The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 270, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 22, 1944 Page: 2 of 6
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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?AG r TWO
-'-
CITY TEAM
BRISTOW STAY
111 TOURNEY
The Cushing Future Farmers ! k7r11-
of America and Weaver's Service! -141 NO!$'
Station of Bristow softball teams
emerged the victors last evening: 'it orit
of a double header game the $ N 1 N''
first bracket of the distri ct soft- : 0 "N
'
ball tournament being played:
lu re at Sportsman's Park I
These two winners will play t-4:4!
Wednesday evening in a game
scheduled at 8 o'clock at Sports-' ' TT !' :-
man's park I 41:sii
o
i st-t ' ':'
The F F A team Cushing loi 47
Softball League champions de-:
feated the Texaco team from '41
Bristow 1 and 0 in the opening ill yek-'11
gre a stiff hard opener that i'
held spectators on the edge of '44i
their seats the whole period last Pot
evening The game was a scoreless vt4
tie until the sixth when Emmons i Joh
was credited wit ha run No hits'
1 OUT VO1
were recorded for the F F A
team until this inning The debris el
Texaco team recorded two hits
One during the first one the r ea on ho
fourth and one the sixth Oar- 'that A Buil
Mt pitched for the F F A team
Bristow Team Winner uf Tilliall
---
In the second game of the
double header the Weaver Ser- 1 scn A
vice Station of Bristow defeated!
the Perry All-Stars 9 and 4 nti
arid three in the sixth but could I
not overcome the seven run lead
racked up by the Service Station
team in the third
To Play Tonight
Scheduled to play tonight are N
the Harmony Independents and it
the Baptist team both local 1
teams The winner of tonight's a
flans will meet the winners of 12
Thursday's night game and will 2
be played Thursday evening
FFA — Texaco
Poi Texaco t
Garrett P Bath
Mayberry C Cuse
R Dowdy 1B C Fredrick
Cowan 2 3 RIM° lull
Ford 3 3 Smith
Dykes S 3 Mouser
Trimble L P Kinnard
P Dowdy C P Princer
Walker RI' Boyle
McE'wen S 1 Leff ingwell
Weaver
All-Stars
23 R tido lull
3 3 Smith
ss Mouser
LP Kinnard
C P Princer
Boyle
S Leff inawell
R 11 E
9 9 3
4 4 4
-V
Cream No I 43
Cream No 2 45
EGGS No 1 27c
EGGS Infertile 29e
Prices Quoted By Burkeys
Creamery
OKLAHOMA CITY LIVESTOCK
OKLAHOMA CITY Aug 22--
(1111)--Livestock:
Cattle 5000: calves 1200: steer
market steady top 14: cows
steady to weak top 11: heifers
steady top 1250: bulls steady
tcp 1050 stockers and feeders
steady on good kinds slow on
others
Hogs 1400: market steady:
packer top 1445 bulk 1350-
1445 sows steady top 1350: !
stockers steady to 50 lower top!
12: feeders steady top 1250
Sheep 800 lambs big 25 high-
( practical top 1325: sheep !
steady to strong top shorn ewes
450 1
V
! KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK
KANSAS CITY Mo Aug 22—
(UP)--t WFA)--Livestock:
Hogs salable and total 2000:
active steady good and choice
180-240 lbs 1450: 241 lbs and
sows mostly 1375 few 140-170
lbs 1375-1445 all sold early
Cattle salable 8500 total 9-
250: calves salable 1500 total
1 600: native fed steers steady to
15 higher active on strictly good
and choice grades with 13 selling
1625-1740 latter price highest
since 1928: few loads medium
end good short fed steers 13-
1625 all choice fed heifers 1890:
cows fairly active: most beef
kinds 750- 1 few good 1150-
1250 small number medium and
rood feeder steers 11-1350: coin-
mon light stockers down to 7501
Sheep le table 2500 total 3-1
250: pra-tically nothing soldl
earto trade delayed by higher
asking prices good and choice
natives and Colorado spring
lambs lold above 1450
V
ominent Tulsa Oil
Man Leaps To Death
TULSA Okla Aug 22—(UP)
—Charles W Catlin 44 vice
president of the Chatham Oil Co
was killed yesterday afternoon in
a plunge from a window of his
12th floor office in the Phi 'tower
building
Fellow office workers said Cat-
lin had been in good spirits ear-
lier in the day and police were
unable to account for the fall
Ile was alone in his office at the
MM-
Fisher 1B Crenshaw li-ail of Sul') Inn mixing i
W n a var-
att ins 23 Lester
Kenzie 313 Hays tion of single-wing but keeping
Ryan S 3 Providence il a man in motion on all nia3ts
Brown LP Smith 1 South to Use Deception
BcIton CP Baker i "ICU be a w!Oe-cpen affair"
Benny RP jonesiCaach Jenks Simmons El Repo
Butcher ST? Harold of the North said last night after
It 11 E :devoting bot h ovaetive sessions
P P A 1 1 1 Ivestet-dev to helter-skelter tactics
TEXPRO 0 3 1 i Ind trying eVelVO”e but the tackWeaver-Perry
Iles in some iwulitut form of the
Service Sta Po Perry offensive net ion
Feeback P Nicewander I Stamps promised plmtv of de
!reptien against the North el
though his South roster packs the
ihcavyweights of the two squads
and will rtsort to power when
needed He kept Harry Para-
Dunean in the Smith signal
leaning snot in both workouts
I Coach Bud Hysor tutoring- the
INerth forward wall is Jubilant
lever his prospects for fast mcwing
ii!uards and stalwart tackles "Oar
!ends are looking good too" ha
Passing Feature
The feature of the two drills
I was the paesing of Perry Moss of
!Tulsa Central who was hitting
the North receivers frotn all dir-
ftions Simmons had Mess hand-
ling the ball in the quarterback
I slot throughout the sessions but
!shifted his other backs freelY He
had giant 190-pounder Basil
Sharpe a fleet-footed back from
Pawnee in both the running and
I blocking spot
Bobby Jack Stuart Tulsa Will
Rogers rabhit-back was plenty -
busy in yesterday's session snagc-
tint passes lateral and forward
intim almest any place on the field
as well as scooting WIt h the pig-
4tin StillWater's BA) Moore al-
ternated with Moss on kickint!
and Passing
A blistered heel slowed Tom
Meason A dmore one of the
Souths best passers He was ben-
ched after a short workout Jim
Palmer Mangum pleased Stamps
with his drive when carrying the
ball on numerous power plays'
The 195 pound ball lug ti-eit pro-
bably will socarheed much of the
South attack
Squads Catch on Fast
Although many of the boys'
were unaccustomed to the T for-
mation coming from scattered
parts of the state where they were
coached by different mentors in
several systems the all-star coach-
es are elated over the speed with
which the youngsters are catch-
jog onto the model-T system
Coach C C Lefty I Custer
Bartlesville put his North basket- I
ball team thraugh two h?avy
yesterday at Taft gymnasium and
coach John Pryor Capitol Hill
coach of the South cagers said
last night he had completed his
10-man squad He still bemoaned
the loss of Bill Waters giant
smoth operating eager from Cap-
itol Hill now at Fort Sill Okla I
The all-statit basketball game1
the first sponsored by the Okla-I
homa coaches association will be
played at Classen gym Thursday!
night
Tickets were on sale today for
the two all-star classics with a!
$225 combination ducat for both !
events or $165 for the football
game and $1 for the cage tussle
V
WOODWARD Okla Aug 21—
Wilt—Chaplin Norman B Gibbs!
of Woodward Army Air Base has
set a new all-time high score for
physical fitness in tests given
here The chaplin a former track'
and basketball star of Southwes-
tern college Memphis performed!
114 sit-ups 24 pull-ups and ranl
the 300 yard shuttle in 45 secondsl
to secure a total of 93 points cut !
of a possible 100
I
time of the plunge
Catlin was also treasurer and the Bates-Reading Oil Corp
assistant treasurer of two other which had offices with the Chat-
companies Beading -ito Bates and ham firm - -
Marrs Rescue Tinian Hatives Dispel Their Terror of Americans'
0111EMPM
OUT YOU COME — Marines pull IiU Iinitn nallve girl from
debris el dugout where she and family had hidden for weeks
The Weaver Service Station in
a wild orgy of scoring got seven rk) ti 1 I Var Moves 1
of their runs during the third in- I -SIA0
fling The first two runs came Ey !Awls F Keemle
during the first inning Ulm V
t l'ilitrd Press ViiirAnaly4 i
The Perry All-Stars picked up i I ti L11 !in THE Col mans aPpear to have I
lcur runs one in the second ' tt im—Ili I tesignAl lla
ulvives to the
a nri th"an 11 ha eivth hit aallIel I
THE CUSHING DAL V CITIZEN CUSHING OKLAHOM A
413131—Only the Quarterbacks hod "' "" '"‘"' "" Lignin urmy troops ouve clew--
high command has announced
-ollt van' irlon torlov of whprp Hwy eft nit Germans from the ancient
ations icI t11 ultimate in razzie- mid robably nil the Balkans: Florence ('lard - -
dazzle offpnse 'and tipir llama' resources Asserting that "it can now he Total 25E54
Both teams are employing the Bfflvtirta and numary
are a- ' said" that Florence has been ill) I
tricky T formation with the b
- out reiliY to thIOW 111 the ttmcl : (waled mut "is firmly in our hanis":
litlLot tactill :e AN IbLyi bnotait ttliiemttntle1: rimed mut "is firmly in our hanis"
South t(8flL
30111i1 MUM 1-0aUlit-ti uy U '3' Lind thiS 41kur-1 give them the the communique also rtport
Emmons C Cecil
nal imptt us toward surrender Ram trgaiii Iloilo hp Adri
Fighpr R
Stamps of Duncan and Bob Sum-
fi
final aiijit L us MUM surrenuer t hut Polish 11001A along the Adri-
There seems little likelihood that'
atm einiit ids° had pushed north-
' hiller tun hold Ittonania IV ward after brisk 'fighting between
long WqtillSt a 111:Ijor Russian
mo and Metauro rivers
lensive aluml t brow ing in he ("est
forge GtiInall serves and ha t Marshal Albert Kesselring has
lie cannot fro-!alny do I eivtn no indication however that
-
Thus hit lei's continantal em- he allead3 to make a general
pire inch he had boasted drawal Of his German troops to
would la:t I000 years is rapid- new positions behind the Gothic
ly crumbling to rtfn on the west: line vhere it has long been eN
east and south If the war we:a :pected he would make a rntjfl
to last a long while the loss of stand for defense of northern
cconemic and material resources
alone would ensure Gernrany's ''Bv
and patience" the Al-
eventual defeat but now that
lied communique wported "nor-
the struggle is in its final stags '
ence has fallen into our Minis and
that Li nct so important to '
decision which is due to 13? extensive damage apart from &-
reached forthwith molitions by the enemy has been
WHAT is immediately import- !nyultl"fi
ant is the Is of Crit-an 7 "Unless the enemy decides to en-
manrove entailed in hopelessly gage the city with long-range
the lit Min which means that the mtillery the city will quickly re-
defending the enter ramparts of turn to normal and full assist-
final defrmre of the inner citadel ance be brought to the in-
will be in !habitant by the Allicd
The bottom of the German government"
manrower barrel is being seraped Force Nazi 1Vithdrawal
for the defense of the eastern The Germans first Were pushed
Russians
tot deis of the Reich against the
and the drain is ter- aeross the Arno river tvhicli ruts
riVc as the battle for the Bairns Ihe eilY in half' and la" ‘vall-
East Prussia Wainw and solithH hi hi their n1"111 1"rees ii " """I
ern Folana continues in the mmt horn suburiv viith
Flom dispatches indicate there tanks and machinegun fire Low-
is a good prospect for the des- ever they made a Irina' no-
tt nctien of the Wetirmacht in mans-lit nd out of the noatheili ee-
Wcstern Europe It has been dis- tor until the British troops 13red
cicsed that the German Pre's those ij1atel units also to t hie
has been irmaucted to prepare'
the public for the loss of France —
That does not mean the ' army en the northern side as
mact will be able to willuilaw a well The other two armies south
tangible part of its strength for of Paris have little prosm it of
the defense of the Rhine The escape as the Mediterranean in-
Gtrmans most probably are de-1 Yodel's press north and Maquis
termitud to hold the "Rocket" strength swells daily
CML of northwestern France as The French report that the
long as they can but here are Maquis he liberated ciele de-
signs that it is no intended to partments in the past week
stnd in reinfortments to the have gained control of the big
army almady time city el Toulouse and are cncirc-
That inav mem the destrue- iing the German garrison iti 15-
tion not only of the seventh army 000 in Grenoble is indicative of
which is being chopped to pc s the plight of the enemy's 1st and
along the Seine but of the 15th 19th armies in the south
OUT OUR WAY
ndimrimMho
-f
--- -5 - S - ST! JUST
LOOK AT THOSE
-rHoS
' SOCVS AKJI °KV (
ONIE 1211 IvE GOT
TO DO SOMETHIKIG--
GNE ME -THI SCISSORS
!2(NIC iou HOLD
Him!
v
citC
- CI
(
NO VOL) HOLD HMI
I BROUGHT 'THE PRUK-J)
NG SHEARS 'THEYRUlki GOOD SCISSORS -
SUCH LONJG IYEGLECT
MAIES 'DA SO
TOUGH THre--r rr's
ALMOST LIKE
(7E- VICP1QiNG
A COW! --
i A-- (- -)
CALMING FEARS—Marine has tilt ficulty convineing natives that
they would tteeive humane treatment not be killtd as Japs saiti
Fed on horror stories by the Japanese who told them dugouts for W eeks rather than submit to capture by U S
that Americans would mistreat and kill them natives 'Atarines Photos above show members of a Marine patrol
of Tinian Island in the Marianas hid in hill caves and bunting isolated groups of Japs ats they found and rescued
I ALLIED DmvE Liipi"is troops in the Adriatic sec
tor have cleared the Germans from
I hoA
scRAmBig "Poday ) s
I ALLIED DRIVE ! Polish troops in the Adriatic see-
tor have cleared the Germans from
I
1
A I I A War 111 oyes lowARD 11 A71
ALL tatdetTiloctigeAet-inhoe
' u'i I M IS t tailiid tiinug!:)"n(!erbs
n 'coastal art a have taken the towns
fly LEtt7s F Keernie (Jr Cerasa Orciano and Poggio the
t
1 i 9
Y 11- 1 1 7)
1111litt-t!:- nitcd Press t
titrAnaly4 i
THE Golmans oPpe At ivity elsewhere ar to have I
THE thorn elvcs to the 0 hi
tki communique revenied
g i c alon
g the
front including the area held by
PEARL HARBOR Aug 22—(11
P —A recapitulation of casualties
in the Marianas campaign show-
! ti today that 44956 Japanese were
k11ed at a ratio of 10 to one tor
eveiy Amcrcian lost in stightly
more than two months of fighting
on Guam Saipan and Tinian
The figure fur the Japanese was
the actual count of enemy dead
but many others undoubtedly were
kilied in the pre-invasion bom-
bardment and taoups were des-
troyrd in caves blasted shut with
explosives
The losses among Army and
Marine fumes in the successful
conquest of the three islands
were: 4470 drad 20345 wounded
and 721 missing
Pacific fleet hfadquarters said
moppine up oNtrations were con-
tinung in the Marianas where
organize:I resistance ended 13
eiays ago The new casualty figur-
es included both the American
and Japanese losses incurred in
that period
For the entire campaign which
beean June 14 with the invasion
of Saipan the casualties were:
Count—Japanese: 14097 dead:
American: 1226 k I lied 5765
wounded 329 missing
Solpan—Japanese: 25144 dead:
American: 3049 killed 13054
wounded 368 missing
Tinian—Japanese: 5745 d e ad
American: 195 killed 1526 wound-
ed 24 missing
Headquarters also announcedl
new ar attacks Saturday on enemy
bases from the northern Kuriles
through the Marianas to the wes-
tern Carolines
Navy Ventura search planes
bombed and strafed airfields at
Paramashiro in the Kuriles with-
out aerial opposition although
three Japanese fighters were
sighted taking off from the air
base
----V
Rain has not heen known for
three years on some farms in the I
Rudolph Lake district of the
Kenya colony in East Africa
-
By J R WILLIAM
JP vviLioAtki5
1 M PM I) IS PAT OCT 8-21
tilF44 144 PI NA N vi( A INC
- 4102
-)-' - 11
-?— Is!m?--
'J— 4- "N
-
a--724))'? : i
ilf---:
4-71"V770
10
ommt Ino boo a ommomon
'
git k34
4'7 '
CLEAN-UP—Marinea bathe little Tinian girl and brother Later
thty got new clothes for them removed family to place of bait tY
one of these terror-stricken native families Father of this
family swallowed Japs' atrocity tales firmly believed end
had come when Marines appeared
State Truckers
Strike Is Held
OKLAHOMA CITY Aug 22-1 Union representatives James E
(UP)--A threatened strike of 65011amilton had expressed hope of
4L Activity olsowhore along tne!truck drivers and freight hand-avoiding a general walkout but
fro y lers in
t including the area held b the Oklahoma City area was there "may be some little
n
and the Associated Motor Carri-
ers of Oklahoma office reported at
mid-mcrning that they had rece-
ived no reports of workers refus-
ing to carry on their regular duties
1 Unt 111141-1 iiiii Am- at" swon
the
IOSS Paris and most if not all - 1' my !bein d in a
g helbeyance today al-fla
ireups that can't be avoidcl o In
Aim American Fifth m
1 — ar
OKLAHOMA CITY Aug 22— of France
A tts Is rts”ssss
ROM: Aug 22 —(UP)—Brit- "" J though a strike deadline set by! a matter of this kind"
west was confined to clashes of nnInec4nlc $nol I cst —t a
At the saute lime the German ish Eight ort-ny troops have clear-"''"" “""""-" t" the teemsters union had expired: Only 31 of the 46 truck lines
otit It wellAvtieri-s4
15P1--oniv tne PlialLerOaCKS ilOCI " f 7 " "'" -— --- atrm last midnight
i here would be affected since 15
high -conintiind has announced
eft all Germans from the ancient p
lny real idea today of where they
ull Both the union headquartershad already signed contracts ea-
the start cl the long-awaited ientilssl' inc e city of Florence and
would play when the Nmth meets Soviet sout hem ofiensive driving the enemy nortl
into —
the South in the annual Oklahoma
C G
astrities
e'
Romania If this is the expected rnlw are
karcl to the heavily fortified Gothic 71U2 citige IV - $4 jACUICLI 1
high school all-star football game fs
et tplinsive it presages ‘:
at Taft Stadiu Friday night as '
the early loss of Germany's chief Ilne an It
Ali' d ommuniqu
ce revetil-' a
coaches sou m ght the best combin- d today
remaining vouree of natural oil e vi iirea !animas Now m k go p7 01 1 EAll PI
ations f th ultimate in razzle- PE Pk jAsssititul
in a vt- m 1k irl- ri S-F1 I 11111 PI II-
7111 ewe 4 co j
11 k PT kl W11 CO- haild4
agbDitaktlatt 3AW9ntin
First Biography of America's Great General
copyriabt lir44 Ann Woodward MI Hero Distributed InIKA nervier Inc
COMMANDING CENTRAL:
EUROPEAN THEATER
XIII
WHETHER the event makes the
man or the man makes the
event is the conjecture of his-
torians With Gen Douglas Mac-
Arthur fighting to hold off the
Japs swarming into the Philip-
pines and the islands of the Pa-
cific the question arose Who will
lead the forces against the Axis
hordes who have conquered Eu-
rope and now threaten to invade
both North and South America?
There were many able generals
in Washington many of them hav-
ing won renown in World War
The nation faced the emergency
of building a great army in the
quickest possible time How the
miracle was performed under Gen
George C Marshall Chief of
Staff the farm boy from Pennsyl-
vania who had come out of the
Virginia Military Institute is a
book for future historians
The Army's revitalization pro-
gram needed a man Five days
after Pearl Harbor General Mar-
shall a keen analyzer of poten-
tialities in soldiers sent for Eisen-
hower He was informed that he
was to take over the War Plans
Division as its chief and was to
formulate the grand strategy for
all theaters of operation
His only comment as he left
General Marshall's office was
"Yes they've given me a new job
I guess somebody must have told
General Marshall I was a hot
shot"
With a shrug of his shoulders
he went away—to go to work
Sitting at his new post in Wash-
ington the world became a huge
chessboard before him Watching
every move he sent strategic or-
ders to American commanders in
both hemispheres His penetrat
OUR BOARDING HOUSE -
r d-49
I ing vision gained immediate re-
suect They knew a master hand
was playing the game
President Roosevelt recognizing
Eisenhower's skill nominated him
for the rank of major-general The
Senate immediately confirmed 't
Six days later the War Plans Divi-
sion was renamed the Operations
Division and Gene-al Eisenhower
was now at the head of what the
War Department described as "the
controlling nerve center of the
'Army"
THE War Department the Gen-
eral Staff and the White House
were in conference day and night
Finally the momentous decision
was reached—this was the man
He measured up to all the qualifi-
cations of modern warfare had a
genius in organization was an ex-
pert with tanks a firm liellever in
air tower and the co-ordination
of land sea and air forces He
was a natural-born leader of men
General Marshall called lIajor-
General Eisenhower to his office
and said "You're going over to
command the European divisions
When can you start?"
Eisenhower taken by surprise
swallowed quickly and replied
"Tomorrow morning!"
It is said that he received this
appointment because of two rea-
sons: First his amazing record in
getting things done second his
strong advocacy of a Second Front
Convinced of this necessity he
had worked out "practical plans"
which were FO plausible and bril-
liant that they commanded the
attention of the War Department
Ike "talked it out" with Mamie
his wife at their home in Wash-
ington The responsibilities of the
new job were discussed He was
willing to undertake anything in
the service of his country His
wife had full confidence in his
ability to carry out his plans she
had lived with him twenty-six
with
GAO1S1R! LUC141 FOR 139
40U CAME CI-AUGGIRG
DO ROT DEEK ME At ORDININRY
"Tv4umetR-s4A- FACT IS I'M SE-KWTOR
Mc FADDLe IND I ELECT Tt-tS
MODE OF TRPNEL TO FEEL
POLI-TICNI PULSE OF NW
COMSTITUEMTS 1M ENEiZ4
SOCIPNL STRNIUM
---- 9-22 c--zp::775!"17'7-!: il k
L
Me COULD'T
GET ATRPsIKN RE
-- - '''-irJ' '-"-''-'"1 i''' -'4:'- P ‘ ' : "I 1 )
f 1r 1ti sv ui'!-
'
S E CZWT 1 0 t Z- -''''Ni- 7 ''
TUESDAY AUGUST 2? 1944
-- - —
treeing to a five cent per hour
wage increase ordered two Months
ago by the War Labor Board ok
7x Hamilton pointed out that the
union had asked r4ities in the
1: hourly rate to 70 75 and 80 cents t
tl! for different classifications of
' workers The board approved a
i ' five cent increase to 05 and 70
re
cents from the present rates of 60
' ' and 65
"We didn't get nearly what we
? thought we were entitled to"
0 said Hamilton "but we Mtve ae-
1 'anted the War Labor Board's
i !directive I can't see why the opo
2i lerators are holding back"
IK
t Ile charged the °pennon' one
of whom had said the directive was
I confusing were "merely stall
I ing"
I Hamilton repeated his pledge
:that war materials "will be moved
7i :without tuteriupUon regardless of
any other considerations"
t It v--—
r-" Indians PlannIng
-) Annual Snake Vance ‘
(lc 1 r I!clImitCr INC
a
GALLUP N M Aug 22—(UP)
—The fact that the Indians of
Itoteville village in northern Ari-
zona still have not selected a
snake dam priest apparently
isn't going to put a damper
thtir plans for the snake dance"'
occasion it was revealed today
imton Ladd Hope Indian
event reported that although no
definite date has been set for the
dance it probably will be in early
September 0
The problem of finding a new
snake dance priest arose when
the Hoteville priest died about
two years ago Since then no rel-
ative has been found to replace
him Several of the villagers
would be eligible for the office c:cept for the fact that they have
lited with white men instead of
in the Indian village
-V
Read the Daily Citizen
years she knew the Eisenhower
character and determination
CENERAL STAFF officers In
Washington gave this word
picture of Ike's last meeting with
them Snappily laying his plans
before them he said: "This Is
what it This is what we're
going to do This is what we
need We're counting on you
to see that we get it Goodbyl"
We find him a few days later
in England in t ecret conferences
with Prime Minister Churchill and
the great military leaders on the
British staff fils mission osten-
sibly was to help prepare a merger
of United States and British Air
Forces to carry out bombing raids
1 on the European continent He
was reported in London with Gen
Mark W Clark on May 25 at
but was back in the United States w
on June 3 at a discussion of mili-
tary and supply problems which
was also attended by Lord Louis
Mountbatten
Out Of these and sweceding
conferences came the first news
that our nation was soon to throw
its power against Hitier's mighty
forces for the liberation of the
conquered countries of Europe—
the armies of freedom were soon
to meet in decisive combats the
armies of despotism The official
proclamation on June 25 1942
read:
"The War Department today an-
nouneed the formal establishment
of a European Theater of Opera-
tions for United States forces w
Maj-Gen Dwight David Eisen-
hower formerly assistant chief of
staff cf the Operations Division
of the General Staff has been des-
ignated Commanding General Eu-
ropean Theater of Operations
with headquarters in London
England" -
As Ike was leaving to return to
England on the most challenging
mission ever intrusted to an
American soldier he turned to
General Marshall and said simply
"General Marshall I haven't tried
to thank you yet"
"Don't try to thank me" Gen-
eral Marshall replied "You go
over and do the job and we'll
have cause to thank you" IP
NEXT: The Man 'ilnd the
Soldier
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 270, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 22, 1944, newspaper, August 22, 1944; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173438/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.