Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 40, Ed. 4 Tuesday, March 25, 1952 Page: 1 of 8
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1
$
PRICK FIVE CENTS
LATE STREET EDITION
VOL. LXIII, NO. 40.
CIO Chief Says Wilson
•n"e
P
%
d
4 |
2 .
.C
Snubs New Peace Plan
M
1
1
. 1
1
Murray Blast Holds Threat New Storm
I
On Nevada
S
J
~o
1
I
Will Go to Alli**
I
r
At Least 6 Die
I
♦--
40 Battle Casualties
Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, appear-
The mattress on the bed still was
smouldering when Mrs. Maxine
1
In Oklahoma at least, the army's
4
Tuesday.
eral home after examination by
)
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from Arthur H. Vandenberg Jr.,
Smoky has been on the honor
inviting Eisenhower because of the
WASHINGTON, March 25——
began the task of rebuilding.
Sid MeMath said hat night
water to a depth of 10,000 feet,
tial nomination.
The Democratic leader of the
1
stead of being both candidate and
Costello’s New Trial
Fall
sients.
NEWYORK, March 25—-
Gambler Frank Costello’s second
as J. R. Moore and Charles Ellis
Black, addresses undetermined.
s
1952."
tion.
control.
What’s Inside
14
38
55
a. m.
N
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M
LA
Leftists Losers Where There ‘s Smoky
In British Fight There’s a Real Fireball
Senators Drop
Ike Quiz Plan
Navy Nabs
21 in Loss
Smoking in Bed
Seen in Death
Student at Weatherford Studies, Works,
Has Time for Wife, Four Children
Sea Water Sampled
To 10,000-Foot Depth
Several Believe Aid
Opinion Not Needed
Clerk Saves Many
From Swift Flames
State Guard Getting
New Gear for Old '
City May Get Sprinkle;
Cold Wave to Return
Although the Oklahoma national Ben LaFon, acting coroner. Offi-
guard has only a limited number cers L. T. Brown and M. E. Te-
of vehicles since the 45th division brinke said LaFon withheld a ver-
was mobilized two years ago, that diet pending further investigation.
A swift-moving cold front threw
weather observers here a curve,
Brunsdale said some farmers had
been snowed in for four or five
week, they indicated Tuesday,
Rainfall which had been expect-
ed over most of the state now
the San Joaquin Valley on the
west side of the Sierra Nevada
Snow Blocking Trains,
Cattle Starving
in Wide Area
Of $50,000
Court-Martial Urged
For Supply Crew
Of Carrier
LOS ANGELES, March 25——
Fire which flashed swiftly in a six-
floor hotel killed at least six men
I
t
he entered the school of phar-
macy. It took him just two hours
to get a job—in a drugstore.
Smoky's schedule is up at 4
a. m. to study. Classes start at 8
5
!
♦ -• -~
Vandenberg Replaced
As Ike Group Chief
NEW YORK, March 25_M_w.
a
1
1
Mike and Mark, 22 months.
The Torberts were married
while they were in Lawton
highschool.
»
l
ived from a survey of the state.
Arkansas was the hardest hit of
six southern states struck by tor-
nadoes, storms and flood last week-
suffocated.
Two were identified
)
!
NEW USE
FOR ICE BOX ...
)
1
t
r
«
Green (D-RI), who also voted to left by a battery of tornadoes
invite Eisenhower, indicated they which chewed through six states
were satisfied with the information and claimed 223 victims.
t
f
i
i
But even as the southerners bur-
ied their dead, rising waters in Al-
abama and Georgia threatened to
add flood victims to the thousands
made homeless by the tornadoes.
Arkansas Torando
Loss Is $25 Million
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.---
Arkansas totaled up a 25-million
dollar damage bill from Black Fri-
day's vicious tornados aa the living
1
»
i
child lying at the head of the
stairs. Afterward, he couldn’t re-
member whether it was a boy or
a girl. After getting oxygen, the
child was sped off to a hospital.
Third Big Fire of Night
As frightened faces appeared at
upper windows of the 100-room
I
I
r
r
Dead Mourned in South
Th* sun also shone on the South,
but in many places it beamed down
on a scene of desolation and griot
capes and a few jumped into nets. E
Most of them were suffering from I
the intense heat and heavy smoke. E
The blaze was quelled in an I
hour. It Was the third major fire E 5
of the night. A few hours earlier, I J
a $400 000 blaze swept a two-story I
business building a few blocks '■
away, on Broadway, gutting a I E
clothing store, dress show, jewelry I M
store and restaurant. M
One wing of the Bel Air Country IE
club was burned out in another ] '
fire shortly after midnight. Presi- I
dent Frank Winnie estimated the ■
loss, chiefly to the kitchen and M
banquet room, at $200,000. Six em-
ployes escaped.
4
U.S. Red Party Still
Peril, FBI Chief Saya
Story on Pago IS
i
Oil Reports
Radio Log
Society ...
Town Talk
TV Topics
Vital Starts
g
>
r
Gruenther provided and would not
press for another vote.
Issue Was Shelved
On March 17 the committee re-
Crossword Puzzle
Market* ........
ft
t
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f
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t
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Labor Party Adopts
Code for Discipline
LONDON, March 25-IP—The
Clement Attlee wing of the Labor
party won a double victory Tues-
day over leftwinger Aneurin Bev-
an’s faction.
/
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WASHINGTON, March 25—(.P—CIO President Philip
Murray Tuesday accused Defense Mobilizer Charles E. Wil-
son of trying to “wreck the entire wage stabilization pro-
gram” and bluntly refused to consider his new proposals for
heading off a steel strike.
In an angrily-worded statement that carried the threat
of a future union boycott of the wage stabilization hoard,
Murray said his United Steelworkers will spurn an invitation
t
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Generally, however, th* weather
was good throughout the nation.
W
replace tanks and vehicles worn
out by American combat use in
Korea and training in Europe.
Army Reply Revised
The Army's official reply to
questions was made available only
after it had been revised by the
Defense Department. The final
version said the delivery schedule
called for priority shipment to for-
ces already engaged in hostilities,
"as in Korea and Indochina, or
who are most likely to be engaged
in the event of aggression else-
where.”
cross country highways were part-
ly blocked, with one-way traffie
permitted in a few cases.
Farther to the east in North and
South Dakota, the problem of
starving livestock reached the criti-
cal stage. Report* of snow-ma-
rooned cattle dying of starvation
came in from several pinta.
...
)
Then it unanimously reconsidered
the vote, in effect shelving the
issue until after Gruenther bad
testified.
Moat of those who voted against
r
i
s
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r
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t
i
on Scissors Fatal
EE
TI
.2 ■
By MARK SARCHET
(Times SUM Writer)
VXTEATHERFORD, March 25—When, and if, the citi-
W zens of Weatherford or students at Southwestern
State college get feeling overworked, distracted or down-
in-the-mouth they just go call on the Don “Smoky" Tol-
bert family. They come away ashamed they aren’t working
harder.
At 22, Smoky and Mrs. Tolbert are the parents of
four children. There’s Dusty, 5; Susan 4. and the twins.
Tanks of U. S.
Units Shipped
To Help Allies
I still say, however, that Eisen-
hower will be welcome if he wants
to come."
Sen. Wiley (R-Wis) and Sen.
Oklahoma City Times
Allies Give Up Control
Over New Jap Laws
TOKYO, March 25—m—The Al-
lied supreme command Tuesday in-
formed the Japanese parliament it
will not have to obtain allied ap-
proval for its laws, budgets and
motions.
The command asked only that
parliament give 24-hours advance
\ ’
■
Bze da/
may come home.
Nine Sooners Return
Following Korea Duty
Nine Oklahomans were returned
to the United States under the
army rotation plan after tours of
duty in Korea recently, Col. Char-
lea E. Tompkins, executive officer
of the Oklahoma Military District,
WASHINGTON -A once- weeka And.Suth. Dakota Go:
rejected proposal that Gen Dwight Sifurt Anderson appealed for a
♦l
A packed meeting of the Labor-]
he members of the house of com-
mons voted a new code to enforce
parliamentary discipline in the La-
bor ranks. It also obtained by a
unanimous vote a ruling that Attlee
North Dakota
authority to re-impose the former swung to rescue the occupants.
Others clambered down fire es-
honor roll the two years at Came-
ron and all through highschool.
When the boy works, he works,
regardless of the job.
rAKING A PART in campus
- politics. Smoky got elected
president of the student council
at Southwestern last May. As the
result he drew the job of sponsor-
ing the 1952 Bulldog, college
yearbook.
He started looking for a busi-
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
(Eveninu Edition of The Daily Oklahoman.) Entered at Oklahoma Cty, Oklahoma. Postolfice aa second data mall matter under theaetot March >. 1879
EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY TWENTY-SIX PAGES 500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1952 ___
Women ............... 11
Hindi
goes to work at 1 p. m. Two days
a week he works to 6 p.m. Three
days he works to 10 p. m. Satur-
day and Sunday he works all day.
HE HARD-WORKING Smoky
- played football for South-
western on the 1950 and 1951
editions. Last autumn he was
named all senior college confer-
ence football center. His foot-
ball playing days are over, but
he still has one year to go in
pharmacy school.
notice of taking up such measures.
The command still has the basic brick structure big aerial ladders
shortage funds' ship's supply de emergency conferences with President Truman at Key West, The weather bureau saidthe new
A Naval board of investigation Fla., and announced that he would call in steel industry and storm,, pac r snow
charged Monday that shortages union leaders to discuss “a whole series of plans for settling - •
but cold and wet weather i still jected, 7 to 5, the proposal to have
on the books for Oklahoma this Eisenhower testify if he cared to.
M you’re interrupted at the iron-
ing board, wrap unironed damp-
ened clothes in a towel and put
into refrigerator.
But if your mood la dampened
by an everyday problem, let a
Want Ad put relief on ice for you.
Through Want Ads you find
good tenants, a good job, good
workers and a good business.
Phone 2-1211.
. - _ ---, Vandenberg will work in Wash-
Emil Mongee, was in a hospital civilian scientist William V. Kiel- ington under Sen. I___ -
with critical burns. Until they horn reported to a news confer- Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts, cam-
could question him, fire depart-ence. paign manager for General Eisen-
ment arson investigators said they Kielhorn returned to Washington hower. ‘
had no idea how the blaze started, after the series of landings on t_ "1
Whitehouse said the two men north polar ice carried out by the 11 a former chairman of the
checked in about 1:30 a.m. ‘-------- -—•
----—--- V1MVV VI HGVa- -Vdd--1 WHU Hlaucdi---- --- 57,----707 1'
The hote is just off Main street, flown from the air testing center a private business group,
has a permanent population of at Patuxent, Md. ----t-----
80, and caters chiefly to men tran-
.. ..Z ein. h» hit Southwest. tified by police as A. D. Bern-
hardt, fell or jumped to his death The navy has sampled arctic ocean Eisenhower organization,
in an alley. The other occupant,
Walter Williams, Washington state probably will be confined to east-
Republican chairman, took over ern Oklahoma, observers said. ---- _ _
from Arthur H. Vandenberg jr.. However, the longrange outlook is the proposal said they were against
Monday as head of the Citizen's for for temperatures far below aver -inviting, Eisenhower because ofthejbegan the task of rebuilding.
age for this season, with rains political implications.h is-candi- Gov, Sid MeMath said last night
Henn Cabot SX -^7 and continuingidavafonathesnepublicanpresiden-that the damageestimate wasder
nations. • rejected proposal unaL yen.YWI. voluntary “self-help program to
c.. Man 7A E Murray Mid Wilson hast"ereated D. Eisenhower beinvitedshome.t open the rad in 36 snowbound
as Fom misses “=r
Cornelius Mason England, 7-Board for extensive conz Relations Committee McMahon*” good throughout the nation.
-----“ ----- — sideration of its merits only to| The proposal by Sen. MeMahon But sunny skiesand mild tempera-
tures brought with them a new
threat—floods.
Already warnings have been is:
sued that any extended period of
warm weather accompanied bp
some spring rains will loose the
snowpack and send high waters
rushing down on lowland areas.
New Mexico and the Dakotas
100
' - M6
WASHINGTON, March 25
—(P)—Army units in this
country—including the na-
tional guard and the reserves]
must turn in thousands of
tanks and other vehicles to
meet U. S. priority shipments
to the allied build-up overseas.
The Army disclosed the equip
ment levy after Gen. Alfred M.
Gruenther told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee yester-
day that priorities drawn up at
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's head-
quarters already are guiding the
allocation of equipment by the
U. S. military services.
Army Carries Burden
The Army is carrying the bur-
den imposed by the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization decision to
equip 50 combat ready divisions in
Western Europe by the end of this
year.
The turn-in order applies to all
Army units in this country, the
Army said. An official source said
the brunt of the levy will be borne
by the reserves and the Guard.
9 Doctors to Receive
50-Year Service Pins
Nine men of medicine will re-
ceive 50 year service pins from
the Oklahoma County Medical So-
ciety Tuesday at a 6:30 p.m. din-
ner at the Oklahoma club.
The nine are Dr. Everett S. Lain,
Dr. L. J. Moorman, Dr. A J.
Coley, Dr. James I. Lyon, Dr.
Horace Reed, Dr. John M. Alford,
Dr. R. M. Howard, Dr. George L.
LaMotte and Dr. J. W. Shelton.
The Weather
From the United states Weather Bureau
Airport Station
LOCAL—Partly cloudy and
colder today. Mostly cloudy and
continued cold tonight, with oc-
casional light rain likely. Wednes-
day partly cloudy and continued
rather cold. High today near 50,
low tonight near 30.
STATE—Partly cloudy today,
colder southeast and extreme
east. Mostly cloudy tonight with
occasional rain likely east.
Wednesday partly cloudy west,
mostly cloudy east with rain end-
ing. Colder east Wednesday.
Highs today 40s northwest to 50s
southeast. Lows tonight 20 north-
west to low 30s southeast.
SHIPPERS—Prepare for tem-
peratures in Oklahoma next 24
to 36 hours: Northwest 20 to 25,
northeast and southwest 25 to 30,
southeast 30 to 35.
EXTENDED — Temperatures
will average about 5 degrees be-
low seasonal normals next five
days with rather cold weather
Wednesday, followed by brief
warming in western Oklahoma
Thursday and Friday and colder
Saturday and Sunday. (Normal
minimums 37 to 42, normal max-
imums near 65.) Precipitation
will range from about % inch in
Panhandle to near an inch in
eastern Oklahoma, occurring
mostly Friday through Sunday.
Hourly Temperature
SAN DIEGO, March 25 to meet with Wilson. 1
Twenty one Navy Supply Corps Wilson had no immediate comment on Murray s blast,
personnel from the aircraft car- Rut some of his top aids were summoned, to a hurried con-
" —4 mEa —h- n a
Family Watches Smoky Get in Some Studying -Tme *** Fhote • Tom KUllan
If you feel overworked and distracted a visit to the Don “Smoky” Tolbert home at
Southwestern State college, Weatherford, will convince you that you’re a sissy. Above,
Smoky studies as Mrs. Tolbert attempts to keep their four children quiet. The chil-
dren are, left to right, Mike and Mark, twins, 22 months old; Susan, 4, and Dusty, 5.
The Army plans to substitute yearoiar-tiredblacksm ith was sideration of its merits only to The proposal by Sen. McMahon
older, World War II type equip yrddeatresdhynimnim in “ have Charles E. Wilson, a self- (D-Conn) lost one supporter and
ment as soon as possible so that Ledroissingueireyin asmiitwo proclaimed big businessman at-two others who had favored the
most reseryeandNa tor2^ roomframehouse at the rear of & to reverse the decision.” idea seemed only lukewarmabout
units wisbeeguipped for summer his daughter's home, 2610 SW 22. -----•----- it afterEisenhower 1 chief of staff,
field training. . M.e. 41 Lod etiil An n ..1 ~____i •__ Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, appear
wS s d*I£ killed, 25 woundedi,three missing Gruenther'. knowledge of th. Eu- mountains in California has begun
twonsaidgthe in sc ion And three injured. ropean defense program is so com- flood emergency preparations,
was smoking in m “ •5. prehensive that testimony by Ei.- Some flooding already was started
w... n _ enhower would be just cumulative. in the south.
guard authorities commented on it The position of the body Indicat- D • n a
Rov W. Kenny, state ed K « “£ £ Rain1 orecast
adjutant general, said all old bed with his feet on the floor. Is Drying Up
personnel from the aircraft car- Hut some oi nis 1oP ads were ummone" W » ' unm. II", snow smothered Nevada a* the tar-
.a wreossstftementmmeekt endrohercomig war ‘
as the Army, also will contribute because °f an.ane8 ed17,0. The defense mobilizer returned Monday night from job.
military vehicles.
World War II-type equipment is A son, Robert England, 4013 NW
being turned in by the national 18, said his father lived alone. The
guard, and new equipment is to be body was token to Capitol Hill fun-
issued. " *
Of Another Boycott by Unions r M.„;mo
Of Pay Stabilization Board lflovinS
Gov. Norman
« A 10
"A—•—-
Temperatures here in the next — ----------- .
24 hours are expected to range House, Rep. McCormack of Massa,
gwu-o-: c., from about 50 to a low near 30. chusetts, said Eisenhower should
on the . Williams, a Seattle business man, That would compare with 56 to give up his command at once and
mui ui puar ice carrieu out vy hejis.2 ferpe: chsirman of the com* 28 at the airport, 58 to 29 at the be a candidate for President, in-1
office of naval reesarch with planes mittee for. economic development, Classen station in the last 24 hours, stead of being both candidate and
There could be a little rain in commander.
Oklahoma City spilling over from’ McCormack said in a statement,_______________
that expected in the east, but it he was surprised that Eisenhower ci _ 1 wz-.i . I
. _ _ BERKELEY, Calif., March 25— probably will be very light. “permits himself to occupy this Slated Without Jury
jump, are to get general informa- (- Miss Sue Irvin, 63, retired Highest reading in the state Mon-dual position.” ---------- - •
tion for navy operations to aid Berkeley highschool principal, died day was 64 at Ardmore. Overnight] Gruenther Is Evasive
tentatively rescue operations and eventually to Monday when she fell on a scissors low was 19 at Gage. There were Fi.„hAW__ ..t .1.
iarles Ellis assist commercial aviation use of and the blade plunged into her sprinkles at Ponca City and Way-- Eisenho er ".for-: President trial on charges of contempt of the
_ , ... _ „ the north polar routes. lheart. noka.
Policeman W. E. Meyer said he —-
ran up a stairway from the lobby K
to the second floor and found a
St. George hotel fire..«Man rescued as woman screams from her window."PM"
shall continue to preside over meet-
ings of the parliamentary Labor
party.
Bevan and his followers were re-
ported earlier to be planning a
move to ban Attlee and other mod-
erate socialist leaders from acting
as chairman at the meetings.
Chairmen Is Powerful
The parliamentary Labor party
consists of all 295 socialists who
sit in the house of commons. Its
meetings enable party leaders to
blueprint policy for commons de-
bates. The chairman is in a power-
ful position to influence the pro-
ceedings. Attlee was in the chair
as usual Tuesday morning.
The closed door meeting lasted a
little over two hours—a surprising-
ly short time, since Bevanites
turned up with their pockets bulg-
ing with amendments to the new
disciplinary orders.
Their aim was to get a wider
Interpretation of the "conscience
clause” which enables pacifists
and anti-liquor enthusiasts to vote
Leftists
15».
Hee
announced.
The men are: Sgt. Earnest Book-
man, Lawton; Sgt. Lewis M. Dean,
Norman; Cpl. Henry H. Goff, Tul-
sa; Sgt. 1-c Charles Heath, Rt. 2,
Oklahoma City; Maj. Owen A.
Johnston, 5013 N Steanson Drive,
Oklahoma City; Pfc. Walter P.
Key jr., Tulsa; Sgt Lowell W.
Long, Beaver; Pfc. Ronald K.
Smith, Blackwell; and Lt CoL Ca-
vil V. storm. Normao.
ern. Of course he was on the
IN‛52fM
IT COULD BE TPU
Accidents to March 1....4,639
injured to March 1 . ....1,525
Dead to March ......... 122
Kielhorn said that the purpose of
or the dead beside Bernhardt, Ul the program, known " project ski
headquarters called McCormack’s senate apparently will be held
statement a tipoff that the Demo- without a jury.
crate regard the general as "the Costello wants is that way. The
No. 1 threat to their hopes for prosecutor agreed, and federal
1952." Judge Sylvester Ryan indicated.
Gruenther, believed to be Eisen- Monday he would approve the
hower’s choice to succeed him in gambler s application when the
Europe, smilingly parried repor- trial starts Monday:, ,2 , .
ters’ questions as to when his boss Costello• «Jfirst trial, before Judge
Ryan, ended last January with the
jury deadlocked 11 to 1 for ionvic-
1ga
b ■ ■. 2,*"»
1
Smoky graduated from high- T Tf . 1)1
school and entered Cameron 111 Hatel KlA7A
State Agriculture Junior college 111 •IAV
at Lawton. He had to work and
did. He was also named all-ju-
nior college football conference
center in 1949.
AFTER COMPLETING two
M years at Cameron Smoky
transferred to Southwestern. He
brought Mrs. Torbert and Dusty
and Susan with him and started
huntingiobs. Withanambition the corridors knocking on doors,
toward owning his own drugstore then hurried back to his switch-
board to warn others by telephone,
was credited with saving many
lives.
An estimsted 150 were in the St.
George hotel, at 115 East Third
st., when the blaze broke out at 3
a.m. Police said 10 were hospital-
ized with burns or injuries.
The night clerk, Leland White-
house, 57, said:
"The first I knew of the fire was
when someone called down from
the fourth floor when he saw
smoke. I ran upstairs. I went down
a back stairway from the fourth
to the third floor. Then I saw the
fire. It was coming from room 312
at the rear. The door was open.”
One Plunges to Death
One of the occupants at 312, iden-
______________
• * •' ■ ‘.A
a. m. He eats lunch at home and
or reserve units. ships fundsover the. Peio fm strike April 8. be resumed so that planes could
In a statement replying to ques -January, 1948, to September, 1950. Wilson repudiated the wage board’s recommendation drop urgently needed fodder to
tionseon the £ that "he dispue"be settled with .17.^ hourly wage che starvingwatiia znear
delivery equrpmentttsPerowh trict convene court martial for the increase plus "fringe" benefits adding up to another 8 - mSnow"orswint6Tryeare
of our allies." , caluretorepnrpirshyrtegesddnrana He ,»id th. bMrd’. propowlB—afrwly by tto;
thatfshassnterprrtedthisqtpmemn 7 “ * “ union-"wou ld„beaaserious
taken from units at home would go Two officers, who had headed threat Y nnmv ”
to the allies. A small portion is the ship’s. supply department at to stabilize the economy.
known to have been earmarked to different times, three warrant of- The wage board ruled last week
fleers and 16 enlisted men were that the 26 cents-an-hour "pack-
named as suspects. age" increase could be granted
within present stabilization rules.
Stung by the unexpected rebuff.1
union members of the wage board
hinted privately that they may re-
sign en masse. There also was
speculation that public members
may join them in submitting resig
ed before the committee in support
Truelove went to check on her fa- i • .1. N:, Ara killoJ of the program yesterday,
ther and found him dead. The rest Llsted; Hine Are mu-eu Gillette Changes Mind
of the house was undamaged. 1 AcIweN . Naens, Sen. Gillette (D-Ia), who voted _______ _______ ______
... -nuuia mimps,muea uuy . F G. Wolf, district fire chief, WASHING oN. identified 40 ad- a week *1° for inviting Eisenhower have received such warnings and
A night clerk who ran throxgh is working just in reverse to the broke into flame,
plan announced in Washington.'cause apparently
Both regular army and national bed.
Comic Dictionary
Table Manners—A way of be-
having that was invented by
someone who wasn’t hungry.
Smoky
Perils Wage Program,
Loss of Equipment; • —
Airforce Not Affected
on hand always has been thought
PEASE EUBNNTanks
Storms
25
24
-i n
. 12
.18-19
. 14
1
CBy Unated PtomI
' A fresh storm moved over the
Rocky mountains Tuesday toward
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 40, Ed. 4 Tuesday, March 25, 1952, newspaper, March 25, 1952; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1988549/m1/1/?q=The+Kiel+Press: accessed June 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.