The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 124, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 23, 1944 Page: 2 of 8
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OKLAHOMA CITY Feb 23—
(1313)—The value of livestock In-
eluding poultry on Oklahoma
farms Jan 1 1944 was estimated
I at $200108000 compared with
$241707000 a year ago and $165
648000 two years ago the annual
livestock report of the Departmenti
of Agriculture said today
An increase of 10 per cent in
the number of cattle and calves
for this year was shown in the
estimate of 3154000 made by the
department for Jan 1 1944 as 1
compared to 3123000 on the !
states farms on Jan 1 1943 This
year's estimate is the largest num-
ber on record in the state
The average value per head on
Jan 1 was 84530 compared with
' $5410 a year ago The total value
of all cattle and calves was $1421
936000 compared with $1690431
000 on Jan 1 1943
An increase of 10 per cent was
also shown in the number of two
year old or older milk cows on
state farms this year with an est !
'mated 921000 head over last !
: year's 912000 head The average
value on Jan 1 this year was $61
per head as compared with $73
a year ago or a total valuation
I of all milk cows and heifers two
years old or over of $56181000
Os compared with $66576000 on
' Jan 1 1943
Dogs Decrease
Oklahoma's farms on Jan 1
this year had an estimated 1465
000 head of hogs a decrease of 2
per cent under the 1495000 head
t a year ago and is the second
largest since 1933 The average
value per head was $920 compared
with last year's $1540 and the
' total was placed at $13428000
compared with $22996000 the
1943 estimate
f The number of all sheep and
lambs including those on feed
Jan 1 1944 was estimated at
330000 head a decrease of 22 per
cent during 1943 The number of
stock sheep was estimated at
! 305000 compared with 359000 a
year ago The valuation of all
sheep and lambs was placed Ete
$2448000 compared with $3576
000 a year ago The estimated
number of ewes one year old and
over on farms Jan 1 was 228000
head compared with 275000 head
1 a year ago
r Chicken Increase
The estimated number of chick
ens on state farms on Jan 1
' 1944 wa-s 16247000 compared
with 15841000 a year ago a 2
per cent increase The average:
: value and total valuation on Jan1
1 was $1 and $16247000 campared
with 88 cents and $13940000 on 1
Jan 1 1943 The number of ttir
keys on hand Jan 1 this year'
was estimated at 216000 the same:
i as estimated a year ago The aver-
age value and the total valuationl
were estimated at $385 and $8321
000 bead but mules showed a drop t
of about 10 per cent during 194311
the number declining from 13000014
to 117000 The average value per!
head and the total valuation of
horses on Jan 1 were placed at t
$46 and $16150000 compared
with $60 and $21139000 a year
P ago The average value of mules
was $69 compared with $79 last It
year and the total valuation was
estimated at $8065000 compared
with 1943's $10289000
f In the United States cattle
showed an increase of 4 per cent
1 this year over a year ago with the!
total value of $5647875000 this I 1
t year or $145073000 above last 1
t year's and the highest value for 1E
t all years
PA TWO
SETE HAS
E2CREASE IN
LIVESTOCK
Value Of All Livestock
Including Poult r y Is
Slightly Lower
t year or $145013
t year's and the hi
i all years
V
i Nazis Mass—
(Continued from Page 1)
British barrage
Steady Fire on Lines
The Allied big guns maintained
: a steady hail of fire on the Ger-
man lines yesterday probing
constantly for the tanks and
1 shock forces known to be moving
Into position for attack
Relatively small forces of fight:
er-bombers and fighters braved
the bad weather to bomb and:
machine-gun Nazi troops gun
positions supply dumps and trans-
port The Luftwaffe struck in con-
siderable strength against the
beachhead flying about 130 Son'
ties over the Allied lines Ten
German planes were shot down by
! the Allied fighter cover 1
Headquarters revealed that a
force of Nazi raiders bombed An- I
zio harbor Monday night but no
details of the attack were issued!
I Allied medium bombers struck
avain at railway targets north of
' Rome bombing Montalto Do Cas-1
tro and Albinia on the west coast
line and Poligno on the Ancona!
Rome road
On the 5th Army's main south-1
ern front and the British 8th '
Army's Adriatic sector only min-
i or patrol clashes were reported
' Headquarters censors however
t:
: permitted United Press War Con
reepondent James E Roper to re-
' port that the Allied attack across
the Rapido river south of Cassino
had been "unsuccessful"
The Allies crossed the narrow
Mountain stream and captured the
Casino railway station but with-'
drew later under German attacki
' Roper's dispatch indicated that the
fiatted forces might have been
4riven back across the river at
'''Illat point
i
"
150000 Sq MI!
z ot"x"'e
20 mi prom
Spanish roost
!cliff
-
St Nozoire
Bay of Biscay''
Havre
iwUrn r OS 15 irki
'
I ti '
1 q e c
Atlantic Ocean Geo
St Plymouth
360 M Land's Endeca'
i' 4
SCILLY v
''" '
' '?ISLES5
' : ' ' ' Ushont
5 " :- :: 4s:
Mites I
0 100
By declaring "dangerous to shipping" the 150000 square miles in-
cheated by shading on the map above and warning that all vessels
enter the area without permission at their own risk Great Britain
clamped tight pre-invasion blockade on the Bay of Biscay Was
ship and plane patrol plus mining of the blockade area virtually I
Cuts oft approach to France by ships from Spain and Ireland
Britain Warns Neutrals: "Keep Out"
Finisterre Cape
0
COM INA BY WA novice INC T M PM U PAT OM
"If you're the Wile Jones who used to steal my cherries
I'm glad you're in the Navy—now I know the Japs
- - tiaven't got a chancel"
'Reds Observe— !The final reckoning is nearing
!for allerimes carried out by hit-
1Continued from rage 1) lerites on Soviet soil in the oceu-
t 1
! — - — pied territory of Europe"
The victory cannon of Moscow
Lrningrod Kiev Gomel Dniepero-Fetrovsk
and Rostov were
primed for concerted salvos this
:evening to celebrate the Red
!puny's triumuhs in the last year
It was the first time the cannon
cf the last three cities had spok-
en in celebration
Fcreign Ccmmissar V M Mol-
otov was giving a reception to
!the Moscow diplomatic corps and !
military missions tonight The !
guests were asked to come in
!formal dress cr uniform and to
wear their decorations
Churchill Address
The front pages of all news-
I naocrs were solashed with Sta-
lin's order cf the day The second
and third pages were given over
Ir-relv to communiques and lists
of men decorated for distin-
!guished service
The newspapers on their for-
elan pages published lengthy
'summaries of Prime Minister
Winston Churchill's speech yes-
terday in which he pledged the
!western allies to "smite the Hun"
by land sea and air this spring
and summer
Churchil's statement on the
Polish question describing the
!Russian made giant new strides
in the same general area in !
!which the Red army won Its first
'victory over the Germans 26
lyears ago today
More than 210 towns and vil-
lages on a broad arc around Ps-
kov and Dno were swept up by
the Russians yesterday in their
Pursuit of German units fleeing
!toward the auproaches to Latvia
for a new stand
( On the southern front the fall
of the mining center of Krivoi
!Rog after g firece street battle
'knocked out the northeastern
'anchor of the German bulge in
!the southwestern Ukraine and
set the stage for coordinated
drives by the 1st 2nd 3rd and
!Ith U17rainian armies into Ru-
mania and southern Poland
Peace Hints
Stalin said German diplomats
!weer rushing from one neutral !
counrty to another attempting
to make contact with pro-hiter I
elements and hinting at possibili-
ties of a separate peace
"All of these tricks of the hit-
lerites are doomed to failure for
the basis of the anti-hitlerite co- l
alition is the common interest of
the allies who have given them-
selves the common task of smash-
Ing hitlerite Germany and her
satellites in Europe" Stalin saidI
1 "It is this common interest !
which lends to the strengthening
of the fighting alliance of the
USSR England and the United
States in prosecuting the war1
Coruna
Bayonne
'et
Santander Son
Sebastian 411
at-- SPAIN
PORT
tie precPeted that Germany's
position would become still more
ileptiess and desperate when the
main forces of "cur allies:" come
intc cotion on the western front
Ya s Wr eck—
Continued from Page 1
An air ministry-home security
rriniFtry communique said there
ave a vaaaainna AN e"1
IL (to
0-4301
01 4 1
L:(t lk-40
1746y
SPAIN
-St Brituc
botient
101111
Nantes
FRANCE
La Rochell
Bordeaux
I
were a number of casualties 1--- — — --'' ---
some of them fatal At least
seven of the raiders were shot If you need to
down one of them over its base 0 tl A Wet p
in France by a Canadian intru-
der I
The 8th U S Air Force carried cco clog
its offensive aganst German Ibm
fighter plane production center) i
through its third day yesterday ' 717
Pinkthhit's irliblITI:irminet4OVLi
with attacks en Pernburg Ascher- ' best home WHYS to get iron into
Sieben and Halberstadt all 80 to I blood Pirilluan's Tablets are also
105 miles southwest of Berlin mmoounstiliDyrViLetvuerramnete6totit3lesenotmettinoefti:
while the 15th air force in Italy soothing effect on one ol toonon's n
Jeined in the assault for the first' imponunt Organ FOHOW Libel di
tious Worth trying
time with a raid on fighter plane
OUR BOARDING HOUSE with
1-1E FIRST CLUE ? WELL3At4E-
-1t4E GU‘t WHO DEMANDED
THE ANSTERIOUS "GOD
WISDOM" GIGED HINASELP
THe -
I FIGURED 714E GOD
WAG EGIPTIAN1- s-ri
GIWA14 is ANS MAr
OASIS 14EAD
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L-"
P$11341 al aLlt HTILL LLFILY Ek
THE CUSHING DAILY CITIZEN CUSHING OKLAHOIVTA
!President And Congress
In Bitter Policy Battle
l ------ IP WASHINGTON Feb 23—CLIP)
i fe ctories et riegesburg 250 miles —President Roosevelt and con-
acuth of Berlin ! 'arm are engaged today - in a
bitter policy contest of conse-
quence comparable to the strug-
1 Thunderbolt lighters which es-
1cntzei Eritish-based Flying For-
! tic ! ses tc cential Germany shot pie over reorganization of the
idesva 512 intercepting German supreme court
planes while the bombers tic- No single issue is involved this
cc mcd for a still unannounced
t
time But the president and con-
!
additional number in some of the gress are slugging it ou in a
1 liciesst aerial combats of the
battle of Germany presidential el"ction year to de-
termine the fundamentals of the
rs Eyinr Fortresses and Libera- nation's present and post-war
' to from Italy shot down 40 out economy It is a high stake con-
' of 1 2 0 intercepting German test with the White House likely
planet during the attack on Re- as not the nrincipal prize
gensblirg an Algiers communique The dispute almost can be
announced simplified to a matter of five
The fortresses shot down 14
points proposed by Mr Roosevelt
in
during a 55-minute running bat- his Jan 11 anual message on
tie south of Regensburg A and the state of the union
icver the city itself while Libera- So far congress has rejected
tors destroyed the remaining 26 two points in bills which the
some of them rocket-firing twin- president promptly votoed One
engined planes Others mounted veto—food subsidies—has been
20-millimeter cannon sustained by the house The tax
I The Mediterranean air forces veto is pending for consideration
! accounted for an additional 10 Bele is what Mr Roosevelt ask-
enemy filliters in engagements eel in his annual message:
'over the Anzio beachhead below 1 "A realistic tax law"—by
Rome ' which be meant new levies ap-
The new successes brought the preximating $10500000000
'Americans' three day toll of
2 "A conlinuatian of the law
enemy aircraft over Germany to ter renegotiation et contracts"
303 An additional 18 were "prob
a point which so far has been
1ablv" destroyed over southern
I sustained by congress subject
Germany yesterday ' to a prevision contained in the
1 Fifty seven allied planes were
vetoed tax bill that the law
lost yesterday in all activity over shad expire E:c 31
!axis Europe which also included
tost ef food law" — by
:small-scale attacks on central
which he meant a general sub-
end southern Germany and men- sidy system
rid France and Holland by Brit-
ish based planes and objectives ! 4 "Early re-enrctnient of the
in Italy and Jugoslavia by the ! ste bilization statute of October
!
Mediterranean feirces l 1942" — The Pet enabling Mr
1 f - I 11r-s-velt to freeze wages an-1 I
a 1 t larks and control prices It
I rev avers Is '- I expitzs June 30
i 5 "A national service law" 1
B & P W Speaker
John Aycock Also Is
r Speaker On Blood Plasma
i At Meeting
Reverend Douglas V Magers
1 was tirincipal speaker last even
Mg at a dinner meeting of the
Cushing Business and Profession-
' el Women's club held at the
'Curhing Hotal
I Rty Megers spoke interesting
ly cit the subject "The Larger
rod Eicher Life" The program
i w7f prosntrtri by Mrs H A
1 r?ViS and Mrs Ida Crain
I mr srt—krr stressed four main
objects in obtaining the larger
end richer life He said that first
hutch be God end then love for
1 our neighbors In conclusion he
i
seld that reople do not live up to
Itheir 'possibilities and that the
mew attitude towards others
must t a attained
1 Jchn Aycock hospital techni-
I clan at Payne County Masonic
I: -soital was presented by Mrs
1 H C Manning of the Health
' Cemmitter he distirsA it'f-tTrlHtively
the subject of "Blood
latest:Ia"
Douglas V Magers was a
gitct cf the club Plans wa're
mi during the meeting for a
co d dish dinner meeting to
110)
br old In two weeks at the home
cf Mrs Jchn Newell with Mrs
Alice Beath as assisting hostess
—v— —
ANADARKO Okla Feb 23—tU
Pt—Two Anadarko boys 15 and 13
years old have been placed on
probation after admitting they
had broken into and robbed five
' city business firms Police recov-
ered $4675 and a butcher knife
part of the boys' loot
coo eloom
110 MEOW VEIN NW NEW MEW
Try this great blood-iron tonie—Lydia
Pinkham's TABLETS—one of the very
best home WHYS to get iron into the
blood Pifillnun's Tablets are also fa-
mous to relieve symptoms of functional
monthly disturbances because of their
soothing effect on one or toolnon's most
important Organ& Follow label direc-
tions Worth trying
with
I-14E
I
—by which Mr Roosevelt sought
I authority to draft men ani
women for essential work anl
to prevent strik23
The notienal service law re-
commondation was made conting-
: 1 ont uprn enactment of the pre-
iceding four prot4ram points
: Mr Roosevelt 's "realistic tax
jaw" was reducrd to a bill en
acted by conpress for apwoxi-
metcly $2315200000 which was
i about elle ourtsr of what be
!sought and which was vetoed Yes-
: terdeyt The tax bill corrhd a
which weuld have permit-
ted the Bureau of Internal Rm
nus—and under certain circum-
stances congrEssional committees
—to examine sworn and itemized
statements of union income and
experditures Union leaders dis-
liked that provision
New 139tt1es To Come
1 Mr Poorevelt's veto was not
1 utter:meted H3 denounced the
!till in !onstage vs pimishing as
the "fraud" mestage he tossed at
ungrees in protest against the
so-called statc-ballot system of
1st Idisr voting
1 Point No 2 for a cost of food
law was rejected by corgress in
a vot9 which outlewed subsidies
Peesevelt last week vetc-td
1 the anti-subsidy bill and the
housti sustained him Fut the is-
rue is nct settled
The battle royal over point N
14 frr re-enactment of the stabil-
intim statute is still to come
end will be spectacular Point
No 5 for the labor-draft of men
! Pnd wcmcn annaears to be on ice
(Cr the tim- be!ntz If the presi-
I dent can lick congress on the
preceding feint tnints h9 probably
will hove th momentum neces-
Isary to obtain the labor draft
ar well
Tltere are also other points of
!conflict Beth sides are building
I up irsuss for the presidential
I earl-warm Sen Arthur H Van-
cienbrb H Mich charges that
!Mr Roosevelt intends to make a
'fourth term bid on anti-eongress
Irlatform The senator cites the
soldier irt3 message th3 Kw-
! sidy and the tax veto as his evi-
dence Read the Daily Citizen
!
I classified Page Daily
MAJOR HOOK
1 cAzro-t
f3t51 11-AtG
11GCORPION111
FELLER z
HID LIKE-
A GOPHER
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4IMMLEIE 45 A SLICCESSo To
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NEEP
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MEDICINE FORTHE NEAT miLLI0I4
YEAqS
A Fine- Mace to Play Two-Handed Ping-Pong!'
'
I
eriqin—last night smashing hun-
dreds of windows but apparently
eausinct no deaths
Hardly a window was left un-
broken in the worst damaged area
and trace today frosted guards in
the Eriksdal (wailer where num-
erous shop windows were smashed
!ea
One burning airplane was re-
ported to have come down north
of Stockholm
An official announcement said
that "several foreign ' planes"
I flew cver Swedish territory over
Stockholm's Skaergaard— an Ar-
chipelago immediately east of the
capital—dropping bombs on sev-
eral southern suburbs Including
Hammarby and Aarsta Just be
OUT OUR WAY
TE17'5
LAGT ONE
rLL EVER
-TRY -j
RAISE!
2ff
I
01--t
c—1
'PEELING TOE WOrttO'S ONiOhl
CROP MIGHT CAUSE OM TO spiel"
A FEW -MARS 'FOR 'NOSE OE
OAS MuRDEIZED
"c-1
-THERE'LL-
NEVER BE
ANOTHER
LIIAE D104--
NOT -ro
ME!
Just A Few Suggestions
wRITING AN V-PITAPH foR EACH
OF His vicTiM5NwouLy 6ive Hisi
THE 4iumAt4 -roucti
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ktett4
koW s' —
BUT
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IS
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 23 1944
i
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1 -
I-IFADQUARTERS 1 4 T H AIR
FORCF China Feb 22—UPI
—Mej Gen Claire L Chennault'
head of the U S Army 14th Air
Force predicted today that the
ellit's could accomplieh the same
destruction in Japan as now be-
ing achieved in Germany with
one tenth the air force being
used against Europe
Chennault's statement was a
reply to the often-repeated Ques-
tion of how effectively the allies
ceuld bcmb Japan from China
While he did not elaborate on
the prediction Chennault has
definite ideas of where Japan's !
vital spots are—information he
gathered when he personally vi
P--
- - - - ' - -1
4c194146 MAkE A
)3Eure LOOK Matte
HumAKI 'THAN A
NECKTIE
n)‘)
OR n415 MIGHT $0FTes1 t-cm
uP A Tin
t
Q
!!!!:47 — - ---11011Vb I
!!4n
It certainly looks as if the chap above is involved in fast action in a two-handed ping-pong game
but he's just a signalman aboard escort carrier HMS Ravager-waving in a U S-built Grumman Hell-
i - -- - - - --- cat fighter of the British Fleet Air Arm ' ! A
f
olm
A '
Shickh Ilit
1 owe ammo r 111'
fore 9 p m a violent explosion sited Japan and examined her in-
! was heard in Soeder the southern ! dustrial 113 before coming to
!quarter of the city i Chinr to Iliad the Flying Tigers
1 At least three bombs were drop-1 V
In Bomb Raid ped on Straengnaes 62 miles west ! FAYHUSK& Okla Feb 22--( y
1
of the capital and it was announ- 13)—It takes more than aversit'
Bombs Identified As Russ ced that these were identified as to halt Pawhuska Cub Scouts'
ian Finland Has A i r I
I of Russian origin ' - iwaAe paper campaign The young
Russian planes were over Fin- 'boys report they have earned $16
!16 for their Scout units by collect-
phoned from Turku ( Aabo) the
Alarm - l I land last night A dispatch tele- !ing old paper but not without dif-
! y
STOCKHOLM Feb 23--(UP)-- ficult For several weeks 041 main Finnish port for traffic
At least three foreign bombers 1 Wtir Sweden 175 miles northeast ' had gathered paper tied it in
!-
bundles and slored it in the M
Idropncd high explosives on Stock- ! cl Stockholm across the Baltic Liebenheim home When they pre
'
holm's southern suburbs and at !um said there had been a four- !pared to sell it they found some
!Staentriae-- where the bombs !hour air alarm there beginning at
1 culpitt had untied the bundles and
!were identified as of Russian i 7:20 P zn- ! 0 f a t fortiti t bo no 'Inv all moor ha
DEMANIOLO -n-ke
DO OF- EGNPTIAtS
INASaP GOD WISIDONI
IS A "1-1-10Ti-A"
DD - DIZZi
— STATUE OF A
MPr1 WITH A BIROS
EADTh'tPOR
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A RUSSIANI 117c
rOOKENrC)
IstM
T N kE0111 U PAT OPP
COPIA 1944 9Y PITA 9APVICT
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TRwILLirsm5
2-23
By J R WILLIAMS
-THERE'S SOME- N
THIM1 -THEM -TWO
012 BACHELOR
MAVERICKS
NEVER THOLI6HT
'THEY'D LIVE
TO SEE! -
rs r:27
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P-77s
1' In ft--
7-77- ):N:--j'c--)'
t1)) (
ep t
--jt
0
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0
0
1 waAe paper campaign The young
boys teport they have earned $16
i16 for their Scout units by collect-
!ins old paper but not without dif-
ficulty For several weeks the()
had gathered paper tied it in
bundles and shared it in the M
iLiebenheim home When they pre-
!pared to sell it they found some
eulptit had untied the bundles and
scattered the paper all over thk
'garage They had to arrange Imes'
'tie the paper again
1 V
I Phonograph records in Spanish
'French or German are sent to
1
enrolees in language courses
through the University of Okla()
home correspondence study de-
' paqment
V
Miss Lorraine M Maytum form-
er a:aft member at the University
of Minnesata Oklahoma A and MI
cellege and Kansas State collegiV
was recently apptinted assistant
prefesser of physical education at
the University of Oklahoma
--v
Read the Citizen Classified Ad-
vertisements ()
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The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 124, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 23, 1944, newspaper, February 23, 1944; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2173676/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.