Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 201, Ed. 3 Monday, October 1, 1956 Page: 5 of 9
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Cupid Takes Pot Shots at ‘Flying Dolls''
Doctors Plan
like a miniature haystack, the size
N
have greatly simplified fuel in-
system.
Li
a given-sized engine, improved ac-
{
They are sending recruitin
ydro
bure
tor dur-
carl
$33,600 Gems Taken Japanese Troops
central location and the manifolds
ernment in Washington. He re-
NEBRASKAN'S BODY FOUND
wives listened and applauded ev-
I
COMING!
THE BIGGEST
THE NEWEST
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NEW CARS
4
P“-
IN 20 YEARS!
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$%,
situation.
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NEW RIDE: The outstanding engineering advance of 1957:
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CHRYSLER CORPORATION
1
See the new Plymouth, podge, DeSoto, Chrysler and Imperial beginning October 30th
4
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MUSTEROLE
With a plenum chamber (central
reservoirs at the top, this houses
WH1 Illinois
I
Forget Hodge
in November
ration’s 1957 cars will have greater displacement—better per-
formance with power for-precision control in every driving
Swift Strikers Go
Back to Their Jobs
Fall Meeting
For Lawton
Ishmael and Dr. John F. Kuhn.
Dr. Malcolm Phelps, El Reno.
40 States Ask Part
In U.S. Highway Plan
a man tentatively identified as
Charles Davis, about 60. of Ord.
Neb., was found floating near a
been missing for two days An au-
topsy showed he died of a heart
Parade in Tokyo
TOKYO UB- Tokyo reverberated
Each tube leads into a small jet.
or nozzle, that feeds into an intake
manifold a couple of inches above
the valve.
Ram jet describes the unusual
NEWS YET FROM
THE FORWARD LOOK
the spray of fuel and flow of air
they can generate.
If the claims of fuel injector ad-
vocates have much merit, the car-
buretor is on its way out.
General Motors' new passenger
car fuel injector is not a "pure”
NEW STYLE: So striking, so right, so in tune with the
future of car design that it's called the new shape of motion!
There are high-flying fins and dramatic lowness—yet greater
comfort than ever, more room where you need it most!
CHICAGO (CDN— Fuel injec-
tion is headed for a role in your
motoring future.
General Motors Corp. engineers
■, a
. de
The fuel injector is a different
method of getting the gasoline
to an engine's cylinders for burn-
ing. It has been used for many
years on racing cars.
It is said to make possible large
increases in power developed by
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the war in Korea.1' ——•----- । reviewing stand in downtown To-
The crowd that included many NEBRASKAN'S BODY FOUND kyo. Emperor Hirohito was con-
state employees, husbands and ANTIOCH, Calif. Uh—The body of spicously absent, emphasizing the
F
comers and "dive” in fast stops!
tors.
But they are limited by 15
pounds' atmospheric pressure to
TOTAL NEWNESS: During the past few years, The
Forward Look has opened America's eyes to many bright new
ideas in styling and engineering. Now comes the topper! For 1957
Chrysler Corporation will present five complete lines of cars with
total newness! In whatever price range you choose, from Plymouth
to Imperial, in any pf 93 models you fancy ... you will find
them the newest new cars in 20 years!
eight stacks, or chimneys, running
one to each cylinder. These chim-
f
t
i
riage. She is Mary O'Connor, a
United stewardess for 23 years
NEW VISIBILITY: With bigger windshields than ever
before and greater glass area all around, you will see better and
have a wonderful new feeling of openness!
You will also enjoy Chrysler Corporation's exclusive full-time
power steering... new single-unit heater and air conditioner...
and many other features you will not find in other cars this year!
Before you buy any car, wait and let your dealer show you what
The Forward Look has achieved for *57. Then compare as you’ve
never compared before!
$300,000 Fire Rages
In Formosan Capital
TAIPEI, Foryosa U-A fire in
Taipei Sunday destroyed property
estimated at 5300,000 in value.
More than 1,000 persons, most of
them squatters, were left home-
less The cause of the blaze, which
destroyed a whole block of shacks
and three three-story buildings,
was not determined.
NEW TRANSMISSION: TorqueFlite, the smoothest
and swiftest transmission yet in going from full stop to driving
speeds . . . controlled by the modem miracle of pushbuttons!
NEW BRAKES: All five Chrysler Corporation can will
have the revolutionary Total-Contact Brakes . . . requiring
20% less toe pressure ... with twice the resistance to "brake
fade" ... with up to 50% longerbrake-lining life!
NEW PERFORMANCE: The engines in Chrysler Corpo-
wage increase of 25 cents an hour
spread over two years. The com-
pany did not accede to tne unions'
demand for a union shop.
MINERS MEET
LOS ANGELES (INS)-The
American Mining congress opens
a four-day international conven-
tion in Los Angeles Monday.
try reference to Ike.
They saved -heir loudest hand-
clapping for those references to
the president's personal honesty
and integrity.
Hodge Affair Hur?
able for a passenger car.
A new type ram jet fuel injector
will be introduced on part of the
1957 Chevrolet line. Other passen-
ger car divisions on General Mo-
tors are working toward a similar
the inertia of interrupted air flow
(from intake valve closings) to cre-
ate pressure. When the blocked air
is allowed to surge into the cylinder
an effect is obtained somewhat like
super-charging.
Initial experiments with the fuel
Injection device showed a tendency
cheerful, tactful, mature and pos-
who has racked up more thcr 5% sess good judgment."
million flying miles. I And she must be as single as a
The stewardess job is pretty one-whc "ad bicycle track.
cushy. 1 Get in line, girls. ' *
-
stored integrity and confidence in
the White House," said Nixon. "A
man of experienced judgment and
‘skill in matters of defense and
peace.
The American people will not
trade such leadership for a policy
of indecision and drift that led to
wick manor, home of American to the now-unfamiliar sound df
impresario Gilbert Miller, and marching feet and rumbling tanks
hade off with gems valued at Monday as Japan's reborn mili-
12,000 pounds ($33,600), Monday tary forces staged their second an-
The gems belonged to Mrs Mil niversary parade.
ler. who had left their Sussex Adm. Felix B. Stump joined
home only an hour before the bur- other American and foreign mili-
glary. , I tary and diplomatic officials on the
neys connect to the portions of the
----------manifold cast into the cylinder
rate in adaption to the require- head
ments of higher horsepower mo- Acting on the same principle as
a hydraulic ram, these stacks use
SPRINGFIELD, HI. (CDN)-Will
Illinois voters’ affection and re-
- spect for Dwight Eisenhower save
the scandal-rocked state Republi-
can administration?
This unanswered question hov-
ered over . a sober, partisan
crowd of 5,000 in the state armory
as Richard Nixon spoke. But Ike
got about all the applause.
The handsome, smiling vice-
LAWTON—Members of the Co-
manche-Cotton county Medical so-
ciety will play host to Southwest
Oklahoma physicians at a scientific
program and banquet here Octo-
ber 10.
Dr. Frank H. Austin, president
of the two-county society, said In-
vitations have been mailed to 150
physicians in the area.
The banquet, at 7:30 p m, in the
Hotel Lawtonian, will honor the
president of the state medical so-
ciety, Dr. H. M. McClure of El
have been designated. Applications
are still coming in. '
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
• MONDAY, OCTOUR 1. 1756
t i re,
‘57 Auto Has Fuel Injection
difference the government make
between the present "defense"
forces and the prewar imperial
whart here Monday. Davis had troops
Nearly 4,000 troops of the 140,-
000-man defense force marched in
the parade.
The big meat packing firm and discuss the recent dependent med:
two unions reached agreement on ical care program of the armed
a new three-year contract Satur- torces.
day. The strike, which idled 38
plants in 37 cities across the na-
tion, was officially settled Sunday.
The new pact provides a general
TORSION-AIRE ... it carpets the road! Chrysler Corporation’s
engineers have created a new kind of suspension that carries you
smoothly on any surface! It virtually eliminates sway around
WASHINGTON I—Sen, Gore
(D., Tenn.) said Monday he ex-
pects the senate public works -
roads subcommittee to meet early the motor, and driven from a flex-
next year for an appraisal of how
the new highway program is com-
ing.
At the same time the bureau of
public roads made public figures]
showing that 40 states have made
applications for 9,238 more miles
of interstate super highways than
t attack.
In a press conference at the air- i—
port, Nixon was asked about the
effect of the Hodge scandal on Re-;
have distributed it to the cylind- manifold involved. Centered atop
ers.. the V-8 engine block, this looks *
There have been complaints that.......
under such a system some of the of a small loaf of bread.
..... gcau, ouupuuaiou u cylinders have been starved while
jection devices to make them suit- others have been overfed, due to
difference in manifold length and
quirks in carburetor operation.
Carburetors have gone from one
barrel to two barrels to four bar-
Presidept,ahis vaie retitussdsti, teams' to college campuses with fai
. 12
Base pay runs about 5360 a
month. Hotel bills, food, taxi fares
and recreation are paid for by the
airline when a girl stays over in a
destination city.
Comes vacation, she can usually
fly free to Hawaii, Mexico or Zan-
zibar.
But requirements for a steward-
ess job are pretty tough:
A candidate can't have visible
scars or birthmarks, she must be
between 11 and 27, weight 135
pounds or less, and be able to bal-
ance a loaded food tray while
virtually standing on her bead.
She can't have mental quirks.
She must have a good smile, “be
lures of good salaries and free
travel.
Northwest Airlines finds it loses
its girls to marriage chiefly in
May. June and at Christmas.
Bennett King of United says a
stewardess can fly until she's 60
if she keeps her looks and her
health.
“But 88 percent of the girls quit
within 26 months to get married,”
be explained.
United hired the first stewardess
in airline history—back in the 30s
—and has had plenty of experience
in trying to lick tie cupid problem.
One girl has become famous by
sticking It out and avoiding mar-
Reno d -ven-eu en8e, u-P-Vve ds
seiemtifie phase of the meeting esfmrnaonrunourscaconommvcandona
vill begin at 1 P.m. Scheduled that gush from the
address the gathering are three ing deceleration
Oklahoma City specialists. Dr g “eeerauon
Robert H. Bayley, Dr. William K.
standing ovation as he entered ac-
companied by his pretty wife Pat. i
who wore a shining green dress '
endmatshnshataitone By British Thieves
"President Eisenhower brought a ]
whole new moral tone to the gov- RUDGWICK, England (-
ernment in Washington. He re-'Jewel thieves broke into Drunge-
for the engine to run rough at
type, such as that it uses on diesel idle speeds.
railroad locomotives or diesel This was due to varying pres-
truck engines, sures in the intake manifold at
It does not attempt to send a the fuel injection nozzle. To over-
Heretofore, the carburetor has measured shot of fuel directly into come this, GM added a system of
mixed the air and fuel at one each cylinder at the precise in- small tubes that provide a sec-
stant for combustion. ondary source of air supply at the
, The Chevrolet version is sort of nozzle points
ahybrid pfcarburetion.and.fuel A system of vacuum controls
injestionlsprays gasoline, afup proportions the pumping of fuel
to 200 pounds per square inch, to the amount of air going into the
through individual nozzles near mee . Ef tI
each cylinder and does carburet- motor.A,s pnda YS wof controls
1 mg in the manifold. cdndstsonsuet warming-uP
Heart of ‘he GM system is an A special fuel filter has been
added fuel pump. mounted atop added to prevent dirt in the gaso-
ible shaft geared to the distributor ‘rom blocking the fine nozzles.
I drive shaft. This pumps the fuel
, through eight small tubes with an Now - Futor Help For
aupencidtema.ter aDout the 0( muscle pain to
Al Aaalgesic W Ml Coimtar-irritamt-
THE FORWARD LOOK
--n ■ 1 ugic
. ... S .9
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CHICAGO (CDN)-The world's
most glamorous girl-type job is
hiving "help wanted" troubles.
Airline stewardesses—bless their
purty smiles—are getting married
too fast.
"We just can't keep them in
stock," lamented John Corris of
TWA bare.
"Stewardesses are pretty. Men
like pretty girls. Pretty girls get
married faster than the other
kind," Corris explained.
So fast, in fact that the nation's
airlines will need about 2,500 re-
placement stewardesses this year.
The big four-United, A ),
TWA end Eastern—are waging all-
out campaigns to build p their
supply of these “flying dolls."
• ■ • -• ■ ■’W
publican chances in Illinois
"I think the situation in Illinois
is good,” be replied.
' Neither party has a monopoly
on honesty and morality
"The imporatnt thing is what is
done about it. The swift and ef-
fective manner in which Gov
Stratton handled the Hodge affair
probably won him support in this
state."
Then he added, as Gov. Stratton
smiling, stood beside him: "I un-
derstand the other party (Demo-
crap) have been involved also in
th problem."
Adlai ‘Erred"
Nixon told reporters he consid-
ered Adlai Stevenson “a man of
character and integrity personal-
ly," but be has erred in taking
the advice of men around him who
would divide Americans and arouse
class against class.
Nixon amused the crowd in his
opening remarks telling about his
and his wife's tour around the
world.'
“In country after country, we
were told that Adlai Stevenson and
Eleanor Roosevelt had been there:
before us," he said.
"In one country Pat slept in Ad-
lai Stevenson’s bed, and I slept in
Eleanor Roosevelt's.”
• —
Durant Eyes
Lake Project
DURANT—If the Blue river up-
stream flood control project is ap-
proved by the U. S. soil conserva-
tion service and other necessary
federal agencies, 85 lakes. rang-
ing from 12 to 50 acres, would be
formed on the watershed.
Half of the 85 detention dams
would be built in Bryan county
and would be tied into a chain de-
signed to hold the water where it
falls and release it by degrees to
maintain a constant flow in Blue
river even in its driest years
Applications for the project will
be made by the soil conservation
districts in Bryan, Atoka. John-
ston and Ponto’e counties, accord-
ing te W. B. Jessee, work unit
conservationist. Development of
the program will cost 52 millions,
which will come out of an appro-
priation already made up congress
for approved projects.
Easements must be given free
by landowners who will be bene-
fitted by the dams and flood con-
trol measures. The landowner can
use the normal lake water for any
purpose he wishes, such as irriga-
tion, stock water, fishing or recre-
ational purposes
Land for which easements will
be required includes 225,570 acres
in Bryan county, 12,240 acres in
Atoka, 71,360 in Pontotoc, and 121,-
280 acres in Johnston county.
Large detention dams will be
built on Little Blue. Kanella,
Chuckwa, Mineral Bayou and on
other small tributaries in Bryan
county.
"It would be a boon to irriga-
tion as even the smallest lakes
would provide enough, water for
irrigation," Jessee concluded.
Steer Price
Sets a Record
in Claremore
CLAREMORE-A check of rec-
ords in the county agent's office
has disclosed that the 51 per
pound bid on the grand champion
steer in the Rogers county free
fair livestock auction was the
highest price ever paid here.
Bill Whitenton. county agent,
said Oklahoma Military Academy
and the Kissee-Marshall Chevro-
let Co, of Claremore paid 51 a
pound for the 990-pound heavy
Hereford exhibited by Allan Clin-
ton, Oologah 4-H club member.
The grand champion barrow ex-
hibited by Bobby Moo try, Inola,
brought a bid of 60 cents a pound
from Al Pettigrove, local grain
merchant. The Fir at National
bank, Claremore, paid 5150 a
, pound for the grand champion
Southdown lamb shown by Viola
Dowden, Sequoyah.
MAJOR IttUI MEN
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
—I-Labor minister Jan Derlerk
hinted Sunday night that the ques-
tion of making South Africa a re-
public would be the major issue in
the 1958 general election.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 201, Ed. 3 Monday, October 1, 1956, newspaper, October 1, 1956; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2000853/m1/5/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.