Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 84, Ed. 3 Thursday, May 6, 1948 Page: 2 of 4
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IT JUST SOUNPS
TOO GOOP TO
< BE TRUE.' J
OUR STOCK MLL BE
WORTH THE WHOLE
420,000: anp
WEVE ONLY BEGUN!
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7) ’
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Al
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THEN THE ♦HARE«
WOULP BE PVlPEP
IN A SATISFACTORY
WAV BETWEEN US. .
IT WILL BE MOSTLY
PAPER VALUE TOBTAET
WITH, BUT AS SOON A4
WE SIGN UP 1200
BHOPB AT <K» EACH—
$
It
/WHATB THE FIRST
/ STEP MR. SMUCG, IN
MAKING WALLET &
BOBBLE A NATIONAL
k INSTITUTION ’ .—f
iSMb
----.
incorporate
FOR <120.000,
THAT’S 0,000
SHARES AT <10.
A
German Unions
Onlj
<£?
rkers.
inee
at-
“ , talk
s:
,T Ney
i
It's Lewinsobns for values
Bitter Butter
I
ided
mia
(-
C . May 6—(4*>—An
W a
$55
|F.;
SUMMER
TAILORED
B Y
•j
Large Shipments
»50
are arriving weekly
LE WINSOHNS
THE HUB
108 W MAIN
The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
Stein Bloch Tropical Worsteds
»70
■y
BES
H
136-138 West Main
r
i
I
c
A
L
L
E
Y
RarW
IM-M W. M*J»
Urge Workers
To Halt Strikes
Marine Kills Two
Chinese Raiders
E
L
L
A
Head of Continental
Oil to Address Forum
M®y Brothera
In th* Htart of Oklahoma City
WORSTEDS
D A R O F F
in<
the
E
R
S
G
A
S
Chl-
fired
I Hua. Amrtinf r—wlt». J -
j the
Jen-
in.
it-
irt
something
*“ began 1
I could
"■*y.”
of
1-4. i
a fli
from 10 a. m.
t 6:30 p. m.. a
given by the
44 passengers
which stopped
light from New
Co©'**'
roads,, like the Southern Pacific, said
they had no immediate plans for fur-
loughing The Baltimore and Ohio
aa*d it would not recall 8,500 employes
*_ .—----- the recent
tat all its
■ :01 a. m.
sre calm."
didn’t
It
was
to treml
I do was 1
y were
ring to
>ack to
protested an
•rs suspend-
on the strike
s not er-
-itish ant
day since
Ascension
I water for
being sup-,
by Arab authorities, the highway
H Aviv would bo closed to Jewish
* i S.)
still laid off in the wake of r
coal strike, and added that
men wHl be laid off at 12:1
< ESTi Wednesday
The Chesapeake and Ohio? the New
York. New Haven and Hartford: the
Boston and Maine and the Southern
also sent out layoff notices.
The Pennsylvania said tn a letter
to all its employes that the strike
might idle all its 140,000 employes.
The Louisville and Nashville said
there was a “possibility” of layoffs
Tuesday.
The union*,
strike, said their
milk, troop and
1J
jgj|
TWO-THURSdIy, MAY «, 1948
jo filed
repre-
ja county
1 records
On the avenue, at the office, at home, you can wear
this ‘‘Botany’’ suit with the greatest of ease and
the maximum of cool comfort. It’s tike carrying a
breeze next to your body. Nor do the superb lines
of this garment disappear in the heat. You stay
smart ly - groomed.
..., -Angus
nths in jail
illty to lac-
V. a prep-
i pests. Po-
annoy his
^.^4
New/ |
Odorless
■M
XK ■
: J I
1
Jr
Mother, 3 Sons
Shot to Death
L<i
1 ^.x z? i m
St .Joseph aspirin
WORLDS LAWGEST SELLER Al IO<
lev v
jrotest h"
order A
>*C»**,
When old Sol really starts pouring on
the heal and your office feels like an
oven . •. step into our store and ease
into a Stein Bloch Tropical Worsted
Suit • • • They have mountaintop cool*
ncss that lunkca hot days like beautiful,
balmy days in May. . . and the Stein
Bloch tailoring is comfortable almost
beyond belief.
Qualify
IT’S ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST
St. Joeeph Aspirin is as pure as
money can buy. First choice of
millions, its famous name is your
assurance of highest quality. Buy
Soviet Geologist Dies
MOSCOW. May 6—UP>—Peter Lebe-
dev, soviet geologist and Corresponding
member of the academy of science of
v.-e USSR, died Thursday.
LONDON, May 6—(ZP)—J
Harper, 26, got nine mont*— ‘
Thursday. He pleaded guilty
ihg the family butter with i
a ration for killing garden
lice said he wanted to i
in-laws.
in announcing t!:-
nMSnbera will operat
hospital trains.
Three Railways Here
Get Embargo Orders
Embargo on shipmenu of livestock,
Mve poultry and jierishable cargo after
12 01 a. m. Friday was announced
Thursday by Oklahoma City repre*en-
tauvaa of the Misaourl-Kanaas-Tcxas
lines in preparation for the threatened
lail strike Tuesday.
The Oklahoma City. Ada Sc Atoka
hnr. serving southeastern Oklahoma,
announced an embargo going into af-
frct at the same lime as Uie Katy.
Frisco representatives announced
the aame embargo effective at 5 p. m.
Fnday. with exception of livestock,
poultry and perishable cargo for short
hauls that can be completed before
12:01 a. ®. Tuesday.
Arabs
(CeaUaued From Page 1)
U as most unlikely the Jews would ac-
cept The withdrawal would benefit
the Arabs atone. They do not hold any
Jt s ish territory.
The truce terms laid down by
Arab delegation at a meeting in J
co Wednesday provided:
ONE—The truce cover all of Jerusa-
lem
TWO—Jerusalem could not be used
as a base for military activity of any
kind
THREE-Whlle food and
the Jewish population was I
plied by Arab authorities, th
to Tai Aviv would be closed
traffic (KarNer detoiia. page
W//AWA2WAAAA/
r
wrong. I tative from the fin
ible,” They were BUI Pat
hold C. P Dobb. Rt. 3.
Fred V. Otto and Frank Walker,
candidates in the fifth district, and
Neale S. McGee, in the sixth district,
also withdrew. All races will be con-
tested in the primaries.
Enrolment Now Open
For Nutrition Course
Enrolment in a nutrition course
sponsored by the Oklahoma County
Red Cross chapter opened Thursday.
Mrs. Ollie B Stone, chairman of the
nutrition committee, announced.
The course wUl be taught by Miss
Lavon Thompson, volunteer Red Cross
' . 217 Terminal building.
eld May 17, 19 and 21
11:30 a. m.
TSINOTAO, May 6—UP>—An
American marine sentry Wednesday
night killed two Chinese and wounded
two othtfs as a party of 20 suspected
will be in the Silver cmnmufUU tried to rob the compound
the Skirvin Tower ho- C*,/P11‘tar\ M
A. McGee, chairman of Th* aent1’7 challenged the 20
oil and gas division. nese .from his midtown post and-----
warning shots which went unheeded.
".♦iv. ------ i. L*’1 another American marine
sentry was surprised by four Chinese,
presumed to be communists They
managed to steal an undisclosed num-
ber of rifles and military supplies
American and Chinese authorities
declined to definitely identify Wednes-
day night's raiders as communists.
---- J---vssv VLUVU4D4VJ VI 1 C AOd,
will give an address on pain from a psychiatrist’s point of view.
-----« After a general discussion of the
opening papers. Dr. James O. Hood,
Norman, will apeak on mental hygiene
in the college health program; Dr.
Robert A. Knight, Oklahoma City,
will discuss cerebral palsy, and Dr.
Franklin Top, Detroit, clinical profes-
sor of preventive medicine at Wayne
university, will talk on food Infections
and intoxications.
Boston Doctor to Talk
In the surgery sectton. featured
‘nlks will be given by Dr. Richard R
tttell, Boston, surgeon-in-chief jof
x-Jew England Deaconess hospital, and
Dr. A. W. McAlester HI, Kansas City
ophthalmologist.
At the May 17 afternoon sessior
Dr. Helen* B. Taussig, Baltimore, out
standing specialist on congenital heat,
disease, will discuss malformations
amenable .to surgery.
Dr. Arlld E. Hansen. Oalesvton,
t up chairman of the department of pedi-
fw atrics and director mf the child health
program. University of Texas, will talk
on rheumatic fever as a diagnostic
problem; and Dr. Ewalt will discuss
general practitioner's responsibll-
in psychiatry.
Griffin
Dr. D W
i- of Central
d Win be hon
Federal Grand Jury
Called for May 24
th_ u. 8. District Judge Bower Broaddus
rate Thursday officially called the 1946
federal grand jurors to reconvene
May 24.
There are less than 30 cases to be
presented, records in the office of
Robert E. Shelton. U. 8. district at-
torney, discuosed Thursday.
M*11" OM |
bscsvM IT » OUT
lickly. Mtfly rsnovM ksir. FACE.
---- ‘ nger Satin-amocxhl
Jat. Good sorn.
“Deficiency or Sufficiency of Oil—
Which Do You Want?” will be the
theme of a talk to be delivered Friday
at the noon forum of the Oklahoma
City Chafnber o^C o m m e r c e. The
speaker will be L. F. McCollum, presi-
dent of the Continental Oil Co.
The meeting
Glade room of t
tel. with Dean A. M<
the chamber's oil i
presiding.
McCollum, a native of Tennessee, is
a former co-ordinator of worldwide
operations of Standard Oil Co., of New
Jersey, and a former president of
Carter Oil Co.
FRANKFURT. Germany. May 6—
(ZP)—German trade union leaders tried
Thursday to get 70,000 workmen strik-
ing in protest against food shortages
I to return to their jobs. They also
sought to keep the food strikes from
: spreading throughout lower Saxony in
I the British occupation zone. Such a
‘ 1 affect some 600.000
Funeral Ship Due
NEW YORK. May 6— (ZPi—The
army transport Lawrence Victory, car-
rying the bodies of 4,183 Americans I
who died in World war II. is sched- I
uled to dock at the Brooklyn army met
base Friday. the
36 Acres of Land Due
To Be Sold by State
A 36-acre tract of land sought by
the city in connection with expansion
of its south disposal plant will be of-
fered for sale at the county courthouse
May 18. Virgil L. Stokes, secretary of
the state school land commission, said
Thursday. «
The tract of state preference right
land lies between the state fairgrounds
and the south disposal plant. It Is
appraised at 818.850 and must bring
the full amount under state law.
Stokes said Lu Shepherd. 811 NE 21.
holds a preference right lease on the
acreage.
‘afternoon, Dr. L. H. Garland, San
Francisco, president of the Radiolog-
ical Society of North America and sec-
retary of the California State Medical
association-.- -wHl talk oh the present
status of radiation therapy in cancer.
Ponean to Be Honored
I At a dinner dance Wednesday night
honoring Dr. C. E. Northcutt, Ponca
City, president-elect of the state as-
sociation. Dr. Ellen R. Moritz of the
department of legal medicine, Boston,
will give the featured adress on ‘‘Facts
and Fancies About Murder.”
On the Sunday preceding the con-
vention, there* will be two meetings of
the house of delegatee of the associa-
tion.
Registration will be f
to 4 p. m. Sunday. At
buffet dinner will be .
Oklahoma County Medical society for
the more than 1,000 doctors expected
to attend the sessions.
Adequate Housing Seen
For OU Summer Uerm
NORMAN. May 6—(Special)—Gar-
”.r%^!X Tc,5ruo.'h„h^”^
Thursday there will be adequate hous- . it ill! be hel
ing for single students attending the from a 30 to 1
summer session at the university. —
Four university-operated men’s dor-
mitories and two women s dormitories numir
will remain open and dining facilities A rummage 1
will be provided Extensive repairs
be made on the women's residences
not In use, but will be re-opened al I
the beginning of the autumn semester.Pottawatomi
“BOTANY’!.. 500
Rummage Sale Set
facilities A rummage and white elephant sale
istlrs will will be sponsored by the YWCA Camp
Ione committed. Saturday morning at
Kiwanis Friendship Center. 623 E
lie.
Top U. S. Medical Minds
To Spark State Meeting
Scientific panels conducted by some of the nation’s outstand- I
in< specialists will feature the fifty-fifth annual convention of'
* horna State Medical association here May 16-19, officials
Thursday.
_ r. R. Turner, Tulsa, will lead a panel on problems of,
psychiatry at the May 17 morning session at the Skirvin Tower
During the first part of the convention, Dr. Harold Binder, I
Oklahoma City psychiatrist, will talk on therapy with children,
and Dr. Charles F. Obermann, state mental health director, will
discuss Oklahoma’s program. 1
Dr. Jack Ewalt, Galveston, professor of neuropsychiatry and
director of the psychopathic hospital at the University of Texas,
ite represen-
IctwUhdrcw
and
EwHb'j
“Now you’re POSITIVE you
don’t want him any more?”
Oil Curb
(Continued From Page 1)
than was consumed during the peak
year of World war n.
"We already have found Well over
half the crude oil we can expect ulti-
mately to find in the United States.
Only about a 12-year supply of oil 1
mains. Our known .co
than one-third of the known reserves
of the world, but they are being con-
sumed at a rate of 63 percent of the
world's output,’’ the report said.
The nation must move vigorously
and promptly to make more steel
available to the petroleum industry for
pipe lines, tank cars, refineries, drill-
SrZ“".Sd,nd OU,W
“If within the next six months or
leas it becomes apparent that insuf- —
flcient steel can be provided by volun- to d
tary means," it said, “congress must R'
■■ e’tabl2?1 by roverament controls
allocation 8f steel to essential users.
“There is simply no alternative.”
The subcommittee said that if do-
mestic oil consumption continues at
Proent levels a decision on whether
oil rationing Will be necessary also
must be made within six months.
Tidelands Dispute Evaded
lrc The subcommittee recommended
rett, th*‘ Hills reserve In California
the not be turned over to civilian com-
l- P*n 58 tor development, but remain in
the hands of the armed forces.
The group refused to enter the dis-
pute over ownership of the tidelands
area along the nation’s coasts, but
said the question should be settled
promptly. It recommended that de-
velopment of the tidelands be pushed,
and that large portions of the area be
set aside for military reserves.
The report also recommended that
oil exploration and development be
pushed by the geological survey and
the interior department in Hawaii,
Puerto Rico and the Virgin islands, as
well as Alaska. The navy has been in
charge of Alaskan exploration.
The subcommittee also recommend-
'-----" ’ Preaident Truman
— --------- -0 study the petro-
leum situation, and an investigation of
steel production prospects by the full
house armed services committee. It
suggested that the president's com-
mission recommend a long-range pol-
icy for the nation.
CHESTER 8 C.. May 6—(4>>—An
85-vear-old mother and her three
bachelor eons were found cut or shot
to death in their home 16 miles east
of Chester Thursday.
Coroner Lewis H. Miller listed the
dead a«:
Mrs. Margaret Howze. 85-year-oId
widow; R. T. Howze. 38; Lucius A.
Howze 5g. and Ike Howze, 55.
Chief Ernest L. Bostic of Chester
county’s rural police said cursory ex-
aminations Indicated murder and sui-
cide. He said it wasn’t yet possible
to say who did the killing.
G. H. Christopher, a plumber of
Port Lawn, told officers he discovered
the four bodies in one room of the
five-room rural dwelling. Christopher
said he had gone to the residence of
the widele-knoMTj farm family to re-
pair a pump.
Layoffs
(Centtaaed From Page 1)
roads., like the Southern Pacifl
they had no immediate plans f.
France Joins
Russia, Fights
V. S. Proposal
NEW YORK. May 6—.>P>—Frai
and Russia Joined Thursday in an 1
tack on the American-supported j
to place Jerusalem under a neut
commissioner without police power.
Both declared the plan inadequate
to preserve order in the Holy Land.
It was laid before the special Pales-
tine assembly of the United Nations
after getting unanimous approval of
the UN trusteeship council.
French delegate Alexander Parodi
urged a plenary session of the assem-
bly at Flushing Meadow Park to set —
a strong international authority i
Jerusalem, backed by an eUte valun-
teer police force of 1,000 trained men.
TnMteeahip Power Hooted
Soviet delegate Semen K. Taarapkln
told the aaaembly he could not accept
the trusteeship council's proposal. He y 1
demanded that Prance's suggestions
be studied Carefully.
Both France and Rusaia are mem-
bers of the council, which completed
iu report early Wednesday after nine
days of wrangling.
New Zealand, another member of
the trusteeship council, demanded that
the UN place Jerusalem under tempo- otT
ZZ. SWISS’ "av,u J"“h •“
Arao opposition.
Sir Carl Berendsen, vice-president
of the UN trusteeship council, made
the demand. He said the trusteeship
council's pending recommendation for
a neutral municipal commissioner of
Jerusalem was entirely inadequate,
contending the proposed commission-
er would not even have power to see
that garbage was removed.
Fears Jerusalem's Destruction
Berendsen said the proposed com-
nnmioner would be a straw man sub-
ject to whims of Arabs and Jews.
“If we do nothing in Jerusalem until
we have the consent of both parties."
Berendsen said. It may be we can do
nothing until Jerusalem is destroyed."
He demanded that the assembly set
.J, yp an international volunteer police
force to back up ugiatever decision it
takes regarding Jerusalem.
to Be Honored
Griffin, superintendent
1 State hospital. Norman.
---- ..onored at the Alumni asso-
ciation banquet of the University of
Oklahoma medical school at 7 p. m.
in the Venetian room.
Dr. Fred Woodson, Tulsa, will speak
- the Oklahoma Medical Research
.^undation and Dr. Mark R. Everett
medical school dean, will discuss t.„
future plans and needs of the medi-
cal school.
Both surgery and medical sections
will hold panels Tuesday morning.
At the general session Tuesday after-
noon. Dr. Laman Gray. Louisville. Ky„
assistant professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at Louisville university, will
discuss hormone therapy. V
Symposium Slated
At 8 p. m. Tuesday, a symposium
will be held on "What's New in Med-
icine." Dr. Onls Hazel, Oklahoma City,
will be chairman and visiting spe-
ialists will be featured speakers.
Highlight of the Wednesday morn-
ing section on surgery will be an ad-
dress by Dr. Vincent Vermooten, Dal- ' ed appointment by 1
las. professor of urology at Southwest- of a commission to
era university medical school. leum situatton, and a
At the general session Wednesday
' the Bi
1 walkout would
) workmen.
The workmen are striking for more
meat and fat in their rations. Th<
began walking off the job in pi
against a Bavarian government u
cutting out extra meat and fat
tions in the diet of heavy wori
British Zone Threatened
The strikes threatened to cripple
the British zone.
Trade union leaders said they 1
meeting stiff opposition in tryir;
persuade the workers to go bacii
their Jobs. The workers pr----- J
order of union headquarter
ing voting in factories
question.
-------------- The strike situation was
fear supply of oil re- pected to be clear in the Brit
? P21 lyserves are less American zones until Frida
most of Germany observed a,
day Thursday as a holiday.
100,000 Quit Jobs
Scattered strikes in the two zones
have taken about 100,000 workmen
away from their jobs aln-* Monday,
but some returned Wednesday.
In Berlin the British licensed news-
paper Der Tag reported Thursday in
a dispatch from Leipzig that the Rus-
sians were breaking food strikes in
their occupation zone by threatening
deport strikers to Siberia.
Ztussian-controlled newspapers in
Berlin gave prominent display to the
food strikes in western Germany.
United States authorities have stated
that there is evidence of communist
agitation behind the strikes.
Oklahoma City Times _________________
Pilot’s Skill Saves Only Six Quit
Tire, Blow O»< J^g»la«>ve
3AN DIEGO, Calif., May 6—<ZP>— Contests Here
C.pL Don wood', coo, heed. .u.dy | Only of „ wh(
hand and a prayer were credited for state senate and house of
Thursday with averting a tragedy in sentative posts from Oklahoma
the takeoff of a full loaded DC-4 *“hdrew. state election board
transport plane from Lindbergh field. sh22*ed
Wood, pilot ot the Amertcn Air-1*^.^0?^”
lines transport, managed to brake the Burns. When the withdrawal period
plane to a stop after the dual star- closed at 5 p. m. Wednesday, all were
board tires blew out almost simul-1 counted present except Charles Huff,
taneously as the craft roared down the I 18 SW 27.
runway. candidates for stat
I sensed something w-as wrong, ' tative from the first distrit
then the ship began to tremble.” They were Bill Patton, 118 SW 4.
Wood said. “All I <—
■ steady and pray.
A capacity load (
was aboard the DC-
here Wednesday on i
York to Los Angeles.
“Boy. those passengers wei
Wood said. “I’m glad they
know how hard I was praying,
was lucky we didn't groundloop.”
L
r
*
**/
Irzajil
YOUte AHMW
WOMAN,-eAL.'
HEY RAINBOW,
WHAT BECAME
Of
mortgage r-
This IS PON'T
HIM, Y HANAUS
PELLAS.' k THAT/
Noeoov'P 1
8ET0N THAT
- GOAT.'
KAINBOW, I WANT S
YOU TO WASH THOSE
WATER-PAINT SPOTS j
OPF HAS8EN ANP
STOP CALLING HIM J
. ELLA'S MORTGAGE.'J
>51
LET HIM RACE .
HMMM.' KIN9A
LOOKS UKE, I
HONEST* AiNT 8
GONNA AFFECT 1
r THE OPPS,
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 84, Ed. 3 Thursday, May 6, 1948, newspaper, May 6, 1948; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1768342/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.