The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1945 Page: 2 of 10
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Page 2 General News.
Gen. Hodges' Armor Envelopes
Nazi T roops In Western Reich
Prisoners Rival Winners Announced I Smaller Nations
Winner in the Junior high
Study Vote Plan
By HAL BOYLE
With the U. S. First army in
Germany March 29 (Delayed)
(97 The greatact maaa ol German
troop left in western Germany
was being enveloped tonight by
fast charging elements of LL Gen.
Courtney H. Hodges armor which
had swung north to within 10
miles of Paderbom.
Compressed in a vast packet
between the British on the
north the First army swinging
p from the south and the 0.
8. Ninth army smashing threagh
the Bohr from the west were
many of the finest remaining
units under the swastika.
In number of prisoners taken
it well may rival the pockets at
Mon . Belgium said one First
army officer.
In that battle the Germans lost
some 17000 troops as prisoners.
As a result of this epic trap Amer-
ican forces were able to thrust
through unmanned portions of the
Siegfried line last September.
In the envelopment area facing
the First army was a depleted
Nazi division with an estimated
strength of no more than 15000
troops but opposing the British
were other strong forces of un-
determined strength.
Other armored columns ram-
paged eastward int) the bare de-
fenseless heart of Germany as
Hodges sent the northward-
thrusting forces from Barburg
through Grankenburg and Mede-
' bach. Medebach is west of the
Eder dam bombed by the Royal
Air Force in May 1943 setting
off a disastrous flood.
By mldaftemoon these columns
had travelled up to 55 miles and
were still rolling.
Medebach lies IS miles south-
west of Kassel and M south of
Paderbom.
Faderbera was declared one
ef the main eonoentmtiea points
far the Germans In this region.
It was from there that German
parachute troops took off dar-
ing the December breakthrough
and insz behind the Ameri-
can lines In the Monechan area.
Picturing the remaining Ger-
man army in the west as an un-
willing host kept at the front
only through fear on officer
commented:
No two men can trust cam
other. They all know its a lost
causa for them and the armys
heart is no longer in it They
know they arc only fighting now
to keep a bunch of skunks from
being hung.
Besides the divisions now com-
mitted the Germans arc believed
to have as reserves a few Volks-
sturm or Home Guard divisions
hut American commanders dis-
miss these are worthless.
Columns of refugees walking
back along the military roads
toward their hemes lu Belgium
and Frans are becoming a
serious truffle hazard and tho
army is new making every at-
tempt to free so them in their
present locations until tho ad-
vance has swung farther for-
ward. This Is almost impossible
because with each new town
taken hundreds of farmer war
prisoner and slave laborers hit
far the open road they hope
leads to heme. Many soldiers
tom them gifts of food choco-
late and dgarcta as they trudge
post.
In Altenklrchen 700 allied refu-
gees were grouped yesterday. One
walked across the street to wash
his face and found a German
wine cellar.
Every refugee lined up behind
him and they broke open every
bottle and barrel in the cellar.
In about an hour there were
700 roaring drunk refugees said
a officer But after what they
have been through you couldn't
blame them for wanting to taste
the Joys of liberty.
No. 3
Continued
From Page I
lion with the BrlUsh
army planging eastward rapid-
ly ander a security blackout
and may ha well beyond that
point after spearing vlrlaally
anoppesed la the headwater
ef the Ruhr wlthla 19 miles ef
Faderbera.
Moscow dispatches said Mar-
shal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's Third
Ukraine army had Invaded Aus-
tria stabbing into tho low range
of hills Just inside the frontier
and threatening momentarily to
lay siege to Vienna after their
one-day 30-mile dash through
western Hungary. Tho Russians
had seized Kapuvar fortified
Hungarian border town 43 miles
southeast of Vienna and an-
nounced an outflanking drive by
other troops on tlis vital Bratis-
lava gap area.
The German high command an-
nounced that the great Baltic port
of Danzig waa occupied by Red
army troops.
GIRL Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Brown Lindsay announce the
birth of a six-pound 14-ounce
girl at I o'clock Thursday night
in a local hospitaL
BOY Michael Loon la the name
chosen for the six-pound three-
ounce boy born March 25 to AS
and Mrs. George Leon Carpenter.
GIRL Karen Lee la the name
chosen for the seven-pound
seven-ounce boy born March 3J
to Pie. and Mn. Eugene Weber.
JHS Hobby Show
Winners Announced
Winner in the Junior high
hobby show were announced Fri-
day by Bob A mould principal.
In order of pladngs they are:
Art (drawing and painting):
Lottie Handke Bobby McClung
Joy belle Wheeler.
Handcraft: Jennie Lee Martin
Louise McConnell Jerry Baird.
Collections: Reford Bond III
Bill Pltchford Lawrence Cook.
Woodwork: Jack Burnell Jr
Fred Eslick Donald Brooks.
Homestead Exemption
Filing Closes Monday
Monday is the last day for
home-owner to file for home-
stead exemptions Clyde McCau-
ley county assessor pointed out
Friday.
Since April 1 is Sunday Mon-
day will be the last day.
Grady Agents
At 4-H Meetings
M. G. Tucker county agent and
Miss Felice Branigan assistant
home demonstration agent at-
tended meetings Wednesday of the
Lucille and Hawkins 4-H clubs.
Twenty members were present
at the Lucille meeting which was
presided over by the president
Anita Rogers.
Anita Roger and Nina Hendrix
gave a team demonstration on
How to Make and Use a Hem
Gage.
Juanita Roger discussed Good
Grooming" and Herman Rogers
discussed The Value of Various
Feed for Hogs.
Thera were 41 present at the
Hawkins meeting which was pre-
sided over by C. L. Lewis prod-
dent. Mary Pearl Kiser and Betty
Ruth Parole gave a team demon-
stration on making and using the
hem gage.
Imogene Collier dlscumed "Good
Grooming" and Charley Rogers
Feed for Hogs.
Tho following achievement
port wes turned in: Six gardens
planted; live household articles
made; six fruit trees planted; two
garments made; 14 dishes pre-
pend; 179 pounds of scrap sold;
13 terraces made and four wash-
out checks made.
Both clubs mat In separate
sessions for hoy and girls. Miss
Branigan spoke to the girls on
clothing and good posture and
Mr. Tucker talked to the boy
concerning livestock production
and managing.
Mrs. L. Foster
Club Hostess
Plans to servo the Carl Dunn
sate April 4 wen made at a meet-
ing Thursday of tho Friend Home
Demonstration dub in the home
of Mr. Lloyd Foster.
Mrs. Charlie McAleater presided
over the meeting which was at-
tended by 33 members.
The group voted to buy five
dozen Jars for canning exhibit.
Miss Ruth Petermann county
home demonstration agent dis-
cussed Dairy Products in the
Diet and displayed a number of
articles made from milk.
Mrs. Guy Buser ted a lesson on
"Producing Better Dairy Prod-
ucts." She was assisted by Mrs.
Hubert Miser and Mrs. Russell
Reeves.
At the close of the meeting a
shower was given for Mrs. Ernest
Penny.
No. 1
Continued
From Page 1
that the beard would determine
at the hearing whether It can
hear the dispute directly dis-
pensing with the customs ry
procedure ef naming a special
panel.
For a few hours tho stalemated
contract talks appeared heeded
for spectacular 11th hour success
under the guidance id Labor Sec-
retary Perkins.
These hopes were dashed how-
ever by operator refusal to ac-
cept her proposals for a r
working agreement to replace the
one expiring tomorrow midnight.
Misa Parkins immediately certi-
fied the case as a dispute to the
War Labor Board.
This is the first step toward
possible government control ol
the mines.
The board waa expected as its
first move to propose that the
present contract be extended with
any eventual waff adjustments
to bo retroactive. This however
is a point to which tho operator
previously have objected vigor-
ously. The labor secretary yesterday
electrified the month-old nego-
tiations by suggesting a contract
which John L. Lewi grabbed up
almost immediately in behalf of
his United Mina Workers.
Miss Perkins then turned to the
operators but there bar dramatic
overtures stalled.
In a reply handed her last
before midnight the opera tors
protested the proposal would
cost 51SMM.MS a year a
99.41 a week to the average
miner's pay sad 39 crate to the
east of a ton ef coal wlthrat
adding a temp la the output.
Miss Perkins still looking fresh
after hours of persuasive bar
gaining said the operators also
refused to agree to extend the
current contract because of her
insistence on the retroactive foster
London March 30 (97 States-
men of smaller nations studied
today strategy for combatting the
move by Soviet Russia and the
United States for triple voting
power In the proposed world se-
curity organisation assembly. Some
were -believed counting upon
France and China to help block
tho plan.
Representatives ef tho little
countries wonted over leegn
domination by the Big Three
expreseed surprise at the Waeh-
fasten dlariosnra that Rossis
and the United States would
claim three votes eaeh to bal-
ance the British empire's six.
Some spokesmen said they re-
garded the proposal as a trading
device to offset attempts- by
smaller nations to obtain more
xdent voices In the assembly
i Mhers considered increased power
for the big nations a relegation of
the' smaller nations to rubber-
stamp roles.
Representatives of such coun-
tries as the Netherlands and Bel-
gium would say for the record
only that the report of tho plan
had Just been brought to their
attention and was being studied
by foreign ministers.
For gn ids nee a familiar
term in diploma tie a Darters to
convey a governments private
view a spokesman for one of
them said the proposal would
be sure to stir a major contro-
versy at the 8aa Francises con-
ference opening April 85 and
that the dterawdoa would over-
shadow even the issue af veto
privilege for a major power in
prospective league military ac-
tios against iteeif.
Spokesmen contended that
neither France nor China would
support a proposal which would
give them a voice smaller then
those of tho Big Three. One of-
ficial said the best solution to re-
move tho snarl over voting would
be for Russia the United States
and the British each to be given
a single vote.
Some said privately that the
three-vote plan might be with-
drawn as a trade if the smaller
nations' softened their clamor for
greater representation in the
league council This however ap-
peared unlikely. The British sepa-
rately are pressing claims to votes.
Short Stories
Mrs. Jack Mallraff and chil-
dren 1615 South Eighth left today
for Grandfield to visit relatives.
Dr. and Mrs W. 8. Corbin and
daughter Mrs. P. A. Meat-ham
have returned from a two weeks
visit in Marlin Texas.
William Yaaag fanner Chick
asha resident is reported to be
showing improvement following
a major operation in a hospital at
Long Beach Calif. His condition
has been regarded as critical He
is a son nf Mr. and Mrs. L G.
Nichols 3016 Texas.
Mrs. Johnson
Rites Conducted
Funeral services for Mrs. Mild-
red Lucille Johnson 30 Nlnnekah
were held Thursday afternoon at
the Nlnnekah Baptist church by
Rev. L. W. Royxdcn pastor.
Music was furnished by a quar-
tet composed of Mr. and Mrs.
Neal Wind Mrs. J. A. Anthony
and Woodrow Hamilton accom-
panied by Mrs. Joe Bird. They
sang Does Jesus Care" In the
Garden and Nearer My God to
Thee."
Flower girls were bliss Barbara
Webb Miss Verna B. Wynn Miss
Erma Lee Gynn. Miss Francis
Giger and Miss Myrtle Richard-
son. Pallbearers Included: Ralph
Gogger Clyde Durham Amuel
Spencer Doe James Bill James
and Dan Foster
Burial was In the Bush 8pringa
eemetenr under the direction of
tiM Chlckaihi Funeral home.
First Army Spearheads
Reach Paderbom Today
With U. S. First Army March 30
(97 Spearheads of the First army
reached Paderbom today and
drove on with virtually no oppo-
sition Tho armored drive now has car-
ried more than 125 miles in five
days.
Reports from leading elements
wet running at least eight and
one-half hours behind actual ad-
vances. Only a 65 -mi Is gap remained
between advance elements of
British and American armor
MaJL Goa. Maartee Rose's
Third Armored Division whlrh
led tho drive from the Raer
river to the Rhine waa spear-
heading the new plunge ratting
off the Ruhr Censorship aha
permitted the naming of MaJ
Gen. Terry Allen's 164th Infan-
try Division fallowing p be-
hind tlie Third Armored and
MaJ. Gen. Robert W. Basbrourk's
Seventh Armored IHvlatea
The task force setting the pace
for the First army drive is com-
manded hr LL CuL Prentice Yeo-
mans of Syracuse N. Y Columns
commanded by LL Col Walter
Richardson of Bcaumonl Tex-
and LL Col. John Welmom of
Southern Pines N. CH are running
almost even with Yeomans.
tDl (Dftcksslra (Ok.) flaflg
War In Brief
. (By Tbm AmiHiHI Ft)
The Westers Front: American
First army raced northward in
dazzling dash 65 miles from Junc-
ture with eastwird-plunging Brit-
ish and 186 miles from Berlin;
Ninth army tanks broke loose and
sped east through Ruhr now cut
off by the First; Third army
veered north to point 31 miles
east of Giessen and 168 from Ber-
lin; Seventh army bunt through
Odenwald on - 20-mila front;
French reported across the Rhine
In 10-mila bridgehead.
The Birataa Front: Russians
massed on Austrian border; free
Austrian radio said Bed army
crossed border; last-ditch defend-
ers being cleared from Danzig;
East Prussian pocket southwest
of Koenigs berg cleared.
The Italian Front: Light Ger-
man artillery fire directed against
V. 8. Fifth army front near Bo-
logna as movement waa spotted
behind enemy lines.
The raeifie Freni: U. S. 14th
air force has abandoned air base
at Laohokow 200 miles northwest
of Hankow in fact of Japanese
offensive; powerful British tad:
force Joined Americans' naval as-
sault on Ryukyu island approaches
to Japan; Americans invaded
Mactan and Cauit islands in
Philippines off captured Cebu
city; resistance on Cebu disor-
ganized; sporadic fighting report-
ed on Luzon
Mn. Eggleston
Rites Conducted
Funeral service! for Mrs. Phelba
L. Eggleston 18 who died in an
auto accident Tuesday morning
were held at 10 a. m. Friday in
the Church of Christ at Rush
Springs.
Burial was in the Rush Springs
cemetery Chickasha Funeral home
in charge.
Songs Included Previous Mem-
ories by Raymond Murray and
Min Jane Mullican and We Meet
Somebody Again and Farther
Along by the choir.
Pall bearers were Earl Hanson
Otto Bryant Joe Atwell James
Travis Woodrow Harris and Ike
Cook. Flower girls were Virginia
Dyer Dorothy Davis Marry Har-
ris Lenora Workman Hazel Tay-
lor Mary Lovelace and Gladys
Harrison.
Immediate relatives of Mrs.
Eggleston are: Her husband who
is in the army in Europe; her
mother Mrs. Viola Stockton; and
two sister Billie Myrie Stockton
Chickasha and Mrs. Norma Finch
Pueblo Col
Pardon Parole
Work Discussed
Discussion of the work of the
state pardon and parole board
was given by J. F. Hatcher chair-
man at the weekly luncheon of
the American Legion Friday.
Crime is a disease and we
are not handling it correctly yet
he told the Legion. Some day
medical authorities will put into
operation a plan to help prevent
the disease of crime.
Tho pardon end parole board
was created by the people of Ok-
lahoma he explained and we
are trying to do what tha people
want dona.11
Prior to July 1944 the clemency
power was in tha hands of the
governor. Now it to in the hands
of the board members of which
serve four-year terms.
Thera ere several different
stands on clemency Mr. Hatcher
said. One group favors giving
all convicted criminals Ufa sen-
tence or death. Another favors
giving them an opportunity to
return to good citizenship.
It is the policy of the board
never to give a pardon but a
panda. Then if the freed man
does not become a good citizen
he is arrested and returned to
prison.
The board requires that at
least 10 years of a life sentence
and at- least one-third of other
sentences be served before
parole Is granted.
Defending clemency Mr. Hatch-
er told of numerous cases in
which mm were convicted and
later proven InnocenL He also
declared that especially men 18
to 21 in many cases can be
formed.
Tha group singing was led by
Ralph Conrad with Mrs. Frieda
Young at tha piano. .
Post Commander Chauncey
Goetting named the following
four men program chairmen for
the 'four April luncheons: Bill
Broderaon Mr. Hatcher Dr. Ken-
neth Shepard and Q. K. Hote-
apple. No. 2
Continued
From Fl(i I
tries after the Nazis lifted tha ex-
port ban on money several months
ago.
C Sending German technicians
" and scientific research ex-
perts to school and firms in for-
eign countries at low cost af-
fording tha German an excellent
opportunity to design and perfect
new weapons.
C A broad propaganda program
w aimed first at softening up
the allies through a subtle plea
for fair treatment of Germans"
and later giving rebirth to all
Nazi doctrine and furtherlni
German ambitions for work
domination.
listing United Nations agree-
ments the state department said
the peace loving nation of tha
world are united and will taka
such action as is necessary to
smash the economic and political
foundation of future Garmon ag
grosrion.
0 6 9
Tha U. 8. navy is using search-
light so powerful that they can
shoot a beam of light through 23
mile of ink itiAwM
fixyt
Food Experts Forecast Plenty
Of Vitamins-But Not In Cans
By 8. BURTON HEATH and
DOUGLAS LARSEN
(NRA Staff Correspondents)
Washington March 30. You
should get plenty of vegetable
vitamins this year provided you
have time to prepare tho fresh
varieties and provided your food
budget will stand the strain. Both
government and private experts
say that staple fresh vegetables
will be in relative abundance as-
suming that our Victory garden-
ers do- as well as last summer.
But canned goods are becoming
almost museum pieces.
Supermarket Merchandising re-
garded in the food tradee as a
very reliable publication head-
lines a processed food survey:
Outlook Dork. That is almost
optimistic in comparison with
some of the figures gathered from
OPA WFA trade publications
nH food dealers.
Tha United State ended 1944
with tha smallest reserves of
canned vegetables fruit and
Juices since the war began be-
cause tha armed forces have to
depend upon canned goods to feed
fignters both on land and at sea.
For this purpose and for lend-
lease the government took 44 per
cent of the pock out of which we
would normally ha eating this
year.
Tha OPA predicts that with de-
mand at an all-time top civilians
will get about two-thirds of the
canned good they used before
the war. That to over-all. Heres
part of the breakdown:
CANNED VEGETABLES
Retail stores have 36 per cent
less canned vegetables now than
they had a year ego. For the
year their supply will be a third
under that for 1944. The wont
spots are peas snap beans and
com.
CANNED FRUITS
There will be less than half the
pre-war supply of canned fruits
and 26 per cent less than last
year's tight aliotmenl The new
supply is off only 14 per cent
from last year's but in 1944 we
eta up an 8000000 case carryover;
this year wa must live on what
tha armed force do not need of
the 1944-45 pack.
How serious the situation in
canned fruits has become is in-
dicated by a survey made by Roy
L. Pratt of the California Pack-
aging Corp. who as long ago as
last August found tha retail stocks
of canned peaches down a third
In a year fruit cocktail down 70
per cent pears down 62 per cent
and pineapple down 20 per cenL
Mr. Pratt reports that 42 per
cent of retail aims checked had
Points And Protocol Pose
Problems For San Francisco
Conference Hosts
By ETHEL BOGAEDUB
NRA Correspondent
Sen Francisco Mr San
Francisco is in the same quandary
the village social leader who
has invited the new parson to din-
ner and not only cant get a
chicken but cant find out If the
person will bring his wife.
The desk of San Francisco's
Mayor Rogert D. Lapham is
stacked with queries from hope-
ful hostesses who'd like to grab
off a few big-wigs to llonize when
the United Nations delegates come
to town. Since the State Depart-
ment has decreed a minimum of
social actlvitie the mayor gal-
lantly refers these queries to the
departments advance guard
which as ceremoniously lumps
them right back in his lap. To
date there aren't any answer Its
Just a question of what rumor are
you believing todayf
Chief interest of the top drawer
bluefalood even Republican is
the possible arrival of FDR. Will
he bring his wife? When will he
stay?
HOTEL OR ESTATE?
The SL Francis Hotel is
ting In a strong bid for the official
presence since it has a semi-private
ride entrance and elevator.
Ora rumor has tha president and
his entourage quartered on tha
William P. Roth (Matson Lines)
estate TilolL Another places him
at the William Crocker (banking)
Newplace." Both are down the
peninsula. Then theres the possi-
bility of a warship in San Fran-
cisco Boy
Whether or not OPA will re-
lease enough red points to feed
the visitors at oven tha Class A
hotel let alone permit tha local
folk to entertain them in the man-
ner for which San Francisco is
famous is another matter still in
the rumor stag Even with point
beef end chicken are definitely on
the scarce rid
Liquor is another problem.
What of tha amenities with dele-
gate say some from North Af-
rica who frown upon spirits?
That's a complication Just now In
the plana for the da luxe United
Nations art show which Is ex-
pected to attract soma 5.000 guests
to the De Young Memorial Mu-
seum in Golden Gate Park Scions
of tiie De Young family are re-
for s kaffae k latch for teetotalers?
State Department advene men
are warning eager hostesses not
to consider thie a miniature
World's Fair and break out cham-
pagne in 44 language but to let
San Francisco ha her colorful and
charming self.
Just tha same everybody who
knows somebody in the Stale De-
partment is angling for prefer-
ence in tha limited entertainment
schedule.
There waa a touch of Golden
I Gat International Exposition
I hospitality in tho first social gun
Fewer canned seeds will he fan
no canned peaches
cent had no fruit cockl
cent had no pineapple
cent had no pears.
CANNED JUICES
Canned Juices are going to be
as scarce is canned fruits 52 per
cent under pre-war and 11 per
cent under fast year. Tha rub
Is hardest in citrus Juices grape-
fruit orange and a blend of tho
two. Not only are the army and
navy taking huge quantities of
them but hurricane losses last
year are expected to reduce the
new pack greatly. To get what
tha fighting men need the gov-
ernment has had to step up its
aet-aside percentages' and is tak-
ing 100 per cent of the grapefruit
at alL 40
xktaUj 53
da and 56
FROZEN FOODS
Tho supply of frozen foods ap-
pears excellent. But this business
is so small In contrast with can-
ned goods that lt can not even
irike a dent in the canned goods
shortage. You can expect to find
high blue point values on most
processed foods that will force
you to the green grocers for most
of your vegetables and fruits.
FRESH PRODUCE
The only anticipated shortage
in fresh produce U In what the
trade knows as luxury Items e
plant cucumber celery and the
like.
The potato situation looked very
Mayer Lapham . hopes ballet-
weal ha
filled by Mr William Denman
wife of the U. S. Federal Judge
and a member of tha exclusive
womens board of the exposition.
Mr Denman snared Assistant
Secretary of State Dean Acheson
lor a preliminary dinner this
week to which a tow notables
were bid.
Until the State Department sets
up protocol Mayor Lapham and
his fellow hosts and hostesses can
do little.
The mayor however has on
suggestion. He's had an offer from
an automobile manufacturer of the
loan of tha special bullet-proof
limousine in which the British
king and queen toured Amerlc He
hopes nobody will need 11
Hold Everything
Hereafter the West Wall will
ha known as tha Western Ex
PWlttSE
4 an grocery shelves this year.
bad for a time. Tha army had
tied up most of tha old stock
with priori tie and then found
Itself unable to move a lot of
what lt had because of the storm-
hred shortage of freight cars. Ob-
servers feared that huff quan-
tities of potatoes would begi:
sprouting before they could he
used. Fortunately railroad can
were made available to han
old crop potatoes and now new
Red Blisses are beginning to ap-
pear from Florida and Taxa
with tha California crop soon to
me. Thera are many potatoes
still available In Maine for civilian
us and the situation seems to be
improving. Sweat potatoes
plentiful
The fresh vegetable situation
has hem improved for civilian
by tha vary thing that to making
tha processed food supply more
critical That is tha emptying of
army camps in tha United State
which formerly drew heavily on
fresh vegetable and the soldiers
transfer abroad where they must
live out of can
Rice which often replaces po-
tatoa may become tight because
of the unexpectedly rapid succes-
ses of our Pacific farce As they
liberate increasingly large areas
whom residents live mostly
xlc the government set-aside to
feed our Pacific protegee has
turned an abundance of rice into
a 50-50 edge which may soon be-
come scarcity.
Public Invited To
Food Nutrition Clinic
All persons interested in foods
and nutrition an urged to attend
the nutrition school" scheduled
for 10 m. Saturday in the educa-
tion room of the Public Service
company. Miss Ruth Patarmann
chairman ef the county nutrition
committee state
Mias Martha McPheter exten-
sion nutrition specialist who ar-
rived in Chickasha Friday for a
conference with tha Grady and
Caddo homa demonstration agent
will have a part an the program
as will several other authoritie
During the afternoon a film
Kids Must Eal stoning tha fam-
ous Quiz Kid will he shown. At
though the 'school lunch program
will be the big topic of discussion
the meeting should prove val-
uable to every home maker Miss
Petermann announce
THREE NAZI SUBS
CAPTURED AT DUISBURG
With Tha U. & Ninth Army
March 30 (97 Three German sub-
marines were captured In the dock
of Duisburg today by troops
under the command of Col Edwin
Van Bibber of Bel Air Md. Tha
size and condition of tha U-boats
were not reported.
Thrraebcrry Arrested
Washington Match 30 (97 The
FBI today anonunced tha arrest
of Randel O.- Throneberry de-
scribed by the bureau aerly this
year as one of tha 13 mast sought-
after criminate in tha United
State
Hard Eggs
Chicago Match 30 (97 Service-
men are going to get a sunrise
when they pick up soma of the
eggs which will be used in the
egg rolling contest at Grant park
Sunday. TO save food brightly
colored wooden egzs will be
used in the contest hut there'll
ha 5000 real hens egg to
Flyaa Leave Berne
Rom March 30 (97 Edward J.
Flynn personal emissary of Presl
dent Roosevelt left Bong yester-
day after completing his discus-
sions In Italy. He expects to con-
far In Forte with French leader
Including Gen. De Gsulle and
then go to London far further
discussion
Satisfaction Is assured at Brown'; and
yet the cost it within the means of all.
Brown Funeral Home
W. P. Brown
Funeral Director
IL
FRIDAY MARCH SO 196
Mrs. Ramsey
Service Held
Funeral services for Mr Nonna
Ramsey 19 wars held Thursday
afternoon in tha chapel of the
Chickasha Funeral homa with
Rev. Harold K. Grave pastor of
tha First Baptist church offldat-
&Mr Roy Holt and Mr BIU
Sutherland sang Sometimes
WeTl Understand and What a
Friend. They were accompanied
by Mr Frieda Young.
Pallbearers were J. S. Wray
R. L. Stidham Ben Father
Charles Simnnd J. M. Atwell
R. L. Hargrove and A. W. Whit
Interment was In the Rose Hill
cemetery under the direction of
tha Chickasha Funeral home.
She is survived for her parent
Mr. and Mr Ben Dillard Chick- 1
asha; three sisters. Mr Valla Maa (If
Miller Misa Lois Dillard and Misa
Virus Dillard Chickasha; and ora
brother J. C. Dillard army air
corp
Mullinax Baby
Service Today
Funeral services for Jacqueline
Gate Mullinax seven -month -old
daughter of Mr. and Mr Jack
Mullinax were to bo held at 2:30
oclock this afternoon in tha chapel
of the Brown Funeral home by
Rev. Paul Morgan pastor of the
Calvary Baptist church.
Interment wes to he in the Rose
Hill cemetery under the direction
of the Brown Funeral home.
Other immediate relatives sur-
viving are the grandparent Mr.
and Mr J. F. Mullinax of El
Reno and Mr. and Mr A. Don-
aldson of Cbickadia and a broth-
Stanley Dal
Nips Say Relief Ship
Course Is Changed
San Francisco March 30 (97
A Japanese Dome! news agency
dispatch today said the course of
tha steamer Awa Maru dis-
patched to deliver relief supplies
to American prisoners of war and
Internee had ham changed af-
fective April 3.
The wireless report directed to
tha United States and recorded by
the Federal Communications Com- . .
mission said circumstances had 7
made it imposrible for tha Awa 'f
Mara to enter Mojl Kyushu is-
land port of Japans Intend sea.
U. 8. Pacific fleet carrier aircraft
have recently raided Kyushu and
intend sea target
Dome! said tha Awa Mara had
bean sent to southern Asiatic
water Presumably it is due to I
return to Japan.
Local Markets k
Cotton
Cotton 1816 middling... .31 A9e
Grain 1
Milling wheal baste No. 1.11.48
Rya M3
Yellow shelled eon N 1. 1.197k
Yellow oar eon N I.... 1.14
White ear eon N X.... 1.20
Mixed shelled com 1.107k
Mixed ear corn 1.12
Oat No. reds AS
Kafir eon N X (cwL)... 1.69
Milo mate N X (cwt.). . 1.56
Bartey N X M
(Grades below No. 2 regular
OPA discounts) .
Broomcon per ton $300
Hay
Hay alfalfa N l .....933
Produce
Eggs Xle
Fryers 36c
Heavy hens 33c
Leghorn hens 20c
Croon N 1 52c
Cnam N X 49e
Chteagn Fndace
Chicago March 30 (97 BUT-
TER Firm; receipts 303119: mar-
ket unchanged. Centralized car-'
lota 584074
EGGS Receipts 17486; firm;
market unchanged.
Okla. City Livestock
Oklahoma City March 30 97
(WFA) Cattle 600; calves 300;
killing classes around steady; no
steers or yearlings offered; few
beef cows 9.00-11.00; cannera and
cutters mostly 9A0-9A0; bulla dull
and weak; veaten and calves 14.00 -down;
moat sales stacker steers
11.50-13.00.
Hogs 1100; butcher hog sows
and stags firm: stock pigs 33
higher: good ana choice barrows
and gilts 14.45; sows and stazs
13.70; load 64-lb. stock pigs 14.75.
Sheep 100; receipt! mostly new
crop lambs at 15.50; other classas
- WILL SILL
Fhal Mat fait ranks OU.
L B Nunnary & Co.
MUm al tit CkMalt A
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The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1945, newspaper, March 30, 1945; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1891086/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.