The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 307, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1944 Page: 4 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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1
i
PAGE FOUR
Mr and Mrs Thurman Morley
Tulsa spent the week end here
visiting Mrs Morley's mother and
slater Mrs S R Staton and Miss
Epaphra Staton and Mrs Morley'
pal ents Mr and Mrs C E Morley
-
Don Guthrie Iowa City Iowa
City Iowa Is in Cushing a few
days transacting business He Is a
: wilier resident
Bingo minstrel plenty of eats
crazy house fish pond country
store Deep Rock School earn!
val Friday —Adv
Miss Betty Maack who is attend-
' ing school in Stillwater spent the
' week end here visiting her grand-
mother Mrs A F lialfield 217
y East Cherry
Miss Ada line Furry who is at-
' tending school in Stillwater spent
the week end here visiting her par
ents Mr and Mrs Loy J Furry
525 East Broadway
$25 War Bond given free Deep:
Rock School Carnival Friday Oct
—Adv
Pvt Andrew Hinkle who is sta-
tioned at the Amarillo Air Base1
Amarillo Texas spent the veek
end here visiting his parents Mr
and Mrs C E Hinkle it)2 East
Seventh street
Edwin Kautz who has been
employed during the summer at
the Cushing Refining and Gaso-
line Station left this week for !
Shawnee where he will attend the
- Oklahoma Baptist University
Leonard Cochran who Is cm-
Ployed by the Cushing Motor !
Sales is in the Pane County
Masonic hospital recovering from!
an operation which he underwent
Thursday
Birth Announcements
Mr and Mrs Thell C Woods
940 East Moses street are the par-!
erns ot a baby daughter born at
11:30 p m September 30th at the:
WI
tine Station left this week for 1 Yanks— st
Shawnee where he will attend the f (continued From rage 1) If!
Dklahoma Baptist University f in a general northeast-southeast w
! till ect ion above Aachen di
Leonard Cochran who is on- Four hundred medium bombers fm
Ployed by the Cushing Motor :icliowng up more than 100 dive-
Sales is In the Pane County bornotf:rs took advantage of the In
Nlasonic hospital recovering from f first truak ol he weather in many !
an operation which he underwent i nays to kick ell the big attack fro
Thursday f antell at the Etineland above the HI
I breaches knoktd m the lira wall f fo
Birth Announcements lof Siegfried lortificatiorri east of ill
Mr and Mrs Thell C Woods i Airmen
!
940 East Moses street are the par- f Massed artillery In the frontier fpr
ems olf a baby daughter born at area Joined in the saturation bom- I wl
11:30 p m September 30th at the! bat:dm:M anti the avalanche of 1 ar
Payne County Masonic 110tpital' bombs lift many of the German In
The baby weighed 7 pounls :7 uefenders dead at their posts Th2l
ounces and has been named Beeke 'array of big guns included eight-
fi:Ich Howitzers firng from Hol-
i f 1
Ann
:an
V i d
Gains 1 1 3 Mile
Orville Brigham who has been B
y noon an hour alter the in- f A
in the local hospital for tthserva-'fantry went over the top the
tion and treatment is reported as gains approximately two kilotart- III
H OU 14 III 1RVIIi11rt IV
Payne County Masonic
11 The baby weighed 7 pounds 7
ounces and has been named Lecke
' Ann
tion and treatment is reported as
much improved
Miss Betty Le Sueur who has
been in the local hospital has been
dismissed and is much improved
Mrs C G Richeson of Russell-
ville Alabama spent Sunday in
Cushing as the guest of her brother
and vile isJ and Mrs George R
White
Mrs S J Berton broke her right
arm in a fall Sunday morning She
slipped on a waxed floor in her
home
Mrs W E Moody made a busi-
ness trip to Tulsa today
Senator Hurlers
Not Popular In
Detroit Today
DETROIT Oct 2— (UP) —
Ernel John Leonard and Stanley 1
Orvil Spence are the two most I
urpcpnlar men in this town
Emil Jlallt better known as
"Dutch" is a pitcher far the
Washington Senators Stanrot
Orvil is an Outfielder of the same
team
THIS irVEEK IN I
' CUSHING
Monday
Farm Shop Repair Class Farm
Shop Building 301 E Main 7:30
to 10:30 p ni
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class Red Cross Rooms Public
Library 2 to 5 D m
Tuesday
Cushing Masonic Lodge spec
lal meeting Masonic Temple 7:30
p m
Lions Club Cushing Hotel 12:15
p m
Tem Town Cushing Armory 8
p
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class Reil Cross Rooms Public
Library 2 to 5 13 m 6 to 9 p
Wednesday
Mid-Week Prayer Services City
Churches
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class lied Cross Rooms Public
Libraly 2to 5 p m
Thursday
notary Club Cushing Hotel
12:15 p m
Farm Shop Repair Class Farm
Shop Building 301 E Main 7:30
to 10:30 p
Teen Town Cushing Armory 8
pm
Red Cross Surgical Dressing !
Class Public Library 2 to 5 p tn
Friday
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class Public Library 2 to 5 p
Saturday
Teen Town Cushing Armory 81
pm
Dutch blew the Detroit Tigers i was InecuLlg
right out of the world series ance from German forces Including
a number of tanks
terday with a four-hit 4 to 1 "It appeal's the Germans still
triumph Spence blasted a fourth- are fighting a stiff rear guard ac-
his victory certain Sentiment Inning two-run homer that made tion to gain time to fight on the
Maas" Clark said
Outweighed sportmanship and 46- In other sectors of the Seconhl
565 fans in Briggs Stadium booed Army front German counter-
them lustily
thrusts dwindled and the fighting
Sad End I slackened generally Northeast of
Antwerp troops of the Canadian
It was a sad end for the Tigers !First Army were moving slowly
who drove to the top of the anh unspectacularly through the
League after trailing ty 912 area of the Dutch border north
games on July 13 when they were of Merxplas
In seventh place Front reports said no German
Dutch is 34 old for an athlete counter-attacks developed between
but he was a y3ungster yester- Arnhem and Nijmegen between
day the two branches of the Rhine
He wanted to win in order to Allied planes destroyed a column
help next year's contract It of 300 Gal-flan cyclists moving
looked hopeless at the outset into the area
The Tigers were shooting with Gorrell reported that several
their workhorse star Paul (Dizzy) hundred guns ranging from long
Trout And Leonard hadn't beat- Tom 155s to the huge 240-millien
the Tigers since 1941 But he meter rifles exploded an intense
only let one man as far us see- bombardment on the Siegfried
ond Lane until the ninth when pillboxes as wave after wave of
he gave up two of four hits and medium bombers swept in and
the Tigers only run Dynamite rained explosives on the German!
Dick Wakefield was held V3 a fortifications from heights of a
cheap Single and hard-hitting few thousand feet
Rudy York went hitless And Shellfire Paralizes Batteries
Dutch didn't walk a man The U S shellfire almost par-
Cast Pennant alyzed the Nazi antic-aircraft bat-
In the final analysis it was the teiles giving the bombers relative
wearyness and shallowness of freedom for their screaming dives'
their pitching staff which cost and runs
the Tigers the pennant They The diva bombers swooped down
had bcattn 1Fast-tiroon 15 of 18 A3eneath low-hanging clouds to:
games bcfore this final four- saturate the Siegfried strong
game series Trout no - longer points with explosives Flame :
had it because of overwork and 1 and thick black smoke shot
dropped tw games Stubby Over- hundreds of feet German troops
mire was- on the bench with a occupying the rear pillboxes quick-
- sore arm and Hal Newhouser ly retired to foxholes farther back
and Rube Gentry were practie- where at last account they were
ally all that was left It wasn't strugling to hold back the Am-
' enough erican infantry
lers of nearly one and a third mil-
!es The inhabitants of the picture-
zque little town of Heerlen in the
Dutch "Appendio" near the Ger-
man frontier were treated to the
seen by the Hollanders as the
bombers dropped thousands of
pounds of high explosives on the
boxes
Up to late afternoon supreme
headquarters had received no of-
!finial account of the First Army
!offensive Pending receipt of word
'from Hodges headquarters spok-
esmen warned against interpret-
ing repolts of the attack as an
all-out drive toward the Rhine
!until the full pattern of operations
unfolds
They pointed cut that Gen
Dwight D Eisenhower's strategy
always called for throwing m
i as many diversions as possible
matking the main thrust in an
effort to confuse the movement
of German MSCIITS
The medium bombers attacking
strong points in the Siegfried line
!near Aachen were identified at
headquarters as Marauders of the
Ninth Air Force
Swing Toward Venlo
Above toe First Army offen-
sive sector the British Second
Army was swinging westward to-
ward Venlo border town 40 miles
north of Aachen
United Press C o rrespondent
Ronald Clark said the drive west
of Venlo toward the Maas (Meuse)
was meeting considerable resist-
ance from German forces including
a number of tanks
"It appeal's the Germans still
are fighting a stiff rear guard ac-
tion to gain time to fight on the
Maas" Clark said
In other sectors of the Seconh
Army front German counter-
thrusts dwindled and the fighting
slackened generally Northeast of
Antwerp troops of the Canadian
First Army were moving slowly
anh unspectacularly through the
area of the Dutch border north
of Merxplas
Front reports said no German
counter-attacks developed between
Arnhem and Nijmegen between
the two branches of the Rhine
Allied planes destroyed a column
of 300 German cyclists moving
into the area
Gorrell reported that several
hundred guns ranging from long
Tom 155's to the huge 240-millimeter
rifles exploded an intense
bombardment on the Siegfried
pillboxes as wave after wave of
medium bombers swept in and
rained explosives on the German
fortifications from heights of a
few thousand feet
Shellfire Paralizes Batteries
The U S shellfire almost par-
alyzed the Nazi antic-fitreraft bat-
telles giving the bombers relative
freedom for their screaming dives
and runs
t
2
d
40
'I could se our eight-inch shells
expltaling" Correll repoited "and
lyet the Dutch villagers 'in Heer-
len went about their business as
usual The Windo Ws of their neat
1-?ed brick homes bulged in and
out Eon) the concussion of the
shellfire"
Ile described the dive bombing
as most effective and cited an in-
stance of artillery beim!' asked to
pinpoint cne hwie pillbox with
white phosphorous As the first
divc bombs crashed home the
message came back "pinpointing
unnecessary Fort completely de-
molished by direct hit"
The attack was launched over
rolling preen pastures dotted with
clumps of trees The Sieklrled
fortifications were well camou-
theeed with gras
When they heard the planes ap-
proaching the liermans released
white smoke from a mine shaft in
an effoiL to screen the area but
the kesture was futile
V
tr
Tulsa
Among liallon's
Unbeaten Clubs
Unbeaten Clubs
NEW YORK Oct 2 --WM—
The Monday call of perfect record
football teams survivors of a wel-
ter of Saturday upsets reads as
follows:
East—Army Cornell and Penn-
sylvania Midwest—Notre Dame Wiscon-
!sin Illinois and Great Lakes Na-
VaL South--Georgia Tech and North !
Carolina Pre-Flight i
! Rocky Moutotalu — Second Air!
FOcE SI:peiAnith::s and Colorado
!College
1 Missouri Valley --Tulsa and Ok-
lahoma A and M
Southwest—Randolph Field Tex
as Texas Christian Texas A and
1M and Soutlum it hOdist
Pacific Coast- Washinglon Cal-
ifornia and Southern Califrnia
1 There are other unbeaten teaml
:in all sections lout they haven't met
top-flight opp6s1tion as yet
! The Irish of Notre Dame wore
the prestige of national champions
iin romping 1(o a l')M to 0 victory over
Pittsburgh in Saturday's most out
standing vielloy over Pittsburgh in
!Saturday's most outstanding per-
formance They met Tulane this
TILE MHING DAILY CITIZEN CUMIN( OKLAHOMA'
"el t
- i ker
'' 1"--0??
---"--''''---------:------- (4-)1 -01 IfV1(--N ' stuAtiing historic lanittle tl- the desperate stand of the 13ritish
day ckn
attaia that test Gtrinau in w
11Y 1940 who turned every
inn ON ''''41'7-21 ''::-
((-"4 t '
e stronghold on the VI:elicit clianne1 honse in conks into 9 iortress ond
coast barely 24 flows after 114i:r-
atios the town and tainting
lais
of Ca
lei le at ainight Satur-
C9 ö 11 M 1themselves tv s their toughest fight
ti
tictrt loPtutth: walOwr p huat the Germans said
Col Schroeder
ct77N day kitter eight days of overpower
)
turiaptlipeaciii thasptpatrinetnetly try
i land and a
' ing
1k-44-1 400f7:12 ' '
sent an emissary
Canadians were eitpected to detti 1 Verlin that he iskught to the last
ir assault iind the ing to Convince his commanders in
'---- ---- ' -- 0:Le:e III - tetinlaniuttkecivrcil45e:
-----'-'"--777 1( ' ' "'4 t - where tile ill-lated Briltsli expie-'
i
N j ' -mor 0910'41is'Y
— ' '—:1- - - p h lait AIWA)
t''
(sts
ditiinary figce of 1949 lialall l4 rovi
t 0 n 0clork sattourtdhletyCamuao:l4lioilligs
with an offer to quit at 3 p m
pded the Canadians would
I march in and let the tjerrnen gar-
Wurd of the assault on Pnker-1
pytTeL
guy (4411 w a Ikeld guspawh to) risen simply decline to fight them
-''ii xLF) ---------- -'-dt' ei-''-' V') il s It 'smelled like a trap and the
the L0000n Daily Expruess earlY I
the : :c'etAntuNa 7:4 this kuurnteg 'Ibere were po hn-Capadian refused l'hey seat back
--------- 6 :' - Mediate details on the battle and bluitt word that the thrie for bar-
-- i'' '-- '''' headquarters 1104 LIG confirata- gaining was past They were going
:-'' r-r' titil? illiat the attack had beg i in with the bayonet and the only
"- ''''''- MAW-VI? ! way for Germans to surrender wa
s
-7'': -- '' 4 CO11111111114qUe ainsounced that to walk out of the port with their
War Correspondent William A
is
-- -' t A-4 nioppiutg -up ontiiections inznalOala !lauds in the air- '
7016020(1 of:'
- 40--- - s
-1"'-'
-!- 4' ‘(1
)
' -ft'''
- 14 14 a WAPI d Mug
after Cualaillati Patrols routed out At X p no xtported United Press
- — 411) 11)sc g- d tc sie-bard nazi gimpers who refused
i i t 'is I — ----- urrender witii rest 9 1 the soli trol l' Q s pqt outside C the
alai s
garrison Canadian assault opened up with a
Zstoe than 5000 Germans kn- cascade of shellfire au da rain of
— 1"- 4o04117 eluding the Calais commie:icier bombs from RAF warpianes
- -----' '?-17:-- coi bchrociler were reported caP- Barrage Lifts
- - Lured by a late how SutidaY At 3 o'clock the barrage lifted
:Otto night and the final count was
and grim-faced infantrytneu moved
gm wAds 20 t X P c V tted t0 reach 700Q or more
in through the smo flame
--- - ---- ---- -—- — V it lithe liberation of Calaisr ke and
One thou
Yale m sand Germans surrender-
meets Cornell Pittsburgh:casts claimed the sinking an estimated 82000 nazis had
eeks to recoup against Bethany sc i en A of been removed from the French ed within an hour ond more qua as
s
merican submarines In the 'channel ports Mid four years of fast as the Canadians reaebed them
t'olumbia opposes Syracuse and past week and referred onlylunremitting terror ended for the You can go into Calais tonight
liartard tackles Boston College Ivuutely to the fighting in the Pal- !Britons of "hellfire corner"' whose but a's risky" Wilson reported at
7 p
An m P
d Noty meets Pent' State fliis which it dismissed as a pre- lhomes along the white cliffs of h "Soldiers are going in and
Illinois got a 26-20 lie with lint-diary to the "decisive" battle i Dover to Folkestone bad been
Great Lakes Navy's dying there and will for just a
short me efore t is ours
i
1 R'wer-i'ackd 13f Bt!idei(P) hTlinikPyPii)neqsUoted the news- The German garrison of Calai s under steady shellfire since 1940 s h t ti b i
-' " °P hara &Vt! artaaril a rtinaa aNt
t 6R "
1 Z74 -
÷
s
s''T
-
-I Ea
6611
BRITAIN'S laLFIRE CORI1211
IRIO:CES AT FALL OF CALMS
10IDO$ Oct 2— cup) dered te ?sip' orrison to fighthto
UK all toot4 woe two) toil the last for 044 rejtteleherlhg
t
- -
Yam tr1:!rsenEtcted yiefanf
eleven a
tilt) uny ti CLI LUC I 1 I IhCt stu JCL Abkr n s aa i aarssa was 1
nd h"8 a"uther 1""111" mull Mehl as saying fought o
-- — -- - ----- '''''''" 1)IIWV Yomura 110CM as saying i iougnt stutioornly lor Lou WM
wiling in Purdue Other midwest-
that the Philippines have been t) n adian troops and artillery
ern headliners are Wisecilein-Alar-
tooverted into the strongest bast- ralud them from all aides and
(melt( Minmsoin-luielii7ito (for ion in Japan's perimeter defenses flee ts of RAF bombers showered
the little brim 0 Jug) (treat Laket- V 'more than 11500 tons of bombs
and Ohio State- —
' Cara Boss
Northwestern down on them in the fina1 eight
Iowa i days of the siege
4 V ta
I (('ontinued from rage 1) I but they broke down Friday
In the south Georgia Tech which ant to worry about" he said It s
"- :- i after the Dominion Infantrymen
crushed Clemson 51 to 6 goes after
my WI fielder Danny Lithwhiler' i had stormed and captured the cita
twice ch n
asteed North Carolina Danny had to be taken out of the
del dominating the taWn and tkieir
and Wake For-st meets Maryland
Other standout games match Duke- commander appealed for an arm-
North Carolina Pre-Flight Ala- kheader with the Giants because a
first game of yesterday's double-
istice ostensibly to permit the evac-
balm-Howard Clemson-North Car- lle may be unable to start the
nee injury was giving him trouble nation of some 20Q041 ckvklians
from the port
Willa State Georgia-Presbyterian woi Id series The German high command or-
on Friday 'irginiaW
-eA Virginia: "Very definitely I don't Illi it" —
Kentucky - Michigan State Tenn- Southworth said "First he was hit I
PSN0P-MiNgiiimi rand Itivolt11 WI a 1 Reoulse Fourth—
'Luny
Repulse Fourth—
hit
esseeAlisisippi:14:ttnna IS:ItIllitxvortigthlitsakidnee"Fl‘i!-istth hae f‘oruals
itary-Iticlunend
(Continued From Page 1)
over in Philadelphia Then the pain
inf "tts etsast
""-' '" """" —1-- -- '-- "" west of the town Strong enemy
' Kansas State Lind TIsouri open si clued to move to the hear of his forees suppoyted by syll-propell-
Lt the Big Six season 011ie Oklahoma knee Now it seems ta have settled ed susuns were fpund 9u the oppo-
ggles
ItsIsa 9 F plays Texas A and M Iowa State
1ne Alk t4 gli 1 I kciAllik I' in the Joint TO me It looks like'sfte bank
ia VC 1306
meets Doane holisto opposes un- i itnri iinjury it might v be: The British forces also pushed
! heaten 'Inisa an dille second Airrhcionatism and in that case he southwest from the village of Til-
1 Force Superhombers meet Iowa
' Pre-Flight S eallawks may not be able to play at all in bola to attack Monte Heggiano
two and three Wiles
C
: olorado Colle it
ge stakes s rec' p !and Borghi
thi:eireifets field" so Augle Bergamo will
'respectively southwest of Mont-
old against Fort Warren in the The closest Southworth would albano Heavy fighting was con-
tinning in tthdat sector a commtm-
rockies while on the west coast !conk to picking the series winner
the standout game is Cali(ornia's I was to say: "1 don't care if the bet-
clash ‘vith Southern California 'IgteleThreepGoreleman transocean news
reported strong concen-
! In other Pacific area I ling odds do favor vs: it's going to agency
games: he a tough series My Cardinals are trations of British Eighth army
' Nevada plays Arizona State II C I no super team At the same time troops in the Rimini sector today
! L A meets San Diego Naval and don't underestimate the strength of and speculated that the British
Washington takes on bilk Wil- l the Browns" :offensive in that area shortly will
liamette lbe resumed)
A
1 v I The weather generally was good
Red Troops---- iyesterday all along the Italian
Yanks Secure— front except for a few light
iContitiutd from l'age 1) I (Continued from Page 1)
showers in the Apennine Moult
east bank tam n region
strip on Ngcsbus were in American ' The Germans attempted to A week of driving rain had
hands inoviding ilunIP-off 'mink stem the Soviet advance along plagued American troops driving
for land-based bombrrs less than the Timok valley at the last mu- on Bologna but United Press war
600 miles east of the Philippines i mcnt by rushing up mohile re- correspondent James ro Roper re
Of the estimated 12000 Jap- rives but they were intercepted ported in a front line dispatch
anese holding the southorn Pal- and routed In a single sector yesterday that the Americans fin-
ans when the American invasion nearly 1000 Germans wcre killed ally had succeeded in hauling
began on Sept 15 about 150 were end EiX self-plopelled guns were heavy artillery through seas ' of
known to have been capture' and destroyed mud and around hairpin turns of
more than 10000 killed against' Front reports said the Rus- mountain roads to positions from
officially- annoiniced A m cretin sians also were advancing through which the enemy lines could bq
casualties of 5500 as of Sept 25 Sous 1: ea stern Hungary toward bombarded
Including 0116 killed i Szeged Hunlary's selland eitYa That heavy artillery was being
Strong Japanese forces still and vitro widening their bridge- effectively used Roper said In
were believed entrenched on Ba- head on the west bank of the the Fifth arIPY's twin drives down
balthaup Ind other islets in the ly'
turesul river in center Transyl- either side of highway 65 leading
Palau chain farther north and vania but the Soviet high corn- to Bologna
the Tokyo raido said scors of mand's Sunday midnight corn- I - ------------ - ----
American aircraft carrels were Inunioue—one of the briefest In a fall ffensive designed to clear
'ranging off the islands—a poss recent weeks--gave no details 1 the Balkans knock Hungary ou
nar t
ibly enemy hint of new oations of these campaigns of the war liberate Czechoslo-
"'" "'""' ""°11ny enemy hint of new operations 01 these campaigns
week
to curie
Wareaw Duel Continues
"-- to cume vvarraw tmet tontinues
Nor Carolina Pre-Flight's 21 to : Strike Halmahera I - Information also was lacking
14 victory over Navy's touted Mid- 1 A cciumunication from Gen On the progress of the Soviet
dies ranked with Penn's - 18 to 'V Douglas MacArthur's southwest advance on Riga capital of Lilt-
defeat of Duke as the day's top up- 'Pacific headquarters reported neon via Russian and German bat-
set Indiana scored a 20 to 0 vic- 1 carrier plane strikes against the teries continued their artillery
tny over unbeaten Miellienn Halmahera islands south of the duel across the Vistula at War-
i1 — —
gan l''hilippines and a land based raid saw
Irt
Dartmouth v ot to tiith t
- - - - - f - t k 1cn titze Kendari airfields in thry! ondon observers attributed
Holy Cross Army was impressive :Celebes that destroyed thri2e' the lack of concrete develop-
in beating North Carolina 46 to O grounded enemy planes mitts on most of the eastern
The soldiers play Brown this week t Japanese propaganda broad-1 front to Soviet preparations for
'Leaving Their Tails Behind Them'
Yank soldiers in photo above inspect one of the tail sections of a German robot bomb In an
underground factory at TM! France north of Vietz Plant was located in an iron ore mine and
was operated by the Germans for four maths before it was caDtared
more than 11500 tons of bombs
clown on them in tlw fina1 eight
days of the siege
But they broke down Friday
the Balkans knock Hungary 'out
of the war liberate Czechoslo-
vakit and decide the fate of East
Prussia at Warsaw)
classic military necessity and trag-
edy too—tragedy caused by a bull-
headed German C911)Mlintler
"Col Schroeder wanted hitter's
knight cross He wouldn't surren-
der when be bad a chance and not
even when bis men lost heart for
battle Smoke and flame and bomb
and billet made him relent once
and he tried to Aalk‘ terms but the
Canadirms suspected a trick and
told him he had had his chance"
On Britain's hellfire corner
tbere was cp4te thanksgiving af-
ter a day of A4bi1ant celebration
such as those ane4-packe4 towns
had not knowq since the war be
gAn
L
I'll'e townsPeaPle crowded into unt on it
I myn(e 8
t4V e ch ll
l:7che5 i9P6 the coa-st tor n
spedal memorial services fer th ieae lli 4
e t
Canadians who had just finished time he 1!
tile battle a score of miles away sermons ii
and for the 150-odd men women Oklahoma
3 n d children who died under the IIEEmOPOMM
four-year Gelman bonMirdinent
V 01
Production Rate
Of Pilots Is NoN
Reduced Today
FORT WORTH Tex Oct 2—
(UPI—The War Department to- 7 ' -e
day ordered a temporary reduc- 1')
tion in the production rate of i"4 !41
pilots for the Army Air Forces!
because the Army's reservoir of 1 !
pilots is filled" go:
Under the order all students!
I in the AAF trainiug commands -i:!'!'
1 pilot training program will re- j -t
i in in his current phase of ---
I tiaining an additional five weeks s
1 after Oct 16 Lt Gen Bartau K'
1 Yount Commanding General of ! -
the AAFTC explained Ten weeks' ' ' ix -1
is the normal period for each of 1 ri'
4-‘k
teh four phases—pre-flight Pri-
mary basic and advanced !
Ihe order does not apply to :" A
bombardier and navigator train-:11i
i
ees air transport command foie- '! ii '4
PRESCRIPTION FILLING IS A
SERIOUS BUSINESS WITH US
Prescriptions are the mod if&
portent port of our dote
That's why your hest voter
ton it pert of ha guaterw
Wit 7ewil teed resdiptioe tervim
Bell ql rql rql rql
Anouncement To Owners
Of United Stales Sayings
Bonds of Series A B C D and E
This bank is pleased to announce that it has been
authorized by the United States Treasury Depart-
meut to pay any Savings Bond of Series A B C D
orE subject to that Department's regulations when-
ever any such bond is presented for that purpose by
pn individual (natural person) wtose name appears
on the bond as an owner or co-owner an4 who fur-
nishes proper identification
The Treasury Department and this bank sincerely
request that you d9 not redeem any bond before its
Maturity date unless a real personal emergency
requires such action nosvever if circumstances- re-
quire you to cash a bond this bank will be pleased
to serve you
BYLY U S War Bonds and Stamps
aaltnee44 national 'lank
MOSVoMrEMMOMIMIMM
Re 'caber Feders1 Dep 944 Ipswitno
Ccipoyation
Is103DAY OCTOpER 19444
ib
1
ign and women pilot par grad-
nate pilots rtceiving tritusOon
training'
The 41ve week time limit the
Vitkr Deparmeot said was based
on a continuing war with Ger-
many In the even Germany is
Wfcatcd the program will be re-
viewed with an eye to revision
Oinct al Yount said that the
additional period would be
ized "to inmease the proficiency
of our graduates"
COTTON
NEW YORK Oct 2—(1113)—
COttion closed barely steady
Open high low close
Oct 9210 2210 2203 2203
1I2c ' 2206 2206 2193 2193
Jan UnqUoted
March 2210 2215 2202 2204
May 2211 2217 2201 2201
Juiv 2190 2196 8184 2186
Spots closed nominal at 2239
down 16
Navy Officer
Tells of Fight
With Union Men
WASHINGTON -Oct 2 —(11P)
—Lt Randolph Diekens Jr 23
said today that he and a friend bat-
tled a group of teamsters union din-
ner guests at the Statler hotel on
Sept 23 shortly after President
Roosevelt made his first 1944 cam-
paign speech at the banquet be-
cause they were attacked for re-
fusing to slate their political af-
filiations —
V
Southwestern
Doctors To Meet
In Kansas City
KANSAS CITY Mo Oct 2 —
(UP)— More than 500 physielans
of the southwest assembled today
for the opening of the three day
conference of the Kansas City
Sauthwest Clinical Society with 11
guest speakers some of whom re-
turied recently from stations with
the armed services on the program
Dr Morris Fisithein of the
American Medical Asaociation Jour-
nal will speak tonight on "Past-
War Medicine" Dr Frank IL
Leahey Boston 1011 speak tomor-
row night on "Medicine Today in
and out of service and after the
war"
V
CLINTON Okla Oct 2 —(Ul')
—For the first time in 27 years
the Rev J B Ediger is taking a
vacation He has served that period
as missionary to Indians in the
Clinton Hammon and Thomas C(1111
mutinies Ile is' on a six months
leave of abscpre hut daring that
time he plans to ' deliver Sunday
sermons in Kansas and possibly in
11) t3Mctl )11 41
Now Thrt Tuesday
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IP"
op
se!tTt
Added
Cannon And
Latest News
Now Thru Tuesday
A ROMANTIC ROUND-UP!
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 307, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1944, newspaper, October 2, 1944; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173473/m1/4/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Advertising%22: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.