Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 239, Ed. 2 Thursday, November 13, 1958 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 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:
/ •
A
Death of Hearst Son
Teens Cut
Is Called Unexpected
Fears Out
Times religion editor who tithes
Mary Jo Nelson
2
Mary Jo had handled church
to talk.'
news at various intervals before
an-
To Open Concert Season
1
hold-
elation.
NO MORE LOPSIDED BISCUITS!
demand concert artists, Miss Tur-
ner
»
I
the
fore the blast.
V
t
i
6
BUY SNOW CROP!
»
0
04
NOW
I T “ S
BARBECUE
0
■
■ )
s
I
I
W
t
«862
w
4
y
ed
)
PUMPKIN
*
G-
A
DAHO
hPallan
-
W
• ।
P
1
•dhthaha
COLDS-SORE THROAT
■ 94
< e
0
■■
THRIF TY RECIPE S ON EVERY PACKAGE
fde
VALUABLE COUPON
GROWN N
/
VALUABLE COUPON
The best fixin's ever mixed. Naturally, because they're put
together with loving care from an old Comstock-family recipe.
Kills Germs by
the Millions
Integration
Conference
THIS COUPON
WORTH
Red Scissors
Coupons
inside
CHICAGO (UPD—Between 200
and 300 parents and children at-
2
writer, and they have seen her
head home at sundown more
than once with the thick church
The conference will be staged
at Central State college. Ed-
mond, beginning at 9 a.m. No-
vember 23. Its purpose is to pro-
mote safety among teen-agers.
About 400 students, represent'
ing all Junior and senior highs in
Oklahoma City and several in the
I
And Calumet has sealed-in double freshness,
too... thanks to the metal can and the inner
seal (with the "measuring edge" for even meas-
uring). See for yourself why women have de-
pended on Calumet for nearly 70 years.
I
I
Recommended by
General Foods
Kitchena
Look for
the red
metal can...
Hunt Sends Firemen
In State $2 Millions
State Insurance commissioner
Joe B. Hunt Thursday said
$2,064,881 in 1958 insurance pre-
mium tax has been allocated to
firemen's pension funds in the
state.
Hunt said that was the total al-
located by the state budget di-
rector out of this year's premium
tax.
The money goes into the pen-
sion funds of 256 cities and towns
participating, Hunt said.
I am proud to say I have final-
ly walked down the Bap-
tist aisle!”
The award didn't come a min-
ute too soon. Word leaked out
the superior
RUSSET ,
POTATO
A
Look for"Grown In Idaho* on
the potatoes or containers-
It's your assurance of
genuine Idahos.
Women who want tender, flaky biscuits that are
"even all around" bake with Calumet because
Calumet has eontrolled, even-rising action, to
give you "just right” rising always—in the bowl
and in the oven.
plugs away at other regular as-
signments, ranging all the way
from military news to Oklahoma
City symphony coverage.
Sharing the excitement with her
Wednesday night was Mary Jo's
sister, Miss Monty Nelson. They
are daughters of Mrs. Alma Nel-
son, 1532 NW 48.
1
RECIPE
OVEN.SMOKED I ■■ — —
BANNECUE TURKEY
Ui* brush, or swob, t apply
FGANO Liquid Barbecue Smoke
liberally to inside and outside of
Turkey.
Let set hr two houn >• the deli-
ciovs flavor con penetrate.
Stuff Turkey with your usual dress-
Ing but add one tablespoon ef
homo Liquid Barbecue Smoke.
Ab juices appear in the baking pan,
odd to th* juices-for bosting pur-
pose-2 teblespoons d HO ASO
Liquid Barbecue Smoke Cook in
your regular way, batts freqvently.
Vote Probe Set
The commission also
given."
She said the plan is expected
to increase membership materi-
ally next season.
tending an open house at an el-
! ementary school panicked
Explosion Starts
Panic at School
The Baptist honor was a "star"
in the crown Mary Jo started
Baptist church. A lifelong Meth-
odist, she later chuckled, "Well,
To obtain the best frying results you need the best
potatoes you can buy—and that means Idahos! 1.
They are high-altitude grown and have a firmness
of texture and a flavor quite unequalled. Finest of
all potatoes, too, for baking, boiling, mashing—
serve them often!
2 ,,
forging at age 17. She went to
work as an Oklahoman-Times
as a steady job in May, 1957.
%, $L~
Snow Crop is the one
frozen juice that retains
the real fruit particles of
the whole orange. Snow
Crop looks and tastes like
it was squeezed in your
own kitchen. Enjoy real
"Home-Squeezed" Style
frozen juice. Get several
cans of Snow Crop today.
by typewriter for every church in
town, Thursday admitted that vir-
tue is sometimes more than its
own reward.
On her left, or carriage-return-
ing, wrist rested a sparkling new
6
1
■ W
i
-(ATI Wirevhote
John Randolph Hearst
she has been P-TA columnist,
feature section editor and long-
who time teen page editor.
JUST THINK! These two delightful fillings, and many others, areat your store
this minute. Too good to believe? Just go and see. The name... COMSTOCK!
A
i 2.
a
2
A
M
DRIED
CORN
DUTCH DELIGHT dried corn
is delicious. Now available
at your favorite store. Write
for free recipe folder.
MARTIN H. COPE CO. Rheema, Pa.
Calumet’s even-rising action
promises perfect texture every time!
San Francisco opera, and in con-
certs here and abroad. Ovations
from critics and audiences ac-
company her on singing tours.
As in past seasons, the Civic
Music concert begins promptly
on schedule, and admission is
Mincemeut Want your mouth to water?
Listen. Currants, raisins, citron, orange
peel, cider vinegar, nice spices and other
wonderful things, all put together. That’s
Comstock’s way of making this delicious
Mincemeat Pie Filling. Maybe we’re old
fashioned, but that’s the way our friends
like it Just make your crust Pour in the
mincemeat Into the oven-and then sniff.
Mmmmmm-wonderful!
The delicate flavor of Figaro: a blend of tangy, liquid
smoke, choice spices, and herbs makes Old Fashioned
Barbecue. No muss, no fuss, Figaro Liquid Barbecue
Smoke puts real "Smoke Turkey" goodness into every
mouth-watering bite.
It's time for
Mince'n'Pumpkin Pies
And here are the tasty fillings—ready for the crust
school, and learned her trade the
hard way.
She became a state desk as-
sistant in 1950, and transferred
to the Times city staff three _
years later. Among other chores,
and a few others cracked.
] Mrs. Marie L. Steiner, princi-
pal, said the blast was appar-
ently a "schoolboy prank.” She
mkEhz
■■^1
Pa
hI ..
as an
4ovun
5280 a.m. in the Virgin Isle |
hotel.
He was believed to have suf-
fered a heart attack, but the
cause of death was not imme- 4
diately determined.'
Hearst and his wife came here . ‘
two weeks ago on a vacation. I
Sle was with him when he was
stricken.
Hearst was a native of New
"AkcandKEV We®
Mio AMs Homemade Pies .
COMSTOCK EAgIy PIE mUMS
PumpkinI The spices, the sugar, the eggs
are all in that selected pumpkin. Just stir
in a little milk, and fill the tender, flaky
crust that only you can make just right
Your big, sunshiny pumpkin pie is oven-
ready, and when it comes out, that man
of yours will re-discover his barefoot-boy
appetite. This is old fashioned eating, just
the way the Comstock family made it in
their kitchen years ago.
FAn."
1 ad"a
t Ma e "4
i
At your Favorite Grocer. This coupon good J
for 10c of the regular price of one bottle J
of farhou FIGARO Liquid Barbecue Smoke, I
or 10c off one bonle of any other FIGARO r
Product: Hot Barbecue Sauce, Shrimp J
Cocktoll Sauce, or Garlic Vinegar. Not |
valid after Novomber 29, 1958.
i
.____■ -- - _____- I
" I
Mumd
BAKIN
kl pOWDEA
*,77,4
/4,50- /
N‛,“0g1,H20ataxer /
* 16; 2247 a**1' /
.4-27 /
833-s*/ . /
And Enjoy i
oked Turkey 2
From Youg Own Otkn! k
W Am
oue .... .. _______— ।— -------- - said a group of boys of about
claim for her performances with concert only. One-fifth of the highschool age had been loiter-
- —■!>— n-- ..4 tha mamherehin win he natified prior ing near the school shortly be-
ST. THOMAS, Virgin Islands (P) — John Randolph
Hearst, 49, son of the late publisher William Randolph ,
Hearst, died unexpectedly Thursday.
Authorities said Hearst, assistant general manager
of Hearst Newspapers, had apparently been in good
health. He was stricken at -----------------------—....
MSO.
vention here (thus ending her
puzzlement about why her aft- page file under her arm.
ernoon paper editor had summar- The Rantist honor was i
ily ordered her to cover a night
meeting).
Rev. Dick McCartney sum-
moned her to the rostrum from
Of Safety
Teen-agers planning their an-
nual county-wide safety confer-
ence are making sure this year
that the younger set doesn’t get
stage fright.
For the first time, the junior
and senior highschool delegates
will be separated in the discus-
sion groups.
"Esch group has its individual
problems," explained one plan-
ner. "But in the past the junior
high students have been afraid
to speak up.
"If they're in their own group,
nounced it was ready to proceed
with a probe of alleged voting
right abridgments involving Ne-
groes in Alabama. Executive di-
rector Gordon Tiffany indicated
the subpens would be used if
necessary to get at voting rec-
ords, which have been withheld
from federal investigators.
There were these other devel-
opments:
—The Little Rxk school board
Wednesday night dismissed
school Supt Virgil T. Blossom,
and five of the six board mem-
bers resigned effective at mid-
night Friday. The resigning
members said they wanted to
give voters a clear-cut choice on
the question of integration in a
vote December 6 to fill the va-
cancies.
Negroes File Suit
—Negroes filed a damage suit
against the city of Birmingham,
Ala., challenging application of
the city's new law which allows
transit officials to enforce seg-
regated bus seating.
—Rep. William M. Tuck (D.,
Va.) urged that his state fight
to maintain segregation, even
should the state's "massive re-
sistance" laws be struck down.
The statutes are being tested in
both state and federal courts.
—Rep. Brooks Hays <D..
Ark.) reaffirmed his "moderate"
stand on the racial question in a
speech in Atlanta and called on
the south to “earnestly seek to
solve its problems." He said Ar-
kansas voters who rejected his
bid for re-election in favor of a
segregationist write-in candidate
“will one day realize they made
a mistake.'
Claramae Turner, of opera and by membership card only.
Pre-concert dinners, a
copy messenger following grad-
uation from Capitol Hill high-
WASHINGTON (UPI)—
The first full-scale federal-
state conference on the
school integration question
will be held in Nashville,
Tenn., early next year.
The federal civil rights com-
mission announced Wednesday it
plans to invite school officials
from all over the country to take
part. Chairman John A. Hannah
said the commission would ask
school spokesmen for "all the
available information" on local
problems in admitting Negroes
to white schools.
Metropolitan Opera and the membership will be notified prior
to each concert and will be sent
we believe they'll be encouraged KorSnirenit^
tat " his first editorial assignment as
concert fame, performs at 8:15
p.m. Thursday in Oklahoma City over from last season, are con-
University auditorium. । tinuing this year. Membership j
The famed contralto opens the I will meet in the Patrician room
season for members of the Okla- (of O'Mealey’s cafeteria, NW 81
homa County Civic Music asso- ! and May avenue, at 6:30 p.m.
As a spur to interest in the as-
Mary Jo Nelson, Oklahoma City3 Wednesday night at a general
.......1 session of the 53rd annual con-
among other newsmen,
could barely choke back prema- i
ture congratulations. aewo at valuus ___________
Fellow workers were nearly taking over the Saturday page
as pleased as Mary Jo herself i .......—
because she is widely-respected i
-— v - j ... i Since then, she has steadily ex-
all-purpose, heavy-duty panded the section as well as de-
watch, engraved as a tribute ___________________
from the Oklahoma Baptist Gen- the thronged sanctuary of First
a pass.
“No choice of concerts will be
5 TO I STORK
county, are expected for the con-
ference.
Chairmen of the various dis-
cussion groups will be chosen
from among top leaders of the
participating schools.
Committees planning the con-
ference have been meeting the
last four Saturdays at the Okla-
homa Education association
building.
eral convention. With it came a
plaque, acclaiming her as the
state's best church reporter.
The figurative orchid followed
by only a few weeks the arrival
of the Mary Jo Nelson orchid,
created in California as a flow-
ery “thank you" for the versatile
reporter's coverage of a nation-
al orchid fanciers' convention
here last year.
State Baptists gave Mary Jo
their first annual award for out-
standing religious reporting
PREFER
"HOME-
SQUEEZED"
STYLE
JUICE?
One of the country's most in- sociation, officers this year are ( powder bomb, however, was
demand concert artists, Miss Tur- initiating a guest pass plan. Mrs. 1 slight. Six windows were broken
ner appears regularly with ma- George W. Gilroy, president, ex-
jor symphony orchestras and plained it like this:'
stars frequently on network tele- ; “Each member will be given
vision and radio. | one guest pass during the sea-
She has received greatest ac- son, which will be good for one
assistant to the publisher of the
Atlanta Georgian.
He served as president '
of Harper's Bazaar-Cosmopolitan I
Book Corp., general manager of I
Hearst radio operations, and as- I
sistant to the general manager I
of the International Magazine I
Corp.
He was publisher of the New I
York Daily Mirror from 1932 to I
1934, and president of the old I
New York Evening Journal from I
1936 to 1937.
Hearst had been assistant gen- I
eral manager of Hearst newspa- |
pers since 1941. The Hearsts had
four children.
_• * - ’*
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES la Religion, Our Gal Takes Prize
M THURSDAY, NOV. U. »tM — ---------------------—
u. s. Seis An Amen for Mary Jo
MINCEMEAT PUMPKIN
CPIFfiLI/
Wednesday night when a home-
made bomb exploded in the ves-
tibule.
Damage from the black
mew"Ee onpoxaosThungpmspaersmsak
(e9 calicd the TASURYraoMKNiKgVariations
788838 ...everyth 5 Eo* 09
01% “Jam rinwhecls"! . .
..ee
1.x-*-** wore name and address to: CALUMET REES
book, Box 1375,Dept. N, Kankakee, nlHertsaabong pwdeni
become as important to you as your Calumet Baling
gyEon
L4s-E
61*2 E,,
22205
"“62.0082827
2-
La22B 9008383823
gg
liatetia
14- $,444 #452
sT-aafth.Ns
34
e
‘'onlyIdahos <
fry like
Idahos
*22"co°
V30•"* Nodousvkpey/
Tastes Better • Cooks Better • looks Better
WintAds CE 2-3311
—-----. - veloping front page news from
Miss Turner’s High Note " s >.,«« *•
24-.-}—S
hsph/PINT
f I ONLY
334
Sn.
E * ".23 1e5e
2 i.mmmre
Colombo Plan Hears
Asia Minister Speak
SEATTLE u — Foreign Min-
ister Vu Van Mau of Viet Nam
called on the Colombo plan min-
isters’ conference Thursday to
consider without delay measures
for self-defense against commu-
nist dumping tactics in southeast
Asia.
He said that if these manuevers
continue, "they might cause the
ruin of our economies while
opening the way to foreign politi-
cal dominance." By this he re-
ferred to the flooding of markets
with cutrate goods which he
said sometimes bear false Indi-
* cations of origin.
EASY TO
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. 69, No. 239, Ed. 2 Thursday, November 13, 1958, newspaper, November 13, 1958; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2002204/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.