The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 299, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 12, 1945 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
People You Know
COS111116 In BRIEF IStudy Of Trealle
!Under cy crecy
az AL anti Mrs klertnan R Welts TIIIS WEEK !N
il( uttutallerE (tan Neil and
tr: 'A u y Ante of ArKansas City
snms spent the weekend here
visiting in the home of Mr and
Mrs s V Baines near Agra
r -
-
Me and Mrs &tor Wright
a Lilo children left Tuesday or
t-tattord Kansas where Mr
nght has been transferred by
tanchnd ripe Line Company
Se
1 Mr and Mrs R E Morley
southwe“ of Cushing and Mr
pad Mrs Charles Downs ot
Davenport returned yesteroay
4"' from Brighton Colorado wnere
I hey have been visiting Mr and
Mrs Farl Know Mrs Know Is
the daughter of Mr and Mrs
Morley and Mr Know is a net-
and daughters Ga:e Nell and
r hew cf Mr and Mrs Downs
Miss Dila Marie McNeill left
V - Tuesday for Fayetteville Arkan-
sas where she will enroll in the
4 University of Ai kansas as a sec
ond semester sophomore
Mr and Mrs J L Wright of
Fort Smith Arliont as arrivi d
here today to visit their soi R
C Wright who is cricically
in the hospital here
Mrs T F Ward and baby re
turned to their home here yes-
terday following dismissal from
the local hospital
I r00IL911 uusning Dgers vs
'Hominy Football Field 8 p m
Mrs Cleytort Stite4 and baby ' Saturday
It the local lic!spltal today 1
1 Jaycee Dance Jaycee Hall over
'turn to their home in the city :Citizen 9 p
JI
' left the local licspital today lo I
A 1 ynce Jaycee H
Wan to their home in the ci Jacee Da
ty
:Citizen 9 p tn
I --
17 MIT W W Wells Jr and baby L
'''' hie returning today front St
-
- Anthony's Hospital and will be cal Dairymen
"
'Sit honic in the apartment of '"
A" IIVIRIU 411 111ditillUnt
MI and Mrs Wells in the Hotel Organize Tuesday
Cushing
Pvt Bob Male who is stationed
at Camp Robinson Little Rock
1 Arkansas is here spending a 111-
dav furlough visiting his parents'
Nit ard Mrs Henry Bickle of the
- Deep Rock community
Mrs Delbert Morley left this
morning for Lubbock Texas to
spend a few days visiting her bro
ter and wife Mr and Mrs Aetna
Christie Mr Christie flew from
Lubbock last evening and spent
the night here with his parents
Mr and Mrs A C Christie 944 1
( Fast Moses street and Mrs Mor-
! L3 ley returned -vith him
'
L r Gaunt ill in the local
iP showing only slight
' improvement
' - —
o - Too Late to Classify i
—
1
NO 26
FOR SALE: 125 big type Eng
) 14 lish leghorns starting production I
't ) 7 Inquire 1 mile cast on Highway 33
t t '2 south Mrs John Allen
I
1 —
i4 FOR SALE: Jersey milk cow
and heifer Phone 320
I
t --- —I 1
LAMM am
CUSHING
monda3
Junior Chamber of Commerce
Regular Meeting Jaycee Ball 8
p ni
Veterans for Foreign Wars Post
American Legion Hut 8 p
Watermelon Feed C u s 111116
Firemen and families Fire sta-
tion 7 p m
Tuesday
Pusiness and Professional Wo-
moms Club Gingham Room of
Hotel Cushing 6:30 dinner meet-
ing Dairymen's Meeting City Ball
8 p m
Lions Club Hotel Cushing 12:15
p m
ClithitIR Masonic Lodge Maso-
inic Temple Regular meeting 7:30
ip
Wednesday
I Slid-Week Prayer Services City
Churches
I Civil Air Patrol Cushing Air-
Port 7:30 p m
Thursday
Round-Up Club calf-roping
practice Club arena east of city
8 p m
ttatary Club Hotel Cushing 12:15
ip
I Farm Shop Repair Class Farm
Shop Building 301 E Main 7:39
to 10:30 p
Friday
1 Footb911 Cushing Tigers vs
A group of dairymen mei 'fues-
day evening to re-organize the
Dairymen's Organization which dis-
continued meeting r over a year ago
The business meeting was held at
7:30 o'clock in the City Hall
James Williams was re-elected
president during the election of of-
ficers Other officers elected were:
Leslie Holderread vice-president
Oliver Kinzie secretary A H Bur-
key treasurer: and Alvin Gelhhar
milk and dairy inspector chairman
Meetings were planned for the sec-
ond Tuesday in each month at the
City Hall
In a statemcnt today Akin Gel-
bhar said the purpose of the organ-
ization was for a uniform price to
keep up the quality of dairy pro-
ducts and to better serve the com-
munity He pointed out that Cush-
ing has been rated high in the state
for quality of milk and cleanliness
Dairies belonging ta the organ-
ization are: Williams Brothers
Kinzies Dairy J P Perry Dairy
Loyd Yount Dairy Burkey Cream-
ery S A Bryant Dairy Leslie
Holderread Lee Stiles Lewis
Honeywell Dairy Ralph Williams
and Jay Smith Dairy
Boyington IFreshman Class
In Election Of
7 Against Soft y Officers Tuesday
- -
7: : 1 1 iv Froshman class of the
- ' -
Peace For fops Cushing High Schca I elected of-
fleet yesterday
-4-
OAKLAND Calif Sept 12 —' 7 he officers chosen were: Glede
-- i UPi—Gregory (nippy) Boying- Vaughn president Joe Cantrell
v: ton who wouldn't say die came vice-president Joe Holman sec-
:t: home today with the warning retary-treasurer aivi Jack Say-
' that "if we give Japan a soft ers ard Ray Wilson Pat Woods
r
peace the Japs will think we've Irene Corey student council rep
even bigger suckers than they al- resentatives
tt ready believe we are" 1 '
t' Boyington who was tied as the pormal Surrender—
top U S air ace when he was
t inuer
it shot Cont trotr rote I)
t down a year and a half agoi
t- received a roaring welcome from land forces Admiral Sir Arthur
a his "Black Sheep" Power commander of the East In-
tl He was wearing new silver oak dies fleet Dutch representative
lt leaves of a lieutenant colonel Col Burman Van Vreeden and
As soon as he stepped from the France's Maj Gen Jacques-Phil-
17- navy transport that brought him ippe Le Clerc De Hautecloque
' ' and 20 other former prisoners of Preceding the ceremony Mount-
‘''''' war from Hawaii the marine ace batten inspected a guard of honor
r-
I was besieged by members of his composed of Australian troops
r : tomer squachan They asked Royal Navy midshipmen Royal
! more questions than newsmen It Marines and other British forces
' was more like the "Black Sheep” Thousands of Chinese and Malay
getting a briefing than a press observers climbed trees stood
-conference atop buildings or pressed into
o The marine flier started with tight crowds to witness the cere-
his last aerial battle and led his
mony
i listeners through all his expel'
1 The crowd cheered wildly when
s iences in Japantie prison camps Mountbatten drove up before the
g on Honshu municipal building behind a mot
Names of Guards orcycle escort The roped off
a Army authorities he said know
1a the names and descriptions of all square where the inspection was
held was lined with a great val-
" the brutal guards at the Honshu
it
z prisoner of war camps iety of uniforms—with the Navy's
white predominant in the sun
"The Japs will turn them over"
r Ile said "It's no bauble for them '
''-'- to double-cross a pal"
Bovington who plans to remain kDrear —
(Continued From Page On
ott ' tu the postwar marines said he
held chcsen bank flooded Ow
t hoped to remain in the San Fran-
market with paper money
I - cisco bay area for about five days
r Later today he plarned to buy Meres Rite sugar Destroyed
i
the round of drinks he promised Many of the milit3ry stores
were destroyed Rice was dumped
his squadion mates in celebration
into rivers and sugar was mixed
' of downing his 26tli plane and
- returning to this country with sand I While the Kareans protested
od men landed at the Alameda
Boyingtor and 21 navy enlist-
that they still must receive orders
Japanese police and civil
twin
naval air station at 7:48 a m
tCAVTI ir a four motored navy government authorities an Am-
o
erican military government was
transport plane
Among the enlisted men re-
'being set up to gradually replace
turning with BOyillgtOn was Gun-
the Japanese administration that
' ner's Mate 2c Cliford W Kny-
has held Korea in bondage
The Koreans are joining with - Kendall of Wichita Flats Tex 1
29 American military personel in
L The ace was liberated Aug
''' ' f ter pending
19 months In a setting up the military govern-
P s
mentlderite !heir objectiona tp
1i Japanese prison His liberators
cf I- a m- Ira intaining Japanese officials
were the first Americans to enter
even on a temporary basis
the Yokohama area The Japanese government of
gcvernor-geroral Noboyuki Abe
Ork StOprIC6 iit '1tLough remaining in office for
Ford Canada Plant the present will not be permitted
to take any independent action
WINDSOR Ont Sept 12— Lt Gen John R Hodge Amer
(UP i—Production stopped at the icon military commander said
tuviel livi -gc:u di 111JEJOy LIK I Arm
Vil Ork St0PneCi At -1though remaining Jr office for
Ford Canada Plant the present will not be permitted
to take any independent action
WINDSOR Ont Sept 12— Lt Gen John R Hodge Amer
(UF)—Production stopped at the icon military commander said
Ford Motor Company Ltd to- today that "I will remove Japan-
day when 10000 CIO automobile ese civil officials as fast a3 I BA
--crkers went cri 7trike through with them"
WIblIMile000O aN' P A
Big Five Holds experieneed Is trying laird but must the center In the center itself
show a little more stuff Ito 'shows was a epre slightly deeper
The erater? There wPasn'tn12
LONDON Sept 12
The toretm ministers' of the big
five and their deputies began con-
aeration of peace treaties for
Italy Romania Bulgaria Hungary
and Finland today behind a wall of
secrecy
Italy was believed first ott the
agenda and a communique report-
ing that yesterday's preliminary
meeting was harmonious indicated
that Russia had dropped her ear-
lier demand for 'simultaneous con-
sideration of the toucny Balkan
situation
Official British sources pointed
out that if Russia had intended to
raise her demand the logical time
would have been at the organiza-
tional session yesterday There was
nothing to hidicate that Soviet For-
eign COMMIISfir V M Molotov had
pressed the point
Deputies to the foreign minis-
ters met at 11 a m today to settle
technical details of the agenda to
come before the plenary session at
p tn al a m EWT) The last
night's communique said that other
subjects would be considered once
the peace treaties have been com-
pleted Under a plan of rotation of chair-
men Molotov will preside over to-
day 's meeting Others present yin
inelude U S Secretary of State
James F Byrnes British Foreign
Secretary Ernest Bevin French
Foreign Minister Georges Bidault
and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang
Shill Chief)
W Averell Harriman American
ambassador to Moscow was due to
take off today for Britain to par-
licirate in the ccIfnence
If any serious differences devel-
oped at yesterday's ri hour ses-
slim the ministers succeeded in
keeping them secret London's top-
flight diplomatic observers were
limited in their comments in morn-
ing newspapers to last night's
vague communique
It appeared that official news
vould continue scarce for a few
days at least Byrnes' set the pat-
tern at press conference yesterday
when he said relations of the views
of any one government would
jeopardize the success of the con-
ference The first communique said others
will be issued from time to time
State Dcmocrats
Give $40CZO
OKLAROMA CITY Sept 12
-P-ittl-i—Dcnicicrats in Oklahoma
have contributed more than
I $40000 to tilt party campaign
' chect state Party Chairman
harrington Wimberly announced
today
sciy bigwigs met here today
to di!cuss the state financial
drive which is expected to end
afiet Oct 1 in most counties
! Wimberly said donations rang
m m SI to $100 and that no
I!mei contributions were accept
cd in the campaign
-1 tic oumonai committee re
(-dived $20250 from us today"
tau' Wimberly "and we will
Id thcm another s41 an to
our $25000 quota
I Oct Robi n S Kerr and
other- ParlY leaders heard the
inancial report Wmberl also read a wire
iom Potmatter General Robert
! hannegan who said his visit to
Cklahoma would be "somewhat
delayell Hannegan I etional
Democratic Chairman offered to
icomc to the Sooner state in
Septembei but the state was in
the thrces of a money - raisin3
ampa:gn and could not corn-
lete plans for his appearance
hoc! and in Tuha so now he
will mile some time between
"ctct 15 and Nov 1" Wimberly
tcld thp money raisers
The perty Chairman announcc-I
that a numbcr of counties
had rinsed their quota of Demo-
cratic licances and that
wont(' remain in state headquar-
ter: all week in an attempt tu
fettle arrangements for the
Hannegan visit and comp!ete
the money drive
Cushing Bengals—
(Continued From Fags l)
The following are some of the
candidates for the various pos-
itiom On hand:
RIGHT HALF-BM:R—Billy Gal-
'loway and Fred Fitzgerald Gallo-
v ay weighs about 155 pounds hiss
hard in both tackling and block-
ing Ile has spirited competition
I from Fred Fitzgerald who was one
of the scrKsationsin the Junior High
Ileum of last 'year He is a good
broken field runner and in oil
every play He spins when tackled
and is hard ta stop
LEFT HALF — Fred Johnson
and Bobby Coffee Fred Johnson
was the star of the red Junior
High last year A sizeable stocky
lad he packs power and is hard to
stop He tackles with vigor Bobby
Coffee who showed only fair last
year is giving Johnson a hard race
far place His summer work of
mixing concrete and pitching wheat
1 is all to the good and Bobby is
!showing lots of football promise
I FULLBACK — Moon Mullins
and Burl Harper Both of thee
Iyouths weigh about 160 lbs Moon
Mullins Is the more experienced of
the two 'A first string man last
year who played center he Is be-
ing shifted to fullback this year
and looks good Burl Harper less
- -
-
' -IIIE CUSHING DAILY CITIZEN CLISTIING OKLAIRIMA WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 12 1945
: ---- ab mow
'It vit sa LAItut has tee guar- qtricer seE in a Dole in us cen-
' terbauc si AL 'tic can carry' the °I The "plate" was 2400 feet
across gradually clipping 10 feet
!oda IS IltiLII0 get aown and has a
ir to ctnter and the saucer was
luvb0 IIII hen ate is In motion
" 360 feet la diameter depressei
iteft — Byron uore Atm' ana tiler ten feet
Liuta ttitt Domini ouit uort il
I he total depresion of 20 feet
&tie larger of the three is a little the newsmen were told was the
It3-44ee- alli wsslug tit° tam oacht effect ef the terrific pressure of
Lh4I IS snowing improvement De is die exploding bomb that went
good ott tile uetelise as a inieuaeser eff about 100 feet above the
UtAIlu a tne centia inst ground The earth simply had
year on one of the Junto Hign Lem tamped down that distance
teams and has promise Donatia Outside the rim of the plate
IJLIa is Inexperienced but is in was an area extending out 2-
400 feet from the center (the
niece plugging Lore may be un-
s e rim itself was 1200 feet from
awe to play r riday bt vuuse 0 ' " the renter) in which no strtic-
nod on ins know ' lure could have withitood the
cilLARDS — Wenn Cates Ken-
neth Argo Earnest Ilarber Forest blast This outer circle of earth
was rot fused like the plate but
ruqua All the gtards are green was swept clean
Cates Is showing up the best ot Here's -where the lingering
the four Cates is likewise the radioactivity business comes in
neaviest of the group Kenneth The test bomb set off here
Argo weight 12t) puunns is a IlitIL Grows said was "essentially
tgiit Out a hard worker and has
tle same" as that which smash-
promise Earnest Herber weight ed Hiroshima It was no labor a-
' or y
to° looks late a starter tor Friuity s miniature
game rarest a aqua inexperienced
Is willing and may develop Barris Usher Talks--
piths 04 that guards must be o :t g el
test and that this spot Is some- '
Lachenmeyer made a
thing to worry about ft may Lt short report on work being done
quire some shifting : by the industrial committee to
cCtseS — Lo 0 b McMahan interest industry in Cushing
Bill Bugg Keith sonebrake Atoka- - At the meeting the Board also
eit Morton Bob mcmahan is the voted to purchase up to 500 tin
big man of the entire team tipping cans to be used to can fruit for
tile scales at 294 los He bandies war relief
himself well for a big man and 'flie new assistant secretary of
looks like a sure starter for l i- the Cnamber ol Commerce Mrs
day Bin Bugg la0-pounder troduced to
tall Vanua Moore was in
tom rangy snows lots 01 sum tie Lie Board members
is a good blocker and has possibil-
Prior to the Cushing District
hies Keith Bonebrake weight 160 Fair the C al C had the Fair
los is tairly fast Ite's in there grounds thoroughly cleaned gates tepaired new panels built in the
plugging Robert Morton u( MI I
- '-' - 1 stocityards and crushed rock plac-
230 inexperienced but a big "Iat' ed in a number of the pens A new
and big men are hard to find contract is being drawn between
ENDS —' Charles Sala dolihy tne C of C and the county corn-
Cargill Billy Archer Keith Clay- missioners for lease of the Fair
baker Charles Sala weight 160 grounds for fair purposes
lbs seems to be the more finish-
ed player of the four Keith Clay-Suicidal—
baker who has only been out ler
— dapailese imperial high corn-
two practices because of illness is -
maim etfective at nnanignt La-
showing up well and may be a mplit 11'1E11 order alreaay had
starter Bobby Cargill and Billy Eaellipteel a former commanaer
Archer weights 14b and 110 re- of Japan s enampines army
spectively are scrapping hard for and a spcitesman tor the in-
the position and may be one of penal headquarters to kill them-
the end men ' wives
amitlancoul 41 alsurAtibur
i abolished the infamous Slack
To Discharge— wagon society ant his mill-
(Continued From Page it " taty r011te SqUalls hauled in
Mar biggest prize to date—
:Aran net be kept in idleness"
he explained "The discharge ' Art m Shigetare shimad I
score will be reduced as con former Navy Minister who di-
planned the sneak raid on the
i tions warrant with that thought 1
I in mind"
: Anicriean ilea at reari Jar-
I Sen Edwin C Johnson D boe !
'
Colt questioned whether de- ! Arresteä Al Home
Shlinada was arrested at his
!mcbilization hi the face of con-
cave '101C‘ II01111 wrille American
I limiest inductions k being
ea—tors fought an aPparentay
010 out as rapidly as Pattersol
alumna °awe to save the lae
I
said was Army policy r
He poInted out that tlia Army en tne suiciae-bent premier un-
' "
hatt- 8-500300 men on Sept 1 "-' ti own lie tersed eten Biueici
1 Ow I'esjo Eva6 reported "resting
Fetterson said the Army had
Luilliortau' at a Yokohama
dlicharged more than 500000
Itary
men between May and Sept 1 hwipital
I "Thee ('-u must have taken h ' frauennui In another of the
series of moves to shackle saat
1000000 during the same period'
Johnson countered Japan's former warlords order-
!
I Soldiete Complaining Ina the tractication of the Black
Johnson said Senators are
Dragon society ant the arrest of
:
eoven of iti leaders The Immed-
I cf Mug complaints from men in
unifnm who have sufficient late dissolution of the society
:prints for discherge who are 1111g one of the most influential
1 groups in Japan was demanded
sitting around idle for months
Coincident with the arrest of
i with no progress being made tE
I toward their release himada and four other war
!minarets by American Military
I peatersmi said that in globsl Police Supreme Headquarters
warfare it weuld be "truly re- ordered the seizure of the Black
tearkable" if there were no dis-
locatirns He said that despite :Dragon leaders They were list-
mliateires ''ve believe tlis th ed as Rychei Uchida Col Kin-
plaming that has been done is 1 gum Hashimoto tieigo Nakano
along sound
lines end will 1e l'ioyasaburo Kikuchi Kaki Hor-
!
Isult in rapid demobilization at ota Oketea Ogato and Prof
a preens( accelerated pace" I lienchl Kato
Johnson suggested that Col- Strengtnened by a direct blood
I
i
Pren set up a special agency to transfiBion Dm cm American
I "watch sergeant Tojo was given a bet-
I Izaticn program over" the Army demobil- I
!
i tcr than even chance to recover
Fatterson obleeted that it Dem his suicide attempt and
I would be "harmful" stand trial as Japan's No 1
I mamma His condition was de-
' tioinson Said P:itylier lic want-d
reribed as "very satisfactory" at
I the Army and Navy to explain a I Atnericala military I pita!
the number of men needed for '
1 in
the eccupation armies Ile added Yokohama
wo
that he wanted to exam 1 more Japanese Army sui-
examine the I
iqTaratien machinery which IIP chic' ere revealed one by a
I
Named
ed for the deobilization If 1 n'ici commander of the Japan-
delay est Philippines army and the
Seine Cum m I ttee members eta- I other by a public relations of-
fended the Army ard Navy Poll- !liar at imperial general head-
des contending that the servie-
quarters
1 plans rapidly since the unex-
es have adjusted their discharge I besides ShilliaCa Americ a l'
I peck(' Japer ese surreneer Bald Military Police also took into
ever these backers ef present I tuAody as war criminals an Am-
detr"hillva 'ion e-ranoe (r a n I s I c dean civilian—Mark la Streeter
weWoined the cpen hearings as who allegedly wrote and partl-
y means of clearing on questions eipated in Tokyo propaganda
about discharges centinued draf- droadeasts after his capture on
thrg and voluntary enlistments Wake island—slew with an
— Australian army officer a Fill-
iFirst Bomb pino puppet diplomat and a
German diplomat
I
I
1 titaatitrEkBACK — Billy Bo ldt' world like a huge plate with a
ta LOlut IlttS tie guar-
aucer set in a hole in Its ten-
'terbaca 'fic can carry' tuts tel The "plate" was 2400 feet
across gradually clipping 10 feet
:oda IS IO get Down and has
cinter and the saucer was
1U0b0 hen ate Is in motion 360 feet la diameter depressed
tsoi — byron taore Grunt feet
titer ten feet
Uua astu liOntial OWL Uort
toe larger of the three is a little Ihe total depresion of 20 feet
the newsmen were told was tit?
wss'llg "ie bulL welt cflect cf the terrific pressure of
Lik41 Is snowing improvement tie is die exploding bomb that went
good oit taie uotelise as a llama:see cff about 100 feet above the
LAAIIU US$ toe center last ground The earth simply had
yta on one Ot the Junius! Hign Lttr tamped down that distance
teams and ims promise Douala Outside the rim of the plate
was an area extending out 2-
IJUli is filexperienced but is in
400 feet from the center (the
mere plugging Lore may be un-
svuuse 0 rim itself was 1200 feet from
awe to play rriDay bt " the center) in which no struc
'Jur' &ill wear it around
Your neck for more than six
month: at a time" an accrm-
rellyinr scientirt warned with a
grin The stuff was slightly
radioactive but bad been tested
by hrtruments and found to be
First Bomb— pino puppet diplomat and a
German diplomat
(Continued From Page 1)
talus Japanese army sources disclos-
pVore alighting from the bus- ed the two army suicides One
ET s they were handed CLUIVai 1Col T Oydomari public relations
"bortiec" to slip over their Fhwn officer at Imperial general head--"mrrely
to make tore you !quarters killed himself with a
rIcr't ulek un anv struy particle l pistol after poisoning his wife son
that might be radio) active" and daughter only a few hours be-
Greves t1Id them ilore MacArthur's order abolishing
Tiny stepped out on a brittle ithe general headquarters takes ef-
mita of gray-green glassy sub- !feet tomorrow
stance That ' was the earth's 1
unlace that had been foseu by I A- reliable source revealed that
the terriPe heat el' the blast It Gen Seidl' Tanaka former com-
ciarkled like crusted snow when mander in chief of the Japanese
they walker! on It They picked Philippines army also had shot
I' and pocacted bits ot the himself to death though the news
crust - I was suppressed by Imperial head-
Not Dangerous quarters
soul neck for more than six City Rainfall
month: at a time" an accom-
rrlyine scientirt warned with a I otals 73 Inch
grin The stuff was slightlY
radioactive but bad been tested Rainfall here today measured
by lirtruments and found to be 173 inches while the high temper-
not dangerous ature for the day dropped to 85
Tim crater Ther wasn't oti ? in contrast to yesterday's muggy
as newpaper readers are etc- 'heat Over the state the weather
(Usti tiled to seeing them in plc- man predicted possibly more pre
turer of deep jagged pits cipitation tonight with tempera-
There was a wide area rough- tures remaining about the same
ly circular covered with gray- according to a Vnited press re-
green crust and sloping toward port
e
'Sapulpa Citizens Ho' Measurable
To Talk With Kerr Radioactivity
Kerr Said Group Would On Hiroshima
Either Protest Or Urge
1 Four-Lane Highway Ac-
thm CKLAItoMA CITY Sept 12
--t ue P —Saul hoyet I b Ito
said today ttiaL lie out not know
lite tittails of lequesis to oe
Istwe 41k it 2apuipa uelegittLiii
soneoultu to ciseu3a roads wiui
'tun itutsuay
herr stud he did not knJw
hewer itep Stutter bpeakman
kioor 4ettaer at the luta house
at hepresentataves and °Wei
sspulpans wanted to protest the
lour-lane 'I ulsa-Sapuipa nign
way or urge speeay action on it
saptillla Is In sinnednut tin
same PObitiOn as Norman Villos
LAS omelets are balking on sup-
1ot of the toui-lane okielionia
city-Norman road on U b 're
Lecause it would -move" to4
much city business property U
b bd goes tnrough tne main
!Action of downtown Sapuipa
!Lula Cie wiaci oi righta-way
hautanded tor feaeral road pro-
'Jette ingni atitzt some th oa-
Iptitpa s ousiness houses
Suggest By rasing -
1 Norman civic leaaery in ses-
'Jon Alin the State HO11WaY
LGMMbSiOn yesteraay suggested
by-passing tile city SCCEIMI eau
Sall (Aug the heavily traveled
lingliway lettoing tato the city lor
a lew blocks Ism highway 1
!AdIed wan ousiness houses in-
I eluaing cafes tourist camps M-
I ling sauons garage i anti stores
I Norman s Mayor H VThord-
!ton City Manager H M McCool
!property owners and Civic lead
cis met With the State Highway
I Commusio4 and its engineeid
ITuesciay sceking fluorination on
tin propoed width of the hign-
I way
highway engineer H E Bailey
saia the imbue roads adminis-
tration &mended certain spewmations tor four-lane super
I highwas anu that a 288-ipot
right-ot-way would be asked but
!suggcsted that the federal gcq-
erritileilt inignt compromisc on
200 teet
The right-of-way now i3 6d
feet and even 200 feet would
sweep out much of the Normai
highwPy business propeety
Kerr is optimistic about 11'3
increase in rcad money front
Jiro federalgavernmEnt and tolu
!Highway Commissioners that he
!believed the state would have
!S61000000 for highway in the
next three years on a 50-50
1 basis of state-federal contribution
Rejects Stopping
Aid To Britain
HIU IU U1110111-
1
I WASHINGTON Sept 12 (UP)
—President Truman today rejected
as "a perfectly silly 'conclusion" a
suggestion that this country should
not give financial aid to Britain
lest it be In the position of sup-
porting a socialist government
I U S and British delegations are
now conferring here on solutions
for Britain's postwar economic dif-
ficulties
Mr Trnninn snid sit his 'Immix ron-1
Mr Truman said at his news con-
ference that there had been sug-
gestions in some Washington quar-
ters that U S aid would be used
to finance British socialism
I "I think that is a perfectly silly
conclusion" he said permitting
direct quotation of this rhrase
He went on to say that the Brit-
ish have every right to have any
kind of government they want and
that it is none of our business as
long as this government is on
Ifriendly terms with the British
Fear that U S money would
Phone 383'
TOKy0 Sept 12—(UP)--Brig I
Gen T F Farrel chief of the al-
omic bomb mission to Hiroshima I
announced today that no meas-
livable radio activity" was found
in the devastated city although
American doctors found a num-
twr of patients whose synitoms
were similar to those caused by
radiation
I "Tne largest number of casual-
dons t of casualties) faiably will
never be known" Farrell told a
Press conference upon his return
from the city blasted by theato-
mic bomb
"The alrgest number of casual-
ties probably resulted irom blasts
of missiles and fires" the general
said
No Cases Found
I Farrell commenting on Japan-
ese reports that citizens had died
from radioactivity said that it
might be possible that some per-
sons in the area did succumb to
such causes although no actual
cases were found
Farrell's mission made merely a
'preliminary survey and American
medical men and scientists are
'still pursuing their study of the
area
I he Japanese he said appar-
ently had not made much pro-
gress in the development of an
atomic bomb of their own
' The general told correspondents
that from 80 to 90 per cent of
the buildings in Hiroshima were
destroyed or damaged The sector
or destruction spread out for two
miles and for three miles 50 per
cent of all buildings were destroy-
ed i Farrell said that no evidence
had been found that the bomb
:would cause deaths through radio-
activity after a long period of
time Hiroshima is perfectly safe
without any special precautions
he said
Chinese Assume
SHANGHAI Sept 12-411P) --
American fighter planes were
alerted for possible action today
as thinese Marshil Tara En-Po
assumed control of Shanghai and
bluntly directed hundreds of Jap-
anese troops to turn in their arms
and surrender
j ang pushed aside the sched-
uled formal surrender of this
great port city and simply issued
orders that Japanese soltliers
would immediately cease wander-
ing around Shanghai's streets or
izice the consequences
i Gen John Kennedy rep-
Arsenting Lt Gen George E
1 azave tne culisequttiuub
Elig Gen John Kennedy rep
resenting Lt Gen George E
!Eh atemeyer American air corn-
' milder in China said both the
i 14th tug 10th U S air forces
were standing by for tactical mis-
sions "in case of trouble"
However no incidents have
bran reported and both Chinese
and American headquarters be-
lieved there would be no trouble
Maj Gen Douglas Wean rep
resenting U S commander in
China Lt Albert C Wedemeyer
Laid that American ground forces
would leave the problem of oust
irr Japanese troops from Shang-
bat entirely up to Chinese units
I WEATHERFORD Okla Sept
11--(UP)--Class work began to-
day at Southwestern Tech here
Students who enrolled yesterday
were greeted by the new college
plesident R H Burton and a fa-
culty that included seven new
members
LIICIII LJel b
—
be used to help the laborite Brit-
ish government to finance a soc-
ialist program has been voiced in
congress
Britain wants credit for the bit-
lions she spent before lend-lease
PN ) Oi
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both for only Pim Id Tor
CHOOSE FROM 7 LOVELY SHADES
CITY DRUG
a
1Survivoislh
1Houston Are
1Shy 01 Women
WASHINGTON Sept
Fl—Thirteen survivors 01 tale
Cruier tiouston wno arrived
here by plane last inglit have FL
teat pi eidem on then' thillOS
h e y were looking tweak'
theotut as they stepped eat
u ansport cummand piano
that brought them lu're at ter
their rescue trom Japanese pus-
Ion camps m Tmulano Mitt hey
were-looking lora ard La a steak
dinner
IAnt one of titon confided kJ
this reporter:
"live re shy ef white women
Well have to get used to thein
' again"
Tne men first Houston slat
vivors to reach this country tIrd
en the final battle of that gal-
lant ship and also detaited their
I experiences m Japene7e prison
camps where they said they had
been treated worse by Korean
gutuds than they were by Jtel
anese
liouston Slugged It Out
They said their ship haul
slugged it out for an hour and
a half against a powerful Jan-
' aneie naval tome before goint
awe- under emnny gunfire aril
tot pedets
They reported that as far as
they new 299 officers and men
of the Houston's crews of more
than 1000 are now alive Al-
though 368 escaped death dutlit
the attack ti9 died later of mat
nutrition and starvation
Lt eigl Harold S Hamlin Jr
of Honolulu and Orlando Fla
In r firt hand account of the
disaster said the Houston ea-
countered a Jtiptall na I
flotilla escorting a landing party
' headed toward nerthwest Java
Alter an hour and a half of
night fighting the Houston
her ammunition gone went
down About 400 were killeel
1 I he ship Others died on the
beaches Survivor spent loin
I three hours to three days in the
water
As prisoners of war all sar-
i vivors were first held under
plorable conditions and a stt7r-
vatien diet in the city jail and
a theater building in Smile
Java After about six weeks
they were remeved to a "tairly
I
reasenable camp" in Bata 01 J
Hamlin said
'! From there they were taken to
priton comps "all over the Far
East"—Singapore Burma and
I Moulmein They we re put to
I work building a railroad from'
I Burma through Siam spendilic
C year on it and vcere then
in camps in Thailand
lainton Cabler
It Found Dead
: Cl INTON Claui sty!
I IN )—The body Cr Joe Motele4
I
croft about 75 retired 'Clinton
shoe cobbler was found in
i coal ters hi a dnwntow
ing last night
Felice sad a rope am
I Pa venscrofrq neck had strangle
him to &Min They tatd hi t
!room had been locked from the
Inside
1
itAl-
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Theatre Phone 1036
Office l'hone 131A
Now Thru Thursday
24:0 ts 4tt
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—Thursday- Fri- & Sat
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Office Phone 1310
Office Phone 1310 11
Theatre rhone 1310
Last TIITIC3 Today
11614117 jorai
Ottel
124 E Broadway kmanur
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 299, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 12, 1945, newspaper, September 12, 1945; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173176/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.