Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 153, Ed. 2 Thursday, August 15, 1968 Page: 2 of 3
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4 Survive Caddo Plane Crash
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THF MORTON HOI SI (HAR.^NTEE; if you don't think
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STORE
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N
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COGAR — Four persons survived the crash of a light
plane early Thursday when the craft hit a hill on a farm
in Caddo County near Cogar.
The highway patrol reported the plane was piloted
by Dr. James Hill of Carnegie and was enroute from
Oklahoma City to Carnegie.
Passengers on the plane were identified as Barbara
Schroeder, Bethany, and Mr. and Mrs. William Long,
Belview, Ohio.
Dr. Hill and Miss Schroeder were taken to St. Antho-
ny Hospital in Oklahoma City after the Longs were able
to walk to the home of Kenneth Kinder near the crash
scene to summon help.
Dr. Hill was reported by the highway patrol to have
suffered a fractured ankle and other injuries.
Miss Schroeder reportedly suffered a broken leg,
cuts and bruises. Both were reported in satisfactory con-
dition Thursday at the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Long were taken to Grady County Me-
t.
Co
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Ruthless Raid is America's
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on any one of the
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,— s-—-—•—j—+e
mhddinamanmanmeaaeeee
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Other sauces are thin and runny. Morton House romaro
sauce is thick and rich And each can contains wood smoked,
sugar-cured bacon, not just fat
Try a few — and you ll soon grab for a fork.
V09
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when you know
from beans you buy
Morton House
18 Thurs., Aug. 15, 1968 ' OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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Craft Pileted by Carnegie Doctor
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better than
com chips?
New Wonder
Corn Capers
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information to
Morton Houte Kitih-
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NthraMa.
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morial Hospital in Chickasha where they were reported
treated for cuts and bruises and were in good condition.
Long, contacted at the hospital said, “I was just en-
joying it, riding right along, then we were on the ground.
“There was quite a bit of rain — it was real clear,
then all of a sudden, like a rain squall or something.”
A spokesman for Catlin Aviation Co., Oklahoma
City, said Dr. Hill and his passengers took off from Will
Rogers World Airport about 2 a.m. while thunderstorms
were active in the area. The crash occurred about 3 a.m.
It was not known why the flight was made at that
early hour.
— sdheesa
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These sccigents with iniury were imves
tisated by Oklahoma City police durine
me -hour parted endina at minloh
Wgdnegday:
W= ana Muy, two-car njuree was
Denny Laa Gothard, 1, of 2121 SW 24
NE 54 am Lineln, two-car. iniured
wap michael Ray LoudermiIk. 21 choc
Kw 44 and McKimigy, twocar. tnjurad
wara William pavi Fora TF., 15. of 2529
NW 45, and Tarry MCHaney, 14, no ad
dress given.
NW Hlhwey (800 block), two-car in
lured were Sybil Elite Metheson, 44, of
430 NE 50, and George #irh, 44, of 2221
Westchesfr.
SW 44 arte Welker, two-car Iniured
were Louis Carter, 17, of 701 $E 10, and
HNW » "— “ “ -
Raid Ant &
Roach Killer
Crawlng insects aregoneis.
Penetrating Raid vapor is
so powertul 11 seeks them
out wherever they hide
And us continuing aclion
keeps killing bugs lor weeks.
tatted, utll refund your
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP)—
Fourteen refugees fled Cuba
Thursday in a yellow Rus-
sian-made cargo plane the
pilot said skimmed the wa-
ters of the Florida Straits to
avoid radar detection.
"The pilot told me he
came close to touching the
waves more than once," said
Rudolph Wanderon. Dade
County Port Authority super-
visor at Homestead Airport.
Some of the Cubans were
armed he said.
He said the single-engine
biplane landed at the air-
port, 25 miles south of Mi-
ami, shortly after 9 a.m.
“The people aboard imme-
diately asked asylum,” Wan-
deron said.
“They said they began
their flight at Varadero." he
said. "The men still had wet
mud on their boots when
they landed
A spokesman for the U. S
State Department said the
plane was stolen.
Varadero is the city where
the daily Cuban airlift flights
originate. It is 60 miles east
of Havana and about 200
miles south of Homestead
"There were 14 persons
aboard," Wanderon said
"Aside from the men there
were five women, three chil-
dren and one teen-ager.
“They had three pistols
and a rifle."
"T
The spokesman said Dr. Hill had taken the plane,
which was on consignment at Catlin for sale, to try it out
as a prospective buyer. He said the Carnegie doctor
owns another plane.
An investigation was underway Thursday by the Fed-
eral Aviation Administration.
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You probably think beans are beans. So you lump Morton
House with the other brands
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7-
44 MW Waiker, two-cor.
Louls Carter, 17, of 701 SE
— Norris, 35, of 701 SE 10.
.... _ end Ann Arbor, three-car. in
iured wer. Wilje Merle Jefirev, 42, at
g NW , Warren L. Murray, U,
Royal Ambassadors at the
opening session Tuesday,
welcomed the group.
Rain the last few days
plagued several hundred
delegates who pitched
tents in several parts of
Oklahoma City
A caravan of school bus-
es and chartered buses
was expected to make its
way from the fairgrounds
by noon, taking the boys to
their home states.
Co-ordinating the con-
gress was Bob Banks, sec-
retary of the Baptist Gen-
eral Convention of Okla-
homa’s Brotherhood De-
partment.
T» the Dealert For each coupon you
accept as our authorized agent, we will
pay you lace value plus 24 handling
charges, provided you and your customer
have complied with the terms of this
offer; any other application constitutes
fraud. Invoices showing your purchase
of sufficient stock to cover all coupons
redeemed must be shown upon request.
Your customer must pay any sales tax.
Cash value 1/20 of 1e. Void where pro-
hibited by law. Redeem by mail to S. C.
Johnson 6 Son, Inc., P. O. Box 1130.
Clinton, Iowa, 52732. Offer good only in
U.S.A, and expires Oct. 1, 1968.
our baked brant are the bett 1 >.
purihatr price /uit
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Oklahoma City, is one of the
banks and investment firms
associated with the Chicago
house.
The First National Bank's
interest rate is 3.936 percent
on the fire bonds and 3.678
on the street bonds.
Ross said total interest
rate for the life of the 10-
year street bonds is $642,195,
while the rate for the 20-year
life of the fire bonds is
$166,910.
A contract also was
awarded for the printing of
the 7,132 bonds Involved in
the sale.
It went to the American
Bank Note Co. of Chicago,
which bid $2,790, as com-
pared to a bid of $2,939, by
the Northern Bank Note Co.,
also of Chicago.
Ross said the first bond of
each issue, general purpose,
fire and streets — all series
"A” — will be sent to the at-
torney general's office by
September 4.
30-Day Protest Period
“He will look at them and
improve them, we hope,
within 48 hours,” Ross said.
The finance director said
then there will be a 30-day
protest period, at which time
any citizen can appear to of-
fer opposition to the bond
transaction.
Time Element Cited
“After that period expires
there can be no other pro-
tests,” he added.
Ross said if the lawsuit,
filed August 1 by S. Dale Ro-
rem and the Oklahoma Tax-
payers’ Association against
the city and the county elec-
tion board, is settled soon,
there is a chance the bonds
will be delivered by October
11.
The plaintiffs allege a
printer's error referring to
question Number One on the
ballot July 16 changed the
results on the tabulation on
the “for and against"
proposition. ।
Only Two Bidden
Other contract awards
went to Armco Steel Corp. ,
and Sherman Machine and
Iron Works for a tunnel liner ’
and cast iron pipe in a sani-
tary sewer project. ,
Armco bid $1,215 for the
tunnel liner and Sherman ]
Machine bid $2,484 on the i
U east iron pipe. I
f The two firms were the ,
• enly bidders. "
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In a special meeting
Thursday, the Oklahoma
City council awarded con-
tracts to lowest bidders on
general obligation bonds to-
taling $35,660,000.
The largest contract,
$32,625,000, went to Harris
Bank and Trust Co., Chica-
go. along with 44 associates,
and covered all projects ex-
cept the fire department and
streets.
The First National Bank
and Trust Co. of Oklahoma
City was awarded contracts
on street bonds, $2,670,000,
and fire department bonds,
$365,000.
An election May 27 author-
ized the sale of the fire
bonds and a July 16 election
approved the street and gen-
eral purpose bonds.
The Harris Bank and
Trust's group interest rate
average is 4.0891 percent,
with a total interest payment
of $18,764,859.17, over the life
of the 25-year bond, Nate
Ross, city finance director,
said.
R. J. Edwards, Inc., of
H AMRURG, Germany
fAP) — A former SS (Elite
Guard) lieutenant. Wilhelm
Rosenbaum, 53, was found
guilty Thursday of the World
War II murder of Jews and
sentenced to serve a life
term at hard labor.
The court convicted him of
killing or giving orders for
the execution of 148 Jews in
1942 and 1943 at Rabka, Po-
land.
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A rootin' tootin' rodeo
staged by world's champi-
on Jim Shoulders of Hen-
ryetta closed the fourth
National Royal Ambassa-
dors Congress Thursday in
Oklahoma City.
Shoulders and his rough
riders played to a jammed
State Fair Arena as mote
than 10,000 Southern Bap-
tist boys from throughout
the United States and sev-
eral foreign countries
looked on.
Shoulders shared billing
with a Southern Baptist
missionary to Brazil.
Showing his riding and
roping skills was mission-
ary Bruce Oliver, who also
delivered the closing ad-
dress.
The rodeo got off to a
fast start at 8:45 a.m. as a
standing room only crowd
thundered its approval.
State Sen. Clem Mc-
Spadden, a veteran rodeo
announcer, emceed the
event. Organist was Ri-
chard Huggins, Oklahoma
City, a student at Okla-
homa Baptist University.
Meanwhile, representa-
tives of the largest single
delegation — a traveling
unit of 575 boys from South
Carolina, paid a visit
Thursday morning to Gov.
Bartlett's capitol office.
Bartlett, who had greet-
ed the more than 10,000
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 153, Ed. 2 Thursday, August 15, 1968, newspaper, August 15, 1968; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1984980/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.