Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, May 9, 1955 Page: 2 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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MC
“for Auto Loans!
w IOu^rhehentht
* '•>««.
*p<-« -k«,
lran« with
U «««Wi*h bank
ruJAmerican
5APULPA
OKLAHOMA
MtMBCR F.P f.C
OF
v se/n ut.
Editorial
Page
IN STEP
WITH GOD
Amos Discusses
Social Security
Mm ju*ht alti)i to pra* and not
Thi» i» the sixth in a scrips uf ♦
SAPULPA
HERALD
to faint—Luke I*: I Faith ia a aub- *fUc,e'‘ Pr*P‘‘red b» L*rif H cLal security checks for each of the
hmated Hind of courage. Bv faith a ■llltl manager for Use t>oci 1 I months he worked.
FAUfc IWU-
MONDAY. MAY 9, 1955
desert tribe was raised to great poW- «*«? Vdm.nislratlon, outlining f -a-
er ar.d d.gir.'.y Humble men have lur<’' «t the 1*54 \mendmrnl* to the
become heroes.
Social Security Act
Herald Data
PAIN IN THE NECK'
Infer the new law. he can earn
this $000 and still keep all his hrnr-
fit checks. I^t's see what that means
Wnen . a w -ke : ‘ti ed The ^ |llm jn dollar, and cents.
bene?;' provs ns of the Sot al Sec-
urity Act were des.tned .a .epUce under the oid Lw. he would have
.n part, ea.n.nr.i ».j..h are . s. be- fpCe;ved jj* months cf social secur-
IN STEP WITH EVENTS
Albert W Berkley, 77-yeor-old ex-Vecp, returning to
Senate where he sat for 22 years If will be odd to be
called the 'junior' Senator "
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
cause of dfatn or retirement of tor ;ty cj,crijS totalling $420 and s.x
-fy WILLIAM RITT-
Katabllshed la 1*14
Entered »> seepnd-daM mall mar’er Sep'-mbe: S' 1BI4 s' n»
Pueicffic* in Sap'ilpa Oklahoma unde- an act >f March 1 I*8*
•nrotne-earr.ng tr.enib* cf the fa.n- months of work at $150. or $900 Th-s
Jly A rettren nt rs. p.jv.drs a fa., a'ould g.v? him a uifal inrotne for the
mratis of determ.n.trg whrn a worker yfar a, jj jjq Under the new Law
ic ret.red. he can ea.n his $900 and not lose any
1 . I of his socjtl secur.ty checks which
Central Press Writer
NATIONAL Noise Abatement t F.E F., it looks more like Lhe
•__a ..u.r urna ho 1 rxtr hnnnrcfl
H V MATTMKWS, Owner anil I'ehllsliei
The Origin 1 oveuJ Seen city Act ae n0* ra sed t_ *78 50 per month.
w... i/lu-t Ik al t 'BlithnlllM fCllfC- _____
HAFI 1.1’A ( AKKI8.K KATI S
One Week _ _'--— _ — — • M
One Calendar Month — _ _ — . — 1 10
Three Months _ — _ — -'--- — 330
Mi Month! _'__- — — _ —--— — • M
One Tear------------ 1»»
Qmvided 4j-*t thr .eeoimui.i retire- J; a [0;a; j $352 far the year,
itrnt age wi*i to bj 65. Thrre has
b-en no change In the ;«*e require- ||is combined income under the
•nent *• . . new wll| h, sl862 This incre se
of $543 will be a substantial increase
A -e. nd :e»t of retirement J his- the amount of mon.-y Mr. Diva
ed on earnir.rs Th.s teit ha been ^vuilrable foe his living expenses,
changed from time to time In 1940.
a worker was said to be retired if he jhe new ret.remer.t te.si did not
earned less than $15; in 1950. he until the firs; of January. Un-
Oellvered by owner anywhere in
■epuipe Mounds Kiefer Kellyrille and Olenpoo.
wa: peimitted to eatn up to $30 per t_j then, beneficiaries had ob-ervsd
month and sti.i be considered re- the $75 per month rule.
C R
Matthews, city editor Ted Olioit adver is.rvg director
Faye Dunlap society editor Winona Ma'.'hew office mnnagei
Chester Miller, circulation manage' Bill L.nv.lie e.«-iatant
aatvertiaing manager and Mai Hatchelder reporter
tired; in 1952. the amount w.araaed
to $75 per month T.ie newly amend-
ed Soc.al Secur.ty Act permits a per-
son to earn as much as $1,200 in a
calendar year and still be consider-
ed retired for the entire year
•a been ben mlaeing e paper are requested
to phone 1M. befrre 7 o'clock
Changing to the new law permits
more seasonal employment, allow* a
few months al regular wages, and
per mils the holding down of a part-
lime job
Federal Mediators
Working To Settle
57-Day-Old Strike
Week ended before we realized
that it was supposed to be ob-
eerved Probably the quietest
:e)ebration on record.
! ! !
A Loudon ballet chorus strikes
for better pay. That's one kick
that Wasn’t in the script.
! ! !
A Uganda, Afrita, native bit on
erttacking lion. It's gelling so,
those days, a wild beost isn't safe
in its own jungle.
! ! !
Those attending that Demo-
cratic testimonial dlgt r to vet-
I eran House Speaker Sam Ray-
bum in Washington had to fork
up $100 a plate. Offhand, declares
____L-----
chef was being honored.
i t i
e o e
Grandpappy Jenkins wonders
uhatll happen to the Dolt•
Yourself fad when this becomes
a Push Button civilization.
! ! 1
A smort politician, with on eye
out for tho volors-of-the-future,
could do wore# than change his
name to Davy Crockott.
! ! !
What astronomers at first
thought might be radio waves
from Jupiter, which is 400 million
miles away, are now believed to
be electric disturbances caused
by that planet's thunderstorms.
Long way to go just to pick up
static!
FORT
farper, \
lial Nati
ment
story v
>ar golf,
lim the
The 41
mils Vir
an of Cl
>ci a $5.1
i four-ur
Colonial
troke a'
l whopp
he Held
Accord
|iui ran
• 4 for
*C1A sa>
lording
Igures,
h-r pou
ehich w
n the
You W
BODY
olvr y
203 F.i
LABOR AND AUTOMATION
The question of outomation in industry is one which
is Currently cropping up 'in union-mar jgemenf negotiations ,
and is 0 question which sometimes worries labor leaders ,____
However, o close look at automation shows that it is LOPOf wOUSCt
merely 0 continuation of tho trend toward mechanization
and that it does not necessarily pose a threat to the work-
ing mon m the United Stotes
In the lost 50 years, machinery ha$ been used more
and more to replace,manpower on heavy |obs Yet woges,
By WILLIAM SINDFRI.ANII
WASHINGTON - UP - Repre- , , J „
-ematnes of striking rail .orkers e>"Pl°V^ demand for a welfare
The new test, however, appl.es tu and the Louisv.lle & Nashville wl * begin Thui >day.
all earn.ngs; the oid test applied Railroad Monday agreed to end 1110 “nl<®s. and managemen
only to eairungs unde: Social Secur- the 57-day-old walkout and submit 'evi uslv had agreed to arbnr e
ity Income from nterest or rent is the dispute to arbitration. the dlsPule ~ *'“! ”* al 1 '
not c.insidered earnings. The National Mediation Boar.1 l“r s hecisvon to be bindmg b t.
Let s see what toe new law means announced the signing of the that Iel1 apa“ when theyu co!i‘d u
to a worker whom we shall call, agreement between representa- a8ree on what shou.d be
"few davs to get back to normal ttonal Mediation Board. said * _
Arbitration of the dispute - which tlement of issues to be aibiti aUd
centers around the non-operating de^ndeSxt°"orjmary Sunday esslo-t
was extended jmo another all- (
night meeting.
M; Dav^
virs.*«««
arbitrated
farm SuliKidioN
H-s earnings of $200 per month en- un;onv awd the line Some 4.000 of ,thc mediauon boa:d the
By LYLE C. WILSON ♦
WASHINGTON - UP- — Ameri-
produchon ond |Ob numbers hove stcod.ly mcreosed We (an farmers who prefer huh and °Vs^niowThe 91 per cent return
”, r. .a aispuie \um me uon-oper-
$15° per month But to do ao under ^ orgaPjzaUons „ l0 be ^
the old .aw he had to forfe.i h^ s- mUted t0 a neutrai referec whose
... . ... .__effective with this year's harvesi.
!“bor ( lh 1 ‘ The 1955 guarantee will be 82.5 per
cent. What the House d.d last week
was vote down the flexib'e system.
Drouth Dented
'Continued from Page One)
think this will continue to be the cose even though automa ^‘®'d‘y f/art?. prevails. The administration's low-
tidn will carry on the trend from manual work to mechani- by Presldenl Eisenhower cai er„ fl,r*:bl<‘ .,suub,l‘dy dec“!lie.'
zation hi
A good example cited by many is that of the dial tele- ump in the House
ably Yet the number of telephone workers today is twice record for the legislative contest
whot it was ten veors ago points to organized labor as the
The some IS true in the outomobile industry Machinery k' >' **ctor in the administration ■>
j . . . , . , defeat More specifically. Presl-
to save time, and to replace monual labor on the heavy Jpnl Wg>.(.r HeuVher aud hl> Cio BL.__________ ___________ _____
jobs, hos been increasingly used in the automobile industry .provided -.ome of the muscle which damage was not serious, Beers re-
and yet the number of automobile workers has doubled barely hoisted the Democrats to ported
in the last fifteen years victory. * L. D Ward. El Reno Tribune
There rnnlr! r vcxihlv he n thrent tn Inhor hv automation Organised labor was aaml .rly ja,d n3 damage had been reported
I here could possibly be O threat to labor by automation Unkpd etrller ln ,hls MS8j0n with (rom the area where the twister
in select localities where a certjin industry suddenly con speaker 8am Rayburu in pushing » wav supposed to have occurred
verted, on a wholesale basis, to machinery However, we w!0-per-head tax reduction througn Lindy Davis. Stillwater New.-
must remember that technical ond mechanical developments the House Taxes and farm sub- pip.s, reported more than 100 tele-
open .up new industries, such os the television industry, and <ldu‘> aie r ',!l®ncs out 111 ‘hat clty He 'a;i1
stie^ around, short of war and la- lightning caused three fires One
ttveretofi, new jfxis ore created . tla] dij.-rimlnaUon house was destroyed near Still-
If we ever reach the p'oee where we refuse to adopt FttecUvr Trend ater
modern time ond lobor saving inventions, then the United The succeaeful and active partner- Perry and Black well a iso report -
States will quickly lose its technical lead omonq the ra- 'hip of the House Democratic lead- ed te ephone troubles, and Soutli-
tionx of th» world erahlp with these most powerful western Bell officials said line
° ° . political forces in the U. S. Is not breaks had been reported elsewhere
---- new But it is a continuing and d. e to lig.itning and falling tree j
BUYING COFFINS AND MAKING FRIENDS esUtT- ^ILmu^hidh.dua''--' which began splauerm.
A recent news story included o tip on making friends ln ,his ,oun,r>'. *.ho hoPc.to sec k.
tiled him ■ . >.0 per operating employe* ala» 'had ^ritmn operating workers ere
month. He haa an opportun.ty 'to JOined the strike. signing another agreement to re-
work six months of each year a: ..ti.-, nturn to work
the dispute with the non-ope - ( nimpuired Seniority
He said all workers — operating
„ . . . . . and non-operating — are Mk|
decision will be final and binding, ..relurned t0 service with senior-
, . ., the board said in a short state- ;fv llnimr.aires ••
at Oklahoma City. Gage and A.- menl. All employes are to return Ve Mediation board has been
tus a , lo service and full operations re- tr>-4ng (or more a mollth e.-
The weather bureau said ear.v sumed on Wednesday. May 11 bei to settie the dispute or to
Incomplete reports -howed Canton, "in the interim the roads Atll flnd enough agreement to submit
on the North Canadian Rive, tske stetjs to prepare for full op- a.'ju.Mion tor a dec.sion that
watershed had tTceived 1 14 inches eration. would be binding on the company
ln the past four day- Carnegie "Get Back to Normal' and UjUon.s
145 Vinita .71, Spavinaw .07. Ant- In Louisville. Ky., W. C Kcu- M 7 ‘ a ni cst Monday, Francis
lers .60. Tahlequah 105. Stilwell dall, assistant to the president of • A O'Neill Jr chairman of the Na-
.52 and El Reno 68 the railroad, said it would take a v *
Enjoy Finest Foods in
Air Conditioned Comfort
& COUNTRY
TOWN
Mile West on 66
Straks-B rlirrur->andw i< hes
Servin* onl> l . S. Choire Beef
We Specialize in
PRESCRIPTIONS
Smith Drug Co.
"Ask Your Doctor"
Motor Deliver? — Tel 7B4 Humes Drug Store.
MILLIONS USE THIS
Get relief from ac id-lndigestlon.
Takt Bisma-Rex, the 4-action anti-
acid powder which neutralizes
acid, expels gas, relieves heai tburn
and soothes the stomach. Buy
Bisna-Rex, a 50-dose bottle for 79c
at the Rexall Drug Store.—O. L.
—adv.
NOW is the
TIME TO BUY
your
(lear-Yu
OR
Essex
EVAPORATIVE
AIR
CONDITIONER
Prices Go UP
May 15th
Today, see
BULLOCK
IS N. Main Phone 610
* t
fx V ** PI \
■ pvi* - •
If revealed thot Mrs Emma Hawkins, of Honey Grove, urve'up 'hrre tra'f.c^ccident^At^^'iea*!* Lve"trar-
Texos, hod mode a lot of friends offer buying her coffin, Rruthrr »s among thoie who f;c deaths were blamed on wet
may be counted a- moving toward roads or poor visibility. One man
twenty years ogo
might soon die She reports that she obtained a baking political pane' As the trend Is , rain The mo sture came just in
powder can and every time she had some chanqe or a now. that would be the Democrat- time to make a ,'ucce-s of Hobart -
a 41 i “ m -x. _a___— 4m Im faitk " ii'hinh ctQft.
dollar, she put if in the can " Ic party. Reuther's strategy Is to "experiment ln faith.” which start-
After what Mrs Howkm, calls a long time the baking ^rmerpro^ucerV^'each ' S‘ son Wear Rain.oat*
powder con contained $6S and she bcught herself a gray ^ppon the legislative ends of An estinia ed 900 Hobart resi-
upholstered coffin, with white SOtin lining She put a dress :hr other -lent* wore raincoats and umbre,-
Ond seme mothbolls inside putilcationa as well as ln- ius in bright sunshine Saturday at
That was sjm' twenty years ago. And at that time iiraw'i'Slw th?S^ b ed'o^'Tiid^Iayo^ Bust'er Jw.n.
Mrs Hawkins was 64 Today she is 84, and relates how lht. Wl.pgs 0f subsidy dispute They kin- who said it would ram If
the purchase of the coffin, which news passed rapidly took » Hirong editorial position It people had faith Rain continued
fne^d9shi«ser bT9M ^ rny V'S,,Stand *UfhUre :r’Cmersh'°UnLrn ,o° diagr^ume ^e bureT sa Id sho*-
friendships. She soys people arc still cpmmg to see her, labor pallnerahlp The er> would continue in all of the
ona they all osk whether she hos tried the coffin for size NFi, tssUWi a statement. stale Monday and Monday ntghi
The newspoper which reported Mrs Hawkins' experi- Bring on Pressure and over the east Tuesday
cnee reports she hasn't tried if out for Size 'Both the AFI. and CIO are but- Highway patrol clerk L R Rug-
_ i ionhollng chy congressmen lo urge er at Enid said 'a nice soft rain
vo es fur the 90 per cent of pai l y was falling there at 6:30 and that
Personally, w® think it is a good thing for the residents a^Pult!l n?a '\ y^ason'
. * ’ »’*«» ett-nnn 1 a hnf llOnl Iff.
of our community to slick together in business ways and “ " ' lon' l8l>01 (l'dl a-e
tlius help each ether ah ny
Tfaofoem
JUST RECEIVED-FRESH, HEALTHY
for US 60 was closed for a few
blocks at the west side of Enid
"1 Concern about fall.ng cm- Roger said a small creek had
p.oyment ln industries dependent flooded the highway panel liead-
Up„n farmers' buying power. quarters site and water was with-
■J The hope of reciprocal sup- in six Inches of the office door-
port from farm district congress- way and rising
nen for increasing the minimum 1.54 Inches at Selling
wage to $1 26 an hour” Roger estimated 150 Inches fe 1
Thr Senate brat the Democratic at Selling during the night but said
House's tax bill on.d is not like’y Woodward to the northwest got oa-
, ven to eotisider thr h.gher farm ly a trace
-ub'idy this session. That wUl The weather bureau showed a
wait for 1956 a presidential 24-hour total up to ti 30 a m. of
veai The issue then will be Shall 02 at Gage Oklahoma City OS
tanner' producing five ba'ic crop' Ponca City 1 58 Ardmore tiace.
ruarenteed a leturn on the Altus 59 and Fort Sill
crops at the rale of »o per cent Light rains fell in the morning
BIDDING
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF-
PLANTS
Most are in bloom. Incudes Marigold,
Sweet William, Petunias, Snap Dragon,
Portulaci (moss) and others.
59 Doz.
rpHERE S a famous restaurant chain that boasts of twenty-
I eight diffetent flavors of icc cream on its menu—but the
waitresses often take a dim view of this feature. Harvey Camp*
bill, of Dcrtoit. for instance,
once demanded, “Before
order dessert. I'd just like for
you to twttle off
twenty-eight flavors for me.
“Nothing doing,” retorted
the waitress sharply. “I know
gents like you. After I re-
cited all of 'em you'd decide
on chocolate or vanilla. Now
which do you want?”
« ..J
J. J. NEWBERRY CO.
L'rdri graduate hosannir
All preiae to the ripe banana.
A fruit of great resown
It* inatdes tend your weight
up.
But its outside bring* it down.
^cSi'“A!e" ^ ®rn*rtt Cttf. t>.«ti4'»itd tj Kmg Featurtl
i
l
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, May 9, 1955, newspaper, May 9, 1955; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1488270/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.