The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 369, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 8, 1956 Page: 1 of 10
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.ulr'nor.G Historic.”! Sooldtf
B.7 Lac Bld{5. ■ Ow.-p.
felt&priE City, 0:'.lr.«
The El Reno Daily Tribune
Single Copy Five Cents
Wl MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
El Reno, Oklahoma, Tuesday, May 8, 1956
nr MEANS UNITED PRESS
Volume 64, No. 369
:>W-
;*t| ™
JT SEEMS TO ME that if we
had begun on the adult
delinquency years back, we
would not now be having so
much trouble with our children.
And the question is, whose fault
is it that they (the children) are
becoming such a problem?
We believe that most teenag-
ers, in their hearts, want to do
what is right: they have a cer-
tain amount of energy which
must be used some place, and
the thrill we had in the horse
and buggy days is tame com-
pared to the ones the youth of
today enjoy.
Our young people have their
problems as well as the adults,
, and I don’t believe it would be
very difficult to find a few de-
linquent parents — both male
and female — just by a little in-
vestigating. Where arc the par-
ents whose small children arc
allowed to roam the streets late
at night? In our childhood the
curfew bell rang at 9 p.tn. and
if we were caught on the street
after that hour, unaccompanied
by an adult, it generally cost dad
a dollar. And dollars were so
scarce that we knew to start for
home at the first tap of the bell.
Then came the nickelodeon
and a slackening of the “get for
home” rule; and finally no cur-
few. And then all restrictions
■ were lifted. The movie house
owner had to have the nickels
regardless of the effect the late
hours had on the children. And
the pictures shown on the screen
were clean. In those days they
had to be.
TJTAST cars and money to spend
1 accounts for a great deal of
our juvenile trouble. Certainly
young people should be allowed,
l>> and encouraged, to drive but let
the parents lay down some rules
to the children, when they take
[ the family car out. and when
,1 these rules are broken the priv-
i iloge of driving should be taken
away for a certain length of
1 time. If all parents did this it
would help. It might save some
fathers and mothers a lot of
sorrow.
Too many parents become
[; angry if an officer tells them of
even a minor infringement of
the law of one of their children,
[.thus encouraging them in their
misdemeanor.
No one wants to break a
| ■ child's spirit. They should be
f, encouraged to have a mind of
their own, but it seems to me
[' that we have become tender-
, hearted (or something) that we
have torn down the old-fashioned
woodshed to make room for the
reformatories.
I am not trying to prove that
the horse and buggy boy was
perfect, we had our faults and
lots of them. The youth of today
has a greater fight to keep clean
and upright than we oldsters
. did. There are so many things
|j to tempt them.
1 There is an answer to the juve-
nile question: God, and real
fathers and mothers. —E. L.
1
m.
mm
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. I
If
Bomber Production
Schedule Increased,
Defense Head Says
Wilson Denies Soviets
Lead U.S. in Air Power
m 2:1
■3$
BLAST—Sequence photos taken aboard the USS Mount Mc-
Kinley, eight miles from the atomic bomb blast. (1) Seconds
after the atomic device was detonated a ball of fire glows.
(2) Fireball expands and mushroom cloud begins to ex-
pand. (3) Fireball continues to expand. (4) Intense glow
increases to become a blinding mass. (NEA Telephoto.)
EHS Victor In
Tennis Match
El Reno highschool’s tennis team
downed the Duncan players five to
four Monday in a match played on
the Legion park courts.
The El Reno players, coached by
Israeli Says Dar-Ren°Rnt
Remains Possible ^^ Contest
Hearing Is Set
On U. S. 66 Suit
I
OKLAHOMA CITY, May 8 —(tin— WASHINGTON, May 8—141—Secretary of Defense Wilson
A district court hearing is sehed- today disclosed the production schedule for B52 bombers
uled May 18 on a motion by the has been raised to 20 a month and said “it is not so” that the
Soviets are far outstripping the United States in terms of air
power.”
Wilson said the current output of the eight-jet interconti-
nental B52 is six a month.
He said he would have preferred to keep these figures
secret, but “because of the confusion and doubt that have
arisen on this matter 1 believe it desirable to set the record
straight."
The secretary was before a senate appropriations sub-
committee to discuss the military budget for the government
fiscal year which begins July 1. He said actual expenditures in
the fiscal year would be about
36 billion dollars.
The senate appropriations com-
mittee meanwhile set the stage for
a Democratic battle with the ad-
ministration over the adequacy
of the airforce budget.
Try to Blunt Drive
The defense appropriations sub
committee started consideration of A discussion of the history and
President Eisenhower’s proposed operation of the small business
state highway commission to throw
out a lawsuit seeking to halt con-
struction of U.S. 66 along the Choc-
taw street route at Clinton.
The motion, filed by Leroy Pow-
ers, attorney for the commission,
charged that the lawsuit is design-
ed to “harrass and embarrass’’
certain members of the commis-
sion.
Powers said he has advised the
members not to obey a summons
requiring them to give a deposi-
tion in the case Thursday.
Forced to Soli
The lawsuit was brought by
Clyde Rush, Clinton motel operator,
who charged that commissioner A.
B. Green, operator of a chain of
service stations, had purchased
property along the Choctaw route.
Governor Raymond Gary has dis-
closed he forced Green to sell the
property.
Paul Updegraff, Norman, attor-
ney for Rush, caused suhpenas to
be served yesterday on the indi-
vidual commissioners, who had
The Dar-Rcno 4-H club received gathered here for their regular
TEL AVIV, Israel, May 8—IIPI—Israeli Premier David Ben- ] "1,2“m*reting confeV’hdd with the dis- task °* “unl*ng ,h,e Democratic [ of the small business administra-
.................. tsszxutt
; strs Ai st *.ren Acab *** £ *-c, jlssl*vs s r &sr ““■ - ~
'but took two out of three doubles sentatives was the only way of bringing about a general im-1 and her assistant, to determine- Served On Secretary this jevcl a ad au . although ... , _
matches to gain the win. provement in mideast relations and renewed his proposal for a the three best in the county. In his motion. Powers argued admitting there probably will have n h, . ? ,°n r*e”„
meeting with Egyptian Pre- Rocket Club Second that the summons was served on to be a steep Increase in another ooo he said ° up t0 J250>00°1*
mier Gamal Abdel Nasser and The Rocket club was rated sec- a commission secretary, Rac year to maintain modernization - m .Hritti™ i„n„« .a
Other Arab leaders rnd and Piedmont’s 4-H club re-1 Brown, who is not employed by of the airforce. ’ f?”
The premier said also that ceivtd the third place award. the commissiort to accept service I Budoet 'Just Rioht' 1maM ,
“without a balance of forces be All the 4-H clubs in the county, of process. Wilson said in a Chicago speech tracts and offers management
; tween the Arabs states and Israel 125. were judged twice to gain an He also claimed that the court ,ast nigh| tbal ,he defen*c ,£d " / “ 8 * “
Singlet Results
In the singles matches Jim Bass [
I dropped to Phil Leonard, 8-6. while !
| Pat McCabe lost to Pat Leach 8-4.
The only other loss, in singles, was
a 12-10 battle between Bob Allen,
El Reno and Will Willis.
John Shaw downed Duncan's Jim
Cole 8-4 and Tom Zachary took a
10-8 win over Jim Jones. Charles
Staton handed Duncan another loss
when he downed Art Mihram 8-0.
Doubles Play Scores
In double play Duncan’s Leonard
and Leach took me first match
$1,600 Damage
Accident Result
Small Business
Aid Discussed
$35.9 billion military spending bud-
get for the coming fiscal year.
Opening witnesses were Wilson
end Admiral Arthur W. Radford,
chairman of the joint chiefs of
staff.
Wilson and Radford faced the
administration since its organiza-
tion in July, 1953, was presented
for members of the Lions club at
their regular noon luncheon meet-
ing today in the Oxford cafe.
Speaker was Owen C. Jones,
Oklahoma City, district manager
Damages of over $1,600 were re-1
was introduced by Jim
it is difficult to believe there will average score for each club. The has no jurisdiction because the is ••nlsi rjBu. >• nn ... , ...... , , ,
-:2~£r. _|SSEF-’* SSSSES £=3:s=
ported as the result of a two car pendent for the first interview he ! Judges Named consent to be sued. | the budget is inadequate to main- j0IM,s
accident six miles east of Union has granted since UN Secretary Miss Ruth King, assistant home Another argument presented by |ain supremacy over the growing R., "
City Monday. | General Dag Hammarskjold flew | demonstration agent , and Bud Powers was that Rush is seeking Russian air arm. Senator Richard '' *
B. Russell (Dcmocrat-Georgia), an
influential Democratic member of
-------------------- ,------------------------ ------ the subcommittee, has suggested
In an appraisal of the H^mmars Sponsor for the Dar-Reno 4-H mute. that a $1.5 billion increase should
kjold mission Bcn-Gurion said lie c]ub is thc Reno valley home de- The document filed with the be made in the airforce budget.
Highway patrolman Joe Dunn, to tlle midd*e east last month to | Barnes, assistant county agent, to halt an action which already
who investigated thc accident, said lljy ant* prevont war breaking out both from Grady county, were thc has been done. This refers to the
8-6, from McCabe a nd Shaw" but!,hat tl,e crash oceurrcd as James ,nglhetense °f (.’aza st.r‘P- judges for the finals. designation of thc Choctaw street
Bass and Allen handed Willis and Masopust. 78. route 1, Mustang,
the part of Egypt and also perhaps
on the part of Jordan.”
Hits at 'Attacks’
But Ben-Gurlon charged that
Arab attacks across the Israeli
border since the forging of the
Traffic Fines
Paid by Three
In JP Court
Three drivers were fined a total
of $35, plus cost, in thc justice court
of W. H. Gilbert, Monday, court
ecords showed today.
In the first case, Henry Leroy
Moles, Oklahoma City, entered a
lea of guilty to speeding south-
east of Okarche on May 1, and
iaid a $15 fine plus $8.50 court
cost.
Frank Pravdik, Cogar, paid a
10 fine and $9 court cost after
entering a plea of guilty to charges
»f driving a vehicle without a prop-
er drivers license.
In the third case Don Patker
I1 lammons, Canyon, Texas, was
iharged by highway trooper Joe
lunn with driving left of the cen-
er line on May 6. Hammons cn-
.crcd a pica of guilty and paid a
110 fine and $10 court cost.
Cole an 8-5 dubbing to even the was mak>ng a left turn off of state
count. In thc final match Zachary highway 152, onto a county road,
and Staton took Jones and Mihram Car, Pickup Crash
8-5 to give thc El Reno netmen thc According to Dunn as Masopust
one game edge. made the left turn his car, a 1937
It was the second tennis match model, and a 1956 pickup truck,
for El Reno in three days, with thc driven by George Collins Emery,
Boomer conference play being last 27, Oklahoma City, collided.
Saturday. In that meet thc Indian Masopust was traveling east at
netmen took a third place standing, j thc time of thc accident and Em- cease-fire "arouse doubt in either
ery was traveling west. The colli- the willingness or the capacity of
sion was between thc front of the the Egyptian dictator to maintain
Masopust auto and the left rear order in thc Gaza strip.”
of thc Emery truck. ——-
No One Injured
After the collision the Emery
vehicle turned over on its side, [
causing most of the damages.
The accident, which happened'
hoped the visit has been useful monstration club. Deep Dale is court stated that the plaintiff has
since he brought about, at least the sponsor „[ the Rocket 4-Hers 1 not suffered any damages and that
for the time being, a cease-fire on ;,nd thc pjcdn)0nl c|ub js sponsor- he is seeking through thc lawsuit
ed by the Friendly Neighbors
home demonstration club.
High Court Fight
On Suit Promised
Group Delayed In
Trip to Russia
OKLAHOMA CITY. May 8_u-i-
A suit seeking to force reapportion-
ment of the legislature will be
taken to the U. S. supreme court,
Sid White, attorney, announced to- a',ou' 6 p m., caused an estimated
day ' $125 damage to the Masopust car
White, attorney for James Rad and *1’500 damaKC ,0 Emcry’s
i truck, according to Dunn.
Guilty Pleas
Entered In
County Court
Two men entered pleas of guilty duc p, arrive in Leningrad Thurs-
NEW YORK, May 8-UV-Twcnty
nine Oklahomans cn route to Rus-
sia have been delayed in their
departure from New York.
Thc Oklahomans were scheduled
to leave by plane at noon today
but mechanical difficulties with
the plane delayed the departure
time until late in the day.
Thc Oklahomans, who will make
an agricultural tour of Russia, arc
ford, Oklahoma City cafe owner, . . . . . .. , .
was overruled by thc state su- Their were no injuries from the j in county court Monday and one day. Their first stop after leaving
preme court recently. Thc court acc'den'- sald Dunn, but Emery man was sentenced to the county New York will be Prestwick, Scot-
refused to take original juris- ™ce'vcd minor lacerations about jail by judge Sam Roberson. land. From there they will go to
the face. | Richard Julice Wiese entered a Stockholm, Sweden; Helsinki, Fin-
pica of guilty to charges of driving land, then Leningrad.
diction.
White’s case, like several other
attempts in rceent years, is based
on movement of population from
rural to urban centers. The legis-
lature has refused to reapportion
its membership which is based
upon population, with thc result
thinly-populated areas have more
representation per capita than
large cities.
Weather
Burglars Again
Strike at Yukon
The second break-in in Yukon in
two days was discovered at 1 p.m.
Monday, according to deputy sher-
iff Thurmon Hale.
Thc enter was made into thc
Brooks Oil company and about $25
was taken from the firm, accord-
ing to Hale. Entry into the build-
Estimate Is Made
On Cotton Crop
I while drunk and was sentenced
I to 20 days in thc county jail and
! fined $125.
The other person to enter a guil-
WASHINGTON, May 8 —UIV-Thc l>' P|ea. Dewey Marshall Gulliam,
agriculture department, in a final "ilhdrcw a plea of innocent and
report based on ginnings, today entered the new plea. Sentence
estimated thc 1955 cotton crop at date was set for May 12 by Rober-
14,721,000 bales of 500 pounds gross ' son-
weight valued at $2,382,000. In olht r cases on the county'
This compared with 13.696,378 cour| docket Bob Dubberstein en-
balcs for the 1954 crop with a value tered a plea of innocent to charges,
of $2,301.000,000. Both crops were of drunk driving and trial date was
grown under rigid production eon- j sp’ ^or today,
trol programs designed to prevent j Preliminary hearing for Billy
-L
’to harass and embarrass certain
members of thc Oklahoma state
highway commission in an effort
to keep U.S. highway 66, through
Clinton, Oklahoma, routed past his
place of business.”
Judge Fred Daugherty, who will
hear thc case, set a hearing for
May 18 on Powers’ motion.
Inquiry Rushed
Another subcommittee, which is
investigating thc relative strengths
Guests Introduced
Guests ati thc meeting included
John Kerin, Oklahoma City, and
E. N. Potts.
In other business Ralph Myers,
jr., chairman of the nominating
committee, announced committee
selections as follows:
Mervil Meyer, president; W. L.
Three Runaway Boys
Detained by Sheriff
than the administration plans for
j B-52 production.
The administration admits Rus-
sia is producing more long range
bombers than thc United States,
Three Oklahoma City boys were | but insists that the United States
held briefly by sheriff’s officers | js maintaining supremacy in over-
Monday after being picked up by all air power, including thc naval
thc highway patrol. | air arm
Thc three youths, 12, 13 and 15
of U. S. and Russian air power, is Holloway, first vice president;
racing to finish the first phase of Kessler Dorman, second vice pres-
its inquiry in time to influence ac- ident; Dr. F. W. Hollingsworth,
tion on thc defense appropriations third vice president; Don Arnold,
bill. Democrats on this subcom- secretary - treasurer; Ted Aber-
mittce, which is headed by Senator erombie! tail twister; Bill Gustaf-
Stuart Symington (Democrat-Mis- son uon tamer, and Ivan Barnett
souri), want more funds allotted and Leslie Roblyer, board mem-
bers.
Anti-Red Book Is
Studied by Judges
WASHINGTON, May 8 — (W— A
special three-judge panel is study-
Thc Symington subcommittee to- ing thc logal langle *nvolving
years old were picked up by the day heard closed-door testimony pnntin8 and distribution of a sen-
patrol west of El Reno and turned from General Otto P Weviamt ale document about communism
------I---1—— ------j . .. y ’ called “A Handbook for Ameri-
over to thc sheriff’s office
Thc boys, who had run away
from home, were turned over to
the patrol later in the day and re-
turned home to their parents.
commander of the tactical air
command. It previously has heard cans'
from thc heads of the air defense The special panel met yesterday
and strategic air commands.
if
1
accumulation of excessive supplies
The department estimated the
price of cotton received by farm-
ers at an average of 32.4 cents a
pound for the 1955 crop amf*33.61
cents for the 1954 crop.
The acreage harvested, yield per
harvested acre and production, ro-
Ray Scoggins was set for May 18
on charges of passing a false and
bogus check.
Ike Urges Work
To Secure Peace
Stats Faracast
Partly cloudy tonight and
Vcdnesday with scattered showers
nd thunderstorms west portion to-
light. Continued worm tonight and
Vedncsday. Low tonight in the
Os. High Wednesday in the 80s
■ast to the lower 90s west. F\irth-
r outlook: partly cloudy and con-
raued warm Wednesday night and
'SttrkUy.
ing was gained by breaking out a sP®ctively, in 1955 showed: Okla-
north window.
homa 790,000 acres, 281 pounds an
According to the report received aCre 463,000 bales gross weight,
by Hale thc thief found the keys NAMED TO POST
OKLAHOMA CITY, May #-Wi-
Governor Raymond Gary has ap-
pointed the Rev. Finis A. Crutch-
field, Norman Methodist minister,
for a two-year term on the govern-
or’s committee for the employ-
ment of the lundiMpped.
* ^
nn
to a cabinet and gained entrance
to a metal money box that was
in the cabinet.
The Kimball wholesale building
was entered sometime Saturday
night, and $60 cash, radios and
tools were taken at that time.
WASHINGTON, May 8 - OP —
President Eisenhower today direct-
ed that the United States “continue
to patiently and persistently seek
| a sound agreement” bn disarma-
ment with the Soviet Union and
other nations.
The president’s instructions in
those words were reported to news-
men at the White House by Harold
E. Stassen, Eisenhower's aide on
die,armament problems.
»:.■ ..
aX4
&
VICTORY—Democratic Senator Lyndon Johnson right and
his brother Sam Houston Johnson look over scores of Texas
newspapers announcing his landslide victory over Governor
Allen Shivers in the first fight over control of thc delega-
tion to the state convention. (NEA Telephoto.)
Charge Is Filed
After Accident
Charges of reckless driving were
filed against one man following
an accident Monday afternoon, po-
lice records showed today.
Thc charges were filed against
William C. Buford, Kingfisher, aft-
er his auto, a 1940 model collided
with a 1953 auto owned by A. D.
Cox, jr., 1101 West London.
According to the report, the Cox
auto was parked at the curb in the
100 block on south Choctaw. At the _ . i i i
time of the accident Buford was Employment IS Up,
traveling south on Choctaw. ~ ’ ' e r/
Damages to the Cox auto (jOVCmment jOyS
amounted to $75, according to po-1 '
lice records and Buford’s car re-1 WASHINGTON, May 8—(84—Em-
to look at the constitutional issues
raised in the feud between the
government and thc Methodist
Federation for Social Action,
Gresham, Ore. The federation com-
plains the handbook falsely lists it
as a “religious Communist front.”
Crux of the controversy turns on
whether a temporary restraining
order issued by a federal judge
here to ban further printing and
distribution of the handbook is
valid.
Distribution of the handbook is
continuing since the senate-house
printing committee voted to defy
the court ban.
ccived about $100 damage.
Buford posted $to bond on the
charge of reckless driving.
Two Calls Answered
By City's Firemen
Firemen answered two calls
Monday, records showed today.
The first, a false alarm, called
firemen to North O.
The second call, at 220 West Elm,
was to a trash fire. No damages
were reported in either alarm.
ployment jumped 900,000 last
month to a new April record of
63.990.000 while joblessness drop-
ped by 270,000, the labor and com-
merce departments reported to-
day.
The unemployment total dipped
to an estimated 2,564,000, the de-
partments said, even though job-
lessness among auto workers in-
creased and unemployment among
factory workers generally failed
to show the normal springtime de-
cline.
Slippers Mother will love for
J
l
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 369, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 8, 1956, newspaper, May 8, 1956; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924159/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.