The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 325, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1944 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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PAGE FOUR
oll NO ta mammon
b
Birth Announcement
Mr and Mrs Yol Test C Ladd
843 East Second stredll are the
parents of a baby daughter born
at 9:45 p m Monday October
23rd at the local hospral The
baby weighed 6 pounds 6 ounces
Mr and Mrs O O Britton of
312 North Hartman are the par
erl'is of a baby daughter born
at 2:55 p m October 23rd at
the Payne County Masonic Hos-
pital The baby weighed 7 pounds
71'2 ounces
Sgt Robert E Warren returned
yesterday to his station Harding
Field Louisiana after spending
a five-day furlough here visiting
his mother Mrs Mary Warren
and sister Mrs Lloyd Stand ley
Mrs F Jerome McNulty and
baby son and Mrs E C Mullen-
doi e and grandson Erd Mullen-
dore were guests here Monday of
Mrs R C Jonos and family at
their home Fairview
NO 10
WANT TO BUY: 2 wash tubs
Phone 750-R
REDS ATTACH
lelPORTAHCE
To PRUSSIA
The weight of the Soviet at-
tack on East Prussia now that it
has been launched after long and
deliberate preparation indicates
that Moscow attaches great strat-
egic importance to this first in-
vasion of German soil from the
east
Whether there is any Russian
inten:!on of afcmrt4nct to con-
toinue 1 ailde on to Berlin by the
northern route if the defenses of
East Prussia collapses under the
onslaught is highly problematical
There are however other consid-
erations which prompted Stalin
to throw into the offensive an
army estimated in news dispatches
at perhaps 750000 with tremend-
ous armor artillery and air pow-
er Moral Effect Great
In the first place the moral ef- !
feet on the Germans of this In-
vasion of the cradle of Prussian !
militarism should be great and
it would be heightened by a major
defeat in the first defense of home
soil
For political reasons it also Is
desirable for Moscow to conquer
by foce ot aims this menacing
German outpost which is likely to
figure largely in the post-war !
territorial settlement of eastern
Europe Moreover the campaign I
affords another opportunity to
strike a damaging blow at Ger-
many's waning military strength
piling up the heavy losses inflict-
ed because of hitler's ill-advised
persistence in clinging to the Bal-
tic States
Advance Flanking
Finally and probably most im-
portant the campaign will great-
ly advance the flanking of the I
Reich from the north keeping
pace with the Russian drives Into
Hungary and Czechoslovakia on
the south
Either of these moves is cap-
able of being extended into an ad-
vance on the Reich proper but
they serve the more important
purpose of protecting the flanks
of the main frontal assault across
central Poland from the line of the
Vistula
17-
Louisiana—
(Continued from Page 1)
Supt T J Quigley of the Ill-
inois Central re-ported that the
Sunset Limited which was on its
way to Houston had come to a
full sto pon account of the dense
fog and the Illinois Central train
was moving at a slow rate of
speed
Passengers In the Sunset Limit-
ed reported they couldn't see the
ground outside the windows due to
the fog and that they did not know
another train win behind them
Two army doctors and a navy
nurse were aboard the trains aided
In administering to the wounded
A three hours delay In train sched-
ules was expected to result from
the wreck
a 1 9 I H Hits
t "Attemnt To
Regiment Medleme
OXLAHOMA CITY Oct 24--
P)--Dr Herman Louis Kretrehmo-
preLicictit 1' the AInc11-
(1 Medical Asoijjon t'ild
Irlf-Ccroi doctors 1st night that
an onlanized attempt to regiment'
(octe75 and their patients in al
va5t Lw onue-acY is being made'
In tV-!e Untied States
Speeing at a banquet opening !
the four-day meeting of the Ok-1
lahoma City Clinical Society
Kr e bchmer said he used the term'
"retriment" because he does not
understand the meaning of the
term "s)cialized medicine"
"Put I do know what regi-
rnen)ation means It is regimen-
tation of both doctors and their
patients I think this is an attempt'
) regiment every man woman
and child in the 'United States"
-ucrr5 of thq plan
weldri an unbearably heavy
tax load upon workers and a
top-heavy bureaucracy
TIIIS WEEK IN
CUSHING
Tuesday
Lions Club Cushing Hotel
12:15 p
Teen Town Cushing Armory
8 P in
Red Cross Surgical Dressisg
Class Red Cross Rooms Public
Library 2 to 5 p In 6 to 9 Pm
Businss and Professional Wo-
men's Club Gingham Room of
Hotel Cushing Dinner 'Meeting
6:30 p m
Wednesday
Mid-Wek Prayer Services City
Churches
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class Red Cross Rooms Public
Library 3 to 5 p m
Family Night Dinner First
MEthodlst church 6:30 p
Thursday
Rotary Club Cushing Hotel
12:15 p m
Farm Shop Rpair Class Farm
Shop Building 301 E Main 7:30
to 10:30 p in
Teen Town Cushing Armory
8 p m
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class Public Library 2 to 5 p m
Friday
Red Cross Surgical Dressing
Class Public Library 2 to 5 p
Saturday
Teen Town Cushing Armory
8 p m
Mud-
(Continued from Page
there his buddy no longer need-
ed water So they took Williams
over the hill to their own position
and made him a pallet on the
mud
It was an hour before the med-
ics could reach him but he didn't
have to worry now—about the
gun or the gunner or the wound-
ed lad—or the water he couldn't
-!!!!'0 reach He closed his eyes
sz–ady drizzle wet his
face that was streaked with grime
Well on the road to recovery
Williams knows he will talk again
in time After that he can return
to Cushing and wait for his
brother Audrey to finish his duty
with the navy Then perhaps
some day both will smile when
folk say war is romantic folk
I who have seen it all—from ever
Iso far away—
' V 1
Major Dewey—
(Continued From Page 1)
'rule or ruin" policy in an at-
tempt to "blackjack" the people
tory to the isolationists Tmman I
proceeds to Chicago tonight
Bricker to Texas
1
'Dewey's running mate Gov
John W Bricker headed toward
Texas where he speaks tomorrow
at Fort Worth and Dallas He 1
tcld a Denlver audience that he I
was opposed to giving any presi-
dent "great blanket authority"
but favored "living within the
constitution"
In New York republican na-
tional chairman Herbert Brownell
Jr charged that Truman in his 1
recent Los Angeles speech had
"figuratively embraced" the Ku I
Klux Klan
In Washington Rep Albert J
Engel R Mich charged that
Presidert Roosevelt in the pre- i
war years had deliberately kept
from congress a report showing
the great increase in German air
power but at the same time de-
prived U S armed forces of ne3d-!
ed equipment by cutting army
requests for appropriations
Strike-
(Continued from Page D
against Germany which a dispatch
from supreme headquarters at
Paris said was being planned by
Allied officials
The dispatch said the Allies have
decided that Germany will get her
worst winter of bombing by an air
force which now ha s reached a
new peak of strength and still in-
creasing The magnitude of the forthcom-
ing campaign was indicated by last
week's operations 'during which the
creasing
The magnitude of the forthcom-
ing campaign was indicated by last
week's operations 'during which the
Americans and British put 5000
heavy bombers over Germany in a
single day
Technical improvements It was
said have been so greatly Improv-
ed that the campaign will be op-
erated regardless of the weather
over Germany
Drive In—
(Cnntfnued From Page I)
Prurle Irrider the cover of gt
ilree ki uni'nlla kind w?e tiriv-
trig rapialy on both sides of the
:Kauna-Konigsberg railroad
The offensive in which Gen
Ivan C Bagrarnian's 1st Ba
Army was expected to Join mo-
mentarily with a push against
Tilsit in the north threatened
to develop into a battle of an-
nihilation (Air lin reported at Bagra-
mian had reached the Niemen
river on a 72-mile front in the
Memel zone and already had at-
tempted crossings of the river for
an assaull on Tilsit)
While Cherniakhovsky was ac-
cumulating his potent forces the
soviet high command carefully
watched the Germans feverishly
hudin iltenses and massing
tanks and arlillery reserves The
Nazis have announced repeated-
ly they would fight to a finish
THE CUSHING DAILY CITIZEN CUSHING OKLAII61IA
ts have waited (Beachhead— !British
and the Soviets have waited and
apparenbly are ready for Just
such a battle
Includes 62 Generals
The size of Cherniakhovsky's
forces was indicated by the fact
It included 62 generals The great-
est number participating in any
Also newspaper dispatches re-
campaign on the eastern front
ported that 411e young general
had concentrated as many as 1
300 guns in a mile and a half
and employed up to 20000 guns
in one operation
The invasion precipitated one
of the greatest tatt and artillery
tattles of all kimes as the Ger-
mans furiously attempted to halt
the Soviet drive which already
ilumbled the big town of Goldap
19 miles inside the border The
measure of Nazi 'resistance was
obvious front the fact the Rus-
sians have been destroying more
Pan 100 panzers daily for the
las41 five days
Cherniakhovsky's troops were
stretched along a front from Wil-
luneno 37 miles southeast of Til-
sit in the nortilL to Suwalki cap-
ital of Suwalki province in the
south Beside the 400 towns in
East Prussia the White Russians
Lithuania and the former Polish
territory of Suwalki
(Berlin said that a force even
grealer than Cherniakhovsky's
was poised on the west bank of
the Narew river for a drive into
East Prussia from the south in
the vicinity of Augustown The
Germans said this force was
comprised of two armies)
Stalin also announced that
Soviet arctic forces had captured
Salmtiarvi Finnish gateway town
to Norway and cleared the entire
vital cickel production region of
Northern Finland
Land Operations
Salmilri--Yi on allie north shore
of Lake Kuotsjaervi is only 18
miles southeast of Kirgenes Ger-
man submarine and air base on
the Allied Arctic convoy route
Russian warships were reported
yesterday to have sailed into Va-
iord off Kirkenes in pre-
paration for naval and land op-
LI s in Northern Norway'
(A Berlin broadcast said Soviet 1
troops had launched a two-I
pronyed land drive toward Kir-
kenes) At the same time a communi-
quo disclosed that Marshal Rodio
Y Malinovsky's 2nd Ukrainian
Army struck within eight miles
of southern Czechoslovakia in
capturing Dombrad and estab-
lished a solid 30-mile front be-
tween there and Tiszabk on the i
south bank of the Tisza river
His forces also closed in further
on Satu-Mare seizing Martines-1
ti and Samesul two and three 1
FY)
40r41 PARA DE:rffit
4
c 41
1 49V
3149V 3149V
WELL—OX JOE and JANE over
s there somewhere in the Pac-
ific or beyond the Adriatic or over
here deep in tne routine of a
camp do you wonder what we
talk about at home
It goes by seasons quite a lot
and right now it is cotton picking
season a
It's a big cotton year in the
Cushing farming territory this
year The fields are white with
cotton—the price being paid for
picking is the best in years and it
is practically impossible to employ
anybody who ever did pick any
cotton to do anything at all except
pick cotton so long as the weather
and the season hold
Not only that but people are
learning to pick cotton this year
who never tild pick any before
in their lives even tho' their lives
have extended over quite a per-
iod To-day you have a maid work-
ing in your home washing up the
dishes running the sweeper put-
ting your house to order
Tcmorrow she says: "Why yes-
terday afternoon I went out with
my husband to a cotton field and
picked 110 pounds of cotton just
in a short afternoon- I don't Ague
I can efford to do any kinbi of
work but cotton picking while the
picking is on—and so—"
And so—the next day you don't
have a maid Another cotton pick-
er has joined the vast army of
pickers who barring accident and
incident seem likely to get the
cotton harvested before the fall
rains begin If rain there be—that
is
In one rather large field of
cotton near Cushing to-day more
than 25 people are "pulling snow"
They harvest about 7000 pounds'
per day and one man does noth-
ing but weigh and check on the
amounts
The yield is exceptional and the
quality is exceptional Some of
the fields it is said will average
more than a bale to the acre I
have a bet up with one city-farmer
that he won't make as much
as one and three-quarter bales to
the acre on more than one acre
He is very sure that he will make
that much on at least one acre
We'll let you know later--in more
detail
on Satu-Mare seizing Martines- i THE reason for all the interest
ti and Samesul two and three i a in cotton picking is of course
miles east and southeast respec-!not hard to fathom when you
'
ively from the Transylvanian hear the wage they Pay
rail center j Two dollars to $250 per bun-I
V dred for cotton picking is re-
' gular And—when you consider
A Book Review that many of them can pick two
i hundrcd three hundred and some
i few as much as four hundred
NEWS OF THE 45th—Robinson Ipounds per day you can under-
Sergeant Robinson who used to
stand why filling station attend-I
ants people who wash cars wash:
work on newspaper in the South-1
clothes and janitor buildings are 1
'west tells the story of the 45 Divis-las scarce as Queen bees
Ion News' in much the same lively i Teachers organize their grade-
spirit in which he edited the paperlschool pupils and take them out
He leavcs the heavy stuff for some-Ithese days for a "profitable'' Sat-
one ete and goes in mostly for the urday outing in the cotton patch'
little things that 'strike him as l Yes indeed until cotton picking
funny He makes almost no at- is over it will be one of the most
tenitt to analyze the actions of absorbing talk topics of the day
his i eaaers nor even of his fellow tin the old hometown !
1
stiff members but is contcnt to
COME of th cotton pickers we It
v
I write an amusing incomquentia1 t)
hear take along a gun and is
account of the crazy life Jr a sol- get an occasional shot at a cot-
diet edI or ton-tail rabbit or a squirrel if
V Gene Price of the Broadway I
NVoods— Pool room--so far as I have been I
able to learn deserves the "bushy-
(Continued from Page 1) tail" thus far as the best squirrel- c
partment He praised The Woods hunter He bagged seven over the s
county board for having rendered 'weekend To correct an impres- 1
excellent service I sion he is Just a squirrel hunter e
"No apparent progress is being not a cotton-picker If
made regarding conditions about 1 Ed Bryant is much talked-about
which we recently protested" the ' because of being an automobile I
board said today in notifying dealer who is "on foot" these days c
Murray of its resignation Other He was offered more money for f
members are Russell L Floyd and his family passenger car than he i
Fred R Heckman both of Way- thought it was worth to him Now:t
noka and George Redman Alva he wonders It
government appeal agent I Miss Pearl Bates Superinten- 1
V dent of Nurses at the Payne 1
SEE RECORD County Masonic Hospital looked
up yesterday thinking it would c
PRESIDENTIAL be about three o'clock saw that
VOTE NOV 7 it was six o'clock and could-
n't think where her day had gone
With the rooms overflowing and
By United Press i plenty of surgical and emergency
A record presidential vote was i work she hadn't had time to
In prospect today as registration'recognize that time was still on
figures disclosed thousands of the wing Today with nine babies I
war workers had established legal in the nursery and every hospital I
residences in busy atmamentroom full it looked at noon like i
centers and were prepared to cast more of the same as yesterday
their ballots on Nov 7 I Bob Bell of the Bell Drug In
A United Press survey showed answer to the question how are 1
registration increases in westyOU liking these long hours? re-
coast shipbuilding and airplane plied: "Alright--honestly they --al
These factors are designed to manufacturing cities in Chicago seem to agree with me After
force a German capitulation even If and Detroit and In the war Indus- working 14 hours a day I get up
Nazi hopes should unexpectedly be try communities of New England in the morning Just as anxious to
realized and the Allied ground at- and Ohio I get down to work as I was the t
tack Is bogged nown on a stalemat- 1 There were exceptions notably first day I owned my own store"
ed land front 1St Louis and Pittsbmvh i Than ha hpfrueel n rint rr rriihh ff
St Louis and Pittsburgh
A system whereby prospective
voters were compelled to go to a
central election board rather
than register by precincts was
blamed for the drop from 449000
l'epiratvn hi 1940 to 389783
itins year in St Louis
In Pittsburgh political leaders
could give no reason for a de-
cline from 356021 in 1940 to the
rlanst available total of 349850
for 1944
But the increases were heavy
In other cities where war workers
had lived long enough to permit
their voting
v-
Orson Welles 111
1
of Throat Ailment
I NEW YORK Oct 24—(UP)—
!Actor Orson Welles still was un-
able to resume his speaking en
gagements today after a throat
lInfection confined him to his
!suite in the Waldorf-Astoria
'Hotel His condition was described
)
as "very serious" last night
1'
Then he begged me not to pub-
lish it "People will think I'm
crazy" he said
It C Jones in answer to the
question: "It is true that when a
matt gets to the top he wonders
why he struggled so hard to get
there?" said—"I don't know
I've never got there!"
Alter everybody had laughed
that one off I parried with an-
other inquiry: "Is it true Mr
Jones that you have changed
your politics and are going to vote
for Dewey for president?"
Said R C: "There is just as
much truth in that statement as
there is in the speeches Dewey
makes
V
09 DOCILE CHECK SYSTEM
1
v NTEE
GUARAS PRESCRIPTION ACCURACY
y
vr irtp:attayne elleet7 !Am we
gieuble-ckeeer :st'om Pfee"efftlyes
secutety 4 Pat el ywa dodo
tbitAtell00d1 flirted
PIO! 112ng Ftoro
(Continued from Page 1)
Rice Paddies Are Hog
One tith Army officer said the
rice paddies had been a bigger
enemy than the Japanese since
they Logged down our mechan-
ized equipinew and forced troops
to wade chest-deep through the
water
(A Japanese ' Dome! dispatch
raid Premier Gen Kuniaki Koiso
had told his people thtir Japans
position was more critical than
ever before and warned them to
be ready for another Allied "akl-
tempt" to smash our strategic
defense")
(Another Dome' Broadcast re-
corded by FCC montors contend-
ed that American trews had
gained only a "toehold" on Leyte
1 and "would be crushed like an
eggshell once the Japanese forc-
es launched full-scale counter-
offensive operations")
(The Japanese controlled
! Manila radio tald 22 American
carrier-borne planes raided the
Manlia area 350 miles north-
(vest of Leyte today conoen-
tutting on airfields)
Steadily expanding their !ni-
1 tial foothold in the central Phil-
irPines 10th Corps troops pur-
sued retreating Japanese ell the
northern end of the Leyte front
three miles beyond the capitil
city of Tacloban to within 10
miles of the tip of the island
The 10th corps also "bloodily"
repulsed the first organized
counter-attack of the invasion
north of Palo five miles south
of Tacloban then struck inland
hem Palo towards Santa Fe
against stubborn resistance froni
enemy troops entrenched in the
hills flanking the rnaini read
Some 23 miles south of the
10th corps spearhead above 'tax-
loban tank-led 24th corps forces
pounded into the outskirts of
San Fablo seven miles inland
from the liberated coastal city of
Dulga and already may have cap-
tured the town Only rear guard
and night-raid resistance was
oeing encountered
' Other 24th corps troops north-
west of Dulag wallowed through
deep mud in aril envelopment drive
against seven enemy defense
pcsitions of great natural strength
in the Tagmon hills American
columns already have by-passed
the hills and were believed on
the point of completing the en-
circlement of them
G e n Douglas MacArthur's
fifth conununigue of the invasion
revealed that in addition to Tac-
loban Dulag nd Palo the Invad-
ers also have liberated the vil-
lages of San Fernandos Sagehan
!San Jose Maraseran Dawinen
'Duingaduman Aiameanan and
rarayan all between Tacloban
and Dula g on the east coast
Take Dinagat Island
He also reported that his forces
captured 40-mile-long Dinagat
island southeast of Leyte and
Suluan and Homonhon islands
due east of Leyte two days be-
fore the main landings to enable
the 600-ship invasion armada to
enter Leyte gulf 1
None of the three outer is-
lands was believed heavily gar-
risened and it was presumed
that they were occupied and
their defenses neutralized after
brief skirmishes and light cas-
ualties The Japanese continued to at-
tempt small-scale raids on ship-
ping in Leyte gulf and troops
ashore but the communique said
the attacks had been "ineffec-
tual" One enemy dive bomber
was shot down at dusk by "swift
anti-aircraft fire"
progressing along t h e entire
front" MacArthur said
'Our gmurid forces are steadlly
MacArthur's bombers dropped
27 tons of explosives on Cagayan
on the northern coast of the 1
southern Philippines island of
Mindanao touching off fires and
explosions Smoke rose to 5000
feet
At Davao on the south coast of 11
Mindanao It ght patrol planes
destroyed buildings and started
fires at an airdrome
From Pearl Harbor came an an-
nbuncement that fout-engined
transports have begun using Pe-
leliu airfield in the southern Pa-
lau islands 675 miles southeast of
Leyte and newest "junction point
on the road to Tokyo"
and Detroit and in the war Indus- working 14 hours a day I get up
try communities of New England in the morning Just as anxious to
and Ohio 'get down to work as I was the t ----
There were exceptions notably first day I owned my own store" I
YOURS and OURS
Why not help your physician to
better serve you and your family
when real emergencies arise? Take
extra care to keep well But when
first signs of sickness appear' call
your physician at once Phone only
during his office hours and call him
to your home only when it is in
possible to visit his office
To heed these simple suggestions is
to be a "firmer" with your physi-
cian in keeping our wartime health
standards higher
L— Si
BELL DRUG STORE
(s)
'British Faces—
(Continued from Page 1) 1
the often-bombed cities" the dis-
patch said "There also was a
possibility that the lights were
turned on by rebellious elements"
British troops and tanks fought
Into the northern outskirts of
Hertogenbosch 52 miles north-
east of Antwerp during the night
and soon after dawn reached the
canal running through the city
proper Two other columns were
within three miles or less of the
city from the east and south
United Press War Correspondent
Ronald Clark reported from the
1
front that the Germans apparent-
ly were preparing to abandon the
city despite their stubborn resis-
tance on its approaches No large'
numbers of German tanks or anti-
tank artillery have been observed
in the area he said
(A BBC correspondent at the
front said the fate of 'S Hertogen-
bosch 'well may be decided to-
day") I he Canadian 1st Army again
scaled the entrance to Beveland
and Waloheren islands in the
Schelde estuary with a drive a-
cross Mlle escape railway and
highway west of Woensdracht
tattling up the enemy garrisons
The Canadians once before sever-
ed the escape lines but were
driven back by a German counter-atioack
Tighten Siege Are
supreme Headquarters also re-
ported that the Canadians had
tightened their siege arc around
the German pocket on the south
bank of the Schelde estuary One
column drove from Breskens a-
cross the estuary from Flushing
half way to Groede two miles
southwest of Breskens while an-
other was storming Fort Fred-
! erik-Hendrik a intlf mile north-
west of Brcskens
Front dispatches said Bresk-
ens stiii was in Canadian
hands despite a report reach-
n g Headquarters yesterday
that they had been forced to
relinqubh the town 24 hours
sb after occupying it
To the southcast Lt Gen
George S Patton's 311 Army
Doughboys were revealed to have
captured three quarters of Maiz-
Jeres Les Metz five miles north
of Metz itself in a 17-day TGOMto-rocm
battle through thc hous-
es of the fortified French town
4 Collie Small United Press War
I Correspondent with the 3rd Army
said the Germans had been de-
fending Maiziers so bitterly that
'each parlor Ledroom or bath
taken xepresents a "substantial
gain" for the Mb Dizision troops
under Lt Col John Mason of
West Los Angeles '
11 Nazi Troops Surrender
Near Amannvillers five miles
northwest of Metz 11 of Ger-
manys vaunted officer candidate
troops surrendered yesterday af-
ter teing bombarded with props-
I gande leaflets A field dispatch
id it was the first time 'J
the enemy garrison in the Metz
area had showed signs of weak-
ening since the siege began two
monlis ago
Other German forces in the
Iunevilic sector below'riU z efoun
ter-attacked with icanks but were
thrown back with losses Amer-
ican farces northeast of Lune-
villa consolidated gains near
Moncourt 32 miles southeast of
Metz
A German 280-millimeter rail-
way gun dropped at least 16
shells into the 3rd Army area
early today damaging several
houses and causing casualties
At the southern end of tha
front 14 Gen Alexander M
Patch's American 7th Army
For -years- th US Royal
Detuxe has been a high
'scoring tire:' And today
from coast to coast the
new US Royal De Luxe
made of synthetic rub
her is turning in per
formance records that
are mighty close to
pre-war natural rub-
bet tires "US? syn-
thetic tires are good
tires
BUY Una YOU SEE THE US TIRE SIGN 4
TIRES ARE SCARCE-RECAP IN TIME
DUNKIN
Last Times Today
"
with
DON AMECHE
DANA ANDREWS
CHARLES BICKFORD
SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE
00' id
Cimy °Rom) ttei
or AIRCRAFT
r
ARPIER X 1
III DONALD AND
i PEGGY AGAIN!
DONALD
O'CONNOR
e01)
st
Wcd Thru Thursday
A
10' k-k
Pi0 4r)
()' elh'YO4-°"'
LARRY PAIIKS
LYNN WRIICIC
PARAMOUNT
Last Times Today
Wtd Thru Thursday
if49
forced the flood-swollen Mort-
agno river at several points north-
east of Brouvelieures in mists No
thick that drivers of supply
trucks were forced to use head-
lights though it was daylight'
' Gains also were made ale-
where in the Vosges mountairis
against stiff resisance a corn-
munique said
' Surprise Nazis In Holland
British !troops in southwest
Holland took the Germans bY
purprise in their drive into 'S
Hertongenbosch by attacking at
2 a m rather than at dawn as
is customary
¶thOevBerrwithisehlmtlitnligeklythaedvadnelceenddélins
-1
to the outskirts and continued on 1
into the town HAIL Progress
was described officially as very
satisfactory while enemy resist-
ance was said to be only "mod
erate" Clear sunny weather aid-
ed the attackers drying thg ter- I
rain for heavy armor that had I
Ibeen bogged down in mud
! Fort Orthen a half mile north
'of 'S Hertogenbosch on the
main highway to Amsterdam was
under assault while another col-
umn advanced through Berlicum
three miles easiti of the town and
4 third captured Kst Michiels
GQstel three and a half miles
south southeaSt forced the Dom-
nel river and advanced 5000
yards south
The fall of 'S Hertogenbosch
junction of mast of the high
ways and railways front south-
west Holland would force the
Germans back on secondary
communications and deprive
them of opportunity to shift
their forces quickly to threat-
ened sectors
Though the town had a pre-
war population of 40000 most
civilians were believed' to have
bcea evacuitled
V
Stillwater Is
Over The Top
With War Chest
C E Donart general drive
chairman announced Monday
morning that Stillwater's 1944
'annual Community Chest- Na-
t tional war fund drive is over the
tee with a total of 41514670 in
lecltributions against the quota
'el $148000 and there are still
$300 to $400 in sight
IDonart issued an appeal for
!those few remaining contributors
I wino have not turned in their
Apleney to do so as soon as pos-
sible sci the drive can be cleaned
up and the job finished He said
there were a few downtown busi-
1 'leases as well as some contribu-
tors oll the campus that have opt
as yet reported
Even though the total is over
the euota all the extra money is
needed for shrinkage in pledges
and campaign expenses and he
!hoped there would be enough over
j to guarantee 100 on the dollar
!kr every agency participating in
the fund money
--v
ALVA Okla Oct 24--(17Pi—
!Appointment of John Tyree Alva'
businessman as c'tairman of the I
Wobels'eounty war price and rat-
ioning board to succeed F B H
!Spellman is expected to be con-1
I
t2k4ALascwLs Ju cAjvcUctL 141 LIU ULII1 1
firmed today Spellman resigned'
due to press of private business
after serving since inception of
the office of price administration
Corner Broadway and Noble
TUESDAY OCTOBER 211914
Cream No 1
Cream NO 2 ---- 45
Eggs NO 1 33o
Eggs Infertile -34o
?tires Quoted By Burke
Creamery
KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK 0
KANSAS CITY Mo Oct 24 —
(t113)—ONFAI —Livestock:
Cattle salable 10000 total 11-
000 calves salable 2800 total
3300 slaughter steers slow few
loads natives sold about steadyis
practically nothing done on gras'30
ers other killing classes largely
steady some strength in cows:
good beef steers sold 15-16 small
number choice held around 1650
and above medium 1150-1350:
grass steers mainly cutter aryo
common grades few lots mediuni
and good shortfed heifers 1250-
14 common and medium grass-
ers 8-11: small lots medium and
good cows 1050-12 most common
and medium 750-1025 mediunL
and choice slaughter calves 10
1225: few good and choice veal-
ers 13-14 stockers and feeders
steady five loads choice yearling
steers 1150: choice feeders 1325-
'450 latter price on partly fat
968 lbs Medium to good stoch
steers 9-1225 good and choicr
feeding heifers 10-11
Hogs salable and total 3000
active at mostly ceiling Prices
good and choice 150-240 lbs 1450
heavier weights and good and
choice sows mostly 1375
1 Sheep salable ari'd total 7000
slow practically nothing sold -
learly : early bids steady-25 lower
on slaughter classes actvie fully
'steady good and choice range
lambs held above 1450
--yr-- 0
OKLAHOMA CITY LIVESTOCK
OKLAHOMA CITY Oct 24 —
(UP)—Livestock:
Cattle 4200 calves 2500- steer
Imarket active top 1335 cov0
steady to strong top 1150 heifers
!strong top 13 bulls strong to 25
higher top 11 calves steady act-
ive packer top 12 outsiders 1250
stockers and feeder fully steady
IHogs 1800 market steady pack0
cr top 1445 sows steady top 1370 -
stockers mid feeders steady top
1375
Sheep 5tKi sheep and lambs
steady top latnbs 1325 top pack-
: er cwt 550 ' 0
Presbyterian Bazaar
1To Be Held Here
The women of the First Presb30
terian church are holding a bazaar
and food sale Friday and Saturday
October 27th and 28th at 105 North
Clevelan1 street There will be
many useful and attractive gifts
for Christmas and showers of3
fered for sale -
R I LE& ? Drop Everything
for this
Amazing Way! ow
Don't Worry It ordinary method' dieaa-
poluirrt you tan nt home filo formula timed
by riOrrititS nithinetively fit noted Thorn-
ton Minor Clinie ite fininfiert how QUICK
your pile pain itch orenrifil are tf1101141
8100 tube Thornion & Minor's Itortfil Dint
' 7
meat today (Jr get the reeptoapply Thorn
ton le Minor Itomel tilippnsitoriP oalli a Ow
tents Wore Try DOCIOltd way TODAY
At all good drug stores every-40
where—in Cushing at White's
Msgettiiiq0
Price Super Service
Phone 146
1
1
1
V14
ay gun dropped at least 16 1 Ale
hells into the 3rd Army area
arty ousel todnad y damaging seveial gjesr6 IS ge
the lling
a causing casualties
Al e southern end of the r
' (7-P0 ' C
0
)nt 14 Gen Alexander M i
tch's American 7th Army
— --
1
illi3CED
DUNKIN
Last Times Today -
uolRinAL
-fifr0z-AN-iisi f )
A
k PRAYI '
kf:' '-'' l
le0
et
DON AMECHE ' --- V
I 4 A
4 )
DANA ANDREWS t:i''t P:1 I
FORD tt
CHARLES BICK ''‘'''' '
- VP- v -i
ir''
SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE r-A 3 cores iiI cote- a 411
Alt
?004 i )
t1
NGHTyDRAMA? Q
or AIRCRAFT s '4474:4
AMER X 4 — fl 14 z ' a In -14 ?
A k 0 ' - W7 1 f -
o -c 1 4 5g '4!)
4
411
ik:- 00 0
v ia
For year thi US Royal ' ''
-
Wed Thru T2 hursday D etuxe has been a high ‘ A g'
ir
scoring tire:' And today p
ih k
c145)took from coast to coast the ' '
1
I e Lt 4 A 09 idia- made of synthetic rub A -
new US U Royal DeLuxe 4 ‘ilttklW
! ic n't
C'-'1 onv totv
her is turning in per- Tv
till
mi----- - tARRY PARKS f
-- --J --- LYNN MgRotICIC formance records that A
cikit3 0
'
''' 4c Di -
are mighty closeto — 1ttta Olt
— prewar natural rob- 141 "' s
----
bet tires "us? syn
PARAMOUNT thetic tires ars good
tires
Aso 1
Last Times Today 1
- 'l
2 e ' 3 X
A
IT'S --
DONALD Att)ric: ) 1 4:s i 40 44 lc 7
4-
off"'
PEGGYAGMNI
DONALD
lk:k4k
O'CONNOR
—---- toj rt
‘'
414 ''' 47' ' : 'I 1 AI ' I — '
C1401910461141 4:a114-'! L14166-46 "PL BUY Iftit YOU SEE THE US T'1RE A SIGN ' t
001 stri°' 'PRTAGti ) :- TIRES
TIRES ARE SCARCE-RECAP IN TIME 1
ANN BLYINy
lru Thursday -
(4143444'1FA)1 Price Super Service
Aal la- r
(CA:10T44iN --44r I 11
crn Mrthl es
Pb fline 1 A a
-1-fikreA if Ai
41 PRAY11
WIN' ts
7' 41
c"—-drils
oral
11AI'
t -
t - I
0 '1
"--I
czn 116 At)
'I I i ' 10 1 gfilli:
cl'arrxrP
- -" -
i--
40 t51)
91) I
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 325, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1944, newspaper, October 24, 1944; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173492/m1/4/?q=%2522dewey+redman%2522: accessed June 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.