Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 173, Ed. 3 Friday, September 4, 1964 Page: 2 of 10
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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93
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-
DANIELSVILLE,
Ga.
(Continued From Page 1)
when the escapees made a
I
Firm Bars 25
K
*
After Walkout
"i
I
By the State Staff
Record Axed
By Car Sales
com-
that he had been at the hos-
Ford Motor Co. reported
pital earlier when Trujillo Thursday the retail sale of that its Ford division, paced
and Crum arrived, and had
whether they'd caught the ever broken the 8 million month were 34,694 with total
sales since its introduction
guys yet,” Park said. “That mark
Sales of the 1963 model to- last April 17 of 132.300.
Reds
That Gun
Is Loaded
State Deaths
of about 7.8 million passen-
Guilt Plea
Is Made
Trio Is Arrested
Local Deaths
Wendell thalweg.
CHICAGO (UPI) — Chica- day in connection with pros- Leon Hicks, was arrested at
go will be the first large city
12th A N. Hudson
ce 2-4206
(code 405)
registration N Francis, was booked into
DEMOCRATS! REPUBLICANS!
(downtown postal stations.
ft was found.
Libel Suit
Political
Wires Cross
P2=4,
Atkinson,
$
unsuccessful
rue
water-Miller?
— 1a
'No, thi» is Johnson-for-
Tm
paid at od-
the spot. Wouldn't you like thet ?
Quickly elfective, high petency reliet
Atkinson said.
4
4
h
l ,
I
I
I -
t"
B 2
al #6
I
AUTO DRIVERS
Ji :N IS
SCHWEINLE SCHABEL IN
899900800888
of 8 1 million units, the first percent ahead of a year ago.
time automobile sales have Mustang sales alone for the
was no work lor them Fri-
day when they returned,”
ly suspected prostitutes are
referred to municipal court,
which
Force
booths manned by commis-
sion employes would be set
up in 50 neighborhood and
were found near the truck in
the refuge area. The right
front wheel of the truck had
soliciting
purpose.
Houston
late
called
mar-
Oklahoma
newspapers,
said
had
filling an immoral date.
Dee Ann Hicks, 21. of 1221
»
Inc.,
Air
I to
Nr.
fwe
and two other Negroes were
returning home after a tour
of summer duty as army re-
serve officers at Fort Ben-
ning. Ga
were being held for possible
filing of state charges.
nent Washington, D. C, Ne-
gro educator.
seemed to be all that was on
his mind."
Election
Sydney
HUSTLED OUT of hearing room of the House Commit-
tee on Un-American Activities is a man identified as
Gino Foreman. He was ejected from the hearing after
a witness was attacked by a man wearing a Nazi Par-
ty swastika armband. The witness was attacked while
on the stand. (AP Wirephoto)
told the all-white jury the
Klansmen "should be given
as much sympathy as they
showed the victim."
on our Heme Loens
Ne Cancelletion Fee
SEE . . .
N
।
Many Participate
Participating in the road
blocks and search are Fed-
eral Bureau of Investigation
agents, Oklahoma and Texas
must be shown in cases in-
volving persons in public
life.
"In my considered judg-
ment, thissupreme court de-
cision has in effect nullified
fAe libel laws of the state of
MAJ
RoMo
WHY PAY for a
Suiototrnt Pool*
M
%
1
* 2
ft
By Associated Press
W. P Bill Atkinson, pub-
lisher of the new Oklahoma
Journal newspaper, said Fri-
day he will dismiss a $10
million libel suit against the
Oklahoma Publishing Co. be-
cause of a recent U. S. Su-
preme Court ruling.
ih {i,.
| N
am
INSPECTING GUN is T. C. Davis of Burns Flat. Davis attempted to assemble
the gun after he saw three convicts attempting to escape from Deputy U. S.
: Marshal J. Frank Trujillo and guard L. W. Crum. Davis loaded the wounded
: officers into his station wagon and took them to an Elk City hospital. (Staff '
: Photo by Austin Traverse) - •
"BUMPER STICKER"
BOX 14367
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA.
... 79c
...
V y ' .
L _
LB J. AND GOLDWATER
"64" BUMPER STICKERS
3 for $1.00 or 100 for
$20.00-SEND CHECK OR
CASH TO
city jail on a complaint of
vagrancy by prostitution and
is being held for possible fil-
ing of state charges, Capt.
M ■
candidate for governor two
years ago, filed the suit in
connection with editorials in
The Daily Oklahoman during
the campaign.
He had asked $5 million in
actual damages and $5 mil-
lion punitive damages.
In an editorial in his new
morning paper, Atkinson
said he was dropping the
suit in view of the supreme
court decision which pro-
plagued an engineer, farmer
or lawyer.
Demons Run Deep
In recent years, army en-
gineers have spent $1.4 bil-
Cox. 19 and Albert Leroy|Red River into Texas.
(kfafiem
22 - •
cent increase over a year
been thrown off, apparentlyjton dispatcher;
ni L.)
) C . 3 1 Y j B J. I
HOME LOANS
ToBuy, Build, Refinance—Repair
1^ 1 ‘1
r N I J
and Hicks also
1964 model passenger cars by record Mustang sales, hit
° .THE
City L l
j • +- . I
In Mountains
Asks Deafly
F
0T •
Stop it right away with TUMS antacid m+
tablets. Tday’s good tasting TUMS are W=
fortified - sped soothing, high potency
relief ... neutralize git excess acid . .. km
acid . a
indigestion •
Over or Under Age?
License Cancelled?
See
Commissioner
Holzmann said
sharp turn into a
titution after an Oklahoma the couple's apartment fol-
City vice-squad officer said lowing his wife's arrest at a
the woman took marked motel in the 3300 block SW
money for the purpose of 29. He was charged with va-
J:i
; services will be
„ entcostal t:_::-----
ane • Drainer, juq j
for an immoral
Pk“
I
trol dispatcher at Lawton. Highway
their jobs Friday but found j
no work.
vers are hit wile, ihree dausnters.
RALIFE, Mettle, M; services.
it 1 p.m. Eridav in entcostat Moliness
Church. survivort. Inchi
Leona Darrah, Minten,
nze,krokeba,
I rvpp, ronvun•
t er.
(1 } ,
Fort to Stay Open?
FORT ORD, Calif. (UPI)
— A board of 35 civilian and
military epidemic experts
recommended Thursday that
Fort Ord remain open for
training army recruits, de-
spite a severe outbreak of
spinal meningitis this year.
Whatever the differences
Nebraska Attorney General
Clarence Meyer says his
state will pursue its battle in
the supreme court. (Wags
have suggested mobilization
of the Nebraska navy, a
mythical force made up en-
tirely of "admirals ")
It may be the court jus-
tices, used to problems of
scalawags, can cope with the
thalweg.
E rrdee •
i .
35rday September 4. 1964 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
” g" ' -vh W * I • ---mi- 4,
Manhunt Is On
operating room
“His main concern was
served, "the only points of
jurisdictional difference per-
tain to avulsion (sudden cut-
ioffs as in the case of Carter
Lake) or the location of the
WASHINGTON (A — Fred
Mullen, director of the news
bureau of "Citizens for Gold-
water-Miller.” found his po-
litical wires crossed when he
tried out a new phone in his
apartment supposedly con-
nected with his office switch-
board.
After the phone was in-
stalled, Mullen lifted the re-
ceiver and the following con-
versation took place:
“Is this Citizens for Gold-
- *
..-at
i *
Capt. Caldwell said usual- Is Dropped
136.287, up from 118,290 last
August, even though there
was one less selling day in
the month this year.
GM's Chevrolet division
reported record August sales
10 8 percent above Chevy’s
previous high August, in
1955. Chevrolet general man-
ager Semon Knudsen said a
total of 167.167 passenger
cars and 38,762 trucks were
sold in August, up 14 9 per-
DAILY OKLAHOMAN
Morning
DAY OKLAHOMAN
IA fY TIMES
on of The DMIv Okia-
peegszveem
।county officers in all western
(Oklahoma counties, city po-
lice in Elk City and Clinton,
Grandfield, Frederick, Wau-
rika, and federal agents
from Texas and Oklahoma.
An Oklahoma City deputy
U S Marshal. Floyd Park,
was among the few persons
to talk with Trujillo Thurs-
day night after the New
Mexico deputy left surgery
and was in his hospital
room
would make it four in a row over last August.
Gordon estimated a level
(Continued From Page 1)
which the Soviet comrades
should concern themselves,”
he wrote.
"Also in the socialist camp
perhaps . . . one needs to be
on one's guard against the
forced exterior uniformity.”
Because of his views on
party autonomy, Togliatti
said, he “would be against
any proposal to create once
again a centralized interna-
tional organization.”
of Serv-Air
Iowa commissioners even
conceded conditionally that
Carter Lake should go to Ne-
braska.
Claims Pressed
But as politicians began to
talk peace lawyers suddenly
went to war.
Iowa pressed its claims in
court to land it said had
been formed on the Iowa
side by a gradual deposit of
silt over the years. Iowa law
holds that such land belongs
to the state which wants to
use the tracts in question for
recreational purposes.
Nebraska responded with
a U. S. Supreme Court suit
challenging Iowa's right to
take title to the land.
Battle Goes On
“As far as I can see,"
Iowa assistant Attorney Gen-
eral William J. Yost ob-
said airplanes are being
jused in the massive search
of the area Jack Lane, Law-
July 11 shotgun slaying of
Lemuel A Penn, 48, as he
drove through a rural area
of northeast Georgia.
The state and defense
were given two hours each
to summarize their cases to
the jury. A verdict was ex-
pected possibly late Friday.
Johnson waved two sawed-
off shotguns before the supe-
rior court jury and shouted.
These things are made to
kill.
ASSETS OVER 100 MILLION
SOI N Robinson CEntral 2-9547 Oklahomo City
Home Oftice Ponca City, Okia
Manley , 21, of Terre Haute.
Ind They were sentenced
Friday on auto theft
charges
Pat Grimes, highway pa-
sites.
Cook County
Buick division delivered
37.317 cars during the
ger car sales for the 1965 month, a whopping 43 7 per-
model year, which would
vides that deliberate malice President headquarters.”
Pnca City E/--I‘
SAVINGS & LOAN•9
as applied to
against Serv-Air would be
filed with the National Labor
Relations Board in Fort
Worth charging unfair labor
practices.
Thursday he
(UPI) — A state prosecutor
Friday urged a jury to
“show no mercy” and send
two Ku Klux Klansmen to
death in the electric chair
for the murder of a promi-
Total Ford division car
sales during August were
serves Vance
Base, returned
ago.
Chrysler corporation re-
ported its passenger car
sales during August totaled
81,520 units. a 22 percent in-
crease over the same month
in 1963.
ENID — Twenty-five em-
hon taming and harnessing ployes
the Big Muddy. But demons
“He recognized me right DETROIT (UPI) — John el cars during August,
away.” Park said, adding F. Gordon, president of Gen- pared with August of 1963.
Patrol officers,
used the credit card to buy
$500 worth of tires and other
auto accessories.
The card was stolen from
2216 SW 31, formerly occu-
pied by the rightful owner
Instead of forwarding it, a
woman who lived there de-
livered the card to others.
She and another woman
involved in the spending
spree were placed on proba-
tion in federal court. The
second man involved in the
case, Wayne Morgan Banks,
Dallas, is awaiting trial on
the charge September 30.
McMahan had been sought
since Nov. 26, 1962, when he
was arrested last month in
Enid. U. S. District Judge
Stephen Chandler referred
the case to the probation of-
fice for a pre-sentence re-
port. ;
Austin Cechren, M. of 6901 NW It, fieg
Thursdav in an Okiahoma Cl tv hospital.
Services are pending with Bill Merritt
Funeral Service.
Robert Morrie, 11. of 17% S Broadwav,
died Thursday in en Okiahome City Nos-
pital. Services are pending with Garrison
Funeral Home
OMAHA ( — The thalweg
is the scalawag that has set
two neighbors scrapping
again.
The normally congenial
breadbasket states of Iowa
and Nebraska have gone to
the U. S. Supreme Court for
the second time in their long
and sometimes bitter boun-
dary hassle.
The boundary, in a less
precise way than most maps
show, is the Missouri River.
And the Missouri is as un-
predictable and rambunc-
tious a stream as ever
“What were these men
doing walking around with
pistols strapped to their
sides and carrying shotguns
as if they were in the wild
west?" Johnson asked.
He answered; "They were
trying to take the law into
their own hands. They were
looking for trouble."
Johnson said the only
thing the Klansmen knew
about Penn was that he was
Negro
"Would that justify taking
a shotgun and blowing his
head off?" Johnson asked.
Using 55 minutes of the
state's 120 minutes of argu-
graney by being a pimp. His
wife told officers he brought
her to the motel, police said
The porter who allegedly
set up the date, Rozell Hous-
ton, 36, of 2301 NE 19, was
arrested on a complaint of
Truman Miller, Serv-Air
president, said Friday morn-
ing.
Schedule Maintained
Miller said he did not
know what action the com-
pany would take in the case
of the 25 employes when the
plant reopens Tuesday after
the Labor Day holiday.
Miller said the plant was
maintaining its schedule and
there was no interruption of
operations on the base. Serv-
Air has approximately 1,1001
employes at the base, of I
these 118 are employed in
the jet engine shop, from
which the 25 men walked out
Thursday.
Tom Patterson, AFL-CIO
representative in Enid, Fri-
day morning said charges
but in this case, state
charges Twill be requested
since “we have a good
case.”
nS. t
*...................3
SITU
3000220.00 1200 400
3 pack- *
still run deep there and one
of them is the thalweg
The thalweg is the deepest
point of the river. It is the
lawyer's name for the chan-
nel. On the still restless Mis-
souri the thalweg—or chan-
nel—is a wandering troub-
lemaker.
In 1888 a sudden channel
shift sliced the town of Cart-
er Lake from Iowa and left
it on the Nebraska shore ad-
joining Omaha. In a decision
that would continue to gall
Nebraskans for three-quar-
ters of a century, the su-
preme court declared the
town still belonged to Iowa.
Line Is Drawn
By 1943, engineers felt
they were getting the Mis-
souri pretty well in hand. So
Iowa and Nebraska drew a
boundary line down the mid-
dle of the river and signed a
border compact. Iowa, how-
ever, retained Carter Lake
But the thalweg continued
to meander, washing up new
disputes on the Iowa and Ne-
braska shores.
A few months ago boun-
dary commissioners of both
states agreed on a new cen-
t e r-of-the-river boundary.
An Enid man pleaded
guilty in federal court Fri-
day to unlawful possession of
an oil company credit card
stolen from the mail two
years ago.
Charles Steve McMahan,
26, formerly of Oklahoma
City, is one of four persons
the government charges
area from a refuge road.
: entrances to the area
have been closed off. Offi-
errs were attempting to hem
in the trio
Men identified
The men were identified,
as Vytautas George Spi-
rauskas, 21, of Werchester,
Mass ; Robert Lawrence
eral Motors Corp., said
taled 7.6 million units.
Gordon said combined
cars and trucks, including
about 500,000 imported vehi-
des, totaled 9 5 million for
the 1964 model year. Last
year’s combined total was
8.8 million.
The GM president, howev-
er, stopped short of pre-
dicting another 8 million
breakthrough for the 1965
models, but he did predict
another banner year which
MUSKOG[E
BRESHEARS, John, N; services ere
pendine with Lescher Funeral Home. He
KM Tesday In e Muskeree hospital. He
wee e native of Missouri, Suryivers In-
elude hit wifej e daughter, Mn Rev
Cerier. Muskesee, two sisters, Mn Mary
Shelby, Muskogee, and Mn Nannie Hen
drix, Okiehoma City, lie erandchildren,
ana eight vrentvowArAoren •
sPENCER, Mn Mery Ellen, n, serv.
ices will be at 10 a.m. riday lh Beniam-
in Funeral Home. the died wedneedev in
e Newate NospitaL, Surytyerg Inc lade two
ons, Bryon and haul, bath of Nawata; a
daughter Mrs. Eleanor tinea. Dewey
five rendchildren, and two sisters.
VINITA
GQLDEN, Ira James, 41/ servicees are
pendine with Leginbuet Funeral Hema.
He died Wednesday at hie home. He has
e retired empieyee of Easter state hes-
a Itai Survivors Iinclude hie wife, Leona, e
step-dauzhter: * step-son ’ • stster, and
Iwo brothers.
WASHITA
if
tional 10 employes with
1 them.
ARDMORE
MALONE, Richara, U. drowned Tues-
dev. services were Thursday, survivors
are hig mother and steptather, Mr. and
Mn. ■•ri Rewe, "tree sisters end three
brethers, ell at the home
ARKANtAt CITY, Ken.
CURTIS, Richard B.. 43, seryices will
day at hie heme Me wei the owner et
McDowell Jewelry Store Survivor In
elude hi wife, Mlen, two sons, Anthony
and William, both N Ihohomo, ang.bis
mother. Mn. Bea crs, Arkanas Ci.
CANTON
ARMSTRONG, Mary P. M, died
wednesday in an Okiahoma City hospitel
Service* 1 a.m. Saturday In Pint Chris-
fian Church. Burial in Canton cemetery
surviven, a son, Ralph Murray, anton
three daueMen, Mrs. sjanche Naisler,
Comen; Mn Velma Evade, Broom
FexaEy,nd,mrs.charsanenstanar,xiahr.
ma GOY r 1O • r • nec n 00 ren • and I -wree‘
erandchildren.
CHANDLER
COBIRLY, Mn Leia. n. died Wednes
day at her name la Moea, Ariz. services
I a.m. Mandav la Chandler Funeral
Hema chapel, burial in Oak Park Ceme
lory, Chandler; survivers include two sis-
ten, Mn. L. N. Shaw and Mn. William
(F 419 Hightower Buldinq
Johnson opened the state’s
final argumetns in the trial
Prosecutor Clete Johnson of Joseph Howard Sims, 41,
angrily pounded his fist and and Cecil William Myers, 25,
both of Athens, Ga., for the
make it second only to 1964
He also predicted a high
rate of new truck sales for
the 1965 model year.
All of the big three auto
companies reported big in-
creases in sales of 1964 mod-
1.3 a9-19 X. -
.)..3 1 J
Thalweg Georgi
Is Cause
Of Scrap For Negro’s Slayers
seen the deputy leave for the hit the all-time record highian August selling rate 20
“We had rearranged our
work schdeule to maintain
our productivity and there
W:u-
-A.
wooded Wichita Falls U. S.
the men left they took
three quilts with them,
presumably td use as cov-
ering if they had to spend
the night in the open. The
quilts were not in Cunning-
ham's pickup truck when |
shal’s office to obtain the
bloodhounds for the search.
Concentration of the
search in Lawton followed a
day of effort by hundreds of
Oklahoma officers who
manned road blocks
throughout western Oklaho-
ma and at one time sealed
off all bridges across the
9- -
♦ '
an, her husband and a motel commander, said,
porter were jailed early Fri- Her husband,
ment, Johnson said “the
honor of the great state of
Georgia is on trial here to-
day."
Jurors were urged to re-
turn a verdict “that shall not
be the ridicule of the coun-
try."
Penn was struck in the left
side of his face by a shotgun
blast fired from a distance
of three or four feet. Penn
——
I
The 25 employes had
walked off their jobs about
12:30 p m. Thursday after an
earlier walkout over the fir-
ing of two men for union ac-
tivity on company time.
2 Men Fired
Fifteen men had walked
off Wednesday, after the
company fired Joe Haley
and Alfred McCarty. They
returned to their jobs Thurs-
day morning, after a
Wednesday meeting with In-
ternational Association of
Machinists representative
James Witcher of Oklahoma
City.
They walked off after the
lunch hour from the jet en-
gine shop, taking an addi-
Farmer
(Continued From Page 1)
er noon in Cunningham s
empty house while an in-
(ensive system of mad
blocks was maintained
jlo.8
throughout western Okla-
homa.
• At one time a highway
patrol car guarded an in-
tersection only one mile
from the house.
J Cunningham said Friday
the men told him they en-
tered his home at noon
Thursday.
t After tying Cunningham
up in the basement, they
tied in the darkness in his
pickup truck. It was found
about 11 p m. Thursday on
(he U. S Wildlife Refuge
Dorth of Lawton.
• A short time later Cun-
ningham freed himself
from his bonds and
crossed a pasture to his
son's home. He said the
men had left the officer's
car in a shed on his farm.
It was blood stained from
the fight which preceded
the escape of the prison-
1 Cunningham said one of
the men was wearing a
sheer cloth covering on his
head because of a scalp in-
fection. This had arousedj
speculation T h u r s d a y,)
When the men were seeft
fleeing down a highway
that one of the escapees
had been wounded.
Cunningham said hon
of the men was wounded.
; He said the men treated
him kindly although-hey
refused his plea not to be,
tied up. He said one nof
them even brought a small
mattress from the house
into the basement so that
he would not have to lie on
the concrete floor
' They left two suitcases
behind filled with consider-
4ble clothing, including a (
tuxedo. Cunningham said.
It was not immediately de-
termined if ce clothing
ind suitcases belonged to
the men or to the officers
■ si.
On Morals Charges
A Great Bend, Kan., worn- Jack Caldwell, vice squad
from whom they escaped. in which postal stations are
Cunningham said when used as voter registration
MRASEK, Mn Vincent. M; services
were Thursday. She died Tuesday Im a
Chlcka*M hosmital. She wat a native M
Chiekasha. Survivers inelyde her huband
vinegar; a sen, Michael Jesephi a i
Mr. Julie Ann; her parents, Mr and
Bill sulllven, chickashe, a >MMr ____
brothers, including Jahn F. Su Hvan,
Chickasha, and her erandmother, Mn.
W. P. sullivan, chickasha.
wrie",wi
Baalist Church. He died in an Oklaheme
City Nosditai Weanesday. He had been a
M’.
and Jerry, beta of guthrie. and Lean.
Midwest City; twe daushters, including
Mrs. Jack webeg, Dover, two sistars. In
eluding Batsla Edwards, quthilej fhree
prothers, Includin Alva, armere, and
Unie, Gthri, and 14 prandchildren,
DALLAS, Tosas
LEGQ, Edthe M., 421 services were
Thursday She was • former, klehema
City resUant, Survivers are twe dauah
ten, including Mn. J. D. RItMr, Okiehe:
ma City; a san, a brother, and eight
grandchildren.
DUNCAN
DAVIS, Mn. Annie, 75; services were
Thursday. She died Wednesdey in a Dun
can hospitl. Site was a nalive of Wise
ounty, Texas, survivors include her but
band, WHIM R.; twe deueMen, Mn. Ir
one kankin, Duncan, and Mrs. R L. Sim-
mem, Healqioni a step-qaushteri. twe
brethers, includihe Bab ales, Qktahome
fy, asiqter; three grandchildren, end
three ereat-grandchildren.
ELK CITY
STAYTOH, Mrs. Anne B., th services
wen Thundev. She died Mendev in en
ilk city hosaltai She had been en Rik
City resident since 1944. Surviven Inivee
nine randchliren, six sreat-erendchit-
aren end four "Akviwerandchitdren.
KINT, Mn. Chpries "t. n tormer
Raid resident, services Friday j e m In (
Central Christian Church Burial R N «
Enid cemetery at 4 pm. Surviven are
her husbend, Cheries T.; a gaventer:
Mrs. enevlve K McDonald, Fairview,
e son, e sister and Rve orpndchildren.
GAINESVILLE, Texa
CHISUM, J. M., 93, services were
Thursqay. Surviven err twe daughters,
Mn l. J. RIMy and Mrs. John Sawyer,
bath 0 Geinegyille end thrge sisters.
jackH'N. Mrs. Jernes P. (Edith P.)
W, services were Thursday in St Je. sur
vlvon »n her husbangi two dauehton
includin, Mn. fravis .Moore, st. JF' ane
a sister, Mrs. RoaM Haword Dontey, St
d • ' a
, <
* . 221
1 1 •
JACKSON, Mich. (P —
“I'm afraid we'll never see
that customer again," said
Mrs. Richard Furtwangler
as she surveyed the gaping
hole in the ceiling of her
huband’s hardware store.
""Fortunately," she added,
"no one wa hurt."
Furtwangler said a
jrk handed the customer a
shotgun from the rack and
the man snapped it to his
shoulder, aimed at the back
Of the store, and pulled the
trigger.
That was when he — and
everyone else in the building
— discovered that someone
had loaded it with buckshot
The charge knocked down
three lights and several ceil-
ing tiles, ripped through a
partition and lodged in a
concrete wall.
“We still shake when we
think about it," Mrs. Furt-
wangler said
Postal Register
Booths Planned
A , A
' . 1%
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 173, Ed. 3 Friday, September 4, 1964, newspaper, September 4, 1964; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1845263/m1/2/: accessed June 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.