Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 5, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 21, 2014 Page: 2 of 20
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:
Page A2 — Weekend Edition, September 21, 2014, Sapulpa Daily Herald
Tm; Sapulpa Dun Hkkai.d
News II
Email your news to: editor@sapulpaberaldonline.com
10 acres rural water, paved road
$59,900 with more land available.
Call Bemie Fugate.
918 -760-3043
C'.ill Bernie Fugate
(MIS) 760-3043
oklandladyxom
41K1
(918) 227*1862
% Of.
TRiicft
if
1^46
Omelet
iiJBOOjJlf
iJjjaijChiJ
[iiM u
U LMfiMf
Senior M-F 3-6 pm
Investment
Experience
You Can
Rely On.
• Financial Planning
• Stocks
• Bonds
• IRAs & Retirement Plans
[E Call today for an
appointment.
Secuntxw and Advisory Services offered
through IPt Finance!, a registered
investment advisor Member
FlNRA/SPC Insurance products
offered through IPL Fuwnaai or its
kc emed aWum_
Fuoi »Q»C voyU 'I M»>r*Qiuwn«n I UmUmWAm I
• Tax-Advantaged Bonds
• Mutual Funds
• Annuities
• 401 (k) Rollovers
IlfftfUnitecf
'•r Wealth Management
J. Russell Kautz
nmstment hepatsentatfw
We are the same family-owned
business-in the same location-
for over 60 years.
♦Abstracts
♦Title Reports
♦Title Insurance
♦Escrow Closings
918-224-5150 • Fax: 918-224-9107
204 E. Dewey • Sapulpa. OK 74066
H'WH’ .creekcounlyabslracl.com
/USES,
Fallin visits
620 miles,” Fallin said of her
Mary on the Move travels.
The gregarious governor had a
time making the twenty or so
yards to the restaurant's front
door as she spoke and was spoken
to by any and all outside. Fallin
even displayed some on the fly
bi-partisanship in speaking at
length with an old friend' Herald
Columnist and Attorney John
Mark Young an avowed
Democrat.
Additionally Fallin spent sev-
eral moments talking policy and
state small business matters with
Newspaperman Darrell Sumner,
owner of several area publica-
tions including the Sapulpa Daily
Herald.
“As a small businesswoman
almost thirty years ago. I got so
mad about government that I
(first) decided to run for office. I
had a three year old and a new-
born baby, but I was just so frustrated at what was going on in the
stale capitol," Fallin said of her first political aspirations.
Fallin entered the Cafe and was met by Jaber.
She complimented the red white and blue decor and patriotic
theme of the establishment to the owner.
“This place looks great. I see your flag displayed. We need more
patriotism (in business)," Fallin commented.
The entirety of her visit the vibe that this was more of a person-
al visit than a "typical’' campaign stop.
Finally getting to the restaurant's classic movie themed room,
Fallin met with two commissioners, two prosecutors, bankers, busi-
ness leaders and regular folks who were waiting or just happen to
walk by to meet her.
Intrigued by District I Commissioner Newt Stephens office and
name monogrammed shirt, she revealed what has probably been a
closely held secret for years.
Main meth
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
JOHN BROCK PHOTOS
CAFE USA OWNER SAM JABER greets Oklahoma's Chief Executive at the door of his
restaurant.
The following is a Herald exclusive:
“1 see that your first name is Newt. That is my name too. My
middle name and I spent years trying to distance myself from it. I
can still hear my grandmother hollering out Mary Newt," Fallin said
imitating her grandmothers call to come home with a long empha-
sis, trilling on the Newt part.
Stephens expressed surprise later that this fact had been hidden
from him. So he had his daughter Google the Gov. and sure enough
Fallin’s mid name and her father Joseph's middle name are the
same: Newton.
A politician can really say some things when they refrain from
the same same stump speech given over and over.
Fallin was overheard however asking several folks for their sup-
port and vote in the November election.
Fallin at present leads in the opinion polls of likely voters ahead
of her Democrat challenger, Joe Dorman of Rush Springs.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
positive for methamphetamine.
Other objects found in the
woman’s purse were a tissue
with a small comer piece of a
“baggy” with a white powdery
substance and a spoon with
white residue. Spoon’s are often
used to ‘heat’ dry or powder
drugs into a liquid suitable for
intravenous injection.
Officers also found a 7Wur
candy tin which had a small bag
of green and brown leafy sub-
stance. These items field tested
positive as marijuana. The tin
also had had two hemostats and
a clip used for smoking small
hand rolled marijuana cigarettes
known to users as “joints” or
"roaches”.
A hemostat is a medical tool
which resembles a pair of needle
nose pliers with a locking
clamp. Though designed for
medicine.it is commonly used to
smoke the last of the marijuana
by clamping onto a “joint" .
Thompson also located a
Winchester firearms tin with a
metal “ one hitter pipe” and a
glass “hitter pipe.”
The searching officers also
found two white pills in a Pall
Mall cigarette package that test-
ed positive for Carisoprodol, a
schedule IV prescription drug.
According to drugs.com
"Carisoprodol is a muscle relax-
ant that works by blocking pain
sensations between the nerves
and the brain. Carisoprodol is
used together with rest and
A-F school grades
YOUR COOL
I A J J
Be Sure Your AIC Can
Beat The Summer Heat!
Air Conditioning Special
*38.00
not be manipulated. Even
though we see all these other
numbers, growth points and
formulas, the numbers that
really show if our kids are
ready for college and life are
good,” said Deputy
Superintendent Larry Smith
BUMPER
BUMPE C
RI2orRI34a v" • V"\J + Freon
Includes: I) All Summer Service Plans.
2) Leak Test and Evacuate and Charge If
Necessary. Follow Up
Visit If Necessary.
kBOZNY’S AUTO ELECTRIC
7 E. Dewey Sapulpa 9IK-227-40I8
CAFE U!
8EITH-
New
Menu
+WIM
Certified Angus Beef
Handout Steaks
•Daily Specials ‘Banquet Room
725 S. Mission • Sapulpa
MMM4122
during a presentation at this
months Sapulpa School Board
of Education meeting.
Scoring I8S Sapulpa stu-
dents taking the ACT test
revealed:
• In English SPS students
scored an average of 20 com-
pared to the state and national
averages of 20.3.
• In Math Sapulpa test tak-
ers scored a 20.3 compared to
the state average of 19.9 and
the national average of 20.9.
• Reading scores among
SPS students beat both state
and national averages with a
21.6. The state average is 21.5
and national average is 21.3.
• Science scores of Sapulpa
ACT takers also beat the other
averages with a solid score of
21.2. The average for both the
state and United States is a
20.8.
• Sapulpa's overall compos-
ite score was 20.9 compared to
Oklahoma’s 20.7 and the
physical therapy to treat injuries
and musculoskeletal condi-
tions.”
Criminal history cheeks
show that Mathis was arrested in
1995 in Creek County for sell-
ing dangerous substances, pos-
session of controlled dangerous
substance without tax stamp
(marijuana) though no final dis-
position was listed. The other
charges included being a wanted
person out of Creek County for
concealing stolen property.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
national average of 21. The
SPS score is only . I away from
meeting the score a student
must receive on each section
to meet State University stan-
dards of 21.
Sapulpa had one of the
highest percentage of senior
who have taken at least one
ACT test the school has seen
with an 80 percent.
There are only 21 states that
have tested more or the same
students as Oklahoma.
Only 6 of the 21 states had
better composite scores then
Oklahoma.
’’It's beyond ironic that the
measure that means the most
to students and families (ACT)
is steadily improving and has
reached our highest point in
the history of our great school
system, while artificially
measured results such as the
grade cards are heading the the
opposite direction,” SPS
Superintendent Butt said.
HIXSm
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.
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.
Bruce, Eric. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 5, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 21, 2014, newspaper, September 21, 2014; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1507131/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.