Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 71, No. 241, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 16, 1960 Page: 18 of 32
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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Hits TV Plots N
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It is a matter of regret
“Oklahoma has so much early history the outlaws
t
up on the ballot of a special sioners and business people
By Hugh Hall
by said.
to members of the sponsor-
increased
sociation, a branch of the
k
leveled a critical blast at the stage of our history.
television scriptwriters and
Yes
strength for a
Oklahoma City; Mrs. Anabel
vote.
the key address at serv-
an important part of the
Nobody's against automo- line to do their buying where
Gum, Oklahoma City, and
warp and woof of our state
The proposition of a per- biles and motherhood.
Tax Load Heavy
tax increase are old-age pen-
Other tax proposals will
Death Driver Seeks
Pardon From State
ried by 257-31, and the fire
rective operation would do with bond company repre- 36.
the trick—no new surgery in-
sentatives Wednesday to pre-
r
operative shock.
Gov. Edmondson
has agreed only to point ! purchase of a new fire truck.
a way for the legislature.!
Sale of the bonds was made before sale of bonds can-be
will carry something of his city's $155,000 improvement
program and a $1 a month
if J
Otis Paul Sloan
of the 1961 session.
$55,000 sewer expansion car-
trial, which ended with a
L
Presenting the 1961
An increase of the present hardly believe it.
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
Wary of interfering with
the simple pleasures of life
Oklahoma
in place. Do not slide, slip or rock
So brilliantly engineered,
Wednesday killed a proposal
so carefully built it is dealer-warranted
REMODELERS HEADQUARTERS
for two full years or 24,000 miles,
people wouldn’t like it.
whichever occurs first*
$25900
4
F
d
kgmeemee
38
*1
It
SedoneA
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UNCOLN-MERCURY-COMET
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t,
4th & WALKER—OKLAHOMA CITY
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Park Fee
Idea Dies
2 percent sales tax to 3
cents on the dollar would
produce just the $50 million
needed to keep from cutting
election called during the
session to guide the legisla-
ture — and dilute the re-
Pensioners Involved
A tax increase promising
ma had no more than its
share of outlaws and they
were only brief actors on
jury verdict of guilty of
first . degree manslaughter.
Dallas Woman
Whiz at 102
#
screen, opened an unlocked
window, entered the house
and took $41 cash.
Otis Paul Sloan, convicted
of a downtown car crash
killing last Christmas sea-
son, Wednesday asked the •
state to set him free. A
Sloan appealed his convic- I
the biennium beginning
July 1.
state hall of fame, who have
died since last year's state-
hood day.
They are Judge Edgar S.
around activities of the Dal-
tons, the Jennings, the
Youngers and Belle Starrs,
a leading state jurist said
Wednesday.
Judge Orel Busby, Ada.
k
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"38
legislature.
Demands Shown
One will be based on the
$217 million the present tax
$11 Stolen
The home of Lester J:
Sabolich, 2512 Denniston Dr.,
was ‘ burglarized Tuesday
night, police said. The bur-
THIS
WAY
YOU MARK
A GRAVE
-gr."
on the state's fringes. '
Old folks would fear that
taking any of the sales tax-
now exclusively for welfare
—for another purpose would
be a dangerous precedent.
Others Studied
'Fringe business people al-
THIS
WAY
YOU HONOR
A MEMORY
morass.
Revenue Told
r 5.
J‘m
V/ i
7 A
- - *
ried 292-36.
Dale Janeway, mayor, said
it probably will take 90 days!
Classic beauty in a smart new sise.>> Here is
the first fine car that is truly luxurious to drive in
today's traffic. Thoughtful engineering has created a
superb six-passenger automobile that is 14 inches
shorter—ycl as heavy or heavier than other American
luxury cars, to provide the solid ride you expect. It
also has devised center-opening doors that make
entrance far more convenient, contour-zoned seats
that are cushioned with nearly three times the usual
amount of foam rubber, vacuum-locked doors that
bolt shut at a flick of the driver's finger, silent, hydrau-
lic windshield wipers with 50 per cent more power, a
quality program that puts every car through a 12-mile
road test and brings high precision standards of
construction to America's largest V-8 engine. A
glance reveals the character of this tremendously ad-
vanced car, the enduring beauty of true classic design,
the excitement of America's only four-door con-
vertible. But it is only at the wheel that you begin to
understand the real significance of the new Lincoln
Continental, the brilliant blend of sensible size and total
luxury. Why not make that discovery yourself, this
week? Lincoln-Mercury Division,
■ 1
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1"
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11
A
Cacue-0000
L COORDINATED KITCHEN
V .
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B cocontiN
k
edsu . to be sprinkied on upper or lower
lawmakers plates, holds false teeth more firmiy
♦ The terms of the extended warranty provide that for 24 months or for 24,000
miles, whichever comes first, free replacement, including related labor, will be
made by dealers, of any part with a defect in workmanship or materials. Tires
are not covered by the warranty; appropriate adjustments will continue to be
made by the tire companies. Owners will remain responsible for normal main-
tenance service and routine replacement of such maintenance items as filters,
spark plugs, ignition points and wiper blades.
EQUIPMEr€==
\ COMPAM)
flash onto the legislative
horizon, but likely would be
too little and too painful.
The horse race betting bill
will be introduced again,
“It would be to the ever-
reforms of 1959—safe escort! issue gathered 275 “yes”
through the troubled waters j votes, and 29 "No" votes; a
ambition, imagination, and county tax bill for $414.43,
ability would portray the paid off Tuesday with 405
activities of the real worth- silver dollars, 52 dimes, 16
while pioneers of this state quarters and 23 pennies just
who actually dominated our to show the county how
early history, and in which heavy the tax is.
Judge
■nance additional water serv-
so far ices, sewer facilities, and
$(
See this remarkable car at your Lincoln Continental dealership today!
t ' •' M —'
No gummy. nooty. pasty taste or
tn charge camning fees in feeling. FASTEETHisalkaline(non-
to cnarge camping 165 in icld( Does not sour, checks plate
state parks. 1 odor breath". Get FASTEETA at
“Let's kill this,” said RopJ^ counters everywhere.
I enI "
back the school program.
Put color in your
life, with color in
your Kitchen.
gv Caloric
Gold Star Ovtn
Gold Star Top Burner
Double Sink
Vent Hood,
might have promised the All four issues carried by
However, the very fact of possible by an overwhelm- completed,
suggesting more revenue ing majority vote for the
Virgil Tinker, Fairfax,
chairman of the legislative
council committee on state
and federal government.
"This could eat us up alive."
Sen. Ben Easterly of Alva,
vice - chairman, joined in
doing the proposal to death.
He said there are three state
parks in his district, and the;
- ' - • .....
/
Only a few short months
ago the senate and house manent increase in the sales
chose Collins and McCarty tax very easily could wind
as their leaders for the ses-
“We have a little Osage
Hills Park up there," said
Tinker of Osage County.
“Someone read a piece in
the paper about this, and
man alive, whew!"
4 official sanction.
2 • ■
-
tion of the year in state gov- lion needed to close the bi-
ernment. ennial books in’the black.
Moore Bond Sale.
November finds him on tion and 20-year sentence V
the more-tax firing line, for manslaughter to the M
where every shot aimed at State Court of Criminal Ap- W
a tax-raising legislature will peals.
hit him, too. The 27-year-old full-blood "%
He. McCarty and Collins Shawnee Indian was con- . ■
walked out of a conference victed of 'he death of Lettie
six days ago and the gover- Calhoun last December 15.
nor announced he would sub- She was standing at the
mit twin budgets to the 1961 curb at Hudson and Main (
:Mary Elizabeth Pulaski is
102 today, but you'd
powerful ready complain too many
5" vote, folks drive across the state
About $50 million of this rors were made in Sloan's
must be found to avoid cut- tnie1, which ended with -
ices commemorating Okla- _______________
homa’s 53rd birthday and history. Nothing could be Roy M. Johnson, Ardmore,
three pioneer leaders who farther from the truth. *
sion opening January 3 and
in effect told the governor
they'd run their own show
without any help from him.
Position Explained
The governor was in fine
position to tell them to hop
right to it—and while they
were at it figure out how to
meet a $50 million deficit
they created two years ago
largely through education
expansion.
when the car Sloan was
driving collided with anoth- . I
er in the intersection. ; I
Sloan's machine jumped the
curb after the crash and L
---------- —---------- —1 "But recent TV programs ... , -
producers when he delivered proclaim these characters Vaught, federal jurist from
UUUVC
merit system and central better than an 8-1 margin.
purchasing—two Edmondson The $85,000 water expansion glar cut through a window
She's still a whiz with a
sewing machine, makes her
own clothes, reads without |
glasses, cooks for herself
and goes to church every
Sunday.
Advertisement
do FALSE TEETH
Rock, Slide or Slip?
PASTEETH, an improved powder
lasting credit of Oklahoma if FAIRFAX, Va. (UPI)—
some alert scriptwriter with Paul A. Lain, peeved at a
they can escape the present
Likely opponents of a sales 2 percent sales tax.
The fourth issue, to raise
volved and no new-tax post- pare for sale of bonds to fi- water and sewer rates, car-
SORRY
You Will Be If You Buy Before
You See Our Lovely . . .
BLUE RIBBON
TRIPLE-SEALED STORM WINDOWS & DOORS
FACTORY 8125 CITY
How did Collins and Me- hike in water and sewer
Carty bring it oft? Well, they rates.
would not disclose. of drunk driving, but said it
Money demands of state was only to avoid lying in
agencies total about $110 Jaj pending a trial.
million more than the $217 Sloan's lawyer told the
million expected revenue, high court a number of er-
1_ ‘
structure is expected to pro-
duce in general revenue in pinned her against a wall.
mentctutlVe nestheoksthlo. ing Oklahoma Memorial As-
ting back teacher and pro-
fessor pay raises written by
the 1959 legislature.
Educated predictions
around the capitol are that
the sales tax will be the ve-
hicle chosen for pulling the I
state out of its financial DALLAS (UPI) — Mrs.
and a natural gas severance m AA T A
Just 90 Days Away
The reason the educated . ‘ * - *
guess settles on the sales MOORE — Moore city of- ried by 257-31, and the fire
tax is that one simple cor- f icials were expected to meet truck was approved by 252-
♦ ■
1.
Witnesses at his district
court trial here testified he
He also will submit an al- ran a red light and smelled
ternate budget, based on of drink after the crash,
that $217 million plus reven- Sloan testified he pleaded
ue from another source he guilty to a city police charge
N % fiSS K
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Gov. Edmondson’s agree- It is estimated the new
ment to share an antagonis- legislature must raise $8 mil-
tic legislature's self-made lion at once to see schools
money headache is one of and colleges to the new bi- sponsibility for
the most puzzling develop- ennium opening July 1. taxes.
1 IS Wed., November 16,1960 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
। . ' ( । -
Tax Hike Plan Is Puzzler
ments of his administration. • Election Eyed
How Sen. Everett Collins | A temporary sales tax in-
and Rep. J. D. McCarty got crease for four months better highways and schools
k ge5ee
A grave marker is just that ... a mark to
separate one plot of cemetery land from the
others. Where you have no choice and only flat
markers or plates are permitted ... all graves
become alike.
In traditional American cemeteries where you
have freedom of choice ... you find personalized
monuments are erected ... expressing the mem-
ory of individual lives lived.
Never Give Up four Individuality
Your Freedom of Choice ,
• • " ‘ -
that much of Oklahoma's colorful and romantic history played only a minimum
history is being written to be proud of," Judge Bus- part."
Judge Busby paid tribute
Judge Orel Busby have died in the past year.
___
Billionaire Dies at 78
GLENWOOD SPRINGS,1
Colo. ( — Frank E. Kistler.1
78, one of the west’s most!
prominent businessmen and
investment leaders, died
Tuesday of a heart attack.
His oil and gas field discov-
eries a few years ago were
valued at a billion dollars.
$14 CLASSEN CI 2-0811
-l • • -
/
him to go along is the ques- would raise just the $8 mil- would muster
■ 705
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 71, No. 241, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 16, 1960, newspaper, November 16, 1960; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2004416/m1/18/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.