Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 203, Ed. 2 Monday, January 14, 1946 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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I
SIX—MONDAY,
JANUARY
Oklahoma city Times
1948.
14.
CM Restudies
I
5.f •
Union-Favored
KF
19-Cent Raise
red
' 2*
1
Electric Workers
*
presidential fact-finding board for a
I
X.
re-
Follows His Master
day boost.
Mrs. Roosevelt to Visit
as
SURPLUS
GOVERNMENT
known
OWNED
MATERIAL
I
FOR SALE AT
i
DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT PLANT
!
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
NEW THROUGH
rt
Oklahoma City and Memphis
ORANGEBURG
IK™ MEMPHIS
Mot So Dumb
Also
n. SMITH
SEWER PIPE—ROOT-PROOF
FOBRtST ClW
OZARK
HtMfMTTA
j
WATER HEATERS
Quickest Route
j
Floor Furnaces—Automatic Controls
NEW LOTS ON DISPLAY EACH WEEK
I
f
a
TRAILWAYS SERVES THE NATION ~ at Scwtq
Mr^Ur, N'etn,nat
T>eUsrey» 2Sy*f«m
I
Asthma Medicine
On Free Trial!
SantaJFe
Phone Union Leaders Call, Then Defer Strike
Meeting In Washington Sunday, the executive board of the National Federation of Telephone
Workers called a strike of operators thorughout the nation, then a few minutes later ordered
it postponed for 30 days. Shown here are Ernest Weaver (standing, left), central regional
member from Chicago, talking to Frank Fitzsimmons (standing, right), president of the West-
ern Electric Employes association of Kearney, N. J., who was visiting the board members.
Beard members seated, left to right: George Du Vai, Washington. D. C., eastern regional mem-
ber; John C. Crull, St. Louis, southern regional member; Carlton W. Werkau, Chicago, secre-
tary-treasurer; J. A. Bieme. Washington, D. C., president; J. J. Moran, Pittsburgh, vice-presi-
dent, and Mrs. Frances V. Smith, Detroit, member-at-large. (Wirephoto.)
with BTeaft. interest as the proprietor
unwrapped a package his wife rushed
into the shop with.
They were disappointed when he
brought out his false teeth. The bar-
ber h»d forgotten to bring them to
work with him.
the three exceptions noted by
Gudger have ever been seen.
“ i apparently flop on
4dr more or leas indifferently,
Tight-eyed" specimens appear
alcohol,
wound.
CLAY SEWER PIPE
AND FITTINGS
BECO OR MICROMET
Eliminates Rust In
Hot Water Heaters
pieaaant
added
more
•r
dhiAAelL (plmnLinvp (fo.
47 N. E. 23rd Phone 4-9822
Heating and Plumbing Contracting
SAME SERVICE
0Kht?*A okmuigk
MUSKOGLt
CONSTIPATION
Hazardous In
BAD COLDS
Beware of sluggish elimination when you
have a cold. It you are constipated you
may be sure your intestines are retaining
virus-laden mucus and other putrefac-
tive waste matter. This condition may in-
terfere with the treatment of the cold
•nd lead to more serious complications.
Relieve this hazardous constipated con-
dition promptly tonight with Calotabs.
Caiotabs are one of the most dependable
of al! it retinal ellminants. They pleas-
antly yet thoroughly act on every foot of
the Intestinal tract, thus helping to
■weep Out virus-laden mucus and other
putrefactive material, enabling Nature to
more effectively combat the cold. Oet
Calotabs from your druggist. Use only aa ,
directed on the labeling.
Me CALOTABS!
Buffalo Area
I SteeLPlants
I Remain Idle
years after it was bought.
No word of explanation accom-
panied the suit, which was still in the
box in which it had been sent.
Helpful II ife Saves
The Day for Barber
COLUMBUS. Neb—(UP>—Custom-
ers ot a barber shop here watched
To Strike Tuesday
W.tSHINOTON. Jan. 14—OP)—The I Corp., had delayed the scheduled I
CIO United Electrical Workers union j strike until midnight Sunday.
Price Hike Unsettled
Murray and Fairies* arranged to re-
Bir-
Baltimore.
came re-
Ford Meeting Tuesday
Even as they telegraphed this three-
page document to the White House, a
General Motors spokesman said the
corporation's answer of Friday “still
stands'*
At that time. OM President C. E.
Wilson turned down without qualifi-
cation the fact-finding proposal and
repeated a long-standing offer to raise
wages by about 12 percent.
While General Motors held the spot-
light. interest mounted in the Tuesday ,
wage session between the UAW-CIO
■ad the Ford Motor Co. The two sides
have indicated they are nearing a wage
agreement, the last step prior to sign-
ing a renewed contract.
General Motors Prober
The national labor relations
board Bunday designated Ger-
ard D. Reilly, one of its mem-
bers, to conduct a hearing on
union charges that General
Motors has failed to bargain
collectively with the striking
CIO auto workers on wage de-
mands. (Wirephoto.)
Fair Warning
INDIANAPOLIS. — (UP) — 8 /Sgt.
Homer Peckingpaugh of New Castle,
Ind., bedded down at Billings hospital
here with a huge cast, has thia* ign
on the door of his private room: “Rose
Room—Peckinpaugh proprietor. Enter
at your own risk, you sweet little
thing!” The proprietor is entitled to
w»ar, besides his east, the Purpls
Heart, oak leaf cluster, unit citation,
combat infantry badge, and battle
■tars for Normandy, Luxembourg, ths
Bulge and Germany.
■ ’ B
[‘t, ■<
Perhaps He Feared Being
Caught With Pants Down
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. Jan. 14.—
mA’’- Police reported a burglar <1)
scaled a 15-foot fence, (3) bent win-
dow bars, (3) cut heavy wire netting
and (4> broke a window to enter
Simon Goldman's store.
Hix loot One traveling bag and one
pair of au*|>end*rs.
SPECIALIZED aircraft instruments such as
gauges, indicators, relays, solenoids, rheo-
stats, small accessory electric motors, lights,
inverters, coils, ammeters, etc.
Frederick O. Pfeifer, head of th*
ACEW Baltimore local which covers
Maryland, Virginia. West r‘
and the District of Columbia,
picketing halted.
In Portland. Ore . E. T. Healy,
president of a union of 3.000 phone
workers. Mid he was advised pickets
would be removed from Pacific ATAT
exchanges.
At Chicago J. R. Fry die. president
of the ACEW in Illinois. Wisconsin
and northern Indiana, told members
to return to work. Its picket Unas
had been respected by operators.
In New York, long lines union ex-
ecutives ordered operators to return
to work but James C. Johnson, vice-
president of ACEW local, announced
picketing would continue Johnson
said the union's orders came from
W D. Barry, local president, and that
his Instructions so far were to "con-
tinue as per schedule, which means
picketing.”
k
Scattered Picketing Continues
As Telephone Tieup Is Delayed
(By Tha Aueoiaua Frs»«>
Telephone service throughout the
nation returned to a more normal
basis Monday with tha threat of a
general strike tieup staved off for 30
days.
In Atlanta, about 15.000 members
of the Southern Federation of Tele-
phone^ Workers in nine southeastern
states were ordered back on th* Job.
They had bean out in sympathy with
the St rial ton of Communication*
Equipment Worker*.
In Kansas City, the absence from
work of long line* workers, totaling
300 in Missouri and Kansas. came to
an end and Frank P. Lonergan, dis-
trict head of the Southwestern Tele-
phone Worker* union reported 4.500
members tn Kans-' and western Mis-
souri had been advised to resume
work
George Lawson western regional di-
rector of the National Federation of
Telephone Worker* in Seattle, said
telephone picket* would be withdrawn
from Washington exchanges and aerv-
iee would reooen
At Detroit. ACEW picket* were still
on duty but operators, member* of
the Michigan Telephone association,
were told by union officers to report
to work whether the picket line* were
there or not.
California's situation waa confused
In Los Angeles picket Une* were main-
tained and A. F. Cutforth. president
of the ACEW local. Mid they would
remain until orders to the contrary
were received from national official*.
Other unions which had been observ-
ing the line* Mid they would con-
tinue to do so.
In San Francisco, pickets were or-
dered withdrawn and operators told to
return to work.
into the mill* and management striv-
ing to restore production facilities.
There were scattered stoppages, the
I most serious in the Buffalo
where some 12.000 men were idle, but
i were independent of
tt ee authentically known c ases ot the national wage issue. In other1 *u * u, l,lrr ^U'K'U'IHllIKI
w ines- flounder* with eyes on the left instances the formal union postpone- : r~;.
aide of tileir heads Instead of on the ment notice was tardily reaching local 30,000 Caech farm families settled
COUGHS
-* COLDS
gm quick relief from tka saugk.
naueculsr snreasas aad atiiflhseas,
dua to soida, at teas than le a tow.
Follow label Oreetiawa. Get •
bottle today. All drug storm, 3U.
JUNIPER-TUt
COMPOUND—-
Steel Workers Remain on Jobs; Hess Charges
Captors Gave
Him fPoisons’
Eases the Pain —
Soothes the Nerves
Headaches, and nerve* upset
bv minor pains, usually respond
promptly to the quick-acting ef-
fectiveneaa of "BC" Also reuevew
neuralgia and muscular aches. Usw
only as directed Consult a physi-
cian when pains persist. 10c de 2Sa
sizes.
Alva Housing Shortage
Cuts School Enrolment
ALVA. Jan. 14.— OP) —In common
with other college cities in Oklahoma.
Alva is short of housing. President
Sabin C. Peroefull of Northwestern
Slate college says 500 students—
mostly returning veteran*—must be
turned away the second semester if
living quarters are not found.
unions
On the bright side of the ledger was
the announced intention of some
5.000 UHW-CIO member* to return at
the Aluminum Co. of America plant*
in New Kensington and Arnold, Pa.
Birmingham Nearly Normal
A few major production unit* were
ready for capacity output. Th* no-
strike order reached Birmingham in
time to halt scheduled banking of
th* bl*it furnaces. Operation there
was forecast at 35 percent of capacity.
In the Youngstown-Canton. Ohio area,
steel producers Mid output would ap-
proach normal within 34 hours.
Fabricating plants, where iron and
steel are turned into finished prod-
uct*, faced little or no difficulty in
resuming operation* And they had
ample backlog of steel pending In-
creased production.
Steel output last week was reported
by the trade magazine “Steel” a* 85
percent of capacity, the highest level
heartjhs; banked and cooled in an anticipation of a shutdown. An
industry spokesman said this task might not be completed before
’ Y' j | | ! -----—j Wednesday.
Report* from steel centers
workers were obeying the order of
CIO-UBW Chief Philip Murray to go
to work as usual. Murray, at the re-
quest of President Truman following
an eleventh-hour parley with Pn»*i- j
dent B. F. Fairies* of U. 8 6(?el
delayed the
Mary's, Kan . manufactures a med-
icine for the relief of Asthma
paroxysm* In which they have so
nftich confidence they will send by
mail a regular 81.25 bottle, all charges
prei>aid. Use it according to directions
on label and after you are completely
satisfied with it. pay only 81.75. You
ar* the Judge—if not Mtiafied you
owe nothing. Thousands have taken
advantage of this offer. Bend your
nam* and address today.—(Adv.)
Waahington Gela
Super Microscope
PULLMAN. Wash.—Washiiw-
ton State college ha* acquired a high
magnification electromagnetic electron
microscope, which may magnify 100
times more powerfully than does the
common optical microscope.
e.. r__. ... ----------
physics department. Mid it will open
up a new world to investigations in
physics, chemistry, industrial tech-
nologies and other fields.
Dog Mascot Struts
Stuff for USO Show
INDIANAPOLIS. — (UP»—Smokie.
champion dog mascot of the south
Pacific, pul on a show for servicemen
at an Indianapolis USO recently.
She was found in a foxhole in New
Guinea two years ago. Her master.
Cpl. William Wynne of Cleveland.
Ohio, has taught her to ride a scooter.
•Udes, spell out her name and sing.
In addition to these achievement*,
she has 13 combat missions to her
credit, ha* traveled some 35.000 miles
gun by ship, plane and train, and ha* been
in Australia. Korea. Japan. Philip-
pine*. Netherlands East Indies and
Oklnswa.
Talks to Resume Wednesday
PITTSBURGH. Jan. 14.—(4*>— The wheels of the nation’s steel
industry kept turning Monday as CIO-United Steelworkers re-
ported for work, their scheduled walkout postponed a week for
further wage negotiations.
Production at “basic” steel plants—those which convert ore
to pillion and the iron and scrap to steel—was below normal as
the companies sought to restore output of blast furnaces and open
hospital* ha* revealed that patient*
frequently prefer ice anealhe*ia to
other form*.
‘ Wide interest has been expressed
in the possibilities of amputation of
extremltie* where the only anesthesia
used was refrigeration.” Dr. Dennis
said.
“Patient* who have had one ex-
tremity removed in this manner and
the other by means of another method
of anesthesia all express their prefer-
Via the Shortest
Leave Oklahoma City
6:00 a. m.—12:45 p. m.
Be sure to specify one of these de-
parture times to enjoy the advantages
of this new through service—no
change of buses. Dirqpt connections
at Memphis for all southeastern
points.
UNION BUS DEPOT
427 WEST GRAND PHONE 3-6425
Bathing Suit Returned
21 Years After Sale
CHICAGO—<UP)—A bathing
that had never been worn wa*
turned to a Chicago store recently, 34 ,
Toolmaker Tries To
Outguess Car Designers
DETROIT, Mich. — (UP) — Ca«
Lupinski. 37-year-old modal-maker,
trie* to keep two Jumps ahead of th*
bln motor manufaciuier*.
Hw iwbby i* making miniature
automobile*, carved from wood, and
rather than duplicating current
models he tries to outguess Detroit’s
big designer*. For example, for 1948
his model* show front and rear fend-
er* incorporated Into the body itself,
with wider rear window* rounded into
the aide*.
Lupinski also foreseen better front
vision, with removal of corner post*
»nd the windshield curving around to
th* door window*.
Wedding Ring Pawning
walk a tight rope blindfolded, go down I1 p Since Pre-War Days
LOS ANOELES. Jan. 14.—i£>i—Sign
of the times?
Pawnbroker William Keller Mys:
"They're ^bringing me five or six set*
ot wedding and engagement rings
every day. Before the war we only
got a couple a week.”
Worry of
FALSE TEETH
Slipping or Irritating?I
Don t b* (inbarmsM* by Iosm (sJm i««th
klippins, drnapins ar vstollns you Mt.
talk or lauah. Juat aprtnklo • llttl* |
FABTXXTH on your ptalM. Thu
powdtr ctvM * remarkobl* aanaa of
comfort and aacurity by holdln« plataa
firmly. Mo tummy soooy. poaty taaU
fooUng Wa alkAlliw (noo-aeW). Gal FA*-
TXXTH m any dru* star*.
Ice Anefttheais Win*
Support of Patients
MINNEAPOLIS—(UP)— Dr. Clar-
ence Dennia. aaaociate profeasor of
surgery at th* University of Minne-
Ru*ia Before Return
LONDON. Jan, 14. — — Mrs.
Eleanor Roosevelt Mid Monday she
intended to visit Russia some time
after the United Nation* assembly
adjourns, but declared she wa* un-
decided a* to the time of her de-
parture.
Her duties as a delegate to the as-
sembly are expected to keep her in
London for at least six mor* weeks.
CHAMPION AND CREST
WATER HEATER SHELLS
I
: . J
cent* apart
U S Steel had tendered a 81.20 per
day boost The union, which origin-
ally asked 82, said it stood ready to
accept 81.56.
Also unsettled wa* the projected
steel price increase. The industry,
advocating 87 a ton. found some gov-
ernment official* who thought 84.50
might be approved. Price and stabi-
liMUon authorities reportedly were
contending 83 would be the limit if
Inflation is to be prevented.
Buffalo Area Hit
From such steel centers
Kansas City.
Canton. Ohio, and Chicago
ports of workers trudging amicably
MADERA. Calif—(UP>—Man Is
not dog's best friend. A doleful-eyed,
brown dog went to Jail here because
hl* master and some friend* had im-
bibed too freely and were confined in
the county bastile. The dog. the only
sober one of the party, stood sadly
outside the cell where hi* errant mas-
ter sat, until officers jailed man's best
friend in the local pound.
________________.
Dr. Paul A. Anderson, head of the
they mm tit to the bottom and hr down
on one side all the rest of their live*,
except fof very brief spurt* of swim-
ming. Tiuir ' underneath'* rye* ml-
|tidr 8i’<’Und sn that both right and
left 4tyes e<«ne to be on the same xide
of the head.
Some »i>ccie*
either aid
•o thM ", .
in Ri4>ne qr les* equal numbers. How-
ever. th the winter flounder, known
•cientifirally as Psuedopleuronectes
•mericanus, the tendency to lie on
the left side and have eyes on the
right Is practically universal. Only
Dr. I since V-J day.
---♦---
Dog Pound in Chicago
More Like Noah's Ark
CHICAGO—(4*)—Robert B. Forejt,
head of the city's dog pound, wonders
u’hether the name of the establish-
ment is appropriate. In the past year
besides dogs, it has sheltered two
horses, two pigs, two squirrels, a brace
of monkeys, five goat*, 168 cat*, a J
porcupine, a muskrat and a hamster, today.
cnee for refrigeration.”
ea Czech Families Returning
To Former Su<lelenlan<!
A^O U E;—(UP)—Approximately
I ——ww.. •«••••• awaaasaawn rwvvswl ill
new noniri in th» former Sudetrnhind
during the past seven weeks, the min-
istry of agriculture reported.
"Temporary national managers''
were still adminiatering nearly 60,000
confiscated former German farm hold-
ings in the Sudeten districts, await-
ing definitive new Owners, the farm
paper "Zemedelake Novtny' said
Oroup transport of several hundred
persons were continuing, the paper
added, with the resettlement, office
eeeking to settle families as close a*
possible to their old neighbors in the
new location*.
BARRANQUILLA. Columbia—OP)—
A deaf and dumb woman was arrested
here at. a key figure in a gang of
petty thieves. Speechless but sharp-
eyed. she cased jobs for her accomp-
lices while begging alms from house
to house. She confessed after submit-
ting to examination by an “inter-
preter” versed in the sign language.
DETROIT. Jan. 14.—<>P)—Oancral
Motors Corp, had for consideration
Monday a once-rejected proposal to <
settle the 55-day-old CIO United Auto |
Workers strike for a government-
backed wage increase of 17*4 percent.
The compromise, approved by the
union's General Motors council Sun- J
day. marked the first time the UAW- 11
CIO had shelved, even temporarily, its I
30 percent wage demands. ■
The corporation's flrat reaction waa 11
to repeat its rejection of the proposal. 11
NLRB to Hear Charges
However, the 200-man OM council , I
of the UAW-CIO gave the corporation ' I
until January 21 to reconsider, warn- 11
ing that after that date the union will ■ I
revert to the original 30 percent . I
demand. I
In Washington, the national labor 11
relations board, moved by what it j I
termed "the national interest,” inter- il
vened in the strike that has idled '■
175.000 production workers across the I
nation. I
The board announced it will hear
UAW-CIO charges that General Mo-
tors has failed to bargain collectively
on wages. The corporation will be
given 10 days to answer the union's
allegations after which a hearing will
be scheduled.
The NLRB said, however, that GM's
"ability to pay” will not be a factor in
the hearings.
• Leiter to Truman Drafted
In a long and stormy meeting Sun-
day in a downtown Detroit hotel, the
UAW-CIO * OM council decided to ask
3.500 employes of 300 tool and die Job- '
bing plants to put "under the bench" 1
*r‘ke any i Town Removes I
work D^ing Gone Tor om.
They threatened to make the same Advertising* Billboards
request of an unestimated number of
UAW-CIO employes in parts and sup- LA JOLLA. Cal. —<UP>—The last
ply factories upon which GM normally advertising billboards in La Jolla were
depends. coming down as the local Conservation
The GM council drafted a lengthy Society completed removal of real-
letter to President Truman urging him ( estate advertisements.
to "persuade" the corporation to re- j "No billboards allowed” will be the
consider and accept the proposal by a rule after that. Two large signs at
presidential fact-finding board for a north and south entrances to Lo Jolla
17’w percent increase, amounting to a will tell tourists that the ban is an
wage boost of about 19'a cents per ■ effort to maintain the beauty of the
hour. : community.
All items will be grouped in small lots to
sell as is, where-is, on a competitive sealed
bid basis. Material will be sold from 9 a. m.
to 3 p. m. each week day except Saturday.
Prospective buyers report to Cate 1 5.
• ^^Ra
served notice on it* 200.000 members I
Monday that their Tuesday strike will
go on as scheduled. sume Wednesday, again at tha" White
The walkout is set f - — - - -
the General Electric and Westing- ! offer by the steel firm and
house Co.'* and the electrical division proposal from the union.
of General Motor* Corp., whose 175,- ! these offer* has been made public, but
000 CIO United Auto Workers are in i when President Truman intervened to
the fifty-fifth day of their strike. I summon the two leader* for the Sat-
in wiring local officers the "strike urday parley they were only a few
goes on a* scheduled.” Nell Brsnt,
W.istilbgton representative of the
eiectridal jworkers said the three com-
panies hid rejected union proposal*
for averting the shutdown.
OK and Westinghouse. Brant said
were asked to offer * 15-cent an hour
wage mc*ea*e with the remainder of
the original 62 a day demand to be
negotiated The union proposed in
the see of OM he added, the pres-
idential fact-finding boards report
in the agto workers dispute be ac-
cepted. This called for a 19‘x-cent I
incraMr. i I
Bran*, said the strike is set for one mingham.
~ J
A
t VI
ST. MARY'S. Kan —The D. J. |
Lane Company. 1645 Lane Bldg., Bt. :
BUFFALO. Jan. 14.—(4»>—Two Buf-
' falo area steel plant* were strike-
bound Monday, despite a week's post-
ponement of a scheduled nationwide
steel walkout.
Negotiation* were scheduled to tie
resumed in the four-day strike of 11,«
000 workers at Bethlehem Steel Co.'s
Lackawana plant.
A strike involving 1,100 employes of
• Worthington Pump and Machinery
Corp, became effective when picket
lines established ar the plant.
At Schenectady, a scheduled walk-
out of about 8.000 American Locomo-
tive company worker* was postponed
for one week in compliance with CIO
president Philip Murray'* request to
all United Steelworkers local*.
Similar action was taken at the Al-
legheny-Ludlum Steel Corp.'s Dunkirk
| plant
Bethlehem worker* are seeking a
25 cents an hour wage increase.
NAeDIUM and small lots of raw stock
aluminum and steel sheet stock, bar, tubing,
etc. Automotive and aircraft type electrical
items, radio wiring and supplies, miscellane-
ous screws, nuts, bolts, bolt fittings, etc.
Wooden shop equipment, consisting of cabi-
nets, lockers, tables, benches, racks, bins
and booths.
NUERNBERG, Jan 14— (UP) —
Rudolf Hess charged that his Brit-
ish captors gave him "brain poison"
and "heart poison" and disclosed he
attempted twice to commit suicide
in a 15,000 word document which
allied authorities released Monday.
The former Nazi leader de-
scribed his flight to Scotland on
said | May 10. 1941, and the subsequent
years of imprisonment.
In his statement Hess said he suf-
fered thousands of planned mal-
treatment* ranging from "brain
poison" placed in his food to
whistles tied on bushes near hi*
quarters where their wailing would
keep him awake
Hess admitted he fractured his
leg when he jumped out of a ae< -
,, .....^ ond story window in a suicide at-
for plant* of House, discussion ot the latest wage | tempt. On another occasion he
‘ a counter- 1 stabbed himself near the heart. He
Neither of saW th® British then gave him
"heart poison.” by putting poison in
to dress the self-inflicted
Doctor Explains
, Gall Bladder
The experience of 30 years with over
40,000 csMt ot common gall bladder
and liver disorders is
described in a new
booklet by Dr. E. E.
Paddock. Box 5805,
Desk 82. Kansas City.
Mo. This booklet tells
why surgery in many
cases may be either
unnecessary or inad-
visable. or how suffer-
ing may be relieved by
his palliative medical
treatment. Also are described many
symptoms of Gall Stones and infected
Gall Bladder. Send for free booklet
hour be to re the start of day shift
operations Tuesday.
Only Three Known Cases
Of Left-eyed Flounders
NEW YORK—<SSi—There are only these disputes
Uv,;:,’ known cases ot the national —------ ...
winter flounders with eyes on the left instances the formal union postpone- i
* ... i____ji * k. . mant nAttoM «a*a *.a>««4laa a^.^_a
right states Dr E. W Oudger of the
Antenqan Museum of Natural History
here, i jn the forthcoming issue of
Bcienrto Of these, only one la now
reprrMhtttd by an actually existing
apecimtn. which is In the American
Muerum dollectlona.
Flounders and their ichthyological
relatives are odd fish. In early youth
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 203, Ed. 2 Monday, January 14, 1946, newspaper, January 14, 1946; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1765183/m1/4/: accessed June 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.