Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 237, Ed. 2 Friday, November 1, 1946 Page: 8 of 18
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NOVEMBER
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Including 3 and 4 piece American Twitter matched ladies’ sett
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Um Our Convenient
Layaway Plan
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Tillman Wheat Planted
FREDERICK. Nov, l.--<Special )—
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2 PIECE MATCHED
PULLMAN AND
OVERNIGHT SET
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ing fields, tl
the weight
glider, and i
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Last ceason’t .acreage was about 2M.-
000. but he believes 300.000 acres will
be planted this fall .,
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Save up to 50% on your Diamond Purchase
>2 WIST GRAND AVI. ♦ SOUTH BROADWAY
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|acquard Pattern
■* Cardigan
SWEATER
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Key Io Her( Heart
150 Tons of Limestone
in Bryan
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Please add tax
to Mail Orders
ORDERS
FILLKD
PU.w »arlM» l«r far F*«t
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equipment to the city a
ical cente>. Total prqjee
announced at $75,000. includin,'. $37 -
500 from the Baptist General conven-
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. . leather baund! White and brawn. Rawtex and assorted
colars. Men’s 2 suiters, gladstones and handbags in genuine
cawhide ar pigskin leather.
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USE
YOUR
CREDIT
Con£<4'ent Budget Payments
ROBINSON at MAIN STR«T
flying duckling
A gay light-hearted Costume pin
for the young, and the young at
heart ... in Sterling Silver or
gold plated on Stirling Silver . . .
a duckhng jn flight tp keep your
spirit
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. Smart with' winter maH
and furs. Two styles sketched.
2.90
Hat Bar] Street Floor
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The Wicrrlll offei
food prewrvat’ion, cook- ,
nd other phaaea
rtf'.’
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L. TL
NUTS
AND j
JOLTS
Multi ltblr?iu:i
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August
Gyro-Glider
Most Radical
Craft in Fiekl
SCHENBCT>
Declared to I
development A
field, an
which works
1 a power »oi
at I
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142 West Main St.
Comer Mam & Robinson
Pigskin Pull-Ons
a
‘Hilda! When you take jthe sheets off the bed, make sure
Rusband isn’t in them!”
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earmarked, to renovate and adjt new
leading nied-
1 expense 'was
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Bensen one of the G-E engineers responsible for its design
and development. The craft, Urhich works like an autogyro
without power, is capable of lifting nearly 300 pounds in addi-
4 tion to its own freight and can land in extremely small areas.
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(Special) —
of Mr. and
Paula Kay
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Fmest. supple peccary p«gsk*n .completely
hancAnade. In fbatmeal
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'0.95- .
Street
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Scattered Japs
Still at Large
In Pacific Area Spread Daily ir
DURANT, Nov. .1.—tSpecul >—
,.h Llmeatone U being spread on lime-de-
ficient Bry^n county crop and paaturo
land at the rate of 150 tons a day.
Clement Harkey, director of the county
agricultural conservation administra-
tion. announced,
Two contractors are shipping -in tha
limestone and each iyia five lime-
spreadlng trucks which move the hws
to the farms and distribute It. Har-
key said the present program will
7 run through January and
will complete the county's quotas fbr
both 1$4S and 1947.
Mych of the limestone is be-ng
placed on land which produced pea-
nuts this year and on which hundreds
acres of cover crops have been
. nted • —t •
Some super phosphate la being dis-
tributed. but fi shortage of thia soil-,
building material has put debveries
far behind orders. The phosphate la
beiqg distributed only on winter Je-
BROADWAY’S SPECTACULAR
i $25,000 SALE OF
LUGGAGE
■
Th»» Is really a
mire, A smart,
sweater
waist
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HARRY KATZ
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EIGHTEEN—FRIDAY.
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tThis odd-loo king wingless craft, known as the G-E Gyro-
GMder. *ab developed at General Electric’s newly-opened
flight test center at the Schenectady county airport. Using &
, jeep as its towing agent, the glider is being flown here by I. B.
Bensen. oipe of the G-E engineers responsible for its design
11 Pin.. 500
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escaped last month. They1 have friend*
among the. Chamorros and can mi ng la
with the, native population without
detection so it is doubtful if they wtU
ever be recaptured.
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LAY AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING
BROADWAY
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Staff of Indian Office
At Holdenville Cx/nuids
4 HCUJKNt ILiLE,i Nov. 1.—- Special*
Mltias. Linda : Masss v b-s
faetn assigned to the local Indian of-
‘htje M fltld home ^xtensioii ageat,
Leiar.a Stark Indian agent, reported.
....The home rx'r-ns’or. service was re-
ipewJy established in the county office.
> Miss Maw was transferred here
frqmj Idabel She. will set up a proT
trami m H..g‘ins> .Pontotoc and* por-
cin til Scnr.noie county that will "id
Ibr It'-.rws, ipop nation U1 establishing
J :Wl:ter homks • -----— —M
I in»truetU>n in
L ftnf clothing •'
M rutaka Get* Bleachers
■ ! WKWOKA Nov 1—especial)—
WewoMa nifhak-Mool officials were in
Ada this- wegk securing additional
bleachers finr ' the Wewoka-Seminole
football gatne Friday night Calvin
Ti Smith limit ipal. announced Some
S400 are rtpected here for the game.
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'The Arrows at Main and Robinson Point Your Way
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\alue to ad-
|ong vleeve
coat sweater with snug
knitted waist band and
a
cuffs. Comes in contrasting
color Jacquard, designs on
assorted color backgrounds.
995
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STORE HOURS
t:30 te 6:30
Sat. HI 9 R. M.
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Overcharges
»
(B«prlai«t tram Late ECltlaa TmtevCay)
In two OPA auita filed Wednesday
in federal district court the OPA
asked damages from landladies for
alleged over-charging on rents, the
damages not only for the benefit of
the United States treasury, bfit also
for the benefit of tenants, something-
unusual in OPA rent suits her^.
In a‘ suit filed against Ida Lou
Alcorn. Edmond. OPA asked $247.50
I f°r the treasury, and $123.75 for Mrs.
. | Pete W Morgan, who was the ten-
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Betyw Bensen makes ready for another experimental flight.
Duncan Grade School
King, Queen Crowned
DUNCAN. Nov. 1. —
Bobby Jack Oupst. son
Mrs. Jack Ouest. and
Boyd, daughter of Mrs. Jack Boyd,
were crow-ned king and queen at the
annual l<ee school carnival this week.
Both are third grade students. Tqtal
receipts from the carnival amounted 1
to $$19.! Mrs. Archie L- Hupp, presi-
dents of the school's Pa rent-Teachers
association, sponsor, stated.
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Pawnee Girl I* Pilot
PAWNEE. Nov. 1—(Special )—Miss
Elizabeth Wittich, daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. H. R Wittich. Pawnee, has
received her private pilot's license. An
employe of the American Broadcast-
ing Co In New York City, she began
the study of aeronautics as a hobby
last February and now has B5 hour?
of flying time to her credit. 1
25% OFF
OF CEILING PRICES
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felil
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N. Y. Nov. 1.—
most revolutionary
„ date in the glider!
booking wingless craft
Jte an autogyro without
lower source has b?enf
the Ornefal Electric flight test
center here. ;
Known as (he G-E gyro-glider, the
wingless craft; is flown. with the aid^ol
two 9-foot (Otating blades atop the
craft. Weighing 120 pounds, it U -
capable of Hlting nearly 300 pounds (
in addition tf its own w®»«ht.
The gyro-<hder can land in ex
tremely smalt area* re«ulrln*
mg field of not more than 00 feet in
(diameter, afccording to David C
Prince. O-E* vice-president in charge
of the company's general engineering
and consulting laboratory, who is one
of the designing engineers of the new
aircraft.
Wide Commercial Um
Expected =to have wide commercial
application |aa a means of reaching
isolated are*s without adequate land-
tie gyro-glider is one-third
r;of a standard fixed-wing
fan be steered within lim-
ihd land on any spot of the
pilot's choice. ' I .
The new; aircraft, which can be
towed by airplane and released from
various altitudes like a standard
glider, has a descending speed less
than that of a parachute.
Like an autogyro, the new glider
makes a forward rolj of 20 io 30 feel,
when landing. The routing blades,
with a total diameter of 18 feet, can
be easily removed so that the gyro-
glider can be transported from home
to airport in the rear of a station
wagon, which also can serve as its
towing agent. The new craft also is
equipped with a trftycle landing gear.
Towed Behind Jeep.
Designed last March, the gyro-
glider was recently flown for the first
time at the O-E flight- test center.
Schenectady county airport, by Igor
B. Bensen. G-E engineer, who. with
Prince and R. H. Ball designed and
built the new craft.
In experimental flights at the new-
O-E center, which rapidly is becoming
the idte of development and test work
on a11 types of jet engines, radar and
electronic aircraft equipment, the
gyro-glider is towed behind a jeep.
The tow rope allows the craft to reach
an altitude of iqpre than 100 feet.
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I , Oklahoma City Times
OPA Accuses,
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1 United States treasury and $72 for
the benefit of the tenant, alleging
- ' overcharges on rent.
In a third suit fifed by OPA against
k Mrs. Lillie Douglas. 594 SW 26. OPA
■ asks a permanent Injunction to pre- • 11 • > ■-< ■
vent her from ousting Mrs. Edgar Hia|]l] HoSDltal F 1111(1
■ Rubrecht. OPA allege* that when: r
Mrs. Rubrecht returned from a visit /' P'Anl
to her husband. October 29, who is LxHlipdlffn .iCaT (>031
■ in the armed forces, she found her 1 *
personal possessions had been re- MIAMI. Nov. 1.—(Special. )-*-Witt
moved from the four room apartment reports that the current drive to mod-
at that address, and that Mrs. Doug- ernize and enlarge Miami Baptist ho*.- i
las refused to allow her in the apart- pital was meeting an “exceptionally’ 1 , V .
ment, although she had rented it for fine response, R E. Holland, chair- About 95 percent of the wheat in Till-
more than a year. OPA asks a court man of the chamber of commerce man county has already been planted,
order putting Mrs. Rubrecht's prop- committee sponsoring the campaign* according to 8. E. Lewis, county agent
erty back tn the apartment and.per- said the $37,500 goal will be reached1
m&nently injoining Mrs. Douglas from within a few days.* "x,
evicting her. Funds raised during the drive are
ant of Mrs. Alcorn. In ^his case it
is alleged that the landlady made
overcharges on rent for a period of
,8*3 months.
In a suit filed against
Brace, at Cordell, the OPA asks dam-
ages of $144 for the benefit of the
Tady.
be the
Ito di
odi
v-r_Jg A <*
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Thnllmg Christmas gift idea <you'll
♦him for yourself. »» w«IH. .
' ' ■» .i - ‘ • ■ >;. ■ ‘ . -ft
Victorian chatelaine ■ in gold colored
metal twinkling with "crown jewels.”
Earrings, 1^8
(Pius r«x( Ta»r t
Jewelry. Street Floor
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GUAM. Nov. 1—'(CDN>—Notwith-
standing the continuing efforts of the
' United States forces to complete th<»
roundup of Japanese tn> the Pacific
islands, it is generally conceded that
scattered bands are still hiding out. 4
Official estimates have placed 50
former enemy soldiers still at large 4n
Ouam. for example, whtidh.the Amer-
ican. forces retook in August. 1944
Army Col. Leonard B. I Creswell 6f Pr?.0*0^
State College. Miss., a marine Veteran
of Guadalcanal, adnilts there is no
way of being sure, though he th|Qkai
there are not more than 15 still h*re. ■
Any Japs still tree of prisoneriof- of
war camps here, however, ‘'mqst. be planted. •
bush-crazy by this time,’* the colonel
insists, beckuse if they had any sense
they would suirender.
'’The' 4.000* Jap prisoners we have
here Ilka it so well they don't want-
to go hogne. The other day one man j
was left behind when a tryck drove
aa-ay without him. He went down to
the main'highway and thumbed a ride
back to the compound." said Creswell.
The authorities admit they c»n t charged at Fort Sam Houston. Texas^
even estimate the number of jap this week
soldiers-still f in hiding on the other overseas
islands ! •- - -
taken from the former Mim Rubye Jean Zumwalt,
—■ ......a, -U— ———-- uh ■■ 1 ■ y ■■———I ■
estimate the
Fgumes and grasa.
Veteran Is Discharged
FREDERICK Nov 1—«Special >—*
E A Roberta jr.. Frederick, was dia-
; after serving 1$ moot ha
f .He took a plane to Fori
Teni pri-sohers—there are 700 Worth, where he waa me’ byJua wife,
on Saipan—which were t
the Japs more than two years ago Frederick. '
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 237, Ed. 2 Friday, November 1, 1946, newspaper, November 1, 1946; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1766045/m1/8/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.