Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 113, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1960 Page: 3 of 12
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• Continued from Pape It
•st year said such a bombing
ystem is feasible. It made the
toint that a satellite bomb could |
* Placed in orbit in times of
*ace and then hurled at an
nemy by command signals from
he ground whenever its masters
in shed.
l.app agreed that such a bomb,
ecallable on demand, would re
Writer Sees New Boost
For McGill In Hassle
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI*—Jim,mondson will oppose his reelection
Arrington's support of Gene Mc-
Gill for state Democratic chair-
man “will furnish new and effec-
tive support for the McGill cam-
|Uire "highly sophisticated guid- *’aiBn" slate Rep. James C
nee " From a strictly militaryi Nance, Purcell, wrote in his week
landpoint. he said, it might not ly Purcell Register today,
e the best of all possible Nance, a veteran state politici-
veapons. | an and publisher, discussed the
But as a terror weapon, he Arrington development in an edi-
aid. an H-bomb circling the torial labeled "more pepper.”
vorld at an altitude of some 300
niles would have a vast effect
Gov. Howard Edmondson, who
was asked Wednesday whether
ipon the minds and emotions of the Arrington move would help
nankind whether or not it was
ver used.
"And," Lapp told United Press
nternational, "Khrushchev is
|uite knowledgeable about the
McGill, said any answer would be
rank speculation.”
No bitterness
Edmondson said he bore no bit-
terness for Arrington, who lum-
isychological impact of what he ed against him in his fight for
ays and does
The 100-megaton missile war-
lead also would be an effective
control of the Democratic party.
The governor also said he
doesn’t think the party dispute
’terror weapon.” A dozen dirty will harm his petition program,
tombs of that size, Lapp said, Nance took no sides in the edi-
Hould deposit enough radioactive torial, which read:
pllout to "take out” all of the "More |>epper for Ihe political
Jailed States east of the Missis-
dppi.
One 100-megatonner could de-
llroy every home in New York
’ity with its blast alone A dozen
--particularly if detonated at high
altitude — might start eonflugra-
lions that would devastate half a
Continent.
pot. . . Jim Arrington hus chang-
ed his mind. Arrington says now
he will support Gene McGill for
reelection as chairman of the
Democrat state committee. Ar-
rington had previously announced
that he would not take sides in
the contest between McGill and
Pat Malloy, the Edmondson can-
as Democrat national committee-
man. Being a smart politician,
Jim has turned to his friend and
fellow party officer Gene McGill
for reciprocal support
Influence Wide-Spread
The break between Arrington
and Edmondson will add new in-
terest to the forthcoming meeting
of Democrats at the grassroots
Arrington is no small - calibre
politician even though he is now
being branded an Old Guard poli-
tician. His acquaintance extends
into every county in the state,
and he is rated one of the best
liked members of the House of
Representatives. Arrington will
furnish new and effective sup|x>rt
to the McGill campaign.
Local politicians expressed the
belief even before Arrington made
the partisan alignment that he
would eventually change his
mind. The alignments are being
tightly drawn. Jim should know
better than anyone that the state
organization controls the election
of the national committeeman
The group that controls the state
committee controls the state con-
vention and the state convention
elects the national committeeman.
Arrington was first elected nation-
Third Big Snow
Of Season Hits
New Mexico Area
By I nltcd Press International
The nation's third major storm
of the season today produced two-
loot snows in the Southwest, one
of the Northeast's worst ice
storms in 50 years and damaging
Midwest floods
The third major storm Of the
year swept out of New Mexico,
Colorado and Utah to drop 22
inches of snow at Williams, Ariz.
McNary, Ariz., reported 21 inches
and nearby Grand Canyon had 20
But in the Southeast snakes
/oEuhom” impin'3 #t t,w °ffl,,MD 3*pulp“ Sapufpo (Oklo ) Hero id, Thursday, January 14, I960—Section 1—Page 3
Lewis Retires
As Union Boss
jurors Urge
Death Sentence
In State Slaying
prince and eventual president of
the UMW.
Lewis' departure marked the
end of an era for the-UMW. Lewis
ll« | Imiam KAff ~a 1,1 a man who used words
as his weapons — yields to the
mild-mannered, soft-spoken Ken-
WASHfNGTON tUPD - John My.
I
[,. U*wis, labor's living legend. ( As a Shakespearean scholar.
bows out today as president of thc/'*>w's m'Kht dwell on a phrase
United Mine Workers from a,M‘ Juliet:
is such sweet sorrow .,
The white-haired warrior, who■ *. , ,. , , .
fought the miners' battles for «> . Nos alKif W!“ b0l,nd .** ,hc ----- -------------„------
years and led an army of mass ^ u banquet tonight m agw| gir| aiK( recommended die
production workers into industrial “ °L U‘w,s, and ?en”edy al
. , . . ' one ol Washington s plushiest ho-
umons. planned to resign without . i.
grave near Pate’s home in Wa
nette She had been dead for
more than one month.
Pate had been sentenced to 24
years in prison for burglary a few
days before the body was found
County Attorney Harvey Cody
stressed in his final argument
Bfiiioon Launching
Is Plonned Again
WASHINGTON (UPI>-The Na-
tional Aeronautics and Space
Administration will try again to-
day to launch a shiny 100-foot
SHAWNEE <UPI* - Ocrald |)a( Pale kl|U.(l thp gir) whom he sphere into spare
fanfare.
• Jute I Pate. 23-year-old convlrt ^ ^ for ahout a when
from Pottawatomie minty, faced she lhreau?neil l0 lell authorities
death in the electric chair todayjo( hjs bu , un|eSS
after a district court jury found he mam,,d her
him guilty of murdering a teen-
recommemicd the l,"'anitv *«» Meam
death penalty.
Adverse weather conditions
forced scientists to postpone a
launching attempt Wednesday at
Wallops Island. Va.
P | If weather permits, NASA
Kenneth hienzle. court appoint- planned lo Mnd up the sphere
,.HaM*1 All f.>x Dntn kn..A<t kn> I * 1
It could
A jury of six men and six worn- attoriiey ^hir^Pa^e.^hased^ ms ajXjUt 5.30 pm today
en returned the verdict Wednes- defense on temporary insanity. In ^ vtSihle. reflecting the setting
He arranged to step down at a * °r ** was sure ,0 day night after deliberating one h!s Lnal two-hour argumeng Kicn- un jor hundreds of miles along
came out to sun and they turned closed session of the union s :«> |fnolh,*r ,lay. ,ul1 ol memories: hour and f)7 minutes. District ““
in a
mid-
“It would be truly a scorched- didate, for state chairman. Jim
tarth weapon," Lapp said. has learned, probably, that Ed-
on air conditioners
winter "heat wave.”
Wednesday was the “warmest
Jan. 13 on record" all across llte
South. The 78 degree high at Sa-
vannah, Ga, 73 at Greensboro.
N.C., and 75 at Nashvillle, Tenn.,
all were records. It was mostly
in the 80s in Florida.
Sun Replaces Snow
Convertibles with the tops down
were reported at every college
campus. At the University ot
Tennessee, where 700 students en-
gaged in a snowball fight just a
week ago. students sat on the
brown grass in the sunlight lo do
their studying.
At Winston-Salem, N.C., an in-
nocent garter snake created con-
, ... .fusion at the airport when he de-
al committeeman with the support cided i( was summer and came
of the Gary administration which
also controlled the state commit-
man executive board almui a
monih in advance of his 80th birth
day on Feb 12.
Thomas Kennedy, UMW vice
president, automatically succeeds
to Lewis' job. He is 72.
To Name Kennedy Successor
The union was expected to dis-
close a well-kept secret—the name
of Kennedy's successor as vice
president — after the meeting is
over late this afternoon
The man who is elevated lo one
of the top three UMW offices is
Mire to i& regarded us the crown
zic said Pate was under the influ- theEastern seaboard,
cnee of narcotics when the girl |
was killed
Pate had testilied Tuesday that
Sit-down strikes in the turbulent judge J Knox Byrunt scheduled
30 s; the split within the AH, ] formal sentencing for Feb 9.
that led to creation of the ClOi ... , . , .
___1 . , . , , Pate, who was relumed heret. ... ,
' 00 ' 1 yJa, s 0 wa ' ,nou" I from McAlester stale penitentiary *i:id >e<'11 011 doPe ai,d hlack-
latnous fines for contempt o foil- |() s|and ,na| evicted ol °1"" durinK a" a!*u,"e,M with about 250 miles
e.al court back-to work orders. 1 u Mary Jane Haygood. Mary Jaae, ,,e sa‘d B,rt *1
1o, ay s transfer of power was Junior high school «*** *a* ‘yng a‘ h.s feel when
scheduled to take place in a plain . . Ihe "came to.
basement room at the union’s!®
headquarters Its walls are lined
with dozens of cartoons depicting
the crises, conflict and comedy
that marked Lewis' career.
AImmiI 220 field representatives
Purpose of the launching will
he to test the ejection of the fold-
ed sphere from the rocket nose
and its inflation at an altitude of
| he "came to.’
Pate’s mother. Mrs. Stella Mi-1
Death Toll
Serving Burglary Term |^ Wednesday (hat herl OKLAHOMA CITY ‘UPD-Traf-
Her decomposed body was son had suffered accidents which
l(ii"u! last October in :i ->luillow p,-,,,),,,-,-,! nervous disorders ami
, „ . . changed his personality.
Hazard, Ky.. Bluefield, W. Va and1
of the union arrived from such Big Stone Gap, Va , to attend tin-
coal capitals as PoUsville. Pa , ceremony.
Use Herald Want Ads
fic fatalities reported by the Okla-
homa Highway Patrol.
In the last 24 hours ending at
9 a in.—O.
To date this year—13.
To date in 1958 18
Clearance Features From
Morton's Men's & Boys' Dept.
ALL FALL MERCHANDISE
MARKED DOWN TO CLEAR
MEN'S SUEDE JACKETS
Quillon treated. Reg. $19.95
$13.95
BOYS' AND MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
From Va to Vi Off of Regular Prices
ALL WOOL TWEED TOPCOATS
By Curlee. Reg. $39.95
$29.85
BOYS' AND MEN'S SKI TYPE
AND FLANNEL PAJAMAS
’/« OFF
BOYS' and MEN'S
SPORT COATS AND SUITS
All Reduced lo Clear
* ft AioUotuil***
DEPARTMENT 8TORS’
Your Store of Nationally Known Merchandise
122-124 Eost Dewey
Arrington, state representative
from Stillwater, went against Ed-
mondson Tuesday when he an-
nounced he will seek reeleetion as
committeeman and will support
McGill of Alva, for state chair-
man.
State Hospital
Closing Is Hit
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A reso-
lution requiring Congressional re-
view before any Indian hospitals
can be closed, sponsored by Rep.
Ed Edmondson (D-Okla.». won
unanimous approval Wednesday of
the House Interior Committee.
The resolution would require the
Public Health Service to give Con-
gress 90 days notice before it
doses any Indian hospital or re-
duces any health services to In-
dians.
It also would require that the
surgeon general certify that a
closing or reduction would not
| create or intensify a shortage of
hospitals in the area served, and
that adequate facilities and serv-
ices would be available to Indians jamrned
of the area.
Edmondson said he had assur-
ances from Oklahoma Sens. A. S.
(•Mike* Monroney and Robert S.
Kerr that they would seek Senate
action on the resolution.
CATTLE FOR KHKCSH
WASHINGTON (UPI* - Three
gift cattle for Soviet Premier Ni-
kita S. Khrushchev left here
Wednesday by an Air Force plane
I for Moscow.
President Eisenhower gave
Khrushchev a purebred Aberdeen
Angus heifer when the Soviet
leader visited here last Septem-
ber. Former Commerce Secretary
Lewis Strauss, who also raises
Angus cattle, made a present of
a heifer and a hull.
out to sun himself. A 17-year-old
Boy Scout quieted the fears ot
airport personnel by' killing the
snake.
Heavy snow warnings were is-
sued for parts of Colorado, Kan-
sas and Nebraska today. Six to 12
inches of snow was expected from
southeast Colorado through north-
west Kansas and central Ne-
braska.
A band of freezing rain and
sleet was forecast (or parts of
Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa,
bringing hazardous driving condi-
tions. Wind gusts up to 50 miles
an hour were expected through
the northern plains area.
Nine inches of snow combined
with a bitter onslaught of sleet
and ice to cripple Connecticut and
glaze roads and trees in upper
New York State, Massachusetts,
New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Threat of Flood
Gentle, spring-like rains, trig-
gered by a freak warm spell, sent
rivers rolling through towns and
tarmland in Wisconsin, Iowa and
Illinois and threatened to send
the mighty Missouri out ol its-
banks above St. Joseph, Mo.
The northwestern storm
all transportation in
Connecticut, trapped six boats in
Connecticut River ice jams, and
covered the state’s highways with
a slush or hardpacked snow.
Tlie worst sleet storm in half a
century sent ice-crusted tree
branches crashing across power
lines in Elmira, N.Y., shutting off
power to 1,500 homes and Elmira
College, which sent its 700 women
students home for the day.
Three of Wisconsin's most trou-
blesome rivers jumped their
banks and drove flood-weary res-
idents from their homes. The Pec-
atonica coursed across a third of
Darlington's business district, the
Little Sugar flooded parts of Mon-
ticello and the Rock River bur-
ied several streets and flooded
basements in Beloit.
w/
Spectator
ihirtdres*
in wonderful new
"Suttamotic"
cotton
with wash-
and-wear finish.
Tailored with
fobs at sleeve
and waistline.
Navy, beige,
foom green,
toast,
8 to 18.
14 95
9-
Garden-
Amel jersey .
with pretty, *
scoop-neck bodice
and softly-shirred
skirt. Blue, brown,
helia 10 to 20
and custom sizes
for the shorter
figure, lOcto
20c. 17.95
^ DEPARTMENT STORE ^
Your Store of Nationally Known Merchandise
122-124 E. Dewey
1
Bullock's After-Inventory Clearance
Buy Now... Pay Later!
7-P(. CHROME
PLASTIC DINETTE
** *'C'°
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pT»cea “ 00Vi-
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Compare this quality and price!
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$.
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new and distinctive styl-
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ciate!
$
EACH
SCATTER RUGS, beouti-
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colors. Siies 24x48. Re-
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EACH
2-Pc. MAPLE Bedroom
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this terrific special!
$1
PLATFORM ROCKERS,
fhe finest selection in
town are yours at Bul-
lock's, and prices start
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For Your
Present TV
If It Plays,
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Or Over!
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(Me 7^
Handcrafted Quality
wnuDBnBsr
PERFDRMINGTV
ONE SALE GROUP ot To-
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Your choice—
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PAIR
Model E 23 50, available
in maple or walnut fin-
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available at $10.00 ex-
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a Fail F*war Traatfarmar
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a Tana c*nlral
a "Fring* lack" Orta*
a "Capacity-give” campaMPH
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NEW WESTERN HOLLY
Gas Range. 30 Inch De-
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$199.95. We ll fake your
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LOUNGE CHAIRS, by
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Prices begin ot—
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ALL CHAIRS
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SAVE UP TO $100.00
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Blond Step-End Tables
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Phone 610
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 113, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1960, newspaper, January 14, 1960; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1493734/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.