Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 23, Ed. 3 Tuesday, June 17, 1941 Page: 2 of 7
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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T
I•
TWO—TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1941
Oklahoma City Times
Every day the Times sells more papers in Oklahoma City than there are homes
Auto Parts Strike Imperils Jobs
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SAN ANTONIO, Texas, June 17—
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Still nearly $15,000 .short of its
center here, United Service Or-
)
Rothschilds Has The COOL CLOTHES..
Fort
Production employes who had been
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Portland, Maine.
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Portland,
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the
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y
the next convention city.
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A SHACKET IS A
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gress— particularly those from Miss
Res.,
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John Reed Kline, AC., Res., Wash-
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Gordon Resignation
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Resignation of S. J. Gordon as as-
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Second Floor
Come Seb’m!
By King
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3%--
Perfume Used
In Liver To
Slaying Stirs
Capital; Sex
Maniac Sought
U. S. Artillery
Chief in World
War Is Dead
Army Service
Fund Is Still
Short of Goal
Closing of Plymouth, Briggs, Ford,
Dodge Factories Feared; Sugar Refinery
Workers Walk Out in Quaker City
General Ernest Hinds,
Famed for Accuracy,
Dies at San Antonio
Army Planes May ‘Raid*
During Night Test
. WILMEE,
WHAT'S
GOING ON
. HEEE f
Rate Board Law
Aid Steps Down
Ruling Bloc ‘Regrets’
JIGCEES !
uses COMES
CHICGEE,
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I'LL BE
SEEIN‛
YOU!
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cency and served a sentence of 30
days in the county jail.
THREE — Providing literature and
writing rooms for soldiers.
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FOUR—Arranging transportation fa-
cilities so soldiers new to the city
may visit such show places as Lin-
coln park, the oil fields, etc.
FIVE—Thorough checking of all sol-
diers whose proof of service is their
official leave passes.
SIX-Check of persons listing their
homes on the center’s invitation list
to guard against possible abuses.
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Suspect
Continued From Page 20
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i oeopptD
THESE, MR.
CHIGGER, AN'
I WAS JUST
PICKIN' 'EM
1 UP. )
from Roosevelt hospital Monday night
by physicians who said his condition
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underprivileged children, the Hospi-
tality club will sponsor a dance start-
-TEF 1--3
• wg ii l
sire soldier guests at dinners or par-
ties.
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U. A. W.-A. F. of L. has a union shop agreement with the firm,
and has contended that the rival C. I. O. union has tried to raid
its membership. This the U. A. W.-C. I. O. denied, describing the
walkout as a "spontaneous vacation period."
tinguished service medal for services
in France. Other decorations won by
Gerieral Hinds included the French
Commander, Legion of Honor: Oom-
mender of the Order of Leopold, King
of Belgium, Italian Commander of the
Order of St. Maurice and St Lazarus,
and the Croix de Guerre with Palm.
Kreisler Leaves Hospital
NEW YORK, June 17.—(AP—Fritz
Kreisler, 66-year-old violinist who was
IT’S EXTRAO-- .
COMING sooN!
OKLAHOMANS TIM
the reports credited the artillery
largely with bringing about the de-
Americans' advances and prevented
counter-attack
He Retired in 1928
Woman’s Call For
Police Help Turns
Into Boomerang
A woman living in the northwest
part of the city telephoned the po-
lice Monday night that she needed
help. She had discharged her Negro
maid and they were having a fuss
over 81.10, allegedly owed by the
maid for laundry.
Scout car officers went to the ad-
dress and unable to appease the
pair took them both to the police
station.
There Lieut. John Butler told the
employer she had better go home.
She gave Butler a piece of her
mind. Butler put her in jail and
told the maid to go home.
Early Tuesday morning the woman
paid the desk sergeant an (11 fine
for drunkenness and went home.
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tion date of the new Will Rogers field
base to be a part of that observance.
Sterling said. Chief occasion of the
blackout is a reported transfer of a
fleet of heavy army bombers from
March field, Calif., to Langley field,
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the downpour and there was seized by
her assailant. A variant of this was
that she accepted the offer of some
passing motorist to take her home.
Dr. A. Magruder MacDonald, dis-
men. and from 64 to 98
women.
55
With S5O0.OOO.O00 worth of ship : $40,000 goal for a soliders service
construction at 11 San Francisco bay center here Inited servien Ar.
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Alcohol passes directly from the
stomach into the blood, a fact which
E.AL
MAIN AvGeiwanvV
L
1 TWO—Arranging contacts between
soldiers and city residents who de-
John Paul Wetherholdt, QMC. Res.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, to duty, Washington.
Oscar Ernest Eggert, Spec., Res.,
Milwaukee, to duty. Sacramento
Gilbert Francis Esser. Chap Res.
to Collegeville, Ind., to duty Fort
Devens.
John Joseph Holtz. QMC,
Chicago, to duty Baltimore.
went on strike Monday at the Piper
Aircraft Corp. at Lock Haven, Pa,
where light aircraft used in civilian
yards still tied up by a machinists'
strike, Harvey W. Brown. A. F. of L.
machinists president, made ready for
a personal appeal to the strikers to
return to their Jobs Further, the
mediation board in Washington was
drafting recommendations which of-
ficials hoped would settle the dispute
between the machinists and Bethle-
hem shipyards, which holds about
*300,000,000 of the affected work
About 300 A. F. of L. machinists
accounts for much of the alcoholic
breath. Doctor Crohn's experiments
all indicated that no breath odor
comes from the stomach at any time,
except during burps.
The American Medical association
40 $,
K
Luther R. Moore, MMC., San Fran- ' receiving less than 81.01 an hour got
cisco to Fort Richardson. | 8-cent increases, while 7-cent boosts
Fred During. Inf., Fort Sheridan, to , went to those who had been making
" “ ■ more than S101. The new hourly
scale ranges from 90 cents to S1 57 for
Nazi-Aided Soviet Base*
Called Alaska Menace
SEATTLE, June 17.—()—Return-
ing from Alaska with a report that
Russia had established military bases
with German technical aid “at
Alaska’s back door,” Representative
Warren G. Magnuson (D., Wash.)
said Tuesday he would recommend
immediate creation of a Joint Inter-
national highway authority to direct
construction ofa n arterial route to
the northern territory.
Magnuson, chairman of the Inter-
national highway commisston, pre-
sided at a meeting of the body in
Alaska and surveyed the proposed
northern routes of ths highway.
v 1 , . c - ■ c, seriously injured when he was struck
Medal in School Cleanup by a truck in April. was discharged
29
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28 I
Baldauf saw the man run from a side
door.
Eichenberger, whose wife manages Tentative plans to black out
the string of apartment buildings, said Oklahoma City on the night of
the man first appeared at 2 p. m June 27 as a tactical civilian de-
Saturda .when.he, knocked..on the fense problem in connection
door ox the Baldauf apartment. Mrs -*
Baldauf, who was bathing, put on a with air corps maneuvers were
robe and answered the knock. The i laid Tuesday.
Japanese Appointee Slain
HONGKONG, June T.—(PP—Hong-
kong sources reported Tuesday that
Chiese gunmen killed the Chungshan
district magistrate, an appointee of
the Japanene-controlled Canton re-
gime. Monday night at Macao, Portu-
guese. colony west of this city.
17 p 1 1p •
*40
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City’s Bluff Creek
Priority Request is
Taken to Washington
Oklahoma City's problem of getting
priority ratings for the Bluff creek
water supply project was carried to
Washington Tuesday by Fred Jones,
co-ordinator for the office of produc- 1
tion management.
With Jones is William H. Carson,
M’ALESTER. June 17.—(Special.)
Lieut. Col. Walter M. Harrison of the
ganizations workers continued
solicitation for funds Tuesday.
Following are some of the services
planned when the total goal is raised:
ONE—Operation of a clearing center
for general information and com-
munity contacts.
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army bureau of public relations in
Washington. D. C. Tuesday was
awarded the Veterans of Foreign
reports that have circulated for a
1 week that one result of the unau-
thorized strike at the North American
Aviation Co. plant at Inglewood,
Calif., would be a "purge" of radical
C. I. O. leaders.
Purify Breath
CLEVELAND, June 17.—()— Per-
• fuming the liver is the newest,
acientific way to control halitosis.
Swallow, for example, one drop of
oil of wintergreen, and in about two
hours you should have a breath slight-
ly perfumed with wintergreen. This
•cent may last two days.
Oil of peppermint works similarly,
except that the breath scent is pep-
permint.
The perfumes, tn both instances,
come from the blood, into the lungs to
be exhaled. But the storehouse is not
the blood. The liver appears to be the
place where the scent gathers.
Both these perfumes are rather
faint, too ladylike, in fact, to mask
the odor of garlic. Adding more of
these oils does not help. Too much of
either may be dangerous to health or
life, particularly in children.
The experiments which ferreted out
this natural storehouse of either hali-
tosis or sweet breaths in the liver were
done mainly with garlic. It too per-
fumes the liver.
feat of the Germans because its ■'ma-
chine-like accuracy and deadliness" I
held up their advances, covered the
(By The Associated Press) i
A jurisdictional strike at a Detroit auto parts factory Tuesday Funeral services will be held Thure.
threatened enforced layoffs for 40,000 workers in automobile day morning, with burial in the na-
John W. Bulger, Inf.,
&
•mi
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Strfeff's native Iowa—and a speedy
solution of the case was demanded. —.....me, A
Police already have two unsolved slay- ington, to Jefferson barracks.
Ings on their hands for the same gen-
eral neighborhood.
ing editor of The Daily Oklahoman
and Oklahoma City Times.
The V. F. W. hopes to present the
medal at its national convention in
Philadelphia. Otherwise the District
of Columbia department will be
asked to make the award. The state
encampment closes late Tuesday with
election of officers and selection of
He looked for sweet scents which clothes to give them a valuable lead
would mask halitosis. But so far in the mystery surrounding the death
nothing has been found which over- of 23-year-old Jessie E. Strieff. whose
comes garlic. nude body was found Monday,
newly appointed manager of the OPM
office here, who will assist with tech-
nical details in obtaining priority rat-
ings on grounds that unless they are
granted, the city may be delayed in
obtaining necessary materials and
equipment for the reservoir work.
Jones and Carson will attend a gen-
eral meeting of OPM executives where
plans will be perfected to co-ordinate
the efforts of government. and indus-
try in speeding completion ’ defense
construction, and widening u e scope
of manufacturers filling orders for
war materials.
The McGregor SHACKET can be worn
either as a shirt or as a jacket . . . and
looks perfect either way! When it's
worn outside your slacks, it has the easy,
casual lines that distinguish a well-cut
sports jacket. And when you tuck it in
your slacks, it provides all the free-swing-
ing room you expect in a shirt tailored for
WASHINGTON, June 17 —(P— De-
tectives searched through one of the
capital's best residential sections
Tuesday for the missing clothes a
comely young war department
stenographer wore Sunday before she
was waylaid, raped and strangled.
Police counted on the finding of the
jority faction Tuesday “with deep re-
gret."
Asked why his “OK” was not on
Gordon's letter, W. J. Armstrong, mi-
nority member of the three-man
board, said he had not been informed
at it. Gordon wrote that he was
leaving effective July 1 to enter law
practice and termed his six-year as-
sociation with the commission “most
pleasant and profitable in the experi-
ence I received in the practice of util-
ity law," and expressed "sincere ap-
preciation of consideration ani r ■-
esy” shown him.
His letter was marked "OK" by
Chairman Reford buu. .
Chairman Ray Weems. It was a--
ter of Weems charging Armstrong
with “blocking harmony" last week
that bared to the publlo the split in
ths commission.
Gordon was reported to have been
an appointee of A. S. J. Shaw who
preceded Armstrong as the commis-
alon minority.
cents for Wars citizenship medal for his part in
I the school board cleanup as manag-
e
73
ajMa
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Resignation nr s J. Gordon as as- Miss Strieff came here
sistant attorney for the corporation Moines last September to work mn Te5
commission was accepted by the ma- war department as a "Junirr clerk!
stenographer. She recently was pro-
moted to a better position in the of-
fice of the chief of ordnance.
Wright, to Fort Lawton.
Colonel
Nicholas A. Albanese. MC.,
Knox to Fort Leonard Wood.
Lieutenant Colonels
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6, • •
Army Orders
WASHINGTON. June 17.—(P—
Army orders Tuesday:
Brigadier General
Carlyle H. Wash. Fort George
active sports! In
tan, brown or
blue rayon pop-
lin.
Highway Patrol Joint
Hunt for Bethel Youth
The highway patrol Tuesday was
broadcasting a “pick-up" for Melvin
Joe Black, 16-year-old pupil in the
consolidated school at Bethel, who has
been missing since June 1.
The boy, son of Mr and Mrs R L.
Black. Tecumseh. last was seen near
Shawnee, where his car was recovered
wrecked a few days after his dis-
appearance
Mrs. Mary Erans, 1425 Southwest
Thirtieth street, is an aunt of the boy.
YOUVE GOT A
SIX. HERE’S A
Pims you DONT
MAKS YOuR
POINT.' 4
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HURTHER experiments then showed
1 that the liver and the bile were
storing the garlic scent. The escape
was from bile into the blood, and ap-
parently this was slow. for Doctor
Crohn noted that sometimes the scent
persisted on the breath for an hour
or more after it had disappeared from
the bile.
was "good,"
Phone 3-4431
For Your Office Supplies
Jhe Standard
OFFICE SUPPLY CO.
315 North Broadway
SHIRT AND JACKET IN ONE
trlct coroner, said the autopsy showed
that Miss Strieff had put up a "ter-
headquarters points out that oil of I rific struggle.” She could have been
wintergreen when used in more than stransled by a rope or a folded hand-
a therapeutic dose. which is 12 drops, kerch ief, he said
is poisonous, and that in medical lit-1 The crime aroused members of con-
erature 56 cases of oil of wintergreen
poisoning have been reported, with 60
percent fatalities.
(P.Major Gen. Ernest Hinds, 77 ,
chief of artillery notne A Pershing man. then in uniform, asked If he Back of the maneuvers was the idea
I Tuesday at the station hospital ’ Fort I could use the telephone. She told 1 'hat if army bombing plane pilots on
Sam Houston. ' him he could not, that she was busy. a transcontinental flight can "find"
He then went upstairs, Eichenberger the. city in darkness, they'll have no
said, and finally left the building. difficulty spotting the base of any
plants which depend struck factory for parts. I tiona Icemeteryat Fort Sam Houston toAorte P mayondayttaeapartmind of a com-
A Michigan state labor mediator declared that employes of with fu military honors, agaun. Mrs Baldauf screamed and mittee to work out the civilian defense
Plymouth, Briggs, Ford and Dodge truck plants might be made Germans Pay Tribute the man fled. end of the maneuver, said "the city's
ghiteajatmsgbnepwareerssxeseheemomtaranazomagno‛co:"therdmfFtrsoznmz“ssmemhrmap"sin-svmmerzrdsdupaesia,rmasyrmhazymndany‛erouriif
kx s 4m ™
artillery. wasons.beueve this, was false. The call for close co-operation of every
AS chief of artillery of the A E F. man. Ad in hs pocketfve checks person, not only t sten ror warnings
General Hinds was in command of 1nPoeusAt P erenforzed. They of approaching bombers, but to douse
every piece of artillery which the were, in. amounts from $2 to $5. 1111 lights.
United States threw into the great . „ Ponce M d a man tried to force bls The blackout will be strictly volun-
conflict. WaY into several apartments in the | tary, and no effort will be made by
After the war, secret reports of same neighborhood about seven weeks any agency to pull master switches on
observers on the efficiency of the AK0. They are investigating the pos- electric circuits, Sterling said.
Americans were revealed somty 11 was the same man I "We'll try to arrange it as near like
While every other branch of the The man was identified by police : A London blackout as possible," he
American battle forces was criticized, from fingerprint records as a man said.
the reports credited the artillery I who was arrested in July, 1940, at Coincidentally, the blackout attempt
Northwest Fifteenth street and North (Will come close enough to the dedica-
Walker avenue for molesting a young ----- ' '
woman. He pleaded guilty to a charge
of outraging public morals and de-
pllot training are manufactured.
Pickets Surround the Plant
The company has offered a 10 per-
cent wage increase, but the machin-
ists demand a minimum of 75 cents
for skilled employes, compared to the
present 50 cents.
At McKeesport, Pa . 175 C. I O.
employes of the municipal street, san-
itation and water departments were
on strike, contending the city govern-
ment had failed to recognize their
union and expressing dissatisfaction
with wage increases granted last week.
Fourteen thousand employes of the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Akron.
AdreementannighnEea"ygeseuneoraan Walter Harrison Awarded
the C. I. O United Rubber workers.
John Caldwell Bennett Jr., AC.,
Res, Louisville, to duty Tampa.
Colin Clyde Campbell, CWS . Res ,
Berkeley, Calif., to San Francisco.
She became engaged three months
ago to Stanley Le Blanc, a farm se-
curity administration clerk. It was
Le Blanc who first reported her
missing.
Pretty Washington Clerk Is Strangled
Jessie Elizabeth Strieff, 23 years old, comely clerk in the war
department, was found strangled to death Monday in a fash-
ionable Washington residential section. Police sought a sex
maniac they believed waylaid the girl during a storm. (Wire-
photo.)
IMPORTANT results are a new the-
l ory of the mechanism of this kind
of bad breath, and a principle of diet
which promises to get rid of some
halitosis without need of perfuming.
These experiments were described to
the American Medical association by
Dr. Burrill B. Crohn. They started
with an observation that the sleep-
producing drug, paraldehyde, may
leave its disagreeable odor on the
breath for two days.
Obviously the odor does not remain
in the mouth for that long time. Doc-
tor Crohn chose garlic as his guinea
pig for finding out more about this
•cent puzzle.
He tried garlic in the mouth only.
That is, none was swallowed. Either
chewing it vigorously, or painting it
on the teeth, resulted in a garlic
breath for never much more than one
hour.
Then he introduced garlic directly
Into the stomach, wthout touching the
mouth. There was no garlic breath at
all until about two hours. Then it ap-
peared and lasted for two days.
Two hours is the length of time that
garlic would take to pass from the
stomach into the small intestines and
for the further step of diffusing1
through the digestive canal into the
body.
The next experiment was on a sur-
gical case, where it was possible to
place the garlic directly in the small
intestine. This time the garlic scent
showed on the breath in about one
hour.
’ City Will ‘Hide’
Under Blackout
—
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Bride Strangled Nearby
Three months ago Mrs. Rose
Abramowitz, a young bride, was raped
and strangled by a daylight intruder
in her apartment, a few blocks from
where Miss Strieff's body was found.
Last month a refugee German editor,
Dr. Heinrich Simon, was fatally beat-
en in the vicinity while on an eve-
ning stroll.
r
ThP +,ete ,g, 11 + « _____ .u sprawled in the garage of a retired
that the sthav nr 1to.a new theory, professor, near fashionable Dupont
xnau me storage or odors m liver and circle
bile is associated with the natural gggg
processes of breaking down fats and • „ Storm Angle Probed
fatty acids Al evidence indicated that ____
As evidence Doctor Crohn said that crime, had.been. committed elsewhere
a diet high in butter fat and milk may and that the Eirl's body was thrust
cause halitosis. In a number of pa- into the saraze for temporary con-
tients. furthermore. he found that bad cealmernt. Abrasfons "L back and
breath could be controlled by regu- i 1e85 lednuthorities to believe that she
lating the amount of fat 10 aaEu 1 had been dragged some distance.
InK^L^Lta^h S"niale ' stm wnzcnopsmhged mha -r nt
mrintutesbreath aftet ihe "nSe *“ *° usiea gtian:"ni aviation enthusiast
if whiskv wo. . a ,, , , with a private pilot's license,- left her
th? whisky, was. placed directly into apartment to go to a nearby deli-
thest omach, without contact in the catessen store just as the storm was
mou ththe: re no. breath odor at i coming up. She was wearing the miss-
21,;. This experiment, however, was ing blue hooded raincoat and a blue
done with only therapeutic doses of । play suit with a button-on skirt,
uquor, that is the amounts that a i Terrific Struggle Indicated
physician might prescribe as a remedy I One possibility that detectives con-
in illness. । sidered was that she took refuge in
some doorway to escape the worst of
General Hinds retired from the
army in 1928 after a service of 45
years, making his home here He is
survived by his wife and two chil-
dren. Mrs. E T. Cruse, wife of Col.
E T Cruse, field artillery, and Major
John H. Hinds of the general staff
corps.
General Hinds, born at Red Hill.
Ala . in 1864, was appointed to West
Point in 1883.
He served in the Spanish-American
war, receiving a wound at Santiago,
and later served in the army of oc-
cupation of Cuba His senice also in-
cluded the Philippines
Upon A citation from General
Pershing, he was given the dis-
Of 40,000 Men in Other Plants
severely beaten. Finally Miss Lowther
succeeded in freeing herself and the
man fled when she screamed. Ivan I
295
Q elacke *ad
• shacket
Labor difficulties broke out in ae
new quarter Monday night when 1,300
employes of two large Philadelphia
sugar refineries walked out as a cli-
max to a wage dispute The A. F. of
L. Longshoremen s association asked
that the wages of laborers be in-
creased from 63 to 80 cents an hour,
with boosts of 10 to 20 cents for me-
chanics. The wage scale of the me-
chanics was not immediately made
public.
Shipyards Still idle
Maine, to Fort Custer
Robert D Ingalls, C. of E.. Fort
Bragg to Fort Snelling
santanMniCorkite, C Seattle, to Murray Denies Purge
Majors Of Reds Planned
.John.s. Griffith, AC. Santa Monica, WASHINGTON, June 17.—(UP)—
tosscatte A , .. ... Rumors of an impending "red purge"
NRussel ArRore,goD "Me tuchen. In (he Congress of Industrial organi-
N Frederick J Rragc 01% Wright zations were denied Tuesday by C. I O.
field, OMo,toFort‛Beivoir. 5 "right President Philip Murray, who accused
Llewellyn L. Barrow, MC., Hawaiian "candat.mongers".of seeking to pro:
Dept., to Washington. I mote internal dissension in industrial
Arthur Golden Coulson, Inf., Res. I unions., n. ,
Chicago, to Washington | He implied, however, that he would
Alfred Harle Leigh, Inf, Res Lan- continue to crack down on unionists
sing, to Washington. ’ leading "outlaw" strikes
Captains In a letter to 811 CI o officers
Airmna n x-V"N - . .2 . and locals, Murray promised that
cAlfred GatEritzlandoretired, Aurora, “constitutional controls" would be ap-
Colstoduty,Fort Logan, .g. plied 10 "outlaw" strikes to insure
BeWoi to FIeonhard, C. of ' l adherence to C.I.O. policies.
Joseph A. Adams: QMC., Fort Murray's letter was an answer to
Bragg, to Philippine Dept.
Earl De Witt Dickey, FA., Camp
Blanding, to Philippine Dept.
Steven Malevick, C. of E., Fort
Bragg, to Philippine Dept.
Armel Dyer, Inf., Fort Douglas, to
Fort Benning.
Benefit Dance Sot
By Hospitality Club
As a benefit for its work with
SUMMER
EXAMINATION
Of the Oklahoma State Dental
Board will be held at the Uni-
versity Medical school, 800
N. E 13th St., Wednesday and
Thursday this week. Persons
desiring free dental services
will report at the Medical
school Wednesday morning. No
plate work will be done.
__W. T. LONGWELL. Sec'y.
ing at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday at Blossom
Heath. More than 300 reservations
| have been made.
A 30-minute free instruction in
: square dancing will precede the
dance which will feature both square
and modern dancing. Tickets at *1.12
a couple may be obtained at the door.
Mrs. Carl O. Lund, president of the
club, Mrs. Jesse Lee Jones. Mrs. W.
8 Marler and Mrs. Grace Singleton
are in charge of arrangements.
Is your child a
NOSE PICKER?
It may be more than just a nnaty habit!
। It may be a Rign of worma. Yes, ugly, crawl-
ing roundworms inside vour child! Other
warning signs are fidgeting, •’picky” appe-
tite, crankiness, itching in certain parts.
Roundworms can cause real trouble! If you
even suspect your child has them, get Jayne’s
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 23, Ed. 3 Tuesday, June 17, 1941, newspaper, June 17, 1941; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1993963/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.