Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 239, Ed. 2 Thursday, November 13, 1958 Page: 6 of 6
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♦
Some Issues SYA,T
>
% I
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Still Short
4
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Estimatod Salable Receipts
89 do
> s
4 J
4 0
%
11
1
'•xtroo
:*
9%
19
2
w
1
1
I:
Y
'll
11
14
Qil
34
’Y
Air
2
102%
ly late
as
I
My
r»
■
kt
l
1
H
%
100% - %
Kennecott
Standard Oil (N. J.) 59% - %
M
51% + M
Royal Dutch
15%
69
1
1.65
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i
3 1
Dan River
38
Am Chi
7
3
mCr
102
Am
Inka 26
1
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35
1
32
mii
106
6
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0
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to nn
SA.SeE
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HO Am hip 56
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arris Int
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3
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14 Vnadjum
ie §
VaC* Cha %
189"ap MM
1
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Livestock Markets
A
129
18
%
m
m
R
320
Mi
%
11
‘ft J
1
8
iUl
Northwest
11
Rains Ebb
pf
Picks Republican Aide
1
tom 14%
evn
4%
its Amsterdam congress in July
EMTFRES
er
France.
crat. Stiles for 18 years has been
1 I
Here's all we have to know
a
Dec
$ In Active Mart
edt
E
July
13
212%
ner, principal, for a plan to pre-
its 71
NAME (please prim)
(STREET)
1.UH
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[awi»|
Chng.
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E
Position
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251
a
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Total
(x)
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would be evidence of bipartisan
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8
3
CRPITOL hill snuincs
\
PECANS
. 27 Tulsa ...... 27%
.. 27
Supply Of
Livestock
Jump But
List Eases
Name of employer.
Kind of business
400
100
SOO
400
i.
n>
times on mill and New Orleans
buying but met renewed liquida-
tion and hedging on the upturn.
The selling was attributed in part
to dealer reports that, despite
the current heavy movement into
Am
Am
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
THURSDAY, NOV. 13. I HI 39
Cattle
Calves
Hogs
Sheep
- Business phone------
Are you a U. S. Citizen?
f
c
| 0
1 0
9
10
I
Home phone---
Are yon over 211.
am
«3
losses in other nearby contracts;
the list closed 15 cents a bale
higher to 90 lower than the pre-
vious close.
3
1
ously wounded had fired shots
into a crowd of about 75 danc-
ers, wounding two of them. He
was identified as Boisy Banks,
17. Police said they believed
he was shot in a struggle for
the gun. Also hospitalized were
Derow Young, 21, shot in the
right leg, and Frank Bates, 15,
shot in the right arm.
5v
i
: 2
. 8
in
■i
State Newt Roundup
Democratic Police Chief
$
1
1 3
4
4
3
5
%
Il c
8
(
I
2
+ %
1%
........... . . M
(Fam
48 SI? CIty ;
■ vs
:5#
s
11
1
4392
351
23%
23
2
14
Tons of Rock
Removed, Body
Found Crushed
P
RC
Alva
ck #
•H
33
51
#w
R
27%
1$%
1 3
Steady
Muskogee
Shawnee .
82
WEDNESDAY
(Br me Asoctatea Press)
ed the Notre Dame pin by the
Serra club of Tulsa was Edgar
Ledoux, 17. a senior in St. An-
thony's highschool in Okmulgee.
.. . Phillip Wolfe, of Carter In-
dian school at Ardmore, received
a 575 check from Edythe V. Tur-
ings, until rye and some wheat
contracts moved ahead near the,
bell on mild buying support.
Soybeans had scattered sup-
far
K
ago. . 1 Mailing address
Nearby December futures ral-
lied near the bell and shaved
Republican. Winterringer said he
needed "trained, experienced and
competent help in the office."
to act against ships operated un-
der "flags of convenience" in or-
der to force their owners to ac-
cept union conditions.
Some time before next Decem-
ber 15 union dockers, seamen,
shipyard workers and others
around the world will be called
on to refuse to work ships regis-
tered in Liberia, Panama, Costa
Rica or Honduras.
Cotton Lower
road.
Oklahomans to participate in
the event Friday on the Tech
campus include Milt Phillips,
Seminole; W. M. Morgan. Okla-
homa City; John Franks, Sapul-
changed with choice to prime
quotable to 521 to 521.25.
Cattle buyers were quick to
clear the decks of the few odd
lots at hand and most slaughter
interests were out late in hopes
there would be some late-morn-
ing arrivals to help fill out needs.
When a Democrat seeks ap-
pointment of a Republican to his
staff it is a most unusual event,
but it is happening to Cushing.
Police Chief Clyde R. Sapp has
recommended to the city com-
mission the appointment of Lee
R. Stiles, a former deputy sher-
iff. to the Cushing police force.
Sapp said if the appointment
is approved, Stiles will replace
Herb Carpenter, a former patrol-
man. Sapp is a former Kingfish-
Closing New York Stock Exchange Prices
County Clerk-Elect
Wants Old Employes
TULSA (UPD—The Tulsa coun-
ty clerk's office will keep mpst
of the outgoing Republican offi-
cial’s employes, despite the fact
a Democrat won the post in the
recent general election.
jEi 1
2
s
I
s
THOMASTON, Conn. IP—The
crushed body of a construction
worker was removed Wednesday
night from under tons of rock
and earth that poured down upon
him near the end of his day's
work Tuesday,
Rescue workers freed the body
I
s
42
NEW YORK Cotton futures
were lower Thursday in active
%
I
I
88
8
ar
ply
(Merriu
1ft
i
i
$
)
)
tags.
• )
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)
Jnit A
Unit Al
do 1956
Ji Art
Uni 11
Signature--------—------
All filled out? Then just mail it to-
Raymond J. Dusek, Manager—Dil>l. CSSI .
18Yonp)rm 29
an Raal 4
1
Dictatorial Power
Voted in Lebanon
BEIRUT (UPI) — The Leb-
anese parliament Wednesday
night voted the government of
Rashid Karami emergency pow-
ers to rule Lebanon by decree
for the next six months.
The seven-man bloc of deputies
supporting the policies of former
President Camille Chamoun with-
drew from the chamber in pro-
test a few minutes before the
vote. ,
In |
Oregon through Washington and
rains were in prospect through-
out the area for the next several
days.
Scatered snow fell in the high-
er elevations of Maho and west-
ern Montana but amounts were
light. Only other wet spots dur-
ing the night were in the form
of showers in the southern
a
130
1
That's right. Dealing with a broker can be as easy as •
filling out this form.
If you think you might like to buy stocks or bonds—
now or any time in the future—why don t you fill it out
and mail it in?
It won’t obligate you in any way, but it will enable us
to set about the business of opening your account. Once
that’s done, we’ll let you know, and then anytime you
want to buy or sell securities, all you’ll have to do is
give us a call.
2
i
13
• A AM/
• m\K.A
With SAVINGS
How it "they" do it? Chances are
those vacation trips, that college edu-
cation, the down payment on o new
home, were mode possible by regular
saving. You can work the same magic
—ooen an account here, and save every
payday! Liberal earnings help your sav-
ings grow faster.
tach Account Insured to 510,005
£
I
Murder-Suicide
Is Completed
DALLAS (—Mrs. Ann Ma-
berry, 25, wounded by her hus-
band Tuesday night, died
Wednesday night.
James Maberry, 32, shot him-
self to death after fatally wound-
nig his wife. Their two young
children and a playmate were in
a nearby room at the time.
!
4 Am
M Am
M Am
IS Am
54 Am
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Members New York Stock Exchange ant ell other Principal Exchanges
FIRST NATIONAL BLDG., OKLAHOMA CITY 2
Telephone: CEntral 2-1212
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CHICAGO UPS—Rains continued
but diminished in intensity in
the drenched areas of the far
northwest Thursday. Fairly dry
and mild fall weather prevailed
in most other parts of the coun-
try.
Heavy rains in the Pacific
northwest the past several days
caused some flooding in lowland
regions as rivers in western
Washington overflowed. The wet
belt extended from northwest
Have you ever been a customer of thii firm before?
What office?--------------
Name of your bank—----------
To comply with New York Stock Exchange regulations,
plense supply the following information about yourself-
or if you're a housewife—about your husband.
12
K
7 one AW
#§udgk
Some traders were more pessi-
mistic on the outlook for cotton
distribution this season. Exports
are lagging far behind a year
a new expressway. The new
route Ues right through Zelval-
kink's living room.
Senator’s Mexico Trip
To Cement Relations
WASHINGTON (UPD - The
state department said mutual
friends have arranged a meeting
between senate Democratic lead-
er Lyndon B. Johnson and Mexi-
can president-elect Lopez Mateos
to discuss hemispheric problems.
The Texas Democrat is expect-
ed to go to Mexico before the in-
auguration of Lopez Mateos on
December 1. Johnson’s mission
K %
%E
k
4
9
68
Fryer Prices
Take Drop .
(By SBA Market News Service)
Eggs advanced 3 cents in
Blackwell, but Ught hens were
2 lower in Lawton where heavies
were off a cent early Thursday.
The fryer market was down to j
15 cents at all points.
Turkeys are arousing a little,
more interest. A Payne county
flock of heavy breed tomsand
hens were reported bringing 20.6
Maralin McGee was elected
5%
#y
*y
%
I
30
2
M
.13 -—
14 E3
8 Wa dorf
15"
30 Walwith .
1319
18
FEED2
-- . __ c and 10 H nlarTUW WEIV SSVSOi A-a9 AAEUMVF III ,
of Matthew Pagarulo, 38, Irom northward into Oklahoma. Mis-1 vice president of the Frisco rail-
the grasp of a deep, rocKy, ra- — ■ 1
vine that clung to him tenacious-
ly for nearly 30 hours. Pagarulo
apparently was killed instantly,
a medical examiner said after
ft
$
to open your account...
port at times on an unconfirmed
si report that Spain will buy about
M 35,000 tons of vegetable oils in
m U. S. markets soon.
Active and fully steady trading
prevailed again in the livestock
market here Thursday as all buy-
ers continued in their search for
volume to fill the week's quotas.
In fact, three loads of top-good
to low-choice 1,254-pound steers
were ordered in to bring 525 and
pearly 400 shorn lambs of 97
pounds with No. 1 pelts to be
weighed up at 521. Otherwise the
day's livestock offering consisted
of smaller bunches and odd lots
and trading on these was active
and at least steady.
No trade-topping butcher hogs
were included in the run, kinds
comparable to those bringing
519.25 Wednesday and best at
hand sold to $19, figuring fully
steady.
Salable lamb supplies were ex-
tremely light and rates un-
The International Transport
Lad G
-Ane,B
BE
a deputy sheriff under Emil G.
Schroeder, Payne county Repub-
lican defeated in the general elec-
tion by Charlie G. Fowler.
Rockies and in the southern Speaker Chosen
Great Lakes region. Featured speaker at the lunch-
The 50s were the rule in most eon meeting to start industrial
other areas, except for the 60s Emphasis week at Oklahoma
confined to near the Gulf coast state Tech, Okmulgee, will be
and to a narrow belt from Texas Theodore H. Banister. St. Louis,
74m
5 Am
2 Am
21934m
27 Am
41 Am
57 Am
queen of the highschool band.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Blant McGee. . . . Present- 3uy
4M
9
> #8
J
e
‘im
qk
66 Am Smell
5 M do 1 ...
6Amasnur‛ 45
HAMBURG, Germany I—
Trade union leaders representing
seamen and dockers of 42 coun-
tries met here Thursday to ham-
mer out final plans for a world-
ift wide boycott of so-called "cheap
flag" ships.
h«m
1Ar9
& Loan Rssociation
311 w Cammovcr ME 2 44 j J (Hh •
The new government estimate
that the corn yield this year will
be a record high brought out
light selling of that grain and
reports from the southwest that
producers were selling larger
amounts of wheat also had a
slight bearish effect.
Generally, though. offerings
were light.
Wheat closed % cent a bushel
higher to % lowet, December
I
35129 s
rat
and 24.6 cents respectively.
Meanwhile a Custer county grow-
er received 21 and 25 cents for
toms and hens.
Small eggs are getting a play
in the retail stores. It was com-
mon to see tags offering 3 dozen
for 51.00 Thursday. Short supplies
coupled with an improved de-
mand pushed farm clean eggs
up 3 cents in Blackwell to 33
cents today.
Lawton dealers were covered
up with fowl offerings. Light hens
were lowered to a nickel, low-
est since September, 1957. Heav-
ies were lowered a cent to 15,
the second drop in two days.
The demand is fair to good for
heavy hens but most dealers are
having to go to the "soupers”
to find a home for the hens un-
der 4 pounds.
s
; 3178
. «.q
.3
• •357
230 06
38
prices were generally higher in
active trading. Gainers included
Russell Co., Menasco. Ogden
Corp., Douglas Oil, Dynamics
Corp, of America, British Pe-
troleum and Lefcourt realty.
Among losers were Texam oil
and Kaiser Industries.
Government and corporate
bonds worked higher.
There was a good assortment
of gains in rails, utilities and in-
dustrials. Corporate volume was
heavy, but somewhat under
Wednesday’s tremendous turn-
over.
Long-term treasury issues were
up % point or more near the
close; gains in intermediate is-
sues were in smaller fractions.
Two high-priced American Ma-
chine 4 Foundry convertible is-
sues sprinted around 7 points,
Florida East Coast 5s over 4.
Some German bonds rose frac-
tions to around a point in a steady
foreign list.
Seamen’s Union
Plans Boycott
Of ‘Cheap’ Ships
#
IN (
• yoe
30 Nor
Wheat Farmers
Seek New Markets
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (UPI-
Kansas wheat farmers, plagued
by over production and stock-
piles grown near the billion and
one-half bushel mark, will meet
here Monday and Tuesday to
talk about new markets.
Hie conclave will be the of-
ficial annual joint meeting of the
Kansas wheat commission and
the Kansas Association of Wheat
Growers. Buyers for two of the
biggest milling concerns in
Great Britain will speak at the
meeting.
4 ‘ ulna .
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ite
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30 <0 5 ot IN
| WV 59
33 uIc^aI1 ift
1,2040 644 Pt M
283,5
.. Adams, 80, Muskogee. Enoch
county sheriff, and a Demo- Harry Hunt, 64, Mulhall. Miss
tie highschool was Judy Hander-
son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 8
Elmo Henderson. ... In Hollis Mar
uh S?¥ale “ 33%
8 tmr 26 Workers' Federation decided in
33 •b
dg $.
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•ERS
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35
State Deaths
Virgil W. Dover, 61, Perry.
Daniel Bacon Allen, 39, McAles-
ter. Louis B. Beznoska, 70, Wal-
ters. C. B. Harrison, 73, Law-
ton. Raymond Lawrence, 22,
Lawton. Lieut. Don M. Wal-
droop, 26, Altus. John Ben Ling,
73, Altus. Mrs. Barbara A. Mar-
tin. 72, Wagoner. Mrs. Glenn
Rosier, Okmulgee. Isom Brown,
84, Wagoner. Mrs, Lula Breland
‘ ri Cont
l • 2.70
14
I
3
, 7
22746
#
at wiSu ,Tk&. 138
oarhe’yellow’ihellea 118
h s5
W
71dahp Pw 45
33,
2333,
with is Clerk-elect Clyde Winterringer,
"eei a Democrat, has handed appli-
tatdouj cation blanks to employes of de-
“ feated William P. Gable jr., a
Volume for the day was esti-
mated at 3.800,000 shares com-
pared with 4,440,000 Wednesday.
Pivotal issues fell fractions to
a point or more, Scattered gain-
ers relieved the generally lower
pattern.
American Motors lost a point
and more after its president said
the firm plans greater capital
spending next year.
The market was mixed at the
start but gradually found a lower
The Dow-] ones Ticker
are DowJonesabourty zostockisaveraze
IU.- zUCSTfirS
"-35#-*
level. The ticker tape was late
on two occasions of heavy trad-
ing.
Brokers regarded the action
as a consolidation of gains made
in the latest upsurge to record
highs.
American stock exchange
K
"2
)K. N.
I ‘
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.59 do 4,1
oust
owrd
I Howe
Hud }
! Hunt F
Junia Irene Long, 38, Ponca
City. 0. C. Musselman, 81, Ton-
kawa.
Special Honors
Elected football queen of Tut-
2Ea B
192 4-! 57%
120%
rs e #9
3n ar
& 3,
ri
a 2
;ung ift
art nm
o ev
■ar
22 on
44 Armco SU MU
43 Armour P
S4rmome
xng 4
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12-227,
IM ;ichison . MM
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14005 Far 15
igua ich 14%
25 Auto Cen 28%
Odd-Lot Stock Deals
NEW YORK, Nov. 13 Im-The New ,
York stock exchanue reported Thursday
& Fin:
la
short. _____._
Broiler Markets
ample for trade needs, moat lota over 3
rc 2," 2
pct. at 1514. W pet. at 15c.
10.66 16.65
' 3 399 Hut z The market rallied mildly at ।
tmvt •
-232922* 2 2 2
- — 10.65 19.64 +1
MM -S
MR .
» Smith
# 18 3
(CITY) (ZONE) (STATE)
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1333036T™ pt 78
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$8 $,,P #
Am2na 549
2g F:
r Sh 82%-
roehler I*
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1 Harris Int 41
run
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34
3^^A“,r Hy
the government loan, plenty of
cotton is available in the open
market-with demand slow.
TariAiA (W k«l Wapt 202
20
70 ef 1 io
53 no
284 # 18
8 iFnsw 8
$1.96%; com % to % lower,
December new-type contract.
$1.12%; oats ¥4 to % lower, De-
cember 65%; rye h to % high-
er, December $1.31%4, and soy-
beans %to% higher, November
52.12%.
Coal trike
is Looming
PITTSBURGH (UPD-The pos-
1 sibility of a strike, the first in
nine years, loomed Thursday in
the soft coal industry because of
a reported demand by the Unit-
ed Mine Workers that big coal
operators stop handling non-un-
ion coal.
However, Edward G. Fox,
president of the Bituminous Coal
Operators association, said in
Washington neither he nor the
association had yet received a
strike threat from UMW presi-
dent John L. Lewis.
It was reported here, where;
top officials of the BCOA met
Wednesday, that the UMW
chief would serve a 60-day no-
tice of termination of the present
contract December 1.
2 %
Local Markets
(Oman by O^traA-ro
Co.) At
- ‘ Uric 43
by Barnes Bros. Efl House
or better
nt
#e
x 2%
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WHOLESALE KOGA
iLmm Fagk ,
ed by Tenser Froduce Co ■»
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Hensseavy
WIOLESALE WFLI
& 5 jena
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cm 129
81 ktM Ind 402
R Drewrys 29
5 Dunhill 134
It uplan H's
46 du Pont 26444
3284,0 v
BEV* 22
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14 Am auh 59
100 Am Airlln 3 %
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l& Wilf #
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300 Am Boell 1 H
524% E
2*7$mcaR p
i21af 53
pa; James P. Mitchell, E. J.
O'Connor and L. K. Melton, Okla- ,---- .
homa City, and A. D. Davis, vent fires in the area of the
Tulsa. 1 school;
8,’ $0
2 128" $e 1*
*8 7%
GRAINS • LEKOS
143
Cora. No. 2 iellow A mixed, bu. 1.2004
Oala. No. 2 white, bu, .
128 JR
AorbM. bu. IN bran, ton • 36 25
Sherta. too 40 25
ICNeag Markel
Cara. No. 3 yellow, bu........... 1.13
1 UIS'
3 omestk 2.
T, ..
§hz
110 do 5 rf N
43 Ga Par 43
lifer
1 pt®
“2
ranhym .TH
Fansteel 49
: Fawck
ift
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Elktonm
uromocker
Hr
Watonga ...
■ f * „
•sgs 37%
, PnX,t*
#5#
,4|BrK 9
rpw lift
Foreign Exchange
(Based on New York quotations),..
Ce&r” fn
dtt brit pound ....... #202 2 8025
90-day futures ........... 2.7097 2.7082 !
France, franc ......... 0921 4221
Germany, west mark........1387 .2387 ,
Mexleespesg.w ............9803 9883i
Venezuela, bolivar .........an
Wheat, Rye;
Rally Late;
BeansUp :
, Lgw b Li CHICAGO IT)—Grain futures
2 5 were moderately weaker again
“ » most of Thursday in slow deal-
Other Markets
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U. S. Treasury Statement) dance to bring harmony be-
(WASHTNGTRN. 3,".. 52 j tween two rival neighborhood
gntc"sirso compared with Nov. 7, 1957: groups.
Police said witnesses report-
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Stock Judge Dies i225
CALGARY. Alberta (* - :
Charles Yule, 70. former gen- 3^1
eral manager of the CalgaryIoti
stampede and an internationally 1
iterestiinLatin American deal- znonsolyestskaeddwednesdao.te. -
NEW YORK I - The stock
market continued lower late
Thursday afternoon in active
trading but some stocks ad-
vanced briskly. Early losses
were trimmed.
Pfizer jumped 6 to 99% as un-
confirmed rumors of a stock split
swept Wall Street.
Prices near the close included:
U. S. Steel ........ 87% -1
Youngstown ........ 112% —1%
Am. Telephone .... 200 —1
General Motors .... 49% - %
American Motors .. 30% — %
J. 1. Case .......... 21% +1%
Northrop ........... 30% + %
General Dynamics 63% - %
Haveg Indust...... 35% +2%
.... 35 Blackwell •••••• 33
"surKnFAA-
ac K
>ac TAT 1AM
conet *
WORK HI
YOUR jy
Magic ®
"6
souri and southern Illinois. An
exception to the mild pattern
was a cold 10 degrees above
zero at Big Piney. Wyo.
Four Hunted
In Poison Death
Of Texas Man
Three Shot at Church
found in a ditch near here last) --
week died of cyanide poisoning j n . (n n..79
"Feesamummeanmaswomnarenmd During Peace Parley
two other women who were seen —
with Samuel McLaughlin, 56,, CHICAGO (—Three youths
Grand Prairie, Texas, shortly । were shot and wounded, one
before he died last Thursday. , seriously, Wednesday night as
A niece told authorities that) a gang fight broke out at a
McLaughlin, a freelance photog- dance in a west side church
rapher, was carrying about 5300) hall.
and a tan suitcase and was wear-, Detective Cyril Lightfoot, of
ing a wrist watch and topcoat, the police youth bureau, said
AU the items were missing when he and Rev. Donald Oxford,
0 pf 2%
Id
viewing the body.
Pagarulo was operating a
power shovel to help build a rail-
road cut at the 517 million fed-
eral Thomaston dam project.
Roads Just Keep
Following Man
* GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. B—
Bernard Zevalkink had to sell his
suburban Grand Rapids home
„ last April to make way for a
new expressway.
Before buying a new home,
Zevalkink checked with state
highway officials about other ex-
pressway plans. He said he was
given a clearance on his new
property and bought it. This
week the state disclosed plans for
om -
onson
82
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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/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.