Sapulpa Sunday Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 41, No. 167, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 18, 1956 Page: 1 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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HERALD/
VOL XLI NO 167
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FA/R
« •
SAPILPA AND VICINITY: Sap-
posed to be fair and mild today to
rime out the terrific rainy spell (la
which a trace of moisture auctnally
fell).
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SAPULPA OKLAHOMA SUNDAY, MARCH 18, 1956
Death Toll In
Storm’s Path .
Reaches To 40
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY
\
'<*pu
tl~od<x
)
The WCTU meets Tuesday at
p. in. at the South Heights
♦ BOSTON. March 17—UP- Bliz-
zard winds whipped snow nnd sleet
across the northeastern States
Saturday, hurling ships against the
New England coast.
At least 44 persons died along
the storm path from Ohio to Maine.
Deaths totaled 28 in the six New
England states, six in Ohio, four in
New York, four in Pennsylvania
and two in New Jersey.
Officials called the blockbuster
blizzard the “wildest” storm in a
generation.
Four Navy vessels and a freight-
ers ran aground. Hundreds of
stranded motorists were trapped
in their cars for hours or were
forced to take refuge In hotels
and shelters. The Coast Guard
amphibious ducks sent to rescue
33 persons from their homes on
Nantucket Island, off Cape Cod.
7
City Primaries Set For
Wards Two And Five
In Balloting Tuesday
de In It
le East]
le in or
lome -i 1 30
■s betwt Baptist church,
and jq —000-
In city police court this morning
t> .m.J.M battery, one trttb double part- 1' lr,nc' “ Nea-port.
to the ing. one with parking in an alley,
and one with operating a motor ve-
hicle without a driver’s license
SAFEWAY
- 4I« ;«v _■*
when high tides flooded the streets jjjfilRTa
of Brant Point.
The bodies of three sailors were
ftpr
. - ■
,iv>-
I., harbor. Five persons died
in a fire that destroyed a West-
brook, Maine home at ihe height
of the blizzard.
arss
NHH
■
;
Florida Governor
Relieves Attorney
Until Investigation
crewmen were rescued by breeches
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.. March 17 buoy after a night of wintry hor-
—UP—Gov. LeRoy Collins relieved ; ror and the Navy refloated its de-
ft Negro assistant state attorney of stroyers one by one. ,
Saturday for allegedly Another Ship Loses Control
a sting that his Miami office was Another ship bobbed out ol con-
tegrated and white stenographers trol throughout the night off Long
c-«ir dlctatlon Island in the storm-tossed Atlantic
Collins sent a telegram to State • and aId ftnalIy reached it Saturday
ttorney General George A. Brau- morning
Tf™ orderl“* Aim to I sun another freighter, the Italian
Ileve Henry Arr ngton. the Negro s. S. Laura Lauro was damaged otf
ide. pending a full investigation of Norfolk, Va . when it was blown
barges he Is guilty of “breach of lnU> two u. S. destroyers at the
Confidence and misconduct.” The navai base there.
stroyer, a tugboat, and a Ireighter
were tossed about like corks and
then slammed aground on the rocky
New England shore by winds up to
83 miles per hour. The freighter
Filings End Soturdoy
Lawrence Regains Sea! On
School Board; No Opposition
governor said he could suspend Ar-
lington if the charges are proven.
The issue of Arrington's alleged
Vtfttements, said to have been made
a radio interview, was brought
Ip Wednesday In a campaign
v tpeech by Sumter Lowry, who is
\ running for governor on a pro-seg-
^ ’egatlon platform.
$ Polio Vaccine
.Clinic Planned
Highways throughout the storm
area were clogged with drifts of
snow up to 10 feet deep. Huge trac-
tor trailers Jack-knifed on slippery
roads in New York and West Vir-
ginia, blocking traffic for hours.
Hundreds of automobiles were
abandoned in deep drifts and snow-
(Continued on Page Six*
The chainnau of the school board ♦
for independent school district 33
Jack Lawrwnoe. regained his seat
on tlie beard of education when no
one filed against him for the seat
on the board.
Only candidates from wards one
and three were eligible to file for
the single vacant post on the board.
Filing period closed Saturday ev-
ening at 5 o'clock.
Cypriot Extremist
Killed By British
NICOSIA. Cyprus, March 17 —
up—A Cypriot extremist was killed
and five British soldiers wounded
Voters will still go to the polls on Saturday in the biggest gunbattle
Tuesday. Mar. 27. to decide the
questions of the 5 mill building
ievy and the five mill current ex-
pense levy. •
The board now consists of Law-
rence, from ward three. X Jones,
from ward two. Charles Teel, from
the outlying district, John Mose.
from ward live, and Doug Duckert,
from ward th:ee.
since Britain exiled Oreek Ortho-
dox Archbishop Makarios a week
ago.
The battle was fought in the rug-
ged snow-covered Troodos moun
tains, about 35 miles southwest of
Nicosia. It erupted even while Brit-
ish troops moved in to evict 20 fam-
ilies from Nicosia's “terror town"
Polio vaccine clinics will be held
hroughout the county by the Creek
minty health department during
die coming week.
"The schedule for the clinics is
follows:
| Allen school. 9 30-12 a. tn., Mon- visitors at the VesentTime.’iTwas
announced.
No Visitors Are
Permitted Family
Injured In Wreck
I 84SC *UI a Uii LUC liumu. A MHie I A hnnH ,nm. to r* ,
I r *? re Jor;term rup -1 rss SmSK
residents of wards two and one may I mnT,,hc a *n
i file for a post on the beard A' state ' a band of
ttors are being allowed to see Mi i the board may be from the same
and Mrs John R. Edwards and | ward.
their daughter. Darla Edwards, at I -i-
St. John's hospital. Tulsa.
Tire Sapulpans, who live here at
502 S. Poplar, are unable to receive
Bowden school. 1-3 p. m. Monday
Pickett Prairie school. 9:30-12
m.. Tuesday
Kiefer school, 1-3 p m.. Wednes-
»y
Dunbar school, 9 30-12 a. m., Fit-
ly
are
They were injured Monday mom-
| ln8 in a car-train accident near;
35th and Sheridan, Tulsa
Mrs. Edwards is still on the crit- I
ical list at the hospital. She receiv-
ed multiple fractures of her legs
and severe cuts and bruises.
Edwards, employee of Liberty
Glass, underwent surgery Friday
for Jaw fractures. He also received
Many Ways For
Savings Bonds
To Get Mutilated
Church Late
WESTERLY. R I _ UP — A ... .........__ ^ ^ ^
Uh “a track VTeTnd^iepT'riS ' ^Miss StoSSln SltoTS^ard-1 *Vln*‘ Bonds Committee, who “told
'Maybe your wife doesn't get an-
gry and 'ear up your savings bonds
—but you might get them mutilated
in a hundred other ways."
T ' n °* “,c Boa troops iannea
and bombs, ambushed two patrol
Jeeps of the Gordon Highlanders on
a mountain road near Khandria in
the early-morning darkness. Rein-
forcements. summoned by radio,
helped drive the attackers off after
a sharp skirmish.
Five British Wounded
A Bren submachine gun and five
unexploded bombs were found near
the body of the dead extremist.
Two of the five wounded British
soldiers were reported in "danger-
ous” condition.
Immediately after the clash,
tracker dogs were put on the scent
of the extremists and troops fanned
Voters m wards iwo and five willv
go to the polls Tuesday In 3 city
primary to narrow the field of can-
didates for city commissioner to
four in each ward.
The general election, two weeks
later, will see two representatives
from ea:h ward selected for posts
on the city commission, and at the
same time the city voters will bal-
I lot on a $50,000 bond issue for the
! relocation of S. H 97.
In the primary election, voters
i from ward two will eliminate two of
i the following candidates: Earl Atch-
I ley. J C. Dyer, Harry Pantry,
j Schley Sconiers, Allen Wallace and
Mack Westbrook
To Choose lour
In ward five, the primary elec-
tion will see four among the follow-
ing candidates picked. Fred Cow-
den. Harold Goodwin. J Pearman
He: rin. Fred Patrick. Tom Ritchie.
James Troxell and Eddie Young.
These are the only two wards in
which more than four persons fil-
ed
In the general election in two
weeks, all wards will go to the polls
but voters in ward four will be vot-
ing only on the bond issue; their
two city commissioners are alreacy
picked ss only the incumbents, Vir-
gil Folsom and Carl Sherman, filed
for the race and face no opposition.
Polling Places
Ward two. precinct one voters will
u-e the library as their polling
place, with Mrs. Ruth Finnegan
SteVens as inspector, Dora Oault at:
Judge and Clara Lackey as clerk.
Ward two, precinct two voter?
will xo to the Garfield school to
vote. Officers there will be Mrs.
H A Clark, inspector. Leona Oar-
lick. Judge, and Mrs. Howard Bak-
er, clerk
In ward two, precinct three, the
BTW school will be the polling
place Officers will be Geneva Vann,
inspector. Beulah Owens, Judge, and
Martha Combs, clerk.
In ward five, precinct one. the
voting place will be Liberty school.
Georgia Pritchett will be inspector,
Leona Ball will be Judge, and Mag-
gie McQuilliam is clerk
Change In 5-2
The only change In polling places
will be In ward five, precinct two,
where voters used to go to the
Woodlawn school. New polling place
will be right across the street at
the number two fire station. Offi-
cers will be H. C Hughes, inspec-
tor. Ruth Grant. Judge, and Mary
Fagen, clerk.
In ward five, precinct three. Mil-
ford Davis will be inspector,
Mavme Welch is Judge and Mrs.
B. C Burnett is clerk Voters wftll
use the Forest Park school as
their polling place
★ ★★★★★
Serving The Flag
★ ★★★★★
Hrst LI. L. Wayne Atkinson is
cuirently stationed at a U S Air
Frrce base near Norwich. Eng-
land His wife i- with him there. I _ ______
Sne is the daughter of Mr and!
Mrs. Ross Davidson of Kellyville I...
Lt. Atkinson was formerly asso- CIIGIlQCr ISSU6S
Josephine Scaggs Wins Honors
Sapulpa Woman Is Presented
With Medal By British Queen
elated with the Kellyville ■school.
FORT CARSON, Colo. — Pvt.
Orville W Long, whose father,
William T. Long, lives In Mounds]
is receiving basic combat train-
ing with the 8th Infantry Division
lit Fort Carson, Colo.
Long is training with the divi-
sion's 13th Regiment. The unit is
preparing for its move to Europe
next fall as part of Operation
Gyroscope.
The 18-year-old soldier entered
the Army in January of this year
His mother, Mrs Marie Cobb,
lives in Arvin, Calif.
Stalin Is Painted
As Dictator Under
New Red 'History'
By DONALD J. GONZALES
WASHINGTON. -March 17—UP—
The Kremlin's new leaders are
spreading the world throughout
Russia that the once-idolized Josef
Warning Against
Violence In South
By WARREN Dl'FFEE
WASHINGTON. March 17—UP —
®en Allen J. Ellender said Satur-
day night the south must avoid law-
lessness and violence on the race
issue if it wants to escape a "repe-
tition of the Reconstruction
regimes” that followed the Civil
War.
The Louisiana Democrat, one of
101 signers of a "declaration of
constitutional principles'' by South-
ern lawmakers denouncing the Su-
preme Court’s school desegrega-
tion ruling, said any breakdown of
governmental authority in the
Southern states would ' open our
gates to an invasion by a new and
even hungrier breed of carpet-bag-
gers."
Ellender made the statements in
a radio broadcast for Uiuiaiana
stations.
Rare Relations Worsen
Stalin was actusfly a powe™ drunk *‘nce thc court'8 1954 »e
dictator, driven by paranoid fears Kald' ia| rela‘lons »" the South
of treachery, who weakened Rus- haVC delerlorated and threaten to
A house-to-house search was car-
going explained to police that ess h«. ' Zi.I.“,“".alL^.atoday of how the Treasurv Depart- ... „ . .
Mow Stalin Attacks
\R
iDemonstrations In
Russia Break Out
• you
n withi
Few of
>est wavf By HENRY SHAPIRO «►—___
to 17 —UP— law. order and the rights of Soviet
*eet demonstrations broke out citizens
INQtl Tiflls, Georgia, after the March
Mir tint
>ur int(
Khrushchev probably made a
confidential statement to the dele-
, *hc courts must thoroughly gates present, but the substance of
ceremonies marking the third crush the smallest manifestation it could not be' confirmed here bv
hiversary of the death of Josef of lawlessness and arbitrariness. Soviet sources
ftlln. it as reported Saturday the party paper Zaria Voscoku * Statement Discussed
(Moscow reports of outbreaks in s®ld in an editorial.
Bis. coincided with other re-
Jts from Washington and Lon-
c which told of bloody rioting
the Oeorglan capital as an aft-
ftiath to harsh denunciations of
llin at the Communist party
ress in Moscow last month».
Communist party newspa-
in Georgia demanded editorl-
Saturday that the courts
ush" violation of law and or-
I in Georgia, the republic in
4ch Stalin was born.
Outbreaks fnmentloned
It was reported that abbreviated
ine same newspaper published versions of the Khrushchev state-
a front page editorial last week mem were read and discussed at
party meetings throughout the
commemorating Stalin and print-
ed a portrait of Stalin and Lenin
together.
Georgia Is Hotheaded
Tiflls was the sold capital of all
the Soviet republics where the an-
niversary of Stalin's death was ob-
served with memorial meetings.
Georgia is known for Its warm
climate and the hotheadedness of
some of its citizens.
Reports that could not be con-
(ore
rhe newspaper made no refer- firmed from Soviet sources in Mobi-
le to the reported March 5 out- cow oirculated Saturday among the
w„ k... — »-■ «— — ex. western diplomatic corps that
but oalled for
of all kinds of
provoca-»closed session of the party con-
In Nicosia, British troops evicted
; some 150 men, women and children
1 from their homes in the teeming
Greek quarter which British forces
have labeled "terror town."
Retaliations Carried Out
Red-bereted paratroopers carried
out tables and mattresses and
dumped them in the streets among
protesting men, sobbing women
and scurrying children. The evic-
tions arc collective punishment for
the refusal of residents to give in-
I formation on the recent murders
and attacks of British servicemen
and police.
District Commissioner Martin
i Clemson ordered the houses closed
for three months after a public
court ol inquiry.
The narrow winding streets of
the two-mile-square area was Ut-
tered with iron bedsteads, pots and
pans, bulging suitcases, mattresses
and rolls of bedding. On police or-
ders. the evicted families were al-
lowed to take away only what they
could carry—they must apply to
headquarters for permission to take
the rest.
Soldiers moved among the evac-
uee? searching each bundle and
suitcase for arms before carrying
thrth to the barbed-wire barricade
which marked the boundary of the
forbidden zone Once outside the
barricade, the families are on their
own
Woodlawn Slone
Contest Entries
Will Be Judged
Entries in the Woodlawn stone
contest will go into the hands of
the Judges this week for final de-
cision.
Winning idea wiU receive a $25
award from the Herald and the
Idea will be considered by the Vet-
erans of Foreign Wars for construc-
tion
sia for the Nazi onslaught by
murdering 5.000 of the Red Army's
oftlcers.
Diplomatic sources reported Sat-
urday that these and other sensa-
tional charges, signalling the start
of an all-out campaign to discredit
Stalin, were made by Communist
Party Secretary Nikita S Khrush-
chev in a secret speech to the
Communist party congress in Mos-
cow on Feb 24
They said a summary of Khrush-
chev's gory allegations is now be-
ing distributed to Communist lead-
ers throughout Russia^ to be pass-
ed on to the people
Campaign Backfires
This campaign to knock Stalin
from his self-prepared pedestal ap-
parently backfired in the late dic-
tator's home state of Georgia near
the Turkish border. Officials said
reports have reached here of wide-
spread rioting in Georgia follow-
ing the March 5 anniversary of
Stalin's death.
Information available here was
! that the situation in Georgia is
; now under control. But experts on
Russia said lt was highly signifi-
cant that « large group of people
in the Soviet Union had dared to
challenge Khrushchev's regime | moderation by "extremists” on
and openly declare their contln- both sldes In the segregation issue.
ued reverence of Stalin. But his remarks drew the fire of
These reports said it was bound s°me northern Democratic liberals
to have an unsettling effect inside wbo called for him to speak out
Russia i\hen Khrushchev, by de- more firmly.
pteting Stalin aa a bloodthirsty -
tyrant, confirmed what the West _ .. ..
the Soviet Buy At Home
oovie. LOWELL. Mass — UP — Bur-
get worse. But the declaration was
necessary, he said, to show that
the people of the South, both white
and Negro, are not going to be
used as either whipping boys or
political pawns in order to fulfill
the Supreme Court’# new doctrine
of sociological justice.”
As a result of the ruling, he said,
“outside agitators who seek the
subjugation of both the white and
Negro races in the South are hover-
ing like greedy vultures for the
time when racial antagonisms lead
to chaos.”
The South, he said, has been in-
vaded by "unprincipled, power
hungry, self-seeking, outside agita-
tors. primarily "the National Asso-
ciation for the Advancement of
Colored People.”
Peaceful Solution Sought
But it Is important for the South
to avoid “violence, lawlessness and
bloodshed," Ellender added.
The "declaration of constitutional
principles." presented to Congress
last Monday by Sen. Walter F
George (D-Ga.) and Rep. Howard
W. Smith (D-Va. i kicked up storms
of debate In the capital.
At his mid-week news conference.
President Eisenhower pleaded for
had been saying about
dictator for years
glars found only three nickels when
came from Mis Robert E Yocham
register here They used the nick-
Mrs. A M. Bray. Jennie Oarber.
els to buy cold drinks after they
comment beyond saying it had
Olive Garber, Mrs John Hulnik. M^ch^nd' OeorK'a^niHm ^' But tr,ed unsuct'essfully 10 *orce oper.
Mrs. Harold Anguish. Donnie Moss. tPf , ., . . Kr.._rir. ., the soft drink dispenser In the of-
Mrs Mark Hanna, and Mrs. Mollie P * l°f flee
Wallace information from a variety of
Not entered in the contest, but wurces' gave a deU,led accoum Pago Pago. Samoa, is known as
showing a lot of thought and good 'Continued on Page Eighti the best harbor in the South Pacific
ideas was a floor plan for a home
for the aged submitted by Lee
Spears, high school sophomore
WILBERT
country.
The Tiflls party reminded its
Georgian readers Saturday that it
i? the duty of the Communist party
to "put up a decisive strug-
gle against offenders who violate
Soviet legality and to liquidate se-
rious shortcomings in the educa-
tion of the youth.”
Tlie paper criticized "unjustly
pronounced liberal judgments
against certain violators of social- Persona on the Isthmus ul Paiu»-
lst law. And it attacked a peoples nia can see the sun rise in the Paci-
court for "violation of law, incor-, fic and set in the Atlantic. The
rect decisions, undue delays of Ju- Panama canal farthest east touches
3
Built By High School Closs
Open House Tomorrow Night
For Oakridge School Cofeteria
♦ Miss Josephine 8aaggs, a mission*
ary to Nigeria. West Africa, a native
of Sapulpa. was honored recently
by Queen Elza be th of England with
the Member of the British Empire
de<”-ee
It was only the third time this
royal honor had been conferred on
a missionary in 106 years. Miss
Scaggs. a missionary tn Nigert* for
22 years, is a graduate ol Bapulpa
high school. A circle of the First
Baptist Women's Missionary Union
of thc Sapulpa church bean her
name.
Herald Fsreaaa
Her father, a printer, war
foreman of the Sapulpa Herald at
one time, and owned a print shop
and newspaper here later. He is
now living In Mangum.
Excerpts from Miss Scaggs letter
to her family describing the exper-
ience are given here:
“I lived through the experience
of meeting Her Majesty, Queen El-
izabeth, and His Royal Hlhgness,
the Duke ot Edinburg. It waa a won-
derful experience and one to be re-
membered the rest of my life.
“It was one at which I aa moat
unworthy and I still do not under-
stand why I was allowed such. The
honor bestowed and the medal pre-
sented were received on behalf #f
the Lord Jesus without wtaee lead-
ership and power nothing could
have Tield the ropes” through
their faithfulness In praying and
giving; and on behalf of missionary
and African co-workers through the
years.
"It was at Enugu the capital of
Nigeria that these unforgettable
events took place. I drove the hos-
pital Chevrolet taking with me Mrs,
Carson. Alice Miller the missionary
nurse with whom I live, Awarrl,
our faithful cook and helper for IS
years, and Edema, the steward for
10 years. The Jeep was not Mg
enough to take all of us, hut X felt
ashamed not to take the Jeep when
it should have been decorated for
Its noble part in carrying on our
work.
"Dr. and Mr*. Carson are the
ones who introduced me to the
needs of this area. X was so grate-
ful she was able to come from Of-
bomosho to go with me.
"I was required to be at the house
of Assembly by 6:S0 p. m. the day
before the presentation for rebeer-
sal it was Sunday and we had our
church service as we drove along
because we had to miss church.
M Decanted
"At the rehearsal there were 38
to be decorated by the Queen, the
Governor of Eastern Nigeria, the
Deputy Oovemor, and other im-
portant officials. Before the re-
hearsal I was talking freely with a
nwn I did not recognise in his
shirt sleeves. It was His Excellency
the Governor. He was most kind'to
assurances that we need not be ner-
vous as we came before the Queen.
Being the only American X guess
he felt I needed reassuring. I did.
"The Queen and Duke arrived by
plane at Enugu at noon Monday in
the midst of a great throng of peo
pie at the airport. 8he and the Duke
are most friendly and gracious to
their manner.
"At the Oardcn party Monday
given by the Ooveraar and his wtftf
on their lawn, the Queen and Did^O*
were introduced to a number at
persons as they walked down spe-
cial lanes I was one of those notify
od that the Queen would be brought,
to me where I was standing along
the lane Those of us to whom they
were to be introduced were notified
in advance and told that they would,
be interviewed about 60 seconds.
' Wher. she arrived at the airport,
and at the garden, the Queen was
beautllully and simply gowned.”
An open house is planned tomor-4-
row night from# 7 to 9 o'clock at J
1 Oakridge cafeteria •
The open house will mark the
official completion of the new cafe-
tena building which was construct-!
ed bv membeia of Lamar Stephen-
j son's high school carpentry class
The board of education purchased
the material for the building and
Sapulpans Leaving
For Farmers Union
Meeting In Denver
Infant Daughters Of
Sapulpons Die In
Tulsa Saturday
The infant daughters of Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Ray Howard. 320 W.
Lee. died shortly after noon Sat-
urday in a Tuisa hospital. Tho
twins were born Saturday morning
at Sapulpa hospital.
Survivors besides the parents
are the grandparents. Mrs. Mary
ts. hooligan and hostile ele- gress was held March 4wth . 7? * OI JU' Panaina caQal farthest east touches
Ms-all who violate Sociallst ^gT gu^ts absem ^ and °'hPr ~Pt0US, thp “d *e end farthest
? * , tauiis i wegt touches the Atlantic
"My mother got the ideo after I
lost my seventh pair of mittens.*
W I. Cuiuingham. 1140 E Hob-
_____son and Bill Firey, Sahonu road.
Stephenson's boys provided the lab- lefl toda> for Denver to attend the
1 or while they earned class credits, national Farmers Union convention
The building will be opened for which continues through Thursday ___ ___ ^
u~e Monday and thereafter by the - ■ ^ -*n expense paid trip won . Aim-, Charles Kiefer Mrs Marv
Oakridge school population! ! b> Cunningham, district organizer, Lou Perrv Sapulpa ’ Omer Rav
Mrs Henry Simmons fourth > w‘w work. | Howard IRefer Three zreat-grand"-
grade teacher is principal Other Vlrey is county president ; ;nothers Uve ln gapuip*. Mrs Ad-
teachers at the school are Mrs - die Smith. Mrs. Amanda Perry and
1 Dolores Nace, first grade, Athena Nearly one-half of the some 700,- Mrs Freida Howard
I Andros, second grade and Mary , 000 words in the Enghsji language Funeral plans will he anuo m.etf
Alice Smith, third grade. I consist oi sc lentil ic terminology. by Owen Funeral Home.
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Sapulpa Sunday Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 41, No. 167, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 18, 1956, newspaper, March 18, 1956; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490645/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.