The Oklahoma Eagle (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 5, 1941 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Eagle Publishing Company and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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«
SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1M1
Registrants who Marry to Avoid
Television Comes to Japan
I
o-
at once reconsider the cases of all
m'.'
Howard U-
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TO
after
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epsiCM
in progress.
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VWUM m-XX
ft
Etta In-
ti
"Keep the Service going - •
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AAJUEM__Olb -CAPSULES
J Sr
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‘Xmry Service, Must Serve
Same as Others
Yancy Williams
Charges Bias in
Air Corps
Preparing for
Defense V> ork
Defense Training
Class Has Closing
Exercises
MV DOCTOR SAID
“YOUR KIONf VS MAY
NEED A tlURETIC’’
Th< National Defense Training
class in Auto Mechanics, widen
♦
ippcul a-
O 4
Ou
O
s as the def
e
h
i?
|i
♦
J’AGE TWO
desirable
the next 60 days at the
He highly praised the stu-
to the
m mended
Say, Rev. J. RiSlay
M» Oliee Baptist Chiircte
Nath«UI«. Taaa.
I BOUGHT GtNUINE
GOTO MfDM. HAARLEM
OIL CAPSULES FOR
ONLY 3S*.
</o°
k o
IV \I
V -
f tLi i has bccu Rl irig on s‘,,ce March
If vcmI tre.utslad with getting up frequently at
night, the tn,wry, tiarkarh*. puffy »y<«. thifting
pairH, <1»fh ’»!» htifnin| pafgagri due to thio
fsute, try Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Cap«ule«. the
r>rig<vval formula of Dr Boerhane that ha» helped
rntli'onr H f«,lht with clow acting kirln, st and »rn-
fated Idad'L r whi« h so* often follow*. Gold M< dal
Haarlem Oil Capsules start to w<-tk immediately
I > results. He sure and get
Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules a phyti tan’g
formula rusts but 38« at druggists everywhere.
Loo It for the gold medals «<n the package.
M «ney refunded should Gold Medal fail to help you.
GOLD MEDAL
I fl
had not learned many thing*
Husband, Employee
Charged With First
Degree Murder
sister and brother-in-law. Mr. and
Mrs. flu* McIntosh, 1143 North
Lansing and Mrs. Word SkilUm,
of 1845 N. Norfolk.
.... .. .
o - -
Mrs Tom Richardson, 917 Al-
len, Dallas, Texas, is visiting her
gratifying that this has
permanent pail of Hie
the fourtn stay-at-
9
» ___
to solicit an
PROMPTLY I SECURED WELCOME RELIEF
FROM BACKACHE MISERY — NOW MISS
NO DAYS FROM THE CHURCH — THANKS
TO THIS GREAT MEDICINE. PRAISE THEE!
During the World War he was
transferred to the 350th E icld Ar-
tillery in the National Army. He
served overseas for 18 months,
and look part in the fighting in
tiie Ai gonne Forest. He was pro-
moted to the grade of sergeant
during the World War.
After the War, he was muster-
I
t
attached hereto, local boa'da saaJl
' A
PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY of Oklahoma
Urban League bay
i that if the si™-..'—
"Neither Rain Sleet • -
ys’ dutn and Amendment
All Select a e Service re.ts
trunts with one or more depen-
dents to whusv uppoit they make
‘■any substantial contribution '
■
II
u
After
t ic i pining A. It Vo-
and
1.1 worker, »«.'■ some interest-
ing inside information reguiding
v.c government's set up and out-
line'. the present training court es
,n progress throughout the city.
Th® G—- —.
( 1. s runs 8 hours a day, 5 days
vick. giving both theory and
application of
JC •
Greenwood
Community
•>.«.« ; i. a a 1
■’ ? ladies, informing ( enter
the boys had really
m schi» 1 each night and not
roving the streets us some might
have suspected. This statement
drw laughter and applause.
Following closely remarks by
| Mr. A. G- Rogers, master of ci rc-
.nonies, presentati' n« were called
our instructor was read by
*** j
•____; __ - — -■ building of
a Construction Comp.i.iy at 1-iit
Huachuaca, Arizona, January 16.
1941. When the pod enyinu ar-
rived on the .scene of the the
building, one dump tru.k an t sev-
eral drums of lubricating oil
were burning rapidly. During
the fire, efforts were made by ci-
vilians employed by the Company
to remove hot drums of oil from
the tnen almost completely burn-
ed build.ng until one drum ex-
ploded and several men were
burned. Sergeant Baker, Assis-
tant Fire Marshall at the Post,
having escaped injury during the
explosion, with utter disregard of
hiJ own personal safety, kept fire
which wcie then bulging with hot
oil. Due to the low pressure it
hose on the remaining drums
was necessary for him to approach
within fifteen feet of the oil
drums in his attempt to cool the
unexplodcd drums, and by his un-
tiring efforts assisted in bringing
• /
The sheriff and his deputies al-
> made an inten ive hunt for a
Negro who was seen prowling
around the slain woman's car
shortly after the time she was re-
ported by her husband to have
and Robert Ste- left home.
enjoyed by every one.
ti.i m tn it t —
SAVE MONEY
BUY THE CARTON
Thu co it-c uu'vdes E-ement.,! /
rk, Related Inf rmatii-i. . - 4
'< ■!,. ni< s, M ■ ' I* nance vi E r
11 vice, Fender-b dy Work, Wcliiu.g
Colored I and Painting.
e upport
expie- ed man,
uc 1
Iication of such registrants wneie
I such action is indicated.
change the existing classification
waa married after the date he w.a> appeal . . provided in .
such case, and if there is a rea- I
ed out of the 350th Field Artillery
and enlisted in Company ‘L tSlh
Infantry in 1919. He has since
served continuously with the 25th
Infantry us a non-commissioned
officer. He was promoted to the
grade of First Sergeant in March
of this year. Before that he had
served for two yean as Fire Chief
at Fort Huachuca.
Sergeant Baker has eight hon-
orable discharges from tne Unit-
ed States Army, all of which bear
the character of •Excellent.’ He
is serving at present with the
Headquarters Detachment, Second
Batallion, 25th Infantry.
Uve service, asse: U tiiut int gr<
FLIGHT WITH LOVE . . .
t< . illumed from Page 1)
small Percent
in
four months of the school
fault of the instructor.
1 a token of ap-
lents for thc very fine inspira-
received throughout the
Refreshments wei\_. seiv-
’^*816 6°™-^
\ home carton
From Washington, D. C. comes
new . from .1 foimei I ul an, Yan-
cy Williams, now a
niversity student.
According to Williams, desjite
public statements of officials f
th,. Wa: !>• > .1 tment that fa< I
ties have been provided f‘'f I
training of colored cadets tqg d
ty with thc Army Air Corps, sil h
1 not the CMe- T,u' 'b'h niint
was made in a reply to Vie aLy-
■ a sum
mary Judgement in his suit to
compel his aoecptaiWe as a fly-
ing cadet.
Issuance of otders for the ac-
ceptance by the Army of colored
applicants as flying cadets did
not cadse his application to re-
ceive the non-discriminatory
treatment to which he is entitled
under the C< institution which the
defendants. Secretary of War Hen
ry L. Stinson. General George C.
Marshall, Chief of Staff; Major
General Emory S. Adams, the Ad
Jutant General; Major General
Walter S. Grunt, commander of
the Third Corps Area, have sworn
to uphold and protect, William*
assert*.
Yancy finished high school here
several years ago. He is the son
of Mr*. Orclia William*. 1.’28 N.
Greenwood Pl. and the late Pierre
Williams and is the brother <*f
Mr*. Adele Williams Fisher, sec-
retary at Carver Junior High
School.
"BACKACHE
Caused by my torpid kidneys
ALMOST DROVE ME
WiLDi"
for Mrs. White.
. few individual there f a-lice in th
:g- to keep a clo d ■ <vl*.
<n and given to Mrs.
19, 1911, held their closing exer-
, n?.; Friday evening. June 27, in
| the Industrial \rt Building of the
Booker Washington High School,
' with their wives end friends pre-
I mt. The prog-i'iii began al 8:30
j i with thc song. America, and invo-
I 1 call' n by Mr H. W. Pitt*.
M tne opening . r».
rational Educdian teacher
Bob White's C ase
NAACP
The Bob White ease is far from
I....... studied to reopen the ca«»
and pr secute W. S. Co. l.ran wnc
r„c <> 1 ,»r ■ m. it has been reve d-
(Conctinued on Pare 3)
The Show must go on • •
the crime, a <
s hour which he gave as the time
his wife left for an automobile1 peditien
trip to visit her mother, and thc mand of General Pershing.
tuindabon for a success- time she was seen'by a newspaper
a ____ 4L™ K«.tle*A «<» e'ritotin-
___________i^mi
married men or men witn minor
children who are in Class 1-A, g
________ ana shall m< n ide ■ U.e clai i- |y.
iT should be dit|gM.v •• irom military
’. training, Nuttuntu Headquarters,
■ Se|wtive Sei 4uE< System, oeeiai -
I rd today in a memorandum to
State Disrotors cluiitying nd n-
al policy on depnidency ducr-
■ menV.
’the only exception to this gen-
eral rule is that a registrant wi.
• Before granting a r<
in Die ordinary
te resolved in favor of |
rf,«pt.
fn the cose of a
Whose financial status
dependents may support
selves in some fashion.
lured that nothing In thc law 1
1-hc registrant may not be r
tftifffd to cash or borrow on
hi. home, deplete his 1
< Marts before be rg e
to deferment.’’
Putting the amended
IP® into operation
TByi’tor ■ to instruct th
Isserd* and appeal boar is «
Yuur service is uninterrupted because
of planned service—backed up by
many sources of
power . . . and be-
cause loyal crews are
at their |K>sts in all
kinds of weather.
interview with you
. lr Frcedley said it was too
men. for thc five USO sNbws now
July 10. when troops begin man-
euvers. He also raid that he al-
ed deiien^ gaining officii.* it a* important as it is neceu.ary Uxludg Na»ro parformers.
required to register and cannot
prove that this new status was ac-
quired “in a Manner consistent
with the ordinary course ul hu-
>qan affairs'' und not in order t
. provide basis for a deiermc .:
ctfMn.
zihe ruling appl.es not
future classification ot maruec <
men or men with minor chddren j
but also directs reconsider:
ot the cases of ail such registra; ■
who are in Class 1-A.
4>,i ecturs, General i.c.
s.iey, Deputy Direc tor 11
, caused thc police to contin-
progress bung | uc their investigation of his ac-
himself tor not ' tivities
< f the training
was
land of thc free,
not Closed—
THE OKLAHOMA RAGLE_______
WHITE MAN HIRES NEGRO
TO Kill WIFE
V’
mg number of casts
men seeking di»r nai
Army on depenu... ; grounds
duly burdens tae -d un .
machinery of both tne Ai
tne Selective Service
ed by the Army. an*J
Irvm three types, . if
■aid, are:
unit. Frequent^
finds iiei.'Cif uaut .j
2. Tne new ly m
the local board at 1 des 1.
theai.-tives in st
dents," and to 1 ’oive
- o — -
Mi's Margie Ftewart is visit-
ing with Mrs. Chart?s
gram, 320 N. Hartford.
munities as Philadelphia, I’AU- j sated for.
In 1938 the Stajl-At-Home Sum-
mer Camp was statred as an ex-
ji fment b.H t^- Community
Center Council and state office.
B< y sand girls from 4 to 14 years
ot age attended and tile results
were so
become a
program. The fourtn
camp w JI open
Greenwood Community
Munday morning July 7th at
a. m. The boys and girls from 4
to 14 years of agc arc eligible
The activities will consist of
handicraft sandcraft, folk games,
iklive games, softball and wood-
woik. The Tulsa City Lincs fur-
nishes a bus to transport the
youngsters to the Lincoln Park
| fur a swim each Wednesday murn-
I mg. The Zeta Phi Beta Sorority
We w. h to announce tr.it an- I sponsors tho recreation project in
class of this same nut-ire North Tulsa and is contributing
It .lifted much toward making this stay-at
. -home camp a success.
We are requesting parents to
have their children, 4-14 years,
enroll Monday, July 7, 9;<)o a. m.
Each child is asked to bring his
lunch daily and remain until 3
p. m.
that had been given.
if his martyred
Familiar slogans — and they mean
something stronger than law itself—
the show goes on—the mail is delivered
—the electric service wires hum as
long as thc tradition and personal
loyalty of these people may endure. •
I * *
The General Superintendent,
Mr. R. B. McHenry, was intro-
ducted an in an encouraging ad-
| dress outlined the opportunities
| for Negro mechanics m the near
future. He informed us that nev-
er has there been such a shortage
of skilled labor as therc i* n< w,
and he assured the men who had
taken this training that they’d ,
receive desirable employment
I dents for their loyalty
i,.r the way in which the framing
course has been carried out. He
Mr. E. W. Clarke, of the Jack-
ful career.
Graduating from the experimental »tage. television in Japan ha, pro-
gressed so rapidly that regular broadcast* have been inaugurated.
Above photo "ihows girl, being televised at the Japan Broadcasting
“My Husband Shot Down Like a Do#”
WhisPered Mrs. Bob White at
N. A. A. C. P. Confab
I woman will ever suffer the terri-
roe Court Room, Tuesday June
The plump brown-skinned wo-
man wfr e <.*ye ure itiH haunted
by t . siiu'idei.ng nerre rs of the
4 dangerous fire under cmiUi-l ■ ^()Tl government for
The high degree of heroism dis-
played by Sergeant Baker on this
occasion contributed to the sav-
ing of Government property and
pvssibly human life and reflected
great credit upon himself and the
military service."
Sergeant Baker was born on
silver dollar foun t j May 6, 1895, in Nashville. Tennes-
the back of the crown. Her I see. He enlisted in Company T.
found dumped face! 25th Infantry, in Hawaii on
. March 3, 1913. In 1!H6, he was
repeatedly | furloughed to the Regular Aimy
* -----. Five months later he
called back to active duty
greased ,0 rapidly that regular broadcasts have been inaugurated.
Corporation’* research studio, on the outskirts of Tokyo. The image*
are sent to station JOAK in downtown Tokyo, eight mile, away, where
they ar, recreated by the receiver.
Negro Soldier Cited For Heroism
During Fire
-----Q
The War Department nas an-
nounced the citat* i.i fm’s ' id of
thc Soldier's Me :; i for herobAn
to Sergeant Sumuei !’• Bnl er,
Company, F. 25th infaitry, Uni.-
ed States Army.
Ti.e official citatim reads, for
heroism displayed during a fire
in the truck greasiir; building o(
MEMPHIS— (ANP) — Cli-:a<
maxing 10 days of intensive in-
vestigation by thc combined staffs
of the sheriff and attorney gen-
eral, an announcement was made
Tuesday that E. E. Ashcraft, white
44, drug line operator, ha* con-
fessed that he hired John Ware
20, his one-time employee to
murder his wife.
Both inen were charged with
first degree murder and arc now
in Shelby County pail. Ware ad-
mitted his part in the brutal kill-
ing while Ashcraft entered a for-
mal plea of not guilty.
While details of the murder
were not revealed by the Sheriff
office, r scr bits were pieced
together -util the whole story of1
the slaying came nut. It was dis-
covered that Ashcraft had been
planning "to do away with his
wife" for several months
family difficulties arose.
Ware, who lived in a nearby
town, a tone time worked under
Ashcraft on a construction job
and agreed to take part in his
former boss' plot to kill Mrs. Ash-
craft.
An autopsy showed that the
woman was beaten on the head by
a weapon similar to a stout stick
Her skull was craked and a hole J
the size of a t.A— .
in the back of the crown. Her!
body was
down in a slough.
Although Ashcrjift
denied having any know ledge of | Reserve.
■ discrepancy in the was eal!
“ land served with the Punitive Ex-
• - I —u.i. n jn Mexico under the com
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Hughes, Horace S. The Oklahoma Eagle (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 5, 1941, newspaper, July 5, 1941; Tulsa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1803994/m1/2/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.