Sapulpa Sunday Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 129, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 3, 1952 Page: 1 of 12
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i^TOMA HISTORICAL wO.ILTY
OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLA.
iet m tl
:d to set
L’clved ||
rry and
Philip
Dickey,
Mai ai
nee. Dot
, White
ONE-A-DAY
HERBERT MORRISON, British
I ore ik ii secretary: "We shall watch
e development io( Japan) with
tience and understanding . . . Let
[>eace. progress and security march
>nwards."
\SAPULPm
SUNDAY
I* ★★**★*!
HERALD/
WINDY
' Partly cloudy and
' mild. Rather windy,
1 lint dlmlnls hint
/ northwest. Highs
/ 65-75.
%
Mali h
p—Th. \VOL. XXXVII NO 129
ird of <•<*■
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1952
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY
|New Instrument
“Promises More
1 Accuracy In Air
a
automatic Pilot
ictions Bottor
ipita Jot Spaad
By DEAN D1TTMER
A8HXNOTON. Feb 2 HP—Jet
__jmbers, (lying almost three
--Jnes as last as World War II
*■ •*’ Smbers can drop their missiles
s't I? A lt(th even more accuracy through
the sthw 0( a new automatic pilot, the
»leea sows- Force said Saturday.
show The pilot Is the product of joint
ile eveiPrk beKun b» IN* wlth Boeing
. , Trplane Co., engineers and auto-
-ouie I Atlc pilot manufacturers,
ur delidThe World War II bombers, the
tervice. *irs ■nd B-»’s, bombed while
' ying at speeds of 200 to 250 miles
hour. They were equipped with
ailed 'standard'' automatic pi-
Allies Seek To
Compromise 0a
Or
Armistice Talks
UN Rejects Russian Demand
To Enter Peace Conference,
Ignores Poison Bullet Talk
Soviet Proposol
Is Smothered
V«ffr»en
li*1
postwar B-60*s came along
top speeds of 400 miles an
Then came the B-47 "Stra-
medium bomber in the 600-
le an hour class.
driest Need
.The need became urgent tor a
;ter automatic pilot—one that
tiuld react more quickly .to a
bardter's move after the hu-
pilot had turned the automa-
: pilot over to the bombardier for
e bomb run.
With the standard automatic pl-
It was found that too much
ne was needed for the aircraft
make a few degrees' heading
ange.
With the new automatic pilot de-
nied by Boeing engineers for
t B-47's. a bombardier now can
ake a five-degree change in
urse in leas than half the time
Kh the ' standard pHato."
One exnert explained ft la the
between "tight" and
controls
Need 'Tight' Control
The “loose" control la used on
immerclsl aircraft and fighter
lanes where the primary object
to give the pilot aome rest. This
ipe of control changes a planes
Hirse gradually and gently.
But wth bombers It may be ne-
yaaary for the bombardier to
•ke a sudden change in course
•ring the bomb run after the hu-
T ~ pilot has turned the auto-
tic pilot over to him. With a
automatic pilot control, he
make sharper, qucker ma-
yors.
Force spokesmen said the
pilot works satisfactorily on
B-47 at full or low speeds and
any altitude. But engineers are
ulng to try to Improve and
ipllfy it.
For one thing, the pilot, with its
reds of vacuum tubea and
equipment, casta about 1260.-
for each plane, compared to
036,000 each for the World
tar II type.
GOP D«l«gat«t
Attend Meeting
r riu
L1
Friday eleven delegatee from the
Commissioners Republican dls-
attended the fourth Oongres-
sl District meeting at Shawnee
Mrs Albert Kelly. Bristow, was
| loten as one of the national OOP
. ilegates to attend the convention
1 Chicago next July,
tAttending the meeting In Shaw-
were John Prank, oounty chair-
k|tn. Mrs. Clara Scott, vice chair-
!em. Mrs. Olenn O. Young. Mrs.
E. Henderson. Mrs. R. M Sween-
t Mrs John Whittle. Mrs. C K.
agner. Mrs. Det Auemus. Jim
tithrie.. Frank Routine, and Dee
•■mils
By RUTHERFORD M. BOATS
TOKYO. Sunday. Feb 3 <tf —
Allied stall officers Sunday sought
a compromise with the Commu-
nists on supervision of a Korean
armistice, but slowness of the Pan-
munjom talks brought internation-
al repercussions
In Paris. Soviet delegate Jacob
Malik asked the United Nations for
immediate Intervention to end the
Korean war and begin overall set-
tlement of problems dividing the
world. He linked the appeal with a
charge of American atrocities in
North Korea: The use of "toxic
bullets.”
The proposal was rejected, but
American delegate Ernest A. Oross
told the.UN the United States was
"disturbed" by the lack of pro-
gress In the truce talks. He press-
ed for the West's proposal for an
emergency General Assembly ses-
sion to study drastic action by the
UN if the talks break down for
good.
‘MaUsh, Dlogical'
A United Nations delegate at Pan-
munjom pointed up the difficulty
pf the negotiations when he called
the Communist member of the
deadlocked subcommittee on war
prisoner exchange “very mullah,
very Illogical and thoroughly In-
progress of a sort as they studied
for the s«cond time a United Na-
tions draft of a plan for super-
vising an armistice, but they were
leaving untouched the major issue
—construction of airfields during
an armistice.
At Saturday’s session the offi-
cers agreed after more than (our
hours of talks that each side could
determine the rank of its own mem-
bers on a military armistice com-
mission and picked Panmunjom
as armistice headquarters after the
truce signing, giving the commis-
sion the light to choose another
spot later on.
Kelpci Iron Curtain
The Allied officers firmly reject-1
ed the Communist move to draw |
the iron curtain around' the Yalu 1
river by trimming North Korean
inspection ports to three. The Reds
hoped to place two observer teams
on the east coast and one at Sin-
ulju across from Antung. Manchur-
ia. thus cloaking some 400 miles |
of Manchurian border
The Reds ai the same time sug-
gested that neutral teams be sta-
tioned on the Allied side at Pusan.
Inchon and Suwon. This brought
an Allied protest that Seoul's air
fields would become useless. How-
ever the Allies sgreed on a flex-
ible radius around the porta of en-
try.
By 51-5 VoU
PARIS Feb. 2 HP—A special
United N;i(Ions committee, ignor-
ing a Soviet charge that U. S
planes in Korea are using "toxic"
bullets, overwhelmingly rejected
Saturday Russia's demand lor lm-
Bod Weother In Punxotowney
MRS. WILLIAM BOONE, bapuipa Reading club treasurer,
presents to Garthv{5lak.e, director of Sapulpo high school and
junior high bands, a check for $45 This is port of Reading
club's participation in the "Build Freedom with Youth" pro-
gram adopted by the General Federation of Women's clubs '^2',
(Herold Engraving) mg
Murray Says He’ll Vote For
North Route For Turnpike
It’s Fair Weather Here, Says Groundhog
• - - — - — ~ -----------1
Douglas Willing RoUe* b listed
For Showdown On **Cow*01
Phuira* P PotwhUtle. the ground ♦
hog prophet of Pole Cat creek.
U.S. Flees To
Appeal End To
Europe Disputes
RFC Nomination
mediate UN intervention in the Ko- peered grumpily out of his hole
rean truce talks Saturday, and seeing nothing alam-
The Russian proposal was mg disported himself happily about
smothered by a vote of S2 to 5. his den
with one abstention and two na- Occasionally he'd stop and take
,,, jW a wary look around the premises.
The Western counter-plan, call- bllt H sl,Hdow did he see to
g lor postponement of Koresfl become affrighted of.
debate ur til a truce has been He retired with a cheerful look
signed or It become* necessary to at dllMt Bnd pr0mised Ulr W(.ather
extend Uj- war. wa* approved by for a„ lui good ,f „ound Polr ,
>« vote of 51 to 5. with Chile and Cal ,.rM.k. ln iplu. of what h,J Hv WARREN DUFFLE
Yemen abstaining • cousin saw at Punxatawney. Pa. WASHINGTON. Feb 2 Of-Sen.
Only the five nations of the So- Paul H Douglas iD-Ill > said Sat-
vlet world voted for the Russian PUNXSUTAWNEY. Pa . Feb 2, urday he is willing to have a Sen-
resolution and agutnat the western 'IP—The Punxsutawney groundhog ate Banking committee showdown
proposal. —the winner and still champion— next wsek on the nomination of
Charge Poison Raid' warned 160 million Americans Sat- Harry A. McDonald to be RFC sd-
The vole was taken after Rus- urday to keep their woolen undies mintatrator
Mb had charged that American handy. The committee has delayed ac-
warplane* sprayed the "peaceful" The famous "chuck" eyed his lton for more than two week* at
hamlet of Ulnim in Red Korea shadow at 7:62 a.m. ieati and then jDouglas' request. Chairman Bur-
with explosive and poisonous bul- .scurried back to hi* den. Hi* shad- I net R. Mnvbank <D-S. C. > called a
lets in a raid Jan. 9 ow signified six more week* of meeting for Tuesday and said he
Soviet delegate Jacob Malik in- j winter hoped to get a vote unless Doug-
trodu-ed this neta atrocity cry dur- "Chuck s" prediction was con las ha* found evidence that jus- . w. -
ing debate on the Korean Issue ; curred in by his Quarryville. Ps.. tides public hearing* or further da-1 , ”.p*nn7V TV -T”* _
He said five person* were "hesvi- cousin, but disputed by an upstart lay. P*0**®
ly wounded” and 83 poisoned in groundhog in Run Prairie. Wta. | Douglas asked the committee to .!g”n ” - ^
the alleged raid 'Bepe-aeesiUve Ineeper' , hold up action last watk WU1 he , |^iriMT^vi^5er'
OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb 2 OF—4
Gov. Johnston Murray said Sat-,
urday he will vote to route the
Oklahoma Clty-Tulsa turnpike along
the north side of Sapulpa rather
than through the center of the city
if that is necessary to complete
the road.
“It's not the idea of spanking
Sapulpi^" .Murray said "If the in-!
creased cost is going to be so tre-
mendous. sp much higher than oth-
er like property, we've got to fol- By DONALD J. GONZALES
low the legal opinion and put it* WA8HINOTON, Feb 2 ilh—The,
wii«r* g>fe practical.u - United dutes Saturday planned
Murray referred to a legal opln- reef appeals to France and West- ^ ^ ‘^7 are massarrelng snooper, repeneu ^uarryvu.e ------------------
j?" the turnpike route ern Germany to drop disputes prb«,ners of war He said 17,000 that their animal also predicted Bu' ** ,0,d • reporter he will no
through Sapulpa should follow a which threaten to upset the critical communlsls had iieen killed tor- six more waoks of winter longer try to hold up the vole He *hforoad
Sopolpon’s DoeA
Rabies was listed aa the causa of
the death of Mrs. Roy Shsrrsr, 716
E. Lee. by examining pathologtali
at Hlllcraat hoanital.
Mrs. Sharrer died Thursday fol-
lowing her illness which sms diag-
nosed in Tulsa ae first as flu. Sev-
eral weeks ago. the family dag dtad
of rabies.
In the past several montha, then
have been a number of oaam of
rabid dogs, and the city Friday an-
nounced a quarantine on all date
in the city.
The quarantine sails for all duOi
or they weald ha
Another Soviet spokesman—Bye- The Slumbering Lodge of Oround- 'could study 10 pounds of files he “T
reported st Quarryville which McDonald now la chairman £**?
^ r0art ““ Lisbon two^kThei^e"1^11"* » fro*pn hto death ln Allied
ed for In the new tJ. S highway eminent had lost its patience with Bo*hP^flpaEandMn charges^'were
66 plans drawn up before the turn- the two-power argument on the fu- ndviinred to hUpport Russia's de-
pike authority wss established lure of the Saar regon and wheth- ^ for ,mtnf.dlatf| high-level
Turnpike authority member* will er Western Germany is to become UN action on Korea to end the
meet Feb. 14 to review their flnan- ~ ---‘----* *w“ '" —**— J_
cial problem*. They were told
earlier this week the linal cost ol
the read would be $7 million Hbove
the >31 million already borrowed
for it
A motion to restudy the Sapulpa
route, criticised by some engineers
as too expensive, was passed at
this week's session.
Murray rejected the suggestion
of a representative of turnpike bond
buyers, E 8. Emerson, that tax-
payers' money might be used to
complete the road
a full member of the 12-nation de- war and paVe the way for "settle-
lease pact ment of a„ thr problem., u^i dt.
The official view is that these is- vide the world.”
sues are wholly secondary to the Earlier. Ernest A Oro*« of the
main protlem of getting agree- United State* expressed concern
inent at Lisbon on a formula to over the slow course" of the Ko-
Include O. rman forces in the Eu-1 rean truer talks but pressed for
ropean defense community. adoption of the Western proposal
Already Enough Difficulty u> postpone UN debate
Experts pointed out that agree- Britain's minister of state. Bel-
ment* at Lisbon are expected to be wyn Lloyd, and Jean Chauvel of
difficult enough, without the Prance supported Oross.
French hi d Germans arguing. 'Atrocity' Interchange
Appeals lor pushing the dispute The ’ atrocity" interchange oc-
tnto the background are based on curred during debate on the Wes
"But we are going to finance it the consensus here that action l* tern prop*, al that the Oeneral A»-
somehow," Murray said "It may necessary forthwith to strengthen ,emb!y drop debate on Korea for
be through private financing, the (jen Dwight D. Eisenhower's de- the time being, bul authorize a
purchase of bond* by private in- (ease force on several fronts. The special aesaton as soon as a truce
divlduals. even the Reconstruction possibility that Elsenhower may iK signed cr it becomea necessary
Finance Corp."
Froat occurs oftanast whan there
a clear sky and vary little wind.
3 Plead Guilty
To Burglary Count
Jimmie Crewell. Raymond Smith,
snd Raymond Hamilton this morn-
ing plead guilty before District
Court Judge Kenneth Hughes on a
charge of second degree burglary
They were given three year terms,
suspended because of their youth.
One Is eighteen years old snd the
other two are seventeen
They were charged with breaking
Into a rilUng station In Mounds the
10th of last month.
Britaia Tails
Egypt Stops To
Take h Dispute
LONDON. Feo 2 ilf-Bri
give up hi* command in early sum- to extend the war
mer to enter the presidential cam- Malik did not tell the special
palgn also figures ln the American political, economic, social commlt-
desire lor united action tee what sort of "poison" was sup-
Amerlcan officals hope that the poaed to be in the bullets, but he
- princlpa lof establishing a six-na- said many victim* could not gel
tion defense force. Including West-
ern Oermany, can be approved,
even though details will have to be
worked out later The Oermuti
question has been hanging over
the Western Allies for nearly 18
LONDON. Feo 2 ifB—Britain re- months
vealed Saturday that she has told Add Greece, Turkey
the new Egyptian government The LUoon conference is slated
what steps should be taken to clear to revise North Atlantic Treaty
the way for another attempt to set- operating machinery, outline a
tie the bitter dispute over control new set of defense goals, and add
of the 8uez Canal tone Oreece and Turkey as new pact
This, It was disclosed, represents members,
a first step towards reopening ne
March OF Dimes Drive Is
itill Short Of City Goal
There are more than five-million
Boy Scouts and leaders in the 52
nations using the Boy Scout Pro-
gram
March of Dimas official* said ♦
Bterday that the Bapuipa Dimes
lota of $7500 is still 61000 to |1500
of being fulfilled.
■beady ami
Med 0760 Bl
yltti Kelly, to charge of
_I returns, reports that of
i snvatops mat out, only 100
have been reeotvod. la the
of eiaoo That laavrn am i»t-
not yet anaworoi. Mia. Kelly
all those who roaaHad tatters
la U am wMb i
Is still
of the
to from the
Louie
it-
Martin nr
James Stewart, head of the Sapulpa
drive.
"We cannot fall short of this
goal.'' Stewart said yesterday "Sa-
pul pa ns realise the necessity of
fighting potto, and this is the bast—
really the only—way It can ba done.
If every Sapulpan gave aa little aa
a dime more, the goal could be
reached A dollar will make up for
nine others that didn't give. Ten
dollars will make up far » that
didn't take the time to drop that
extra dinta Into the counter con-
tainers. or put It Into the envelope
they received from the drive head-
gotiatlon* which collapsed when
Egypt abrogated the Anglo-Egyp-
lan treaty
Informed quarters said thr Brit-
ish embassy In Egypt has been in-
structed to suggest to Egypt what
could be done to create an atmos-
phere in which negotiations could
usefully be resumed
Premier Aly Msher Pasha, who
heads the new Egyptian govern-
ment. already has said he is pre-
pared to negotiate and accept any
proposals — including Egypt's
membership in the Western pro-
posed Mld-Eastarn Defense com-
mand — which "would satisfy
Egypt's national aspirations"
These "national aapltallon.i" in- ■ Democrats Saturday he will be a
elude removal of British troops front-line lighter ui the 1963 presi*
from Egypt and union of the Su-' dentlal election campaign
out ol bed the next day. lost their
appetites, had headaches and in-
somnia, and "many spat blood and
had nosebleeds "
The symptoms Malik described
sounded Uke those of radiation sick-
ness, suggesting that the Russians
may be rying*to hint that the
United States is using rsdioactlve
atomic wastes in the Korean war.
Rapublicons Matt
At Swaanay Horn#
A relied inerting of all aaember*
of thr Women’s Republican council
will be held Friday. Peb. 8 at 2
p. m , In the home of Mrs R. M
Sweeney. 610 8. Main.
Truman Promises Demos He’ll
Be Fighter In 1952 Campaign
But the Sun Prairb- tyro saw no d‘d not disclose how he will vote,
shadow. Emden Schey. ro-chair- *>ut last week he said that, as of
man of the Bun Prairie Oroundhog <hat time, he planned to vote
club, was satisfied against thr nomination.
"TTiaPv official," he preclaimed ’No Heroic Effort’
triumphantly. "An early sum- Douglas said his concern grew
mer." out of the SEC allowing former
But the dissenter and supporter chairmen fo practice before it lm-
made no Impression on "chuck”, mediately after they left to enter I _ , , . ,
He stood on his record es the private business. He said Me Don- PMM QUCRMI,
sSxSSSEB
iforcsa and will bs wlaMf la
the tatter of the law. Then will ha
no exaepliano.”
He said "there have bean a nuas-
ber of pewaar anil aw sashing eft*
empttao fna Mm ruling. It wftl
We aoo
champion Feb. 2 prognosticator.
Fear of Foul
There was fear among some of
aid win not responsible for start-1
Good D
to stop It. ■------
the faithful Punxsutawney follow-1 Several key comm!tee members taWfWWW
lng thr precedent, but had made
no heroic effort"
rogrooi Ai
Mooting
i'a Jayeees
ers that a foul might be claimed : predicted privately that McDon- _
Dr Frank Lorenzo, president of the aid will b* approved unless Doug- —
Punxsutawney Oroundhog club. *»“ presents "considerable evl-|crZ»™ . ■
held a decoy groundhog as he dence" against him I"'TTJ,
ance Moreover, he was seen In President Truman nominated;1000
earnest conversation with a retired McDonald to succeed W. Stuart
president of a coal company. Symington aa head of the big lend-
This opened these possibUities: ‘ng agency Symington * resigns- “*
1 If Lorenso was holding a fe- Hon was to have been effective
male groundhog, then it was an Jan 16. but at Maybsnk's request J°r ^ujs aay.
admission that "chuck” was he stayed on temporarily pending ... . ----- -------
"strong" for the "weaker aex Senate action on McDonald tor.“frrU1' r'y?c,' ,?*””*• rmmmr
More Coal, Mare Dividends fomplele Per*lysis ,nd Be*n* ,to0* M0**r* . „ >
2. The retired coal president, na- Maybsnk has co»..plained that Bowman gave i brief Introduction
lurally, wanted six more weeks of ihe RPC feces “complete psraly- to a sound movie film presented to
dividends sis" unless the Senate confirms explain the Intricate working metft-
But the die-hard-members of the McDonald quickly or the Pres!- ode of Uv Haw York Muck Bn*
Punxsutawney Oroundhog club set dent names a deputy admtnlstra- change and IMW simple It is far
no store by these fears "Chuck" ‘or to be acting bend of the agen- average wage earners to invest In
hadn't failed them for three gen- cy. He said Symington is planning common stoska.
orations Uo leave immediately Bob Powers, president of the Jaft>
So it's back to the red flannel. Peter I. Bukowaki resigned as t ceee. announced that the next moot
mink costs and footwarmers for deputy admntatrator before By- ing. two atm hence, would puivtus
another six week* Mighty "chuck" mlngton's resignation was accept- an explanation of the chronic need
has over struck out yet. «d. in Sapulpa lor a modern airport.
Hawaii, Alaska
Statahaod Bills
Changa Position
The Boy Seouta of America have There are paw 80J6S Unite of Cub
honored 2J01 of its member* since Scouts. Bee Bseuta and Bxpianra In
1610 for saving the Uvea of other*, the Boy
of eomrlra
Unidentified Planes Strike
Along Keren Front Saturday
By JOHN L. CUTTER
WASHINGTON. Feb 2 (If
President Truman promised fellow
realises the drive's Im-
Mttta °m«,f^0*March
will prove
"Bveryane real!
partanoe. Haw If
http just littk
W^Dtmes far I
aft) that UMa city thtaha and
Mggor than any athar city in
the nation'
dan with Egypt under the crown
of King Parous.
Britain has Indicated ahe is
agreeable to such an arrangement
If Bgypt first brings anti-British
terrorsm under control and joins
In the Brtttah Amartcsn-French-
Turktlh arrangement tor Middle-
Eastern dtfenee Under that plan
the security of Ihe lues canal
would ba vested In an International
force.
Informed Brtttah quarters said
U. B. Secretary of State Dean Ache-
son also baa moved, through din-
lomatlc chamala. lo urge Brtttah
Foreign Secretory Anthony
to mabe an offer to Egypt
will enable negotiation* lo ba re-
sumed
He didn't say. however, whether
he will be tn there pitching as a
candidate (or re-election or s* the
titular head of the party defending
the administration he has headed
for the last seven yeare.
Mr Truman made his pledge in
a letter to Democratic Nnllonul
Chairman Frank E. McKinney
hailing the start of a party news-
paper. the Democrat, for the dura-
tion of the campaign
■Cat Through Png'
Anticipating that the Republi-
cans will have ''unlimited funds"
to spend, on an effort to “confuse
and mislead" the people, ihe
WASHINGTON. Feb 2 'IS—Pres-
ident Truman ha* approved a shift
in strategy in sn effort to im-
prove the sagging prospect* for
Senate paxsage of the Alaskan and
Hawaiian statehood bill*. Sen Jo-
seph C. O Mahoney disclosed Sat-
urday By PETEB HALIM HER
The switch calls for running m TOKYO. Sunday, Feb 3 'IP — principal clashes occurring north-
the Hawaiian statehood bill ahead 81x unidentified planes bombed west and northeast of Kumhwa an
of the Alaskan bill, on which de- and strafed Allied lines in east ihe central front,
bate is scheduled to start Monday central Korea Saturday, while Isolated engagement* with soe-
Because it has much greater Re- American jets shot up three ene- my untte up to platoon sue were
publican support, the Hawaiian bill my JPl* and two tanks and killed fought oc the Karnhwa-Kumsoog
has bean considered to have a bet- „r wounded more than 100 Red road Northwe»t Of Kumhwa a UN
ter chance ol passage soldiers patrol ran into trouble and was
_____ O Mahoney conferred with Pres- jy,, „lx punes inflicted no AI- rescued bv tanks *
lion and see dial ihe people have ,dPnl Trunan by telephone Hatur Ppd casualties, bul thiec Korean Air FlghUag Brtak
an opportunity to know the truth d,‘>' "" administration lead laborers were injured slightly The The Allied petrol fought Us way
"That Is what I am trying lo do ,?rh w,’rr *,f,al'|n8 gloomy report* ntta<-k came in the Kumaong ureu buck in sn hour and a half battle
in every wav that I can—und I uboul P'o^cts ol getting approval The unidentified plane* were de- after armor came to its rescue,
expect io devote ■ lot more lime 1,1 lbe Alaskan bill The President scribed a* blue or silver with white The tanks pulled beck 15 minulee
to the tark later on this year." wanU h0'1’ passed
Thta was notice thit he Intends The Wyoming sen-tor said Mr
totaieV^er^l Z s«iv. hi^ Trum.n waa agrw.ble to having
'the Hawal'an bill considered first
in the campaign, possibly with a
"give 'em bell" whistle stop tour
which contributed to his 1040 elec-
ted victory
Hie Republican reaction was:
Bring on the champ.
Tall Welcome* Fight
Which President said:
"It win b#up to ua to evi through ittod cOaiwt the
Ihnt fog of confusion and dlsioi • I
If U passed, a try then would be
made on the Alaskan measure
O'Mahoney still must get the con-
sent of other Senate Democratic
leaders for the shift in progrsm.
however The Democratic floor
Ben Robert A Telt of Ohio. w “cr“rl*,nd w“
campaigning toe the Republican th* city this weekend,
preaidantiai nomination, wants Mr
Truman to ran again because he
foals ft will present the issues most
dearly.
Barters af Oag
Dwight D.
OOF nomina-
a* a can-
Naw Ftunp lastalled
SHAWNEE, Feb 3 'IP-Installs-
markings An Sth Army spokesman later after raking Bad
said the description* verted "all with It millimeter guns
the why Irom Measerschmtt* to The fighting In the er became
Navy Corsairs, and that Army brisker and earn# 116 Oommanbtt
Force units were being MIO-lla railed aciaaa the Men-
snd Air
checked
Dropped Large Bombs
churtan
three of
In a MO
ndMBt
plane* appeared shortly after noon, to the
circled a UN company position and Eighteen Sabreieta a
dropped four large bomb* and aev- I ought the rtf battle
an or eight smaller one* Ten min- Air Para# did not
utes later three twin-engined loses*
appeared in the seine vt- F-00 Miaatiaf Stars destroyed ana
snd dropped three bombs lank end ItoMF
with “
The drat three propeller-driven^ tie that raged from <
'M~ Otoi
clnlty
foot daam
and to MJOe
The Ftfto
lion has begun on a new sewage behind the Allied Une. Injuring the
lilt station pump hare Water Supt Korean workers ,
Lester lanwrover said the new Allied rnd Oamnuintat toll
pump will replace one that has |patrols sparred aaraaa the IN , ■ *
been tn uas the past 1« years snowbound battle line with the my linen.
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Sapulpa Sunday Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 129, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 3, 1952, newspaper, February 3, 1952; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490635/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.