Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 287, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1951 Page: 1 of 30
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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T2T25 .
Planes Sought I
• I
To Spur Family
(
12
FINAL HOME EDITION
32 PAGES—500 N BROADWAY. OKLAHOMA CITYj FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1951
VOL. LXI, NO. 287.
Hunt in Texas
To Block Escape Route
; #
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9%43
Of Retreating UN Forces
Four Allied Divisions Elude
Breather Seen Taft Calls
*
38
e
■
; the Texas city.
U. S. Reported
I
Famous Store." Decatur. Ill. Officers
"I do not think we should assume
November 28 and December 15, to
Taft
U.S. War Debt
to work by the end of January.
Acting Director
8
ii
I
British Force Heroic
I
1
WASHINGTON,
Retail Sales Are High,
y, is used in
postmaster feels he
planned and executed withdrawal and
$
meet additional needs for men for the
Tinker
PXJA8 SlW
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an".
of which 450,000 are still being held
a
in the all-out push, he said.
28
included: Six Chinese armies of about
-
the scarred hulls of Seoul and Inchon.,
Even so the Reds were still eager.
as fast as they could get to the river.
Ura
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he hopes that before any new
action is taken on taxes "the ad-
ly Friday the withdrawal of United
Nations forces in Korea is a well-
PLEASE TURN to
PAOS 1. COLUMN »
Coupled with the terrific losses
allied troops inflicted on the attacking
it
11
Draft Is Urged
For Boys, 18;
Bill Prepared
dnodtend.asc '
—g Wrephote
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a
Search Operations Shift to Wichita Falls Area;
Chief Deputy Positive Missing Travelers Seen
In Mystery Illinois Car at Service Station
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la
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30-Day ‘Freeze’ Due
To Halt Higher Costs,
Authorities Declare
Board to Meet Monday,
Study While Successor
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1,
catiors are that the moisture will be
relatively light and temperatures still
relatively moderate.
h‘9
\ 1
The officer, who may not not be
named, emphasised that point re-
pestedly in talking to reporters st s
Pentagon briefing session.
Lend-Lease Parley
Ends Long Stalling
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5—(U.P)—
A
t
a
munists against the United Nations
forces.
A total of 950,000 enemy troops.
five are in reserve to the north.
The enemy has reactivated and re*
years of stalling, has agreed to
negotiate an over-all settlement
of its lend-lease account with
the United States.
Negotiations will begin in Washing-
ton January 15, the state department
said. They will be confined to the
lend-lease problem.
The United States sent Russia 811
billions worth of lend-lease aid during
the war. Much of the materiel was
consumed in the fighting but Russia
still retains 431 naval vessels, most of
them small craft, and 84 merchant
vessels which the United States has
J
homa.” It was postmarked
"Moskva” and also “USSR.”
What it said made Shaw run for
the nearest American flag. Then he
read it over again.
Translated, it says. "The director
of the Moscow central postoffice and
the bureau employes present their
TV Toplos
Women ..
57
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Increase Expected
To Hit 50,000,000
But Not Until July 1
WASHINGTON, Jan/ 5—
(P)—Some congressional tax
framers indicated Friday the
50,000,000 or more individual
’ IV I
Ready to Order
Price Controls
I
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6
B
ol
dNggNNinas gadt
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has not been set out as a special
friend of the Kremlin.
Other Involvement Hinted
"Probably every state and provin-
cial postoffice in the world got one,"
he said hopefully.
The letter-size sheet of paper is
light blue and inside the top fold is
a pen sketch, in gold ink, of a
pigeon-like bird, with a crest like a
cockatoo. The message is in royal
blue script type with the date and
initial capital letter in red.
-Ml
oau,v
portant allied escape highway center 55 miles east of Seoul.
General MacArthur's headquarters said seven commu-
nist armies—perhaps 210,000 men—are moving from the
Rout in Korea
Denied by U. S.
Army Officer Insists
UN Withdrawal Orderly
in
t-
1-
it
1‘
I
Yo
"a”
NEW YORK. Jan. 5—(P- R etail
sales in the week ended Wednesday
generally were sustained at the record
Christmas-week level and ran moder-
ately ahead of a year ago, Dun &
Bradstreet reported Friday.
Total retail dollar volume for the
week was estimated at 2 to 8 percent
above a year ago for the country aa a
whole.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5—-
The government was reported
about ready Friday to slap a 30-
day "freeze” on prices. to combat
the soaring costs of food and
other essentials.
The report circulated in authorita-
tive quarters just after release of of-
ficial government figures showing that
retail food prices three weeks ago were
almost at an all-time high.
The bureau of labor statistics said
portion of the men without
training can expect to land em-
ployment there.
Tinker Staff Screens Applicants
Six employment staff members from
Tinker are at work at the local office
screening and Interviewing applicants
on a rapid-fire assembly line. At the
peak of the summer hiring, only four
Tinker personnel staff members were
used.
".,a
.2
I
Report Chances Plan
Missing is Carl Mosser. 33. Atwood.
Til.; his wife. Thelma, 29, and the
couple's three children. Ronald Dean,
7; Gary Carl. 5. and Pamela Sue. 3.
The change in plans came imme-
diately after a Wichita Falls service
station operator reported a family fit-
ting the description of the Mussers
had stopped at his establishment Sat-
urday night and the father of the
family had grappled with a companion
the father shouted was planning to
kill him. The frightened man sudden-
ly grabbed his companion from behind
and plead for E. O. Cornwall, the serv-
ice station operator, to assist him.
Both Forced From Store
“For God’s sake, help me," the fa-
ther pleaded. “This man has a gun
and is going to kill me or my family.”
>
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2
}.
Airforce Begins Mass Recruiting of Labor;
Applicants Urged Not to Quit Present Jobs
By Jeannette Hopkins
Mass hiring began at Tinker airforce base this week after a
four-month lapse as the call went out to put 2,000 more men
Na Women’s Draft Slated
Larkin said the plan is to extend
the present 21-month service period
for draftees to 17 or 30 months. He
added, however, that this term was
not firm and might be changed before
the manpower bill reaches congress.
About 1,300,000 boys will reach 18
during the next fiscal year beginning
July 1 and about 800,000 of these
could be expected to meet physical
requirements for military service, Lar-
kin estimated.
He said the defense department's
manpower proposals do not envisage
the drafting of any women.
Other Agencles Make Study
Larkin said the defense department
is working out its own proposed man-
power law and that undoubtedly selec.
live service and other agencies will
Postmaster Shaw Shudders at Dark Implication
As Moscow Sends New Year Greeting
tory." !
He said the “issue is not Korea" but
"whether some day the same thing
goes on in America or the western!
world or whether we can keep it away |
from our shorea until international
agreements have worked the problem
out in more orderly fashion." ,
In plunging down the icy mountain
slopes of central Korea the Red armies
were following the same path as their
North • Korean comrades when they
swept over the lightly defended and I
demoralised South Korean republic
last July.
American and British unite fought t
a brilliant rearguard action out of ।
Seoul and onto the road to the south-
east.
sion of 8284.000 for income taxes
“Whaesinside
Oklahoma county, approximately 8,000 men. employed and un-
employed alike had trooped Into town by Friday in search of the
stained car at Tulsa.
"The Famous Store" has been iden-
tified by the missing man's brother as
the firm with which the apparent
murder victim did business.
Brother Aids Officers
The brother, an almost identical
twin. is Lieut. Chris Mosser, who
Thursday arrived in Tulsa from Albu-
querque. N. M. where he is on duty
with the army. .....-
After its stop in Wichita Falls, the
3:30 p.
4:30 p.
p.
BE
22 i
2
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h
it
-
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-
within two-tenths of 1 percent of
the record high, set in July 1948.
Reports of the proposed freeze said
it would be in the form of an order
requiring all businesses to give a
month’s advance notice before they
raise their prices.
Firms Fall te Reply
While this would include grocers
and food wholesalers along with other
firms. It would not cover all prices
at the farm—because of special legis-
lative restrictions.
Officially, the economic stabilization
ageny (ESA) said it had “no com-
ment” on the reported plans.
ESA already has asked 250 of the
nation’s largest industrial companies
to let the government know at least
a week In advance before they raise
prices of any manufactured commodi-
ties.
Stabilization officials reported, how-
ever, that fewer than half the firms
have replied to the request.. It was
sent to the corporations some 10 days
ago.
coming communists.
Seoul Still Burning
The last UN elementa, port and
service personnel at burning Inchon,
blew up the harbor at 2 a. m. Friday
popamesnnmeadyrqns bombtag
Seoul and Kimpo, ita main airfield.
F-SS Shooting Star jets attacked a
Chinese battalion at the demolished
air base with rockets and jellied gaso-
line fire bombs.
Associated Press correspondent Don |
Huth flew over Seoul and said the
deserted South Korean capital was still
a man of flames and smoke. i
Follow First Invasion Fath
General Ridgway described the mass
movement As “perhaps the greatest |
’I
By Wayne Mackey
Airforce heliocopters probably will start covering north
Texas Friday night or Saturday morning to help with the
search for an Illinois family of five whose blood-stained car
has been found on the outskirts of Tulsa.
Martin Boyle, chief deputy sheriff at Wichita Falls, Fri-
day said officers there are positive the missing family was
hostage •f an unidentified man Saturday night in the north
Texas city.
As soon as officers from Tulsa and Osage county arrive Fri-
day afternoon, he said. Wichita Falls officers plan to ask officials
at nearby Sheppard airforce base to press heliocopters into the
search.
A search for bodies of the missing family still is continuing
in Oklahoma—particularly near Luther where Jake Sims, head
of the Oklahoma crime bureau, has taken two cars of state and
Oklahoma county officers—but greatest activity in the apparent
—------—----------------- mass murder case has swung to
Crossword Fumle
Forum .........
In Oklahoma ...
OU Reporta ....
RadloLoc -----
Society .........
language of dipilomac;
the message, the poalrr
-
1.
I
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
(tmrtnz zaition ot The daliy oklahoman.) Etered at Okiahoma Cits, oslehoma Potottice u second cUm matter unde he •0 ° -rh • •67
well-paying defense jobs.
At the rate of 2,000 a day, double the usual daily load. men
have engulfed the local office of the Oklahoma Employment Se-
curity commission at 120 NW 2 to apply for Tinker jobs. Dave Van-
divier, director of the commission, urged workers not to leave
present jobs for although the airforce base is seeking both semi-
skilled and unsiAlled workers in addition to skilled, only a small
Forecaster Just
Won't Give Up; He
Sees Snow Again
Snow flurrles and much colder
weather here, possibly some freezing
rain in northeast Oklahoma, was rid-
ing toward the state Friday on the
wings of summer-like ’ south winds,
said Mr. Maughan.
The forecast was changed at noon
to call for the possibility of snow,
after an earlier outlook called only for
some clouds and colder. Temperatures
are expected to climb up to about 86
during the afternoon, with the strong
south winds, before the change comes
early Saturday.
That would compare with 57 to 36
st the airport, 57 to 41 at the Classen
station the last, 24 hours. Highest of
record here for this date was 72 in
1927, and the lowest was 1 below zero
By Allan Cromley
PRED SHAW. acting postmaster, figures he's in for some kind
F of a communist investigation.
(
i
Fred Shaw ... Iron Curtain Special
\
t. n
First Moscow Message
In five years as Oklahoma City
postmaster, this is the first message
Shaw has received Irom Moscow, he
declared.
Shaw resigned during the recent
election campaign to manage the
successful senate race by Mike Mon-
roney. Shaw was then appointed
acting postmaster, and his reap-
pointment as postmaster is consid-
ered a virtual certainty.
"No," he laugned. “I don’t think
they'll hold the Moscow greeting
against me.”
He said the letter is probably the
real McCoy—no fake. It appears
official in every respect The Rus-
sian star, and hammer and sickle,
with wheat shock, adorn the post-
mark.
Because French, the international
I
- 1
PRICE FIVE CENTS f
------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
Trap in Four-Day Battle;
More Enemy Hordes Arrive
I
11
t
I
Eighth army headquarters late Fri-
day said there was no longer any
organized contact with the enemy. But
the Reds pressed on like ants search-
ing for the allied rearguard.
On the eastern Korean coast, more
communists were pouring down toward
recently-abandoned Hungnam from
the Changjin reservoir sector.
Net Income Reported
NEW YORK. Jan. MF-The
Western Union Telegraph Co. reported
Friday it had net income of 8823.180
for November. This was after provi-
i burning city of Seoul as anon
as the last allied troops blew the
bridges screes the frozen Han.
Red Casualties Heavy
Four hundred vehicles were strafed
3*3*835
Jan. 5—(P—A
security, he said, government spend-
ing should be cut to the bone.
Doughton told newsmen he doubts
If anybody knows now just how much
of a tax increase President Truman
will ask to meet mounting defense
costs. But guesses are running from
85 billions to 810 billions a year. The
president said Wednesday the increase
must be “substantial."
The Capitol Hill managers of tax
legislation—Doughton and Chairman
George (D., Ga.) of the senate fi-
nance committee—expect taxes to be
increased again. But some members of
the ways and means committee said
privately they think any increase on
individual incomes probably will not
become effective until July }
Doughton. however, woul not rule
Two-Year Old Girl Tumbles 100 Feet Over Cliff-Broken Leg Only Injury
Susan Eve Brooks, 2 years old, was recovering Friday in a Chelan, Wash., hospital from a broken leg received six
days ago when she fell 100 feet over a cliff. The broken leg was her only injury. At the left is the precipice over
which ahe tumbled, at the right, her father, Lee Brooks, visits her at the hospital. •
' .L "" IENSAV-
ministration, by action, not
words, will do something about,
cutting unnecessary government
expenses.”
r
The long range forecast calls for 8r6s8
TOKYO, Jan. 5—P—Swarms of Chinese Red troops
Tinker Issues War Call
For 2,000 New Workers
V
11
I
of figures to show the overwhelming . 2 ___
strength now being thrown by the and the.U.8. FiIth airforce, pounced
Chinese and North Korean com- on the — ' •
-"43
submit their own ideas to congress.
The defense department proposal,
he said. would permit 17-year-olds to
enlist with their parents' permission;
18-year-olds would be automatically
car, believed to be Mosier's, later was
seen at Iowa Park. Just west of Wich- n 1 rm T1
ita Falls, and its occupant asked di- Karc ta l olIz
rections back to Wichita Falls without IAUU3 UU I dill
M the same time, he set hard-hitting far M
President Truman has no I
power to commit American i
troops to a European defense
force without approval first
from congress.
Taft asserted, also. that the
U
XI
_______ believe that hat positively ties the
they had climbed 1.2 percent between Wichita Falls incident with the blood-
Tinker is estimated to be employing _______________ _____ -
17,000 civilian workers at the present high army officer asserted emphatical-
time, having added approximately -........- •
4,000 to the pre-Kored paY rob o.
13.000. Mass airing began in earnest muu execuwu waunuzawn
the first week In August wheneofici- "is not any rout or any Dunkirk "
sis said they were employing 50 peo- —
pie a day. However, 100 per day, in-
cluding men and women called back
to jobs they had held in World war
II and new employes, would have been
employed to reach the present level.
With the new personnel, actual
Ohio senator declared. “I do not
think we should insist or even urge
Spending Cut Demanded that Europeans form a great inter-
Aside from expenses of defense and national army unless they request
us to help them with that project.
7 ,
M. .
210,000 Chinese Racing,
The YMCA board of directors will
meet Monday to select an acting gen-
eral secretary, a position left vacant
by the death December 21 of J. B.
White, secretary for 25 years.
Claude Monnet, board president, said
a member of the local YMCA staff will
be appointed until a permanent sec-
retary is found.
"We are trying to be very careful,
and trying to get the best man obtain-
able," said Monnet. “We haven’t de-
cided whether we will take someone
from our staff (for the permanent po-
sition i or from elsewhere.”
“It’s a big job," Monnet continued,
“a wonderful opportunity and awfully
big shoes to fill.”
Monnet said the national YMCA
council and the southwest area board
are making suggestions as to men they
think the , Oklahoma City YMCA
should consider. He added the board
will consider “our own men here, too.”
In a recent meeting with Monnet
and R. J. Clements, vice-president,
the YMCA staff was unanimous in its
desire to have a local man appointed
acting secretary. __________________
It’s confusing enough to bear the same last name as the
city’s best known red, but when you receive New Year greetings
from Moscow, it becomes downright embarrassing.
That’s what happened. This week came a powder blue
envelope addressed in French to “The Director of the Central
----—— -------------------- Bureau of the Postoffice, Okla-
vi w s im. ii T•VaVV v avail ME1A iiciu - ~ — —■ - «z—IT " ----
in reserve inNorth Korea, are involved by the airmen. Pilots reported up to
in the all-out push, he said. 1,250 casualties were inflicted. The far
other nigureesuppiled the reporters
y; ign g •
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gfagipreg
Midmkdkgdbkm.
traveling on the highway.
A man reported a woman and chil-
dren lying in the back of the car. He
said the woman tried to signal him.
If the car seen in Texas is the
Mosser car, its wide travels bears out
a speedometer reading on the car
found at Tulsa. Officers until now
have been puzzled by the mileage
colder weather about Sunday and some armed services,
light rain or snow then, too, but indi-
great because of the large number of ..
automatic guns, including "burp guns.” They pushed patrols across me nan
Chunchon area toward Wonju.
They apparently aim to destroy United Nations forces
there and then wheel west in an attempt to cut off Eighth
army’ units retreating down from ruined Seoul.
Allied pilots said they saw the heaviest traffic yet ob-
served in Korea behind the enemy lines. They reported
1,200 vehicles clogging North Korean roads.
The allies in a skillful retreat had yielded Seoul, Its airfield
at Kimpo and the port of Inchon.
At Inchon UN units blasted docks and the tidal basin. then
left by sea. The main body of UN troops moved on southward
by land.
Four cut-off South Korean divisions broke through com- 1
munist road blocks and reached UN lines north of Wonju Thurs- 1
day after a four-day battle. With the Koreans safely back, UN
lines were drawn closer around Wonju. Chinese troops pouring
down secondary roads and through valleys could turn left or
right at Yonju and possibly cut off parts of the allied forces.
It was a desperate race.
Lt. General Matthew B. Ridgway, U. S. Eighth army com- |
mander, returned to his headquarters late in the day after visit- I
ing two of his army corps defending the retreat
“Everything is going fine," he said.
But the tough army general said the retreat from Seoul was 1
dwarfed by the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of Koreans un- 1
—----------------------------1 able to get out ahead of the on-
reading.
It reads 18,601 mile*. But a sticker
on it when the vehicle was serviced
in Illinois last Thursday shows it had The state department announced
only 15,500 miles at that time, a dif- Friday that Russia, after two
ference of 3.101 miles. The distance
In response to rumors which spread like a grassfire through trjedvdtinthehowrieotnsvnghisn
30,000 men each are at the front and the airmen to above 7,000 in the past
four days.
5
. -n., -
I P
said he is willing to commit "some
limited number of American divi-
sions" to North Atlantic defenses.
But he said the European* must
take the lead in forming such a
force.
Their Request Needed
"I do not think we should force
our assistance on nations which do
not wish to arm themselves," the
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5—(P)—Fed-
eral Judge T. Alan Goldsborough Fri-
day refused to dismiss the murder
charge against Oscar Collazo in the
attempted assassination of President
Truman November 1.
Collazo, 37? a Puerto Rican na-
tionalist, is scheduled to go on trial
tor hU life February 19 for his part
in the effort to storm into Blair House,
Mr. Truman's temporary residence.
Collan was wounded and a com-
panion. Orisello Torresola, was killed
in a furious gun battle with the presl-
dent’s bodyguard A White House
policeman was slain.
Judge Goldsborough quickly dis-
missed a defense request for diamissal
of the murder charge after listening to
arguments by Collazo’s courtrappoint-
ed lawyers and prosecuting attorneys.
■K
atM.e:* • I
2M2Ak.
848 g
ruPned o'tsrtauvKorsnangstrnm Reds, «w communists paid heavily'for
: A an, ar0M6g
130233 22 Wes 1 ,
b3 3 ga
g4. i { c "
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5—(P—.... — - -----
The defense department plans to been trying to get back.
ask congress to let it draft 18-
best wishes for the New Year, and UN/C A a D: 1
to you and the people of your coun- Y VIG .A 1o VICK
try they wish a lasting world peace." - --- EV - -n
The British troops were particularly.
brilliant in a hand to hand bayonet
battie with Chinese Reds in a village I
before they reached Seoul on their
withdrawal.
Their Churchill tanka and field
guns, plus the great courage of the
Casualty report page 7
men, helped them to fight their way
out of one ambush after another.
The Americans covering the with-
drawal stayed behind to be the last
The Weather
From the O. S Wenther Bureau
Airport Station
LOCAL—Fair and warmer with
strong south winds this afternoon.
Maximum temperature about 16.
Fair and windy with little change
in temperature tonight, Minimum
about 36. Saturday eloudy with snow
flurries and considerably colder.
Maximum temperatures in 40s.
STATE— Increasing eloudiness to-
night, possibly snow flurries or light
freezing drizzle northeast tonight
and Saturday morning; ealtar
north; warmer extreme south to-
night; considerably colder Saturday;
low tonight 28-32 north, 45 extreme
south; high Saturday 38-38 north to
45 extreme south.
EXTENDED—Little change In
temperatures until somewhat colder
Sunday or Sunday night, then no
important changes through Wednes-
day. Temperatures will average 3 to
5 degrees below normal over north-
ern Oklahoma and near normal
elsewhere. Light rain or snow Sun-
day night or Monday, amounts of
precipitation will average about
1/10 inch in western Oklahoma te
% inch or mere in eastern Okla-
homa. _____
The Weather
#t
#E=
!E
taxpayers may get a short president “without authority
breather—possibly to July 1 involved us in the Korean
—before Uncle Sam reaches mt w policy speech
into their pockets for more of the fighty-second congress. Taft
money again.
Oklahoma City Times
year-olds and tighten defer-
ments and exemptions for cur-
rently draft eligible men from U. S. Survey Keveals
19 through 25. _ i'_
Felix Larkin, the defense depart-j
ment's general counsel, tola reporters
Friday of the plans. He said a man-
power bill would be submitted to con-
within two weeks, designed to
... -
‘22.5
mmdmunmmm 2.400 to 9,000. Their firs power te
Cornwall grabbed a shotgun. reporta
state, and forced both men out of the
store. Cornwall is elderly. , ..
kK-xSS City Mail Chief Gasp
abandoned near Tulsa. j •
A gray, size 7 hat was left in the 5 _____
service station. It bore the label. "The
1 OUT OF 4 MEN
IGNORANT OF NECK SIZE
According to a survey made by
U. B. department of agriculture.
25 men out of every JOO don’t
know their own shirt-collar size.
But when it comes to Oklahoman
A Times Want Ads moat men in
Oklahoma know that it’s the size
of the OFFER that matters most
and not the size of the ad! So
regardless what your offer may be.
2-1211 and ask for an ad
8h« knows how to put into
your ad EXTRA-SIZE POWER in
a minimum number at words.
I although not greater than the fire
5 power of an American division.
-—
Plea for Release
RefusedrGunman
In Truman Attack
PLEASE TURN। to Manhunt
PAGE 1. COLUMN 1
flxasx TURN to Draftees
OE 1 COLUMN 1 •raa*c
PLEASE TURN TO Breather
paox a. column i wraiuci
, Chairman Doughton (D..N.C.)
Kremlin’s Kudos Make "4
For Taxpayers pOrEnding
Before New Dig (ISo;
- © pushed on southward Friday night and menaced Wonju, im-
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5— IP—
' Sen Taft <R, Ohio declared
in the senate Friday that
a 12/9258
_ . 1.. JR
3ifi . 1 E
> E
* W i
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 287, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1951, newspaper, January 5, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1994465/m1/1/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.