Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 103, Ed. 3 Saturday, June 8, 1957 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 19 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Yr
?
V ..
i
• !
1
IMES
I
VOL. LXVIH, NO. 103
I
‘Miz May*
Collegian Is Acquitted
Ma
Casts Eye
1
7
At History
In Enid’s Controversial
I
$
%s
f ■
23
Moondance Kid
Case
6
K
Killing to Stifle Kig Races
Courtroom
ei
h
Is Packed
For Verdict
Old Story:
'Grandstand' Play Hit
Woman Balks in Suicide Try
Rains For
Mother Murders Three Children
Weekend
Queen Liz
Public Indignant
Will Visit
Teen Gang Is Facing
In Fiery
Prosecution for Raid
explaining why he should not al- days instead of the planned three Hipkins took the witness stand
visor, Maj. Satnley F. Levin
se gers scrambled to safety as I women leaders huddled in
Aid Given
Senate OK
bery occurred about 10 20 p.m.
ed to the Japan Lawyers' associa-
tomatically" by the Maebashi dis-
any move to dismiss him was "en-
lover Girard), that is an entirely
he added.
"It can only serve to damage
French Premier Job
PARIS (P — Maurice Bourges-
Land Parcel High
trict bond issues. They were Ho-
eral government or with the state ation must be approved later.
courts or both.
I homa!" in Tokyo.
He Stole to Tell
What's inside
agriculture, labor and the health,
Iron Contract Due
HOURLY TEMPERATURES
:v
gtee.")
A
v.N
’ ir-
Al!.' ,
.1
■
2/
2
6-
(
1
S3.6 Millions Bill
Due Floor Action
Iraq Premier
Quits Post
Governors Aide
Wins U.S, Title
Teacher lakes On
New Personalities
To Review the Past
Junior At OSU
Is Cleared After
2 1 2 Hours of Study
Political Reshuffle
Spurred Resignation
BAGHDAD, Iraq w — Premier
YOU CAN BE
A BOOSTER!
tion at 19,000 feet, according to
the pilot, Capt. E. Q. Ford of
hended in the refuge and author-
ities here have added four more
names to the suepect list A 11 are
terror at Camp Boulder.
Five of the youths were appre-
was being discharged at the rate
of 93,000 cubic feet per second
and the lake was expected to
drop to 640 feet by Tuesday.
Landing
NORFOLK, Va. U_An East-
"I feel sure there will be some
prosecution one way or another,"
Crane added. "Howard's visit to
October Trip Set
After Ike’s Invite
Earlier testimony by Hipkins'
parents corroborated the time he
time before 10 p.m. after seeing
two movies and visiting at tne
home of his girl friend during the
freighters fought the blaze.
The blazing four-engine plane,
enroute rom Miami to Boston,
experienced the fire as it was
lying directly over the air sta-
Editorial Page
Edgar Ansel Mowrer sys sci-
) SACRAMENTO, Calif. (—Cali-
fornia's Gov. Goodwin J. Knight
do was expected to be signed by,
union and contracting representa-
The Esquire theater was robbed ’
of $1,500 last July 29 on a hot
Sunday night. A masked bandit
i
en driving charge.
Hearing Society Picks
President at Parley
p .
1
Miami
Enable to extinguish the blaze
or to control the runaway pro-
peller in the air, Ford and his
crew of five made the emergen-
cy descent and landing without
incident.
As the plane touched down on
the runway at the air station, it
was met by five navy emergen-
Water-w e a r y Oklahoma ap-
peared to be in for another soggy
weekend Saturday.
Showers and thunderstorms de-
veloped in the Panhandle Friday
night and then moved eastward.
Saturday morning, more showers
broke out in the vicinity of Alva
and Fairview and then spread
southward to around Canton,
Clinton, Hobart and west of Sny-
der.
special education at Ohio State
university.
jecting, 10 to 4, a move to cut
it $800 millions.
The amount is $227 millions less
stay on until the new cabinet is
formed, perhaps Sunday.
them teen-agers.
In spite of the late hour Satur-
day morning, there was still only
standing room. A great round of
applause went up from the spec-
tators as the verdict was read.
Judge F. B. H. Spellman held
There should be a few widely
scattered showers here through
Sunday as temperatures stay
close to the 90 mark
a
r
v
and women who write the ads
will have to dream up new sales
appeals—comfort, luxury, speci-
al features, prestige value—or
something
The industry may he confront
ed with a lot of cheating—Ford
emphasized safety while Chevro-
let pushed speed in 1955 and
1956— and Chevrolet sped away
from Ford in sales.
The decision means the death
of some auto sports events and
the downgrading in prestige and
national attention of others.
Jap ‘Miss Oklahoma’
Leaves for State
Kazuko Honda, Japan’s 19-year-
Guynn was an old hand at "con-
fsesing." He had pulled the
same thing in California and
Arizona, they said.
With no prosecution for mail
theft, Guynn had to be content
with serving out his 30-day vag-
level stood at 642 feet, two feet
above top of flood control. Water ; to select another laywer .accredit-
p
Nuri Nad resigned Saturday. in-,
formed sources said he did so to different question. ’
be able to reshuffle and strength- ""
en his cabinet.
। early in October. She will visit
Jamestown, Va—where the 350th said he arrived home.
> ■
1 (
’ ■
-uo J
living room floor. The bodies of
her daughters, Diane, 6 months,
and Deborah, 1′2. still in their
nightclothes, were discovered in
the bathtub.
The father, George, a truck
driver, was at work when the
tragedy occurred. Police said
there had been domestic diffi-
culties in the family,
Mrs. Wheeldon was rushed to
Mount Carmel hospital. incoher-
tribution, Knight sent the sponsor-
ing national equipment firm a 100-
word statement saying Miss Per-
lin had the requisites for a gover-
Weapon Found
The bags and a rusty .32 auto-
matic were found in a farm pond
early in October. Hipkins' arrest
5
6
4-5
6
7
8
1
3
Travis. x
Then to make sure the fed-
erals didn’t "slip" up again,
went to the postoffice, walked
up to E. A. Lee, postal ‘inspec-
Boise City and .60 at Woodward
The outlook for Sunday and
Monday is for continued warm
weather and more rain.
Taxoma Drops
In the far southeast corner of
the state, Lake Texoma contin-
ued to drop Saturday after reach-
ing a new all-time high earlier
said he wanted to get it off his
conscience because it was the
only crime he had comnmitted
that he hadn't been punished
for.
government check out of a ' yancy sentence,
house mailbox in Lexington. He
‛/
total outlay may be trimmed be-
fore the measure is passed.
The administration won a mo-
President Eisenhower's formal followed police investigation after
........ given to the another employe, Warren Stasny,
adamtdad — —j — *1 he
-r —-- --a * an iron-
workers strike in southern Colors-
Bridge ................
Comics ...............
Churches ............
Crossword Puzzle ....
Sports ................
Times Talk ...........
Vitals .................
Women's Psge......
accosted two girl employes, held
WASHINGTON UNS' — Authorita a gun on them and escaped with
live sources said Friday that currency and bills in several can-
1-
’J
of teaching shorthand, typing
and general business courses at
Grant.
Stock car races will continue,
but without Detroit money behind
them they may not amount to
much. The Pike's Peak hill climb
will lose half its contestants.
The Indianapolis 500-mile Mem-
orial day race will be without a
Detroit car to pace it. Although
its product is in no way involved
in the competition, bigger motor
car companies have been willing
to pick up a $200,000 tab for pro-
motion attached to furnishing a
pace car.
tickmoun such an eventuality I invitation will be given to the, another employe, Warren St
ana in sucn an eventuality, British foreign office fy American I identified the gun and said
have no doubt the court will ap- ' "oren" wm iy Amermcanl-l • - I-i--
"What an eyeful of gleam teachers had in your day, grandmother"’ Wanda Lee
May seems to be murmuring to her own image in the mirror. That 1857 dress she's
modeling was worn with 21 other pieces of clothing underneath. (Times staff photo
by Richard Cobb.)
DALLAS. (P—C. E. Hightower of virtually sewed the job up Fri-
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was award- day when a Socialist party cau-
ed a total of $650,000 Friday in । cus voted to participate in a Bour-
connection with the condemnation ges-Manoury coalition government,
of some 21 acres of land being Several other parties, notably the
used as the Dallas interchange for Popular .Republican movement,
the Fort Worth-Dallas toll road.‘took a simpilr position.
of a shiny dream.
Doris Fleeson says farmers
and ranchers are beginning to
complain about H-bomb tests.
' V i ' oortrrrrrc.; •' 1
Stan Delaplane sees a big
waste in dog appetizers--since
his pooch is always hung*
. ■
I
1, 1
,l
" 2
ago and details for the visit have
been passing back and forth be-
tween London .and Washington fo
several months now under a heavy
cloak-o secrecy.
President Eisenhower and other
Saturday morning was 65 at long message over the telephone visit the U. S —but only for six quee letters "Moondance Kid.”
lion, then the Japanese court by
law would be required to name , ..
a lawver for the soldier, aniversary of the landing o the t
'Such a step," the Japnese at- first English settlers in the U S.
torncy declared, "is required au-is. being observed—and New York
City in addition to Washington.
storms, some locally heavy, over
many sections of state through
Sunday. High 95, low 60 s. (Details,
Page 8.)
tirelj uhethical" and "contrary to
the (ode of lawyers."
"If'U had beet) decided that the
...
%
g P
Auto Makers Pul Brake on Speed
‛1
A-
More Sunday
This activity was expected to
decrease during the morning
hours but increase again Satur-
day afternoon and move slowly
eastward .The weather bureau
i
1
1 7
k
1
I - MMETG.
A.
Economy forces generally are
low himself to be represented by । weeks. • himself Friday to deny he was the
Hayashi or his military legal ad | The sources said the British gov ■ masked gunman who robbed two
visor, Maj. Satnley F. Levin ernment has already informed the girl employes of the theater.
Hayashi admitted his extreme White House that the queen will I During two hours on the stand,
surprise on learning the news. accept. Hipkins testified he arrived home
the night of the robbery some-
Labeled the "Moondance Kid"
since last October when he was
arrested on the campus of Okla-
homa State university. Hipkins
has worked side by side with his
attorney in setting up his defense.
Hipkins at one time studied crim-
inology and had professed to have
borne, in charge of the secret
service office here, got a call
from Guynn, languishing in
jail on a vagrancy charge.
When Osborne went to see
him, Guynn declared he wanted
to confess to the theft of a $75
and the formal acceptance will be
returned quickly. I afternoon and evening. The rob-
A j- . . horu ner-~A/ eknist 1A AA -
According to present plans,
Queen Elizabeth will make the trip ‘
mer district, Pontotoc county,
$19,500 for building and equip-
ment, and dependent school dis-
trict No. 32 in Pottawatomie coun-
ty, $6,000 for building and equip-
ment and $2,000 for transportation
equipment.
i
p ■ I ■
) 1 9
GI’s Japanese Lawyer
Won’t Accept Firing
TOKYO (INS) — Army Sp 3/C William S. Girard's
Japanese lawyer said Saturday he has "no intention” of
accepting his dismissal notice from the young GI accused
gored when he was shown a news
report that Girard's older brother,
Louis, extracted a promise from
his soldier-brother by trans-Pacific
telephone that he fire the Tokyo
i lawyer. Queen Elizabeth will accept Presi- vas bags. He left his signature
The heaviest rainfall reported J The soldier's brother read a dent Eisenhower s invitation to behind spelled out in theater mar-
g.The state attorney.generalso- to determine whether jurisdiction
appro would rest entirely with the fed- ly an authorization. An appropri-
believed to be Lawton boys. Mrs.
Edwin Bossman. Chickasha. a
United States had jurisdiction
LAWTON—Authorities here Saturday sought to de-
termine jurisdiction in an effort to prosecute several Law-
1 ■ the gun.
of killing a Japanese woman and who is now facing trial Doubt It Planted
in a Japanese court. The defense used character and
r.
relations between Japan and the
Political circles said the 69-year- United States.”
old premier wants to bring new * -
and stronger elements into the cab-1 Defense Chief Eyes
inet. King Faisal asked him to
, .... — u „ , „ , i ST. LOUIS (INS)—The execu-
old Miss Oklahoma, left Japan tive vice-president of the United
I by airplane Saturday for ,Oklaho-. Foundation of Detroit, Walter C.
ma s semi-centennial celebration Laidlaw, is the new president of
in Oklahoma City, June 14 through the American Hearing society.
July 7. ,, , , . I ' Laidlaw, elected Friday night at
Kazuko, who is from Fukuoka the group's annual national con-
City, Japan, was chosen from ference in St. Louis, succeeds
Japan wide entries in a contest Herschel W. Nisonger, director of
held in conjunction with the open-
ing of the RKO movie "Okla-
I ■
v
.. ■ Jurisdiction Eyed than the president had requested i
He indicated that charges may At first, the reduction was $252
be filed either in federal or state millions, but the committee added!
courts, depending upon which an unrequested $25 millions for
agency assumes jurisdiction, aid to Latin America.
Julian Howard, manager of the Delay Possible
refuge who arrested five of the committee Chairman Theodore
boys involved, conferred with T Green (D„ RD..said he hopes
County Attorney Warren C r a n e debate can begin next week.
Friday afternoon. However, there may be some de-1
Crane said Howard had in- lay, because several appropria-
formed him he was awaiting in- tions committee bills have the
instructions from his superiors right-of-way.
The pending legislation is mere-
The giant Semi-Centennial Exposi-
tion is due to open June 14. This
is your state s 50th birthday party
and the celebration is attracting
world attention.
Sunday, Line 16, the Oklahoman
is providing the public with an
Exposition Guide. This is a spec-
ial section devoted to the entire
three week program, the. location
of the various exhibits and the
acts, displays and ' excitement
available. I
in tomorrow s Oklahoman we will
have an order blank for your con-
venience in ordering this special
edition for your friends and ouV
qf state residents.
Y '
Give your support to the biggest
progress report made in this cen-
fury — send an exposition Gulde
thisweekt
. 1. . 1
gye
. 4
ig W A
I Scout leader, said about 15 boys
were involved.
Hearing Canceled
Public indignation over the May
29 incident was rising here and
punitive action against the offend-
ers is being demanded.
U. S. Commissioner Vernon
Field, who had ordered several
L
ent and suffering from gas in-
halation. The boy was apparently
slain first and police said the
girls died a few moments later.
Officers received a call from
the mother who said simply:
"I just killed my three chil-
dren.”
After giving them her address,
the woman hung up and appar-
ently went utside to await ar-
rival of police.
Film Blast
Is Too Real;
Ship Shaken
HONOLULU (P- A navy ship
carrying a Hollywood movie
cast and crew Friday narrowly
escaped what' its captain said
"could have been a very seri-
ous accident” when 11 depth
charges exploded prematurely
off its stem.
The destroyer-e s c o r t White-
hurst suffered engine room dam-
age from the blasts which sent
a wall of water more than 100
feet into the air just behind the
fantail.
"It wasn't serious but we
were lucky,” said the skipper.
Lt. Cmdr. Walter R. Smith of
Los Angeles.
Actor Robert Mitchum, who
plays a captain in a World war
II, sea battle film, "The Enemy
Below" was giving firing orders
when the depth charges went
off 40 yards astern.
Director Dick Powell and his
wife, actress June Allyson, were
on the bridge when the accident
occurred 18 miles off Pearl
Harbor.
M
mE5Bb
eligible to become a trusty. He
promptly walked off the job,
job, went to 916 NW 4 and stole
____ from a mailbox there two' let-
Osborne promptly checked ters addressed to Evelyn
with the secret service office in
Lexington. No such check had
ern Air Lines DC-7B, its left i ton youths implicated in a night raid on a Girl Scout en-
outboard engine afire and its campment in the Wichita Mountains Wildlife refuge.
SSS rumernenlydinmndeat : The youths allegedly hurled threats of assault in vul
the Norfolk naval air station gar language and exposed themselves indecently as the 21
here early Saturday and 68 pas- Girl Scouts and their five ■——
WASHINGTON (INSI—A $3,657,-
110,000 foreign aid authorization
bill was headed Saturday for sen-
ate debate amid indications the
"I can hardly believe it,” he They added that the President’s
said. formal invitation will be conveyed
Action Called Unethical to .London sometime next week
He said in the event he did at-
cept dismissal and Girard refused
has a secretary with a national agriculture, labor and the health,
title and he lent a hand in earning' education and welfare depart- l he W eather: ShUCKS;
entists cloud issue in dispute the erpwn. ments and other agencies. [
.. .. . toee " 1 . ■ . „ i - ---- Scattered showers and thunder-
about bomb tests. V I His private secretary, Miss Sa-
min
tw ice since then .He ha r a major let, Saturday was considered al-
ity of 120 in the house of deputies. most a cinch to succeed the So-
but faces a small opposition edge cialist leader as head of the French
in the senate. ; government.
| The radical-socialist — which
I really means middle - roader—
Jail-Fond Confessor Scores a Hit
-----— ------------- PUEBLO, Colo. (A contract
tional Secretary of the Year, plus that erases, the threat of
a trip to New York. As his con- ytt— --- i----——
:m ” 2
am M
LM.
■
!
‘ _L
Oklahoma City T
* >3
mittee voted to restore a house-
eliminated $500 millions authori-
zation fund to keep the soil bank
program in operation another
year. /
The/bills carry a total of $11,•
951,000.000 in new funds for the
25
CHICAGO, (CDN>—The auto
industry has agreed to install a
muffler on the horsepower race
The Automobile Manufacturers
association, meeting in Detroit,
resolved to divorce itself com-
pletely from any event suggest
ing speed
The big five auto makers went
on to slap a ban on advertising
or publicizing speed, horsepower,
engine size, torque and accelera-
tion in its cats
The resolution will put a huge
crimp in advertising. The men
. •1
• i 2
I .
A, F
I
Dick Ellis remembers the end diatPerlinad“asn
But Thursday, his first 12
days were up and he was
She was graduated in 1956
from the University of Oklahom
and, four years before that,
from Capitol Hill highschool,
where she was valedictorian of
the senior class.
At OU she won a bronze Letz-
eiser award as one of three
outstanding seniors. She was
named to "Who's Who in Amer-
ican Universities and College."
was president of Mortar boadr,
secretary of the womtn stu-
dent's association and vice-pres-
ident of the women's quad-
rangle.
As if all that weren't enough,
she was first alternate in the
"Maid of Cotton" competition
and a finalist in the "Miss
Senior” contest.
With all that personality, you'd
think she'wouldn't need to take
on four extra ones.
considered studying to be a spe-
j cial .in vestigator.
Attorney Itsuro Hayashi confirmed that he had been alibi witnesses, planting reason-
officially informed of Girard's decision to fire him. But ble doubt in the minds of the
the Tokyo lawyer said: "I.---------------------------- - - ■ ■ -
Meanwhile, the appropriations
committee has slashed nearly $1
billions off the president's requests
the office was the first time the for.three, departments.and as-
county attorney had been officially sorted nd ependenttagenc ies.
„pzc01 nt 41 nnan • Bu the administratlon Won an
notified of the case. important skirmish when the com-
American officials as well as Brit-
be able to spend at least three docket Monday morning, a drunk-
weeks touring the U. S.
'Times Northwest Bureau!
ENID— A 20-year-old Oklahoma
State university student will be
। able to return to his studies as a
junior now that he has been ac-
quitted of armed robbery charges.
1 A seven woman, five-man jury
brought the innocent verdict for
Arnold Hipkins in at 1:07 a. m.
Saturday after a short two and
half hour deliberation. The acquit-
tal followed five days of heated
testimony by both the state and
the defense.
Prosecution's case was circum-
stantial, the state relying on eye-
witness identification and word-of-
mouth testimony as to the sale of
I T V
,1 1 ir
/ 1 _.
this week.
Saturday morning, the lake
quired no medical attention,
however, and the passenger
joined the others. in continuing
the flight by another airline from
municipal airport.
Bonds Approved
’•»•
v Fi
. 0
) -
i
i -
said some sections might re-
ceive locally heavy rain.
... t . boys and their parents to appear
cy vehicles, which chased the at 2 p.m. Friday for an informal
burning plane down the runway hearing canceled the session be- . .. „ .,
and estinguished the fire. cause "it would not accomplish mentary victory Friday when the
As the freighters went to anything at this time." senate foreign relations committee
work, the passengers calmly -Until someone files formal approved the bill, 12 to 3. after re-
slid out of the plane using the charges no hearing will be held,"
craft s emergency canvas Field said
"chute" to slide the 16 feet to ..... _ .
the ground.
Navy spokesmen said no one
was injured, but that one uniden-
tified woman passenger did
sprain an ankle. The ankle re-
V °
•t1
been stolen, forged or en-
dorsed they reported. Furthed
inqukry with, secret service
agents at Louisville revealed
muuiunumemimuumummimmimuum
DETROIT (INS)— A 29-year-old
Detroit mother murdered her
three children Saturday and then
called police after she tried to
commit suicide.
Police rushed to the home of
Mrs. Constance Wheeldon and
found her sprawled on the lawn
of her home.
Inside the gas-filled home, of-
ficers found her son, James,
4'i, strangled and lying on the
73 Unhurt
i ■ T-I '
have no intention of doing
so (accepting the dismissal) 1
at the moment.”
Hayashi angrily charged the de-
cision to fire him was "unethi-
cal” and "nothing but a grand-
stand play.”
Anger It Apparent
Hayashi appeared visibly an-
Prosecution Promised more successful on the floor, and
“if the federal government there is a strong possibility that $
doesn't have exclusive jurisdic- deeper cut can be expected when
tion Howard said he wold lay the action is taken on the actual
evidence on my desk for prosecu- money bill.
Skirmish Won
tives Saturday. A strike, which had
.... . , been scheduled for Monday, would
nor’sisecretary in “superlative de- have paralyzed construation at the
tee"’ V. S, airforce academy ite,
{.....1 1 . "
point me." Hayashi declared ,hat! Throughout’’the trial there was
col. standing room only in the district
j Actually an informal acceptance courtroom here with the court
by the queen was made some time bailiff hard-put at times to control
reactions of the ’crowd, half of
1" . ..
, j0, !
. ! ‘4 ' ,
I ; r I
" ■
mrg
A”'
i, j-
By LEONARD JACKSON
Pert Wanda Lee May will be :
taking on four extra personali-
ties next week.
No schizophrenic, this winsome
U S. Grant highschool teacher
will be showing in flashback what
the well-dressed members of her
profession wore years before she
came along
Her predecessors may have
known how to twirl a mean hoop-
skirt. but they never had a
chance to flash their charms be-
fore a television camera.
THAT'S WHAT Miss May, 2510
SE 8, will do daily beginning I
Monday, when the Tom Paxton
shiw, aired by WKYTV. honors
the centennial of the National
Education association
Selected by the Oklahoma Edu-
cation association to represent
her profession for the telecasts.
Wanda Lee is boning up on what
happened when teaching was
young.
On successive days of the 5-
part series s he 11 appear as a
teacher of 1957, 1887, 1907, '927
and—of course—1957
First, she thumbed through
some Godey prints and found a I
few fetching fashions of 1857.
THAT'S THE YEAR 43 teach-
ers. mostly men, trooped into
Philadelphia for the first NEA
convention. They also got their
first gander at the new-fangled
railroad sleeping cars a fellow
named Pullman had invented.
Then it was just a calendar
hop, skip and jump to 1887.
Styles then were peeking into
the Gay Nineties and public ed-
ucation was wondering who to
make itself a free commodity.
Highschools were being organized
at the rate of one a day, and edu-
cators were-trying to get children
out of factories and into school.
Another turn of fashions in 1907
brought tailored suits with jabots,
Oklahoma statehood, and com-
petition between schools and the
cotton patches.
Flapper foilles charmed young
teachers in ‘927, when they took
time out for such novel stuff as
adult education and individual
pupil attention.
NATURALLY, Miss May
didn't have to dq any research-
ing for 1957 fashons, being part
of the younger generation her-
self.
She's a veteran of one year in
the teaching profession—a year
100 a.m.
2,00 a m.
tor, and surrnedered. . . .
tion," Crane reported.
7 / " 4
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
(EralU Edition at The Dally Oklahoman.) Enured as Secon-Class Matter at Um Postottic. at Oklaboma city. Oklahoma
12 PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 LATE STREET EDITION
By PAUL ROBARTS
John S. Guynn, who apparent-
ly can't stand the smell of fresh,
free air, was back Saturday
where he wanted to be—in jail.
The 27-year-old Lexington, Ky.,
man was under $1,000 bail after
waiving grand jury indictment
before H. A. Leatherman, U. S.
commissioner.
Guynn is charged with steal-
ing letters out of a mailbox, and
he announced he would plead
guilty when he's arraigned, next
week before W. R. WaNace,
U. S. district judge.
This is the second time he’s
"confesed" to a charge like
that, but thia time he made
sure it was for teal.
Back op May-90;. ii. Os- •
1 • 1;: • i 7 ‘ • *
p.m
MW. 3
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 103, Ed. 3 Saturday, June 8, 1957, newspaper, June 8, 1957; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1996292/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.