Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 66, Ed. 2 Wednesday, April 25, 1956 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 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:
7
f
BIBLE VERSE: Not the letter,
J
Bear It
Business Daze
Oklahoma City Times
I
I
.. d ‘
?
1
E K GAYLORD. Editor
IF
;=
. 139
t3-
Direetor of
11
CH*. Dalas
I
n KAT
tO-
•i
for democracy
*6
I*
hv
"1
ij7
1
f
1. ■■
"How about a new suit to go with that tie?"
2
Ike Invites Red Revolt
f
Males of Cheyenne. Okla.
Stone Creek project, at Cheyenne, is doing an extraordi-
narily effective job of flood prevention.
'owUHind,
I
thow suggestions.
3,
8
last war, when he first came to
441
FALSE
TIMS
of the Philippines worship Magsay-
I
eager to attend.
I
great novel. "Resurrection." says
and
vice-versa—but it is never true to
I
say one
Hie Neighbors
0 6
They’ll Do It Every Time
2
eP.22
ferring to Soviet offers of eco-
)
'"The communists conceal the
ag
$))
I
E5
09
•j
>
J
l
y
C - • .
MM
U
-d3
N case you haven't given much study to this problem, it
. should be stated that the Army Engineers “do not claim”
YOU MON TO gnow OL
WMEN vou REACM MIDWLE MS
to their home! I thought it would
become such clou friends!"
s
Wins Writers
By ROBIRTC. RUARK
• egp,,
r,
485
(Chiesce Dally Mom Poretem Bevice)
LONDON - American scientists
have calculated that the amount
of extra radiation any person has
received as a result of nuclear
tests so far is leu than that of a
single chest X-ray.
British studies bear out the
American figures.
Before there would be any gen-
eral radiation dangers outside the
immediate area of explosions, pre-
KE
tinguished success. Obviously if a whole river watershed
were treated in that way, there would be no floods “on the
main stem.” A top Army Engineer in a mass meeting at
Hiawatha, Kansas, recently admitted, upon close question-
ing by former Congressman Howard S. Miller, that if
floods were prevented on the tributaries of Blue River, the
Tuttle Creek dam wouldn't be needed.
Why, then, do a few USDA officials use the meaning-
less generality of “do not claim," as mentioned by Gen.
• Sturgis, to the great damage of the SCS program ? Is it be-
cause they are afraid of offending another federal bureau?
Why is it necessary for laymen to do all the “selling” of
thia remarkably successful and worthy program? If the
USDA people are too timid to sell the program to the pub-
lic they should let some other agency take over.
In the first place. In more than 20 years of doing the Smoking
Room column, during which time we have diligently dug for
points and facts about Oklahoma history, its goodness, greatness.
Oklahoma now admittedly leads the nation in the field
of agricultural flood prevention, one bit of evidence being
that the recent meeting of the National Association of
Soil Conservation Districts, at Boston, unanimously voted
its approval of the famous Washita Valley program as be-
together a startling picture of
। the dramatic events of last
month " His dispatch says:
That day they stood in a soak-
ing rain for hours to hear him—his
head as wet as theirs, his clothes
controversial Brannan plan which
was viewed with pious horror by
i
V
Indians have made heavy marks on Oklahoma's history. But
that Indian history already has been recorded in a dozen or more
excellent books. The now Guidebook should take care of Indians
by naming the individual soldiers, tribal leaders and scouts who
have stood out; listing the 67 tribes still identified here and point-
ing out where they are, and by giving locations of the annual core-
menials and pageants which home people and visitors alike are
stow His aid. _
For the first time, it is an-
nounced, a single atom on the sur-
face of a solid has been photo-
graphed it looks, one imagines,
very much like the tourist's snap
shot of his 3-year-old child in front
of Pike s peak.
Men are like a river-wide and
deep in places, narrow and shal-
low in others, bit always the same
river. So, every man has every
human quality, displaying all in
turn—yet. he is always the same
man."
♦ —
Damage Denied
In Nuclear Tests
"Don't bother daughter, Ambrou.' . . . She’s spending a
quiet evening at home .. and is trying to figure out ‘why ?"
‘ •.25
•i«aa Vwle
to prevent floods anywhere when there is a cloudburst of
thia magnitude on the proportionate watershed. In fact
one of the top engineers in this bureau, during the disas-
trous Kansas flood of 1951, said, in substance: “When a 12-
inch rain falls within a week on such a watershed, we
couldn’t prevent floods even if all the big dams in our pro-
gram were built.”
The West Owl Creek agricultural flood prevention
program easily took care of a 100-year flood. And it is typ-
ical. Comparable examples come from Sandstone, Barnitz,
25
Presiqens
—■navi Vicebresdem
terrible human costs that char-
acterize their ruthless systems
of dictatorship and forced la-
bor."
The climax of what may be
considered a sensational appeal
to the peoples of Soviet Russia
over the heads of their rulers
came at the very end of the
president's address — again in
carefully couched phrases, as he
said:
"A Soviet government genu-
inely devoted to these purposes
can have friendly relations with
the United States and the free
world for the asking. We will
welcome that day.
"WE CANNOT doubt that the
current of world history flows to-
ward freedom. In the long run
dictatorship and depotism must
give way, We can take courage
ALL
RIGHT,
DEAR-
1,
eU,
425
So THE LITTLE
WOMAN GOT HIM
PAJAMAS WITH
BUTTONS"AND
HOW DOES HE
PUT ’EM ON P
VRAM.
seks chiefly to prolong the "ac-
tive span." I'm sure I have added
years to my active span by high
protein diet, calcim, vitamins,
and hormones—under medical in-
struction.
Does the way parents treat a
child influence his attitude
toward himself?
Yes, according to the "Journal
of Genetic Psychology." A whjning
mother tends to develop an ex-
cited. demanding child. A boister-
ous father tends to develop a
happy, playful son. Overprotecting
parents focus a child's attention
on himself—thus making him self-
ish. A child reacts to others and
to himself as others act toward
him. If made happy, he laughs at
others and himself; if harsh-
ly treated, he becomes hostile and
impatient toward others and
toward himself.
De we usually label a man by
one outstanding trait?
Yes, generally. Tolstoy, in his
( ""
f-A • f L
ir
uanusur- —
A
2 !
Democrats After
Three Key States
By DORIS FLEESON
FORT WAYNE, Ind.-Indiana is
one of three states in which Demo-
prats have a special reason for
believing they can capitalize on r
the farm revolt in their effort to
retain control of the senate. The
others are Iowa and Colorado.
In each a highly placed agricul-
ture official of the New or Fair
Deal is expected to be the nomi-
nee against incumbent Republican
senators. Two former secretaries
of agriculture are included.
Already in this state Calude E
Wickard, a Roosevelt secretary off
agriculture and a Truman rural •
electrification administrator, is on
the circuit, explaining to the farm-
ers that they never had it so bad.
Politicians are confident that he
will be nominated to oppose Sen.
Homer Capehart.
IN IOWA, the way is also said
to be clear for R. M. "Spike"
Evans, an early chief of the agri-
culture adjustment administration
and later a governor of the fed-
eral reserve system. His target is
Sen. Bourke Hickenlooper
So far, Gov. Johnson of Colo,
rado and eager party strategists
in Washington have not been able
to wring a final yes from the best
known of the three, Charles F.
Brannan. Brannan was the secre-
tary of agriculture who tipped off
Harry Truman in 1948 that there
was electoral gold in what the
0* 1
i h
Ma
acted for wool. Brannan is now
counsel for the Farmer, union,
which with the Grange opposed
President Eisenhower's veto of the
farm bill.
Nor can Coloradoan, be sure
dinns.
0-
gy,
is 233
wildest storm ... And brings the
’paraphrased); "We say a man weary ti^warm0^ There
,,21.
MR. MALES used color slide projections in his speech,
IVI showing, by actual facts and figures, that the Sand-
"80-worst" GOP congress had
failed to do about storage facili-
ties.
KI IS ALSO the author of the
tin. . Nnint with . man.siyed points ana acts apout OKanoma mtor): 13 KeI-9:
ating apointwithamansred beauty and challenges, we have received countless thousand, of
shputsandasho: Ful helpful letters, calls, inquiries. And not one time have we ever
Herreminded years Er"ue received an inquiry about any individual who ever held public
gencio Batista. years perore me territorial or statehood davs. and never a auerv concerning
again though he has been twice
nominated for the senate and twice
defeated
The Colorado Republican in-
cumbent, Sen. Eugene Millikin, fa-
mous for his wit and erudition, has
been battling arthritis. Though it
has crippled him severely, he has
announced that he will run again.
WICKARD HAS other cause for
encouragement in his fight against
Capehard besides farm discontent.
Indiana had Republican mayors in
two-thirds of its cities when state- -
wide municipal elections were
held,The next day they had Dem-
ocratic mayors in roughly the
same two-thirds, Fort Wayne be-
ing the only large city to buck the *
trend.
Sen. Capehard is, however, a
shrewd and rugged operator, hard-
ly a statesman but smart tor Cape-
hart In business and politics. With
Eisenhower on the ticket, Wickard
is the underdog in the race.
Tiper Story
Is Debunked
By Small Fry .
(Chicago Dally Nm Service)
CHICAGO—MIDJI THI TIGER
debunked a textbook story at
Brookfield too here, while 40 third-
grader, and their teacher watched.
The tiger just wouldn’t eat the
sweet potatoes.
He wouldn’t eat them even
1 though they were sprinkled with
brown sugar and plenty of butter.
Recently the third grade at the
Byrne school read in a schoolbook
I the story of "How Percival Caught
the Tiger."
The story said Percival baited
his trap with "sweet potatoes,
, brown sugar and plenty of but-
ter."
Somebody in the class asked the
teacher, Mrs. Sylvia Kayser, if
tigers really ate such a diet. She
said she didn't know.
I So Anna Marie Guarnieri, I. was
I elected to ask Albert Bean, direc-
tor of the Brookfield too, about
this grave matter.
: "I don't really know," Bean
revolution that still goes on."
TNI PRESIDENT went on to
talk at length in terms of the
American revolution and its
"firm belief in the spirit of the
individual." He then applied the
illustration to the past decade
as he declared that 18 nations
totalling 650 million people "have
gained their independence."
After some general observa-
tions on how unsafe these new
nations are, the president issued
a plain warning to them about
the dangers of the communist
dictatorship. Then, without nam-
ing Soviet Russia specifically,
Eisenhower said in a paragraph
that ought to be read round the
world:
"The prospects for peace are
brightest when enlightened self-
government peoples control the
policy of nations. Peoples do not
want war. Rulers beyond the
reach of popular control are
more likely to engage in reck-
less adventures and to raise the
grim threat of war. The spread
of freedom enhance, the pros-
pect for durable peace."
IT WAS EVIDENT what rul-
#
In the past 20 years the Smoking Room has used the Guidebook for
VIRGIL Pinkley and I went up reference more than any other book on Oklahoma history and facts,
with Magsaysay to Aparri in the j We hope that the modernised edition will be the last word about
provinc# of Cayagan to dedicate a , things, events, places, people, achievements and opportunity in
new irrigation project in the Bar-' Oklahoma and that it will be in heavy demand from the time it
rio of Bulan Irrigation and roads begins to come from the press
A secunu nuu«> wa oui „uo —______ ,____J. Republican, but which congress.
For the last several years not a copy of the book has been available, at the request of Secretary of
• - ‘ • - - ■ • *r Agriculture Benson, recently en-
• •
t
J
Ed#
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1956
2
sent testing schedules for all three
_____ - _____ nuclear power, would have to be
nomic aid to Asia, he had said: stepped up 1,000 times, It was said.
MANILA—Ramon Magsaysay is.
I believe, the most charming and
dynamic man I ever met in my
life. He is the president of the
Philippines, but he is a peasant
first and a man later, a charmer
predominantly, a tough piece of
furniture, a great advertisement
I
I ’ 1
+
False. Students of old age say
you begin to grow old at about
seven. Already the arteries begin
to be lined with fat—to harden.
Your body dies in spots. A man
may die at 40 from brain hemorr-
hage, while his heart would run 30
years more "Gerontotherapy"
.—II Corinthians “
say. Their faces bloom when he
passes, as if be were Santa Claus
appearing personally for each
child's benefit.
* * *
Judging by our daily mail through the years and by questions
asked in the Know Oklahoma periods we have conducted in nearly a
hundred towns. people want to know something about the state
which is not given in school textbooks, history books, state and
town brochures, park and playground folders. For example, there
are 140 different kinds of trees in the state; name them. Sixty-one
counties produce oil; name them. There are nearly 200 man-made
lakes and 30 rivers; name them. Cave explorers have found nearly
100 underground caves; name them. Nature's deposits of gravel,
salt, zinc, lead, coal, volcanic ash. pottery clay, glass sand and
building stone are being processed every day. but where? A di-
rectory of some of the state's principal industrial plants should be
given, these to include meat packing, cotton goods, steel fabrication,
flour milling, glassware, oleo oil, brooms, lumber, boats, livestock
feed, fishing lures, auto trailers. furniture, frozen foods, feather
pillows, etc.
A and^rtaW "S
munists don't play golf. Well, chapters for the new Oklahoma Guidebook. We may come in with
were none of us all bad mure ideas later.____________'_____________________________________
- was fired that was "heard
Cloud Creek, Mill Creek and other projects—all with dis- round the world,” and when, he
added "our forefathers started a
is good, kind, wicked, wise, or---------- --
foolish. This is wrong. We should may be some destruction.
E. 7^. put a M Su ®:
It cannot be in vain ... And k
w-;
In all parts of Oklahoma there is a vigorous demand
for the same principle to be used on various watersheds,
for instance Wewoka Creek, the Blue river valley, etc.
The people who make these demands are not cranks,
fools or fanatics. They have seen what has been done on
Sandstone and other creeks, and they believe, with ample
documentation, that the program will prevent floods—not
merely “retard” them. There wouldn’t be this widespread
demand for the program if it did not prevent floods at
least up to the “100-year” variety.
rHE chief roadblock in the way of this movement.
I strange to say, is a small group of highly placed
"do-not-claimers" in the USDA.
They periodically issue negative generalities, saying
“We do not claim that the agricultural flood prevention
program will prevent floods." The significant thing in such
statements is that they never produce facts or figures.
They only make a general statement.
The paradoxical fact, however, is that, in effect, they
do actually claim to prevent floods.
For instance, on Page 18 of a brochure by the Soil
Conservation Service called “Upstream Flood Prevention
in the Western Gulf Region,” is given a description of what
happened on the SCS-treated part of the West Owl Creek
watershed of Oklahoma, in May, 1950.
There are pictures and figures showing that the soil
conservation techniques impounded and absorbed 13.5 inch-
es of cloudburst falling within two days.
Magsaysay was a great guer-
rilla fighter, and how many japs
he and his men did over will never
be counted. Then he cleared up the
Huks, the communist partisans, at
a time when it seemed likely the
Huks were going to take over the
islands.
He is a big man, but with small
hands and slim legs. He is perhaps
one of the handsomest men I ever1
saw. His English is excellent his
Spanish fluent, and he speaks five
or six d l a l e c t s He could he a i
movie actor or a football player
AS A POLITICIAN, his approach
to people is nearly perfect. He is
completely fearless Any man,
woman or child in the Philippines
could kill him but, to the consterna-
tion of his cabinet and the coun-
try. he uses no security precau-
tions whatever.
I went on a flying trip to Luzon -
in the presidential plane, deter-
mined to resist the charm of which
I'd heard so much. I was going to
be the only one to come back and
shrug and say: "Oh, Magsaysay’/
Nice fellow, but I don't see what'
that John Carroll of Denver, for-
The new Oklahoma Guidebook for 1957 may be the seme book mer congressman and aide to Tru-
which Savoie Lottinville of the OU Press has been soliciting RGM man, will not contest the primary
to write for the last five years. Ivon if we were capeble of doing
this book, we lust don't have the time. We already have a fulltime
job, plus. But perhaps we con be helpful in wggesting material that
should go into the Guidebook, and we proceed to offer come of
By DAVID LAWRENCE
WASHINGTON—There's more than meets the eye in the
speech delivered by President Eisenhower before the American
Society of Newspaper Editors It is perhaps an oversimplification
aug wuzlu, J. »„w .. .... — — -....... .________ to say that Eisenhower actually called upon the people of Soviet
The man who "stole the show," according I. top observers
. at that meeting, was a modest, conservative banker, L. L. dent, by an implicit reference to historical trends, as much as
I says that revolution in Soviet Russia is "inevitable. ’
! The news dispatches already justify the assumption that
there's something of an incipient revolt on now An Associated
Press correspondent traveling in Tiflis, in the province of Georgia
in Central Russia, reported over the weekend that he has "pieced
from that sure knowledge. But
as a wise American, Mr. Jus-
tice Holmes once saids "The in-
evitable comes to pass through
effort." We should take these
words to heart in our quest for
peace and freedom. These great
aspirations of humanity will be
brought about - but only by
devoted human effort."
Then Eisenhower, in his con-
cluding sentences? deliberately
referred again to the Battle of
Concord, describing it as a
"symbol of the faith, the cour-
age. the sacrifice on which the
victory of freedom depends.”
it was the most pointed appeal
for revolution, bloodless revo-
lution if possible, which has yet
been made by any world states-
man to the peoples of Soviet
Russia and the satellite states.
One hundred of the state's more important historical sites have
been marked; people would like a full list of them, and a thumbnail
of the history made at each. People read that Oklahoma has more
different kinds of wild flowers than any other state: let's list them
all and tell where they may be found. Petrified wood ranging in
sue from small chips to big logs is found in ten or more counties; said. "Let’s find out."
show the people just where these deposits are. More than 23,000
acres of Oklahoma farm crops are being irrigated this season; I SO MRS. KAYSER BROUGHT
which counties lead? The new book should include a table of eleva- the entire class to the zoo. They
tions (from sea level) showing the figure for each county seat fixed sweet potatoes with brown
town and possibly others. By all wpeans include a list of mountain ! sugar snd- plenty of butter,
ranges and chains of hills of which there are 15 or more; it would Then the class stood by, while
be well to show the height (from ground level) M the 25 principal keeper Zenil Osman slid the pan
mountains. of potatoes into Hedji’s cage
The giant bengal tiger was hun-
gry. He pounced toward the pan
with a nasty snarl. He smelled.
He smelled again. And again.
With a big yawn, be backed
away. 2
The experiment was ever, the
textbook debunked
"I guess they just told a fib."
an 8-year-old commented. "Tigers
don't eat sweet potatoes with
brown sugar and plenty of butter.
1 know." '
Sen. Soaper Says:
A London newspaper complains
about the sumptuousness of the
travel arrangements of the royal
I family. After this, when boarding
the yacht. they will display their
lunch, economically packed in a
shoebox.
Of s new fabric for men's suits
it is ssid that it doesn't pick up
lint, shine or show scuff marks.
But with a tot of us, all we have
to show at the end of a day's work
is a little more lint, shine snd
0 0 0
5 5 man is kind snd wise. I put my trust in Him ... And I
snd another wicked and foolish. am not afraid: . -For is my
■ spirit to resigned . .. He will be-
70
L 0 \
(0 ‘LETS EXPLORE
il
fBy Albert twud r«ai,lk
ers the president mesnt, be-
cause earlier in the speech re-
office in territorial or statehood days, and never a query concerning
wwop in cLa ana hefor. he was any statute enacted by any session of the legislature. Which 11 fairly
powerin cuba and before " convincing to us that Oklahoma people may not be as much inter-
5Poed ested in statehouse records, stormy politickl clashes and long-ago
IN THOSE DAYS, when Batista land openings as they are in what Oklahoma has today in the way
was merely a former sergeant! of what may be seen, felt, used and enjoyed by the masses. The
came to power. the guajiros- new Guidebook should guide people to the things they asked ques-
peasants—of Cuba adored him tions about.
slavishly. So now do the Paisanos
J -
9
(4
The Smoking Room ByR c M
THI UNIVERSITY PRESS in Norman has set to work to revise
ih. fuse is about " l and modernize the Oklahoma Guidebook. It is planned to have
i r»m» hack Ebbling his the book ready for distribution early in 1957. RGM hopes that
picrmebak, he owned me advance orders will begin to pour in early. No home or office in
after five minutes and he gave me Oklahoma should be without the new Oklahoma Guidebook. This
a dav I will never quite forget I volume was first issued if the mid 1930s as a WPA writers' project,
know now how t is possible for A second edition with some revision was issued a few yearss ater.
7,/
drenched. They lined the roads for
miles in the pouring rain for a
chance to see him. ,
They fell on their knees before
him, and hundreds grasped his
hands as we rode along. Pinkley
and I had one thought between us:
Any hand he grasped could have
handed him a bomb, and we were
in the back seat with him.
Portraits
By JAMIS J. METCALFE
The rain is lashing down tonight
... The thunder rocks the sky
. . . And every now and then I
see... The lightning flashing
by ... But I am not‘the least
afraid... For in my heart I
know ... it to the hand of God
that guides . . . Whatever wind
may blow . . , Just as it to the
hand of God . .. That calms the
LOOk/ J DONT LIMB THESE
88 PAJAMAS Yu GOTTA PULL OVER
99 YOUR HEAD/ NIXT PAIR,GET ME THE
9 KIND THAT BUTTON, WiLLYA P
Gr—r--y
d
■u
. Shoot or Give Up the Gun 1
TN the U. S. News and World Report for April 27 appeafs
I a 14-page presentation of the timely subject of the
national water supply.
The subject is so far-reaching that no attempt will be
marie here to analyze even the outlines of the presentation,
which is made in the form of an Interview with Lieut Gen.
Samuel D. Sturgis, Jr., Chief of the Army Engineers. How-
ever he mentions an extremely touchy subject which is
particularly pertinent to Oklahoma, and it needs a lot of
explaining, not by the Army Engineers but the S. C. S.
• • •
In the cours of any year we receive many inquiries about
wher, to go to find mesquite bushes, huckleberries, hickory nuts,
muscadinos, wild plums, wild blackberries, buckeyes, yueca,
flowering cactus, may apples, oFnamental rocks, pecan and peach
orchards, wild mushrooms, fields of corsopsis, fig orchards and
so on. Any number of p®ople ask directions tu th. better camp-
out spots outside the established parks.
• • e
‘t
scuff marks.
A low-budget movie, starring peo-
ple nobody had ever heard of, won
the Academy award. Whether a
baseball team operating on these
same principles can win the pen-
nant remains to be teen.
Of the profestor's book on n
ways to cuss there mst be plenty
of folks who will tvoid reading e
supposedly learned work by some-
one who ban io obviously only
skimmed tho mriw.
—,6
bSEUN
~e 41. i
r- fl
qamo
are two of the most cherished of
the Magsaysay plans for pulling
his country to its feet
The president was dressed for.
bush—open-necked shirt, rough
boots. This was no longer Mag-
saysay. the immaculate head of
state, but Ramoncitu, the gueril-
lero, the Huk-chaser.
This was a guy who called you
“Bob” easily and immediately and
who aat on the side of an aircraft
seat, swinging his feet and punctu-
s.dnt*((
839 SpaLKso, I
___J
"RELIABLE GIORGI AN
sources said that up to 100 Geor-
gians may have been killed
when troops opened fire on surg-
ing pro-Stalin demonstrators
who tried to seize the Tiflis
postoffice last March 9. The
sources said that the city was
an armed camp for days after
the rioting. Troop* and tanks pa-
trolled the streets and a mid-
night curfew was clamped on."
The foregoing was transmitted
from Russia by telephone and
then came an interruption by
the censor. The world still does
not know all the details but in-
asmuch as Eisenhower receives
secret reports from the intelli-
gence representatives of our own
government and from other gov-
ernments he had this back-
ground when he made some
carefully veiled statements to
the American Society of News-
paper Editors that go farther
than anything hitherto said of-
ficially by any American high
official about the inevitability of
revolution in Soviet Ruasia.
EISENHOWER MADI two
speeches to the editors — the
first a prepared document and
then some extemporaneous com-
ments largely intended to con-
front the tariff protectionists in
America with the prospect thnt
unless they see things different-
ly Japan mny be forced to trade
with Red China
But it was the deliberately
planned strategy of the pre-
pared speech which will evoke
world-wide comment. The sensa-
tional passages were carefully
separated from one another in
what was designed, for reasons
of tact and diplomacy to make
it appear that the president was
discussing abstractly the theme
of revolution as it related to the
states in Asia which had in re-
cent years won their freedom.
Eisenhower's first mention of
"revolution" come, for example,
as he referred to April 19th as
the 108th anniversary of the
Battle of Concord when the shot
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. 67, No. 66, Ed. 2 Wednesday, April 25, 1956, newspaper, April 25, 1956; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2000327/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.