Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 120, Ed. 2 Friday, October 9, 1942 Page: 2 of 34
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Oklahoma City Times
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Cast His Ballots;
Voters Warned
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wedding
band
$1750
trated another street of the settlement
Friday: Nine of the tanks were de-
stroved, two companies of the troops
killed, and the surviving tanks and
Australia Cute Hours
CANBERRA, Australia, Oct. 9.—(P)
Oklahoma City: What is a Sikh,
and how 13 the word pronounced?—
OKLAHOMA*
LARGEST
JEWLLENS
Best Retail Gain Ship Survivors
Since April Shown To Get Stars
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preachers.
The club operates only in the win-
ter season and at the time had been
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Minor Parties
Have Declines
In Candidates
death sentence, had been a more or
less regular voter.
The record showed that Stephan
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Including Democrats and Republicans
it has indorsed.
Other minor party names on the
Urge perfect blue white diamond
solitaire ... 3 fine diamonds in
wedding band ... a lovely matched
pair in 14K natural gold.
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WHO KRWT AN,
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Others Have Reduction
The Socialist-Labor partv which had
30 candidates running in 1940 has
only 19 on the state ballots so far: two
for the senate against four in 1940;
two for the house against 10; three
for governor against five. and 12 for
other state offices against 11.
The American Labor partv has 44
candidates in the field in New York.
•Low Heels, High Heels in
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23: for governor, five against six. and
for other state offices. 21 against 34.
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in the Russian noon communique to
indicate that the attacks had been
His orfanization, he said, is anxious
to utilize the services of every citizen
in ferreting out suspicious activities,
particularly shortwave.
Radio Broadcasting
Check Starts in Area
DALLAS, Oct. O.—(R—I you're
hearing suspicious broadcasts on your
radio, William Jerome Pollack would
like to know about it.
KERR
THE QUALITY STORE
—5
wrong." she told Miss Mildred Dono-
hue. "I know the soldier who sent
it, and he's very smart. The first
part is clear enough—just some army
orders. But there is a line that doesn’t
make any sense."
Answer: The first man to sign the
declaration of independence was John
Hancock of Massachusetts, then pres-
ident of the continental congress. His
name written in a bold and flourish-
ing hand, is many times larger than
that of any other signer; so much so
that his name has become a popular
term for signature
ssacanzcil
DR. FOWLER BORDER
...ANNOUNCES...
the elosing of The Border Hos-
pital and Goiter Clinic in Man-
gum, Oklahoma, and the opening
of a new ellnle in Oklahoma City,
located at-
Tenth & Hudson Streets
Phone 7-7777
3-Diamnd Natural
GOLD WEDDING BAND
$2750
U Menthly
/
$
4 J
School Scrap Soars
MAPLETON, Ore.. Oct. 9.—(P—
Mapleton school students would just
as soon the scrap drive went on for-
ever. When Principal Morrie E. Har-
vey recessed school, the youngsters
collected 45 tons, ah average of 1,612
pounds each. He's going to let them
try it again.
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soldiers, and many are in the British-
Indian army.
A fluttertongue with the Mikado
influence. Mrs. T. B G . of Newport
News, says this must be a comic opera
war. She heard a newscaster speak
of "Japanese installations on the Gil-
bert and Sullivan Islands!"
NEW YORK, Oct. 9.—(P)—Retail
sales this week showed the widest gain
over 1941 since last April, Dun &
Bradstreet said Friday in a review of
business.
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E heel. Come in. Try Nat:
Bashful Soldier States
His Case in Code
BALTIMORE, Oct. 9 —(P— A girl
at third service command headquar-
ters telephoned Pratt library asking
help decoding an official message.
"I can't understand what went
1MAVGN1,YNOTMG.\/MR)
MAuIV/NVoSo. )UMS
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Pollack came here Thursday from
Washington to open a regional legal
branch of the war problems division,
federal communications commission.
BLACK SUEDE
Patent Trim or
. Black Kid
121
ANWF
&Nd
WASHINGTON. Oct. 9.—(P)_The
Communist party thus far has put
only 11 candidates in the field for sen-
ator. representative, governor. or other
statewide office in next month's elec-
tion as compared with 59 two years
ago.
All minor parties have put forward
fewer candidates this year—a grand
total of 293 against 378 in 1940—but
the Prohibitionists show the smallest
decline with 83 against 92. The So-
cialists have only 51 names on the
ballot this year as against 70.
An Associated Press survey Friday
showed more than a dozen political
labels, in addition to Democrat and
Republican, on the candidate lists. The
minor parties are running 31 candi-
dates for the senate: 129 for the
house; 28 for governor, and 105 for
other state offices.
Two Communists for Senate
The Communists have only two sen-
atorial candidates (Colorado and Vir-
ginia) this year as against eight In
1940: five for the house against 21;
three for governor (Colorado, Mas-
sachusetts and New York) against
nine, and only one for other state of-
fice as compared with 21 in 1940.
Two years ago the Communists also
had a presidential and a vice-presi-
dential candidate, as did four other
minor parties.
Candidates running under the Pro-
hibition label next month will total
eight for the senate against six in
1940; 24 for the house against 25;
eight for governor against eight, and
43 for other state offices against 53.
Socialist candidates for the senate
total five this year against seven two
years ago: for the house, 20 against.'
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Dlamends
Fishtoll
, Desien
) "sine
>75
ment. United Pension, and National
Recovery.
Frank Colby’s
HMS
THE QUALrTI STORE
November 3 ballots throughout the
nation include independent. Farmer-
Labor, and Progressive. Here and
city's defenders.
Timoshenko's men were rooting out
and killing Germans who had resorted
to trench warfare in an effort to stop
him. The Germans were ceaselessly
counter-attacking.
Apparently the Germans had been
checked again in the Mozdok area of
the eastern Caucasus, where they were
making a great effort to drive to the
1 r
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even modified. Rather, the communi-
Miss Donohue went to work with a
radio telegraph code book. Then she
called the puzzled girl.
I ve translated the message," she
told her. "It reads: ‘I love you.'"
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y .
10 DIAMONDS
Exquisite ... 10 perfect
diamonds in beautifully
matched 14K natural
gold ensemble.
$100
*5.50 MONTHIY
Grozny nil fields, 50 or 60 miles away.
w H ‘ The Russians smashed seven succes-
A Sikh is a member of the Indian their “tossknThunrsdn andorm rroved
religious order of Sikhism, a Hindu long range artillery smashed a whole
sect that does not recognize caste enemy regiment and destroyed 20
distinctions. Sikhs make excellent tanks.
T% PRICE* INCLUDE FEDERAL TAX g
KOSENFIELD’S
-“2-222128)-
number, and
“w,
SS3H,
tion is strictly informal. WSA ex- is effective November 1.
i "n‛“ 1 • ■ adSv ”
A_______________
than genuine, pure St. Joseph Aspirin.
------------- World's largest seller at 104. Big savings in
thrown open to a ehurch conference large sizes. 36 tablets, 20g; 100 tablets, 354
TWO-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1942.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—(P)—Fi-
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Botanical Gold Mine
BIG TIMBER, Mont., Oct. 9.—(P_
A brown-leafed mountain plant inter-
ested George A. Campbell.-He took it
to a chemist who identified it as hen-
bane, used as a drug. Campbell went
back to the woods, gathered 10,000
pounds, a pharmaceutical company
took it all at $1.25 a pound.
seamen. their present address.
The club will have no dues, no rules [ -------
and no officers .nd for the present Counterfeiter Betrayed
has no name, but its members will ’ J
be the seamen whose ships have been By Handlebar Mustache
torpedoed, shelled, bombed or wrecked ।
in the war zones. CHICAGO, Oct. 9— (P)— Russell
giving the
even the Russians f°r they retertoit“Amotessttrsntrda, in the 5o-mite
-MCN. steadily forward to the relief of the
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pressed belief, however, that it would
promote the morale of seamen during
the war and become "a source of pride
and satisfaction In the future," Eligi-
ble members were invited to submit
suggestions for a name for the or-
ganization.
Membership will be optional among
those eligible, including both officers
and seamen. Those applying for
membership were instructed to write
to Frank Rusk, war shipping admin-
DETROIT, Oct. 9.—(P—City Clerk
Thomas D. Leadbetter called attention
Thursday to the approaching Novem-
ber elections by pointing out that Max
Stephan, convicted traitor under
Films Sign Entertainer
In Army and Navy Show
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 9.—(P—It
was a profitable bit of work for Lynne
Baggett, 19 years old. of Wichita
Falls, Texas, when she appeared at
an army and navy relief show in
Dallas
A film scout saw her, and Thurs-
day she won court approval of a
movie contract with Warner Brothers
which will pay her $100 to $1 000 a
week on a sliding scale over seven
years.
,»a
You'll hive Rhythm in
your walk, as well as
Rhythm in your wardrobe
color scheme, when you
step out in black Rhythm
Steps. Smart and dainty,
these shoes with weight-
less Rhythm Treads give
you added support at heel,
arch and ball of foot!
Exclusively Ours
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"Anticipatory purchasing in liquor,
food and woolens gave an added fillip
to turnover which reached the highest
levels of the year in many stores,” the
missed only seven of 20 elections in agency said. “Heavy demand for reg-
Detroit, including primaries, since ac- ular needs continued the backbone of
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Ma "J ah
leans who are 'too busy’ to vote.”
Leadbetter said. “The Nazis in our
midst are usually on hand to vote for
their candidates.”
Stephan. sentenced to hang Novem-
ber 13 for his assistance last April
to the escaped Nazi flier, Hans Peter
Krug, has appealed to the U. S. cir-
cuit court of appeals in Cincinnati.
Krug was recaptured after fleeing
from a Canadian prison camp.
Battalions of Mexican
Convicts Ready to Fight
MEXICO CITY, Oct. 9 —(R—Two
battalions of convicts serving terms
at the Tres Marlas islands penal col-
ony, on Mexico's Pacific coast, will be
formed to defend the islands or fight
any place the Mexican government
designates, the warden of the prison.
Gen. Miguel Crozcho Camacho, said
Friday.
General Orozco added that the con-
victs were willing to serve abroad in
their desire to fight for the allied
cause wherever they were sent.
Youth Eats Carrots
By Bushel for Marines
ROCKY FORD, Colo., Oct. 9.—R_
Marine recruiters turned down Donald
Moore. 17 years old, when he tried
to enlist last July. He was color
blind.
Eat, carrots. they advised. Their vi-
tamin A might help.
I Donald never liked carrots, but he
bought a bushel.
When he had eaten all of them he
was back at the recruiting office. The
verdict: better, but still not good
enough. ’
Donald cringed, started his second
bushel.
."Im getting kind of tired of them,"
he admitted.
Set this new rippled
beret level on your
head — and by so
doing, you’ll prove
you have a level head
on your shoulders!
It's a hat so fashion-
right. so wearable
that it's a marvelous
“common sense”
buy! Black, brown
and colors.
mh."
Brilliant diamond en-
gagement ring with
charming band to match
in 14K gold.
$25
U MONTHLY
! generous toe-room . . . E
8 cushioned metatarsal .
“ support . . . well-firting
fleeted the record demand at retail.
Call for seasonal and holiday mer-1
chandise continued to rise.”
The agency estimated retail volume
for the country as a whole was 5 to
10 percent ahead of last year, with all i
sections registering some gains. In the i
various regions they were: East, 1 to
3 percent: New England. 5 to 9; mid-
dle west. 7 to 11; southwest and south
8 to 12; northwest, 3 to 7, and Pacific
coast, 9 to 13.
John Dillinger, the Indiana bandit who now lies in Indianapolis’
Crown Hill cemetery, takes a belated hand in Oklahoma City’s
scrap drive. A 16-cylinder Cadillac complete with one inch, bullet-
proof glass, once owned by Dillinger, is headed for the scrap we- -----------
piles to help the war production effort. The car, once used in 1 ico lou^
a sideshow, is in a garage owned by Mrs. O. J. Williams, 718 sas. He will work closely with the fed-
Northwest Twenty-first street. Mrs. Williams’ son, now an Ar- eral bureau of investigation and the
kansas theater operator, took the car on a national tour, but amm! and navy intelligence organiza-
stored it several years ago Shown inspecting the one-inch glass
in the back of the car is Homer Ford, a neighbor.
Dillinger’s Car Donated as Scrap
r ' i
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Wholesale markets were stimulated'
Nerdemand forn.autumn and winter lhere are men eligible to
merchandise with many more buyers
in central market places than at this
time a year ago.
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the re t a i l expansion, however. A
Y T—ANO I’M
T , •
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A-a
dhr It will cost you less at
Rosenfield’s
I If you’rt looking for S'
J down-to-earth comfort f
7 just look at these special 78
features. Built-in arch... N
time, but when they reach port again —In a measure designed to relieve
they head for the nearest shipping fatigue in industry and reduce ab- >
office." ; senteeism. Labor Minister Ward an-
Reminiscent of the “Caterpillar nounced Friday that working hours
Club” for aviators who have bailed in factory's will be limited to a max-
out of disabled planes, the organiza- imum of 56 weekly. The reduction
N,A. A
NK JS
St. Louis: Can you tell us how duo and all dispatches from Stalin-
the card game BRIDGE got its name? grad, now in its forty-sixth day of
—K. C. siege. indicated that pressure had in-
nally hitting on a method for giving
official recogntion to the heroes of istra tion, Washington,
the merchant marine, the war ship- ; name of the vessel on which they
ping administration Friday announced served, their license number
formation of a new club for merchant
Quick Senate
Approval Due
On Navy Bill
WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 — (A)—
Swift senate approval was anticipated
Friday for a $6,236,956,621 omnibus
supply bill devoted chiefly to financ-
ing the navy’s bid for aerial suprem-
acy over the Papific.
The measure, swelling this nation’s
bill for World War No. 2 to $220,000,-
000,000, was passed Friday by the
house without opposition or a record
vote.
Approximately 90 percent of the
money was earmarked for the navy,
with $2.862,000.000—the biggest sin-
gle allocation—set apart to purchase
14,611 naval planes.
The bill formally authorized the
navy to enter into contract obligations
for the previously-approved 1.900,000
ton fleet expansion program estimated
to cost $9,510,000,000 and shaped
around aircraft carrier expansion.
In addition to the naval allocations,
the legislation carried $2,000,000 for
war housing $33,800,000 for the office
of war information, $19,000,000 for a
guayule rubber project, $25,000,000 for
the office of defense transportation,
and $10,303,680 for the war manpow-
er commission.
Both Chairman Cannon (D., Mo.)
of the house appropriations committee
and Representative Taber (R., N. Y.),
ranking minority member, reported
that the nation's spending for arms
would reach a rate of $6,000,000,000
monthly by the first of the year.
Answer: The origin of the game creased.
itself is uncertain. It was first known No new German gain has been re-
ts "Biritch," or “Russian Whist," but ported, however, since Thursday, when
that the game originated in Russia is the Germans occupied two streets in
doubtful. the industrial settlement. They paid
Ogden: In stories of Soviet Russia with the lives of 4,000 men and 16
I have seen the initials G P. U. What tanks for it, the record blood sacrifice
organization do they stand for?— in.one, of history's greatest battles.
T. McC. Twelve tanks and 500 troops pene-
Answer: The initials stand for the
Russian secret service, gosudarstven-
noe politlcheskoe upravlenie, a mouth-
ful that apparently is too much for
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there nominees are found wearing
these labels:
Progressive New Dealer, Peoples ‘
Unity, Townsend, Industrial Govern- ern section of the city, but the heroic
defenders showed no signs of weaken-
ing.
Despite German propaganda broad-
casts seeking to justify to the German
people an abandonment of frontal at-
tacks on Stalingrad, there was nothing
Night Clubbing Soldiers
Drop in on Preachers
CAMDEN. 8. C.. Oct. 9.—(R)—Sol-
diera passing a night club near here
dropped in for a bit of amusement.
But instead of the expected throng of
merrymakers and diners they encoun-
tered a group of somber-garbed
24*03
WSA will award each a distinctive ; Erastus Miller's hirsute adornment got
ribbon bar like those worn by mem- him into trouble and a subsequent
bers of the armed services. If the . sentence of one year in jail,
member's ship has been lost through Secret service, agents had one clue
enemy action, a silver star will be as to the identity of the man who
affixed to the ribbon ' was passing counterfeit coins—he
“An additional star will be added sported & red handlebar mustache.
for each engagement in which a vessel . The agents said red handlebar mun-
has been lost," WSA said. "Already taches are rarities these days and
wane si Miller was easy 10 find. They said
stars. » - he had a bunch of limp dollars, half
The club idea originated from dollars, Afew diesfor making them
WSA's wish to recognize the usually and a supply o lead.
unsung men of the cargo ships, many
of whom, WSA said, “have been forced
to take to the lifeboats time after
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 120, Ed. 2 Friday, October 9, 1942, newspaper, October 9, 1942; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1988068/m1/2/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.