Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 101, Ed. 1 Monday, December 31, 1951 Page: 1 of 6
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OKLAHOMA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
OiaVTO'IA CITY, OKLA.
ONE-A-DAY
TELEVISION
TV isn't replacing radio hall as
fast as It Is homework— Pathfinder.
VSAPULPASiHERALD/
SNOW
i
Unseasonable
today turning
mid with
ntrlhft
I y winds and snow
flurries tonight and
tomorrow.
> snnw
VOL XXXVII NO 101
UN Tells Reds
Armistice Hinge
On Airfield Ban
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1951
DIMES SQUARE, SIGNIFICANTLY
mm
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY
Negotiations Are
Deadlocked Now;
Meeting Planned
By AHNOI.lt DIBBLE
PANMUNJOIM. Koreu, Dec 31
or- The United Nations told the
Communists Monday that there can
be no armistice In Korea unless
they accept a bnn on nlrfleld con-
struction.
UN negotiators handed down the
virtual ultimatum In accusing the
Communists of seeking "not peace,
but war,” by demanding the right
to repulr and build airfields in
North Korea during a truce.
U.S MaJ Oen Howard Turner
charged In n stinging 200-word
statement that the Reds wanted the
airfields to enable them to "strike
suddenly and deep in our rear
•No Farther t'seressleas’
The UN will make no further
concessions lor an armistice un-
less the Reds drop their demand.
Turner said. _ _
North Korean Col. Chung Chun
Ban promptly countered that the UN
has "high-pitched Imagination." He
renewed his demand for the right
to build airfields.
The exchange In the armistice
supervision subcommittee left ne-
gotiations tightly deadlocked How-
ever, both sides agreed to meet
again at 11 a m. Tuesday i9 p.m
Monday esti.
The prisoner subcommittee like-
wise foiled to make any progress
,n Its attempt to arrange an ex-
change of war prisoners It also
scheduled another meeting for 11
am Tuesday.
U.S Rear Adm R E Libby
told newsmen alter the prtsonei
subcommittee meeting that the
Communists seemed to be "trying
to Welsh on their commitment to
provide detailed Information on 50,-
000 missing Allied war prisoners
Meantime, a UN command an-
nouncement tn Tokyo said that
6 000 Communist war prisoner*
have died tn Allied prison camps
The announcement emphaataed that
the total was only about B per cent
of the 132.414 prisoners held by the
UN. ,
By contrast, the announcement
said. 11 per cent of all UN prisoners
known to have reached Communist
prison camps in the early days
of the war died.
FBI Agonft Join
Probo Of Bonk
Robbory In Ttxot
CHILDRESS, Tex.. Dec 31 «R—
FBI agents and Texas Rangers
Monday Joined Childress officers tn
investigating the bold Sunday
morning bank burglary which cost
the rtrst State Bank more than
$5,000. all tn silver.
The bulky load of cash was cart-
ed out by prowlers who apparently
had a key to a building the bank
temporarily occupied when Its own
building burned
The building formerly housed
the City National Bank, and was
eautpped with a strong vault.
Officers said • IB by IB-Inch hole
was cut in the door of the vault
with an acetylene torch The mon-
ey was scooped out through the
hole but an Inner male prevented
the raiders from reaching the
bank’s currency
The bresk-tn was the seventh
major burglary of the year In
Childrens, but the first Involving a
bank.
'Braathor' Ind*
For City Firtmon
jSapulpa Today|
Justice of the Peace C. €’. tirlmes
Sa'urday fined Joe D White, a
Tulsa man. t35 and costs for oper-
ating a motor vehicle without li-
cense
ooo-
In city police court this morning.
one man was fined 110 and cost* on
a drunk charge, one man forfe'ted a
)2l bond on a charge of drunk driv-
ing. one man was fined $10 on a
charge of us n« profane language,
and one man wa* fined 110 each on
charge* of using profane language
and defrauding an Inn keeper
—000-
If some young buekarno in Sa-
pulpa received a Hopalong Cassidy
billfold for Christmas, and can’t
fnd it now. he can get It at the
Herald office. Although lost and
found do not usually go In Sapulpa
Today, we thought it might get
quicker results for the hombre that
misplaced It. A few coins were In
the pocket book, and no identifica-
tion. A good-luck coin was In the
change pocket.
—ooo—
City of flees wIM be cloned tomor-
row.
Search Planes Fan Out In
Wide Hunt For 3 Aircraft
Missing With 68 Persons
1
After six straight days of good
weather and no flrea, Sapulpa fire-
men were called out to f'ght four on
Saturday and two yeaterday
It began Saturday morning at
11 06 Juat a few mlnutea before the
next shift of firemen were to come
on. A grass fire at the Euchee mis- |
slon was put out
At 3 BA that afternoon, a pickup
truck belonging to Sam Sheffel
caught fire at II N. Main when a
gas line broke over the ear be tie nr
An hour and a half lator. a* * ».
a grew fire was atartad while trash
was being burned at IBM B. Dewey,
at the home of L. A. H’xtor
At IX.BB that Mina evwnlng. an
Oklahoma Natural Oee mater house
south of the South Haights ceme-
tery Ignited front the heater at the
regulator
UN Farces Try
Fmt 4th Day T#
Recapture Hill
By LKKOY HANSEN
8TH ARMY HDQS . Korea. Dec
31 its—Tank-supported Untied Na-
tions forces tried for the fourth
straight day Monday to recapture
k an advance hill position on the
western front.
They Jumped off soon after dawn
against Chinese forces clinging
stubbornly to the contested height
In no-man’s-land west of Korangpo.
29 miles northwest of Seoul
UN tanks and artillery laid down
a curtain of fire and steel ahead
of the advancing Infantry
Blggeat Battle la Month
The battle was the biggest since
the start of the abortive 30-day
cease-fire line agreement more
than a month ago Up to two Com-
munist battalions — some 1,600
troops—were engaged.
The Reds threw outnumbered Al-
lied troops off the height last Fri-
day. and the Allies have been try-
ing to recapture tt ever since
UN forces seized a hill lying be-
tween the main Allied line and the
lost height Sunday, but were halted
there by the Communists tn bitter
hand-to-hand fighting Tempera-
tures were below freeling.
A front-line briefing officer esti-
mated that 300 Chinese were killed
Sunday alone. Allied casualties
were very low. the officer said.
One MIG Damaged
Three small-scale Communist at-
tacks were repulsed In the arqa
Sunday night and early Monday.
Farther west, other UN troops
beat off a light Communist prob-
ing attack tn a 50-mlnute engage-
ment east of the truce conference
village of Panmunjom early Mon-
i day. _ .
Only patrol action was reported
from the remainder of the 14B-mlle
Korean front
In the atr. eight American Bhoot-
intc Star Jets outntaneuvered 18
speedier Russtsn-bullt MIO-16 Jet
fighters and damaged one of them
1 tn a dogttght above Sunchon in
northwest Korea All the Shooting
Stars returned safely to their
bases
TiMIS SQUARE In New York ta changed to Dimes Square for tha IBB
March of Dimes drive, underway Jan. 2. Officiating In the ceremony
chairman of the Mothers’ March. , International SoundpUatal
45th HasBeen In Action In
Keren 3 Weeks; Morale Higt
Storm-Botte red
Queen Mery Leave*
With Churchill
8TH ARMY HDQS. Korea, dec ♦
ji (1A—The US 48th Division,
eighth American division In Korea,
went into action against the Chi-
nese Communists more Ilia* three
weeks ago and Sunday fought the
longest patrol contact of the day
In deep snow along the balilefront
The Oklahoma unit la the first
National Guard division to enter
the Korean fighting. It was called
to federal service Sept. 1. 1950.
shortly after the outbreak of the
war and arrived in Japan April
25, where It trained for seven
"'correspondents with the first 45th
units to reach Korea reported mo-
rale was "amazingly high" even
though the division had been assur-
ed once that It would remain tn
JUThe first major unit of the 45th
landed at Inchon Dec 5 and a
division artillery battalion fired Its
first shells against the Reds four
days later.
News of the division’s shift from
Japans northernmost Island of
Hokkaido, off the Soviet coast, was
a poorly kept secret
The story was published in the
U B. early this month after men
of the division telephoned and
wrote uncensored letters to theii
families disclosing the move. Com-
plete press censorship was Impos-
ed but the Chinese Communist ra-
dio reported the division tn Korea
last Friday.
In releasing reports on the 4»th
Sunday. Oen. Matthew B Rldg-
way’s headquarters In Tokyo re-
fused to disclose whether tt re-
lieved a battle-worn outfit In Korea
HAS NARROW SQUEAK
BEACON. N. Y tUFi-A casual
conversation with Patrolman
George Van Felt Is credited with
saving Mtthtas Angele’a life. An-
gela mentioned that he found two
objects resembling melsl "pine-
apples’ and Intended to take them
apart They were hand grenades
By R. H. SHACKFOBD
ABOARD QUEEN MARY. Dec
31 If—Tlie storm-battered liner
Queen Mary, converted into a
"floating No 10 Downing St."
sailed for New York Monday,
carrying Prime Minister Winston
Churchill and ht.s top advisers to
a momentous conference with Pres-
ident Truman
Delayed 24 hours by a raging , ”• crash
Atlantic storm and u not her 24 hours Densp wou<
by a fouled anchor chain, the
world’s fastest liner sailed at noon
Churchill remained In his suite
amid busy clacking of typewriters
and the bustle of secretaries pre-
paring briefs for the Washington
meetings as the liner hoisted Its
repaired anchor and headed west.
The prime minister also remain-
ed aboard throughout Sunday while
repulrs were being made to the
anchor. When Com O. E Cove,
commanding the ship, told hint
about the delay Churchill was re-
ported to have shrugged his shorn
ders and said:
“It Is an act of God We will
stay aboard."
After writing Mr Truman apolo-
gies for me delay Churchill spent
the day working. He had a small
dinner party Sunday evening and
the group saw a movie.
The unexpected delay will put
Churchill’s first meeting with the
President in Washington back from
next Friday until Saturday or Sun-
dny Their formal talks probably
will begin Monday.
Their talks are expected to lead
to the closest Anglo-American work-
ing agreement stnci World War II.
Subjects scheduled for discussion
range from cold war strategy to
a broader pooling ol atomic sec-
rets and prospective American help
for austerity-ridden Britain
Plano* Sought
From Allaghonies
To Californio
By UNITED PRESS
Search craft fanned out over the
Allegheny mountains, the rain -
soaked Arizona desert nnd the Cal-
ifornia coast Monday, seeking some
trace of four planes missing with
1« persons abourd
In addition, u fifth cruft, de-
scribed ns tt "blu two-engined
plane that looked like u C-41. was
reported down about 1.000 yards
off the coast of Wabasso Beach,
Flu Authorities were checking the
Flighty military and 100 Civil Atr
Patrol craft took off to criss-cross
the urea trom Pitsburgh to Canada
tn search of a C-48 non-scheduled
airliner which disappeared Satur-
day night with 40 persons aboard^
Clearing weather after days of
drenching rains allowed 100 planes
to go aloft tn search of a C-41
missing since last Wednesday on a
flight from Spokane. Wash, to
Fairfield. Ca The military craft
carried eight persons
An Atr Force C-41 carrying 21
persons disappeared soon alter it
radioed Willtama Air Force base
near Phoenix. Ariz . that It planned
i to make an Instrument landing It
was not heard from again
Silence Closed la
A single-seater F BI fighter plane
was missing somewhere between
zPhoeuta ami El Paso. Tex It al««.
radioed that U intended to land
I and then silence closed In
Oround parties Joined with the
air searchers seeking the twin-
engined C-48 which disappeared on
n flight from Pittsburgh to Bullalo.
N Y.
They concentrated on a section
ol the rugged Allegheny National
foreat north of BrookviUe. Pa . on
the strength of a report from 14-
vear-old Ed Frampton of Clartng-
ton. who said he heard a plane
MAIL FROM POW* TO FAMILIES
Wo Wont To Frost
Eorly Again . . .
■
Today’s issue pf the
Herald went to green shortly ni-
ter noon today IB order In glee
our employes a shaaee Is
Jey the
nUef yi
n Happy
Your.
The Herald's __ _
sue will be printed We
Sapulpa alerts wtai aim he <
ed New Year's Bay.
mpteyes a MMO la 0B>
te New Year holiday. Ta
you. ere alike Herald tdB
ppy and Ol mg Irani New
Knight blflNi
Captain to fifty
Police Fine
a*mv omCBRS at U»e U. 8. Army poetofflee tn Tokyo sort eome 100
U. S. Te Bring Pressure On
Russin To Halt Kidnaping
MM Mi &
O. B.
Dense woods and fog hampered
Ute search Some area* were so
wooded that experienced deer hunt-
rs occasionally lost their way 100
feet from their parked automobiles
Headed F«r Ban Angela
The plane carried a crew of four
nnd three stewardesses It had 33
passengers aboard, three of them
small children and five ^rvtcemen.
It was operated bv the Continental
Charter Co . ,__
The C-41 was en route from Ham-
Iflton Air Force base. Cal . with
a crew of four nnd 23 passengers
when it last radioed *tl >J PJ"
Sunday The pilot reported he ws,
at 1.000 feet and intended to let
down at Williams
The plane originally was sched-
uled to land at Goodlellow Air
Force base at San Angelo. Tetr,
but changed plans, apparently be-
cause of the bad weather.
The F-61 was last heard from In
Phoenix at 3 15 p m Sunday when
Uradloed that It Intended to and
In El Paso at 3 10 p m The plane
was out of Custle Atr Force base.
Merced. Cal
Cold Wovo Hoods
For Eostorn U. S.
arty next morning at l:». fire-
men put out a fire tat a
'tsursiSi .* ■-
men went te IH> Oklklww
where they pul out a gram fire
started from intowwn cat
was the bum given by
4MMO'
Former Sopulpon
Dio* In Toxos
Funeral services were to have
been held at S p m. today In Kerr-
vtlle, Tex. for Mr*. Betty Sherwood
Oakes, formerly of Sapulpa, who
passed away Saturday. Interment
nr£it to bo thflf-
Mrs Oakes la survived by two
children and her parents, Mr and
Mra J. W. Sherwood, formerly of
this city, all of Kemrllle. two broth-
ers Joe and John Ed Sherwood of
Sapulpa. and two siatera Mrs Mar-
ietta McKay and Mr*. AUoe Stile*,
both of California._
Snimaa Beal Gettaa Ceuwiy
FREDERICK Dee. SI BB-TUI-
man county la the top cotton pro-
ducer for 1M1, unofficial crop re-
porta indicate. Latest crop reports
estimate Tillman county has pr£
dueod 52.051 bates. ernnBorod with
20,01* balm lor aocood-plaoe Jack-
son county.
Washington la known a* the "Ev-
ergreen State.”
Jilted Soldier Slays Girl
In Church, Committs Suicide
BOURBON. Ind., Dec 21 'if—Ae —
Jilted soldier home on Christmas evening. .
furlough crept up behind hi* would- Her parents. Mr and Mrx Arthur
be girl friend as she listened to Golden ol nearby Mentone, Ind .
a auiet church service Sunday were among the parishioners Who
night, killed her with two shots In witnessed theMtaorttap nod rt£ed
111*111. BIIIW eow-a •*
the back and then committed sui-
cide.
Two of the five shots fired by
Pvt Omer R Shoemaker. 34, went
wild and one plowed through a
new and injured 12-year-old Judy
Faulkner as 1M shocked church-
goers screamed
Ruth Oolden. It. an attractive
high school Junior, apparently died
Instantly after Mwemaker fired one
mu, her mine and another
Into her shoulder.
Shoemaker
Apostolic Oeepet church. Ualltng
blood. He drove hie cor nine blaeka.
and billed himself with another
bullet.
Police aoM HIM Oolden bod
formerly dated Otrtmaker but had
told him did wanted "nothing more
to de with Mm” who* be aaked
i her for a data sorter In the
to help the girl ulter Shoemaker
staggered from the church.
He stood behind the girl and
fired two bullets at her back, ooe
striking her In the shoulder oad
the other In the spine She waa
killed instantly.
•Drew Oen Aad Fired
Forest Faulkner. 51. a second
cousin of Judy and an elder of the
church, was conducting testimon-
ial services when the shooting oc-
curred
"I saw this boy enter the chureh
and «ek* a aeat In the last row,
behind Mts* Oolden." be said. "A
short time afterwards he wen* cut-
aide but came back tn again and
sat down.
•Then he got up and walked .up
By UNITED PRESS
An eastbound mass ol cold and
snowy weather raised lears Mon-
day that slippery motoring would
bring a sharp upsurge of traffic
fatalities to end the long New
Year’s holiday
Already 115 persons had died in
traffic accidents since • p m Fri-
day Another 21 lost their live* tn
fires and 38 died in miscellaneous
accidents
Forecasters said a mass oi
snow and much colder’ weather
already had spread down Irotn
Canada Into Montana, the Dakotas
and parts ol Wyoming and Ne-
br?t was moving rapidly eastward
MM should reach the Midwest and
Cast by Tuesday Just as the home-
ward-bound trek begins The Na-
tional Safety Council said the four-
day holiday might cause 350 deaths
In traffic accidents . ,
The snow-covered Midwest,
particularly Chicago, look advan-
tage of a mild weekend to shovel
away some of Its deep blanket of
bhow.
A 200-pound icicle, loosened by
the warm weather, tail from a
three-atory building. killing elght-
year-old Richard tick The Icicle
waa nearly 12 toot tan«,our
toot thick at Its widest point
••men ne got up ***» ^
behind the pew where Mlaa OolBm
waa sitting with two of her Etal
friends. He drew a gun trem hia
By MICHAEL J. O'NEILL
WA8HINOTON. Dec 31 ilB-The
United States will bring pressure
directly on Russia to stop Commu-
nist satellite countries from hold-
ing American clttaens for “ran-
som.” diplomatic sources Indicat-
ed Monday.
They said a stern warning to
Moscow to keep tt* minions in
check ta considered the most ef-
fective way to prevent a repetition
of Hungary's treatment of four U
8 airmen
The fliers were released Friday
after the Blale Department paid
1120.000 in "fines" Imposed on
them for crossing the Hungarian
frontier tn an unarmed transport
plane which lost Its way on a
(light from Oermany to Yugo-
slavia
{’apt. Swift On Way Home
P One of the ransomed airmen,
Capt John Bwlft of Olens Falls.
NY, was scheduled to fly here
Monday en route to Syracuse. N
Y . to see his ailing lather. Plans
cailed lor Bwlft to atop over in the
capital lor about an hour to talk
to newsmen about hta "Interroga-
tion" by Russian and Hungarian
officials. . I
High officials still were confer-
ring over what further steps this,
country should take to make Hun-
gary regret Its venture tn Inter-
national "extortion ” |
The Bute Department already!
has retaliated against the Red gov-i
eminent by closing Hungarian con-1
nutates in New York and Cleve-
land. O.. and banning travel of
American clttaens In Hungary
While no final decisions have
been made on future strategy,
diplomatic informants sized up the
possibilities this way:
Lille Leeway Eceaemleally
A warning to Moscow la very
likely As one dlplomut put tt. “u |
we are going to prevent a recur-
rence of this high-handed business,
Moscow la the place to go .’’ The
State Department set a precedent
by going directly to the Soviet
foreign office to secure the release
of the airmen held tn Hungary
United Nations sctlon The
secret trial ’undoubtedly” will be
reported to the UN
Economic sanctions: since u. B.
trade with Hungary already la
virtually non-existent, there does
nut appear to be much leeway lor
punitive measures In UUs Held.
Breaking diplomatic relations:
The State Department view la that
this gesture la a two-edged sword.
Losing the U » "listening poet
in Budapest would harm this coun-
1 try. It ta felt, at least as mych as
a diplomatic rupture would harm
Hungary.
Effort* to propagaf pheasant*
In Thus
overcoat
firing.
pocket and
aeodtttana.
_ hove been
I, food and cover
HaapMnl - BMa Jaa. I
CLINTON. Dae. 21
130.000 renovation project at West-
ern Oklahoma Elate hospUal won t
be accepted until Jan 1. R*x Mad-
den. hospital business manager
aaye the project calls for general
I repairs and radecarettona
, Ttta lint democratic legislature tn
America wag the Virginia Hoane of
-————I bi mg.
Sapulpa Girl, 11,
Dks Of Burw
Barbara Fern Heath. 11-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jamas J.
Heath ’U2 E Perkins, died of burns
she aullered Nov. 22.
She waa burned when her dreaa
caught fhre after she apparently
barked too close to a stove. She died
yesterday afternoon at Curry clin-
ic she was bom In Sapulpa on
April 12. 1*40 „ .
Survivor* betides the parents. In-
clude two elater*. Jo Ann and Lata
both of the .tome; two brother*. J.
W. Kellyvtlle and Donald, Wichita.
Funeral service* will be held Wed-
nesday afternoon ** 3 10 o'clock at
the Assembly of God church with
Rev L L. Osborn offlc’aUng aataat-
ed by Rev O W Ataup Burial will
be In South Height* cemetery under
the direction of Owen-LandrlUt
funeral home.
Incomt Toxpoytrt
1 Insultad By Form
Asking For Com
WASHINGTON. Dec II I*-
Bome taxpeyer*. touchy about
scandals In the Internal Reve-
nue bureau, were "insulted"
when the burewu recently ap-
pealed to them to avoid er-
rors on their Income tax re-
turns.
Internal Revenue Commls-
Hioner John B Dunlap, in a
letter to each of 53.000.000 tax-
payers. asked for greater care
tn making out returns He said
14.000.000 return* last year had
error* which Increased the coat
of the tax collection Job i
Nearly »» irate taxpayer*
promptly returned Dunlap*
form letter, with a note scrawl-
ed serosa it. telling him he'd
belter clean up around hla own
doorstep first.
Many of the note* contained
caustic references to "mink
eoal*.’’ "Influence |>eddlers,"
sod "corruption"
One taxpayer told Dunlap
the government should stop col-
lecting taxes altogether until a
house-c leaning U completed
Sopulpo I OOF
To Tulsa Thursday
There will be no meeting of Bapul-
pa Odd Fellow lodge on Thursday.
Jan. 2. according to Max nob-
le grand. Instead Sapulpa tadgewUI
participate with Tulsa County Ocan-
cU In conferring the lidtlatory «ta-
grve at Aurora lodge No. IS. Bit B.
since.
He ta the
force at the |------
Knight etartod Mi ----
an early age. He opart hta
time around tha pattae efttL. .
Wagoner a* a ho*. BBd at tha 20Bj
IS ' wm----- —
Wa.-----
Ha Mowed 9* Tula* totalta,
ten Into tha Aran, tae Ml
Aran March 4. BE, and
wart at Sapulpa._
Aircraft Warfcar
HoM At %mpeat
In Twin Mwdor
SANTA MONICA. OsL.
ir—Police held » "love
ed’
bing theta male oaanartr~ -
an early maralBE party.
Merton C. Mtaapar, 24. i
ed in elty Jail aMto MBB.
Cramer. »i, waa tart,.**
J&XX&
Mrs
gun ahof
hospital.
Officers
Mrs.
_ Mrs.__
UrtS*3Ka*
the lie
mer,
friend. In the
M. Beck
M keener shot
26-caliber
said, and
kntle and
outside W
■many Umaa.”
Beck waa tn citaleal
Santo Mantes heaftaaL
Neighbor Crtta Fetaee
“I could never have dona a
thing Uko that." Mtaaner MM
lice whan he waa
Assistant Chief ol 1 ___
Horn aatd Mtaaner refused to -
firm or deny that he had ehrt
women ,_
Beck, who waa weak taaaa
lorn of blood, said "yea." whar
fleers asked If it waa Miaener
stabbed him.
Police were called to the
low by a neighbor, Harr
who osld ha Ind
chase
heard
■areas
Portland,
ha vlnt S 1
Maine.
extends a cordial btvltoUea to iH
Sapulpa membtrs to ittauu tiuu
, meeting. Hush raid.
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 101, Ed. 1 Monday, December 31, 1951, newspaper, December 31, 1951; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1492009/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.