Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 225, Ed. 3 Friday, October 26, 1951 Page: 1 of 12
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VOL. LXII. NO. 225.
ll
HOME EDITION
PRICE FIVE CENTS
U. S. Cheek
Power
in
Is $28,260
Dud Here
As Tories Cinch Victory
k1
Near End of Vote Count
dae
It didn't take S. R Haiko. op- +
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6273,
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mons. Some of the districts still out were impregnable Con-
seats and cinching the election.
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British Socialist Raps
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For Cooler Saturday
LONDON, Oct. 26—(P)—Herbert Morrison folded
rains Saturday, Mr. Maughan's fore-
1
casters said as
weather off the menu for Okiaho-
to extend the traditional thanks to his local elections
5
C
arms and waited.
I
*
to 65
southeast. High Saturday will range
and closed Municipal airport, Will
Rogers field to all plane traffic for
a
The freezing weather headed for
Oklahoma City’s Classen station
Most of the Conservative candi
and Ardmore, .10; Chandler and
The 12-day-old waterfront walk-
FOR SUNDAY
docking operations in Boston.
WANT ADS
BLACKWELL, Oct 26—an—Serv-
1
IS
It is the second extension of the
church here Saturday for William
injuries.
The car, driven
V.
the victim’s
NOON TOMORROW
husband, Clarence
Shelby, 35,
Sell, trade, rent, hirel
i
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26—4-
census in Texas and an in-
Women .. .....
be involved in Friday’s test
§
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Blackwell Services Set
For Former Legislator
from 40 northwest to 65 southeast.
Fog moved into the city at 7 a. m.
Waurika Given
$14,400 Grant
Stormy Weather
Cancels A-Drop
At Last Minute
UN Shoots Up
5 More MIGs
Vinita Woman
Dies in Crash
ed to parliament. His next public
appearance probably will be
when he receives the historic
kCALL 2-1211
M for MWam Aa"
Allies Reject Buffer
Costing Strategic Areas
F
-
Tulsa, .08; Vinita, .07; Chickasha
and Guymon, .05; Elk City and
Idabel, .04;
Altus, Guthrie, Okmulgee and
Paula Valley, .03; Geary, Shawnee
and Ada, .02; Hobart, .01, and Fred-
erick, Lawton, Waurika, Ponca City
and Clinton, a trace.
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Infantry Moves Up
In Rugged Combat
U. S EIGHTH ARMY HEAD-
QUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 26— IP—
a
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bp
Made Czech Envoy n
•MOSCOW, Oct 2^-The So F reeze Stalls
(
King’s Summons Due
Soon, Perhaps
Late Today
{
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4
Traditionally, the king’s represen-
tative in Canada holds office for
of the Liberals were support-
ing Tories in districts where
the Liberal party had no can-
didates of its own this year.
Indications early in the second
day of counting were that he would
have a margin of 30 or more votes
in the house of commons—far more
comfortable than the slim Labor
margin which had wavered be-
tween four and seven in Labor's
last 18 months of rule.
5
“Unless you give order, I will
say nothing at all,” Morrison said
angrily.
“Hooray," the booers shouted
back.
Morrison didn't budge. He said
he would "retire from the micro-
phone" without moving the cus-
tomary vote of thanks and would
ask his defeated Conservative op-
ponent to take over.
The Conservative said he was
sorry and asked Morrison to
overlook the incident and try
again. But Morrison still wouldn’t
budge. He just sucked his pipe
and glared.
But the communist candidate,
who had polled only 578 of Lew-
isham's 57,000 votes, moved
quickly into the political vacuum.
He grabbed the microphone and
said that since no one else would
do it, he would move the vote of
thanks to the polling officials.
Morrison went home.
as much as 15 miles. Their proposal countered Thursday’s
UN suggestion for a buffer zone generally along present
Flood Rehabilitation
Aid Pledged by State
Nearly 315,000 of federal flood
rehabilitation funds will be sent
to Cotton county, LeRoy Powers,
attorney for Gov. Murray, an-
nounced Friday.
Approval has been received for
grants of 30,000 to the city of Wau-
rika, 35,000 for Cotton county and
3400 for Waurika schools.
The money will come from a
3100,000 relief appropriation ad-
vanced to Oklahoma through the
federal housing and home finance
agency after floods last summer.
Checks will probably be mailed out
next week.
Appropriations totaling 340,000
have already been made to Miami
and Ottawa county for damages
caused when the Neosho river went
out of banks.
Also expected to get funds are
areas in Kay county damaged by
Chikaskia river flood overflows.
tween 150 and 160 jets in MIG al-
ley over northwest Korea and near
MUNSAN, Korea, Oct. 26—(P)— The allies Friday
quickly rejected a communist buffer zone proposal that the
UN give up such bitterly won Korean areas as Heartbreak
ridge. . . . Punchbowl.. . . Iron triangle.
The Reds wanted the United Nations forces to withdraw
ma City. It will be a lot cooler,
however, Saturday.
High in Oklahoma City Friday
will be near 72, compared with 67
at the airport and 68 at the Classen
station Thursday. Low overnight
will be near 44, cooler than the 57
at both stations Friday morning
High Saturday will be in the low-
er 60s.
Scattered showers or thunder-
storms Friday and overnight will
be followed by rains Saturday here
must be ended immediately.”
The mediators withdrew after
Joseph P. Ryan, president of the
AFL International Longshoreman’s
association, pulled his non-striker
group out of the peace talks.
dates regained their seats by larg-
er majorities than they had in
1950.
out has crippled the vast port of
New York, including piers in New
atomic radiation being carried over
Las Vegas and other populated
areas. Las Vegaa is 75 miles away.
vitation of Gov. Soto Maynez of
the state of Chihuahua.
put the 1951 Oklahoma traffic toll
51 ahead of last year.
City Cafe Man Jolted,
Moves to Correct
Army Error
By PAUL ROBARTS
WHAT WOULD you do if you
" opened a letter, properly
addressed to you, and it contain-
ed a U. S. treasury check for
$28,260 18?
five years.
7,711,194 Texans
T ONDON, OCT. 26—P—Win-
— ston Churchill drove to his
The patrol removed the name of
Eugene Florer, 47, Tub
traffic toll when it was
died of a heart
the North Korean capital of Pyong-
yang. But some of the Reds fled.
i
yrior to a traffic
luskogee.
2939
I
82 i
The vote Thursday was heavy,
but in districts counted Thursday
night, it was slightly under last
year’s. In that election, a total of
28,769,477 balloted. This year a
half-million new voters—most of
them young people just turned 21
—had been added to the rolls.
Extended Term Seen
For Governor-General
OTTAWA, Oct. 26—CP—Viscount
Foreign Secretary Morrison Elected, Refuses
To Give Thanks at Noisy Town Hall
► 1
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7
For a time good voting weather keyed up Labor hopes,
but at the close of counting Thursday night, the mass-circu-
lation Daily Mirror, most widely read of the pro-Labor news-
papers, gloomily conceded that “bar miracles, it’s a Tory
victory.”
The trend that began to show up in the first-day count-
ing became more and more marked as districts began tallying
their votes early Friday. It appeared that about two-thirds
“I just called the secret service
and told them to send a man
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Late Returns Assure Defeat I Churchill
Of Labor Party; Action Due ,
Tonight on New Government Waiting
Victim Is Thrown Out
Of Overturning Auto
STATE TRAFFIC DEATHS
1951 to date, 448; October, 53.
1950 to date, 397; October, 44.
A Vinita womar was killed on
U. S. 66 near her home late Thurs-
ing to say about the incident.
But Haiko had his receipt, which
indicates the secret service has
Bl
wwoo
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„C-ddMi
voted not to “work” any ship car-
goes diverted there from New
York, effective Friday.
Union dockers in sympathy with
the wildcatters maintained the
Mild temperatures and showers
Friday will be followed by cold
bands of 76. going on 77, would
be asking for slippers and the
rocking chair. But her husband to
jut about to start another areer
as prime minister. He will be the
, second oldest in British history.
She is accustomed to his
boundless energy, late hours,
sturdy appetite and after dinner
brandy.
Like her husband she has
never grown old in spirit. And
there is far more than a trace
left of beautiful Clementine
8
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Winston Churchill and Mrs. Churchill pause Friday at
their home in Hyde Park section of London as they leave
for Woodford to watch the counting of ballots in
Thursday’s voting.
Oklahoma back of a cold front
from Canada stalled in Kansas and
Mr. Maughan's forecasters said the
delay would give the air a chance
to warm up before reaching this
area.
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Churchills Off to Check PITReuits "
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LAS VEGAS, Nev., Oct. 26—(n—
A scheduled atomic bomb drop was
called off Friday with planes in the
air, presmuably ready to loose
their nuclear weapons.
The AEC said storm conditions
over the big testing range north-
west of here failed to improve as
rapidly as had been expected.
The AEC had scheduled the sec-
ond of a series of tests here after
rains and high winds subsided
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the check.
, -----------. -----. r----- And it’S a fair deduction that
battle lines. the next move is up to the army
Maj. Gen. Henry I. Hodes told the Reds their proposal finance office in Chicago.
horererrtlatonhtctothgumilitary line of contact and did Soviet Wheel Horse
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Oklahoma City Times
I aid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
_____Eattonot The Daliy‘Oklahoman.) entered at Oklahoma City. Oxishoma, Postottioe M vecond dass mal matter ander th. not of Mareh 1, 18m.
s
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officials Friday. He said the Tories were too rowdy.
Morrison, foreign secretary in the socialist govern-
ment, got back into parliament as representative from
Lewisham. The announcement of his victory set off a
noisy demonstration at Lewisham town hall.
The tough little man with the heavy mop of hair got
up to speak, and the cheers died down but not the boos.
Morrison just folded his ---------------—
Mrs. Josephine Paynter Shelby, _ ------- e---------
34, was killed instantly when she Jersey, and also has closed down
was thrown from the rolling car "-
and the vehicle rolled over her,
trooper J. E. Carl of the highway
erator of a W Grand cafe long
to answer the question.
Thursday night. But officials felt islatre
Friday conditions still were too un-
E. Knapp, 84, Kay county pioneer governor-general’s term, which
and former member of the legisla- originally was to have expired last
ture who died late Wednesday April but was set forward one year,
night at his farm southeast of here. T-2"2
Only tight party discipline had
— —-- • , -------- --------- --u-- kept the Labor government from
they-pulled freezing his arms, took a few defiant puffs at his pipe and refused falling time after time under steady
• forAklehe + evtend the •-nditi—i .1—1._ , .... Conservative attack, led by Church-
servative strongholds, insuring Churchill of at least 315 summons from Buckingham pal-
seats and cinching the election. ace to become prime minister
*11
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The Fifth airforce said all its
jets returned safely from three sep- i
arate air battles in which 68 allied
planes tangled with 121 MIGs.
I g
1
extended several months beyond
______________ _____ next April 12, reliable sources said
ices will be held at the Methodist Friday.
AFTER 43 YEARS of marriage
!• - to a legend nothing uton-
ishes Mrs. Churchill. Most hus-
Churchill was winning through despite a vigorous Labor
campaign which had been capped by frequent opposition
charges that the World war II coalition prime minister is
more likely than Attlee to lead the country into a new world
conflict.
-
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g, • , ’■ i —P Wirephote.
Soviet Flag Slashed at UN Ceremony
This Russian flag, grouped with that of all other mem-
bers of the United Nations for a UN anniversary cele-
bration Thursday in Denver’s civic center, was slashed
by an unidentified man just before it was to be hoisted.
Temporary repairs were made and it was raised with
the other flags.
CLOSING TIME
3lZAGES-500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1951
Churchill Back
payee, Haiko said Thursday was
some slicer manufacturer in In-
diana.
“I just knew it wasn’t mine
and all I was trying to do was
get rid of it and get it into prop-
er hands just as quickly as pos-
sible," he said, pointing out that
he has a receipt from secret serv-
ice for the check
gow DID the army finance of.
i -- fice in Chicago happen to
send him the check in the first
place?
"You see I feed army person-
nel here and at the end of each
month send the tickets into the
army finance office in Chicago
and when they get around to it
they send me a U. S. treasury
check to pay the bill,” Haiko
said Thursday. “So when the let-
ter came I just thought it was
payment for the meals the sold-
iers had eaten. My wife opened
it and let out a small screech.
। Then I called secret service.”
5 Haiko said the letter was not
A
L J
Churchill, just turning 77, rode back toward the prime
ministership of Great Britain Friday on a Tory tide which
overtook the early Labor lead shortly after the halfway mark
in the counting of votes in Thursday’s general election.
NEw vnov n.oc, . .. and over the state. Highs Friday
PEW. .OKK, Oct.. 26--(A)—Federal mediators have will range from 60 to 70 and lows
United Nations infantrymen at- ..... .. .—7------ f-, --vuu- w „ aolaagwu ana ciosea mu
tacked against stiffening resistance Thursday night after top conciliator Clyde M. Mills an-Rogers field to
northwest of Yonchon in the west nounced : “We’re giving up. This is a dispute which must be several hours,
and in the area southeast of Kum- aolved within the union. This situation ia intolerable and" ~ ‘
All told, UN fighters sighted be- . NE ” --Kk, vct. 4b—(A)—Federal mediators have will lange auzs J w ,u auu
abandoned efforts to end New York’s crippling wildcat dock overnight from 35 northwest
strike amid claims by insurgent union leaders that the walk-
out will spread to still more east coast ports.
__ The four-man mediation panel returned to Washington
gt.L12 , -a running fight with the school land
ms mzmsarutxsgzas
m... ence on the same problem with than in 1850, the date of the first
The AEC said no troops were to Gov. Murray at the capitol just be- federal ‘ ~
. e fore his death Wednesday. crease of 1,296,370 over 1940.
Knapp, who served in the 17th
and 19th sessions of the state leg-
-----j was best known for his
F
A
Alexander’s term of office as gov- , . _
ernor-general of Canada has been ish society who married the Boer
war correspondent and aspiring
young politician Winston Church-
ill in 1908.
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540383 7
A Tory party spokesman said as soon as Churchill is T ONDON, OCT. 26——Win-
declared the winner, he will go to Buckingham palace Friday — ston Churchill drove to his
I night to receive the king’s request to form a new government constituency at Woodford Friday
With 21 of the nation’s 625 election districts to be heard to.hear himseif officially re-elecb
from, the Conservatives held 310 seats in the house of com-
The early Labor margin from the cities, which had put
Prime Minister Attlee’s Laborites 30 seats ahead at the close
of counting Thursday night, was not enough to offset the
heavy Conservative advantage in the rural areas, bastions of
Tory strength.
Tories Gain Steadily on ‘Down Country’ Vote
The Tories crept up steadily throughout the day as the
“down country” count poured in, and gloom settled over
Laborite headquarters. Long before the Conservatives over-
took the Labor vote, Attlee’s party appeared to have resigned
itself to changing places with the Tories and starting out
in the new parliament as “his majesty’s loyal opposition.”
Union rebels struck over their
---a-z.-x.-• uuy, demand for re-negotiation of s re-
ran off the right side of the pave- cently approved wage contract
ment and when Shelby attempted with east coast shippers. The con-
to pull back on the slab turned tract calls for 32.10 an hour, a 10-
over. Shelby escaped with minor cent wage boost. The rebels wsnt
a 25-cent hourly raise.
The demand immediately was
from the turned down by Ryan, lfetime
arned he head of the ILA, who pointed to
attack suffered the two-to-one ratification of the
i accident near pact by 65,000 longshoremen work-
ing docks from Maine to Virginia.
What’s inside
Crossword .......... 29
Forum............... 21
Markets ......... 29
Oil Reports ........... 37
Radha Log ........... V
Society ............... 18
Sports ............... 32-33
Town Talk I • 1111« • 11« 13
TV Topics ............ 29
Vital Statistics........ 13
Hosier, granddaughter of the
earl of Airlie and belle of Brit-
The communists made no mention of their previous de-
mands for a demarcation line along the 38th parallel. Appar-
ently they have abandoned the viet government Friday announced
iT p ,,, the appointment of deputy foreign
The Red offer and UN rejection minister A. 1. Lavrentiev as the
came at the second meeting of new Soviet ambassador to Czecho-
subcommittees trying to agree on Slovakia.
a cease-fire line. The meetings are The government relieved M. A.
। held in Panmunjom. Silin from the Prague post. Lavren-
Under the Red proposal. they tiev has been one of the most im-
would keep Kaesong, former site portant officials in Soviet foreign
of truce talks two miles south of affairs.
the 38th parallel. They would; p "
withdraw from part of Ongjin pe- noad Meeting Slated
ninsula on the west coast, an area AUSTIN e,. .. ,g _
Allied jet pilots Friday shot down thealties describe as militarily un- Gov. shivers will attend a
two Russian-made MIGs and dam Pe subcommittees meet again at highway meeting in Chihuahua
aged three others in the sixth! -hesubcommittefsmeet again at City, Mexico, next Tuesday on in-
LONDON, Oct. 26—(AP)_On the basis of almost com- Cfimmfinil
plete election returns, Winston Churchill’s Conservative — -- --------
party has swept back into power, ending the Labor party’s
six-year Socialist rule.
Others to Refuse Work had a trace of rain Friday mn™
xoSsrhasgdecnd samp
In Philadelphia Thursday night,
four ILA longshoremen’s locals
The Weather
Prom the UMM states Weather Burenu
LOCALCTody-twith OCCS-
sional showers or thundershow-
ers this afternoon, tonight and
Saturday. Continued mild this
afternoon with high near 72.
Cooler tonight with low near 44.
Cooler Saturday with high in
lower 60s.
ST ATI—Occasional light to
moderate rain tonight; colder
west and north tonight; Satur-
day cloudy and colder; with
showers and local thunderstorms
east and south; low tonight 35-
40 northwest to 60-65 southeast;
high Saturday 40-45 northwest
to 6065 southeast.
EXTENDED—’ Tempera t u r e s
will average 4 to 6 degrees be-
low normal Saturday through
Wednesday. Normal maximums
66-68, minimums 38-43. Only
minor fluctuations of tempera-
ture with no important trend in-
dicated. Precipitation will aver-
age hear a half inch with oc-
casional rain over the state Sat-
urday and Sunday.
Hourly Temperature
illi
again.
The “former naval person” has I
been waiting for the command I
from King George for a long time I
—ever since he was defeated in I
the general election of 1945. I
Now with victory clinched the I
old warrior practically can count I
the hours before the king asks I
him to form a new government I
WJHEN CHURCHILL was de- I
*’ feated in 1945 he was at I
the palace to hand over the seals I
of office as soon as victory was I
no longer possible. Prime Min- I
ister Clement R. Attlee is ex- l
pected to follow the same custom I
snd his successor may kiss the I
king’s hand in traditional pledge I
of fealty before the night is out I
Churchill had only six hours I
sleep Thursday night He stayed I
awake until 4 a. m. (10 p. m. CST) I
studying returns and was “pretty I
happy” about them, according to I
an associtae, by the time he went I
to bed. He left a call for 10a.m. I
(4 a. m. CST) to give himself a I
little time to work and for con- I
sultation before driving to Wood- l
ford, just outside London, where I
the count of votes was announe- I
st 12:30 p. m. (6:30 a. m. CST).
TT was a THRILLING night I
- even for a hardened cam- I
paigner of 54 battle-scarred years |
of politics. Over his radio he
heard throngs surging through
Piccadilly and Trafalgar Square
shouting “We want Churchill"
with the same enthusiasm that
marked their admiration during
the war.
Outside his house at 28 Hyde
Park Gate another crowd shouted
for a glimpse of “the new prime
minister.”
But surrounded by family and
such friends as Lord Woolton,
chairman of the Tory party, and ’
the marquis of Salisbury, Tory
leader of the house of lords, he
lingered over brandy and cigars
discussing the shape of the vot-
ing and did not show himself.
IHERE WAS A FAMILY duty
- or two to perform. He con-
gratulated one son-in-law, Dun-
can Sandys, on his re-election to
commons. And he consoled his
son Randolph, 40, who lost a
close fight with Bevanite Michael
Foot.
Mrs. Churchill seemed to have
a little figuring of her own to do.
It wouldn’t surprise anyone if
she were wondering how much
10 Downing street has been al-
tered since the Churchill’s were
dispossessed in the election of
1945 But the wives, of former
army officers know how to pack
and move fast. And Mrs. Chrch-
ill is ready to go back to Down- D
ing street at a moment’s notice. H
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Albany Port Reopened
.. -. . .. ------. Hie port of Albany, N. Y., closed
patrol said. She suffered a broken for two days by wildcat strikers,
neck, skull fracture and internal reopened Thursday after the men
voted to return to work.
.7-
> ‘ $ v ■ /
■ in
registered or otherwise protect-
ed except for the government 06 me
Reds Suggest Move From Heartbreak Ridge, Friday morning Haiko was re- 3 •
Other Vital Points; Another Parley Scheduled chesknr
government which might have
had some connection with the
mixup. And the regulation-re- , A
stricted secret service had noth-
vw- /%
But Rains Due Boos, Calls Off Speech
State Forecast Calls I
— J
.1
and destroyer were hit last week Mediators Quit Effort
by Red shore fire and one man -
was killed and six wounded. riv c I m I I .
l o Solve Dock Dispute
A., ' .
A- . .
s
■
M . . A
T""m
-
down here to get the check and .
do it quickly,” Haiko recalled. -
The check was from the U. S. i
army finance offices in Chicago
and the envelope was addressed
to his cafe. it was learned Thurs- —3
day. Everything was regular on —02
its face except for the payee of .ad
the check and the amount. The aasd
00777
<
ill’s withering oratory.
Churchill Wins Seat
The Tories are pledged to carry
on much of the program that At-
tlee’s Laborites initiated, but there
likely will be a halt to much of the
socialist experimenting.
The Conservatives have prom-
ised to halt the nationalization of
iron and steel, already in its ini-
tial stives under Labor direction.
Churchill himself won easily in
his own constituency, Woodford,
polling 40,398 votes against 22,359
for the Laborite, W. A. Archer;
871 for the communist, J. R. Camp-
bell, and 851 for independent A.
Hancock. Churchill's plurality was
18,579, a gain of 80 votes over Feb-
ruary, 1950, the last general elec-
tion.
Attlee Also Victor
Prime Minister Attlee also won
his seat easily. So did the Liberal
party leader, Clement Davies.
The Tories, for the most part,
held the districts they captured in
1950, but Labor lost in many of the
ones it took in the last election.
PXAS2,EVELT% - UN
V N
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A X. -
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day night when the car she wss __________ ___
riding in went out of control and standing vote was, in effect, a
rolled over four times. Her death strike vote.
E Ngp F"g-223E2
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. =----4
straight day of aerial dogfights; PL*Aa TURN to Allieg
over Korea. On the ground UN in- r 1 comwoi s_____________
fantrymen advanced in hand-to-
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 225, Ed. 3 Friday, October 26, 1951, newspaper, October 26, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1995508/m1/1/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.