The Enid Morning News from Enid, Oklahoma (2024)

I THE ENID MORNING NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1941 SEVEN OFFICERS IMPRESSED BY MIDGET TRUCK New Vehicles Apparently Can Be Driven Virtually Anywhere By David J. Wilkie (Associated Press Automotive Editor) DETROIT, Feb. The manueverability of the army's new "midget" reconnaissance truck and its ability to absorb abuse was demonstrated today to a group of United States army officers as the dwarf fighter unit reached the volume production stage at the Ford Motor company plant in Dearborn. The first of 1,500 similar vehicles the Ford- company is to build the army was driven off the assembly line today by Edsel Ford, com-, pany president, with Charles H. Bonesteel, commanding the sixth cops area, as passenger.

Later several of the cars, 127 Inches long. and less than 40 inches high with the windshield down, were given a "field test" for the visiting officers. and others invited to the special demonstration: It was this. writer's privilege to be a passenger in one of the cars as it climbed, up a 75 per cent grade, crashed through 'heavy underbrush and swung across the frozen furrows of a ploughed field at a. speed of close to 45 miles an hour.

The reaction? Well, the car is emphatically not a "pleasure" vehicle and it can absorb all the abuse its driver can give it and survive. At one point in the demonstration three of the cars were driven across a field to a rather abrupt but short ascent in the terrain. Hitting the rise at 40 an hour all three bounced at least two feet clear of the upper level, landed on all. four wheels and were swung around quickly to repeat the performance. The army officers seemingly were mostly impressed with the maneuver-ability of the new vehicles and the fact that they could be driven virtually anywhere.

Looking like- a lot of bugs, the short, low cars were turned around in an extremely small space; driven along the slopes of several hills and bounced around deliberately in what seemed like an ef-: fort to test axles, springs and steering apparatus to the last ounce of impact resistance. Through it all the only thing that happened was the loosening of the hood covers on couple of the trucks. Powered with al four -cylinder motor, developing 45 horse-power, the 'midgets have. four wheel drive with six forward and two in reverse. They speeds, maximum of 55 to, 60 miles an hour and minimum of two miles.

In war service the midget trucks are to carry an anti-aircraft gun and light field pieces, and a crew of three Then, two in front and one in the rear, KNUDSEN OFFERS PLAN TO THWART www DEFENSE STRIKES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ment for sabotage on property or finished articles. But he said he opposed similar penalties proposed for "interferring" with property on detense or handing such property "In a defective manner." Sumners said that the committee would resume on Monday its hearings on the general subject of labor troubles in defense industries. WORKERS CHEER AS STRIKE IS ENDED BUFFALO, N. Feb. Cheering, flag-waving CIO workers terminated a two-day strike.

at Bethlehem Steel's Lakawanna mill today after the company and employes approved a governmentdrafted agreement. After strikers unanimously ratified the three-point program submitted by President Roosevelt's office of production management, Lackawanna Plant Manager Edward F. Entwisle said he telegraphed the OPM its proposals are "satisfactory to us." Union members will return to jobs as soon as conditions at the plant. permit. The settlement, termed a "great victory" by Van A.

Bittner, steel workers organizing director, provides: 1. Reinstatement of all employes recently- discharged, estimated by the union at between 600 and 1,000, 85 soon as resumptions of operations will permit; 2. A conference to seek adjustment of differences; 3. The OPM to "explore" with the labor board the possibility of holding a collective bargaining agency election. Bitter said the union's original demand for a 25 per cent wage increase, late abandoned, would be considered when it "bargains" with the company.

He added he hoped an election would be held within 30 days. The strike, called at 9 p. m. Wednesday and attended by occasional violence, threatened, the union said, to engulf other Bethlehem mills, working on $1,500,000,000 worth of defense orders. The SWOC claims 10,000 members among Lackawanna's 14.000 employes, but has declined to estimate the number who struck, A steady stream of workers, some union members, filed through the seven gates of the plant, located on the southern fringe of Buffalo, to report for the 3 p.m.

shift. Bitter conceded the possibility of delay before all the men return to their jobs, and said "it may not be Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 32. 1. Had Fabricated mercy on 33. sensational report 18.

Ambassador 36. 14. 39. escapes or 40. evades 41.

15. Planet 16. Puzzling 42. 43. 17.

prduestion 45. 18. Feminine name 46. celebrated in 47. song 20.

Babylonian 49. deity 21. English letter 50. 23. Rub- out 52.

24. Crazy 54. 25. Pale brown 55. 27y Contend 28.

Instance 29. Dwarfed 56. 31. Summoned In Party -colored Hindu woman's garment Slender stick Threatened Paradise By Public vehicle: collog. Guided Not so wild Bulgarian coin Article Continuing for a long time Quarter pint: abbr.

Labored Called forth Arctic native Member of a Caucasion 1. race Grow more profound BOB ADEPT CAB EDE SETAE ADO ROC SPAIN BIN GROVEL REBATE MOTOMETER THEW ROD SETS RAS HEW BETEL EN AND CUT RE EDUCE FOG ISE DYNE BEL ANET TRAVELERS MARBLE ASTUTE AND INEPT RID TOE VERSE ERI END EDGES DOT Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN 3. Turkish title Artificial 4, Genus of the passages for frog water 5. Musical study a public place 57. Bartered Faultless 6.

Merited 7. Cherry color 8. Bring Into a row. 9. Undraped 10.

Find the sum of 11, Set free 12. Feared greatly 19. Deposited 22. Burst forth 22 23 violently 24. Seemingly 25 26 28 supernatural 26.

Combination 30 28. Unit of weight 30. Number 32 133 31. Broad open vessel 33. Most placid 34 35 36 37 38 34.

Too late 35. Like a gland 36. Short note to 40 jog the memory: 42 colloq. 37. Interpreter of Scripture 47 48 38.

Separated 40. Forgive 50 52 53 44. 43. Topic Large stream 47. Paper fastener 155 48.

State found of in- prosensibility 51. Masculine nickname 53. Young goat possible to get all the into furnaces and other plant equipment immedlate operation and it may take several days to take all the men back." 45TH CARRIES OUT GREATEST DEFENSE TRAINING JOURNEY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Wichita Falls and Vernon, Texas. Two-way portable radio transmitters kept the two columns in contact and kept the commander of each column in close -touch with his units. Especially eager to make the masstransfer of troops from Oklahoma, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona without a bobble were the officers of the 45th.

since the motor movement was the first of its kind to be attempted on. so large a scale. Following today's movement, a second cadre of approximately 8.000 will make the 235 mile journey March 7. Cooks Go to Work The troops arriving today found major construction on the camp virtually complete, with augmented gangs of plumbers and electricians closing up the gaps. Principal roads were finished, but there was still much mud in regimental areas where the soldiers will live in house tents.

The early arrivals said they already knew all about mud. Many them expressed pleasure at finding walled -up house tents. The cooks looked the shining new kitchen over and went to work. The convoy will continue rolling into Camp Barkeley until late tonight. Only a small section was detoured into Abilene for welcoming ceremonies, and officers expedited movement of each unit into its cantonement area.

"The main thing," one staff officer said, "is to get these men fed and into their tents." Key Opens Ceremonies The west column under command of Brigadier General Louis Ledbetter and the east column under Brigadier General W. E. Guthner converged here shortly after 4 p. m. CST) and the single state road connecting Abilene with Camp Barkeley, nine miles southwest, was a jam of workmen's cars and troop trucks for hours.

Lieutenant General James Brees, commanding the third army inspected Camp Barkeley and reported he found it in "fine shape." Major General Walter Krueger from Fort Sam Major General Citude V. Birkhead, commander of the 36th division, and Generals Guthner and Ledbetter were introduced at the ceremonial at which the keys to the city were presented Major General W. S. Key, commander. of the 45th by Mayo: Will Hair of Abilene.

General Key opened the ceremonial on the part of the army by kissing Miss Abilene, brunette: Miss Ruth Evelyn Foote. Miss Foote then held up a neatly printed placard. "Abilene Welcomes the 45th Division." Seven other pretty girls did likewise, but the general did not kiss them. A massed band from the 36th division, Texas national guard in training at Camp Bowie played the "Eyes of Texas Are Upon You." Spaced a hundred yards apart and rolling steadily at 30 miles an hour, the convoy maintained its prearranged schedule throughout the southward trek through west Texas, officers said. General Key accompanied the west column, then cut across country to lead the east column part of the distance.

COAST ATTORNEY KILLED LOS ANGELES, Feb. (U.P) Charles Francis Adams, 65, a prominent attorney, today was shot: and killed in his downtown Los Angeles office by an unidentified man who then committed suicide, police reported. Both Adams and the other man were dead when police arrived. Read the News-Ragle Classified. MERIT SYSTEM BILL IS SAVED IN COMMITTEE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) or are well-to-do "vacationers." She succeeded in limiting employment to 8-year residents.

A. bill tightening provisions for free public boating on Grand river dam lake in northeastern Oklahoma was given a "do pass" vote. It would allow a fee only for boats used in commercial enterprises. Appropriations of $25,000 each for armories at Oklahoma A. and M.

college and the University of Oklahoma are provided in bills passed by the senate and sent to the house. The government is expected to provide $100,000 at each institution for the buildings, the senate was told. To Recess Tuesday Administration bills and most controversial measures remained on the back seat until after election March 11, with only two legislative work days remaining before both house recess. The legislature will quit work after Tuesday until Wednesday, March 12. By then the fate of Governor Phillips' budget balancing amendment will be known and the financial course outlined.

Tomorrow will find the campaign for the three proposed amendments getting into full swing. Several legislators have scheduled addresses in their home districts. Phillips will tour tomorrow through southeastern Oklahoma and discuss the budget, old age pension and coordinating college board referenda with school Miskovsky To Speak On Sunday, Representative Miskovisky, Oklahoma county, will speak from 2 to 2:30 p. 'm. over a state radio network in opposition to all but the pension amendment, which he will support.

Phillips will confer on his trip with Major R. C. Brown, assistant district army engineer, and attempt to find out what the federal government may propose to pay the state for flooded roads in the basin of the Denison dam. Debate on the civil service bill reached fiery proportions with pro-. ponents attacking the "patronage racket" in state government and their opposition countering with the argument the proposal was a "further" release of legislative power and that more debate was is an un-American piece of legislation," asserted Representative Dan D.

Draper, Cherokee county. "I am against putting anyone on the payroll for life. I think the jobs ought to be handed around in the American Give everybody a chance to hold a job. This bill won't work and we don't want it." -It-is good government to have a merit system, countered Representative Guy. B.

Massey, McCurtain county, added "now that we have an administration opposed to the patronage racket this is the time to do something about STAMP FOOD VARIETY ASSURED FOR MARCH A continued variety in surplus foods available to families taking part in the food (stamp plan in Garfield county is assured by the surplus designations for March, announced yesterday by Dan L. Boyd, local stamp plan representative. The surplus foods are obtainable at stores throughout the county in exchange for blue surplus food stamps. The foods available for March are the same as those which were designated for February: fresh grapefruit, oranges, apples, pears, onions (except green onions); Irish potatoes, butter, raisins, rice, pork lard, all pork (except that cooked or packed in metal or glass containers); corn meal, shell dried prunes, hominy (corn) grits, dry edible beans, wheat flour, and whole wheat (graham) flour. COMMISSION MARKET MAY BE SET-UP IN ENID (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) interested in' starting, up immediately, if they can "be assured of the volume of business from cattle breeders of the county and northwest Oklahoma.

"The closest market is the best market," Joe Jarboe declared to the group, "providing breeders can get prices comparable to what they would receive at Oklahoma City or Wichita." "We're ready to set up tomorrow, if necessary. We believe we can offer livestock men in this area as good or better price than they can get anywhere else, after they have considered shrinkage and the differential rate of transportation to any market." Sheep Men Interested Anderson said he could not speak for the sheep breeders' cooperative association without first conferring with the board, but as an individual he believed the county sheep men would be interested. "However, they have had the service of a grader from the Wichita commission company who looks over their flocks, sorts them into No. 1 grade. We've been encouraging them to ship only No.

1 animals, saving the others for a time when they are ready," Anderson explained. ready to offer that same service if we can get the volume and we think we can make it worth the while of the county sheep men to trade with us," Jarboe replied. "The only way to try it is to get started." he said. Heep said he had been informed 22 Billion Dollars Worth Of Gold Now Safe In U.S. Treasury Vaults WASHINGTON, Feb.

(AP) Secret movement of $8.500,000,000 worth of gold from New York to Fort Knox was completed today, it was learned authoritatively, and the Kentucky vault now holds el 000.000 of the yellow metal- -the largest treasure ever assembled under one roof. Strictest military secrecy veiled the movements on special trains, and no word of how much wealth was involved could be obtained until the job was done. Now the metal is locked in bomb-proof subterranean vaults with 25-inch walls of steel and concrete. A division of mechanized cavalry occupies the fort which surrounds the depository. The pile of glittering bars is about half of all the monetary gold in the world.

The treasury has another quarter of the world's gold scattered in other American vaults, and owns altogether $22.200.000,000 worth. Gold was shipped to the United States in avalanche proportions during the first 16 months of the war, but now this country owns so much of all that has been mined since the beginning of civilization of the meeting late in the afternoon and that his company in Oklahoma City requested a few more days to consider the proposition. Cites Vater queried Hurst as to the number of cattle in the "The government's tuberculin tests indicate about 65.000 cattle in Garfield county," Hurst said, "and I judge a relative number in the surrounding counties. "On hogs, it's difficult to say. They are not stable and their number fluctuates." Jarboe pointed out the improved business conditions which Tulsa and particularly Parsons had enjoyed in an actual direct relationship with the commission firms.

Jarboe said he had found from experience that the steady volume of business which made the commission business pay came from livestock breeders -within a 15, or 25, or 30 or, 40 mile radius of Tulsa. March 20 was mentioned as' a tentative date for the opening day of the commission but the question was passed temrorarily pending Heep's company the first of next week. Jarboe said he had assurance that at least one major packing house from? Kansas City could be interested, and "where one comes, the others soon follow." BOOTHS READY FOR INDUSTRIAL SHOW OPENING Display Space to Be Allotted in. Drawing This Booths were in place last night for the 13th annual Oklahoma Industrial exposition which opens Monday at Convention hall. Drawings will be held at 9:30 o'clock this morning in the office of Retail Merchants association for booth space.

O. E. Zink, manager, said last night all but four booths hard been signed for. Exhibitors will begin to move in Sunday afternoon, The rides and part of the farm machinery to be exhibited in the pavilion will be brought to Enid Sunday also, Zank said. All Space Used Every bit of space in the Convention hall auditorium and the livestock pavilion will be utilized again this year, with exhibitors already having planned their styles of automobiles and farm machinery to be displayed.

B. C. Truex, Wichita, is expected late today with the stage scenery for "Americana," stage revue which will feature this year's exposition. The city took on a festive air yesterday as workmen began the hanging of streamers, banners and flags. MAN KILLED, FIVE CHILDREN INJURED HOLDENVILE, Feb.

Raymond Nix, 48, was killed and five school children in his automobile were injured, one critically, in an auto-bus collision late today near Calvin, 12 miles southeast of here. The injured, all riding in the Nix car, were Cleta Nix, 14, Theo Nix, a 12, Melvin Caldwell, 16, Earl Curtis, 16, and Thelma Linton, 13. All live near Gerty, south of here. The children were brought to a hospital here, and attendants said Caldwell was in critical condition from a fractured skull. Curtis suffered a fractured pelvis.

The other three received cuts and bruises: Highway Patrolman Boots Acton said Nix drove from a filling station onto U. S. highway 270 and the bus and car collided. He said the driver of the bus was Kenneth Moore, Fort Smith, Ark. None of the bus passengers was injured.

FLYING CADET KILLED SAN DIEGO, Feb. (U.P) Flying Cadet James E. Spillman, 23, of Lancester, Texas, was killed today when the primary training -plane he was piloting failed to come out of a spin. that the inflow has tapered off to a trickle. New and old gold alike has been melted down into standard bars, about the size of an ordinary brick, and can't very well be told apart.

But officials believe the depths of Fort Knox now hold gleaming bits of metal once fingered by the ancient pharaohs of Egypt, the chieftains of the Incas, the grandees of Spain, caesars of the first Roman empire, and the caliphs of Bagdad, So much of the world's gold is in this country, that economists argue about the question of whether the rest of the world could repudiate its value. Used primarily as a backing for American money, the gold in Fort Knox is 50 per cent more than all the paper money in the country. The extreme measures taken to guard the treasure arose more from custom than actual danger. The Fort Knox gold weighs 14,000 tons, and nothing less than an invading army could carry it away. If a thief succeeded in stealing a bar or two, he couldn't sell it in this country and would have difficulty any place else.

DR. 0. R. GREGG WILL ASSUME STATE POSITION Commissioners Have Not Yet Named County Physician Successor Dr. O.

R. 'Gregg yesterday completed his last day's work as Garfield county physician. Monday he begins a position with the state health department working to check the spread of venereal disease in the state and in the interest of general public health. Doctor Gregg said yesterday he would attend a school for a few weeks at Seminole before being assigned to his permanent post. His headquarters will be at Oklahoma City at the start.

County commissioners were in Enid yesterday but had made no definite selection for Doctor Greg's replacement. It was understood a physician from Cherokee was considering the appointment, but commissioners said no action had been taken and probably would not be even at next Monday morning's meeting, Doctor with the Dr. W. W. Gill was instrumental.

in founding the Garfield county clinic for treatment of venereal disease, which has provided free weekly treatment for those unable to afford it otherwise. Senator Ginder Quickly Denies Ties To Measure OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb: From the Yankee territory of Alfalfa: county comes State Senator O. M. Ginder. From the deep south territo" of Okmulgee county comes State tor S.

E. Hammond. Hammond had 'up today: a bill increasing confederate pensions from $27 a month to $40 a month, making pensions payable monthly. There was a rush from the deep south counties to get on the bill as joint authors, and senators were showing their hands. "Senator so and so, senator so and so, and Senator Ginder," said the presiding officer, Senator John Monk of McAlester.

But Ginder wasn't trying to get on the bill as joint author. He was just getting up out "of his seat to leave the chamber. "I want to congratulate the senator on at least seeing the light," said rotund Senator Paul Stewart of Antlers, so-called boss of "Little Dixie." At first Senator Ginder didn't know what was afoot. Then he heard Senator Stewart addressing him. Cherokee's senator hot-footed it to the president's desk.

had his name stricken as author, asserting "why there isn't a confederate in 'my district." Iron ore produced from 174 mines in the U. S. in 1939 amounted to 641,000 long tons, according to the census. More than 60 per. cent, 163,000 tons, came from 68 mines in Minnesota.

DEATH CLAIMS H. SCHROEDER; RITES SUNDAY Twd- Month Illness Takes Pioneer Garfield County Man Henry Schroeder Funeral services for Henry Schroeder, 85 years old, will be Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Albert Meier, 1429 East Broadway. A second service will be at 2:30 o'clock at the Redeemer's Lutheran church, 1724 West Broadway. Rev.

Holtmann, pastor, will officiate and burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery with the Fossett-Schaeffer funeral home in charge. Schroeder died yesterday morning at his daughter's home It was Schroeder who located in 1903 on a quarter section of land that later became the site of the most prolific oil producers in the Garber-Covington field. He. had been ill since Christmas. Fis wife died last September, Eight of the couple's 13 children survive.

Schroeder purchased the lease on his land for $4,500 and 15 years later, when oil was found there, he and his family moved to Enid to watch the well become one of the most productive in the Mid -Continent territory. Although wealth flowed to the Schroeder family an initial rate of more than $1,200 a day. Mr. and Mrs. Schroeder continued to live modestly.

Schroeder was a native of Missouri, moving to Oklahoma -in 1903. Mrs. Schroeder's death came only a brief time before she and her husband would have observed their 64th wedding anniversary. Surviving children are five sons. Mart and Oscar of Enid; Walter, living southeast of Enid; Paul of San Bernardino, and Herbert of Los Angeles, and three daughters, Mis.

Amanda Schumacher of Grange, Mrs. Rosa. Meier of Winfield, and Mrs. Albert Meier, of Enid. ROME ACKNOWLEDGES BRITISH SUCCESSES By The Associated Press ROME, Feb.

were told by their high command today that the British are scoring new successes in Somaliland and commentators warned them they may expect new Italian retreats. The fascist communique acknowledged the fall of Mogadiscio, capital of Italian Somaliland, but said desperate resistance at Cheren and at the desert oases of Giarabub and continued to holt the British in check in Eritreat and Libya. SUNDAY RITES FOR MRS. IDA M. REED Mrs.

Ida M. Reed. 75 years old, will be buried in Glenwood cemetery Sunday afternoon following services at 2:30 o'clock in Friends church at Ames. The Fossett Schaeffer funeral home will be in charge. Mrs.

Reed died Thursday her home at Ames. JAPS INDICTED IN HAWAII HONOLULU, Feb. federal grand jury today indicted nearly 80 persons, most of them Japanese, and three fishing companies on charges of conspiracy in connection with the registration of fishing sampans. Read the News-Eagle Classified. SPECIAL Shamrock Brick Delicious Vanilla Ice Cream With a Green Shamrock Center A Delightful Combinatian That Will SayGive Me More Meitrel's FAST FREE DELIVERY- JUST PHONE 768 CITY PLANNING ON -RANGE BASIS PROPOSED Planner Suggests Coordinating Council for Visionary Program Formation of a coordinating counci' to establish a visionary, longrange planning program of beautification and recreation for Enid was suggested by R.

C. Morrison, city planning authority, in his closing appearance of a two-day Town Building Institute last night. Speaking at the Y. W. C.

Morrison last night conducted a round table discussion on what democracy should mean to Americans, and summed up his findings during his two-day stay in Enid. The council he named as the one big thing. He. looked over the present post office building, said it would serve ideally as a community center when the new building is completed. The city needs another swimming pool, he said, but it should be located near the present pool.

Morrison spent yesterday in giving his findings to various civic groups and agencies, in conferring with the park board and other officials. Today he leaves for a luncheon at Kingfisher and op to Oklahoma City, Monday he begins a two-day institute at McAlester. His appearance here was under the sponsorship of the Enid Council of Garden clubs. Mrs. J.

R. Weldon, its president, said last night that the Chamber of Commerce would be asked to carry on the project of setting up the coordinating council, naming to its membership those individuals who will start an immediate improvement program. BRITISH BREAK IS SEEN AUTOMATIC BY OBSERVERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) at least outwardly a united front. They on their announcement of a complete identity of views after having examined all eventualitiespresumably including a. German push through Bulgaria into Greece to the Mediterranean.

A matter for speculation was the part that Bulgaria's well advertised ambitions for an outlet to the Aegean sea was playing in the drama of the Observers also. pondered on whether Adolf Hitler definitely had decided to disengage his Italian allies from their ill-faring. war with the Greeks in Albania. Neutral military experts here agreed that such a move might well mean that Germany has abandoned hope of a blitzkrieg windup to the war with Britain. RITES SUNDAY FOR JESSIE J.

JORDAN Rites for Jessie James Jordan, 80 years old, will be conducted Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the Garber Methodist church. Rev. O. W. York will officiate and burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery with the Darnall funeral home in charge.

Jordan went to Garber to live. five years ago after retiring from active farm life on homestead west of Drummond. He died Thursday morning at his home: Survivors include his wife of the home; three daughters, Mrs. H. E.

Strecker Fairview, Mrs. Florence Coppage of Enid, Miss Mary E. Jordan of the home, and two sons, George of Jet and John of Enid. SOFIA SHUT OFF AS AXIS CHIEFS PLAN INVASION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) made identification of the craft impossible. Legation Ready to Move The British legation was packed for a quick get-away.

ahead of any nazi invasion. All diplomatic missions, including the United States legation were cut off from any kind of outside communication during the interruption in telephone service -both international and internal -from 8 p. m. last night (12 noon CST, Thursday) until a single line was reopened to Belgrade. at 6:45 p.

m. (10:45 a. m. CST) to night. Even after this line was restored it still was impossible to communicate with the provinces It was reported unofficially that King Boris had secluded himself in his palace, refusing even to see his own ministers.

Attempts to get word from the palace of the developments were futile. Britons. Arrested Secret police descended shortly after dawn on the homes of ten or more Bulgarian journalists, oil men and others, seeking incriminating documents and all were arrested. Those taken into custody and. sent immediately to a newly-established provincial concentration camp included Michael Padeff, Times of London correspondent; Christopher Janeff of the Chicago Daily News staff here: Peter Radoeff, official of a partly Americanowned oil company, two officials of the British press service and the nephew of a famed Macedonian leader, Pudor Alexandroff.

The roundup of additional individuals was reported still going on at nightfall. Miami, jumped all the way from 78th to 48th rank among the nation's cities between 1930 and 1940. TURKEY AND BRITAIN IN FULL AGREEMENT ANKARA, Turkey, Feb. (P)- The British military mission left Ankara tonight, concluding talks with Turkish leaders with the announcement that the two governments were in complete agreement on "Balkan problems" -presumably Germany's expected march through Bulgaria to Greese and the Mediterranean. It was learned that Anthony Eden, the British foreign secretary, after flying to Egypt probably would visit Athens for consultations with Greek leaders on massive British assistance for the Greek armies.

Eden and General Sir John Dill, shief of the British imperial staff, left vat 7:02 p. by special train for. Adana. Before leaving Eden talked at length with Sir Stafford Cripps, the British ambassador to sovtet Russia, and had a third interview with the soviet ambassador to Turkey. British sources said these talks were harmonious and added that Eden had found the soviet near the British viewpoint KEOTA HIGH SCHOOL BUILDING DESTROYED KEOTA, -(P) -Fire destroyed the three-story Keota high school building tonight.

Lack of a fire department and a central water system hampered volunteers seeking to control the blaze, whose efforts were limited largely to keeping sparks extinguished on the roof of the nearby gymnasium, which escaped damage. Salvaged from the building were some school records and a few pieces of damaged furniture. KINGFISHER COUNTY DEMO CHIEF NAMED HENNESSEY, Feb. George Dinkler, Hennessey druggist, has been named chairman of the Kingfisher county democratic committee, George L. Bowman, Kingfisher county state senator, anpounced today.

Read the News-Eagle Classified. We Do Custom Killing, Curing and Smoking of All Meat MOORE'S MEAT MARKET All meat Products Wholesale Phone 408 604 North Independence.

The Enid Morning News from Enid, Oklahoma (2024)

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