Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 219, Ed. 3 Wednesday, October 18, 1950 Page: 1 of 12
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
****
r1
VOL. LX I. NO. 219.
18, 1950
HOME EDITION
PRICE FIVE CENTS
H
Rips Across Southern Florida;
1
One Killed; Troops Called Out
Top Reds
it traveled overland, moved
LjL
Scamper
To Safety
—on Wlr^boto
■
Hurt Seriously
Ox*
&
■Gm
$6 Billions Aid
pers in the lobby of the Burlingame
lew driving after hi* c*r piled into •
!
■
rrea
the
&
I
/
k
I
&
H
"7»
Ti
7
r* T
Ml
I
uu
I
President It Greeted
By Acheton, Marshall
east coast. were secured Wednesday
— ---
Hol Scat Wrecks Car
SEATTLE, Wash.. Oct. It—<U.R>—
I!
1
)
> •••
t 1 *
Troops
Reported In
1500 Millions Earmarked
For Indo-China Share
French Force* Quit
Post Held 65 Year*
Am Threat Increase*
Pioneer Judge
Dies in Tulsa
53-Year Career End*
For Summers Hardy
Suicide Leap
Foils Rescuer
Labor ite Ranks to Shrink
GLASGOW, BcoUand, Oct. IS
—A 78-y*aj-old Labor party member
of parliament, David Kirkwood, an-
nounced Wednesday he intend* to re-
Ur* from parliament the end of thl*
month.
funcUon, that of stopping traffic be-
tween the Vletmlnh and the Chinese
communist* who. the French charge,
have been training and equipping the
guerrilla* on a large scale recently.
France to Get
Patrol Hunts Driver
Who Fled Accident
CAT-GUT DOESN'T
COME FROM CATS
daughter.
However. Dr. Ray W. Hammack
told a superior court jury Tuesday
that the tests neither prove nor dis-
prove that Babu Dostogtr is the father
Satra ha* denied paternity.
Market*
Oil Report* ....
Radio Lag ....
Society
Sports -.77. 7.7
TWH W TMBT
TV Tapica
Wamea .......
<
r-J
-
li
11
.... tt
.... ii
.... It
.... 17
.... a
.... t«
■trn-n
The Weather
PHOS P. a Wsotlwr Bum*
Strcart ttaMaa
LOCAL—Fair and eantiaaad
warm today, partly eloady and eoa-
Unaed warn tonight and Thurs-
tedgy jaaar K lag ID-
might near M. High Thursday ia
asMdto Ma.
STATE—Fair waet aad partly
etoady east portion tonight aad
Thursday aaamaeaahli warm; tow
toaight M aarthwaat to M oaaU
aad east; high Thursday mid Ms.
^.Hourly Temperature
{
1
1
w <
kjf »
&
BULLETIN
■AMHUNG, North Korea.
Oct IB—(U.B—The bodies of
IN Korean civilian*—includ-
ing some teen-age youths—
were found Wednesday near a
prison here. They had been
murdered by the retreating
communists.
against communist aggression.
weT^‘e^^Wth:ti7m;rVtx; short-circuit ael fire to hu troZn
wiU carry through on thl* policy pro-
nouncement which means r —
the rearmament of the fre* world on
His chief aid* In thl* program-
Secretary of State Acheson and Sec-
retary of Defense Marshall—were at
th* airport when Mr. Truman * plane
landed at 10.04 a. m after a flight
from San Francisco where he made
his foreign policy speech Tuesday
night.
Because of fog over the National
airport, the plane was brought down
at Andrew* field, a military airport in
Marylehd 12 miles southeast of
Washington. (Ear Iter report Fage II. I
Blood Tests Reported
In Sabu Paternity Case
LO8 ANGELES. Oct. 18—<A5-A
Red Capital
Pusan Radio Claims South Korean Troops
First to Enter Pyongyang; Capture of City
Believed Imminent; Cis Meet Opposition
TOKYO. Oct. 18—<U.F1—The vanguard of onrushing al- nii
lied armies was reported Wednesday night to have smashed
many auto- J
Oklahoma City Times
30 PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CHY WEDN^SDAyToCTOBER
Old Indo-ChinaHMHHil^^H^B^^^^^^I
io p. m.
It is too early to predict damage to
Florida's record 100.000.000-box orange
and grapefruit crop, just now begin-
ning to move to market.
I
I
&
WASHINGTON. Oct. It—<Ah-Hlgh
United States officials said Wednes-
day that France Is likely to get up to
56 billions in American military aid
during the next three years.
An American plan to allocate up 18
12.400.000.000 of existing funds to the
French is .lust "a first instalment,"
these officials said.
Additional billions will be needed If
France is to build up an army of at
least 20 divisions by the end of 1952.
This reportedly 1* one of the goals set
by mUitary planner* to help strength-
en western Europe against commun-
ism.
President Truman and Secretary of
State Acheson have put congress on
France
rtrsss TVRM TO
rso* i. column «
Hit-Run Victim City Goodwill
Group Visits
7 Cities Today
By Ben Berger
BARTLESVILLK, O c t. 18—
Starting the second day’s tour
of northeastern Oklahbma, 45
Oklahoma City goodwill trip-
pers and the 24-plece Kiltie
band took oft Wednesday
morning for Nowata.
Wednesday they were at Nowata,
Vinita, Chelaea, Claremore, Sapulpa,
Drumright and conclude the day at
Cushing. The first day out the
trippers visited 10 northeast Okla-
homa cities and were greeted by ap-
proximately 5,000 persons with prob-
ably the largest crowd right here.
The three-bus caravan hit Bartles-
ville just as employes of downtown
offices were leaving their buildings.
Kiltie* Make Hit
The Kilties sponsored by Amer-
ican Legion post 35 received a grand
reception here Tuesday a* they did
In all nine other cities.
The trippers Inaugurated a new fea-
ture Tuesday night her* when they
had a regular get together for mem-
bers of the trip. Only three guests at-
tended the dinner session.
Bartlesville’s chamber of commerce
secretary R. 8 Bedford, the junior
Ed Sweeney, chairman of the tour
patrol authorities said they expect to'presided at the evening session at'
which. Ideas for improvement of the
trip were exchanged.
Stirling Given Cap
Pat Henry presented Shel Stirling
a fancy leopard cap In recognition of
his work as a salesman for the Okla-
homa City soo on the trip to south-
east Oklahoma. Stirling incidentally
is still selling the ano, devoting hi*
efforts to the new seals and the young
chimpanaee.
Bartlesville is observing Oil Progress
through a flurry of communist resistance and entered the
North Korean capital city of Pyongyang’.
The Pusan radio reported at 9 p. m. (6 a. m. CST) that
the South Korean First division crossed the Taedong river,
which flows through Pyongyang, and entered the city.
American and South Korean flying columns had raced into
the suburbs from three direction.*;, and had brought the richest
prize of the lightning sweep through North Korea within their
grasp.
Dispatches from the fast shifting zone of the climactic action
in the Korean war said the fall of Pyongyang seemed imminent.
The communist government leaders were believed to have fled
to Manchuria. The Pyongyang radio fell silent. United Nations
forces captured the Pyongyang airport, four miles east of the the^mouniainousjrontirr. stronghold
city proper, according to field re- ‘
ports broadcast from Pusan.
South Korean* Win Race
The South Korean First division ap-
parent iy surged westward from the
■trport snd won the race to be the
tint of the three main allied col-
umns to enter the cily.
The South Korean First division at-
tacked at dawn from positions eight
mile* east of Pyongyang and four
.mite* from It* eastern airport It re-
ported little opposition to the start
of the push Into the capital.
Th* U. 8. First cavalry dlvi^on.
dashing for Pyongyang from the
Hwangju area some 20 miles to the
south, ran into a Hurry of resistance
near Chunghwa, eight miles below the
capital on the trunk highway to Seoul.
U. 8. Eighth army headquarters in
Korea reported some opposition to the
allied column* spearing tn from the
south, southeast and east. A dispatch
front Headquarters said the report In-
dicated that last fragment* of the
communist army might have decided
to make a stand before the capital.
Army's Report Is Vague
An Eighth army spokesman can-
celed the customary pres* conference
Wednesday night. Instead he posted a
three-sentence bulletin which, he said,
contained *11 the new information re-
ceived during the dav. It said.
“Friendly force* ar* meeting In-
creased enemy resistance just south
of Chunghwa, 10 mile* south of Py-
ongyang. First cavalry force* this
morning were reported to be leading
th* parade at American and British
troop* up th* main Seoul-Pyongyang
rood. They Jumped ttt thia morning
south of Chunghwa." ' ~ ~ 1
Notably the mileage figures In the
bulletin differed from th* measure-
ment* on field map*.
Ran Against Tanka
The South Korean First division was
ahead in the race for Pyongyang even
st the time of th* Eighth army re-
port. Th* statement said the van-
guard of the division met considerable
resistance. Including some tank*, seven
miles west of Taedong. 14 miles from
Pyongyang. But reports based on later
Information placed the South Korean*
past those position*.
The Eighth army also reported that
troops of the South Korean Eighth
division were meeting resistance in
the westward drive from Yangdok, 60
mile* east of Pyongyang, along the
main highway to the capital.
Communications between Tokyo and
North Korea reached a new low, with
a virtual blackout shielding the de-
velopments most of the day.
Two Industrial Cl lie* Keised
But the scarcity of news at Eighth
army headquarter* was not viewed
with alarm. * dispatch from there
said. One staff officer said the com-
munists should be expected to make
some kind of defense of Pyongyang,
but he did not think It would last
long.
Both Hamhung and the twin city
of Hungnam. center of the greatest
’''nn*1 T° plac< 411
. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
A&M Sports a Pretty Tie
Balloting ln e,ectl°n for Oklahoma A&M college’s
Tint Lady of Commerce" Tuesday ended in a three-way tie.
The Commerce club, sponsors of the election, called for a run-
off election Thursday. The candidates In the three-way tie
are, left to right, Paula Sue Nyswonger. 2118 N Kelley, member
of Pi Beta Phi sorority; Patty Laird. Ponca City, member of
Kappa Alpha Theta, and Nancy Thomason. Pampa, Texas,
member of Kappa Delta. All three are juniors.
Flood Waters Damage
of blood te^. Sabu, elephant boy of \fAvip-in Fstivric
the films, could be th* father of * ITICAlldll lUWIIS
VERACRUZ, Mexico, Oct. 18—HJ.W
—Flood waters cover part* of al least
six southern Veracru* state towns, re-
port* reaching here from the hurri-
cane-devastated are* indicated'
Wednewtsy- ____________________J.
State authorities said the 110-mlle-l
an-hour Mow last week affected "at*
18 different towns snd de-|
**aaaa than •> AAA
- W I reph nt<»
Ohio Visitor Learns About Hurricanes
This unidentified man from Ohio was visiting in Miami when
the hurricane moved in. He left his car on a street in the
path of falling bricks. He’ll probably ride a train home.
Truman Back
In Washington
TOKYO, Oet. 18—<UJD—
North Korean Premier Kim II
Sung, who one week ago called
on his anned forces to ‘fight
to the last,” waa believed
Wednesday to have fled to
communist Manchuria or the
Soviet Union.
He probably took with him all
hi* top adviaer*. There ha* been
speculation her* that on* reawn
North Korean troop* in the field
have not quit is because there Is no
high authority left In Pyongyang,
the northern capital, to tell them
to surrender.
Borne authorities believe Kim has
gone to Manchuria in the hope of
mounting guerrilla raids into Korea
during th* winter. Other, think h*
might go to Vladtvoetok, where the
Russians arc sUU holding the for-
mer J a pane** puppet emperor <.f
Manchuria. H*nry Pu-Yl
It would not surprise headquar-
ter* officiate if Kim suddenly turns
up somewhere with a Korean "gov-
eminent in exile."
Kim teat addressed hl* people
October 11. when he rejected Mac-
Arthur* last demand foe . North
Korea * surrender with * call to hi*
force* to fight » the end.
* •
Summers Hardy, 75, former justice
of the Oklahoma supreme court and
dean emeritus of Tulsa university
law school, died Wednesday at his
home here. He was a former district
judge of Marshall, Bryan, Choctaw
and McCurtain counties.
The colorful legal figure, whose ca-
reer began in the U. 8 Indian terri-
torial court in 1807. had lived In Ard-
more. Hugo and Oklahoma City.
Judge Hardy drafted the constitu-
tional amendment which prevents the
legislature from exceeding it* budget.
His help was enlisted in thl* work by
former Oov. Leon C. Phillips.
He also handled legal details for
the merger of the Sincialr-Pralrte Oil
4 Ou Co., which involved 8600 mil-
lion*.
Services will be announced by
Stanley funeral home.
Damage Set at $5 Millions;
Hospitals Packed as Storm
Swirls Toward Citrus Belt
man about midnight as he
changed a flat tire on his car
one mile north of the Newcastle
treacherous mountain section along bridge on U. 8. 62.
Bam Rosa Cain. 28. of 211 8E 45.
wu taken to Wesley hospital with a
basal skull fracture, broken rib and
longer are' eftectlve in 'their main j deep laceration of the left leg. He wm<
““ — - - • - — ■ stin uncongcj0us Wednesday.
Caln, his wife. Mrs. Eleanor Caln;
Russell Rowan. 34, and a companion.
Geneva Van Sickle. 24. of 4400 8
Lindsay, were returning from Tuttle,
where they had been visiting friends.
Caln and Rowan are drivers for the
same trucking firm. Caln was driving
hte car.
They had a flat tire and pulled off
the highway onto a dirt road to
change wheels. Cain was tightening
the wheel nuts when a car sideswiped
the parked vehicle, knocked Caln 20
or 25 feet and sped on without stop-
ping.
Rowan narrowly escaped. A fender chamber of commerce vice-president,
of the speeding car hit him but he Bill Simpson, were guests of the group
was not injured seriously. He Jumped “long with Herman Olds. 8t. Louis,
clear just tn time. Both women were Mo., who happened to meet an old
In the car. which was not damaged friend Mack Landrum one of the trtp-
seriously. ; ' ..
The license number of the runaway hotel,
car was not obtained, but highway “'
identify it by damage sustained In the
accident.
Royal PalniN Bow Ix>w Before Hurricane
This Is a view on Blscayne boulevard near Flagler street In
Miami Wednesday morning. Hoyal palms, flattened by the
125-mlle-an-hour wind, litter the pavement.
3
Antarctic Trip Resumed
SOUTHAMPTON. England, Oct. 18
—The survey ship John Briscoe
left again Wednesday for the Antarc-
tic with a party of weather and geo-
logical experts to man Britain's bases
there. It had to return to Southamp-
ton Tuesday to remedy engine trouble. ----------
--week and all stores were remaining
doctor has reported that on the basis,
I t
Among the most sheepish i Lea&ssw "kaTiev dMeeea'^Mar^id.
names known is “cat-gut." It!
comes from sheep not cats! But
Oklahoman and Times Want
Ads can well be described as
the cat’s meow because they
bring such wonderful results!
Thousands of p«opl« have
learned to make regular profits
through the Want Ads. When
i it comes to selling, buying,
j renting, recovering la
invasion R„ute Scores Injured as Hurricane
Opened to Reds
MIAMI. Fla., Oct. 18—(ZP)—With one person known
dead and hundreds homeless, national guardsmen were
called out Wednesday to guard hard-hit areas in the south
l Florida hurricane area where damage was officially esti-
I mated at $5 millions.
The storm, losing force as it traveled Qverland, moved
I on toward the central Florida citrus belt, leaving destruc-
I tion in its wake from 125-mile-an-hour winds.
| Hardest hit were the communities of Davie, West Hol-
I lywood and West Hallandale. In those towns at least 40
I homes were destroyed, 79 trailers wrecked, many homes
I damaged and an undetermined number of persons injured.
Mrs. Owen Adams was killed at West Hollywood when the
J winds upset and smashed her trailer. Her husband was crit-
ically hurt and their three children injured.,
44)-Fool Fall Fatal
HARTFORD. Conn..-Oct. 18—<U P>—
Fifteen years ago Max Rubenstein was
persuaded by his family to quit work-
ing as a roofer. Tuesday the 75-year-
climbed onto a roof, slipped snd fell
40 feet to his death.
WJuiTs Inside
CatlinlL.* Ifni* an-hour Mow last week affected "at’ *BUl*
(Jrtholica Loac I mt ,, dlfferent towng and df , i. oktahom.
PRAGUE, Caechoalovaki*. Oct 18— stroyed "no les* than 3.000 small j !
i.Ti—The communist government's of- homes" tn the southwestern corner of
renting, recovering losses, hir» I ricl* gsastte announced Wednesday the Gulf of Mexico. Important crop*
I ing good help and finding well- congregation at Catholic youth were damaged badly.
I paying jobs, the WenfArir irw" rwhaatomkta. with tU seal ainese and aimsae H—W** ■>»'
- - - Brno, ha* ceased to exist for lews of state were reported all swollen but
i an members " The government has the Papaloapan river valley was the
sponsored a rival Cathalls action or-:most seriously mtnaced by threat of
gamaation. ! general floods.
the storm swept through."
Large part* of Miami and suburbs {
were plunged Into darkness. Power
went off at two big hospitals in Miami
and Miami Beach and auxiliary equip-
ment was pressed into service.
Bus service was halted and all traf-
fic ordered off the streets shortly be-
fore the hurricane—ninth of the *ea- j
son—roared in from tfee south around
Sheriff Amos Hall of Broward county made a tour of the
three communities and called out company C, Florida national
guard.
"Davie, a town of about 2.000, looks
a* though a tornado went through it."
said Hall. "Substantial homes were
destroyed and there isn’t an undam-
aged house in the town."
Hospitals Crowded
West Hollywood was hit even hard-
er. Twenty-five injured were hos-
pitalised. 500 were homeless. 30 or
40 homes were demolished and 200
others partly or wholly unroofed.
Dr. Paul Hughes of the Broward
county health department moved a
water purifier into the town of 2,000,
and asked al! residents to report to
an Improvised hospital In a plumbing
shop for typhoid immunisation shots.
The three communities are Inland
from Fort Lauderdale, resort city 24
miles north of Miami, and Hollywood,
another resort between the two cities.
The tornadic nature of the storm
was evidenced by leaser wind* in Hol-
lywood and Fort Lauderdale.
.Miami Is Hard Hit
Miami Itself was hard hit. On*
estimate of damage in the Oreater
Miami area alone was as high as »8
millions. About 40 persons injured
there crowded hospital emergency
rooms after the wind died down about
3 a. m.
Some houses were unroofed and
about 2,000 plate glass windows were
shattered in the Miami area, but no
fatalities were reported there. Fallen
trees blocked a number of streets.
Orady Norton, chief storm fore-
caster, made preliminary damage estl- 1
mate for the south Florida section of '
85 millions.
Miami safety director O. D Hen-
derson estimated damage in Miami at
83 millions. The Miami Daily News
said It may reach S8 millions in the
area.
Radio Towers Wrecked
Five radio stations lost their towers,
which lay In twisted heaps after the
blow. Storm shutters were wrenched
off many windows, the glass smashed
and displays sucked out into streets.
Uprooted trees crushed
mobiles.
Palm Beach, at the other end of
the 70-mlle south Florida "gold coast ."
escaped damaging winds Peak velocity
was 70 miles an hour In gusts. Lake
Worth and Ocean boulevard over- |
flowed a few streets. Signboards and ■
shrubbery were chopped up. There was I
no structural damage and no one was !
injured.
Communities along the eastern
shore of Lake Okeechobee rode out
hurricane winds and heavy rain. Crop .
damage, especially to corn and beans,
was heavy. Many houses sustained roof
damage, windows were blown In and
trees uprooted.
The storm lost some force aa It
pushed northward near the eastern
edge of Lake Okeechobee, but still
packed winds of 100 miles an hour a*
it headed for central Florida.
Power Knocked Oat
Sharp lightning accompanied the
hurricane, and falling power lines,
uuu.uw w . nuBuuai snooting out blue flames, gave dark- il
Dr Harold F. Raynor said the M ’
housewife feared she was suffering
from an incurable disease and
threatened .suicide He had been
treating her for a nervous disorder
for six months.
“I told her there was nothing
| wrong with her and that she needed
no further treatment." the physician
said. "She seemed to be somewhat
calmer.
"Then she ran toward the win-
dow. I grabbed her by the skirt and
one ankle and held on for what
seemed like an hour. The skirt
ripped and I couldnt hold her."
SAIGON, Indo-China, Oct.
18—(A*)—France Wednesday
announced abandonment of
„ie Indo-China frontier post
of Dong Dang, relinquishing
for the second time in 65
years her control of the main
invasion route from China.
A French military spokesman
said the Dong Dang garrison
withdrew Tuesday, presumably
15 miles southeast to the French
frontier headquarters fortress
of Langson.
Invasion Bout* Open
It was the fifth post the French
have given up within a month along
------------ . .. j
of Moscow-trained Ho Chi Minh's na-
tionalist guerrillas.
Dong Dang squarely faced the tra-
ditional Invasion route from China-
through the walled Chinese city of
Nam Quan (Chinese gate) and a
mountain pas*. Except for periods of
Japanese and Chinese occupation dur-
ing and Just after World war II,
France had held the post since 1885.
The withdrawal from Dong Dang
left major French frontier garrisons
only at Langson. and on the western
and eastern ends of the former French
border defense line—al Laokay and
Moncay.
Retreat I* Orderly
The military spokesman said the
retirement from Dong Dang had been
carried out "in good order" and
without unusual pressure from Vlet-
mlnh forces.
Langson Itself was readied for the
onslaught Of the Vletmlnh guerrilla*,
or perhaps for abandonment by the
French, a* has been Increasingly ru-
mored recently.
The spokesman said evacuation of
civilian* from the fortress point had)
been completed despite a typhoon'
which has been raging on the frontier.
The bad weather was continuing, he
added. .
Proclamation of a state of alert in
north Indo-China Tuesday added to
the growing evidence of the gravity of
the French situation.
Attack By Bed* Feared
The proclamation was taken here as
evidence of official fear* that the
Vletmlnh force* may descend from
their mountain strongholds to attack
th* French held Red river delta. . *“* highway patrol Wednea-
The latest withdrawal strengthened 4ay Is seeking the hit-run driver
from the victmtyof Hwangju “Smiles bellef lhat France ha* decided she who struck an Oklahoma City
„. ------•» mual concentrate <r protecting the----- - •
north Indo-China capital of Hanoi,
Its port of Haiphong and the sur-
rounding rich delta region, leaving the
1..-^;...— ______
the Chinese frontier to the Vletmlnh
guerrillas.
Military experts already have ad-
mitted that the frontier garrison* no
DETROIT. Oct. 18—fAl-A
physician pursued g woman
patient around his office for
TOLRA net ta-mn-etat* Tude. 15 minUtM ln a effort
TULSA. Oct. 18-(8pectab-Judg» Jate keep hfr frojn
plunging to her death from a
thirteenth floor window.
Mrs. Jean Cogley. 41. eluded his
grasp snd landed on a fifth floor
window ledge. She was dead on ad-
mittance to a hospital.
open until 0 p. m. That was the rea-
son for no joint meeting with the
chamber of commerce here. Th* group
will meet with chamber of commerce
official* in Cushing Wednesday night.
These goodwill tour* give you a
good insight into Oklahoma. In
Guthrie Maurice Coffin, a creamcry
company executive, and Don Mc-
Dowell. retail store manager, were
definitely Interested in Oklahoma
football, both the Aggies and the
University of Oklahoma. McDowell
proudly admit* he's an Aggie and
say* "the flrat 20 minute* in Dallas
I thought Whitworth's boy* had a
chance to win that ball game "
Dr. John Abernathy. St. Luke's
Methodist church, Oklahoma City,
continues to be one of the leading
trippers. In Outhrie he reminded
rams8" cXumJ°s Goodwill
W A 8 H I N O T O N. Oct. 18—(JV- Industrial concentration on the north-
Prealdent Truman returned to Wash-
ington Wednesday from hi* Pacific
pilgrimage which produced an offer
to all Ast* of American aid and a
“full partnership of peace” for those — — — —
willing to defend their Independence Clyde P. Foss. 37. charged with reck-
againrt communist aggression. J1"’’*"? •»— -Jr! tr.U z
immediately ahead of th* president ra^' '°'d off'<*rs Wednesday a
*nd he lo,t control of the car while
pressing lryin« lo Mat out the flames.
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.
Matching Search Results
View 12 places within this issue that match your search.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.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 219, Ed. 3 Wednesday, October 18, 1950, newspaper, October 18, 1950; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1838069/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.