Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 289, Ed. 4 Thursday, April 24, 1941 Page: 2 of 2
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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I
$
TWO— HURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1941
Every day the Times sells more papers in Oklahoma City than there are homes
Oklahoma City Times
State Gets 10
Excited About
Schools For
Ground Crews
in two or three hours’ time."
SINGAPORE, April 24.—(P)—A great transport arrived here homa city and Tulsa immediately.
Rose
Continued From Pate 1
>
German planes while fine motors, do
d
Declaring
■
the axis win. "we might as well kiss
our export market for farm products
New U. S. Taxes Small Price
the
For Freedom, Says Morgenthau
WASHINGTON, April 24.— (UP)— Secretary of the Treasury
places in England, but also to send
"That character of witness,” Mor-
for five years.
%
28 :
KUPPENHEIMER
1
SPORTSWEAR
1"
ek
'This surely is a modest proposal In
the present emergency, and with the
4
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point the men to fill them.
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Athens
*
1 1
*
Continued From Page 1
*
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Hart Schaffner & Marx
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Li
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LEWINSOHNS
THE HUB
108 W MAIN
Replacement of 51
GASOLINE ALLEY
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^TTSNTION!
Huge New Transport Reinforces
British Defenses at Singapore
Income Tax
Bill Reported
Out Favorably
*
board were honest but had to play
ball with the board in order to get
Students to Be Taken
From WPA Rolls;
City Io Have Unit
la.
•M
Powerful Force Is Prepared to Meet
Japanese Threat; Commander Savs U. S.
Fleet Still Greatest Factor Deterring Tokyo
Treasury Chief Tells House Committee Big
Levy Boosts Are Needed for Safely
guns up country to strengthen vital
centers in northern Malaya (facing
restore the positions, giving the new
governor a welcome opportunity to ap-
| meet Ilie needs of Britain and other
nations resisting the axis powers.
would be hard politically on legis-
lators; that the next legislature might
didn’t dare to come in here and face
the light. He didn't dare come and
say the money ($10,000) was used the
"Wilkins told you he testified under
oath three times and each time his
testimony was contrary to the testi-
"Instead of lighting lights to gulce
those who follow him. Otto Rose has
WP
BETTEE
TELL
HAYE YOU^
TOLD NINA
YOU ANP SME
NENT OUT
TO THE 19
CLUB?
8.85
11.10
5.25
19.10
22.70
I HEAKED HER OVER THE
RADIO FIRST. TEN I CALLED
UP AND FOUND IT WAS THE
WIE ) USED f MOH SACK
IN GRADE SCHOOL PAYS.'
wouldn't go that far, far enough lo
bring Rose into the case.
Wagnon
Continued From Page 1
OLP FRIEND 3
THAT HAPPENED TO
BE IN TOWN. WHAT
WOULDN'T SHE
UNDERSTAND: )
Parents to See Play—Lafayette Pa-
rent-Teacher association will meet at
7 p. m. Friday at the school for its
annual night session and all-school
play, said Mrs Lillie Wise, principal
Thailand).
"From a military point of view."
jail has been turned over to the WPA l ment by attacking the character of
as a storeroom for tree-moth extermi- \ the chief government witnesses, Frank
nator equipment. It had been unused ’ Wilkins and Earl Johnson.
small incomes.
Although Morgenthau stressed the
need for paring non-defense spending
below current estimates, he cautioned
lest such economy work hardship on
old people and unemployable persons
In need of public assistance.
Pressed by Disney for his views on
the business.
"In some cases," O'Connell pointed
what a profit there is in such deals?
They give him a little profit and take
all the rest away from him.
Gasoline Tax Held t'p
The gasoline tax increase of 1 cent
a gallon is being held up until action
is taken on a motor vehicle license
mittee starting its task of ironing out
wrinkles in the judicial redistricting
bill, was reported to face an increas-
ingly tough task.
The senate cut the present 43 judzes
to 34, and the house boosted the fig-
ure back to 41. Governor Phillips has
selves spending less than 15 percent
of our national income for the na-
tional safety.”
Ft. Riley, Kan.....
Leavenworth, Kan.
Muskogee, Okla...
Denver .........
Cheyenne .......
A
Proposal Would Add
$600,000 to State's
Revenue
3
Thursday bringing formidable reinforcements of men and ma-
chines for the main body of the Australian imperial force which
reached this British far eastern stronghold February 18.
Australian-manned bomber planes met the convoy 100 miles
at sea and circle overhead as the big liner steamed through Singa-
; pore’s protective minefield and past the powerful harbor fortresses
to the naval base dock. •---------------------------------
.
Mtmhfr National
* TrailwaytBus Syittm
turned to this country from England
Several books on baby culture have
been given him, but nobody yet has
given Wagnon a club.
Wagnon is here visiting his family
at 1510 Northwest Fifteenth street.
Phone 3-4431
For Your Office Supplies
by taxation.)
Fair Share of Burden
"Secondly, It is designed so that all
735 and 73850
*
A
BUS DEPOT
427 W. Grand
Phone 3-6425
Caviness in Charge Here
John Caviness, Little Rock, who has
recently completed instructor train-
ing nt Houston. will be in charge of
the .school at the Municipal airport,
WPA officials announced.
Major Gray left Oklahoma City for
Tulsa Thursday afternoon to confer
24/4
3
JR art LT
204-06 w. Main
where non-defense expenditures might
be whittled down, Morgenthau pointed
to the proposed $300,000,000 outlay
for the CCC and $370,000,000 for na-
tional youth administration activities.
He added there are still other possible
savings.
Disney mentioned $200,000,000 of
annual expenditures for roads. $80,-
000,000 for postal subsidies, and $840,-
000 involved in the handling of mail
franked "by congress alone."
5"
* NOROLINE«
NON-SKID. NON-SLIP BOTTLE-10*
completion of the course, they will
be returned to a WPA project.
Major Gray said the Oklahoma al-
lottment of 10 schools may not mean
that that number of different schools
will be established but that some of
the training may be repeated at cen-
tral points
Farm Aid Bill Cited i violations have become so rare in
"Ordinary traffic must now get to 1 Middleton that the two-celled town
one side to let planes and tanks and
guns have the right of way," Mor-
genthau said in summing up his po-
sition on that score.
Representative Disney (D., Okla.)
Oklahoma county will furnish only
one replacement among the 51 men
to be brought here Friday for induc-
tion into the army.
He is Paul Edward Rutledge, 2327
Northwest Tenth street, who will be
sent In Friday morning by local board
No. 7. Britton.
Fifty men were slated to arrive here
Thursday afternoon. They, with the
51 due here Friday, constitute the fi-
nal replacement contingent due on 10
calls for 7,218 men.
However, draft officials expect the
usual rejection percentage of between
20 and 25 to necessitate calling in
about 25 men to complete replace-
ments.
not give them as fast a pickup as the
British and American planes have stake in a British victory to be "very
and in dog fights the British are able ereat," the secretary said that should
to move to more advantage than the "ha ......... • mih‛ l"“
, Germans.”
Kuppenheimer 2
Sport Coats . . . •%
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he declared, "it is neither wise nor
right to derend on it, but there is
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Kuppenheimer $4 Q50
Slacks...... •
boards present funds, would be used Morgenthau told congress Thursday the administration's program
to finance food stamp and cotton । for $3,500,000,000 in new taxes is "a small price" to pay lor defense
Stampprograms tThe house has sim- of this nation's freedom.
U*So far, the legislature has failed in He testified before the house ways and means committee at
attempts to levy taxes directly against1 the outset of public hearings on treasury proposals that would
box and was made of a thin strip of
aluminum and two layers of a plas-
tie. The induction motors on the
not choose
said "You
The highest lighthouse on the A" -
lantic coast of the United States us
278 feet above sea level, at Marcus
Hook, Del
NEW YORK, April 24.—’—
The people of the United States
were told by Secretary of Agri-
culture Wickard Thursday that
it was high time they "got ex-
cited” about the critical state of
world affairs.
"Nowadays." the cabinet officer re-
minded. "ostrich nations don't last
very long "
The secretary offered this commen-
tary on the progress to date of the
European war:
F
strewn the path with rocks, debris
and broken promises."
Morrison began his closing argu-
selves they would bring in a fellow
citizen? They brought in old Otto
Rose who has been under suspicion
stand Don't you think in order to help thorn-
(Eo
a
toe
“63
com to A em rues
LIKE THE 79 CLs FoR
INSTANCE. I'VE NEVES
TAKEN HEC TEEE,
YOU KNOW.
wav they are trying to say it was
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said "It also is expected to give the
British an advantage in altitude ”
German planes. Wagnon said, are
already being constructed of metal
substitutes
"I had hold of a piece of a wing
from a German plane shot down the
other day," he said. "The wing was
about the thickness of a cardboard
2
8 YOU MEAN, SALLY,
- YOU'LL TELL HE?
_ IF • DON'T.' )
week you have plenty of them, but
you don't think about them until you
get somewhere else and see how people
live ”
The newspaper man is very busy
getting acquainted with his son, born
18 months ago after Mrs Wagnon re-
WJAGNON says that German bomb-
W ings. while destructive, have not
cut British industrial production 5
percent.
"German planes have to fly so high
that they cannot be accurate,” he
said, "although they attempt to h
objectives."
American help. Wagnon said. is
about to give British aviation a de-
sppaampadegemaaadaadagpAaMkk
I PAINT JOBS
I FINANCED!
3 No Down Payment
3 Pay for both material
3 and labor in easy month-
S ly payments Terms may
3 be arranged to suit your
3 convenience. Use Cook’s
|| Easy Payment Plan!
ft COOKS MINTS
11b3ldcesBroadwaovevd
I HAVEN'T YET SALLY.
NINA HASN’T A
JEALOUS DISPOSITION
BUT SHE MIGHT NOT
UNDERSTAND SOME
THINGS ABOUT IT. )
any more witnesses on
Thursday morning.
"The government does
its witnesses," O’Connell
mony he has given here. For the
testimony given here he expects to be
pardoned Johnson also expects some
consideration as a result of his testi-
mony."
Oklahoma has been allotted 10 avi-
ation groundmen's service training
schools, including two which are ex-
pected to begin operation in Okla-
Jhe Siandjahd
OFFICE SUPPLY CO.
315 North Broadway
% )5-
„§amtaFBus
- • The top-ranking
travel bargains this year
are Santa Fe Trailways Bus
fares .'Take advantage of
these low round -trip rates
to visit him in camp.
Round-Trip Bargains
Little Rock, Ark.. .$10.90
’This is the man behind the throne
This is the man who didn't have the
nerve to collect the graft himself but ;
got poor dupes to do it for him "
O’Connell made the first closing
argument for the government as the
trial came to a close when W. P
Morrison, Rose’s attorney, rested the
case for the defense without putting
described the most important features
of the new program as follows:
An increase of income tax rates.
A lowering of the minimum income
subject to surtax.
An increase in excess profits tax
for "further reducing the evil" of
defense profiteering.
New excise taxes on a number of
commodities which are not essential
to the defense program.
"Greatest Service of All"
"We are now about to pay for the
greatest service of all: The safety
and protection of our country,” Mor-
genthau's prepared statement con-
cluded.
The schools. to be presented through
the work projects administration. were
explained Thursday by Major Lewis
M. Gray. Washington. D C , who was
in the city for examination of pros-
pective students.
Prospective Students Tested
The students, men taken from the
WPA rolls, were being interviewed
Thursday. The 10 to be selected for
the Oklahoma City unit will be paid
their usual WPA wages. during the
training period and in event they are
not given private employment on
asked for specific suggestions on non-
defense economy and Morgenthau told
him to "look first" at the gigantic
agriculture supply bill for 1942. which
contains an unbudgeted boost m
parity payments.
In outlining the tax program, Mor-
genthau said one of the advantages
of a heavy tax program at this time
would be to keep down prices on nor-
mal commodities, since by paying
more money into the treasury the
American people would have less to
spend. In that way, he added, mone-
tified this was for three years’ work
and legal fees. Is it likely that But-
terfield worked three years without
getting anything for it? What did he
live on in the meantime?"
Earlier Thursday, Joseph P O’Con-
nell. Washington tax expert aiding in
the prosecution, said that nothing was
too big or too small for members of
the old school board to collect so long
out, "there was obviously a large
profit When a man has to pay 30 to
40 percent tribute, can you Imagine
The dockside scene was less noisy
and less colorful than that of two
months ago when the Australian van-
| guard came ashore to the blare of
bands and lusty singing.
Defense Near Peak
But Thurday’s reinforcements were
no less important to Malaya's defense
because the new contingents included
transport services and other auxil-
iaries essential to a fighting force
j With the new’ arrivals. Lieut. Gen.
L. V Bond, commander of British
land forces in Malaya, said the de-
fense in terms of men, guns and air-
l planes was nearing its peak, for the
time being at least
। Other powerful army contingents of
Australians and Indians plus a whole
i shipload of the latest type anti-air-
! craft artillery from Britain and Amer-
ican-made planes. he asserted, have
ensured closely co-ordinated striking
power which forms the basis of Brit-
1 ain’s far eastern defense scheme.
der govern, ent control Only two of
them testified, however Apparently
two of them. Price and Spivey,
in- ernment expenditures during the next
i fiscal year were previously estimated ...
by Morgenthau at $19,000,000,000. of He stressed that in stepping up pro- ] no Question but that the United States
which $12,667,000,000 would be raised duction in this country, it would be I fleet is the most powerful factor de-
necessary to divert to defense produc- l terring the activity of an enemy of
tion "more and more of the resources I Britain in the Pacific area."
"The stop’ in this conflict, so far
as the democracies are concerned, has
been a story of too little and too late ’
Millions of Americans are getting sick
of that story. They see clearly the re-
sults of appeasement and unprepared-
ness."
Wickard’s address was prepared for
a gathering of New England and the
middle Atlantic farmers, called to dis-
cuss the agriculture department’s pro-
gram for expanding production of
meats, poultry and dairy products to
. . . and still take adequate care of our
defense needs. Therefore government
expenditures outside of the realm of
defense and security from want
American agriculture's
tary purchasing power would be kept
from "outrunning production."
Cautions On Relief Slashes
The ways and means committee has
two plans before it, the drastic
Your first choice for week-
ends and evenings. Mello-
weave natural shade coats
with hand-crafted slacks to
match.
weapons of national defense? How
much is it worth to be a free man
living in free land.
"If we remember always the serv-
ices we are receiving as individuals,
the new taxes will seem a small price
to pay. The American people are
ready to pay that price."
Speed-Up Termed Vital
He reminded the committee that al-
though this country now has a pro-
gram of about $39,000,000,000 for de-
fense expenditures, including the lend-
lease appropriations, treasury studies
showed that unless there is a decided
speed-up in American production ef-
fort not much more than $12,000,000,-
000 will be spent for defense in the
next fiscal year, beginning July 1.
Recalling the treasury estimate that
at the start of the new fiscal year
"we shall be spending no more than
$1,000,000,000 a month on defense,”
Morgenthau said that "the danger to
as Rose could have his share.
"Here is a man who had the guid-
ing of little children." O'Connell said
Did he lead them right? No. he took
10 percent of the value of their ice --------
cream away from them just in order 1 with officials there on the examina-
’ to get his share. lion of students for the Tulsa airport
| "This is the man who started it school.
for four or five years Under suspi-
cion cast by the press and by the
public.
"No one else could lie brought into
this case but Otto Rose or Mrs. J S.
Poole, for all the others pleaded guilty.
The four members of the team—Wil-
kins. Johnson, Rosco Price and Ed
Spivey. are undoubtedly guilty, for
they pleaded guilty and all gre un-
land is at home. And in England WJap. 1 6 AT. *
[ there is no point at which troops in ▼▼ •-9 “ • *-e - V-- a
any quantity cannot be concentrated
cided superiority.
"American gasoline of high octane
rating is now on the way and is ex-
pected to increase efficiency of Brit-
ish airplanes 25 percent." Wagnon
"We are big and rich and strong. We treasury plan and the proposal of the
are economically better able to carry joint congressional committee on in-
l this load than any other people in the ternal revenue taxation. The latter
world ” ; proposals would not be so severe on
He left the task of detailing the sug-
our peace and security is mounting
hour by hour—yet we shall find our-
the public. ; increase the levies on average taxpayers as much as 600 percent.
A soft drinks tax was shot down in Morgenthau said the program hase
committee. A cigaret tax, increasing four objectives:
Force of 90,0(10 Seen
Those troops—declared by some ob-
servers to be the forerunner of an
army of 90,000—will take up positions
in already prepared stations on the
Malayan peninsula
Arrival of the Australians followed
by 11 days signing of the Japanese-
Soviet Russian neutrality pact—which
has been seen in some quarters as
freeing Japan for a push southward
against Sinzapore, the Dutch East In-
dies. or both.
Domei, Japanese news agency,
broadcast a dispatch from Amoy
China, to the Tokyo newspaper Asahi
to the effect that a "secret military
agreement between England and the
Chungking government would appear
to have been concluded for the de-
fense of Burma."
U. S. Fleet Influence Cited
General Bond said the arrival of
Tan is by far the leading color
of the season. But there are tans
and tans. Our wet sand shade has
that certain something you’re look-
ing for.
Gulf weights, gabardines and
cords in the smartest drape models
—as tailored only by
asked a reduction in judgeships as
an economy move. in new taxes would take “only 4 per-,
One prediction was the committee cent of a rapidly rising national in-
has a chance of agreeing on a cut to come "
35 or 36 positions, but that increased I •
traveling costs of those remaining ! the
would offset much of the savings, present level of prosperity," he said.
Another view was that losing judges — .....
"How much does It mean to the | County to Furnish
American taxpayer to have a navy I A n K , n
guarding American shores? How much One Man 111 Draft
does it mean to him to have an ade-
quate supply of airplanes and other
gested new taxes to John L. Sullivan,
assistant secretary of the treasury,
who was to follow Morgenthau before
the committee. Morgenthau, however.
rison told the jury, “is seeking some
benefit or immunity for himself.
George II of Greece, former King
Carol- of Romania, King Haakon of
Norway and Prince Bernhard of the
Netherlands.
Greece's high command, explaining
the collapse of the Greek armies
numbering perhaps 250,000 men
which surrendered in the northwest
after they had been cut off by Ger-
man panzier columns, summed up that
debacle in seven words.
"These forces did not possess anti-
tank guns,”
Premier Mussolini's high command
listed 6.000 Italian troops killed or
wounded, including 400 officers, in
the final offensive against the Greeks
on the Albanian front.
Hostilities ceased at 6 p. m. (10 a. m.
Oklahoma time) Wednesday under
the terms of an armistice signed at
the Salonika headquarters of German
Field Marshal Siegmund List, com-
mander of the Nazi southeast armies.
Even though reports in London said
the pace of the motorized Nazi drive
In Greece had slackened, Britain
waited impatiently and in an in-
creasingly critical mood for word of
the Grecian finale and was prepared
to hear the worst.
The Bosporus and Dardanelles—
vital straits between the Black and
Mediterranean seas—loomed possible
as the next axis objective.
should be re-examined with a magni-
fying glass."
Called Modest Proposal
Morgenthau said the $3,500,000,000
By King
NOT ON YOU? LIFE:
I'M NOT STICKING MY I
NECK OUT THAT FAK. E
WAGNON said the German air
VV raids have done considerable
damage to British docks, but Britain
still has plenty of docks and still is
getting food and other materials in
sufficient quantity.
Despite a 2-year adventure, Wag-
non is happy to be home and would
like to spend the rest of his life do-
ing nothing but remembering the ad-
venlures he has had He looks for-
ward eagerly to his new assignment
as head of The Associated Press bu-
reau in Philadelphia which serves the
states of Pennsylvania and Delaware.
"Have I had any narrow squeaks?"
he laughs. "If you're in London a
bill from which more revenues would ,, . ...
he diverted to local government and bear their
A fight win be made to send at resTrtreslyrortderenselpoyormautinzgotr
least half of any gasoline tax boost amount of money that the public can
to counties for road purposes. ;
Predictions increase that the state
will be forced to fall back on the sales >
tax to balance the books. That would
bring an attempt to split such an in-
crease with the old age pension fund.
Redistricting Hits Snag
can't expect a man dealing in this
sorry work to be associated with peo-
ple who would not commit any of-
fense. He couldn't get upright citizens
to go around and collect money as
tribute for him.
"They didn't bring G A Nichols in
because they didn't dare. Nichols
good-bye. (See David Lawrence’s
opinion. Page 8.)
★
passage.—at least as a 2-cent
crease.
Stillwater Wildcat
Tests 400 Barrels
STILLWATER, April 24.—(/Pl—The
Gardner Oil Co. said Thursday its No.
1 Lowry wildcat, NW SE SW 12-19-
Iw, 11 miles northwest of here, in
tests showed for production of 400
barrels of oil daily from the Meisner.
The company is installing choke and
more tankage for additional testing.
Get a Wrecker—the Wrecker’s Wrecked!
A Soo line wrecker made it a grand slam when it bit off too
big a chunk at a freight train wreck 12 miles west of Minne-
apolis Thursday. Wnile liberated pigs rooted in content-
ment, crewmen tried to right the wrecker, overturned when it
began lifting one of the nine derailed cars. (Wirephoto.)
<6) ‛
Qe
spend for comparatively less important
things.
"And finally, it is designed to pre-
vent a general rise in prices by keep-
ing the total volume of monetary pur-
I chasing power from outrunning pro-
duction.
The senate-house conference com- "We simply cannot carry on bust-
ness as usual and government as usual
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additional anti-aircraft guns not only used."
would permit Singannre to nut up a O'Connell said many of the busi-
more dense barrage than at manv ness men dealing with the school
( Ci ) 1
AcAMP.
The senate revenue and taxation
committee reported favorably Thurs-
day the administration's 1941 income
tax bill designed to add between $600,-
000 and $700,000 to the budget bal-
ancing drive.
The committee cut the 20 percent
depletion allowance on gross income
from oil and gas property to 1712 per-
cent.
That was its major change to the
bill which the house passed without
altering rates or exemptions on indi-
vidual incomes.
New Features Listed
Principal new features of the meas-
ure:
Tax on income from dividends paid
by corporations which do less than 5
percent of their gross business in Ok-
lahoma.
Disallowing exemptions for building
and loan associations on their divi-
dends, which the present law classi-
Xies as interest paid.
Although the bill is important in
the all-over picture of putting the
gvernment on a cash basis as the
people demanded, its full effects will
not be felt in the next fiscal year.
Therefore it can largely be dis-
counted in the first year taxation
drive.
First Measure Signed
The first of the new money meas-
ures, increasing the tax on corpora-
tion franchises, has been signed. It is
expected to raise upward of $400,000
more.
The second increases the 2 percent
gross premium tax on out-of-state in-
surance companies to 4 percent. It
is figured as a $1,000,000 revenue pro-
ducer. It was passed by the senate
Wednesday and sent to the governor.
Prior to the special election at
which the budget balancing amend-
ment was passed, the legislature had
transferred the 2 percent use tax and
automobile excise tax to the general
fund. That however, means the public
welfare board must be financed from
the general revenue fund.
Jobless Fund Passed
The senate passed and sent to the
house Wednesday a bill to set up
$900,000 annually for the board with
which to care for unemployables.
Another $600,000. to come from the
* -g
Same Rule II orks
At Opposite Extremes
NEW ALBANY, Ind. April 24 — (PP)
—George W Sluder. 81 years old. put
a classified advertisement in a news-
paper asking for a wife.
Mrs. Sarah Gresham. 75. answered
As the two were married, each for
the third time, Sluder said:
I guess if the young folks now-
adays get married younger the old
folks can get married older."
the rate from 3 cents a package to "First of all, it presents a method
5 cents, is high on the house calendar of paying as we go for a reasonable
with many members doubtful of its proportion of our expenditures. (Gov-
'Time to Get
now engaged in satisfying our civilian i - •--—
needs and wants." | MIDDLETON, Mass.—(UP)—Law
(6
399
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 289, Ed. 4 Thursday, April 24, 1941, newspaper, April 24, 1941; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1993834/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.