Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 65, No. 128, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1954 Page: 1 of 22
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.
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VOL. LXV, NO. 128 "
TWENTY-TWO PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY. TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1054
EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY
FINAL HOME EDITION
PRICE FIVE CENTS
"Vt"
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4
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%
Under Scrutiny of Guardsmen
9
Some Precinct
Martial Law Taken in Good
Staffs Pushed
-
heard several witnesses demand
investigators Tuesday. One of the
"tTan
Thunderbird Guards Polling Place at Tahlequah
Fire Heroine
In House Probe
By MARY GODDARD
Hits West
polling places. (apt
or
House Probers
Blast at Clark
was
in
in the west.
were
The quake, followed by three dis- proprieties of Ford, formerly of
Vote Board Swamped
thermometers
The quake, registered as being port.
Fines Only'Wanted
of 6.75-7 magnitude on the Richter
He charged that the subcommit-
ended a 72 hour all-out vigil at
___ rated to get in the runoff'
in the immediate Fallon area.
The latest traffic victim was tions
Mur-
'Completely Baseless’
PIESFCUMN°
- —- - -- ■
New Showers
shed by a former member of Pres-
Is Likely in City
injunction petition was postponed by a Cordell couple who crossed
PKEASEEVEMN°s Balloting
Soldiers to Indochina
high’y localized.
mittee members in its major sec-
60s.) There will be no rainfall of
Poteau,
caught .03-inch.
I
e«o•••••«•
Pages
48.10 per cubic yard.
Uummiaa
l h
$
/
/
' .,t
. J '
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settled is the nomination for U. S.
senator. Fred M. Mock, Oklahoma
state.
Hourly Temperature
Temperatures will be 5 fo 10 de-
gress above normal in the eastern
Tenn., as saying that Judge Chand-
ler told him of the alleged im
man" to check up on the associa-
tions and opinions of its faculty,
the American Civil Liberties un-
STATE—Generally fair Tues-
day night and Wednesday ex-
rept for scattered local thun-
1
11
14
21
to Gov. Murray's proclamation of
martial law for election day faded
in Poteau when a hearing on an
High supped prices are hurt.
Ing the farmer, Secretary of
Agriculture Benson insists. The
secretary told a farmers' audi-
ence in Indiana that crop sur-
pluses are forcing production
Pressure Applied on Judge Chandler in Tax
Cases, Controversial Quiz Report Maintains
Two Oklahomans Win
Farms in U. SDrawing
ersons, stamping ballots like 60
for their favorite red-head, Wil-
lie Murray.
Willie's got two married broth-
Billy Graham Home
From Europe Crusade
boygan in 1938
Among the biggest clans whis-
>e
I
14
Ml
Ml
R;
91
Not Counting the Kids,
Politico’s Relatives
Can Poll 5,000
ident Truman's Cabinet.”
Clark could not immediately be
Monday morning
Time of his death was tentative-
ly set at 6 to 6:30 p.m. Sunday
A-Helping
! ’Em Win
In Bad Shape
City Woman Burned
Fighting Home Blaze
An Oklahoma City woman was
Fair Play Urged
The senate rules committee
To Top Speed
Registrar Here Sure
We'll Top 67,319
Votes Cast in '50
WARNING!
I N*
I
Markets .....
Oil Reports «
Sport ......
TewnTalk ...
Vital latistics
8" ’ »:M a.
.... M 11:3 .
#3:
treated at the base hospital.
After Shocks Fellow
Whafs inside
Comics ................
Crossword Punle ......
London After Dark ••«*.
By ALLAN CROMLEY
(Oklahoman -Times Washington Bureau)
The Weather
LOCAL—Fair and hot through
Wednesday. High Tuesday near
100. Low Tuesday night 74. High
Wednesday 100.
Ford
———
part of the state through Sunday,! T
the extended forecast promised,
Building Walls Fall;
California, Nevada
Shaken Up
weighty ballot totals Tuesday
even if nobody went to the polls
but the family.
The yard-long ballot in Oklaho-
j watching boxes in Oklahoma, Tulsa, Pottawatomie, Latimer
land Creek counties.
Reports from the martial law counties showed guards-
during the main quake shock at vestigated tax fixes in the early
4 14 a m. (PDT). ...... ......
of national guardsmen and plainclothes officers to several a fair-play code for congressional
hundred ballot boxes.
can do" Two other phones were
being adde: to the information
service to handle more calls, he
said
One slip-up had precinct officials
in Precinct 26, Ward 1, 2811 NW
New Trouble With Reds
U. S.-Soviet relations took a
sinister turn Tuesday after three
Russian diplomats were expelled
for "espionage and improper ac-
tivities" and Moscow’s retaliation
ouster of two U. S. officials. Au-
j thorities said the incident shows
I the constant need for vigilance
agamst Red agents in the U. S.
(Page 7)
China Wins Backer
New Zealand’s foreign minister
now favors admission of Red
] China to the United Nations in
1 an "endeavor to drive a diplo-
matic wedge between Russia and
. Red China." The official, T. Clif-
ton Webb, previously had op-
The subcommittee majority re- eral in 1945-49 before going to the
port said that Johnson said Judge Supreme Court.
man, and said most of the report
had not been approved in subcom-
mittee or even considered by the
are to be in the 70s, with 74 ex-jen Finland, Denmark, Holland,
lpected here, I Germany and France.
PARIS, July 8—a— The French might announce the steps taken to
government took preliminary steps the national assembly sometimpe
Twe Phones Added
‘We’re taking care of them as
fast as we can," said Dwain D.
Box, secretary of the county elec-
tion beard. "I guess that’s all we
WITH An My
RELATIVES
HOWCOUL7 I
• .tost
battle between Sen Roberts Kerr telephoned the fire department and
and Roy J. Turner, both oil mil- then attempted to fight the hlaze
lionaires and both former gover- with water until firemen arrived.
E,
3,
A I &
No communique was issued. But Pt ease TURN to
it was understood Mendes-France page 1 column «
scale by a University of California _
seismograph at Berkeley, was ap- tee staff did not make available to
parently centered in Fallon, 60 members of the subcommittee s
miles southeast of Reno and 270 report wherein "one of the investi-
miles northeast of San Francisco, gators interviewed Judge Chand-
An Oklahoma City airforce cep-
tain, LeRoy L. Lette, who went
through two wan and came
home to tell about it, is in «
Pennsylvania hospital with se.
vere injuries suffered in a crash
landing Monday. Hie plane ran
out of fuel in a storm. (Page 12)
By HUGH HALL
Oklahomans swarmed to the polls in Tuesday’s primary
election, their interest apparently whetted by assignment
next five days and no rainfall of four nieces and nephews, and at
consequence anywhere in the state, f least a couple of first cousins
is
Pfc. Austin Walker, member of the 45th national guard division, stands guard before
a polling place in Tahlequah, his home town, as the first voter of the day steps up
to cast his ballot. Walker is a member of Company M, of the 45th‛s 279th infantry
regiment. The guard was ordered out to watch elections in five eastern counties.
Gov. Murray earlier said the guardsman would not be used in their home districts.
5h ‛
J-A
*,
en
r
e 1
Comic Dictionary
Drudge -A man who keeps his
nose to the grindstone so that
his wifecan tur her, up at the
neighbors.
Oklahoma City Times
V.
»
T
R
jet plane passing overhead." It was mittee "ghost writer” had made
felt as far away as San Francisco "flagrant distortions of facts, sup-
and the San Joaouin valley, positions, and baseless conclusions
Fallen is Center ..." in the subcommittee’s re-
150,000-square-mile area of western in a 1950 tax case.
Neyada.a ndunorthern CaliforniaThe federal judge was Stephen S. ( handler. Oklahoma sue weauermnan rouia promise tuner parents or two cnilar
-refy tnis small “m center sev- City. Ford was not immediately available for comment but no relief from the heat over the! either four uncles and aunts
5 All of the injured were sleeping reporters were referred to a
sailors at the nearby Fallon naval minority report of the house
air station. Most seriously hurt subcommittee report in which
The weatherman says the scat-
itered showers probably will re .
sume in the eastern part of the state ican evangelist Billy Graham
'ate Wednesday. The moisture is to to arrive here Tuesday (8:15
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
(Evening Edition M Th, Daily Oklahoman.) Entered at Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. Postotfic. aa second class mail matter under the act or March J. 1879
men and public alike were taking the situation in good
humor. Troopers, mostly teen-agers, laughed and joked j ration. (Page 21)
Humor in Eastern Counties;
Officers Patrol Other Areas
derstorms in the extreme east ; T •1 I • T
late Wednesday. Continued hot l ikzo|v in Hagt
except not quite so hot in the —m-- -- —m3-
Panhandle Wednesday. Low ‘
Tuesday night in the 70s. Top of 100 Degrees
France
) .'
■
was any anticipated apparently,!
in the other counties under mar-
tial law.
In Pittsburg county, three local
’ controls so stringent that most
। farmers won’t be willing to put
up with them. (Page 14)
$810,000 Plot?
A Chinese businessman has
been arrested in New York on
। a charge of stealing $810,000 in
Chinese Nationalist funds The
nationalists claim the Chinese
was involved in a plot with a
general who fled to Mexico in
1951. The general is accused of
embezzling $6 millions from the
nationalists. (Page 7) .
! Indochina Alibi?
Eight Hurt Peyton Ford Hit
As Quake
The injured all
watchful eye on votingplaces in 10 counties by order of Rescuers Honored .
Gov. Murray. When a man j, hanging uncon.
Guardsmen were stationed at 197 polling places in Se- scious by his lineman’s safety
quoyah, Cherokee. Adair. Flore and Pittsburg counties belt stop a power line pole, a few
! under a martial law proclamation. Officers were reported seconds time and the skill of his
— - - closest colleague spell life or
death. That's why OG&E is hon-
oring seven crewmen this sum-
mer for saving lives by the tricky
method of poletop artificial respi-
attorney, said ane of his
assistants would keep the of-
fice open until 9 p. m. Tues-
[day to receive possible com-
1950s, quoted an assistant U. S.
beingdistrict attorney in Nashville,!
EXTENDED — Temperatures
will average 5-10 degrees above
normal Tuesday night through
Sunday in eastern Oklahoma and
10 to 15 degrees above normal
in western Oklahoma. There will . 0. ---
be only minor day to day tem- Monday, but the hard shower
perature changes. (Normal high.
Tuesday and late Wednesday it revivalist a dockside welcome in
Smut. 25.16: mold, rose to 97 during the noon hour;recognition of his ‘
14.06; Crass, - - - —-T
Kith, Kin
letter to
40,582 in the non-presidential pri-
mary nf July 2, 1946
Soma Precincts Swamped
"We'll beat that,” said the county
registrar who has nursed along a
countywide reregistration of voters
that some politicians feared would
decimate the vote
A scattered check of precinct of-
ficials showed most of them were
swamped with voters and a few
last minute reregistrations at the
j polls
"We’re doing a land office busi-
ness," Mrs. R. S. MacCabe, regis-
trar of Precinct 17, Ward 1, of 1316
NW 21, summarized. A total of 145
ballots were cast in that precinct
by 1 p m.
Temperatures Het, Toe
Qnatuly?
Top NEWS
Indys Timtuh
Editorial Page
Ray Tucker notes Sherman
Adams’ talk of Ike's retirement
to pressure congress and finds
the GOP short of possible re .
placements.
Edgar Amel Mowrer terms
ouster of the Reda in Guatemala
a victory for the United States
despite others’ disclaimers
of ties for fear of our being
called interventionists. _
3”
plaints of federal election law
AKLAMOMA primary election violation.
• candidates could roll up J
Sparks Seen Top Man _ ______ ______________ __________________
Major Republican contest to be cast that 10 would die'on state Dam authority, Monday pledged
1 .... - roads. to keep the river agency out of
Prague Man Killed politics. He announced his inten-
Sleeping residents were awak-
ened and dishes rattled throughout Peyton Ford ever discussed this mmitt:.. . , . .-------- 1.
enly serious damage... reported ggj mm. Hg;.--tk thcasestomorconroe
Charles Campbell, all Tennessee- versial actions were traced back
ans. to Clark. Clark was attorney gen-
. highways over the three-day holi-
William Giu jr., day weekend, the highway patrol
Ted Foster Ottinger acted calmly, called the ion charges. The university de-
fire department and directed fire- mes it. (Page 5)
"They're coming in as fast as urally, none of these men and Intosh county were at the polls
we can hand out the ballots,” an worhen is a lorn orphan and even Reports from Poteau were that
cir., ,, , , , other precinct election worker said ! more naturally, blood is thicker LeFlore county’s 43 precincts were
FALLON Nev Julv €_ p_ At WASHINGTON, July 6—Former Oklahoman Peyton As voters stamped ballots, tem- than the opposing candidates' soft under national guard eye. Two
least eight persons were injured Ford, deputy attorney general during the Truman admin- peratures were on the climb to- soap and honeyed promises, troopers were reported stationed
one seriously, Tuesday as a rum- istration, Tuesday was accused in a congressional report ward a predicted high of 100 de - Being terribly t...........
bling earthquake felt throughout a of having exercised “flagrant pressure on a federal judge” grees in Oklahoma City and a abort it all, we figure each can-
---- range of from 98 to 105 degrees didate has a wife or husband, !
over the state. I two married brothers or sisters, - -
I The weatherman could promise either parents or two children, one to each of Adair county's 26
By JIM JACKSON
Oklahoma county voters
early Tuesday afternoon
seemed well on the way to
setting a vote record for a
non-presidential primary elec-
tion. The weather bureau
promised continued clear
e ,
State Halves
Expected Toll
Myrtle Louise Brown,
Lawton, critically injured
when her car went out of
control east of Norman
in eastern Oklahoma,
you WON/AND
IDIDN’r TMINK
YA HAV A
ASH*
Despite soaring temperatures, scattered reports indi- witnesses said citizens should be
rated a heavy vote was rolling up in United States senate, permitted torefuse t testify un-
governor. congress, stale and county races. code Kpa 45s ° °* such *
Uniformed troopers and plainclothesmen kept a /
No Trouble Reported
No trouble was reported, nor
that southwestern Okahoma city The 135-page printed report con-
"" . . . r was tained no signatures of subcom-
ler who emphatically denied that parent judiciary group.
-■ - The report, dealing with the sub-
95. Normal low, in the upper Carnegie,, also in southwestern PLgsg TURN To ProLere
.....[Oklahoma, reported only .02-inch. page x column i nroners
consequence anywhere in the BniseCityain the P anhandle, re-,-
i ported ,06-inch and Beaver a traces
—f
the bridge twice, once at 5:45 p. m.
and once at 6:30 p.m.
Others Ara Listed
A fender of Hayes’ car was seen
on the bridge at the second cross-
ing.
Another motorist became curious
about the fender Monday and
stopped to investigate, finding
Hayes' body.
Others who died during the long
weekend include:
JUDY KA Y K E N T, 15, Fred-
erick.
GEORGIA ANN STANEK, 14.'
Dallas.
RALPH LOREN IVIE jr. 28.
Inglewood, Calif.
LEROY WILLIAM, 20. Okay,
Wagoner county
There were 128 accidents during
the 72 hours and 72 injuries. The
patrol arrested ,835 drivers and
assisted 1,730.
Lawrence Bellatti, commissioner
was BM-1 Charles J Collins, 35, the accusations were hurled.
of San Diego, Calif., who suffered Chandler Quoted
a fractured leg when a metal The report, released by a house
locker toppled on top of his bunk judiciary subcommittee which in-
, 16 n P1MVA8 VIIVl b"‛- F.5 "V1. •J WV •5....."° ...
testify was unfortunate because cint ballots for the third legists a homestad drawing, including
"we were deprived of the benefit . — .....* - — ■ ■
nors. Turner is Kerr's greatest
threat to being nominated for an-
other term.
The race between the two is ex-
pected to be so close that a run-
with voters. Unarmed guardsmen were ordered to re-
port any irregularities to election inspectors.
The governor’s personal investigation of alleged absen-
tee ballot sales in Sequoyah county led to putting the five
counties under martial law for election day.
In Oklahoma City, Paul Cress, United States district
ma county sports 232 names. Nat- units and 11 men from nearby Me- burned severely early Tuesday
of her"home"Satson.Nwadoand (Page 7)
cAMrd SNnalndamotznger, 27, was Thought Control?
rprs,werorrorgea.s watch' taken to Mercy hospital for treat The University of Californin
conservative intside each polling piece, watch- ment of third degree burns on her has employed a "thought police-
From Stilwell came reports there arm s, hands, face, head and chest.
were only enough guardsmen for J. W. Marrs, district fire chief,
- said in spite of her burns, Mrs.
Aunt’Mvrtle who moved to She- (this month which will give each Mrs. Ottinger told officers she
party its nominees for office, awoke and found her bedroom in
High in voter interest was the flames. She ran to the kitchen.
Record Vote Looms in County
As Oklahomans Flock to Polls
‘ * 9
in a
82 p skies and high temperatures |
fh to encourage the big vote. j n
-ip Wirephot. "I’m sure we'll make a new rec Ik
ord,” said Mrs. Inez Gilson, county1 "I
registrar I
There were 67,319 votes cast in —
the July 4 primary in 1950 and
, .. ■ -------- 34, writing names of legislative RUPERT, Idaho IP — Irrigated city lawyer, and Raymond Fields, - ■ „ . _ । -----— -
Keating said in an accompanying candidates on ballots in early vot- farms valued at $10,006 each were Guymon publisher, are rated top Walter G- Hayes, 60, of Prasue ray. (Page 3)
I ... .printi *e Tor Eeve he.pre _ 2b/.60.Y erani.! emdax.nn ।
■ tive district. The precinct is in the two Oklahomans. FePIn k Snarks Wood .he,was ki lled late Sunday.
of any light which might have been seventh legislative district. t The Oklahomans are George .CarlinNqugnschwandrr
"We got it changed just as soon Pratt. Texhoma and Bynum Wi to be top man, der the Washita river bridge on
as we found out about it. Box hams. Elk City. More than 5.000 What had appeared as a threatSH 41, eight miles east of Cordell,
, .n . n • . veterans had applied for home- - •
reached for comment. But Roger, PIEASECOEMMN° Precincts steads.
[Called Keatings statement "com- __________—--------------------
pletely baseless" and accused the __
New York Republican of violating HunA GAnInAe H pAch
Rain-charged clouds over Hollis his own fair play code in making I IdIICC OIIUIII, I I ObII
dumped .77-inch of moisture on the report public. •
Tuesday morning, died Sen. Mike Mansfield, a Demo-
about 2:30 p. m. (Details, and former delegate to th.
Page 5.)
Despite five deaths on Oklahoma
OOA DEAD ON STATE
40 V ROADS SO FAR
THIS YiAik_
cMsc?X.GtYz?
Injured to July 1 ........... 5,551
Accidents to July 1 ...............
UN, has accused the adminis-
tration of trying to "alibi" on
the issue of Indochina and on
admission of Red China to the
UN. The Montana senator says
the Republicans are trying to
saddle the Democrats with the
issues. (Page 12)
‘No GRDA Politics’
op more strength than polls indi- had predicted for the long week- Retired Admiral J. J. Clark,
end. With perfect weather for out- Gov. Murray’s nominee for gen-
ings, the safety council had fore-' eral manager of the Grand River
, . r e . . . . Scattered 1 o c a 1 thunderstorms
-usticess criticized were predicted for the extreme
For Remaining Silent easternportion of. the state
R . Wednesday. with a slight modera- „ _
WASHINGTON, July 6__T—A tion of temperatures in the Pan- tled up Tuesday likely will be
tinct after shock*, toppled walls of Sayre house judiciary subcommittee, in a handle .. the Murrays. Johnstons and Em-
downtown buildings, buckled at Johnson quoted Judge Chandler disputed, report, criticized Justice u.--
least two paved highways, cracked a, saying that Ford called him to TomC ( lark Tuesday for declining I re ■ election day
cejlings and walls and toppled mer- urge several tax cases in Nash to testify after he joined the su recorded high weather and political
. chandise from store shelve, and ville, where Chandler was sitting preme court but said it had turned temperatures throughout the state
show cases ' because of the illness of another uP no proof n{ wrongdoing by Monday. The mercury rose to 105 ers-in-law, Messina and Bill Mur-
The duake was accompanied by judge.' be dismissed. Clark while he was attorney gen degree, in Hobart, 104 in McAles- ray jr, right here in town; two
a pronounced rumbling noise de- However, Rep. Byron G Rogers, eral ter Oklahoma City baked at 98 de - sisters, Mrs. R DSergeant..at
scribed by resident, of Fallon and (D.. Colo.) issued a fiery minor The document drew immediate grees Monday Watonga and Mrs. Bessie Potter
Stockton Calif as being like 'a report in which he charged a com- fire from Rep. Byron G. Roger, (D. Coolest spot in the state Monday at Weathenord, a raft of Emer-
...........Colo ), one of the five subcommit-night was Guymon, where the mer- son kinsmen in the southwest
tee members, whir said Chairman cury fell to 66 degrees
Keating (R , N. Y.) pulled a "sneak Voter temperature, rose for a
play ’ by his "unwarranted political great-number of voters who tried
release . ; of his proposed libel- to phone the county election board
ous report ” for information Tuesday morning.
Rogers defended Clark, an ap- Lines into the office were swamped
pointee of former President Tru- with calls and the courthouse op-
erator was reporting "no lines
open" to the callers.
R I:
5 30 I:
n 1110 (.
«» N:20 a.
M 'vsa a.
off between them in the July 27
primary will be necessary to de-
termine the Democratic nominee
Gary Expected to Lead
Oklahoma short grass country Of the 16 Democrats m the race
and relatives by marriage all for the governor nomination, Ray-
over the Tahlequah and Tisho- mond Madill state senator,
mingo reaches of esstern Okla- appears favored to lead the ticket
homa in the first primary, William O.
Coe is rated second in the race
of publie safety, said traffic was 9
particularly heavy Monday night, em
mm}
THAT’S IN addition to her Seen with a possibility of a run-
'S- husband, Johnston, and her off spot are Bill Logan, Lawton
father in-law, W. H. Murray, state senator; Ti-... 7.”
who has himself dabbled in poli- Oklahoma City, former city man- cue.
ties from time toA1™. ager, and W C. Doenges, Bartles- midnight with degree of satis-
Now you take the Cartwrights, ville and Tulsa car dealer. ; faction
whose candidat. Wiburn.isabid. Mrs. Wilie E. Murray, the gov The five deaths were exactly
d n • ernor’s wife, would have to devel. half what the state safety council
Tuesday to bring its expeditionary later Tuesday.
force in Indochina up to its full, With only 15 days left to achieve
pre-Dien Bien Phu strength. his announced goal of an Indochina
NEW YORK, July 6—UP—Amer- in addition to assuring the secur- ceasefire by J uly 20, Mendes-
i wasity of the Hanoi area, the action France won approval of a plan to
______...._____________ . ____5 am was aimed at showing the world reinforce and safeguard the secur-
be accompanied by an electric dis- cst) aboard the Queen Mary after that France is not headed for a ity of the French expeditionary
plav. his five - month "Crusade for "peace of capitulation" in Indo-force, the sources said.
Temperatures, except in the Pan- Christ in seven European coun- china By filling in the thinned French
pcss - handle is expected to range from tries where he preached to more The decision was disclosed by rank, with professional soldier,
.. r,1 , n it "*100 to 105, thpn 2 5 million persons. sources present at the two hour, from North Africa, occupied Ger-
Ask Today a Pollen — The weatherman predicts joo de- Baptists'representative, planned and 45 minutes cabinet session at many and metropolitan France,
'greet for Oklahoma City bothjlateito give the handsome, 35-year-old the foreign ministry under the the government would bring the
Tuesday and late Wednesday. It revivalist a dockside welcome in chairmanship of premier and for-expeditionary force roughly up to
- ------ - - -- -r .... —.. -- ......... mas "triumphant eign minister Pierre Mendes- the level of strength it had before
.74; total, here Tuesday. Low, Tuesday night tour” which covered Britain. Swed- France. it suffered its stunning defeat at
varr ora +n ka aL. •A. ..2aL Wa__1__' ______j m . a » ■ ■ —---- **
.jugb
.. 11
IMF
... 4
"m
f -
jr . Oklahoma City, was in charge nre department and directed lire- me, it. (Page 5)
of the men, all member, of Com- men to the blaze. । ... 1 n ....
and 10 miscellaneous in-laws. pany 1. Stilwell. Theflamesswereconfirnedto.the High Props Hit
550 000 Votes Seen southeast bedroom of the one-story
HAT MEANS nearly 5 000 Seasoned political observers pre- brick home. ( hief Marr, estimat-
. eelueu .e.ao. poeu votes, not counting fos- dieted around 500,000 Democrat ed damage at $500 to the house
and 10 to 15 degree, above normal ter relative,, courtesy kiss in' and voters and perhaps 50.000 Repub- andt 8500, to furniture. ,
votin' cousins, supporters too licans would go to the polls in assumed .me cause
voung to vote for Daddy, and Tuesday'., primary, first of two smoking in bed,” he said.
• : __ 1.a ■ .a a - a a Mrg netinner tele ACCicc
DON'T MISS YOUR
TAVOMTE PAPERS
AB Enjoy the news
from home
while you en-
MBMF joy your vaca-
Y tion You can
“/ have The
Oklahoman and Times sent
to you by mail at no extra
cost just contact your car-
rierboy or local agent to
arrange for this special
service. Avoid that last min-
ute rush. Do it today.
Oklahoman & Times
8:30 P. m.
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g: 5
rs t m
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I 1
1 Te
cp "
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 65, No. 128, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1954, newspaper, July 6, 1954; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1992112/m1/1/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.