The Alva Review-Courier (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 262, Ed. 1 Monday, July 23, 1951 Page: 4 of 6
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SUBSCRIPTION RAT'ES
By Mall in
Woods arid Adjoining Counties:
One Year $5811 plus 12 tax --VISO
i Six Month 310 plus 08 tax -- $316
Throe Months $1110 plus 04 tax $1135
By Mt11 In Oklahoma:
One Year 8710 plus 14 tax $724
Six Months 8445 plus 00 tax— $454
Air Force Must Be Enlarged r---r4r
KJ
For Safety at Home and Abroad - '
BY 'PETER EDSON Nte
NEA Washington Correspondent N"
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—How big an Mr Force the 'United States
" should have for security is one of the most challenging subjects in
Washington It is the key to defense planning And it is the key to
-- government spending and taxation As the Air Force is increased in
size everything goes up with it
'"' No statement set America back on its heels more than the recent
testimony of Gen Hoyt S Vandenberg Air Force Chief of Staff before
the Senate Committees investigating General MacArthur's firing
"The fact is" he said then "that the United States is operating a
shoestring Air Force in view of its global responsibilities
What was overlooked in General Vandenberg's statement was
qualifying clause "in view of its global responsibilities"
This qualifier has since been re-emphasized and clarified What
General Vandenberg wanted to make clear was that if the United
- 1 States was to be required to fight a Pacific war a European war a
0 Mediterranean or Middle-East war and also launch a devastating
: strategic air attack on Russia then its Air Force was a shoestring
4 operation
'OR the defense of the United States alone the present 87-group Air
"--1- Force might be sufficient But if any outside work had to be done
wat is not
The Air Force still sticks to the story that if Russia should attack
the United States American strategic bombers could retaliate with
: such force as to devastate Russian cities and industrial potential
t This boast can be made however only on one big assumption It is
that Russia has no guided missiles which will be effective in shooting
down high level strategic bombers
There is one other important factor which enters into this calcula
4N tion It is simply that the B-36 bomber is rapidly becoming obsolete
It is obsolete in the sense that jet interceptor planes have been im
proved to such a degree that they can overtake the slower B-36 and
destroy it This is true of even the Russian MIG 15 jet which General
'1Vandenberg declared has superior speed and climb to American and
British jets
6'" U S jets have greater fire power and better fire control Also
American pilots are better trained That has given the UN Air Forces
superiority over Communist aircraft in Korea But it is pointed out
that the UN advantage in numbers of aircraft in Korea has in recent
' months been rapidly decreasing
Answers to the problems raised by growing obsolescense of the B-36 i
and improvement in Russian jet aircraft are the obvious demands for
-better and necessarily more expensive aircraft and more of them
Better bombers are being built in the B-47 the B-52 and even a B-58
about which little has been said The claim is made that within two
years the U S Air Force will be able to double the force of its
strategic attack on any enemy
44141
pRODUCTION of newer aircraft will not really begin to roll unit
4- February of next year It will be the end of 1952 before the 95-
group U S Air Force is in being But the plans for 125 then 150
and 180 groups are actively being developed
- The numbers racket in counting aircraft is apt to be deceptive Esti
— - mates of Russian air power have run as high as 5000 planes in Asia
and perhaps 10000 in Europe There is no way for a civilian to
":!: -estimate how correct this intelligence may be
The only real basis for comparison between opposing air forces is
by type of plane reserves obsolescence fuel and pilot supplies and
- replacements American transports tankers and strategic bombers are
vastly superior to anything Russia is known to have On bombers the
margin is two to one and the best the Russians have is a TU-4 which
was a steal on the B-29 I
- On air defense and tactical air support the ratio may be reversed
: or worse In Europe for instance the U S has only two groups or
about 150 combat planes no match for any Russian 10000 -
1
AI
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to
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THE REVIEW PUBLISHING CO Inc
lie Flynn Avenue Alva Oklahoma
Publishers of
The The
Alva Review-Courier Alva Weekly Record
1st Sept IS 1893 Est May 1 1900
Published Daily except Saturday Published Each Thursday
and Sunday morning
TWO INOEPENDENT HOMETOWN NEWSPAPERS
each Publication entered as second class mail matter at the pestotnee
In Alva Oklahoma under act of March 5 1879 on each regular publi-
cation date and frequency
A M Delaney °Me Mgr
Bill Montgomery Sports Editor
Leland
PBX TELEPHONES ALL DEPARTMEN1S-2N mkt 211
National Ad Representatives
SOUTHWEST DAILIES
Dallas New York Okla City
SUBSCRIPTION RATES FOR WEEKLY RECORD
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Monday July 231951
o
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WASHINGTON COLUMN
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Canine Breed
HORIZONTAL
16 Depicted dog
13 Feminine
appellation
14 Gastropod
mollusk
15 Pastry
16 Engine
18 Insect egg
19 "Coyote State"
(ab)
20 Tree
21 Novel
23 Doctor of
Science (ab)
24 Preposition
25 Daybreak
(comb form)
27 Egyptian
month
29 Great Lake
32 Also
33 Filth
34 Pate
36 Oriental coin
37 Rip
38 Final passage
In music
39 Behold!
40 Article
41 It — noted
for its
gameness
43 Deep hole
46 Groove
48 The gods
50 New (comb
form)
52 Highways
54 Insane
55 Containers
57 Muse of poetr:
59 Makes
melodious
GO Repulse
VERTICAL
1 Little demons
a Incursion
BROOKS H BICKNELL Editor and rublhiher
dm ammo
3 Anger
4 Yes (Sp)
5 Dress edges
6 Make a lace
edging
7 Black
8 Unusual
9 Right line
(ab)
10 Charged atom
11 Geraint's wife
in Arthurian
legend
12 Injures by
exposure
17 Exclamation
of surprise
20 Social insect
22 Obnoxious
22 Obnoxious
plant
24 Trying
experience
ZA
Ronald Harrill Adv Mar
Jo W Taylor Mech Supt
W Sample Cit glar -
MEMBER0ot 1951
( 0 3og 1
J
FOR REVIEW-COURIER
By City Carrier
In Alva only in advance: -
One Month $100
Six Months $575
One Year $1100
By Mail °Weide OklahNna:
One Year $785 plum I6 tax — $781
Six Months $485 plum -10 tax -- 1405
Answer to Previous Puzzie
EEM1
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Marlifft EllAhl
PisACOR
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LEER E E
26 Prayer - 45 Musical -
27 Elapsed quality
28 Grafted (her) 46 Road (ab)
30 Angered 47 Employer
31 Volcano in 48 Palm fruit
Sicily 49 False god
35 Support 51 Scrap
38 Feline 53 Onager
41 Quechuan 54 Cartograph
Indiafi 56 Tungsten
42 Chair (ab)
44 Press 58 French island
Indiafi
42 Chair
44 Press
rs8
Your Nichols
Worth
I By HARMAN W NICHOLS I
By HARMAN W NICHOLS
WASHINGTON July 23 dB— The
next time I pick a fuss with a ma-
rine I want a regiment of my gang
standing at the ready
I tried my hand at Ju-jitsu (or
Judo) and today I'm sore from
crew cut to big toe My instructor
(better say enemy) in the art of
unarmed defense was Sgt Fmk
C Hubbard of Dearborn Mich
who is stationed at Camp Le Jeune
N C
Frank dolled me up in proper
costume for the session —a Dwagi
kimono which looks something
like a chopped off night shirt Then
followed by half the marines at the
barracks here we made it bare-
foot to a baseball diamond
The first hold he tried on me
was as nasty as the Jan name for
it which is seol-nage The ser-
geant a little guy whom I out-
weigh by about 25 pciunds grabbed
arm and shoulder and jeprked
Over his head' That 'wasn't bad
but the spill down was violent
Nichols Was 411 ever the infield
and the audience seemed to like it
The name of thenext hold was
enough to scare the Dwagi kimono
off a man It was called tsuri-Komi-Goshi
-
Without even waiting to let his
buddies get their bets down on how
soon I would make a forced land-
ing Frank grabbed one fat arm
and locked his arm between my
legs - '
It was another case of up slow
down fast That put one bruised
man on third base Me
The next performance was the
worst one This hold is called kata-
guruma The opponent grabs you
like a flash by both hands and be-
fore you know it you're riding his
back Also before you know it
you're over his shoulder — and
down
This time I favored home plate
It was quite a throw but Frank a
muscular kid made it
I hadn't touched' first or second
base yet but I was 'willing to leave
those two pillows to their own fate
I had had it
The audience of marines enjoy-
ed my misery and said so and then
Frank did something real nice—
just for laughs and a picture He
called on his fellow 'judo Artist
Sgt Dan Cassel of Danville
The two boys let me put arm
locks on both of them The camera
clicked I collapsed
That was judo lesson No 1 and
if I have anything to say abotit it
there won't be any more—for me
The two sergeant i flew here
from Le Jeune to appear on the
American Speaks television show
put on every afternoon by the ma-
rines My friends of course ju-
doed Frank was telling me how this
practice of unarmed mayhem can
be of great value if a man is
caught phort of a rifle or sidearm
on the 'field of battle
You can choke a man cripple
him or bust his back if you know
how
Frank apologized for the bad
time he had given Me and admit-
ted that he had been a student of
this pain-giving sport since he was
10 years old He explained that the
defense in judo if there is any is
something like lirofessional wrestl-
ing You have to know how to fall
The only way I know how to fall
is with a dull thud '
RELATIVES GRADUATE
TABLEQIYAH July 23 liP1 — A
mother-daughter and son-la-law
combination will be among 130 sen-
iors to graduate from Northeastern
State college here at the end of
the summer session
Mrs Catherine James Vinita is
the mother Daughter and son-in-law
are Mr and Mrs Bob E
Adams also of Vinita
-
: BUDDING GIANT—You might
know he's from Texas Folk
down in Houston offer Wayne
Addison as their candidate for
the biggest six-year-old in the
U S Doctors say the 145-pound
youngster who doesn't eat snore
than the average boy is perfect-
) ly normal except for being "a
little big tor his age"
vc
News From
Avard
57 Years of Commun!ty Ss mice
00'11
1
There were 72 in Bible school
Sunday at the Avard Christian
church M E Goucher gave a
talk on the dreamers of the Bible
and their dreams Sunday after
Bible school Mr Goucher will
continue the talk next Sunday
Mrs Mark Williams of Alva was
the Sunday dinner guest of her
sister Mrs M E Goucher and
Mr Goucher The women attend-
' ed the WCTU meeting at Alva Sun-
' day afternoon
Mrs Pearl Hasman of Oakland
Calif is visiting her parents Mr
and Mrs George Ferguson4 Mrs
Hasman was the guest of her sister-in-law
and family Mn i and
Mrs Lester Cummings Sunday
Mr and Mrs George Milledge
spent Sunday with her parents
Mr and Mrs Lewis Olson of Edith
Mr and Mrs Leon Johnson left
Friday on their vacation They
will visit their daughters and
families Mr and Mrs Scott Hecht
in Guymon and Mr and Mrs
Harold Ream and daughters in
Ephrata Wash Mrs Johnson's
mother Mrs Maude Johnson of
Waynoka accompanied them They
will be gone about five weeks J
D Flury will carry mail for Mr
Johnson
Mr and Mrs Hubert Flury and
Linda of Freedom spent Thursday
night with his mother Mrs Joe
Flury Mr and Mrs Flury are
moving to Tulsa this week
Mr and Mrs Fred Curtis and
sons were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs Joe Miller
Miss Jean Cumming of Hardtner
is spending her vacation with her
parents Mr and Mrs Lester
Cummings Miss Cummings works
in the Hardtner hospital
Lee and Rex Cropp are spending
their furlough with their parents
Mr and Mrs Earl Cropp The
boys will go to Camp Bragg next
week
The
ALADDIN'S LAMP
By R J VEGA—C)'51 General Features Corp—TM World Rights RM
6 3 11: 4 9 10 2 8 11 75 14 3 6 12 9
P USCEHUGES A SNLEN
5 7 -8 2 6 11 4 3 12 5 9 10 7 8 14-2
CU OSE GH I XT" A ROP E
8 6 12 9 3 72 8 14 6 4 11 3 9 10 5
POQ PQ I E4 SA RUY P W
3 5 14 7 612 8 9-10-3-2-12-5-4-11 7
E l NRA LMD POU A TN E
6-9712-8-5-10 -2-3-7- 6- 5-11- 9 - 8 14- 4
N A IPH Y1PSTI GYRDC
27-3-10-5-6-1277-9-11-8-4-14-2-3-7-5
CP CN I NI W AGE J KO NC
4 212 9 8 11 3 4 14 6 7 10 5-9-12-6
'TE 11V TRO UNG LAT F D
2-'8-11-3-4 -14T6-2 12 5-9-14-3- 4- 10- 7
S E ETM S I T YPH TUA I S
6 4 14 9 5-11 7 8-12-6-4 10-9-3-14-2
CK EPA AUM OAE MEN NM
5 7 12 8 4 14 3 6 11 9 2 12 4-7 10-8
CMUEMOIT'IlEMOMAN
6 2 10 9 3 7 48 14-'5-6-11-2-9-12-4
IT XETEN'T'1110MHNUE
2 5 12 6 2-14 3-9 12 4 7 14 8 6 11 5
O TSNDGY'D T YjiHSSS Y
This fascinating game will give you an important message daily
For tomorrow's words of guidance look below for the key number
corresponding to the date of your birth—this changes daily in accord-
ance with the Aladdin's Lamp secret formula Next circle the let-
ters in the chart which are under your number Start at the top line—
read left to right
Mar 21 to Apr 20— 4 Jut 24 to Aug 22-10 Nov 23 to Dec 22— 2
Apr 21 to May 20-12 Aug 23 to Sep 23-- 8 Dec 23 to Jan 21— 3
May 21 to Jun 21— 6 Sep 24 to Oct 23— 7 Jan 22 to Feb 20— 5
Jun 22 to Jul 23-- 9 Oct 24 to Nov 22-11 Feb 21 to Mar 20-14
Silent Partner
fiEnNe'l
Rex Cropp spent Sunday with
Mr and Mrs Harry Ralston and
sons
Miss Lola Ewing of Alva spent
last week with her cousin Miss
De Verl Gourley
Mr and Mrs Bruneil Link and
children and Mr and Mrs Harold
Ewing of Alva spent Sunday with
their parents Mr and Mrs John
Link
News from
Greenleaf
The wheat fields are getting too
dry to plow Some have theirs
plowed Those that haven't are
one-waying and waiting for anoth-
er rain
Mr and Mrs Buel Thurman and
Jimmy were visiting at the home
of Mr and Mrs Louie Thurman
and family Friday evening
Those shopping and visiting in
Alva Saturday were Mr and Mrs
Elmer Hada and children Mrs
Fred Nighswonger and children
Mr and Mrs Paul Hada and fami-
ly and Mrs Ralph Schupbach and
children
Mr and Mrs Norman Hada of
California are here this week vis-
iting relatives and friends They
visited Mr and Mrs Louie Thur-
man and family Saturday and Ida
Hada Sunday
Howard Nighswonger purchased
him a new self-propelled combine
this harvest
Those visiting at the home of
Mr and Mrs Edward Mosser and
Dorothy Lee Sunday were Mr
and Mrs Willie Murley Mr and
Mrs Paul Hada Floyd Lloyd and
June Orval Martin Dee Alltizer
and Albert Ike
Mr and Mrs Axel Pederson at-
tended Sunday school in Alva Sun-
day morning and visited her folks
Mr and Mrs Brandy in the after-
noon Mr and Mrs Dewey Cummins
Jr and family are here visiting his
folks Mr and Mrs Dewey Cum-
mins Sr
Ow
OU-Aggie Game
Will Be on TV
OICLAHOMA CITY Ju1 3 23 IIP)—
The annual University of Oklahoma
—Oklahoma AIM college football
game had OU President George
L Cross' nod today as the one grid
event to be televised this fall
Cross said he will recommend to
the board of regents that a con-
tract be signed with WKY-TV in
Oklahoma City to cover telecasting
the game scheduled Dec L
He said others have suggested
that the William and Mary game
at Norman Sept 29 be televised but
that he favors the Sooner-Aggie
clash
' Banned More T '
Both the National Collegiate Ath-
letic Association and the Big Seven
conference have banned member
schools from alldwing live telecasts
of more than one game during the
1951 season
Films of other games may be
telecast
Cross said the university will "go
along" with the ban
He added however that last
year when all OU home games
were televised "we could tell no
difference in the crowds"
Led To State Dispute
The NCAA directors voted the
ban last year as an "experiment"
to see if telecasts of "big college"
games were hurting attendance at
smaller schools
THE GILA faun
I BY JULIUS LOUG'
COMENT 19111 111 NEA setvoct IC
TKO STORYI Laura Colt elvle and soelal leader of Colton
e lite and the wealrbleet womas In
Sown r into the glove cots-
yam:sent of her ear and Is bitten
be Strengeo terrtfyinn creature
h iding there By the time old
eould be summoned by Mr and
Mrs Mob Crawford who lived
Dear the seen Laura Cotton La
dead
lie
1
CHIEF MITCHELL realized soon
enough that he had a case that
was to make Coitonville history
What had happened to Laura Col-
ton would make a story anywhere
and the fact that it had happened
to Laura the richest woman in
Coltonville made it a local sensa-
tion in the nine-day wonder class
Chief Mitchell knew that a crisis
in his life had arisen This thing
would have to be handled just
Doc McCracken the coroner an
ancient man with a bearing aid
: that did not assist his hearing over-
: much took the matter coolly
enough in stride though the sight
of the hacked and severed corn
ponent parts of the deadly lizard
would make him shake his almost
completely bald head
"It didn't kill her" he said
I'She died of a heart attack" and
be gave it a technical name "It
I wasn't too serious only something
!like this could easily put her out
for keeps What in the world was
it that bit her?"
Chief Mitchell shook his bead
"Doc I thought you'd maybe know
I never seen anything like it in
50 years Some kind of a lizard
ain't it?" He spoke loudly from
habit and Dr McCracken said:
' "I guess so But I never saw
One that big or that color in Ohio
Looks like a lady's beaded bag"
There was some truth in the
coroner's comparison The Lizard's
bide was rough and bead-like
tubercles covered its body save at
the bead itself The coloring was
coral aud Mack and there was a
otarS de dagn as In beaded bags
- -- -- -
U P EXPERT DIOESiS TODAY'S REPORT
Fanning the Foreign Fretnt
t
By HOMER JENKS
(Foreign News Editor)
The next 48 hours may show
whether the Communists want
peace in Korea or have been just
stalling foe time i
If they do want peace they will
have to back down on their de-
mand that withdrawal of 'foreign
troops" — meaning American —
from Korea be made a part of any
armistice agreement
Otherwise the talks will come to
an abrupt end and Russia's original
cease-fire proposal will stand ex-
posed as nothing more than a ma-
neuver to gain a cheap military
victory
The Reds have until 7 p tn CST
Tuesday to make up their minds
At that lour United Nati Ons and
Communist negotiators are ached-
uled to sit down again to resume
their deadlocked talks on an ar-
mistice agenda
The showdown is expected " to
come soon afterward
The Communists it're fully aware
of what is at stake When Chief
UN Negotiator - Vice Admiral C
Turner' Joy reiterated 'Saturday
that the Allies would neVer agree
to discuss withdrawal of the
troops as a condition of an armis-
tice the Reds asked for and
were granted — 96 hours to iecon-
Bider the situation -
The allies from the start have
been suspicious of Communist mo-
tives in suggesting a truce in Kod
rea They feared the Reds were
counting upon an obvious Ameri
can desire for peace to get the
Communists what they could not
win on the battlefield — a UN with-
drawal from Korea and Commu-
nist domination of the peninsula
However the Allies are deter-
mined that South Korea shall not
be at the mercy of the Communists
again They have no intention of
pulling out of Korea until a politi-
cal settlement on the future of the
country—not Just an armistice—
has been reached
An allied withdrawal before iron-
clad guarantees for the future se-
curity of South Korea would leave
FUNNY BUSINESS
"We're answering a call at the bee farm again!"
There were four feet rather claws
and jaws with their fang-Like
' teeth The creature was indeed
enough to scare a woman to death
even if her heart had been far
stronger than Laura Colton's
"I ngger" said Chief Mitchell
"that she got it out of the glove
box I looked in her car and its
open After it bit her she stopped
her car in the street and come
a-runnin' to Bob's house carr3rin
the thing with her She must of
been scared plumb out of her
wits"
Dr McCracken had not quite
heard all that the chief bad said
but be got the idea and he nodded
"I think I'd better can Dr Crev-
iston" be said "He's her physi-
cian and be can probably tell me
about her heart Though I'd swear
my diagnosis is correct the au-
topsy will make it sure"
PHIEF MITCHELL winced It
‘-4 hardly seemed right to perform
an autopsy on the body of Laura
Colton who bad been the towns
virulal queen since her father nad
died 25 years before and who had
been its crown princess another
25 years before that
of course there had been the
two-year period when Laura bad
been absent from Coltonville the
Arizona interlude when she bad
been the bride of her second cou-
sin Sam Colton an engineer em-
ployed by a mining firm at Bisbee
Ariz also at Mo It had been at
the latter village that Laura had
persuaded Sam to give up mining
and return to Ohio She bad
brought him proudly back her
father's death baying been the
prying wedge between her hus-
band and his chosen career She
had returned to reign as the un-
disputed queen of Coltonville
People had said nasty things
They had questioned Laura's mo-1
tive for marrying Sank arguing
that she had Amami hor busband
as consort only Illoinono We name
that tiny republic with only 4 s own
outnumbered and under-tra
my to face the North Kor
my and its hordes of Chines Com-
munist "volunteer" reinforlmentS
should an armistice agr e ment
break down I
Obituary
THEODORE WAONE
Theodore Wagner son o John
Wagner and Ann BIM lel was
born seven miles east of El 10WW
Michigan June 6th ' 1868 lid de-
parted this life in his bottle July
19 1951 at the age of 88 yeart
one month and 14 daySA2
:
He came to Ellinwood eprbtle
with his parents in )874 4nfletalbv-
ed on to this area at the Idpening
of the cherokee Strip on"gepteM-
ber 16 1893 itp'
In 1899 he was 'united IttAmarri-
age to Miss Arina Getaler-Thel
lived on the farm 6 miil1 north-
east of 'Alva until 1925 when the'y
settled in Alva His wife Mina pre-
ceded him in death March 13 (981-
Theo was a member of 1 the
Lutheran church He wal one of
the 13 original signori of Yie Con-
StitutiOn on May 21 1899
He is survived by ones brother
Charlie Wagner Alva lotmaisters
Mary Koppitz and Mrs caroline
Schroeder Alva Mrs Hanna Win-
ters Amarillo Texas Mits Ida
White Capron a number of nieces
and nephews AV
-
CARD OF THANKS-
Words cannot adequatelY bxpress
our deep appreciation for the many
kind and sympathetic Acts Vat
came to us at 'the time of a r
recent r bereavement alsoljor the
lovely flowers Family of Theo-
dore Wigner
's By Hershterget
i
had been the sante is her truddan
name of which she was so proud
They further charged that day by
day she ruined Sam at good
rugged soul who could have been
able to support her to his own
right but who Wag like a flab out
of water to CoItonviUe Laura
wouldn't even trust him Won the
machinery In the factory 41 wu
alleged doubtless unfairlye')
The truth however cal
comfortably close to popular gos-
sip Sam Colton knew nothing but
mining and after live years be
had become a loafer wheee life
was made bearable onty by the
two children Lawrence and Pate-
cis Sam doted on the kids Is'Itd
though Laura dominated their
raising ha derived aufficient satis-
faction from them to make Ms ex-
listence bearable '
tti
pERHAPS it would be more cc
Curate to say that be enjoyed
Pat as Patricia soon came to be
known Lawrence never did come
to be called Larry and the phea
nomenon may explain the differ-
ence between the two The boy
first born was never very$ well-
liked from the start while Pat was
a hoyden rascal popular with
everybody and pretty as a movie
starlet
She was just out of a co-ed col-
lege now having won the fight
against her mother who doted on
Vassar Lawrence was vacation-
ing from post-graduate se boo
where he was getting his PhD in
abnormal psychology the only sub-
ject in which he bad evert shown
any interest He bad be IV-Ir
during the war because of gat fess
weak eyes and a heart murmur
"I think we oughS to Mir ths1
family" said Chief Mitchell "Sere
shouldn't have to bear it trwa tbd
neighbors"
"That's right" agreed Doe 142
Cracken notify W briars
I call Creviston" He hesitated
think you're the one to tall as—ko
"What are you afraid ofr-laiiii
police chief asked candidly "Motet
tell me Sam will mourn bevr"
'Okays " said Doe laPe2oa4est
"I'll call Sam Colton and You
Paul Baker the county prerf--we
over here
(IV Do Centh12441
1)
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Bicknell, Brooks H. The Alva Review-Courier (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 262, Ed. 1 Monday, July 23, 1951, newspaper, July 23, 1951; Alva, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2063607/m1/4/?q=coaster: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.