The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 27, 1942 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Luther Register and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Allies Take Offensive in Pacific Area
With Naval Attack on Solomon Islands
British Thwart Sabotage Plan in India
Nazis Reap Profits From Russian Drive
(I DITOlt'S hinTF't When opinions are epressed In thse columns thy are these or
estern rienseAper t nien's bras analysis and not necessarily of this nelisaaper)
lieleased by Western Newspaper Unlon
0 ITENSI V E :
In Southwest Pacific
Exactly eight months after the
bombing of I'earl Harbor—eigiit
months of gloom-laden defensive
warfare—Allied air sea and land
forces carried the battle to the en-
emy in the Southwest Pacific thea-
ter of war
In a fierce battle for the Solomon
Islands the United States fleet and
warships of the Pacific flotilla struck
heavy ccntinuing blows at Japa-
nese bases in America's first great
offensive of the war
Adm Chester V Nimitz U S
naval commander in the Pacific
stressed the force of enemy resist-
ance The fight was at the northern
boundary of the Coral sea where a
U S task force in May inflicted the
first great naval defeat in history
upon Japan
Although not discussed in official
communiques navy spokesnen
rnade it clear that the assault on
the Solomons was the first major
attempt to regain Japanese-seized
territory Equally clear was the
fact that all possible fire power was
being brought to bear upon the en-
emy This would include army and
navy bombing planes shelling from
big guns of naval shrface ships and
possibly strong land action
Some thousands of miles north a
Pacific fleet task force had bom-
barded Jap ships and installations
at Kiska one of three Aleutian is-
hands upon which an estimated
10000 Japanese have entrenched
themselves
LABOR:
Another Crossroads
As "peace" committees of both
AFL and CIO begin preparations for
their meeting to bring about labor
peace both Philip Murray CIO pres-
Ident and William Green head of
AFL Issued public statements indi-
cating that they favored the objec-
tive There were definite signs howev-
er that the method of reaching the
objective might encounter some dif-
ficulty along the way For in one
of his statements on the subject
President Green urged that CIO:
"come bark to the AFL the House
of Labor"
Later in a speech to the Impor-
tant CIO United Automobile Air-
craft and Agricultural Implement
Workers of America meeting in
their convention in Chicago Philip
Murray avoided all reference to this
statement But he did say: " I
hope I pray that their (the AFL's)
attitude will have changed that ex-
perience has taught the need for giv-
ing recognition to the aspirations
and objectives of those organizations
rtnup MURRAY
" hoped and prayed"
which make up the Congress of In-
dustrial Organizations"
Biggest stumbling blocks in labor
peace talks for the seven years that
the two groups had gone their own
way had been persona'ties and the
refusal or inability of AFL to recog-
nize CIO's organization of unions by
grouping all workers in an industry
into one union
As far as personalities were con-
cerned Philip Murray had by-
passed John L Lewis by appointing
to the CIO peace committee mem-
bers not necessarily committed to
the head of potent United Mine
Workers Lewis and Green had con
stantly differed on peace terms in
the past and with the former out of
the front trenches (but still very
much in the fight) some observers
were forecasting an outside chance
for a united labor front—united for
U S victory
GENEVA:' Guglielmo Ferrero
noted Italian historian and foe of
the Fascists died here at the age
of 71 Seven years ago his books
were selzed by the Mussolini govern-
ment and he was forced to flee Italy
He had taught history at the Uni-
versity of Geneva ever since
Among his most noted books was
The Grandeur and Decadence of
Home"
Action
As the crisis in the latest drive
for India's independence ap-
proached Britain acted with speed
and surprise By official decree
Mohandas K Gandhi and almost 200
other All-India Congress party lead-
ers were arrested as they prepared
to launch their nation-wide non-
violent civil disobedience movement
as a protest against Britain's re-
fusal to grant India immediate free-
dom Some sources reported that the
British acted because it was learned
that an extensive sabotage cam-
paign against the war effort was
about to get under way
Rank and file of Gandhi's party
did not take their rebuke quietly
Dispatches from New Delhi report-
ed rioting in Bombay and Ahmeda-
bad In addition government grain
stores were looted in protest against
the British action
It was the sixth time that Gandhi
had handed himself over to govern-
ment officials in his life-long fight for
Indian independence As he gave
himself up he called upon his fol-
lowers to remember the slogan:
"Either we get freedom or die"
Technically Gandhi was not being
Imprisoned but he was to be kept
under "strict surveillance"
Britain's attitude seemed to be
summed up in the thought that while
India's independence was important
the most vital problem of the United
Nations at present was the winning
of a war
GRAIN AND OIL:
To the Nazis
Though the cost in men and ma-
chines has been terrific the Nazis
are already reaping the benefits of
their 1942 drive for the oil and grain
riches of the Caucasus
This was evidenced by an admis-
sion on the part of Red Star offi-
cial Russian army newspaper that
already the Germans were shipping
trainloads of foodstuffs from the Ku-
ban area Kuban is one of Russia's
finest farm sectors but now has been
practically cut off from Soviet con-
trol However the Nazis were not har-
vesting all the grain nor pumping
all the oil that the Russians were
forced to abandon For as they re-
treated the Cossack defenders were
employing the "scorched earth"
polif:y to the best of their ability
Grain fields and granaries crammed
with wheat were blazing as the Ger-
mans advanced to them Oil wells
in the Maikop field were blown up
by Soviet troops Yet experts were
forced to admit that the Nazi prize
that remained was worth the battle
losses For these are the things
Germany needs :o continue lighting
—oil and grain
GRINE ENDING
For Saboteurs
The greatest execution in the his-
tory of the nation's capital took
place when six of eight Nazi sabo-
teurs who came to this country by
submarine to cripple the war effort
were electrocuted in the District of
Columbia Jail's electric chair
It was an hour and a half after
the first of the plotters was pro-
nounced dead that the White house
made its official announcement The
six were Herbert Hans Haupt Hein-
rich Harm Heinek Edward John
Kerling Hermann Otto Neubauer
Richard Quinn and Werner Thiel
Two other saboteurs escaped death
by aiding the prosecution One of
them Ernest Peter Burger was sen-
tenced to life in prison at hard la-
bor The other George John Dasch
was sentenced to 30 years at hard
labor
Meanwhile the nation's first im-
portant sedition trial since the out-
break of the war came to a close
when a federal court jury in Indian-
apolis found William Dudley Pei ley
founder of the Fascist Silver Shirts
guilty ef criminal sedition
Pei ley's co - defendants Agnes
Marion Henderson his secretary
and Lawrence Drown were found
guilty only of conspiracy Pel ley
was found guilty on all II counts in
the indictment
Even as the erstwhile dictator of
the Silver Shirts braced himself for
the penalties ahead the American
public demenstrated again its stern
temper when Federal Judge Arthur
J Tuttle pronounced a death sen-
tence for treason upon Max Stephan
Detroit restaurant owner for be-
tvaying his edopted country by be-
friending an escaped Nazi prisoner
1 II I G II L I G II T S in the week's news
-
IVASIIINGTON: Manufacture of
typewriters except for a small
quantity to be produced for the gov-
ernment by one factory will end
October 31 it was announced by the
War Production board in an order
released here The order likewise
limited the production of most type-
writer companies between July 1
and October 1 to 1212 per cent of the
machines sold by them last year
STEEL:
Probe 'Black Market'
In answer to charges that a
"black market" in steel existed
where "immediate delivery was
made from bulging warehouses scat-
tered over the nation" two govern-
ment investigations were immedi-
ately begun
First probe was undertaken by
Price Administrator Len Ilenderson
after charges made by Frank Hig-
gins associated with his father in a
New Orleans shipbuilding yard that
SENATOR HARRY S TRUMAN
negligence or willful misconduct"
his company had bought steel from
such markets at higher premiums
The second investigation was un-
dertaken by Congressman Carl Pe-
terson chairman of the house sub-
committee investigating the mari-
time commission's cancellation last
month of the Higgins' company's
contract to build 200 liberty ships
because of an alleged steel shortage
Meanwhile Chairman Harry S
Truman of the senate committee in-
vestigating national defense charged
the navy department's bureau of
ships with "negligence or willful
misconduct" in connection with the
construction of tank-landing boats
Senator Truman's charges contained
in a letter to Navy Secretary Frank
Knox referred to the navy's insist-
ence on substituting its own models
of tank-landing boats for ships of
proved value built for this purpose
by the Higgins company in New Orleans
HOUSEWIVES:
Face Job 'Draft'
Spokesmen for the manpower
commission intimated that one out
of every four American housewives
between the ages of 18 and 44 may
be needed in munitions jobs for this
country to attain full war produc-
tion It was indicated that a nationwide
occupational registration of women
might be undertaken as a means of
cataloguing the country's total fem-
inine adult resources
Paul V McNutt manpower chief
has estimated that about 5000000
more women must be placed in war
jobs by the end of 1943
CARGO PLANES:
Get Green Light
A "go-ahead green light" for the
construction of vast cargo planes in
months to come was given by both
the army and navy
Speak lag for the army Lieut
Gen Henry H Arnold commander
of the army air forces told a senate
military affairs committee that 21
per cent of all multiple-engine
bomber planes to be produced for
the remainder of 1012 will be cargo
or transport carriers Including all
planes of comparable flying range
he added 30 per cent of the total
output will be essentially for cargo
purposes
General Arnold revealed that car-
go and transport carriers now being
produced are used to move para-
troops and airborne infantry to tow
gliders and to carry supplies to com-
bat zones Planes are moving about
2500000 tons of material a week he
said
Speaking for the navy Rear Ad-
miral John IL Towers chief of the
Bureau of Aeronautics disclosed
that the navy is speeding a huge pro-
gram for building cargo planes
SUBMARINES:
Lull Near US
That American coastal waters are
no longer a soft spot for German
submarines was the view expressed
by British officials in a communi-
que from London Consequently it
was believed that Axis U-boats had
been forced to seek other waters in
which to prey on United Nations'
commerce
Adoption of the convoy syLtem in
the Panama and Caribbean areas
plus increased air defenses were cit-
ed as coinciding with a decreased
scale of submarine attacks
American military authorities
commenting on the recent drop in
submarine sinkings warned how-
ever that the Nazis might now be
preparing to bring the full brunt
of their underseas attack' against the
heavily convoyed supply lines across
the North Atlantic
Increasing Allied effectiveness
against submarines was said to be
due to the fact that the "bottleneck
regarding engines for submarine
chasers defensive craft and dirigi
bles has been broken and defensivs
craft are corning forward in greats
numbers"
THE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
Rationing Chief Lauds
Public for Cooperation
Most 'Kicks' Come From Pressure Groups
OPA Administrator Points Out
By Leon Henderson
Administrator of the OPA
Moralise the present ritioning proeram Is
at paramount interes4 to every person this
paper presents an exelndve artittle written
tor Meni hors of the Yostern Newspaper
Union syndivate by Leti Henderson price
control a dim TItrator trte views expressed
are those of Mr Itendetswit
There are still a lot of rough
spots in rationing but we know
we're on the right track because
most of the kicks we're getting
are coming from the pressure
groups and comparatively few
from the public
And as more and more ration-
ing becomes necessary we're
going to make more mistakes
But we're going to find them
out and cure them one at a
time because that's the way
progress is made
While rationing on the modern
scale is unprecedented rationing it-
self is nothing new to Americans
As a matter of fact it's older than
our government itself because the
Pilgrims used it at Plymouth Rock
to weather the hardships of days of
scarcity Washington of course
was the nation's first rationing ad-
ministrator Indomitable courage
and rationing brought his men
through Valley Forge Rationing
played a great part in the settling of
the West because many of those
hardy pioneers would never have
made it across the desert if they
hadn't pooled all their supplies and
shared alike
Fight for Life Itself
Now that our nation faces a fight
for life itself we're using this valu-
able tool to insure the necessities of
life to every American so that we
can all pitch in on the one big job
of winning the war That's what ra-
tioning really amounts to The pub-
lic I believe is realizing that ra-
tioning is a protective measure for
the individual and the country in-
stead of an unnecessary restrictive
device and they are supporting it
by and large as they are supporting
our other necessary war measures
Most of the criticisms that come to
us from the public are from people
who really don't understand the pur-
poses of rationing programs and
why they are necessary or those
who have been misled by selfish in-
terests seeking to destroy rationing
into the belief that it is not neces-
sary or that it is being done simply
to make our people aware of the
seriousness of the war
Six Commodities Rationed
In the first eight moiths of war
for our country we have had to
ration six commodities: sugar tires
autos typewriters bicycles and in
the East gasoline
Very briefly here are the reasons:
We can't ship enough sugar
Into the United States to give
everyone all he wants of it
therefore we ration sugar so
everyone can have a fair share
Our principal source of rub-
ber is cut off we can't make
enough tires for everyone there-
fore we ration tires to serve our
country's most vital needs
We need our auto factories for
war production No more autos
So we ration what autos we have
r-'
Urbana Ill—Folks can't help but
know when they possess that much
sought after prze—buoyant health
according to Mrs Nettie Essel-
baugh home economics nutritionist
University of Illinois
The fact is they feel wonderful
They feel capab:e of tackling most
any job They're pleasantly tired
at the end ef a fall day but have a
satisfied happy feeling of having
done a job yell
And they're all set to begin again
on hand to serve the country's
greatest needs
We need all the typewriter fac-
tories for manufacture of shells
gun parts and other war sup-
plies Typewriter production
stops so we ration the typewrit-
ers we have on hand to meet our
most essential needs
We need the metals and rubber
that go into bicycles for war
production No more bicycles
So we ration the bicycles we
have left to those who really
need them
In the East we can't get
enough gasoline because we
haven't enough tankers or other
facilities to transport all it takes
to run all cars as usual without
hampering our war effort So
we ration gasoline to give every
essential user enough for his ac-
tual needs
Each Problem a New One
While the underlying purposes of
these rationing programs can be
stated that simply the working out
of the machinery to make them ef-
fective and fair to our 130 million
people is quite another matter Even
if we had the benefit of long ex-
perience in such work the launch-
ing of a new rationing program
would still be a man-sized job But
to work out rationing systems for
Constructive
Criticism Invited
The public has been wonder-
fully patient because most peo-
ple know how difficult such a
job must be The constructive
criticism of the large numbers
of persons who have written to
us and of the loyal newspapers
of the country have been a great
aid in helping us plan soundly
1Ve eagerly invite such construc-
tive criticism--Henderson
130 million people is something new
under the sun Never before in his-
tory has it been done Every prob-
lem that arises is a new problem
We can't call in the experts be-
cause there are no experts We
have to work it out on what seems
to be the soundest possible basis
and when we find we're wrong and
our plans don't work we have to
go back and change them We're
learning as we go
But we have been beset on the
other hand by another kind of criti-
cism that has not been helpful Our
rationing programs have been sub-
jected to criticisms and attacks from
enemy and selfish interests whose
sole purpose was to destroy public
confidence in rationing tc wreck the
system
These enemy attacks were de-
signed to hamper our war effort by
spreading confusion and dissatisfac-
tion on the home front as one phase
of the Axis propaganda activities in
the United States This of course
emanated from the offices of the
former Bund members and other
enemy agents and is dealt with
whenever the FBI breaks up the
work of spies and saboteurs
Downright Selfishness
But the other is the result of down-
right selfishness as opposed to the
higher interests of our war effort
There have been some—and fortu-
nately the number is small consid-
ering the size of our country—who
'v-- '-" x- r
13 aloe kiiikAiividbm&akoa
Like millions of other housewives throughout the U S Mrs Leon
Henderson wife of the Office of Price Administration's head went through
the routine of registering for her sugar rationipg book Dr Elmer S
Newton superintendent of Western high school Washington D C is fill-
ing out the application blank for Mrs Henderson
The other lady on the left is Mrs Henry Wallace wife of the vice
president
the next morning
There's no tired dragged-out feel-
ing no languid appetite headache
nervousness irritability constipa-
tion and other annoying ailment
which can be traced back to the
fact that they are not getting the
right food in the right amounts
Many ailments are so common
and generally accepted by every-
body that it never occurs to some
folks that they can help themselves
to health by eating more of the vi
' i
iPOSUI: 'C I
1-dat 1&-AmbelRT441:
LEON HENDERSON
"Neter before in history has it been
done "
have sought to wreck our rationing
programs because their own per-
sonal profits from the sale of the
rationed commodities were reduced
They have sought to do this by cit-
ing misleading figures in attempts
to prove that shortages do not exist
in the rationed commodity in which
they hold an interest and that ra-
tioning therefore should be discard-
ed These people whether they real-
ize it or not are committing an un-
patriotic act They are putting their
dollar profits ahead of their coun-
try's interests and are trying to
bargain their hopes for future free-
dom for the quick financial gain
that would come from frantic hoard-
ing by a panic-stricken people
It is not sufficient for good Ameri-
cans simply to ignore the attacks
made by these selfish interests We
should all be vocal in our denunci-
ation of such propaganda and de-
mand that every person making
such unwarranted statements de-
signed to wreck our rationing pro-
grams back those statements with
facts to prove them
End False Rumor
This does not mean that Ameri-
can citizens should be denied the
right to express their opinions on
rationing or any other subject I
am simply asking that Americans
who know the importance of assur-
ing fair orderly distribution of com-
modities that become scarce during
our war effort place every selfish
critic of rationing in the position of
having to prove everything he says
We can thus bring to an end much
of the false rumor and insidious
propaganda that has beset our ef-
forts to do a necessary job
Paint Scarcity Looms
Home Economist Gives
Hints on Its Best Use
College Station Texas--Before
long paints of many types are go-
ing to become scarce
Mrs Bernice Claytor specialist
in home improvement for the A
and M college extension service
says shortages will be felt especial-
ly in paints varnishs and enam-
els for interiors The reason is
these require natural or synthetic
resins
For some time synthetic resins
have been ear-marked for exclusive
war use and lately the War Produc-
tion board has ordered a 50 per cent
cut in the amount of natural resins
manufactured for civilian purposes
Here are some of the specialist's
suggestions for choosing and using
interior paints to the best advantage
Semi-gloss paint which washes
well and is not too harsh in ap-
pearance is suitable for kitcnens
and bathrooms
Flat paint gives a "soft" appear-
ance and is best for large areas
such as walls and ceilings It soils
less quickly than gloss paint but
it will not stand up as well under
washing
Calcimine is the cheapest wall
paint available Though it cannot
be cleaned it can be washed off
entirely and a new coat applied
The specialist cautions:
"Don't use calcimine on
smooth woodwork or on walls
which have been covered with
oil paint" The coating eventu-
ally will chip off and make later
re-painting far harder
Enamel should be used only on
very smooth surfaces for it makes
holes chips and scars more no-
ticeable Homemakers who want to avoid
the trouble of sandpapering and
planing uneven surfages should use
a gloss or semi-gloss paint instead
of enamel
With other scarcities looming
homemakers have been requested
by many universities' extension spe-
cialists and government officials to
file clippings which describe how
such material can be efficiently
used
NUTRITIONIST TELLS HOW TO GET BOUYANT HEALTH
tal "protective" foods rich in vita
mins minerals and proteins the nu-
tritionist suggested These liabili-
ties usually do not receive the at-
tention of the doctor but quietly
undermine health and stamina
Health of the teeth sharpness
of eyesight mental alertness
bone formation and mainte-
nance as well as digestive dis-
orders are influenced by what
people choose to eat—or rather
not to eat
WHO'S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F PARTON -
Consolidated Features--WNLI Releaxe
NEW YORK—Harold McCracken
explorer for the American Mu-
seum of Natural History says Japa-
nese in the Aleutians are just like
Germans in
Japs in Aleutians Florida and
Must Be Bayoneted he says fur-
Out Not Bombed thermore
that we can't
bomb them out They can hole up
like gophers in the native huts and
in Mr McCracken's view'must be
"chased with bayonets into the
Bering sea" if we are to dislodge
them at all
This should qualify as expert tes-
timony Mr McCracken knows the
Aleutians In July 1928 heading
the Stoll-McCracken expedition he
unearthed a sarcophagus on top of
an almost inaccessible Aleutian rock
islet containing the mummies of
three adults and a child This cul-
minated his 11-year search for stone
age remains along the Aleutian
land-bridge
As an archeologist and explorer
the author of a number of books
he has studiously pieced out the his-
toric jig-saw puzzle of his various
findings and taken due account of
their bearing on war and peace and
the present and future of mankind
In 1934 he elaborated a plan for an
"international grand jury" to end
war which in some aspects was
the first of several suggestions for
fusing individual interests across
national boundaries rather than
grouping sovereign nations More
pertinent to his current observation
is his previous conclusion that the
Japanese invasion of the Aleutians
was long planned and carefully pre-
pared Mr McCracken a lean gentle
man with horn-rimmed spec-
tacles doesn't look like a man
who has killed about 20 Kodiak
grizzly bears but he has and
such encounters are a minor de-
tail of his desperate adventures
In shipwrecks blizzards and
lonely treks in the frozen wilder-
ness It was in 1915 that he first went
to Alaska heading an expedition for
Ohio State university his alma
matter In 1919 and 1920 he placered
pay dirt on the Alaska peninsula
and into 1922-23 headed up a moving
picture expedition again for Ohio
State university to film big game
This led him into the production of
travel and documentary films
0 NE of our first stories as a be-
ginning reporter in Chicago
was a rock and sock fight between
some Jugoslays and another Balkan
group down
Milzhailovitch around the
Still in There Hegewisch
Socking the Axis steel mills
The Jugo-
slays were outnumbered but they
won
They were more versatile than
the opposition better in knee and
elbow work and could land a chunk
of slag or a slug of pig-iron on an
exposed skull with skill and author-
ity Their own skulls seemed
strangely resistant to such missiles
As to the fight they seemed
to enjoy it and when it was over
set up a patriotic song which
ranged far over the slag heaps
and far into the night
It would be nice to recall that the
defeated challengers were Italians
but they weren't and that good news
has been held for another day
The Jugoslav guerrillas 16 bat-
talions of them are chasing the
Italians out of the former province
of Bosnia At the time of the Axis
attack on Jugoslavia we recalled
that Hegewisch battle and would
have made a bet with any taker
that something like that would hap-
pen In the above and other en-
counters we have noted that in fight-
ing the Jugoslays seem to have their
mind on their work more than any
other combatants And again they
seem to enjoy it
His flaring black mountaineer's
mustache has become a gonfalon
of hope to those who want to believe
that victory may be won by a stout
heart and not necessarily by the
biggest tanks It is reported that
3000 Italians have been captured
or killed in the last two weeks and
that the general's forces have now
wrested 11000 square miles from
the Axis They didn't try to make
their second front a jug-handled
deal
The rocky-faced General Mikhailo-
vitch a colonel of artillery several
years before the war came out of
the First World war with a strong
distaste for the German military
clique
When the blitzkrieg hit he was
invited to join officials and army
leaders in a plane night to Cairo
He said he had another engagement
went back to the mountains and
emerged with a few hundred of his
hard-rock boys started savage
forays and later worked them into
refully planned and operated mill-
i:1 actions
A
of
i
ii
I
it
I
i
S
4
4
IP
41MEEMEMMIEMIMMEMEMEMUI
-
OPA Adtriinitrator
'''-'"' WHO'S
t6
t
1 -'—! y a
NEWS
!4 4:t r
1
''''''''
4 - '- 'r't
' A
$
--
-ii74
tew '
'‘ k
44 fi t
THIS
j
' 11 i
1 ': '' ' WEEK
1 i :
te
t
c r t
By LEMUEL F PARTON
Consolid Ited Features--WNLI nelealle
A
EW YORIC—Harold McCracken
explorer for the American Mu-
' ': ' scum of Natural History says Japs-
g ii ) 1 I nese in the Aleutians are just like
' Germans in
ItmubmkO I I 1 ' Japs in Aleutians Florida and
A4
1e3: I -- Must Be Bayoneted he says fur
ISTEEL: n : IL - T dr v rl
'
t 1
t
t
t
'" - ': 10 U g '' l 0'
' f i A c t A 1 ' A
-I‘ -1c - '--A
r-- -- --0" - ?r- -:- t- e- :-
k's- ' -ts'"''''--s-' ' ' ' ' - — Ni ' 43j'x4'-!44''''''4'"'-: 43 al 4---1-
: — -- r 4 ' --4 lo - -t i- 'CO -4 ': w i' '
Ar ' --- 4 ' 't-1::1t 4 i i - : 1 t
i
'$:odiltx4 '— I 4 '' ratAk-2i :i: ::I
1
: :'::' z '''' t' -4'175 r --L'S-4 -':-- t '
- et ::: i t I
' ' '" A -::' ''' 3'1''-'''''‘''' -: :1
t$'' 1:ti'-:i
'- -' I
41 ti :At ' ''''' -: 1 'A tr:k! 1 I i & - - c 'r ' ' - t T":
'' '-:'' ! ' ' - " I tz 11‘ -7'e i'V A ' V :'
s "'t
1 4 CR A i'1 2s' ' 4 1 ' '4"- --i' k-444vtt''0AA ' ' A - 404
: - t" s4 t" - n--4 4 ' Sf': -'7t4
' 1 - ' 101-
F' "Ai 1 - ' 3- '' it:4Y -
-:
:-i:7- 5r-stmi-kr-77777t-to-: :-1 ':'a Ikl::!:
lo--e 2' ' '':' Irovt-Tr-""--- !slat S:L1! 4- '''''' 4-- -I : '4-0-'14' 4 4 4 ' ' '1: 4 ' 1 ''''' LP
' " - ' : - -Z4 oteak ''' -i f ''' V ::"' :: '' ''''' :' I 1 ‘4 1 A ' :r
t' '' '''''': ':'" - 4 4 '!" -f-44' 'gt!:x7 : ' 4:1 :1 t: ' - '92!
: '::' '!-' :::
:: '!4: '1 ut '': 1'' 71 '--' "-'-::::
: " ' : 4 - :' 5 : ' -4' I - ' '' e- '''' ' ' ''
'v46-A-ImAz44-41a6io ifi-amo0ak :IJ
0 4 t 0:- t k
z - — '
p '
':' ' f5-4
- &
It'
1
- 1
--111-' I' 01"0 -p - -
'11c
I4
! vm4' e 4
'o
:3 -o lc ov
V 441" '1 ' ! I'''''
i
f ' it' t
!-? L gt:
'
4
17 ‘
t'4 ' 1)
11 ig1-: -:
' ‘‘ s : vor 7:t44 Ii::1::"
ik‘
s- --i5- :
1 ''' ' -2S t' ''''s!' ) -
: t - 1
A
!S:1
''' N
01 '-—A' ' 1-1f:-L-2:4
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 27, 1942, newspaper, August 27, 1942; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2301624/m1/2/?q=technical+manual: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.