The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 121, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1967 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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TWO
* THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Monday, July 10, 1967
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The Sen-(complex and more subtle than
of
ART
4th 8 Miasour Dial CA 4-0184
WASHINGTON
(UPI)—
preceded her in death in 1958. added.
Drew Pearson
the
the
been in the area of criminal
that the balance on the court
law. Right of suspects under probably would remain about
9
President Returns
=-
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Marshall Now Faces Civil Rights As
Supreme Court Justice, Not Lawyer
Also
New.
issues, the court’s most con- conservative whom he succeeds
troversial decisions of late have remarked as he stepped down
SEVIER’S
FUNERAL HOME
13
15
his
the
(N C.) for the 1967 summer
season. She has also been chos-
en to participate in the Select
Choir. A graduate of Oklahoma
College of Liberal Arts, Miss
get
of
12
14
16
g-
li
44
51
56
Walter Snedeker, diet.
Phone CA 4-0376
One Year ...
Six Month ...
Three Months
Established
1892
Save with
State Farm’s
low insurance
rates for
careful drivers.
See me.
those he argued before the high
court as an attorney in the
1940's and 1950's.
It was Marshall, representing
the legal defense fund of the
National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People,
who won the celebrated 1954
decision ordering public schools
desegregated with aU deliberate
speed.
Thirteen years later, however,
the justices are still dealing
with such questions as how fast
desegregation should be carried
out, who has responsibility for
the job and should children be
bussed across town to further
integration.
sons who might know why 5-
year-old Judith Anne Elwell
disappeared last Thursday, po-
lice said.
Police called for the wide-
spread ground search for the
child late Sunday after no new
clues were found by the more
than 200 searchers.
“About the only thing we
have left is to investigate per-
sonalities," said Lt. Jim Read-
ing, who is heading up investi-
gation of the disappearance.
''We have to check the back-
grounds of some people,” he
The National Association of
Retired Civil Employees, Chap-
ter No. 734, will meet Thursday,
July 13th, at 2:30 p.m. at the
Post Office. Discussions on New
Legislation, Medicare and Soc-
ial Security will be had. Mem-
bers and non-member retired
civil service employees are re-
quested to attend.
BOY — Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Burnet, 1827 Montant, are the
parents of a seven-pound, 15-
ounce boy born at 9:05 a.m.
Sunday in Grady Memorial Hos-
pital.
GIRL — Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Nixon, 924 South 13th, are the
parents of a three pound, six
and one-half-ounce girl born at
2:09 a.m. Sunday in Grady
Memorial Hopital.
BOY — Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hammonds, 1309 Chickasha Ave-
nue, are the parents of a even-
pound, 11-ounce boy born at
4:55 p.m. Sunday in Grady
Memorial Hospital.
GIRL — Mr. and Mrs. David
Woodson, Trenton, Mo., are the
parents of an eight-pound, seven
and one-half ounce girl bom at
12:30 a.m. Sunday in a Trenton
Hospital. She has been named
Kara Michelle. Mr. Woodson is
a former Chickasha resident.
The J. D. Airington family
reunion was held Saturday in
Shannon Springs Park. There
were 52 in atendance. .
__________
______
___ US
State To Decide
(Continued from Page ONE)
and Missouri, Clarence Ply at 2017
Georgia Avenue.
W I P 5 — South of the center
line of Grand Boulevard to and
including Carolina Avenue, west
of the center line of 17th Street to
the west city limits, Town and
Country addition, 17th and 18th
south of Carolina, the Doyle
Poe home, 2607 South 19th.
W I P 8 — South of Center line
of Grand Boulevard to and in-
cluding Carolina Street, west from
center line of Ninth Street to cen-
ter line of 17th Street, between
17th and 18th south of Carolina,
Ellis, Cole, Parker and Nichlos-
Stephenson additions including
Park, the W B. Kitiley home,
2201 South 16th Street.
ISI
I
$17,50
ISO
4.50
asked the Defense-Department
to open Camp Perry for 5,000
more.
The answer was: 'No.” The
rsason was: “The National Rifle
Association's target competi-
tion.”
—Target Pracice or Youth Help
The 8,000 participants in this
rifle match travel to and from
Camp Perry at public expense
and are billeted on the camp
grounds free of charge.
Pentagon officials admit that
Phone
CA4-
4266
MAKE THE
WANT ADS
DA DAILY HABIT
7.75
4.00
1.40
As a symbol of love
and reverence, dignity
is inherent in a
funeral service.
TRULY
DIGNIFIED
Survivors are one daughter,
Mrs. Rosemary Mogch of Wood-
land Calif.; two brothers, Wal-
ter Hannon of Verden and
George Hannon of Oklahoma
City; three sisters, Mrs. Myrtle
McClung of Verden, Mrs. Nethel
Hall of Tulsa and Mrs. Ruth
Mitchell of Norman; and two
grandchildren.
Funeral services are pending
under the direction of the Brown
Funeral Home.
personal services,
1 the decorum of
our home reflect
that dignity.
DISMISSALS
Kay Halbrook, Lindsay.
Mrs. Frank Cole, Chickasha.
Willey Rich, Blanchard.
Mrs. W. P. LaGrange, Chick-
asha.
Mrs. Billy J. Branch and son,
Linday.
Mrs. Lester Tablert, Chick-
asha.
Mrs. Lula Rollin, Chickasha.
Johnny Long, Anadarko.
Mrs. Tennie McKay, Chick-
asha.
Patricia Ann Merritt, Ninne-
kah.
Mrs. Warren Bolton, Chick-
asha.
Mary Jo Moore, Pocasset.
Mrs. Elbert Rodgers, Alex.
Chickasha Baily Express
Mi Ne. ara Street
r. o. DRAWER a
49 Shade tree
50 Pronoun
61 West Indian
_ Indiana
53 Down--—
56 Maintenance
57 Thin (var.)
58 Untidy
59 Shore
DOWN
1 Desert animal
2 Dissolute
3 Church calendar
k 4 Shoshonean
Municipal Court
Louis Jon Cloud, 18, 614 Wash-
ington Ave., forfeited $10 for
careless driving.
Barbara Gene Hawthorne, 25,
1028 South 5th, forfeited 820 for
each count of reckless driving,
having no valid state driver's
license and for making exces-
sive noise with a motor vehicle.
Homer Eugene Rankin, 52,
Durant Okla, forfeited 820 for
each count of public drunkeness,
driving while under the influ-
ence of alcohol, reckless driv-
ing and transporting an open
bottle.
Charlie Henry Jones, 53, 820
South Second, forfeited $20 for
having no valid state drivers
license and $5 for improper
backing.
Cecil C. Reed, 48, Box 401,
Minco, forfeited $10 for speed-
ing.
MRS. MILDRED ESTHER
MECOY
Grady Memorial
Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Mary E. Davis, Chick-
asha, surgical.
Mrs. Joseph Starkey, Minco,
medical.
Elton Parish, oPcasset, med-
ical.
Mrs. Ray Lawrence, Rush
Springs, surgical.
Mrs. Nola Wood, Tuttle, med-
ical.
Mrs. J. D. Pennington, Brad-
ley, medical.
T. J. Wright, Marlow, surgi-
cal.
31 Single
32 Small barrel
L. C. GASS
5th 6 Colorado
CA 4-0440—Roa. CA 4-3230
38 Symbol of
wisdom
41---up
(withan)
43 Moslem holy
men
44 Lament
45 Murled
46 Impure layer
One Month . ... .. 1.25
CHICKASNA POST OFrIcr BoxEs
/
-
BAKER-FAIR
REXALL
Professional Prescription Service
Prompt Free Delivery
Petroleum Bldg.—CA 4-0627
command
130 Hurrian coin
133 Elevate morally
135 Suction
36 Ancient city
in Greece
37 New
. (comb, form)
38 Freudian
concept
40 Superlative
suffix
41 Doctor of
Our
an
<vegey
yP*,
7770/20
•(Cecnne
svArt vAam
e
musveane,
- “J
STATE FARM
MUTUAL
AUTOMOBILE INSUNanc cowirr
Humphrey argued that the arm-
ories were used for National
Guard only once a week and
could be used as recreation
centers six nights a week. The
Vice President also persuaded
the Pentagon to send 16 ser-
vice bands to play concerts in
Chickasha
Okla. 73018
MiGHlY
tMUi
ate Judiciary Committee has
scheduled hearings tomorrow
(Tues. July 11) on President
Johnson's choice of Thurgood
Marshall to be the first Negro
member of the Supreme Court
The foliowine dispatch on
Marshall was written by UPI’s
Supreme Court reporter.)
By CHARLOTE G. MOULTON
ua
mm
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF
CIRCULATION
A LOCALLY OPERATED MEMIER
OF THE
According to Walt W. Rostow,
Johnson's adviser on national
security affairs, the President
has not yet made a decision on
whether to boost U.S. forces in
Vietnam by upwards of 100,000
men.
Await McNamara Report
“The question of troops will
be decided by the President in
light of the review being
conducted by Secretary McNa-
mara and his team out there,”
Rostow said in a television
interview Sunday (NBC—Meet
the Press).
The White House aide ack-
nowledged, however, that there
47 Narrow atrip
48 Annoys
49 Extrasensory
abllity (ab.)
50 Hindu mental
discipline
52 Turkish title
64 Seine
55 Perslan
gateway
i ivinity (ab.) —
42 in company of Im lai
4 Millimeter tab.) I
46 < ommotion
Deathsand
Funerals
Missing Girl
Case Mystery
To OC Police
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -
Lie detector tests were a “pro-
bability’’ today for several per-
GSu
AlNCONDITIONING
SHOMOGENIZED
MILK
VITAMIN D
9 Herb genua
10 Gait
11 Possessive
pronoun
13 Conger
18 Peer Gynt’s
mother
i (comb, form) 21 District
117 Bad 22 Defeated (coll.) 34 Whip
(comb, form) 23 Doll --- '
19 Equine’s tidbits 24 —____data
20 F rench article 26 Mouse genus
21 Swiss mountains 27 Encircled
23 Postscript (ab.) 28 Newt
24 Swiss canton 29 Outcast (Jap)
25 Auitrallsn bird 30 Relative
27 Driving
iiyiarar
! -*-1J ■
to use Camp Perry on
shores of Lake Erie.
Vanik had discovered
Asked whether Polygraph, or
Ue detector, tests might be giv-
en, Reading replied: "I would
say probably.”
The officer declined to say
who would be asked to take the
tests.
The youngster's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Elwell, told of-
ficers the last time they saw
the girl was Thursday evening.
An exhaustive search of the
area turned up a canvas shoe,
identified as Judith's, in an
abandoned shack not far from
the Elwell house. Police theore
ized the shoe might have been
lost in a struggle with an ab-
ductor.
Police ruled out any possibil-
ity that the girl might have
wandered off from home.
The Elwells, who remained
calm throughout the search,
said Sunday they thought the
girl had "gone on a mission for
God.”
Elwell, who was eight years
old when he saw his mother
shoot his father to death, said
the search and publicity had
‘ brought about people turning
to God and to prayer.”
To Place Your Ad
Cal CA 4-2600
Chickasha Daily Expresa "
. .. . .i u nu> । accorded criminal suspects in
in his day of anti-ballitic mis- _______
WASHINGTON UPI) -
Tanned and rested after the
closest he has come to a real
vacation since entering the
White House, President Johnson
was back at his desk today
grappling with weighty prob-
CAR
INSURANCE
DUE?
sites and nuclear weapons, tar-
get practice is a long way from
being as important as when
the NRA subsidy was first voted
in 1916 at the beginning of World
War I.
Nevertheless, Camp Perry
will resound to the crack of
rifle shots this summer while
the slums of Cleveland will re-
sound to the crack of firebombs.
NOTE 1-In Washington Vice
President Humphrey has per-
suaded the National Guard to
open up armories in various
Lincoln Memorial.
NOTE 2—When this column
asked the National Rifle As-
sociation for the amount of sug-
sidy it received from the fed-
eral government, it hesitated.
Money paid by taxpayers is sup-
posed to be a matter of public
record and not a secret. How-
ever, a replay has not yet been
received from the NRA. The
figure had to be obtained from
the Defense Department.
—Headlines And Footnotes—
Sen. Bobby Kennedy has told
friends that when Lyndon John-
son was Vice President, he ad-
vised President John F. Ken-
nedy against going to iVenna
for a summit meeting with
Khrushcev. Today, says
Bobby, Johnson not only has
held a summit meeting with
Premier Kosygin but is an-
xious to hold more ... President
Johnson has asked the State
Department to prepare a de-
tailed report on all the Vietnam
peace feelers received in Wash-
ington. He wants each feeler
traced from its original source
to its ultimate disposition, pre-
sumably to show the doves how
eyewitness account
Ona Year --
Six Months -
Three Months
major participants in Cleveland
rioting have been youngsters
aged 8 to 15. Last month the
in the Cleveland Hough area
was burned down by youngsers
armed with homemade fire-
bombs. Rep Vanik has raised
8100,000 locally to finance a
summer program for 1,500
underprivileged children, but
parts of the country as youth _ _ .
recreation centers this summer, lems of Vietnam strategy and
were "increased needs and
increased possibilities" for use
of additional forces, to counter
the Communist buildup along
its famous 1966 series
from Vietnam to
One Month __________________
(All prleen inelude Tx)
MEMBER OF
Miss Kathy Moring is working
in the Children's Building at
Ridgecrest Baptist Assembly
the Demilitarized Zone and to
assist in the rural pacification
program.
The President may also have
the chance to confer with Gen.
William C. Westmoreland, U.S.
military commander in Viet-
nam, this week. The general
plans to return to the United
States to attend the funeral of
his mother, Mrs. James R.
Westmoreland, 81, who died
Sunday at her home in
Columbia, S.C.
Tax Increase Unavoidable
As for taxes, the President’s
chief economic adviser, Gard-
ner Ackley, has said there is
“no escape” from the fact that
taxes will have to be raised
before the end of the year.
Expert—Inexpensive
Re-Upholstering
-- AlL
the same. Marshall will not
“vote much different from me,”
Clark told reporters.
The American Bar Associa-
tion, which takes a look at all
judicial appointments, rated
him “highly acceptable.”
Marhall was born July 2,
1908, in Baltimore. His father
was William Canfield Marshall,
a writer and steward at the
Gibson Island Club on Che-
sapeake Bay. His mother was a
teacher in Baltimore’s segregat-
ed schools.
"My father,” Marshall re-
calls, “never told me to become
a lawyer. But he turned me into
one by teaching me to argue, to
prove every statement I made,
and by challenging my logic on
every point.”
W 2 P 3 — South from cen-
ter of Dakota Avenue to center
of Missouri Avenue, west from
center of 12th Street to west city
limits, the home of C. W. Pay-
ton, 1101 South 12th Street
W 3 P I — South from center of
Chickasha to center of Dakota Av-
enue east from center of Fifth
Street to the east city limits,
Epworth Methodist Church —
Youth Building, 320 South
Fourth.
Thurgood Marshall, who may
have done more than any other
man to break down segregation
in the United States, will
confront more racial issues as
the first Negro member of the
Supreme Court.
But they will be more
taxes.
The Chief Executive, who
arrived in Washington shortly
after midnight from an 11-day
sojourn in the Texas sun, was
awaiting the return of Defense
Secretary Robert S. McNamara
W 2 P I — South from center
of Dakota Avenue to center of
Missouri Avenue, east from the
center of Fifth Street to the east
city limits, Shepperd Street
Christian Church - 803 Shep*rd.
W 2 P1 — South from center of
Dakota Avenue to center of Mis-
souri Avenue, west from cen-
ter of Fifth Street to center of
12th Street. - Vocational School,
1014 South 10th Street.
Mrs. Mildred Esther Mecoy,
62, 221 South 6th,.died at 1:30
a.m. Sunday in a car-truck ac-
cident thre miles south of
Chickasha.
She was born May 1905 in
Kemp, Tex. She came to Grady
County with her parents in 1908
from Texas.
Mrs. Mecoy was employed as
a nurses aid at the Shannon
Springs Nursing Home. She was
a member of the Epworth Meth-
odist Church.
Her husband, Virgil Mecoy
Marhall the jusice may look
at things differently than
Marshall the government law-
yer.
In any case, he will have an
opportunity to refine his posi-
tion next term when the justices
will look ' at the rights of
suspects who are stopped on the
street by police and frisked for
weapons.
“Amiable” and “practical”
are the words most often used
to describe the Supreme Court
nominee a man of homespun
manner and football build (8 ft.,
2 in., 200 lbs.). As a justice, he
may not stick to an early
resolve to “wear life like a very
loose garment and never worry
about nothin’.” But neither is he
likely to be a thorn in the side
of any colleague on the bench.
Marhall looks solemn—per-
haps mournful—when he is
serious. But the expression can
be deceptive. He hails acquaint-
ances from a distance with a
jovial “hi" and is unsurpassed
as a story-teller.
Predicts Bolster
When Johnson named him to
the court on June 13, legal
observers predicted he would
bolster the voting bloc headed
by Chief Justice Earl Warren.
This group usually includes
Justices Hugo L. Black, William
O. Douglas William J. Brennan
Jr., and Abe Fortas.
On the other hand, Justice
Tom C. Clark, the mild
tion is using Camp Perry, Ohio,
for its annual target practice,
at the expense of the tax payers,
at the very same time the
camp is needed as an overflow
for boys to prevent big city
riots.
Rep. Charles Vanik, Cleve
land Democrat, has requester
the Defense Department to
make Camp Perry available as
summer jobs for the youth of
derprivileged boys. Vanik argu-
ed that the failure to provide
summer jobs for the youh of
Ohio cities made it imperative
W 3 P 2 — South from center
of Chickasha Avenue to center
of Dakota Avenue, west from cen-
ter of Fifth Street to eenter of
12the Street, G. S. Spoon resi-
dence, 923 Iowa.
W 3 P 8 — South from eenter
of Chickasha Avenue to center of
Dakota Avenue, west from cen-
ter of 12th Street to the west
city limits. At “Y" Building in
Borden Park.
W 4 P 2 — South from center
of Vermont Avenue or the north
city limits to the center of Ill-
inois Avenue, west from the cen-
ter of Fifth Street to the west
city limits. Mrs. A. W. Sim-
mons, 601 North 12th.
W 4 P 8 — South from the cen-
ter of Illinois Avenue to the cen-
ter of Chickasha Avenue, from
the west city limits to the east
City limits: also between Illinois
Avenue and Frisco from the cen-
ter of Fifth to the east city limits,
North School.
Tom Dodd, D-Conn., was ap-
proved by the firearms manu-
facturers of Connecticut and
was chiefly aimed at the mail-
order business in foreign arms.
Nevertheless, nearly four
years after Kennedy’ death,
this relatively mild legislation
has not passed. Reason: Na-
tional Rifle Association. Con-
gresmen say that they have
been flooded with letters, phone
calls and personal visits from
this persuasive and potent lob-
bby. They have bowed to its
pressure despite the following
facts which the public doesn’t
know:
1. The Rifle Association is a
non-profit, tax-exempt organi-
sation which, unlike other tax-
exempt institutions, is permited
to lobby. If other tax-exempt
organizations lobby, their tax-
exempt status is removed. But
the NRA has special exemption.
2. The Rifle Association re-
ceive subsidy from the De-
fense Department totaling $2,-
300 a year. It's supposed o
use this money to train Ameri-
can citizens in target practice,
not indirectly to lobby before
Congress.
—Big City Rioting—
3. Indirectly this subsidy may
contribute to big city rioting
this summer. Sen. Ted Ken-
nedy, D-Mass., has called the
attention of the Defense De-
partment to the fact that the
“Revolutionary Action Move-
ment” in New York, which had
formed the Jamaica Rifle and
Pistol Club as a cover for the
possession of illegal weapons,
had plotted the asasination of
national civil rights leaders.
"This club,” charged Sen.
Kennedy, "apparently was af-
filiated with and received a cer-
tificate of endorsement from
the National Rifle Asociation,
and thus under present regula-
tions was entitled to participate
in the civilian marksmanship
progiam of the Defense De-
partment.”
4. The National Rifle Associa-
3===2
Chickasha G Tuttle, Okla.
1 Up in the — 6 Rascal
< impractical) 7 Finish
7 Down to — 8 Spanish
uSSS. -Ereeung
artery
13 Last
14 City in Italy
15 Newspaper
1 executive
’ 16 Within
the poorer sections of Washing-
ton instead of exclusively in Progress of the war.
front of the Senate and the
Second-ciass postage paid at Chick-
asha. Okla. Published every afternoon
(except Saturday and Christmas Day)
and Sunday morning.
Any eroneous reflection on the
character of any person, firm nr
corporation and any misstatement
which may appear in the columns of
The Express will be flatly correcte
upon its beng brought to the atten-
tion of the management.
Advertising Dezdlines
Weekdays: Noon preceding day ef
publication.
Sunday. 12 Noon Friday.
Monday: 5 p.m. Friday.
TELEPHONE
Chickasha subscribers who miss
seryice may get their Express by
celling telephone CA 4-2600 between
5:00 and 7:00 p.m. Weekdays and 7:00
and 9:30 a.m. Sunday.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BT CARRIER IN CHICKASHA
One Year ---------------- $21.00
Six Months ____________ 10.50
Three Months -______________ 1.0
One Month .....___--------- ITS
Week 49
BT MAIL IN OKLAHOMA
(Exeept Chexasha)
O Awnings O Drapes
• Traverse Rods
O Custom Venetian
Blinds
ANTINORO
FURNITURE SHOP
818 So. 15th CA 4-6888
Answer to Previoue Puzzle
B
fc
One Year ....___.......
Six Months .............
Three Months .
— ALL OTHERS
Express g
Ads Sell 9
Serves Notice
The court also has given
numerous sit-ins and marches
the protection of free speech.
But it has served notice that the
First Amendment’s umbrella
cannot shelter every kind of
harrassment a civil rights
demonstrator may devise.
The justices unquestionably
will be aked to continue sorting
out these and similar issues and
one of the big quetions for
legal observers will be Mar-
hall’s position.
Rightly or wrongly, many will
see Marshall voting as a Negro
rather than as the96th Supreme
Court Justice. What mind of
man has President Johnson
chosen to meet this test? Will
he surprise those who expect
him to be a stereotype where
civil rights are concerned?
The 59-year-old solicitor ge-
neral expressed himself recent-
ly on one of the legal issues at
the heart of the civil rights
movement—the right to disobey
a law considered unjust. Re-
sponding to an inquiry by Sen.
Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C.,
Marshal said:
Cite Two Methods
“I believe that in our
democratic society the ways to
challenge an unjust law are (1)
by intelligent use of the vote in
order to spur elected official to
change the law, and (2) by
action in the courts if its
validity is doubtful.”
Despite unresolved racial
police investigation have been
defined more sharply and more
cases are on the way. Marshall
also has stated a view in this
field.
“A lot of people talk in terms
of balancing,” he told an
interviewer a couple of years
ago. “You know, balance the
public interest against the
individual’s righto. Well, I don't
see this as a balancing problem.
“My original position has
been t hat constitutionally
protected personal rights take
precedence, and that it still my
position."
Could be Different
As solicitor general, however,
Marshall the justice may look
short of what the court
■ *
49,
ACROSS 5 Noise
he has explored for peace . . . Moring majored in music edu-
rope Paul has sent a personal cation. She is the daughter of
emissary to discuss with Presi- Mr. and Mrs. Herb Moring of
dent Nasser the Catholic pro- Chickasha, and a member of
posal for putting Jerusalem un- the First Baptist Church
der international control. The
Pope urged support for his idea
that the Holy City should belong
to the world, not to any one
Home Office: Bloomington, Illinols
---------5932
(Opinion* of columnists ar* thele
•wb and are not neeessarlly ceneur-
red in by Th* Chickasha Daily
Erpress.)
WASHINGTON - The Ameri-
can public doesn't know it, but
it is directly supporting one of
the most potent lobbying groups
on Capitol Hill—The National
Rifle Asociation.
Shortly after President Ken-
nedy's assassination, legislation
was introduced in Congress put-
ting relatively mild curb on
trade in firearms and requiring
them to be registered. The
Senate Bill introduced by
COUNTY PRECINCT VOrING
PLACES
Alex—Public School House.
Amber—Union Church.
Ball Park — Room 27, San
Man Motel.
Bailey—Everett Mayes Home.
Bradley—Methodist Church
Harrison — Cox City School
House.
Laulis—Marion Morris Home,
old Highway 81 North.
Middleberg — Mrs. Glenda
Faye Ricks, vote at school.
Minco 1 - City Hall.
Minco 2 — Legion Hut.
Naples—H. G. True Home.
Ninnekah—School House.
Norge—Pioneer School.
Pocasset — School.
son.
Rush Springs — V. H. Lister,
Town hall.
Rush Springs 2 — Earl Faulk-
ner, American Legion Hut.
Snow Hill—Community Bldg.
Tabler—O. L. Malone resi-
dence.
Tuttle — Old Post Office
Building.
Tuttle 2—City Hall
Verden—American Legion hut
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 121, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1967, newspaper, July 10, 1967; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1864942/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.