The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 180, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1955 Page: 1 of 12
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We El Reno Daily Tribune
Okie:none Hiet-oricrl Soclctjr
217 Loe B1
Ok lemons City
(A>) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
|ingle Copy Five Cents
Police Quiz Youth Over
|Theft of Car, Burglary
El Reno police today were questioning a 14-year old El
jteno boy following theft of an automobile and a $1,500 bur-
glary at the William J. Schulte oil company office at Evans
Lnd Oak sometime Wednesday night.
Police Chief Lee Harvey, said the youth, captured after
chase by officers both in cars and on foot early today, had
admitted taking the car, but
denied any knowledge of the
El Reno, Oklahoma, Thursday, September 29, 1955
(U.R) MEANS UNITED PRESS
Vol. 64, No. 180
bounty Youths
lAdd Fair Honors
Canadian county 4-H club youths
'e captured a sizeable chunk of
ne wards issued this week at the
Oklahoma state fair in Oklahoma
oil company office burglary.
The boy, who Harvey said pre-
viously had served a term in the
Optimism Felt
On President's
Heart Condition
DENVER, Sept 29 —UR— An at-
mosphere of growing but still sub-
dued optimism over President Ei-
senhower’s heart condition spread
through the Denver White House
today.
James C. Ilagerty, the president’s
press secretary, said that Eisen-
boys’ training school at String- ] hower has suffered no pain since
J Tuesday, that he no longer is run-
ning a temperature, that his mo-
rale is high, appearance good and
there is no feeling of depression.
For 13 hours yesterday there was
j no need of an oxygen tent for the
I chief executive At times during
town, was spotted by police as he
drove a car stolen earlier in the
evening from Norman Stevenson,
Oklahoma City, at its parking place
in the 1100 block on West Wade.
Shot It Fired
The two policemen, Russell Wood
and Lloyd E. Palmer, pursued the the day he listened to soft, record
A county 4-H team composed of fleeing youth until he ran the car <?d music,
arl Donald Folk, Yukon, Karlson i jnj0 a jence back of the Hammons Rolapto Still Pottiblo
annschreok of Union City, Billy used car (0, and look off on foot j None of the outstanding heart
inkston of Union City and French stopped only when officers specialists here on call across the
enwalt, El Reno, took first place | fired a shot ovcr hjs head and country is discounting the possibili-
was brought to the police station ty of a relapse or even another
shortly after 2 am. attack. None will say, at this point,
Th. Mull, office burglary
the state crops judging contest.
Folk placed as second individual
the state and Mannschreck plac-
id as fifth individual, while the
as a whole received 2.388 discovered later, and police prompt-
ly began quizzing the boy m the
Dints to come out a full 36 points
the lead over the second place case- ......
.,r Clock Is Stopped
Sheep Division »•*»** tbat the.bur:
, In the sheep div.sion Buddy 8>ar had taben a wlde, ot
Itout, Piedmont, had the champion I off,cc machinery including two _ .....
“over the hump,” or even that he
is improving definitely and steadi
iy.
But for five consecutive days,
they say, Eisenhower has been re-
acting normally and “without com
plications” to a type of heart at
tack from which the large majority
Quick Start On
Resurfacing Of
Streets Slated
Resurfacing work on streets in
paving district 27, including a ma-
jor portion of the city's downtown
business area, is expected to begin
within 10 days, after final awards
were made on bids at an adjourn-1 WASHINGTON, Sept. 29—(IP)—Vice President Richard M.
ed session of the city council Wed- Nixon, substituting for President Eisenhower, summoned the
nesday night. national security council into secret session today to discuss
Councilmen awarded the con- niajor issues facing the administration. The outlook for furth-
construction contract to the 1m- er defense spending cuts topped the list,
perial Paving company of okla- The top policy group, concerned with foreign and military
h0i?I,jCityi.ijft?r c"mpany. s“h‘ affairs, was confronted with the prospect that defense out-
W.M.S. 'and° a0wardedW0pavin°g lays ">»? 3011 ^ * recentlySU^eSted
district bonds to R. J. Edwards, cut of*1 ’ ?00:000 this year
Oklahoma City, on a bid of five may a b u * ou^ 0
percent interest.
Curb Job Starts
City Manager C. A. Bentley
U. S. Security
Council Holds
Secret Talks
question.
Those facts bear vitally on the
administration's efforts to balance
the federal budget by next June 30,
a goal that Treasury Secretary
i George M. Humphrey says can be
reached with a three percent re-
pointed out today that following
completion of the work, and the
engineer's final revision on costs,
property owners will be given a ^tlon in federal's^ndTng.'
, 30-day period in which they may p.nU,0n Differ,
I pay off their assessments, with .
! out interest, before sale of the Pentagon officials take a differ-
bonds.
! Meanwhile some phases of con-
! struction already have been start-
| ed. Workmen today started work
ent view. They argue that federal
revenues are running ahead of
prior estimates and that a balanced
budget may be reached through a
on curbs on the north side of Hayes combination of smaller government
first place Hampshire ewe, and
(•'red Knight, Yukon, had a sec-
ond place Hampshire ewe in the
ppen class sheep division.
In the junior dairy division Jean
blair Griggs of Mustang had a first
place Guernsey, three years or
corder, a plastic radio, a desk pen
set, a desk stapler, several rub-
ber stamps and $7 in three-cent
stamps, all with a total value in
the neighborhood of $1,500.
In detaching the electrical office
equipment the burglar accidentally
| tions” are the key, significant
i phrase. The absence of complica-
tions is encouraging to Eisenhow-
er’s physicians.
New Term Eyed
Dr. Paul Dudley White, the Bos-
ton heart expert who was flown
ver, and first place two-year old stopped an electric clock at 11:40 j sunday t0 examine the president.
heifer in addition to a fourth place
peifer calf.
Other Awerd, Wen
Robert Griggs. Mustang, had a
place junior yearling heifer
Juemsey and fourth place two-
hear old heifer and in the open
class had a seventh place junior
pearling Guernsey.
In the junior dairy division Mari-
lyn Berousek of Mustang had a
pecond place junior yearling Guer-
nsey and in the open division had
p.m., giving police the apparent
time of the burglary.
says that complications can come
any time in the first two weeks
after a heart seizure. That is the
period in which an afflicted heart
is discarding damaged muscle tis-
sue and forming a scar.
“For the first two weeks,” White
says, “we keep our fingers cross-
ed."
In Washington, meanwhile, a
, cabinet member was reported to
CH1CKASHA, Okla,. Sept 29 (flt— have told a group of important
Making their second successful fund raisers for the Republican
Trio Makes
Second Break
Out of Jail
Im-mI
rs of the second place district
for Canadian county.
sixth place Guernsey two-year break in two months, three prison- party there is no definite reason
id, a seventh three-year old and ers escaped from the Grady coun- at this time to think President
ver and an eighth yearling. ty jail last nigh, after overpower- ( Eisenhower cannot run for a see-
Jean Clair Griggs, Robert Griggs ing jailer Ray Markham with “pa- ond term.
nd Marilyn Berousek were mem- [ Per” Blackjacks. I This report was echoed within
A state-wide alert was broad- J hours from a number of top level
cast for the trio—a woman murder administration and GOP quarters,
suspect and two male companions. | in a sudden lifting of the gloom
Sheriff Hack Perrin identified
the escapees as Flora Mac Gid-
dings, 25-year-old Marlow woman
charged with murdering her son;
W. R. Garrett, 29, charged with
burglary, and Cornelius Cook, 29,
serving a 1-year sentence for dis-
turbing, the peace.
Storm Hits
Mexico Coast
MEXICO CITY, Sept.
The weather bureau announced
Jthat Hurricane Janet, with an esti-
Imated death toll of 350 to 400 al-
lready, lashed at the Mexican coast
(today, a little north of Vera Cruz.
It said winds of 119 miles per
(hour blew along the coast at day-
Ibreak, with the eye of the storm
(not due for several more hours.
|The bureau said 16 inches of rain
(had fallen in 12 hours but that the
(apparent course of the year's 10th
(hurricane will carry the center
(past major populated areas. The
(region north of Vera Cruz is sparse-
fly populated.
The U.S. weather bureau at
|Miami reported Janet already at
la standstill at midmorning, sug-
gesting a possible change in di-
| rection.
Janet is Mexico's third major
I disaster in 10 days. Hurricane
1 Gladys killed an estimated 297 per-
jsons. A train explosion near Tor-
Ireon killed about 30 and cut west-
lern railroad traffic.
that settled over the Republican
1956 presidential outlook after
Eisenhower was laid low with a
heart attack Saturday.
Attack 'Lightest Kind'
The outburst of optimism that
Eisenhower might yet lead the
party's ticket in the 1956 presiden-
Markham said Garrett and Cook I l*al race was based on an assess-
attacked him with blackjacks ment ‘n high administration quar-
made from rolling magazines tight- taers here that Eisenhower s heart
ly and soaking them in water. He attack was "the lightest kind that
said they locked him in a cell, a man can have
taking his keys. I This did not iibe w‘th the n'ed,‘
Mrs. Giddings and the two men, I ca' bulletins from Denver, which
along with Ivan C. Allen, 35, es- at f'rst described the attack as
caped early in August, taking with “mild" and later as moderate—
them a supply of whisky. They 1 neither mild nor severe.
REACHING FOR WIN—Walter Land, El Reno highschool
end, plucks a ball out .of the air in a practice session as the
team readies for a battle with the Norman Tigers at 8 p.m.
today in Memorial stadium, pic.^ame will be the first con-
ference outing for either team.—{Photo by Bobby Allen.)
street in preparation for surfacing
work there.
Area Described
The paving district includes
Bickford avenue and adjoining side
streets in the business area, along
with a stretch of paving on Ellison
avenue, extending from Watts
street to the 800 block.
Councilmen remained at their
session until 10 p.m. Wednesday
j after finishing up their work on
the paving district but without tak
ing additional formal action.
Water Needs Talked
They discussed further action on
a proposed survey of the city's
water needs and present distribu-
tion system, but tabled any de-
cision until a later session.
Further action also was post-
poned, pending current discussions
with the CAA, on the condition of
runways at Mustang field, aband-
oned wartime airport which now is
being used as a shop and ware-
house area.
Chamber to Ask
For Nominations
Masons Honor Three Members
For Long Years of Lodge Work
Baby's Kidnaper
Faces Prosecution
savings and increased revenues
due to the current boom.
The budget and defense spending
situations were to be discussed
again tomorrow at a cabinet meet-
ing, according to treasury and de-
fense sources.
Nixon called both meetings under
the administration plan to carry on
as usual while Eisenhower is re-
covering from his heart attack in
Denver.
Decisions to Wait
But the likelihood of an impasse
between treasury and defense de-
partments over further military
savings made it clear to authorities
that final decisions would have to
wait until the president can take up
his tasks again.
The likelihood that defense spend-
ing, now set for about $34,000,-
000,000 this fiscal year, may have
to rise next year was based on
these facts:
The army, which has been living
“off the shelf” for more than a
year, probably will need more
money in the year starting next
July 1.
Radar Funds Needed
were captured the next day in Win-
field, Kansas.
Officers described the fugitives
as "very dangerous.”
Wranglers Club Holds
Special Meeting
Members of the El Reno Wrang-
lers club held a special meeting in
the Veterans of Foreign Wars club-
house Wednesday night to make
plans for a trail ride Oct. 1 at the
Ferdie Merveldt ranch.
In other business the 26
But the widespread nature of the
] belief—or hope—that Eisenhower
may run again was indicated by an
Associated Press poll. Of 116 GOP
state chairmen and national com-
| mittee members reached, only 12
said firmly Eisenhower should not
run again. Five said he should;
the others awaited further develop-
ments.
Illness Fatal To
Frank Vogel, Jr.
Weather
Partly cloudy with scattered
mem- showers and thunderstorms moving
Teacher's Picture
To Go on Display
The face of Miss Rose Witcher,
I retired El Reno highschool teach-
er, has been recorded in oil by
Mrs. LaVerne F. Walker, Yukon
I painter.
The portrait, along with others
I in the artist's collection, will be
on exhibit in the theater building
| of the Mayde Mack Mummers, in
Oklahoma City, from Oct. 3 to 12,
during the run of the group's
opening play of the new season.
The play, “An Italian Straw
Hat,” is a French comedy by Eu-
gene Labiche and Marc-Michel,
with the Mummers attempting a
world premier of its English trans-
lation. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m.
bers present heard reports on the
recent county fair rodeo by various
chairmen and a treasurer's report
before adjourning until the next
regular session in October.
into east and southeast tonight.
Cooler tonight. Friday, fair and
continued mild. Low tonight 50
north to 62 southeast. High Friday
80 to 85.
59 Classified by Draft Board;
Two Men Are Ordered Inducted
Two Men Fined On
Speeding Charges
Charges of speeding on U. S. 66,
eight miles east of El Reno on
Sept. 28, have cost two drivers
fines of $25 and $10 costs each in
the court of J, H. Craven, justice
of the peace.
The two men fined, both accused
of driving 90 miles an hour, were
named as Willie Elton Ward, Floy-
dada, Tex., and Nick Callas, Chi-
cago, 111.
Complaints in both cases were
made by Trooper Ira Walkup.
Two Canadian county draft re-
gistrants have been ordered to re-
port Oct. 4 for induction into the
armed forces, and 59 others have
been classified by the local draft
board during the past month.
The two ordered up for induction
arc John Herman Everett, Union
City, and Melton Eugene Wright,
El Reno.
The list of new classifications
includes one man, Frederick W.
Heupel, placed in class 1-A, avail-
able for military service.
ThrM In 1-C
Three other men, Henry K.
Moore, Larry W. Wood and Donald
L. Reese, were placed in class 1-C,
inducted, while five, Jestin L. Braz-
zeal, Charles E. Norman, Philip
W. Walch, Rodney M. Thomas,
Marvin L. Ballard, Claude K.
Smith, jr., were classified 1-C, en-
listed.
Placed in class 1-C, discharged,
were Leslie H. Johnson, Darrell R.
Williams, Albert L. Frazier, Don-
nie L. LeFever, Melvin G. Robin-
son, Norman L. Booth, Thomas G.
Taylor and Joe M. MadBull, while
those classified 1-C, reserves, were
named as Donald R. Taylor,
Joseph M. Phelps, Kenneth R.
Barton, Sammy R. Goodman, John
H. Marsh, Max H. Huston.
24 Are Deferred
Twenty-four men were placed in
class 3-A, registrants with depen-
dents. They are Marvin J. Hinkle,
Jackie E. Hurd, Allen B. Moffat,
J. R. Howard, Joe E. Potts, Joe
Roush, jr., Rudolph R. Taylor,
Kenneth L. Boevers, Bobby M.
Smith, BUI G. Williams, Melfred
R. LoyaU, Ralph J. Mcngers, Clar-
ence R. Brothers, Phillip L. Shank-
lin, Marvin K. Smith, Cecil L.
King, Dailard E. House, Carl D.
Klohn, James E. Emmert, Richard
W. Royse, Richard A. Robertson,
Virgil R. Randell, Donald R. Nason
and Stanley L. WiUhoite.
Placed in class 4-F, unfit for
military service, were Osker K.
Byrne, Leon J. Ross, Frank Gil-
bert, and Burgess L. Prentiss.
Seven men were classified 5-A,
over age of liability for military
service.
Three men who have been active Masons for 50 years or
more will be honored by the Masonic grand lodge of Okla-
homa and the El Reno lodge No. 50, when the local lodge is
host to a district 20 meeting Friday night in the Masonic
temple.
The three to be honored are C. C. Kegelman and J. F.
Nighswander, both of El Reno, and Willie Wallace of Okarche
route 3.
Both Kegelman and Wallace
are past masters of the El
Reno lodge.
A fourth man who was to have
been honored with the group Fri-
day night was the late Murray A.
Ashbrook, who died unexpectedly
at his home Wednesday morning.
To Recoivo Pins
W. Earle Goode, senior grand
warden from Canton, will repre-
sent the grand lodge at the meet-
ing and will present certificates
and three pins to the trio, as well
as deliver the principal address.
The business session will be pre-
sided over by district officers who
currently are all from the Hinton
lodge. Rev. L. B. Saltzgiver, a
past master of the El Reno lodge,
will serve as master of ceremon-
ies.
Readings and musical selections,
principaUy by Rainbow Girls, will
be included on an entertainment
program preceding presentation of
awards and refreshments wiU be
served at the end of the meet-
ing.
Three Others Named
District 20 is made up of Masonic
lodges from Kingfisher, Yukon,
Geary, Hinton, Calumet, Bridge-
port, Loyal, Piedmont and Mus-
tang, in addition to El Repo.
Three other members of the El
Reno lodge currently living in
California, will receive 50-year
awards sometime this year. The
awards, to be presented by the
California grand lodge on behalf of
the Oklahoma grand lodge will go
to H. L. Merry, West Covina,
Calif., Lewis Rex Gephart, Long
Beach, Calif., and Harry E. Har-
rison, also a past master, of Bak-
ersfield, Calif.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 29-/P—
Vigorous prosecution was promis-
ed today for Barbara Jean Bene-
dict, blonde wife of a Filipino
lodging housekeeper, who snatch-
ed 2-day-old Robert Marcus from
his crib at Mt. Zion hospital here
10 days ago.
Robert was returned to his de-
liriously happy parents, Dr. and
Mrs. Sanford Marcus, in Stockton
early yesterday. That was shortly
after the 27-year-old kidnaper had
been spotted with the baby by a
sharp-eyed deputy sheriff at the
prize fights in Stockton Tuesday
night.
While the deputy probed her
story that the infant was hers
Mrs. Benedicto telephoned Dr.
Marcus in San Francisco that she
Frank J. Vogel, jr., automobile wouid deliver Robert to him in
Nominations for five new direc-
tors of the El Reno chamber of
commerce are being accepted this
week by the chamber's nomination
committee, headed by Morris Stock.
Nomination blanks were being
placed in the mail for all chamber
members today following a ses-
sion of the nominating committee
late Wednesday.
The new directors, arc to be
elected to succeed Carlos Weaver,
Stock, H. M. Woods, Dr. C. Riley
Strong and Louis Reiter who will
be ineligible for nomination during
the coming year.
Nomination blanks must be re-
turned to the chamber of com-
merce office by 5 p.m. Monday,
Oct. 10, in order that the nominees
may be included in the chamber’s
mail ballot.
Jack Burmeier, chamber maii-
ager, said the election itself must
be completed by Dec. 15, with
newly elected members to sit in on
board sessions as observers before
taking office. A new set of officers
will be elected by members of the
new board.
Holdover members of the cham-
ber’s board of directors are Lloyd
Anderson, L. C. Chapin, Boyd Hal-
verson, A. R. Harrison, Stanley
Youngheim, Jess Burge, Glenn
Mordy, Asa Mayfield, Ralph A,
Myers, jr., the current president,
and Roy Stevenson.
Members of Stock's nominating
committee are Reiter, vice chalr-
Guided missiles, shipbuilding and man. {.'rcd Beckett, Vestus Mor-
jet plane spending arc likely to ris David DeLana and R E
increase. Larger sums will be j Hinchey.
needed for the radar warning nets I
being installed in this country and
in the Arctic. The army will need
more men and money to handle
expanded reserve forces training.
A high defense official said to-
day that it would “take a lot of |
doing” to hold defense expenditures
where they now are. The present
rate is betwen $34,000,000,000 and
$35,000,000,000 a year. He said he
saw “nothing in the offing to re-
duce the current level.”
Rotary Club
Peace Work
Is Outlined
PERON GETS ASYLUM
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina,
Sept 29—(IP)—Ousted President Juan
D. Peron has been granted asylum
in Spain and may begin his flight
into exile today, a source close to
the new president said.
dealer of 1412 South Reno, died
early today at his home following)
a long illness.
Mr. Vogel was bom Oct. 2, 1911,
at Arkansas City, Kan., and was
graduated from the University of
Oklahoma, Norman, where he was
a member of Sigma Nu fraternity,
in 1936.
He lived in Oklahoma City for
II years, where he was in the
automobile finance business, and
came to El Reno in 1947, remain-
ing here most of the time since
then with the exception of a short
time at Hereford, Tex., and Ponca
City, where he also was an auto
dealer.
Mr. Vogel was a member of
the First Presbyterian church, the
El Reno Golf and Country club,
and the Benevolent Protective Or
der of Elks in El Reno.
Survivors include his wife, Bet-
tylu, of the home; two children,
Judith and Frank, III, .both of the
home; his mother, Mrs. Blanche
Vogel, Arkansas City, Kan., and
two brothers, Louis Vogel, Alice,
Tex., and Charles H. Vogel, Santa
Clara, Calif.
Funeral services will be held at
10 a. m. Saturday in the First
Presbyterian church with Rev.
Otto Bergner, pastor, and Rev
Russell Wingert, pastor of the
Hereford First Presbyterian
church, officiating. Burial will be
in the Riverview cemetery at Ark
ansas City under direction of the
Wilson funeral home.
Stockton.
DRIVER PAYS FINE
Wayne Kingsley Bowling, 20,
Concho, charged with speeding, has
been fined $10 in the El Reno city
police court.
AUTOMOBILE DAMAGED
An accident on Wade street about
4:30 p. m. Wednesday caused dam
age estimated at $150 to a car
driven by Andrew T. Richardson,
70, of 609 North Choctaw, police
traffic records show. Richardson's
car, stopped at a traffic light, was
involved in an accident with
truck driven by Robert Paul Chap-
lin, 28, Clinton.
Feddersen Winner
In Rodeo Events
NEW YORK, Sept. 29——Billy
Feddersen, El Reno, was the only
two-event winner in the opening
performance of the Madison Square
Garden rodeo last night.
Feddersen beat out Grant Bryan,
Dublin, Tex., in the saddle bronc
riding competition and won the
steer wrestling in 10.1 seconds.
Tom Nesmith, Bethel, placed
second behind Lynn Shephard,
Globe, Ariz., in calf roping and
Duane Hennigh, Lavernc, finished
second behind Pete Crum, Red
Lodge, Mont., in bull riding.
Rotary clubs in 92 countries and
geographical regions are united in
efforts to promote international
understanding, good will and peace,
j El Reno Rotary club members
I were told today.
( Speaker was Ed Smith, Enid,
governor of Rotary district 181,
who appeared at the club's regular
OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept. 29—noon luncheon meeting after a con-
—Felony and misdemeanor charges ference with local club officers and
were filed today against 10 more committee chairmen,
men accused of beating city gar- He outlined the club’s $1,750,000
bage workers Tuesday in the latest expenditure in recent years on stu-
outbreak of a month-long labor dis- dent fellowships, which permit out-
Charges Are Filed
In Garbage Strike
pule.
standing students to study in coun-
Felony charges were filed yes-1 tries other than their own.
terday against six former city Those attending the session to-
workers implicated in the gang day included a visiting Rotarian,
attacks on garbage crews. All I Claude Westerman, Palestine, Tex.,
pleaded innocent and were re- and a new student Rotarian, Bob
turned to jail in lieu of $5,000 bond Maynard,
each. -
Indonesia Voting
Gets Under Way
JAKARTA, Indonesia, Sept. 29—
lib—Protected by steel-helmeted
SKUNKED
REGENT, N.D.—HPi—There's a
shortage of storage space in North
Dakota, but that had nothing to do
with Frank Laufer piling a load of
wheat on the ground. A skunk got
caught in the combine with the rooPs. and natlona» P°'lce
wheat and Laufer decided to keep terrorists and extremists Indo-
nesians began voting today in their
that batch separate.
Yankees Trounce Dodgers 4-2
In Second Straight Series Win
NEW YORK, Sept. 29 —UPi— The New York Yankees
shelled Billy Loes tor four hits and four runs after two
were out in the fourth inning today and beat the Brooklyn
Dodgers, 4 to 2 behind the steady pitching of Tommy Byrne
for their second straight world series victory.
Byrne, the second Yankee lefthander to face the Dodgers,
limited them to five hits in a superb performance.
With the Yanks two up. the series moves to Brooklyn’s
Ebbets field tomorrow where righthander Bob Turley of the
Yanks is slated to face Johnny Podres in the third game.
The Yankee scoring was limited to the one big inning as
Karl Spooner came up with a one-hit relief pitching job for
three innings. But that inning was enough for the crowd of
64,707 that jammed into Yankee stadium
The Yanks had made only three hits off Loes and were
trailing 1-0 with two out in the fourth when they suddenly
caught fire.
Brooklyn’s third double play apparently had snuffed out
a scoring chance when Yogi Berra dropped a single into
short left. Joe Collins, Wednesday’s homerun hero, walked
on four pitches and Elston Howard drove a hard single to
left, bringing in Berra with the tying run.
| first popular national elections.
I The big question was whether the
| anti-American Communists would
fulfill their promise to win a ma-
jority.
Voting is by stages in the 3,000
| scattered islands that form the
| republic of 42,320,000 registered
voters. Final results in the con-
tests for 260 seats in parliament
may not be known for six months,
but the general trend may emerge
in two or three weeks.
Assault, Battery
Charges Denied
Two men, Willie Turtle and Mur-
ray Turtle, entered pleas of inno-
cent to charges of assault and
battery when they were arraigned
Wednesday in county court.
Judge Sam Roberson admitted
them to bail in the sum of $100
each.
They had been acused in a case
filed Sept. 12 on complaint of Ed-
mond H. Burns, that they had
beaten Burns about the face and
body.
a
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 180, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1955, newspaper, September 29, 1955; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924209/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.