Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 180, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1951 Page: 3 of 20
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
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Apparently it will cost about $230,-
SUITS... better
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because they’re
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WATCH
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repairs
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1 0 U R C A f 011 J t a H f •
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R 0 R . M S
CASH
YOU
RECEIVE
America co-operated with Britain in
the early part of World war II by
turning over naval destroyers to this
country in the famous lend-lease deal.
YOUR SIGNATURE ONLY
CAR OR FURNITURE CAN GET CASH TODAY
MLP
UKK
The six district judges here, who
hold the strings on court funds total-
ing more than 1175.000, have indicated
they might be wiling to help the
But Tuesday morning motorists
had had a change of heart. Most
driven were slowing down for in-
OTHER AMOUNTS IN PROPORTION
UP TO 14 MONTHS ON GOVEENMENT EXEMPT
IOANS. NO BROKERAGE oa MIDDEN CHARGES.
FAST ONE-VISIT SERVICE. COMS IN OK PONE
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Kerr s third floor Dress Shop,
also Kerr s l ‘ptown Store
bur sou CAN^r aaregt
OADOY, MILD/. • -AFTER
ALL HE DONE FOR YOU /
■ • • GIVING YOU A JOB /
-fl
TRADED
‘ IN: —
Pullman and choir cor service, also
dmer featuring Fred Horvey meals.
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3 daily trains
from Oklahoma City
1
is easy
going
1J WELL, HE
7 BOUGHT A NEW
- RFRIGERATOR
AND WE’RE HERE
7
impeccably tailored of
finest wool flannel for fall
obeying the 20-mile-an-hour limit
through school sones ‘
A check of driving conditions at
Emerson, Wilson, Edgemere, Horace
WA
la
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The school Mine speed limit was
raised from 15 to JO miles an hour
last year.
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UP TO $2000
COMPARE i SAVE
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little children sometimes forget to
; be careful. The driver must think
| for himself and the child, too."
A number of school intersections
were found completely unprotected
as students took their chances cross-
ing streets.
There hasn’t been a sehool child
killed in a school zone in the last
11 years, but s number of school-
age children have been killed near
schools after school hours.
—.00—-.
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Crystals soe
Rock Cryatal SI
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from the governor of Georgia and said
that formal murder charges already
have been filed in Fulton county,
Georgia, ’
7
a
000 to air condition the courthouse,
county commissioners learned Tues-
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commissioners "if everything looks all
right."
Murder Suspect Taken
By Georgia Officers
Two officers from the homicide
squad of the Atlanta, Ga. police de-
partment arrived here Tuesday to re-
Kerr s fourth floor Sport Shop.
also Kerrs Ufflown Store
,2
. “When you take 40,000 children.
, 90.000 drivers. 13,000 bicycles and
about 2,000 motor scooters and throw
them on the streets the day after
a three-day holiday, it‛s a miracle
• when somebody doesn’t get killed or
. • AHO WHAT ABOUT
MEf. . HOW CAN
YOU OO THI$ IF.
> You LOVE ME ?
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Wine, moss green
10 Io 18.
Given Gty Nod
A contract between the city, and
the state health department, under
which the state will care for persons
who must be isolated for treatmient of
communicable contagious diseases, was
approved with one major revision by
the city council Tuesday.
It is to go before a group of state
officials for final acceptance Septem-
ber 11.
The original draft of contract pre-
pared by the state health department
specified the city would have to pay
for transient persons treated in the
isolation ward regardless of what part
of the state they came from.
This provision was eliminated by the
council on grounds that the city could
not legally accept that responsibility.
Under the contract the city would pay
the state 120 a day for each day a
patient is hospitalized in the isolation
ward, but this would apply only to
those patients certified for treatment
by city health authorities.
When the new plan goes into ef-
fect, the city will close the isolation
hospital it now operates at a cost of
about 120,000 a year in an old build-
ing on state land south of Lincoln
park.
CALL: Santa F< Ticket OfflCt,
Telephone 2-2501
112 N. Robinson St
O5lahoma City 2, Oklahoma ,
R F Emanuel, Dirn. Pasi. Agent
news for fall...
you'll wear it as a suit...
as a two-piece dress!
MILO DANE /-IP YOU
ARREST DADOY JUST
6ECAUGE YOU BELIEVE
JANE AROENSWILD
. STORIES • • A-L
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Clark’s a Big Bov Now—Give Him a Real Chan ce.
Clark Evans Cramer is just 5 but Tuesday he became a man. This was the day he had been
waiting for. his first day in school. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Cramer 1114 Fenwick place,
have more than a passing interest in traffic safety because Cramer is assistant manager of the
Oklahoma City Safety council. Clark Evans started to Nichols Hills school Tuesday and before
he left home his mother, shown with the boy, stopped on the driveway to point out the dangers
of running in front of an automobile
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injured.” Hollingsworth said.
and grey check tweed. Sizes
hFAST
PPh SERVICE
thel
ully cut to
ilannel with
"Motorists must remember that
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assistant safety council
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"The Gift Horse," a story of how
‘Gift Horse' Hila Snag
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day
That is the estimate made by a firm
of consulting engineers. The county
heads are waiting for another concern
to make its estimate before taking de-
cisive action.
. The figure includes air conditioning
of the first six floors of the court-
house Commissioners agreed earlier
the top two floors, used for the coun-
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REFRIGERATOR
Slow Up
PEACE is for the strong...
BUY U. S. Defense Bonds!
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LONDON, Sept 4—(P— Hollywood
actor Robert Stack said Tuesday that
he had been refused a permit by the
British Labor ministry to make a
movie in this country. The movie is
ya,
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Ch
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Dandruff and Itchy Scalp "
HEAVENER. OKLA.-Mrs. J.
E. W ray, Box 492, Heavener, Okla.,
says: "I have used Baker’s Hair
Tonic for over a year, and know
how wonderful it is. It is hard for
a person who has not used Baker’s
to believe what it will do, so I say
to all who are bothered with
dandruff or itchy scalp just use one
bottle of Baker’s Hair Tonic. They
will never be without it again. That
is the way I feel about it.”
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terseetions around
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Lives of 40,000 City
Pupils at Stake
in Traffic
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the ground near an automobile parked
by a drive-in restaurant. The boy Cramer.
started to run when the policeman manager, worked around schools cau-
tioning driven and students as well.
( YOU FORGET i'm
THE OIGTRICT
\ ATTORNEY,
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7-7995
131 w cam
We reline re-install with
magnesium rod guarantee
Licensed-Bonded-Insured
Cooper Gasheat Co
Since 1930
7-4705
By Bob McMillin
PORTY thousand students went to
F school here Tuesday morning-
many of them for the first time—and
90,000 motorists were charged with
the responsibility of seeing that they
escaped injury.
When Oklahoma City motorista
drove to work, most of them remem-
bered this was the opening day of
school. The majority of the drivers
obeyed speed laws in and around
schools, but a few drove as if on
their way to a fire.
The entire police motorcycle
squad was on duty Tuesday morn-
ing for the opening of school. They
were patroling school streets and
on boulevards elose to schools.
Fifty-two school policemen were on
duty at dangerous school intersec-
tions. but many warning signs had
not been placed in streets to warn
motorists of school tones.
At# a. m.. a city truck was still
delivering signs and in many in-
stances the signs were sitting on
parkways. They normally are placed
in the center of streets so as to be
easily seen.
T OCAL driving habits Tuesday were
L in sharp contrast to those ob-
served in a spot check last Thursday
morning, the day elementary stu-
dents enrolled.
Last week, cars were speeding
through intersections near schools,
passing in school tones and parking
in no-parking tones
At that time. Dan Hollingsworth,
manager of the Oklahoma City
Safety council. remarked that if mo-
torists continued to drive in that
, manner, almost anything could hap-
l pen.
8 7
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1 MONTHLY
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Plan to Share
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Isolation Cost
ardley . . . the impeccable traveler ... finest
annel or tweed. Beautifully band tailored,’ youth-
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turn Robert Mahoney, 21, to Georgia
' to face murder charges.
The officers, W. 8. Acree and J. M.
Peck. said Mahoney Is wanted in con-
nection with the murder of Hulbert
Holloway. The man was arrested here
Saturday by agents Qf the FBI on an
unlawful flight warrant and was taken
to Shawnee where he pleaded inno-
cent before Harry Price. U. 8. com-
■ missioner.
Motorists!
2/a7o
APACHE. Sept. 4— (Special)— T h e n .. p. VII D
Farmers Union Co-operative has re- Folice Uhase KlllS DOV
ceived Apache's first bale of 1951 col- J
ton. The cotton was grown by Willard NEW ORLEANS, Sept 4—(P—A
Keever, htree miles west of Broxton. 15-year-old boy being chased by police
The 1,900-pound bale was half-and- was killed when a policeman stumbled |
hedordanngetk gin employes. Tel: enagzchderoraetecrvesntaliypan- Mann and Putnam Helehu schools
will receive a premium and free gin-lels reported. showed motorists are aware of open-
8 - The detective chief said patrolman Junior chamber of commerce mem
Lawrence Michel was chasing Richard bers were stationed at many inter
D. Boyer when the fatal shooting oc-1 sections. They carried placards an*
curred in a cemetery Monday night nouncing the opening of school anR
Daniels said Michel and patrolman urging motorists to drive carefully?
Joseph F. Bauman stopped to investi- ...
gate when they saw Boyer lying on PHE police department’s sound ear.
A manned by Jack Frost and Ted
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Judge Edgar 8. Vaught, federal
Judge here, signed the order and Ma-
1 1 honey started back to Georgia. The of-
ficers brought with them a warrant
Chicago
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male the most of your figure. Navy
or charcoal with white stitching.
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$u .......
WsRASKINS
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The Chicagoan Streamliner......5:00 am
No 6, Passenger........ 1:00 pm
Texas Chief Streamliner........5:55 pm
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Tulsa Job Waits on Steel
TULSA, Sept. 4—(U.P—Lack of steel
i will delay work on Tulsa’s new $1,750,-
000 YMCA building until after the
first of the year, contractor W R.
Grimshaw said Tuesday. Grimshaw
said he expects government approval
of a 500-ton steel allocation for the
building by October 15.
Convinced If s Good For
g22.8, W -
NOPE,UNCA
DONALD’S
NOT HOME:
UY
TV
' 6
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1951—THREE
— ---
48
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$105.60 $633.60 $1006 $1600
——
$10
.,,
__________________________________-
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Oklahoma City Times
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224 NW 2nd Phone 3-8457 ty Jali, could do without it.
FAMILY INVESTMENT CEETIFICATES FAY 3% PER ANNUM '
mnmuuomom
d
. . . a suit that discreetly denies being a
size over sixteen. Heavy, lustrous tail e
with clever criss-cross pockels, double
skirt pleats, lacket has self buttons and
slash cuffs. The whole . . an al lair of
slenderizing lines. Sizes 3ft to 42 and
141 to 22%. Black, brown or char-
coal grey, rhinestone starred.
| For dandruff and itchy scalp use
Baker's Hair Tonic and for clean
scalp and lustrous hair use Baker's
( "Lathernist" Shampoo. Get them
both at your drug store, barber
shop or beauty shop. You’ll be
delighted with results, or the
makers of Baker's will refund
every penny of your money.—Adv.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 180, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1951, newspaper, September 4, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1995335/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.