Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 71, Ed. 1 Friday, April 22, 1949 Page: 12 of 38
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
»
It* latest report showed .02 of an inch
descn
fires
- ft
*
and another rain belt from Lake
Charles. La . to Corpus Christi. Texas.
Rain fell during the night over parts
of Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana with
heavy local fall* in some areas. A
heavy downpour drowned out a major
F Clergymen
CE SUCCESS, N. Y.. April 23—
The United Nation* prepared
y. to clear the next-to-the-last
• Ip it* consideration of the east-
fight over the Balkan church
H TM I
**
-A’ > w Jj
I a —
N /
* LITTLE ROCK. April 22—(>Pi—
Forestry official* continued to hope
Friday for a rain to end the north
Arkansas woods fires.
Some sections of the state got rain
Thursday night. But to the north.
*■-'>? jw.
st.joseph
/• aspirin •
FOR CHILMEM
Chairman Carlos P. Romulo of the
UN's special political committee, de-
ing soviet blop objections. * expressed
nope that five days of hearings can be
’hushed with a vote on a recommen-
dation to be given final action by the
UN assembly next week.
Polish and Russian delegates have
indicated they would try to stall a
vote on the issue Friday. Romulo had
pl <r.ned to fly home to Manila Friday
night. If he departs on schedule, that
will put Vladimir Houdek of Czecho-
slovakia in charge of the commission
—a strategy that eastern Europeans
' may be counting upon.
Advance indications are that the
committee will approve a Bolivian
plan calling on the assembly to "ex-
press its concern over the trials of
Joseph Cardinal Mindssenty and Bul-
garian Protestant churchmen. Drastic
condemnations of Hungary and Bul-
garia would be considered by the UN
next autumn, under the plan, in order
to allow Britain and the United States
to take action through World war II
peace treaties.
Tagged for defeat are proposals by
Cuba and Australia to have the UN
send a special commission to the
satellite nations to attempt to investi-
gate court records, and to interview
the prisoners. A majority of delegates
are certain the Hungarian and Bul-
garian authorities will block this ap-
proach since they so far have refused
to even tend representatives to the
UN during the committee hearings.
Arkansas Still Hoping
For Rain to End Fires
Action by UN
on Trials
Safe Torn From Heavy Concrete Case
Burglars left an office this way early Friday after they ham-
mered to pieces a three-foot concrete casing which enclosed
a safe at the Jones Boys grocery No. 2, 117 SE 29. Police found
the safe outside the store, still intact. Roy E. Jones, owner,
declined to say how much money was in the strong box. The
thieves entered the building by breaking a window and pry-
ing two guard bars apart.
Most of U. S. Faces
Fair Weather Today
CHICAGO. April 33—GP>—Another
day of generally fair weather appeared
in prospect for most of the country
«uv w me nviui,
at Batesville, the weather bureau said Friday. <_
it* latest report showed .02 of an inch There were showers from lower
in a 24«hour period. Harrison had a Michigan to the Carolinas and Georgia
trace. These observation stations are
the nearest to the fire area.
itant state forester R. M. Henry
ed the situation as much 1m-
, but his latest report showed 12
ill burned.
forest fire in Juneau county, Wiscon-
sin.
Temperatures in some areas hit high
marks for the year Thursday, includ-
ing Chicago's 74. But the hottest
weather was in Arizona where the
mercury was in the 90s. It touched
07 at Yuma and 94 at Phoenix.
—HJ---
O»^w7//wx-Y0UR CHILD
VfUClll ty^ E SERVES
Easr to give—g
no breaking of I
tablets. Assures accu- I
rate dosage — tablets I
are V< adult dose.I
Orange flavored. 35c. I
"“T • I
k I
' *1
iniFT
I
95
r
r
to
Deb Shoes
Accent
• Better Fitting
• Greater Selection
9 Beautiful Styles
from ‘America's finest
Shoe Makers
\Yie mos\ wa\keA abou\
SHOtS in \own
95
li
American Girl
Buskins
and many other famous names
Where your
Dollars buy more Shoe Value!
In our Green Room ...
■T Special for
F Saturday & Monday
' WATER-BESISTANT
17
17
WATCH
—
SB
-55
t
-
I
■ 1
•. f'- ■
TWELVE—FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 194®
j I - ■ _ • - w e » ___________________•__________________________
■
Mack
7*
■
7.
8.
7.
7,
1
v
7.
7
A watch made
c
Week
t
5.
Interest—No Carrying Charge
’ fl
7.
Ad drew
6.
5
Charge C.O.D.
--'
ST A
? /IN PIS TRESS!
s
e-t
1
ill
I J
. i-.
'Iff
I
»
I
I
4
t
I
1
»
I
4 ’ -
- * ’ - J J •
*
a li
s
■J
•
I
4
t
: CITY .
c
A
h
Y
C
N
S
T
E
V
E
NON-
MAGNETIC
F WHAT'S THAT YOU >
ARE AMJIV\BL1N6 ? 14
TH 14 YANKEE HUMBM
k NOT NAV4EATJN0 ?
INPEEP, MY COMMANDER!
WE WERE COMMENTING
ON FT4 A»4ilKC>mE4J...'^
\ IT 14 WELL KNOWN THAT
I YANKEE BANKEE4 WEKE
X NEV&e IN VNIRNtM!
■ NAME
I
STREET
COULD WE
4EE TM&
AW PUL
OVER
AOAIN,
4IRE »
4OTHAT
WE MAY
PE4PI4E
IT TWICE
A4 MUCH..
P
s
I
I ^SAR
ft^tWPi.'
A WOMAN _
I :
u
1
■4 w' I.
A
6
L (V
50
No Inter*
I' <
I* H
THE HANDLE44 SAILOR RECEIVING
A PENSION WAS LAUGHABLE...IT <
IS COMMON KNOWLEPGE THAT ALL
AMERICAN WOUNDED WEKE THROWN )TUlN6
INTO ASYLUMS KUN FOR GRAFT BY
t politicians/
especially for active
men. It combines all the
above features with good looks
and a history making low price.
II
E
I
INCABLOC
r ’I
G
U
^5.
W e WE' WS
129 W. Cz Grand Ave.
00 SUPPOSE
XWB SHOULD
JSSOR N >U4P
«BT FATHER! \QUICK J*
HO.HO! HCK
COUPLE OFPU
POLICEMghl—I
OUT THE RIOT
■ | ’ L
I ■
I
$S KNOWS WHATS
^s^r>RS^^
a*;
4^
jpjw
A 53495 Value
Down
-i J0
V’ 4K., t?r
L
Mail Orders Filled;
B WEBER'S CREDIT JEWELERS
. 129 W. Grand Oklj. City
■ I Please send me Watch for which I
■ ! agree to pay SI 9.95 plus 40c state
I 1 tax.
'• - * ■■. -
i* |
7
I
f. American Giri In black pct*nt.
Sis** 4 t* 10, ^QC
AA » B_____________
2. D«b She* in green, red, balck,
brown or sabl* milt tummor
sued*. Sis** 4 te 9,
AA a- B ____________
I. American Giri in hi or medium
ho*l black patent. Sis** 4
t* 10. AA » B_________ /
4. Buckin in whit*, lim*. gr**n. *r
blu* lin*n. Sis** 495
5. N*w ballerina In gr**n, y*ll*w
and r*d; er **lid gr**n
■u*d«. Sis** 4 t* 9_^._
6. Cel* ballerina inside wedg* polka
dot in blu*. red. gro«n or yellow
with whit* p*lka det. J QC
Sis** 4 te 9_________
7. D«b Sho* in gre*n. red. navy, or
turf tan. Sis** 4 t* 10. QQC
AAA t* B_________... O -'
I. Accent in red. green, whit* *r
golden harveat. Sis** 4 to FGC
10. AAAA. AA b B____ P
1 ,
1 ‘
, | •
1 Nam*________Addrea*---— •
• i
• Sis* ____ Color.---She* Ne._. j
I Mail order* please include 20c ■
[ pectag* and 2% tas.
—
1
I
■i
♦
1
I-
/
ou raa.
(**•>
and husband was permitted to keep
the remaining »1«, which the court
said was barely enough to feed and
house him ao he could work.
Helpt You Overcome
FALSE TEETH
Looseness end Worry
!•• longer M annoyed a* teal 1H-**-*m*
o< loom vabbl, UiM tmtk. >*>-
TKTTH. an unprovad alkaMaa (non-aeid) pow-
*ar hold* them firmer aa thar faa) more aam-
'onabla aoothln* and eooltn* to turn* mad*
tore OS raea*^** acid mouth Avoid embar-
raMmenr cause* by loose plates.
' TSkre today a* aay dm* stora.
be achieved if the FBI wu author-
ized to apprehend and bring them
back for trial. Van Meter believes.
And fewer fathers would skip across
state lines if they knew the long
arm of the federal government would
be reaching out for them.
Not all of the fleeing fathers are
“morally bankrupt,” say* Van Meter.
Some leave the state because they
cannot meet the financial burden
placed upon them by the court*.
Judges are acutely aware of this sit-
uation. They make extensive in-
quiry into the father’s income and
financial obligations before fixing a
child support order.
If the burden is too heavy, a
father who 1* willing to support his
Corner Main & Hudson
return persons committing those
crime* /while “morally bankrupt”
fathers roam foreign states unmo-
lested because Oklahoma does not
have funds to pay cost of bringing
them back.
The jurist thus advocated broad-
ening of the federal flight act to
authorise the FBI to apprehend and
.
return a fleeing father on the same
basis they now are returning persons
charged with murder, arson, bur-
glary. assault, robbery, kidnaping,
embezzlement and rape.
He said it will take an act of
congress to broaden the law, and
urged support of the proposal.
The judge was not taking a flight
children to the best of hi* financial
ability, often will skip the jurisdic-
tion ofKhe court and leave his fam-
ily on society.
The problem a divorce court judge
must face was pointedly emphasized
recently when the mother of three
minor children asked a divorce and
child support. The husband and
father earned 338 a week.
No amount of men al calculations
convinced the judge that »38 was
enough to. support the mother and
children in one home and the father
in another. They had had a meager
existence while living together.
The mother and children were
awarded >20 a wee^ and the fa ther
Judge Urges Law for FBI to Return Deserting Fathers
Fathers who dash across state
lines to avoid their legal and moral
obligations commit a worse crime
than a burglar, embezzler or arson-
ist. in the opinion of A. P. Van
Meter, presiding judge of the dis-
trict court.
Yet, the jurist pointed out Friday,
full resources of federal law enforce-
ment agencies are used every day to into fancy when he recounted case
after case where fathers “went over
the hill” and out of the jurisdiction
of the court. These cases are re-
corded at the county courthouse.
Occasionally some county attorney
starts a crusade against “delinquent”
fathers, but It invariably ends on a
sad financial note.
. A solution to this problem could
V.
I •
STAINLESS
STEEL
EXPANSION
BAND
X
I
WEAK
Ideal far
Service Men
and
Sportsman
riifit.
J
BE PROTECTEPZy^l^T,BiMJ LEAP
__ LZon/ IF we pidn t
kUSM TO HER
PROTECTION WE-p
J
I-,’.*-
■ ;;7:
■■'
, *
I *
I
•
4
I
J
I
I .
I
1
k
•t ■
ifr. ha
.4
V- •' L i
Aaan&uM ■ ,«**
0
\
V . ■ tM
• •• , ag&j.
f
•<***«FW*-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View 38 places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 71, Ed. 1 Friday, April 22, 1949, newspaper, April 22, 1949; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1769401/m1/12/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.