Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 253, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLA.
ONE-A-DAY
ADVERTISING;
The shorter thr headline. lire
i longer it it lys in somebody'* head,
i —Torn Alien. Adv. Agency.
\SAPULPA|
DAILY
HERALD/
FAIR
i
V F a I r tonight and
tomorrow. Low* to-
night. In 7h, high
tomorrow, 95 to 190.
VOL XXXVII NO 254
JvAPULPA, OKLAHOMA FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1952
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY
'ommunityChest
Head Is Chosen
PANMUNJOM TO ANNAPOLIS
F
ORWARD
* *
The toiui) ot * ...,
mtreiy a composite picture
ot individual ambition
B] R. P. M.
•* New officers and members of
the Board of Directors for the 1952-
1953 Community Chest have been
announced today.
Chosen president was Glenn
Stimmel, with Tom Allen and
James Stewart as vice-presidents
and Robert Powers as treasurer
For the Ifrst time, a Negro. Char-
les Colbert, was picked to hold a
position as member of the Board of
( Directors. Colbert was elected to
/ fill an unexplred term of a board
| member who moved out of town
Hold-overs to serve one year are
) Hever Pinch. Jr., E D Walker
f Heber Pinch. Jr.. E D Walker,
Leonard Biron. Otis Huines, James
Stewart. Charles Colbert, and
^ Schley Scotuers. Sconiers was al-
so chosen to fill the unexpired
_ , . I term of a board member
Funds for the recreational park Holdover to serve two years are
treas for the Negro section of the . Harold P Doild, Satn T Allen. Ill,
|ity has swelled today to $211 16! Harry Oeiger. C, O. Thomason
nanks to tne contributions reeelv- H°*ard ^ Gilliam. Jr Clyde Mc-
. , ... Masters and Deltnar Sharp
since this column was whiten!
bursday
Today ... I acknowledge con-
tributions is follow: $10 from
Harrison Clothier*. $25 f r o m
Plymouth Drug: $5 from Homer
Carter; $1U from Mr*. M. L.
H u t t o n. 400 N. Hickory,
and checks of $25 each from
two public spirited ladies who
srlsh to remain anonymous, but
aftio thoroughly approve the park
idea.
Sunday I shall try to wind up
|he campaign in order that active
vork may begin at once on putting
facilities into as near operation-
order as can be accomplished to
the immediate need.
w i
Union Leader
Reuther Says
Taft Jo Lose
Auto Workers1 Head
Proposes New Wage
Minimum Of $1.25
By ROBERT II. PETERSON
K OKLAHOMA CITY. June 27 (IF—
Walter P Reuther, president of the
United Auto Workers <CIO> Thurs-
day night predicted the defeat of
Sen. Robert A Taft and proposed
a new national minimum wage of
$1 25 an hour
“Any candMate running on the
platform of Senator Taft cannot be
elected president." the head of the
1.000,000-member UAW union said
Reuther added that a candidate
running on a “forthright New
Deal and Fair Deal platform" will
be elected
Reuther said the CIO probably
would recommend both Republi-
can and Democratic platforms car-
ry a plank calling for a national
minimum wage of $1 25 an hour.
Reuther held a press conference*
after addressing the
Npwly elected directors, who will
serve a full three years, are Huber
Hughes. Cecil Gibson. Jessy Sulli-
van, Berry Re.i, Charles Mauch.
Quentin Walkup, and Albert Coley
Retiring members of the board
are Louis V Stuart, Val Chase. Mrs
Hobart Robertson. Ray Harrison.
Marcus Hor:., Lon T Jackson, Sr
and Lloyd Herrman
Immigration Service
Says Appropriation
Would Hurt Work
WASHINGTON. June 27 OP—The
federal immigration service said
Friday a drastic reduction in Its
"wetback” control program along
the U S-Mexico border would be-
necessary unless Congress restores
a House-imposed $4 million cut In
One plan the rehabilitation the service's appropriations
kf a baseball diamond atop the hill I The reductions would include, the
■or teen-agers and adults alike . . service said, halting the "Wetback
tails for an estimated $150 for ma- Airlift," stopping work on two
erlals. Homer C Carter, president $250,000 detention camps for wet-
Lf the Negro Chamber of Commerce backs and laying off 250 border
las pledges of laborers to do the patrolmen
f ork if materials are furnished But the Senate Thursday rejected
its goal has now been reached and two attempts to grant the immi-
iork will begin at once under dir- gration service extra funds to con-
ation of a committee of three tinue its crackdown on the illegally-
ersons Mayor H Q Gilliam entered Mexican aliens, or “wet-
y
-J
For those who may have miss-
ed this column the past week,
lot me say thst a move is under-
way to construct a two-fold plan
of recreation areas for thr Ne-
gro section.
BACK IN fHI U. S. from Korea, Vic* A dm Charles Turner Joy, former
chief UN truce negotiator at Panmunjom, and Mrs. Joy are shown In
San Francisco on their arrival aboard the transport Gen. H. W. Butner.
Joy Is scheduled to become commandant of the U. S. Naval academy
at Annapolla (International Sound photo)
Sapulpa Youth Center Doors
Open Again Saturday Night
ouis V. Stuart and Carter.
The second part of the pro-
gram will be to Install barbrrue
pits, picnic tables and play-
ground equipment on a site to
be selected soon somewhere
along or adjacent to the old
"south” route of the turnpike
which was abandoned.
backs," who cross the border to
vjrk on American farms
Immigration Commissioner Ar-
gyle R Mackey immediately an-
nounced that if Congress fails to
restore the $4 million in appropria-
tions the service will have to make
drastic reductions in its wetback
program.
The immigration service, grant
This area will be landscaped and ed a supplemental appropriation of
hrubbed and converted Into a nearly $1 4 million for the year
>lace of beauty Instead of depress- ending June 30. has accelerated its
ng ruins which now make it look enforcement activities against 11-
ike a tornado or flock of Patton legally-entered Mexican aliens,
anks had passed through. More than 300 border patrolmen
Both phases of the program will were put to work on two $250,000
:ost a total of approximately $600 detention camps for housing wet-
t u minimum backs and the "Wetback Airlift
A. .i-ted .ho., the next „h«e v» resumed In Texas and Calif-
At stated above th f|r*t ornia this harvest season, to trans-
has now been completed and 1 { meg4iiv.enn.red aliens by air
am urging Sapulpans to help £ep ,nto the lntprior of Mexico
reach the second goal. Sen Hubert H Humphrey 'D-
Approximately $400 more is need- Minn , o(fered an amendment dur-
ing floor consideration of the appro-
priation Thursday to increase the
The Sapulpa Youth Center doors♦-
will open Saturday evening for the
first of the four big summer parties
scheduled for the summer.
Some of the highlights on the
program Saturday will be a few
numbers from J B Cue's Swing
band, a solo by Stella Fay Kuy-
kendall. and twirling by Alyce Ann
Moore
Sophia Letlow of the Sophia Let-
low School of Doncing will teach
the dancers a few new steps.
"Many plans have been made to
make the party a success.” said
Marilyn Willibey. chairman of the
planning committee. "New records
nave been purchased and they ore
the top tunes on the hit parade.
e wping pong sets have been put
in and the television set will also
be available.
The summer party will be chap-
eroned by Mr. and Mrs Wes Whit-
tlesey. Mr and Mrs B F Rea.
Mr and Mrs. B. Branson. Mr and
Mrs. R Hayes. Mr and Mrs T. J.
Kennedy, and Mr and Mrs Mar-
cus Horn
SSSj,
UN War Planes Make
Third Raid On North
Korean Power Plants
Aircraft Stay Clear
Of All Controversial
Targets Near China
*-
convention at Oklahoma City of the
National Association for the Ad-
vancement of colored people
Thursday night
"I don’t see how a fellow can
live on less than $2 an hour." he
said. "But our recommendations
probably will not be that high
by FREDERICK C. PAINTON
SEOUL, Korea, June 27 ‘IP—
United Nations war planes were
disclosed Friday to have made
theird third raid in four days on
North Korea's power plants, but K..-tauter of Tennessee visited Dal-
43rd annual mis time they shunned controver- las Friday to address the 32nd an-
Refauver Visits Dallas today
For Jaycee Convention Talk
DALLAS, June 27 IP—Sen. Estes ♦-
SAPULPA TODAY
A representative of the
slal installations just south of the nual convention of the United
Yalu river Manchurian border States Junior Chamber of Corn-
One hundred and fifty fighter- nierce and woo Texas unmstructed
bombers from the U S , Austral- delegation to the Democratic na-
lan, South African and Korean air tional convention.
forces Thursday blasted trans- The mdefatigueable candidate for s*cu“£y administration will be at
formers switches and generating the Democratic presidential nomi- the courthouse July 1, from 9 a. m
, , plants of power installations in the nation may be running square into umd 12 8 m t0 888151 peraona In
It amazes me, he said, how chosen and Fusen reservoir areas, his most formidable campaign lest hiing applications for retirement
millions ot Americans can live on which missed the devastating raids yet — the Jaycees, not the Texas 8nd family insurance payment*.
less. But some live on a third of fe*rlier ^ week Democrats. --
Liia t. The three raids made a shambles The chairman of Thursday's Jay-
Avfreu Bajr*m8n of New York, 0j four enemy hvdro - electric cee program. K W Kemler of
the Mutual Security administrator poWer centers in northeast Korea Marshalltown. Ia.. put it this way
and Democratic presidential hope- However, in Thursday's raids the when he cautioned his colleagues
ful, has the most forthright posi- Allied bombers avoided the Suiho No Firing During Speech
lion on civil rights of any of the <iam power station on the Yalu "Let's not fire our pistols while
kvowed candidates, Reuther said river in northwest Korea, which Senator Kefauver is speaking to
5r<JjS !le. e NAA, ' W85 hit American army and us. Not in the building here, any-
one LAW head called fair employ- naVy pianes Monday. The Monday way."
..Practices legislation a rahi touched off a political fight in Dr. John R Steelman, acting di-
Woman Who Took
Youngster Claims
She'd Do It Again
___
Survey Facts 1«
"Schedule sales promotion twice
a year and include the periods of
March. April. May and October.
November, and December They are
the heavy purchase periods in Sa-
pulpa, and It is then that retail
trade promotion should be pushed "
That’s the gist of advice Sapul-
must. Great Britain, because the target rector of defense mobilization, was
As long as people are denied an was near me Communist Manchu- exposed yesterday to both .45 cali-
bpportunity to earn a livelihood rian border ber revolver fire (blanks) and In-
Without discrimination because of u. S Air Force F-84 Thunderjets dian war dancing by Ponca City,
Jace, creed, color or national ori- an(j p.go shooting Stars. F-51 Mus- Okla , delegates, as he spoke to a
he they are denied tan(?s and Marine Corsairs teamed Jaycee session,
the basic freedom to which all oth- up ln tne mud attack on the Chosen Frank X Tolbert of the Dallas
er freedoms are secondary
Allied Negotiator
Abruptly (alls For
Three-Day Recess
By LEROY HANSEN
PANMUNJOM. June 27 IF-MaJ
Gen. William K Harrison abruptly fighter-bombers
called a three-day recess In the-
Korean truce talks Friday and
and Fusen plants — scene of the Morning News reported Friday that
epic Marine battle out of a Red Steelman immediately hurried
encirclement In December. 1950 from Dallas to Mexico City for a
In the ground war. Eighth Army rest,
commander Gen. James A Van Kefauver was scheduled to ad-
Fleet sent his infantrymen smash- dress the Jaycee political luncheon
ing into two hill positions west of in the same 85.000-square-foot
Chorwon The Allied foot soldiers Automobile building of the State
knocked Chinese off both hills after Fair oi Texas where Steelman
bitter struggles. ' appeared.
An Allied reprt said 284 Chinese New Jaycee national officers
were killed in the two attacks One then will be elected. Horace E
ol the infantry assaults was sup- i Hunk > Henderson. 34. of Williams-
ported by tainks, the other by burg. Va., and Douglas L. Hoge,
LUBBOCK. Tex., June 37 OU-A
woman who kidnapped a three-
year-old boy from the front porch
of his New Mexico home becauae
ahe liked him and couldn't ham
a baby of her own said Friday
she’d do it again.
But Mrs Fred R Elrod, 22-year-
old wile of an itinerant oil field
worker, spoke from behind Lub-
bock's city Jail bars. And she and
her 25-year-old husband were to
be charged by federal authorities
later Friday with kidnapping.
The three-year-old boy they ad-
mitted kidnapping, Johnny Wade,
was found healthy and happy ln a
Levelland, Tex , home Thursday,
more than seven weeks after he
was kidnapped from his parents'
front porch at Aztec, NM
The child's great uncle Jim Wy-
pa's chamber of Commerce reeelv- | walked out of the truce U»nt des-
ed at the turn of the century from pite objections of Communist nego-
Oklahoma A&M college's Agricul- | tiators.
tural-Industrial "—'-----* ~ rTn'“
vice.
Development Ser-
I
immigration fund from $40,399,000
to $42,899,000 This proposal was
rejected 65 to 11.
(reek (ountians
To Attend Meet
AIDS, in the business of inven-
torying cities by human, economic,
natural and municipal resources, of-
fered that tip to close out their
three-page analysis of the city's
The chief United Nations repre-
sentative called the "respite from
propaganda," the third such recess
in a month, when the Reds demon-
strated they had nothing new to
offer.
North Korean Gen Nam II pro-
tested strongly when Harrison said show and open house have
Air Show Is Slated
At The Stillwater
Airport On Sunday
31. of Cincinnati, Ohio, are the can-
didates for national president
It may be the rebel influence of man °* Levelland. led officers to
the 1952 convention site, but Hen- house after he saw the boy
dor son appeared to have an edge playing outside a nearby apart-
in the race Friday. ment building and thought he rec-
ognized his nephew, son of the Rev.
and Mrs. Anthem Wade, for whom
.______„ __a $10,000 reward was posted.
Jaycees. Kefauver will mevt with LitUe Johnny cried and fought
Democratic national convention *."i l7*w
delegates from Texas from 2 to ofncers who took hun away ,rom
Kefauver To Meet Delegates
After his tour of duty with the
2 30 pm. and at 4 pm will hold
STILLWATER, June 27 — An air a press conference.
been Steelman spoke at a Jaycee ses-
t© reach the overall figure
I 1 will be at my desk all day Sat-
urday to answer question or ex-
plain more fully the program
khoufd anyone desire Information
In the event you care to help
this very worthy project, you
may bring or mail or telephone
your pledge to me, or. If you
prefer, you may list vour ron-
| trihut ion with Don Judd. Hr Is
ramroddtug thr financial end.
The lists will be closed Sunday.
All money will be turned over t-* urday at 10 a rn at the Tulsa
he commuter outlined above for luneral home Burial will be in Rose
rxpenditure
NORMAN. June 27 — Represen-
tatives from Creek county will at-1
tend a school lunch workshop to be
held at the University of Okla-
homa north campus extension stu- |
dy center, July 6-10
market area. It Is part of a 200-pace j UN would not show up for any scheduled to mark dedication of tlv sion
report completed on the basis of 1 meetings until next Tuesday
1949 figures. "Nam's tone was very high," UN
"Approximatelv nine out of every | spokesman Brig Gen William P
10 rural residents of the area stu-1 Huckols said "Toward the end it
died trade in Sapulpa-four out of was approaching a strident
10 regularly and another five on | scream "
held
occasion,' 'the report summarized
Greatest competition for retail
trade comes from Bristow. Sand
Springs, and Tulsa.
after a 52-block-long
Stillwater Municipal airport term-1 "Roundup of States” parade
inal Sunday, June 29. Hoyt Walkup through downtown Dallas,
manager, announced today Steelman presented the U S Jun-
Port Sill's flight team of helicop- ior Chamber of Commerce with a
ters and li&son planes will provide special plaque in recognition of
the air show, including ground services rendered by informing
Mrs. Elrod.
She Cried Too
Johnny's would-be mother criad,
too, when FBI agents transferred
her and her husband from Level-
land to Lubbock city Jail Thursday
night.
But. Mrs. Elrod told a newsman,
she was crying mostly about hav-
ing to leave Johnny, not because
Nam opened Friday's 51-minute maneuvers at '2 30 p m Stillwat- American communities on the need of the trouble she was in.
meeting with a
bringing up his
long statement er.s F;ym? businessmen w.ll chal- tor and development of the nation-
old charges that ,pn|fe the Oklahoma Women 99 s in defense program.
... ------— — The jaycee convention ends Sat-
Approxtmately ISO are expected to and and big competitors are
attend the workshop which is plan- ^ Springs, and Bnqow. con^t-
Par groceries UN was gullty of ''Estreating a spil landing content at 1 30 p. m
Communist prisoners of war
Nuckols said he "got the impres-
sion'
Harold Hancock
Dies In Tulsa
Harold Hancock Tulsa, brother of
Mrs. T N Davis. 1201 E McKinley
j tied Tuesday in a Tulsa hospital
Funeral services will be held Sat-
11 ill cemetery
A tour of the new terminal, tom-
n . h> nr ma- ado warnin8 laboratory and th<*
ned for the purpose of giving school ltoJ|s f^r rPf,af,of ca^.f'|/ne'1 ganda of earlier days in an attempt s'ati°n WalkuD*said^Other
lunch managers and cooks pnaette- and other feed is felt from all three. t<J etT1phasis of the talks ** , L ^ . '1
a! help in the operation of their veterinary care is obtained largely (away from the quandary in which * ’ ‘ ' . . f, h.
-s .cssa - -.«»apon- xr,...... Jsus s^ss^jsjti
cation ^School funch S^Wto^atSf^s j wari^lfl^pul^ cShl^g^dth ““rhe AU ^s' h!d “disclored^o Nam 1
under the direction of Drew Ung- , metropolitan Tulsa the s.phon-is II that Russia offered voluntary
ley of the State Board the big Item purchased away from , repatriation to Axis soldiers ui
Representatives from 24 central home World War II The Reds here have congressional hearings
counties will be ln attendance at As a
he four-day meeting „ ,—------—--------
—---- livestock products, only 14 per cent (bolding up an armistice
of crops and 12 per cent of the live-
urday
Methodists Meet
To Elect Officers
The Methodists Men's club
meet tonight in the basement
The reporter asked Mrs Elrod U
she would take the child again U
she had It to do over.
She paused only a moment
"Yep, I think I would," she said
The Elrods never sent a ransom
note to Johnny’s parents The baby
was well taken care of, officers
said, and wanted to stay with the
woman.
w'il Made Signed Stale meet
of
Although 1
are still
BABSON DISCUSSES
Traffic Death Rate
NEW BOSTON. N H, June 27. The death of a friend has
brought to my attention this week both the economic loss to the coun-
try and the personal loss to relatives from needless automobile acci-
dents.
NEED OF BETTER ROADS: First, let me admit that these acci-
dental deaths have not increased proportionately with the number of
motor vehicles, although the deaths may have in-
creased proportionately with the mileage operated
When I was a student at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, there were only four automobiles tn the
United States When I was married in 1900, this had
Increased u> only 8,000 automobiles, one of which 1
owned. Today there aie about forty-five million auto-
mobiles and about nine million trucks in operation
Truly this is a miraculous industry
Unfortunately, most of the roads used today
were laid out before automob-les were even dreamed
of The improvements tn these roads have not begun
to keep pace with the number of automobiles. This is
primarily responsible for most accidents. We. however,
are now entering a new road building industry of tre-
proportkms Great toll-roads, and
farm market Sapulpa pirk< repeatedly insisted on forced return pentling. Walkup said there is ex tles wlU ^ g.ven
1 arm niarxt sapuipa pi nrL*ioner^ the onl\ raue now celient chances hr Central Air- ... —
up 50 per cent of her trade area s p* 8" prisoners, me oni> issue now ( ^
Sopulpons To Take
Training In Georgia
| stock.
"The Utile town
of Mounds on
Both Mrs Elrod and her hus-
the First Methodist church for din- band signed statement admitting
net at 6 30 taking the boy from the front porch
Election of officers is to be held of his home Mrs Elrod said they
and a report of next fall’s act.vi- had been living at Farmington.
N M . and saw Johnny when they
All meifioers and men of the drove by his home "I took a liking
lines to begin operation of four church are urged to attend to him," she said,
flights daily in the near future
Propoeed flights would link Still-1 - ■
Center To Be Built ! water to Oklahoma City, Enid and
ANADARKO. June 27 lh—Con- Tulsa
the south is drawing a great deal struction on a $40,000 center for Located two miles north and one-
Cadet Howard Brewer son of Mr of rural trade in that area while a Indians will start here in Septem- half mile wesf of Stillwater the
and Mrs William H Brewer ol large part of the agricultural prod- ber, Rev J L Raney, missionary airport is city owned but has been
Kiefer and Cadet Marvin L Mur- ucU of this area Is marketed in for the American Baptist Home i^a-ed bv Oklahoma A&M college
m
Vi
Roger Baboon
phy. Jr., son of Mr and Mrs M L.
Murphy. 1801 S Main, reported to
Camp Oordon. Ga. this week to be-
dn an intensive six-week course at
the U. S. Army-Signal Corps' Re-
erve Officer Training camp.
Cadets Murphy and Brewer, who
ire students at Oklahoma A&M
college, and members of that insti-
tution's ROTC unit, are working to
juhlifymg for a commission as a
•cm mission as a second lieutenant
in the Signal Corps Reserve
Beggs.' 'the report said .
Mission society said Friday
Other Sapulpa Groups Aiding
Jaycees In July 4th Picnic
A&M conducts aircraft and engine
_ classes at the airport and operates
four light planes for use of college
personnel.
Three clubs maintain headquar-
ters at {he airport They are the
Crime Bureau Chief Arrests
Suspect tn Burris Slaying
By JACK MORRIS
Two Sapulpa Jaycees and theire-
wives returned Thursday afternoon 8re8-
PRYOR. Okla . June 27 IF—Okla- scribed his death as a vengeance
homa Crime Bureau Chief George slaying.
‘‘p'-nn'W Howard Wilson announced Friday Wilson said the pickup truck, a
posed of A&M students T7.e F*> tomev Jack Burns and said an whom, federal records show, has
Aggies were nost last msi ® underworld alliance" plotted the purchased gambling stamps from
National Intercollegiate flving meet murder of the young pros- the U S collector of internal reve-
Be'ireen 75 and 100 planes are ecuj^r
expected f^r the deil.ca^on da% pro- ^ Wilson said olficers seized
nue
However.
Wilson said Dawson
The camp will continue until Aug lrotn by private pUne The Sapulpa Sporting Goods team pram. Walkup stated Persons f’.vinv pickup truck""which was beheved to was not being held and that the
1. at which time the cadets will re- Mr and Mrs. Quentin Walkup Instance, will play Nat.onal in i t thp dedication will be given nave been used by the assassin truck’s title had been transferred
turn to their homes. and Mr and Mrs. A1 Bradley re- bank of Tulsa a baseball game at a free breakf. at from 7am to 10 an<j indicated two or more men to Dawson after the slaying.
------ turned to Sapulpa after attending 2 The 6apulpa Roundup club a m.. and then provided transpor- nave been arrested Burris was Seised Gambling Equipment
Eisenheur Resume* Job an "Oklahoma” partv at which Sa- wd' sponsor a rodeo from 6:30 to tation to Stillwater churches -hot through the back of the head The truck was hauled Into Pryor
WEWOKA. June 27 'IF John R pUjpa Javcees, through the Bart- 8:^0. A merry-go-round for the Walkup said the airport's termtn- with a 12 gauge shotgun In the and parked in front of the tempor-
Etsenhour has resumed his Job as jett-Coliliis company, presented each smaller youngsters will be available. aj tower now operates fr^m 8 a m backyard of his Locust Grove home ary Crime Bureau headquarters
manager of the Chamber of Com- Javc(v aUenttint? the convention 88 a miniature train ride A to 8 p. m dailv as a flight advi«orv June 8 here The truck was loaded with
merce here following a 22-month wlth a |jus c&rytn« the name of r«,dl° station. ROME will make a service for anv pilot within callinc The arrest followed an all-night contraband slot machines, punch-
leave of absence for military ser- thf sapuloa Jaycee organization two-hour broadcast from the fair- distance of the tower SetMng is ' raidmg party m Ottawa county in boards and other gambling para-
auper-highways costinx I X,‘Ce ,Tllh ^ While the Jaycee* are the guid- KTounds. 122 • me for ground radio The northeastern Oklahoma in which phenalia
$1 million per mile are beinx built Tho>w auiier-hiehwavs umi*r»rounrt i Royally who filled the job aunnv Fvmrth T*1*5 15 8ddil‘00 to all the other field la open 24 hours dailv seven state agents confiscated a num The truck became a prune clue
parking iuuL»thaqtera imd Xd d^loS^D underground FAsrnh„w^ absence, hi now man- »"« »'ght and sponsors of the Fourth connstS rldei game? of u.n ^ week, and has facilities for ber of shotguns, pinball machines shortly after the slaying when a
VWATr^CIIONAraM^^V^lLted th*. ihere were “«er lt>C chamber of Ju,y ««*»**ty celebration, they wh!ch arp by CJVlf organ- nivht landing and right refueling and whisky witness reported seeing it near Bar*
about 40 000 person- killed bv diiU.mobile* last vnr up i mmv manv ___ boost* all along the way from izations of Sapulpa The field will be ck>«ed from I N) Linked to Alliance ids' home the night he was killed
•“r. “'“•o by automoOUes last year, and many, many Occupational accidents cause ap- ^her organlzatiom and clubs
times this number Injured Over one-ttitrd of these deaths were due proximately 250.000 finger injuries
And all of this too. is tn addition to 2 d. m , and from 2 N) to 5 p m Investigators indicated the raids Wilson said officers spotted
to collisions and about one-thud from' non collL^n J?h ^ . Mn^'. mJurlfs, Other recreational groups have ar- to the regular day's entertainment Sunday to avoid interference with were linked to an underworld alii- truck some time ago and had key*
(Continued On Page Two> L ° mcct<tenU' uch ^od..fi<).n<9 ^t^uri*s MCh y*®r n «nged to hold ^their activities dur- being presented by the, Jaycees on the air show and other aerial actlv- ance which planned th«-^killing of a close watch on It the PMt W
the United States
tag the da> and at the Fairgrounds July Fourth, a week from today it les Walkup reported
Bums At the time, officers de- days
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 253, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1952, newspaper, June 27, 1952; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1489165/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.