Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 213, Ed. 4 Tuesday, October 14, 1958 Page: 2 of 7
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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Tunisia Revolt
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Hurts Nasser
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By GEORGB WELLER
Bohannon
(adv)
inside fair grounds.
dafoma sub-
My opponent makes much of pardon and parole office. This
a highway commission appointed regular reports to the Oklahoma
9
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But the Oklahoma pardon and
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be paid for their service with the walls.
Peerl4
Plot
(Continued From Page 1)
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hope to break the case.”
passed over Nasser’s chole, the
dividual and society.”
220
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Ailing Slav Cardinal
Won’t Go to Rome
Ferguson
Aims Blows
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army help in the campaigning
for the elections next month. The
board will supervise his employ-
ment and private life and make
Atlanta detective Lieut. J. L. I
Moseley would say only that offi-
cers were continuing to question
suspects in the bombing of a
Jewish temple here Sunday, and
that "with the co-operation of
other enforcement agencies. We
(Continued From Page 1)
secretary to Warden McLeod,
said Bohannon was still at the
honor farm but that he would be
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office.
If Bohannon should violate his
parole, Texas will notify Oklaho-
ma and his parole can be re-
voked. This is done under a re-
ciprocal agreement between the
two states.
19 at Cordell, 26 were established
in farming. Of those at Cordell,
14 are in full time farming or
have direct farming interests
and one is a veterinarian now.
Harper has 49 boys enroled in
classes this year, all of whom he
visits regularly to inspect and
help with projects, in addition
to doing a lot of personal serv-
ice work in the county. At Cor-
dell, the boys have a new FHA
building with classroom, shop,
laboratory and office.
"I’ve always been fortunate in
being in schools and commu-
nities that not only have good
school programs, but places that
have a keen, working interest in
vocational agriculture,” Harper
said.
"I try to conduct well rounded
programs. We enter most of the
county, district and state judging
contests in most fields but do
not specialize in any one. The
boys exhibit livestock along with
tated and has paid his price to
society, I feel the state of Okla-
homa would be committing a
wrong if it refused to grant a
parole.
“When a person is serving a
long term, about all he has to
live for is hope. If you keep
turning him down, then you de-
stroy his hope.
"After all, they are human be-
ings and should be considered
as such. I feel the state should
ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (-Ail-
ing Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac
will not apply for permission to
go to Rome for the conclave that
will elect the new pope, reliable
church sources said .Tuesday.
Cardinal Stepinac, 60, spiritual
leader of Yugoslavia's Roman
Catholics, was confined to his na-
tive village of Krasic by the gov-
ernment in 1951. His decision re-
portedly came on advice of his
doctors, who advised him the
trip to Rome would be too
strenuous.
That was in essence the reason
for the uprising last May. Many
felt that with the weakness of
the Paris government, Algeria
would be lost under the pressure
of the four-year-old Algerian re-
bellion.
The premier's order appeared
aimed at thwarting hopes of
mals increases interest in class-
room work. I also try to interest
them in speech contests for that
training."
Harper's family consists of his
wife, Pauline, Judy, 11, and Jack
III, 5. His parents still live in
Weatherford. With his brother,
Frank, Harper is farming six
quarters of land near Cowden,
although Frank—also a top rank-
ing FFA boy in highschool—is
directly handling the operation.
BOTTOMS UP! John Anderson of Poultney, Vt.,
cheerfully plays nursemaid to this baby raccoon, as
he feeds the animal from a milk bottle. The raccoon
plainly prefers the upside-down feeding method. (UPI
Photo)
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So is LeFlore because Bohan-
non will have that marble in his
pants pocket when that heavy
iron gate clangs shut behind him
for the last time.
"All officials who have dealt
directly with Bohannon feel that
he has been rehabilitated,” Gary
said.
In the Way
Laborer Timothy Mellon, 19,
was fined $11.20 for obstruction
in London over his plea that
whenever he tried to move
around police constable Leon-
ard Long "his stomach was al-
ways there."
C. Fred Freel for insurance.
(adv)
the committee nor the civilian
members hid their bitterness.
The impact of the withdrawal
of the officers from the commit-
tees was bound to be great. They
have formed the backbone of the
committees in all parts of the
country.
Extremists Thwarted
"We don't want to make politi-
p J
aia
I
OF MOUSE AND MEND — With its broken hind leg in a splint, a tiny mouse
rests in the hand of a student at Roosevelt junior school in Salina, Kan., where
it’s been adopted as a mascot. Rescued from a dog, the mouse is recovering nice-
ly after the leg was set by a science teacher. (UPI Photo)
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YOUNGEST FONTANA. The newest addition to the -
famed Rome fashion house of Fontana is 20-year-old
Gioia Fontana, daughter of Zoe Fontana. Here, the,
youthful designer uses photos of modem missiles to
style her latest creations. This dress (background)
is done in white shantung with black velvet "suspen-
ders." (UPI Photo)
plump sausages into the end of
the pipe to prevent explosion
or fire. The sausages worked
nicely.
Coming: SPORTS CAR ROAD
RACES Nov. 1-2. Two mile track
Algiers
(Continued From Page 1)
chief of government," said Massu
[ the moment the meeting began,
"I and other officers are with-
drawing."
Immediately there were shouts
of protest from among the civil-
ian members, who have counted
on the officers to give the com-
mittee force and public standing.
Bitterness Not Hidden
"We will follow you, general,"
cried one of them.
"No, you have work to do,"
Massu replied.
"We are leaving with a heavy
tef.
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Orem's Appllences, 3rd H-Perk Ave. W. CI 2-1231
Brown’s Capitol Hill, Lower Floor MI 4-3344
Orem's Apollance Store, 2Sth & Se. Walker MI 2-9503
tOpen week nights uniil to
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M Moolaala
A MARBLE with a glass
eye will change hands at
McAlester Tuesday after-
noon and a prisoner will go
free. Campbell LeFlore, top,
state pardon and parole of-
ficer, will give the marble
to Julius Bohannon, bottom,
and the long-term convict
will go free on parole.
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state jobs and political favors?”
Nudists
4
(Continued From Page 1)
friends they said lived in Fres-
no they registered at the camp
as nudists and moved .nto
Brenkman’s cottage with him.
Last Thursday night the
three visited with Bachar in
his cottage. Bachar said the
Pattersons seemed "nice and
refined." He didn't know where
they came from.
, Friday morning the three
were not to be seen and Brenk-
man's car was gone, so he
entered Brenkman’s cabin to
feed his parakeet and water
some house plants. He saw
nothing wrong, but when they
hadn't returned Friday night
he called police at Clovis to
see if there had been a possi-
ble accident.
Monday Bachar again en-
tered the cabin. This time he
found Brenkman's body under
the bed, nude.
The wrist watch and dia-
mond ring he usually wore
were missing, as was his wal-
let, containing an estimated $25
in camp receipts and $40 to $50
of Brenkman’s own money.
Bachar said no one else was
at the camp. Others are not
admitted to the camp except
on weekends.
Ler
During a breakfast of scram-
bled eggs, bacon and sausage,
the president chatted with Mrs.
Clare B. Williams, assistant Re-
publican national chairman.
As a surprise national chair-
man Meade Alcorn asked Eisen-
hower to lift a special phone
which had been installed at his
seat. On the wire, calling from
Maplewood, N. J., was Mrs. An-
nabelle Smiley Khalaf. Mrs. Kha-
laf, wife of a Maplewood dentist,
is originating a series of tele-
phone calls in which Republican
women are urging housewives to
vote for the GOP ticket.
Ike Praises Plan
In an excited voice Mrs. Kha-
laf told Eisenhower about the
plan.
Eisenhower said he doesn't be-
lieve there is any better way to
stir up enthusiasm. He said he
hopes two million such telephone
calls will be made in New Jer-
sey.
When Mrs. Khalaf replied that
the goal is 3 million calls, Ei-
senhower burst out: "Well, I’m
being raised out of the pot.” He
explained that he was using a
poker term.
The president joined in the
singing when four pianists played
"Let Me Call You Sweetheart”
in honor of Mrs. Eisenhower.
Eisenhower grinned broadly
and clapped his hands when a
curtain was pulled back to dis-
play a 14 by 20-foot birthday
card which said "Happy Birth-
day Mr. President.” On the card
there was a poem addressed to
Eisenhower under the title "Ode
to the Boss,” as well as a series
of cards bearing signatures of
Republican candidates and cam-
paigners from all the states.
---•----
Turn About’s Fair
CHICAGO (UPI) - Flagpole
painter James McKeon, 39, re-
vealed Tuesday what he does to
get even with people who stare
up at him while he works. Mc-
Keon stares right back, with a
camera he uses to record the
sea of gaping faces below.
Chicago i
(Continued From Page 1)
way and windows of a brick:
duplex apartment, owned by el-
derly John and Emma Schuldt,
at 6819 South Morgan. The down-
stairs apartment had been oc-
cupied since October 2 by a Ne-
gro family, Mr. and Mrs. Jota
Daniels and their children. Dan-
iels is a postoffice worker.
The other bomb, at 6823 South
Morgan. shattered windows and
caused other damage in a build-
jag owned by Kit Johnson Jr.,
25. The downstairs apartment in
this building has been occupied
since August 1 by another Negro
family, James Branch, a pack-
inghouse worker, his wife and
five children.
The owners also lived in their
respective buildings.
enough of Cairo’s leadership in
the Algerian war.
Three leading Cairo newspa- •
pers accused Bourguiba of “at-1
tempting to destroy the Arab I
league and becoming an impe-
rialist mouthpiece."
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES f
1 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1958 I
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•MIRROR-S HARP PICTURE, clear, real,
sharp ... new picture balance circuit
gives more depth, dimension.
• «A$Y TUNING, high, sharp, ««iy "One-
touch" control. Turns on-off without
changing volume selection.
• BALANCED FIDELITY SOUND, now ad-
vencod FM round circuit makes possible
a richer, fuller, more realistic round in
ell reception areas.
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brain-child: the new Algerian
government of Ferhat Abbas in
Cairo.
—Because Nasser’s leadership
in the Arab league has embar-
rassed on a worldwide scale
when the United Nations accept-
ed Charles Malik of Lebanon as
of Roy Craig, then a district su- '
pervisor, whom Harper had as- |
listed as a student at Weather- I
ford. 1
3
M-T
_______________________। extremists were believed plan- Sudanese foreign minister, and
do what is best for both the in- ning to put up pliable Moslems elected Malik despite the Arab
as candidates. (league’s disapproval
■ psrgb
aggd. “ 1632
Perfect Use
British sausages, more often
damned than not, were the
subject of acclaim Tuesday.
After a gas pipe was broken
by a truck that went out of >
control in Coventry, England,
Harry Matty stuffed three
other States rad Foreim Countrier.
*8 *4*3’
Sunday only . 10.40 5.20 1M 355
Second dun, postaue pata at Oka.
kana City, Oklahoma.
THE DAILY OKLAHOMAN
Moraine and Sunday
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMEs
Evenine‛kaSton‛2*68dnkahoman
SOONBroadpaoa0kdabomaclty1,Okia,
-Russia has jolted Nasser and been an interstate conspir-
the Arab league by refusing to ]
recognize Nasser’s week-old acy:
d Wha
nEr
ALEMES
‛s-x F"
Tunisia's charge that Nasser
is leading the league into the
Kremlin hurt Nasser for three
reasons:
—Nasser this week end sent
his trusted vice-president and l
military commander, Marshal
Abdul Hakim Amer, to Czecho-
slovakia where he is getting
high honors and probably more
arms.
by the county attorney who has
spent most of his short adult life
holding office or running for gov-
ernor be a non-political commis-
sion?
“How could a governor sur-
rounded by the old guard ma-
chine build anything but political, — ------------ puu uu - -
roads to pay off both the old parole board, Gov. Gary and heart,, said one of .the officers,
guard and the 2,000 'volunteers’ | prison officials are betting Bo-; decining to permit use of his
who are waiting breathlessly tohannon will make good outside name.
Neither the young officers on
a 'non-political, constitutional
highway commission.' How could
T.
33208
Here is truly outstending beauty
and performance! 242 sq: in,
vieweble picture, hes t power
transformer for extre power,
mahogany finish.
But the atmosphere in the de-!
tective bureau, nerve center of I
the probe, was one of subdued
elation and optimism.
"There are several more per-
sons we want to talk to that we
haven’t been able to locate yet.”
Moseley said. Some of those al-
ready questioned had been re-
leased, but several others still
were being held.
A growing reward fund in At-
lanta brought the total now of-
fered for useful information on
the series of bombings in the
south to $65,000. Investigators are
going on the theory that the At-
lanta incident was tied in with
recent blasts in Tennessee, Flor-
ida, South and North Carolina
and Alabama.
Arthur Levin, southeast region-
al director of the Anti-De-
famation League, said the sim-
ilarity of dynamitings at Jewish
installations here and in other
southern cities "sets a pattern
of anti-Semitic activity.” This
existed even before the question
of integration became such a hot
one in Dixie, he added.
In Atlanta, activity against
Jews has been carried out by
groups calling themselves the
National States Rights Party
(which picketed the newspapers)
and the National Committee to
Free America from Jewish .Dom-
ination.
parole and marble from LeFlore.
At a summer meeting of the
pardon and parole board, Bohan-
non said he had saved several
thousand dollars in the last three
years.
Tuesday, Anderson said Bohan-
non had only $21.27 in the prison
trust fund, but added, "I guess
he has more money someplace
else."
Bohannon was reported con-
trolling his emotions "well” Tues-
day, but was described as "a
very happy man.”
Gary made the parole decision
after studying the matter for sev-
eral months. He followed the
unamious recommendation of the
clemency board despite strong
opposition from many persons, in-
cluding children of two victims
of Bohannon's blazing guns.
Bohannon will live his parole
under supervision • of the Texas
European extremists of enlisting assembly president.
The United Nations coolly
'^,4, / ]
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1o,
American is Elected
BRUSSELS u — The Interna-
tional Federation of Agricultural
Producers has elected Jamies J.
Patton of North Dakota as its
president ',
Ike
(Continued From Page 1)
in Washington and restore it to
the states and individuals.
As one of these endeavors he
said the administration has done
its best to balance the federal i
budget. He added that an unbal.
anced budget is likely to push
every price further up and hit the
pocketbook at every wage earner.
Eisenhower charged up this
year’s deficit to the recession
and the military outlays occa-
sioned by the Russian Sputniks,
and to additional sums voted by
congress "that should have not
been voted."
Accompanied by Mrs. Eisen-
hower, the president arrived
promptly at his birthday party at
1:50 a.m. Dressed in a gray suit
and dark tie with a white carna-
tion in his lapel, Eisenhower
grinned broadly and waved in sa-
lute as the breakfast crowd gave
him a standing ovation.
Phone Calls Made
Mrs. Eisenhower, wearing a
charcoal suit and a silver blue
(Continued From Page 1) |
Oklahoma State university. Still-
। water, graduating in 1939. He be- ,
gan teaching agriculture at
Mooreland, on recommendation [
brought back to receive his their farm programs. I think
both contests and showing ani-
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g ocmehn
1M mema
9
The Picket Conga
Instructors at Arthur Mur-
ray's dance studio in Milwau-
kee displayed something new
in union picket lines. About 20
of the instructors picketed in
a hip-swinging, foot-kicking
conga line to call attention to
their grievances against man-
agement.
Geo. W. Bass Insurance Agcy.
(adv)
Bartlesville Tuesday, with Re-
publican Phil Ferguson hitting
hard at charges of graft in the
Democratic administration.
Ferguson promised "a depart-
ment of agriculture for the farm-
ers, not for the grafters; a securi-
ty law to protect our investors,
not to protect grafters; and to
free this state from political graft
and pressure."
His talk was prepared for de-
livery at a noon meeting of the
Bartlesville Lions club.
Democrat J. Howard Edmond-
son was due in Bartlesville for a
Democratic rally beginning at
3.45 p.m. Tuesday. Advance
copies of his talk were not avail-
able earlier in the day.
Record Is Attacked
Ferguson's talk touched on
highways and the record of Ed-
mondson as Tulsa county attor-
ney.
He termed Edmondson "the
loophole candidate" because the
Tulsa prosecutor has explained
that Tulsa city, not his office,
has jurisdiction over Tulsa boot-
leg violations.
He said it took a U. S. dis-
trict attorney to jail principals
in a Tulsa bootleg payoff ring.
"Mr. Edmondson,” he said,
"insists that he has no jurisdic-
tion over whisky merchants in
Tulsa, and that is why he can
do nothing about the 61 bootleg-
gers now operating in Tulsa with
a federal stamp.
Bad Roads Claimed
"In other counties in Oklaho-
ma the county attorneys are not
stymied by the loopholes Mr.
Edmondson speaks of. We have
some effective county attorneys
who successfully enforce the
law."
His trip to Bartlesville, he said,
rudely reminded that "I was
coming into an area of the state
that the Democrats must believe
is only inhabited by cowboys
and Indians . . . highways in
northeastern Oklahoma have been
sadly neglected."
He explained his plan for a
highway commission of four
Democrats and four Republicans
“pledged to build roads in Okla-
homa where the traffic demands
such roads."
Payoffs Awaited?
"The roads of Oklahoma," he
slid, “will never be any better
than the integrity of the governor
and the highway commission he
appoints.
Harper's own FFA work was
done at Weatherford under Harry
Chambers, now assistant state
conservationist for the 8CS, Still-
water. Harper lived on the edge
of town and his principal proj-
ect! were in dairy cattle. As a
livestock judge, he was twice
high man in state contests in
dairying, on several top teams.
In 1947 he moved to the Cor-
dell school and has been active
in civic affairs, the Rotary club,
By HUGH HALL
Paths of the two major candi- ' \
dates for governor crossed in a
Methodist church and other com- ’
munity activities. He has been
a member of the state vo-ag ad-
visory council for 1$ years.
Of the American Farmers he j
turned out, the four were es- i
tablished in farming, the record ;
m d
1 ■'
shows. Of the 13 junior master »
farmers at Mooreland and the hi
i-------r
mink wrap, was seated across !
from the president on a podium 2%
decorated with the presidential
seal. B
2'2R5.
u..
"Everyone recognizes the
crime for which he was commit-' cal careers,” said one army of-
ted was a horrible crime. But1 ficer. "All we want is to assure
when a man has been rehabili- French continuation in Algeria."
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Tunisia'! disillusionment with
the Arab league goes deeper,
however, than Nauer's purport-
ed red influence.
Tunisia's unhappiness resem-
bles that of autumn pledges to
a college fraternity that finds
the brotherhood broke. Almost
the first act gf the phantom Al-
gerian government of Ferhat Ab-
bas on entering the league was
to ask $35 millions in help. The
aim was to keep Algeria’s re-
volt, mounted largely in Tunisia,
from breaking pu in face of
French premier De Gaulle’s
sweet-talking reConquest of Alge-
ria.
The Tunisians, under president
Bourguiba, dead broke them-
selves have been providing for
the Algerians training grounds,
hospitals and camps for attack-
ing France back into Egypt's
transmission belt for Egypt's
weapons sent through Sahara.
$35 Millions Asked
The Tunisians expected that
other Arab league members
would match these sacrifices by
quickly subscribing $35 millions.
Instead, however, Arab league
members have talled. Even the
richest, like Saudi Arabia and
Iraq, are not paying.
The hard-up Algerians have
now offered to make cease-fire
terms with De Gaulle. Nasser
is settling Suez claims and bring-
ing France back into Egypt's
cotton market.
Where everybody else in the
Arab league is talking anti-De
Gaullism but acting otherwise,:
and while Russia itself is gam-'
bling on seducing De Gaulle out,
of the North Atlantic Treaty or-
ganization, Tunisia has had
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NICOSIA, Cyprus, (CDN)-Ga-
mal Abdel Nasser's designs for
a Monroe doctrine over the Arab
world have been all but wrecked
by Tunisia’s bold revolt against
Soviet influence in the Arab
league.
Tunisia’s president Habib
Bourguiba has now replaced
king Hussein of Jordan in Nas-
ser's category of "enemies of
Arab unity."
Like a bride biting ■ groom
Tunisia has ruined its ceremon-
ial marriage, paired with docile
Morocco, into the 11-member
Arab league.
Bourguiba followed up his blow
at the United Arab republic pres-
ident by demanding that Egypt,
if it prized Arab unity so highly,
should surrender his rival Saleh
Ben Youssef, now enjoying Nas-
ser's hospitality.
Egypt Refuses
Egypt refused saying that Ben
Youssef had fled from Tunisia
to Egypt with Bourguiba's con-
sent.
Here’s how Tunisia's row with
Nasser over Soviet influence has
developed:
Tunisia hit straight at Nas-
ser's communist ties when El
Habin El Shatti, its delegate at
the Cairo meeting of the Arab
league, struck “certain Arab
countries which attempt to dom-
inate the league.”
He charged that "links with
the east" were being imposed.
These charges caused Egyptians,
led by onetime pentagon arms
negotiator Gen. Abdul Hamid
Ghaleb, to walk out in resent-
ment.
El Shatti then called a Sunday
press conference in Cairo to an-
nounce flatly, "we are with the
west.”
Nasser is Hurt
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 213, Ed. 4 Tuesday, October 14, 1958, newspaper, October 14, 1958; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2002103/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.