The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1943 Page: 7 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.
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''' THE STORY SO FAR: The story of
'I their part in the battle for the Philip
'I a pines is being told by four of the five
II a v al officers who are all that is left
L
of Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron 3 They
1
are Lieut John Bulkeley (now Lleuten
ant Commander) squadron commander
Lieut R B Kelly second-in-command
1 and Ensigns Anthony Akers and George
E Cox Jr March 11 Lieut Butkeley
A delivered to the squadron their secret or-
den s to take General MacArthur's party
and some additional personnel to the
1 southern islands where they would be
met by transport planes which would
carry General MacArthur to his new
headquarters The weather was bad
Lieut Keliy is 'peaking
CHAPTER XI
—
"Shortly thereafter we were sup-
posed to make a landfall—an island
about half a mile square at which
point we must turn in order to make
the final landfall which would bring
us into port
"With such a wind and sea we
were probably retarded but by how
much? I had to guess at it Also
the helmsman was having a wres-
tling match with the wheel—it was
all he could do to keep within t)n
degrees on either side of the corn-
pass course—whisli meant a possi-
ble error of twenty degrees We
i missed the island entirely in the
dark and from then on until dawn
1
I changed course as I thought nec-
essary Dawn came at six and we
1
i saw land ahead a point which I
i thought was the peninsula Just west
1 of Cagayan our destination I
i
2 showed it to the Admiral and he
I shook his head with satisfaction
q
: "We were up to top speed now
i carbon burned from the motors and
4
1 at 8:30 we sighted the light on the
i
0 point at Cagayan's entrance We
'a slowed to let the 41 boat lead the
-
way as it had the channel charts
"General Sharp commanding of-
ficer of the island of Mindanao was
4 down to meet us and as soon as we
could see the pier we woke up Gen-
- eral MacArthur" said Bulkeley
"He shook the salt water out of his
i gold general's cap flipped it on his
14 head—somehow it always lands at
a jaunty angle seems to go with
his cane—and looked around with
1 his jaw set—a fine figure of a sol-
i 1 dier
1 "Then lie said to me 'Bulkeley
I'm giving every officer and man
here the Silver Star for gollantry
You've taken roe out of the jaws of
death and I won't forget it!'
"Still later that afternoon he told
me: 'If the boats never accomplish
anything more and were burned
now they'd have earned their keep
a thousand times over If possible
when I get to Melbourne I'll get you
and your key men out'
"We arrived on the thirteenth
Four flying fortresses from Austra
lia were supposed to have met the
T General One cracked up on the
take-oft two came down in the Aus-
tralian desert and the one which
finally arrived had supercharger
trouble and had to turn around and
I go back without any passengers so
MacArthur didn't get away until the
eighteenth
' "We told the crews to keep quiet
not to let it get out whom we'd
brought in so the Japs wouldn't
find out and maybe attack while
MacArthur was waiting"
I "The afternoon we arrived" said
Kelly "Bulkeley told us what Mac-
Arthur had said about getting us
out if he could It was good news
but we weren't exactly excited For
if the air force couldn't get even
one serviceable plane up here from
Australia to take MacArthur out
what chance had we?
"Our job I knew would be to
fight out the war in the southern
Islands—with torpedoes while we
had them and on land with rifles
when they were expended So bet
ter not get our hopes up
"The boats were to be anchored
off the beach and before I left mine
I told my executive officer to check
on the anchor—we were close to the
beach and there was a lot of surf
pounding the coral Just to make
doubly sure I went on the forecastle
for a last inspection myself The
line seemed taut I tugged to make
sure and it came loose in my hand
" 'Start the engines immediately!
They were started in thirty seconds
but five seconds later there was a
grinding scrape—one propeller had
hit bottom The other engine conked
out and when we did get it going it
was too late the waves were slap-
ping at us broadside each breaker
driving us farther on the beach
"I yelled over to the 41 boat to
get under way and give us a tow
but by the time we'd tied her line
onto ours we were stuck—hard and
fast We worked furiously four hours
until the tide had gone out and by
midnight we were solid as concrete
in water so shallow that now there
were only three feet of water aft
a it and less than a foot forward Im-
I possible to get off that night I
i went to bed disgusted
"Next morning I was up at five
and there she was high and dry ex-
cept for six inches of water at her
It ? stern and a crowd of natives gawk-
ing It all happened because the
anchor shackle had parted—the
threads stripped It was the old
story—continuous usage and no re-
placement of parts
"Sunday we were again up at
dawn We had persuaded the army
to lend us a sergeant and a work-
ing party of native troops and we
started digging and pounding away
THEY 'WERE
p ONE M g:
00 WHITE 46 7f4z
at the coral the propellers and rud-
ders had chewed intn
"I called the crew into the for-
ward compartment and told them
the skipper had left it up to us I
talked about what the old boat had
done to date with them in it—sunk
two ships and two landing boats
So now were we going to let this be
her end—sit by and watch the surf
pound her to pieces? Or were we
going to get her off?
" 'You're damn right we're going
to get her off!' they said and some-
one suggested maybe we could hire
work gangs of natives to help us
whereupon the whole crowd started
pulling money out of their pockets
and piling it on the table They'd
had no pay since the start of the
war but since they'd been down
here in Mindanao they'd had shore
leave and a chance to play poker
with the army The government
could cut the cost of the war by
just paying the army and then giv-
ing the sailors a chance to play
poker with them
"We hired what men we could
and all of us got to work with them
digging out those razor-sharp coral
boulders with our naked hands But
there were other boulders fifty yards
out We got some dynamite and
worked all one afternoon pounding
holes in them and blowing them up
With our money we hired natives
driving carabao to pull pieces away
at the rate of one peso for the na-
tive and another for the carabao
"We were about ready now for
the test" said Lieutenant Kelly
"Another army tug showed up We
hitched a line onto it we bridled the
wheelhouse of the first tug with a
line and as the tide came in we
took soundings The 34 boat needed
five foot of water to float—that
"Ail of us got to work digging out
those coral boulders"
meant we'd had to dig a two-foot
hole under her—had we done it?
"High tide was nine o'clock at
night At 8:45 the two tugs started
a steady pull she didn't budge The
water churned as we took sound-
ings As nine approached we sig-
naled the tugs to give everything
they had At 9:03 the 34 gave a
sudden lurch—she was free and
would fight once morel But first
something had to be done about her
back end—rudders struts and pro-
pellers were a jumble of bent steel
"Before he left for Del Monte the
skipper had told us he'd heard of a
little machine shop up the coast at
Anaken which might possibly have
tools to straighten out steel if by
some miracle we got her free So
we begged a tug from an army
colonel to tow us up there We
were gone ten days and I missed
one of the high spots of the whole
campaign while we were gone"
"It wasn't much" Bulkeley in-
sisted "Just one of those things
where they thank you if you do it
but give you hell if you fail The
army called me in and said that
President Quezon was over on Ne-
gros Island and if he could be
brought over here they hoped to
get him to Australia by plane The
trip to Negros was risky—seven Jap
destroyers were loose in the vicinity
Probably to cut off Quezon's escape
So they weren't going to order it
"So we left at seven o'clock—I
was in the 41 boat and Akers was
commanding the 35 Off Apo Island
we sighted one Jap destroyer but
luckily she didn't see us and we
could dodge around the island in
time It was one o'clock when we
entered Dumaguete—it was pitch-
dark both the town and the harbor
were blacked out We had no chart
—I'd never been there before—and
when we pulled up to the pier—no
President! However his aide Ma-
jor Soriano was there to meet us
He said three hours ago after we
had already left Mindanao Quezon
had got a telegram from General
Wainwright ordering him to cancel
the trip—there were so many Jap
craft in the neighborhood it was
WNUSEATUIZES
TIIE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
:
all mil
too risky But Soriano said as long
as I was here maybe we could go
over to the President's home—it was
about forty-five kilometers away—
and he might change his mind We
went ripping over there in Sariano's
car at sixty miles an hour Quezon
was up dressed and considerably
Interested He listened to us looked
me over very carefully—I had a
long black beard then which must
have been quite impressive—and
finally said he'd go (Later on when
he saw me in Melbourne shaved he
said he'd never disregarded Wain-
wright's orders if he'd known he
was riding with a mere child of
thirty) Anyway Quezon and his
family were loaded into cars and
we were off
"Meanwhile I'd left Akers on pa
trol outside the harbor If a Jap
destroyer came nosing around I
didn't want him to cut oft our re-
treat and figured Akers could han-
dle him"
"I was riding back and forth
about two miles offshore in my 35
boat" said Akers "keeping my eye-
balls peeled for any of these seven
Jap destroyers when all of a sud-
den there was a thud and a splinter-
ing noise—we had crashed int') a
submerged object a raft with metal
on it apparently which ripped a
twenty-foot strip out of our bow
Water came pouring in and we got
busy with buckets and pump—"
"—and kept right on with your
patrol —" said Bulkeley — "which
took plenty of guts"
"The water kept gaining on us
but we thought we could hold it
until Bulkeley got back with Que-
zon to the pier although I knew we
could never get her back to Minda-
nao in that condition When I saw
the lights of the car I figured it
was safe to come into the harbor
She was sinking fast then so we
left her in a place where she would
drift on the sand and in the morn-
ing the army could salvage her ma-
chine guns Then we all climbed
aboard the 41 boat with Bulkeley
and the Quezon party You might
say that was the end of the 35 boat
and yet it wasn't quite although
she fought her last fight Bulkeley
was working frantically to keep the
squadron together A few days lat-
er he came over plugged the hole
temporarily and towed her back to
Cebu where we hoisted her on the
marine railway for repairs We
burned her just before the Japs
came into the town"
"The trip back with Quezon was
as rough as I'll ever see" said
Bulkeley "We left at three o'clock
with one hundred twenty miles to
go before dawn At four o'clock a
big sea landed us a punch in the
jaw which knocked two torpedoes
loose in their tubes and instantly
they started a hot run—a terrific
hissing of compressed air the pro-
pellers grinding it sounded like the
end of the world
"In a situation like that" sail
Bulkeley "The logical thing is to
get them out by firing an impulse
charge—touch off some black pow-
der in the rear of the tube which
sends them scooting But we were
having trouble with the mechanism
—it took a minute to get this done
and meantime the two aft torpedoes
were sticking out of the tubes so far
they seemed about to fall so the two
torpedomen Houlihan and Light got
out on them with their feet hang-
ing on by their hands to the for-
ward tubes and tried to kick them
loose They couldn't but they cer-
tainly impressed President Quezon
who when he got to Australia gave
them the Distinguished Conduct Star
of the Philippines for what they did
that night as well as to Ensign
Cox and me And it was a ticklish
job for the torpedomen too Before
we blew the torpedoes out their
back ends where their motors are
turned pink and then bright red
from the heat On a normal run
of course the surrounding water
keeps them cool But out of the
water they're not nice things to
crawl around on
"At first President Quezon didn't
understand what was going on and
asked why we were getting ready
to fire the two torpedoes Not want-
ing to worry him unnecessarily I
said we were just firing them at the
enemy who was near by When we
got him ashore at Oroquieta I ex-
plained that we'd really been in
quite a dangerous situation
"We found a passage through the
coral reef outside Oroquieta just
at dawn and found General Sharp
waiting in his car In order not to
be recognized Quezon tied a red
bandanna over his face below his
eyes But the natives all knew him
In spite of it—hats wero waving
from the sidewalk as he rode oil
down the street"
"We missed it all" said Kelly
"because we were up there in Ana-
ken trying to repair the crumpled
steel in our hind end at that little
oversize garage back among the
bamboo which they called a ma-
chine shop Native divers holding
their breath took of? the struts and
shafts of the rudders and the pro
pellets We tried to pound the pro-
pellers back into shape with ham-
mers on palm logs while the propri-
etor did his best to straighten the
teat in his machine shop
"Finally there was a trial run
She'd make only 11 knots—a frac-
tion of her normal speed—and the
vibration was terrible you'd think
someone had packed an earthquake
In our lazaret
(TO EE CONTINUED)
gst::?fit 0 I
H
S
111
w'
Serve Regal lIam for Christmas!
(See Recipes Be Icw)
Yule Goodies
Merry Christmas to You!
Whether you walk where there is
hard-packed snow under your feet
T and the crackle
ritZ7777 of frost as yuu
I
walk or whether
' ii - you recline under
-k 0 lazy palm tries
0
i'' ' '- with the sun beat-
- '° jog down on you
in all its warmth
er may this be your
i ll I 1 meryiest artitt
Is the time of year to lay down the
heaviness of spirit and to think only
of goodwill toward men
There's an elegance about Christ-
mas dinner which you can't avoid
even if you serve the simplest of
food Perhaps it is the spirit with
which it's prepared and the blessing
with which it is eaten Whatever it
is make the most of it with what-
ever you have
And now to the bustling and busy-
ness that is Christmas If your
choice for the dinner is ham and
you've been saving your points for
it prepare it thus:
Christmas ham
I smoked ham
2 cups fruit juice
1 cup brown sugar
2 doicn vhole cloves
Plac the ham rind side up on an
open roasting p a n Bake in a slow
oven (325 degrees) for 18 minutes
per pound for the average size ham
10 to 12 pounds 16 to 17 minutes for
larger hams 12 to 15 pounds When
ham has been baked for required
length of time remove from oven
and cut away the rind Score ham
with a sharp knife rub sugar over
surface and stick
with cloves Pour gi
1 cup fruit juice
4--1 ("-Th?
over it Return to -
a i1
oven rind bake at N
' t
400 degrees for it
4 t A
20 minutes Baste
frequently with LT-6
remaining cup of juice
If the ham is precooked it needs
only to be heated thoroughly before
the glazing
You've chosen a turkey for the
Yule meal? Then here's the stuffing
for it:
Savory Stuffing
(For a 12-poun(I bird)
8 cups toasted bread crumbs
1 teaspoon salt
11 teaspoon pepper
teaspoon each of sweet marjor-
am thyme celery leaves and
parsley or
2 teaspoons poultry seasoning
teaspoon grated orange or lemon
peel
2 onions diced
2 tablespoons fat
1 egg
)3i cup hot water stock or milk
Toast bread and break into
crumbs Blend crumbs and season-
ing together lightly Fry onion until
light brown in fat mix with bread
and seasonings Stir in slightly beat-
en egg and liquid Cool mixture and
Lynn Says
Decorative Notes: Dazzling
bouquet for your Christmas table
would he shimmering Christmas
tree bans wired to t m s Use
lieveral exnaments to each stern
d t r i rt !T e is
used for fresh flower bouquets
Little evergreen branches can in-
termingle with the colorful balls
to carry out the Yule idea
Silvered twigs are pretty with
red and green gumdrops Use a
w black howl for this setting
or place them on one of those
pale blue mirror's which you may
ve
Favorite in many homes is the
Iced gingerbread houFe Make a
gingerbread dough roll out and
cut to fit house Put together
Aith white icing sprmkie
whole with shimmering silver
snow and set on a cardboard base
r mirror Miniature figures can
be used in this setting
(VI 177 gft!
i
4
Christmas Dinner
Hot Tomato Juice with
Avocado Slice
Christmas Baked Ham
Baked Orange Garnish
Baked Yam Puff
Pried Brussels Sprouts
Cranberry-Apple Relish
Hot Cloverleaf Rolls
Beet-Olive Salad
Celery Hearts Red Jelly
Fruit Cake or Plum Pudding
Beverage
Recipes Given
fill bird which has been rubbed with
salt and pepper inside cavity
Sometimes the family receives as
much pleasure from the relish as
they do from the meat of the day
Here is a delightful colorful relish:
Cranberry-Apple Relish
(Makes quarts)
4 cups fresh cranberries
2 apples pared End cored
2 oranges
1 lemon
2! cups sugar or
Ili cups sugar and 1 culls
corn syrup
Wash apples and cranberries put
through Mod chopper Quarter or
and lemon -
ett
rind and all re-
move seeds and
chop Add sugar
and blend Place
rind and all re-
move seeds and
choP)end Place -
in jar cover
closely and chill
in refrigerator
This i1I keep iiidermitely
Vegetables to go with dinner are
important These two will harmo-
nize in color and texture to comple-
ment your entree:
Fried Brussels Sprouts
(Serves 6)
1 onion chopped
3 tablespoons drippings
4 cups cooked brussels sprouts
Cook onion in butter until tender
add sprouts and toss gently until
thoroughly heated
Yarn Puff
(Serves 6)
4 large yams or sweet potatoes
!i cup margarine
2 well-beaten eggs
cup sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Peel potatoes and boil until soft
Mash and add remaining ingredi-
ents Beat well and place in greased
casserole Dot with butter or mar-
garine and bake until brown about
12 hour
Beet-Olive Salad
(Serves 6)
4 cups cooked beets cut in strips
IA cup sliced stuffed olives
3 tablespoons french dressing
Toss together beets olives and
french dressing Serve in lettuce
cups
It would no longer be practical to
give an elaborate recipe for fruit
cake so here is one more simple
than I've given in other years It is
delicious Pick over fruit carefully
chop rather than grind it:
Wartime Fruit Cake
1 cup dried apricots
cup sugar
cup shortening
4 eggs
1 cup seedless raisins
cup candied cherries
cup candied orange peel
!:$ cup candied citron
IA cop blanched almonds
2 teaspoon grated lemon peel
2 cups flour
1:s teaspoon salt
Boil apricots I minute drain then
slice Cream sugar with shortening
add eggs beaten until light and
thick then combine with fruit and
almonds Slice cherries orange
peel and citron before measuring
Add flour sifted with salt and beat
thoroughly Pour into small greased
oven glass dish cover with glass
top and hake 114 hours in a slow
Oven 275 degrees
"UU uUIIt sugor-satinft suggecrion3
urite So hnn Chamber Weltern Netts-
piper Union 210 South Deylaines Strpet
DonI lorget to encloie
a stamped seitaddreised entrlope for
)our reply
heleased by Western Newspaper Union
Have a Two-Pierer!
'YES have a two-piecer in your
I wardrobe — the top may be
checked wool the skirt a solid col-
or—or it may all match Here's
one of gay spirit which is good fur
work or play
There Must Hare Been
Politicos (It the Beginning
Over a cup of coffee at the club
a doctor claimed that his was the
oldest profession "For" he said
"Adam's rib couldn't have been
removed without a surgeon to per-
form the operation"
"Yes" said the architect "but
before that the world had to be
created out of chaos And you
will admit creation implies an
architect"
There was a politician in their
midst
"Hold on gentlemen" he said
"You must carry it back still fur-
ther—to chaos And where there
is chaos there must be a politician"
--:-----
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n of the ternoua Pleisch
' rnann's 'Dread tesket4 recipe
1 book Over 70 recipes all made
vvitil Peischtnatues pellow
-
"the! Yeast the only Nab
3teast with both Vitamins A 1
and A ea wet ea the 114nie
13 Cornplet Standard trends
Inc °rand Central
13ox
477 New ?cork N Ilz14"1
hin6AW'L44
Barbara Bell Pattern No 1871 1 de
signed for sizes 10 12 14 16 18 and 20
Corresponding bust measurements 28 30
32 34 36 and 38 Size 12 Pot with
sleeves requires 411i yards 39inch ma
terial
Due to an unusually large demand and
current war conddlons slightly more Urnd
Is recuired in tilling orders for a few al
the most popular pattern numbers
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT
530 South IVells IL Chicago
Enclose 20 cents in coins tot each
pattern desired
Pattern No Size
same
Address
DISCOVERY T?:sCOLDS'RELIEF
(home rnedieated mutton enet)--whiell
grandma used for coughing—nasal con
ti o n muscle aches of golds—teaches
niodern mothers to follow her example
tio their fainthes get relief from these
(014m' miseries with Penetro the salve
with modern medication in a base con
taming old fiteltioned mutton suet 25c4
double supply 3f)ct Demand Penetro
Do lit take
CHANCES"
! is
Limited Quantity
in l'acuunt
Maws Jar
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!' P-10)
POLAR BEAR
FAVORITE COFFEEI
Richer Pinar Flavorl
Drip or Regular Grind
In "Flav-O-Tainer" Vacuum Frith
Wartime Package
Cf0117ittva)
Guornated by N:
Good Housekeeping'
Just-Revised rzeischinatuve IteelPe -
iVtlY ilia' e Reap
Zook Ivow nearly to no
tient rittz to root
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1 cup milk Iiii cup lukewarm sister
2 tablespoons sugar 3 cups silted float
1
112 teaspoons salt 3 tablespoons melted
1 cake Fleischmann'aVessl sliortening
Scald milk add sugar and ol lukew
salt co to arm PisstIve yeast
In lukewarm water and add to lukewarm nilik Add 1A cups flour
and beat until perfectly smooth Add melted shortening and
remaining flour or enough to make an easily handled dough
Knead wed Shape into toils and place in well-greased pan Cover
and set In warm place free from draft IA rise until doubled In
bulk about I hour Date In moderate Oen tit 400 F gout 22
Makes
minutes 12
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1943, newspaper, December 23, 1943; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2301692/m1/7/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.