The Alva Review-Courier (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 125, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 11, 1954 Page: 6 of 8
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Page 6—Alva (01da) Review-Courier Thursday Feb 11 1954
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 11 1954
DRIVE CA REFULY IN 1954 AND DON'T
FORGET TO DIM LIGHTS AFTER DARK
EON IN WASHINGTON
West Eyes Berlin Parley
Warily but With Hope
BY PETER EDSON 1
SEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON—(NFA)—The Berlin conference of U S Secre
tary of State John Foster Dulles with Foreign Minikters An-
thony Eden of Britain Georges Bidault of France and V M Molotov
of Russia is not labeled as a meeting of the Big Four Council of
Foreign Ministers It is designated instead as a meeting of the
foreign ministers of the four powers If that sounds like the dif-
ference between Tweedledum and Tweediedee it is also indicative
of the thin threads orr which hang the chances for anything con-
structive coming out of this gathering
The Big Four CFM as it was called for short was created in
World War II days when these pokNers were cooperating to a certain
degree It had a formal organization and fixed rules a procedure
THIS meeting of the foreign ministers of the four powers was
brought on by four principal developments
1 President Eisenhowerls speech of last April 16 to the American
Society of Newspaper Editors in Washington in which he called on
Moscow for "deeds" to make peace and not "mere rhetoric"
2 The growing need to conclude peace treaties with a unified
Germany and with Austria The June riots in the Russian zone
of East Germany :1tosved that the Soviet hold on that province was
vulnerable By contrast Chancellor Konrad Adenauerls re-election
in September showed his government to be well established in
West Germany
3 The desire to establish security in western Europe to replace
iS prolonged postwar insecurity While the Russians may want
to talk about creation of a weak neutral German state which would
have no part in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization or the
European Defense Community American British and French for-
eign ministers are fully prepared to speak up for both institutions
4 The necessity to strengthen the hand of the French govern-
ment This is unquestionably the screwiest factor in the whole
Berlin bag of tricks French opinion has two serious complexes
One is a desire to come to terms with the Communists not only in
western Europe but also in Indo-China The other is fear and
suspicion of a strong Germany These two influences have been
responsible for the delay in French ratification of EDC
THE western powers are of course prepared and willing to accept
any "deeds" the Communists may perform to further the cause
of peace If such deeds come in the form of such things as coopera-
tion in tlfe development of atomic energy for peaceful purposes
relaxation of the Iron Curtain barriers willingness to make peace
with Austria or to hold free and democratic elections for creation
of a unified Germany the western powers will take them as pure
conference gravy But they are not expected
The Russians are expected to come to the conference with a full
program of proposals for a five-power conference—including Cam-
munist China—to discuss ‘vorld tensions They may want to discuss
the Korean peace Or trade relations with the Communist coun-
tries Or disarmament
American British and French foreign ministers are in Berlin
with a program of their own too They cannot telegraph their
punch But they have done hard training for thi!7 diploma:le battle
royal ever since they started swapping notes with the Russians
ISinging Star
ACROSS 3 Miss Castle
I Singing star and Miss
Jack --- Dunne
6 He on 4 Pewter coin
radio
11 Talking bird
13 Respect
14 Standards of
perfection
15 Expunger
16 Wife of Aegir
(Teut myth)
17 Bird of prey
19 Observe
20 Uncle (dial)
21 Scottish
Nnee p fold
22 Abstract being
23 Descry
26 Enclose
29 Whirlwinds
31 Unit of
weight
32 Burmese
wood sprite
33 Transgression
34 Capital of
Spain
37 Back of the
neck
40 Feminine
nickname
41 Young dog
43 Adder
45 Art (Latin)
46 Punitive
48 Station (ab)
49 Cowardly
51 Rents
53 Impede
progress
54 Inset
55 Paradise (pl
56 Pithy
i0OWN
I Steeple
2 Title or
courtesy
I
of Malaya
5 Pit
6 Withered
7 Yellow bugle
plant
8 Promontories
9 County in 25 Period of time39 Natural fats
Alabama 27 Piece of 40 Mother-of10
Sudanese money pearl
Negroids 28 Girl's name 42 Hawaiian
12 Former 30 Fixed precipice
Russian ruler compensation 44 Adhesive
13 Softens in 34 Blemished 46 Personal (ab)
temper 35 Handled 47 Church fast
18 Driving 36 Ask for sCaFOrl
command payment 50 Mover's truck
24 Body of 38 Football 52 Peer Gynt's
water player mother
Answer to Previous Puzzle
MEOW MIA'
E Saal
E imam NE
N I E
E
L 0 :r 5
LIA16
0 1 7
A T la
7e7'EUUMMMIQO '5EiN
9L07-5000ME
OBEIBUMB
UMMIUMMEIM500111
OUDOMOWOMOOMM
MMUUDGMOUGGOO
01010010801010111000
1300111WOMO
OOMODOWINGUM00
UCIUMOMUMO
MEM DU BOOM
MOO MOW OUOM
' 13 14 1' I
18
lb
ri
15
31
b
Si
'"I42
n
37
47
z
1 18
8
51
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11
'la I" L
43
48
4 it
I
Senator Kerr
Says:
WASHINGTON Feb 11 — Wayne
Rowe president or Me Oklahoma
Cattlemen's association and the
miin or men he represents' are
trying to crawl back from the end
the limb where they have found
themselves dangling dangerously
with only Secretary Benson to coin-
'fort them And in an obvious ma-
neuver to distract attention from
Weir own embarrassing position
they are turnin6 to name-calling
m isreprosent at ion of ot hers
HERE IS THE RECORD:—
In their June 5th resolution
R OW!' and 'the man or men he
ep1esents' pronosed the packers
t)urchase program and at Amaril
lo they peddled it to Secretary
Benson On July I i lithe Okliiho-
' ma press vice-president of the as-
sociation praised Secretary Benson
' fer adopting this beef-buying pro-
i gram and described it as "just
the shot in the arm that the cat-
Ho industry needs From now on
we've got a going industry" (Yes
!I say it was "going" — Going
broke)
All a lone I urffed Secretary Ben-
sCt1 to give price support direct
I 'io producers and in my news let-
ter of July 2 I said I -ill sup-
y):I stop-gap purchases by the
government to bolster cattle price
but I Nynnt the belief its to go to the
producer instead of the processor
In the same release I objected to
the June 5t1i resolution just pre-
sented to Congress because it AN:11S
! t 110 packers program which Ben-
' sor had just launched This A as
not denied or refuted
- Secretary Benson make weekly
reports of his beef purchases and
repeatedly cited the climbing
' prices of processed beef (both to
consumers and the government)
anti the filling price of live cattle
Not once did Rowe and the man or
mon he lepresents' utter a word of
protest over this government sub-
sidy for narkers
Conditions got worse and worse
: and on Aug 4 the Oklahoma Farm
bureau condemned the Benson beef
program as a "costly failure here"
Rowe and hi is associates began to
squirm but n'A until Aug 27 did
they (h feet nd then they had the
iudacity to claim that they hadn't
kmwn Benson was going to sup-
Dirt the pitchers instead of the
: produt ers Brt by Oct 8 they were
in lull rctreat and passed still an-
other resolution urging "a 12
cent a pound minimum price on
live animals bought by packers for
luovernment orders"
I They then and there for the first
! time publicly urged specific action
that would be of some benefit to
the producer: and they then and
there fully embraced one of the
proposals I had been advocating
throuehout the year This makes it
' thrys41 clear just who has
ehrnecd his :)osition
I have been convinced from the
tart and still am that Roves
primary purpose is to help the
pleat packers and the Republican
Ivrty instead of the cattle produc-
(rs P S Rowe are you going to
tf11 the :)eople when you 'unlaoded'
your own cattle?
---
HEADLINE IN OKLAIIONIAN
Feb 3: "Farm Prices Bit The
Skids" As I predicted throughout
1953 Biltson's farm program made
this inevitable and unless Con-
2r) ss compels him to change they
can use the same headline again
next year to tell an ever sadder
I ST RESORT OF CHRONIC
admit his posi-
tion is riht but he's insincere"
FALSF LCONOMY: In a letter
tc the Sente conunittee on agri
culture indorsing the Monroney
bill to expand and co-ordinate the
a9jcultunl food control pro':ratn
I 1c t1 !::1( of vnproprilitions
wlk11 has been the chief obstacle
to this development in the past
Ancl now in the TIPW budget only
requested for
he enti!e national program 'rile
111c should have SI5 mil
lion How Pcnny-wise and pound
foelish can they be?
The adminimation budget also
Foroot only S55 5 Million for the
Sol Con ervation yervice about Sr)
th:m Congress voted
this yeir and the program of
PMA payinent to farmers for por-
i mrnent s)il improvements which
Benc011 W11111 t u nliminate entire-
lvt is still up in the air with no
i'equ(Q )tnoing a proposed revision
I
i
KERR KERNEL: Just frown at
yoorself in the mirror and you
will resolve to show the world a
! i1u1ln face
-
! ORS I was happy to WO-
thP 10110V:11W Oklahomans to
otti" cipimg the past with
y Sanford of Enid Everett L
: Allan Fowler Curtis Ear-
I Scott and Mr and Mrs
TI E a is all of Oklahoma
City: Pilph A Burney of Pawhus-
ka: Lee Drake and Mr and Mrs
R A Cimshaw of Ponca City: Mrs
Miade Dealon of Sallisaw: Lyle
an en of Seminole: and Bob Col-
of Tulsa
An estinated 63000000 cords of
wood are used annually for fuel
n the United States This is about
one-eighth of all the wood used in
the United States
The Long Arm of the Brazilian Weatherman
VA71- 1 1
arlutiazit
Sub Is Top
Commie Fighter
ROME Italy Feb 11—IIP—Ma-
rio Sce lba latest to attempt to
form a stable Italian government
to end the nation's extended polit-
ical crisis is given a major
share of the credit for defeating
the early post-war rise of commu-
nism in Italy
By an odd turn of circumstance
if he succeeds in forming a govern-
ment and becoming premier Seel-
ba will once again be matching
wits leadership and political skill
‘v it h the man who did most to
further the postwar rise of com-
munism in Italy
That man Alexander Y Bogomo-
lov then the Soviet member of the
Allied Control Commission for Italy
has just returned to Rome as an
ace diplomat of the Kremlin and
the Soviet ambassador to Italy
Scelba knows what Bogotnolov's
return means Russia is hoping to
capitalize on Italy's long crisis and
political uncertainties by resuming
the effort to 'in Italy away from
the West
Sce lba also knows how to deal
with such a sitnation
He built the police force that de-
feated Begomolov seven years ago
Bald 53-year-old Scelba is one of
Italy's mos( controversial figures
Observers concede he did a won-
derful job in team-work with form-
er Alcide de Gasperi in beating
back the Communist surge in the
early post war years But they
fear that he might become lost In
the jungles of party politics
He is regarded more a crusader
and man of action than a negotiat-
or even by leaders of his own
Christian Democratic party He is
known as "the elephant in the
glassware shop" His blunt politic-
al speeches have stirred violent
criticism in the past
After Music() lini declared war on
the Allies Scelba contacted de Gas-
pen who was working in th Vati-
can library In 1941 the two of
them began to rebuild the Popular
party renaming it the Christian
Democratic party Scelba served
on the party 's untleraround central
committee He became president
of the party's Rome provincial
committPe after the 1944 libera-
tion of Rome
FUNNY BUSINESS
Just because we're going to have
some additional toll roads that
doesnt mean Oklahoma's stepped-
up building of so-called "free"
roads is going to be neglected
A few people are worrying over
such a possibility They have the
mistaken notion Oklahoma's main
road-building effort during the next
iew years will be on turnpikes
That is definitely not so Turn-
pikes are meant merely as a sup-
plement to our regular highway
program nothing more
Those who have paid attention
to Oklahoma's highway improve-
ments the past few years know
what I mean We are now build-
ing new roads and improving old
ones at a faster pace than ever
before in the state's history
When my administration ends
we will have spent $165-million to
improve the state highway system
during a four-year period That's
a 25 per cent increase over any
other four-year period in the state's
history
I have every confidence this
trend will continue Oklahoma vot-
ers are seeing the results of these
improvements and like them
Which means they will let their
elected representatives know they
want these efforts continued ac-
celerated if possible You may be
sure State Senators and Represen-
tatives will take the hint and do
their level- best to comply with
the people's wishes
Their chances -of doing so are
much better now that the turn-
pike election is behind us Pres-
sure to use the big end of our
highway revenues in building ex-
pensive cross-state highways has
been removed
We can now concentrate every
dime of highway funds not used
for maintenance on erecting new
bridges straightening some of our
most dangerous death-curves and
laying new stretches of pavement
The length of time between plan-
ning a highway project and getting
It completed should also be reduc
By Hershberger
"Meet my husband—he's an amateur magicianr
ed
This will undoubtedly please
private citizens and legislators
alike I know legislators will take
pride in telling their constituents
road work is getting underway in
the heme district without the cus-
tomary endless delaybetween time
of programming and time workers
start moving dirt
All signs point toward Oklahoma
becoming much richer in modern
highways during the next few
years Which will help the state
in many ways
Our various road-building proj-
ects will furnish employment to
hundreds of Oklahomans who
might otherwise be out of work
once completed these new high-
ways and improvements on old
roads should mark Oklahoma as
one state cross-country travelers
will make every effort to route
themselves through
Many of those bitterly opposed
to turnpikes are already accept-
ing the results gracefully and
adopting a cooperative attitude
They too want Oklahoma to pros-
per and I'm confident we can ex
pect them to lend their best ef-
forts toward making our highway
system second to none
Wherever inability to get major
highway improvements is a prob-
lem — just about everywhere—all
eyes are now on Oklahoma where
we're doing something about it
OPEN HOUSE: Don't forget the
governor's mansion and office are
open ev er y Thursday through
April from 2 to 4 pm
Como
Cory ligbe 1953 by Nclyon Nye
DIN 'kilned by NEA Service lee
XXI
HOOF sound and buggy wheels
stopped outside the door
Brown eyes still showing the
seething violence of her emo-
tions Naome jerked it open
Frailey's face appeared sur-
prised hung indecisively there
a moment and looked about to
be withdrawn when Marratt
growled "We ain't got nothing
that's catching"
The old medico looked uncorri-
fortable "I could just as well
come back later Luke "
"No need to do that Miss
Ryerson's about to leave anyway
Would you care for a cup of
java?"
Naome thrust the checks at the
doctor "I wonder if you'd mind
keeping these for me?"
Marratt said to Name "Don't
ask him to go into a thing like
that blind Tell him what you
told me and let him do his own
thinking"
As she told him the story the
doctor's zountenance schooled by
many a crisis revealed nothing
of his thoughts but grew steadily
more grave particularly when
she came to Marratt's fight with
Tularosa
When she was done he did not
speak at once but appeared to
be turning it over He said at
last "I've long suspected ' that
fellow Crafkin had a pretty free
hand in the things that have
made your father unpopular—"
"Then you believe I'm right?"
Naome asked breathlessly "You
think as I do it was Crafkin
who really killed Luke's father?"
The doctor said frowning "We
have only your conviction on
that Point Naome I hnppen to
know your father made several
offers for this property-4
"Dad? Or Wineglass?"
Frailey looked uncomfortable
"The most of them may have
come through Cratkin but your
Mary Sinclair
Back on Ground
She Loves—TV
Dd Lit WI VIIMMILLI BY HARMAN W NICHOLS I 1
'
WASHINGTON Feb 11 —UP--
'
She Loves-- TV We started oet to talk about stamp ) stap
collectors and wound up talking
about baseball :4'
By JACK GAITER ' "Now Vou talk about that feller
named Bob Feller of the Cleve-
NEW YORK- Feb 11 —UP— land - Indians" said the man I 4:
Mary Sinclair the brunette that
' called on at the Post Office De-
blond gentlemen prefer is back on
1 partment "And by the way my
her home frounds—television—and
name happems to he Bob Fellers r
glad of it ' with en S' hindside No kin" i
She's had her fill of one of those
Well" went On the director of -
fabulous seven-year movie con-
the division of philatelic exhibits
tracts I i which deals with stamps for
The yrung woman who was a
stamp collectorst "funny thing but
top dramatiC actress of television
I used to be a pitcher too A rieht
—created by the medium a coy-
bander Good fest ball No curve
ple of years ago—is taking things
no FIOW ball"
rather easy for the present with a
Of Stamps and Screw Balls
recurring role in an ?afternoon TV collctors A
"About these stamp e"
"soap opera" and some- 1 P
'3"' le I butted in
seem to regard this as an indica-
"Didn't seetn to have !pitch of a
lion that her career has run out of
screw ball either"
steam "How many stamp collectors are
i r
there in the United States?" p I
"Actually this is exactly the sort
"About 12 million I'd say" Bob
of thing I need at present" the l '
Fellers went on "Seemed like
pretty actress explained
"My I" every time 1 chfuwed pace they -
ther was ill for a long time I
batted me all over the lot"
was III for six months and the I
"Make any money for the gov-
movie deal threw me completely
ernment out of these stamp collect- ii
off my stride 1
ors?"
"Sure that's a good question" e
"Now I'm doing just what I want the limn said we mint p j
to do at- this stage I have enough sues 01
i 30 cents a thousand and
work to keep me from going stale
we eel S10 a thoasand from col-
and it is so spaced that I have
lectors BPS4 of it is that 1P17 of the
plenty of time to study"
stamps ever find their way onto
So far as Miss Sinclair is con-
1W1'S Sa V(' i Ile ICI (pr carriers
cerned her career is just getting
a lot of bunions and us a lot of
Its second Ind She studies ballet
expense
voice piano acting and jazz danc-
I remember one (19 V there was
ing all with an eye to the future
a little left-hander up to bat A
which she hopes includes the
sucker for a fast ball I thought
stage She wants to be able to do
The bases wore lammed and sir
anything
they ra
There was a time back when ver did find tha t hall"
"What makes a stamp valu-
Worthington Minor was the direct-
able?"
or of CBS-TVs famed "Studio "Well they can be rare—like the
One" dramatic-program that Mary
time we printed an eirolone op-
seemed almost to be "Studio One's
She played dramatic leads expert- side down on a stamp Only about
a thousand ever eot out Id like to
t
ly in show after show and was t-
own half a (107rn Of those Some
regarded as one of TV's few gnu- have brought as much as SI0000
Me contributions to acting apiece But when t'ant coy crime
At the height of that career across the plate I just dared at
him il 4
Paramount pictures signed her to That's what I did Th
a long-termer which permitted her best
tossed in a new ball and the I
the next guy could touch me for7
to hold onto a three-year contract
she had signed with CBS the was a itou
first ble with nobraI N
O "
I n
"How a b o u t coeative
I such player contract in televisi mmmor
on
stamps?"
"I turned down the first picture
Paramount wanted me to do" she "We print only 110-millien of
these end an awfal lot of them go
I said "because it wasn't right for to collectors" Felleis said But
me I was suspended naturally I you'd have to kee!) one a lonff time
went to Europe for a few months to make money unless we g ot
and when I got back the picture snirlr thing U!'sidP CICIWII " !'idPW1"'
people promised me big things in on 'Cl)) 13a then you always can
a westetn called 'Arrowhead' pet face N-alue Well it took me
quite awhile to eel the side out
"It was a terrible experienoe in that game but after nine runs
I've never seen the film and I came in I finally did"
never want to I felt it wasn't A Question Answered $
f
right that a company could inak- a -How Many employee-- do you
person do things that would not have here? Any mail order bus
hell) his career The option on my iness?" I
contract had been taken up but I Thirty five employe-s to she !
asked that I be released It was first questien And yes to the
fortunate for me that this didn't 1
ond question" the Feller said
happen several yeats to My re-
1 quest was made at a time when 1
the studios NverF4 only too glad to !der contract hadn't winked Dut as
I wash up their long contracts with i the network had hoped 1
1 "All that sounds lik I've been t
players 1
1
living a ap opera' iny:e If
'After that I aso bowed out of ' doesn't it? But I'm teeny q 11I !
I
my CBS contract which still nad happy to to hack 110W- V rhii 11
a little over a year to go because i just entmeh tor the time lit-II g on
the original idea of putting a s(Aid 1 the WOrniin NV tll a past' :-eral for
nucleus of important players on- ! CBS"
A - Sin o li i n
rLI ligi1
I
father made at least one of them
because I was here myself and
heard him He offered Jake
$10000 for the place without the
stock"
"There was nothing wrong
with that price or with him offer
jog it" Naome countered
"It suggests he was determineo
to have it—"
"Not necessarily It borders
our ranch on this side and if
Crafkin persuaded Dad we might
have trouble over the boundaries
You've got to realize that Dad
took Crafkin's word unreservedly
on anything having to do with
the running of Wince hiss It
Crafkin said we had to have this
place 11id probably thought it
would avoid ill feeling if he
offered Jake more than the ranch
was worth Jake Usher's stub-
bornness was proverbial f r o in
what I've been told They say
he was hot-headed too"
priAILErs frowning eyes
touched Marratt's face "You
made some pretty wild state-
ments that day yourself Luke
Has your memory been able to
dig up tihe sight of Ryerson
shooting—'
"I have no recollection of it"
"Were you here when your
father was shot?"
Marratt Mod a hand "Some-
body coming"
Marratt stepped around Fral-
ley and went out on the stoop
The man on the horse said
"Heard you might be figurin'
to open up again so I reckoned
I'd drop by an' test the chances
of a job" Ile sat his horse like
a man who'd been born to the
saddle but his long-lingered
hands were too well kept to be-
long to a range hand Ile wore
bonohmade boots and blue serge
pants thut were powdered with
dust He had straw-colored hair
and a straw-colored mustache
but it was the bone-handled gun
Your Nichols'
Worth
that Ntarratt looked at the
est That and tho- half-amused
stanch of green st 0
Gainor send you
"Don't know any (lainnt no I
have to get the okay trom nun
to get a lob here?"
'Mostly" Marralt said "you've
got to be able to work a pun"
lie IN S conscious of tne girl step-
ping out of the door behind him
and of the bold and lecherous
way those arrogant eyes assessed
her figure -On the barn door
behind you there's a woe of
strap iron that gets by for a
hasp—"
The report of the pistol jumped
through his words Sixty feet
away the hasp hanged round on
its swivel and the rithocheting
slug screamed to silence ewer the
tamarisks
"Try it again" Marratt said
and vatched carefully lie saw
a mere blur of motion culminat-
ing in thunder The hasr re-
niained static but the hole the
slug drilled wasn't two imhes
from it
A sHAGGY-HAIRED pup came
around thi barn's side and
answering the man's whistle
trotted over and sat down ears
pricked and tongue tolline
"Is that your dog?" Naome
asked the stranger
"Just dog" the stranger said
in a lone bordering smugness
"Do I get that lob or don't I?"
"For as long as it lasts" Mar-
ratt said "you've got it" Ile
scowled at the discoloring
knuckles of his hands "Turn
your cayuse in with those others
and stash your truck in the old
man's bedroom" About to start
off he swung back saying sourly
"What name do you want burnt
into your headboard?"
The green eyes laughed "Kid
Boots will look good as anything
I reckon But don't get me
planted till I been cut down"
Marratt didn't care what label
a drifting slug-hammer gave
himself: it was the tail-wagging
part of the yard's assemblage he
was scowling about It was the
same pup he'd seen by that tank
when he'd come onto Name
swimming in the raw
(To Ito Continued)
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- HE COURIER PUBLISHING00
(Suecriors to Review Pub Co)
616 Flynn Ave AM Oklahoma
PUBLISHERS OF
Alva Review-Courier Alva Weekly Record
Est Sept 16 1893
Published Daily except Saturday Est May I 1900
and Sunday morning Published Each Thursday
TWO INDEPENDENT HOME-OWNED NEWSPAPERS
Each Publication entered as second class mail matter at the post office in
Alva Oklahoma under act of March 5 1879 on each regular publication
date and frequency
BROOKS IL BICKNELL Editor and Publisher
TELEPHONES FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS-200 AND 201
Business Office Hours 830 A M to 5 PM Daily
Advertising Department Hours 8 AM to 5 PM Daily
News Department Hours 8 A M to 5 PM Daily
Circulation Department Hours 3 PM to 7 PM Daily
ATLEE M DEI A NEY Business Manager
TOE A WOOLARD Advertising MalliiMPT
HARMON MORGAN NVW51 Editor
CIUY H ROGERS Mechanical Supt
RICHARD KUNTZ
Circulation Manager
4 111134
–
OKLAHOMA PRESS
! WOW FION
1
SUBSCRIPTION RATES FOR REVIEW-COURIER
By Mail in Woods and By City Carrier
Adjoining Counties In Alta Only in Advance:
One Year $5 88 plus 12 tax $600 One Month 4100
Six Months $310 plus 06 tax 6316 Six Months 63 75
Three Months 180 pins 04 tax 6184 One Year 61100
By Mail in Oklahoma By Mail Outside Ok4rhoina
One Year 6710 plus 14 I x $7 24 One Year 6763 plus 18 tax
Six Months $44a plus 09 tax $454 Six Months 84 83 plus 10 tax 6495
---
SUBSCRIPTION RATES FOR WEEKLY RECORD
One Year by Mail in Woods Ono Year by Mail Elsewhere in
and adjoining counties 6130 Oklahoma and Other States 82 50
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Bicknell, Brooks H. The Alva Review-Courier (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 60, No. 125, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 11, 1954, newspaper, February 11, 1954; Alva, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2064367/m1/6/: accessed July 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.