The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 231, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 27, 1945 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Cushing Citizen and The Cushing Independent and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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EU
-I
1 Mrs J F Alfred went to °Ma-
1 home City to-day to enter Wesley
Hospital there for a major °per
ation
Mr and Mrs Earl Bray went to !
! Tulsa to-tray to bring their daugh-
ter Miss Mary Bray home from
St John's hospital She was op-
crated on two weeks ago for re-
moical of appendix and has been
dismissed from the hospital for
two or three days
Mrs Marvin Vandever has re-
ceived word that her son Ken
neth Vandever QM 3c Is recov-
ering from a major spinal opera
tion at the U S Navy Hospital
ln Shoemaker California He has
been on sea duty in the Pacilfc for
the past 13 months
z
Mr and Mrs Harry Cross who
are both employed by the U S
Navy at Hastings Nebraska are
here visiting Mrs James Cross
and family at 420 South Central
street Mrs Cross also plans to
visit her sister Miss Leone Or-
ner who is an instructor at Okla-
) home A and M college
V
t Mrs W L Vockrodt of 734 East
'! Broadway who suffered a broken
hip one day last week and is a
patient in the local hospital is
'reported to be Improved
Cadet Harvey Henry who is
In the U S Marines and was sent
back to the states after many
months combat duty in the Pee-
Mc is at home on a short leave
Henry is attending the University
of South Carolina for one year
preparatory to entering officers'
training at Quantico Virginia He
Is visiting his mother Mrs R E
Henry of 302 East Greenlee street
Mrs E E Rhodes of Drumright
who underwent major surgery in
the local hospital recently is be
ing dismissed to return to her
home today
George Butcher underwent a
major operation at the local hos-
pital today and his condition was
reported as satisfactory this al
ternoon He is the uncle of Miss
Mary Ellen Butcher of the hos-
pital staff
PAGE FOUR
People You Know
CUMIN III BRIEF
WANTED: Clean cotton rags
tizen Office ADV
Citizen Office
to 'SSA S
s
THIS WEEK IN
CUSHING
Monday
Farm Shop Repair Class Farm
Shop Building 301 E Main 7:30
to 10:30 p m
Junior Chamber of Commerce
regular meeting Jaycee Hall 8
P m
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
American Legion Hut 8 p in
Tuesday
Business and Professional Wo-
men's Club Gingham Room of
Hotel Cushing 6:30 p m dinner
meeting
Lions Club Hotel Cushing 12:
15 p m
Softball Game Deep Rock vs
Chandler Sportsmans Park 8:15
p m
Community Canning Kitchen
Central School 9 a m to 4 p m
Wednesday
Mid-Week Prayer Services City
Churches
Civil Air Patrol picnic Cushing
Airport 7 p m
Thursday
DeMolay Meeting at Masonic
Temple 8:00 p m
Community Canning Kitchen
Central School Building 9 a in
Softball game Shell vs F F A
Sportsman Park 8:15 p in
Community Canning Kitchen
Central School 9 a m to 4 p m
Farm Shop Repair Class Farm
Shop Building 301 E Main 7:30
to 10:30 p m
Saturday
Jaycee Dance Junior Chamber
of Commerce Hall over Citizen
office 9 p m
V
homa City spent the weekend here
visiting in the home of her mother
Mrs F E Cochran 842 East Sec
Mrs Lula Dean who has been I all the way was played at Sports-
in the local hospital for observe- Iman's Park east of the city
tion and treatment is improved The game proved to be the best
and has returned to her home in one of the season played thus far
tir 800' block East Broadway In the first inning the customers
--- were given their money's worth
Mrs K B Wendt and children when Harold Blosch hit a beaut-
George and Mary left today for iful homer for Deep Rock with
Muskogee where they will spend all bases loaded and brought in
the night before going on to visit !four runs
friends and relatives in several
Texas cities The Chandler team was able
to get one run in the its and
Mr' and Mrs Ralph Smith from It was not until the fourth inning
Lordsburg New Mexico are here 1 sten the Chandler team got five
runs that they pulled ahead of the 1
visiting Mr and Mrs Roy Harmon
'
112 North Noble street Mr and Deep Rock team Deep Rock man-
!
'aged to get one run in this inning 1
Mrs Smith are former Cushing res- I which made the Chandler team !
'dents lead 6 and 5
I In the fifth inning Deep Rock 1
Mrs Clyde Boyles leaves today I got three more runs and Chandler I
to spend the remainder of the two to tie up the game 8 and 8 !
week visiting her sister and fam- 'The tie still held in the sixth r
fly Mr and Mrs George D Riley when both teams got three runs
at Osage Station Shell camp near i each It was in the sixth inning 11
Tulsa I that the second homer of the I
!game was hit by Willbanks of I
Dr R D Hebard pastor of the Chandler In the seventh the '
First Baptist church of HarlingenIDeep Rock team cinched the game
Texas and his family are here with five additional runs
visiting his parents Mr and Deep Fock Pos Chandlv
Mrs Ch9rIes Hebard 741 East i
IV Yot—ig P McClure
Second street
o I E Forbes C Helford
Mr and Mrs P M Beck and Strickland 15 Zimmerman
2B Parsons
hi
ksr
daughter Dorothy Dell of Clovis Brookshire
New Mexico who have been here ' H Forbes 3 B Wilbanks
visiting in the home of Mr and Schlegel SS Lofties
Mrs W H Hatfield 211 East T Nichols L F Cherry
Sixth street have returned to H Blosch C F He121
their home I rinson RP Cowden
I Butcher SF Howerton
Miss Mary Lou Hatfield and Runs Hits Errs
Miss Marietta Deahl who have 1 Deep Rock 16 12 8
been visiting in the home of Miss Chandler 11 11 8
Betty McKeowen Oklahoma City! V
returned here yesteiday DeMolays To Install
Mrs May Lechner and daugh-lOfficers Tonight
ter Miss Charlene Brookshire of
Hynes California are here visit- DeMolay members will hold an
ing relatives Mrs Lechners mo- installation of officers here to
S TONIGHT
Continuous Night Performance 6 :30 to 10
Matinee From 1 p m to 3 p m
See him in the largest traveling cage in the world An
attraction every mother father and child should see
Cage located
' Lot to set cage donated by
AberCrombles
94v:4
IN
LOVEI
Starts Tomorrow
why we have here resolved that— - —
power and strength shall be used!
tabtit4rtm-trwitv
not to wane war but to keen the ' - el4115"tr:leirz—t
geferitrw
roone 183 Jul E Broadway
'-- Store Hours: reek "lays 8:30 a m to 8 P Tu
Saturdays: 933 a tn to 9 p m
ond street V
Deep Rock Takes
Win Over Chandler
In Fast Game
Deep Rock's softball team de-
feated the Chandler team in a
league game here last evening 16
and 11 The game which was close
ther Mrs Walter Tate and her 'night in a regular meeting it has
eifeok Tnot
sister Barbara Jean will return no uns-c'e"d 'T'h”e'' in" t5a
with her July 6th to make their
'services will not be open to the
home in California
public The meeting will be held
Cpl Jack Booher U S MAC at 8 p m at the Masonic Temple
left yesterday to report to the Gun- Heads of the organization urged all members to be present
nery School at El Centro Calif V
where he will receive advanced
training He has been here visiting Repairmen Ready
his parents Mr and Mrs E J Independence For
Booher 821 North Steel street fol-
lowing duty in the Pacific theater Truman's Arrival
as an aerial gunner
V INDEPENDENCE Mo June 27
--(UP)--A 50 mile an hour wind
"Cheeta" Of The 'storm which beat President Tru
Movies To Be man ot his home town by a dozen
ihours brought street cleaning and
Exhibited Here repair crews out under emergency
orders today to refurbish the town
"Congo" the ape who played the for his arrival
part of "Cheeta" in the Tarzan 1
pictures with Johnny WeismullerJ Torn down and tattered by the
and Maureen O'Hara will be in gale were many of the banners and
Cushing in person tonight through bunting tvhich decked the town
Thursday square Temporary wiring installed
J L: Lewis the anthropoid's own- in the auditorium for press and ra-
er who has him here in the largest dio was damaged and streets were
traveling 'cage in America will ex- littered with debris of broken trees
hibit him in performance here to-
night et 6:30 o'clock on the cor-
A full force of workers moved
ner of Central and Broadway The
into the streets at dawn to clean
animal will be shown tonight up the litter restore the bunting
through Saturday from 1 p m to and repair power lines A unit es-
3 p in each afternoon and from signed to the "summer White
6:30 p in to 10 p m each evening House" territory swept up leaves
V and branches of small shrubs the
OKLAHOMA CITY June
only damage in that immediate
' 27-:-
(UP)--D A Bryce FBI head vicinity
- here speaks today on "law en-
City officials said that everything
forcement" at the weekly lunch-
would be ship-shape by the time of
eon of the Kiwanis club the president's errival late today
: -
g
A'AL V rt
SUMMER seems to bring to a
' crisis the battle between the
yard-improvers and garden-growers
and the pet-keepers and child-
raisers As a result newspapers all over
the country from the Bible-belt
of the south to the honeymoon
center near the Canada line write
phone And ask such questions as
these:
"How does one prevent the
neighbor's dogs from digging
up the garden? Is there any
law? Can you invoke the law
I without making all the neigh-
bors mad at you?"
"What can be done about
children running over your
yard and damaging flowers and
gardens shrubbery and plants
which you have spent long and
painful hours cultivating?"
"I can't get a fence to fence
out my neighbors chickens and
meat is so scarce that I hate to
'say anything about them scrat-
ching up my flowers They do
have a fence but the chickens
'et throughwhat can one do?"
TO the above and many other
similar nuestions my best an-
swer would be:
Children are so much more im-
portant than flowers that I be-
lieve people should tolerate them
to the limit of endurance and let
the flowers suffer if need be
Chickens are also becoming very
vital factors In life liberty and
the pursuit of sustenance Better
help the neighbors feed the
chickens and make a deal to buy
one occasionally
these:
''How does one prevent the
neighbor's dogs from digging
up the garden? Is there any
law? Can you Invoke the law
without making all the neigh-
bors mad at you?"
"What can be done about
children running over your
yard and damaging flowers and
gardens shrubbery and plants
which you have spent long and
painful hours cultivating?"
"I cant get a fence to fence
out my neighbors chickens and
meat is so scarce that I hate to
say anything about them scrat-
ching up my flowers They do
have a fence but the chickens
get throughwhat can one do?"
TO the above and many other
'n similar nuestions my best an-
swer would be:
Children are so much more im-
portant than flowers that I be-
lieve people should tolerate them
to the limit of endurance and let
the flowers suffer if need be
Chickens are also becoming very
vital factors in life liberty and
the pursuit of sustenance Better
help the neighbors feed the
chickens and make a deal to buy
one occasionally
n OGS are a much greater strain
on my magnanimity I do not
exactly dislike dogs I Just think
they are much more trouble than
they are worth I think they are
Ihiehly overrated and over-indulged
I think there should be a
limit set upon the number of
dogs to a town One to a family
is much too many I would be in
favor of granting dog priorities
only to families with children of
I young years who really need them
I for companionship
Old maids and old bachelors
I who can show proof that they have
ifew friends or companions or fac-
ilities to get them might also be
!allowed dogs Young healthy WO
men who should be expending e-
jection upon children or adults--
not any-11111eS3 they have a great
Ideal of room Men who keep does
Ito hunt with should be required to
t"board them out" on farms in
the summer
Now of course I know that
many people will heartily dis-
agree with me But—rve got a
right to be radical about a few
things Just the same as the rest
of you!
Sure such attiudes as mine
about dogs is the reason why
World Peace agreements are so
hard to make work
WARNING:— Don't anybody
dare bring me a dog as a gift
I'm not going to permit myself to
get acquainted with dogs I know
I'd get to liking 'em if I gave my-
self a chance But there's to be
no exposure Keep that dog at
home I don't care if he is a
thoroughbred—I don't want him
—not even as a present
I
STILL on the subject of yards
and dogs the following letter
and editor's answer appeared in
a Houston Tex paper recently
Dear Editor:
What am I to do about the
neireabor's children I moved
to this house a short while ago
and have worked very hard
to improve my yard But the
children of the neighborhood
run through it and break off
plants and young trees and
damge shrubbery
I paid MO for a bulldog
thinking he would keep the
children away But now he
and the children have become
friends and they all run
through the yard together I
don't want to have trouble
with my neighbors What do
you suggest?
Mrs Smith
La Porte Texas
Editor's Answer:
Mrs Smith:
You certainly made a mis-
take in spending M for a
dog for such a purpose But
you're mighty lucky that the
dog did not prove vicious with
the children Had that hap-
pened you would have had
neighbor-trouble right
You should have spent
your 840 for a fence Fence is
still obtainable--maybe not
the fancy kind but a fence
that will fence Your dog in-
vestment was bad
oP0e'ftW0SWI
Your Doctor knows that
he can depend on the pur-
ity of ingredients we asp
and the accuracy with
which we lilt his prescriptions
VEE DRUG
o mm k ow t
e"01ndlvi
THE CUSHING' DAILY CITIZEN CUSHING OKLAIIOMA
-
Cushing B & P IV
Club Heal Session
Members of the Cushing Busi-
ness and Professional Women8
club held a regular dinner session
Tuesday evening in the Gingham
room of the Hotel Cushing
Miss Mildred Steinmeyer had
charge of the program and pres-
ented an Interesting parliament-
lary drill and discussion Miss
'Francis 'Price president of the
'organization conducted a busi-
ness session
Guests of the club included Mrs
George Werner KaaSaa City and
Corporal Gladys Pippenger WAC
who gave an interesting discussion
on her work at Mitchell Field in
New York
It was also announced that the
club will sponsor Miss Alyce Rae
Clark a a candidate for Girls
State to be held at Chickasha
July 13 to July 19 Girls State is
held annually by the American Le-
gion Auxiliary
V
Yanks Land—
(Conlintlen from Page IL
eye' on all enemy moves" it add-
ed In invasion-jittery Japan the
enemy's bigegst surviving oil re-
finery blazed following an attack
by 50 Superfortresses Just before
midnight last night
The B-29s bombed the Utsube
river oil refinery 18 miles south-
west of Nagoya only 14 hours af-
ter nearly 500 more of the big
bombers had raided 10 aircraft
and arms plants in Japan—the
first time that Superfortresses
have hit Japan in strength twice
in 24 hours
The Utsube river refinery was
Japans largest producer of avia-
tion fuel
Two Emergency Landings
Radio Tokyo conceded that fir-
es were started in the attack but
said all were "quickly brought
under control" It said bombers
also attacked the coastal area
south of Nagoya through an over-
cast Returning airmen reported good
to excellent results in the large-
scale daylight raid despite "soupy
weather" that iced their planes
Mustanes escorting the bombers
shot down two intercepting enemy
planes and damaged six but five
B-29s were lost
One Mustang was also lost but
the pilot was rescued at sea More
than 70 Superfortresses made em-
ereency landings on Iwo at one
time landing at the rate of one
every 30 to 45 seconds Most ran
short of gasoline but others had
been damaged over Japan
Various Tokyo broadcasts had
claimed that 27 or 28 B-29s bad
been shot down and 44 to 66 oth-
ers damaged
Sink Damage 23 Ships
Other planes of the Pacifiè Air
Forces sank or damaged 23 more
ships along a 5000 mile arc from
Borneo to the Kurile Islands north
of Japan Fliers under Admiral
Chester W Nimitz's Pacific Com-
mand accounted for eight and
these under Gen Douglas Mac-
Arthur 15
Nirnitz announced that search
Mariners of Fleet Air Wing One
sank a medium freighter-transport
in the Yellow sea and two luggers
off the south coast of Kyushu
on Tuesday Search privateers of
Fleet Air Wing 18 sank a small
cargo ship three fishing vessels
and a lugger south of Honshu the
Poor Digestion? i3
Headachy? o o
Sour or Upset? o o
Tired-Listless? o o
Do you feel headachy and upset due to
poorly digested food? To feel cheerful
and happy again your food must be
digested properly
Each day Nature must produce about
two pints of a vital digestive juice to
help digest your food If Nature fails
your food may remain undigested—
leasing you headachy and irritable
Therefore you must increase the floe
of this digestive Juice Carter's Little
Liver Pills increase this flow quickly—
often in as little as 80 minutes And
you're on the road to feeling better
Don't depend on artificial aids to
counteract indigestion--when Carter's
Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Na-
ture's own order Take Carter's Little
Liver Pills as directed Oet them at any
drugstore Only 24
SRMP day
Aleutian-hased Liberators of the
I lth Air Force hit installations at
Kurabu Cape on Paramushiro in
the Kuriles Monday while Mar-
ine planes battered the Sakash-
ima islands southwest of Okin-
awa Monday and Tuesday
Jap Commander Dies
Japanese planes struck back at
Okinawa Monday night but caus-
ed no damage Twelve of the raid-
ers were shot down
Tenth Army forces on Okinawa
rounded up 802 more Japanese
prisoners Tuesday boosting the
total for the 87-day campaign to
9498 The number of Japanese
dead remained at 101853 for over-
all casualties of 111351
A dispatch from Okinawa said
the bodies of the Japanese com-
mander Lt Gen Mitsuru Ushi-
Jima and his chief of staff U
Gen Isama Cho were found Mon-
day in shallow graves on the Is-
land They had committed hara-kari
at a formal ceermony after their
last stronghold an elaborate 5Y-
stem of inter-connecting caves
on the southeast coast had been
surrendered
Pacific fleet headquarters re-
ported many of the prisoners tak-
en on Okinawa presented surrend-
er leaflets which had been drop-
ped over the island by American
planes
Acquit Soldiers
I
n bout mania
at 9:08 a m (clATT)'
The (thief executive was up at
6:40 a m and left the Hotel Utah
at 7:30 after breakfasting on what
he termed luscious Utah strawbev-
ries He was dressed in a gray
suit blue shirt and a dark blue
bow tie
Yesterday the president ended
the United Nations conference with
a dramatic request at San Fran-
cisco for "world-wide rule of reas-
on and today he was going home
for the first time after hemming
president of the United States
e PS 1
LINCOLN ARMY AIR FIELD
Neb June 27—(UP)—F0ur en-
! listed men have been acquitted
is : of charges of beating and nits-
" treating prisoners at the Lin-
tcoin Airfield guard house in a
series of general court martial
1- ' trials which ended yesterday
11 Army air field officers announc-
it ed today
rs
a 1 The War Department said
r- 1 yesterday it was seeking further
' information on alle?ed beatings
41 of soldier prisoners at the field
?- after Rep Leon H Gavin R
iy :Pa charged before the House
's' that a young cadet had been
es :clubbed into unconsciousness
ist I some time last year
e i
I Col Herbert W Anderson
it : commander of the field since
Oast April said the offenses were
CJalleged to have occurred between
'
e May 1943 and August 1944
l
IC Captains Antony Paris Staten
Island N Ir and Stanley Jones
n
d Utica ' - N Y provost marshal and 1
police and prison officer respect-I
d I ively 'rem April 1944 to August
d 1944 still are to be tried for al-
i-
leged allure to prevent !nis-
treatment of prisoners Their
trials will open next week
Ir Those acquitted are Pic al-
v fred L Winkle Sherman Tex
n
Cpl Carlton D Medows Long-
h
view Tex Sgt Kenneth R Ha-
'
I mill Glenrose Tex and Pfc
'' John P Davis Chicago
Anderson said each trial was
d !conducted by a separate general
ccurt martial composed of dif-
h ferent members all anointed by
e the Commanding General of the I
t Army Air Forces Training Corn-
mand Fort Worth Texas
's V
u
'f Independence-
11 (Continued Prom Page One)
s as presiding Judge of the county
e court 11 years ago — businessmen
' poured out onto the sidewalk and
it was "M Harry!" in a tumultous
roar as he drove past
Irdependenee Cheers Truman
A high sign above the court i
house door whipped in the still
fresh wind It said simply: "Wel-
come Home"
Police guarded the route of the I
caravan through Kansas City into I
Independence where a detachment I
of military police was on hand to
assist the small local department
In its biggest police job
Along the line of the caravan in
downtown Kansas City crowds lin I
ed up long before the presidential
plane was due for vantage positions
'
Stores and businesses were not dos-
Ied and many admitted they were
going to overstay their lunch hour
to eee the president
I Up Early
Gov Herbert B Maw of Utah
Iaccompanied Mr Truman from Salt
Lake City where the ship took off I
This is the first time the pres-1 p''''' -- b--- — ---
Went has been home since he -
-
went into the white house And Asks Speedy Ratification Stettinius said the four Con-
were ready to pull out all the
Independence and Kansas City gressmen On the U S delegation
had made an "inestimable con-
stops in giving him the welcome tribution" to success of the con-
deserving of the nation's No 1
"hometwn boy who made good" ferehee'
Once the parade through In-
dependence is over this afternoon "And now" lie added "it is
t the turn of the whole Senate to
he president will hold a news
give force and effect to this
conference in the Memorial build-
work"
ing at Maple and Pleasant and Stettinitis said he hoped the
make what his aides referred to United States would be "among
as one of the biggest announce the first if not the first to ra-
ments of his career both in the tifiy the Charter" That he add-
senate and the White House ed would be "fitting to the plan
The conference for reporters of leadership our country holds
was scheduled for 4 p m CWT in war peace"
There was no clue as to the na- The Secretary said the Japan-
ture of the president's announce- ese vat' seemed very close in
ment White House Press Secre- San Francisco however far away
tary Charles O Ross would not it may seem here He said !'it
say whether the announcement was never possible to work" tin-
would be primarily of domestic or
international interest mindful of the Pacific conflict
"There can be no peace for
V ils at home" he continued "un-
Urges United— less the task ahead of us is
carried nut sneedilY and Wee-
(Continued From Plage 1)
ments—but they will be the re- lively The stakes could not be
adjustments of peace and not higher"
of war" Etat intim' wife and twin sons
"Openly reassuring the little were On hand to greet him
nations that the big powers will President To Talk Monday
not seek to dominate the world The work of the San Frandsen
by force Mr Truman said: Cc:IfTwo ended last night with
"Out of this conflict come pow- frrmal signing of the historic
erful military nations now fully document and a closing speech
trained and equipped for war but i by President Truman advocating
they have no right to dominate:its prom pt ratification by the 50
the world It is rather the duty of participating nations
1
these powerful nations to assume Plans were made for the Pre-
the responsibility for leadership sident to transmit the Charter
toward a world of peace That is' formally to the Senate next Mozis
DUNKIN
Office Phone 1310
Theatre Phone 1036
Wed & 'Thur
AiTL
RECKIES5
GLORIA JEAN
HENRY STEPHENSON
ANDREW TOM BES
PARAMOUNT
Office Phone 1310
Theatre Phone 1310
Last Times Today
- WEDNESDAY JUNE 27 1945
words which had been written'
into the charter
"Upon our decisive action" he
Auld "rests the hope of those who
have 'fallen those now living1
those yet unborn—the hope for a
world of free countries—with de-
cent standards of living—which
will work and cooperate in a
friendly civilized community of
nation"
U S Delegates—
(Continued rrOM Paige 1)
the Senate Foreign Relations
CoMmittee and the Army Air
Forces band greeted the delegat-
es - Asks Speedy Ratification
Stettinius said the four Con-
gressmen on the U S delegation
had made an "inestimable con-
tribution" to success of the con-
ference ''And now" he added "it is
the turn of the whole Senate to
give force and effect to this
work"
Stet Unitis said he hoped the
United States would be "among
the first if not the first to ra-
tifi3' the Charter" That he add-
ed would be "fitting to the plan
of leadership our country holds
in war peace"
The Secretary said the Japan-
ese war7 seemed very close in
San Francisco however far away
it may seem here He said "'it
was never possible to work" un-
mindful of the Pacific conflict
"There can be no peace for
us at home" he continued "un-
less the task ahead of us is
carried out sPeedilY and effec-
tively The stakes could not be
higher"
Etat intim' wife and twin sons
were On hand to greet him
l'rcsident To Talk Monday
The work of the Ssn Francisco
I
I
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111
day ' with a' personal plea for 'W
speedy approval
In the interim the way will be
smoothed by the Senates own
participants in the San Francis-
co deliberations—Chairman Tom
Connally D Tex of the Foreign 1
Relations Committee and Sen
Vandenberg
Their talks are - scheduled as a
report to the Senate the Amer-
ican people and the world at
large on their evaluation of the 41
I0000-word Charter under which
Atte United Nations pledge them-
selves to maintain peace and se-
curity throughout the world
with force if necessary
The Charter will become af-
fective as soon as it is ratified
by the Fig Five nations—the
United States Great Britain
Russia France and China—and
a majority of the 45 other signa-
tories I Connally said he would work 4)
"In perfect harmony" with the
President as Chairman of the
Foreign Relations Committee to
get speedy U S ratification
Hearings Set
Committee hearings tentative-
ly have been scheduled to start W
July 8 exactly one week after
Mr Truman's appearance before
the Senate
Senate Democratic Leader Al-
bert W Barkley told reporters
he hoped the hetudngs would
take no more than two weeks
He hoped floor debate would
take no longer
Barkley had no doubt that the
treaty would get far more than
the two-thirds vote necessary for o
rat if icat ion
"I couldn't flit my finger on
a single vote in opposition al-
though there may be a few" he
said
Nor was Barkley worried over
tile prospects of crippling reser-
vations lie said he experts any
I fights along that line to be made
later when cengress takes up
separate legislation spiting up
the method for naming a dele-
gate to the new security Council
and outlining his ditties and U
authority
tr
go
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- Office Phone 1310
1 A4n1S'P s " ros Eii'Iugow
teir I s-e-r-17ice-s"-u-11-rn-o-t ile"-op"e-n-io-“iii" Editor's Answer:
Mrs i
I Theatre Phone 1 f
310 '-ilN I FACTORY Itil ETRIOD
public The meeting will be held Smith: A
ii C PP
kCIat 8 p m 4 NG
at the Masonic Temple You certainly made a mis- SEE
itt) 'REAI
Heads of the organization urged take in spending M for a Last Times Today
?IA 1 ':
in-
1 I : 14
all members to be present dog for such a purpose But
if V you're mighty lucky that the MONGP 0 40------
giamoudr: - ''''"--$1-- '')' i'& ! At ' Only Firestone lidcap-
ed
peed it-livZ Virr 1 10 6 i 1
ng Repairmen Ready dog did not prove vicious with ' ping gives you the
' Tustin v 110i 3 b4' N
the children Had that hap-
to 4 famous DeLuxe
ol
J Independence For n you would have had f A -' i 1 It ' ' Champion Gear-Grip
- neighbor ) ftsi
' A t J''
i -
14- 74) Tread the tread with
ter 1 Truman' ighbor-trouble right s Arrival You should have spent
l a '"‘-' extra depth for extra
your $40 for a fence Fence is Monster Anthropoid Anc rola ' ji NI & f $ 414 Da
1 INDEPENDENCE Mo June 27 still obtainable--maybe not Tirol
-- ' ' l :mtf ' r 600- S 16
--WP)--A 50 mile an hour wind the fancy kind but a fence 4 Days Only—Starting i fp)
1 '
1 is (1
''! '-0 Other r
Proportionat IVLow and longer mileage No
storm which beat President Tru
I - that will fence Your dog in- ri certificate needed
man ot his home town by a dozen vestment was bad "" I '''' 1
I I Live 71
hours brought street cleaning and T01)116111' WE LOAN YOU TIRES WHILE WE
orders today to refurbish the tow
repair crews out under emergency "'"'"'"Ø"'"9
I
LLAND r r RECAP YOURSsTHIS SERVICE
n 0olitalithk Olivia DEHAVI
he:for his arrival Pithl lill'i IONS i
v If: I W1 A TAKES ONLY ABOUT 30 MINUTES
an
Continuous Night Performance 6:30 to 10
er I Torn down an d ta tt ere d b y th e ' I 1 91101rr-r4"-IwITraiW"6714-7
in gale were many of the banners and 1 Matinee From 1 p m to e7
Matinee
gh bunting ivhich decked the town! -' rttl 3 p m I onwt UFT Tv 6 '' '
i
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0 " '1'41) 1 0
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square Temporary wiring installed
n- in the auditorium for press and ra- See him in the largest traveling cage in the world An ( 'less BARKER 71A
t 1 't P5
S t dio was damaged and streets were -4--:' attraction every mother father and child should see '
'0 Pr 4 14
c -4- - 1
x- littered with debris of broken trees l
A4)( i al -1-r'
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1 t
0-
A full force of workers moved Cage located
he '"“
r-
into the streets at dawn to clean Your Doctor knows that Corner of Central and Broadway Starts Tomo
l rrow i
t
ht uP the litter restore the bunting he can depend on the pur-
a
an pa
d reir rrithe power linesA unit s
a Ad
-
to 1 y ngredients we usp
t of i
signed to "summer White Els 4 ' $
m and the accuracy with m 25c Icl Tax No Extra Charge n a ‘ 61 LVS1 O CFO
g '
House" tetory swept up leaves
st a i
-
and branches of small shrubs the
which we fill his prescrip 111 1 - n
: only damage in that immediate tions - Lot to set cage donated by
Ld I vicinity - Ulla N at SINOP(' riione 183
' 101 E Broadway
1-- City officials said that everything WE DRUG - - Aberèrombies
-- -- Store Hours: tireek Days 8:30 a m to' 8 P In-
1 would be ship-shape by the time of
Saturdays: 1130 a m to 9 p In4
the president's arrival late today eo41es6se6"6eesooetw
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and easy to Install
water-repellent and
highly flre-resistant It's
a now type insulation
and a real wonder
GLORIA 'TEM ' CP
HENRY STEPHENSON et
ANDREW TOMBES 0:04LED I
PARAMOUNT I tAl'ANINi
artAkegi
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 231, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 27, 1945, newspaper, June 27, 1945; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173310/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.