Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 177, Ed. 2 Wednesday, September 13, 1967 Page: 2 of 4
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Sl^BiUion Pledged
Petition
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7
Slum Money
Big Questions
Market Eased
(Continued From Page 1)
Nev Mast
Center
ing her university studies
Storms
I
Set Off
urging immediate passage of Administration in the fiscal
year ended June 30.
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IRON!
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Men’s Fall
Sport Shirts
Lawrence L. Walters, profes-
sor of transportation at Indl-
Wall or desk calendar.
Sept.-Dec. ‘67, Jan.-
Dec. '61. Small site
1.00 large size 3.00
Broww's Stetienery
let. R., Dewntew.
Cepitel HIH, Penn Squere
Morning
Evening
Sunday
M ■ S
E-5
M-E-S
Petition Prepared
TULSA (AP) — A petition
is being prepared in Tulsa by
representatives of the city's
Roman Catholic clergymen
A,.>
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her cousin David Rockefel-
ler, chairman of the Chase
Manhattan Bank.
(Continued From Page 1)
consists of an attack seeking
to knock enough signatures
off of a petition to leave it
with insufficient to call an
election.
Opponents would have to
invalidate about 40,000
names, almost one-third of
the total names on the peti-
tion, to leave it with too
few.
Former Secretary of State
2"
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16 Month Desk Calendar
.*
6*..
in
Beige,
Fink,
Yellow,
Blue,
Whitel
Brown’s Stere fer
Men IW. R.,
Dewntewn
Penn Squere,
Cepitel Hill
Brown , Budget Sportswear,
Ist Flr., Downtown
Capitol Hill and Penn Squere
I 5 39
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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Johnson got a pledge
Wednesday from the life insurance industry to channel $1
billion of mortgage money into big city slum areas.
Johnson, after meeting with industry leaders at the
White House, welcomed the move and said the insurance
. , beauty, who prefers finish-
Cecil Parham, chef deputy county clerk, explains |
an a
2/
Knit with Lurex
THREADS
)
9
399
Assocjation of Police Chiefs
Tuesday.
Because of this, safeguard-
ing the currency of this coun-
5
. Most /eminine look of all...
3 The Fabulous Fall
i
$18.00
111.00
11.00
30 00
30 00
48.50
h-
Td
SEPTEMBER
UE WED
1
(Oklahoma, Kansas, Texa and Ariel
I Yr.
35
70c
45c
i
--
snneqq-
nteeret
1
“sbditng g
K Fall bf eosy-to-core-for Dynel you'll lo
a determination to sail the
world alone.
All went well until a few
weeks ago when his mast
snapped in the Indian Ocean
100 miles from the Cocos Is-
land.
Graham set up a jury rig
with a boom, added a bed
try has become an interna-; cities to operate transit sys-
tional operation, said agent tems free and "haul people
AHhe glorious, luxurious length of heir
-"that lets you enjoy swingy new styles
instantly. You can choow from our
wide range of shades.
.. in shades to match your hair to
action ... the Fall is fashion.
159s
We recently bought a new house and when the deeds
w?r.e returned to us they had a stamp on them from In-
ternal Revenue Service. I would like to know why our
deeds had to be OK'd by Internal Res enue. J. D. R.
?
7
jnm)
1 Mo.
11.75
1.75
1.®
3.2
3.25
5.00
Arown’s Wig Selon, 2nd R., Dewntown,
* Cepitel Will end Penn Squere
?
3:,
transportation study commit-
tee recently that it might be
more economical in large
to a possible Hollywood
contract.
n currency is the
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adz
V
most: counterfeited in the
world, a U. S. Secret Service
vember 30. Opponents ap-
pealed his ruling to the su-
preme court.
NP58
Shell and Matching Jacket
g. By Baar and Beards
3 In Luxurious Lace
The wind prevented him re-
turning to the Cocos and he
headed for Mauritius 2,100
miles away.
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Flies High
SYDNEY, Australia (AP)
— Lee Graham, 18-year-old
round-the-world sailor from
Vista, Calif., should have a
new mast fitted on his 24-foot
sloop by now.
Graham's father sent him
a 30-foot aluminum mast
which Qantas, the Australian
airline, flew from California
by jet to the Indian Ocean is-
land of Mauritius where the
youth has been stranded.
Graham left California at
the age of 16 with a good
the daily OKLAHOMAN
Morn ing
THE SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Evenin ediFion of Th* fl Okie-
homan, 500 N. Bbadwy, kloma
kiokoqpzenpvgk, 22311.
(By the week)
Morning, Evenins, Sunday .......
Mom In* & unday ...........
Evenjno A Sunday ...............
Morning only ................
Evening only ....................
Sunday only
MB/
We have lived in the 3100 block Sunset Blvd. for the
past six years and our mall is still delivered all over
town before It finally gets to our house several days lat-
er. Apparently there are several “Sunset” streets and
the post office tries them all before they try us. Ideally if
every person would use the Zip Code there would be no
problem, but we cannot control our incoming mail. B. W.
Postmaster J. H. McCasland concurs that one of his
mst difficult problems is the proper delivery of mail to
stteets which have the same or similar names. He says
there is a total of 11 streets in Oklahoma with some vari-
aton of "Sun.” There is a Sunset Blvd., Sunset Dr., and
a Sunset Terr., each of which is delivered from a differ-
ent delivery unit. The postmaster says your mail should
no he delayed in delivery and they will try to do better
in the future.
Perky little panty made with Lycra® spandex power-
net is super smooth at waist and cuff bottom. Makes
less of your tummy with reinforced front panel,
shapes the derriere with a natural back. Adjustable
garters. S, M, 1.
Brewn’s Netions, Ist R., Dewwtewe,
Cepitel Hill and Pena Squere
(Continued From Page 1)
AThere will be a grade separation where the present road
is located at NW 33 and Independence.
Opens
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Park Avenue town house
from whose balcony Nikita
S. Khrushchev harangued
New Yorkers seven years
ago while he embraced Cu-
ban Prime Minister Fidel
Castro opened Tuesday as a
center for inter-American
studies.
The house, built in 1911 for
millionaire Percy Pyne, was
Credit Aid Given
WASHINGTON (AP) —
More than 3.2 million rural
area people received credit
aid from the Farmers Home
Envoys Recalled
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
(AP) — Prince Norodom Si-
hanouk told a crowd Wednes-
day he is recalling his en-
voys from Peking "to avoid
incidents if there is a demon-
stration against our embas-
sy”
agent told the International ana University, told a state
Warning Given
On Bogus Bills
James Bullard upheld suffi-
ciency of the petition last No- companies "have made a historic contribution to your
outside kjehoma County, Moore and
Yukon. add Sc Mr week for morning or
evening.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES
; Is there a legal limit to the candle power that you
ran have on your car headlights? J. M.
: A spokesman for the department of public safety
pays there is not.
American Relations, a pri- sheet to help with the sailing,
vate organization headed by ~
/
92
A '. v
f
M22222 7
MEia-
Wed,, Sept. 13, 1967 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
1967
< STUDIES come first for
Keratin Aap, Stockholm
Free Bus Rides
'Economiear
ofher States A Forelen Countries
Retes silghtiy higher--ladly furnished
UDON request.
Secong class postage Mid at Okia-
home City. Oklehoma.
SUN mon
Carty while the latter was
under investigation by an
Oklahoma County grand
Jury in 1965.
Pate’s original story was
that he delivered money to
McCarty and Everett Col-
lins, former state senator,
in the interest of passage
of the betting bill.
Questions about the $2,-
500 also arose in the mind
of Marvin Johnson, who
acted as judge in the bar's
trial of Pate on the con-
flicting statement charges.
“Can you explain how it
happened to be an even
$2,500?” Johnson asked
Harkey.
"Well, if I had to tell you
that I knew that it was an
even $2,500," Harkey
answered, “I don’t have
the recollection that it was
actually.
"I thought it was a little
less than that, but I was
told later that it was $2,-
500. But to remember that
it was exactly $2,500, Mr.
Johnson, I don't know that
it was.
"I actually thought it
was $2,000; that's what I
thought. But I was told lat-
er that it was $2,500. But I
don't really have an inde-
pendent memory of what it
was.”
Childers said Pate told
him he would sign the de-
nial, that it was "the gos-
pel truth,” and that he
would have signed it for
nothing.
Childers also said that
after newspaper stories of :
the alleged payoffs he told
Pate, "Bill (Harkey) said
there was going to be some .
awful good boys hurt by in-
situations in there, unless
they would get them clari-
fied."
Pate refused to testify at
two grand jury proceed-
ings involving alleged bri-
bery. He also took the Fifth
Amendment at the recent
federal court trial in which
McCarty was convicted of
income tax evasion.
Pate told newsmen Tues-
day he would appeal his
disbarment to the U. S. Su-
preme Court if the state
court denied him a new
hearing.
Nigh
(Continued From Page 1)
ment but would remain as a
commission member.
Nigh was made an ex-
officio member of the com-
mission when the legislature
passed the enabling act, but
was not given the right to
vote.
that Internal Revenue does not see the deeds that are re- !
corded nor does it approve them This is a federal tax and j
not a stamp of approval. This fax was effective Dec. 1. j
1914, at $1 per $1,000 consideration involved and was mod- '
ified in 1940 to 55 cents per $500 or $1.10 per $1,000. This
federal tax terminates December 31 and there will be a
state tax of the same amount beginning Jan. 1, 1968. They
are called “documentary stamps" which is nothing more
than just a tax.
By The Associated Press
An outbreak of cold air
swept out of the northern
and central Rockies and into
the plains Wednesday, trig-
gering thunderstorms from
Kansas to the upper Missis-
sippi valley.
Hazardous-driving warn-
ings were in effect through
the night for the higher
mountain passes of Wyoming
where strong gusty winds
caused local areas of blow-
ing and drifting snow.
Frost warnings were post-
ed Tuesday night for por-
tions of Montana, Wyoming
and Idaho. The cold air was
expected to overspread the
entire Rocky Mountain re-
gion and the Great Plains by
Wednesday night.
• »- wor
ters for the Soviet delegation
to the United Nations.
When the Russians moved
to larger quarters on East
67th Street, the Marquesa de
Cuevas, granddaughter of
John D. Rockefeller sr.,
bought the house and donat-
ed it to the Center for Inter-
mer Speaker J. D. Me-
Threads of gold and sRver
in locy chanel matching
shells and jackets of white,
beige, or copper. Shell is
sleeveless with jewell neck-
line and back zipper.
Styled to wear with jacket
or -without. Jacket is
opened down front with
round neck and 34 sleeves.
100% nylon lining. Mode
of Acrylic, nylon and po-
lyester. They are wash-
able. Sizes: S-M-L.
serving in 1960 as headquar- knowledge of navigation and
205 Pate Off
■fl
P Ht‘s
MThe Least
for lying, in effect.
At Pate's secret trial be-
fore the bar — public now
when filed with the su-
preme court clerk — the
) purpose of Harkey's send-
* ing $2,500 to Pate to sign
the anti-bribery statement
aroused the curiosity of
Wayne Campbell, special
bar prosecutor.
Harkey had testified he
put $2,500 and copies of the
statement in an envelope
for Marx Childers, anoth-
er attorney, to take to
Pate.
"Mr. Harkey," Campbell
posed, "in all candor,
could you explain to us
what was the purpose of
i the $2,500 being enclosed
with that statement?”
‘Hard to Explain'
"Looking back on it,"
Harkey testified, "it is
kind of hard to explain. I
wanted the affidavit, but I
cautioned Mr. Childers to
tell Mr. Pate that under no
circumstances did I want
him to sign it unless it was
true.
"And he had made state-
ments in this paper that
there was nothing to this
alleged accusation.
"Actually, I was told by
Mr. Childers that he gave
all this, whatever was in
there, to Mr. Pate.
"I d i d n't necessarily
mean for him to; I wanted
him to be paid for his time
and effort, but I didn't
think. ..."
Campbell said, "You in-
tended the $2,500 to be de-
livered to Mr. Pate?
Harkey: “That was all
right with me."
The record does not dis-
close that any of the law-
yers prosecuting Pate be-
fore a trial examiner ever
asked Harkey who put up
the $2,500.
When a newsman asked
Harkey the question Wed-
nesday, he said he had no
further statement to make
on the subject. Then he
added:
"I might be violating the
law on what you can say
about a client's business.”
Harkey represented for-
• .833//
a fair housing ordinance.
S CITY (AP) — . INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
i
4 $ ' Np k’vA <
F,azgea
m0-
country."
Some 348 companies will
put up the $1 billion, each in
according to its assets.
The mortgage money will
go mainly into various hous-
ing programs qualifying for
Federal Housing Administra-
tion insurance.
These include rent supple-
ment and model cities pro-
jects, rehabilitation pro-
grams and purchases of indi-
vidual homes in slum areas.
In effect, the insurance in-
dustry will divert $1 billion
of its lending funds to
"high-risk areas” it formerly
avoided. The availability of
FHA insurance to guarantee
the loans largely makes this
move possible.
Because there are interest
ceilings on some
FHA-insured loans, the in-
surance firms presumably
will reap less interest from
the $1 billion.
Ir. Please Note
gction Line will study every inquiry or request, but
it2un*t possible to answer each one personally. Don’t en-
‘ lOBKself-addressed, stamped envelopes, as answers to
gnjal interest questions can be given only in this col-
UBG-a
tlfctn ember. Action Line wants to protect every citi-
zOHX rights to be treated fairly by government agencies
-gl0al, state, national — or any other community or-
gMlMtion. If you are confronted by a problem of this
typ, call or write Action Line. And please give a phone
number at which you can be reached in case additional
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 177, Ed. 2 Wednesday, September 13, 1967, newspaper, September 13, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1847116/m1/2/: accessed June 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.