Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 133, Ed. 2 Friday, July 2, 1948 Page: 2 of 17
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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Chicago. GfRln Futures
<■> Msrrtli Lroeh, Pirns. “
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Formerly $1.75
NOW ONLY
Nationally Famous Silverplated
BABY CUPS
$]19
M,
lesurieei*
CedbBWO-Uho
Goodall >.
sun frost*
Tropical Formats
Yoen ... the envied ’luxury look**
... in the suit with the wonderfully
cool eoftneee, the mehmere like feel!
■Few blended yarn* turn the trick
. .. end you get the smarteet warzn-
weather formal the price can boy.
• a
. . . you 'll j I nays find tlx
for the loveliest of all
White Alumesh
by Whiting and Davis
Always clean and gleaming brightly, this
x
3j
1050
Ma* tee
KomltM
two twenty-five west mein
phone 3-0565
b •
Rosenfield’s
semi-annual
t
f
bu-
rr
*
i
Co. ventured
$ .50
$4.95
Girls Birthstone Rings
NOW $1.10
2.95 Earrings
NOW
1.41
2.95 Cameo, Chokers, Chains NOW
Cirls Birthstone Rings
1.41
7.50
NOW
5.00
4.95 Pearl,
Rhinestone
4.50 Earrings
...NOW
Cents. Initial Rings
14.75
--..NOW
..NOW
2.25
9.01
.6.95 Rhinestone, Metal, Pearl NOW
5.50 Earrings
1.45
19.75 Ladies yellow Cold Rby. Rngs. NOW 11,17
-.-.NOW
2.75
7.95 Pearl, Rhinestone _
7.50 Earrings
--.NOW
3.95
22.50 Cents. Cameo Rings NOW 15.00
..NOW
5.75
8.95 Earrings
9.95 Gold Filled, Pearl & Stone ..NOW
4.95
24.75 Ladies Carnet Rings NOW 16.50
...NOW
4.45
O- .
12 95 Pearl, Rhinestone
10.95 Earrings
. . . . NOW
6.45
..NOW
5.45
ou
..
17.95 Pearl, Cold, Silver NOW
12.50 Earrings
5.95
...NOW
6.25
24.95 Gold Filled, Pearl & Rhnstne. NOW 12.45
14.95 Earrings
39.75 Cents. 32 degree Rings NOW 26.50
NOW
7.45
Many have bracelets to match ’/z
Others priced to $49.50
price
Many other beautiful rings --
Vk
— H
Price
eff
the
gov-
Chiiago Grain
CHICAGO, July 2—<4’1—Most graine
recorded email fractional loeeee at the
Contract Let
For Wewoka
buildings, putting new shutters on the
hog bams, erecting two gates to keep
cars from between the bams and oil-
ing and graveling the streets there.
29.75 Gents. Masonic Rings -.-..NOW 20.51
33.75 Ladies Eastern Star Rings ..NOW 22.50
Arabs Sulking
As Mediator
Early Markets
New York Stocks
lower. July 42.2202.22%, and
were % lower to % higher,
440©40%.
New York Cotton
NIW YORK. July 2—(UJh—Cotton
Weather was considered excellent for
growth of feed grain crops.
Wheat started unchanged to % cent
lower, July 42.32%; com was %-%
oats
July
BcrnMtall
x-xtr.
$1.00 Earrings
. .... 33%
on-i.:::::::::::::::::::
..•Sri.
- • eeaoeeoeeo e eee eoeoe 63t^‘
* * * * •••••••••• *0Tp
al Markets
Demonstrations for Tito
There was no indication from Sofia
as to what this development might
have to do with the relationship of
the two countries tn the light of the
events.
In Trieste, newspapers quoted
travelers as saying the people of the
free territory’s Yugoslav sone as well
fashionable, white, summer bag is made of
soil-proof enameled aluminum mesh linked
in the famous, ingenious manner in which
Whiting and Davis make their exquisite
evening bags.
Prw,
Clone
IM%
34%
M
k
&
K
B
a
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NEW YORK. July 2—<4h—Some old
favorites stepped well in front of a
steady stock market Friday. Most price
changes were fractional either way.
Nickel Plate Railroad, though, jumped
3 on its first sale and Richfield Oil
gained more than a point. •
Only moderate activity developed,
with turnover at the comparatively
low level which has prevailed through-
out the week. Steel shares improved,
possibly in response to overnight news
that President Truman had decided to
try out a voluntary steel allocation
program.
Others higher included Packard,
Studebaker, Air Reduction, Sante Fe.
Pennsylvania Railroad. Southern Pa-
cific and Union Pacific.
qr^Tito and against the cominform.
rrtunlw. and' anti-Yugoslav, told the
papers Yugoslav civil police had re-
laxed a ban on talking politics to al-
low the demonstrations.
Police of the Yugoslav sone took
the unusual step of stopping the cir-
culation of two communist dallies—
the Italian-language II Lavoratore and
the Slovene-language Primorski
Dnevnlk.
They did the same to the lefUst but
non-communist Corrlare Di Trieste,
which had reported a break Imminent
In Trieste communist ranks,
New York Cotton Futures
«»T Merrill Lynch. Pieros. Former
.. -- . aa4 Besac.!., Prev
Mo«t»— ??’*" Hl,h Ur" Clo—
July ...MJ* ».M Mas IS. 23 MJ?
Oct. 32.IS 33.M 33.M 33.51 33 .S3
Dec. .i. ■■•••• .32.3S 3243 32.23 32.3T 33.3S
’*• » H 32.IS 33 12 33. IS 33 M
My O....M4S 33.03 31.M 13SS 33 03
J“*r 3i.so 3i as si te 3i ss 31.S3
Slavs
(Continued From Page 1)
ported a lone Danish communist has
withdrawn from the party saying. M7
want to join Marshal Tito’s brigade
He was Johannes Jensen, town coun-
cilman of Roeskilde, Zeejand, former
party chairman there and former
member of parliament.
War Fear May Diminish
Western diplomats here said they
believe Tito may be playing within
the soviet sphere for a free hand for
economic deals with the west.
They said he may keep Russia so
busy straightening him out that she
will have to ease her pressure on the
west and the world’s fear of war
therefore may diminish.
The resolution of the nine-nation
cominform (communist international
information bureau) passed along
criticisms of Tito and other Yugoslav
leaders presented by the soviet com-
munist central committee and others.
telephone building.
Delaney
(CenOneed From Page 1) '
the surface of the earth in the hunt
for needed new oil reserves.
Pure’s well was drilled to 14,309
feet total depth, then plugged back
to 13.C00 feet for completion tn the
Frontier sand, r
1,000 barrels of 43.S gravity oil daily.
ypHE Frontier sand Is compara-
J- tlvely shallow In Wyoming and
there are several formations be-
neath which may bear oil at Poison
Spider. The chances are that Pure
will have a look at some of these
deeper sones In later tests of the
structure. ■ ■
Bearing out the belief the trend
will continue toward deeper drilling
in Wyoming was the purchase by
Superior Oil Co. of a 20.000-foot rig
at the International Oil exposition
in^Tulsa. That rig now is in Wyom-
In the Lost Soldier field of Sweet-
water county, the Sinclair-Wyoming
Co. drilled right down Into the geo-
logical basement—the Cambrian for-
mation—and got flowing oil at the
rate of 700 barrels a day. This is
the first Cambrian production In the
state. ,
Nbt so long ago, there were few
geologists who thought oil could be
found in that ancient formation just
above the granite of the earth's
crust. Petroleum has its origin in
the fossils of plant and animal life,
and the Cambrian era was supposed-
ly without life except in the most-
primitive form.
rpHIS discovery also will stimulate
A deeper drilling because not many
oil men are going to be satisfied with
a test of a structure now until the
Mt gnaws into the granite.
A leader in deep exploration in
old fields, Sinclair-Wyoming also
opened Madison production In the
Lost Soldier field, the most prolific
oil pool for its six* In the Rocky
mountain region. It covers only
about 600 acres but has 13 producing
formations.
In the Wertx field of Sweetwater
county, Sinclair-Wyoming drilled
two deep tests In rapid succession to
est*bMah tbo- Anuden and Madison
as ridh new prod&tag xondC-
The Tejtas Co. ventured out
toward the center of the Powder
river basin and made a Minnelusa
sand discovery which touched off
one of the year’s best leasing plays.
The well, at Adon in Campbell
county. Is the first tn the middle of
the basin. Previous production has
been along the rims.
Don't Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Do falM tooth, drop. «tfp or vabblo wb«n
rou talk. oat. touch or snoeaer Don't ba an-
ooyd and onbarraaaod hr auch bandleapa.
PaamTH, sb alkallno (non add) powder
to sprtnklo on row plates, keeps false teeth
store flraalr set. OItsb confident feeUas ef
eeeuMtr end aMsd eomfort. Wo rummy, goosr.
pastr taste er fSaling. Oet PASTSS'lW today
at ear drag stere.—<4dv.>
It will yield about
13oSENFIELD'S ■ . . Oilo6<»na’t largrsf leoeleri
Telephone Crewa
Parade Placards
■1 In Pay Rise Plea
NKW YORK. July 3—Tele-
phone equipment workers, carrying
their pay Increase demands to the
public, marched with placards in front
of 70 major telephone exchanges from
coast to coast Thursday, their union
said Friday.
Daniel Harris, vice-president of the
CIO Association of Communication
Equipment Workers, said the few
union members who walked off the
job Thursday in Detroit were expected
to return Friday.
The union members instal and re-
pair communication equipment for the
Western Electric Co., manufacturing
subsidiary of the American Telephone
and Telegraph Co.
The placard carrying does not con-
stitute a picket line, the union has em-
phasised, and no attempt will be made
....
...
::: S?:
...F airground J ob
WEWOKA, July 2—(Special)—F. P.
Blair and Son Construction Co. of
Tulsa was awarded the contract for
building and Improvement of the
county fairgrounds when bids were
opened in the office of the county
commissioners here.
Blair submitted a bid slightly less
than 435.000 for the entire job.
The contract calls for the work to
be completed within 120 days with
construction to begin Immediately.
Main feature of the work to be done
is enlargement and completion of the
livestock arena.
However, also included in the proj-
ect is construction of a racetrack,
rodeo grounds, lights, -concrete bleach-
Once again, as Is our custom twice each year. Rosenfield’s brings to you this value-giving,
price-slashing clearance event! Costume jewelry, as advertised in leading magazines such
as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Ladles* Home Journal and others . . . birfhstone rings, wrist
watches, clocks, silver, men's and ladies* gifts all reduced to one-third and one-half the
original price. If you're looking for quality, service and satisfaction in jewelry gifts . . .
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY! You'll get all these and at the same time save up to 50%.
Do not delay... come as soon as you can for choice selection.
Foreign Exchange
rate?
lun eento):
-5*9****". In «»» Tort op.n n>rUt
• • IS p«rc«nt dtooouat or S3.«>>« 6. 4. eonte.
unchan«o0.
■urop. Orooi Brltsln 4443%, unch«n«od.
AreonUns frto SO.Mn. down
i®* * •«"»*: ■‘tot’ ’roo S.M. uachoneod;
Moxlco 3S4X, uaehsasto.
futures ciritu-d lower ID slow pre-holl- cominform resolution and subsequent
day dealings Friday, with losses ex-
tending up to 45 cents a bale.
Around mid-morning the general list
ruled 15-45 cents a bale lower. Julv - ,, ----- ------— —T
>6.32; October 32.55; September 32.32. “ <* Yugoslavia were demonstrating
• ,4 ess i /<?r Tito and against the cominform.
Markets at a Glance
Stort Qu.tottoo. at II .-flort Oktoboaaa Ttaa
Or MarrtU Lroeh. Pioreo. Psnnor
ao4 Boaasj ~
StoarioMi Tatopbono
•••£.....
•••t.....
________ eokseeoeseesoeo’eoo
Seeks Treaty
CAIRO, July 2—(4b—Count Folke
Bernndotte te expected tn Cairo Satur-
day to try to salvage bis Palestine
lieace p; ms in the face of threatened
Arab rejection
An Arab league Informant said this
Thursday night after Arab leaders re-
fused to send representatives to Ber-
nadotte's Rhodes headquarters and
asked the United Nations Palestine
mediator to come here if he wished
to talk with them. .
Arabs Study Reply
Bernadotte arrived in Jerusalem
Thursday night to straighten out
truce problems. Including food allot-
ments for the city’s 100.000 Jews.
Moshe Shertok. Israeli foreign min-
ister also visited Jerusalem Thursday.
He discussed truce problems with
Jewish civic leaders. Archbishop
Ouytavo Testa. Vatican envoy, is also
in the Holy City. Inspecting religious
buildings te determine the damage
caused by the recent siege.
A high Arab league source said
"Thursday the league will turn down
Bernadotte'S proposals for a perma-
nent Palestine peace and has ap-
pointed a committee to draft a reply
to the mediator's plan, submitted early
this week.
The nationalist newspaper Al Misrl
■aid here Bernadotte had proposed
that Arab Fs teattne be Joined to
Trans-Jordan and that the Arabs ac-
cept Israel as a Jewish state.
Trues VMattom Charged
A! Mteri said the plan would re-
rise the UN partition scheme and give
the Negeb desert in the south to the
Arete.
Both sides hsve the right to give
Bernadotte oounter-propoMls.
The UN truce commission in Jeru-
salem was told formally Thursday of
an Arab violation of the truce earlier
this week, a Jewish spokesmsn Mid.
Mo said Arab snipers at the Jaffa
and New Gates fired into the Jewish
sones, wounding tour Jews, two of
whom died later.
In Montreux. Bwlteertsnd, the ex-
ecutive of the world Jewish congress
called on Jaws throughout the world
to join in the struggle for the inde-
pendence and Integrity of Israel.
era. Cyclone steel fence, toilet*, office. Mother Love Turns Turtle wUh • torujU« Ruito often ahg
scales, loading chute, painting the M»o i urne lorne putg Jn poueh anrt u for
*- ** a ride The tortoise seems to en)oy
the trip, but visitors get a shock te
see the tortoise heed that looks like
that of a snake.
. Mis Beses.) ■,
Op« Ht»h Lo
.....M3S M3S 3S
3240
32.30 3243
'*• .....32.12 32.IS
SYDNEY —(A*)—A kangaroo.
"Rusty," lives on a farm near Oilgan-
dra. New South Wales, and is so pally
neyv, the unusual, and the best at KommIou
$1.00 Gold, Silver, Pearl & Cameo .NOW
It accused the Yugoslav leadership
of a "hateful policy" toward Russia
and a departure from the Marxist-
Leninist line in foreign and domestic to persuade any one not to enter a
affairs. **•—*----------
Grosk GeerriUas Laak Tito
Taas. official soviet news agency,
said the Russian committee's OK of
the resolution was by unanlpious vote
in a special meeting.
A Moscow radio broadcast said the
committee heard the report of Its
delegates to the cominform meeting—
CoL Gen. Andrei Aleksandrovitch
Zhdanov, G. M. Malenkov and Mikhail
Andrerich Suslov, and "adopted the
result* of the work of the meeting
and the resolution of the information
bureau of the situation in the Com-
murilst party of Yugoslavia.’’
Belgrade dispatches to Rome news-
papers said Thursday the Greek guer-
rilla radio of Markos VafladM had
sided with the cominform. They sal
It broadcast a charge that the Yugo-
_P°??inunUt party waa Tnlng to
upset Balkan equilibrium" by pro-
posing a Balkan bloc.
United Nations commissions have
accused Yugoslavia of help
guerrilla fight agsinrt the Qr
ernment.
Slav Reds Back Tito
The Hungarian. Austrian and Brit-
ish Communiit parties, like Russia s
endorsed the cominform attack. A
three Mid they hoped the Yugoslav
communists would correct the errors
ahnged.
Bui a Yugoslav army division and
the communist central committee of
Slovenia, a Yugoslav state, voiced
faith in Tito. A Belgrade broadcast
picked up in London protested "or-
ganised insults’* to Tito in Albania.
Th* Belgrade newspaper Borba ac-
cused Bulgarian communist* of "un-
openlng on th* board of trade Friday. Principled methods” in approving the
eomlnform s action.
A Bulgarian cultural subcommiulon
eft Sofia Thursday night enroute to
Belgrade In connection with applica-
tion of a Bulgarian-Yugoslav cultural
agreement, an official announcement
Mid.
your summer bags . . •
r. a.
$4 25 Gold Chin* Bonbons .....NOW $2.15
$1.00 Cents. Tie Chains NOW
$6 95 Silverplated Dinner Bells ..NOW $1.95
.10
1 1.50 Sugar, Creamer & Tray NOW
10.95 Crystal Perfume Bottles ....NOW
5.48
1.50 Cents. Cold Cuff Links NOW
5.75
.75
16 20 Silverplated Meat Platters ..NOW
12 50 Boy & Girl Figurines NOW
6.25
3.50 Cents.
5.10
Cold Tie Chains ....NOW 1.75
35.00 Silverplated Candlesticks NOW 17.50
14 95 Calif. Dresden Basket NOW
7.45
5.00 Cents.
Cold Cuff Links NOW 2.50
120.00 Tea Tray
47.00 Candelabra—Rose Petal ....NOW 21.50
.NOW 60.00
7.50 Cents.
Fitted Cases
NOW 3.75
17.95 Sterling & Crystal Cocktail ..NOW
I 80 00 Breakfast Service
NOW 90.00
5.95
165.00 English 3-Bot. Decanter Set NOW 52.50
22 50 Ccktl. Shaker. Tray. 6 Class. NOW 11.25
Many other men's gifts
Vi
Silverplated Bar Accessories _
Many other gift* for the home
Prie*
%
price
Price
OF
OUR
INCLUDE
PRICES
FEDERAL
TAX
LOOK FOR HUNDREDS
OF UNADVERTISED SPECIALS THROUGHOUT THE STORE
7.95 Hand Tooled Billfolds NOW 1.95
13 50 Cents. Fitted Cases NOW 6.75
»
HOME GIFTS V2 OFF
Formerly $3.25
NOW ONLY
$]19
Nationally Famous Cuarantood
ALARM CLOCKS
TWO—FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1MB
L 1 ___________#______________
Oklahoma City Times
227 W. MAIN ST.
RM-M W. MaAo
4
$A99
WHITI FORMAL jACKKT $34.75
A SA sate
Formerly $17.40
NOW ONLY
Famous Dejur
EXPOSURE METERS
E. W. 'BilF Brown
mmociat roe
STATE
SENATOR
• VatoVM
Bteb W«rM
Wan
M. Fte. **v.
• tonner Atsf.
C»vnty Atter-
• • V v ■ * • r
towia t.
Mxrit
k
Ji
$.50
SILVER HOLLOWARE V2 OFF
OFF
MEN S JEWELRY ’ 2
is part of our service
convenience
WE
MAKE
IT
REAL
A
Despite
the Iftmendout
reductions
E■ tro liberal
available
no
NECKLACES '/2 OFF
BIRTHSTONE RINGS ' 3 OFF
EARRINGS >/? OFF
TORE-WIDE CLEARANCE!
I
CIANLLY
ROGERS
^SHtRlffi
■1
,,T
$J98
Lidin' I4-k». Cold
MOUNTINGS
Formerly $9.95
NOW ONLY
Price includes setting and string
dd
cazs
fc'i
I
| ^E5£E|j^
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• e
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l’H
jW
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 133, Ed. 2 Friday, July 2, 1948, newspaper, July 2, 1948; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1768487/m1/2/?q=Birth+of+a+Nation: accessed June 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.