The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 213, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 24, 1965 Page: 2 of 32
thirty two 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:
77
1
T---
5’.’"
hye—= -es
Funeral Rites
i
■
E
—62
Bellmon Signs
$
F
3-
-a
Area Weather Forecast
Minn.
participants
Local
wanva
Continued From Page One
typewriters; $755 for typewrit-
$7,475 to International Business
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
are local companies.
>
Command
the
UN
and
Wichita Falls
The U.N. Command admitted
Mayor Wayne Gilley’s office
Westinghouse
iii
Viet Nam.
I
P
starts along the Han River
es-
OPTICAL
00
$148
W.T.
N
Wednesday
Previous
inspired demonstrations against
ance.
12-Cu. Ft.
15-Cu. Ft.
pright
Philco
tions.
Freezer
Horn* Mtg-Co.
Monthly Pmt. Dep*.
1604 Jefferson
{
■
troopers
S
O5 Cong’s “D
W
118.ma
$
Which Door Do You Go To?
Il
Zinc-Coated Chas-
Const,
Fil-
i,
. perfect
Cooling Capacity . .
for night time cooli
YOU TO CALL
IT WILL PAY
cooling.
1
A
F-
qnd
v
THEY HAVE SOME STARTLING HOME BUYS
EL 3-2323
EL 3-2323
515 C
*
I
4
b
-
.5
(W)
.QUALITY OPTICAL SERVICE
OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY,
k____]
ELD
J
H
0
ALL PHILCO BLACK & WHITE TELEVISION
SETS NOW PRICED AT CLEARANCE PRICES!
two million dead and wounded plains for Taegu. Taejon and on
Millions of civilians died and bil- up through the mountain passes
lions of dollars of damage was to slam the back door on Seoul.
a 24-yea r-
i reported-
the French from time to time.
Viet Nam. now split in two.
planes were sighted, the spokes-
men said All 20 planes returned
Const, a Sunde,
ress a Sundav
(Delivered to Press Subscribers)
Satrdav Press (oniv) oer coov
U. S. casualties were reported.
The force was working its way
ate to heavy damage to bridges,
barges, roads and ferry installa-
6 From City
Will A+tend
4
5
%
Ge
Officer Slightly
Hurt In Collision
charged the Communists with 4.-
395 since the armistice agree-
ment was signed July 27, 1953.
Charles A. Brown
Arrangement* are pending at
of Vinh and that the two men
aboard were missing.
In other raids on North Viet
Nam today, eight A4 Skyhawks
slightly south of Kosong.
The Kaesong area, north of
Refrigerator
Regular $269.95
in November 1951, brought the
Chinese into the fighting and the
United States and the Republic
of Korea had a new war on their
hands.
UNBELIEVABLY LOW PRICES ON ALL
PHILCO DRYERS AND ELECTRIC RANGES!
spokesmen said.
Heavy air strikes also contin-
MAM
REALTY
38th & Gore
EL 3-1080
til after the congressional fate
of the program is decided.
In addition to the health care
provisions, the bill approved by
Air
Conditioning
Fort Sill Man
Resists Officers
Const. Prass & Sun. 22.4 15.30 &.1 167
Outside Okichome
.guumnue
12.2 Cl. KI .
2-Door PHILCO
Auto Defrost
mined ”
The pilots dropped nine tons
of bombs during the five-minute
attack, the spokesmen reported.
They said there was no antiair-
1
ensnandt8aty orrcddisgpmg.the38th Parallel caved in ■mvyablesalimg the river
opens here Friday.
Registration opens at 4 pm
in the Hotel Lawtonian for the
convention, which runs through
14
e
(
319 AVENUE*D
Phone R 3-3456
ments and the basic health plan.
Postal Officials
Ae
Decov'
BILL SMITH
AGENCY
2625 Cache Road
EL 3-4985
president. Isaac N. Dalrymple.
Enid, state president, will pre-
dutv, were to be at 10 a.m. to-
Hi-Y day in the Wilke-Clay Funeral
Operates __ ___
Amps ... it plugs in like a
About 200 delegates are ex-
pected to attend the 49th con-
vention of the Oklahoma State
at E -GA—--- - • 1
and deductible for the husband;)
and two measures relating to
hries,
ymae
The legislature revived the of-
fice of state fire marshal and
created a fire marshal’s com-
Bellmon signed that
5,000 B.T.U.
1965 Westinghouse
Room Air Conditioner
5-YEAR
REPLACEMENT GUARANTEE:
(ENTIRE AIR CONDITIONER IS
REPLACEDI
PHILCO Chest Type
Freezer
SERVICE
COMPANY
“Payroll patriot” was a name
given to a person seeking a gov-
French Indochinese states along ernment.pos itionto esc apemji-
with Lao, and Cambodia. After taryessericstduring the "ar
ill
i
$237 RO to Empire Paper Co..
. Tex.: $3,545.81 to
Quality.
Built-In Thermostat
NEMA Certified 5,000 BTU
Everyone Pays For A Home
In A Lifetime . . .
Either For Themselves Or
For Their Landlord
No. 2 Gold Coast
Blvd,
landlord
night while subduing ;
old Fort Sill man who
Sunday.
Keynote speaker will be Max
Gelfound, NAPS second vice
sisted arrest and in the struggle
the policemen were hurt slight-
ly.
THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION
Dallv Exceot Sot and Sun
are & A Ave. Lawton. OHIO ns
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Secona ciass oostaoe OOM
4
515 C
(Stott Photo)
DENNIS H. WILLCOX
Capt. C. H. Buck
Services for Capt. Charles H.
Buck, U.S. Army Reserve, Cor-
pus Christi, Tex., who died
early Sunday at Fort Sill while
on a two-week tour of active
RELATIONS
Continued From Page One
VIET NAM
Continued From Page One
on another strike over North
Cord’s Office Supply. Lawton;
| reached Korea five days after again to a spot north of the
the fighting started. but couldn’t Hwachon Reservoir, then north-
By midsummer, east to a point on the Japan 563
side.
The women’s auxiliary also
’ OFFiCE S Al
ZALES
bier patrol car, traveling east on
Jefferson, collided with a 1953
the Plymouth being driven north on
14th by Nathaniel Cooper, 37. of
army was finished leaving the 86 and denied 29,963. The others
38th Parallel undefended for a are still under investigation,
mad dash to Pyongyang and the The Communists admitted two.
Yalu. The threat to Manchuria.
housing. I
Robert C. Weaver, the federal
housing administrator. had
asked that the supplements be
munists have been estimated at came banging out across
became known as the Pusan is manned by 600,000 South Ko-
man at the tavern where a
fight had been reported.
one of
age assessment was undeter-
lamp.
2 Fan Speeds give you a
choice of High Cool. Night
Cool. High Fan and Low Fan.
Plus- Rust-Proof Aluminum
from the carrier Midway at-
tacked the Vinh Son supply de-
pot about 150 miles south of Ha-
BOARD
Continued From Page One
from Larry Milligan. Washing-
ton Jones. Ronald Bost. Fay
rial departments. Total expendi- strike again, they would get _
tureswill include $6,775 to Mar- hot reception, whether nuclear stem the tide
vel Underwood Corp. for type- weapons were on the program Gen MacArthur's UN Com-
writers. $12,290.50 for typewrit- or not There are 650,000 Repub- mand was squeezed into a nar- seo is guarded bv 50 000
ers, and $199 50 for adding ma- lic of Korea and U S forces . . . -eoul, is guaraed ny 30,00
.....- ........ c o v -l- row area far to the south which Americans. The rest of the zone
used to help families in the gap - .
between public housing and the announced the following water
least expensive privately built cutoffs for Friday from 8 a.m.
to 12 noon: From Gore west on
----- . ..will hold its state meeting in
in the lowest income brackets conjunction with the postal su-
now eligible for low-rent public pervisors conference.
Water Cutoffs
COMPARE
THESE LOW, LOW APPLIANCE
PRICES
WITH ANY DISCOUNT OR CHAIN STORE
ANYWHERE
Branch of the National Associa- _
tion of Postal Supervisors, which
Ings. Inc., Oklahoma City.
Architects’ reports were also They said the plane went
presented, and Justin Kun t z. down about 25 miles southwest
clerk, read a letter from the
was once
tuary, on the western
then turns north to a
Teenage America.
Group discussions of current
issues facing high school stu-
dents will be another feature of
the conference
the three
CONVENIENT TERMS!
chine, to McCord s Office Sup- along the front today.
Ply:, Ma- Fifteen years ago. the Com-
chines & Equipment Co., for
position to American participa- metropolitan areas.
tion in the war against the Viet It did include funds asked by
Cong and advocacy of a nego- the President to continue
tiated settlement neutralizing present major housing pro-
South and North Viet Nam. grams such as urban renewal,
public housing and FHA insur-
meeting were a sheaf of propos- I
als asking in one way or another
that doctors not participate in
government health plans.
A compromise awaiting action
would postpone the decision un-
52nd, and
The officers said the man re- Some communist groundfire
was encountered, but no hostile
governments have
miles ton ’north SthE now HihUng^we cannot the "panel included nearly allof
« i-z" ^=“2^
Relations between France and dined to go along with a pro-
her former colony have grown posed new program of federal ।
increasingly strained since1 aids in the development of SO-
De Gaulle began outspoken op- called new towns adjacent to
World War II a long war against
French rule began. It ended
with the cease-fire accord
Senate Banking Committee ap-
proved 10-4 today a $7.3-billion
four-year housing bill after re-
vising the controversial pro-
posed rent subsidv program for
low-income families.
Commissioners of the Land Of-
fice, noting that the sale of a
Atrip of land adjoining the Ei-
senhower Junior-Senior High
School is tentatively set for
early August. The board desires
to buy about five more acres,
for use when a separate junior
high school is later construct-
ed.
‛\
Const, a Sundav $18.36 10.20 an 222
Reg. $629 Philco
COLOR TV $/cK
in walnut______ A• W.T.
done in the countryside.
American troops from Japan
ly created a disturbance in front
of a downtown tavern.
Officers Tommy Britt and
Wrapper. Zinc-Coated C
sis. Permanent-Washable
ter. Westinghouse Built-In •
Reg. $695 Philco
COLOR TV $/7K
in walnut------ t I d W.T.
NOTICE OF BID
City of Lawton will accept bids until 9 00 am Tues-
day, July 6, 1965, for the supply of tires and tubes
for City vehicles for period from bid award through
June 30, 1966. Sizes, approximate number and
other specifications available at office of City Clerk.
City of Lawton reserves the right to accept or reject
any or all bids.
R. M. DODSON, City Clerk
JE mission. _________
"e measure Monday. The legislat-
.. ure abolished the office of fire
2c- marshal several years i
5. ’ transferring its duties to
3 state crime bureau.
Press a Sundev 183610.20 6.12 23 -------- , .,2 _.
- Press a Sun mm mm 11.22 5i south to the Dong Nai River
Sundav ensntution-Press coniv) 1 yr 7M
ued against Viet Cong installa-
tions or suspected Red concen-
trations in South Viet Nam, the
spokesman said. U. S. Air
Force, Navy and Marine planes
took part.
On the ground. 600 U. S. para-
i Eight Measures
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) —
Gov. Henry Bellmon signed
eight legislative acts into law
today, including a bill for allo-
» cation of fire insurance pre-
mium taxes to support the new
; state fire marshal’s office.
Boys from Marlow Anadar-
ko and Okarche also will par-
ticipate in the trip. accom-
pamed by Howard Andrews.
Duncan, district commander.
Willcox, 16. is the son of M
Sgt. (Ret ) Meade J. Willcox.
Rt. 4. He will be a junior at
Cache High School in the fall.
During the past year, he was
sophomore class president,
and a member of the Student
Council, Future Farmers of
America. National Honor Socie-
ty and basketball and track
teams.
00
o"o
552875fr‛Eurrughsitcorpora. Counci Gen. MacArthur broke out of port submitted to the Armistise
..on, for adding machines. All ™ freops have ar
Paper, warehouse and in- seven others contributed com- neuvers of his career The 1st t d and M17 aepanea sin
•zd.- sSsSSE
safely to their bases.
will be
The whole North ‘Korean
homes. , .
But members said a majority South 50th to 52nd, and on
of the Senate committee felt South 52nd from South 50th to
The demilitarized zone. which and building the nation,” he th a ineedorofpuillconsousngshnd Bet
coast, hoped to avoid the extremist sidies should be confined to that
spot 15 actions of other former colonies, area. .
• but in view of the decisive war The omnibus bill approved by
omc
Decov’
--• - - regarrvietscongspusitionsinthe
Prices "nelude * Pe -m Stete Se | “D" zone
Peace Corps, will be principal
speaker. Others on the program
will be Jerry Lindgren, Seattle,
Wash., Olympic track gold
medal winner, and Carolyn
Mignini, Baltimore, Md., Miss
Two police officers were
thl ed Nations with 30,609 violations The commitiee kept the pro-
. .. .. .. C------1 has gram in the bill but provided
that it would apply only to those
invaded the Viet
’ zone 25 miles north
civil procedures, defining debt-
or’s property reachable after
judgment and providing for ver-
ified application for exemption
rom by» Convene Friday
Senators Revise
*148 w.t.
Refrigerator
Regular $288.00
$188 W.T.
Regular $219.95
*168 w
noi, spokesmen said, but “dam-1
Gerald High arrested the
)
"Below Cost*’ Closeout
Prices On These Appliances
other personnel assigned for
1956-66 were Wanda Matheny.
Eisenhower Junior-Senior High
School, secretary; Chester
Combs, Clifford Hall and Cary
Jackson, custodians.
The board gave formal ap-
proval to a plan submitted by
Milton Worley for implementa-
tion of the Neighborhood Youth
Corps program provided under
the Economic Opportunity Act
of 1964. Worley was recently as
signed as director of federal
programs for the school system.
The school system. Worley
noted, could use a maximum of
141 enrollees in the program, in-
cluding four instructional equip-
ment operators. 31 cafeteria
aides, 33 maintenance and cus-
todial aides. eight librarian
aides. 40 departmental and
teacher aides. 18 secretarial sci-
ence trainees, one assistant
manager to school store and six
athletic equipment manager
aides. Total cost of the pro-
gram. with 141 enrollees plus
persons to assist in training,
would be $113,850 of which $96 -
488 would be reimbursed by the
federal government, and 117.362
would be paid by the local
school system.
Worley was authorized to file
an application for the program
In other business, the board
accepted the bid of Howard
Smith Ford to provide a 1965
Ford for the superintendent's
use, for a cost of $1,389 35. aft-
er allowance for trade-in Dow-
lings. Inc., Oklahoma City, re-
ceived the bid to provide 49
overhead projectors for a total
cost of $5,241.53. and Thompson
Movie Supply, Inc . Tulsa, was
given the bid to supply five
projectors for a cost of $2,485.
McCord's Office Supply. Law-
ton. received the bid to supply
new library shelving for Cen-
tral Junior High, for $1,245.09
Business machines were also
purchased for Lawton and Ei-
senhower High School commer-
A Lawton police officer re-
ceived what were believed to be
minor injuries Wednesday aft-
ernoon when the patrol car he
was driving collided with an-
other car at the intersection of
14th and Jefferson.
Injured but not hospitalized
was Johnny B Moncrief. 22. of
810 Park He was treated by a
private physician following the
mishap.
The accident occurred at
about 3 pm, when the 1965 Ram-
slightly injured
SonSceSprions,* of Saigon where large Commu-
Cemanche. Cotton, Tilimon, Kiowa, coo nist concentrations were be-
do. GrodveStephens Jefferson and Jach lieved massing. By noon they
i • a i had made little contact with the
Yr. Ne. No. Mo pnomv
Faum m Kaua-, goygcin g l 9a CIF--J.
press a Sunda 7.18 no 357 The second battalion of the
cara* Press A Sun 11.22 5.61 3.08 173rd Airborne Brigade moved
Baione in pnomq.: Lewton into the dense jungle area by
$14 28 2-10 »» helicopter early today. They
* - encountered sniper fire, but no
Glick, Patricia Hum
Yvonne Milligan and Li
Noble.
Home Chapel, Austin, Tex.
Burial was to be in Fort Sam
Houston National Cemetery,
San Antonio. Tex. Ritter-Dalton
Funeral Home was in charge
of local arrangements.
Retcliffe Book Store. Lawton;
$4,945.21 to Baty Office Supply.
Lawton; $387 53 to Oklahoma
Paper Co., Oklahoma City;
$424 98 to Forrester Sales Co.,
Fort Worth, Tex.; $27 36 to
Hoover Brothers. Sayre; $268 30
to Thompson Book Co., Ada;
$241 93 to Southwest Chemical
Co., Lawton. and $27.72 to Dowl-
-- VFW Sponsors Trip For Youth
munists hit without warning and perimeter. ™ infantry:, ., . ।
the lightly defended lines along Today Korean farmers grow nistsin’kora isopento conjec- l
mediately. that formed the outer limits of ture. I AW_Kent — An
The United Nations Security the perimeter According to the official re- LVV I IVI 11 l IUI I
TENNIS H. WILCOX, Rt
a • 4, will represent Fort
a Sill's Veterans of Foreign
I Wars post on a 10-day trip to
Washington. DC., June 25-July
5, officials announced today-
Sponsored by the Sixth Dis-
I trict of the Department of Ok-
lahoma VFW. the trip is an
educational and patriotic pro-
- gram for sophomores and jun-
iors in high school.
The Gen. Leslie J. McNair
I VFW Post 5263 is one of four
5 district posts sponsoring boys.
MEDICARE
Continued From Page One
approached a showdown on
whether to urge fellow physi-
cians to boycott Medicare or to
delay a decision on the issue.
Pending in the New York
I ")
14-Cu. Ft.
PHILCO
Complete No-Frost
Refrigerator
Freezer
Regular $349.00
$258 W.T.
ma_L—E
the Jefferson Funeral Home for
Sgt Charles A. Brown, 33. of
1927 McKinley, who died in an
Oklahoma City hospital Wednes-
day afternoon.
Sgt. Brown was born Dec. 15.
1931, at Meridian, Miss. He
came to Lawton from Germany
'three years ago and was medi-
cally discharged at Fort Sill
Nov. 19. 1964 after 12 years
service in the Army. He was a
member of the New Zion Bapt-
ist Church
Survivors are his wife, a son,
Gregory. 8, two daughters,
Gwendolin. 6. and Gena, 3. all
of the home; his parents. Mr.
and Mrs Ollis Brown. Meridian,
Miss., a brother, Ollis Jr. of
New York City, and a sister,
Mrs Audrey Cole, of Meridian.
i craft fire, no enemy planes
were sighted and all the Sky-
hawks returned safely.
U. S. Navy and Air Force
planes made four other strikes
over a 65-mile area in North
Viet Nam, U. S. spokesmen
said The pilots reported moder-
Partly cloudy with little
change in temperature this aft-
ernoon through Friday with
the chance of thunderstorms
over 30 per cent of the area
this afternoon and evening and
again Friday afternoon. South-
westerly winds from 12-20 m.
p.h. Low tonight 71. High to-
day 90. High Friday 92.
FAT
OVERWEIGHT
Avollabie Jo you without o doctor s pre-
scription, our product coiled Odrinex.
You must lose uglv tot or your money
bocr Odrinex is o tinv tobiet and easilv
swallowed. Get rid of excess fat and
) live ionger Odrinex costs $3.00 and
the Senate committee would) Hi Y OSS I OH
ago. b^represented by*six
the Most important is a t percent deneates at the 11th National
increase in retirement, disabili- Hi-Y Assembly. Warren Smith.
Other bills signed today au- ty and survivor benefits re- general secretary of the Law-
XS iroK"vemhaximumthtreuremment
mer patient case records to cer- payment for a person going on at St. Olaf College, Northfield,
tain persons; provide for pro- the rolls now would be boosted
cedure for returning patients on to $135.90 a month compared ---
leave from mental hospitals; with the present $127 The mini- Sharlie Gunter. Karen Hastings
fix the dates of the Korean War mum would go up from $40 to and Jan Lisk, of the Law ton
for benefit of veterans; provide $44 High School Tri-Hi-Y: Julie
method bv which minors may The bill will bring an increase Smith. Eisenhower Tri-Hi-Y .
disaffirm contracts relating to in Social Security taxes next and Marie Johnson and Cyn-
repair or equipping of motor ve- year to about $5 billion as com- thia Vaultz. Douglass Tri-Hi-Y.
hides; provide that alimony pared with 1965 or of $2.5 billion About 1,000 teen-agers are ex-
and separate maintenance pay- as compared with what present pected to attend the conference,
ments under certain conditions law would yield in 1966. The in- Dr. Samuel Proctor. associate
are taxable income for the wife crease is needed to finance both general secretary of the Na
the higher Social Security pay- tional Council of Churches, and
... former associate director of the
2 THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION, Thursday, June 24, 1965
is sold on this ouarantee: If not sotis-
tied for onv reason, lust return the
pockooe to your druggist and get your
full money bock. No questions asked.
Odrinex is soid with this guorantee bv:
Roys Phermacy-432 “O" Avenue-Mall
Orders Filled
signed in Geneva in 1954 after
French forces had been defeat-,
ed at Dien Bien Phu. The agree-
ment split the country in two
and the Republic of South Viet
1 Nam was established.
of Lowton Okia
(Pavadie in Advonce)
CARRIER SERVICE
IN LAWTON AREA
(For Monm)
mernine Press A Sundov _______ $1.55
cansttution a Sundov _________ SI SI
Constituhion Frees A Sundev ..... MM
Mondev Constitution toniv oer coov Mt
(AF Wirephoto)
Two GIs are shown slogging through Korean mud in 1951.
U.S. Mired In Another Korean War
7*2 ,1 ,,n
4 ■ ehee n
andAiv
Conditioning
ci
I
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.
Shepler, Ned. The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 213, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 24, 1965, newspaper, June 24, 1965; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2033489/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.