The Edmond Enterprise (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 20, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 22, 1956 Page: 1 of 6
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Boy What A Commotion!
Runaway Boy Causes
Full-Scale Police Duni
Twelve-year-old George Van-
Antwerp had no idea how much
trouble he'd get into when he de-
cided to go for a !moonlight ride
Friday night in one of his family's
automobiles
After the frightened youth !
wrecked the car and fled on foot
from the accident scene just
southeast of town his antics set
oft' a king-sized hunt that would
have delighted the heart of any
adventuresome youngster
A total of 12 officers and a
highway patrol airplane had join-
ed the search for the boy before
he was located the next morning
at the home of a relative in Ok-
lahoma City
At first believed to have been
injured and lost in a wooded area
southeast of tewn the boy was
none the worse for his night's
activity
The fast-moving chain of events
got underway about I:45 am Sat-
urday when two Edmond police-
Men Gene Holt and Richard
Mack observed a late model
automobile cruising E d o n d
streets with the lights turned off
The officers attempted to stop
the driver for questioning but
the driver young VanAntwerp
sped away
The officers chased the fleeing
car up and down Edmond streets
until the driver turned off on E
Ninth and crashed into a clump
of bushes
When Holt and Mack arrived
they found a badly wrecked auto-
mobile but no boy There was no
blood on the car but the steering
wheel post was bent leading
them to believe the boy had been
injured
Methodist Bishop Will Deliver
Ceniral's Baccalaureate Address
One of the nation's outstandingtt
Methodist leaders—Dr W Angie
Smith bishop of the Oklahoma
New Mexico area—will give the
baccalaureate address to the
graduating seniors of Central'
State college at 2:30 pm Sunday
in Mitchell Ball
The processional led by sen-
ior class marshalls Mrs Esther
Howell Curtis and Lloyd D Noel
the highest scholastic man and
woman will begin at 2 pm
Dr Smith has been a student
at Southwestern university Geor-
getown Tex Southern Methodist
university Vanderbilt Union
Theological seminary New York
and Columbia university II e
holds degrees as a doctor of laws
and a doctor of literature
He is president of the General
Board of Evangelism of the
Methodist church president of
the Commission of the Structure
of Methodism Overseas president
of the division of Cultivation and
Education o f the Methodist
church and president designate
of the Council of Bishops of the
Methodist church He is president
of the board of trustees of Okla-
homa City university honorary
president of the board of trustees
of McMurry college and a !nem-
ber of the board of trustees of
Southern Methodist university
and Southwestern university
The baccalaureate invocation
will be given by Rev J Frank
Graham of the First Methodist
church and the benediction by
Rev Harvey Lord of the First
Christian church
Patrolman Transferred
OKLAHOMA CITY May 22—
(1?—ltighway patrol Lieut Eugene
Bumpass has been transferred
from Pawnee to Oklahoma City
with a drop in rank state safety
commissioner Jim Lookabaugh
announced today
DOWN WITHOUT PARACHUTE — The arrow points to
Pvt Oscar R Lozano of Hidalgo Mex as he dropped
1200 feet to earth in practically a free fall after a shroud
line fouled his chute during a demonstration drop by para-
troopers at Ft Sill Okla He suffered a broken back
Bolt and Mack sent for rein-
forcements and were joined by
Y V "Salty" Burks George Long
and Guy Bauguess deputy sher-
iff's and six highway patrolmen
Lieut Gene Clark Arch Hamil-
ton Jim Garabaldi Bob Black-
burn Ray Rich and J M Thax-
ton The officers searched the 'wood-
ed area but were unable to locate
the youth
His parents Mr and Mrs E
Van Antwerp owners of an Ed-
mond bakery were notified and
Chief of Police Lee Carson said
it was learned the boy had taken
his mother's ear from the drive-
way At daylight the highway patrol
airplane took to the air to join
the search and plans were made
to obtain a bloodhound to sniff
out the area
Before the bloodhound could
be sent for however the boy's
parents located him at the home
of his grandmother in Oklahoma
City How had he arrived there?
Simple he had easily eluded
all the police searchers slipped
home mounted his bike and
pedaled down No Bing to it
After the boy had been discov-
ered everyone enjoyed a good
laugh over the affair every-
one that is except several tired
and sleepy policemen and the
boys parents It was also reported
that George himself found little
to laugh about
Carson said that no charges
could be filed but said that the
boy's parents indicated George
could expect disciplinary measures
CHECKING IN—Bo Winin-
ger of Oklahoma City dis-
plays a check after winning
the $22000 Kansas City
Open The check Wininger
holds was blank as tourna-
ment officials did not have
time to fill in the $4300 the
34-year-old golf expert was
to collect for winning
Edmondite Elected By
Engineer's Group At OU
NORMAN May 22 — Floyd
Hensley son of Mr and Mrs
John W Hensley Route 3 Ed-
mond has been elected vice pres-
ident of the University of Okla-
homa branch of the American
Society of Civil Engineers The
society is formed as the beginning
of professional 'association within
the field of engineering -
5 Cents Per Copy
VOLUME 55
Engineers Say
'Y Toll Road
Would Be Best
OKLAHOMA CITY May 22—
(81—Traffic engineers advised the
Oklahoma Turnpike Authority
today a "Y" toll road with prongs
serving both Oklahoma City and
a point midway to Tulsa would
best serve southern Oklahoma
and Texas travelers
The "Y" ‘Yould lie more profit-
able than a toll road linking
Tulsa or Oklahoma City separate-
ly wit h some terminal at Red
river Wilbur Smith and' associa-
tes stated in an official report
After studying traffic patterns
throughout southern Oklahoina
for several weeks the firm said
movements from the general
areas of Oklahoma City and
Tulsa southward a re almost
equal
The Turnpike Authority after
accepting the report was schedul-
ed to order manager W D Bo-
back to negotiate for construction
engineering surveys on the route
to be completed by August I
Following an informal session
last night the turnpike members
were reported ready to consider
the southern route as part of a
package offering to bond i buyers
when new data has been assembl-
ed on the northern and south-
western routes The package plan
was voted on several months ago
after the authority was unable
to sell the northern route bonds
alone
The traffic surveyors recom-
mended this alignment:
"Beginning at a point near the
Oklahoma-Texas stale line north
east of Thackerville and extend-
ing in a northerly direction east
of Lake Murray generally parallel
and west of Oklahoma S H 18 to
a crossing of the South Canadian
river near Wanette and then
dividing into two roadways one
extending northwest to Oklaho-
ma City and the other northeast
to a junction with the Turner
Turnpike just west of Stroud"
This would leave Shawnee
home of turnpike chairman Mead
Norton without a direct connec-
tion with either leg of the "Y"
The eastern leg would angle
northeast from Wannetee about
20 miles south of Shawnee to-
wards Prague and then run
straight north to Stroud
The western leg would angle
northwest to Hollywood a point
north of Norman on the U S 77
route then due north to the west
end of the Turner turnpike
The base of the "Y" w(ould ex-
tend due south of Wanette west
of Stratford and Sulphur about
two miles and east of Ardmore
about eight miles It would end
at the shore of Lake Texorna just
north of the Cooke-Grayson coun-
ty line in Texas
The engineers drew a broken
line from the north shore termin-
us southwest to Thackerville
which is just north of Red river
on U S 77 Presumably this
Ilk would be a free feeder route
about 15 miles long Thacker-
ville is about 80 'miles north of
Dallas
"This route" the firm CUM ud-
ed "will provide the greatest
traffic services of any route
be within the prescribed
limits for a southern turnpike
liniess I here are narked differ-
ences in per mile osi it will also
produce highest net income per
nide of any route vithin the
study area"
State Residents Urged
To Reduce Drownings
OKLMIOMA CITY May 22 —
W)—A state official today urged
okLihomins "to take (-very pre-
caution pible" in activities at
lake:4 and streams to curb a wave
of it drownings
The warning was sounded by
Claode Goin chief of the law en-
forcement division of the stale
ganie and fish cornimssion
-Oklahoma's t'iStUsitY it ffOrn
drowning 1a5 reachcd fi ightening
ploportions" Goin said "The in-
creasng popularity of rill wider
sports is altrActing persons with
little or no knowledge in the
handling of 143ati or of safety
method"
Weather Forecast
Fair and continued warm to-
night Wciblesday partly cloudy
and WL0111 LOW tonight 67 to 72
FIVE DAY FORECAST
Temperatures will tiverage 3 to
ciegrees ilDoVt normal Wednes-
day through Sunday NOMA high
83 NOTIMil low 57-61 Cooler
Wednesday and Thursday Warm-
er Saturday or Sunday Precipi-
tation is expected to average 75
II) 150 inch during period occur-
ring as showers and thunder-
storms mostly Thursday and
Friday and again about Saturday
E
Entered at the Post Office at Edmond Oklahoma as Mattel of the Second Class under Act of March 8 1897
(United Press Wire Service NEA Feature Service WNU Feature Service)
EDMOND OKLAHOMA TUESDAY MAY 22 1956
z:'7771"7 - '
A LESSON FROM DAD—A big glove hanging from his
right hand Hank Bauer jr five years old watches his
father New York Yankee outfielder warm up before a
game with the Kansas City Athletics in Kansas City Mo
Little Hank was at home in more ways than one The
Bauer family home is in Kansas City
Slate Dentist To Fight Charges
Thai Advertising Violates Ethics
CUSHING Okla May 22 —
(111—A 49-year-old dentist ac-
ued of violating professional
ethics by advertising in news-
papers and other media said
today that taking his license
will )e like "pulling eyeteeth"
71! L R Moore who moved
his office here from Tulsa six
months ago said most of the
"hullabaloo was caused be-
cause I put up a temporary
sign measuring more than 800
square inches" Ile has been
ordered to appear before a hear-
ing of the board of governors
of the registered dentists as-
sociation of Oklahoma here
May 28 to show cause why his
license should not be suspend-
ed The dental group has lodged
two complaints against Moore
One charges him with runn-
ing an ad in the Cushing Daily
Citizen
The other contains three
counts It alleges he used the
mails to advertise his services
that he maintained a sign not
attached to the premises and
that the sign measured more
than 300 square inches Moore
Swimming Pool
To Open June 1
In answer to dozens of queries
from the small fry city manager
J B Marshall announced today
that Edmond's Kiwanis swimming
pool will open June I
Bob Delver Edmond high-
school football coach who has
been in charge of the pool for the
past two SUITIMCFS will again be
in charge of all activities there
The city-owned pool which
remains open about three months
each 'tar is located near Fifth
and Boulevard streets jklSt S011th
of Stephenson park
County Residents Spend
$5000000 On Bonds
Oklahoma county citizens have
added $49089'39 to their personal
savings in the form of Series E
11 bonds since the beginning
of the year according to Ira Vi
hanis Oh ahoma county bond
chairman This figure represents
3229 percent of the county's 1956
sziving! bond goal of $15199000
First four-month purchases state-
wide amininted to $24093479
which is 34 percent of the year's
goal of $7t200000
Seward Pool Test
Has Gas Sets Pipe
lones Shelburne ez Pe llow Oil
has set casing at Its No I Bryan
in NE SE SW of 27-I5n-3w step-
out one-half mile southwest of the
Seward sector in Logan county
alter getting 265 feet of free oil
and 30 feet of oily Mud on a drill-
stem test in the Second Wilcox
at 6342-60 feet Crews landed
V8-inch pipe six feet off bottom
at 6354 feet
Coffee Prices Rising
NEW YORK May 21 --V—
Bad news for the nation's coffee
inkers came today in the form
of wholesale price boosts an-
nounced by six major processor
of the beverage bean
said the sign was used only
temporarily after he moved
into an upstairs office in a
downtown building
Moore is a former Army den-
tar officer and a 1932 graduate
of Washington university St
Louis Mo He said he never
has been in trouble before with
any dental group
"1 am prepared to go all the
way to the Supreme court if
necessary" he told reporters
'They haven't charged me with
malpractice or anything like
that but just because I used
several mediums to advise the
public of my location and
services"
Donald L Worthington Cush-
ing attorney for Moore said
the 10 am hearing on May 28
will offer the first real test of a
law giving the state dental
group authority to fix profes-
sional standards The complaint
against Moore brother of St
Louis Cardinal coach Terry
Moore was signed by four
Cushing members of the state
association Dr George Boling-
er Dr L P Bulkstri Dr Tom
Harrison and Dr William L
Fielding Jr
Luther Lieutenant
Completes Course
First Lt La Roy A Smith'
whose wife Vera and parents
PvIr and Mrs 11 D Smith live in
Luther recently was graduated
from the associate officer ad-
vanced course at the Infantry
Center Fort Inning Ga
The course gave Lieutenant
Smith advanced instruction i
the duties and command po-rtion
of company and field grade of-
ficers The lieutenant entered the Army
in 1941 He was last stationed at
Fort Lewis Wash
Edmondite Initiated
By OU Engineers
NORMAN May 22 — Bill Pur-
vis Edmond hien in
into Eta Koripit N u hotiorafy
'cal Engineering
'ociely on the canipus of the Lim-
versity of Oklahoma
Purvis lie of Mr ind Mr3
D O Puirk
is a :-enior !maim ing in chi( ti lea!
engineering Only the top tu-
dents are fii Eta Kappa
Nu since inenilicr hip i limiled
to the upper orie-f:th of
junior class and to the upper one-
t hod of the seniori
Here Are School Building Bids
CONTRACTORS'
BASE
BIDS
Edmond Mph School
Northeast Elementary School
Addn to Clyde I Lowell hool
Combined Units
HISTORIAL SOCIElY Comp
State Historical
Oklahoma C1t48
minE
Aginemeat Enpected
lbw Tam Dill Today
Bid Date Set On
Lincoln Boulevard
Widening Project
The state highway commission
will open bids June 5 for con-
struction of the four-lane ex-
pressway on Lincoln boulevard
from the state capitol in Oklaho-
ma City north to the bypass
G A Stoldt state highway di-
rector ordered the project placed
on the June letting after receiv-
ing official notice that right o
way has been acquired
The right of way problem was
solved Thursday when Oklahoma
City businessmen underwrote a
$400000 loan for purchase of the
needed property
The city then filed condemna-
tion suit against all of the proper
ty which had not been acquired
Under the law when condemna-
tion suits are filed a govermnen-
tal agency is allowed to take pos
session as soon a property is ap-
praised and money is deposited
with the court clerk
About 60 percent of the needed
right of way already had been
donated by property owners
largely through efforts of t h e
northeast chamber of commerce
Gov Gary has said he will ask
the next legHature to pay for
half the right of way cost because
the highway will serve the entire
state
The 2040-mile project begins
north of the state capitol and ter-
minates at Grand boulevard It
will cost more than a million dol-
lars June bids call for grading
drainage four 12-foot divided
traffic lanes of 8-inch portland
cement Also to be constructed are
two bridges 160 and 170 feet each
in length
In addition the project will in-
clude 0691 mile of grading for
the site of a three-level highway
separation structure scheduled to
he let to contract in July
W E Curry Is Named
Republican Chairman
Walter E Curry Oklahoma
City WWI the state chairmanship
of the Republican party Saturday
afternoon without opposition
Curry replaces Douglas Mc-
Keever Enid who has resigned
to !mike the race for United
States senator against Sen Mike
Monroney
Curry's election came at a meet-
ing of the state Republican com-
mittee after he was nominated by
Paul Darrough jr Oklahoma City
committee member His nomina-
tion drew a second from Reuben
Sparks Enid ll952 Republican
candidate for goverrror and Carl
Morgan state senator from Guth-
rie Curry reveised the usual trend
iind made no acceptance speech
But he called for committee mem-
bers to give a rising vote of
thanks to NicKeever
Services Held Monday
For Mrs Martha Brown
svrvi were held Nionday for
Mrs no thi Alo lit own 75 who
died Sunday in lin Edmond
alt(ir of a week
No teineiery
under tho direct JI1 of the Mg-
gii'ley A wit ive of Woyno TOWfl MIS
11row trniVod 10 Okl:thOrril in
1899 living in MiLood Ind
Cliirtioylil before eoniing to
tond Sit? wils a it:eint)er Of Ow
hap! t ditir( ft
Stirvivrils indude three sons
Syl G krown Edmond Richard
k Ttx and Janus
Roonoke Va a !-wtr
:113 Pow Ilarroh five
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504 462 502260 506492
46285 45600 47260
27462 25000 26290
573209 572860 580042
I
5 Cents Per Cope
NUMBER 20
Compromise Measure Expected To
Reach President's Desk Wednesday
By Vincent J Burke
United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON May 22 —1111— Senate-ltouse negotiators
expected to reach final agreement today on a new compro-
mise farm bill acceptable to President Eisenhower
Sen Allen J El lender (D-La) predicted that Congress
would complete action on the measure and send it to the
White House tomorrow-37 days after President Eisenhower
vetoed an earlier Democratic-sponsored farm bill
The conferees expected to tale final action today on a tentative
formula worked out yesterday
for resolving major differences
between varying farm bills pas-
sed by the Senate and House
Informed sources said the ten-
tative compromise called for:
—Adoption of the Senate-voted
plan to boost price supports for
oats rye grain sorghums and
barley this year to 70 percent of
parity from the already-announced
70 percent level This provi-
sion is acceptable to the Adminis-
tration —Elimination of the alternate
plan approved by the House
which would raise supports for
these crops about 18 percent this
year for those producers who cut
back plantings under a proposed
acreage restriction program 'The
acreage restrictions woul(t not
apply under the Senate plan
—Adoption of the provision in
the llouse bill which Ivould direct
the agriculture department I o
launch this year the $12 billion
soil bank contained in both bills
The Senate bill would leave it to
'secretary of agriculture Ezra T
Benson to determine whether it
was fesible to begin the program
' this late in the 1956 planting sea-
son' Sen George D Aiken 01-111
predicted the conference commit-
tee would come up with "a good
bill" Since Aiken is a leading
Senate spokesman for the ' ad-
ministration on farm matters his
statement indicated Mr Eisen-
hower would sign the compro-
mise The President vetoed the origi-
nal bill because it included flat 90
percent price supports along
with his $12 billion soil hank
plan I3oth houses then approved
new legislation dropping most of
the price-boosting provisions but
retaining the soil bank system
Contracts On School Buildings May
Be Awarded Al Wednesday Meeting
Local school boatid
are hoping that contract on an
extensive school improivellient
program here will he im'arded
a meeting Wednesday night
The board faced with a pro-
lilern Of paring down ri the
alternates to atay within the
amount otf money available alto r
receiving hids from right cull-
tractors at a inceling Thui
night
Although firms licaded y 1to
P:dniond tc!ildents vare annouut-
ed as the low bidders no coh-
tract 1xcPri awarded 1nd
wa3 pfttnontoil until tlio daeH
day 1100mg to t( lout 1:cc1
mei-Owls reole tiltiQ to 11jly 11Q
Lid'
A -11:Ir1 ini ro:J!t! in InnilInt!
1n1 niatotwik (luring ino
innnths' Ityulfol ii I!
1-e ing the
li()ard's
Ctin'ornrtwn Co 11-
wri by Otto 13't r sidolt!!(1 a
low 1)po of $48171'' 11Q
ptopeit now bimIKIHuil
mot a koe bid of
iPIA11 lull to the
ci
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Services were held today in the
Shia Ile-Kessler chapvl for Henry
3 Dahl 52 prominent Arcadia
farmer who was found burned to
death Sunday in a pump house at
his home eight miles east and
miles north of Edmond
It i believed Dahl was killed
by accidental gasoline explosion
The charred victim was found
by a neighbor W R Sweet about
10 am Sunday Sheriff's deputies
said neighbors heard an explosion
about 8 pm Saturday
Officers reported Dahl ap-
parently was cleaning the pump
with gasoline when the fluid
ignited Walls of the small con-
crete structure were cracked by
the heat or the blast and Dahl
was burned beyond recognition
Dahl lived on a farm west of
Edmond where he was born un-
til 1937 when he moved to his
home near Arcadia
Survivors are three brothers
oger Bainbridge Oklahoma
City Johnny Dahl of Edmond
and Herbert Dahl Perry one sis-
ter Mrs Arnie Blanton Corpus
Christi Tex
Interment was in Gracelawn
cemetery
Blackwood at 'Nichols Co h a s
completed at the No 1 Harrison
in C SW SE of 32-14n1w in the
Edirmnd field in Oklahoma coun-
ty after making 88 barrels of
distillate and three million cubic
feet of gas a day from perfora-
tions at 6243-57 feet and 6261-
85 frit total drpth is 6340 feet
Clyic I iowell elementary school
tito Skaggs head of the J W
Skiicg- Construction Co submit-
ted a low hase bid of S37459 on
the ((instruction of the proposed
w Northeast elementary school
if m r and Skagiifs were
hal to meet vial the board
tini t he architect Wednesday
ho?111
'1111410th Inds were higher than
iiiiiimates the school of-
fei Ii indicated they were hope-
it t'iiyingri could be efhati-1
tponllig the start of any
or of th three 'imposed pro-
jet I
on the three projects
was (xi p'ionilly competitive
i' h ehly a fv thowand dollars
teirating the 1ovvsl Lod from
t!-o
In iiht ion to Weller and
other firms submitting
Ciu palter Construction
CO Y1 m rik ii & Parks SeCOr
Ct) ml Im & S011 Con-
ttLIctioll C(17 (211 Stittle
Cow rio tp)ii Ilid Tankersley
Con ! 0 li11 to :ill of Oklahoma
City told Cowen Construction of
Shay tiee
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Henry Dahl
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The Edmond Enterprise (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 20, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 22, 1956, newspaper, May 22, 1956; Edmond, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2055262/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.