Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 160, Ed. 4 Tuesday, August 12, 1952 Page: 5 of 8
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1952—NINE
Oklahoma City Times
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NEW! GO-BETWEEN
Rayon Faille Suits
95
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FASHION by Betty Hartford . . .
FASHION at a tiny price!
ness.
sistant to the vice president of the these are the results of a woman
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10 paces, and dining room stew-
Waitresses on one of the dine’s
TIPATION LICKED
uniforms with-white pique puritan
t
—and
licked.
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partment of the system, my job
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12—The
HOLDENVILLE, Aug
meet in the election board office.
the best head waiter manner.
Hightower of Gerty.
■
160 H.P. "ROCKET” ENGINE!
---
HYDRA-MATIC SUPER DRIVE!
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M CMw ChMee
GM HYDRAULIC STEERING!
Color
d
69
NEW AUTRONIC-EYE!
4
OLOSM
Rhinestone-touched Suit Dress
• Tuxedo Front Suit Dress
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FIRST FLOOR SPORT SHOP
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JOE PALOOKA
ITLLBEIN THE LATE
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merie SupeDrim GMMydreulieS
JANE ARDEN
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III YOUR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER
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Me
=OEMM/PTA
Completely
air-conditioned
Whenever she rides as a passen-
ger on one of the C & O trains, Mrs.
Peyton-Marcus, 115 West Main
Please send faille suit dress (8.95)
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States must show its sincerity by
deeds, such as effective aid under
the Point Four program.
Take a tip from
Johnny and Lucille
and try these
thrilling new features
The sureness of a suit, the grace of a dress
... in this fashion that travels from
summer into fall... day into night. Styled
with two large rhinestone studded buttons.
' Black and brown. Sizes 10 to 20.
national defense program.
--♦
Board to Convene
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Double Eloping
Brings Trouble
To Teen-Agers
TUCSON, Aris, u - Two 13-
year-old girls faced indignant par-
ents and marriage annulments to-
day and their youthful husbands of
one day faced possible criminal
action as the aftermath of a joint
week-end elopement.
In Nogales, Arix., the justice of
the peace who married them said
he "told the kids they didn't look
old enough.”
Judge Fred Allen said the cou-
ples signed sworn affidavits that
they were over the state legal min-
imum of 16 and 18. He said the
statemefts are on record at the
Santa Crux County Courthouse.
For the baby-faced Tucson girls,
their return was an unhappy one.
One sobbed loudly as her 17-year-
old husband was arraigned on a
charge of contributing to the delin-
quency of a minor. He was ordered
bound over to the Juvenile Court.
All four sets of parents said the
double marriage would be annulled
immediately. But the girls' parents
signed criminal complaints against
the boys, one a sailor from San
Diego.
The mother of one of the girls
said she became alarmed when
her daughter had not returned
home late Saturday from a girl
friend’s home, where she was to
have stayed Friday night. Sheriffs
deputies checked and found both
girls missing.
' Road to Be Paved
In Cotton County
LAWTON, Aug. 12—Contractors
are scheduled to move in this week
to begin converting about six and
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a job, but really it’s fun. And I
think I’ve made more friends than
enemies."
Mrs. Stevenson is one of a grow-
ing group of women holding ex-
ecutive jobs with the nation’s rail-
roads, and their influence is to
by C. A. Stoldt, which set August
15 as the final date for operations
to begin.
Construction will cover a 36 foot
roadbed and two bridge jobs, a
200-foot steel structure on Dry
Beaver creek, two and one-half
miles north of Hulen, and a triple
cell concrete culvert.
Poston Construction Co. of Law-
ton has the 1109,833 roadbed con-
tract and Duard Pyle, Oklahoma
City, the 179.489 bridge project.
Contractors have 100 working
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A citified suit dress, cool and crisp to wear
right now, and from then on, it’s smart
simplicity makes it a perfect foil for quick-
change accessory magic. Black and brown
only. Sizes 10 to 18.
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Woman’s Touch Gives Spick,
Span Look to Railway System
By DOROTHY ROE
(Associated Presa Women a Eaitor)
epddoma a Eqaipmen4, ■—He mnd "i
• eheng wieheu meria t Genee Mem Velue
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Graduate Checks a Relic of Imperialism
Jim Thomas jr., Shawnee, examines one of the swords
he obtained as a souvenir on the 19th century battle-
ground of Omdurman in the Sudan, where the British
ended the long revolt of the Dervishes against foreign
rule.
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The population, already 22 mil-
lion, is rising swiftly, and the
only possible farming areas, in
the Nile valley, already are
crowded. This siuation was ob-
viously an explosive one, Thomas
notes, and the king squandered
his good will through riotous liv-
ing and the corruption of his min-
liters.
Some progress was made by
the government during his 16-
year rule, but not enough to sat-
isfy the people.
“When agitation began to get
the British out of Suez," Thom-
as says, “many believed that Fa-
rouk really wanted them to stay
to bolster his shaky regime.”
Thomas visited Khartoum, Cap-
itol of the Sudan, where he stud-
ied the wars between the British
and the Dervishes in the late 19th
century. .. .
From the old battlefield of Om-
durman just outside the city he
obtained many souvenirs. It was
there in 1898 that Britain’s Gen.
Sir Herbert Kitchener finally
quelled the Sudanese in a color-
ful battle featuring a cavalry
charge in which Winston Church-
ill, then 24, took a lively hand.
On the wars Thomas hopes
eventually to do a doctor's dis-
sertation in history.
----
Botanist Dies
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Company, who spends about half Much of Mrs. Stevenson's job en-
of her time these days riding the tails housekeeping know-how. One
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Mrs. Stevenson belies her fragile, new cleaning materials, and show
feminine appearance. Her big blue stewards how to keep dining cars
eyes can spot a speck of dust at neater.
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____________ _ Thomas arrived in Egypt last, «
son was announced last winter, September under a Fulbright
opening the way for a possible scholarship, and stayed there un-
military ruler," Thomas says. til June 19. He did research work
The Yale university history in Islamic history and studied the
graduate was in Cairo during the Arabic language. •
wild anti-Bntish rioting of sev- He hopes to return to the near 32- wn gzorgthri chout the
oral months ago, when Egyptians eastern area to work for five or and growing forc^throughout the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway executive’s touch.
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-FERS All FOUR I
Christian Klees, 181
Pavilion Avenue,
Providence, R. I.
One of many unto-
lieitod letters from
ALL-BRAN utert. If
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you suffer from coo-1
etipation duo to I
lack of dietary bulk, Mt an ounce
(about % cup) of crispy Kellogg’s
AUL-bban dily, drink plenty of
liquids. If not oomplttoly satisfied
after 10 days, return empty box to
Kellogg’s, Battle Creek, Mich. Get
..WITHOUT HIS PANTS . HA HA . IT WAS
A RANK... HE WAS MAKING A NUISANCE
---N OF MIMSELF... <
Try Aefotmrot of At your in Aoeur of theyearl Drive Oldsmobile's
flashing Super "88” and thrill to the swift-surging setion of um
motoring s most popular higb-compression engine ... that s At
"RackoT! Diseover how smoothly and quickly you sweep from
take-off to highway speed . •. Atft Hydra-Matic Super Drive*! A
Lean how easily you can park and taro and take the curves.;; J
Ami GM Hydraulic Steering! Discover Oldsmobile’s new auto- I
matic heeillight dimmer... thm't At Autronic-Eye*! Make a date IA
with the Super "St” and drive the car that outfeaturn them all! U)
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WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 •P — various trains of the system, keep- of the first things she did was to
Melville Thurston Cook, 83, nation- " • 1
f
. Details such as piles of loose___________
silver left on the tables, dogged secretary, announced. Other mem-
salt shaken or slovenliness in the ben of the board are Lon J* Tay-
appearance of waiters all come lor. Chairman, Wetumka, and Flo
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ing a weather eye out for possible institute improvements in car
improvements in comfort, clean- cleaning syatems, suggest new and
liness and service.
days from August 15 to finish their
are under way to snap contracts. State Sen. Bill Logan,
itere‘ uniferme with . however, said he anticipates slow
work on the bridge construction due
to the recent steel strike and the
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Style a.________________
Style b.__________ _ ______________
Charge_______ Cash------ C.O.D.-------
Name ....................................
Address ....................--------------
Pleas* include 2% sales tax and 15e postage.
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be seen on many of the country'* -
trains. If you find chintx drapes under her eagle eye.
Thursday, to transact regular rot-
tine business, Clinton J. La Valley,
A woman’s touch is transforming in the club car, flowers on the three quarter miles of SH 65 gravel
some sspects of the railroad bust- table, pretty upholstery in the surface into paving, from Hulen,
-355. coaches, new colors in your room- inCotton county, to the intersection
" She is Ann Elgar Stevenson, as-ette, you can be pretty sure that with SH .7, in Comanche county,
gistant th* vice nresident of the these are the results of a woman Work orders have been signed
“I aat AL-BRAN every day for
1 my corstipation
________.Iwouldn‘swap
it for alT the pills
in the world." Mr.
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sounds ■ ke an -unpopular sort- - jf the steward met each passenger.0 ....
entering the dining car, giving off Hughes county election board will
with courtesy and friendliness in ......
Shawnee Traveler Says Nationalism Grips Near East
10 years eventually to teach the near east, he points out. As a rule who are affected by the national-
history of the Arab world, the Arabs takeaisort ofisola-
How did he become interested tionist viewpoint. They don’t like
in his specialty? “When I was a Russia, but their, bitter Sxperi
kid I saw Cecil B. DeMille's ences to the past with Britain,
movie, “The Crusades,” be re- France and other imperia listie
plies smilingly, “and I suppose it western nations, hasnlt inclined
stuckthem toward the democracies
unw masunastatdaxalsimpone me bope to avolaaniance
' TThomas made’trtps toTurkey.
Uw igbt lote uring
I Of the recent Egyptian revolu-
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SHAWNEE. Aug. The revo- demanded that the English quit
lution that tossed pudgy King Sue__ .
Farouk off the throne of Egypt gT hsuewred by the wealthier
came as no surprise to Jim olasses,m he says. “They also as-
Thomas jr., Shawnee, just back sailed many foreign • controlled
from a year of graduate study businesses, such as big hotels
at the American University at and department stores.” Many
Cairo. British citizzens were killed before
“The situation has been electric order was restored. —- ----- „ .
ever since the birth of the king's Thomas arrived in Egypt test, self-preservation, Thomasnotes
“It is the bet possible base from
which to bomb Soviet industry in — — ..
the event of war, and tte oil po- favor will be returned, Thomas
tential rivals that of the United says. 41»
States » “To counteract thia attitude,
Arab nationalism is a potent he declares,, "the United States
must reach the bulk of the people
- 4/11
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prdscsnehtdestentis hertjbber.GP: divisions now wear smart yellow
“I’m kind of a nagging wife to comars and coronet cape. And ex-
the operating department. Much of periments aze wa, WSup
my work seems to be minding up the waiters’ uniforms with a
other people's business. Wherever touch of color and better fit.
I see something amiss in sny de-
er
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1st movement Too much of our
message today is getting only
to the ruling groups.”
Democratic propaganda is re-
ceived with more than a grain of
aalt, and to win the friendship of
the Arabs he believes the United
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- ------------------------------------
°Ruokancus
tion, Thomas said:
“King Farouk was very popular
when he first came to the throne.
He was expected to do much for
the rspidly increasin.g rural popu- _
lation." Sixty percent of Egyp-
tian families have incomes of 114 v <
a month or less and are able to a
have vegetables cnly once month- E
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HAMANO LOOKS WONDERFUL, YtAH .» SCUSE
KNOBS ..I HATE » SAV IT... » ME, JIM, ILL
BUT on GONG TOGNVE JOE A SEE A LATER »
A TERRIFIC BAT TLE... THE M -—---
GUVS GOT EVERVTHING...
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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/m1/5/: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.