The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1944 Page: 3 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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7
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lVashington D C
PLENTY OF TRAINED PILOTS
General Arnold did not say so in
his report to the secretary of war
but the tremendous job of expand-
ing air forces personnel is almost
finished He might have penned a
little footnote saying "We have pi-
lots running out of our ears"
No cadet training bases have been
closed as yet but the army will
close approximately one dozen
schools for training pilots between
now and April Air forces officials
find that the elaborate program has
now produced enough competent
navigators and pilots to finish the
Joh in both theaters of war
The tip-off to this is found in re-
cent changes in policy of the trans-
port command
Army transport command which
does non-combat flying all over the
world has always preferred to take
pilots from the open market usu-
ally from the airlines These pilots
are specially trained in safe effi-
cient transport flying as distin-
guished from the combat type of
training in the army air forces
Recently however transport com-
mand has been forbidden to take on
civilian pilots and has been forced
to accept combat - trained pilots
from the air forces
MIRACLE 1VORKERS
Miracles happen even in Wash-
ington Farm Security administra-
tion heir to all the grief of Rex
Tugwsli and long confined to the
Capitol I1111 dog house is now
emerging into the warm sunlight of
congressional favor A simple mat-
ter of southern friendship did it
The miracle resulted from the
fact that Frank Hancock and Harold
Cooley wers a couple of congress-
men from North Carolina Hancock
now out of congress has just been
appointed head of Farm Security
Hence Congressman Cooley for-
rnerly FSA's deadliest critic is now
a supporter and friend
All during the past year FSA
operated on a shoestring Its funds
were cut and congress frowned on
almost everything it tried to do
But row a report of a house agri-
culture subcommittee which Cooley
heads is about to give FSA a clean
bill of health and recommend that
It be continued as a permanent
agency
The report will not whitewash Mr
Tugwell or any of his works In
fact it will sharply criticize all the
old resettlement projects (already
In process of liquidation) But it will
give strong approval to two other
ESA programs—rehabilitation and
tenant purchase
Also there will be a proposal for
combining the lending programs of
Farm Security with two types of
Farm Credit administration loans
with a new corporation to handle the
joint lending activity
EXIT nomnstclur
There is every indication that the
U S bombing to which the Jails
will be subjected in 1914 will be
without benefit of bombsight
The Norden bombsight has been
publicized as the great secret ap-
pliance which will help us win th‘s
war It has been highly successful
in the European theater but in the
Pacific it has actually become ex-
cess baggruze
Surply officers in Washington are
still assimling bombsights to planes
for Pacific action but fliers are urg-
ing that the device be left at home
They have found that the most suc-
cessful air attack in the Pacific is
the lowdevel tree-top bombing in
which medium bombers sweep in on
the target and let the bombs drop
when they are so close they can't
miss This is better than any pre-
cision instrument ever invented
Also it is less dange"rous than
high-altitude bombing Corning in
low the planes avoid detection by
the enemy whereas the high-altitude
planes are caught both by in-
struments and vision
The tree-top flying requires great-
er pilot skill also the use of delayed-action
bombs so that the plane
can get away from the target before
It blows up under the plane
This is the kind of work that was
done in the famous battle of the
Bismarck sea in which every Jap
ship was destroyed It was also how
the Nazis sneaked up on Boni and
wreaked havoc with Allied shipping
mEnRY-GO-ROUND
(1 The budget bureau several times
has offered Cordell Hull all the
money he needs for the state de-
partment if he will only clean house
and get in some good men
(I The A F L executive commit-
tee will finally vote John L Lewis'
mine workers into the A F L at
this month's meeting in Florida
Ilaro Id Ickes and Henry Wallace
who didn't love each other too much
when Wallace was secretary of agri-
culture have made up Jesse Jones
(not love for him) brought them to-
gether Instead of cutting down red tape
the war department is increasing it
It opened the new year by requiring
reception clerks at all entrances of
the giant Pentagon building to ask
no less than 14 questions of each vis-
itor and write down all answers on
a pink blue or yellow filing card
Guess the army thinks we are losing
the war not winning it
-- -ICZECHOSIOVAKIAY :
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According to plans announced by 11oscow this is the possible geo-
graphic outline of Poland after hostilities cease Russia proposes as
Poland's new eastern boundaries the Curzon line suggested by the late
Lord Curzon in 1919 Solid black areas are those parts of Poland which
she would retain from the line of demarcation set by the German-
Russian treaty of 1939 which in other respects matches the Curzon line
Poland would be enlarged by the acquisition of East Prussia Including the
Danzig corridor and Silesia
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Postwar Poland as Russia Wants It
POSEN
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1
1
2 Billion New Ration Tokens Out Feb 27
POLANDC
WARSAW
T
c
LUBLIN
For several months workers at a war plant in Cincinnati Ohio have
kept it running 21 hours a day 7 days a week turning out new red and
blue ration tokens This employee is working a press which prints 200
tokens a minute Local banks will distribute the tukens to stores by Feb-
ruary 27 On that date arproximately 2 billions of the disks vill be in use
Natives' 3-1)ay Thirst Quenched by Navy
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Precious water is doled out to natives on Makin island by men of the
'United States navy The Japanese bad prevented the natives from ob-
taining any water for three days before the American landing Since
our forces have invaded islands of the Gilbert group Jap forces have
retaliated only with nuisance air raids
Propellerles Plane Ready- for Factory
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View of the 1tet devaivnent in aircraft—the jet prnpul4in
Diagram indicates the gcneral princi!de i?t propuh-ion The Avar depart-
ment a n non need that the Plane would soon be ii production
THE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
Macot Mao
Tony Mao 10-year-old Italian boy
vho lost his family in the bombing
of Avalino is now the mascot of
American troops in the Allied Filth
army Tony has his own "GI" uni-
form and even a half-pint rule Ile
is shown being directed on an errand
by Lieut Anderson Smith
Labor Draft Chat
77r'71::!V7"'
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Vv in- With 66
-
President Roosevelt as be read
his third wartime "state of the Un-
ion" message in which he asked con-
gress to enact oat nal service legis-
lation lie also recommended a "rea-
sorable floor urder the prices the
farmer may expect for his production"
Sympathetic Admiral
i
Wearing a marine dungaree snit
Adm W i Liam Halsey sauth Pa-
cific force commamter visit a sand-
bag houital on 1:m17ainville and
chats Ivith marine Pfc 1manuel
Caruco who i4 recovering from an
alendeclomy ilakey rect ntly had
a similar exrcrience
2
eWa-P
U PPER BAY MOBILE ALA—It
was just about daybreak A
sweeping gale half hurricane came
out of the northeast accompanied
by a cold driving rain
"A perfect day to kill ducks" the
guide said lie had overlooked the
fact that it was a much more per-
fect day to kill men The wind
roared the rain whipped in the
small boat rolled and soon Was half
full of water
"You couldn't find a better day
for ducks" the guide said There
were ducks every-
where but there rr-Isp"2114 a'
4
was a lot more rain '' '
and wind and bump-
lug water in the
bay dam OK
Ve finally reached 4 1
the blind Ahead i! ' -'
was the job of get- a'-'a 44'4 'i i
ting out the decoys
nnd the cane for the 4'''''ti44 k 1
' -44- '-'-
camouflage
1N'e get the skiff :4 : t —
info the blind Posi- Grandam Mee
thin as another half-
tidal wave hits us anti we really
get to work Part of the decoys are
swept overboard I'art of the cane
for the blinds go with the decoys
Your correspondent would like to go
with both and end it all
It still isn't quite daylight and the
storm is picking up speed end hit-
ting power It is also getting cold-
er and colder wetter and wetter
rougher and rougher tougher and
tougher
Everyone is soaked and freezing
But everyone is happy except your
correspondent 1vho has suddenly de-
cided he has no hostile feeling
against any duck In fact he likes
ducks But it is too late now We
are out in the middle of a virtual
tidal wave to mow them down
11 here Beal Fun Begins
Now we are all sot in the blind
with a sand bar close at hand
here come the ducks—teal red-
head mallard widgeon F prigt a it
black duck canvas 'oack dough-
grey every known forin of the duck
breed A big 1)(irt of this display
WaS due to "Ducks Unlimited" a
fine sporting organization
And there were DUCKS UNLIM-
ITED The ducks were doing all right
But I kept thinking why should man
be subjected to this punhliment
"Here they come" our guide said
"Get low—get low"
We got low At this moment an-
other swirl of wind and rain over-
turned our boat
Mind you it was bitter cold and
much colder as our clothing became-drenched
"We missed that raft cap but
they'll be back Work in' over to
another bay But they'll lin back
just as soon Os we get straightened
out agait-e—set you know" said our
amiable guide
I turned to a fellow named Stout
Steve Owen coach (if thy New York
Giants who was in the naxt boat
I could see that Owen's 21)-pounds
1A'ere in agony Ile was taking an
even worse beating for 1e was a
much bigger t2rgut
"Bring me the Bears (nal the Red-
skins" he growled "11ri1'J g me
Baugh and Luck man"
At this spot a rush of water swept
Owen out of sight And this is true
Ill admit at that time I AA asn't in-
terested in What happened to Olven
I was only interested ill a fellow
named Lice
'e got on a mud bar or a sand
bar again and it took us 5il minutes
to get away losing a paddle and a
few more decoys
Suddenly someone fired a gun and
a teal blew out to sea Ile was dead
—and he was lueky
We got set again with thousands
of duck swarming in
‘Ve were ready for the big killing
But once again another halfdairri-
cane struck us with another rush of
water and once again the boat iAlrit
under—and so did we
By this tune the wind had reached
a velocity of 50 miles au hour and
the rain was a young deluge Un-
der these conditions you couldn't
hit gn elephant at 5 paces
Had the teals and niallarda and
redheads and widgeons bei n lanai t
they could have rnordered us For
we were v-hilped
Soaking wet battered and beatan
halfairowned aching and carsina
V'( only vvanted to find "Ned" Leath-
erhury'a hoayelaait with l'at Marl-
ton my l'avorie lir ctor leadaig
the way
The (itirk:i v ere Nit !1i! I —a e
1a re not J nart---but kilo is in tras
cocke3ed waaki?
Cobb's Tat ortIcs
Irv:n S C h ti!o
- is rectfri!rg in N'') r
a ser1011S
' ibjt tie r k 41U C 1nrac:tels
iJ (inv
'':'1 t 1' -
i by swce d0- CAA
If:atoll (Jug") 3eSpaden Phil- : "I mean Christy Mathewson and
aoi1:1 mho won America's Roger Ilresnahan -- Three-Fingered
ricle I gen' crown and Jobriny Kling —Walter
An'-lcies "P"ll trire roll Johnson Rube iVaddell Eddie Col-
2 boles was 273 with a fjj on his !ins Joe Jackson Ty (ebb Nap La
last IS ple and Shoeless Joe Jackson
l""m""""IMPROVED"'"""
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAY I
JCHOOL Lesson
By T 11NDQuist r)
Of The Nb4ty II 1bbito ef fblewo
helesed by Wrtern Nevpaper Union
Lesson for February 6
LeSS011 NtlteIM DIA Scripture text ille
lecicit irnit 1 ir by lute t tood
C01111( ii 'tutu:loos Education: used by
bet inistott
JESUS FEEDS TIIE MULTITUDES
LFSSON TIXT —Mark 63514 81-9
GOLDEN TENT—I ant the bread of life:
he that contort to tne shall never hunger
and he that beheveth on me shalt never
thirst—John
---
Hungry! That word kieseribes the
crying need of the greater part of
the world's population Men who
have 'aunted themselves because of
tlieir aliihty and ingenuity have
brought the nations of the earth into
such awful confusion that CVCII
abundant provision cannot reach the
needy ones
God is concerned about man's
physical need just as truly as Ile is
about spiritual needs This story
brings Christianity into action on a
level that all will appreciate—the
need Of food for the body It works
there LIS It (IIWS everywhere
The supply of every need of man
is God "My God shall supply all
your need according to his riches in
glory by Christ jesus" (Phil 4:19)
Countless Christians have found it
to be true that we may trust God—
completely—anti for everything
The stories of the feeding of the
two groups of people show the wrong
and the right attitude toward mans
need In two approaches to the
problem the clisciples were wrong
Then Christ showed them the right
way
I They Can Take Care of Their
Own Need (6:35 3()
'Send them away"—that was the
plea Of the disciples when the multi-
tude of those who had followed Ilan
became hungry The people were
there because they were interested
in Christ They had come in a hurry
(v 33) and had not brought food
The problem was on the disciples'
hands and they sought the easiest
A:ay out Let them shift for them-
selves—"Send thorn away"
The church has followed their ex-
ample in thaling with the social
prohlents of the people down through
the years: The result is that being
denied fellowship comfort and help
by a church which was too busy
building up a vast organization or
a beautiful order of worship the
comnran people have respond-
ed to the appeal of political leaders
who have provided a substitute for
what the church should have given
them
When Jesus put upon them the di-
rect responsibility to feed the people
the disciples changed their "slogan"
and said:
H We Should Like to Help but
We Cannot ((1:37)
Reckoning hastily on what a small
boy had brought for his lunch (trust
an alert boy to be ready!) the
disciples soon demonstrated that it
was imposisible to feed this great
throng (See similar reasoning in
Mark 8:4)
Logic is such a devastating thing
when it operates apart from faith in
God 'flay were absolutely right in
their reasoning and in their calcula-
tions but they had forgotten the one
factor that really counted Jesus Was
there and Jesus is God and God
is omnipotent
As we face the nerd of the Maalid
now and alter the war we wonder
how the peoples of other lands can
he fed vithifit OUr
land of what it neetle It is a great
problem and we otieht to pray for
those who ntuat work with it
Bot let us not forget that all that
we have comes front Gott and that
Ile is dile 10 do "excecfling alam-
dantly above ill that we ask or
think" With 32(1) The Chriat who
multiplied Hie loaves and fishes is
oUr LIVing LOI'd tOday Ipady itrot
able to do it again
Jesus Said "I !rave Compa!-sion
on the INfultilude" (633-11
8 I-9)
Ile started right Instead of shut-
ting Ilia heart agairiSt the tender de-
sire to help Ile let Ills lave for
the people control Then inotewl of
magnifying the difficulties He mul-
tiplied the provisions And In there
was enough for all and to spare
"Ile commanded and
did all eat" (vv 39 42) When God
speaks all the limitations of the Petite
disappear and the needs of men are
fully met—with "twelve basikets full
of fragments" left over!
Note the orderly manner in tivitiel
our Lord met this situation: Five
thousand men fNith wornen arlri chil-
dren to swell the throng were seat-
ed on the grass Jesus took time
lottees anti fishes and blessed them
You who forget to return thanks at
time table notice that quiet and nean-
ingful act Then He broke the
loaves anti divided the liahes
doubt they were niultplitiel as tile
disciples passed them out to the
tt
God i3 ali:e to do that Try thing
even in our tlay Perhaps not in
just the same manner Let surely
those who serve Him have marveled
as they have seen that "little is
much when Gad is in it" Let those
who lehor in dilllcult places t-vith
re:oiurces take heart—and
trust God
Note the care with which the frag-
roripts were collected fur future use
It took this war to teach ArriCtlea
11'V shamefully waateful it has been
penmallminmoommt
Just 2 drops l'enetro
Nose Drops in each
nostril help you
iireathe freer almost
instantly so your
newt cold gets air
Tie -22 times as
much for roe c'autlida:
l'ati only as directed
l'enet ro Nose Drops
For the Preservation
Of the American
Way of Life
BUY U S WAR BONDS!
Ades
saga
0 r
High quality HI-LO BAing Powder
A
is "just right" for all krds of bak-
ing Because HI LO is 99 45-1007
perfect It is BALANC D for bet-
for baking Most impo ant of aft
HI LO is DOUBLE ACV G For
sure results at less cost ask for
HI LO You'll like it to
1-11-10
BAKING
POWDER CO - a
D 1
musx0GEE
OKLAHOMA
Monkey Receptionists
Trains that stop at way stations
near Udaipar India are always
met by troops of monkeys that
emerge from the jungle to chatter
at the passengers
SKINIRRITATIONS OF
EXTERNAL CAUSE
Aerie pimples eeterna faetory derma-
titi Iii111110TMMV011111 tel ter mit rheum
(hliteklieinis) and ugly broken-
out mkin h1Iiuris reliovo itching burn-
ing and aorenvtis of thett 1)11Heritql with
simple home treatment Goem to work at
once Ai In4 healing workm t hi antiseptic'
WRY 1me Black and IA htp( (Int tlivilt only
as directel 25e 50e totem 25 pilot'
moceems Money-hark guarantee Vital
III cleansing im good moat Enjoy fa-
tuous Black and IN into Skin Soap daily
50-Pound Seeds
In the Seychelles Islands of the
Indian ocean are pa lin trees whose
seeds weigh as touch as 50 pounds
Don't Fuer hlonre a cold! They're
treacherous—Irk ky item—avoid ez-
poeme And for pr pt clechilve
'lief from mum Cold 11 lieeriee (like
Croee's (Ad lablem hey roman'
eight Bulleu itteretlienut—m ntultiple
medicine Work on all these syrup-
forn4 01 a cold iir i he same time—
bendm he—hody aches—lever—nasal
omen ttke CroweS nld Tahlele
(lit ily an dire4 fed Accept no nub-
Cet Crova's Cold Tableis—
for year known to millions as
"Illogno (old TAbbete
Say Money—Get Largv Economy SiZe
1i j
Heavy Stuff
"CIndy" in India is a 500 pound
wt101t
SNAPPY FACTS
ABOUT
RUBBER
Inflatable rubber barges for
th U S Navy ore "cured"
at B F Goodrich In a stlam
vulcanizer that is 42 feet
long 10'1 feet In diameter
weighs 3$ tons and has a
door that alone weighs 10
tons It's a record for size and
turns out th 25-toot barges
at a rate of on every 50
minutes
Synthetic rubber plants already
completed and those scheduled
for constnJction w11 hove an an-
nual rated capacity of 850000
long tons Before the war the United
Stutes comumed about 600000
long tom of rubber anrmally Now
however our supplies must be
shared with the United Notions-
etolotoe grit 41-'"1
17Goodrich
t 1 I:1
iii i
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Milk
7A--41 I Postwar Poland as Russia Wants It Alascot Mao
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il is almost cc- I c RUSS: k
: : --zis 'i i: ::- 7(abl --e---rl " A perfect day to kill ducks" flit
-------'-'----" — -1 - 4 i
Lave penned a 111 ' 1 1 IL- ill AA- 1 ' i ' f 1 b S
k ' t--' guide said lie had overlooked til
" t
We have pi- 0 O 'c g REST-LITOVSK 4 1 0"14 : i k l' 7: i'i: V" fact that it a s a W much more per
r ears" cA ' WARSAW -- - A —1 t 41 A Jo ' 'f I '' '''': c'''' ' 'I" 4e'7 - f e ct day to kill m en The winc
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es have been ')Ry 4" —--tr-PINSK i A i ii' e c i " P t I d the rain whipped in th
he army will t
r‘"'r ' 4')( cp t 4 7 18 A i i - : :--A small boat rolled and o
son al
was h
sie c
one dozen BRESLAIA
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MAR-HE ' i --c' 4': 1 1 1 ' i 1 of 1 full w ater
pilots between HIall
BLIN '1) 0 4 T
KdROSTEN I 'ii f "
1 t You couldn't find a better da3
rurces officials 1 SILESIA -2' t - : ' for ducks " the tilde said Thert 1 '11 6? mko le 1 '' 41 g -
! program has
GLEIWITZ1k 1 t"- 4 -- o w ere ducks every-
411 competent f KRAKOW --
"a' i'rt$14e-''' ' ' ' '' ' where but there ri"--4102-7477
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to finish the 1 ik911 tro-----r-------
as a lot nmre rain -
4i- t k k :!: '' I -- N4'‘: I ' '' I'l
s found in re- - IWOWG fits ' V - 1:il : i ' and wind and bump-
) BERDICHEV k ':Y V t I -'''''''''''' ing ter in the I t§
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 3, 1944, newspaper, February 3, 1944; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2301698/m1/3/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.