Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 160, Ed. 4 Tuesday, August 12, 1952 Page: 1 of 8
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Oklahoma City Times
4
LATE STREET EDITION ‘
PRICE FIVE CENTB
EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY
VOL. LXIII, NO. 160
Marines Crush Ferocious
Truman Meets
928%
Heights
on
K
4
OFFICE
for the presidency.
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The battle for Bunker hill began Monday night with
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At Cordell
Storm Leaves
4
Cool Weather
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it
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movie screen and a small water
There’ll be more rain for Okla-
soldiers.
month ago to put
A state capitol "machine” created
a
Then you can find out who is or- Stratford, Garvin county, and
To Red Team
Women
Storm
ALTUS, Aug. 12—Altus was look-
bunkers A Marine spokesman said ing at it’s first bale of cotton Tues-
Aug.
The new plant is considered im-
Stale
PIEASEEEMT%
fafher, the wound was not very
dear up with home medications.
visit by Margaret Truman.
was posted at the
“Truman Hall
ported.
What’s inside
Crossword Puzzle ....
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I
Ohio Will Get
New A-Plant
First Cotton Bale
in Altus Earliest
81,200,000 Project
To Make Uranium
Troops Quickly Erect Bunkers
Against Night Counterattack;
UN Officer Calls Land Vital
‘T ruman HaW Sign
Restored Just As
■
Rain Outlook Good
For Rest of Week
Greer Sisters Add New
Family Teaching Mark
Injured to August 1.
Dead to August 12 ..
Margaret Arrives
BERLIN, Aug. 12 (W-The U. S.
Stratford Wreck
On Slick Rttad
in jures Four Men
Group to Plug
Hig way Bonds
Y
)
i
Garbage, Street Workers Also Stay Home;
Emergency Sewer, Water Service Provided
!
while they looted it of >5,900 in
cash, furs and jewels.
counterattack with only a half- Monday,
hour preparation by their artil-
takes no slock in that.
'Stevenson Is Embarrassed’
.......V
I 11 « 1 M I H <
3.
thunderstorms and showers
throughout the period.
Hourly Temperature
P
». ■.
A. •.
again in darkness—and that
could go either way.
Artillery Heralds Attack
“The Chinese like to fight
night," he said.
The doctor in charge of the pa-
tient says the child is still in
serious condition, but not criti-
cal.
“The infection is taking long-
er to wear off than I expected."
the doctor declared. “Usually be-
tween the second and fourth
week, the tetanus begins to dear
up."
communists on Siberia hill.
HUI Is Vital
Tawn Talk ...
TV Topics.....
Vital Statistics
Women .......
mmurnuM
in the Democratic campaign -ypvm
5 8
- . . that kicked off a severe storm in
The communists began their the Muskogee-Tahlequah area late
Markets ...
Oil Reports
Radio Log
Society ....
Sports .....
6,783
315
cause of the walkout, which
began Friday.
J
county have held the rest camp.
Miss Tettleton said the results
was honeycombed with Commu-
nist bunkers and trenches, made
sure they would stay.
They Carry Own Logs
They carried with them king-
sized prefabricated logs for im-
mediate construction of their own
IN52fM
IT COUID BE YOU
Accidents to August 1 . ...17,293
bage and street department em-
ployes joined in the work stoppage
Warren has threatened to dis-
stayed home.
The workers demanded higher pay and shorter work
weeks. Mayor C. M. Warren called an emergency meeting
------of the city commission be-
a marine tank attack. The Leathernecks then caught the
Reds off balance by feinting an attack at nearby Siberia
hill with flamethrowers and infantry. Then they attacked
and took the higher Bunker hill by dawn.
During the day, allied fighter-bombers, tanks, artil-
lery guns and small arms fired shells, bullets and bomba
at the communists with the aim of weakening the expected
counter-attack.
The Leathernecks meanwhile worked frantically against
time to set up pre-fabricated bunkers out of logs they had
carried with them up the hill-’
A 10-year-old girl with lock-
jaw has been kept alive under
anesthesia at Wesley hospital for
four weeks and four days.
The disease, becoming infre-
quent because of tetanus shots
given to children as a regular
immunization procedure, is fre-
quently fatal, according to the
state health department. Howev-
er, modem treatment methods
d
in Vote Drive Seen
As Topic of Parley
By JACK BELL
apply for articles of incorporation
of the Oklahoma Good Road Im
provement association, Inc.
Robert O. Cunningham, pro-
ponent of the bond issue, said he
was not at liberty to discuss the
organization.
Radio Talk Planned
•‘It is not my organization,” he
told newsmen. "However, I under-
stand the application for incorpora-
WHEN OVERTIRED
GO EASY ON FOOD ...
Ivan if you're quite hungry, to
easy on food when you're tired,
authorities say. A stuffed stomach
can cause trouble to a fatigued
person.
But you can keep from being
fatigued by hiring good help
through a Want Ad in the Okla-
homan and Times. That’s the
method that tells thousands of
folks about your job-opening in a
matter of hours! Phone 2-1311 for
a helpful Ad Taker.
SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 12—CU.P)—Hard-fighting U. S.
| marines threw back a horde of screaming Chinese com-
I munists who tried in vain to retake Bunker hill Tuesday
and grimly braced themselves for another assault as night
fell over the battlefield.
The counter-attack on the strategic hill five miles east
' of the truce village of Panmunjom came at 4 p. m., less
than 12 hours after the Leathernecks took it in a sur-
prise move.
>- wH
odeig-
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Name Tags Make Getting Acquainted Easy
Miss Wanda Tettleton, left, home demonstration agent for Washita county, and her
assistant, Mrs. Janice LeForce, are busy getting ready for the 10th annual Washita
County Home Demonstration club rest camp Wednesday and Thursday. Above the two
agents prepare name tags for more than 200 farm women expected to attend the
camp. _____ ___
Tulsa Council Called In 200Women
After Walkout Spreads To Gather
until this week.
Lists Are Prepared
2
tending the Washita County
Home Demonstration club rest
Later the child went to a
farm. The doctor in charge feels
the youngster may have picked
up the tetanus germ there while
playing on the ground.
The child is kept unconscious
with drugs to prevent convul-
sions, the doctor explained. Al-
though there is generalized stiff-
ness in the body, there is no
paralysis. It is the convulsions
that prove fatal.
Tetanus, or lockjaw as it is
commonly called, is a bacteria
which grows in wounds closed
off from oxygen.'A toxin, or poi-
side during the attack.
When the grenade-carrying Chi-
nese began the attack, the ma-
rines were ready The sharpshoot
ing leathernecks mowed down the
advance communist battalion as
it moved forward.
A marine front line officer said,
“We stopped them cold." But he,
warned the battle could begin.
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
Evenina Edition at The Daily oxtahoman.» Enterea at Oklahoma Qu. Oklahoma. Postotlice as second elass Mid matter under the act of Marra 3, 1879
TWENTY-SIX PAGES-500 NBROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1952___
-
passenger service from Britain to
Ceylon, a BOAC Comet liner land-
ed here Tuesday only 17 hours and
10 minutes after leaving London.
Actual flying time for the 5,954-
mile trip was 11 hours 53 minutes.
Regular BOAC service takes 23
hours for the trip this far.
Twenty one passengers left the
Comet here and 15 others went
aboard for the remainder of the
flight to Columbo, capital of Cey-
lon.
camp at Spring Lake park
Wednesday and Thursday.
TodayforTakksRed Attack
Red army during the war, and
Miss Adele Koskosky, Chicago, for-
mer U. S. special services em-
ploye, were married here Satur-
day. The two met at a Russian
Orthodox church social after Be-
lov escaped to the weat after be-
coming disillusioned with the So-
viet regime. He had been on occu-
pation duty with Russian troops in
East Germany.
Burglars Switch Tactics
CHICAGO, Aug. 12—IBur-
glars pulled a switch here Monday
-
Former Soviet Hero
To Live in America
FRANKFURT, Germany,
the logs were large, heavy counter day, two weeks earlier than a bale
parts of “Lincoln logs." a chil- of cotton had ever been produced
Kl J
!
tizure It Ciassen station. Mil ts
•UMm.
HFASE
State Employes Getting
First Party Bite on Pay
Cards Asking for Campaign Kick-In Start
Rolling Into Agencies; Salary List Is Set Up
By HUGH HALL
BTr,
-nfo'n-
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aiiMMM-* 4 —TMMMIWBelaKa >
Sulphur Girl Wins New York Adventure
Roy J. Turner, former Oklahoma governor, presents
Mrs. Florence Randolph with an expense check to
finance a trip for Miss Joan Coyle to the Madison
Square Garden Rodeo. Miss Coyle was selected to rep-
resent Oklahoma at the world famous indoor rodeo when
it opens in New York City, September 24. Pictured
left to right, Mrs. Randolph, Jim McCelland, Turner
ranch foreman and president of the Sulphur Roundup
club, Miss Coyle and Turner. (Story on Payc 15).
TULSA, Aug. 12—(UH)—Sewer and water department Farm Club (.(invention
skeleton crews provided only emergency stand-by service
Tuesday, while almost a third of Tulsa's 1,600 city employes
)
I
* ’
A
AS
Stevenson s scheduled arrival I
here today for White House con- I
ferences with the President and a I
Cabinet luncheon is expected to I
bring a decision in the backstage I
controversy over Truman's role in I
the campaign.
Unless all the outward signs fail, E
the Illinois governor probably will I
tell Truman he will be glad to I
have his help But Stevenson is I
expected to make it plain he wants I
no presidential whistlestop tours I
overshadowing his own efforts as K
the nominee to get his views across I
to the people "
Conflict Settlement Eyed
One issue that may be settled
is a conflict in Labor Day speak-,
ing plans for the two.
i William Flannigan, Stevenson's '
press secretary, disclosed yester-
jday in Springfield, 111, that the
1 nominee was considering kicking i
off his campaign with a Sept. 1 f
, speech in Detroit. h
Flannigan said the Stevenson I
legend “Truman Hell” were re-
moved without explanation from
either side of the entrance several
months ago. The President's photo-
graph disappeared from the lobby
at the same time.
But the Army did a quick about-
face when Miss Truman arrived
in Berlin Monday and expressed
two wishes—to see the house her
father lived in during the Potsdam
conference and to visit "Truman
Hall."
- . .. . । Long distance telephone service
lery. During the battle they pound- was restored in Tahlequah at 3
ed the marines with 600 rounds. a.m. Tuesday after it had been out
“They wanted that hill bad. an since 7 p m Monday. More than
officer said... .. 700 local phones in Muskogee and
Bunker hill dominates a valley about 300 in Tahlequah still were
and the marines can see enemy out of order Tuesday morning,
buildup areas both to the east and but should be restored during the
the west. Moreover, they said they day.
can “look down the throats' of the Apparently it was a near-twister
i that knocked down an outdoor
tonight and Wednesday, scattered
thundershowers west portion
late this afternoon or tonight.
Wednesday partly cloudy with
scattered thundershowers. Warm-
er west and north today. Highs to-
day in 80s, low tonight in 60s.
EXTENDED-Temperatures will
average about 2 to 5 degrees
above normal next five days, with
warming trend through Wednes-
day. (Normal minimums 68 to
TO, normal maximums near 95).
Precipitation will total M to %
the third time in as many weeks on1 tributed until Tuesday, when oth- ley.
grounds the Reds have offered er departmental workers began .Ane
nothing new in the deadlocked dis- getting their cards, signalling the Piketon
cussions on prisoner exchange. — hh- ion 1 - ■ - -
miles southwest of Altus, had one
bale ginned at the Davis gin,
which weighted 520 pounds. The
cotton was graded strict middling,
31-32, and will bring Chenault
Chenault slightly over $200.
John Davit, gin manager, said
this was two weeks earlier than a
bale of cotton had ever been pro-
duced in this area.
11 Building Permits Up
Battling Marines who captured ruu io I
Bunker hill, so named because it PdAE columni
gust building permits for the first
__ nine days total $126,300, boosting
A painted wooden sign rending the 1952 aggregate to $17,088,564,
Frman Wall" wne nneted at the F. y Rugeley, city engineer, re-
in which they were riding skidded
tion will befiled Tuesday afternoon, on a muddy county road near
Four persons were injured, one
critically and another seriously, 1Lo1'
near 11 p m. Monday when a car the 0 " '
WASHINGTON ( - The Atomic the past week. Two men were killed 100 or higher,
and IS wounded. | It was a bit cooler in the Great
• P‛V,VVV • ■ -- -- ,
national campaign this autumn, Tuesday began tightening
its grip on pay checks.
1 txt a 1 • ' Approved at a meeting of department heads and party
( \ Apologizes officials called by Gov. Murray July 10, the kick-in drive
I © has remained almost dormant“
f
With Stevenson
■
Statewide Asgociation charge the men if they didn’t re-
-aewae As-auu turn to work, but the warning ap
is Due to Be Formed parently had no effect.
Some Tulsa officials feared a
Organization of a good-roads as -serious sanitation problem would
sociation to promote a $102 million develop from the strike. So far no
bond issue to remedy highway de- major problems have arisen,
fects in every county in the state Garbage men have demanded a
was reported under way here Tues- 40-hour week with the
same pay
day. . . . they received for 44 hours. Street ,
Leaders of half a dozen existing d epartmental men had virtually the ing
highway improvement associations same demand,
were understood to be ready to
. Firm
Aln»r«
3 IP
i
:W »
: W
night. They locked Dr. and Mrs.
non. is produced and spreads Harold C. Brill out of their home
portant in the ABC's big expan-
sion program for which Congress Arm,
Comic Dictionary1 its recent session. MSrmnansat
The plant site will lie between
- " ___i and Wakefield on the
pay bite is on. Scioto River. Exact boundaries will
Arrangements were made.at the be determined after detailed engi-
governor s meeting to put the tap neering surveys, the commission
on employes all the way from cap- advised Elston.
itol janitors to college presidents. r.miiu. will be re-
How the esmpaign is progressing Some 50 families will be
in the state's institutions of higher located.
By CLAIRE CONLEY
in her yard 10 days before her 12-—A former Russian artillery
hospital admission. officer who fled to the west snd
According to the youngster's his American bride left Frankfurt
father, the wound was not very by air Tuesday to make their
large, bled freely, and seemed to home in New York.
clear up with home medications. Fedor Belov, '33, a hero of the
any appearances at all.
This official said he is suggesting
that Truman’s greatest contribu-
tion might come in his assurances
to people in the populous Northern j ’
states that Stevenson will carry
on his civil rights program if
elected.
He Could Help
of the camp can be seen in the
co-operation between the 22 Flanders, whois supporting the
clubs in the county and in he GOP nominee, Gen. Dwight D. Ei-
I spirit of friendliness existing senhower, said he regards Steven-
from one corner of the county to son as "a damn good man," but
— ------- .. added he will have to fight for the
"When we try a countywide right to run his own political show.
project,’ Miss Tettleton said, "it । "In my estimation," Flanders A ova. ...........- _________________e- — -
gets under way in a hurry. The said, “Stevenson quite obviously is $30,000 bite on state workers’ pay for the Democrats’
women from the various clubs ————__ —------ .....
feel they know each other and 1 ruman
work like next door neighbors, i--
classes. Some Republicans have been
ggie will BE the 10th vear contending that Stevenson is the
THIS WILL BE the oth year "captive candidate" of the Truman
A the farm club women of the admnistration, but Sen. Ralph E.
Flanders (R-Vt) told a reporter he
“We made a diversionary attack homa Tuesday, with the best
on Siberia hill," the marine said in chance apparently being in the
describing Monday night's action western part of the state, instead
“Then we came around and of the east this time, observers
caught them completely off guard, said.
They didn't know what was hap- But the long range forecast
peningpromises an average of M inch or
Other Heights Useless better for the entire state, with
Although the Marines withdrew about an inch in eastern sections
from Siberia hill after the raid, during the next five days,, while
their capture of strategic Bunker other areas still scorch in drouth,
hill completely neutralized the oth- Warmer in New England
er height, which has changed hands The Associated Press said there
five times in the past three days. still is little hope of moisture for
In Tokyo, UN naval headquar- Texas and the great southwest,
ters announced that two American which chauked up readings Mon-
destroyers and one British frigate day of 109 at Presidio, Phoenix and
were hit by Communist Korean Yuman, while Dallas reported its
east coast shore batteries during 10th straight day with readings at
night, and warmer Wednesday. „w, „
nes nea 8,"And A iwe 4 Weeks
STATE—Partly cloudy today, ---- " --U°7
entrance and a photograph of Pres-
BOMBAY, India, Aug. 12^- ident Truman replaced in the lob-
inaugurating the first jet airliner btwo metal bearing the
This Week to Have
Busy Schedule
BY MARK SARCHET
(Times Staft Writer)
CORDELL, AUG. 12—The busi-
Vest persons in Washita coun- ,
Water and sewer workers left ty this week probably will be the
their jobs Friday. Monday gar- more than 200 farm women at-
y hurriedly restored the name
..jman Hall" to its shopping! WICHITA FALLS, Aug. 12Au-
center Tuesday, just in time for a
.. are giving hope of recovery, a
inch, except over one inch in member of the department said,
eastern Oklahoma, occurring as — ... .
ganizing it." struck a tree.
Cunningham, Oklahoma City leg Frank Brown, 38. of Stratford, is
islator whose road-finance plan has in an Ada hospital with a broken
tentative approval of Gov. Murray, neck, broken arm and a broken mHE CAMP THIS YEAR will
announced he would speak in be- leg. He was a passenger in a car I open at 10 a. m. Wednesday
half of the program over 18 radio driven by Walter Newton Jarvis, and lose at 3 p. m. the next
stations at 8:30 p.m. Friday and 41, also of Stratford, who suffered day In between the women will I1
over four others the same night two broken legs and a broken arm, take part in classes, swimming,
after the baseball broadcasts. Earnest Brown, 43. Ada, brother stunts, games, story telling and
Another Group Joins In of the critically injured man, re- just plain fellowship.
At the same time, Cunningham ceived minor injuries. Gerald The Spring Lake camp is main-
claimed endorsement for the plan Brown, son of Frank Brown, also tained by the Church of the
by another road group, the McClain I received minor injuries. -------------
county Good Road Builders associa- The accident occurred six miles page
tion. Last week the Oklahoma east of Stratford. Trooper W. J. j----
City Trades and Labor council ap Eddleman said the road was so M.L., Stonl, Dauehtefa
proved the program. slick he could hardly stand up "other Mean umtgruer
"The governor," Cunningham while making his investigation.
PEEASE CTmS°s Group
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug 12 IP—A WASHINGTON, A u g. 12—AP— Located by police Mrs. Giovann
clothing store reported to police The Association of American Rail- Ferone said she fell in love With
Tuesday that four wigs were stolen roads reported Tuesday that 5,402 Gaetano Fraese, When hecame lne nove was nanaea vo u* com-
from its show window dummies new freight cars were delivered in to ask for the hand of her daughter meeting between liai-
Monday night. July compared with 6.411 in June. Maria in marriage trapse and l ML- ------- .J
—•------ It said the drop reflected the ef- Mrs. Ferone said they intend to
> The Weather fects of the recent 55-day steel marry regardless of Manas "
From Unteg statenewssrher Bureau strike._______ fa ___________
LOCAL-Fartlyc1o u d y with ,,, , - kJ
Girl Is Kept Asleep9
Wednesday. Cooler today and to- I X A
iMex
pN
camp learned that Truman tenta-
tively had arranged to speak in
Milwaukee the same day. He said
the mixup occurred because of lack
of knowledge in Springfield of Tru-
man's plans
Should Truman Give in?
Democratic leaders apparently
agree that in any such conflict the
President ought to defer to the
nominee.
One campaign official who asked
not to be quoted by name said he
thought Truman ought to let Ste-
venson get a running start on his
drive before the President makes!
, Sen. James Murray of Montana
said he believes Truman could help
The schedule for the camp at Stevenson with a public power ।
the Church of the Brethren speech in the West.
camp, eight miles southeast of "The President is popular in our
Cordell, is crammed with activi- country and it would be a mistake
ties. Miss Wanda Tettleton, if he doesn't campaign for Steven-
Washita county home demonstra- son," Murray said. "He doesn't
tion agent, and her assistant, have to undertake a whistlestop
Mrs. Janice LeForce, have campaigu but he ought to give
planned everything from a bath- his fullest co-operation to the nom-
[ beauty contest to textile inee."
"We need that piece of real tower, wrecked trees, power and
estate," said the marine officer, telephone lines, and set at least
“The Chinese have been moving one house afire in the Fort Gibson
closer and closer so they can snipe area.
at our main line of resistance.” Muskogee Drenched
As the sun set, an officer said Muskogee had a 1 47-inch rain-
the Chinese had crawled up to the storm officially, and Pryor report-
base of Bunker hill and that ma- ed .35 during the period. Tulsa had
rine artillery fire was being with .49-inch, and Vinita .56-inch of
held in the fear of hitting allied moisture during the period.
Cool, cloudy weather with more
showers and thunderstorms was
Oklahoma’s official forecast Tues-
at day in the wake of a cold front
i. Overlooking Siberia Hill
be asked Tuesday to play a (J
; muted second fiddle to Gov.
Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois —---------------------------------------------1--------------
SLr.. 4. a
PHASE EVMT Marines
Reports from workers in various
Allies Say Jets Possibly departments here Tuesday were
r. . N . 7 that lists of employes and their
F lew in peutral tone pay, with the donation expected for
each wage bracket, were being pre-
PANMUNJOM. Aug. 12—AP—The pared
LnitedNationssadmittedATuesdaz “Contribution" cards already
that in all possibility Allied jet have been printed. They are in two
I planes entered the Panmunjom 55. pccint For the work-’ .______
. Street heart and Elope, neutral zone Sunday and apolo- er,the nther a record ror the state Energy Commission willbuild a
..ree t A.. <4 m A gized for the incident. S.i. Wlich inetioated the ram- new $1,200,000,000 plant in South-
g, igRuT .NAPLES, Italy, Aug- Tups In a written reply to a Commu .P . t, 8 ern Ohio, Rep. Elston (R-Ohio)
Sled Strike Delivers Blow 17-year-old .girl complained Tes nist protest, senior UN liaison of paign.. . said today The plant will produce
Rag Hairline • To Freight Car Deliveries day that her. moth with him ficer Col. Charles w McCarthy , Workers making no more than uranium 235. a key atomic sub-
— Receding Hairline 1° rrennt - 561168 sweetheart and ran away withhim. said, “Our side will make contin- $125 a month are being asked to stance.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 12—- Located by police,.Mrs. Giovanna ued efforts to prevent occurrences kick in The.bite runsfrom An aide to Elston said the new
of this type.” there,, tot.a fa t,1 percent gaseous diffusion plant will be
The note was handed to the Com $6 50 a month, or located on a 6,500 acre tract in a
The Bite Is On sparsely-settled area of Pike Coun-
w son officers, the only activity at Employes in one department re ty, about 18 to 20 miles north of
feel, the truce camp. The armistice talks ceived their cards about two weeks Portsmouth. It had been said pre-
are in another one week recess, ago. Since that time, there was viously that a new plant would be,— -
--- called Monday by the Allies for no reort of other cards being dis- located somewhere in the Ohio Val- dren’s toy. The mobile, pre-fab here.
the third time in as many weeks on tributed until Tuesday, when oth- lev. bunkers come in different sizes, he Delbert Chenault, who farms four
upi"y"er ..urf.ll that ... First Jet Airliner
-— 1 ■■ ---=1 Links Britain, Ceylon
The patient, an Oklahoma City PLEASE TURN to c:p1
girl, cut her foot while playing FAC25E COCMN° iri
gAneK
21 .
25
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20-20
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 160, Ed. 4 Tuesday, August 12, 1952, newspaper, August 12, 1952; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1989401/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.