Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 216, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 14, 1958 Page: 2 of 8
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Phone 254
(IIKIMN
KWAI' WINS ACADEMY AWARD
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Poge 2—Sopulpo (Ohio ) Herald, Wednesday, May 14, 1958
O.C. Police Probe
Wild Shooting Spree
OKLAHOMA CITY <UP) Po-
lice Chief Hoy Bergman said to-
day investigation Is toeing pressed
in a shooting ca.se which resulted
in a polio- cruiser and several
store fronts being shot up last
Ihnrsday
Two detectives, O. W Huberts
and J. L Doyle, were discharged
Tuesday after they were accused
STEAM and MASSAGES
106 Eost 9th, Tulsa
Apartment 3
Phone GI-7-5420
of firing a pistol at a street lamp
early last Thursday morning. Two
I policemen reported this incident
An hour and a half following
this alleged shooting. IX.vie and
Robei ts said they chased a car
1 carrying three youths who report-
i edly fired numerous bullets into
| several plate glass store fronts.
The two men claimed the youths
[ fired at their cruiser with a lifle.
knocking the vehicle out of com-
mission A roadblock network wa-
thruwu up. but the trio was not
found.
Bergman -aid Doyle a ltd Rob-
erts were not being su^x-cted of
shooting at the stores He said
they were dsmlawtl only in
' connection with the alleged shool-
' .rig of the street Ugh!
The chief .stressed tnvesligation
of the latter Incident is continuing
' No Open Season
On Plovers
The Oklahoma Wildlife Conserva-
tion department today reminded
hunters slid plinker that uiu-t of
the ploveia arid shoivb.i ils now ml- j
grating northward through Hie stute
arr rigidly protected by Ft - -ral
lax. To slioot or molest any of the e
long-legged shorebuds. or "snipe-
as they an- sometime'- called could
result in prosecution unti r tin mi-
gratory bird laws set up by Federal
statute
Even those bird* which are resi-
dents. classed as non-inigralorv. are
protected by state regulations Many
spi . s of shores ids are Very dilfl-
j cult to distinguish in tlie field, even
I by experts So hold your fire and
| stick to legal game. This is the mark
of s sportsman And as pointed out
by wildlife officials, ll Ls extremely
rate occasion when a spoilsman Is
‘ i quire 1 to stand before a judge
and expl.un his actions.
tn £~a<j ftnUrt
COLO ft
ClNlt,„.Sc(H»£
THESE YOUNGSTERS attended the pre-kindergarten party
at the First Baptist church yesterdoy They will enroll in the
"Little Friends" kindergarten class held in the church this
foil which marks the third year of its existence The.children
and fheir mothers viewed a movie, were orientoted on class-
es and served refreshments at the party (Herald Photo )
FOR SALE
S Room Frame Home
A Reol Nice Buy.
234 Wert Dewey
$5,750
Herbert P. Johnson
Agency
8 E. Dewey Phone 39
France Near Civil War
9
As Rightists In Revolt
a badly .shot up car was repaired
In a Tulsa garage the day after
the shoutings here
PARIS i UP i—President Rent
and reporta are being checked that; Coty today demanded 1 o y al t y
from the 40O.(K>a French troops in
Algeria where a military junta
seized ptwer in an effort to set
up a French dictatorship under
Otn Charles de Gaulle. The na-
tion appeared close to civil war
Coty used the prestige of his
office und the power of the
I French constitution in an effort to
i stop the military defiance bet ore
it spread from Algeria into met-
rupolitau France
Coty acted after the National
I Assembly, frightened toy the xpec-
| ter of a military coup, swept
I aside political differences and in-
vested Pierre Pflimlin as Pre-
mier early thJs morning
Pflmvltn became France's 27.h
l postwar Premier. He Is head ol
COMING-MAY 17-23
y iwiUCU 1 cotuMi* ricnini *m*«t> * jam snctti mnetw
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kCktt0*M"THI BRID6K ON THi
RIVER KWU*
TiCNNicoiORO ciNiuAscoee
ADMISSION-
ADULTS—90c
CHILDREN—35c
the Catholic-led Popular Republi-
can Party (MRP) which favors
a "liberal" solution of the Algeri-
an war His Investiture ended al-
most one month without a gov-
ernment
Government liefied
In Algiers, Gen Jacques Mas-
su. tough veteran paratrooper,
called the Pflimltn cabinet a
"government of abandonment."
Massu said his defiant army
group would keep control of Al-
geria "until final victory."
Massu. apparently with the
backing of Gen Raoul Salan.
commander-in-chief of all French
forces in Algeria, broadcast over
Algiers Radio this morning a vio-
lent speech in which he apparent-
ly closed all exits for a peaceful
settlement
Massu said Jacques Soudelle
former governor-general of Al-
giers and proponent ol a "lough"
policy to squash the rebellion,
was en route to join him. But In
Pans, police said Sousteile had
been put under police "protec-
tion" at his home because of
death threats" from Algerian
rebels
Telephone operators began re-
fusing unofficial calls to Algeria
during the night, and otiicials
clamped tight restrictions on
travel to Algeria
Police at Orly Air Field said
they had orders to turn back all
political leaders. National Assem-
bly deputies and heads of war
veterans groups trying to get to
Algeria Air France and Air Al-
geria flighLs to Algiers were sus-
pended
lit'inonstraliuns Renewed
Pflimlin backed up Coty with
an urgent radio appeal but now
anti-government demonstrations
already were startling in Algeria
By midoiorning a crowd of 2.000
was milling outside the French
Command Headquarters in Al-
giers and nearly every store In
the city was shut for the second
successive day
Massu set up a "committee of
public safety" — harking back to
a term used in the French Revo-
lution. It included four civilians
and three military men but the
actual power was In the hands
of the army
He called for Gen. Charles de
Gaulle to come out of retirement
and set up a "government of pub-
lic safety" In Paris. That would
mean a dictatorship.
Massu assumed control of Al-
giers Tuesday after a day in
which rightwing European resi-
dents engineered a city-wide
strike and staged several riots.
They wrecked the U.S. Informa-
tion A’/enry building.
Pflimlin, his u-ually-jovial face :
grave and his eyes puffy from
lack of sleep, held an emergency
meeimg of his new cauinet Im-
mediately after he was invested
by a vote ol 2TJ to 124 There
were 135 abstentions, including
most of the Communist oioc
Falconry, like archery, goes far
back into antiquity. Chinese appear
to have practiced the sport some
2.000 years ago Ancient sculplui.s
and written accounts suggest that
hawking was popular in Egypt, Per-
sia. Greece and Rome. In medieval
Europe it was a favorite pastime of
the nobility.
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 216, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 14, 1958, newspaper, May 14, 1958; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490773/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.