Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1966 Page: 8 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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War Backed
By Laborites
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Iron Man’s’ Rites Set
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SAIGON (AP)
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Harry “Dutch" Hill
to OU to work toward the degree Derrick, 72, of 1433 NW 33, who
he didn’t receive as a young
five sisters, Mrs. Howard J. Cole, Wednesday in University Hospi-
Mrs. Richard H. Godfrey, of 1604 Spencer Road, with burial in Kolb
In lieu of flowers, the family Wednesday in a local hospital,
Salesman, 76, Dies
Services for B. F. Howard, 96,
104 E Oak, who died Thursday in
at 2 p.m. Friday at Capitol Hill
I
WILBURTON — Services for J.
n
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LIVS OAK AT OLE ANO PEARL
IN MODERN SOUTHLAND CENTER
who died Wednesday in a city
nursing home, will be at 2 p.m.
Saturday in Bethany Church of
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J. Paul Richardson, 76, a re-
tired auto salesman, died Friday
in his home at 2205 NW 43.
"\
.. - }
Whitey Ford — thanks to a
Tulsan who is chief of per-
sonnel services.
Maj. William M. Tooke,
who attended both the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma and
the University of Tulsa, is
in charge of athletics and
entertainment at the base.
. I
I
I
Yankee pitcher Whitey Ford describes his winning pitch for Maj. William
M. Tooke and Yankee coach Jim Hegan during visit to Torrejon Air Base, Ma-
»drid. (Times Staff Photo)
MARGARET BARBEE
BARTLESVILLE - Graveside
services for Miss Margaret Bar-
bee, former Oklahoma City high
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Our World Today
La
Bethany Cemetery directed by
Gene Adams Funeral Service.
B. F. HOWARD
tional 1.2 million tons of food grains to offset the effects
of the current drouth in West Pakistan, the Morning
News reported Friday.
Quoting Food Minister Shamsud Doha, the report
said drouth conditions in wheat-eating West Pakistan
have reduced the crop 1.2 million tons.
Normal production is a million tons less than con-
sumption.
Viet Nam TV Scheduled
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Set "The World in 1965" aside now
, for exciting and informative reading
when he is old enough to appreciate
what really happened the year of
1965, the year he wes born.
)
dh
Queen9 Prince Open Tour
GEORGETOWN, British Guiana (AP) — Queen Eliz-
abeth and Prince Philip stepped ashore Friday at the
start of a five-week Caribbean tour. Prime Minister
Forbes Burnham and his cabinet greeted them as they
came ashore from the royal yacht.
The royal couple, on a 48-hour visit here, were greet-
ed by thousands of flag-waving, cheering persons along
the route, from the dock, passing through dense slums.
The opposition People’s Progressive Party, which is
predominantly East Indian, has ordered a boycott of the
visit — but some East Indians were spotted in the
crowd. The party’s parliamentary seats were vacant,
however, when the queen arrived.
PROTECT YOUR
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For Home Owners Only
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• NO ADVANCE FEES •
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HOME OWNERS
NEED MONEY?
Cemetery.
BEV. LAWRENCE H.
DICKERSON
Services tor Rev. Lawrence H.
Dickerson, 76, of 3820 N Peru el,
Cemetery.
MRS. PEARL WILSON
Services for Mrs. Pearl Wilson,
81. of 3220 Eagle Ln., who died
Duncan’i First Presbyterian
Church, with burial in Oklahoma
City's Rose Hill Cemetery.
BAY E. HEAVES
Services for Ray E. Reaves, 52,
a former Oklahoma businessman
LONDON (AP) — In a highly unusual move, 155 La-
bor Party members of parliament have pledged their
backing to Prime Minister Harold Wilson's policy of sup-
porting the United States on Viet Nam.
Such support from the government’! own members
usually is taken for granted, but Wilson has been under
strong attack from Laborite leftwingers on the Viet Nam
question.
Last week almost 100 Labor Party members sent U.
5. Sen. J. W. Fulbright a cable siding with him in oppo-
sition to resumption of bombing North Viet Nam Wilson
has supported the U. S. resumption.
Pakistan Asks More Grain
urday at Smith & Kernke Funeral
Home, with burial in Rose Hill
Cemetery.
HARRY E. BRICE
Services for Harry E. Brice, 61,
of 2901 N Spencer Rd., who died
i W Crist Mor •V
Lt 2-1621—419 Hightower Building
rial Gardens.
MM. NETTIE s. DERRICK
Services for Mrs. Nettie Sarah
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' ______2
Ever wonder what else happened
the year you wore born? What made
the big headlines? What was the mood
of the world, what wore the condi-
tions, the fads? What were the day-
to-day events that happened?
Efroem , "
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agent for Aetna Life Insurance
Co. in Oklahoma City who died
Tuesday in Gravette, Ark., will
be at 2 p.m. Saturday at Burke-
Jones Funeral Home in Wilbur-
ton.
MRS. NELLIE M. BARTH
EL RENO — Services for Mrs.
a graduate <
School and was a
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DRIVE RIGHT IN!
CENTER OF
UPTOWN DALLAS
“The World
in 1965”
44//
yn.
Saturday in Smith & Kernke Fu-
neral Home, with burial in Fair-
lawn Cemetery.
He was born in Albany. Texas.
He was a 32nd degree Mason, a
Shriner, former member of Arab
Patrol of the Shrine, and was a
member of Knights Templar and
the First Christian Church.
Survivors include his wife. Ha-
zel, of the home, and a sister,
Mrs. George Woodward, city.
KINNIE C. LEDFORD SR.
Services for Kinnie Curtis Led-
ford, sr., 69. Exchange Hotel, who
died Wednesday, were to be at 10
a.m. Friday in Vondel L Smith
Mortuary, with burial in Sunny
Lane Cemetery.
1. A. WOOD
day in his home, will be at 11
a.m. Saturday at Rolfe Funeral
Home, with burial in Trice Hill
Cemetery.
BESSIE MEAD
Services for Bessie Mead, 80, of
1,
Sheltering Arms Children's Agen-
cy in New York, will be at 11
a.m. Saturday in Memorial Park
Cemetery, Oklahoma City, direct-
ed by Arnold Moore Funeral
Service, Bartlesville. She died
Thursday in a Bartlesville hospi-
tal.
d
taJ, were to be at 2 p.m. Friday
in Dickson Baptist Church on
pA*
1
ni
I "w3
will be at 10 a.m. Saturday in St.
Luke’s Methodist Church, with
burial in Chapel Hill Memorial
Gardens directed by Street &
Draper Funeral Home.
MAUDE ANNIS FISHWICK
Services for Maude Annis Fish-
wick, 85, of 5232 NW 46 Dr., who
died Thursday in Deaconess Hos-
pital, were to be at 11 a.m. Fri-
day at Memorial Park Cemetery.
ROBERT L WHARTON SR.
NORMAN - Services for Rob-
NATIONAL CONSUMER SERVICE
BUSINESS HOURS: 6:30 A.M. til 10 P.M.
of 1718 Randell Rd.; Mrs. F. G.
Cheadle, of 1710 Andover Ct.;
Retired City Auto
man. He was
Chickasha High
suggests that friends make me-
morial donations to the Cancer
Research Fund.
ARTHUR O. FULLER
Services for Arthur O. Fuller.
75, of 1723 NW 11, who died
Wednesday in St. Anthony Hospi-
tal, were to be at noon Friday in
Guardian Funeral Home, with
burial in Rose Hill Cemetery.
MRS. GERALDINE FORD
DUNCAN — Services for Mrs.
Geraldine Green Ford, former
Oklahoma City resident who died
MRS. MARGARET MOORE
Mass for Mrs. Margaret Moore,
56, a former Oklahoma Qty resi-
dent who died Tuesday in her
Tulsa home, were to be at 10
a.m. Friday in Tulsa’s Christ the
King Catholic Church, with burial
in Calvary Cemetery.
8AM H. HUDGINS
HARRAH — Services for Sam
H. Hudgins, 74, a retired Tinker
Air Force Base warehouseman
who died Wednesday in Shockey-
Shannon Hospital, will be at 2
p.m. Tuesday in Harrah Baptist
Church, with burial in Memory
Lane Cemetery directed by Wil-
son Funeral Home.
LOLA MAE JACKSON
NORMAN — Services for Lola
Mae Jackson, 69, who died Thurs-
day in Norman Municipal Hospi-
tal, are pending with Primrose
Funeral Home.
pa.z
L . 1?
reer in athletics.
By Ken Bonham
(Times Military Writer)
MADRID, Spain — The
big U. S. air base at
Terrjon, about 15 miles out
of Madrid, has a lot of
sports activity these days
— including the visit of
New York Yankee pitcher
A’
-4
a New
of 1027 NE 7, who died Wednes- Thursday to her Duncan home,
.... - will be at 10 a.m. Saturday in
Harry "Dutch-’ Hill, who won
fame as a University of Oklaho-
ma and professional football star,
will be buried Monday in Fort
Sam Houston, Texas, Military
Cemetery.
Hill, 64, died Thursday in
Brooks Army Hospital at Fort
Sam Houston after a long illness.
Know as the “Iron Man" of the
1918-21 OU teams. Hill later
coached at Wilburton School of
Mines and played professional
football for the Toledo Maroons,
the Kansas City Cowboys and the
New York Giants.
A ROTC member at OU, he
served in Italy, Belgium, France,
Japan and Korea in the Quarter-
master Corps during World War
II. He retired from toe army as a
colonel.
Hill served Grady County in the
state legislature in 1937, ‘38 and
’41, and worked for the state cor-
poration commission from 1956
until he became ill in January,
1965.
During the 1950’s, he returned
Hillcrest; Mrs. A. C. Huss, Okla-
homa City, and Miss Almeta Hill,
of 1701 NW 47; a brother, Hous-
ton "Bus” HUI, of 1406 Kenil-
worth, and four grandchildren.
•“HSS M astaFidpm.insasulam,
over, Tooke said.
Other members of the
party were Jim Hegars, a
former catcher with the
old Oklahoma City Indians
who is now on the coach-
ing staff of the Yankees;
Bill Kinnamon, American
league umpire; Frankie
A. Wood, 83, a former general school teacher and long-time ex-
- “ - ecutive secretary and manager of
L-‛
championship he
burial in in Bin Merritt Funeral Home,
with burial In Chapel Hill Memo-
first attempt at regularly
scheduled television broad-
casting in South Viet Nam
will begin Monday, the
ministry of psychological
warfare announced Fri-
day.
It said the bugs had
been ironed out of the U.
S.-assisted program, which
Crossett!, Yankee coach,
and Curt Blefary, Balti-
more outfielder recently
voted American league
rookie of the year.
After three days at Tor-
rejon the baseball clinic
was to move into Germany
where it would conduct
similiar programs for the
U. S. forces.
Tooke, who has his fami-
ly with him, has a brother
Ed now living in Tulsa. He
and his wife Marion have
six children, the oldest of
whom appears to be fol-
lowing his father in a ca-
Nellie Mae Barth, 84, who died -
Thursday in El Reno, will be at 2 -
p.m. Saturday in Wilson Funeral
Home, with burial in El Reno
______(check or money order)
copies of "The-World in 1965."
ert Lee Wharton sr., 83, a retired
railroad foreman and farmer who
died Thursday in Norman Munici-
pal Hospital, will be at 2 p.m.
Saturday at Mayes Funeral
Home, with burial in IOOF Ceme-
tery.
_ died Wednesday in Baylor Hospi-
of tal, Dallas, will be at 2 p.m. Sat-
a
(2
Vatican Defied
By Conservative
NEW YORK (AP) — Rev.
Gommar Depauw, 46, says
he heads the Catholic tradi-
tionalist movement in the
United States despite in-
creasing opposition from
other Roman Catholic lead-
•rs.
The Belgian-born priest, a
conservative, disputed the
contention of Vatican offi-
cials that he is still under
the jurisdiction of the Balti-
more archdiocese.
now has a scholarship to
the University of New
Mexico.
“We like it here. It’s an
Interesting place,” Tooke
said. “But, I don't exactly
speak Spanish. I speak at
it.”
Tooke formerly was sta-
tioned in New Mexico as
part of a combat missile
crew for the Altus F pro-
gram such as was located
at Altus.
is part of the Saigon gov-
ernment’s war effort to in-
form. educate and enter-
tain its people and of the
U. S. millitary command's
program to entertain its
forces.
There will be an hour of
programs in Vietnamese
each night and three hours
of American television.
AIAUAII | Pleaw send me your information about mortgage MM for heme owners
VVV. [*•■*.....
VI8-2631 l""*
I < h IMMIUlAI L ■ RVAIION5S
CE 5 6767
As your child grows, so will his
library—a library he and the family
will use through college graduation.
member of Kappa Alpha Frater-
nity at OU.
Survivors include his wife, Mar-
ion Sackett Hill, of the home in
Norman; a daughter, Mn Har-
riet Jo Swanson, Del Mar, Calif.;
Services will be at 3:30 p.m. the Nazarene, with burial in
E5y
E'
If
- ’ '
hh
SALLY READY
Services for Sally Ready, 79, of
[ 335 SE 26, who died Wednesday
। in her home, will be at 2 p.m.
Saturday in toe Missionary Bap-
tist Church of Stonewall, with
I burial in Stonewall Cemetery di-
f rected by Criswell Funeral Home.
| Ada. Local arrangements are
I being handled by Capitol Hill Fu-
neral Home.
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A busy man who intends
to return to teaching, or
possibly coaching in high
school in Tulsa when he
retires three years from
now, Tooke was right at
home with the group of
five big name baseball
।
The 296-page book, filled with all
kinds of news occurring in 1965, also
contains two four-page sections on
Oklahoma, "Capsule History of Okla-
homa, 1865-1965," and "Oklahoma
News Highlights of 1965."
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Tbs Oklahoman and Timu
Oklahoma City, Okla. 73101
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RAWALPINDI. Pakistan (AP) — The Pakistani gov- 6
ernment has asked the United States to supply an addi-
8 Friday, Feb. 4, 1966 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Tulsan Stresses Sports at Spanish Base
If your child or grandchild was born
in 1965, here's your chance to start a
unique library for him and the entire
family. For $3, you can purchase "The
World in 1965," a dramatic volume of
the great pictures end stories of the
yeer.
I
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players he brought in for a
baseball clinic.
Americans in Madrid
can see bull fights, but
they haven’t forgotten the
great American pasttime,
and this was one reason
the big league stars came
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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/m1/8/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.