Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 27, Ed. 4 Tuesday, June 23, 1942 Page: 2 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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V
TWO—TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1942
Oklahoma City Times
‘Cot House Row’ Back
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Niles, who recently closed out his
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Civil Patrol Pilots
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timony, made public Tuesday, before
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sidered making the race himself.
an early parade through the downtown section, the 91 members
Battle in Ward Three
Feel the Breeze Through
: SHEER N‘ COOL SHIRTS
2
Clemency is
by PARLY
-
were
Low in U. S.
Oklahoma's rate of “felony
shown signs of wanting to stay
neu-
bushes for Niles now and what will
Levy on All Carriers
4
WASHINGTON, June 23.—(P)-The
WASHINGTON, June 23.— (P) —
Secretary of State Hull declared Tues-
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MIRROR.
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New Bootleg
Drink Boasts
Niles Backed
By Campbell
And Stark
of New York was one more instance
illustrating the policy of frightfulness
and terrorism the German high com-
mand is undertaking to carry on in
ME FIRST
ARMV MEAL
It MICHTV
Go0D. ,
in
fi,
pe
NOW LONG IU<
YoU WOrKED W,
youE PRISENT
k POSITION: I
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mt
an
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att
to
bui
Lethal Punch
The police vice squad has found
YEL, AND
IM BEST or
I IS, IT
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na
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to
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a yen for self-destruction.
Rationing took the wildcat whisky
►
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part that tavern owners were willing
to co-operate.”
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house row political charges as the man
who "handled the row for the Camp-
bell crowd."
In 1939 cot house row voters testi-
fied before Lucius Babcock, district
judge, in an election contest suit that
they received whisky before and after
voting from a dispensary set up in
Niles’ furniture store, then operated
in the 300 block West California ave-
nue, and that they also received meal
tickets good for one meal at the same
place.
Asked if the goal could be realized.
Arnold replied:
It is our judgment that it will be
realized. We must realize it. We can-
not fail.”
Major Gen. J. T. McNamey. deputy
chief of staff, told the committee that
aviation is being given “first prior-
ity” in the development of offensive
and defensive weapons.
Arnold said that not only the pro-
duction goal will be reached, but that
Al
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St
th
m
th
Glass Replacing
Jewel Bearings
in Instruments
4
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WYWAV, WEVe
got PSNT or
. COMPANY.
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doi
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night as signs were put up and torn
down, and a large segment of the po-
lice department participated actively
in uniform in behalf of Campbell.
Board Members Friendly
The next time Pendleton ran for re-
"ITigv
fei
Feud Broke Out
The feud between Campbell and
Pendleton broke out in the 1939 city
council race when Pendleton workers
backed Jim Pulliam. a former Pen-
dleton road superintendent, for the
city council.
After the election in which Pulliam
was defeated by 132 votes. Pulliam
made an unsuccessful contest of the
results.
That campaign was the wildest in
r
"Me
Is:
N
-
The average time served by prison-
ers whose sentences expired was 15 6 E
ip
-
MY HUSBANQ BECAUSE
HE SAW HIS PACE
r REFLECTED *• A
\ HALL
"enemy" planes over their areas will
be compared with actual flight rec-
ords to determine efficiency of the
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. No3
WON-
D"
We
. our or
were I
• and n
depth
' coast
water
up al<
, meant
hours
■ death!
place
•< up ant
tane g
' we ha
, fishing
in tow
, no tin
supply
< sunplie
hitch-
' truck t
The
' then a
, harbor
the an
। that •
A contact
‘clomed
The
me.ss
Ford Fights Huge
Housing Project
DETROIT, June 23 —(P— The Ford
Motor Co. plans to fight by "every le-
gal method" plans of the federal pub-
lic housing authority to erect a per-
Filling Station
Seeks to Purchase
Rubber Only Once
a
f
N
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oner” release in 1940 was the lowest
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21 Un/ini»hed Army
Houses Razed by Fire
WALLA WALLA, Wash., June 23.
—(P)—Fire of undetermined origin
early Tuesday destroyed 21 unfinished
buildings, comprising nearly all of
the hospital section of the new army
air base here, causing about (150,000
damage, Lieut, Col. Earl T. Vance, base
commander, reported. Col. Vance said
an army investigation was started, and
that a heavy guard would be main-
tained over the ruins.
The buildings had not yet been
turned over to the army.
--
< I
Sponge iron is a substitute for pig
iron, front which steel is made. Sponge
iron is produced by a new process;
which O'Mahoney said would be con- j
siderably cheaper than present pro-
cesses.
"We are in the midst of an investi-
gation on suppression of sponge iron
processes," Truman said, "and there is
plenty of evidence, so far as we have
gone, that the processes and develop-
ment of sponge Iron is being sup-
pressed."
.. ------ The Campbell group was active
a house subcommittee considering the against Senator W. C. Fidler in the
1943 army appropriation. (election which led to his defeat be-
cause they believed that the election
But when several small boys came I
around with scraps of inner tubes on .
which Bender had done a bit of carv-
ing. he recognized his handiwork.
"It's taking advantage of a na-
tional emergency," he says.
221.2
CHICAGO, June 23. - (P) — Tiny
drops of fused hard glass, the Ameri-
can Institute of Electrical Engineers
was told Tuesday, are replacing pre-
cious sapphires successfully in produc-
tion of war-needed electrical indicat-
ing instruments.
F. K. McCune and J. H. Goss of the
General Electric Co. reported glass
substitutes for sapphire instrument
bearings have been developed to the
point where they could be produced in
quantity and there is little to choose
between the two for actual miniature
instrument application."
Highly polished sapphire Jewel
bearings had been used almost uni-
versally in such instruments as am-
meters and voltmeters and had been
imported, principally from Switzer-
land. The war cut off the supply of
Jewels and the personnel trained to
cut them.
County Opens New
War on Taverns
A renewed "crackdown" on county
tavern operators, forcing observance
of restrictions preventing the sale of
beer to minors and to drunks was re-
vealed Tuesday by George Goff, sher-
iff.
"The men in the office have been
ordered to make a new check of tav-
erns for violations," Goff announced.
We have followed a policy of check-
ing them at intervals to keep them in
line.”
Officers have been ordered to warn
the operators of taverns in which vio-
lations are found. If the operators re-
fuse to co-operate, drastic steps must
be taken, Goff said.
The check is particularly Important
to owners of beer licenses for their
permits must be renewed by the coun-
ty July 1.
GOSPEL
MEETINGS
7
)
4
1,4
HEAR
GUY N. WOODS
EVANGELIST
EACH EVENING, 8:30 P. M.
CHURCH of CHRIST
S. E. 19TH & BYERS
EVERYONE WELCOME
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Dollar-a-Year
Men Accused
Of Obstruction
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and
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THAT ONE
I LITTLE LAUGH )
COST MR. JURK J
FIVE MILLON 1
DOLLARS.'
ANO SINCE THAT
DAY HI HASN’T ,
LAUGHED oNca.
OR LOOKED INTO
X A MIRROR/2
man, for years has figured in cot
Spotlighi Speakers Fire
in Race for County Commissioner ASrvwars
• •
without permission recently
ejected and 700 stakes they had driv-
recent years. Workers clashed every
flak q0o
2swa.
#86.
Mapped by Committee Hull Hits Sinking
WASHINGTON, June 23.—(P—The C
Of Argentine Ship
gEu- I
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e
I
Arnold Sees
148,000 Ships
For Air Corps
WASHINGTON, June 23.—<UP>—
Aircraft factories under contract to
the U. S. army will produce in 1942
and 1943 at least 148,000 planes—the
army's share of President Roosevelt's election as county commissioner.
185,000-plane goal for those two years. ; Campbell went after him with Dick
Lieut. Gen. Henry H. Arnold, army ' Jolly, a motor car dealer, whom Pen-
air force chief, revealed that in tes- , djeton defeated handily.
Loans $10 to $300
FAMILY LOAN
COMPANY
BRANIFF BUILDING
314 No. Robinson St, nr. Third St.
Telephone 3-4452
WASHINGTON, June 23.— fUPl —
Senator Harry S. Truman (D. Mo.)
charged Tuesday that "dollar-a-year
men from the big steel firms abso-
lutely control the steel policy" of the
war production board.
Truman revealed that the special
senate committee investigating the war
program—of which he is chairman—is
conducting a study of suppression of
processes for manufacture of sponge
iron. He said it would open hearings
within two weeks.
He made the charges before a sen-
ate agriculture subcommittee which is
investigating the production of indus-
Niles must give Pendleton a sub-
stantial drubbing in ward three to
win. Dickerson, since Pulliam sur-
prised him by failing to follow up his
fight with Campbell by filing against
Dickerson in the council race, has
A. I
tm.0
Annexation of Britton as part of
Oklahoma City was ordered studied
Tuesday by the city council on recom-
mendation of A. P. Van Meter, ward
one councilman.
Van Meter reported he had been re-
quested by Britton officials and resi-
dents to bring the question up, and
asked for detailed financial and legal
data.
Leon Shipp. assistant municipal
counselor, said the decision of "who
asks whom” for the proposed annexa-
4*
$
"rigorous as they are for this year
and next, will be met and fulfilled by
American ingenuity and industry."
"The air corps overlooked many op-
portunities to have much more ef-
ficient and modern planes prior to the
outbreak of war" in Euorpe in 1939.
the committee said. "We developed the
dive bomber ... yet we had none.
We are Just getting them now We
pioneered in self-sealing gas tanks,
but abandoned them and the Ger-
mans demonstrated how necessary
they are."
A stepping up of the tempo of the
campaign of Warren Edwards, school
board member running for county at-
torney, was observed when speakers
for him appeared at four meetings
Monday night.
Fred Hoyt, attorney who filed for
the office and withdrew, appeared at
meetings at 600 North Bath and 417
Northeast Eighth street.
John Keahey. attorney, who has
been handling speaking appointments
in Edwards headquarters, spoke at a
meeting at 225 Southwest Tenth
street, and at Bohemian Hall, 515
West Frisco avenue.
Both Hoyt and Keahey stressed Ed-
wards’ outstanding service on the
school board as an indication of his
attitude toward the public welfare.
Keahey said workers for other can-
didates have said Edwards cut school
teachers' salaries in an effort to hurt
him with working men.
' Edwards lopped off some big sal-
aries to even up some little ones,"
Keahey said. "He’s the best friend the
working man has. He's saved a third
of a million dollars a year on the
school board."
Work Training
•
Hundreds of Oklahoma City women
are needed in the training program
of the Oklahoma City war trades
4
4
4
4
4
" $
IS 1
a” %1A
en were pulled up. Bennett said.
"Mr. Ford is still of the opinion that
'permanent' homes on the site you
have located is not only a mistake,
but an unnecessary, wasteful, and ex-
travagant use of the government
funds and vital war materials,” Ben-
nett wrote.
A Years ago, \
MY HUSBAND WAs
I CALLED TO THE
BEDSIDE OF RICH *
UNCle Elias who
SAID HE WAS GO-
ING' TO MAKE My,
HUSBAND HIS A
I It SOLE HEIR/ A U
factory's sugar to make other ex-
plosives. so the newest dynamite to
hit the Oklahoma City bootleg market
is a potion made of molasses.
A cross between Japanese rose-petal
wine and a glass of warm beer with
cottage cheese. the new brand's re-
suits are nebulous.
The police have yet to find some-
one who has sampled it, but are of
the opinion that if sugar ever stages
a comeback, the new lethal liquid
could well supplant formaldehyde.
It has the color of anemic bourbon:
smells like the dressing room after
the big game.
With a terse warning to fish, algae,
water spiders and other denizens.
Capt. Walter Acord of the vice squad,
consigned a gallon and a halt of the
new molasses whisky to the drain
Tuesday morning.
Rr,
RM. 201, MAJESTIC BLDG.
301 W. Main Street, Cor. Harvey
Oklahoma City, Okla. . Phone 3-8457
!
2,000 of Oklahoma's womanhood."
Curtis said in announcing a drive to
obtain women students.
Training of women at the school,
located at 918 North Broadway, start-
ed two weeks ago. About 125 are now
enrolled. The entire student body
numoers 1,100.
Women up to 40 years of age will
be admitted into classes offering train-
ing in sheet metal, machine shop and
aircraft engine mechanics, Curtis said.
Students go to school for 10 weeks
without cost to the student, since the
government foots the bill. The city
aircraft plant, and other warplane
service centers, accept the training as
preparation for employment.
The first 50 women enrolling in the
school here are from the files of the
state employment service, with a
group of 75 women coming from civil
service rolls, Curtis said.
Training of Oklahoma City air de-
pot soldiers will start the school
Wednesday, he announced.
Boys, Don’t Forget
Date With Uncle Sam
In case they haven't been infe -med
in the last month or so, Oklahoma
youths 18, 19 and 20 years old Tues-
day were notified again by state draft
headquarters that they are to register
with the state's 105 local boards next
Monday and Tuesday.
Lieut. Col. John Banford, state draft
registration director, said local board
offices will be open from 8 a. m. to
6 p. m. Monday and from 7 a. m. to
9 p. m. Tuesday. Obligated to register,
he said, are all men born on or after
Jan. 1, 1922, and on or before June
30, 1924.
2*62
x068888898 ■ 8 8, ■
Somebody is giving Fred Bender's
filling station a mighty unpatriotic
double-shuffle.
You can fool some of the people
some of the time, but when they try
to sell Bender some old Inner tubes
that he already has puchased once,
then comes a reckoning.
Bender, whose station is at 821
North Hudson avenue, voiced his
7 '
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also the army must face "terrific
training and procurement problems”
while at the same time "engaging the
enemy in vigorous offensive action
wherever he can be contacted."
Check itching
First Application
Agontatna uehtng of diy eomma. Rash,
Tetter, Ringworm, Pmples, Moabtes, Too
itch to checked in on APPLICATON at
BLUE STAR OINTMENT. Bapeat M
needed M nature Mm bail. Momoy book if
rmir " Sue to Mitoty. T k tadas
2)
the Atlantic.
Hull said at a press conference
that, according to reports, the 4,800-
ton Argentine vessel had been at-
tacked and sunk in broad daylight,
thus eliminating an opportunity for
the Nazis to hide behind the pretext
that the vessel could not be identified.
Hull had reference to the fact that
Germany, in recently replying to an
Argentine government protest over
the torpedoing of the Argentine tank-
er Victoria off Cape Hatteras, North
Carolina, expressed regret but con-
tended the ship was improperly
marked and her identity had been
mistaken.
Hull said the Rio Tercero sinking
proved that no matter how the policy
is stated in Berlin, in practice and
effect it means that neutral ships
will be sunk by German submarines
just as promptly as any other vessels.
225
Cool, light-weight shirts that you can really
Feel the Breeze through! We've a new, large
assortment of handsome whites with the new
lo-band non-wilt collar, also in soft cool plain
shades that contrast your summer clothing.
Sheer ‛n‛ Cool Pajamas, $2 G 2.50
Parly Shirts 8 Pajamas Exclusively
RBcRlaa
MAIN ATGeNG HARVEY
house ways and means committee de-
cided Tuesday to include contract car-
riers as well as common carriers in
the 5 percent tax it has decided to
impose on freight and express ship- _________. _ __________.0
ments, ■ .. ... day the sinking of the Argentine
Whipping the ,$6,640,000,000 reve- freighter Rio Tercero 120 miles out
nue bill Into final shape, the commit-
1
in the nation, a census bulletin re-
vealed Tuesday.
The low rate of release is attributed
by observers to Governor Phillips’ de-
termination to hold acts of clemency
in the early years of his administra-
tion to an absolute minimum. His
acts of clemency have been more nu-
merous since the outbreak of war, and
the governor has issued several pa-
roles and pardons on the specific con-
dition that the prisoners Join the
armed forces.
In 1940, of 2,088 prisoners (con-
victed of felonies) released in Okla-
homa, only 84 were given cenditional
releases, and none received executive
clemency, expiration of sentences
freed the other 2,004.
(Conditional releases include pa-
er Senator° jonph cthetirhbher, af-just the thing for the alcoholic who
Wyo.) had voiced similar assertions. ’ I has a sweet tooth, the don't-cares and
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said that Henry Ford has denied a
request to permit federal surveyors
to enter property owned by him, and
that he would continue to fight the
housing project as "unnecessary,
wasteful and extravagant." About
100,000 workers are contemplated for
the plant at peak production.
Surveyors who entered the land
Am
9070
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4
bi
tee decided not to write in any spe-
cial provisions for corporations now in
debt, or for deduction of individual in-
surance premiums from taxable in-
come.
Bill Drafted to Admit
Alaska to Statehood
WASHINGTON, June 23 .-((P)—
Senator Langer iR„ N. D.) is drafting
legislation to bring Alaska into the
United States as the forty-ninth state.
Asserting the territory was vital to
defense, the North Dakotan suggested
in a statement that Alaska should
have two voting senators and two
voting representatives in congress in-
stead of one delegate with a voice
and no vote.
The senator quoted the late Brig.
Oen. William Mitchell as once saying
the country that had Alaska ruled the
• world.
Nigerian Chief Offers
Sons to Stalk Hitler
LONDON, June 22.—(UP)—A Ni-
gerlan chieftain has offered to send
three of his sons, with the bows and
arrows which his tribes still use, to
Berlin to kill Adolf Hitler, the war of-
floe announced Tuesday.
“X have many sons," the chief told
the British commander in the Ni-
gerian aoM of British West Africa, “I
•an easily span three of them to put
an end to the man who is causing so
much trouble. They will stalk him like
any etfer jungle beast."
aema Wa
The perennially messy vote situa-
lion along "cot house row" on Cali-
fornia and Reno avenues became of
political interest Tuesday as Joe C.
Campbell, ward three city councilman,
and G. A. Stark, ward four city coun-
cilman. were brought into the open as
backers of W. C. Niles, former furni-
ture store operator, for third district
> •
i »
• •
Mike McGrew and S. A. Norrie, 1 .
deputy sheriffs, said that for the most j state warning service.
pee-aaRothschild's Has The COOL CLOTHES...
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UNCLE ELIAS W
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AND KNEW IT WAS NN
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roles. conditional pardons and other i L
similar releases.) I L
Oklahoma sent 2,054 men to state
prison or to federal reformatories in I
1940. Of them, 48.2 percent (989) had 1 _
no previous commitment, 4.2 percent । C
(87) had been in jail or a juvenile |
Institution, and 47.6 percent had been -
in prison one or more times previously.
tral in the Pendleton-Campbell fight. school, M. L. Curtis, director, said
But some of his boys are beating the Tuesday.
bushes for Niles now and what will "The nation's expanding warplane
happen before the campaign is over is industry .will require the services of
problematical.
months, for those receiving condi- R
tional releases, 15.5 months. .
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board under Fidler appointees had
been friendly to Pendleton.
Now with Campbell's close political
friend, Fred Lowe, former county
commissioner, generally recognized as
close to the election board, the Pen-
dleton boys are watching the election
board with a suspicious but hopeful
eye. So far there has been no evidence
that the election board, as such, is
taking any part in the race. Both
sides have election officials who are
for them, but these instances appear
to be purely personal choices.
Filed at Last Minute
Niles filed for office at the last
minute, after a candidate that his
group considered strong failed to ap-
pear against Pendleton. Niles, Roy
West, friend of Lowe and strong
P0Ka4/a
"ns. %
ve 1
e • 2
The chief battle in the campaign
State Felony
“bi^to haPandleton never has F or Aucrait Clemency is
WHEN YOU SEE
WANT CASH U J
urgent need for the accumulation of
stockpiles of strategic raw materials."
"More effective methods of control
of shipping by the maritime commis-
sion or other government agencies
were not considered necessary until
far too late a date,” the committee
said. "The maritime commission has
failed to provide adequately for the
movement of strategic raw materials
by use of the tonnage actually or po-
tentially under Its control.
"The attitude of the Straits-New
York shipping conference, as well as
that of the British Unes engaged in
this trade, in preventing or delaying
the use of non-conference tonnage
available to move rubber” from the
far east in February of this year "can-
not be too strongly condemned.”
The committee said efforts of these
shipowners to retain control of the
rubber traffic "unquestionably added
to the shipping difficulties and re-
duced the amount of rubber actually
delivered to this country."
The report said "an outstanding
need” of the war department is "an
adequate, currently maintained cost
accounting and audit system, the gov-
ernment having a responsibility to
“eliminate exorbitant profits not after
the war is over but during the period
the war is being prosecuted," county commissioner. against Grover
A note of cheer was sounded in a I Pendleton. incumbent
xection dealing with aviation. After Niles, who recently ciuse uul iis
relating how American-made planes furniture store and who before he be-
had proved their ability in actual : come a furniture man was a carnival
combat. The committee said produc-
tion of planes is “progressing satisfac-
torily” and the production schedules.
In considering the forces opposing . .. _ . _ . , . -----------
manent “bomber city” for workers it one another in this campaign it ap- o the Wiley Post Tornadoes are shown in the top picture as the
the Ford Willow Run bomber plant pears that Harlow Gers, fourth ward WKY mobile unit, in the left foreground, broadcast a brief pro-
near Ypsilanti, Mich., Spokesman city councilman, has patched up his gram at Union station. in the lower picture, Mr and Mrs G F
SxSBs ,‘8
- pickles. I left with the squadron for training at Athens, Ga.
“The
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and p
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“’the e
wake
the si
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cause
' a con
of fis
' action
complaint Tuesday and put it on a
patriotic basis.
“When we buy it," he said, "It be-
longs to the government, and in this x . . ■ . ..
case of a rubber shortage, it's down- tion would determine the place of tl
right unpatriotic." election.
_ . u . "If we ask Britton to come into the
Bender was willing to let bygones would hold the electon, but ir
be bygones overg the.weekend.whenBritton asks us to take them in, wed
collection ^In U out o the i hold the election here," he said.
h I
Lanum.-4.
an h
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, 1 and
whee
, > plosti
V N
NOW
SHE SHOPS
"CASH AND CARRY"
Without Painful Backache A
Many suffmn relieve naezing beeksch O
quickly, mm they discover that the nal .
eauee of their trouble may be tired kidpneya L
The kidneys an Natures chief way of tak-
ing the escen aelda and wente out of the
blood, They help moat people pan about 8
P"VhenSXhorder of kidney function permits
poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it
may cause nagging backache, rheumatic paint,
tog paina, lose of pep and enerv, getting up
pletta,, tiwellipa,. puIBMM under the eyee,
keadacbee and disine. Fnquent or eoanty
pemage with smarting and burning come-
itonM shows then in aomethlng wrong with
zogrkdmzzrox.2toddaFaammma. Dm.’.
zz2zzm2#
aw waste from you blood Get Dean’s Fil
south side political figure, and Coun-
prmmningtar"hehpdtnertgroups S Young Eagles Leave to Grow Wings
Pendleton if they would put up a | Oklahoma City said goodbye Tuesday morning to the largest group
candidate who could do it. stark con- of young eagles ever to leave here for naval pilot training, After
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CHIGGFItMe?
•EFFECTIVE QUICK COMFORT
Jitter-Bud fa
A few drops of JITTER BUG • Anaah
on ankles and wrists keens off chig- Il j
gers, mosquitoes and other vicious 5"5
insects Safe— easy to use. Pleas, wer.
ant odor — no stain. Get JITTER (22-8a
BUG—at all druggists — Only 36c. «mmsnsd
"I
----:—
City Asks Financial
And Legal Data On
Plan to Annex Britton
) y, : :
■ d
d> /
S D
• •
• <
Called to Meeting |
Pilots of the civil air patrol will,
meet at 7 p. m. Wednesday at the
Chamber of Commerce to receive in-
structions relating to the mock air
raid to be staged July 5 in 50 Okla-
homa counties.
About 125 pilots, from six counties
in the central part of the state, will
attend the meeting, W. F. Peterson,
public relations officer lor the CAP,
said Tuesday.
Maps of the routes each of the.
fliers will cover in flights over the
entire test area will be distributed.
Moss Patterson, C. A. P. state com-
mander. and Jay Perry, mock air raid
director, will be in charge of the
meeting.
Thousands of air warning observers
will keep track of the planes’ flights
in the trial period lasting from dawn
until dark.
Reports from the 800 or more ob-
servation posts on the movement of
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 27, Ed. 4 Tuesday, June 23, 1942, newspaper, June 23, 1942; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1988359/m1/2/?q=WAR+DEPARTMENT: accessed June 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.