Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 235, Ed. 1 Friday, October 31, 1947 Page: 3 of 36
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
arcs
comes to town for daytime
wear. Wool menswear flannel
basque jacket and ballerina
skirt in spice, banker s grey.
• •
As seen in Life! 10 to 16
Jacket. S1S.M Skirt.
Sport Shop, fourth floor
5
/
>4.00
Exclusively Kerr’s . «.
Lingerie Shop, fourth floor
*r.H R.« U.S. Pat Off.
slips are in grand
Dimensional* sizes in nine
different figure conformations
in pink, black or white
rayon satin. 32 to 44.
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Exclusively Kerr s
Dress Shop, third floor
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nips in your waistline,
fastens the double-breasted
jacket with gilt. Green, red.
purple, brown,
10 to 16
wool crepe in sizes
•17.M
and
jewelry.
stationery! Many
belts.
at savings
even
mes.
Buy
now
jewelry •••
hosiery •••
} 97c
SOe
a
*
i
blouses...
}
*2
f
gloves • . .
bags..•
}
«5W
Lederer de Paris.••
belts...
•tn
stationery . . .
40%
}
Accessory Shops, street floor
New Budget Terms to Suit Your Convenience
sweaters . . .
SO*
<•»!
Visit Our Appliance Shop for
•134 pieces in special group! Hurry! These
will be perfect for Christinas!
h 5*%
•ff!
2
boxes
•1
Christmas!
(plus tax).
(plus tax)
(plus tax)
%
(plus tax)
Sorry, AZo Mad or Phone Orders
7
Special group of famous make stationery • ■ •
many perfect, some with slightly damaged outer
boxes. Have them monogrammed now for
Christmas! Hurry!
than
p er f u
for
much .more
sweaters! Bags
one-half!
o f
•134 genuine leather belts in black, brown,
saddle, red. green, several widths, plain or metal
trims. Were $1 to $20! Perfect for Christmas!
• 50 pairs famous make capeslin gloves by
famous maker. Were $10.40 pair. Save!
• Group famous brand perfumes, toilet waters
and lovely gift sets . . . Just tn time for Christ-
mas shopping!
Group of discontinued accessories including
calf and reptile bags and cobra-trimmed cape-
skin gloves! You’ll want these lovely things for
Christmas!
. . hosiery, blouses, gloves.
•150 rayon and cotton blouses by makers you
know well. Were $5.95-7.95. Save to $4.98
on each blouse here!
• 82 pieces finer costume Jewelry ... were
$3.95-10.95. Save to $9 each!
• 65 all-wool sweaters, long or short sleeves in
group. Your favorite colors! Were $5-9.50
. . . save to $7.50 here! t
} ’2«
cosmetics ...
• 450 boxes of Hewitt’s Soap in Lana, pine or
floral fragrances. 6 or 7 cakes per box. Was
85c box. now
• 132 beautiful bags, many by famous makers
. . . were $10.50-12.501 You ll save to $7.51
on these lovely bags!
• 650 pairs first quality famous make nylons,
full fashioned and seamless. Were $1.50, now
• 600 pairs first quality Berkshire rayon hose T llQn
► a • . were $1 pair, now • a ■ • ■ ■ J
• 47 genuine leather bags, many styles in
black, brown, red. Were $5.95-$/.95. Save
to $4.96 on each bag!
• 103 pieces costume Jewelry ... were $1.95-
$4.95. Save to $3.95 on these!
• 400 pairs rayon knit gloves by famous
makers. 4 to 16-button lengths. Wine, beige.
turquoise, tan, black, brown, white. Were
$1-3.71. Buy now.
• 550 pairs cotton anklets, sizes 8 to lO’/a
were 35c pair, now ••••••• J »1
rest floor clearance of
. ■Av’TwS
- -v ■
Oklahoma City Times
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1947—THREE
had
*
Repairs Completed Florida Weatherman Hints
On SH12 Stretch ;.
Replacement of 11% miles of paving
on SH 13, running from Calvin to
Allen in Hughes county, has been com-
pleted and the stretch Is now open to
traffic, state highway director H. E.
Bailey announced Friday.
Considerable increase in traffic on
this road caused the old oil mat sur-
face to deteriorate, making the road
impassable.
The contract comprised construction
of gravel base seven to eight inches
in thickness and with a top of hot
mix, cold-laid asphaltic surface, 23 »
feet wide. The job was supervised for
the state highway department by resi-
dent engineer Paul Keallher, Ada.
The project, let to Stone and Falls
of Ada, cost approximately S300.000,
according to division engineer Roy
Grace, Ada.
SAVANNAH, Oa.. Oct. 31—(IPf—
The chief forecaster of the Miami
weather bureau believes that the
dry Ice experiments conducted by
the navy during the damaging mid-
October hurricane might have con-
tributed to the storm's strange be-
havior.
Grady Norton suggested this pos-
, sibllity in a letter made public
Thursday by Judge James T. Houli-
han, chairman of Chatham county
commissioners. Judge Houlihan had
protested to the weather bureau that
the Savannah area, struck by the
hurricane, was not warned of the
storm's approach in sufficient time
to set up the proper precautions.
The hurricane moved several hun-
dred miles into the Atlantic ocean
after traversing the southern tip of
Florida, then curved backward and
headed toward the North Carolina
‘Healthiest’ Girls Named
LAWTON, Oct. 31—<4^—Susan
Hankins was selected the healthiest
Brownie and Barbara Fisher was
named the healthiest intermediate Girl
Scout from among 200 entrants in a
Lawton Girl Scout health contest
Physicians declared the general health
of the girls "very good.’’
production schedules.
B. Brewster Jennings, president of
Socony-Vacuum OU Co., says:
"Present indications are that
there wUl be a shortage in some de-
gree in heating oil, gasoline, or both.
Any shortage and the degree to
which it wUl develop depends pri-
marily on several factors, most im-
portant of which are the weather
and the avallabUlty of transporta-
tion faculties." ,
Cold weather may help the pres-
ent tight situation in gasoline by
putting a halt to October’s mild-
weather parade of cars on the na-
tion’s highways.
But a severe winter will almost
certainly bring hardships to some
consumers of fuel oil.
Borne companies stopped taking
new customers some time back to
assure old customers of enough oil
to heat their homes, hospitals, stores
and to run their factories this win-
ter.
coast. The south Georgia coastal
area was lashed by an apparent off-
shoot of the disturbance.
While the hurricane was centered
over the Atlantic, it was "seeded’’
with dry ice from a plane. The
seeding was the first army-navy ex-
periment to determine what effect
such treatment would have on trop-
ical storms.
Forecaster Norton wrote Judge
Houlihan that the results of the ex-
periment are a military secret, but
added that “it is entirely possible”
that the experiment contributed to
the unusual behavior of the storm.
At Schenectady, N. Y„ the Gen-
eral Electric scientist who devised
the dry ice seeding method—Vincent
Schaefer—said he personally doubts,
however, that the seeding caused
the storm that lashed the Georgia
coast.
-■ ............... ■ ■ '
Man Held in Jail
7 Weeks by Error,
Blaine Is Dodged
SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 31—0F>—
The judge blamed the district attor-
ney.
The district attorney blamed the
court clerk.
The court clerk said it was the
Jailer's fault.
Whatever the reason, Calvin Barnes
spent seven extra weeks in Jail.
Barnes was arrested August 31. He
was charged with creating a dis-
turbance at the state employment of-
fice over delay in his jobless benefit
Municipal Judge Leo Cunningham
dismissed Um case September It. But,
m it turned out. Barnes spent another
two months behind bars because
K.metxxly apparently overlooked the
necessary papers to let him go tree.
NEW YORK. Oct. 31—(4>>—In-
voluntary "heatless days" threaten
some homes in the east and midwest
this winter, and drivers may have
to shop around for gas to fill the
family car.
Petroleum economists said Friday
that record demand for fuel oil and
gasoline is proving too much for
present pipeline capacity in the
midwest and for oil tankers sup-
plying the east coast, although both
well and refinery productions are at
record highs.
They expect demand to go even *
higher in IMS and predict the
"tight oil supply’’ situation will last
three yean. If the western hemis-
phere is called upon to supply Eu-
rope under the Marshall plan, they
added, the shortage here will be
that much more aggravated.
Service stations in some places
are already hanging out "no-gas’’
signs and closing early. Producers
began allocating available gasoline
i Palestine Unrest ’
Army-NavyTcing’ Steered Gale Blamed to U. S.
NEW YORK. Oct. 31—(4>>—The
United States Friday was held "shnose
entirely" responsible by King Abdullah
of Trans-Jordan for turmoil tn th*
Holy Land which be said if tmchseksd
will "result in bloody chaos beyond
anything ever hinted at tn Palestine
before.”
Writing in the November issue at
the American magasine. the Arab
king, whose country adjoins Pa teal inc
on the east, said the United Stale*
government, "almost alone tn th*
world,” Is insisting on the Unmsdlate
admission of 100,000 additional Jew*
into Palestine.
He declared American Jew
supplied the funds with which
settlements have been established la
the Holy Land since World war L
Heatless Days Threaten East, Midwest Homes
supplies among midwest dealers
last summer, and the practice
spread to the east this autumn.
Electric utilities in* the Pacific
northwest and in midwest regions
where drouth lowered water sup-
plies for hydro-electric plants are
worrying because they haven’t been
assured enough oil yet to run their
dynamos at full speed during the
winter.
Petroleum company executives ad-
mit some factories operating on fuel
oil may have a tight squeese this
winter to maintain present high
*
♦
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 235, Ed. 1 Friday, October 31, 1947, newspaper, October 31, 1947; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1767861/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.