Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 36, No. 138, Ed. 1 Monday, February 13, 1950 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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0KL.V.I9MA lilCTORICAL SOCIETY
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA.
im I
/
ONE A DAY
BEDS New RuUrtu is mi toll- \
.strutted that Its "bounciness" can )
be regulated simply by adjusting a t
cord at one end You can have U ,
firm or soft, as you desire. (Orit). ^
)
I
\SAPULRS
DAILY
HERALD/
I
hmi lint
, OKLAHOMA — Moody. clearing
ursi portion tonlglit and east Turs-
day. < older tonight, warmer north-
west Tuesday. Low temperature to-
night 15 to 2* northwest. 25 to 32
east and south. Highs Tuesday W
to 45 west, near 10 east. Diminish-
ing winds tonight.
VOL XXXVI NO 138
SAPULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1950
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY
44 Are Killed As
Tornadoes Slash
Southwest Sunday
F
FORWARD
s!n i
\APULfA
••The destiny of a rlty •*
[ nerely a romp .site picture
lot tndnidu >1 ambition.”
By K. F. M
mi mmimj
TO SAVf ITS
food or
Bfti >
i ururt <w
'ar.ftJ Mt A
J 'Jt.
t, _
Carl Noble invoked a nostalgic
mood In the conductor of this col-
umn Saturday night
('&rl inuallv ilroos in to tin
Sunday Herald to take home for
a bit of Saturday night reading
until the Sandman unfurl* na-
ture's "shuteye" signals.
While waiting for the presses he
ran his eye over the new lighting
fixtures In the newsroom and re- j same area A
marked how bright they made the Ip. n yesterday from
Texas, Louisiana,
Tennessee Struck
By Hopping Twisters
SHREVEPORT La . Feb 13 U R)
—Tornadoes that devastated scat-
tered sections of the south and
southeast Sunday and today killed
at least 4t persons, -including an
entire family of six children and
their parents, injured hundreds
and cost thousands of dollars In
property damage
Victims of Hu- freakish weather
that hedge - liup|H d with murdcr-
oul violence through east Texas,
norlhwe-t Louisiana and west
Tennessee included the Wilson
Carrol family who apparently died
in Ihcir sleep when a twister
roared into the little wesl-Tcn-
nessee community of Hurricane
Hill before dawn.
The b die.' A the mother, fatlior ^.M w’uj have 120 feet of model
and their six children were found displays on pr0per breeding, feed-
by rescue workers Their bodies t housing, sanitation, etc., for
were badly battered Their home cal^je
... unagunaitaw 0, 0. L BW, «.(. y
-a — I ”'"v‘n“;n V,"„sr.
mw
Sand Springs Police Chief
Denies Shooting Sapulpan,
Date;Say s 'Somebody Else’
rmt
HI yIw '-X v
A unual Dairy Day Observation j ~~~ _
To Be At Bristow Wednesday • Sapulpa oday
Tile Annual Creek County Dairy*
Day observation will be held at the
Bristow fairgrounds Wednesday at
1:00 p. m. It was announced today
by Jay Hesser. county farm agent.
The event will be featured by a
number of experts on animal hus-
bandry
Lloyd Stinnett, dairy specialist of
Uic extension service. Oklahoma
One negro
injuries re-
ceived when the series of tornadoes
whipped through a suburb of Hous-
ton.
Twenty-eight of the known dead
where from Louisiana and six oth-
ers from Texas.
William Klutls, one of the fir.-t
room.
"It's quite a contrast." he said.
"to the old days here m Sapulpa 1
and reaching Into his pocket he
pulled out a faded postcard dated
In 1909 on which was Imprinted
tlie image of the old "Noble's Lead-
er" store which dealt in toys, no-
tions. chinnware, glassware etc It
was run by his father. C. M Noble.
The store was located OH North
Main just south of the Hobson
street intersection and lias been
torn down long ago.
The feature about the store that
intrigued both Carl and me was the
modem gas lights that could be
seen lighting the interior. My,
whivt an improvement they were
over the old coal oil lights that
hung in bracket-’ on the wall.
From coal oil lights to gas lights
, . . our talk drifted on In a
desultory fashion and finally Carl
disclosed the Interesting fact that
Sapulpa once had Its own
OLD LAMPLIGHT! It
Remember the song?
Anyway . . . back in 1905 John-
ny Holmes (Carl said), rented
pressure gas light*, something
like the ( oleman lamps. I reck-
on, lo merchants downtown on
a monthly basis, lie would pick
I Item up each evening, t ie in and
service the lights and deliver
them hack lo the store in lime to injured pei lying during the
a disease Infecting the udder of
dairy cattle.
A motion picture will be shown
with better dairy improvements as
its theme.
A W Jacobs, marketing specialist
i of the extension service of the Okla-
meinbers of the rescue team to hollla a&m college will discuss fed-
reach Hurricane Hill, said that erai marketing orders and markets
bodies of the Carroll family "were ,n Rcnerai
s™!!C!Td “ **"*"" * Oeorge Norwood, manager of the
Klult believed the family as Northwesl Dairy Breeders Assoc la-
sru? STuK ITtnEi I ?? •«
flelal insemination.
Type demonstrations on Jersey.
Ouernseys and
presented
Holsteins will be
ugainst their house about 2 a.m.
First aid headquarters were set
up at Itipiev. nearby. Hurricane
Hill's eight telephones were
knocked out. making communica-
tions to the slrirken area diffi-
cult. • —-
As rescue workers stumbled vidc proper sanitation around
through rubble to rescue the living I dairy bams.
and reclaim the dead from destine- |---
tion already exacted by the freak-
ish weather, the weather bureau
warned that conditions are ripe
for more tornadoes in other areas
of the south Northern Mississippi
and northwest Alabama were alert-
ed
The tornadoes apparently had |
spent their fury In Louisiana and Additional contributions today
the danger in Arkansas was dl- | sWe|ied the March of Dimes funds
mini hed by today. as tbree more sources contributed
There were unofficial reports of a lotal of $54a0
Donations from Kellyvllle citizens
Far Eastern Navy
Under MacArthur
For Emergencies
WASHINGTON. Feb 13 «L» —
The Joint chiefs of staff said to-
day that all naval unit ' of the U.
S Far Eastern fleet are under
complete command of Gen. Doug-
las MacArthur while in Japanese
waters or In event of an emer-
gency.
Adm Forrest P Sherman, chief
of naval operations, spokr for the
joint chiefs in defining Mac,Ar-
thur's naval command for a news
conference.
jsx x ssssp srva«-
Arthur while he and other mem-
bers of the Joint chiefs were In
Japan on their recent 10-day faf
eastern Inspection trip.
MacArthur. as allied occupation
commander In Japan, normally ■
would have command over all land,
sea. and air forces operating with* j
In his jurisdiction. His command!
A marriage license was issued
Saturday u> Bill K Kidder. 24.
Band Spring*, and Kathleen Frees*.
26. Tulsa.
In the county attorney'* office Sat-
urday a charge was filed against
Sam Foster for dusturbing ihe
peace A charge was filed Monday
against Cleo Orby Hickand. Sa-
ptilpa for reckless driving on high-
way 06
In police court Monday there was
a fine of 319.50 and costs for reck-
less driving, and two fines of $21
far possession of liquor. There
were lour case* of drunkenness. One
ease was fined $15.60 and costa and
one $19 50 and costs Two were on
bond for $2100
Filtering the rtly hospital were
Delbert Ritchie. Mrs W ide Purdln,
Phyllis Young and Anna Lee Wiley.
Dismissed were Irene Ruth. Wll-
Arkansas Decides
Liquor May Not Be
Sent To Oklahoma
Farmers will learn pr per meth- WOuld b- extended in an emergent V
ods of clipping around the udder t0 lrdtt. the m ■ •■. <■•'< fleet'
land tin.d quarter* m order to pro- unitswherever they might -be f LITTLE ROCK. Ark.. Peb. IS. (UR)
the oen. Omar N Bradley, chair- —The Arkansas supreme court to-
man of the Joint chiefs, also told day held th^t liquor may not be
j the news conference that the mill- 1 shipped from this wet state tnto Ok-
lary men have prepared a set ret lahoma cr Mississippi,
report for President Truman on the T|,r rourt threw out the liquor
, implications of helping the conn- r rt ,aw passed bv the 1948
tries of southeast Asia to fight |r„iMaiurr, which once was the
Communism. basis for a tremendous whisky -
Hc made the disclosure when
asked how successful he believed
sulh military help would be
More Donations
Swell MOD Total
shipping business.
The specific ruling came In a case
Bobby Ewing, Date
Injured In Gunfire
Sunday Evening
Bv MARILOl KITCHEN
Sand Springs police chief. Law-
rence T. Barnes, today denied fir-
ing a shot which wounded a Sa-
pulpa man and his girl friend yes-
terday.
Barnes denies the accusation*
of 22-year-ald Bobhv Ewing, that
Ihe eltief of police and hi* as-
sistant maliriouxlv shot he and
hi* girl friend early Sunday
morning.
Barnes. In a statement to Tulsa
County Attorney Elmer Adams, said
that he believed there was a third
car involved which sped on after
firing the shot. Barnes said he
believed that someone whs firing
at him.
Barnes -said he heard no shot Hr
said he did not know the girl was
seriously hurt.
The chief said he did not fire
the bullet that pierced the side of
tile car driven by Ewing, hit his
leg and then struck the right hand
of Miss Ida Kirby. 17. Sand Springs.
Pardon and parole records at the
state capitol slewed that Barnes
was sentenced to five years in the
McAlcnter stale penitentiary from
Wagoner county in 1937 for armed
robbery. He served the minimum
lime and was discharged in Oct- j
otocr, 1939.)
Gov. Key J. Turner restored
Barnes' citizenship last year, i
Barnes also denied a charge by
Don Oreen, 29 of 202 Cleveland
St.. Sand Springs, that hr and as- ,
M.staivt chief Jce Bums had been
dunking. Green was ndlri” tu Un-
back .-eat of Ewing’s car with Mis*
Bobble Day. 20. - also of Sand
Springs.
Bunts was to be questioned later
in tlie day. He and Bamc.- MH
parked In a police car In an alley
when the shooting took place.
Marley Ewing, Sapulpa county
engineering office employee, in a
ADMITS KILLING TOO OLD’ FATHER
t
y
Cj
*
light up for the evening I night, indicating that the death toll , . — .
It was quite a sight in those days in Louisiana might rise but some | *ere 'na^e through Mrs B M »
to see Holmes going down Dewey slightly injured patients were being thc telephone office and atno
dusk with a glowing light in discharged from Shreveport Char- lo *18-40.
Ity hospital after spending the | The Oil Wortaers 'International
at dusk with a glowing light m
his hand, and to see the city light
up BEHIND HIM as one by one
he serviced the stores
I wonder how many of the old-
timers still living remember Sa-
pulpa's OLD LAMPLIOHTERV
cuss the mailers because the
views of the joint chief* must be
secret until made public by the
president, the national security
resource* board, or Defense Sec- |
retarv Louis Johnson.
However, Informed sources said
Doctors in Shreveport Charity
hospital had to tell one patient
that she had lost hrr husband
and two children.
She was Mrs Gladys Angie, about
35. who was still in a severe slate
HANDY MAN WITH FISTS of shock Her husband and two of
CHICAOO 'UR) -Richard Tab r her children were killed at Curtis.
30. a street car conductor, showed La. She has three other children
he could punch something besides | two of whom were In the hospital
transfers when he went to work on with her.
would-be thieves with hts fists. | There still was no overall rstl-
n imuiary ncip »uu u uc involving the state revenue com-
Hradlrv said hr could not dis- I misMontr and the 8un Export Co.
oi Lake Village. A Pujaskl chancery
court had ruled that the commis-
sioner could not revoke the com-
pany's liquor export permit. But
the supreme court said the commis-
sioner does have this pawer.
tlie Joint chiefs at their meeting j At Oklahoma City. Assistant Ok-
wlth Truman last Saturday did not lahoma Attorney Oeneral Sam Lat-
dlscuss the possibility of reopen- timore. a dry leader, had this to
Pi‘r°-.! Christian church"gave $2MO *'« ll* Question of military aid to say .
F Th, Hib'c class annually has a Chinese Nationalists on Formosa or | "Evidently the legislature of Ark-
noUtMtlctim appear before the group of helping Indo-China and other ansas didn't reflect the real attitude
durlriB the M^rch ol Dimcs^ and southeastern Aslu countries. of the sUte when It passed the ex-
fund so icIUticn is macP- at tha: Bradley and the three other joint port licensing act Why. even Ark-
me ™wear Norn^L^u Harncr chiefs reported to President Tru- anaas newspapers referred to it as
hlfore th( Class She was man Saturday on their 10-day In- war on neighboring states, for it
ItriSk *wTh ,„lio .onu, Umc ao ' spection tour of United State* mill- was aimcd at exporting liquor from
stricken with polio some time ago. (ary ,astallaUons lhc far t.asl Arkanaas to dry states "
Credit was not given where it was Johnson said he was "quite i _____
i specifically due. according to James pledged and indeed proud" of tltej
Union local No 330 contributed $15
and the Men's Bible class if the
"BECAUSE HE WAS TOO OID TO LIVI" l» reason John Purevich, 29
(right), gives Gary, lnd., detectives In admitting he killed hi*
father, BO-year-old Alexander Purevich, with a shotgtvi- The son,
one of 12 Purevich children, is held without bond. Tlu detective*
a ahotgun found in tha home (JntcrnaUoiuU SAmdphotoJ
Mine Workers Remain Away
From Pits Despite Court Order
PITTSBURGH. Feb 13 <UP<
talk with his son, Bobby, this morn- j0iln l Lewis' United Mine Work-
ing quoted him as saying that he Crs ignored a frdcral court injunc-
and Ills friends had been to a dance ljon ordering them bock to w</rk
until late and were driving around, today.
"My son saJd he heard a report. All major pits across the na-
and thought he had l blowout He lion wrrr dosed a* the embitter-
didn't know he was shot until he
got out of the car.”
Ewing said the shot was fired
a.* he was driving past the alley- I
way at a moderate rate of speed
cd miners stayed home awaiting
Ihe government's next move.
There was no indication, how-
ever. of Immediate new action.
Oovernmcnt officials were opti-
Snow, Rains Add
To State Floods;
Colder Tonight
By United Pro*
Cold north winds brought snow
mmmmmsm
However, that *** the first Umt were Icy this morning. Lows
Lewis' birthday brought a shut- ^ hl t exited at about 15
nnd fixe. on refill *f >4 xltil a U'UV WIMfliS v _ .. . „ j earn a—
s z 1 k rcport u,“,wur m“,ury
coin changer but fled when Tabor Barksdale Field said destruction at ,n lhc tmbulmliotw. ol income me leadrls hi
threw several punches In their di-jthe nearby Slack air depot alone
rcclion
would run as high as (250.000 -j--.- — - ----------------- ------ i---——, ------- . .------_
In the arc&i) favorable for tor- 1 ficial lifting did not designate the chiefs In their vtatements at
In the tabulations of income in tnc ]eadrrs had Riven to Mr Truman,
drive. - The defense secretary said that
Stewart said inadvertently the cf- , security factor? limited the Joint
’Udlcal
Chr
Adon
ner re
f the
le me
and c4
room
r Han
. l. «
irs. Lv
in. >1
Asht*
via F
ale. M
irg. M
dale a
tarda
serf
the ft
ice Cel
$.. whl
Cheet
week
Mr *
d otl
;rcy a
. had
. Cere
Mr a
n. Bte
i. Hon
anne
n. Okl
his pi
iks
NOT AFRAID OF JINX nadoe.s today, thundershowers were Criterion theater as the vehicle for new* conference
OMAHA Neb <u p>— Friday the predicted, to be followed later by a he collection of $403.33 All four of the top oil leers
13th means nothing to M* and cold front. It was raining yes ter- -The assistance rendered by Mr. I ‘ hL‘fr for,e
Soviets Reported
Ahead In Building
Guided Missiles
WASHINGTON. Feb 13. (U.»—
Sen. Lyndon B Johnson. D . Tex.,
said today that the Soviet Union
County Attorney Adams told the
Herald a ballastlc test 1* now be-
ing made to oompare the bullet
from the girl's arm with those from
the officer's pistols.
The three witnesses interviewed
today were Bobby Ewing, Don
Orcer. and Lawrence Barnes Pres-
ent during the examination were
Mrs. Rubyc DeBolt. Sand Springs
mayor, W L Coffey, attorney for
i the two policemen, and Matt Sims,
attorney tor KBs* Kirby
graph standing underneath a lad- j
der further to show their contempt!
for any Jinx
l' -----\
Ail He Knows Is
It Cost Him $5
NEW HAVEN. Conn.. Feb. 13.
(U?1—A customer bought a pack-
age of cigarette* at Frank Mas-
cola's store and paid for it with a
(5 bill. Masrola gave him $4.80
change
The custumcr then asked Mas-
cola to return the $5 and handed
him * dollar bill io pay for the
purchase.
While Masrola still had the $1
bill in his hand, the customer
handed him the original $5 bill
and (4 or the >4 HO change he had
previously received, and asked for
SI0
Masrnla gave It to him and
didn't discover until he checked
Ills cash register that he was out
S4.80 and a pack df rigarrllr.Thcn
he railed police.
V -----Y
units In the far east ____
I invaluable in the March of Dimes." emphasized the need for ad.-quate i coJnlry "in developing guided mis
Stewart said We meant no slight housuw JtorjnM-O personnel and gUes
Little Theatre To
Present Showing
For Negro Audience
It was unanimously voted at a
meeting of the Sapulpa Little Thea-
ter group Sunday that the fourth
night performance of the coming
play, "East Lynn" will be given for
a Negro audience.
The play will be presented Feb.
27. 28. and March 1. with March
2. as the date for the separate au-
i dience. This action, one of the first
of this kind In Sapulpa. was decided
to be the future pattern for all Lit-
tle Theater plays
Polly Carter expressed the feeling
of the group, "We feel there is a lack
of entertainment for colored au-
diences in Sapulpa.”
An 1890 setting will be depicted
In the coming play which will be
'C intlnurd on Page Five)
to them or to the patrons of their
theater."
Lawton Woman Is
Sought As Heiress
LAWTON. Okla . Feb 13. 'UFJ-
An all-out search has been ordered
for a 46-y?ar-old former Lawton
woman—estranged from her fam-
ily, crippled by polio and possibly
their families in the area
Adm. Forrest P. Slierman.
chief of naval operations, said
that the 60 to 70 Russian sub-
marines in the Pacific “could nol
be disregarded" In considering
American security. But he said
the t'nited States fleet there
could cope with any attack. He
said that the Pacific fleet will be
kept as strong ax possible, in-
dicating the possibility of some
more reinforcement*.
However. Oen Hoyt 8. Vanden-
Doesn't Pay To
Run From Police,
Sooners Decide
DALLAS. Tex.. Feb 13. (U.R>—It
doesn't pay to try to avoid a speed-
ing ticket by attempting to outrun
police.
ssy’ilK.TS “ •** *"d m m
an official contract holiday in the
soli coal mines.
The miners were not In a holl-
tlie southeast.
Weekend rains-heaviest in the
southeast with 5.16 inches at Brok-
en Bow-left at least three mad*
day mood They bitterly denounc- tkjsed b flooding The highway
ed President Trumans Tkft-Hart- ;)atrol sakl shouWgrs on all r**ds
ley Injunction action
"Lewis' birthday, or not." John
Beli, Unlontown, Pa. miner, di-
and all county roads were muddy
SUte highway 43 was closed east
of Coalgate by waters from muddy
clared "I don't work until we get creek -me same stream al
a contract.
It was reported in WaahingtMi
that Lewis has upped his wage
spd welfare fund demands In the
so called "Kentucky" agreement*
Lewis signed with a few inde-
pendent operators, wages were
boosted 95 rente to $15 a day and
welfare fund royalties raised
Itom 20 rente a ton to 35.
I'MW sources Indicated Lewis
so flooded 8H 7 west of Atoka, and
that road was Kill closed.
SH 57 was closed eight miles west
of Idabel by flood waters from a
small ( reek The highway depart-
ment said U. 8. 270 wan closed
al the Rock Island railroad under-
pass at Haileyvtlle. but traffic was
being re-routed over a detour U8
280 Was open south of Hodge.'Is
He said the United States has yet
to develop an adequate guided mis-
sile.
Johnson, a member ol the Senate
Armed Service committee, said the
guided missile program has been
relegated to an obscure" item of
‘ ^*1 fbU a** tguided missile warfare on a "dirt ^^rV'inTles^uth’of i “ “* «OYCr",,,r,,‘' u^* I tot deep 100 foot long shoulder
should begin within the next two or Frisco. UMW District 17 President Wll- wa«hohL
three years, we. at our present rate. The marathon began when Uni- ,, BllJuard said he would sign no US 64 was ice-coated this mom-
would be very feeble participants, verslty Park patrolmen spotted an morpi -Kentucky" agreements with in* In Beaver county near Forgan.
he told a press conference. "For j auto ceding south When they the operators. pending outcome f where the temperature was 20 de-
is ssrxissfjst, xrzx
$•« v uniit null Itm " uv*> ............. “ __. , .
the work whistles sounded this and Tulsa this morning. The hlgn-
The operators said the way department said tmow wa*
but the miners falling intermittently at Perry but
destitute—who is heire*s to $13 000 However. c»en Hiyi ts vanaeii- » o---- -----»K*^a***a " V*the operators, penning outcome oi »mrr
Th..«~. a Mr, Wanda Me- SSJ ^15 l&XXXJXZSf £*«-ZX.......... ““ “S —
£cvwww■»> <-» —*>» —-1SmXjsz w^srsjssa&. «<**> m~~*“■*- “ “**”■mMMt
McOulre. to receive half of her late - developing the hydrogen bomb and McKinney police got In the act.
; Grody Becomes Memo
Last record of the wo"*a" is •" plosive in battle." speeding car slowed to let him out.
order entered the Lawton post YUKON okla FH) l3 (U,P _ V----I Ten miles farther, the large, late-
offlce in may. 1944. It direct* that 0rady Ihe s,a0 cow. L* the mother, 1 model car turned onto a dirt road
atiSS? U'T JtaTS °'Thae ^arbor vesteida.v..iias wJSSA^Sf. S" ThC ’-^-^r*6^ ■"**
longer lives in that, area _ _ named Orady II Owner Bill county herlff * office was on the
morning,
lilts were
open.
The two men, one from Seminole.
to**™** “nd ,he ^/’“"Lr^Okla.. and the other (rom Earlstsiro!
Blanche .McOuirc. were divorced In caJf were doing fine
r
Judge Hughes Dismisses Suits
Filed As Result Of Hotel Fire
See Court House News on Poge 4
Oregon about 25 years ago. They M|| was orady s fourth, and scared mast candidates off. The
had been married around 1900 at ber (ip,t son The hereford cow had | Job called for a man who: 1. could
Pond Creek. Okla.. and later lived ju*t given birth to her third heifer speak three languages (English,
at Toiikawa, Okla. calf a year ago Whan she Jumped Maxlcan-Spanlsh, and FiU|)ino-
through a small silo door on the Spanish); 2. would w.»rk a 24-hour
recently but tta ^ M
l-K.EONS IN NO HIKKY
HHOMER. Neb. <UR)—Jack Bo-
bier’s homing plgeous took their
lime about coming home to Homer.
Bobier took the birds out for a
test flight, released them, then
Mach farm and couldn't get out. day and still be considered a part-
Pour days later, greased and time employe, and 3. would not
drugged, she was pulled through require more than $150 a month,
the same door.
Yesterday's birth was larking in
such excitement. "There Just was
They will face charges of running
three signal light*, reckless driving,
speeding, driving irilhcut a license
and resisting arrest
slinpi.v failed to show up
In Missouri and Kunsas. UMW
Dish let 14 President Henry' Allal
raid lie had instructed hts men to
work today and added that he be-
lieved they would They didn't.
was not sticking to pavement*.
Dairy Breeders
To Elect Officers
| Election
tors will
of o*.*.ir* and direc-
I IKE HARD TO FIND
CHICAOO <U^> — Firemen re-
porting to Chicagos sky sera tier
Civic Opera building to put out a
fire found lot- of smoke but thry
were unable to locate the blaze
immediately. Several firemen rode
up and down the building in ele-
vators sniffing smoke before they
The fire wa*
______ , IUI, _lH be held tomorrow night located the source.
|Both men are employed at Sher- its the Sapulist Dairy Breeders As- in * filing cabinet
man aociation holds it* annual meeting
at 7 30 in the agriculture roam, h.\KHI ,t Hit. HE.AKTED
BOSTON :y.»>—Since the end <4
HIS ACCOUNT LOW
CARLETON, Neb (U.H)—A
of the high school
man Jay Hesser. county larm agent.
hurried home. He had ample lime not any trouble at all.
Three days later, the first three 1 "Orady didn’t even look at the silo
drifted in
ennutiun. rreo ur n unn —---- rT W oilvu u
Th, Children', Bu„.» «J. (h.i -ho anl. Ill* (him U« C.rleion *(l
„ cure of , d«b, U ■ ruU-ti.nc Job ?.S, 5 “ SJ": ..2, ^“ Sdlw .hd M.
show up
aay man v even .00* ^the^do for nv"homsTnV«"mlnut«^ y 17 o^ert^nre^ m ‘tht^pro-
The others never did [ all day long But I've closed 'he day and a parttime Job the rest of at th« bank. The occaun $ ^ ^ ^ present
silo door. Just In case.
the time.
In It.
gram
in hts home town <>f Messina. Stc-
Uy.
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 36, No. 138, Ed. 1 Monday, February 13, 1950, newspaper, February 13, 1950; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1488258/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.