The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 42, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 17, 1941 Page: 2 of 8
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Il
ONIMNENIMOOP
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C Wayne
Nazis Employ Giant 'Pincer' Maneuver
In Drive to Cut Russian Supply Line
Federal Agents Arrest 29 Persons
In Largest U S Roundup of Spies
I 1-D11'011 i NoTIF-141 pin!ens aro els r d In ths elitumni they
Ste ilia Mit MING Di) II $SA ant Dectatily iti gewspAprj
(Released by Western Newspaper I:ntool
REDS:
Fighting Hard
In spite of empty communiques
from buth Russian and German
sources on the progress of the war
on a 2000-mi1e front between the
two former allies one thing was evi-
dent that the Russians were flght-
ing with all their might and main
but that they were being relentlessly
pushed back before the fury of the
German mechanized onslaught
Bit by bit and piece by piece the
picture began to be seen despite
the fact that both sides were bar-
ring war correspondents from the
scene
The huge front was divided into
four general parts the far northern
the northern central and southern
On the far north there was no
discernible activity This was the
part which Germany hoped to in-
vade by means of her occupation of
Norway
The northern front really began
with the Finnish-Russian border
that part of it which lies to the
southeast and separates old Finland
from the road to Leningrad Here
the f ghting was severe but appar-
ently was mostly in the air An-
other portion of this front lay some-
what to the southward and included
the states of Estonia Latvia and
Lithuania and the Germans moat-
ing from East Prussia were invad-'
ing these territories only recently
taken over by Russia and were slow-
ly forcing the Russians back into
their own territory
Here the netting was extremely
severe and the Russians were forc-
ing the Nazis to advance slowly
wSere at all
The greatest Nazi advance was on
the central front with the rail cen-
ter of Nlinsk reputedly a ”life-lane"
cf Ressan sanply between south and
north armies as the prime apparent
otective Here the Germans were 1
claiming their greatest successes
and on the basis of meager dis-
patches they had indeed covered
the most mileage in this district
Yet ricst chservers believed the
Ukraine the sentinern fnent was tie
one the Germans coveted mast Yet
it was on this front that almost no
advance had teen rtade the Fs-
sans claiming to hold the Prut
river inch was rell a considerable
destanne !rent CA Ruesian territory
Thus the old Nazi 'pincers tech-
tionee" was evident as it was eb-
vines the Germans were tryirg to
divide the Eussian defending armies
into two parts and drive southward
to sarroend and encinole the 1:kralne
defenders and to da the sante via
the Baltic states with the northern 1
defenders
MORALE:
The Mental Side
As to the propaganda re:eases
which contained much more space
and information than did the cfficial
rews there was every indicatian
that both sues in the Russa-Gernian
war believed strongly that the eth-
ers inner morale was weak
There were dozens of stories frionn
Russian eeaurces tell'ng of Nazi sol-
diers and aviators laying dewn their
arms saying nae dent want ta glit
against the Corrintanists"
The Ger-ea-ins on the other hand
did not make such clanes bet took
the line et -g the world what
brave and foolhardy f Otters the
Russians were rind ty telling stories
of -stands ta the deatn" to r art the
pictere of an army seffering defeat
after defeat and letting its SC:t
fght even inside of burning build-
ings until all were killed
The purpose et each of these types
of stories was to impair merale
This cased many cliservirs to
feel that the outcome of the war
might well hinge on a breach in the
morale of either 32e 1
'NstvP
I
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2r44 4
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4117"11'1A ' -
7 : Z
The figure in the lower left corner of the picture is an RAF pilot who
floats on a rubber dinghy dropped by the land plane overhead The
aviator after being shot down by Nazis was spotted by the English air
sea rescue service who radioed the high speed lAunch shown just al it
reached the scene The plane hovered above until rescue was tom
pleted then sped away upon another mercy mission These dramatic
events are almost a daily occurrence in the battle of the Atlantic
SPY:
Roundup
In swift secret moves agents of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation
completed the greatest spy hunt in
the nation's history and arrested 29
persons on espionage charges
Twenty-two of the group are natives
of Germany
For two years the FBI had been
closing in on the spy ring which is
specifically charged with conspiriag
"to engage in espionage activities"
in the L'rated States
Warrants issued for the arrests
charged the spies with giving infor-
mation to foreign nations concern-
ing cargoes of British-bound ships
and with revealing new develop-
ments in U S naval army and air-
craft products
BOMBER:
U S' Biggest
The taking to the air of the B-19
a $30O0NO airplane and believed
the biggest bomber in the world to-
day a:so the fastest and most pow-
erful was an event
Yet it disclosed that bigger and
faster ships are the rule el the fu-
ture and the not-far-distant-future
at that
Not so very long ago 4-0 miles an
hour was a dream and many ex-
perts declared that at 60-0 miles an
hour or &SO feet per second the
air resistance woald barn up a
plane
This was exeloded when the U S
army annoanced that at Wright feld
a civilian test pilot dived a plane
at the rate el 51 males an hour or
Se-73 feet a secenda which is losirg
altitude almost at the speed of
send which trave:s cnly 1123 feet
a second
The speed of the pilot Bob I-easel
tester for the Wright company
was a mile every 544 seconds Last
year Andy MerSonough an air-line 1
pilot and an air corps reservist few 1
a Bell Airace li-ra in a dive at C23 !
miles an hour
And Czqt Ben Kelsey had piloted
a Leaikheed tram March field Call
ta Macael field L I in seven hours
at an average cf 473 miles per hour
The tip-eff as to the future came
feom Washargton far Langley feld
alaeady with a wind tunnel which
ss:1 test ships designed for 3i)9 miles
an hour is going to be revamped
ta test 5a'9-mile-an-hour ships
POWER:
For FDR?
There were to distinct schals cl
thought about the problem of grant-
ing Presidert licwseve:t farther ad-
dieoral personal powers in the
emergency
The war department according to
authorieeel sources in Washirgaon
was putt:rig pressure on congress to
declare a state ef unleeed natienal
emergency a step already taken
by the Fresident but which would !
Isce h:s hands fer considerable ac- !
tion row tarred to him by the fact
that congress has not given him the
reris
The isolaaanist press attacked
taas move instantly and so did some
cengressianal leaders who had gen-
eraly teen regard od as administra-
tion stalwarts
DOOMED:
Art Biz Guns
The accuracy cf American Isonib-
irig from the air and the size of
tarnbers and bombs has caused the
army chisfs to docarti to cblivion the
b4 ra:way gu ns not to menace) the
he meapatis fixed in coast guard
positicris
Say the army chiefs:
-These big gans cannct fire with
rearly the accuracy nor the effect
of the big air tcrners The war
I
department might as well abandan
this weapon"
Great Career Ends
Sad neu I o the uorld of music bi as
the death of liinace Jan PudereAski
uorld famous musician and Polish
patriot uho died in Nese York of pneto
Monad at the age of Co grott
pianist um only a few class Ills
lona career seas one of confirmed bra
Lame At 9 he us a child prodiey
am! at 18 a professor of TrItt5le An at
complohed concert IMMO ut 27 he
later became a uorld recoisni:ed states-
man and first prime minister of a free
Poland
PLANES:
In Syria
Enthusiastic reports we begin-
ning to come from Australians in
the R A F in Syria and northern Af-
rica concerning the performance
and maneuverability of American-
built planes
These reports constituted an oddi-
ty however with regard to the
bombers and fighters From north-
ern Africa came glowing accounts
of the performance of Martin-built
bombers on the ever - growing
strength of Britain there
The bombers were fast the sights
were unusual:y good and they were
wreaking havoc with Nazi and Fas-
cist planes in the air and on the
ground
The Curtiss-built Tomahawk fight-
er planes also came in for unstinted
praise not only on the North Afri-
can front but in Syria as well
But the Vichy French had the
same Martin bombers that the Free
French and British had in Syria so
it was Tomahawk against the U S
heavier planes there
The reports of victory were still
!optimistic in Syria however the
airmen reporting that the Toma-
hawks shot down the U S Martins
quite as well as they did the Junk-
ers Heinkels and Capronis in Af-
rica "The fire power of these fighters
is terrific and they have all the
speed you want" said the pilots
NOBODY:
Satisfied
The passage by the house mili-
tary affairs committee of a report
condemning a long list of persons
and agencies as havirig bungled the
national defense showed a puzzled
public that apparently ncbody was
satisfied with the way our prepara-
tions were being managed
The house committee attacked the
administration the defense advisory
commission the army the navy
GPM the maritime commission and
the state department and Secretary
Ickes
The President it said had been
too prone when new problems
arose jest to name another boai'd
with the result that endleas
cations and confusion had arisen to
slow progress
And harking back to the Presidert
himself it was recalled that he too
had declared himself far from
pleased with the way things were
going just a day or two before the
house committee reported
William Knudsen head of OPM
reported defense prodectien lag-
girg: Leon Hendersen price con-
trol man was pegg:rg the prices of
tires and tubes and threatening in
other direetiens the maritime com-
mission was displeased with the ship
owners ard Secretary Ickes was
having a hard time with the ria-
tiens oil linen
Defense plant heads is(a: king
a:aces for teanr wet-kers to Lye near
their vaitik k ere failing oet with the
federal hoilsng men and it was
hard to find anybody that was
pleased with anything in the defense
set-up—giving the press and speak-
ers who were oppased to the New
Deal handiing of the whole show
p:enty of material for their attacks
an its polices
FIELD DAY:
For Britain
As the Gerrnans led by Hitler in
person tarned their taks on Eng- !
and the Brsh were haying an
aerial field day ratieirg day and
night air raids with men:mai losses I
in men and shies and dealing out
terrc Eaws to Nazi and occupied j!
territory
But the Britisher in the street
was rot sansfed: There was a grow-
ing demand fer invasion el the Nazi-
held lands This spread far beyond !
the "man In the street" angle when
one general seed that the tone
had come for "tit and run" attacks
on coasta: points as a sure ?retried
wreekmg the Nazis entire bued-
up far an attack on the Brinsh isles
The general J F C Fulier sale
he understood the British had am-
phibian tanks and that if they d:i
have them now was the time tr
use them in cross-channel inyes oe
attentets
TIIE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
i
10
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B-7 47r7 r AZ' : -
r F- L: r: :71 r -2' dr 'or 4t"
Russian Help Welcomed
Despite Communist Bogy
Problem of Defeating Hitler Held Paramount
Dkstra Returns to Wisconsin University
Train 1520000 Defense Workers
W1-en Mayor LaGuardia of New'
York cty forgot about the farmer
in drawing up the plans for civIlian
defense department cl agriculture
effloa:s i----edtately protested As
a rest the farmer voill hare a
cance with the rest cf the civIlians
remember the city fo:ks
to get a cow fcr the Bronx rx just
tc prove to Gothamites rnilk doesnI
come cut cf a tree Lke rubber
By BAUKILIGE
National Farm and Home Hour Commentator
WNU Service 1343 11 Street N IC
Washington D C
WASHINGTON—It was one of
those Washington mornings when
the clouded sky above lets in the
damp heavy heat and an aching
glare on wall and pavement even
though it shuts out the sun itself
The German armies were smash-
ing through Poland and into the
Ukraine With the Luftwaffe roar-
ing eastward for a change British
bombers were blackening skies and
shaking the earth of northern
France and industrial Germany
A British military and economic
mission we knew was sitting down
with the Soviet leaders in Moscow
offering them utmost aid in their
Eght against Germany
The papers were crying over a
drop in American airplane produc-
tion still reporting strikes in defense
industries and very casually at his
press conference the President had
announced that the United States
would aid the Soviets as much as
possible
Later I sat in the office of a per-
turbed government ofnciala
"How" I asked "can you recon-
cile to the American people the anti-
communist feeling in this country
and aid to Russia?"
He paused and looked out over
streets black with staggered shift
of government workers on their way
hone—in another hour there would
be another echelon of hurrying men
and women in another hour an-
other—recruits in the army of de-
fense Americans Dislike Communism
Finally he spoke:
"Of course" he answered "that
Is the problem we have to face We
know that most Americans feel as
unsympathetic towards Communism
as they do toward Naziism And the
subversive activities of the Commu-
nists in this country have aroused
strong hatred against Moscow Our
attitude on that score has been
plainly stated"
Then my friend quoted the state-
ment made by Undersecretary of
State Sumner Welles shortly after
Hitlees speech declaring war against
Russia
Mr Welles had stated:
" doctrines of Communistic
dictatorship are as intolerable and
as alien to our own beliefs as are
the principles of the Nazi dictator-
ship but the immediate issue
that presents itself to the people
of the United States is whether the
plan for universal conquest
which Hitler is new desperately try-
ling to carry out is to be success-
fully halted or defeated"
Then the man across the desk from
me said: "In other words when
your wagon gets stuck in the mud
you don't look too closely at the man
who helps pull you out"
What the government would like
I suggested would be to have the
Nazi gingham dog and the red calico
cat eat each other up
"Perhaps" he laughed that
would be the best solution But it
isn't as simple as that The pup
seems to have so much stronger
jaws in this case that we believe it
might be wise to furnish the cat with
an extra-claw or two"
The trouble I suggested is selling
that idea to the American people
He agreed: but he added that there
V ere certain thiMgs which ought to
be understood in regard to subver-
sive Communist activities in this
ceuntry
Subversive Activities Overestimated
"Let's take for granted" he said
"that we would have rico"eg to do
if we cotilid help it with tne
who is helping us pull oar wag-sin
Out cf the mud But we do want
to get the wagon out so there isn't
riich choice
"Now as things are today a Com-
munist is not likely to do as much
liarm as we may fear" the ot?icial
went on "There are three reasons
for this statement: In the first place
the government has subversive ac-
tivities under much better control
than is generally known
-In the second place pressure is
new being brought to bear effective-
ly on the labor unions to promptly
reincve all members of any subver-
sive organizations from their morn-
be Thirdly in all probability now
that Russia needs our help the
Party line will probably order any
obstruction of the American de-
fense program to cease Comrnu-
fist leaders here have already in-
dicated that this is their new pro-
gram "And then it can be dennitely
stated that the Communist situation
in this country has never been as
bad as certain publieity-seeking gen-
tlemen have painted it" the gov-
ernment officials seated across the
desk concluded
Dykstra Returns
To Wisconsin University
C A Dykstra president of the
University of Wisconsin has gone
back to his campus and his clois-
tered halls beside that shining lake
in the Middle West He did a
historic job here in Washington as
director of the Selective Service sys-
tern and first head of the Na-
tional Defense Mediation board two
great jobs that required all as Ste-
venson put it that a man has of
fortitude and delicacy
Mr Dykstra as readers of this
column know did not get his knowl-
edge of men and government solely
from books He was a successful
city manager of Cincinnati he held
positions of civic responsibility in
Cleveland Chicago and Los An
geles But he was chosen tr) head
the draft because of his deep 3nd
sympathetic understanding of Amer-
ican youth When he left Washing-
ton I asked Mr Dykstra for an ex-
clusive two-paragraph valedictory
Just for the Western Newspaper
Union readers This is what he said
about his experience as head of
selective service:
"My experience with selective
service convinced me that the young
men of America are neither soft nor
indiferent They can be counted
upon to give a good account of them-
selves Moreover public accept-
ance of selective service has proved
to be much more favorable than
was anticipated"
Dykstra is an optimist but not
one who can't see the hole as well
as the doughnut
"My experience on the Mediation
board" l'ee told me "makes me
optimistic that labor and manage-
ment are developing a better under-
standing and a more co-operative
approach to a developing industrial
jurisprudence On the whole there
has been a minimum of recalci-
trancy on both sides The appoint-
ment of Davis is absolutely right"
Train Workers
For Defense Industry
One record of achievement in the
defense program has come out
over a hundred per cent better than
promised and you hear very little
about it Much of the credit goes
to a little dynamic man from out
where the tall corn grows
He is John Studebaker of Iowa
commirsioner of education and he
is the drive behind the federal pro-
gram of training for defense indus-
tries Com—csioner Studebaker prom-
ised congress last October that the
vocational training groups of the na-
tion would produce 700000 workers
trained for service at lathe or bench
by June 33 1941 He now reports
that 152NO have actually been
trained Moreover although the
one-third more than the regular pro-
gram was undertaken the cost of
the Washington end was only about
1 per cent and less money was used
for the entire project than con-
gress had originally appropriated—
an achievement in these days!
Tile average cost of training per
man hour was 21 cents and L-:i7 per
cent of the total amount of money
spent in the training was spent in
the local community That was part
of the Studebaker idea—keeping the
training decentralized—using the lo-
cal schools shops equipment and
teaching force—leaving the running
of the program to labor industry
and the local school ofncials This
not only proved efficient but it
served to bring labor and industry
together on a thousand advisory
committees which were formed all
over the country Labor and indus-
try each furnished 35'3 members of
theze irnrnittees The rest were
made up of consUltants Five hun-
dred systems provided the machin-
ery to caery out this task and they
werked 24 hours a day to do it
BRIEFS
by Baukhace
All the tall tales don't come out of
Vashington It is reported that in
Mentezuma Ga Mrs Christine
! Baldwin p:anted SOnle Paul Neyron
roses last fall which bloomed
heartily in the early spring A short
wriie later according to the Irosch-
! ton (Ga) News she found the rose
bushos were covered wirh black-
terries Can you beat that?
A"4
WHO'S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F PARTON
Features—WNLI Service)
IkeT EW YORK—The arrny could
1'4 use a few top-flighttBroadway
playwrights particularly those who
have had war experience But it
already has
Armylmpresario -
ns own Injects Realism Realism vid Belasco
War games
Into War Games to condition
our new army of 1400000 men for
real combat now provide the ut-
most in dramatic realism There
are machines to simulate faithfully
the screaming of Stuka bombers
there will be the roar of gunfire—
with blank cartridges of curse
there will be parachute attacks ma-
chine gunning from airplanes and
every possible device to keep the
boys from forgetting that "they're
in the army now"
Gen Lesley James McNair
chief of staff of general head-
quarters a smr11 keen alert
man who seems omnipresent in
the army camps is the impre-
sario in this the army's biggest
and most serious venture in ap-
plied theatricals He has had
long experience in war games
and has convincingly portrayed
them as invaluable rehearsals
for the real thing not only for
the instruction imparted but for
the unconscious reflex condi-
tioning of nerves and sensitivity
to the now heightened tumult of
war
When the nucleus of a general
headquarters stall was formed July
Z5 1940 General IltIoNair was put
at the head of it That subsequently
placed in his hands the intensified
and expanded war-training maneu-
vers far exceeding anything ever
before attempted and last Septem-
ber he took over the entire training
program of the rapidly increasing
army
11 is regarded as an undertak-
ing of the utmost importance
and President Roosevelt recent-
ly promoted the army Belasco
front major general to the rank
of temporary lieutenant general
His knowledge of war is by no
means confined to make-believe
He fought with the field artil-
lery in France and won the U S
Distinguished Service medal and
the French Legion of Honor He
is a native of Minnesota and was
graduated from West Point in
THIS writer went to the wedding
L of a young woman friend a few
weeks ago The bridegroom was
a tall loose-geared bespectacled
young an man
Perchance Radio she
Beam Led Inventor chanting grin
and a thick
To Comely Bride thatch of
brownish hair The bride told us
he was a scientist We should have
known that he was Russell Varian
the inventor with his brother Sigurd
and several other associates cf the
Klystron radio generator which
American technicians say is better
than anything the British have in
their new plane-spotting system and
which has made blind-flying in fog
or night like a trip around the block
in a baby-carriage
Russell Varian worked his way
through Stanford odd-Jobbing for the
professors His brother Sigurd was
a flight captain with the Pan-American
Airways cn Mexican and Cen-
tral American routes One day Rus-
sell gct a letter from SigIrd in
which Sigurd said he was tired of
ramming around in fog and night
and they cught to get together and
work out a radio beam which horn-
ing planes could really follow Rus-
sell thought that was a good idea
so Sigurd brought him his savings
of $4CJ3 and the boys set up a
workshop at Halcyon
Their facilities just wouldn't
do Dr David L Webster head
of the department of physics at
Stanford provided a laboratory
gave them effective aid in every
possible way and made them
research associates of the uni-
versity but the university could
provide no funds Sigurd's S4000
dwindled to S47 The young men
were living sketchily when the
Klystron came through A rep-
resentative of the Bureau of Civ-
il Aeronautics put them in touch
with the Sperry Gyroscope Co
Sperry hurriedly plunked down
a check for $25000 and built a
laboratory for Russell in Garden
City Long island
Russell came to New York Iris
radio beam had guided him straight
to Miss Jane Martinson a comely
research worker in biochemistry
niece of Miss Bessie Beatty of the
current radio team of "Betty and
Bill" It was a case of love at first
sight on the part of both hence the
wedding just a fortnight later in
the East Nineteenth street residence
of Adolph Berle now occupied by
Miss Beatty Bride and bridegroom
both tireless hikers had their out-
door tcgs ready for a long va-aton
and honeymoon tramp throug
New England
Home Lessons Cure for
Dance-Floor Apologies
Excuse-me's"—this un-
A happy pair of dancers should
be called Every other step they
take in the smart Westchester
brings crushed toes bumped knees
and a flood of apologies
Such accidents don't beset your
dancing if you practice steps at
home Then you glide easily
along make a hit witn your part-
ners And simple to learn steps
from diagrams
1:ln at dances in admiration!
Our 32page booket riVeS diagrams and
directions for basic seps and variations
of the waltz Westchester fox-trot shag
rumba Samba Conga and tango also the
Peabody and Lindy Hopi Tells how to
lead and follow combine steps Send
your'order to:
READERHOME SERVICE
CS Sixth Avenue Neer Toth City
Enclose 10 cents In coin for your
copy of HOW TO DO ME NEWEST
DANCE STEPS AND VARIATIONS
Name
Address
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Premature Genius
It seldom happers that a re-
mature shoot of genius ever ar-
rives at rnaturity—Quintilian
I: E E ri BEAT
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start ody by sprinkling lealcan Heat
Powder in shoes L: i
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tiredness too Little cost lots of con)
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fort Try Mai Heat Powder today
'Unknown Future
A wise God shrouds the future
In obscure darkness—Horace
rAft3tiorsAPisoctis
Come re:ax to thill crrl r
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bthin hel':1--t111 mune-al Irvt1 but
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Sitn Sormirs INPIrt- 115 Cedar Cuodes
limns Ito Snags Plationdil Pert Ark
Toaay's oivularity
of
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sure:e must
xepted as evidence
of t oe
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" ciinion tUr7Ottl
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uSo test the value of
roan's under es aCtite
laboratory conditions
nbesicians to aorrove every word
of ateettuing yott read the ch:ectire of
whion is on:y to recommend Poaii s
as a rood idiurette treatment f diorder
of tie kidnry function end for rtited oL
tie rain and worry it ousts
if more reoi--e were 'are of bow the
i'dnees must cortstani2y rernie wasie
that cannot stay in the b'mod sathout in-
iurY to hes: tbere wouii be better tin-
dersthod Tie or why the vh:e su4ens
whrn arLd diutetic medics
11Cq4 be rn-re Cr emr!oyeii
tit:ruing scanty or too fre:uent
Con 1411C11CS VtArn of disturbed Iv inc
function Yon may suffer tarring back
rersisteut btA1-xce of cd!
tines& triune up rtleis owe line poi:t
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il t'lyed ott
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 42, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 17, 1941, newspaper, July 17, 1941; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2301566/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.