Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 284, Ed. 3 Thursday, January 3, 1952 Page: 1 of 10
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
2
Oklahoma City Times
E
.3
VOL. LXII, NO. 284.
HOME EDITION
Russia Proposes
As Autos Stall
$
-a
Trouble Spots Snag
A“A
f
nawv
Skipper Won’t Leave
-.2
h,
r UN’s Prisoner
Steel Walkout
patcher, said traffic was moving in
cuers than his own fate.
Trade Refused
T1",
f
ven before
2,500 delegates opened the conven-
day and Saturday, but Carlsen
re-
Dunlap said Wednesday the total
W. L. Thompson of McKinney
down to sanctions—in other words,
f
an attack on the Chinese Reds.
brothers will leave an empty spot in the hearts of those few
morning.
The same condition developed
as a
While the allies hold far
more
thousands of South Koreans serv.
/
communist armies
Cadet Crash Victims
Red army.
Japs Aid Ceylon
Snake Expert Bitten
W. Miller. They were a combina-
dark hat and a bandana handker-
not to excite the crowd of onlook-
Miller
ers.
3
r
$
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3—(
I
Ridgway Picks Editor
Hourly Temperature
i
Jin. 3—AP-- An Ameri-
12 I
armament will be
ready. This source declined to
2
say how much time would be
Ship
2
?
)
4
f
■
E-a
crews were working to get the road
open and traffic moving at mid-
tiations to that body, adding that
the place for successful conclusion
of such talks is in Korea, with the
Attendant at Fuel Firm
On NE 23 Tied, Gagged
was
were
mov-
Blast Follows
Train Wreck
Congress Cool
To President’s
Author Uses Want Ad To
Verify Story Episode
Masked Bandit
Loots Station
Over the state temperatures will
range from 30 to 35 Thursday af-
ternoon and then dip to the 20s
over night. Highs Friday will be
in the 28-32 range. Heavy accumu-
The Want Ad way is often
the only way. Call 2-1211 to
place an ad. It's so easy!
PLEASE TURN to
FGE K cLii e
Gas, Shells Explode
After Trains Derail
■
Libby indicated Lee might be
waiting for new instructions.
He reiterated that the UN plans
to return every prisoner of war
who wants to be repatriated. He
et
compilation, apparently on a dif-
ferent basis from the earlier re-
ports.
The only available information
lists 40 ousters in 1950 and 36 in
winter 5,000 cattle in the old Cher-
okee Strip.
The three Miller brothers, Zack,
Joe and George, succeeded to the
management of the ranch upon the
i
E
State Picture Worse
Over the state the picture
worse Highway patrol units
official reports—was 113 ousters in
the first 11 months of 1951.
But Allies Decline
To Accept Rejection
MUNSAN, Korea, Jan. 3—4M
fused to leave his vessel.
Gale Winds Sweep Area
Attitude Is 'Yes, But—'
Congress members for the mostment is expected by many ob-
part reacted to the president’s re- servers.
Il
2
-
2
2
to
From IM United States Weather Burenu
Airport Station
Cleanup Plans
Some Critics Charge
Proposal Too Mild;
Lawmakers Cautious
7
8
»
10
11:
111
Cars, buses and trucks were
t „ stalled on U. S. 66 near Kelleyville
a - west of Sapulpa. U. S. 77 south of
Carlsen, 37, who refuses to aban- good order. Motorists were driving
don his ship, the American freigh- slow and only six minor crashes
ter Flying Enterprise, is existing were reported from midnight until
on a slim diet of tea and "bits of "2 “
lowed quickly by disclosure that
53 more internal revenue bureau
Cimarron-county. At noon Guy-
mon reported snow starting to fall
as the storm moved eastward.
With publishing deadline
near, Mrs. Frances Parkin-
son Keyes resorted to a
Want Ad in the New Or-
leans newspapers to verify
a dramatic horse-racing In-
cident in her true novel,
“Once on Esplanade," and
had her proof within 24
hours.
meter shells exploded sporadically The same meeting would, he pro-
for three hours. None of the in- posed, take steps to relieve inter-
organization plan with "yes, but—”
attitude. Some said it didn’t go far
enough. Some thought perhaps it
went too far in certain respects.
Rep. Byrnes (R., Wis.) said he
hoped it wasn’t a "smoke screen."
Other reaction was similarly quali-
fied.
-------- national tension,
More than 150 firemen battled The UN assembly took the Ko
Wait for Orders Soon
Rear Adm. R. E. Libby said that
missile ship—an entirely new
field—might require even more
time.
Then, too, there are indications
that at least that long may be
“We are much more concerned
for his safety than he is. He never
119
i
and fairness" in Washington.
166 Already Ousted
“In addition to the reorganization
of the bureau of internal revenue,”
he said, "I expect to take further
administrative action and to make
other recommendations to the con-
gress to insure complete integrity in
iH
with the destroyer by radio tele-
phone. His one request was for .g ,
hot coffee, meat sandwiches and west of Sapu lpa. on V. S. 66
a l rmmmmmmi
Zack Miller and Old ‘While House’ Ruins
Col. Zack.T. Miller, last of the three Miller brothers of
the 101 Ranch fame, died at 2:39 a. m. Thursday in a
Waco, Texas, hospital after a long illness. Above, Col.
Zack is shown on the steps of the ruins of the bid “White
House” ranch headquarters which burned in the 1930s.
Final Chapter Is Written
In Saga of Colonel Zack
Cancer at 74 Killa Last of ‘101’ Millers,
Fabulous Showman, Friend of Presidents
By BOB M'MILLIN
the operations of the government.”
Mr. Truman‛s4statement was fol-
He Can’t Get Supplies
Carlsen keeps in constant touch
lations of sleet, freezing rain and
nree , snow are expected by the weather
as bureau.
wife and twin children, Lynda and
Daniel Steven.
With Gas Tax Fraud •
DURANT, Jan. 3—(P—A 'Bryan
county farmer was free on $500
bond Thursday after pleading in-
nocent to charges of fraudulently
buying gasoline without paying ex-
cise tax.
P. O. Moore, who was arraigned
here Wednesday, was charged with
obtaining a tax roll assessment for
a tractor which he did not own,
and buying 850 gallons of tax-free
gas on the strength of the assess-
ment.
Threat Fading
Murray Hints Strike
Off; Convention Opens
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Jan. 3
—IP—P resident Truman ap-
pealed to tht CIO Steelworkart
again Thursday to cancel their
threat of an industry-wide steel
ttriko.
strong 1
strike isn’t likely-
c
Vishinsky Hints at Further
Trouble in Asia; New Plan
Is Quickly Opposed by U. S. ’
PARIS, Jan. 3—(P)—Russia, in a surprise move, pro-
posed Thursday that the United Nations security council in-
tervene in the Korean armistice negotiations. It asked that
-both Korea and the lessening of world tensions be considered
at a high level, possibly by foreign ministers or chiefs of
state.
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky submitted the
proposal to the 60-nation political committee after a long
speech denouncing a western collective action plan, and hint-
ing ominously at events to come in southeast Asia.
h 180
Woodward Woman, 82,
Recalls Stint as Sheriff
Story, Picture on Page 12
e
coast, probably within a week, to
east coast yards for a start on
the remodeling. >
w I
is
Three persons were injured by gotiations taking place in Korea
shrapnel as a carload of 20-milli- for the cessation of hostilities.”
PLEASE TUAN to
PAGK j COLUMN s
24 degrees with clouds and a few
snow flurries. Lawton reported 30
degrees and a freezing rain with
some roads closed.
A heavy snow started at Boise
City on the tip of the Panhandle
at 9 a. m. and by Thursday after-
noon the highway department re-
ported 2 inches on the level in
chief over his face.
NATO Meeting Delay
Reported by Agency
PARIS, Jan. 3—IM—The French
1949, but a revenue spokesman
said again a different basis was
used in these surveys and that
comparisons might not be com-
pletely accurate.
. —® Wirephet• by Radie from Lenden
Helpless Freighter Lists at 80 Degrees as Rescue Is Delaved
The Flying Enterprise with Capt. Kurt Carlsen aboard was drifting helplessly with
an 80-degree list Thursday as an American destroyer crew tried to get a line aboard
360 miles from Falmouth, England.
City School Business
Is Really ‘Big Business’
Story, Photos Ml Page I
-3
2
I
that the damaged freighter could stay afloat until a salvage
tug beats its way to the scene.
employes have been sacked or sus-4t”0oe.ega16s opened the conven- takenloff the shin “last'Fri.
pended. The last total-based on tion Thursday which was called to Na'anawSaist.'
EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
venine Edition at The Dauy Okiahoman.) toured M Oktahoma cit» Okiahoma, Poatottiee u nacond eian matt matter under the tel at Mirth 3, UH
.TWENTY-TWO PAGES— N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, THURSDAY, JANUARY” 3, 1952
__________ -.......i | .
Rescue Plans Drawn,
—
Ea
dried food," he informed the com-
mander of the U. S. destroyer John
W. Weeks, which is standing by.
The navy will soon will begin
converting two heavy cruisers
. into the world’s first known
' guided missile warships.
aug cnese aauuuans. uU. B an., said the one-for-one exchange
Oklahoma’s greatest contribution to the old wild west, VitNam,BurmaandThailndfor called for in the first two points
"--1- m az211-- -f •n• -----, *-*nn ... .. - - of the allied plan would control
merely the rate of exchange—not
the number of war prisoners and
civilians ultimately traded.
New Parlays Scheduled
Another subcommittee, dealing
with truce supervision, remained
deadlocked Thursday over com-
. I
’ ■ ■. I
car he was driving struck a stone
pillar during a blinding snowfall
The prince was taken to a hos-
pital. One of his companions, Mme.
Jeanne de Tramcourt, 76, manager
of his country estate, was killed
instantly. Another occupant, a
lady in waiting at the Swedish
royal court, also was hospitalized.
Whafs Inside
news conference Wednesday night
for 1951'was 166. This was a new he expects to be in Washington qaq.mmr- p,mnuey,
Monday for the first wage stabilize- Iexas, commander of the destroy-
tion board hearing on the great er Weeks, radioed this description
steel dispute of t h e heroic one-man battle
Since the WSB does not conduct against the elements:
hearings in labor controversies Gale winds, are sweeping the
where a strike exists, Murray's area, about 300 miles off the south-
statement was a potent tip that the ern coast of England. The seas
nation's steel mills will continue areskickingupferociou sly. Car lsen out all night keeping traffic
to pour steel for important defense sh Flying Enterprise uar erspf ing with the aid 0f highway de-
and civiliancustomers part decrrhe' ‘hesarly partment sanding crews and equip-
An indefinite strike postpone- reach. ne can saez ment. U. S. 77 south of Noble
- For five nights the skipper kept closed and opened six times from
w this perilous vigil, rejecting all of- midnight to 6:30 a. m. I
fers to remove him from the ship. A" - ------।
At times the Enterprise lay at the hills south of Noble a skating!
an angle of 80 degrees to the wat- rink and cars, trucks and buses
er—almost flat on her side. stalled. Patrol units and highway
the cruisers or for perfection of
missiles for their new era bat-
teries.
Funds for a start on the con-
version work are contained in
the navy’s current budget, it was
explained.
The two cruisers are of the
Baltimore class, 10 of which
went into the mothball fleet
after World war II. The main
armament of this class consists
of nine eight-inch guns in two
forward and one after turrets.
Both ships were commissioned in
1943.
Normally, a major conversion
of a warship, such as an aircraft
carrier, takes from one to two
years, Conversion into a guided
/
64 internal revenue collectors, sub-
stituting 25 “district commission-
ers” in their place.
TWO—Create an independent
inspection service, streamline and
The president's plan, designed to
"protect the government from the
insidious influence peddlers and
favor seekers'”—will be sent to
congress under the government re-
An authoritative navy source
newspaper editor win replace een
i frmamonodvaserstchenrrbfdg. compleedn guided for
2 way, it was announced Thursday. r-— •L
the psEurrows Matthews, editor Oi so, iuw muen ume wouia de
the Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier-Express, needed either for conversion of
AL, . .. stopped at the motor-court while
A high official, discussing the enroute to Massachusetts with his
munist insistence on the right to
build and repair military airfields
during an armistice.
Both subcommittees will return
——pucanvecEm
-------——-
Parley
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Jan 3—... , . ----------
(—President Philip Murray of the tion that the doughty captain may
CIO United Steelworkers passed a not be able to stick out his lone,
hint that crippling shipmptstxstpassengen,
one of them dead, and crew of 40
war.”
Accuses U. S. Again
In that speech, Vishinsky hinted
at things to come in Asia. He ac-
fered to counter the 11-power draft . . --------
calling upon the UN to set up new Was the end result of the allied
anti-aggression machinery. It was Plan.
made after Vishinsky delivered a He refused to accept the Red
37-page speech denouncing the1 rejection because they "either mis-
western draft as one that could understood our proposal or they
lead only to war. He said the Amer- are deliberately misinterpreting it
ican-sponsored proposal "boils in order to deliberately obscure
down to sanctions—in other words the issues
Col. Zack T. Miller of 101 ranch fame, died at 2:39 a. m.
.......... m Thursday in the Waco, Texas, Hillcrest hospital from cancer
At noon, a freezing rain made of the liver.
The passing of the last of the three fabulous Miller
V D-4on- -V--.E V12J Ml sell J , frierr;
on the point, without elaborating "Whie 12
The Soviet foreign minister prisoners than the Reds, Libby said
- . 4hnre AnHe nf CAI TA--N-
LONDON, Jan. 3—(P)—Capt. Kurt Carlsen was cooped
up Thursday in the cabin of his wallowing ghost ship while
a new storm raging across the north Atlantic raised doubts
Noble was closed with nearly 60
vehicles stalled as rain froze on the
(highway and U. S. 66 west of El
Reno at Bridgeport Hill was
clogged with stalled traffic.
Continued Cold Likely
Clouds, continued cold and freez-
ing rain or sleet are forecast in
the city area through Friday by
Mr. Maughan's forecasters. Freez-
ing mist is due the east and south
with sleet and snow falling in the
north and west. The Panhandle
will be a little warmer.
High in Oklahoma City Thursday
This called to mind the begin-
remaining oldtimers who remember the golden days when ning of the Korean war, when the
Oklahoma was a lusty young state striving for a place in communists charged that the
the national sun United States was the aggressor,
me national eun. and the Chinese intervention in
He had been in Hillcrest hospital for the past six weeks. Korea, when a similar charge was
Once he had been ill and had been cured by his Indian medi- made:’ . ,— ------- -—-----
cine men friends. He was 741-----Vishinsky touched only briefly .ramunjom at 8 p' m. Thurs.
will be near 30, compared with the
26 at both the city and airport sta-
Sea Throwing New Blow on Vessel Struggleo’SX’^^
To Stay Afloat; Captain Still Cheerful whursdaxn morninr High Friday
made no mention of the security . . -------
council proposal in the earlier ing Jn, the , communist armies
speech He brought it up later in should be reclassified as war pris-
a resolution which called on the oners and exchanged.
assembly to abolish the collective The allies have asked for an ac-
measures committee which has counting of more than 50,000--
been drawing up the new anti-ag- mostly South Koreans. Presum-
ably many of these now are in the
cused the United States of ferry-
ing Chinese nationalist troops into
Hilliards Wednesday night derail- lay” a high-level meeting
bottoms in 1901. In 1902 he helped and setting off explosions of gas- amuinc shocaaurak, thfhepe urt
line and ammunition, to a successful conclusion the ne
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3—( —
President Truman’s proposal for a
"sweeping reorganization” of the
scandal-scarred internal revenue
bureau got a cautious reception on
Capitol Hill Thursday.
In advance of the return of the
main body of congress members
next Monday, lawmakers already in
town were divided in their reac-
tion. Few showed any enthusiasm.
With government corruption
charges already high on the Repub-
lican list of election-year issues,
Mr. Truman made plain his move
was but the first of a “series of ac-
tions to insure honesty, integrity
veto-free general assembly decid-, . •
ing later on a political settlement. The communists Thursday turned
Vishinsky proposed that the down an allied plan for exchanging
council be called under article 28 war prisoners and civilians as “no
of the UN charter which authorizes more, thana barter of slaves. '
governments to send chiefs of state!. But a UN negotiator said he "re.
or foreign ministers as delegates .ected the'categorical rejection of
to such council meetings. This the. Reds., .. . „
made the proposal look like an „ North Korean Maj. Gen. Lee
other version of the U. S. S. R. de. Sang Cho said he wanted no part
mand—keynote of its current peace ® . , allied plan because it was
offensive—for a five-power meet- simply and solely on a one-for-
ing, including Red China, to bring one. exchange The Reds want an
about a pact of peace. alktoral trade.
The Soviet suggestion was of-
answer the walkout question.
A smiling, joking Murray told a
bound for Fort Meade, Md. No es-
timate on the total damage was
available.
Daughter of Marine
Burned in Cabin Mishap
_ . The 3-year-old daughter of a San
needed to bring into practical Francisco marine captain suffered
operational form a true long- burns on both legs Thursday morn-
rage guided missile for shipboard ing when she knocked over a pan
use. The navy announced about of hot water in a motor-court cabin
a year ago award of a contract five miles east of the city on U. S.
for production of small missiles 62.
for shipboard use of the fleet, but I Lynda Long, 3, daughter of Capt.
these are anti-aircraft type. Ma- and Mrs. Charles E. Long, was
jor problem in long range mis- treated at Mercy hospital and then
silea is not in attaining distance, released. Capt. Long, who is sta-
but in guidance over the earth’s tioned in San Francisco, said he
curves. ....
------------------ , — — ----- -- —- -1,the fire, which got so hot it melted rean problem out of the hands of
mained hospitalized Thursday from misfortune came to them and the steel box cars. A grain elevator the security council last year after
a rattlesnake bite received while empire crumbled. next to the tracks was damaged the Soviet veto stymied all efforts
feeding an Iquana New Year day. Qil was discovered on the ranch badly. to deal with the situation. But
He continued the feeding despite and. poured $11 millions into the The fire was started by the ex- Thursday Vishinsky insisted again
the wound, saying he preferred Miller coffers. The 101 Wild West plosion of inflammable fluid in a and again that the council is the
"* "he ------j - —i—u derailed tank car. G. J. McCloskey, only body which could deal with K.X;en. Vl.’.
division trainmaster for the Penn- threats to the peace, because the D"enism mine 8 Brother
sylvania railroad, said eight tank charter denied that authority to injured in Accident
cars were in the fire area—four the assembly. “Apu7 u c . .
oil, two ammonia, one naphtha and The Soviet resolution will be,STOCK HoLM, , den, Jan. 3.
one gasoline. considered along with the 11-. Prince। Wilhelm, 67, brother of
McCloskey said the shells were nation measure, but no vote is in Sweden's King: Gustaf,VI, was in-
- -piw-----jured slightly Wednesday after thg
PLEASK TURN TO " ...
PAOB S. COLUMN 3 Kussia
magazines. Three attempts to de-
County officers Thursday were liver, these .items by messenger
seeking a gunman, believed to be -ine failed. When a line is shot to
organization act It'would- driving-a late model auto. in con- him from the destroyer, his pre-
ONE—Abolish the offices of the nection with a service station hold- carious position and. the surging
up at 3 a. m. The robbery netted of the destroyer in the heavy sea
$56.10, Darrel Mayfield, attendant prevents him from hauling the
and victim, reported. —ne; . .
Mayfield told Paul W. Chapman Sarlsen stayed in ‘he cabin amid-
and Q. b. Rose, deputy sheriffs, the hip s.without light.or heat.. Every
suspect came into the station, 4800 tohours he has been calling the
block NE a wearing aqmasktanamandeyerchlerig"Knterentedbancome
state of the weather, conditions of
towing."
is rokro,
24 can newsp
The fearless skipper, hailed by the British r-ons as
“Captain Enterprise, ” appeared more concerned about the Streets in Oklahoma City were
suffering of his would-be res- slick but S. B. East, police dis-
centralize bureau administration,
and provide for “more adequate . .... .
salaries” for top administration brandishing a pistol. — ------
officials. dant was forced into a back room,
THREE—Take collectorships out trussed up and gagged. Radio KnoWl.G.
----- The gunman then searched May-! JA "I KnnwiedgeHelPs ,
field's Dockets taking $4 H. radio ham himself, he has
scooped $52.10 from the cash re- set “he a battery-powered radio
gister and drove awav The at Wiln the antennae hanging out of
---------...... &“later XK the"front a porthole on the port side," Weeks
COLOMBO, Ceylon, Jan. 3—OH door and was freed by A, B. Blev-
—Japan has agreed to supply tech- ins of Elkins, Ark., a customer,
nicians and plant equipment to M-t fi12 J 2-2 , ——
help develop Ceylon's textile indus- white man, 5 feet 10 inches nere a
try, it was learned here Thursday, tall and weighing 180 pounds. He bers of the
A million dollar textile factory was wearing an army overcoat,
will be established here this year deth h 1 * u "
with Japanese help.
The Weather
Top World Diplomats
City Drivers Careful __
. a=eTo Talk Truce in Korea
almost impassable in all direc-
. tions and traffic was brought
to a standstill in many areas.
reported "voice” communication
is available between the two ships
Mayteld dsxerbsdshe.xu"an mursdfK"rree/fay mempcsnownsenuue-tesay. en,- esseinkot theirtiner, cal’Georae juries wm rerTous.
that woula 'have iwum't^the0 Em was hard beatbt
terprise to deliver him a single
cup of hot coffee.
yy
gH #8522
20 • m.......!! 19:22 •
These measures, he said, would be
described as “defensive” when
“military operations begin against
southern China."
freezing rain fell all morning.
More than 60 vehicles were stalled ,
when he died.
Career Started Early
Col. Miller was born in New-
tonia, Mo., in 1879. When he was
12 he stowed away on a ranch
_, __ , chuck wagon bound for the Rio
lo Have Special Rites Grande valley, lay hidden among
.ce - p packing boxes for 24 hours and
WEST POINT, New York, Jan. 3 finally won the right to make the
-P-Arrangements for a memo- long trek south to join his father
rial service here for 19 West Point who was buying longhorn cattle
cadets killed in an Arizona air crash in Texas.
derermene nisheyarethTpurdaz.to TYoung Zack was.with his tather of a box car at nearby
Ccaspokesman mJ the I military mgs to the sue in he Salt pork
academy said.a memorial service ...
undoubtedly would be conducted
but that the time and type had not
been determined.
PK2S2COCMT° Congress
LOCAL—Cloudy and continued
cold with light freezing rain or ----— - — ___.....
nrwstamonsytnaidinhuredaruahergThey’ll Shoot at Targets Hundreds of Miles Away
30, low tonight near 20. High meeting of the Atlantic treaty coun- -----------------------------------------------------------
Friday in the upper 20s. cil of ministers in Lisbon will be1 v • j w AA. A „ G w
in east and southland sleet or Was no official confirmationThere (juided Missile Shins Planned
snow northwest this afternoon, The agency said any postpone-, JL
tonight and Friday. Not so cold ment could be attributed to “deci-
in Panhandle. Lows tonight 25-28 sions of • complex character con-
west and north to 32 southeast, cerning the organization of the At-
Highs Friday 28-32. Accumuls- lantic pact and the project of the
tion of freezing rain, sleet and European army." A
snow likely to be heavy. I Negotiations on p o o 11 n g the > .. ,
SHIPPERS— Prepare ship- forces of France, Italy, Western t.was learned Thursday the
ments next 24 to 36 hours for 12- Germany, Belgium, The Nether- 13.600-ton Canberra and Boston,
17 northeast and northwest and lands and Luxembourg into a Euro- which have been in the mothball
for 18-27 southeast and south- pean army are snagged on prob- —eet Wi sai from the west
west. iems of how to finance the army.
, gression program.
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jan. 3-(—A Previous Failure Recelled
sPool.of ste el cable fell.through The resolution went on to ask n i ri »
the assembly to call “without de-Farmer IS Charged
’ . The American delegation immediately frowned on the
. Vishinsky proposal. Pending official comment, United
I States sources said the Soviet resolution was unacceptable,
we..... The American informants pointed out that the U. S.
en‛..n‛. favors continuation of collective measures as an important
■I’. . vi., factor in the UN efforts for peace. They said the call for
- a security council meeting has been made before without re-
l sponse from the Russians,
\ • • who would not recognize na-
A-l tionalist China as a member
V —as of the council.
--mg-vaewae Soviet Veto Power Cited
dne - eea‛ The Americans said that since
’ the Soviets have veto power in the
K .9 council, it would be useless to
Ma. bring the Korean armistice nego-
K’K Freezing
PLEASE TURN TO Skinner
PAOE 3. COLUMN 3 Kipper
9:30 a.m. (7
Heavy Snew at Clinton oN
Thursday afternoon Clinton re- -
ported a heavy snow falling with t
Rescve Plant All Ready roads covered with ice, sleet and •
"You fellows are taking a worse snow. All traffic was discouraged. ' U|
beating and are suffering more F reezing.1 rain was coating North- , 714
than I am," said the youthful*®5 highway between Oklahoma .122
skipper whose faithfulness to the " ity.and Okarche. , . j "4
tradition of the sea has stirred the Durant, McAlester and Ardmore
imagination of millions al reported freezing rain with ic-
The American destroyer radioed ing on highways Thursday after-
that “preparations have been made noon. Tulsa had 28 degrees with
with Capt. Carlsen for rescue if sleet and freezing ram and ice 2
required.” It was the first indica- inches deep on U. S. 66 both east
and west from the city.
Pawnee had 26 degrees with
clouds but no rain and Enid had
Crossword Puzzle ..
OH Reports........
Radie Leg.........
Society ...........
Sports ...........
Town Talk ........
TV Topies ........
Vitel Statistics ....
Women ..........
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 284, Ed. 3 Thursday, January 3, 1952, newspaper, January 3, 1952; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1988063/m1/1/?q=alien+smuggler: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.