Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1960 Page: 3 of 10
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Illness ••
• Continued from Page 1)
school. She later went to Oklaho-
ma University.
Mrs. Darner and her family are
! commission. ' says Sapulpa could have really
“He was a modest man,” his grown it it had had a big hotel to
daughter says. accomodate the large number of
Today Mrs. Darner, a tax con- oilmen,
sultant, is a woman of many “The oil was here, but Tulsa
hobbies. had the hotels," she says.
The cheerful and energetic
longtime members of the Presby- woman “7* her first hobby is
tfrian church in Sapulpa In fact, her lwo grandchildren. The Dar-
slie says the first Presbyterian
church here was established in
the back of her father's store.
ners have one daughter, Mrs.
Alice Pestonjee. living in Bombay,
India. The grandchildren are
{She says outlaws were very pre- JR°hn"y ^ ^irin' wh° live in
valent in the early days. ' B°mbay W,th the,r mother
4“I can remember a group of
outlaws who rode into town, shoot-
iag their guns everywhere," Mrs
Darner says. "I especially re-
member when they used to shoot
at men’s feet and make them an awful lot a,ld
dance. They used to dance until anolher hobb>'-
Mrs, Darner is a person who
enjoys living as one easily can
see upon meeting her.
"I especially enjoy living in Sa-
pulpa," she smiles, "and 1 hope
I can always live here "
"A hobby is the one thing you
are most interested in," Mrs
Darner says, "so 1 call my grand-
children my hobby."
Mrs. Darner says she likes
culls
Bunche
Petitions -
Entered M teeond-rlnaa maU matter. Sept S. 1014. it the Port Offto*
In Sapulpa, Oklahoma, under an act ol March J, 18»7
Sopulpo, (Okla ) Herald, Thursday, August 4, 1960—Section 1—Page 3
they could hardly stand up."
Although she says the outlaws
were bad, she adds that they never
held up her father's store.
"They used to make us give
them food, but they never really
robbed us."
She married W E. Darner in
"I guess that is why I enjoy
television so much. You sure see
a lot of different characters on
television.
Other hobbies include travel,
stamp and coin collections and
geneology.
Mr. Darner has a hobby of
Sapulpa in 1917. In those early studying nature and reads every-
days her husband was a school thing he can find about nature and
teacher here and later an em- its creatures,
ploye of Oklahoma Natural Gas "When we retire it won't be so
Today he is part owner of the bad," Mrs. Darner laughs, 'be-
Darner-Deason furniture store cause our hobbies should keep us
here. busy for quite a while.”
Mrs. Darner’s mother died in an Mrs, Darner loves Sapulpa and
auto accident in 1933 and her she loves the people of Sapulpa
lather died in 1956. "I really cherish my friends
Her father truly was one of the here and I love the way the
first pioneers and settlers in Sa- weather changes."
pulpa. He was a member of the Remembering the oil boom days
first school board and first city of 1906 and 1907, Mrs. Darner
A & M Electric
IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS
Archie Sechrest, for 14 years electrician with
Rogers Electric and Bill Rogers Electric, has
opened the A&M ELECTRIC and invites old
and new friends and customers to call for all
electrical work.
Also working with ArcHie will be Mock Eaton
and Walt Robe, former associates in the
electric business.
Residential Commercial Industrial
Contracting and Repairing
PHONE 2040
1320 SOUTH MAIN STREET
(Continued from Page 1>
in Katanga would not stop the
United Nations.
In Brussels, Katanga Finance
Minister Jean - Baptiste Kibwe
backed down somewhat from his
statement of Wednesday that Ka-
tanga troops would "open fire on
the blue helmets” of the U.N.
force.
He said Katanga would accept
a "token force composed of a few
unarmed military and led by the
secretary general ... on a fact
finding mission."
"If the Belgian government de-
cided to withdraw its forces it
would be a cowardly act,” Kibwe
said. "If Belgium should abandon
us we may ask the help ol other
countries." He declined to name
any
Hammarskjold made it clear
Wednesday night that neither the
Katanga, Congo federal, Belgian
nor any other individual govern-
ment was going to dictate to the
U.N. force.
"Under U.N. Command"
He said tiiat although the Congo
asked for the international troops,
they are under tlie "exclusive com
mand of the United Nations, vest-
ed in tiie secretary general under
• Continued from Page 1)
ingston opened "I feel honored to
serve with people who are willing
to stand up and be counted for
what you believe is right."
Be Open Monday
Livingston said Edmondson is
carrying out the promises of his
1958 campaign "and I am firmly
convinced he is doing what the
people voted for."
Livingston said telephones and
furniture will be installed in the
DEATHS
Reed Services
Three-Day»
(Continued from Page It
by Neil McElroy. a trust officer
Final rites for John Adam , . .
Reed. 220 North Linden who died f°'' L,berly W,'° 18 n0W vaca
of a heart atack Monday after- bon KeP
noon, will be held at 9 a m. Satur- representing the
Bryce Baggett,
minority direc-
Nixon Campaigns
In Remote Place
To Keep Pledge
State-
| statewide television show where
he charged that his Democratic
opponent for the presidency has
| paid the price of allowing the na-
I lion's union leaders to dictate his !
labor platform in order to get
their support.
He answered questions put to
__ ___ _ _ _ HONOLULU (UPD—Vice Presi- him by Hawaii's newspaper edi-1
day in First Baptist church with tore of Capitol Hill Bank, asked dent Richard Nixon beamed Ws tors Nixon said it was his con- Pontage of cost contracts for
Rev. Alvin Hedin officiating. Kemena to return to the stand lat Presidential campaigning today tention that "the President of the planning surveys. It said
Active pallbearers will be Bill er with details on the loan to Mid- 'nl° ,be remo,est reaches of this United States cannot owe his elec- slK’b contracts should be let on a
Treeman Mike Petteway Jim America Corp. far-flung island state as he backed tion t0 any one group or ^ un. cost plus-fixed-fee basis.
S. R. Fewer spectators were on hand Up h'S plt>dge l° campai*n an7' ‘*er the influence of any one seg- ^ reP°rt als° cited route
(Continued from Page 1)
ing attorneys in counties involv-
ed.
The report also criticized the
| states for negotiating cost-plus-
1 £5 -3SH
Wagwr, * Otis Humes,' ‘Si the Sight,'.?!.* ZSJIXLSZ «led tTitaTlp
“and we ll be open for business
Monday.”
Edmondson named John Kilpat-
rick Jr., Oklahoma City, as fi-
nance chairman Kilpatrick held
the same post in Edmondson's_____,y.
gubernatorial campaign.
Get Campaign Packets
Rep. G. M. Fuller, Oklahoma
City, was named director of re-
search, and Bill Holloway, Okla-
homa City, head of the speaker's
bureau.
All of today's group were given
campaign packets explaining the
his Hawaiian
and Carl Re,,,,,, « Z iSXSS «
Burial will be iu Hard Green abut Ihe tank', doom lax Frida, SS,Three .Krai\,7e.
Boulder City, Mo.,
under direction of Owen Funeral
home.
tonight
Friday
More-
(Continued from Page I)
average on the percentage
of
three petitions, which "include leg- * assessed valuation in ratio to
islative reapportionment, constitu- ^a*r casb *•!* value is 22 07 per
tional highway commission and cent-
the county road bill. All counties below that will be
Assisting the governor at to- increased by the state board's or-
day's session in the Crystal room der. Difference increases will be
of the Skirvin hotel were his exe posted on rural and urban prop-
cutive assistant, Leland Gourley. erty in each county, depending on
and Norman Reynolds, attorney tile local ratio,
on the governor’s stalf Both were I uimlted To 10 Per Cent
f reeling not to go through with waii in all of its proud history
the purchase plan. Freeling was He set out today on a schedule
removed as bank president ubout that would make him the first na-
the time Sebring locked it up At tionully elected official to visit
tlie same time, the directors fired more than two of Hawaii's five
Houlihan as board chairman. major islands.
Freeling's attorney, Sam Moore, Will Island Hop
withdrew from the suit after Mills Although some 70 per cent of
upheld the director's dismissal of the people and votes are on the
the officers Wednesday This cast island of Oahu, Nixon scheduled
Little Rock, Ark. It said this re-
loss of $105,000. of
Honolulu and will leave iwll,i;" *’°'uuu was in federal
money, representing the cost of
morning aboard a char-
appraisals and designs already
done on the original location.
In another case, the GAO said
Louisiana and Arkansas were lax
■ in commencing repairs on federal
highways after bureau inspec-
tions. Tlie law requires such re-
HAVANA < UPD-Armed forces pairS wilhin ^ ^ The GA0
Minister Haul Castro, just buck
from a trip to Moscow and Com-lpa‘rs Were delayed
Castro's Brother
Blasts U. S. With
Address In Cuba
active in the 1958 campaign.
Kennedy-
Tax Commission Chairman Joe
, Dunn submitted a letter stating
assessed values in some counties
were so low it would require a 75
per cent increase to bring them
up to the state average Dunu rec
ommended and the commission
(Continued from Page 1)
tlie control of tlie Security Coun- various commodities." . . . , , ,, .
cil." Loveless said. "We must have.acc^ted a 0 hold the
He said he would not permit the our people ready to go awfully h0081 ta 10 per.cent any one
force to become embroiled in the early in 1961 if we are to come year 0n y fea propel y a?se88'
Congo's internal politics. up with a program for the ™nts are affected. Personal pro-
The statement evidently meant year.'*
that the United Nations was going The Iowa governor said it Anderson said he thought the
Tennessee-
(Continued from Page 1)
years Crump's candidates lost—
___________________ u _ and one of the main reasons was
into Katanga despite any obsta- would be "a physical impossi- change was unfair and, the sur- a sarcastic comment that baek-
des, although Hammarskjold has bility” to write a major farrrijVey unrealistic and that the re- fired
worked to achieve a smooth take- bill in the three - week session suits would be a tax increase. An-
of congress which will begin when Person said if the board were try
niunist East Europe, said early
Baggett and the board members island hopping visits and hand |^J['yK,^,SS,'a„S
who were not privy to the pur- shaking tours of such lesser known
chase plan in tlie role of plaintiffs islands as Kauai and Maui as well
in the show-cause action before as the "big island" of Hawaii.
said it found instances where re-
much as
two years.
Mills. This also made it a friend- which the area hereabouts hard
ly law suit. est hit by tidal waves following
Baggett and Attorney General
Mac Q Williamson were grilling
the witnesses to make a full and
complete record of the methods
used in allegedly "denuding” tlie
bank of its assets. 'Hie Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp., lias be
gun liquidation of tiie bank
Trooper's Auto !s
Stoned By Negroes
over.
Dons Coonskin Cap
le Crump forces lampooned
- the Senate reconvenes Monday. *n8 1° equalize it should also low- Kefauver as a “pet coon" of the
Some 200 degrees tempera- However, he said, Congress er assessments in counties above administration. Kefauver, whose
ture separate the coolest and "might be able to arrive at some tbe &ta,e average. life and career seems that of a
hottest inhabited regions on emergency legislation on farm “When you raise valuations in Democratic Abe Lincoln, prompt-
earth. credit." 63 counties,” Anderson said, "it ly donned a coonskin cap and re-
--A prime part of Kennedy's ef- will result in tax increases in 63 plied: “This coon may have a
CARD OF THANKS fort is to capitalize on the Re- counties and I will bet a chicken- ring around its tail, but it will
Our heartfelt thanks to all who publican Party’s split on farm miller on it.” never have a ring through its
extended comforting sympathy policy as evidenced by Richard "If the county commissioners nose."
and help in our recent sorrow. For Nixon's disavowal of Agriculture
the beautiful service, floral offer- Secretary Ezra Taft Benson’s pro-
ing, and other kindnesses, we are i gram,
deeply grateful.
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Wortman
authorize it," Edmondson said ! The 6-foot-3 Kefauver has been
- fighting the odds and winning
US? HERALD WANT ADS! ever since.
Chile's earthquake His schedule
today spanned some 300 miles.
Tiie vice president arrived Wed-
nesday to tiie thunderous roars of
the islanders, lie and his wite had
rested only briefly after a tough
21-hour schedule Tuesday, but ap-
peared fresh as they stepped
from their DC-7 airliner and were
greeted by some 3.000 well-wishers
at the airport.
At Nixon's elbow was Sen. Hi-
ram L. Fong (R-Hawaii) and
Secretary of the Interior Fred A.
Seaton, both of whom accompan-
ied him from Washington.
Fifth Island Trip
It was Nixon's first visit to the
50th state since it won admission
to the nation, but it was his fifth
trip to the islands.
Nixon told reporters that "the
President of the United States
must always put the security of
America first and obtain intelli-
gence information that will pro-
tect us against surprise attack"
such as Japan's onslaught against
Hawaii which launched America
into World War I.
In the evening, the vice presi-
dent appeared on an hour-long
will blast the United States if it
attacks Cuba.
In a rambling, hour-oml-40-min
ute speech, Premier Fidel Cas- TULSA (UPD - A howling
tro s younger brother also: crowd of Negro men attacked and
Contradicted reports that the threw stones at a highway patrol
premier is seriously ill. saying car today when a patrolman tried
that he is "resting well" and will (0 make a traffic arrest,
come back "stronger than ever." [ Trooper Bill Langston said
The master of ceremonies at the about 30 men emerged from a bar
meeting Raul addressed said Fi- and charged his cruiser as he was
del will speak Saturday at the arresting a 17-year-old Negro,
closing of the current youth con- Frank Freeman, for driving with
vention here improper mufflers.
Said he will produce proof in Langston said one of the mob
a telecast Friday that Edwin L knocked out the back window of
Sweet, of Abilene. Tex , and Wil- his car with a hammer and oth-
liam G Friedmann, of Stillwater, ers threw stones.
Okla., U.S. diplomats expelled Langston sped away and radio
from Cuba in June as "spies," ed for help By the time Tulsa po-
were "nazi agents at the service lice arrived, the mob had dispers-
of Hitler.” ed.
—Suggested in a jocular com Arrested were Freeman and
ment on a U.S. newspaper colum James Hunter, 29 Hunter was
nist's proposal that the United booked for destroying state prop-
States annex Cuba that it should erty.
first “disannex" Texas, Puerto
Rico and the Panama Canal.
and Family
Hughie Gaston and Family
Mr and Mrs. Charles Gaston
and Family
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A passing reference to Soviet
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ovation among the unionists and
youth delegates the younger Cas-
tro was addressing.
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1960, newspaper, August 4, 1960; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1489974/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.