Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, February 27, 1961 Page: 3 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Calendar
Monday
Emanem club -- 7:45 p.m. Mrs
J. F. Curry, 1411 East Fairview
Heart Fund Coffee - all da\
at Berryhill building lobby spon
sored by Tuesday Afternoon club
Susanna Wesley class, First
Methodist church - 12 o'clocl
luncheon Mrs 0. R. Rule, Mrs
J. D. Guthrie, Mrs John Dore-
mus and Mrs. Mary Ellis hoa
teasel.
Pythian Sisters - 8 p.m. Odd
Fellow hall
Called meeting ESA council -
• p.m. American National Bank
club room.
Tibbens home Demonstratior
club - 1 30 p.m. Mrs. Lloyd
WWnery, 719 South Birch.
Tuesday
Parent - Child Psychology club
8 p.m. Mrs Ernest Wheeler, 55
West Mockingbird Lane.
Driftwood Unit, Sapulpa Gar*
den club - 7:30 p.m. American
National Bank club room.
Lone Star Home Demonstration
club - 1.30 p.m. Mrs. Cloe Abner,
404 South Hickory.
Athenaeum Club •• 8 p.m. Mrs
Roy Turnbull, 423 South indep-
endence.
Happy Hour club ~ 2 p.m. Mrs
Rodney Routsong. 5236 South Col-
umbia Place, Tulsa.
Dorcas Class - First Baptist
church 2 p.m. at the church, Mrs
Frank Miller and Mrs. L. W
House, hostesses.
Sapulpa Home Demonstration
club - 10:30 a m. in library club
room.
North Heights WMU - 7:30
p.m. at the church.
Out*Ad Sum Club - 130 p.m
American Legion hut, Mrs. J. G
Barbee. Mrs. Katie Sager. Mrs.
Ivan Smith, Mrs. R. F. Morgan
and Mrs. W. R. Prater hostesses
Women’s Night circle LDS -
7:30 p.m. Mrs. Nellie Ledsworth,
1111 East McLeod.
Wednesday
Glen Hill Home Demonstration
club - Mrs. G. K. Gentis hostess
Presbyterian Women's Associa
tion - 1:30 p.m. at the church
Mrs F. W. Pratt. Mrs C. G.
Witte, Mrs. Frank Collins and
Mrs 6. R. Ramsey hostesses
Flrat Baptist WMU circles -
9:30 a.m. Rebecca Sue, Mrs. W
E. Bragg. 406 South Linden; 130
p.m. Martha Tanner, Mrs. Earl
Cola, 104 East Jackson; Mary Jo
McMurray, Mrs. Harold Perry.
83 West Mike. Virginia Miles at
the church, Mrs. Chester Miller
hostess
First Methodist Esther circle -
4 p m. at the church.
Thursday
Kiwanianns - coffee Mrs. Don
McMasters, Jr., 1407 East Mc-
Leod.
Norman Home Demonstration
club - Mrs. Hutchins.
Amaranth Court - election of
officers Masonic hall.
Good Will Club - Mrs Cora
Simpson. 116 South Division, ev-
ening meeting
Lo-Ki-Ha Study club - Mrs
Otis Rule. 203 South Maple.
Stitch and Chat club - 7:30
p.m. Mrs. Nola Saner. 118 South
Maple
Lady Elks - 7:30 p.m. member-
ship contest losers fete winners.
Mrs. M. M. Jackson hostess
chairman.
Ladies Auxiliary Brotherhood
of Railway Trainmen - 2 p.m
Odd Fellow hall. *
Friday
PEO Chapter DT - 1:30 p m
Mrs. Louis V. Stuart. 1414 East
Fatrview
Builders class. First Christian
church - bean supper 7 p.m
church dining room.
Priscilla Club - Mrs. A. J.
Whitfield. 204 South Hickory.
Saturday
VFW Auxiliary Past Presi
dent's club - Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Lowe, Kiefer.
omen
fU Of 3n M m
Churches — Parties - Organizations
■ntorod m ncoil-rUM mat An>‘ *. 181C a* thu Pool Offwe
Ui Sapulpa. Oklahoma, uudar an act ol March 1, UUT
Sapulpa (Okla 1 Herald, Monday, February 27, 1961—Page 3
r
Television Moslems, Communists Both Feel
In Review Their Ideology Will Win World
Quotes In
The News
£££
Were Telling
YOU!
BY
FAYE DUNLAP
John Brock, a new postal clerk
recently received his uniform and
according to his five year old son,
Jimmy . . , "he looks real
snazzy” . . .
PS . . . We hear his wife thinks
so too!
Small Parties
Entertain Groups
On Two Birthdays
Jan Curry and Bill Curry cele-
brated birthdays within a few
days of each other the past week
Jan's party on Saturday was in
honor of her seventh birthday an-
niversary, with her mother Mrs
I J. F Curry hostess in their home.
1411 East Fairview.
Her guests were Missy Berry,
Kate Allen, Terri Maulding, Jul-
ie Edgerton, Judith McMasters,
Debbie Atkinson, Rhonda Lewal-
len, Cindy Sutton and JoLynn
Patty.
There were birthday games,
favors for each guest, and re-
freshments of birthday cake and
ice cream.
Bill's party on Tuesday cele-
brated his fifth birthday.
Joining him in birthday festiv-
Mrs R. W. Anderson, 117 West tion foreman for Pure Oil Com-lities were Scott Whitten, Saundra
FLO ANDERSON . . . president of Pure Oil Ladies
Club. (Photo by Tony Doudican)
Club President Has Been
Resident Here One Year
Bryan, president of the POL
Pure Oil Ladies» club finds her
hobbies and chief interests in her
jwn home.
She loves to sew, now mostly
ior her grandchildren, but when
her own children were younger
she made most of their clothes
Her family consists of herself
and her husband, who is produc-
Thursday Club
Has Informal
Afternoon Meet
Miss Blanche Katz, 114 West
Thompson, was hostess at the re-
cent meeting of Thursday club
Members attending were Mrs.
Brooke Thrift. Mrs. Ben Bra-
den, Mrs, T. R. Berton, Mrs
Charley Bartlett, Mrs Guy Ber-
Sr., Mrs. Herbert Johnson,
Mrs. Curt Edgerton, Mr. and Mrs
J. Donovan.
Thompson Returns
To Nikita With
Kennedy Message
MOSCOW tUPI> — U S Ambas
sador Llewellyn Thompson re-
turns to Moscow from Washing-
ton today with broad new negotia-
ting powers and a personal mes
sage from President Kennedy to
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev.
The contents of the
meeting of ESA council at 8 p.m
Monday in American National
message Bank club room Every member
were not disclosed in advance but i of all three chapters is asked to
was known that Thompson be present for an important busi-
would convey Kennedy's desire ness meeting,
for improvement in relations be-
Tasty Cheese Bake
NEW YORK <UPI> - Com
muffins with cheese topping are
easy to make. Sift together 14
cups of enriched com meal,
cup of sifted enriched flour,
teaspoon of salt, 3 teaspoons ol
baking powder and 2 tablespoons
of sugar Add 1 egg. 1 cup
milk and V« cup of softened shoi
tening. Beat about 1 minute with
rotary beater, until batter
smooth. Do not overheat.
Stir in Vi teaspoon of celen
seed Spoon butter into 12 grea:
ed muffin cups. Bake 12 minute
in a pre-heated. 425-degrce oven
Remove from oven, crisscross
each muffin with 2 strips I
process sharp cheese and bake
3 to 4 minutes more
FREE
DEMONSTRATIONS
Reduce INCHES!
SLENDER-way
SALON
BA 4-4503
11 North Main
pany, and two children, both mar-
ried. They are Wesley Anderson,
who with his wife and baby dau-
ghter, bom in January, 1961,
lives in Bartlesville; and Mrs.
Harold Yelton, the former Peggy
Anderson, who with her husband
and three year old daughter,
also lives in Bartlesville.
Anderson has been with Pure
Oil company for 30 years, and
his work has taken them to many
Oklahoma towns to live for a
few years. They came to Sapulpa
a year ago in March from Pauls
Valley.
Mrs. Anderson is a member of
the First Methodist church here,
and the Eastern Star chapter in
Delaware. Okla She loves gar-
dening and with her husband
shares an interest in summer
fishing trips.
The Pure Oil Ladies club is
composed of wives of Pure Oil
employes, both active and retir-
ed, and meets once a month for
a social meeting
Other officers of the club are
Pauline McCurry, vice president;
Mrs. L. M. Donham, secretary; |
Mrs Norma Taylor, treasurer
and Mrs. Fay Fox. reporter.
Lou Maulding, Bill Freeman and
Ricky Treeman. Mrs. Curry, ac-
companied by Jan, took the group
to Tulsa to visit the Big Bill and
Oomagog show on TV.
By FRED DANZIG
NEW YORK (LTPI»—Come with
me on a tour of some interesting
TV experiments that kept the lube
glowing Sunday aftemooo.
In one lab, we met President
John F. Kennedy, in another.
Leonard Bernstein, and across the
hall, in less cloistered surround-
ings, Prof Jackie Gleason
"Accent." a new CBS-TV series
devoted to the arts and letters,
presented "Rohert Frost: An
American Poet, and Mr. Ken-
nedy. as they say on TV, was the
special guest star The half-hour
consisted chiefly of photo scan
ning. accompanied by Frost's re-
corded voice and unobtrusive har-
monica playing by John Sebas-
tian. The design of the program
was faulty in that too often the
pictures didn’t meet the flavor, or
spirit of the flanncl-shirted, steel-
rimmed poetry.
But lavas more interested here
in seeing how the President fit
into the show. After all, it has
been a long time since I looked
at one of these programs and
found a President participating.
I'm entirely in favor of our
chief executives getting into the
act when and if possible, but I
wish it were possible to integrate
his performance more closely to
the temper of the program. Mr.
Kennedy's appearance in this
poet-and-president's overture im-
parted a jarring, formalized “sup-
port-the-Red-Cross" air to the
proceedings, surrounded as he
was by the trappings of his office.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Following
Is Uw ort-ond of iwo dispatches
by I-ouls Tassels. I'Pl religion
editor, about the important rote
of the Islamte faith in Africa.
By LOlIS TASSELS
United Press International
Many Westerners have the false
idea that Moslems worship Mo-
hammed But as their creed
clearly shows, they are intensely
monotheistic. Mohammed never
claimed to be, and has never
been regarded by Moslems as,
anything more than a human
prophet.
The founder of Islam was born
in the Arabic city of Mecca about
570 A.D. As a driver with a camel
caravan, he made several trips to
Jerusalem, where he became fa
miliar with Judaism and Christi-
anity Mohammed drew freely on
these older faiths in formulating
his own teaching. He taught that
Jesus was a great human prophet
but that his life was cut short be
fore he could complete all his
work, so God called forth another
prophet — Mohammed — to finish
the job of revelation
The new revelations which Mo-
hammed said were given to him
in a cave near Mecca were writ-
ten down in a book called the
Koran Moslems accord this book
the same reverence that Chris-
tians accord to the Bible They
regard it as the word of God.
( hanged Arab Behrl
The principal religious Insight
of the Koran — that there is one
"jinns" and demons.
The Koran spells out a Mos-
lem's religious and moral obliga-
tions in explicit detail The reli-
gious duties are primarily these:
1 To face Mecca and pray five
times each day — at sunrise, at
noon, in the early afternoon, at
sunset and at the fall qf darkness
2. To give 24 per cent of ones
wealth to the poor each year.
(This is not 24 per cent of an-
nual income, but of all the prop-
erty that a Moslem owns )
3. To fast during the holy month
of Ramadan, ninth month of the
year on the Arabic calendar.
Fasting means going without any
food or drink — not even a sip
of water — from sunrise to sun
get.
4. To make a pilgrimage to
Mecca at least once in a lifetime.
This requirement is binding only
on Moslems who are physically
and economically able to under
take the trip.
Code is Relaxed
In the past, devout Moslems
were forbidden to gamble, drink
alcoholic beverages, eat pork, or
By United Press International
TOKYO - Katsumori Yamashi-
.... ® , ro. commander of the Japanese
historically demonstrated willmg-l (ha, rammed the tOT.
ness to use violence, if necessary, ^ ski red b President
to advance their causes | in *orld War Rlving
More than a thousand years a new account of the incident:
ago, during the first ' golden era" I ..u wa8 a slmp|e accident, and
of Islam. Moslem caliphs spread , messaged the (Japanese) high
munism also have in common an
their faith at sword's point across
the entire reach of North Africa
and into Spain
Threatened Western Europe
Until Charles Martel defeated
command of the accident.''
NEW YORK - President Ken-
nedy. discussing politics and
poetry on a television program
their invasion of France at Tours honoring Robert Frost:
in 732 A.D, it seemed that all "I think politicians and poets
of Western Europe was destined share at least one thing and that
including
the desk and micro- God. who is a compassionate fa-
phones. However. I suppose this
sort of sideline is so new to TV
ther to all mankind — will hardly
sound like a new discovery to
that they're all a bit awed. If it those raised in the Judaeo-Chris-
ever comes to a choice between jtian tradition But it was an ex-
Ike Denies He
(rilicized JFK
PALM SPRINGS. Calif <UPI)—
Former President Dwight D. Ei-
senhower Sunday night categoric-
ally denied criticism of the Ken
nedy administration attributed to
him by Sen. Karl E. Mundt,
R-SD.
In one of the few prepared
statements he has issued since
arriving on vacation at this desert
resort Feb. 8. Eisenhower de-
scribed Mundt's report as in
accurate, saying he has so far
made no judgment of the new
administration.
Eisenhower said he “very much
unbending staging and non-[citing new thought to the Arabs
participation. I'd choose the form- of Mohammed's day, whose reli-
er, of course.
to become a province of Islam.
Today Islam is no longer win-
ning converts as it did in the 8th
Century by confronting them with
the choice of proclaiming their
faith in Allah or having their
throats cut. It Is winning them
is that their greatness depends on
the courage with which they face
the challenges of life ”
l/ONDON - Playboy Edward
Langley, commenting on the fact
that four wealthy families have
throughout Africa by doing more] taken action to prevent their
zealously the same king of mis- young daughters from seeing
sionary work that Christians are him:
doing on a feebler scale, and by "I am caught up in a vicious
approaching the task with a more and tiresome circle."
acceptable record on the all- -
important racial issue. NEW YORK — Magistrate Her-
But there is no reason to be- man Weinkrantz, at the arraign-
lieve that Islam has forsworn vio- ment of former baseball star
charge interest on loans, but these [ence The Koran does not say j Hank Thompson who was arrest-
anvthing about turning the other ed for allegedly holding up a bar:
cheek It specifically condones! "You are a very serious disap-
vengeance against those who have pointment to thousands of base-
restrictions have bean relaxed
gion was a primitive polytheism
in which the one moderately be-
A much more successful and nig*) god — Allah — was outnum-
rewarding experiment was ' Oedi-
pus Rex—Drama into Opera."
with which Leonard Bernstein and
the New York Philharmonic con-
cluded their season.
This artistically awesome, com-
mercially risky assignment saw
Bernstein pull apart and piece
together the searing tragedy by
Sophocles while showing us how
Igor Stravinsky translated the
drama into an opera-oratorio. The
bered by a horde of malevolent
regretted" Mundt's issuance of play, acted in mildly modernized
yet necessarily flamboyant style.
live report. He also denied that it
accurately reported his views on
public affairs or on his personal
plans.
Mundt made t h e comments
about the former chief executive ]lar."
ESA Council Meet in his weekly newsletter to his Although Gleason achieved his
Set For Monday South Dakota constituents, report- greatest TV success while per-
There will be a special called jng Eisenhower felt the Kennedy forming as Ralph Kramden in
JFK To Fly Back
To Full Schedule
M1DDLEBURG, Va. <UPI> -
President Kennedy planned to fly
back to the White House by heli-
copter today after spending his
third consecutive Sunday with his
family at their hunt country
estate.
The President was expected to
take off at about 9 a.m. EST to
keep a busy schedule of appoint
ments, starting with a 9:30 a m.
meeting with science and tech-
nology advisers.
Kennedy drove to Middleburg
., , , with Dr. Janet E. Travell, the
Another noble experiment found yy^ite House physician, Sunday
Jackie Gleason working and play- ^ attending ^ Mass a, st
considerably among liberal Mos-
lems today, and are widely ig-
nored in Africa.
Moslems, who believe in God,
and Communists, who do not,
would appear to be divided by a
basic and irreconcilable ideologi-
cal difference. But as Nasser has
proved in the United Arab Repub-
lic, and as events in the new Ne-
gro republics like the Congo are
now demonstrating, this differ-
ence does not necessarily pre-
clude a certain amount of mutual
cooperation.
Moslems and Communists have
this in common — each is con-
vinced that his ideology will even-
tually triumph throughout the
world. Therefore each is willing
to enter into a temporary accom-
modation with any body that
seems likely to further its long-
run objectives
Islam and international corn-
inflicted a wrong or injury
And it says that any Moslem
who dies in a holy war is assured
of immediate entry into heaven.
Thus a holy war conducted by
Moslems can be more fanatical
than warfare for or against al-
most any other cause.
ball fans in this city.'
NOW YOU KNOW
By United Press International .
The Suez Canal, joining the Red
Sea and the Mediterranean, is 103
miles long and 196 feet and 10
inches wide at its narrowest point.
90-minute production by Robert
Saudek's vigorous crew on CBS-
TV focussed on the musical adap-
tation. but put before us a num-
ber of gripping scenes from the
Don't Forget...
about the 100 gallons of gas free with each used
car, 1955 or later at Marcus Horn! Offer good
thru Fri. March 3rd. Better Hurry!
MARCUS HORN
119 South Main BA 4-5240
ing on "Sunday Sports Spectacu-
tween the United States and Rus-
sia.
Thompson is expected to ex-
plain to the Soviet leader Ken-
nedy’s overall position on such
hot East-West issues as the Unit-
ed Nations, the Congo, disarma-
ment, nuclear weapons testing
and other problems which divide
the two nations.
To reports that Kennedy feels
these areas offer a valuable test-
ing ground for Soviet intentions,
tussian officials are quick to an-
swer "and vice-versa."
Diplomatic sources doubt there
will be any dramatic break-
Juough. Rather, they foresee a
long period of difficult, quiet di-
plomacy. if Thompson can get
his way.
It is known tha both Kennedy
and his secretary of state. Dean
Rusk, favor behind the scenes
negotiations and Thompson is an
■xpert at this type of work.
Cryders Visit
With Relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Cryder
have returned from Sperry where
they visited Mrs. Cryder's par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Green-
leaf.
Sapulpans Have
Had House Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cook. 813
South Poplar, have had as guests
the latter's uncle and family, Mr
and Mrs Cecil Hull and daughter,
Barbara. Kansas City, Mo ; and
another uncle Robert Hull. Hen-
ryetta, and his daughter Mrs.
Mary Nale Clement, Decatur. III.
all of whom have returned to
their homes.
administration policies were "too
much left of center, too partisan,
too slanted toward programs sup-
ported by union bossism."
Mundt, told today in Washing-
ton of Eisenhower's statement,
said, “1 have no comment at this
time.
Mundt issued the report Sunday
on the basis of a one-hour visit
last week with Eisenhower in
Palm Springs He told his consti-
tuents Eisenhower believed the
Republican party failed to work
hard enough on the local level
between elections and that the
former president would make pub-
lic his views in detail in a July
magazine article.
St Matthew s Cathedral in Wash-
ington.
Mrs. Kennedy was attending
Roman Catholic services in the
Middleburg Community Center
situation comedy, he has devoted ^ arrjved G|afl Qra (he
part of the current wason loL^^ estate lh haVf
experiments with non-performing,
roles On the CBS-TV show SuriJ ^ walked lfUo the
day. he played golf against Arnold
Palmer, the pro champ, and shot
pool against Willie Mosconi.
alders Supper
et For Friday
Builder's class. First Christian ^orne
hurch, will hold its annual bear j™■
pper a*. 7 p m. Friday in the j
■hurch dining hall, instead of j"
Cuesday as announced.
Visitor Leaves
Soon For Home
Mrs. Amy Marx. Sand Fork,
West Va. who has been visiting
here for the past two months
with her brother and sister-in-
law. Mr and Mrs O. T. Hewitt,
will leave this week for her
house and then emerged from a
back door to find his 3-year-old
daughter Caroline in a cart romp-
ing with her wire-haired terrier,
■'Charlie."
The Channel Swim: Tammy
Grimes has withdrawn, on the
advice of her physician, from
The Hundred-Years War Be*wecn CORRALS POSSE:
IWEVfcl
MAMNERER
IdownI
OUR RFG
the Sexes,” the Sunday, March 26
"Omnibus" presentation on NBC
TV. Miss Grimes, now starring in
a Broadway musical, is being
treated for fatigue Edie Adams
replaces her in the TV special.
JAVITS HITS KENNEDY
WASHINGTON (UPD - Sen.
Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., has said
President Kennedy’s problems
with civil rights and national pro-
ductivity should provide the Re-
publicans with a “very good op-
,»rtunity" to recapture the White
House in 1964.
Javits said Sunday these were
the "inner contradictions" of the
Democratic administration which
would give the GOP "plenty of
issues" for the next presidential
campaign.
"YOUNG REBELS" ARRIVE
MOSCOW (UPI)-A delegation
of Cuban Prime Minister Fidel
Castro’s "young rebels" has ar-
rived here, the Soviet news
agency Tass said today The
group of teen-age youths is head-
ed by 17-vear-old Joel Iglesias
who holds the rank of major in
Cuba's army.
MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UPD -
Sheriff George Witkowski today
called for the return of all Mil-
waukee County special deputy
badges issued to non-law enforce-
ment personnel before he took
office
Among the badge-holders, Wit-
kowski said, are a restaurant
owner, several other business-
men, a flock of political support-
ers of the former sheriff, and
New York Yankees baseball star
Tony Kubek.
The world's first rodeo was held
down in Pecos. Tex, back in
1883.
USE HERALD WANT ADS
ipend Week In
lot Springs
Mr and Mrs. X Jones have
etumed from a weeks stay in
lot Springs.
For Your Protection everything must go ...
SEE DON OR CLYDE
SEEDS TALL TALE
TELL CITY. Inc. (UPD—A Tell
Jity farmer goes to court today
0 give his side of a tractor-car
•ollision. but his story had better
be convincing
The farmers tractor crashed,
into the rear of a car driven by]
1 judge while two state policemen
were wntching.
M'MAmns
counselors
16 East Dewey—Berryhill Bldg. BA 4-5666
Use Our Convenient Drive-In Window
if it's INSURANCE, we have it
WE WILL BE MOVING SOON!
Our loss is your gain! W« are throwing profits
to the winds!
We don't wont to move this stock of furniture &
Appliances!
EASY TERMS!
Buy Now . . . Pay Later!
BULLOCK'S FURNITURE
23 North Main
BFG "SAFITY-S"
miai roe
IN-TOWN DRIVING
sms
NOW ONLY
6 70-15 ....
7.10-15 ....
7.60-15 ....
...... 116.28
7.50-14 ....
...... 814.95
1
Nut tu tnd old tire on your ctr
B.F.Goodrich "HT"
BUILT TO IAST AT
SUPM-HIOMWAY SPEEDS
SIZSS
NOW ONiY
6.70-15 ....
......820.95
7.10-15 ...
7.60-1J ...
...... 825.20
7.50-14 ...
...... 820.95
Nut tu in* oM lift os your cir
BUDGET TERMS
AS LOW AS Ot
’125aweek1\1
'61 SILVIRTOWN
AU-AROUNO nil rot
TOWN AND HIOHWAY
sins
NOW ONIY
6.70-15 ...
....... 822.95
1 7.10-IS ...
....... 825.30
7.60-15 ...
...... 827.70
7.5B-14 ..
....... 822.96
Nut Xu Md »M rr« «• »•* car
BFG "NEW TREADS"
roe NIW IXTtA SAMTY,
IXTRA MIIIAOI
sins
NOW ONIY
6.70-15 ....
7.10-15 ...
...... 8 9.98
7.60-15 . .
... . 81195
6.00-16 .
Nut Ui »i* old tirt on you* csr
B.F.Goodrich
B.F.Goodrich
19 South Main FREE PARKING
BA 4-5221
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.
Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, February 27, 1961, newspaper, February 27, 1961; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1493151/m1/3/?q=Ardmore+ok: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.