Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 206, Ed. 2 Saturday, October 15, 1966 Page: 2 of 7
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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viaaaz
1
Zionist Raid
Arouses Storm
were
back to the board in about
with increasing
1
1
A
Belmond residents survey smashed buildings and uprooted paving of Main Street. (AP Wirephoto)
3
Cleanup Begins After Storm
Rowboat
Found, 2
Trial Set
Boxer, 29
By Pentagon
in Canada
aggression.
Republicans
Five
FRESNO (AP)
Soviet
outside Italy perished when the car in
/
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[unii ileig
In Crash
3 2
6
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GREAT RADIO RALLY!
THE DAILY OKLAHOMAN
Charles W. Burpo in person
TEELN
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II.
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Oscar T. Witten, 66. of 1819 Cov-
i
it
wultar, watch.
rison).
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•MMyeag
eesa
Tot Hangs
On Train
‘Shocking’
Talk Raked
Doctors Start
Italian Strike
countries
concerned
African
primarily
John came after the entry.
The destroyer said one set
of oars, binoculars, camer-
as, exposed film, compass,
charts, food and personal
items were also found on
4
11
to
45C
The Times’ endorsement,
carried in the Sunday edi-
tions, said Reagan “aims to
phase out the dole system
which has been proliferating
so endlessly, and with such
debasing effects.”
The other boys notified au-
thorities and the train was
stopped. Police lifted him to
safety and took him home.
They said he didn’t even
cry. He was uninjured.
Local Deaths
Mrs. Mary Harrah Holt, 68, of
703 NW 20. (Smith & Kernke).
Mrs. Rowena Samples, 27, of
(
7
1
ROME (AP) — Italy’s hos-
pital doctors began a three-
day nationwide strike Satur-
day in their fight against the
state-run medical insurance
system.
The doctors said emergen-
cy treatment would be as-
sured in all city and state
hospitals. The strikers in-
cluded anestheticians.
which they were riding col-
lided with a Santa Fe freight
train, authorities said.
The victims’ names were
withheld pending notification
of relatives.
23
since he became pontiff in
June 1963. He flew to the
Holy Land in January 1964,
making the first papal plane
trip in history.
He visited India in Decem-
ber 1964 to attend a religious
congress of Roman Catholics
at Bombay.
On Oct. 4, 1964, he flew to
New York to address the UN
general assembly.
One Killed
1
xaiq-qn
The executive director of
Goodwill Industries, Inc., de-
nied Saturday he was asked
to furnish personal bank rec-
ords in an investigation of
alleged cash shortages at the
firm.
I
J
construed and misinterpret-
ed.”
Frasier also was named in
UNSAF
258 entry Ln.. city developer. (Vondel
g ' L. Smith*.
Mr*. Mary Rebecca Bryson, 57,
er
Apology Made Pope Sets
Fair Visit
45
25
might be considered by the
United Nations.
This view was echoed by
others, including the repre-
sentative of Japan.
president, said he will ap-
point a committee Monday
(Continued from Page 1)
cate her brother but was told by both the Red Cross and
military officials that he was not in the service.
Horton enlisted in the army in 1954 at Portland,
Ore., and his records showed his next of kin as Mrs.
Carrie Horton of New Britain, Conn., officials said.
Mrs. Drew said their mother, the former Callie C.
Tag Horton, who now is Mrs. Noale Preslar, lives on a
ranch near Salem.
Mrs. Drew said she could not understand why the
government could not locate her mother because Mrs.
Preslar has been drawing a federal pension regularly for
six years.
The sergeant’s relatives located in Oklahoma by
newsmen include Hugh Horton, Pryor policeman, an un-
cle; Mrs. Edith Thompson, Pryor, an aunt, and Mrs.
Drucilla Horton, Pryor, his paternal grandmother.
A brother, Tommy Horton, and a sister, Miss Caro-
lyn Horton, live in Augusta, Kan., relatives said. Two
other brothers live in Oregon and California.
None of the relatives indicated to newsmen that they
had been in close contact with the soldier in recent years
but had heard from him occasionally.
The relatives had not decided Saturday whether any
action would be taken to have Sgt. Horton’s body re-
moved from the national cemetery in New York and re-
buried somewhere else. Two brothers said they would
like to let “him rest in peace” where he is.
At Pryor, Hugh Horton, the uncle, said several
members of the Horton family have been buried in a
family plot at the Spavinaw Cemetery in Mayes County.
k P3 88 2
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4 s
g 1
NEAR HIM IN PERSON TUESDAY NIGMT
AT THI HAU OF MIRRORS
Municipal Auditorium Building
Time: 1:30 p.M. Topie: "America’s Twin Evils"
Dm** miss this iWMliaf aid tMtoel topic.
These evils cannet be named M rediol
Taylor, fired recently by
Nicholson.
No allegations were made
against Nicholson by the
board.
G. R. McAlpine, Goodwill
1
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(
October 18
Politicians’
gne
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ef 3 }
f
f
who lost a title bid against
champion Joey Giardello in
December 1964, had been
picked up in a car w ith John
Artis near the scene and
questioned after the June 17
crime, but was released. Ar-
tis, 21, and Carter each was
charged with three counts of
murder.
The slayings occurred in
the Lafayette Grill in what
appeared to be a holdup at-
tempt. The two armed men
involved reportedly walked
in and began firing. Police
■ 031
>
would go in late spring or
early summer provided no
circumstances arise in the
meantime to cause postpone-
ment or cancellation, the
source said.
Pope Paul was said to have
given word about the Cana-
dian trip to his apostolic de-
legate in Ottawa, Archbishop
Sergio Pignedoli. The source
said the pontiff had informed
the archbishop privately sev-
eral weeks before the prel-
ate flew to Saigon on a fact-
finding mission for the pope
on September 27.
Visited Holy Land
It would be Pope Paul’s
persons were killed in a
train-car crash seven miles
southeast of Fresno Satur-
day.
Three girls and two boys
But Asian and
11632 NW 30. Services Monday
1 (Smth & Kernke).
grand jury, which alleged he
made slanderous remarks
about a police officer.
Train Kills
Five in Car
I
GRANTED FULL PARDON, Richard Ho neck, 87, was
released from an Illinois penitentiary three years ago
after serving 64 years behind bars on a murder convic-
tion. The pardon was granted by Illinois Gov. Otto
Kerner. Honeck is shown tai 1964 on the first anniversa-
ry of his release from prison. (AP Wirephoto)
(e
jury which accused them of
conspiring to extort money
from club owner Harold
Scites for campaign pur-
poses.
The indictment was dis-
missed and toe charges re-
from the place. The shoot-
ings were believed to be an
effort to eliminate any wit-
nesses.
Four persons were gunned
down, two dying there and
one in a hospital a month
later. One man survived his
wounds.
Carter, whose status has
slipped from a ranked con-
tender in the past year, last
fought August 5 in Rosario
City, Argentina, where he
was outpointed by Argentine
middleweight Juan Carlos
Rivero in a 10-round fight.
Cabinet
(Continued from Page 1)
Commerce Commission.
However, the CAB and
ICC will retain their econom-
ic regulatory roles.
The two major transporta-
tion programs not included
are the urban mass transit
program, which will remain
n the housing department
for at least another year,
and the Martime Adminis-
tration, which stays in the
commerce department.
Officer Nabs
Own Mother
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Thanks to a strong grip, lit-
tle Rene Araiza, 2, is safe at
home Saturday after cling-
ing to the outside ladder of a
moving freight train for
three miles.
Police said the lad climbed
fourth trip
-"3 25 862
—l 0
*-13
Official Denies
Probe Request
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I
I
By the State Staff
ARKANSAS CITY, Kan. —
Cecil F. Nally, 20, of Win-
field, Kan., was killed early
Saturday when his car col-
lided with a passenger train
in Arkansas City.
Injured was a passenger,
Ozzie Red Elk, 18, also of
Winfield. Red Elk, a high
school football player, was
reported in critical condition
Saturday at an Arkansas
City hospital.
Sheriff’s officers said it
appeared Nally’s car
plunged through a barrier at
the railroad crossing. They
said red warning lights were
flashing at the time. The
train was held up for an
hour.
said, if the president agrees
to apologize for his charges.
He said the trip has al-
ready been weakened by
Johnson’s failure to take
along any prominent Repub-
licans and by press specula-
tion that his going to the
conference “is more a quest
for votes than a quest for
peace.”
Meatless
Day Ended
OTTAWA (AP) — A na-
tional conference of Roman
Catholic bishops has de-
clared an end to mandatory
meatless Fridays for Cana-
dian Catholics, but said peni-
tential observance of Lent
and all Fridays should be
maintained.
In a new directive issued
by the conference Friday,
the bishops removed the rig-
id rules on fasting and ab-
stinence, permitting Catho-
lics to decide for themselves
what penance they will do on
Fridays and during the Len-
ten season.
Dee Frasier and Democratic
judicial nominee John D.
Harris on a misdemeanor
charge of conspiring to ex-
tort money is scheduled
Monday in common pleas
court.
Frasier and Harris, a can-
didate for common pleas
court judge, were indicted
msingsrs„ebertinrout
Jones, 1722 leweirv.
Eathfin Knight, m N Harrison, TV
T
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP)
— Highway patrolman Ron
Roberson issued a speeding
ticket Thursday. Unusual?
Well. . . .
Roberson said he was pa-
trolling U. S. 85 near
Newcastle when a car shot
past his cruiser. He chased
the vehicle and halted it. At
the wheel was Velma New-
land of Colony, Wyo., Rober-
son's mother.
Mrs. Newland told Judge
T. R. Cochrane she was
proud of her son’s dedication
— and she paid a $10 fine for
being clocked at 75 in a 65
miles-an-hour zone.
VATICAN CITY (AP) - by a Tulsa County grand
Pope Paul VI has agreed to y --- grana
i 1
filed as informations by
County Attorney David Hall.
Defense attorneys accused
Hall Thursday of filing the
charges in bad faith and at-
tached an affidavit in which
Scites said his statements
▲ special audit of Goodwill 1
resulted Friday in the audit- to study the audit and report
uled from spring to faU 1967. had
it was believed the pope
Manila, however, could mates jumped off, police
still be "a major and succes- said, but Rene was too
ful step toward uniting the | frightened to jump and hung
allies for victory." Nixon on-
Ing firm reporting cash
shortages of $41,516.39.
The audit said executive
director Floyd R. Nicholson
had refused to furnish his
bank records to further the
investigation.
Goodwill directors said
Friday they asked Nicholson
to furnish his personal bank
records to the auditor, Fran-
cis J. Kraemer, a certified
public accountant.
~ “I haven’t been asked to
furnish my bank records,”
Nicholson said Saturday.
The audit lists $20,502.39 as
known shortages from
checks payable to Goodwill
and $21,014.19 as shortage
from Goodwill cafe and store
money.
Kraemer reported to di-
rectors Friday he had been
unable to obtain bank rec-
ords from Nicholson or
former bookkeeper Robert
3204 NW 13. Services Saturday
' (Bill Eisenhour).
Major Franklin Moss, 52, Nor-
*l; man. (Mayes).
cn ; Mrs. Joyce H. Ge rred, 49, of
TULSA (AP) — The trial
of Tulsa County Democratic
Party chairman Thomas
h‛
aa
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
(AP — A diplomatic storm
continued in full force Satur-
day as Asian, African and
Soviet delegates protested
the invasion of Syria’s UN
mission in New York by a
band of young Zionists.
The controversy appeared
headed toward a possible
UN, debate on steps to
protect foreign embassies
and diplomatic personnel all
over the world.
It also has revived pri-
vate talk about moving UN
headquarters away from the
United States.
U. S. Ambassador Arthur
J. Goldberg suggested Fri-
day night that the whole
question of incidents in-
volving embassies was a
matter for concern and
1
two weeks.
‘Til cooperate with the
committee,” Nicholson said
Saturday.
Asked if he would furnish
his bank records, he repeat-
ed:
“I’ll cooperate with the
committee.”
Nicholson added: “I just
know that I’m not guilty. I
ran a good firm for a good
cause.”
been “misunderstood, mis-
A ' ' ' - E
| T*
•11 • -
• 1
incidents in New York.
Meeting Tense
In a statement drafted at
an emotion-packed meeting,
they went beyond the inci-
dent at the Syrian mission to
complain about “various as-
saults made in the past
against personnel of other
missions."
They called upon the Unit-
ed States to take urgent
steps to punish the 19 young
men and women who invad-
ed the Syrian mission and to
act to ensure they safety of
all UN diplomats.
They also decided to
launch a formal protest
through UN Secretary-Gen-
eral U Thant.
Trespass Charged
Iui
. - .a
Charged
In Slayings
PATERSON, N. J. (AP) —
Middleweight boxer Rubin
“Hurricane” Carter was ar-
rested Saturday with a sec-
ond man and charged with
murder for a triple slaying
in a Paterson tavern last
June.
The 29-year-old fighter,
LIVER
Wee
aboard Friday afternoon
while playing. Then the
Southern Pacific train began
j to move. His older play-
visit Canada next year dur-
ing the Expo 67 World's Fair
in Montreal, a reliable
source in the Vatican said
Saturday.
No decision has been
reached yet on the length of
the pontiff’s stay because
the trip is still more than six
months away, the source
said.
Spring Trip Hinted
Expo 67 has been sched-
y
S
6H8329
he could visit Belmond.
The Iowa Highway Pa-
trol said traffic on U. S. 69
would be detoured around
Belmond to keep out sight-
seers.
“If people want to help
us — stay away,” Beaman
said.
Maj. Gen. Junior Miller,
Iowa adjutant general,
said 150 national guards-
men would aid in cleaning
up, and patrolling the
streets.
The national guard
moved in four kitchen
units to help feed towns-
people.
Paper Nods
To Reagan
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
The Los Angeles Times en-
dorsed Republican Ronald
Reagan for governor of Cali-
fornia Saturday, asserting
the state “would greatly
benefit by a new hand on the
wheel of government.”
The Times, which claims
the largest circulation in the
west with a daily circulation
of 845,150 and a Sunday cir-
culation of nearly 1.2 mil-
lion, said the two-term ad-
ministration of Gov. Ed-
have refused to undercut the
United States’ position in
Asia for partisan gain. It has
been the president's party
that has harbored those who
have counseled appeasement
of Communist aggression in
Viet Nam.”
Nixon ‘Shocked’
In a statement entitled
"P laying Politics with
Peace,” issued here, Nixon
said in part:
"I predict that the presi-
dent’s shocking attempt dur-
ing this past week to play
domestic politics with inter-
national peace will weaken
his voice as a spokesman for
all Americans at Manila.
"Bipartisanship remains of
Twins Her Third
CHICAGO (AP) - A Chi-
cago woman has given birth
to her third set of twins—her
eighth and ninth children in
seven years. Patricia Stahl-
berg, 30, commented after-
ward, “I'm on my third
washing machine now.”
By Nixon
NEW YORK (AP) —
Former Vice President Rich-
ard M. Nixon has accused
President Johnson of making
a vicious and unwarranted
attack on the Republican
Party that Nixon says en-
dangers bipartisan support
of the forthcoming Manila
conference.
Nixon said Friday that
Johnson has “gravely jeop-
ardized the bipartisan back-
ing he should have when he
goes to Manila" through an
“insensitive” attack on Re-
publicans, in Wilmington,
Del., Wednesday.
Apology Demanded
Johnson had warned then,
Nixon said, that a vote for
the GOP could cause the na-
tion “to falter and fall back
and fail” in Viet Nam.
Nixon, regarded as a po-
tential Republican presiden-
tial nominee in 1968, called
the remark “a vicious, un-
warranted and partisan as-
sault upon the Republican
Party that has given Presi-
dent Johnson the support for
the war his own party has
denied him."
Demanding an apology
from Johnson “for his irre-
sponsible charges," Nixon
added:
“Republicans have stood
behind the president in his
efforts to deny reward to
un) ′
00
would be found.
Dr. Samuel Leinbach,
president of the Iowa Med-
ical Society, estimated
from 150 to 200 persons
were injured, about 20 of
them critically. He ex-
pressed appreciation for
the amount of medical
help volunteered from
within a 100-mile radius of
the town.
Gov. Harold Hughes who
has been touring the state
with a bus caravan of
Democratic political candi-
dates, canceled a cam-
paign speech in eastern
Iowa Saturday morning so
a slander indictment by the board the deserted craft.
BELMOND, Iowa (AP)
— A tornado, brewed by
the same stormy system
that earlier hit the Rocky
Mountains with a snow
storm, pounced on this
north-central Iowa town
Friday, leaving six known
dead and 150 or more in-
jured.
Four blocks of the
town’s five-block-long busi-
ness district were
wrecked, with virtually ev-
ery business building flat-
tened or heavily damaged.
Numerous homes and
farm houses also fell to
the rending winds. There
was no immediate esti-
mate of the loss.
Law enforcement offi-
cers, national guardsmen
and volunteers worked
through the night, some of
the time in a cold, fine
rain, to clear rubble and
search the debris for vic-
tims.
State highway patrol
Capt. Jack Beaman said
an “inch by inch search’’
of the town had been com-
pleted by midnight.
He said another search
would be undertakep by
daylight but he didn’t be-
lieve any more bodies
mund Brown lacks direction, said money, was missing
(Continued from Page 1)
make agreements with other
Socialist countries to defend
Viet Nam” has hurt the
Communist cause there.
“This has special signifi-
cance,” Brezhnev added,
“since China is the only So-
cialist country with a com-
mon border with Viet Nam."
Brezhnev also described
Peking leaders as the rene-
gades of the Communist
camp.
He cited the Red Guard
rampages in China and the
“hostile” Chinese attitude
toward Moscow and de-
clared, “all this has nothing
to do with Marxism-Lenin-
sim and Socialist policy."
But he stopped short of
calling for an open break
with China and repeated So-
viet hopes that China would
change its ways.
Accident
2 Sat., October 15, 1966 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
of 432 NW 5. Services Saturday
' (Vondel L. Smith).
Richard Miller, 17, Edmond,
service station employe. Services
Monday (Sherman).
Mr*. Mary McClain, Albuquer-
que, N. M. (Garrison).
Pani Mackey, 9010 SE 29. (Gar-
course a two-way street.
President Johnson, with his
irresponsible indictment of
the Republican Party, has
indicated he does not choose
to travel that road any long-
er. Republicans have no
choice but to defend their
record on the issues of war
and peace against the presi-
dent’s assaults.”
Apology Called Vital
The controversy was
sparked when the Zionist
group entered the Syrian of-
fices a few blocks from UN
headquarters just as the UN
Security Council was begin-
ning a procedural wrangle
over an Israeli complaint
against recent incidents on
the Syrian border.
Four girls and 15 young
men entered the Syrian mis-
sion, on the 25th floor of an
office building at 757 Third
Ave. Police finally led them
away.
They were charged with
trespassing, unlawful intru-
sion and disorderly conduct
and released pending a hear-
ing November 25.
The council debate on the
Israeli complaint went into a
night session with a new
flurry of comments on the
incident at the Syrian mis-
sion. The meeting was ad-
journed shortly after mid-
night and was to resume
Monday afternoon.
""geddy
i
7
Aj. ■ - ■
Injuries
These traffic accident*
with injury were investigat-
ed by Oklahoma City police
during the 24-hour period
ending at midnight Friday;
s Portland (1700 block), two-car. In-
iures.was.Morris . Van Valkenburg, 40.
of 3728 SW 37.
NE ferF. * Walnut, two-car. Iniurnd
were Charlene auer, tf, David ajer, 6
and Julia Ann Kayer, 4, all of 265 NW 03.
and.Car Wayne MeKee, U. of 2125 Hunf-
" NW a a Olio, two-car. Injured was
Carolyn Soanbauar, 6, ofMOD ranitt Dr.
These burglaries were reported Satur-
day by OklahomGtSiosotice:
Sherrie Gever, S17 SW 47, TV set.
Leonard Minzer. 12001 NE Expresswav,
camera, boohs, Jaye*, brie? cese.
"S's' Robinson, safe,
cesh, checks.
735
cx
ben‛-'
5"eg ‛
s" —w-
----- -- 4---------
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Missing
HALIFAX, Novia Scotia
(AP) — The air-sea rescue
center here said Saturday
the Puffin in which Britons
were trying to row across
the Atlantic to Britain from
the United States haa been
found empty in the mid-At-
lantic by the Canadian de-
stroyer escort Chaudiere.
David Johnstone, 34, and
John Hoare, 29, set out from
Norfolk, Va., May 26 to
cross the Atlantic in the 15-
foot rowboat. The last re-
ported sighting of them was
August 11, when they were
about halfway across.
The Chaudiere reported
the Puffin was found Friday
about 600 miles southeast of
St. John’s, Newfoundland, at
latitude 45 degrees north and
longitude 38 degrees, 26 min-
ute* west.
The destroyer escort was
reported to be heading for
Lisbon, Portugal, with the
small craft.
The Chaudiere reported
the boat’s log book was
found intact with the last en-
try dated September 3.
The entry said: “No row-
ing because of north-north-
west wind ...” the name
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 206, Ed. 2 Saturday, October 15, 1966, newspaper, October 15, 1966; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846143/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.