Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, September 19, 1952 Page: 6 of 6
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SAPULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1952
fcaPMgesTs
SvHdi Fran'Fair*
Ts Hues! Deal
By JOHN L. CD rut
OMAHA. Neb . Sept 1A-UP-
Dwigbt O. Elsenhower pledged a
■witch from the "Pair Deal" to the
"Honest Deal” before resuming his
whistle-stop campaign serosa the
Midlands Friday
In a major farm speech here
Thursday night. Elsenhower lash-
ed out at the arrogant people who
have been in power too long" and
the "outrageous taxation" of the
Truman administration.
The Republican candidate
will appear at Kansas City
In the morning with stops for rear-
platform appearances at Platts-
mouth. Auburn. Nebraska City and
Falls Cttv. Neb . and 8t Joseph.
Mo
As the train wheeled across Iowa
Thursday. Elsenhower repeatedly
criticised the Democratic regime
and said he found his farm audi-
ences deeply interested tn the
crazy federal spending, deficits
that cheapen our money and the
problem of morality In govern-
ment "
More About Washington Mem
"The people are tired of this
mess in Washington and are going
to do something about It.” Eisen-
hower told the estimated 12.000
persons who crowded into Ak-sar-
ben Coliseum bere Thursday night
"Farmers, like all other citizens,
have had enough of what Is humor-
ously called the Fair Deal. ' he
told his mldwestern audience
"What we all want now. and what
we are going to get Is an honest
deal"
Elsenhower said his election
would bring a peace and prosperi-
ty that mates the past seem pu-
ny" by comparison
The former five-star general ac-
cused the administration of using
farm program funds on costly bu-
reaucratic sniping” and letting the
"sticky hands of federal bureau-
crats" manipulate farm credit
"I strongly favor farmer-manag-
ed soil conservation districts, with
the soil conservation service and
other public agencies giving such
help as the farmers request." he
said.
Attacks an—n Ptaa
A Republican administration
Elsenhower aaul. would promote
farmer-controlled soil programs,
credit, research and rural power
and telephone systems without the
"iron-fisted control" of the so-call-
ed Uranium Plan
Earlier at Dea Moines, la . the
OOP nominee made what newsmen
called the strongest speech of his
campaign He told a crowd at the
Iowa capitol that he will drive the
"crooks and cronies ' out of Wash-
ington if he la elected
"The prodding this time will
start from the V lie said m
promising that investigations of
corruption won't have to await
congressional urging
"And when we are through, the
experts tn shady and shoddy gov-
ernment operations will be on their
way back to the shadowy haunts,
tn *u bee liars of American politics
from whence they came "
The former gemeral's lk-car spe-
cial campaign train chugged across
Iowa from Davenport and made
■tops at Wilton Junction. West Lib-
erty. Iowa City. Marengo. GrinneU.
Newton, des Moines, Atlantic and
Council Bluffs.
j Homer Cook Hurt
In Tulso Wreck
TULSA, Sept 1* —OF— Homer
Cook. »- year • old former Musko-
gee soldier remembers for his ex-
ploits tn Oermany tn order to be
with his sweetheart, was scheduled
for release from Tulsa's H 111crest
hospital Friday.
Cook received minor injuries in
an auto-truck collision Thursday.
He drove his car into the rear of
a dump truck while watching the
roadside for a package he bad lost
earlier.
His knee was dislocated, and he
received cuts and bruises on the
face, chest and arm.
Cook broke jail In Germany
three times in order to see the girl
he later married The pair now live
in Tulsa She Is employed by the
Teamsters Union and he works for
a Tulsa trucking firm.
Oklahoma Police
Alerted For Women
Who Stole Children
FORT WORTH Sept 19—UP—
Tarrant county authorities Friday-
alerted Oklahoma police to be on
the lookout for two women who
were accused of abducting one of
the women's two small children
from a Fort Worth home for chil-
dren
Mrs Dortha Holt, mother of the
tots was charged with taking them
from the Lena Pope home's baby-
land Thursday Authorities said she
and another woman who said she
was the children's grandmother
visited the home, whisked the chil-
dren into a taxicab and drove off
Judge Fisher Denny of the 96th
district court issued a bench war-
rant lor Mrs Holt's arrest and de-
clared her in contempt of court.
Authorities had a report the wo-
men and the tots. Camille Story,
3. and her brother Richard.2. had
gone to Wichita Fall- and were
on the way to Oklahoma
Mrs Holt left the children at the
home when they were inlants She
has since remarried and she claim-
ed the children last month
Judge Denny ruled then that the
tots would have to stay in the home
until probation officers Investigat-
ed the case.
'Hate'll. S.' Drive
By Kremlin Seen As
Becoming Serious
BERLIN. Sept. 10 —UP—Oeorge
F. Kennan. United Bute* ambas-
sador to Moscow, said Friday that
the hate-America campaign of the
Kremlin has become "serious "
Western diplomats In the Soviet
Russian capital now live in "com-
plete isolation." Kennan said on
his arrival here on his way to at-
tend a United States diplomatic con-
ference In London.
Kennan warned the western
world It can put no faith In state-
ments by Russians that they de-
sire to Improve relations until they
halt their anti-American campaign
Despite a formal protest he made
there has been no relaxation, he
aaid
Almost Interned
Kennan said any desire by Rus-
sia to improve relations will be
shown by a relaxation of the Rus-
sian anti-American campaign und
by a change of Russin policy as
regards the Korean war. Rusaia is,
fueling the Communists war mach-
ine there
Kennan said the isolation of west-
ern diplomats in Moscow now is us
complete as that he experienced
when interred by the Oerman
Nazis after Pearl Harbor, except
that they are able to walk ubout
the city.
He told correspondents the Mos-
cow atmosphere is "Icy cold." He
said not even his servants or guides
are permitted to talk to him ex-
cept on business matters No Rus-
sian on the streets will talk to him.
be said
f ind Way Barred
To mcrea.se the isolation of the
diplomats. Kennan said, the Rus-
sians give "inaccurate" information
about the ares* outside Moscow
they are permitted to visit. A dip-
lomat will be led to believe that a
certain area Is not In a restricted
zone only to go there and find ha
is barred. In this way, ha said,
the Russians apparently hope to
keep diplomats from travelling out-
side Moscow without ordering them
formally to stay tn the city.
Kennan for years has been Amer-
ica's No. 1 expert on Russia. He
formulated the State Department s
of communism within its present
limits His appointment to the Mos-
cow post was an International sen-
•■stion The Russians had made it
no secret they hated him.
Kennan presented his credentials
In May. and since then has survey-
ed the situation in the Red capital
as lew other men could.
Deaths
Orvol L. McIntosh
Funeral services will be held to-
morrow at 3 30 fur O val Lee Mc-
Intosh at the All Saints Holiness
church.
He Is survived by five brothers.
Bill and Cootie, of 521 E. Hobson.
Ra yawl Robert. Kansas, and Frank
a member of the U S. Navy, and by
two sisters. Nellie Williams and
Theola McIntosh of California.
Burial will be under the direqgion
of Dyer-Patterson Funeral home.
Generator Installed nt Cashing
CU3HINO. Sept 19 — Cush-
ings new 1 360-kilowatt electric
generator has been installed to as-
sure the citg a better power sup-
ply
Stillwater Fire Chief Named
STILLWATER. Sept. 19 —UP—
Raymond Clyde Davidson has been
appouited fire chief here, succeed-
ing Everett Hudiburg, who resign-
ed Davidson has been with the
local lire department 12 years, and
was trained at the Oklahoma A AM
College firemen's school.
Stevenson Hits
'Grouchy' GOP
Pessimists Today
By MERRIMAN SMITH
SPRINGFIELD. Bl . Sept. 10
—UP—Adlal Stevenson struck back
Friday at Republican critics of his
humruu.s campaign speeches by
calling them "grouchy old pessi-
mists."
He also described Dwigm D. Eis-
enhower. his Republican opponent
for the presidency, as "the honor-
ary head of a regency" under Sen
Robert A. Taft of Ohio.
In a speech prepared for delivery-
in front of the Springfield city hall.
Stevenaon said he would continue
to make an issue of his right to in-
ject humor into his political ad-
dresses
Finds No Humor
But he said he thought It was
"no laughing matter" that Elsen-
hower had decided to "surround
himself almost entirely with the old
guaxd of the Republican party”
"The Democratic administrations
have produced the great social re-
forms of our era." Stevenson said.
"We will defend those reforms
against all those humorless souls
who haven’t been happy since the
days of William McKinley "
The Illinois governor urged the
"good" Republicans of New Eng-
land to support his candidacy be-
cause "there Is always a warm wel-
come awaiting you in the Demo-
cratic party.”
"We know how to make people
feel at home," be aaid. “That is
why we win. Let me say further
that If 1 am elected In November.
I will be a president and not the
honorary head of a regency.”
In examining the problems of in-
dustrial New England. Stevenson
i stuck to the stand he took on his
recent western tour on the subject
of federal expenditures for devel-
opment and assistance.
Should Resist Pressure Groups
He said the test on federal ac-
tivity should be determined by its
effect on the nation rather than lo-
cal areas and should resist the de-
mands "of particular pressure
groups."
Stevenson said he accepted the
fact that New Englanders are dis-
turbed by the closing of textile
mills and shoe factories or their
migration to the south.
He said he favored a federal pro-
gram toward "fair standards of
competition between regions" even
though he believed the government
should not try to stop the growth
of one part of the country to help
another part.
The speech at the city hall was
Stevenson's only scheduled public
to Oy to New York for a quiet eve-
ning. Saturday night he will speak
in Richmond. Va.
Stevenson took his campaign in-
to New England Thursday with a
100-mile tour of Connecticut He
made 11 speeches before an esti-
mated 44.000 persons.
, ANADARKO. Sept 19 —UP-An
Inter-tribal meeting of the Kiowa.
Comanche and Apache tribes will
be held here Saturday to establish
the eligibility of members of the
tribal rolls.
,i to Study Cade
I NORMAN, Sept 10-OF— T
for a campaign to obtain a
plumbing code will be
by approximately 1M .
firm representatives in a
here Oct I and 4 Plana tor .
code campaign will be outlined
H P Douglas. Oklahoma City, "
retary o1 the associated plur*1
and heating contractors of
boms
—--
I The highest fever
on record. 144 degrees _ ^
from which a patient survived, wa
observed In a 66-year-old.^ 10-
pound woman at Memorial
tal in New York.
MOORE'S SUNDRIES
K4KK UnitDiT
We have been closed for one week but will
re-open for business as usual tomorrow
Come In end See Ua
400 East Dewey Pkone 24B4
Mere karma Delivered
OKMULOEE. Sept 19 —UP—
Oame Ranger Claude Ooin aaid 23
more raccoon have been delivered
to the 4.000-acre refuge near Lake
Okmulgee So far. 67 have been
trapped tn the Wichita wildlile ref-
uge near Lawton and brought here.
Goin said about 40 or 60 more will
be transferred later.
SAVI YOUR CEILINGS
with a
NEW ROOF
NO DOWN PAYMENT
At low « $10 • month
Stuart Lunber Co.
117 S. Maple Phone 111
TONIGHT-7:45
’Dm Great Tribulation Period"
Ivongelist W. L Milos
Wl WILCOMI VISITORS
Rev. Lonnie L Osborn, Poster
C R 5 0 LIn E"GOSSIP
by H. P. BOWLES
wfrfc jmf o dm* of HodacolT
You, too, will be omoied of the quick ttorts and
of our Texoco goeollne.
HP. levies Janice M
New! Harrison's Presents
the Continential
Nifty new leisure shoe
for fell with extended •
tele*, white stitching
Only
THE
fUvMt
SKIPPER
a« aovmtimp
in QUICK
Here’* a natty nautical ttyle
that'* faat becoming a campus
clastic... rubber soled white
bucks! Ride the crest of the fashion
wave at tbit low, low price.
YOUNG IDIAS
IN MIN S SHOES
IIOE.DEWEY
/
Y?
•» r*
i
r
it
TODAY 7 OUT OF 10 SAPULPA
FAMILIES NAVE TELEPHONES
nee H wet S out of 10
What ith* tarns chMMh si
much to the prosperity if SriIm?
EMPLOYER . . . provides good jobs for 54
Sopulpo people who torn (155,000 a yeor
—and spend most of it here in Sopulpo.
TAXPAYER ... pays $20,000 o yeor in local
taxes alone—enough to cover the cost of
educating 154 Sapuipo grade school children
for a year.
BUYER ... buys thousands of doMors worth of
supplies and equipment from Sopulpo firms.
DIVIDEND PAYER ... to 4,B00 Oklahoma ns,
many of them here in Sopulpo, who hove in-
vested their savings in telephone securities.
e e e
In just seven years, telephone growth hat
created 23 good, new jobs for Sopulpo
people—and greotfy increased oH our contri-
butions to Sopulpo a welfare and prosperity.
w . e.
Today more families want and have telephone
service than ever before.
As a result, there are 2,700 more telephones in
Sapulpa than there were at the end of World War
II — more titan twice as many.
That gives you an ideu of tlie growing prosperity
of Sapulpa — and tlie growing value of your tele-
phone service.
Meeting your needs for more and more service has
been a big job. Since 1945, we have added 1,960
miles of wire to Sapulpa's telephone system . . *
spent $476,000 gross on new telephone construction
and equipment. . . created now jolts for 23 Sapulpa
people.
As Sapulpa’s telephone system has grown — so
have the costs of operating it. Wages, supplies, and
materials have gone up. And here in Sapulpa our
local taxes alone have almost doubled since World
War II.
•But telephone rates have not kept pace with to*
day’s high costs of delivering good telephone service.
As a result, each postwar dollar we have invested in
Oklahoma from die savings of people who bought
telephone securities is now earning only about 24 a
year.
This is a dangerous trend. Sapulpa needs good
telephone service — and the economic contributions
of a healthy telephone business.
But no business can continue to grow without
getting a fair price for Its services - a price that will
allow a fair profit to those wKose savings build Ae
business and keep It growing.
SOWTNWSSrfSN Silt
OKLAHOMA
$4 TBIISMONI SIOSII . . . MSTNIM IN SASUISA'S SIOORISS
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, September 19, 1952, newspaper, September 19, 1952; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1489622/m1/6/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.