Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1966 Page: 4 of 32
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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arris Talks
8 Killed
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Axed Sister Forgiving
Print Is Issue
Two OCU Models Used
In Death Trial
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IN
Bat
resulted in the coincidental along the highway.
return of one Friday morn-
patrol Carl Shivel of Owasso. A
call to his mother, Mrs.
headquarters answered a
revealed
call that a boy fitting the Evelyn Winkle,
1
4230 NE 23RD
$60.
Ph. GA 7-0566
Okla. City
Spring Footnotes by Allen Edmonds
42%
SAVINGS CERTIFICATES
of $500.00 or more
V.
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‘34
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‘37
4%
Central National Bank
Washington state's poll-
‘40
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happine
TANDY HOMES
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Central National Bank and Friendly
National Bank now pay a big .. .
“Your Friendly Downtown Bank"
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Downtown-304 Pork Avenue
Motor lonk—6th and Clanen
tical exercises.
The maneuvers,
The smart Maincoat in the famed London Fog tradition, with pure
Alpaca lining that zips out. Wards off winter’s briskest blasts while
keeping you dry and comfortable. Pure Calibre Cloth. 65% Dacron &
35% cotton. Totally washable. Black, natural or olive.
, 4
L
Ji
A
Affiliated with
Friendly National Bonk
Sisterly love kept an Ok-
lahoma City woman out of
jail Thursday.
She and her sister got
into an argument about
their children.
One woman picked up a
double-blade chopping ax
ONLY $25 DOWN'
Built on Your Lot Anywhere
ask FOR NEW FRIF CATALOG
«
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County Attorney Curtis Harris was conferring Fri-
day with Al Kavanaugh, president of the Citizens for De-
cent Literature, an organization which is pushing a cam-
paign against obscene books, magazines and movies
Harris said he intended to find out what information
CDL could furnish a grand jury in connection with the
publication, distribution and traffic of obscenity.
CDL has announced it will file a petition for a grand
jury by next Monday.
The petition calls for a broad investigation, including
a study of the connection between obscene materials and
the sex crime rate.
Kavanaugh said Friday the organization has more
than 1,000 names on the petition. He said it will be filed
within the next few days.
The CDL petition claims the organization can furnish
the grand jury with names of people it should question,
and with a vast assortment of material.
Harris and his chief investigator, M. B Cooper,
were conferring with Kavanaugh at his Nichols Hills
home, where he has been confined for several days with
an asthma attack.
COME IN, CALL, OR WRITE
TODAY!
ing.
Tulsa highway
mumemmmmuemuueemmmmnsuuumuuum509n85538988888888
Sooner Capsules
9
Men's Clothing. 2nd Floor; Uptown or Penn Square
DIGGING AWAY for the municipal court building's
new flag pole are, from left to right, Tim Turnbull,
service officer of American Legion Post 35, Judge
Phillip E. Lambert, presiding judge of the city's mu-
nicipal courts system, and Post 35 commander, Don
Stubblefield. The post donated material and a flag to
the building at 700 Couch Dr. after Judge Lambert is-
sued a plea for a flag pole to “add dignity usually as-
sociated with a court house.”
1!
I
Sharkey
Overlay moccasin toe blucher
in genuine sharkskin, full leath-
er linings, heavy single sole,
custom rubber heel. A shoe
made of sharkskin is rugged
and resists scuffs. Brown or
black. Sizes 7 % -12, AA D.
Downtown only
on regular savings accounts —
the highest rate any bank can
legally pay.
-
— .
I
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I
These certificates can be bought only at com-
mercial banks, and they are insured by the Fed-
eral Deposit Insurance Corporation.
i
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245.
IS A HOME OF YOUR OWN
ONE’YOU CAN AFFORD
SEE
stranded on freeways has
nothing ob Oklahoma,
Highway Patrol chief Col.
Lyle Balser said Friday.
Oklahoma has been giv*
away gas to stranded
since 1937, Bak
The Dundalk Maincoat by London Fog®
- with xipin genuine A ipaca lining.
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on 6 month
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Boulevard
The favorite wing is this bal
with its heavy sole and rubber
heel. Allen Edmonds uses the
old fashioned artistry of expert
craftsmen to mould and last all
their styles for comfort and
flexibility. Brown or black.
Sizes 7% -12, AAA-D.
when he asked his name
the boy replied he was
I ‘
to In- 180th Infantry at Durant,
and struck her sister on
the right arm, inflicting a
four-inch gash.
But, the victim refused
to press charges and she
told police it was because
of her “sisterly love.”
area south of Norman Feb-
ruary 12 and 13.
The other units, the Sec-
ond Battalion of the 179th
Infantry at Tulsa and the
Second Battalion of the
Kayoed twice by the
weather, 45th Infantry Di-
vision officers Friday re-
scheduled for the third
time a series of major tac-
Brentwood
The shoe for men who are on
their feet one hour or the activ-
ist—a man on the go will find
nothing to match the Brent-
wood moccasin for comfort
and wear. Brown heather or
black. Sizes 7% -12, AAA-D.
Fire Fells
Old Hotel;
Lt. Gov. Leo Winters denied as “totally inaccurate (
and incorrect" Friday a charge by Midwest City Mayor
Marion C. Reed that Winters attempted to use pressure (
to obtain municipal deposits for a suburban bank.
Winters said, however, he told Reed he thought it ।
was “grossly unfair” for Midwest City to have deposits
of more than $2 million in the First National Bank of
Midwest City and “not one red cent" in the Security
Bank and Trust Co.
Winters, who is now campaigning for election as
state treasurer, is a director of the Security Bank.
The mayor said Winters indicated if a portion of city
funds weren't deposited with Security, he would investi-
gate “moving the state's money out of the First National
Bank of Midwest City.”
Winters said he made no such threat. “I demanded
to know why this inequity existed and he (the mayor)
was unable to give me an explanation,” Winters said.
45th Gives Another Try
The “Eternal Challenge” statue on the campus of
Oklahoma City University was posed by more than one
person, sculptor Leonard McMurry, said Friday.
McMurry said that in addition to using Mrs. Gary
Gardner, the former Judie Randolph, who was featured
fh a story in Thursday’s Oklahoma City Times, he used
Janet Theus to pose for the girl in the statue.
• Miss Theus, now Mrs. Kenneth Rodgers of Kansas
City, Mo., is the daughter of Mrs. Bob Powell and County
Judge Harold Theus. Mrs. Powell called attention to the
fact her daughter also posed.
McMurry said he usually uses more than one person
to pose for his statues in order to escape the possibility
of creating a portrait of one person.
Look-Alikes Run Away
ported Thursday that
Washington’s practice of
giving away gas has been
paying dividends. Some
motorists have been send-
ing in money in envelopes
provided by state troopers
who gas them up.
But Oklahoma does not
charge for the gas it gives
1
l
description of David Dal- her son had also run away,
las Price, 11, Toha. spent so the trooper took him
the night at a truck stop home.
east of Tulsa and had About an hour later, Da-
headed east early in the vid Price returned home
morning. on his own.
Bank Pressure Denied
f-2
Karl Hellen
boy walking
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) —Ailatent print, defined as one
sheriff's technician told Fri-not readily visible to the
day of finding a single palm naked eye, and added it was
MM
Two runaway boys fit- Trooper
ting the same description found the
—
V • fl
A.a /m.
print in the kitchen of
Jacques Mossier s Key Bis-
cayne apartment after the
multimillionaire's slaying.
The testimony was prelim-
inary to the state’s planned
attempt to identify the palm
print as that of Melvin Lane
Powers, on trial with his
aunt, Candace Mossier, in
the bludgeon-stabbing of her
69-year-old husband June 30,
1964.
The witness was Dave
Plowden, a balding finger-
print technician for 10 years
in the Dade County sheriff’s
office.
Plowden testified he found
the pal mprint on a polished
countertop beside the sink in
Mossler’s kitchen and
turned an impression of it
over to a superior for exami-
nation.
Plowden described it as a
_
volve units of the new Se- along with headquarters of
lected Reserve Force, the Third Brigade at Ok-
were knocked out by snow mulgee, will head for the
and ice last weekend and field the weekend of
the one before. March 5 and 6.
Unite of the Second Bat- Division spokesmen said
tal ion, 279th Infantry, the Tulsa outfit will train
headquartered at Holden- at Camp Gruber near Mus-
ville, will maneuver in the kogee and the Durant out-
Lexington game preserve fit near Wister.
Sign Rules Protested
Sen. Fred R. Harris joined Friday in protesting pro-
posed standards for federal control of outdoor advertis-
ing in industrial and commercial areas under the high-
way beautification act.
Sen. Harris agreed with Sen. Jennings Randolph (D-
W. Va.) who steered the bill through the senate, that the
standards published by the commerce department Janu-
ary 28 in the Federal Register are contrary to the intent
of congress and to assurances given by administration
leaders.
Free Gas Nothing New
‛o Smut Foe
I
• \
A Savings Certificate is a special kind of
savings which earns a higher rate of interest
because you agree, in advance, to leave your
money with the bank for a definite period of
time. ”
4 Friday, Feb. 4, 1966 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
•• ----------------------------
Associated Press re- away, Baker said.
« V ■ ,
the only impression found in
that particular area. Howev-
er, he added that at least 144
other prints were found else-
where in the apartment.
On cross examination
Plowden was asked:
“Can you determine the
age of a latent print on a
formica top such as you
mentioned?"
“I would be opinionated,”
Plowden replied.
“There is no method of de-
termining the age of that
print, is there?"
“Not to my knowledge,”
the witness said.
Later defense counsel at-
tempted to draw an opinion
from Plowden as to the
print's age and he said that
such a print, if not dis-
turbed, could last "conceiva-
bly, possibly forever.”
re
If you prefer to have your savings always
immediately available, we continue to pay
Le
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)
— Eight persons died Friday
as an early morning fire de-
stroyed the old three-story
Astor Hotel in downtown
Green Bay.
Thirty other guests es-
caped, several of them after
being trapped for three
hours in their rooms. Four
of those rescued were hospi-
talized for smoke inhalation.
The flames were extin-
guished about 7 a.m., and
wrecking crews were sum-
moned to begin taking down
the ruins as soon as firemen
finished their perilous task
of removing bodies.
First of the victims to be
identified was Mrs. Edna
Colle, 38, of nearby Luxem-
burg. Wis.
The fire was reported at
12:30 a m. Firemen, coated
in ice, battled the flames in
15-degree cold and snow flur-
ries. The roof fell in and the
walls of the brick structure
buckled as flames shot 60
feet above the roof.
Firemen said the blaze ap-
parently began in the rear of
the first or second floor and
worked its way up to the
roof, where it traveled the
length of the building.
Cause of the fire was not
determined. Fire Chief Dave
Zuidmulder placed a tenta-
tive estimate of damage at
$150,000. He was at Madison,
some 150 miles away, when
notified of the blaze, but
raced back here.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1966, newspaper, February 4, 1966; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1845591/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.