The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 82, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 14, 1949 Page: 1 of 10
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C&LAK33A
HISTORICAL SOCCCTT
OKLISOXA CITI OXLA
CHirXASUA MSTMCS wxania
Fossibla showers no tempera-
tum change tonight Wednesday.
Local tern pen turn: I pjn. today
(2; Monday night's tow U; Mon-
day's high 35. Bain .19 inch.
57TH YEAR NO. 82
TEN PAGES
CHICKASIIA OKLAHOMA. TUESDAY JUNE 14. 1949
(ASSOCIATED PBESS)
PRICE 5 CENTS
7
'i
Drew
Pearson
' i riiimiw i i
I Ml
MMm4 So
Washington
Bigfetf news from tho Orient
bm only been reported (O far in
the diplomatic cables. It la that
the Communist government of
.Busria and the new Communist
government of China am already
t each others throats. Mao Tie-
trad. conquering leader of the
Chirese Communists has become
Utterly anti-Russian.
Hero is the inside story of what
happened:
finder the Big four peace agree-
nent the key Manchurian city
ot Dairen was divided between
Russia and China Developed by
the Japanese Dairen stands at the
tip-end of the I -os-tun g penin-
sula. also at the terminus of the
sooth Manchurian railroad is one
of the bast seaports in north
China.
But when the Nationalist Chi-
nese moved out of their part of
Dairen the Russians promptly
moved in. And now that the Com-
munist! control all north and cen-
tral China Gen. Mao Tae-tung
sent work to Bussia that ho want-
ed to take over the Chincca half
of Dairen.
Whereupon the Buwianc mid no.
They mid .it emphatically and
they have refused to budge since.
As a result Mao Tse-tung and
Chinese Communist leaders are
boiling mad. They have come to
believe diet under the. much-
vaunted Bumtan-Cosnmuntet sys-
tem China may not even have as
much land as she did under the
old-fashioned capitalists.
BARKLEYS SON-IN-LAW
Washington's sanctimonious
newsmen say it shouldn't be writ-
ten about merely be bussed about
at Washington dinner tables. How-
ever. tm of dm political misfor-
tunes of Washington la the man-
ner in which tha vice president's
son-in-law Max Truitt is cash-
ing in on Alben LarUaya fine
Truitt is an able likable law
of ex-Attorney General
Homer Cummings. Both get plenty
of law practice on their own. How-
ever. since his fsther-in-law be-
came vice president ot the United
Slates Truitts law business has
expanded so the clients almost
Jortle each other' getting tnudo
tha doer -In
addition young Truitt is not
too selective. On his list are the
three chief dictators of the Latin
world franco of Spain Trujillo
of the Dominican republic and
Indirectly through the largest
Argentine shipping company
Peron of Argentina.
In fairness to tha vice president
. It should be noted that ho la fre-
quently earths opposite side of
tha fence from his son-in-law.
On the senate ' floor to' kill dw
Ti delands ' oil bill. Also when
Truitt registered as tha paid agent
of Dictator Franco and lobbied
for his full recognition Barkley
was known' privately to oppose
audi recognition.
. AT WHITE HOURS DINNUI
Meanwhile Truitt gets in on
soma of the most inner circle
parties in Washington thanks
to tha fact that his wild is effi-
cient hostess for the vies president
The White House dinner for Wins-
ton Churchill wee one of the most
exclusive evor thrown by die Tru-
. mans. Not ovwi aerators Tom Con-
rally and Artnur Vandenberg on
whom the ptiiAnt must depend
1 fur hie bipartisan foreign policy
Were invited.
But Lawyer-Lobbyist Max Truitt
IGNORING STABS
AND STRIFES
Latest of Max's operations has
bean to. demand that tha Mari-
time commission permit Standard
Oil of New Jersey to transfer six
modem oil tankers to the Pan-
amanian flag.
The Maritijnr commission has
refused to .do this tor Standard
Oil so Standard then hired the
versatile Max. Tha commtasion's
refusal waa baaed on the feet that
oil is getting scare in this country
and in time of war the nations
entire economy will depend on
having enough tankers to faring
In foreign oil. If the tankers am
under a foreign flag however the
United States loses control..
But since operation under the
Panamanian flag means lesa taxes
and lower wages. Max Truitt went
to bat for Standard OIL Ho pro-
posed that Standard Oil register
under the Panamanian flog six
modem tan ken built since 1942:
and threatened that if this wee nut
accepted by the Maritime com-
mission four tankers now building
would not be registered under the
Stats and Stripes.
"The Standard OH Company
wrote Truitt will have (four)
tankas which it desires to place
under American flag and registry
to be manned with citizen per-
sonnel provided It ia permitted to
transfer to Panamanian flag and
registry . . . The equivalent carry-
ing capacity of used tankers ...
The company therefore sug-
gests continued Truitt "that the
(Continued on Editorial Paga)
QUICKIES
By Kan Bayualds
I sum laid the baas off today
well lei's see I wander what
kind af fobs are affered In to-
day's Express Wait Adel"
Adult Leaders
For Day Camp
Are Announced
List Of Mothers
Assisting To Be
Given Later
Adult personnel far the' Girt
Scout day camp waa announced
today by Mrs. Fred Hallock. camp
director.
Mrs. HaBaek stated that the
list ie net yet complete and
that stber names will have to
be annauneei later. The Met ef
ethers whe will assist with the
camp alee ia toaampleta sad will
have to be sense need later she
All adult leaders will meet- at
1 pjn. Wednesday in the YWCA
cottage on tha OCW campus for
the first of two planning sessions.
The second will be hdd in the
cottage Thursday afternoon. '
' At that time tha group will work
out final details of plane for the
camp end unite win be tentatively
assigned to leaders Mrs. Hallock
aid. .
Mrs. Charles Hoover is camp
committee chairman and Mm.
Clyde Becker will servo Mrs.
Hallock as ambtant director of
the camp. Mrs. Ditto Hoover will
be businem manager and Mrs. 8. L
McEUioee la in charge of registra-
tion. ' Camp operation will be ander
tho direction of Mrs. Carl Leon-
ard. Mm. S. B. Banger Mbs
Mary Bailey and Mis. M. C.
Green. -In
charge ef tho waterfront win
bo Miss Lou Ann Bristol El Reno
a former . OCW student- Mies
Beistel baa spent a number of
yean in Girl Scout work and has
served ad water front director at
Lake Murray and at El Reno She
will be ambted by Mb Betty Joan
Dryden Mias La Varna McDaniel
Mias Sara Jane Woods; Mia Jons
Cornwell Mbs Bonnia Creeech
and Mm. Tom Blake
i Serving as unit leaden and as
aaristant unit leaders will be Mrs.
Archie Schuler Mrs. Ernest Hul-
sey Mrs. Buford Gentry Mrs.
Frank Worrell Mrs. Halph Steele
Mrs. Earl White; Mrs. Earl SulH-
van. Mm Oscar Watts Mm
JL M. Salyer Mm Gene Payne
Mm J. A. Slama. Mm R. B.
Hinton Mm E. W.MeMonrfa Mm
Herman Prague and Mm W. J.
Kemps.
Mm B. H. Coates and Mm
Bkhard Stall will be camp nurses.
nogram directors will be: Song
leader Mm Hoyt Caldwell assist-
ed by Miss Margaret Harriman
and Mm Clem Heidlafe; handi-
craft; Mm Bob Lackey; folk
dancing; Mbs Pat Pace; Miss
Idabclto Barnett Jdba Dean
Sanger Miss Bom Mary Webb
and Mia Judy BurtechL
Dramatics Mias Martha Tooth-
akar and Mia Ban Jana Led-
better; trails 10a Carolyn Juno
Boothe: and story telling. Mm
L E. Woods.
Joe Cantrell
Is Moderator
Joe Cantrell Cushing was
elected moderator of the Presby-
terian conference now being bud
on tha Oklahoma College for
Women campus.
A vice moderator and clerk
abo warn elected at the first
assembly period of tha conference
tide morning according to Bev.
Kenneth McCullough director.
Mbs Leu Ana Ceng Ingham
Oklahoma City wu elected
vice meitaratar. and Mbs Gall
Millar Ardmatu clerk. Them
three will serve ea the confer
turn eouneU.
Other youth members ef tha
council were to bo selected this
afternoon with the first council
meeting scheduled for tote this
afternoon.
' Chairmen and secretaries from
each of the four commissions of
tho conference will bo chosen to-
day to serve on'tho council making
a total of 11 young people In the
executive body.
Adults on the council will bo tho
director Mr. McCullough; regis-
trar and business manager Mrs.
G. B. Snyder Ponca City; and tho
adult advisors of tho commissions
Bev. Ben Butcher Blackwell; Mm
Glen Carey Guthrie; Bov. Jack
Pritchard Lawton; and Mrs.
Harold T. Baugh Meeker.
A total of 159 students and
faculty members are reported
registered for tho conference. Thb
includes approximately 132 young
Sterling School Bond
Issue (sets Approval
Oklahoma City June 14 (F)
Three school district bond issues
were approved today by tho state
attorney general's office.
They included a 921500 bond
Issue for e building and furniture
at Sterling in Comanche and
Grady counties; $79000 for a
school building at Tonkawa in
Kay county; and 548.000 for a alto
building and furniture at school
district No. $3 Tulsa county.
TULSA BUILDING
AHEAD OF SCHEDULE
Tuba Juno 14 (F Tho top
piece ef structural steel was put
In place today on tho First Na-
tional bank's now 11-story down-
town building 30 days ahead of
schedule. A huge American flag
was run up on a polo 353 feet
above tho ground.
The Stars and Stripes
iiOST people think tha flag may be displayed only from sunrise
to sundown. But did you know there era five places in the
United States where the flag b officially permitted to bo flown 24
hours a day? They are (1) on tha east and west front! id the
National Capitol in Washington whether or not congress is in
session. Flags are never taken down except to replace them with
new ones. The reaeon b that several years ago it was decided by
presidential proclamation there should always be one place in the .
nation when tho national emblem b always displayed. (2) To :
honor Francis Scott Kay. author of tho Star-Spangled Banner tha
Ministers Believed Reaching Betrloini Tyaag
Reunification
Plan Is Out
r n Aoaclatsi Pnsrt
The foreign ministers conference
in- Parte waa reported today to
bo working out a truce on Berlin
end setting up machinery Air east-
west trade in divided Germany.
The eenf eienee is expected to
wind a this week probably
Thursday It kas keen uaable
to acres an any plan far the
ramification of Germany. .
According to well - informed
circles the foreign ministers are
attempting to salvage some con-
crete results from Am aearion
marked by (harp and apparently
insurmountable differences be-
tween Bussia and tha west --
Thera fa expectancy the dele-
gates will reach agreement an
an Austrian peace treaty. They
abo heps to workout a limited
eoaoenial aceord for Gersaaay.
It would fix an exchange rate
for the west mark and the Soviet
east mark and amnia western
powers of transportation aeeea
. to Berlin.
It b e "live and lot livn policy."
Tho major problems unification
of Germany and a German peace
treaty will ha left to a group at
deputy ministers to study. They
will keep tha louea alive and pro-
vide a means of contact until an-
other foreign minister! confer-
ence b celled probably in Mew
York in the falL
Tho west 1 Berlin rail strikers
arranged a referendum today on
whether to accept the settlement
terms worked out by American
(See Page 2 No 1)
Negroes Apply
To Enter OU
Norman Juno 14 (F) Taking
advantage of a new state law
22 negroes have applied for
entrance to tho University of Okla-
homa on a segregated basis.
Three era seeking degrees of
doctor of philosophy 25 seek
master degrees and fivt wont
undergraduate work.
Until tha recent state legisla-
ture acted In the dosing days af
tho session it was against the
law for Negroes to enter tho
tele's while colleges.
The amended law itlll requires
segregation within the school how-
ever with tho Negroes having
either separate dsn rooms or doss
times.
The state re grata must also
certify that tha courses sought era
not offered at the state Negro
college.
Tho law was amended to comply
with federal court decisions that
Oklahoma must offer ib Negro
student education "substantially
equal to that offered to while.
Three Nesrace were admitted
under tha court ruling before
the law was chanced.
Rnscoe Dunjee Oklahoma Negro
leader and state director (or tho
National Association for tho Ad-
vancement of Colored People has
predicted a Negro enrollment of
100 at the university next hIL
The white enrolment b about
Forever
We Saw '
Mrs. Oscar Williams who re-
ported finding on old earthen
brown jug white men were ex-
cavating basement at her
homo; 410 North Eighth. Tho
Jug was about eight feet to the
ground. ... Johnny Davie who
maneges to keep fairly busy
whet with operating a businem
in town and running a farm on
tho outskirts of Chickasha. Yes-
terday was apricot picking time
end mono arc coming along.
Spraying the soma 50 or 100
pecan trees waa no small Job
' C. B. VanVnlkenburgh chuck-
ling aa he retold a story told
him by Kelly DeBusk eecretaiy
of tha Slate Gama and Fish
commission about an easterner!
visit to Uie Oklahoma panhandle.
. . . Overton Burney and W. H.
Thomson who abo have somd
good pioneer day stories along
thb lino; about Introduction of
"newcomers" to tho wmt 1
Northeast Has
12 Heat Deaths
Chicago June 14 (Ft Now Eng-
land today counted 12 deaths at-
tributed indirectly to tho heat in
thd last two days. No relief was
fat sight
Ilamldlty added to the dls-
eamfort hi tho eastern hat bell
but shawm bronchi temporary
retief to tha middle wait Bur-
lingtoa VL had high yesterday
af 94.
Rain fell in areas from lower
Michigan and Wisconsin south-
westward to Missouri in tho Ohio
valley parts of tho south and
tha great plains states. A wind
and rain storm described by the
weather bureau as a locally heavy
cloudburst' Tilt Dallas Texas
and surrounding communities.
Several towns wora flooded. A
40-car freight train was derailed
and wracked after rain washed
out tha tracks.
Basse rain cooled off western
sad northern New York state
teat siiM after two days af
raeard breaking heat
Warm humid weather waa fore-
cast for the New England and
. middle Atlantic states and tha
; Ohio valley. Tha mercury reached
i Into tho BOY in tho hot belt yes-
' terday. Tho country's top mark
however wu 107 at Las Vegas
Nev. In rontrart. Rapid City & D.
reported a maximum reading
of 53.
13 COMMUNISTS
SENTENCED TO DEATH .
Athens Juno 14 IF) Ten Com-
munists have been sentenced to
death by i military tribunal at
Tripods for participating In guer-
rilla activities In the Pelopon-
nesus. Among tho 10 was Takb
Moulopouloa representative of tho
Communist guerrilla government
in the awe with tha rank of
cabinet member. Three of those
santuwsd wora woman.
flag flies 24 hours a day over hb grave at ML Olivet cemetery
near Frederick Md. Nearby b tha Key monument erected and
unveiled in 1898 under sponsorship of the Frederick News. By
presidential proclamation July 2 1948 the flag flies day and night
over Fort McHenry (3) Baltimore; Md. It waa the sight of the
flag over Fort McHenry In 1814 that Inspired Key to write the
national anthem. To honor tha citys war dead Worcester Mass
permits the flag to fly continuously over the World War Memorial
(4). At Taoe N. M. (5) the
' continuously over the World War I
(5) the flag abo flies day and night In
1861 when tha U. & was torn by dissension ova slavery the flag
Franklin Dr Roosevelt Jr Takes Oath
Of Office In House Of Representatives
Non-Union Mines
Closed By 'Holiday'
Pittsburgh Juno 14 (F$ Pickets
patrolled the nations coal fields
today farcing aome non-union
mines to close aa tho "stabiliza-
tion holiday entered the second
day.
John L. Lewis ordered tha walk-
out of tho 480000 soft and hard
coal miners. Ha said it was in
their interest
Mealtime Lewis with one
far another lib Ueuteoanta an
slated to ran use negotiations to-
day with asulheni Mtumlnaua
mine operators at Bluefield W.
Va.
Tha bushy-browed chieftain ef
tho powerful United Mina Work-
Moisture Varies
Over Dislricl
And tha rains came.
Tha Chlekaska district re-
ceived another rate Monday af-
ternoon which further delayed
tha harvest of grains aad tha
replanting af eottoo.
Reports received hero Indicate
tho amount of moisture received
Monday afternoon varied over
moat of the district Chtckaahas
official report was .19 of an inch.
EASTERN OKLAHOMA
GETS MOST KAIN
(By Tha Awwialhl Fran)
Mora rain fell in Oklahoma
Monday night but most of tho
moisture waa in eastern sections
of tho slate instead of on tha al-raady-soggy
wheat fields of west-
ern Oklahoma.
Balnhll In eastern Oklahoma
overalsht ranged np to 4.25 In-
dies at Idabel. Vinlla had SAT
Inches In the past 24 haws and
MeAlcnter bad L84. Virtually
ovary reporting pdnt In
era Oklahoma had aama rain.
Although rain waa lighter in tha
west aentterad points reported
more moisture In tha past 24
hours ranging from a trace at Ho-
bart to A9 of an Inch at Oklahoma
City. However a number of points
ware missed by tha rain including
such important wheat producing
ranters aa Alva Beaver Enid
I Gage Waynoka and Woodward.
Fields In western Oklahoma
! ware wet from previous rains and
the wheat harvest still was bog-
ged down.
Tho weather forecast calls Air
more showers and thunderstorms
in the alnla In the nest 24 hours
with locally heavy occasional rains
in ssatera and central purUuna.
an union met briefly yesterday in
Philadelphia with U. 8. Steel cor-
poration representatives.
Publicly nothing was announced.
Lewb said only that ha had agreed
to meet again with Harry M rates
president of the H. C. Frick Coke
Co coal-producing subsidiary id
tba steel firm. New date: June 23.
(The New York Times laid to-
day that Lewis and a vast seg-
ment of the northern coal in-
dustry arc ia agreement on
creation of an industry czar."
(Tho "Czar said tha Times
story would aid in the perman-
ent stabilization of the bitumin-
ous coal industry. It added that
tha southern coal producers are
dead set against tha idea.
(Tha dispatch added that see-
rat negotiations which are almost
completed indicate that the In-
dustry coordinator would be
Harry M. Moses.)
Tba UMW eon tract with tba
soft eaal producers expires June
29; If no new pact is reached
tha miners strike. Traditionally
their policy la: Na eaalraet ms
Actually tha Lewb men have
only one week left in Juno. Right
now tho 400000 bituminous dig-
gers and 80000 anthracite miners
an spending their time fishing
or resting. Then they get a to-
day vacation with pay starting
June 28. 1
Several hundred pickets are
patrolling the mine livid in an
effort to convince non - union
workers that it's o good kies to
toy out of the pits thb week.
Thera's been a little violence
In West Virginia and Alabama.
Pickets blocked U. S. route 19 near
Clarksburg W. Va. and upset sev-
eral trucks. Officiate decided to
cease operations" at tha Wilson'
burg Tripple a atrip mine.
A crowd estimated at 399 men
forced tha el aulas of a small
mine near Birmingham Ala.
Tha min employs a haul 19 or
29 me a.
Aa authoritative source which
(See Phgo 2 Na 4
TWO NOMINATIONS
FOR AMBASSADORS
MADE BY TRUMAN
Washington June 14 F)
President Truman today a n-
nounced tho resignation of Joseph
E. Jacobs aa ambnaaarior to
Czechoslovakia.
Ho nomlnnted Ellis O. Briggs of
Maine now ambnssuiior to
Uruguay to Jacobs' post at
Prague.
Ha also nnmlnuted Christian M
Rsviidiil of Iowa a career diplo-
mat to aurered Briggs as embus-
sadoc at Montevideo
in Taos Flam waa tom down by southern sympathizers. A groug
of Taos men. Including Kit Carson and Capt Smith H. Simpson
went to tha mountains brought back a tall aspen pole and nailed
tha flag to It They declared It would stay there day and night
Fifty year later by special act of congress tha practice waa made
official. Tha flag ia renewed from time to time by Teoaenoe md
the U. 8. Forest Service. The picture shows the 1849 flag-rabing.
Left to right are: Mayor L Parcual Martinez; Mrs. Margaret
Guedorf daughter id Capt Smith Bimpeon; John de la Chernaya
and Mrs. Marian Estergreen of the Taos Chamber of Commerce
Washington June 14 (F An-
other FDR eaiua on tha Washing-
ton political scene today as Frank-
lin Delano Boosevelt Jr waa
worn in aa a members of tho
bouse id representative. --
IDs mother Mrs. Franklin D.
(Eteauar) Roosevelt beamed
proudly in the gallery aa tho 24-year-old
third boh of tho former
president took tha oath of af flea
from Democratic Leader John
W. MeCornuch ef Massachusetts
acting speaker.
He represents tha 20th New
York district having successfully
bucked Tammany Hull In a spe-
cial election on May 17 for the
house seat held by tha late Sid
Bloom a Democrat
An avowed Democrat Roosevelt
foiled to win hb partys nomina-
tion and ran as the candidate of
tho Four Freedoms and tho Liberal
parties.
Rut them Is M doubt of hb
potiUral affiliation. DemaersUs
leaden already have accepted
him aa aua at their own and
will find him n esaunltlrte as-
signment la tha near future.
Roosevelt sat on tha Democratic
Ida of tha house chamber during
tha few minute! preceding the
swearing-in ceremony. After walk-
ing into tho well of tho house and
raising hb right hand to taka the
oath ha returned to tho Demo-
cratic aide. Col leagues and gallery
spectators applauded. Tho cennony
lasted less than a minute. Mc-
Cormack read the oath and Roose-
velt soberly answered I do." Ho
wore a rumpled light brown sum-
mer suit
Democratic members of tho
ways and means committee will
get around to giving Boosevelt a
committee past later thb week.
Hb reported preferences an labor
or banking; but as tho newest
freshman ho will have to taka
what ha can get
Baaaevrlt became tho lllrd
members of tha house and tha
281st Democrat There stlU are
taro Drawers tie vacancies.
Tha third son of tha lata presi-
dent to whom ho has bean com-
pared in political charm came
hero from New York by plane
till morning to ba sworn In.
Young Roosevelt staged a whirl-
wind campaign to defeat three
other opponents May 17 for the
eat left vneant by tho death of
Rep. Bid Bloom (D) New York.
Since the special election in New
York City's 20th district lie has
been abroad mainly In Israel.
Roosevelt foiled to win the
Democratic nomination for the
special election and ran as tha
nominee of a splinter party." Its
won by a substantial margin ever
the regular (Tammany) Demo-
cratic choice a Republican and
tha nomine of tho American
Labor party.
Despite thb; however he will
it as a Democrat aad boss
leaden of the party have let it
be haowa that ho h welcome
addition to their ranks.
Hu father never served in the
(Sen Page 2 No. XJ
Dallas Texas June 14' .
Storms and floods in aud near Dal-
las county took at least ten lives
today. One other person waa miss-
ing. Fear drowned at Garland
northeast of Dallas trapped by
tha swirling waters of Desk
Creak. Tan inches af rain fell
at Garland.
In northwest ' Garland county
a Frisco freight train piled into n
washout near Fanners branch. A
boy drowned during a storm ia
Denton county north Texas.
Three feciuso youths were
killed at tho outskirts at Fart
Worth whan their ear end a
Missouri Pacific freight tralu
aollided In a Minding min storm.
Heavy threatening clouds bailed
over north Texes. At 10 un. an
sir force plane reported it had
sighted a tornado 15 mile north-
west of Fort Worth and moving
east northeast Tha U. & weather
bureau made the announcement
The report would place the tor-
nado in Denton county some-
where south of Denton.
Tho death toll:
At Garland
Mrs. Dorothy Looser 25. Hal
child waa reported mining.
Auden K. King office manages
at Garland for tin Kraft Cheese
Corps
lib wife who age was asli-
mated at 45.
Their sen. Bully King about 19
Dead elsewhere were:
John Kenneth Martin 49 struck
by an automobile in Dallas.
(Sea Pago 3 No. 3)
RC Spends
$1074 In Grady
A total of 91.074.53 has bran
spent by tha Bed Cram toe die-
aster relief In Grady county sines
the Washita river left It banks as
a result at tho heavy rain tha night
of May 17.
Mbs Taayetta Coen disaster
worker assigned to the eeualy
9tay 34 reported to an advisory
commit teo thb morning that
amount at money has been
pent In assistance to 34 (Unities
who reshtered with tho leral
chapter Immediately after they
were forced from their homes.
The registration desk in the Red
Croce office was set up to register
those families who were in dire
need as a result of tho disaster.
Miss Coon wee assigned to tho
local office from Uktahoma City
following establishment of dis-
aster office In that city. The entire
Into was declared to be a disaster
area because of the heavy rains
high winds and tornadoes
Mrs. Charles Hoover chair-
man at the beard far the Grady
Bounty chapter preaided at the
meeting thb morning.
. Mbs Coon stated that tho
majority of needy cases were In
tho Kenwood addition of Chick-
Bsha with tho others scattered
along tho Washita river.
She reviewed the situation In
tha various areas which wara
inundated by the high water and
pointed out that aha aad Mrs.
W. H. John executive secretary e
tha local chapter had made vfaib
ASao Pago A Met 51
I
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The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 82, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 14, 1949, newspaper, June 14, 1949; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1892398/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.