The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 164, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 20, 1940 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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TUESDAY AUGUST 20 1940
Oil Gridunfca (6L) Sdg Sqnrm
.Sport News Pago S
IFainis (PaaOOiiifi Fi?
T Saadl&a K(dls
IT ALL HELPS
THE DODGERS
New Yorkers Take
First Game 9-2
(By The Associated Press)
This one is one of the rare oc-
casions like a total eclipse of the
sun or breakfast without bacon
and eggs. It marks the only time
this or any other year when
loyal Brooklyn fans will yell for
not at the New York Giants.
The Giants probably without
meaning to are helping their
rambunctious rivals hum across
the East Elver retch up with
the league leading Cincinnati
Eads And If there's anything a
Dodger fan would rather aee
than the Giants being moider-
ed" its his own Super has sur-
passing the Beds.
Hence the tag line in every
Brooklyn prayer and please
please bless the Giants just for
this series with the Reds."
While the Dodgers were idle
yesterday the Giants with a
makeshift lineup that Included
Mel Ott at third and Johnny Mc-
Carthy at first hopped on the
Beds by a 9-2 count
King Carl Hubbell screwballed
the Reds into submission with a
fine seven-hit performance while
his mates were blasting out 14
hits off Oom Paul Derringer and
three assistants. That left Brook-
lyn four games back of the Reds
just a pitch and a puff tor the
Dashing Dodgers who have Leo
Durocher back at shortstop to
make them a wiser if somewhat
slower outfit
That was Carls third win
ever the league leaders this
year while the defeat was Paul's
fourth straight and 11th setback
this season.
While Hubbell was making hash
out of the Cincinnati Reds Dick
Errickson of the Bees were doing
the same to the Pittsburgh Pirates'
hopes tor a first division birth.
He won his ninth game of the
season to 0 limiting the Bucs to
nine hits and skidding them down
into sixth place.
In the American Leagues only
game the Boston Red Sox gained
their most decisive triumph of the
season over the league - lading
Cleveland Indians smashing out
14 hits for a 18-7 win. -
There is not the slightest vest-
ige of a tooth in the mouth of any
bird now living. Prehistoric birds
had teeth but their added weight
was a burden to the flying bird of
later ages.
How Far Have We Come In Three Months? ... Last Of Three Articles
Navy Leads Way In U. S. Race
Last of three articles analyzing
progress of the American de-
fence effort in the three months
since President Roosevelts call
to arms.
By MILTON BEONNEE
Washington Aug. 20 When
Unde Sam got ready for the big
rearmament program asked by
President Roosevelt in May the
navy snapped into action way
ahead of the army. Its the navys
way. It seems to be characteristic
of navies. The British navy did
the same thing when rearmament
was the order of the day in Brit-
ain. Here's one big proof of how the
American Navy Department
Jumped to action. The defense
commission until July 27 had
cleared contracts totaling $1722-
000000 and of this amount $1-
349829342 was for the navy.
The big items were:
Battleships $180000000
Destroyers 280833400
Submarines 117893000
Light cruisers 165625400
Heavy cruisers 94472000
Aircraft Carriers 100000000
One submarine tender 16000000
Two seaplane tenders 27580000
One mine sweeper... 2589000
Machinery for minor
craft 9368287
Machinery for sub-
marines 17634JX)0
Scrutiny of other figures reveals
many things of which little has
been said. For instance contracts
have been let for $1647356
worth of "net tenders." The navy
plans to have towing vessels in
all major American ports to lay
and tend submarine nets in case
of a war emergency. The nets
are made of intertwined cables
and are designed to catch enemy
submarines.
Spending Oi Bun'
The navy is fully alive to its re-
sponsibilities in both oceans ami
is making vast preparations to ex-
tend its airplane activities. Quon-
set Point in Rhode Island will be
one of th jumping off places for
watching the North Atlantic.
A istion facilities there are being
improved at a cost of $23154000.
.Threat to the Monroe doctrine
aid our possible responsibUitiea
in South America have been foc-
toii in. the naval expenditures for
improved aeronautical facilities In
the South as follows: .
Corpus Christl Texes $22500000
Miami Fla SJ42.500
Pensacola. Fla.- 2335000
Jacksonville Fla. . . 13328300
Norfolk Va. -11125300
Guantanamo Cuba 4365300
Panama Canal Zone 10300000
Better to watch the Pacific the
.AMZMtt V009UL-PUH
MAKERS. WV ALSO WfELD
A Bt&SfCK.. ffZtUTtt
JSMUWW&T&
BALL AND IEADNE M
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
WITH AN AVERA6
AROUND. 370
Sport Slants
By AUSTIN BEALMEAk
Oklahoma City Aug. 20 OF)
Oklahoma City University once
a power on Southwestern grid-
irons will have to wait another
year for a fling at the state colle-
giate conference football title . . .
O.C.U. was voted back into the
loop this year but Coach Os
Doengcs ran into more trouble
than a full skirt in a high wind
when he tried to schedule games
with other conference teams . . .
Result: Only three conference
schools on the Goldbug slate for
1940 . . . "Well get em next year
though said Goenges . . . under
a conference rule each team must
meet the other seven at least once
every two years . . Some grid
coaches are worrying over what
will happen to their squads if the
National Guard is called for a
years active duty. But at Tulsa
Central High School the players
are worrying about the coach . . .
Leslie Van Noy who stepped up
from a Junior high post to succeed
Puny James at Tulsa Central this
following amounts are being spent
on the West Coast for naval avia-
tion facilities:
Alameda Calif. $ 9390000
Puget Sound Wash. . . 6991000
San Diego Calif. 1521300
Hawaii Midway Wake
and Johnson Islands 29370300
761 Vessels In Sight
War vessels are the most im-
portant item in naval expendi-
tures. The accompanying picto-
chart and table show the present
lineup of U. S. naval tonnage.
None of foe 136 combatant ves-
sels now in the course of con-
struction is being built because of
the announced intention of Con-
gress to make a 70 per cent in-
crease Jn the navy.
The Navy Department cannot
proceed with the two-ocean navy
plan until Congress actually ap-
propriates the money. The 70 per
cent increase will mean building
about 200 more combat ships. In
tonnage:
Battleships 381000 tons
Aircraft carriers 200000 tons
Cruisers 420300 tons
Destroyers 250000 tons
Submarines 1 71000 tons
When completed about 1946 or
'47 the two-ocean navy will have
ships and tonnage as follows:
35 battleships 1381300 tons
20 aircraft carriers 460600 tons
88 cruisers 956374 tons
378 destroyers 617360 tons
180 submarines 231366 tons
This will mean a navy of 701
vessels with a grand tonnage of
3367700 tons. But foe follow-
ing ships will be over age in 1947:
13 battleships 400300 tons
2 aircraft carriers 66300 tons
10 cruisers 70500 tons
123 destroyers 139360 tons
74 submarines 62380 tons
This makes a total of 222 vessels
with a total of 738140 tons.
9369 planes By 1942?
This being the year of alarm
about American defenses it may
be reassurihg to know that the
following have been added to the
navy so far this year: Aircraft
Carrier Wasp; Destroyers O'Brien
Wake Morris Roe Wainwright
Buck G leaves and Plunkett; Sub-
marines Tamber and Tautog; De-
stroyer Tenders Dixie and Prairie
and the Subchaser P. C. 840.
Seven merchant vessels have been
bought to use as tenders.
Progress is being made in the
building of a number of import-
ant vessels: foe 35300-ton battle-
ships North Carolina and Wash-
ington each of 28 knots speed and
with nine 16-inch guns were
launched in- June. The keel of a
sister battleship the Alabama
was laid last February. The keel
Farm Hands Ready For Big City
NN Rf VitKkSS 3JMUL0 HEylL WART WITH
'LROZUTO P!RUOy.i..
7 B&-TTM WENT NOW 6AN3UOSE WHO
f THEM...
year is a captain in the National
Guard.
Dizzy Dean whose shutout
string was snapped Sunday at 28
consecutive scoreless innings is
getting more of a workout than he
bargained for when he came back
to the Texas League . . . He's toil-
ed 11 innings in each of his last
three appearances . . . Add things
we never knew until now: The
Fayetteville Ark. country clubs
"Bristow Invitation Golf Tour-
ney held last week and won by
Guthrie's Labron Harris was
named for Obie Bristow the old
O. U. football star . . . Apparently
the whistle-blowers are looking
for a lot of long runs in Big Six
and Missouri Valley football this
season . . . Game officials of the
two conferences meeting in Kan-
sas City next month will hold a
field test in which all must run
SO yards against time while in full
officiating uniform -. . . At We-
leetka theyve named their ath-
letic plant the Wa ter melon
Bowl" after (me of the largest
melon crops in that sector.
Blackwells Country Club is go
37 Built
237 Built
6 Built
102 Built '
of the Iowa one of the 45 000-
ton battleships was laid in June.
Cruiser keels laid this year in-
clude Atlanta Juneau San Diego
San Juan and Cleveland. De-
stroyers launched this year are
the Mayo Charles F. Hughes
Gwin Meredith Monsoon Willies
and Nicholson. The keel of the
submarine Grenadier was laid this
year.
The navy has 1313 useful
planes. Last year 933 were or-
dered and some of these are now
JOB 6 SWM WtLL PROBABLS
MOVE OVER lb THIRD WHEN
THEV Comg UP Tb THE PARENT
NEW YORK CLUB
NEXT SPRtNE.
ing to have six new grass greens
to go with the three already con-
structed giving mat city the only
grass-greens course for miles
around . . . Ray Dumont ring-
master of semi-pro baseball has
hauled out that idea for a "magic
eye ball-and-strikc indie ator
again . . We still wonder how
they're going to get the electric
eye to distinguish between the
ball and the bat . . Oklahoma
City will stage a "be kind to um-
pires" night at a Texas League
game Friday night und the local
papers are giving away a hun-
dred ducats for the best poems
about the "gucssers ... We dont
need a ticket so we give you our
contribution at no extra cost:
Here's to all Texas League um-
pires; For them life holds no terrors.
Their life-time average reads like
this
"No runs no hits no errors."
Under terms of the Pulitzer will
a $500 gold medal is awarded for
the most disinterested and meri-
torious public rbrvice rendered by
an American newspaper during
the preceding year.
To Rearm
21 Bldg and Appr. For
60 Bldg and Appr. For
5 Bldg and Appr. For
40 Bldg and Appr. For
being delivered. This year 3900
will be ordered for 1941 and 1942
and if a second appropriation goes
through 4000 more will be order-
ed (or the same period. This
schedule contemplates 8500 to 9-
000 planes in 1942.
A total of 15300 has been au-
thorized for the navy. The big-
gest trouble here is to get trained
pilots for these planes. The navy
and the marines have 3300 pilots
now next year they should have
1 3300 sailors with wings.
DALLAS DROPS
BACK OF 0. C.
Missions Have Two
Top Pitchers
(By The Associated Press)
San Antonio may be in second
place but the Missions have the
Texas League's two top pitchers.
Bab Muncrief king with 22
victories is skipping to keep
ahead of Crown Prince Maurice
Newlin who wen his twenty-
first last night by trimming the
straggling Dallas Rebels 5-1.
It was a bitter draught for the
Rebels. They have done about
everything except shave their
heads to climb into first division
and the league play-offs. Before
last night's stand they shared
fourth place with Oklahoma City.
Since the Indians were idle the
Missions victory shoved the Rcbs
back into the nether pastures.
Houston turned on its power
to win a double header from Tulsa
8-5 and 3-1.
The opener was a swatfest with
the Buffs collecting 12 hits and
the Tulsans 11. Sam Narron's
triple with the bases loaded broke
a 5-to-5 tie in the ninth to ice
the game.
Stove Warchol held the Oilers
to three hits in foe second.
Shreveport had little trouble
defeating Fort Worth 8-2. The
Cats only scores came on a
two-run homer In the fifth by
catcher Roy Easterwood.
Jack Brillhcart scattered six
Fort Worth hits.
Beaumont joined Oklahoma
City cm the bench.
Tuesday's Games
Houston at Dallas night
Beaumont at Fort Worth night.
Shreveport at Oklahoma City
night
San Antonio at Tulsa night
Eddie Uriels Says
Don McNeill
Will Tour
South America
New York Aug. 20 Of) Gossip:
Don McNeill the tennis star will
tour South America next Winter
leaving his racquets at home . . .
Ken Kavanaugh La. State's great
end has told friends hell sign
wifo the Chicago Bears imme-
diately after the all-star game.
Attention Detroit
One of the Cleveland news-
papers Is ranning a contest and
offering tickets to the worlds
aeries aa bait . . . Despite the
shortage of Juniors and sen-
iors Frank Thomas thinks his
Alabama team will have the
best set of backs since Dixie
Howell and Co. wrecked Stan-
ford In the 1885 Rare Bawl
The Texas League suit must be
mellowing Dizzy Dean. He told
our Austin Bealmear the other
day that Bob Feller has more stuff
right now than he (Diz) ever had.
Thats popping off in reverse for
Dizzy . . . Saratoga has launched
a new drive on bootleg bookies
. . . The Denver Post's baseball
tournament weather record still is
intact 25 years of baseball with-
out once having to honor a rain
check.
Paradise
That little Item abont foe
great bam Ashing down in
North Carolina's Currituck
Bound brought a howl from
Florida . . . Fete Norton of The
Tampa Tribune wires the boys
down Ms way throw ail of em
under It pounds back Into foe
Gulf ... But well still stick to
North Carolina . . . For crying
out loud u nice big one jumped
right into L. D. Ennis' boat the
other day.
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
(By The Associated Press)
American League
Batting Radcliff St Louis
362; Appling Chicago 344.
Runs Williams Boston 99;
McCosky Detroit 92.
Runs Batted In Greenberg
Detroit 104; Foxx Boston and
Di Maggio New York 96.
Hits Cramer Boston 155;
Radcliff St Louis 154.
Doubles Boudreau- Cleveland
41; Greenberg Detroit 39.
Triples Finney Boston Keller
New York and McCosky Detroit
13.
Home Runs Foxx Boston 33;
DiMaggio New York 25.
Stolen Bases Case Washing-
ton 26; Walker Washington IB.
Pitching Newsom Detroit 15-
2; Rowe Detroit 11-2.
National League
Batting Walker Brooklyn and
Donning New York 327. '
Runs Frey Cincinnati 86;
Miae St Louis 83.
Runs Baited In F. McCormick
Cincinnati 93; Mize St Louis 88.
Hits F. McCormick Cincinnati
and Herman Chicago 141.
Doubled F. McCormick Cin-
cinnati 34; Hack Chicago 81.
Triples Ross Boston 12; Mize
St Louis 10. .
Home Runs Mize St. Louis
24; Rizzo Philadelphia and Nich-
olson Chicago 19.
Stolen Bases Reese Brooklyn
IB; Frey Cincinnati 13.
Pitching Fitzsimmons Brook-
lyn 12-2; Sewell Pittsburgh 10-3.
Shovel Types. 10300
Conneaut Ohio ODD Demand
for specialized types of shovels has
Increased to such an extent since
1000 that the American Fork and
Hoe Company's Conneaut plant
now ii equipped to make 10300
types of shovels wifo an output of
500 to 000 daily.
Standings
AMERICAN UAGIT
Results Monday
Boston IS Cleveland 7.
Detroit at Kn York rain.
Only three garnet scheduled.
Gamee Toredoy
Detroit st Mew York.
Cleveland at Barton.
Chicago at Philadelphia.
8t Loula at Washington.
RATIONAL LRAGl'R
Near York 9 Cincinnati 3.
Boston 1. Pittsburgh 0.
Only two gamm scheduled.
Gmm TimIij
New York at Cincinnati.
Brooklyn at St. Louis.
Boston at Pittsburgh.
Philadelphia at Chicago.
BmuHs Msntay
Oklahoma City not scheduled.
San Antonio S. Dallas 1.
Bhreveport 8. Fort Worth 3.
Houston S-l Tulsa 5-1.
Shreveport at Oklahoma City.
Beaumont at Fort Worth.
Houston at Dallas.
San Antonio at Tulsa.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
mH )Kig
Minneapolis 6 Toledo 4. (Second
game called end fourth curfew).
Columbus 4 Bt Paul 1.
Kansas City 8. Louisville 2.
Indianapolis 1 Milwaukee 0.
Gamm Tneaday
Minneapolis at Toledo.
St. Paul at Columbus.
Kansas City at Louisville.
Milwaukee at Indianapolis.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Memphis 4-0 Birmingham 1-3.
Nashville 3. Atlanta 2.
Knoxville 11 Chattanooga 0.
Only garnet.
Gum TimIiv
Chattanooga at Atlanta.
Nashville at Knoxville.
New Orleans at Birmingham.
Memphis at Little Rock.
SEMI-PRO TOURNAMENT
AT WICHITA
(By The Associated Press)
Todays schedule (time is Cen-
tral Standard)
1 p.m. Wilmington Del. vs.
Glcndive Mont
3 p.m. Springfield Ohio vs.
St Louis.
6 p.m. Wichita Stearman vs.
Clarksburg W. Va. .
8 p.m. Duncan Ole vs. Chi-
cago. 10 p.m. Racine Wis. vs. Still-
water Ok.
Yesterday's Results
Wilmington Del. 9; Phoenix
Ariz. 2.
Trenton N. J. 10; Clarksburg
W. Va. 4.
Mt. Pleasant Texas 5; Wichita
Stearman -4 (10 innings).
Golden CoL 12; Mir tor City
Miss. 0.
YESTERDAYS STABS
(By The Associated Press)
Carl Hubbell Giants Racked
up third victory of season over
Cincinnati Reds wifo seven hit
performance.
Dick Errickson Bees Scatter-
ed nine hits in pitching Boston to
3-0 win over Pirates for ninth
win of season.
Joe Heving Red Sox Scat-
tered 12 hits as mates pounded
out decisive 18-7 victory over
league leading Indiana.
Mr. And Mrs. Bledsoe
Attend Wedding
(By Express Correspondent)
Cement Aug. 20 Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Bledsoe and Mattie
Lou attended the wedding Satur-
day morning at 8:30 of Mr. Bled-
soes niece Miss Martha Keeney
to Bob Evans of Amarillo at El
Sena The wedding party and
guests were entertained with a
breakfast at foe Southern Hotel
immediately after the wedding
ceremony.
Ret are Hama
Mrs. G. H. Ray Sr.. Miss Maur-
Ine Ray and Mrs. Tillman Witt
and son Paul returned Saturday
from a two weeks' vacation to
Colorado Springs and Manltou.
VWta Cemeat
Miss Adriana Vreeland of Ada.
Ok. was the guest of Mr. and
Mrs. L. A. Williams this week-
end. Miss Vreeland waa an early
timer living in Cement from 1905
until IBIS. This is the lint visit
back In 27 years.
Golfers Show
More Caution
New York Aug. 20 W It's
hard to believe but golfers ap-
pear to be a trifle more cautious
than they were a few years back.
At least there aren't so many
of them willing to spend five
dollars on the slim chance tint
they'll qualify for foe National
Amateur Championship whi:h
will be played at the Winged Foot
Club . Mamaroneck N. Y. Sept.
9-14.
The entry list for the amateur
shows the same downward trend
that waa seen in the open cham-
pionship. The official figures an-
nounced today by the United
States Golf Association show that
just 756 entries were accepted.
That's the lowest total with one
exception of any year since 1933.
When the amateur waa played at
Portland Ore. in 1937 there were
only 619 entries.
The number of places allotted
to each site where sectional qual-
ifying rounds will be played next
Tuesday were based as usual on
the size and strength of foe fields.
The entry totals and qualifying
places of each section Included:
District Entries Places
Tuba Ok 16 3
Ice Creamers
Millers Win
Erratic fielding turned foe
breaks to the Shields Ice Cream-
ers and Chic kasha Millers city
softball league leaders as they
took the opening gomes of foe
double-elimination playoff series
that opened at Grady Field park
before a big crowd Monday night
Shields registered four runs in
foe last of the seventh frame to
take a 7-8 decision from foe Phil-
lips Traders wifo McCombs get-
ting credit for the win and Gib-
son losing after enough chances
had been offered to retire the
side. It was Jack Parrish's blow
that won the game after two er-
rors had permitted foe Ice Cream-
ers to knot the count
Misjudged blows that fell safe-
ly in the outfield were the cards
foe Millers had in the hole as
they stepped Conoco and Chil-
dress 5-2 behind Mathews cut-
ting the corners wifo his offer-
ings and backed up by good sup-
port afield.
Tuesday night beginning st 8:15
Shields plays the Millers and Con-
oco takes on Phillips.
Doubles Play
Is Wide Open
Brookline Mass. Aug. 20 (A)
Refreshed by a 24-hour respite
due to drenched courts foe na-
tion's leading tennis players to-
day begin play In one of foe most
wide open national doubles tourn-
aments in history.
Not even such defending cham-
pions as Alice Marble and Sarah
Palfrey appeared assured of vic-
tory for among their rivals were
f.ich strong teams as Margaret
Osborn of San Francisco and Paul- 1
ine Betz of Beverly Hills Calif.
and foe British Wightman cup-
gters Mary Hardwick and Valerie
Scott Both of those tandems
forced foe champions to three
sets before they won last week's
Essex County Club's doubles
titles.
Frank Parker of Beverly
Hills and Don McNeill of Ok-
lahoma City topped the mens
draw bet two weeks age they
were beaten by Gardnsr Mal-
loy of Corel Gables and Henry
Frnsoff of Seattle in n four-set
match. That south-west team
has been seeded fourth here
and the others ranked In the
drew were Bobby Riggs of Chi-
cago and Welby Van Horn of
Loa Angeles the No. 2 team
and Jack Kramer of Montebello
Calif. and Ted Schrieder of
Glendale Calif.
Parker and McNeill were slated
to open against Joe Gow and Art
Prochaska foe experienced Hart-
ford (Conn.) players and Riggs
and Van Horn drew a Boston en-
try Tom Jansen and G. Holmes
Perkins. Mulloy and Prusoff were
pitted against E. V. Seixas and
William Vogt rf Philadelphia In
the first round and Kramer and
Schrocder against Norman Drake
and A1 Stitt of Boston.
Early upsets appeared unlikely
in foe women's division for Miss
Marble and Miss Palfrey drew
such inexperienced opponents as
Nancy Amory of Beverly Farms
and Joan Humphrey of Manches-
ter while Miss Osborn and Miss
Betz were paired against Mrs.
George W. Wightman of Brook-
line and Mrs. Gretl Dupont of
Loa Angeles.
Honey
Lite for foe male horse starts as
a colt grows up to be a stallion
or is gelded and becomes a geld-
ing; the female starts life as a fil-
ly and becomes a mare. New-born
of either sex may be referred to
as foals.
Christmas Rush
During foe week or two pre-
ceding Christmas more than
9150 000 pieces of first-class mall
are handled daily by foe New
York City postoffice an Increase
of 40 per cent of the regular daily
business.
A glass level full of water
with Ice ' extending above the
water line will not overflow
when the tee melts.
School Starts Soon!
DAVIS SHOE SHOP
ns a. at
Mr. And Mrs. Bilbrey
Entertain At Dinner
(By Express Cerrespondeet)
Verden Aug. 20 Mr. and
Mrs. L H. Bilbrey had aa their
guests for Sunday dinner: Don-
nis Lovell of Anadarko Mrs. A.
W. Nunnery and son. Arthur a f
Chic kasha and Mrs. T. J. Nun-
nery of Granite.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hamrick's
Sunday dinner guests were: Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Hamrick of
Tuttle. Mrs. Fern Aniinoro and
daughter Angeline of Chic kasha
and Mr. and Mrs. Russel Hamrick
and son Billy Riy and Miss Ad-
dle Hamrick of Verden.
Teacher Begins Wash
Miss Dorothy Lokey of Walters
foe vocational home economics in-
structor of the Verden schools
came Friday to take up her work.
Go To Carlsbad
Mrs. B. F. Loveless and ion
Sam and Mrs. P. S. Kern and son
Charles left Monday for Carla-
bad N. M. to spend foe week.
Goes To California
Leo Talklngton waa to leave
Tuesday for an indefinite stay in
Los Angeles Calif.
Slightly Improved
Mrs. W. E. Sage who has been
seriously ill from a heart attack
since Thursday is reported as
slightly improved.
Mrs. Josephine Arnett who has
been very ill for some time is
improving slowly.
Attend Reunion
Mr. end Mrs. W. A. Lamb and
daughter Miss Florence attend-
ed a family reunion at Wichita
Falls Texas Sunday.
Read Dally Express Want Ada.
DiaWn9 k
step
gmoUo
pleas1
mmmr
THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE
Fnt Troubles Cameled
Caras Bewared
DR. IV. C. BULLARD
Chiropodist and red lariat
603 Chlckaiha Phone 310
In Modem Beauty Shop
$5 to $51
ON YOUR
SIGNATURE
$56 to $756
On Any Good Security
Peoples Finance Co.
161 N. 4th Phono 2246
Rneeell Corrigan Mgr.
Cold FUR Storage
and DRY CLEANERS
NEW CHICKASHA
LAUNDRY
PHONE 157
Beware of MOTHS
Have Year Winter Clothes
Cleaned aad Pressed and i.
Returned la MOTH-PROOF
:
NO EXTRA CHARGR
HAMILTON'S
'n nneile P. O. Phene MS
1.
H - .
. V-1 1s
4.
A
i.-.'-r-..
V '
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The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 164, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 20, 1940, newspaper, August 20, 1940; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1882992/m1/5/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Journalism%22: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.