The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 217, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 15, 1944 Page: 2 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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kt
TWO
Unshington Column
BY TETER EDSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
THE almost unbelievable and utterly fantastic Increase In numbers
of shiPa and the Increased sizes strength and efficiency of eacn
type battleship carrier cruiser destroyer escort vessel landing craft
and auxiliary in tha U S Navy has Just been revealed to a group
of Washington correspondents visiting a few of Una
eastern Navy and shin yards at the invitation ot
1 -N Secretary James V Forrestal
It lowe wmourrc1h ouflatItliasnyneowggsitersiksolnrg nftiOtri tr) en Vmiallybevelint
action In this war is an open question But in
(-1 total impact effect of these disclosures is to reveal
ki: to
h
i '
7
think twice before starting any World War III
Begin with battleships: News of the six Iowa-
s' 4a‘ - class 45000 tonne's has already been announced
k showing them to be the most formidable ships afloat
Their 680-foot length should be compared to the
750-foot length of the four South Dakota class ships
Ed s0a
now in service On the tremendous gun decks of
the Iowa class ships are more than 125 antl-aircraft guns topped by
20 fiVe-lach guns and nine 16-inch guns in triple turrets For obser-
vation these ships carry three catapult-launch planes and every
known device for fire control and communication Their crews—
more than 2500 officers and men their cost—more than $100000000
for the WI alone exclusive of equipment
3 TORE dramatic perhaps than these big battlewagons is a new class
of cruiser the first of which have been named for the U S terri-
tories Alaska Guam and Hawaii They are 27000-ton ships 750
feet in length mount nine 12-inch guns as main armament capable
of about 35 knots—faster than most speedboats
Aircraft carrier developments are no less sensational Under con-
struction at the New York Navy Yard is the first of a new type
45000-ton carrier—largest ship in naval history—intended to carry
'the Navy's new twin-engined planes larger and of longer range than
any other carrier-borne aircraft now in service
There is a new 2200-ton super-destroyer that is almost a dream
ship better than many World War I cruisers in firepower and speed
What destroyers were in the last war is now surpassed by the most
modern destroyer escort vessels These lowly Des now carry three-
inch guns torpedo tubes and anti-aircraft guns as well as depth
'charges They are built now at 1300 tons as compared to the 1200-
ton destroyer of the last war
The new LSM or Landing Ship Medium is no longer an auxiliary
vessel but a 200-foot ocean-going ship capable of carrying light and
medium tanks and gun mounts armed with 20-mm anti-aircraft guns
to fight its way right up to the beach
Bigger thaa these andfor later waves of an invasion are the new
-AKA ships--Attack Cargo Auxiliaries—that can bring in heavy tanks
and a complete little expeditionary force of their own And for trans-
port of troops by the thousand there are the new AP ships Auxiliary
Personnel vessels luxury transpotts with an X-ray-equipped opaat-
ing room and a mechanical cow to provide fresh milk
From every angle it looks like a whale of a new Navy
Cherbourg—
(Continued from Page 1)
on the Normandy Veninsula
where the Americans were try-
ing to seal off Cherbourg they
ran into stiffer resisteve in the
area of Pont L'Abbe six miles
west of the Carentan-Montebcurg
road but to the south they
rushed forward west of Baupte 1
toward the west coast railroad I
which is in effect the Nazi life-
line to Cherbourg
Break for Allies
The Allies got another weath- !
er break and combined fleets
of fighters fighter-bombers and
medium bombers blasted and
raked the Germans along and
immediately behind the battle
lines while a great force of Am- !
erican heavy bombers and fight-1
els smashed at aviation plants
air bases and transport centers!
in France
Eridges across the Loire and
the key air field at Bordeaux
were the main targets of the!
Fortresses and Liberators seek-
ing to disrupt Nazi crammunica-
tions vital to the battle of Nor-
mends
The Allied tactical air force
was getting closer and closer to
the fighting line as he battle
developed American Marauders !
hit a Junction midway between
the British and German armor
HELP
RIEEDIE
7PI
aAd E 4bele
i9fDRY CLEANERS -RUO CLEANERS
The Laundry and Dry Cleaner by the Post Office
300 tons ns compared to the 1200-
Medium is no longer an auxiliary
ship capable of carrying light and
ned with 20-mm anti-aircraft guns
1
waves of an invasion are the new
ries—that can bring in heavy tanks
' force of their own And for trans-
re are the new AP ships Auxiliary
ts with an X-ray-equipped oporat
provide fresh milk
a whale of a new Navy
ed forces
Blast Roads
I The tactical squadrons coven- I
tutted this morning on road June- 1'
tions around the Caumont- NTHlers-Bocage-St
Lo areas in an
elfcrt to throw off balance the
'Gelman reserves moving into the
battle
Gen Dwigh D Eisenhwer re-
poted in his 19th communiqua!
I of the invasion that the Allies
were "carrying the fight to the
enemy" on all parts of the front
ir while theGerman high command
acknowledged that Amerioan
British and Canadian forces were
"now trying to widen their !
bridgehead toward all sides"
"The battle in Normandy is
moving toward its climax" the
German communique said
The Germans alone had thrown
500 to 600 tanks up to last night
into the furious struggle rving
between Caen and St La in the
cunter of the 105-mile perimeter
of the Allied beachhead and
Richard D McMillan United
Press War Correspondent re-
rated from the front that new
enemy infantry and panzer div-
isions had been sent into battle
trom all parts of France toi0y
Yanks Retake Montebourg
See-saw battles also raged at
tach end of the bridgehead Am-
erican forces fought their way
ba:its into the streets of Monte
Our need is urgent because we are loos-
ing some Experienced workers who are
juining their husbands in other places
We need TWO WOMEN who can be
trained for Marking and Sorting This
training period takes about three to four
mcnths A good job when you learn it
Good pay while you learn
This is your opportunity to do a patriotic
service for all POWER LAUNDRIES are
concerned with the nubile health of the
community PLEASE APPLY IN PERSON
Pick Up and Delivery Schedule
Monday and Thursday
We serve the territorv EAST of Little
Street
Wednesday and Saturday
We zerve the territory WEST of Litt'
Street
Our ear leaves the plant in the morning
at 8:30 with ail pickups and deliveries
scheduled
bourg 14 miles southeast of Cher-
ibuurg and virtualv had encircled
the town with thrusts along roads
to the northeast and northwest
Germans still held Troarn
" five tulles east of Caen but the
Biltish and Canadians repeated-
ly thrust into its streets
Henry T 0crrell United Press
war correspondent at the front
scid the Germans were using
mortar shells that sprayed the
!Americans with flaming oil in an
aticruPt to half the penetration
toward Valegnes five miles
Incrthwest of Montebourg and
1gateway to Cherbourg
Cherbourg Assault Near
The American thrust west of
1Carentan indicated that Lt Oen
I Or N Ihatiley was throwing
I
his main strength into an at-
tempt to seal elf the peninsula
for an all-out assault en Cher-
bourg 27 miles northwest of
Cartntan and one of France's
best ports
Advancing over parallel roads
' on a nine-mile-wide front the
1 Americans on the southern flank
reached a point just east of Les
Sablons six miles from La Haye-
!Du Pints through which funnel
heth the west coast railway and
highway from Cherbourg
PresumablY overrun in the ad-
vance was the highway town of
Paupte two miles east of Les
1Seblons but the extremely fluid
state of the fighting made the
I situation obscure
Front 'gamine lean°
North el Les Sablens the Am-
ericans were approaching St
Sauveur-Le Vicomte 16 miles
Fcuth of Cherbourg The enemy's
west ccirt railway also passes
through St Sauveur-Le Vicomte
but the coastal highhway in this
sector is several miles farther
west
The German communique ac-
' knowledged that the allies had
achieved "slight gains" east of
St Sauveur-Le Vicomte
McMillan described the front
locping from Villers Bocage
thruorh Caumont and Tilly-Sur!Seulles
to Caen as an inferno of
binning villages woods and farm
steads
American heavy mobile guns
I were revealed to have joined for
the first time in crashing bar
rages on enemy concentrations
!entrenched in weds and heights
I between St Lo and Caen Both
the allies and the Germans were
!attacking at intervals
Marauders Bomb City
Marauders of the Ninth IL S air
force answered a hurry call
from France and dropped 50 tons
of bombs on the highway junc-
tion and bridge at Villers-Bocage
-t dawn today Returning crews
reputed the bombs fell square-
ly on the junction at the north
end of the town apparently
blocking it
The Germans were believed to
have hurled 600 to 600 tardPs
drawn from four panzer divisions
aganist the St Lo-Caen sector of
the front in PI attemnt to stem
the allied drive through the cen-
ter of their line The London
rally Herald placed the number
of German tanks engaged as
high as 1000 but other sources
believed this figure too high
Ca re n ta n Clear
The Ameriran thrust west from
Carentan ftllowed the smashinti
of a flea entm counter-attack
that penetrated to the streets of
I the town tempererily The arrival
el American tank end infantry
reinforcements turned the tide of
:battle again however and the
town once more ves cleared of
the enemy
Pwhinc on in pursuit of the
cntrny the Americans advanced
west along the main highway
and railroad to the west coast
nd at la st reports were just east
rf I es Sablons six miles from
La Have-Du Pints through which
brill the west (past railway and
highway from Cherbourg pass
Cnce the railway and highway
were severad the German garri-
son at Cherbourg 23 miles north
of La Haye-Du Pints would be
cut off from all hope of supply
and leinforcement as well as
escape by land Allied warships
already were blockading the sea
approaches to Cherbourg
Expect Heavy Caumfer
Though the Americans made
rapid progress to the Les Sablons-Baupte
erea some 13 miles
inland allied headquarters warn-
ed that the Germans probably
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
EGAD LEANDER! t
GCADG OF TOPOIL!
FNE OR GIX -
LOADG 614OULD
FILL THAT soLa
IN FRIEND
SAVERS ARID!
THE CIJSIIING DAIL'S CITIZEN CUSHING oKLAnumA
fti
Americans--
continued front Page 1
and then oleaed a fierce con-
centrated fire on the enemy and
foiled the attempt
"Throw n into wild confusion by
the accurate Japanese tio the
enemy barges or what was left
of them instantly returned to
their mother vessel at abont
o'clock Loss inflicted upon the
enemy in this combat could not
be ascertained Intinediatelydueto
the prevailing dense fogs but
observations on the island esti-
mated enemy losses in personnel
at not less than 1800 while at
!least 40 barges were accounted
'for
"Later at about 10 o'clock the
enemy attempted another lauding
again at Mariana harbor west of
Saipan but the Japanese forces
are now inflicting heavy punish-
ment on the invaders"
Minters tirst! IJ084m4 an
English-language transmission
beamed to the 'United States
said that the first Amer lean at
tempt to land was repulsed and
In rtference to the second at
tempt said "heavy fighting" le
now going on
The communique beamed In
Japanese to occupied east Asia !
areas said landings were at-
tempted at both Saipan and
Tinian but did not claim that
the Americans were thrown
back indicating that the in-
vasion forces had at least reach-
ed the beaches
Domei's original report said the
Ainetican "invaders" employed 70
'ending barges and 20 to 30 spec-
4t1 barges in the invasion efforts
'ollowing a series of "raids"
The "raids" apparently referred
o the three-day assault deliver-
by a powerful Pacific fleet task
Sorce which shelled and bombed
ialpan in a series of attacks on
the Marianas during the week-
end Dome' said the Americans'
first landing attempt shortly
antr dawn was thrown back
but in describing the second at-
tempt nearly four hours later
the agency said "heavy fighting"
now was going on between its
forces a nd "the invaders"
Possession of the Marianas
which include the former Amer-
ican Island of Guam wotdd
give the Allies control over
Japan's central Pacific supply
routes and open the way for a
possible direct drive to the
China coast—the goal of Ad
miral Chester W Nimitz com-
mander of the Pacific fleet
Saipan which was attacked by
Avo big naval task forces in five ‘-ur CU AL US It A t- S
IL 40 U WNW smrwoJ
I V
A spokesman fo cis
would react violently in the int- r the free unsatisfatory to h government French leader said the civil ad- I Washington reports s u b se-
tediate future in an attempt tot
ministFrench ration would be independ- 1 quently denied by Fre spokes-
lye their communication lines' Ent of the civil affairs office est-men said De Gaulle countered
vith Cherbourg ablished by the Allied military'Eisenhowers announcement by
ExtEnding in an arc around La
Haye-Du Plias is a range of high authorities in Normandy !forbidding a number of French!
found starting about two miles De Gaulle announced that Fran- i liaison officers to enter France
orthwest of the town and on
cols Coulet former director of the with the invading armies on D-
n
he far side of the railroad grad-
Commissariat of the interior in Day
elly swinging east and south-
the provisional government at Al- Prime Minister Winston Chur-
east Domination of this ground t
giers has been sent to France to chill sidestepped an attempt to
v the allies would give them ar-
take over the duties of "commis-!bring the entire question into
tillery ccmmand of the railroad sioner of the republic for Nor-lopen debate in Commons yester-
and highway in effect cutting 1
mantly': to handle civil administ- day asserting that he did not
Immix 1ULLLLV 11Z 041 a ugxuxyb 'ministration would be independ-lquently denied by Prne
eh spokes-
lye their communication lines' Ent Of the civil affairs office est-men said De Gaulle countered
vith Cherbourg ablished by the Allied military'Eisenhowers announcement by
ExtEnding in an arc around La
Haye-Du Puits is a range of high authorities in Normandy !forbidding a number of French
ound starting about two miles De Gaulle announced that Fran- liaison officers to enter France
orthwest of the town and on
cols Coulet former director of thewith the invading armies on 120-
he far side of the railroad grad-
!
n
Commissariat of the interior In Day
elly twinging east and south-
the provisional government at Al-1 Prime Minister Winston Chur-
east Domination of this ground giers has been sent to France to chill sidestepped an attempt to
v the allies would give them ar-
take over the duties of "commis-!bring the entire question into
tillery cemmand of the railroad sioner of the republic for Nor-lopen debate in Commons yester-
and highway in effect cutting 1
mandy" to handle civil administ-iday asserting that he did not
hem ration in the liberated territory consider a full public discussion
Front reports indicated the Test Is Threatened
advisable at this time
Muericans were advancing west' The Fiench have threatened to! De Gaulle paid a flying visit to
-vard on a solid front of nine: bring to a swift test the months- the invasion coast yesterday where
miles and also were approaching old refusal of Great Britain and he received an enthusiastic re--he
ccmmunications center of the United States to recognize eeption from townspeople in the
zt Sauveur-Le Vicomte six miles De Gaulle's provisional govern-Allied-occupied areas and con-
ncrth of La Haye-Eu Pints ment as the civil authority in lib-ferred with Coulet at Bayeux 1
- ----------
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
)
-1-c
with
1221
UM! WHILE ‘OLVIRE
DIGGIN3G I'LL GTEP
trATO OE16 LUNCH TO
GPENK TO SIM ABOUT
THE 16cild ANININERSARY
OP TIAE BATTLE OF i
OUNIAER 1411-1— W14104
OCCURS GATURDAY i
months is only 950 miles north-
west of the big enemy base at
Truk in the Caroline 1100 miles
almost due west from the Amerlean-held
Eniwetok in the Mar-
shall and 1300 miles north east
of the Philippines
There has been no Allied in-
formation of Ammican activity in
the Marianas since Nimige com-
munique yesterday which said that
battleships cruisers and destroy-
had shelled Saipan and Tin-
ian Monday in a follow-up of
three days of carrier-based at-
tacks On the two islands and
also On Outua Rota and Pagan
In that assault big guns ot
the warships were coneentrited
on Tanatag harbor tharan-
Kamm mut Saipan' s largest
town Carapan which has a
population 010000
Aerial fleets from the same
task force battered the five
principal Islands in the group
Irons Saturday through Monday
ranging from Guam 130 tuibts
south of Saipan to Pagan at
the northern end
While Gomel said the first at-
:mpted landing on Saipan was
second attempt had been thrtwa
repulsed it did not say that the
back commenting only that
"heavy fighting" was nuvi going
The agency reported that 20
transports appeared off Saipan
about 630 a m Tokyo time 1330
p tn Wednesday EWTt and "at-
tempted a landing employing
about 70 landing barges and some
20 to 30 special barges"
V
De Gaulle Names
Civic Leaders
Defies Allies
Oiders R e presentative&
To Establish Civil Rule In
Liberated French Areas
LONDON June 15-41T)—Gen
Charles De Gaulle announced to-
day that he has mdered his re-
presentatives in the liberated
area of Normandy to establish
their own civil administration in
the name of his provisional French
povernment
i
The dramatic move to establish I (Toted metropolitan Prance
the provisional government's auth- I The French leader had charged
olio over liberated French soili
as announced in a special com-1 that the procedure outlined by
munique issued by De Gaulle Gen Dwight D Eisenhower for the
here ! administration o f I i b e r a t e d
Independent of Military French territory was "obviously"
A spokesman for the free unsatisfactory to his government
y
WE'D BETTER WARN EVERY HOUSEH N
OLD
ToWN I --- WE'LL GO FROM HOUSE TO HOUSE
AND HAVE THE OCCUPANTS HIDE WHERE
IT'S SAFE le'
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:
TROTP'660VERLIWIIIITC1-tE -3 1
94 ow NIA COWL INC M IWO U S PAT OM
trq rr c9ii4g fr - " Pkottliosa
MAJOR HOOPLE OUT OUR WAY
OP11141S Y
IS SWELL
DIRT UNCLES
BULGY
MICE AND
LOOGE1 r )
TOO
IT GPADGS
UP EASY AND
-11-MRS'S KO
WEEDG
'AE-11-1-1ER!
Pulaislied in the Cushing Citizen
I June 8 15 and 22 1944 St
SUMMONS
Tim State or Oklahoma to the
'Mrs ecistors AdmAnistra tont
Devisets Trustees and Assigns
limmediate and romiote of
ern h Wilson deeeased
You and each of you are here-
!by notified that you have been
sued in the Distrkl Court of
l Payne County State of Okla
by Altha Gartman where-
l in she seeks by her petition file1
In said court to have the persons
thereinnamed decreed to be the
sole and only persons entitled to
succeed to the interest of William
B Wilson in and to the we8t
half of the southeast quarter of
section fourteen township eigh-
teen north and range four east
of the Indian Meridian in said
county on and by reason of his
death: end unless you answer
the petition aforesaid on or be-
fore the 22nti day of JulY 1944
the allegations thereof will be
taken as true and a decree will be
rendered by said court deter
mining who was entitled to take
the interest of the said William
B Wilson ha said rea1 estate ou
1
and by reason of his death ac-
cordingly Witness my haud and the seal
of said court t1li3 7th day of
June 19441
BILL NEWELL
Court Owl of Payne
County State 010klahome
By Vorcas Hansom
Leputy
(SEAL)
W ALTER MATHEWS
'Attorney for Plaintiff
Published in the Cushing Cal
inn June I and June 8 1944-20
NOTICE: OF ANNUAL MESTING4
OF THE STOCKHOLDERS OF
THE CUSHING SAVINGS
LOAN ASSOCIATION CIL':11
ING OKLAHOMA
To the Stockholders of the
Cushing Savings de Loan Associ-I
ation:
The annual meeting of the:
Stockholders of the Cushing Say- i
ings de Loan Association wilt be!
held at the office of the Associ-I
sit i(al 9ffi1 Pstst 1traluilwav Rtrppk
I
talon 208 East Broadway StreetI
JCuusnellinigi 01941t14ahoaltnai:ootepTuernsdray
or
the purpose of electing three
:members of the Board of Direct-
'ors and transact any other busi-
! —
GOSA WE'VE CALLED
AT FIFTEEN HOUSES
AND NOBODY
HOME! I WONDER
140W COME 2 EVI
10
Z H EID ThiOORAY HE'S 1
:- MAS-TER'
-- -TRICK OF CON-
tt
CENTRATINII HELL
BE A GREAT MAN
4) ONE OF -THESE
r: (o PAYS 1 -'
64 041111:pti
If
! 1 Whs" -
ij 11'311
A k'410'
11)
- I
THURSDAY RINE 15 1944
MI oem
ness which may come before the President Outlines'
meeting
W A MORDA Postwar Security
Secretary i Itt A vri Tme-rrnm
V3r10t1 y
WA611INGTO4 June 15
(UP)- 4-resident Roosevelt tO44Y
Caddo WWI once an important for tle first time outlined this
Choctaw court town and was govei sment's plans fo an inter-
filicd on the first Monday of 'Monett postwar ecurity- organi-
each month with many tribal ration to be built around "a
members who came their ccuncil annually elected by the
to air
n s
grievances or to stand trial fully representative body of all
WPi-1-resident Room volt- tOtlaY
for tl te first tittle outlined thia
gym timent's plans for an inter-
national postwar security- organi-
Patton to be built around "a
ctuncil annually elected by the
fully representative boLly of all
nations"
"I had stage fright so bad that
my tonsils got twisted and my
voice broke" he relates "I made
some decisions in a high falsetto
and players have kidded me about
It since I was all in a fret and a
fidget before a big crowd Cal
Hubbard asked me why my face
was so white I looked like a bad
case of embalming I guess Cal
was at the plate performing non
chalantly as he wigwagged his
decisions on balls and strikes
"Cal didn't know I had been
umpiring that first game ever
since I was hired"
pITCHERS would be slicker
I- umpires did not throw out
baseballs with an oily look or
smell The new sphere sweats It
seems
"It's as If something was ex-
uded through the pores of the
leather or leaked through the
seams" asserts Cal Hubbard "It
might be due to a hasty process of
preparing the hides or it might
be something in the yarn Maybe
BY HARRY GRAYSON
?EA Sports Editor
Specials This thelt
Bring us your Cream Poultry and Eggs
cip —
GD
cz:4011111
BY NE A st ::-----12131:1152111rT215"
KG U S PAT OFF -1 c cc
s I kiEl-i-NOW ALL -THAT's
t icEc rumEm- rsAsZAN1 Y1 ri ts 1 A- r" TAHEFet -
up LAW-TO KEEP
y
0 HIM AL::::17' OUT
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et
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M U PAT OPP " S Att
k't kto pat r44LLIAtbek5
4 jit7HE RUNNIMO MotiaGS R tri NIA NI- ROL IC
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1
I
NrICK JONES says the first game he umpired In the 'Americatt
J League lasted six months two weeks three days and 37 mill"
utet The arbiter obtained from the Southern Association expiains
that he had mentally been umpiring it for that length of time
A Florida cracker Red Jones
had never been north of Memphis
until called by Will Harridge
It's green yarn Or maybe the
substance that binds the It ether
Closely around the yarn is clitler
ent from what was formerly
Used"
Whatever Is In the bafl the
home run output Is on the up-
swing They hit one every time
you look up at the Polo Grounds
The Yankees can't recall w'h a
so many four masters have been
hit against them
B IS for Brooklyn Beautiful and
A' Bum The other afternoon the
Dodgers fielded tn all B infield—
Bolling Basinski Bragan and
Bordagaray
There's one of the stories of
the year Frenehy Bordagaray
finding himself at third base after
10 years shooting for the All-
Star game
Frenchy Bordagaray erratic
through his entire career sud-
denly has become so steady that
Leo Durocher has made him cap-
tain of the infield And he's hit-
ting 333
Anything can—and does—hap-
pen at Ebbets Field
48 lb Golden Sheaf Flour $205
24 lbs Golden Sheaf Flour 110
A & M Dairy Feed $275
Ground Wheat $285
Clears or White Shorts $280
2S lbs Calf Meal $125
Plenty of lien Scratch grain ground oats ground
barley Okeene Dairy Feed baby chick scratch grain
CUSHING PRODUCE
208 West Broadway John II Bird Phone 122
riv MERRILY- BLOSSEIR
LED IIEVP DON'T YOU GUYS HEAR
S wurn" ABOUT II-IE KID WITH
YvricKC THAT BOTTLE OF
Is STUFF?
EVERYBODY?
By J R WILLIAMS
0
I)
0
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r
tt
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 217, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 15, 1944, newspaper, June 15, 1944; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173574/m1/2/: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.