The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 273, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 3, 1971 Page: 2 of 14
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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* THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Sunday, January 3, 1971 * '
Experts Begin Probe
Son-In-Law Believed
AKT-
Mb • Mimaeud Dial 224-0184
WANT ADS
of
GET
RESULTS
historic injustice.
CLASSIFIED
Communists 'End'
Three Day Cease-Fire
the
224-6866
411 »• 19th
CARPETS
levpl and a
Saturday EST).
AT
FT
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
'6,
f
l
f
disarmament.”
Chirkasha Zaily fixpress
o. DRAWER ■
BT CABBIBB IN CBICKAIBA
FRIED
SHIRLEY ANN'S SWING INN
1125 So. 4th
TASTEE FREEZE
224-3551
L
A
•5
4
GRIFFIN
«K/.
L.HW.9
.RIFFIN
I I I
he
CHICKEN
To Have Been Smuggler
Of Khrushchev's Notes
Nixon Signs
Crime Bill
Scouts Spend
Weekend On
Historic Trail
Nixon Vetoes
Pay Raise For
850,000 Workers
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Pres-
gullibility when they diverted
their funds from research into
would drive
business.
One Year
Six Months
Ona Month
caused it,” he said.
Some small operators
claimed the n ew federal coal
mine health and safety law
enacted by Congress a year ago
raised their operating costs and
Weekays: Noon proceeding day of
publieation.
unday: 12 Noon Friday
Lunch Menu
Monday — Com dogs with
mustard, potao salad baked
beans, banana bread and milk.
$27.08
$13.50
»»«
OKLAHOMA OIL
MARKETERS ASSOCIATION
3313 CLASSEN BOULEVARD
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA 73118
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our deep-
est gratitude to all our friends,
Funerals Into Mine Explosion
MRS. 1VAH ELLEN CORBIN ■
SAIGON (UPI) South Viet- the southern arc. of the DMZ. ruhndbtrttsnruhruesse Un unfair statements linking C other groups misjudged ..publie
FURNITURE co.
410 Chiehashe
NEW SLIM GYMS
While They Lost
$74.50
501 Minnesota
224-6452
"-
USED
FURNITURE AT
BARGAIN
PRICES
ALSO SEVENAL 4000
USED RUCS
Q
El
a
□
HYDEN, Ky. (UPI)—Eight- much dynamite, and what type, was Kentucky Mines Commis-
mining experts, riding on was used in the mine. Federal Sioner H. N. Kirkpatrick.
Deaths.nd
FURNITURE CO
| 410 Chickasha i
Over 100 Scouts and leaders
were on the trip. They are ex- Kosyqin Backs
pected to return home about
Grady Memorial
Hospital
DISMISSALS
Mrs. Perry McDonald, Cem-
Less Anti-Smoking
Propaganda Asked
By Tobacco Industry
WASHINGTON (UPIi —The garette smoking with lung
Jim cigarette industry asked Satur- cancer and other diseases.
N
A.
3
IN SCHOLARSHIPS
TO OKLAHOMA STATE TECH......
.....are being offered by the Oklahoma
Oil Marketers Association In cooperation
with Oklahoma State Tech at Okmulgee.
The scholarships cover complete tui-
tion for young men who want to learn how
to become successful service station oper-
ators, a career that can be both satisfying
and profitable.
The one-year course at Oklahoma State
Tech will train you in such subjects as
salesmanship, communications, human re-
lations, and business principles. You’ll
learn how to do engine tune-ups and other
minor automotive repairs and you’ll train
in a showcase service station on the OST
campus.
Approximately 10 of these scholarships
are available, peying $211.50 for each of
the three trimesters of study.
Scholarships are also available for a
shorter 4-month course — Service Station
Attendant: Sales and Service.
For more information contact a local
member of the Oklahoma Oil Marketers
Aasociation listed bslow.
time of the illness and loss of
our mother Alice E. Henry. I
Special thanks to the staff of
Grady Memorial Hospital and j
to the Doctors McDoniel, Wood
and Sparger. Also to Rev.
Robert Young. Our appreciation
of the thoughtfulness is greater
than words can say.
Hr. and Mrs. C. P. Jones,
MY. and Mrs. George Os-
teen, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Fitzgerald. ’
Pashica’s car struck a bridge reduced noise
7
a 08622
..... . 8, a
UNLIKE HIS FATHER, Roe Brynner gets a haircut.
The 23-year-old son of bald actor Yul Brynner got his
shoulder-length locks shorn for role in a Broadway play.
who mtne
earvice may get their Express by
dialing telephone 224-2600 between
5:30 and 7 p.m. Weekdays and 7:00
to 9:30 a.m. Sunday.
SUBSCRIPTIN RATES
9 pcs. 2.35 15 pcs. 3.40
21 pcs. 4.75
—SIDE ORDERS—
— Baked Beane
Cele Slaw—Potate Salad
Snach Pack 1 $c
Pint 454 Quart S0<
are Street
years have been strained. He without the knowledge and contribution to what he consi-
did not have the easy access to consent of Khrushchev or the dered a case of correcting an
... not only are
JIM KOEHN
Funeral services for
Expert—Inexpensive
Re-Upholstering
O Awnings • Drapes
• Traverse Reds
• Custom Venetian
Blinds
ANTINORO
FURNITURE SHOP
enday: s p.m. Friday
TILEFKONE
chtekasha subscribers
neighbors and others for the
flowers, food, prayers, cards,
and memorials sent in the Eda
BY MAm IN OKLAHOMA
(Kzeept Chlekasha)
them out
the Soviet Union’s former Soviet authorities.
Chickasha Established
Okla. 73018 1802
floeend claw postage paid at Chick-
asha, Okla. Published every after-
neen (except Saturday and Christ-
lung cancer
supreme ruler that Petrov had.
Petrov, for many years the
editor of the Soviet Weekly, an
English - language newspaper
prepared by the Novosti agency
for distribution in Britain, was
Khrushchev’s confidant who
frequently visited him and
heard him dictate rough notes
on his reminiscences
thousands of
Jackson, Scoutmaster,
Cobb. •
TWO
Funeral services for Mrs.
Beverly Roberts, pianist, and vious year. cies have used broadcast
The dead: cigarette advertising "as justi-
Melvin Larry Pashica, 30, fication for their massive
KaDsai, Okla. asault on smoking.” With
Roosevelt Ray, 65, Chicks- cigarette commercials banned
•ha. by law as of midnight Friday, ,
MelVin Tedford, Liber*! he said, "Their only real
Kan. • alternative now is a sharply
wora k.. L.. „o.. ing 4 per cent more than
the rd..h f m i u t of Workers in private industry and
the death of Mrs. Leo Hutch- .ha, ... we "oi’uol
BOY - Mr. ana Mrs. pan E STS 0
CBICKAIBA POST OrriCB BOXIS 10 .Po. . . M 97 Mondav in Phnenir big pay measure voted by
AND EEATE of 10 A ounce boy born.Dec.27 Monday Phoenix. Congress earlier this week
on Fear _______________ 22.00 in Oakwood Hospital. Mrs. Die- which is now awaiting the
Si Months ----------------sum drick will be remembered as while on routine patrol last President’s signature
Three MAithSrieen ineluarta5 M0° the former Miss Beth Brand, night at Don Martin Chevrolet- That bill would provide
IrI pFFDBEROFAOpAr The name chosen for the baby Cadillac, 2801 South 81 High- automatic annual increases or
OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION 15 Donald Glenn Jr. The ma- way, Police Sgt. Paul Franklin the estimated four million
MF"cACDEA RONEAV or ternal grandparents are Mr. discovered a 1970 coach parked federal civilian and military
locally operated MEMBER and Mrs. Willard Brand, Chick- on the south side of the build- personnel and allow for an
1 m-onTn.nm asha. 1116 paternal grandpar- ing, stripped of its tires and immediate estimated 6 per cent
GMa32D ents are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn wheels. Sgt. Franklin said the boost costing $2.2 billion re-
MzA anour Diedrick, Detroit, Mich. missing wheels were chrome. troactive to Jan. 1.
efforts to control individual
behavior without supportive
facts," Kornegay said.
had frequent contact with day cease-fire had ended. Vietnamese platoon was lifted MRS. ODESSA BRANCH By United Press International
English-speaking newsmen and Heavy fighting also was report- in to support it. Funeral services for Mrs. Oklahoma’s 1971 traffic toll is victims who have never smoked
edin Cambodia. , i The action took place in the Odessa Branch were held at 2 off to a bad start. Six persons cigarettes being neglected by
In Phnom. Penh, spokesmen vicinity of the U.S. Army p.m. Saturday in the Dibble died New Year’s Day compar- expensive propagation of myths
reported that Cambodian troops artillery base at Gio Linh near Holiness Church with Rev. Ora ed with two a year ago, instead of scientific knowledge,
pushing into a Communist- the South China Sea coast, the Adams, officiating. However, the 1970 count fin- but there are signs of a direct
occupied pass vital Highway sources said. Interment was in the Dibble ished well below the 1999 toll, backfire," Kornegay said in
Four linking the capital with U.S. spokesmen said fire Cemetery under direction of the One death New Year’s Eve reference to the increased
_ . . u ■ the seaport of Kompong San missions by U.S. forces in the Brown Funeral Home. boosted the 1970 toll to 838, cigarette cosumption
To earn their Scout Histone ran into entrenched Viet.Cong area W ere. believved. to have Music was furnished by Miss compared with 899 for the pre- Kornegay said health agen-
Trails awards, scouts from five troops. Elsewhere in Cambodia, supported the South Vietnamese - • - -
Boy Scout troops in the Stumb- South Vietnamese and Cambo- operation. Mr . M r • . RGor
ling Bear District have spent dian soldiers killed 68 Commu- The spokesmen said U.S. piu Aam i anarq Mges
Friday, Saturday and part of nists in two battles. firebases along the entire 40- M Adansparame "n ee
today in Devil’s Den State Park Hie action in the Demilita- mile length of the DMZ used Prina‘ wahina pfsaan
near Fayetteville, Ark., accord- rized Zone separating North their weapons four times during pda."ar 15 &es
ing to Dale Phillips, district and South Vietnam broke out the truce period, and there I, H5 msn"ere-tissbune:
camping and activvities chair- late Saturday afternoon when a were two other sightings of ... -ona
man. platoon of South Vietnamese suspected Communist move- 516, arrg H RRay mond Lile.
The Scouts were to follow troops on patrol encountered ments that could not be hit R Cc ROth. ’ su •a. ang abutment on a county road in rededication to scientific re-
the old ‘Butterfield Trail” in North Vietnamese soldiers in The fighting came during he Delaware County just five min- search.”
area to earn their awards. listathaucomomuhs freguentlt MRS. MARIE EVANSON utes before start of the new Kornegay said the tobacco
expired at 1 a.m. Sunday (noon Marie Evanson, 77, Chickasha, year . . . industry enjoyed a record year
■ --- who died Saturday in a local Ray s car and a pickup truck in 1970 and felt no guilt.
nursing heme, will be held at collided headon on U. S. 277 “I know of no single
4 p.m. Monday, in the Central south of Cyril early Friday, individual among the hundreds
Church of Christ with Jim Tedford died in a fiery acci- of thousands of tobacco far-
Sheerer minister officiating dent on s H 5 west of Shat- mers, manufacturing and distri-
Interment will be ini Rose tuck Friday. His car went out bution employes and executives
Hill Cemeter under direction of control, flipped end over end and retailers who believes he is
of the Brow? FineralLome. twice landed on its top and profiting from poison instead of
Mrs. Evanson was born Feb. caughtfire._____________________pleasure,” Kornegay said._____
-A tin Evanson, preceded her in E
m Ne.
6 p.m. today. (Continued From Page One)
Plans are underway now for . „ ... . .
all district Scouts and leaders matically.in Vietnam caught
to make the first trek over the the attention of foreign obser-
Chisholm Trail, which ran from vers. in Moscow becausenthe
south to north through Grady Soviets have been publicly
County, during Boy Scout Week shunning such a role for some
Feb. 6-12. tme .. . „
Ii. . sis. On disarmament, Kosygin
pThere ri’ g00d Possibility, made comments that took in
Scouts were at Devi"s Den thess.currentStratsgic, Arms stepped up three-year $3 55 death in 1956. She was a long-
State Park and on the Butter- Helsimki and reached beyond billion program to help states time resident of Chickasha and
field Trail, they qualified to them." b5zond and cities fight crime, particu- a.me mbersof the Central
wear Polar Bear patch, which is “We proceed from the larly in urban areas was cu j ,
•warded when the weather is Psmec ♦ A ’ She is survived by a niece,
fwmind or there is snow premise that effective mea- signed into law Saturday by Mrs. Kathy Hinton of Chick-
tS o. nsnow, sures in the field of restraining President Nixon. asha.
.TrooPs and eaders. on.the the strategic arms race and The measure, the last of
trail.includei-ackAlt,Sout- limiting strategic arms would Nixon's major crime programs
mas terTrop,306,1First Chris meet the vital interests not only approved by Congress, is aimed
tian Church. Troop 301 Carl of the Soviet and American at helping local police forces
Sikes, Scoutmaster,, Rotary peoples but also of the peoples with both added personnel and
Clubi Troop 304, Joe Wimbish, od the whole world,” he said, better crime fighting equip-
Scoutmaster. Epworth United ‘ The Soviet Union comes out ment M "
Methodist Church; Troop 355, for the implensentation also of The new law, unlike previous
Wilson Crawford, Scoutmaster, other measures directed at legislation in this field, empha-
Cyril; ana Troop 354, Jack limiting the arms race, especi- sizes help for urban high-crime ident Nixon has vetoed a
Fort ally nuclear arms, directed at areas. Congress heard testimo- proposed 4 per cent pay raise
ny that a disproportionate for the government’s blue
amount of funds under a collar workers, charging in a
previous two-year-old program message to Congress Saturday
had gone to small towns rather the bill would have added to
than the big cities. inflation.
A further boost fofr big cities The bill would have benefitted
was provided in the law by nearly 850,000 government
requiring that states, starting workers who do janitorial,
in 1972, pay 25 per cent of any mechanical and other labor,
amount a city is obligated to mainly in defense installations,
put up as matching funds for It would have cost an
federal grants. Federal match- estimated $130 million,
ing shares in the costs of the Nixon, who votoed the bill
programs are also boosted from Friday night, said the increase
the previous 60 per cent to 75 "is too costly and is unwarrant-
per cent. ed•”
He said the workers, who are
paid on a level with private
n:. v... LA-, industry workers doing compa-
—IM I QU rear • • • rable work, are already receiv-
man Day) and Sunday morning.
Any erreneous reflection on the ent.
Character of any person, firm ©r rpL„A t t c.av
eerporation and any misstatemeni Thomas J. Lewis, Cyril.
Which may appear in the columns at Dala Clift, Cement
The spress will be eiadly correctea ' -emneni
upon its being brought to the at-
tenten of the management
Advertising Deadlines
.2 d
Ivah Ellen Corbin, 85, who died een mining experts, riding on was used in the mine. Federal sioner H. N. Kirkpatrick.
Saturday morning in a local three battery-operated person- regulations specify type of Charles Finley, who with his
nursing home, will be held at nel carriers, entered the Finley dynamite and manner of use. brother, Stanley, has operated
By HENRY SHAPIRO diplomats. He spoke good it is a matter of conjecture 1:30p.m. Monday in the Grand Coal Co. mine Saturday and It was learned two cases of several mines in the Appala-
LONDON (UPI)—An increas- English. that motivated Petrov, a Avenue Assembly of God began an on-sit investigation dynamite were brought into the chian Mountain country in
ing number of observers have The small fragment of member of the Communist Church. Rev. A. Everett Burns, to determine what caused an mine Tuesday to blast a new southeastern Kentucky, said he
concluded that the man in- Khrushchev notes which Pe- Party in good standing, in pastor of the church, will off - explosion which killed 38 men. facing in a coal seam, probably was through with coal
volved in smuggling a fragment trov was believed to have committing what would appear ciate. They were told by rescue Some experts theorized dyna- mining. He blamed federal
of Nikita S. Khrushchev’s notes delivered to the American to be an act of disloyalty to Mrs. Corbin Was born May workers, who recovered the mite may have, ignited an mine laws.
out of Moscow was a son-in-law publishers formed the basis of Khrushchev and his govern- 25, 1885, in Downing, Mo. She bodies from 1,600 feet inside the accumulation of methane gas. "I’m out of business. I can’t
ef the former Premier. the book ‘ Khrushchev Remem- ment. was a member of the Grand mine after Wednesday’s blast. Westfield expressed optimism replace those 38 men. I worked
It was not Alexei Adzhubei, bers"-a vast and liberally The following have been Avenue Assembly of God that dynamite was the probable the experts would determine with them for eight to ten years
the one-time influential editor edited compilation of Khrus‛ • suggested1 Church. cause. the cause but said the and they were my friends. I’m
of the governments newspaper chev’s alleged pronouncements. Persons who knew Petrov , Survivors include one sister, James Westfield, assistant underground investigation may probably finished," he said.
Izvestia, an embittered middle- Whatever the popular impres- have said he had been deeply Mrs. A. M Wolf, Pocasset. director of the U.S. Bureau of take several days. He said it ‘‘This federal stuff, that s
aged man, living in obscure and sion may have been on the resentful at the way the Interment will be in Rose Mines, who rode on the lead was possible a public hearing what did it. We had been doing
dull existence as a minor origin and authenticity of the Kremlin treated Khrushchev in Hill Cemetery under the di- carrier, said the experts, may be held in the disaster, the things the same way, but we
employe of the monthly illus- book, the publishers significant- reducing him to the status of rection of Brown Funeral Home. Including federal and state second worst accident in the never had an explosion before,
trated magazine Sovjetsky Soy- ly avoided the use of the word an Orwellian “unperson,” and inspectors and mine company Kentucky soft coal fields. All these federal laws changed
uz (Soviet Union), "memoirs" and made no claim Petrov wanted Khrushchev’s MRS. EMMA HUNTER officials, sought to learn how Among the 18 investigators everything, and that’s what
The widespread conviction that they had received a restoration to a proper place in Funeral services for Mrs.
now is that th? job was done by genuine manuscript from or by world history. Emma Hunter, 57, former
Lev Petrov, the husband of Khrushchev. Petrov had some misgivings Chickasha resident who died
Khrushchev’s grand - daughter They emphasized the mater- at the cessation of the Thursday in Mena, Ark., will
Yulia, whom Khrushchev legal- ial had come from a variety of campaign of destalinization and be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in
ly adopted in her infancy and sources, at different times and the possibility of the “rehabili- Mena,
raised as his own daughter, under varying circumstances tation" of Josef Stalin. Graveside service will be held
Petrov died a few months Along with the conviction that He was suffering from at 2 p.m. Monday in the Rose
ago. Petrov had a hand in delivering incurable cancer of the kidneys Hill Cemetery under the di;
Adzhubei s relations with his the fragment, there is also the knew he was dying slowly, and rection of Sevier Funeral
father-in-law in the past few widespread belief that he acted raced against time to make his Home.
$.Tan
hV
• m < •
Tuesday — Spaghetti with
meat, sauce, slaw, seasoned
green beans, rolls, cookie and
milk.
Wednesday — Fish steak,
buttered potatoes, creamed
peas, rolls, pineapple pudding
and milk.
Thursday — Scalloped ham
with noodles, mashed sweet
potatoes, green beans, rolls,
applesauce cake and milk.
Friday — Tacos, lettuce, to-
matoes, com- pumpkin bread
milk.
W ■ I
I 1
", I
1
• Hulme Oil Hulm.
• Ross Oil Co.
• Mobil Oil Co.-john c. carrol
• Bennett Oil Co. L.Rnn,
Unlike Adzhubei, the husband namese troops battled a North Military sources said the Interment was in the Plain-
of Khrushchev’s daughter Vietnamese force inside the platoon called for air and view Mennonite Cemetery un- Rad S+art in
Rada, who lives an isolated life Demilitarized Zone late Satur- artillery strikes against the der the direction of Sevier Fun- D-- JIUil ill
and never meets foreigners, day shortly before the Commu- North Vietnamese, and that eral Home TraFfic Decths
Petrov, by virtue of his job, nists announced that the three- eventually a second South 1 "uu-I- eul -
' 3
... da
Koehn, 60, Cement, were held day for less antismoking In a statement, Kornegay
at 2 p.m. Thursday in the propaganda in return for the cited government reports that
Church of God in Christ Men- new ban on broadcast cigarette U.S. cigarette consumption rose
nonite. Rev. Glenn Nightingale commercials. slightly in 1970, with a sharp
and Rev. Chester Koehn offi- Horace R. Kornegay, pres- increase in the percentage of
ciated. , ident of the Tobacco Institute, teen-agers who smoke.
Pallbearers were Willis accused health agencies of "It is apparent that the
Smith, Marvin Smith, Ray Un- neglecting research in favor of American Cancer Society and
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 273, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 3, 1971, newspaper, January 3, 1971; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1866025/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.