Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 269, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 17, 1952 Page: 1 of 12
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ONE-A-DAY
. thrilled* fifth-grade pupil con- ,
Led hi her teacher: “I'm going )
- the program at the next
meeting.”—Mich -
)
b be oh
.i,nt Teach era uu-ru»|. -■••■*--
4 duration Association Journal '
RAIN
! Occasional rain east
' and scattered ahow-
era tonight and
Friday.
v'OL
X XXVII NO 270
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1952
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY
ORWAftD C AfULPA
I
A
Self-Styled
Genius Admits
Slaying Girl
Motive Wos Revenge
Agoinst Company
Hy DAVID FU RMAN
BOSTON, July 17 HP—A self-
styled electronics genius allegedly
confessed Thursday he shot pretty
r, affords the conductor of this ig-year-old Eileen Fahey to death
, mlirh gratification to spon- at the American Physical Society
fnTahy Se entrant in the "MISS 0„,ce in New York because the
m
,mi v v • ■— ■ — _______________
IT S A GALA SCENE AS UNITED STATES SETS MARK
The daattny of •
merely a corapoelte picture
of individual ambition
By R. P M.
Si
-........
arsris
i» . . . well, it glee* * person
- glow that word a are
society had spurned his theories
Detective Capt Francis O Wil-
son said Bayard Pealtes, 29, of Bos-
ton. was arrested at his room "Just
about midnight" after New York
police arrived to aid Boston police
"He said he had written a the-
sis on electronics," Wilson said
I "He claimed he could make men
-M
totally
MoUv,
tie limelight through unfortunate „He 1qW us he declded lo klli
(indents and happenings tnai. s(jme member 0f the society be-
,'hile dramatic or spectaeuia cgu;e thev turned down his the-
eaves much to be desired from a ory ..
ivic standpoint Police found an automatic pistol
' SO the presentation of our (n peages’ room and said he iden-
alented youth to the world is a tlfled lt as lhe weapon with which
jublic relations Job that all of us he klUed Miss Fahey a total stran-
hauld endorse and support. ger to him. July 14 as she sat at
A» 1 look down through the her desk reading love letters from
-C V
r<*. >'** ■' i &<■-*
‘lbs
A2S»i
O
Compromise Talk On
Civil Rights Plank In
Demo Platform Booed
her Marine finance in Korea
Wilson said the next move was
up to the New York detectives.
Louis Beiirens and John Corcoran,
who came here Wednesday morn
mg
Hr Fits Description
Wilson said Peakes was well
dressed in a blue suit and talked
freely to police Peakes fits the
description of the man who was
seen leaving the scene of the crime
a tall thin man with dark
wavy hair. . . ,
Peakes had collected a sheaf of
rompuriilvely few years I have
been In Sapulpa ... I can think
of a steady procration of splen-
did vouth going on to Hie s
stream each year. I can recall
Governors of both Bovs State
and Girls' State ... to name
one activity ... I can recall
dancers singers, musicians •
boys who have gone on to signal
honors In the professions .
surgeons, doctors, lawyers, min
Uteri . . . the Hat could almost
be endless. rcil,tJ __________ ____
, That alone tells those who are newspaper cilpptngs describing the
Ithoughtful and analytic that tms . .... d le{l lhem on a desk in
city has a solid foundation of cul- ‘|‘u,/oom
lture and worthiness. Meanwhile, the slain girl s fiance,
‘----- left the Korean
to
PASSENGERS WAVE GAILY from stern of liner United fc^tetoer than Queen Mar/a
Seven Firms Are Listed
BUT we are remiss to a cer- p(c Ronaid Leo,
Solon Charges Oil Cartel
Controls World Industry
ww • " — . I It —--•
tain degree in seeing that thete battlefront on emergency leave
splendid assesls are set forth in their atlend Eileen's funeral,
p.-iper light to the i*orld I Leo was to be discharged from
We sit back and feel depressed tRe Marines in six months and
because some denizen of the under- plannec| to marry Eileen shortly
world throws us into the headlines thereafter They had been child-
we know ahat such characters bood sweethearts since Miss Fan-
are but a fractional percentage of, ey was n years old_
cur Ora# status but. there It is Police, who were baffled by the
and the reader In other areas apparently motiveless killing had
can be excused for Jumping to the concluded that a Phct^P,lJ
wrong conclusion «0~OU, 1- cornmnwO U»
ter being assailed with a few such some imagined wr™f th ,
wren?headline* in -accession with- by a
out the other side of the picture al- woman-hating lunati
had made
WASHINGTON, July 17 TP—Sen ♦
Thomas C Hennings Jr . charged
Thursday that five American and
two British firms control "lock,
stock and barrel practically the
entire world oil industry outside
the United 8tates ”
The Missouri Democrat added in
a statement that six of the seven
members of the alleged American-
British oil cartel "dominate the «il
industry within the United States
The seven firms listed by Hen-
Job For Credentiols Committee
Maverick Rejects Compromise
With lexos Demo Group
Miss Fahey his target as a
of her sex. _
Oakhurst Han Is
Fined For Reckless
Driving After Wreck
Kr? ^lseMa7dype°rlon‘al^ .up- pS S *££!£
on talent and Intelligence upon lhe county court of S. M cunn
being projected Into the scene
The MISS AMERICA" Con-
test l* now one of great dignity
and merit. Gone I* the diy of
hippodrome and cheesecake It I*
no longer a contest of just
battling suits and physical mea»-
uremenU.
The MISS SAPULPAS. MISS
OKLAHOMAS AND MISS AMERI-
CAS are girls of the highest type
physically and mentally They are
Judged upon beauty of faces and
symbol * srta^ard“o?l Co ^f Cahfor-
By BOY CALVIN ♦-
CHICAGO, July 17 HP Former
Rep Maury Maverick leader of a
Loyalist" Texas delegation, to the
' ______rT'V» ■ ircilB V
lUUBd "Vis ------—- —--- .
Jersey, Standard Oil Co of Caliior-
ma, Texas Co , Gulf Oil Co , So- ■•Loyalist lexas ««!•>"»•' - •—
cony-Vacuum Oil Co..—all Amen- L)emocratio convention, Thursday
can. and the Royal Dutch Shell rejected any talk of compromise
Co and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. wRR a rival anti-administration fai -
. con.p.n,r TV,l SZS»75a'ii"i» -eft*
Is completely integrated from the dentlals subcommittee of the Dcm court room Tue?-ay
-----—— « .. nMS.lHl.O U'GllU
SAPULPA TODAY j
Sit-Down Strike On 4
Election Doy Is
Left-Wing Threat
By ROBERT F LOFTIS
CHICAGO, July 17 HP—Left-wing
Democrats howled down compro-
mise talk Thursday and threaten-
ed a sit-down strike on election
day unless the party adopts a
tougher-than-ever civil right plank
In testimony prepared for deliv-
ery before the Democratic plat-
form-writing committee, Gerwitz
said the Democrats can t beat Gen
Dwight D Eisenhower s Republi-
can ticket in November without the
independent, liberal, labor and min-
ority group vote the ADA claims
to represent
•Can Stay Home'
"To those Democrats who con-
tend that the liberal-labor coalition
in ADA and the great independent
and minority vote In the country
will have no place to go—Just one
word of warning," said Gerwitz
These groups don't have to go
anywhere They can Just stay home
The margin of victory in 1952 will
be the gap between passive indiff-
erence and the enthusiastic support
of these groups ”
Gerwitz was the big gun in a
line-up of witnesses scheduled to
go before the 21-member prelim-
inary platform committee to argue
for a civil rights plank even strong-
er than the one which touched off
the southern bolt at the 1948 con-
vention.
New York Congressmen Frank-
lin D Roosevelt Jr., and Eanuel
Celler were high on the list
The southerners also were wheel-
ing up some of their most outspok-
en champions Gov. Herman Tal-
madge of Georgia said he would
fight any federal civil rights pro-
gram. compulsory or voluntary He
hinted at a convention row that
would make the 1948 brawl seem
HE S NEW GRAND EXALTED ELK
SAM STEIN banker and civic leader of Fargo. N. D , wravei to ^
a^rTtina delegate* at the Elks' 88th Grand Lodge convention to Nmt
Y^k softer bLng elected 76th grand aaalUd ruUr. Soma JQ.OOO laKs
ar« attending the convention. flofir—ttoiW logaipaew;
Mrs. Trumon Rushes To Bodtido
human Is Hospitalized For
Exhaustive Tests On Health
Bv MFRRIMAN SMITH
WASHINGTON. July 17 IP—Med-
womanhood at Its best
That's why the Herald is
proud t« sponsor such fine
young people as Nancy Klini-
ensmlth is truly representative
of.
She Is our Message to Garcia'
OUR BEST FOOT FORWARD
ham today a,ter * head-on colli-
sion early today with another car
on U. S 66 .
Gienn paid a $50 fine and costs.
The accident occurred two miles
north of Sapulpa on the Sapulpa-
TuLsa highway
Investigating Highway Patrolman
mmmmmmwmf*
ket is controlled," Henning said ers and Maverick factions _ooo—
Maverick claimed no knowledge FUhlnf is reported p*or at t e
of such a compromise__________ Heyburn Rewrvoir by the Army
ket is controlled," Henning
Is -World Government'
Insulated from American pub-
lic opinion, the oil monopoly oper-
We’re the legal delegation and gjneers
- ' " he said
would be
IK upainv... —— - .. DC It ~
ales as an independent world gov- we oughl ^ be seated,
ernnient, and dictates Its own .tJ don., lhink a split
terms for petroleum without which cc(lptable My disposition _ is I d
the industry and army of the free ^ ^ seated or not seated
OUR BEST KUUT rvnvYAAu Hiv^una.-B marh.
ir/ja s r rsr sr-3
tjslz "cmm c,op”
___ driven by Denver C. Grigsby. Jr
0.14 HI.. >.«• »«. »» '
TOKYO. July II *- Th, U S *«. ^ ol s>.
Air Force said Thursday approx- with r g . Tutoa.
SHS
tallied there last weekend^ Boating
_ __ pe seaiea oi t»i/% enthusiasm is growing by leaps ana
world could not run " "Vhe credentials committee goes boundg al this lake and the swim-
Hennings' statement was the lat- ^ on the Texas dis- m beaches are getting a big play
est of a series of attacks he has and a smuur contest involv- —OOO-
made on the "international oil car- £ MLsslssippi's 18 convention A (ood i. panned by
tel " He has centered his fire- on yotes N#omi chapteri 0ES. Saturday near
the Federal Trade eommisshm. Works With Byrnes Katz storf
which he has accused of suppre^.- Texiis governor has been -OOO-
ing a report on the alleged ca k g closely with Gov James Th Lefion hair ball game alat-
President Truman has said pub- woraing j ^ - .w-
lication of the report would en
tame. _ _
Will Fight On Floor
Sen Herbert H Lehman of New
York said he would fight it out on. WASHtNOTON Julv 17 u*—Meo-
z“ S"S;, CbLir th™;»<««■“»«» "u
southerners always have used m
thButaNew YkorkS^mSicTad- ] The Chief Executive is 68 yean
intimated Drivat^lv they would old and just recovering ,*rom a
6«* or ail the wav with Lehman, virus infection Before Mr Truman
Thex* believed the platform writ- could become embroiled in an ac-
ers ^would come up with a peace- live political summer, his physic-
of his seven grueling years in the
White House*.
Air Force said Thursday appro** ® ~ « Tulsa to be studving the re-
lmately 1.000 <»mmu^t military * J93g Bulck sedan, porl with a view to possible anti-
in.t.iioMnrTs were destroyed or uienna »•«. ___ . y __
has been
rung ciusei; ____—>v James ^ ____
presiaem nu*.io.. ■•“- F Bvrnes of South Carolina in the tonight with Public Service
lication of the report w-ould m ^ ^ regain control of lhe 0f Tulsa ha? been canceled, accord-
danger the national security rive ,roln northern liberal Oorge Ta:t. team manager
Justice Department, however is ts . 8 -OOO-
understood to be studying the re
(Continued on Page Fouri
Sapulpa Woman's
Case Is Diagnosed
As Polio In Tulsa
U. S. Warships Go
Into Action While
Bad Weather Lasts
SEOUL, Korea, July 17 IB—U. 8.
Communists while 7>ad waathtr
bogged down UN ground and air
ter Reed Army medical center forces
Wednesday for several days of The 45,000-ton battleship Iowa led
scientific checks. the assault from the sea on Red
Mrs Truman, obviously con- ground positions Wednesday ham-
cerned over her husband's condi- mertng mortar and gun positions
non. was scheduled to arrive here and dug-in troops at tha eaatwm
by train from Independence, Mo end 0f the battle line
and visit the President immediate- The Iowa and the destroyer
ly in his luxurious hospital suite Kimberley destroyed four heavy
White House staff members cm-,guns damaged four more, burned
phasized that it w as strlcly Mrs out four bunkers and wrecked coast-
Truman' idea to leave her sick - • - *
lan, Nlaj. Gen Wallace H Gra-
ham, put the president In the Wal-
rS siSS-s
raids were directed at Pyongyang, by car a 1948 Chrysto- lo
Banwon and Hwangju. with the Country coach, at *400 to 1500
Red capital bearing the brunt of
the attacks
Far Fiairt Navy Adeguale
TOKYO Julv 17 ‘IB—A dm Will-
iam M Fechteler. U S Navy chief
of operations, said Thursday U S
naval forces now in the Far East
were ''adequate to take a calculat-
ed risk short of all-out war
BULLETIN
HFXSINKI. Jely 17 IB—The
International Olympic Cemmlt-
ur decided Thursday to let
both the Nationalist and Com-
munist Chinese team* compete
in the 1952 games. »
Despite^the “secrecy clamp'
■ very shockmg facts” through hi?
own study
Claim* Huge Excessive Profits
During the past six years. Hen-
nings asserted, the alleged cartel
has taken "excessive profits tn the
neighborhood of 812 billion, and
(Continued on png* Four>
‘shivers leans toward Sen Rich-
continued on Page Four!
The Tender Shepherd quartet will
be singing at Calvary Baptist church
throughout the week beginning on
Monday. July 21
M-RE, Hint InM Wlien
HereTn6etoIks j|a|jH||lInlc|(
Mr* Jaine? Hopkins 1227 Mabelle mother tn Missouri and rush to the
sr Sr&ai-'s a
was learned today . .n„th,nff he needs and if there is
Mrs Hopkins is the first Sapul- > h she can do to make him
pan to contract the disease this year ^uer ” a close friend of the
She is the mother of three smaU ^ better
children .
Mrs Tom Kelly, herself - r---- wbQ
al installations
On the ground,
family said
PqUo Members of Mr
__________UN infantryman
repulsed minor Communist probes
in the western and eastern sectors
Communist artillery and mortars
pounded the Allied lines with 8.2S7
rounds, more than twice as many
as In the previous 24-hour period
American Air Foree and Navy
headquarters reported approx-
*t«ft imately 1.000 Communist military
K h!,SpJii ■««»“*«<» *s,TOe4 “
By I’NrnCD PRESS
Southwest Thursday
♦—
The Southwest TDuraoay shook
off effects of the works, weather bankfuU.
wise Tornadoes, tqualls, drenen- Rapu«
mg ram. near flood and temper- ^
atures ranging from freezing to
* . no two over Ark., municipal airport six miles dlocese 0f Oklahoma . *"r....................
wls uredicted or Blue northeast of the city TTie first one Ump lhp mmlster of the local church mjured. but they were
was predKtea .o empty hangar The wrved nearby Episcopal con- s ------------
The Rev Raipn E Macv, rectOT of
the EDlscopal Church of the Good __
°hepherd lor the past two years. CHANDLER. Ariz ,
has announced his resignation as Nine persons were
hast “ " ,jarlsh ,o become vi- Thursday with mjunes
rector of UJ>* Altus He when a Southern Pacific passenger
caf. °* ‘ canuloa during July train collided with an asphalt trt»ck
^ der.ilin, w. .UK.™. ■ «
versary in S»p(ilpa. and durin Kines overturned
main portion of this time crashed into its side and a baggage
been a mission receiving a. porti1 ^ dlrecUy the engines ran
of Its support from the Ep.scopa ^ lhe raUs authorities reported
DUrillB lilEa
Mrs Tom Kelly, herself a pouo ^ m the hospital Friday's record
victim, and a neighbor 0 - . ^ Wednesday said the President spent k Pyongyang. Sariwon and
kins has urged friends to write to most q{ the day -sitting around a“ac*s
Mrs Hopkins in care of the polio ^ suite in a bathrobe, apparently «aifi nicturea
ms SrassswvsBtf ... — -
nes suffered fy l"0JtedL" she"said (ConUnued on page Four) fully pinpointed targets^ Th
10 miles east
One of the en-
the second
suffer » crest Of 22 feet, two u«. nn, diocese of Oklahoma^ ww lr-ln crewmen *nd^one_pas:
Hits 1,238 Miles An Hour
Navy Confirms Skyrocket
Has Doubled Speed Of Sound
annarentlv Hwangju.
apparently American officers said pictures
_______ ‘ ’very
accurate” bomb patterns on care-
fully pinpointed targets They de-
nied Communist charges that tha
Allies bombed "indiscriminately."
but conceded some residential areas
near Communist military basss
may have been hit.
Mrs. Anno Hertford
Dies Lost Night
Two baby tornadoes struck dfk;r
east of Texarkana. Ark
the Arkansas-Texas
Wednesday
P caved In an empty hangar The ^ nearby Episcopal con- ^ ‘believed ^,-^us Five were tak-
„ . iumwrsturf1 second, about two hours later grpgatlon ln 1950 the congregation ^ ^ ^ ^u^ide hospital In Me-
Southwett r didn't touch ground at Texarkana *nd<,r!oott the sutus of a self-sup- a and (our aere taken m Me
^ r , 1,^ m- ™ Girled off to R^. Ark.! parlsh This h*. meant a! hospllal ,n Phoenix. ......
n« -.....
&~&sxrsi2m-~mmt
Texas. Arkansas, Louisiana and
ednesday . ,. Texas. Arkansas, nouisiana
An area of squally weather held okl#homa got the worst of }<*»«**
on along the northwest coast 1 in ous weaiher conditions It was
of the Oulf of Mexico, with winds ^ rt,y tioudy over Colorado
<fi miUc n#»r fiour and oc- mina tfrftav with no pre-
up to 40 - •— [ „T ____ _
casional gusts a little higher r,p,tation reported _
■n* cwnUnkeroua we.th._r cond^ t| using New Mexico
ana liiuc ■ -rr~ -
along railroad tracks into Texark-
ana halting service temporarily
U S Weather bureau forecast-
LOS ANQELES. Calif . July 17♦—-— ~ , m hts were
IB Secretary of the Naw Dan A Kimball said thetea^Mnightewere
Kimball confirmed Wednesday made last year oy Doug!....
mghtHthat t^Navv s D-5S2 2 Sky- pitot Bill Br^emaui over the Mo-
rocket has flown 1.238 miles per jave desert of Caldorniv
hour and urged American scien- "On Aug 7, Pdemed *—• ---- — —
lists to develop an even better rocket ship1 to tup |dd|nark to Oklahoma ln 1887
atomic-powered plane heights to top the 16- - " she is survived t
In a statement i-sueJ by naval of 72.394 feet attained in 193a by
tions producing drenching
ranging up
Charles. La
-......- —t ,|un a porting parish T7us has monal hospital m Phoenix
where several houf*® collapsed ireMy increased activity and bud- ^ passenger Mrs Rosa Sills of
The storms hurtled debris (o make ,b, self-support po--s - Hllchcock okla was treated at
through the air. knocked out tel ^ ^ r^v Macv stated in his let- ^ mioenix hospital for shock and
s“.2 — «
sHSnsi immk if€^ IsSSii
ft
Mrs. Anna Hereford, 67 , 906 8
Hickory, died last mght at Curry
clinic after an illness of sevaral
years.
She had lived in Sapulpa sinca
1900 She was born in Ballenger.
Tex . Feb. 18. 1886 . and moved
Battue r!wr'to‘lUnISr,waa^ be uegrer ~ „ mt La Junta
lleved past, although heavy 'auila Mexico » high of 9. at
a «*i » - -----
degree mark in
rainy sped appeared
• 7- ...aaasff's'sasfss
Hirit awl Js * *•*
;hopes to announce soou that *
has been extended to a r.ew minu-
ter for tha parish-
•muss* s=* ^
and crews unn.ediately aat to work to confirm the report.
She is survived by her husband.
- \h7 news re- GuY 01 the home wddress * •*'
tha news CUude Q( n^vui*. Mo a daugh-
ter. Mrs C L Porter of Saptdpa.
a granddaughter, four grandchild-
ren a sister. Mrs J 8 Thompaon;
,ol Bakersfield. Calif.', three broth-
ers. Emmitt Phillips of Harlingen,
Tex . Lon Phillips of LovingtoP,
N M and Ewell Phillips of H';t>bia
N M
Services will be held Saturday at
3 30 pm at the Owen Landrttb
Burial will oe in South
H.-.gtjts oemeteTy.
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 269, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 17, 1952, newspaper, July 17, 1952; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490021/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.