Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 306, Ed. 1 Friday, September 6, 1974 Page: 4 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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PACE POUR S«pulM (Ohla.) Herald Pnday September *. tf7«
GlenpoolAreaNews Briefs*ItZ Ro^ers Lambasts
By ALICE BELL
A baby shower was held
Tuesday evening in the home of
Mr and Mrs Wilbert Griffith,
honoring Mr and Mrs Rickey
Gaither and the aiTival of their
new baby daughter Sara Ree
Games were played, gifts were
opened, cake and punch were
served to the following: Carol
Coats. Sheryl Griffith, (Tara
Cleveland. ha\ Griffith.
Sherry and Karen. Gladys Bell,
Gladys Kastham. Sarah
Cumbey and l>ee. Jan Kiser.
Margie Blackford. Alice Bell.
Donna. Mae and Nancy Put-
nam. Edith Gaither, of lYatt-
ville. Vicki and Robin Hughes.
Margaret Hoggatt of Pratt-
ville, Janice Jenkins. Tulsa.
Sue Jones, Isabella Wagers,
Sand Springs. Ruth Hoggatt.
Sapulpa Those sending gifts
were: Wilma Hunter.
Margaret Marler. Inus Hunter.
Helen Denham, Waffle, Gayle
Bridgeman, Barbara
Broomhall. aunt and uncle
Butch Stokes. Brenda
Anderson The cake was baked
and decorated by Doris I^ntz
liiiiqith pacifer. rattle and
A.B.C. Ghe hostesses were Kay
and Sheryl Griffith, Mae,
Nancy and Donna Putnam and
Clara Cleveland
Mr and Mrs Jim Blackford
and Myrle Burditt. spent l^bor
Day weekend in Kansas Oty.
Missouri visiting Mr and Mrs.
Ted Szulik and Jessie Todd
I-abor Day dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs Gary Jones.
JenAnn. Keith and Kevin.
Tulsa were Mr and Mrs De
Arm on Jones and family of
Fort St John Canada and Mr
the
TRUTH
that Heals
A C HR ISTI AN
SCIENCE
RAmOSER^ES
Sunday. Sept. 8
KGGF 8:15AM
KFMJ .........12 45 PM
“Be Free From Com-
pulsive Habits And Be
Satisfied"
and Mrs W E. Jones
Thursday Paul Chapman and
Debbie Pearson of Gastonia
N.C. Bonnie Cahpman. lilUe
Lightner, Jeanme ('lark and
Kellie, took a sight-seeing tour
to Woolroc, toured the muMtm
there and at Bartlesville they
visited the Nellie Johnson 1st
Commercial Oil well Jeanma
and Kellie (lark spent the
night with the Chapmans On
Friday Bonnie. Jeanme and
Kellie visited Mr Fthel Pitts in
Pleasant Manor in Sapulpa
Alice Bell was a Friday
evening dinner guest of her
daughter and son-in-law Mr
and V"s L B Egbert in
Sapulpa
Monday, I-abor Day dinner
guests in the home of Mr and
Mrs Donald lightner. Becky
and Fddie were Mr and Mrs
Harold Hamilton of Oklahoma
City and Mrs Iallie lightner
Sunday Paul Chapman and
Debbie Perason returned by
plane to their home in
Gastonia. No Carolina, after
spending a week in the home of
his brother and sister-in-law
Mr and Mrs. J. R Chapman
At the airport to see them off
were the Chapman's, Iollie
lightner. and Mrs Chapman's
Brother ( W Terry of Houston,
Texas who is also visiting the
Chapman's.
Saturday overnight guests in
the home of Mrs. Frances
Wood were her grandson,
Richard Wood and son Donnie
of Bartlesville.
Sunday visitors of Mr and
Mrs Lewis Covington were
their son Herbert, grandson
Bill and a friend of Tulsa
Darel Adams has returned
home from Borger. Texas
w here he spent several days in
the home of his son and
daughter-in-law . Mr and Mrs
Elzia Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ball,
were visitors m the Jack
Bridgeman home Friday.
“Ruth'' Mrs Smithee left by
plane for heme
Sunday Mr and Mrs Harold
Hamilton of Oklahoma City
and Lillie Lightner were
overnight guests of Mr and
Mrs Albert Smith and
Charlene of Haskell
Mr and Mrs Ira Smithee
Tulsa and Gladys Bell were
Saturday dinner guests of Mr
and Mrs Roy Smithee at the
Farm near Eufaula
Mr and Mrs Dencil Cook of
Edmond were Sunday over-
night guests of her sister Mrs
Frances Wood
Mr and Mrs Ben Gilley
spent the past week at Tay lors
Ferry on Ft. Gibson Others
there part of the week were Mr
and Mrs lavon Bell. Vicky
and Ricky. Mr and Mrs Carl
Gilley, Mr. and Mrs Leroy
Simpson. Mr and Mrs Buddy
Wilson. Buddy Allen. Donna.
Terry and Billy, all of Sapulpa
The Gilleys returned home
Tuesday
Saturday Mr. and Mrs JR
Chapman enjoyed dinner in
Tulsa at Dons Restaurant with
Mr. and Mrs Joe Thurber of
Chicago and Jeanme Clark.
Tulsa The Thurber's are
Jeannies parents they are here
to return her to their Chicago
home
Mrs. Katie Ball spent
Thursday in Stroud with her
daughter and family Mr and
Mrs Bill Haile and Mark and
Mr and Mrs Stormy Haile and
Mrs Evelyn Haile While there
they attended the Iuncoln Co.
Fair at Chandler, where Mark
had entries of rabbits and
ducks of which he took first
place for the pair of white
ducks His doe rabbit won first
for the best and also the best
rabbit at the fair and 3rd place
for his buck The rabbits were
purchased in this city. He won
a trophy on the doe and (ash
and ribbons on the rest
Gladys Bell spent the labor
Day weekend at Eufaula with
Mr and Mrs Ira Smithee,
Tulsa, also Mr and Mrs
Honny Smithee. Day na. Derek
and Kirk of Harrah, Okla
Work was in progress at the
First Baptist church Saturday
The men were working and the
ladies furmshed and served
lunch Those preparing and
serving lunch were Mollie
Covington. Frances Wood,
Carol Coates, Ruth Bell and
Jannet Kiser.
Mr and Mrs. Gary Jones and
family, Tulsa. Mr and Mrs
Dearm on Jones and family
from Fort St. John, Canada
enjoyed a birthday dinner the
past week in the hoome of Mr
and Mrs W.E. Jones honoring
"Yvon" Mrs Gary Jones on
her birthday
Tuesday Mrs. Bonnie
Chapman and C W Terry of
Houston enjoyed dinner in
Tulsa at Dickies Fish and Chip
and also went shopping.
Sunday evening Mr and
Mrs. Mervil Bledsoe and
Tammy, Tulsa. Mr and Mrs
Harold Hamilton of Okalhoma
City, visited their mother Iillie
Lightner. Also they visited
their grandmother Ethel Pitts
of Pleasant Manor nursing
home in Sapulpa
Sunday afternoon Mr. and
Mrs. J.R Chapman and
C.W Terry drove to Allyson
acres on the lake where they
spent the night. A big barbecue
was held for all present and a
c ar was given aw ay at 2 o’clock
Monday
Mr and Mrs Bob Cryder of
Sapulpa were Friday evening
visitors of her sister Mr and
Mrs W E Jones
riSS Carmen Rebuilds; Heads
Slowly Toward US Gulf
friends and relatives
Thursday visitors in the
home of Gladys Kastham were
Gayle Bridgeman, Jacci. Joe
and Jason, Jenks, Mr and Mrs
Herman Smithee. Jackson-
ville. N.C Gladys and Alice
Bell. Thursday Gladys
Eastham and the Smithee's
...............
' I Our Doors Are Open. . .
I Wutey
United Methodist Church
734 N. Ridgeway
Joe W. Heaton, Pastor
—Nursery Provided—
T*
Sunday Services
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Youth Meeting
Evening Services
REVIVAL Oct. 6 11 ’STTKi
MIAMI (UPIi — Hurricane
Carmen rebuilt its winds to 90
miles per hour in the Gulf of
Mexico today and moved
slowly toward the distant U.S.
Gulf Coast where a hurricane
watch was expected to be
posted
At 6 a m. EDT Carmen was
centered about 130 miles north-
northwest of Merida. Mexico,
at Latitude 22.7 north.
l.ongitude 90.5 west. It was
moving north at 5 miles an
hour.
The once powerful hurricane
that claimed four lives and
wreaked 110 million damage
before losing its punch on
Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula
Monday was some 500 miles
from the United States.
“It will obviously go some-
where on the Gulf coast of the
United States if it continues on
its present course," said
forecaster Paul Hebert of the
National Hurricane Center
“We can’t say where yet
because it is moving so slow it
has plenty of time to change
Here's Your:
SPECIAL
To Hear
Dr. V. H. Lewis
General Superintendent
Church Of The Nazarene
Dr. V. H. Lewis
An Outstanding Speaker With A Unique Message
Services Sunday
“hf
momms
4:45 l.m,
t»:JSa.m.
4:00 p.m.
Our Growing Sunday School
The Hour of Worship
The Hour of Encounter
Sapulpa Church Of The Nazarene
S. Park At Lincoln
Albert Nelson Larry White
David J. Feller
Pastor
Outreach
Mi
course."
Carmen, whose strength was
175 m.p.h. when it hit Yucatan,
was expected to increase
slightly in forward speed and
strength today and Heber said
a hurricane watch may be
posted along porbons of the
Gulf coast today
Such a watch generally is
issued 36 hours before a storm
is expected to strike land.
“1 don't think Carmen will
ever regain the strength it had
before it hit Cheturnal (on the
Yucatan Peninsula l," Heber
said "You don't often get a
storm that violent."
Carmen lost strength over
land and was downgraded to a
tropical storm but it began
rebuilding over the Gulf and
regained hurricane force
Thursday afternoon.
The National Hurricane Cen-
ter also kept watch on a
tropical depression nearing the
leeward Islands. This squall
could become Tropical Storm
Elaine, fifth storm of the
season.
Maximum winds in the
depression, located near lati-
tude 16.5 north, longitude 58.5
west, were 35 m.p.h. as it
moved west-northwest at 15
m.p.h.
Heber said the depression
had the potential to become a
tropical storm after it crosses
the lesser Antilles into the
Caribbean Sea.
Fulbright May
Be t ord's Choice
NEW YORK (UPI)-Sen. J.
William Eulbright, D-Ark., has
been mentioned as President
Ford's choice to be the next
ambassador to Britain, but he
said Thursday he was “not an
applicant" for the post.
Ford scheduled a 10 a.m.
meeting today with Walter
Annenberg, the Philadelphia
publisher who is now the U.S.
envoy to the Court of St.
James.
These reports about my
being the choice are something
I don’t know anything about,"
Eulbright said in a telephone
interview from Peking where
he is head of a congressional
delegation on a HFday China
tour
Grand jury Grand Jury Role
WASHINGTON ftJPIi _ W W
WASHINGTON (UPI) —
Former top White House aide
H R Haldeman has asked the
Supreme Court to declare the
Watergate grand jury illegal,
and former No. 2 White House
aide, John 1). Ehrlichman. lost
a bid to further delay the start
of the Watergate cover-up
trial.
Supreme Court Justice Wil-
liam O. Douglas Thursday
refused a request by Khrlich-
man to postpone the Sept 30
trial date.
Ehrlichman, one of six
defendants in the case, said it
was impossible to have a fair
trial because of the recenl
publicity surrounding the
resignation of lYesident Nixon
Haldeman, meanwhile, filed
a new petition with the
Supreme Court claiming that
the term of the Watergate
grand jury expired last
December and that Congress
extended it illegally.
Both are charged with
conspiracy to obstruct justice
in relation to a cover-up of the
break-in at the Democratic
National headquarters in the
Watergate Hotel in June, 1972.
Meanwhile, Senate
Watergate investigators have
identified former Gov Tim
Babcock of Montana as the real
source of some $35,000 con-
tributed to the 1972 Nixon
campaign in other names,
according to the Washington
Star-News
The 1972 federal campaign
finance law that went into
effect five months before
Babcock began delivering the
money —in cash makes it
illegal to make a political
contribution “in the name of
another person "
The Star-News said it was
"understood" that Watergate
prosecutors were investigating
he case, though spokesmen for
special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski had no comment.
OKlJVHOMA ( ITY (UPIi -
State Examiner and Inspector
John M Rogers accused U. S
Mtorney William Burkett
Hiursdav of "unprofessional
acts” and not following "the
rules of fair play."
He said that was why he
refused to testify before a fed-
eral grand jury investigating
Gov. David Hall’s campaign
finances.
Rogers said Burkett, a for-
mer state chairman of the
Republican party, had permit,
led leaks of twisted testimony
and other unprofessional acts"
which represented a greater
crime than anyone he accused
“In my mind, there are few
crimes worse than this gross
misuse of a grand jury to de-
stroy people politically," Rog-
ers said
Civilians Fail
Honesty Test
NEW YORK (UPI» - New
York cops fumed a few months
back when the Police Depart-
ment announced that nearly a
third of a randomly selected
group had flunked an honesty
test
In the test. 51 civilians
turned "lost" wallets over to
officers, and 15 cops -or 29 per
cent — didn't bother to return
them to their owners.
At first. Patrolmen’s
Benevolent Association
President Ken McFeeley
squawked that the test was a
"Gestapo "-like tactic: then he
decided to conduct a similar
test of his own -on the public
The results, VlcFeelev said
Thursday, showed that the
man in the street was three
times as greedy as the man in
blue.
He said 42 out of 50 civilians
failed to turn in wallets they
found tn the street. In addition,
one of the wallets turned in was
missing $9
"The timing of this grand
jury and the massive leaks of
Gypsum Plant
Closing Down
SANTA FE, N. M (UPI > —
The Environmental Improve-
ment Agency said Thursday it
had learned that Republic
Housing Corp had closed its
Rosario gypsum plant south of
Santa Fe due to "multiple ec-
onomic reasons "
Plant officials told the EIA
that the plant's last day of op-
eration was Aug. 29
The plant manufactured
wallboard for home construc-
tion.
The EIA had been involved
in efforts to bring the plant into
compliance with state air
quality regulations
David Duran, of the EIA Air
Quality Enforcement Section,
said plant officials were aware
of procedures to obtain
variances under air quality
regulations if the regulations
posed economic hardships
However, plant manager
William Petty said the housing
wallboard market had been in
a slump since January, 1974."
half fact and half fiction de-
monstrate conclusively it is
basically a political investiga-
tion of Democrats by a former
Republican state chairman
"Its main purpose is to try to
elect a Republican governor
and U S senator in Oklahoma
this November "
Rogers said he is innocent of
wrongdoing.
"I simply refuse to be tried
by Mr Burkett and (reporteri
Jack Taylor in the Daily Ok-
lahoman w hen I'm not guilty of
anything," he said
"The only wav for any De-
mocratic public official to av-
oid such persecution ls by do-
ing as I have done, refusing to
testify "
Rogers said Burkett is de-
termined to convict "some
!>emocratic official of some-
thing." whether innocent or
guilty
M.. ,lt ls extremely danger-
ous for any Democratic official
to speak freely before this so-
called secret' grand jury,"
Rogers said
Rogers said he believes he
took the "prudent course" for
himself, the Democratic party
and the people of Oklahoma
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Back T& Clutch Sunday
September 8th at
First Baptist Church
Thompson and Elm Sts.
t
Royce Brown
Associate
Minister
Gary W. Cook
Pastor
Chane Hutton
Associate
Minister
500 in Bible Study
9:30 a.m.
Combined Youth Sunday School Goal. .100
Pastor’s Message: "BEGINNING AGAIN”
Message in Music "CREATE IN ME A
NEW HEART”
First Baptist Provides...
A MINISTRY TO CHILDREN
Bus Ministry—Children's Church
A MINISTRY TO YOUTH
Children's Recreation Center
Youth Choir—Youth Bible Study
A MINISTRY TO ADULTS
Great Music—Biblical Preaching
Nursery Provided for all Services
Morning Worship 10:50 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p m
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Sapulpa, Okla.
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 306, Ed. 1 Friday, September 6, 1974, newspaper, September 6, 1974; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1495371/m1/4/?q=mission+rosario: accessed June 21, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.