Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 265, Ed. 2 Wednesday, December 4, 1946 Page: 1 of 20
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9
VOL. LVII.
NO. 265.
EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY
WEDNESDAY,
DECEMBER 4,
LATE STREET EDITION
. PRICE FIVE CENTS
1946.
1
1
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♦ .1
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Li
J
Of Crisis
> r
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3r
been out of the army six months. They are visiting Dr. and Mrs. O. J. Gee, 1328 NW 21.
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Thorez would require an absolute
Molotov Locks
in ltd*
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7
by
A FL
t
line*.
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t
nurses' home, according to
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■ - - • - 1 •*.'
Farmers Told
T ake Freedom
On Set Profits
Industry
On Brink
Boston Girl Fails
In Death Attempt
Under Car in City
Truman Reported
Set for Alterations
All-America Grid
Stars Are Selected
Details. Pace M
Bid to Elect New
Premier Challenged
h
ed at police head*
esday. when they
four
FUtAM TURN TO
PAOB J. OOLUMH 1
parlor plus a well-
in which the cows
move around.
posed on the mine uitiion leader for
falling to call off the economy pata-
was carried out
The congress put off action, how-
»• » »
o «s •
a
‘Giggling Girls’
Visit Jail, Stay
Robbery Suspects’
Friends Admit Part
I
PL KAM TURK TO
PACK 1. COLU MX 1
—
[ -ii. ‘S *■
t
fl
after
. they
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1
Oklahoma City Times
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
Oraalns BdlUoa at Tba Dall* Oeishnwaa-I Katarad at U>e Oklahoma «t». Oklahoma. Poalolllea aa aaeoad elaaa mall mattar under tha act at March 1. J»7».
required
i
chihfcry.
■ f
State Nurses Group
Sets Christmas Partv
A Christ mas program has been
planned for the monthly meeting of
1, State Nurses*
lie on are unnatural.** i
Supersonic Center Site
Announcement Delayed
WASHINGTON. Dec, 4—(Ah—Sen-
ator Gordon (R.. Ore > said Wednes-
City’s ‘Outside’
Engineer Cost
Is $1 Million
What Not to Do
Little Roland Michaud demon-
strated Wednesday in h i a
home in New York City how
he climbed to the family medi-
cine chest and consumed 30
aspirin tablets, a bottle of
cough medicine, a bottle of cod
. liver oil and a bottle of castor
oil. A stomach pump put him
on his feet after his medicated
spree. <Wirephoto.)
A Boaton Mass . girl. IS. waa in tha
county Juvenile a«rd Wednesday after
two city patrolmen observed her at-
tempt to commit suicide bv running
— | in front of an automobile in the 24b
block N Broadwav.
The girl told R 8. Rllev and H. J.
Schmidt, patrolmen, thia story:
Her stepfather is a soldier stationed
at Boston, where her mother u She
is supposed to be staying »t'h a girl
at Muskogee, but has been here since
last July, living in hotel*
She said she was unmarried, be-
lieves herself to be pregnant, and said
saw the soldier whom she has
munists, while outpoiling other parties,
failed to win a majority of national
assembly seats In the November IS
election
THIRTY-TWO PAGES—500 N. BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY,
--------h--7-
Grim Lewis Paces Floor
U rather Forecast
Fair and eeatinaed mild today, to-
aigtei and TMoradav. except somewhat
warmer slang eastern border. Inw
temperalare* tonight in 40s.
Hourly Temperature '
44
41
M
41
41
n
«•
o
>s
Rubber Hose for Lewis?
Cop Has Court in Slew
WASHINGTON. Dec 4—Uri—A
gum-chewing city cop casually swing-
ing a rubber hose Intrigued court room
spectators Wednesday al John L.
Lewis' contempt trial. Even the bailiffs
were worried for a while.
On questioning, they found he wan
waiting to testify in another court-
room and had just dropped in to
gawk. The rubber hooe? It waa to be
evidence in the cop's own case.
"Somebody got hit in the head with
It," he explained.
mary objective of barn
Dr. T. B Symons, director of
Pt SASK rUWN TO
PAOg 1. COLUMN I
—7--—
Labor Laws
Change Hinted
lOlI-The truck drivers
Bunday's incident "must
bar k to Um Angeles "
Oakland Mayor
Girds for Fight
t
Regular Department
Reduced as Special
Jobs Farmed Out
WASHINGTON. Dec 4—■ <»’ Pr
dent Truman's promise tn send the
strongest possible legislative message
to, the new OOP-controlled congress
brought predictions from Capitol Hill
Wednesday that fundamental changes
in the labor laws will be near the top
of his proposals
Mr. Truman used the description in
telling a news conference Tuesday
about the state of the union message
he plans to send the legislators in
January. He said it will deal with la-
bor and other topics so that he and
the Republicans can co-operate and
get something done
His language. In the absence of more
detail, left legislators somewhat up in
the air as to the general tack Mr.
Truman may take.
Some thought that by a strong mes-
sage the president meant he will re-
vive many of the new deal proposals
he has espoused in the past
But others said that if Mr. Truman
hopes to obtain any sort of co-ope ra-
tion with the Republicans—an objec-
tive he has mentioned before—he
could not hope to get it that way. As
a result this group looked for a more
conservative trend In the message.
ialUated its of 50.000 population, which 2>aa only
an eight-day supply of coal.
Slate la Operate Mines
Gov. William M. Tuck empowered
a state defense council to lease and
operate the 200 independent mines in
Virginia not operated by the federal
government to supply coal to state
Institutions and hospitals.
Health officials in Denver feared
an epidemic of influence would result
from “the coal famine in that city
where the last lump of fuel was sold
Saturday. Many homes were without
heat and thousands of residents
scrounged the nearby countryside for
wood to keep fires going. _•
Coal stocks were so low In many
communities that officials were afraid
to reveal the amount on hand for fear
of causing a panic
More Than 150,404 Others Idle
More than 150.COO persons already
were unemployed as a result of the
coal strike, but industrialists predicted
that figure was "only a drop tn the
bucket compared with the number that
will be laid off next week."
Railroads were expected to furlough
t house nds of workers as a result of
the freight embargo and further re-
strictions on passenger travel The em-
bargo was expected to throw 20,000
workers into idleness next week.
Picnic Weather
Forecast Over
All State Areas
It will be quite safe to* go ahead
with that late season streak fry. Mr.
Maughan said Wednesday.
The weatherman’s brief, but pleas-
ing, forecast calls for fair and con-
tinued mild weather Wednesday and
Thursday for both city and state, with
a maximum temperature of about 70
expected locally for Wednesday after-
noon. The mercury should sink no
lower than 44 Thursday morning.
Highest reading here Tuesday after-
noon was 87 and the lowest. 39 at the
airport and 42 at the Classen station
Wednesday morning. Highest and low-
est for the date waa 77 tn 1914 and
5 above In 1997.
Oklahoma A&M Steer is Grand Champion at Chicago
Thia is Royal Jupiter, 1.370-pound Shorthorn steer owned by the Oklahoma A&M college which
was adjudged grand champion of the International Livestock show.in Chicago Tuesday Show-
ing him off, left to right, are Walter Biggar, Judge. Dalbeattie. Scotland; Henry W. Marshall,
president of the international show, and Orville DeWall, herdsman at A&M. tWirephoto.)
z f, i
GILBERT HILL
<Tta>M Staff Wnuri
CHICAGO. Dec. 4—Fanners
cannot be expected to compete
in a free market while "both in-
dustry and labor enjoy protec-
tion of a monopoly," Rep. Clif-
ford Hope. Kansas, next chair-
man of the house agriculture
committee, told farm editors
here Tuesday night.
But. he added, farmers must realise
that for every bit of price protection
they receive they must accept "con-
trol* and regimentation oireoUy in
proportion to the premium above
what they might receive in A free
price market.
Ne K ash Is Aeea
Hope, who has been the spokesman
for the minority party on the power-
ful agriculture committee, will step
up as chairman ax the result of the
November Republican election victory.
He spoke al a dinner of the American
Association of Agriculture Editors
here, insisting that "we don’t have to
hurry about new legislation and I feel
it^hould be well thought out by both
you and the farmers first.''
The new agricultural chairman-
apparent said that In hla opinion the
promise of congress in the Steagall
bill, which sets a floor of 90 percent
of parity prices under all commodities
an which farmers were asked to In-
crease production for the'duration of
the war should be met.
New Floors Needed
/ But. he suggested also that the
parity prices in some instance* es-
tablish an unrealistic approtu~h to
thing* ax they are now. compared with
that of the base period
W 1814."
He cited the debacle in potatoes, in
which the government owns thousands
of bushels dow rotting, as an example.
Potatoes, he said, can be produced
more cheaply now because of machin-
ery and new insecticides like DDT
and "it isn't in direct relation with
other things. The same thing. I'm
told. Is true of poultry and egg prod-
uct* The floor 1* too high. *nd en-
courage* production unnecessarily.
Farmers must decide whether they
wgnt safety of prices and control or
freedom to operate without control.
Farmers
Fighter Pilot and War Baddy Reconvert Easily
This reconversion stuff is pretty tame, in the opinion of Hound Dog, thezwar buddy of Louis
Stark Gee. 24. Abilene. Texas, now visiting here. During the war, when (fee was a fighter pilot
stationed on Attu, in the Aleutians, Hound Dog used to fly with her master in a special little
niche behind him, with her chin and her paws on Gee’s shoulder. She didn't like bombers or
transports, just fighter planes. Hound Dog and Gee met while he was in training, and have
-
French Reds’
Power Totters
More than $1 million has
been spent in outside engi-
neering fees under contract-
from bond issue and special
assessment funds in recent
years while the city council
has been content to allow its
$60,000-a-year regular engi-
neering department to be re-
duced to the status of a mei*e
maintenance unit.
When the question of engi-
neering was raised publicfe Just
ahead of the spending of tne re-
cent $15 millions improvement
bond issue, council members is-
sued their unanimous reply In
the employment of Benham En-
gineering Co., to draft plans for
the $9 millions sanitary sewer
program, wrangted several weeks
over other engineers, and finally
followed through with a policy
of contracting out the engineer-
ing work on the bond issue pro-
gram.
Paving Engineer Contracted
Meantime, tbe council renewed its
outside contract with V. O. Thom peon
as special paving engineer who re-
ceives a 4Vj percent fee on the av-
erage Si million a year of new pav-
ing being laid.
Until the council adopted the pol-
icy of contracting out Its regular pav-
ing engineering work, this fee was
received by the city engineering de-
partment tor the general fund, and
revenues from it were reappropriated
by the council in regular budget*
from its pool of miscellaneous rev-
enues.
The argument heard by the coun-
cil in establishing the policy of con-
tracting out it* paving work was that
the city engineering department can-
not go out and work up paving dia-
participated |R the tricte by circulating petitions for pav-
Up Treaty Pen
Molotov Is (Lonaulteil
While Big 4 FitlgetA
NEW YORK. Dec 4— <UPl —Soviet
Foreign Minister Molotov, presumably
awaiting instructions from Moscow,
stalled tinal Big Four action Wednes-
day on the last half dozen open ques-
tion* In the satellite peace treaties.
Since the council of foreign minis-
ters could settle them all in one sit-
ting. delegates are still expecting to
start preliminary talks on the German
peace treaty before the end of the
week.
The German talks will be just “pre-
liminary'* and devoted primarily to de-
ciding when, where and how real talk*
and decisions on the treaty will take
place.
Secretary of State Byrnes has
abandoned all hope to get the Big
Four to decide here on Germany's fu-
ture frontier*. The French election
and failure of former French Presi-
dent-Premier George* Bidapll to at-
tend the meeting here upaet that plan.
--♦ ——
Lower Rail Rates Asked
WASHINGTON. Dec 4—Idaho
renewed Wednesday in arguments be-
fore the interstate commerce commis-
sion its plea for lower freight rates
on grain shipped to the Pacific coast.
The case involves transportation
chargee on grain and grain products
from southern Idaho, northern Utah
and eastern Oregon.
. I
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t
PITTSBURGH. Dec. 4— (UP) —
The nation headed rapidly
toward an industrial crisis
Wednesday as a freight embargo,
resulting from the 14-day soft
coal strike, left scores of fac-
tories with only a few days to
operate.
More than 1.000.000 workers. 500.000
of them in the automobile industry,
faced layoffs next week a* a result of
the embargo, effective Friday.
Ford Closing Tomorrow
As the full force of the coal strike
bit Into the nation's economy, there
were the following development* *
The Ford Motor Co. of Detroit an-
nounced It would cease all manufac-
turing at midnight Thursday. Assem-
blies will shut down a few days after
that. An estimated S5.000 production
workers will be laid off:
General Motors Corp, announced it
could operate "only a tew days at the
moat" after the rail embargo goes Into
effect. OM employs 243,000 hourly-
rated workers.
Ohio Calls Out Guard
Chrysler Corp., which employe*
75,000 workers, said ft was contem-
plating an early shutdown.
Automobile parts manufacturers also
were expected to close
Scores of other Industrie* planned
to halt operations as soon a* present
storage space is filled.
Gov. Frank J. Lausche of Ohio or-
dered a company of the state's na-
tional guard into Hamilton where the
city's street’s light* will be turned out
at midnight. The guard will augment
the regular police force in this city
AH. Digs Spurn Into
Paralyzing Walkout
OAKLAND. Calif., Dec. 4—
—An aroused mayor, declaring
* the city of Oakland is not going
back to the Jungle." demanded
drastic emergency powers
Wednesday to cope with’an ex-
panding mass "protest*' walkout
of organised labor which has
kept a metropolitan area of
... 1XXM.000 people tied up since 5
a. m Tuesday.
g>en a* Mayor
summoned the citj
cause
can.
Fees Total S45.44S u Year
The argument was supported by a
record as long as the years of the
depression when no paving was being
laid. Then-the WPA offered "half-
price** paving by furnishing labor at
government expense, leaving bene-
fltted owners to pay for the materials
ooly. and thc-.aouncil >-------
policy by contracting with a former
WPA engineer to work up the pAvtng
districts and handle the engineering
work Involved.
When WPA faded, the policy wa*
continued, and still is in force. Under
the program, about SI million of pav-
ing a year is being laid, the engineer
receiving his contract fee totaling an
average of about 345.000 a year
- Thia fund annually is approach-
Expense
While Awaiting Sentence;
Judge, Attorneys Confer
1 ■ _________________J__________________________i--
u*ed la
be sent
# Two "giggling girls” who ad-
mittedly 1 ‘ ~~ ____w___________<_.
robbery of the F and F Grill, NE >ng, while a private engineering firm
10 and Stiles, three weeks ago
now are in the county Juvenile
ward, dty detectives said
Wednesday.
They were arre
quarters here t
sought to visit the four youths
charged a-ith armed robbery here and
who were arrested near El Dorado,
Kan.. Sunday following an accident.
Detectives Wayne Harbolt and
Charles Ryan said one of the girls is
17, the other 14.
Both TeU Parts la Robbery
When the girls went to police head-
quarter* Tuesday to see the four rob-
bery suspects, they were dressed in
bright red dresaea and gave the ap-
pearance of being Maters Both are
awaiting final divorce decrees, the de-
tectives said -
Harbolt and Ryan, their curiosity
aroused, rolled one of the girl* aside
to question her concerning the "gig-
gling girl" robbery. They said she ad-
mitted her part tn the robbery and
implicated her companion and two
youths.
The other girl then was questioned
snd also admitted a part in the rob-
bery. the detectives saM. —-
They told officers they went to the
F and F grill the day of the robbery
with one of the youths.
While the two girls giggled and
laughed at the owner* of the cafe, the
youth scooped up cash from the regis-
ter and the three left, according to
the detectives.
They denied participation in any
other armed robberies. Harbolt said,
but implicated the two youths in the
armed robbery November 17 of a Yel-
low Cab service station al NE 3 and
Walnut.
Fair Flew U» Kanoa*
Saturday night, immediate!
the W H. Snow grocery robbtf .. ,
said the four boys now charged with
that crime came by their home, told
them what had happened and gave
them "travel money " ,
The girls said they were told to meet
the boys in Leavenworth and thgt
they were driving there The girls said
they spent S17 each on plane tickets
and flew to Leavenworth.
The girls said they read newspaper
account* of the boys* arrest and re-
turned to Oklahoma City to see them.
Harbolt and Ryan said the girls
will be held in the county juvenile
ward until their investigation is com-
pleted.
Sonnett
chamber* for the time being
Lewi* continued to pace the floor
in the adjoining ante room
The defense lawyer* declined to an- ! BreM voted 3 121 to 445 to
awer queationa as to whether t±c7
had made their recoaimendation for
* oS*'orS I
4 J Anu re te rroquer. both romer cabinet I
Comb*, informed Lewis of the confer- miHiaiara . , —.—
ence with the judge before joining
the ]
torneys.
Lewi* himself joined the conference
of lawyer* a minute later, behind
closed doors
There wa* no legal ceiling on the
DO
I \ X
Republican Leaders
To Discuss F inances *
WASHINGTON. Dec. 4—
Fighty-seven of the 104 member* of
the Republican national committee
have Indicated they wU attend a meet-
ing Thursday to discuss a campaign
"Hard cement and limited space to budget next year. Another 12 mem-
. — j bers have notified headquarters they
will be represented by proxiqa.
The meeting will end with a night
dinner at the Statler hotel, at which
Rep Joseph W Martin Jr of Massa-
chusetts. next speaker of the bouse,
will make 4he ehief address
day that the site for the proixwed
PARIS. Dec 4——The French
communist bid to head the Interim
government wa* challenged Wednesday
when the moderate Popular Repub-
lican movement and the ngbuac
Radical Socialist party announced
they would abstain from ««un« for
floor in an ante room formerly oc- Communist Mauries Thorw for the
cupied by the pro*pec(ive jurors who premiership. 'L.
were never called to try hi* case He
appeared tense majority of 310 votes in the beUeuag
Private Huddle af Defease ef the new BaUonal assembly Wednes- k
The conference in Judge Gold*- day afternoon to win the premiership,
borough's chamber laited about a half It seems unlikely he will achieve thia.
The MRP. whose leader, Georges
••
. 8200,000 Fine for Union
Each Struck Day Reported
Recommended to U. S Judge
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.—(A*)—John L. Lewis Wednes-
day went before the court he defied to hear the penalty for
his contempt.
Tight lipped, the mine union boss arrived at 8:52 a. m.
(CST) for sentencing on his refusal to obey a federal district
court order designed to avert the soft coal strike.
Curious spectators crowded against the closed doors of the
packed courtroom M Lewis entered with his team of lawyers
The United Mine Workers' president told Federal Judge T. Alan
Goldsborough Tur.Mi ay that he will "firmly stand" on his constitu-
tional rights,” and those of his 400,000 idle followers
On entering the courtroom Lewis immediately took the same
chair he hast occupied throughout the trials,' which began a week
ago Wednesday
, He sat in silence for a moment, staring out Into the jammed
courtroom.
Then he arose and werrt to an anteroom to confer with AFL
general counsel Joseph A. Padway.
The two returned after a brief
consultation.
Judge. Attorney* Talk
The sentencing wa* delayed tempo-
rarily while Judge Goldsborough con-
ferred with the trial attorneys in his
chambers.
The judge was believed to be hesr-
ing the recommendation* of both Mde*
—government and API. United Mine
Workers—a* to what penalties. If any.
should be Imposed on Lewis snd hi*
union. ”
Lewi* himself aat *il<nt and grim in
the courtroom as the minutes ticked
away. ,
Apparently growing impatient al
the length of the conference, Lewi*
left the court room ynd paced the
- Herbert L Beach
Ity council to act be-
~no community can exist in
anarchy. " the word wa* passed among
AFL unions for an even greater sho»
of strength
Effect* Widespread
The huge walkout, prot eating a
police-protected delivery of mere han-'
dlw through picket lines to two struck
department store*, has
—Stopped all public transportation.
—Halted commuter service aero**
the eight-mile-long San Francisco-
Oakland bay bridge and thus jam-
' packed tt with privately owned auto-
mobiles carrying more than 70,000
* pKTKOOS
—Cloaed a huge segment of East
bay. industries. .
— Pulled AFL sailor* off merchant
ship*.
—forced suspension of newspapers.
Including one which hadn't missed an
edition sum* 1S74, 1
—Filled the street* with parading
demonstrators, at times resulting in
fteUcuffs and manhandlings in which
al )ea*i nine person* including three
' newspaper representatives, were
slightly injured
PubHe Support Saogbt
Spokesmen of tbe AFL and the city
appealed bv radio and press for public
support AFL demonstrators, massing
10 the.exite in the Oakland auditorium
TueadP) night cheered speakers who
bUterly denounced the police depart-
ment and insisted the walkout would
continue indefinitely until demands
against the two struck department
store* were met
Earlier in a radio apoeal for public
support. James F Galliano, attorney
- for the AFL Alameda county labor
eounell. declared the AFL Clerk*
union had elear majoritlea at both
stores. Kahn's and Hastings'. but that
the manaerment refused to negotiate
AotberisaUen Denied
Charle* W Real. East bay teamster
leader who is preMdent of tbe AFL
California Federation of Labor, denied
In Washington a claim by Galliano
that Real had authoriaed the walkout
He indicated the strike would con-
tinue •
Demand* emphasised
spokesmen were:
ONE—Tbe two department itore man-
agement* must agree immediately to
negotiate.
TWO—Striking employes of tbe two
•tore* must be guaranteed a return
to their old job*
THREE—CHy official* muM pledge
not to use police in breaking picket
M I N a. m.
. « l .N a a,
•1 l» a a.
m a w.
u I N a a.
. M «;N a a.
. SI- 1:N a a
. «• I N a. a.
4* • N a a.
41 I* N a a.
half-billion dollar supersonic center
orobably would not be announced until
the project ha* budget bureau ap-
proval.
The senator said a preliminary re-
port on the best sites for the project
had been made by an engineering No. 1, State Nuraes* association at
firm employed to survey them. The 8 p.m Thursday in tbe St. Anothonv
firm, he said, took intp account land hospital nurses' home, according to
available, water available and power Mr*. Gold* B. Bltef, district presider-..
1 to operate the proposed gi- Music will be furnished by members
system of tunnel* and ma- of the Wesley boeital school of nursed*
I glee club.
hour. Then Welly K. Hopkin*, chief The MRP whose leader Georges
defense counsel, and his colleagues Biddult. surrendered the rein* of the
left and went into a private huddle provisional government last week, sa-
in another room. nouncod that tf Thoces fails to get
Assistant Attorney qenera) John F »uch a majority, it will put forward
rjnnett remained it| the judge • ’ it* own candidate on tbe next baDot—
either Bldault or former Finance Min-
ister Rbbert Schuman
The Socialist party naUonxj con-
------------ ~ ----• *W«rt the
Thores candidacy, but the deetetan
touched off a lively dispute within tbe
*1 * Lewis
Andre Le Troquer. both former cabinet J
™nilnlMera thrwtening to resign if it
private conference j of defense at- j
ever, on a communist invitation to jam
in a leftist "popular front" cabinet
to succeed the coalition government
of George* Bldault of the Popular
fine 'oZ jail "term whi^’ewid be im'- Republican movement, who resigned
- - the council presidency Thursday. The
invitation wa* issued after the coos-
lyxing coal strike, now two week* old
Union Faces Penalty
Hi* union itself. th» AFL United
Mine Workers, faced tiie possibility of
a crushing financial penalty on the
same charge of ignoring the court *
order not to 'terminate" a contract ,
with the government covering wage*
and hours in the set ted bituminous
mines.
As Lewi* headed batfk to the court
room! an oflcial familiar with the ten- |
tative strategy said Assistant Attorney
General John F. Bonfiett'* staff, in
eleventh hour conference*, had fa-
vored a recommendation that the
Impatient
Swank Dairy Barn
Need Emphasized
COLLEGE PARK. Md . Dec 4—<S*)
—The "comfort, ease and content- »he
meat of the cow*" should be the pri- *dmittedly been consorting with, snd
---7 ‘-*-*—*— -* *"im builders, says whom she believe* to be the father of
, the her child, in company with another
agricultural extension Service of the | jifl- "I wanted to die,*' she said.
University of Marland, j
In welcoming 75 palrytnen and
health inspector* for a three-day con-
ference Tuesday,. Symopa declared. "I
would not suggest lessening sanitary
requirements, but I think milk quality
would be improved wjth a milking
bedded enclosure
would be free to
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 265, Ed. 2 Wednesday, December 4, 1946, newspaper, December 4, 1946; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1766230/m1/1/: accessed June 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.