Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 277, Ed. 3 Saturday, December 27, 1958 Page: 2 of 4
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Swimmer
Robber
Red Loss
had been ordered by Teamster
Minister Fails to Baek
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clerks here have voiced no griev-
1 1
Death-Bed Confession
3 CHRISTMAS FILM
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; 15,000.
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P 4 D PHOTO
son came in the bank just Be-
was tried twice, both sessions
told Durant attorney Roy Paul
WIN *350!
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First Prize
NEW ORLEANS (—The body
Second Prize
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Third Prize
Don't Miss These Features.. •
The Sunday Magazine:
known Spanish soldier, died Fri-
which made De Rivera dictator
,.ta 1923.
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GQ
KEEP
YOUR
WHEELS OF
PROGRESS
ROLLING
BUY A
NEW CAR
NOW
WITH AN
FROM
OF OKLAHOMA CITY
Father to Face Jury
in Wyatt Earp Case
Recheck Finds
Survey Wrong
tand remembered a man who
had just moved into his apart-
CHICAGO (—A coroners jury
has recommended a father who
fancied himself as a fast man
with a gun face a grand jury in
ailment. A weird chant by a
dozen of Miguel’s tribesmen at
his bedside marked his passing.
Fellow gypsies held lighted
candles around their king and
performed a strange death cere-
DURANT (UPD - A convicted
Durant murderer's fight for free-
dom hit a snag Saturday when
his minister failed to back up a
Negotiations at Stalemate
Between Airlines and Pilots
in a. section of the building re-
served for relatives and friends
of patients after their king was
admitted for treatment last week.
King Miguel lived in New Or-
leans. Tribe headquarters were
Knew Cops
Due Soon
Actress Posts Bail
LOS ANGELES (UPD-British
actress Patricia Cutts was ar-
raigned in superior court Friday
on a charge of hit-run driving.
The a1-year-old blue-eyed blonde
was permitted to remain free on
$500 ball pending arguments on
a motion to dismiss the charges.
Aul
Loan
Unitarians Put
Faith in Man
Unitarians believe that the pH-
i Heavy In
Tibet Fight
Radar Can Cook
LONDON (UPI) - New-type
radio and radar transmitters be-
ing used by Britain's air force
send out beams powerful enough
to "cook” or seriously maim peo-
ple or animals as much as half
a mile away, a radio expert said
Saturday.
• Washington County profile of progross, anether fine
story in the "Knpw Your Oklahome" series,
• Mr. Stanley Killion of Bremen — world-wide astorn
Star loader.
ing pilots, with little prospect
that the two big carriers will get
back in business soon.
n. indication of coming to an im-
mediate decision.
then fled to his apartment three
blocks away.
An alert civil defense radio
F
2 % .
New Jersey Funeral Planned
For King of Gypsy Tribe
he had not heard such a confes-
sion.
Hospital authorities said about Miguel or the tribe had ever
25 of the Miguel gypsies camped lived here.)
Earp Bender, was killed Christ-
mas eve as he walked into the
line of fire from his father’s
long-barrelled revolver.
The jury Friday asked that
Jack Bender, 29, be bound to
the grand jury on an involun-
to move perishable merchandise.
Store mahagers from through-
out the city were called in with
their cars to move out a car-
load of bread that arrived over-
night.
Templeman Mid Safeway at-
torneys were drawing up a law-
suit to be filed in district court
during the morning, asking the
court to prohibit the picketing.
An effort to reach officials of
the Teamsters union was unsuc-
officials not to cross the one-man
picket line.
Templeman said organized
THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK AND HUM COMPANY
all are at work.
Non-union employes in the Safe-
MOSCOW (UPI)-Soviet geol-
ogists have discovered huge un-
derground lakes. Mid to be the
size of_ Iran, under the semi-
desert areas of the Republic of
Kazakhstan, Moscow radio re-
ported
53
‘8
SERVICE, INC.
CE 24179
1124 N WALNUT
, MEN IN WHITE. At first giance it appears the
t doctors at St John’s hospital in Santa Monica, Calif.,
are all amateur photographers, clustering around
. ' actress Lita Baron and her new baby, Tami Diane,
*e
\31--
al
• The Sunday Oklahoman 20c
per copy
Pistol Was Gift
Henson, alternately surly and
remorseful, told officers and
newsmen he had bought the pis-
tol as a Christmas present for
one of his children, then decided
to rob the bank with it.
The head teller at the East
Fort Worth State bank, Frank
Stidham, Mid the 250-pound Hen-
Name .......
Address ....
Town .......
ENTER
As Often As You Wish!
In Chicago American officials: with 5,300 members of the Inter-
awaited word from the Air Lines' national Association of Machin-
Pilots Association on a seven-' ists, but the latter will not cross
point formula worked out by me-1 the flight engineers' picket lines.
"Mr. Sargent did not make any
statement or confession to him
swering the description. He
called police, who came and
own powers of n-
tional thought, and
to sacrifice personsl
or immediate gains
mary responsibility for human pro-
gress rests, not upon fate or a
uuasamm superman being, but
upon man—hit will-
ingness to use his
(Continued from Page 1)
suit,” but Mid she did not
realize it until she left the
water and other bathers be-
gan "calling and staring and
pointing at our plaintiff in a
shocked manner.”
She said she plunged back
into the water and waited for
her sister to bring her a towel.
Mrs. Dibble said then she ran
to her car with the towel
wrapped around her.
Named as co-defendants in
the law suit were Joseph W.
and Juliette Chadwich and Ida
Mae Le Roex, partners in the
Juliette shop.
JAMIS DIBBLE, the plain-
tiff's husband, said "this is a
big joke to everyone around
here except my wife.”
"All we wanted,” he added,
"was for the store to refund
the money we paid for the suit,
but they refused. We turned the
case over to our attorney.”
Dibble said the new bathing
suit never got wet until that
first trip to the beach when
"it became quite transparent.”
i
ng out of remote Tibet Satur-
day indicated the tiny, ancient
nation is waging an armed re-
king of the Miguel gypsy tribe
more than 20 years, will be
shipped Saturday night to Tren-
ton, N. J., for funeral services.
there.
An unidentified nephew said
tribal members are now scat-
tered in New York, Philadelphia,
Boston, Miami, Beaumont and
Stidham's cage. He dropped the
pistol. ’ Stidham Mid, but came
up with it pointed at the teller.
He then handed Stidham a note
which read:
"If you step on alarm you will
be a dead man. Put all your cur-
rency in this bag and set on
floor—five min.”
Stidham said he stuffed $20
bills, then' tens and fives into
the bag the bandit handed him.
When he came to the ones, Stid-
ham said, the gunman told him
that was enough.
Robbed Tulsa Store
Henson said he robbed a super-
market in Tulsa, in 1955 and was
given seven years with proba-
tion. He said he went straight,
working in an oil field in New
Mexico until he was laid off No-
vember 28. Henson Mid he came
here because his estranged wife
and children are here with rela-
tives.
Stidham vaulted over the coun-
ter in front of his cage and ran
to the front door as Henson left.
He and other bank employes
spotted Henson's auto and noti-
fied police.
Patrolman B. T. Nash and de-
tective Ed Ruckman arrested
Henson. They Mid they found
$2,170 in a bureau drawer.
Stidham said he doubted any
of the five or six customers in
the bank knew there was a rob-
was brought out he had borrowed
a shotgun and later returned it
to its owner. The shotgun was
branded as the murder weapon.
Braly has asked Winineger’s
trial be reopened, or new trial
be ordered.
. said.
- Adding to the Chinese com-
munists’ woes, most of them
brought on by the commune sys-
tem, were the thousands of refu-
gees fleeing into Burma. Ran-
goon reports said these refugees
refuse to return to China even
on threat of death.
Reports reaching New Delhi
tary manslaughter charge.
Jurors were told by police that
they found about 75 bullet holes
in the Bender home, Bender told
police he was practicing fast
draws in the living room. Police
also quoted Bender as saying he
drank 8 to 4 quarts of beer
before his shooting practice.
Bender is the father of five
children. His wife, Elaine, 29, is
expecting a sixth child.
was charged, but never tried.
During the Winineger trial, it
longer:
• The Daily Oklahoman 20c
par weak
crime.
Jack Winineger, serving 50
years for the murder of Caddo
city marshal Morgan Haddock,
appealed to the state criminal
court of appeals last week. His
attorney contended Grady Bar-
gent had confessed the killing be-
fore he died in IBM. ,
James O. Braly Mid Sargent's
0 R. G. Miller recounts projects and dreamt of Oklahoma
communities In "The Smoking Room."
The Sports Section:
• John Cranky and Volney Mbece raped fram Miami on
Oran,a Bowl game preliminaries.
• Rundown on 2nd day of All Collego basketball tourna.
ment.
• Big 8 Besketball tournament results from Kensas City.
Aho, ill the wonderful reading in these aeetlenn Women’s, T-
Amuvements, At Home, Classified-Business, and much more in...
The BIG Sunday Oklahoman
Daniel O’Conner is being fingerprinted by San
Diego policeman Barney Jones after his arrest in El
Cajon, Calif., on a theft charge. (AP Wirephoto)
The Circulation Director
Oklahoman & Times
Oklahoma City, Okla. .
I would like to subscribe to the following papers for 4 weeks or
3
• 7
w e
l $r,e
k
FORT WORTH, Texas W—"I
was just waiting for the officers.
I knew they’d be there to get
me,” a burly oil field worker
said. He was arrested less than
an hour after robbing a bank
here of $2,180 Friday.
Police Mid J. L. Henson, 49.
*
*
3
n
for the good of a
Frank 8. Holmes larger community
and for the sake of the future.
Khambas booby-trapped it with
ditches covered with earth and
sticks. They also destroyed sev-
oral trucks by rolling huge
boulders down the mountain
aides on them.
Tibet Divided
The reports said that the Tibet-
ana were angered by the in-
crease of Chinese settlers being
sent into the nation and the de-
portation of about 5,000 young
Tibetans to Red China for "high-
er training.”
The immediate cause of the
fall flareup, however, was the
Chinese communist scheme to
divide Tibet into three areas.
The central portion would have
been under the Dalai Lama and
the western section under the
Panchen Lama with the capital
at Shigatse. The Chinese commu-
nists intended to control the east-
ern state of Kham themselves.
. The Khambas objected with
force. The communists promptly
called for "complete annihila-
’ tion" of the rebel forces.
- It is generally believed that the
Dalai Lama is being forced by
FOOTBALL CONTEST
Pick the teams you think will win at the four major bowl games
and guess the net yards rushing and passing Oklahoma and Syracuse
will compile in their Orange Bowl contest. Be sure to mail your entry
before December 28—midnight. Entries must be made on the ballots
appearing in the Daily Oklahoman to be eligible. Send in your sub-
scription now to ...
The Sunday Oklahoman
The Daily Oklahoman
For Best Quality &
Fastest Service
Request your
photo dealer to
have your films
processed by
Paul said.
Paul said Rev. Odom empha-
sized Sargent did not make any
kind of statement to him about
the shooting of Haddock.
"Mr. Odom further stated that
if any such confession had been
made to him that he would have
seen that it received the prompt
attention of proper authorities,"
Paul declared.
Winineger was one of three
men accused. Hiram Robinson
V - >
(By The Aanociated Prem)
Negotiations continue Saturday I diators ‘and already agreed on
between Eastern Air lines and its1 by the company.
volt against Chinese communist
rule. They said 85,000 persons
had been killed in the months-
long fighting.
The reports said the Dalal
Lama, spiritual leader of the
mountain-top nation, may seek
asylum in India.
Commercial travelers and ref-
ugees Mid the largest flareup
came in the August-October pe-
riod when the proud Khamba
. tribe to the eastern province of
Kham revolted
Trouble’ Admitted
- They Mid about 50,000 Chinese
Reds were killed. Tibetan death
’ estimates ranged from 5,000 to
)
32
5
born Christmas night. The men are news photogra-
phers, masked and gowned by hospital order as they
make pictures of the new arrival. The father is Rory
Calhoun. (AP Wirephoto)
- .... . - way milk department were
ment building owned an auto an- switched to the Safeway trucks
With such use of man i menu!
capacities, progress becomes not a
steady, unbroken flight to Utopia,
but a practical and growing pos-
sibility.
This sober optimism and faith
in human progress is basic in Uni-
tarianism.
You are invited to hear Dr.
Frank O. Holmes preach tomorrow
at 11:00 a.m. at First Unitarian
Church, NW 15 and Dewey. The
sermon subject is "The Way
Things Are.” (Adv.)
, the communists to cooperate
with them and some circles be-
• lieve that he himself might be
behind the revolt
Papers <
(Continued from Page 1)
buying rush. The newspaper in-
dustry has lost about-$25 millions
in advertising and other reve-
nues. The walkout idled 15,000
nonstriking newspaper employes,
who suffered a payless Christ-
mas. Some 5,000 others stayed on
the payrolls on a standby basis.
The previous longest strike in
the city's newspaper history was
in 1953. when photo-engravers
walked out fr 11 days.
The newspapers involved are
the Times, Herald Tribune,
Daily News, Mirror. Journal
American, Post. World-Telegram
and Sun, Long Island Star-Jour-
nal and Long Island Daily Press.
Most newsstands in the city
have shut down. Nearby Newark,
N. J., and Westchester County,
N. Y., papers have been publish-
ing, but are not sending extra
copies into New York. Newaday,
a daily at Garden City, N. Y.,
continues to circulate in Long
Island's , Nassau and Suffolk
counties.
Cameron told newsmen a re-
sumption of publishing would "de-
pend on when the men get back
to work."
All aides seemed agreed that,
since the balloting runs until
late Sunday night, there was
more likelihood of the first pub-
lishing being by Monday after-
noon papers rather than by Mon-
day morning papers.
Even if the publishers had the
printing crafts and other per-
sonnel standing by, it was ex-
pected to be too late to get out
Monday morning papers.
Strike
(Continued from Page 1)
by direction of Teamsters union
officials, from the business agent
of the Big Spring RWDS union.
The picket set up his patrol at
the Safeway warehouse, 313
NE 38.
Templeman was of the opinion
that about 80 drivers who are
members of the Teamsters union
>Y, QIC 17. itto OKLAHOMA Cm’ TIMES
widow, now remarried, stated was uiu wue, — ——
Sargent cleared Winideger on his ending in hung juries. Sargent
operator, Dow Hestand, heard
the police radio broadcast de-
scribing the robber's getaway ance with the company and that
car as a pink, new model. Hes- “
Miguel died in a New Orleans in Oklahoma City in earlier days,
hospital Thursday of a kidney but recently many of the some
..... 500 wanderers moved away from
deathbed. Her affidavit said a
Methodist minister also heard the
confession and would back it up.
However, Rev. Ferrill Odom,
formerly of Caddo and now of
G led they were having trouble in
. Tibet when they announced that
- they were delaying imposition of
their heavily criticized people’s
commune system in that coun-
’ try.
• There apparently has not been
ipn largmmmmen"eoramnechs
small-scale actions have oc-
curred.
. . NatonRstvcnzneE sources on
Formosa claimed that the Tibet
erevolt also has spread to four
> provinces in northwest China. In
some areas, rebels have seized
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Hie-
I FBI had an opening Saturday on
[ its list of the nation's "10 most
M wonted” fugitives because one of
B the underworld's "elite" couldn't
7 stay out of new trouble.
1% The vacancy occurred with the
capture la El Cajon, Calif., of
Daniel William O'Connor, 30-year-
Hi
TOKYO (UPD—Reports filter- the shooting death of his son.
--The son, 14-month-old Wyatt
General Is Dead
- MADRID u -Gen. Rafael
Rodriguez de Rivera, 88, a well-
formerly of Sapulpa, Okla., held --------------------r----
up the bank with a toy pistol, had wanted to continue work, but
indicating any guilt of his own or picked up Henson,
indicating guilt of anyone else,"
} -e
E., .12 nahumae Th» New Orleans, while some re-
placed a dlorh d waler in the mainun-okiahomd-’ nnu M
hospital window Friday, ltmust i " ~
remain there threesday*' accord “the youngest three months old.
mg to tribal religion, for his . Oklahoma City police Saturday
sou cast some doubt on the Oklahoma bery in progress.
A tribal spokesman said a sue- links of the tribe. A department
cessor to . Miguel , cannot be spokesman said they had no rec-
named by the tribe for one year, ords that would indicate either
"=he
said the main road from Tibet ----- — —
wu closed in October when the of Walter Miguel, 49-year-old
| $15 Theft j
; Ends Long
I FBI Hunt
fore closing time and walked to cessful. Templeman said, howev-
- er, the unheralded pickets are
■
A
striking flight engineers and Beyond asking clarification on
AnH,“Ap5 I some points 01 the proposed set-
American Air Unes and its strik- tlement, the pilots' union gave
kezspostiontsandoontadnsommey Clovis, N.M. is reported to have
Thecommunists tacitly admit- atonzthatanotbnreminbademtde
studied by San Diego police and
the FBI. He finally admitted his
true identity.
The stocky one-time. wrestler
was put on the FBI 10 most
wanted list April 11, 1955.
He had been convicted of theft
in 1948 at Windsor, Ontario. Pre-
viously, on May 8, 1946, O'Con-
nor deserted from the United
States army while stationed at 4
Fort Campbell, Ky., the bureau
Mid.
The FBI Mid O’Connor cut a
swath across Montana, North e
Dakota and Oregon by victim-:
izing merchants with fraudulent
money orders to set the federal*
hard on his trail.
LARNEP, Kan. U-Lared
State hospital researchers con-
ducted a disappointing survey
among townspeople in October.
It indicated, they reported, that
94 percent of those questioned
wished Larned “did not have a
state mental hospital on its out-
skirts."
Recently, someone questioned
their report and they rechecked.
It was wrong. The results had
been reversed.
"Faulty coding,” researchers
said.
‘100
old athletic bad guy who evaded
the long arm of the law since
1953 by radically changing his
h appearance.
O'Connor, who the FBI Mid
’ once "mereilessly" beat a Ca-
। nadlan mounted police officer,
had been working for several 9
■ years in El Cajon as a handy:;
J man. He dyed his hair red. grew -
| a full mustache and added 585
I pounds to his already stocky 200 »
I pounds.
I He adopted the name "Arthur;
Nelson” and was married with*
i two children. 5
[ O'Connor was unmasked after 7
the El Cajon police department
_ arrested him on a San Diego,
Calif., police department warrant 2
charging him with theft of a BIB 2
trailer. Although identifying him-;
self ai Nelson, O'Connor's fin-
gerprints gave him away when
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ress that I can report. Eastern has reached agreement
"Buhf - •
lu
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marching against Safeway stores
in Oklahoma, Texas and Arkan-
sas.
Fitzgerald said the RWDS un-
ion official who placed him at
the warehouse here had gone on
to Tulsa and other Oklahoma
cities to set up similar situa-
tions.
"There is no dispute here,”
Templeman declared. "These
goons just came in and set up
the picket line. Our driven would
like to be working, but they can't
cross the picket line.
"Our stores are open for busi-
ness and they will continue to
be open.”
Weekly Dept. Store Sales
—----------- Eastern has been shut down
TT . jii [for more than a month. Pilots for
+ । Underground Lakes | American struck a week ago Fri-
-i Discovered by Soviet have been At.
tempting to absorb the passen-
ger air traffic normally assumed
by Eastern and American, while
railroads and bus lines have
added extra facilities to take cue
of the usual, heavier holiday
travel.
Want Ads CE 23311
Som"RN&%EAVKPA-T
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other States 114 Toreim Countries.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 69, No. 277, Ed. 3 Saturday, December 27, 1958, newspaper, December 27, 1958; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2002352/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.