Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 247, Ed. 1 Friday, June 20, 1958 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
.
Page 4—Sapulpa (Okla) Herald, Friday, June 20, 1958
/C’U/J
Visitors In
Brown llomr
Mr. and Mrs S. P Bearden nf
Nashville. Tenn , aie i itinp In Hi
home ol Mr and Mrs H. C Brown,
1120 E McKinley. Mis B< srtlen Is
the daughter ot th-* Brown They
plan to return home thi, Sunday.
♦ ♦ ♦
Former Sapulpan*
Make Brief Visit
Mrs. DcRoo.tc Ooettlng and two
sons Joel and Robin of Baioti
Rouge, La. visited here briefly vr
terday with Mrs. Clifford Fttlp.
Mrs. Fonton Brigance and other
friends Mrs. Gootting, a fortnet
Sapulpa. was rnroult to Paw hits-
ka to visit her sister Mrs. Glen
Gordon.
♦ ♦ ♦
Young Matron
Is Complimented
Gift* for babv were present I t i
Mrs Leonard Long at a show r g.v
en Wednesday night In th.
home of Mrs. H L. Payne 100 E
Dewey, with Mrs Payne anil Mr
Kircn Elliott hostess
Ptnk and white colors were Bre-
ed In party appotntmeni Punch
and cak - were served after the gift
were opened
Ouc-ts were Miss Betsy Brav.
Miss Mary Shumatd. Miss Sue Pagi-
Mrs. Bob Boren. Mi.. Jams Bonn,
Mbs Judy Curry, Miss Lind • Car-
ver. Miw Mntv Sue Rc/'.t. M. Pat
A REELECT
I SCOTT
I BURSON I
■ Democrat
9S EXAMINER and
■ INSPECTOR
■ Second Term
3v Keep State Auditing in
■ Experienced Hands
'omen
Rhodes, Mbs Judy Eden, Miss Mary
I -ul .p Giacomo.
Miss Li/ Smith. Mi Kit Snnrl.
M K., Irt .1 P it B >m-
gnrdn r Mi*.* Cheryl Snider. Mis.
Eugene Powshitk, Mi - K y Casey.
Mr Waik- Cisey. Mrs J U Wood.
Mrs. McCrackln, Mrs. Jolui Mobley,
and the lionoree.
♦ ♦ ♦
Iteliearsal Binner
Set I or This Evening
Mr. and Mrs. X Jones. 1™ R
Walnut, will entertain at dinner
this evening following rehear al for
the wedding ceremony of their
,1 .lighter. Mi s Stele Jones, this
city, and Robert Theodore Smith.
Oklnhomu City.
Dinner will be served at the 1800
Restaurant in Tulsa to members of
th • wedding party and these addi-
t.onul guests. Dr. and Mrs Roy C
Smith. Dr and Mrs .1 F. Curry.
Mr and Mrs. Guy Berry. Sr . all
o[ this city, and Mr. rnd Mr*. E A
Manhardt of Evanston. 111. aunt
and uncle of the bride-elect.
♦ ♦ ♦
W eliding Guests
Arrived Today
Among guests in tin home of Mr
mid Mrs X Jones. 108 S. Walnut,
nic the former's si iter and her hus-
band. Mr and Mrs E A Manhardt
of Evan.ton, III who arrived to-
day to attend the veddtng of Mi
Susie Jones which will take place
tomorrow night.
♦ ♦ ♦
.Mrttimli.t Women
Have Program Meeting
The First Method.st Wonien's So-
riety of Christian Sen ice hrld It*
monthly meeting In the church
Wednesday
"Do All to the Olory of God."
was the theme for tlu- prayer tv-
treat directed by Mis. Ralph Mil-
ler at 12:30 In the chapel
At the social hour the Maude
Bartlett Circle served luncheon to
31 members and these guests: Rev.
Littleton Fowler. Rev Don Ford.
Mr* W M Flack of Jackson, Tenn
and Mrs Lavtima Porter of Phoe-
nix.. Arlz.
It was voted during the business
GORDON DOLLIN5 Sc"icc
Station
Main ot Thompson Phone 218
USED WHITFWALL TIRES..........any size $5.95
NEW PREMIUM TUBES ........... to* incl. $2.95
Wash—Cleaner—Polish
WAX
Sinclair—Sinclair—Stnc’iir—Sinclair
$3.50
LOANS for HOME REPAIRS
See us if you need extra cash to
pay for ANY kind of work
around your place.
Repay conveniently over a
period of months.
ses .on to contribute $10 toward
sending a yotitn from th Simden
Chapel to summer bible school at
i .in - i si Mr ■ Hebt Fln< h. Jr.,
and Mrs W E Pearce were elected
delegates to the school of m. ions
a. c. niip Egan beg.i s..n - July 21 ft
was nnounced that officers train-
ing day will ne at Fu t Methodist
church. Tulsa. June 27 Mrs. George
Tate received the oc’.ct) einbieni
pm for h iving tfic BKMt circle in1 m-
bers present.
In expression of the subject
"S.nglng, March We On." Mis. J
| T. Anderson led the assembly in a
worship service
Tile program presented In the
form ef a conversation between Mrs
Littleton Fowler and Mrs. W E
Pearce proved the etfeetlve results
of occupational evangelism til mis-
sion fields.
* ♦ ♦
f amily Picnic
Closes ( iuh brasnn
A family picnic last evening at
tin home of Mr nd Mrs. John Ru-
l>ort at Kiefer, terminated the cur-
| rent club season for Chrysanlhe-
iiiuin unit of Sapulpa Garden club
Member* and families attending
were Mr and Mrs. Julm Ruper
and children Robin, Jan, Gay
, and Todd, Mr*. G B Hallmark.
Mi and Mis Rulxrt Chambers.
Cindy and Rod. Mr. and Mr*
' Sam D Na.f.-h and children
CliU, Ginger and Mike, Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny Hahn, Mr. und Mrs !
James E. Jonley, Mike and Ca-
rolyn.
Mrs Bernadtne Harrison anc!
Janice, Mr. mid Mrs. Pearman
Herrin and Shawn. Mr aiid Mr*
Robert W Harlow and sons Kn
, and Rus ell. Mr and Mrs. Joe
Moore and children Pat n r#ri
Mike, Mr and Mrs. Roy Baxter.
Jr, Randy and Larry Baxter,
Mr und Mrs. Amon Young, Jr ,
I und Maiiniu.
♦ ♦ ♦
Weekend finest
Herr From Enid
Miss Jody Dosicr of Enid arrived
| yesterday and is the weekend house
| gm si of Mias Jean Brown, 121 W
Bryan. Miss Do :cr Ls to by a mem-1
I ber of the wedding party of Mis-
, Susie Jones and Robert Theodore
| Smith tomorrow night.
♦ ♦ ♦
Dinner Honor*
June Bride-To-Be
Miss Betty Hulf who will become'
the bride of Wtlliam H. Seay in a
I ceremony lo t ike place June 28. was |
complimented W e d u e s d a y at1
j dinner nt 6 30 p. ni
Hostesses wort Mrs G. L. Berry. I
and Mrs. Guy Berry. Jr., in1
the former's home at 523 S. Poplar
| Ouesls were limited to members
of the wedding party and a few close
friends of Miss Huff. Out of town
guests were Mrs. John Dean and
Mrs. Fenton Rainey, Norman, and
Mrs. Kenneth Neal, Sand Springs.
lead, Zinc Workers,
Idled By Shutdown,
See Lillie Prospects
HENUYETTA l UPD-Clo.se to
600 lead and z nc worker*, idled
by the Feb 15 shutdown of the
Kagle-Picher MTJJlter, t day saw
little hope of going back to work j
any time soon
O A. Rockwell, general man-
ager of the mlnlr. r and smelting I
division of the plant, charged that
President E.-enlvjwer b.o e faith
with the lnda-:ry Thursday In
making his dec: i n t > freezo
current tariff rates on imported
lead and zinc
•'ll means the industry will be
in more ol a me s than ii iia*
been,” Rockwell said
lew Find Jobs
Mayer Bill Has.,eberg ol Picher.
center cf the once-thrivir.g but
now dormant trl-state mining em-
pire, told United Press Interna-
tional his city ls now a "ghost
Lciwn."
Ha.s.*ebcrg said a few of tire
worker, Ivad been a ike t-> find 0*1
jobs but about 100 are "walking
the streets." He aid several
hundred others had left town for
the uranium pits around Grants.
N M.
Representatives ol ttie Hcnrycltu
. inelter -met with the negotiating
committee of the Untied K'cel
Workers Union here Thursday
afternoon.
"The current -• tu&ticn confront-
ing the zinc industry wa*. discussed
and the company presented a plan
for re-opening the Henryetta plant
on an econirnic basis for the
union's consideration.” John
Wade, plant manager, said.
Meeting Is Tonight
Claud Swartz, president of the
union's local -1327, said a special
meeting of the members would
Couple Advised To
Take Rabies Shots
eo.s amoei.es turii— a man
ai.d v u<an hunted by Texas and j
Cklah na ixilire were located at
E A Thursday and ad-!
v: i-.l 1 begin taking rabies shot*
Immediately.
Mr and Mrs. Walter Hilfhotlse
who had been visiting a brother
11 Cu mi-. Ok'a. lett Oklahoma
Tue tiny and were believed cn
route to San Angelo. Tex.
The brother, who w-as not Iden-
tified said he contacted the cou-:
pie Thursday. He said their baby I
had been btt'en by a rabid ani-
mal before ihey left ttieir South
American home.
Medical authorities advised the
Mitlhou ex to take rabies shots a.*
a precaution.
be called tonight to <Ji,c:uss the
p: po-al, bu' added that It would
be sent to the legal department
01 the union fer study.
Mining Interests in Oklahoma
hue a ipportcd a controversial up-
watd revision in lead and zinc 1
: ir.tt • Ei-enhower, in making his
da.*:on Thursday, dedimt-nd to'
rule for the present on a u:.ani-1
n us tariff commission reco.r.-
mcndation to increase lead and
zinc duties.
"The maustry Is not In very 1
.1 hap?.” Rockwell said, add-
i: - "we had heped for favorable
action by the President so that
perhaps we could get back some
of the bu mess and put *ome of
u employes back to work.”
Two Tornadoes Rip
Texas Panhandle
By United Press International
Two confirmed tornadoes ripped
Into the Texas Panhandle early
tec ay injuring two persons and
inflicting heavy property damage.)
There also were reports of three
other tornadoes in the area
The most severe o! the tvLslers.
a 150-yard wide funnel, struck
Just north of B rger. Injuring two
persons, demolishing a trailer
home and damaging three larm
building*.
A second confirmed twister was
recorded by Amarillo highway
policemen, who said it struck
over farm country between Lalor.s
and McLean. Th.-e additional
tornadoes were sighted near S.art-
ford. Spearman and Kerrick.
Meanwhile, hola'd thunder-
storms foil in Oregon, Arizona an l
New Mexico, but. in general, ram
was confined in the pre-dawn
hours to few widely aepara'ed
areas ca.*t of the Continental Di-
1 vide.
One of thc*e area* stretched
from eastern Ohio and We'* Vlr- j
gima eastward over much of
Pennsylvania and parts of Vir-
ginia It did not. however, quite
reach the Atlantic seaboard.
The second large area of rain j
was along the Ro.-kii-- fr n Mon-)
tar.a southward through Wyoming1
ar.d Colorado, extending ea--'vnr-1
into the western sections of Sou'h
D.ikc-:a. Ntbia-ka and Kansu*.
Scattered showers also were
forecast tor southern Indians,
where townspeople at Vincennes
reinforced levee- ag.»in*l the dan-
gerously rising Waba .h River.
Roc-k Sprlns. Wyo., recorded 1,
Inch cf rain Thursday night. C!nd-
ron. Neb. and Hard City. SD,
a. 0 recorded one-half inch I,akin
Kan . experienced hill stones one-
half Inch In diameter.
Warm and humid weather
Thursday night made sleeping
ra;her uncomfortable frrm Texa*
eaatward acroaa the Gulf state*
to the Atlantic coast.
The Senate voted to kill the 3
per cent excise tax on r ill freight
and the 10 per cent levy on pas-
senger ticket*. The measures were
tacked on a Hci c-pa.s-sed bill to
extend for another year the 52 per
cent corporate tax rate and pres-
ent excise iate* on liquor, cigar-
ettec. and au'os.
STACY HOWARD
Democrat
FOR
SHERIFF
VOTE
JULY
1st
r
DR. J. W. FREDERICK
OPTOMETRIST
TELEPHONE 2510
2nd Floor, Solisi Building
8’/j Eait Dewey
VAN DEl.BLN
SEPTIC TANKS
30 years in and around Tulsa
Slate Approved
3007 West \dmiral
LI ther 7-6140
Residence l.l'ther 5-9816
picbeltJloaH \^cntpanif
BERR1 Mill. HUH..
For After Office Houri Service, Phone 766
T f I t P II O X I S
JU WLi
Here
A Ol RI. for Mr. and Mrs Don
Burnett. Kiefer. She weighed five
pounds, nine ounces when she ar-
I lived at Hillrre*t hospital. Tulsa.
May 27. They have named her
1 Katheryn Limn.
Grandparents arr Mr. and Mrs.
Carson Antrikin. Kiefer, and Mr.
and Mr* H. W. Burnett, Memphis.
A G IRL Tor Mr and V's John
Hickey. 2121 W Edison. Tulsa. She
weighed seven pounds. 15 ounces at
1 birth Wednesday at Curry hos-
pital They have given her the name
Bonnie Sue.
Ijiwii re earelitrs say that lawnr-
thould lie fertilized af leaU three j
time.- n year.
Tou Wreck -hni—We Eix ‘tm
GEO. E. MARTIN
BODY & FENDER SHOP
Factory Baked Auto I’ahtting
EASY PAYMENT PLAN
Sapulpa * Body and Paint Shop
since 1921.
203 II. Ili.hson
Phone 760
Bottled by Sopulpo Coco Colo Bottling Co.
Farmers Union
Insurance
• City Property
• Farm Property
• Public Property
• Farm Liability
4t Automobile
• Hospital
• LIFE (The Best!)
W. I. Cunningham
1140 E. Hobson
Phone 1035
Abner Shackleford
727 S. Qucnoth
Phone 955 W
PRESCRIPTIONS
Carefully and Promptly Filled by Registered Pharmacist
PHONE 2800—Free Auto Delivery
BATEMAN DRUG
We Give S&H Green Stamps
Alfred Reel, Owner
FOR SALE
1953 CHEVROLET Bel Air Hardtop, 2-door.
Nicely equipped with:
• Radio • Heater • New White Walls
# Power-Glide Transmission
37,000 ACTUAL MILES—EXTRA SLICK
STANDARD (HEVROLET (0.
100-122 South Main
Phones 2779 or 485
RE-ELECT
Heber Finch, Jr.
- k
STATE
REPRESENTATIVE
A Sincere, Dependable Man
El* m
If you don't know him,
ask your friends and neighbors
SPECIAL SATURDAY ONLY
' ;V:' " •
All Meat
BOLOGNA 3 lbs.
a*: k:.
GEARL S SUPER MARKET
101 E. Hobson OPEN SUNDAYS
Gcorl Barkley and Eddie Carson, Owners
Phone 173
Plenty of Free Parking
TRUTH
ABOUT THE RACE FOR GOVERNOR OF OKLAHOMA
(".....And ye shall know, the truth,
end the truth shall make you free"J
THE FIRST TRUTH-'The Double Play"
The State Machine and the Power Politicians behind it are working
hard to name BOTH runoff candidates for Governor—to assure their
control of the Democratic nominee. Machine Candidate No. 1 and
Machine Candidate No. 2, both supported by top officials of the State
Administration, are pledged to give Oklahoma FOUR MORE YEARS
OF THE SAME OLD POLITICAL CONTROL OF ROADS, SCHOOLS AND
WELFARE.
THE SECOND TRUTH-"Thc Man the Politicians Fear Most’'
J. HOWARD EDMONDSON, the courageous, fighting county attorney
who defied the political powers of Oklahoma by running for Gover-
nor, was first to expose "The Double Play" and the State Machine's
attempt to hand-pick BOTH RUNOFF CANDIDATES, thereby robbing the
people of a free Democratic choice.
EDMONDSON, whose record of vigorous prosecution of dishonest of-
. ficials led one newspaper to comment that "Edmondson has demon-
strated beyond r*l question that the Court House cannot hold both
himself and corruption at one and the same time," is the man most
feared by Power Politicians and the Political Rings all over the State.
£drr-ondpop^'00 -
t .riW** .y,e TRUTH-"Edmondson Can Win
C I barter* <°r f EverV da* ,he evidence grows that J. HOWARD EDMONDSON CAN
\ ...........
THE THIRD TRUTH-"Thc Big Red E Program"
EDMONDSON S fighting and constructive Big Red E program far a
greater Oklahoma, designed to take the crooked politics ond waste
out of Oklahoma roads, schools and welfare and restore public con-
fidence in State Government, is a program you can support and vote
for with pride and confidence.
**9t&r!i2P?z£‘
■e«' 01 V i the v" «
CVh*
utitV 9°'
i
-LOH)Lr;>
WIN. He is the one young, new candidate with a constructive program
WHO IS GAINING STEADILY, STATEWIDE. Edmondson's rate ef gain
in United Press polls between May end the second week of June was
a PHENOMENAL 79 PER CENT. The Edmondson "prairie fire campaign"
since June 1st has won for him statewido recognition as "the fastest
rising candidate for Governor."
KNOW THE TRUTH AND FREE OKLAHOMA
FROM MACHINE POLITICAL CONTROL!
Join The Prairie Fire Drive And Support
J. HOWARD EDMONDSON
DEMOCRAT FOR GOVERNOR
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View three places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 247, Ed. 1 Friday, June 20, 1958, newspaper, June 20, 1958; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1492464/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.