Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 42, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1956 Page: 1 of 6
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' o:u.v:o!u city. oxu.
CLOUD'/
Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow
Cooler.
^sapulp^M
VOL. XL 11. NO 13
‘Sro^,1lltpr,nr: V as P°‘t«rttc* tn SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1956
Established In 1914
16 9 Para
DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY,
Dust-Dampening
Rain Encourages
Officials At Fair
Encouraged by a dust-ettllng rain*-—-—-——-
which coaled oil ihe fairground."' ^ - —
area—temporarily—d.striet fair offi- On ThC bllCZ FrOm
er!
row night, the
cfob will present
ClOTt
egular I
laratc,
; action 1
lv v. ishl
lothcs
cs.
FIRST Y0UNC5TER to bring his animal to the district fair being
Hefrf ’fit fhp Sapulpa fairgrouncs was Jce Stephens, center, who
brought this polled Hereford to the show last night to get a jump
on his neighbors- Getting the animal 'cleaned up, Joe gets help
from rwo friends, George Beorrick, left, or>d Jomes Little All three
youngsters are from Allen school. (Herald Photo '
ci.i’s this morning reported that
entries are corning in at about the
' CadjTanijf^Urtlciilture. along with
livestock, was running behind pre-
ying years, hut the horses, poultry
Y i arid rMKdtM' *ihg entered at a
l|i ■ • oet ter rate tttdb last year
Entries began coming in lar.
night, and wi.l continue until 7
, a. m. this evening
” The.. J 'tarts tomorrow
morning, and animals will be re-
lease* We
Tont^n *4U0fcxr
Sapulpa Roundup clu;
a rodeo tor tldfle attending the fair.
With new facilities for the horse
show, entries in that field are ex-
pected to be larger than in the
show's history. The old county tarn
has been converted to house the
horse sii9W.
First Meeting Of
Treble Clef Club
b Set JeaiMTOw
First meeting of the Treble Clef
club for the current school year
will be held tomorrow at 7:30 p. m.
in the choir room at the high school.
The club i* composed of parents
of students in the vocal music de-
partment at high school. Mrs. Leo
Cornwell is the new club president.
Outer officers are Mr?. John Reed,
vice president, Mrs. C.JU DeV’are.
secretary. M:
U.S., Britain Plan Test Trip
To Challenge Egypt Operation
By WILLIAM SEXTON
t’nlted Pres* Staff Correspondent
Grass Fires Still
Plague Firemen
Over Weekend
Perrons in Sapulpa continued over
the weekend to cause grass fires.
To Attend Segregated School
Negro Students Are
Withdrawn At Clay
By UNITED FRKS8
Chou En-lai Gives
Ambitions Plan
For Industrialization t
TOKYO iUPi—Chinese Commu-
nist Premier Chou En-lal outlined
Sunday an ambitious new five-
year plan he said would double
industrial production and triple
frs Ted Whltehottse.
treasurer.
The new officers have held sev-
eral conferences with Miss Argo*
Dickerson, vocal music director at
Sapulpa high school, and have pre-
pared the budget for the year, also
the project program for pre enta-
tion ta the club for approval.
"All mother's and fathers of high
LONDON ?UP> — The United
State- and Britain will ask the in-
nation second Suez conference
Wednesday to agree to an imme-
trip” into the Suet
Canal as a direct challenge to
Egypt, informed sources said to-
day.
Britain wants that test to be a
full convov piloted by Westners. and the Sapulpa fire department
The United States believes a continued to put them out,
single ship would be sufficient, the At 12:30 Saturday afternoon, fire-
sources said. men went to 1400 W. Taft to put
But the two main sponsors of out a grass fire,
the "canal users association." ac- At 8:02 p. m. Saturday, firemen
cording to the informants, are went to 6C0 E Dewey (b put out a
agreed that the challenge should g.-jss fire.
be made quickly before accidents At gas a m morning,
or pilot fatigue choke off traffic firemen went four and one-half
in the canal. miles north of Sapulpa and fought
The first major slowdown of a giass fire—for four solid heiirw
shipping since Western pilots re- At 9:3() a m Siidag^aSlfiL
signed Friday urns reported in the ino-jier (ire fuck went to JOOgY
Canal today. Thej-eport tent.ur- ja;KaOD t0 pat out a ^
gency to the Wednesday confer-1 ., AAS -
ence called In London to study * ,*T2<5l ^ Eiimh
the Western plan for a Sues Canal N ®2nth to ^
users association. * \.L. ,h.
To Frame Details Al 4 30 lhls mormn*- f**®
Authoritative source* said the
had dampened grass
»5&8* xttsr tr s r£rrrS
conference. TTey Intend 1o allow n**~ aw-Sd-a" ffre after snorting
the participating shipowner na- wiring of the home. Some fM
tlons to frame the details on the Id damage waa reported.
conference floor. It was said While there, firemen went to 11S0
The sources said the Western E. Momar.. where the same light-
powers also consider the users ning had burned out the wiring tn
association as a temporary expe- the adjoining home.
dient. This morning at 1:15.
Experts estimated the associa- went to a house one-fourth
tion could be ready to challenge east of Bowden to put' out
Is'hool Vocal’^rnusr** students T'e Egyptian President Oamal Abdel which caused about S500 damaged
school vo-ai mush. nuamis N wi(h tpst ship or convoy--
asked to turn out for this meeting. ■
so that the yea:'* activities can be
planned." Mrs. Cornwell said
[lAfter County Attorney Got Them
Russell Claims Absentee Votes
I CouldHaveBeenTampered With
Efforts of Negro students to en- of the plan would depend on Soviet
ter the Clay. Ky , elementary help
I Sapulpan Wins
1956 Mercury In
Softball Drawing
-♦ WAGONER. Okla. <UP' — At-
torneys for s*ate Sen. John Rus-
sell attempted to show today the
absentee ballots which showed
Russell ihe winner over state Reo.
Tom Payne may have been tarn-
pe.ed with after they were p'iced
in the hands of the county attor-
ney
basic production in China. Much
The rain gauge at ihe city pump
station showed only a trace ' of
school today collapsed in the face chous cpeech t0 the eighth con- j^VVl^The a^S
of a Webster county board of ed- , _.. _ . , Ca.roll. The spotty .am. acc-/.n vienbe's of the Sauulpa Ground
ucation order barring them from *rpss °f the Chinese Communist ^med by a crackling electrical dis- 0^:^ c " * at ^ presented
the all-white school - Party in Peiping was broadcast play, did put up to a quarter of an * ^
G0( To Receive
Wings For Work
In Local Group
within a week after the conference
here finishes work.
Of the 18 nations Invited. 14
have accepted or indicated prob-
able acceptance, although a num-
ber are reported wary of the West-
ern plan. The latest "yes" came
from Spain, which has beer, mov-
ing cautiously to avoid endanger-
ing its Arab interests.
Agree Rluctantlv
* u.u pu. up - a.mgg tomorrow at 7 p. m. a: city
Four Negro children, accompan- by radio Peiping today in a sum- inch ol rain in some pans oi iu*u. ^ {or their parttejpation ^ the
—008—
•ol pane!,
ater.
i hot wu‘C»
bed.
uion.
IHIRIP0
INDOV
jh co-op
' ‘ dn v **
County Attorney Max Findley.
first witness in the trial of a civil I mother
led by their mothers, were turn- j marized version It was the first nowever
ed back at the school door this Chinese Communist congress in 11
morning by the principal. Mrs. years and was being attended by The WCTV will meet Tuesday at
Irene Powell, who read them a world Communist leaders. he Wesley Methcdist church at
resolution passed by the board j Chou announced five fundamen- 1:30 o'clock.
last Friday. tal goals of the nation's second, -—
Mrs. James Gordon, mother of | five-year plan, which begins in
James Henry Gordon, 10. and 1958. with too priority given to
Theresa Gordon. 8. shook hand-1 heavy industry. He listed the lun-
with the principal and said. 'T'm damental tasks as:
taking them to Rosewald <* Ne- l To continue economic con-
gro school at Providence Ky.' to- j *truction with heavy industry as
Its core and promote technical re-
Mrs. Julio Eaton
Rites Are Held At
Graveside Today
, 4. „ Mrs Julia Eaton. 101. Oklahoma
in ne inai oi a civn ---- -------- of ,he other two construction of the national eco- Clly a f0nKer sapulpan. d:ed in an
The S,pulpa team mav not have jaWsUit over validity of the absen- children. Mr* Ca.herme Cooejand ^ ^HeS
*on the national softball title but i lpe votes, denied any tampering sr>e was ^so paging ner emi ? To rarrv thr0UBj, ,he so-af cr a *eefc s lllness
Sapulpa fan cleaned up on the was possible
toirnment by winning a brand new pind|py was first of 30 wit-
1958 Mercury in a drawing held last nessPS .sworn in as the two politi-
hight. cal feudists, whose election battle
Arthur Dial. 1305 E L.ncoln. won proyoi^d a grand Jury investiga-
t.'.e new automobile with a ticket tjon wj,1Ch has rocked the state-
P ;rcbased for the national NSC house, came to grips in open
t-urnament held he r and in Sapul- court. Friends of Russell and applauded,
pa Although most of the tickets Pavne packed the courtroom to Maj. Gen.
»ere purchased bv Tulsaas both la overflowing The two men did not slate adjutant geneial command-
(eir and this ypar. the auto nobile spPak t0 each other ln*f t»*„ . ifnl hi!
a?t September went to ail Ok.nul- p.ed Green, attorney for Ru«- ,, 1 7
sell, directed a «rles of unfriend cnm.d dlspprsed
ly questions to Findlcj. Green
asked if an Okmulgee woman.
equired number of hours of exer-
cise
A representative from the Okla-
homa City air defense command
will make the award present ltton.
The p.ioLc is invited to the cere-
mony.
Cold Front Moves
Across Oklahoma
dren to the Providence school.
Crowd Cheers
At these woros, the crowd of 50
2 To carry through the Socialist
transformation and to consolidate
the system of collective owner-
ship
or 60 persons standing behind a _ T f„rtv,pr increase the nro- *UK“ u““* 'r,cu Niu»ru ouu .CIIK—.a.u.v.
line of Kentucky National Guards- duct|on 0f industry agriculture ,h* went t0 t;ie resl 510X6 m Okla- much as 20 degrees cooler than;
men drawn up along the front
walk of the school, cheered and
tee fun.
and handicrafts and develop trans-
port and commerce on the basis
of socialist construction and so-
cialist transformation.
4 To make vigorous efforts to
train personnel for construction
work and to strengthen scientific
research
5 To reinforce natural defenses
Quarfemote (tab
Magazine Sales
Al Halfway Mark
The Quarternote club's annual
The foreign ministers of Den- magazine sales campaign has reach-
mark. Sweden and Norway agreed ed the halfway paint today, and will
reluctantly to attend but said the continue until next Monday,
issue is so grave it must be taken Some 11.128.83 in sales have been
to the United Nations. reported so far.
A British foreign office spokes- Members of both the junior and
man said Pakistan and Iran oc-1 senior high bands have been se3ing
ceptances included reservations subscr.pttons on a competitive bases,
against any prior commitments. t;le inning band received a picnic
Secretary of State John Foster ^ reward.
Dulles was leaving Washington by .vnong the high individual sales-
plane this afternoon for London to Ten t0 date are DavW Wyatt an<|
seek the w.dest possible support w„j ^ ^ ^ vLv
for the proposed plan He was
backed bv American oil interests band a"d dira f®*
and indications the United States .,and t?*?"1 .WlUton5<m ^
would underwrite the plan up to 5u"l0r band. ■
$500 mi’lion a year The high salesman in each band
' India's roving ambassador. V.K ^ve his choice of several top
Krishna Menon. landed in Cairo Pri»e.*
Bv I’VTTFD PRFSS this morning on an emergency There are 106 different magazines
A lone-delaved cold front finally mission to consult President Gam- on the list from which subscribers
Mrs Eaton was born Sept 1. 1855. shook loose and headed southward al A^l N*sser 011 the steadily may choosey New subscriptions
at Mt. Vernon. Mo., and moved over Oklahoma today. worsening crisis. New U.S. Am- count as muoh as renewals for the
here in 1908 She lived he:e and ir. it brought scattered thunder- bassador Raymond A. Hare flew youngsters. The Quarternote club
Tulsa until -even veats ago. when showers and temperatures as't0 Cairo shortly after midnight, receives 50 percent profit on some
West Rejects Invitation of the magazines and 30 percent on
Sunday Nasser, backed by the Arab na- the rest.
Forecasters said the front would tions- Communist world and Proceeds from the sale will be
southern border until about mid- some Far Eastern neutrals, was used for transportation for the
lune Tamper* With Tradition
LONDON iUP'— The British
Broadcasting C orporatlon
ome up with a new reason for
kf-eping a son; off the an a- wit-
- i.. ban . f "Rackin Through
Hie Ryp •• The BBC Imposed the
and raise the level of the people'.- .uneral home
5in on the Bill Hnlev rock-'n'-roll w#s not spnt mto his office
recording ueenuxe it "tampers
*‘ith traditional British and Scot
of RCJ Ush tunes.
new; of
PTA
by Payne or by Payne's attorney,
speak to each other.
Fred Green, attorney for Rus-
sell. directed a series of unfriend-
ly questions to Findley Green
asked if an Okmulgee
—,or ,h,,r
T have the greatest ad-
miration for Mrs. Powell for read-
ing the notice to the National
Guard and the Negro children
Liberty
All officers and committee chair-
of the Lioerty PTA are re- jots aDd the ballots
?h0* Wsted to meet at the school tarn- processed for the grand
T'fow evening at 7 30 ta mike plan-
- the Oct. 4 fun n!«ht (Continued on Page St*.
4
they were
secretary.
From Superior Court
Findley said the ,nd for the board for its action
from -uperlor court in Okmulgee Thp bo(,rd"9 resolution, which
was signed by Webster County
School Supt Wilbur Collins read
KG°en asked if Payne and Bail »" P-rt. "you have been instruct-
ey were ever in the room where
the applications for absentee bai-
and was not sent into his office j The
by Payne or by Payne's attorney.
ed to inform any pupil attempt-
ing to transfer from Rosenwald
uVre'heina or an>' oUler Negro school to tne,
* Clay consolidated school that ac-
tion taken by the board of edu-,
.Continued on Page Six.
min*!
and all
but nine of the Guardsmen
asged if an “>II'“‘I<|TC. Vr*1' marched back to the bivouac area material and cultural life
who was not Identified, had been beh)nd lhe schooj material ana cultural me
White children who have been*
boycotting lhe school since the
Negroes entered under the suns
of the Guardsmen last Wednesday
began filing back
into the school building
One of the white parents said.
Tm sure glad its all over But
if they come back there will be
another vacation.''
Mayor Commends Principal
Citv Mavor Herman Clark com-
mended Mrs. Powell and the Web-
homa City
She is survived by a brother,
George Castlller. Meaker, 97. She
was a member of the Christen
church.
Graveside rites a ere conducted
ay Rev ,C. C Weba at Sapulpa
cemetery this afternoon Burial was
inder the direction of Buffington
. permitted to see the ballots as
h they were handled by Findley's
secretary.
From Superior Court
Findley said the woman was lmmedlatHy
from superior court In Okmulzee s .
» f
\
night.
Thundershowers broke out in
northern Oklahoma in the morn- (
it»3 and w-ere forecast for the cen-
tral and southern sections in the
afternoon and night.
Early rainfall reports showed
Guymon received .08 inch. Ponca
City .01 and Tulsa 11 up to 6: 30
a.m.
A few thundershowers were re-
ported at about 8 a m. In the area |
ju>.t south-southeast of Kingfish-
er and southeastward to Chandler
The long range forecast said
AKRON. Iowa .UP1 — Two high temperature* in the 80s can
young farm boys were killed near ** expected the rest of the week. I
here Sunday when a bank of a dry considered normal for the period i
creek bed fell on them.
Thev were Jimmy FrUke. 9. the state again toward the end of
and his brother. Paul. 6. who the week.
were visiting their grandparents', High temperatures Sunday rang-
farm with their parents. Mr. and Pd upward to 103 a; Fort Sill and
Mrs Paul Friske Tulsa The maximum of 100 in
Authorities said the boys were Oklahoma City set a new record
(Continued on Page Six*
bands to all out of town events for
the entire year.
Two Form Boys
Killed In Corein
Along Creek Bonk
tafted to reporters today. Here Is
Light showers are predicted over j the ulc of a "nichlmare" at *ea
as told by Chief Steward Demetri-
us Hadjicostas. of Baltimore, and
crewman Lawrence Rediess. of
Central City. Colo.)
Soilor Describes Lifeboot Condition
'Been Shipwrecked Twice, But
Nothing Like This Nightmare’
(EDITORS NOTE: Two of the4----
five survivors of the sinking of them their lives. His story was
the American liberty ship Pelagia supported by another survivor.
Jury.
"Can't hoar you. I’m two hun-
dred million milas oil in apocol".
playing in the creek bed with
three cousins when it crumbled
and crushed them The three cou-
sins were not injured.
On the island of Sark, one of the
Channel isljnds of Oreat Britain,
the residents speak their own lan-
guage. a form of norman French
unde stoed cnly by about 300 person*
for the date.
★ ★★★★★
Serving The Flog
★ ★★★★★
Lawrence T. Rediess. of Central
City. Colo.
"When we were wrecked during
the war we had at least at that
time modern and complete resow
equipment in our lifeboat.’* Had-
jicostas said.
Rackets Didn’t Week
"There weren't even matches In
the lifeboat." Rediess said. "We
! had some rockets but most of
HARD8TAD. Norway (UP> —”1
have been shipwrecked twice be-
fore. but nothing compares to this
nightmare. '
Those were the words of Deme- them did not work. I believe they
trios Hadjicostas of Baltimore, one were outdated. Tm going to have
of the five survivors of the ore- my say on this when we get back
laden American liberty ship Pel- to the United States,
agia which broke in two and sank "The hours in the lifeboat are
off Norway. -omething I want to forget. Tqa-
Hadjicostas. chief steward on sing waves. Icy winds, rain—the
Nurwan Engeae Mahoney. 821 S.. the ship, said the lifeboat on deaih ol our comrade. Jean Ln-
New Mexico has more than 200 Linden, enlisted in the regular wmch the survivors got awav was pea. Saturday night at (la o’clock,
game refuges Army Sept 18. so poorly equipped it almost cost tC^niiaued on Atge 8i*»
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 42, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1956, newspaper, September 17, 1956; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1493768/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.