Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 52, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 30, 1948 Page: 7 of 22
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Oklahoma City Times
RCH 30, 1948—SEVEN
Bars to Vote Violence
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VA Aid Here
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In Sizes 16 to 20!
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$225
$359
Aunt Abby says
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more. Each envelo
quart of sou:
most canned
Naud-Embroidered
Nainsook Gowns
0
Pretty Cotion
Honsocoat with
a 4-yard Sweep
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1“
1
V 7
a
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1
make a dat& -to OIL-PLATE ! b^OT^
If. like this: When N«* Oil (Patented)*
enters your engine, a special added ingre-
dient fastens extra lubricant so closely to
metal that cylinder walls and all working
riwfwoi isas. o—avni os c—f i
• • •]
• ;
* Eat Big Platter
Of Rattlesnakes
That’s why, for extra-cool, extra-power-
ful, extra low-cost miles you’d better ...
•o. e. FM- ma LM4CMI sesiaiao
' v\
So, clear out! Get down the street,
where a Conoco Mileage Merchant can
drain out dirty, contaminated winter oil
and refill with Spring-time Conoco N/A
... the oil that Oil-Plates as it lubricates!
Motorship la Aided
MANILA, March >0—OF)—The
•trteten motorship Sirius massaged
all's well Tuesday after 14 hours of
drifting in Ban Bernardino straits oft
southern Luaon. Another motorship,
the Borsogon. supplied enough power
to recharge the Sirius’ batteries
I
I
TUESDAY, 11
» «
REDUCING? HERE’S
A HELPFUL TIP
Are you slim enough to wear the new
skytaa*... Remember, no matter what
yog pay, “new took” fsahions aren’t
If you're reducing now—or plan to
—you’ll find the booklet. “Kellogg’s
Weight Control Plan,” helpful. It
given 1 spdHal seta of scientifically
ha tonne rl menus for every meal, every
day of the week-end insurance-
company weight tables for each type
at body frame ... These menus
Include KELLOGG’S ALL-BRAN
which contains vital whole-grain pro-
tective food elements — needed
whether you diet or not... This book-
let to FREE—just write Kellogg Co.,
Dept. N, Battle Creek. Mich.
I
♦ The situation was tense as a result
of the slaying of two communists at
Samoglia. 25 milee west of Milan, the
leftist stronghold of the north. Cam-
paigners were mauled, beaten, pelted
with overripe fruit and thrown from
platforms at other points In the north.
There was street fighting In Bari, in
the south, and one man was stabbed.
Newspaper accounts said the two
communists were shot when they got
into an argument with spectators dur-
ing a march from one village to an-
other. The injured rightist reportedly
was a national bloc speaker.
Premier s Aida Worried
Italy’s Christian. Democrat premier.
Alcide de Oasperl. has literally talked
himself hoarse trying io convince the
Italians the communists must be de-
feated
He spoke at Frotinone Monday and
later gave a shortened version of the
same speech at Camino. He will be «7
Saturday and the vigorous campaign-
ing has worn on him. HU aids are vis-
ibly worried about his health.
The communists are pushing their
campaign, too. Oiuseppe dl Vittorio,
communist boas of the Italian Federa-
tion of Labor, said in a signed article
in a Milan newspaper that a com-
munUt election victory would mean
more, not less, American aid.
Asthma
Don't let coughing, meeting, choking, re-
curring attacks of Bronchial Asthma ruin
aleop and energy another day without try-
ing Mondose Thia great Internal medicine
la lasteioaa and taken eaacUy as directed
work* thru the Mood, thus reaching the
bronchia^ tubes and iunga. Usually starts
helping nature immediately to remove
Chick, stieky mucus, thus alleviating
coughing and promoting freer breathlag
and more refreshing alsep. Ost Mendoco
from your druggist today. Money back
guaranteed unless compietoty satisfied. I
Chinese Get Bomber*
NANKING, • March 30— 1’ —rum-
engine Mosquito bombers which (Jhlna
purchased from Canada made their
first appearance ovyr the national
capital Tuesday At Bhanghai. a sec-
ond consignment of Canadian Mos-
quitos was unloaded from the motor-
ship Lakeside. China bought a total
Of IM. The Lakeside also carried more
than d.000 tons of arms, ammunition
and railway supplies
BHAWNEE March JO—CO—A SI
million highschool will replace the
building which burned here Saturday. •
The Shawnee board of education
authorised the new structure Monday
night and named Hugh Brown Jr and
Al bon Davis, both of Shawnee as
arc hl tecta.
Plans cal! for completion by Sep-
tember, l»40 1
Approximately SO highschool stu-
dents started classwork at Oklahoma
Baptist university Tuesday, followmg
registration Monday.
A*WM rbala
Romantic Touch
Lending romantic grace to a
close-cropped new look bob,
Adele Jergens, a Hollywood
model, pins a matched pair of
curls to the side of her head,
brushing her own hair back to
meet the false hair piece. The
hairstyle lends an old-fash-
ioned touch to the popular
Oibson Oirl blouse.
WACO. March 30— (UP)—Don’t get
tough with Waco cops. They're tough
hombres who eat rattlesnakes for sup- I
per. At least they did the other night.
The occasion was a rattlesnake sup-
per with city comptroller J. Ed John-
son as host.
Johnson, a feUow who hunts rattlers
when he isn’t busy checking the city’s
money, last month heard that a
rattlesnake feast had been jokingly
liroftoaed for the cops.
"I'll provide the snakes.” he said.
And he did. too. Fried to a golden
brown (the cook threw the frying pan
away when he got through) they were
served to two dosen policemen.
Cool _ white cotton
> h, large
u .Pertly
io. ' ’
I
Also long-sleeve cotton
gowns in sizes 10 to 20.
EL98-3.49
*7^
Irish Participant in *96
Klondike Gold Rush Dies
_B®'FA5T’NorLh‘‘rn lrelan<1' March
Klondike gold one of the first settlers of the
birthplace in Downpatrick? He~ vu *
u £
£w..- -
I
Sought by Italian Reds
3O-vr>—Italian party leaders, disturbed by two
political killings in the leftist north Monday, arranged to meet
Wednesday to seek remedies for a rash of violence which threat-
ens their campaign truce.
Communist Umberto Terrachinl, president of the constituent
assembly, who arranged the truce in an effort to bar bloodshed in
the campaign for the vital April 18 elections, called the meeting
sw 8t^v^®wlnglng unemployed, some 7,000 strong, marched
through the streets of Milan Tuesday, demanding work and relief
payments. Police stood by anxiously because of Monday's wide-
spread outbursts, but there were no incidents of violence.
Waco Cops Tough;
L ■ 'J- ‘ x '•
kjLA.
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*1
The man who figures life’s too short
to spend worryin’ usually lives a
right long time.
One thing a woman doesn’t have to
L°,r..ry.jb<?ut b P,Mwin< her family
with old-time noodle soup. Specially
the kind with rich chicken broth,
oodles of tender, nourishing egg non-
v. BJJ<? flavor" Yep 1
I’m talking about the grand soup v«>u
make with Lipton Noodle Soup Mix.
It comes in handy envelops* and
takes only seven minutes to cook!
tfy Uncle Joe is bald as a doorknobs
but folks still get in his hair.
Another thing that ruffles him up ta
the high cost of living. So I told hi.
wife how Lipton Noodle Soup saves
money two ways. Costs leas, makes
makes nearly a
»—half again as much as
soups. Better get some
b’ttcr get the surprise
pft the Lipton people have for you.
Write Lipton, Dept. 1, Hoboken, N J.
It s free so Just ask tor it!'
Lipton Noodle Soup
H orld’g Favorite Soup Mix
This spring, -firstthing
• ..you’ve got a date that just writ! parts are actually Oil-Plated!
Because this extra Oil-PLATING ttayt
up on cylinder walls ... won’t all drain /
down to your crankcase, even overnight / /
...a Spring change to Conoco N* Motor
Oil extra-proteas from ’’dry-friction” //
starts ... from power-choking sludge
and carbon due to wear! / I
Sizes 16 and 17
in white only,
Sizes 18 and 20
in white, colors
All hand-embroidered piped
and appliqued in pink, blue
or white on dainty white
nainsook.
jr t
Tke9 Draft Swells Despite Refusal
WABKWOTON. March
Emphatic rejection by an army
spokesman of plans by southern and
norths ru Danners ts to promote
Oax. Dwight D Elsenhower as a
pratodintial candidate tn plact of
Fie*. Truman failed to dampen the
ardor of New York’s Liberal party
Tuesday.
Maj. Oen. Floyd L. Parks, ths
•mr» top proas relations officer,
•aid here Monday night, that ma-
neuvering by the rebelling group of
Tkaix i ala has had no effect upon
the retired chief of staff, but the
‘--——
policy committee of the Liberal
party said Parks’ statement cannot
stop a “psopie’s draft ”
Permitting his name to be used
rather than insisting upon anony-
mity as an "Elsenhower apokeeman,”
Park declared in a statement that
“under no conceivable circum-
stances’ will the general yield to a
Democratic draft.
’The general means his no poli-
tics announcement of some weeks
ago to apply to all parties and
groups of voters.” Parks added That
was a reference to the letter Elsen-
hower wrote last January to a Re-
publican booster. He said then the
"decision to remove myself com-
pletely from the political scene is
definite and positive.”
Bald Parks: ’What he said about
wanting to have nothing to do with
politics applies to the Democrate as
well as the •Republicans.’’
er2efXSdttijJhtP^tort.f bSrw
in two factor*. One was that Eisen-
hower himself did not issue the
statement The other eras that while
Twrka said Etaenhower "has not
changed one iota in hte petition."
the general’s spokesman added: ”1
do not believe he wiU do so.”
t« Job in Reich
Mary Jan Huggins, in NW 18. member of the legal ataff of the
veterans administration here, will leave late this week for
Frankfurt. Oermanjf, where she will be a civilian employe of
the war department. She will sail from New York April 3.
Miss Huggins, whose home is in Sallisaw, is a niece of Ed Mc-
Donald, regional director of the social security commission
Senators Split
Oklahoma Vote
On School Bill
As a matter of f t D i
secretary of the "draft ElsenhXVr
movement” said in New York that
Parks’ statement cannot stofl a
"people’s draft.” James added that
Etaenhower can "speak tor hlmaelf
and win at the proper time "
Almost simultaneously the policy '
committee of the Liberal party of !
New York adopted a resolution call- I
ing upon the Democratic party to !
draft Etaenhower as its nominee. A
party spokesman said committee
members knew of the Washington i
statement before they acted.
Adolf A. Berle Jr., former new
deal assistant secretary of state
heads the Liberal party.
Meanwhile. James Roosevelt said
he has no intention of climbing on |
the Elsenhower bandwagon as have I
two of his younger brothers. Elliott ’
and Franklin D. Jr.
"I’m not a bolter,” the chairman
of the California Democratic com-
mittee told newsmen In Ban Diego
Monday night. He added, however,
that ’It would be better” to change
tfe subject of a talk he was making
from "President Truman" to "the
Democratic party.”
He said he considers the party
more important than candidates.
WASHINGTON. March hb-FV—
Oklahoma’s senators wiU cast oppo-
site votes on the pending bill provid-
ing aid to states for education, they
disclosed Tuesday.
.Ben. Moore said be expects to vote
against the bill, explaining: "I am
against the federal government tak-
ing over the system of public and
private schools, and that la what
u this bUl beoomee
Ben. Thomas took the contrary
view. -I voted for public aid to edu-
cation before and I intend to vote
for it again.” he said.
"If the aid to improperly used or
administered, the next session of con-
gresa can stop it," Thomas said ’That
is the safeguard. It must operate on
a sound, equitable basis or it will ba
cut off abruptly by the next seaaion
of congress ”
The pending bill provides a mini-
mum of |S aid per pupil between tha
ages of S .nd IT. Oklahoma however .
probably would receive considerably
more than that amount under the
formula in the bill if it becomes law.
Shawnee Plans
SI Million School
splashed with
cabbage roses,
ruffled, tie-backl zip-
per front 12 to 30.
30—Patrick William Russell, 82.
rush in 1196. died Tuesday at his mining
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 52, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 30, 1948, newspaper, March 30, 1948; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1768244/m1/7/: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.