Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 294, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 13, 1953 Page: 2 of 12
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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PAGE Two—SEGTiGnI 6n£
SAPUlPa H!RAlD, SAPui-PA, OKLAHOMA
THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1953
\SAPULPA»HERALP7
MEMBER OF
OKLAHOMA PRESS ASS'N
1953
^odcufA,
R P
Established in 1914
MATTHEWS, Owner and Publisher
^^^.assprrs -*• ? s
SAPILPA C'AK KII it BATES
One Week
One Calendar Month
Three Months
Six Months
One Year
t 35
( 1 to
$ 3.30
t 6 60
*13 20
Delivered by carrlur anywhere in
Bapulpa, Mounds, Kie ipr, Kcllyvillc. Olenpool
BTA I F
~S=ri~35S
AdverUsu»8 Manager; Max Batchelder, Reporter.
. i
NOTICK
a 12411
T •
Subscribers Missing a
quested to phone 185
paper are re-
belure 7 o'clock
NICHOLS
------ hlo*lk
Backstairs At
The White House:
By MF.RRIMAN SMITH
DENVER. Aug 13—UP—Back-
stairs at the summer White House;
Mrs. John 8 Doud. mother oI the
President s wile, likes dog racing.
She frequently visits the local track If
when the fleet greyhounds thrill the 11
ic 13 UP— parl-mutue! bettors on lummer
Bv HARMAN
WASHINGTON aus **-«-- nlBhLs
Twenty years ago Friday will live President Is no racing fan,
arsrf.sr.AS'.s
pi~a m,. «»*u«.-. m
newspaper in Lake Oeneva, WK menu
The smell of printer s ink Jrtch~ B,.lor«, Mrt> Doud came west
me down. So 1 called the bossi of ^ . Qf lhe PresMtem and Mrs
the U. P in Ch‘f*K° “ ' J Eisenhower, her neighbors on La
known earlier when I was a string f M street were alarmed one
correspondent in lows> City, lau fUght U) set flashlights playing
and he was U P. buieau manag omlnougjy arountl the interior of
In Des Monies. the unoccupied house
The bo8s. s*ld ,^e kh‘H aiinifieti The neighbors spread the alarm,
the hog and hsy ever called the newspapers
it by calling it the Market Des _ Breathiess reporters and photog-
The price was right, so I accept- r#pherg arrlved minutes later to
**d » - ...... discover the lights were being em-
An Eager ployed quite properly by secret
The first day on s I . service agents preparing for the
determined to arrive blight - eyea yjgit
so I hit the pad In my rented room ,
and beat the dawn up. scrubbed
and legged it over to 400 W Madl- Thy nei8hbors still can't get over
son Street. seeing strange young men pacing
I wanted to show my new leader lp Iront of ^ home as the
! that here wus a new hand who paid service maintains a guard
no mind to sun or clock 1 planned as diacreeny as possible while the
to shock him into good humor by prPa[dent is in residence there,
allowing my lace hall an hour ear- B||t old hands at this business
ly I got Into the elevator and said pre<jlct tf,e neighbors will become
to the man. ' seven.''Aboutfive accustomed t0 the aecurlty precau-
* • 4 rtrte
MEflfi
►r
THURSDAY, AUGUST i:
KINDERGARTEN to COLLEGE
• '
smooth take-off
* .,.1. THOUGHT TO. TOD*. _... ^ ^ up ^ „„
fj£ g;arcssn%.Kezer^l: w,"
ore charitable to ourselves but sometimes cruel to others
Be charitable. Do justice ond judgment —Gen 18 19.
rrr siut *. ------iw ncig
Inhere wai some ringing oi cmer- Truman
gency bells and some screams Irom i
trapped, lrantlc ladies Relief fi-
nally came In the form of a rescue
tions around the President and pay
no more attention to it than did
the neighbors of former President
in Independence, Mo.
The secret service makes a
liable to find the road pr?Tty rough
if they get In a classification over
their heads."
By the time he gets to the maj-
ors, a young player should be so
well educated in baseball he auto-
matically knows such flfhdament-
iils as bunting in any direction,
backing up plavs and son on. Wal-
ker believes that he'll nt*er have
to take time out to
again.
•He'll have enough to learn as It and the
is without having to worry about
the things he should have learned
in the minors,” Walker says.
yn |,r
in
tojloc
oi# ih
Walker broke into the majors
with the New York Yankee organ-
ization. After switches to Chicago
and Detroit In the American
League, he went to Brooklyn where
IU44, tils .351 wa» the national
loop's best bating average He led
the league In 1945 In run* batted-In
with 124.
Hv W J. MCGLASSON
HOUSTON. Aug 13-UP — The
8t Louis Cardinals have begun a
"lop-to-bottom" program of devel-
oping young ball players in ihetr
farm system but for one of the
more important links they picked
a 43-year-old "old timer” whose
baseball career dates back to 1928
He's Fred i Dixiei Walker, best
known as the "People's Cherce"
during seven years as u Brooklyn
Dodger outfielder
Walker recently was named to
manage the Cardinal's Housto
club in the Texas League, one ol
the most valuable units In the Card
system. If not the most valuable Walker looks back upon those
years with Brooklyn, from 1940
The rholce was apt, for Walker through 1947. as the best of his ca-
ls a longtime proponent of the the reer and believes the 1941 Dodger
ory that young hall players should team was the best he ever played
be given their education in funda- ^jth. That team included pitcher
mentals long before they reach the whitlow Wyatt, "the best pitcher
big time. I've ever played behind." Billy
. , ... . . , Herman. Peewee Reese. Cooke
He attributes much of this belief UvBgrtto Joe Medwtck. Pete Re-
to his own career, started at 18 In ^ Ml( kpy Owen and Dolph Ca-
Birmlngham, Ala. ! among others.
During his lirst three years in or-1 ^ oneUme steelmill worker
g a tilled bull, he says he was either (rom Georgla playpd the 1948 and
"a failure" or that he ' Just didn t l#4# gpagong with Pittsburgh, then
do any good at all " managed Atlanta for three years
-From that experience I ve come hp wpnt t0 lht, cardinal or-
to believe that young ball players llllttnn year a8 a coach.
shouldn't be over-eager to start in » _____
the very lilghcst classification pos-
sible,” he says ' Like I did. they'rey TULSA. Aug 13 -UP-Tulsa po-
' lice said Thursday they were
and we all crawled out. I was an
hour late on the first day.
That was a bad beginning. The
boss, who later confessed every-
body in the building knew there
was a stuck elevator, gave me Old
Ned He introduced me to the finan-
cial editor, a man who was leav-
ing and who was disinclined to
learn them t?ach a recruit the complications
of covering the Board of Trade
0.1 pXJ.T.TIWIV ---— - — —
Ident In the quiet residential neigh-
borhood in which Mrs. Doud lives.
Two days aftqr Mr Eisenhower
came out here, the rope and wood-
en barriers erected by Denver po-
lice at either end of Mrs Doud's
block were quietly taken down A
few curious continue to drive by
the house or stroll past, but no con-
centration of people like that on
hand when the president first ar-
rived. •
stockyards, not to mention the but-
ter and egg market.
Got a Souvenir, Any Way
Alter a couple of days, the finan-
cial editor flung hts eye-shade into
the carbon basket, pulled on his
Jacket and departed for good. He
left me along with confusion.
Part of the service was supply-
ing market quotations for cash
corn, yellow and white. I got the
white whore the yellow should
have been To the farmers, going
10 market on our quotations, a sev-
en cent spread between the two
kinds of cash corn meant a lot.
A lot of farmers must have com
plained A couple of days later, the
boss got a memo from the Editor
m Beaver Dam, WIs., a genl who
used to be a U. P hand himself.
It said, simply . , .
• Your blankety blank market ed-
itor Is color blind.''
I'm still color blind and I would
not take a pretty lor that note,
which I *tm have.
Mr Elsenhower's car moves about
Denver—to his oftice at Lowry Air
Force Base or to the golf course—
with a minimum escort; no noisy
motorbikes, but the ever-present SS
agents in their follow-up car.
Tom Golden is a Denver detec-
tive who was loaned to Mr. Eisen-
hower as a security officer during
the 1952 campaign. Golden, after
the campaign, undoubtedly could
have had a Job with the new ad
ministration In Washington, but he
preferred Denver.
When the President came out
here last Saturday, he asked that
Golden be assigned to the White
House security force for the vacs
tlon—and for old time's sake.
PICTURE
ol the Week
proud of Tulsa's record of one of
ihe “best automoblled” cities In
the nation, but It presents a prob-
lem.
Tulsa's police force is well be-
low the number recommended by
LOOK WHO'S HERE
Cotton Estimote
For Free World Is
26.9 Million Bales
WASHINGTON. Aug. 13 -UP-
The international cotton advisory
free world cotton production in the
1953-54 season at 26 9 million bales.
The production estimate is down
somewhat from the 28 4 million
bales produced In 1952-53. Outside
the United States, production is
tentatively estimated at 1 million
bales less than last season and the
first official estimate of the Amer-
ican crop showed a reduction of
slightly more than half a million
bales.
“Free world production In 1953-
54 will likely be much more closely
In balance with the free world con-
low the number recomnienaca uy a BOY. bom Aug 8 at 8npulpa
‘the National Police Academy, and hospital is the son of Rev and Mrs
truth, director l urry Coulson said Dick Shade, pastor of Blue Ben
1 wasn't sure who was going to Fr(H. will Baptist church He is ln oalance wun me hit wu..u iv..-
coue with the 98.000 to 90.000 cars nttmed Lurry Don, and weighed sumpuon than In either of the last
now registered in Tulsa Only 52.- seven pounds and 11 ounces. two seasons," the committee said.
214 cars were registered tn 1942 Orandparenu are Rev and Mrs Exports from free world coun-
Clyde Shade. Tulsa, and Mrs Es
sie Sample, Btxby
The police force has about one
officer per 1,000 population, while
the recommended number Is 2 75
policemen per 1,000 population.
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS WASH
A GIRL for Mr. and Mrs Bill
Hanks ol Ceres. Calif . former Sa-
pulpans. She was born July 3o at
a California hospital. She was a
premature baby and weighed five-
pounds. two ounces, and has been
named Phyllis Dean. Mrs Hanks
is the former Virginia Lee Wilson.
Grandparents are Mr and Mrs
Earl Wilson. 102 E Ooodykoontz.
and Mr and Mrs Hanks of Calif-
; ornia.
tries In 1952-53 are estimated at
10 4 million bales against 11.1 mil-
lion one year earlier. But, “if
world consumption ln 1953-54 re-
mains stable, as is presently Indi-
cated." the committee sees the
possibility of increased trade
Free world consumption ln 1952-
53 totaled 25 5 million, an Increase
of nearly 500.000 bales from the
previous season.
Nnssin* backaoh*, law of pop and enorsr, _
hoodie boo ond ditunrM moy bo duo to oluw-
From the Photos by
Stamps Studio
E. Dewey
Phone 322
nradarnf* mu -----.
down of kidney function iioetoro uy tood
kidney function io very important to *ood
health. When oome everyday condition, tueit
no atreoa ond otroin, couoeo thio important
function tooloor down.many folk*auflernog-
gins backache-feel miaerable. Minor bind-
dcr irritation* <iuc to cold or wr%»ng 4i»«t way
can** fett inf up nlf ht« or frequent pa*MifM.
Don't nrgtoct your kldfayt If tlMM condi-
tlon* bother you. Try Poan • PtlU-« mild
diuretic. I'Md BuccoMfidiy by millions for
over 50 ye«r*. lt*K •mating ht<w many t hum
poan'a five happy relief from theae diarojn-
Doan • fivt nappy renei irem invw ‘jj-
forta—help the IftmtWaof kidney tubeeantl Al-
ter* du»h out waste. Get Doad'a Piib today I
FOR ATHLETE S FOOT A
KERATOLYTIC IS A MUST.
What is a keratolytic? An agent
that deadens the infected skin. It
then peels off, exposing more germs
to its killing action Oet T-4-L, a
keratolytic. at any drug store If
not pleased IN ONE HOUR, your
40c back Today at Humes Drug Co
—Adv.
Heaths j
Annabelle Porter
FOR OFFICE, SCHOOL OR HOME
&Oc Fri.-Sat. Only £Q<
This Certificate is Worth $4.31
» a t wans* nallltlnp irilipAlMirt llllf I'KK^Sl I
^»s«iri«iSi»ssi5&7s
MORK^SHAKING! A lifetime Guarantee with each pen. One sue only for ladies, men, boys,
and girls. Assorted Colon!
The Pen With a Lifetime Guarantee
Funeral services will be held Sat-
urday lor Annabelle Porter. 68, 313
N Burnett, who passed away Sun-
day night.
Services will be held at 2 p m
at CME church, corner Line and
Leonard, with Rev. L. B Graham
officiating. Interment in Falrivew
cemetery will be under the direc-
tion of Dyer funeral home.
Survivors are one brother, W T
Watman. Tampa. Fla., and 10 ais-
ters. Mary E Dickson and Mollie
Bell both of Chicago; Virginia Da- \
vis, Starkvllle. Miss; Susie Harris.
Ethel Shaw, Keonle Mae Hall,
Mrs. L W Hawkin, Elizabeth Col-
vert. Sally Hull and Barbetta Gib-
all of this city
.ion.
i:
!s££‘
'
/ 1953 DELUXE STREAMLINE PEN
This pen holds 200<X more ink than any ordinary pen on the market. You can write for
three months on one filling! \ isible ink supply. No
I™ ■zsr.. ™ siii-y it* *• mrj “s rs
This certificate good only during advertising sale.
The Perfect Pen for Students
__ADD l(k FOR MAIL ORDERS
THIS PF.N
WILL HE
16.00
AFTER SALE
0. L. Humes Drug (o.
Friday and Saturday, Aug. 14 and
LIMIT
2 PENS TO
EACH
CERTIFICATE
TULSA, Aug. '13 —UP-AFL
municipal employees have voted to ,
accept a 1 per cent wage Increase
offered by the city commission and
delay asking for a greater hike un-
til next spring, a union official an-
nounced Wednesday.
Union President John 8. Johnson
■ the workers voted 142 to 8
favor of the action. They are
members of the American feder-
ation of State. County and Mun-
icipal employes, Local 1.180 < AFL*.
City commissioners voted the 1
cent Increase to go Into effect
1.
JoluiAon said "with a reduction
in mileage, we can see there is
little more the city can do for us j
said
in
per
Sept.
on
big sister’s
coat!
[Sophistication softly
defined in velve-
teen with a tiny-
checked, rhinestone
I
studded dickey.
Deep set-in pockets
give the skirt
a peg-top look.
Sizes 7 to 15.. a
Not only are the fabrics and styling like big sister’s, but
these wonderful Yorkster coats are Milium-lined to keep .
your youngster warm on the coldest day . . . unburdened
and comfortable during Spring-like weather. Left, all wool
brush fleece with shawl collar and decoratively stitched
yoke back and front. To keep fleece fresh and nappy, » free
wire brush with our compliments! Right, all wool poodle
cloth in double-breasted style. Multi-paneled back and
velvet-framed johnny collar. Sizes 7 to 14.
$14.98
as seen in Vogue
Other Doris Dodson Juniors
from $8.95
O/r
Fleet* coat in red, eotillion blue, pink or gold
Poodle cloth coat in pink, blue, red or brown *
A SPECIAL GROUP OF
Children’s School Dresses
2 for $3.00 2 lor $4.00
2 lor $5.00
\m\
Hol^wood fashion
'* llcsil
Award
#<V *ce«H '
new season
relnms beautiful fitted toi
pleat retaining skirt. Fasl
“Lerettc" 55% orlon—45r
cuffs are accent touches
fall colors. Mizes 10-18.
<r
Seventeen
Lollip
Pati4 *pa4
CREPE
The softest things y
into...and wonder!
casual clothes) Ur
clipper-soft from e
Swagger Tan, Bloc
_s9\
BOY’S SOX
JUST LIKE DAD S
Bright colors in all the right
. patterns: ribbers, argyles,
/stripes. M.ghty spruce
styling for school or dress!
Longer-lasting — they re
Wear Tested. 39c
r\
Panties
• Cash • Lay Away • Charge • Budget
are sturdily made tor active
n-hool wear Lastex want band,
snug-fitting eg openings and
rvforcto crotch Wc offer thent in A
choice ot colors including Vanilla. ! ea-
oacry Grape Butterscotch Cherry.
HuCklabarry Lime. Plum and Licorice.
Easy to launder Require no irerung.
Keep your eye on our windows
for the newest in beautiful clothes
r\ .
I!
li
IL’
Sixes 2 to 14 . 65c ond 69c
Co.mjfOSitaUlif /Ul Conditioned
Frank’s Department Store
relnms unusual all pica
nr inn—45% wnnf. by Mi
hangs tn dry without I
reinforced waistband. (
Now While Available!
Last year's traffic toll of deaths
and injuries was the heaviest in
history.
Berryhill Building-18 East Dewey
Vnur Store n
12:
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 294, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 13, 1953, newspaper, August 13, 1953; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1491753/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.