Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 35, Ed. 2 Tuesday, April 2, 1974 Page: 13 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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4000 South Agnew
EVANGELIST
John Fleming
CHEROKEE HILLS
5700 Northwest 63
EVANGELIST
Clyde Ross
ATTEND THE REVIVAL
NEAREST YOU!
i
’ A
Gather Together
^Clinst
SIMUITANIOUS RIVIVALS
Of TM TWINTYWX MITKIFAnNO
mutmah 8*ftijt cnuaoms OF
TM CAFITOt • A ATI tt ASSOCIATION
TODAY TH*U APRIL 7
I AGNEW AVENUE
2401 Southwest 32
EVANGELIST
Darrel Hains
BAPTIST TEMPLE
2433 Northwest 30
EVANGELIST
Tai Bonham
BETHANY, FIRST
3800 N. Mueller, Bethany
EVANGELIST
Duane Cook
BETHEL
!
Director Kurt Debus
jsed a stainless-steel shov-
•1 to start construction of
the $21.8 million runway,
which will be 300 feet wide
ind 15,000 feet long.
A
I J
r ’MW
I’
■£- '14 v
I \ V
\ V
I IX’ls
rsKerr *■.
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>
WHEEL BALANCE
6ENIRAL
Sooner or later, you’ll own Generals
/
I
High speed spin balance in*
eluding wheel weights.
MAKE THE DEAL FOR STEEL
General
WSB DUAL-STEEL RADIAL “
STORE HOURS OPEN
7:304:00 MON. THRU FU.
7:30-1:00 SAT.
SIZE
A78-13
B78-13
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
078-15
H78-14
H78-15
REGULAR LOW
4 FOR PRICE_______________
4 lor $ 89 80
4 tor $103 80
4for$11180
4 for $119 80
4 lor $13180
4 tor $131.80
4 for $143 80
4 tor $143 80
WHITEWALLS $3 EXTRA PER TIRE
FED. EX. TAX
PER TIRE
$1.78
$1 83
$2 24
$241
$2 55
$2 63
$2 77
$2 82
REPLACES
6 00-13
6 50-13
7 00/7.35-14
7.50/7.75-14
8 00/825-14
7.10/8 25-15
8.50/8 56 14
7.80/155-15
—T
Priced os shown 81 General Tiro
Stores Competitively priced ot
independent Peelers diopioyinp
the General site
$250
Reg. $3.50
■AIN CMC* Shov'd ou> twOB'y •• s>«ts er $iwi tufiftf i* s ew«i •* ohM hO"D’ e»<t's p'ecee 0fhW*y •’ •e*eH'Md puce
GENERAL MB
TIRE SERVICE
401 NW 10th OKLA. CITY (10th 0 Hudson)
236-4406
The 40,000 Miler
Specified by Leedtno Cer Mekers
• Radial Ply Construction e Two Steel Bolts
o Cureton Treed Rubber
Prices start ^^95
as low as
Size BR78-13. 0lusS2.11 Fed. Ex. Tax
Polyester Cord JI
General PQLY-JETXl f wl
Whatever your the U
wide, smooth riding 4-ply k| 11^ M
polyester cord POLY-JET is an ■ I VXI ■ ^1
outstanding buy! * Size A78-13 tubeless blackwall, plus $178 Fed Ex. Tax per tire.
Fits: Gremlin, Vega, Pinto, Colt, Cortina, Toyota, and more.
. C.. .rfllll AO I nw 4 FOR
SALE PRICE
4 lor $ 78.00
4 lor 8 82.60
4 lor $ 80.00
4 tor $ 83.40
4 tor $104.20
4 lor $104.20
4 tor $115.00
4 ter $118 .00
Stephen Southerland, 13, claims he’s ’uncoordinated* but went ahead and
is the third of three sons to contract cancer. (AP Wirephoto)
definitely suspended the
J
JjjEjAL
.TIRE''
Pat Will Open
Portrait Hall
dent Nixon's impeach-
ment, says a group of Uni-
versity of Miami law stu-
dents.
Dick Hayes, founder of a
group called the National
________________________ local union's bargaining greater prival
ice asking that the ACLU’s chairman.
tax examption be revoked.
Hayes says IRS rules do
not allow tax exempt or-
ganizations to engage in
political campaigns.
a natii
mark
noon.
On Friday, Mrs. Nixon
will join in presenting an-
nual landscape awards at
the White House.
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.
(AP) — First Lady Pat
Nixon has two events on
On Family Planning
LONDON (AP) — Brit-
ain's family planning clin-
ics ended their first day of
issuing free contraceptives
Monday and reported that
a threatened rush of cus-
tomers did not material-
ize.
Law Change Asked
WASHINGTON (AP) -
John D., Rockefeller III
says tax laws should be
changed toqmcourage
greater private gifts to
charity.
ton this week.
She'll take part in cere-
monies dedicating the Na-
tional Portrait Gallery as
idnal hsitoric land-
tWednesday after-
New Artificial showed reporters how he walks with his new artificial leg. Stephen, with walk-
er in photo at left, lost the leg March 21 to bone cancer. At right, he shown a
Leg Tried Out letter he got from Edward Kennedy Jr., who lost a leg tothe disease. Stephen
THR°U®k
APRIL
^CHICAGO (CDN) - The I
guest of honor did not I
come to dinner, but the I
tributes to Elijah Muham- i
mad flowed easily at a tes-
timonial dinner given him
by 100 black business and .
civic leaders. I
The 1,200 diners who I
fathered here came hop- I
ing to hear a message I
from the 76-year-old man I
known to his followers in I
the Nation of Islam (Black I
Muslims) as the messen- I
ger of Allah. I
Muhammad did not ap- I
pear, and there was trou- I
ble making a connection to I
receive a telephone mes- I
sage from his mansion I
here. But the audience ap- I
plauded every mention of
his name as speakers
praised his success in
black economic develop-
ment.
Shouts of approval greet-
ed the statement of the
Rev. Jesse L. Jackson that
Muhammad had "trans-
formed his followers from I__
shooting dope in their
veins to pushing hope in
their brains."
Floyd McKissick, the
militant former director of
the Congress of Racial ____
Equality and now presi-
dent of Soul City, a black
real estate development in
North Carolina, drew
roars when he told the din-
ers:
"This man has been first
on so many things it em-
barrasses the rest of us."
. But no speaker was bet-
ter received than Muham-
mad Ali, the former
heavyweight boxing cham-
pion, who proclaimed de-
votion to his spiritual men-
tor:
"This little black man
took me, Cassius Clay,
frpm Louisville, Ky., and
taught me who I was, and
gave me a new name, Mu-
hammad Ali.“
Ali beat the drum for
one of Muhammad's cardi-
nal teachings — a separate
ftate for blacks — by de-
claring:
"We are 40 million black
people in the United
States, and we don't have
two feet of earth to call
our own."
The dinner was a fund
raiser for the $50 million
500-bed hospital the Mus-
lims propose to build on
Chicago's south side.
Speculation on Muham-
mad's absence ranged
from concern for his secu-
rity to his disdain for fre-
renting places where to-
bacco and alcohol are
)sed. No alcoholic bever-
ages were served at the
Hnner. But smokers were
In the audience.
Status of ACLU Draws Question British Slow to Call
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -
The American Civil Liber-
ties Union should lose its
tax-exempt status because
her calendar in Washing- it placed newspaper adver-
tisements endorsing Presi- Workers Take Walk
WINDSOR, Ont. (AP) -
About 400 United Auto
Workers at Chrysler's
Windsor truck plant
walked off their jobs Mon-
Law School Coalition, says day after the company in-
the students have written
the Internal Revenue Serv-
I
Rocket Ships
Runway Started
CAPE CANAVERAL,
ria. (AP) — Declaring
hat the space shuttle
vould open a new era in
ixploration, the director of
he Kennedy Space Center
in Monday broke ground
or a runway that rocket
ihips are to use starting in
S'
Chief Gets
I
Testimonial
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acation
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v Flotation v L ong mileage
Mexico, just an hour away
via Arizona Highway 80.
2430
*2675
27.30
3425
DtwnHwn
SHi A Hudson
232-S181
ORIH 7:00-5:30 DAILY
AS
LOW
AS...
Norman
SA* W. Moin
32l-*43l
ORIN B-8 Daily
LaketMo
7535 N. May
843-9693
OPTN 8 AM-* RM DAILY
$«•
7 00 13
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7 OO 14
Site
8 70 IS
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700 IS
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lobel.,, bi. .
AplyrMing.
By Joel Sleed
PARADISE, Ariz. (NNS)
<
— If you're a vacationer
who wants to get away
from it all and rough it,
there are still some places
in this vast country to vis-
it. One of them is Para-
dise. But don't take too
long — in not too many
years Paradise, Ariz., may
be lost forever.
It has no post office,
stores or gas pumps, and
for the last half-century it
virtually had no people.
Permanent residents, 30,
and an equal number of
vacationers have jealously
guarded the secret oHheir
oasis above the southeast
Arizona desert.
However, in spite of the
protectiveness by the va-
cationers, this spot is ex-
pecting its biggest boom
since it was a thriving sil-
ver-mine town at the be-
ginning of the century.
The reason is twofold:
there is a great surge by
vacationers to "rediscover
America," i____
the secret is leaking out and animal life. The only
that Paradise has all the two zones not found in the
(WEEK 1
\DNLW
NOW! Our famous
TRANSPORT
WIDE OVAL
wide truck tire
elements that go into a
successful resort area —
climate, scenery, flora,
fauna, history and appeal.
Situated in the 1,200-
square-mile Chiricahua
mountains, which rise like
a giant green island from
the tan sea of the desert
floor below, Paradise has
an ideal year-round cli-
mate. In June, the hottest
month in southeastern Ari*
zona, when the tempera-
ture reaches 102 degrees
on the desert floor below,
it is in the mid-70s in Par-
adise. Higher up, on Flys
Peak, which is a mile
above the desert and the
highest point in the ^rea,
the temperature can be in
the low 60s.
The reason for the sharp
contrast is the so-called
"climate ladder" of the
mountains. Even though
an automobile trip to the
top and down takes only a
bit more than an hour, the
traveler passes through
five of the earth's life
zones, each having its pwn
Chiricahuas are the arc-
tic-alpine and tropical.
These slopes once served
as a hiding place for rus-
tlers and gunmen, and a
fortress for the Apache
warriors of Cochise and
Geronimo. From here the
Indians rode down to raid
the columns of Spanish
troops that explored the
area and later the wagon
trains of Mexican and
American settiers.
Today this is cowboy
country, with plenty of
room left over for bird-
watchers, hiking parties,
campers and sightseers.
Most of the visitors bring
their own accommodations
in the form of tents and
recreational vehicles
which they rent in Tomb-
stone 80 miles to the east,
or Tucson 120 miles to the
northwest.
Some have been coming
for years, making their
base at one of the camp-
grounds maintained by the
U.S. Forest Service. Oth-
ers stop over for a few
and secondly, distinctive vegetative belt days before heading on to
TRANSPORT
*9488
Msg. eicn^nqr
buck tute-tvua.
ALL SIZES LOW PRICED!
6 5016 2625
7 00 15 23.85
l* 30.90
7*80 18 3425
F'KMpki* 82 34 Io 83 33F«4 E> la*. Nock. *•«« rang
6 WAYS TO CHARGE
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•ALL WHEEL
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GET OUR CLEAHANCE TIRE
DEAL FOR YOUR RIG TODAY!
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TIRE CLEARANCE BARGAINS for every road and load! !
I Tirestone
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4
—Mi____
Midwest City
Acre** Irom ____
Tinker Main (3at8
737-143* OF8N B-* DAILY
Shephard Mall
3230 N.W. 33
525-3535
OMN 9:00-8 PM Dally
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tiC
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 85, No. 35, Ed. 2 Tuesday, April 2, 1974, newspaper, April 2, 1974; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1789853/m1/13/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.