Holdenville Daily News (Holdenville, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 163, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 18, 1959 Page: 5 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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LYNDElt WILLIAMS
4 4 - - -
ILLm winisrON7MgAk
MEMBER 1959
0
AU I know is what I read in the papers—Will Rey 3er
a NEW1papet dedicated te the Welfare tiughea toemai
end Hunhes Countyans
HOLDENVILIE DAILY NEWS
Published every weekday afternoon except Saturday and Sunday morning at 116
Nnrth Creek Street Holdenville Oklahoma Entered as second class mail matter
under the Act of Concress of March 3 1879
TOM R PHILLIPS ESTATE
DON MILLIRONS
BOB ADKINS
MATTHEW MIME
MARGARET JONES
And Advertising Manager
Owner and Publisher
Assstant Publisher
News Editor
Circulation Manager
Mechanical Superintendent
-- Office Manager
Accuracy and Fair Play: Errors will be promptly corrected and complaints of um
fair treatment In the columns of this newspaper will be adjusted if called to the
attention of the Publisher or News Editor
TODAY'S BIBLE QUOTATION
Thsre is no limit to human accomplishment if we have faith
Christ said that we shall do greater things than he did That faith
has enabled humanity to reach out and grasp the stars
Believe ye that I am able to do this?---Matt 9:28
0
'Grass Roots' Movement Could Pay Off
Article in Today's Paper Recommended
THE DAILY NEWS recommends that each and every
taxpayer in Hughes County read today's column "Look-
ing Ahead" by Dr George S Benson The column appears
on the inside pages of today's issue
Dr Benson director of the National Education Program
Searcy Ark and other notables in the field of education and
publishing have recently "preached" on the same theme
— if the tide of extravagant and unbelievable government
spending is to be reversed the little man — you and I —
must be the ones who reverse
Not too long ago one of the editors of a national mag-
azine said in Oklahoma that the only way to stop the big-
spending spree and to halt the money-grab from the con-
sumers' pocket books is to realize a "grass roots" movement
This means the people must be heard Only through a
number of indignant letters will our congressmen ever know
)ur sentiments
Dr Benson in today's column points out "It is no exag-
geration to say that the average American family could
own and operate an automobile or send a child through
college with the amount of money that could be cut from
their tax bill if every possible measure of thrift were applied
in government and if for the duration of the cold war at
least plans for new projects and all unnecessary spending
were set aside"
An editorial in a recent issue of the Tulsa World pointed
out that The Citizens Foreign Aid Committee reported that
US aid to Britain actually helped that nation adopt Socializ-
ed medicine and take a long stride toward socialism Yet
President Eisenhower is asking for nearly $4 billion — a
staggering sum — for foreign aid in the year beginning
July
A "grass roots" movement is also needed closer at home
Sen Hugh Sandlin's legislative committe brought out many
evils fo some state county commissioners Yet another legis-
lative committee has laughed gt the efforts of Sand lin and
his colleagues in trying to halt practices of one of the most
powerful political blocs in Okahoma
Sience may be golden but not in situations such as these
above — and many other situations which haven't yet been
brought to light
To prevent rubber boots from
soiling your shoes and hosiery give
them a good dunking in lukewarm
soapsuds Then clip them to the
shower bar with hosiery clips to
dry They'll look like new and keep
you looking neat
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
PRISCILLA'S POP
8
BIG SISTER
e —
POOR PRISCILLA!
YOU MUSTN'T FEEL
BAD ABOUT NOT
GETTING A HORSE
FOR YOUR
(BIRTHDAY!
'AFTER ALL
NONE OF US
CAN HAVE
ALL THE
FHINGS
WE vl
WANT! )(
DOt
NOW 14AT OU AC:?E FULLY MA
pecovEwn poM voup ILLNESS ME
I AM AFPAID Ti-iAT I MUST
DEMAND ma YOU TELL US SE1-1-0
YOUP NAME A ire
"4311 :71' '''
Ltr-ti
Those hand-loomed carpet bags
in large size and with leather lin-
ingys are well-liked by women who
tote a lot of possessions about with
them daily Later on for warm
w e ther wear they'll come in
straw‘and-leather combinations
SPLEASE
DON'T
MAKE
S ME DO
m4A-r
PETI-0
THE PROGRAM USUAL-
LY SCHEDULED FOR
11-11S TIME IS CANCEL-
LED SO 1HAT WE MAY
PRESEW A NEW
EDUCATIONAL
FEATURE --
DIRECT FROM
STATE Uf
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5ON1114INk OF WOW WOPPIED HOW
FPANTIC YOUR MOM-4E P 1-----"'''
AND PATWEP APE AT I-IAVP Kb
wurz DISAPPEAPANCE! MOTWER
W-
w
"Hope He Doesn't Walk in lii Sleep"
Lana Discovers
Happiness With
Work Not Love
A 044'
(EDITORS NOTE: Following
Is the second or two exclusive
dispatches in which actress
Lana Turner tells for the first
time about the changes in her
personal life during the past
year)
By RICK 111! BROW
UPI Hollywood Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Lana
Turner says she has learned in
the last year how to be happy
without being in love
"It's part of the change in my
values" she told United Press In-
ternational in an interview "I
have found there are other things
—work for instance But above
all have the feeling of being
ablc to contain myself I don't
mean I'm aloof or pulling away
from life It's that I no longer
jump without thinking"
Lana told of the changes in her-
self shortly before she left here
Sunday for a five-city 12-day tour
to promote her new movie "Imi-
tation of Life"
Choosing her words carefully
and with much thought the
blonde star said:
Meeting People Again
"This is my first real tour since
the war bond drives in World
War II I think it's time I get
out and meet people again"
On her itinerary were Chicago
Cleveland New York Boston and
Washington
"It's important to show people
that I'm still active" Lana said
"Now and then particularly if
one has a piccure to be released
one should make a legitimate ef-
fort to stay in touch with the peo-
ple who made you what you are"
Another point she noted is that
she owns 50 per cent of the film
Lana said her sense of values
has changed greatly since her
daughter Cheryl 15 was made a
ward of the juvenile court and
placed in the temporary custody
of her grandmother Mrs Mildred
Turner last year
Lives Alone
"r live alone now" she said
60S1-1 1-(ow DO THEY
EXPECT A GUY TO cicr
ANY HOMEWORK DONE
hi' WITH A THING LIKE
THATgoING
' THAT'S
HOW IT IS
ON THIS
WORLD OF
1 OURS! T-r
"which I've had to adjust to
"I've also learned that when
called upon you can live as We
if not better vhen you're nct pos-
sessed by possessions If I had
to go away tomorrow I would
walk out and not worry When
we had our big house I was ter-
rified to leave if the maid wasn't
there My material Fossessions
mciant too much
"I've found out too that there
Are more good people than bad
by the way they came through
with encouragement and sincerei-
ty when I ni?eded it Total strang-
ers — friends who never were too
close before — gave me wafmth
of course there are always tilt
but they can't overcome
the majority of good people"
Is Lana satisfied with what her
career has brought her?
"Yes mostly" she said "I'm
grateful for the recognition the
monetary reasons the chance to
SC? the world and to give my
family what I desired them to
have"
Lacks Privacy
The major drawback she said
is a lack of privacy
"I take issue with people who
think we are public property"
she said "If I were just an or-
dinary working girl and somebody
asked me some of the questions
I've been asked I'd say "Get
lost Buster" But I just take a
deep breath and try to answer
"Sometimes when I don't feel
like it at all — at press confer-
ences for instance — I have to
show strength and calmness when
I'm quaking inside and feel like
running away"
In "Imitation of Life" Lana
plays an ambitious actress who
has a temporary split with her
teen-aged daughter because of a
misunderstanding They wind up
together and happy at the end
"I don't mind playing mother
roles" said the actress "so long
as the parts are good I played
my first mother part in PeNton
Place and I got an Oscar nom-
ination for it I just want the
chance to play roles that show
the growth of a character"
What does she want mc e than
anything else in the future?
"I want" she said "continued
health peace and the opportunity
to seek and find much more
knowledge about many things
than I now have"
The bamboo plant produces flowers
IF ro kNOVIN
TI-IAT I MIGHT
NOT HAILE7--
'--(COME
HERE!
3-e
-1
( BET1TO STAY UFPF
c 7
1qm 1 WANT
011 AKIO
i‘ WiDDNiAANKII
IOW DAD!
A EASE
LET ME
PETkl?!
NANYLOP
1 1-JL
dOLDENVILLE (Okla) DAILY
Boli and Mocking Demands
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
RUSSIAS NIKITA Khrushchey may be bluffing in his
Berlin and German demands But since we can only guess
that he may be we must be prepared for him to act in earnest
We can't deal with this man by trying to bend with
every turn of his thought and utterance as he blows hot
and cold alternately threatening and extending a hand coo-
ing peace in the breath left over from a promise to destroy us
if we cross him
Dig for the irredeible MUM the unchanging heart of
his aims and you r:nd they appear to be these:
1 To sign a peace treaty with East Germany soon
whether or not the 'West agrees to confer with him
2 To ) cancel all Western rights in Berlin and in access
routes to the city with the signing of that treaty
3 To prevent the reunification of East and West Ger-
many if it means an end I() Communist control of the eastern
land
These are the direct points of conflict with the West
We say Nye have full rights in Berlin and the access
routes deriving from wartime conquest of Germany
Though Khrushchev says an East German treaty will
end those rights he leaves a big door open Ile does not
say plainly ‘vhat the Kremlin Or its German puppet may do
to abrogate those rights ill a concrete physical way
Off and on he menacingly tells us we must get out But
the German Reds say again and again they will not try to
blockade us as was done in 1948-49
This is the big bargaining ground on the Soviet side
If the pinmet leaders are true to their Nvord our "loss" of
rights will he a paper thing and there will be no physical
crisis no war INV I
We are at sharp odds too on the reunification issue We
insist on a plan that will protect a Berlin thereafter largely
stripped of armed forces
The bargaining ground here is the idea liked by the
Russians and sometimes considered by some Western diplo-
mats of a "confederation" of the two Germanys after each
has signed separate peace treaties
America's present view is that under an East Germany
still Communist Berlins freedom would be put at the mercy
of never-ending subversive pressures heightened by the over-
hanging threat of great Red armies just a few hundred miles
to the east IV VP
If Khrushchev is not bluffing then at some point or other
he would have to move to block our way into Berlin Then
the question would be how we respond
But there are two reasons why he could be bluffing
Some experts on Russia feel he wants a summit meeting
above all and uses this shotgun technique as the only real
hope of getting it Ile is seen as still deeply immersed in an
internal struggle for power needing the big crisis and the
big meeting to pull him through
He could also be bluffing not to get a summit meeting
but in the stout conviction that if he presses far enough we
will yield at least to some of his demands
These days his words often ring with tones of superiority:
He mocks us for daring to frighten him he says he'll break
the elbow that bumps him that he'll crush capitalism in any
war
Would he even if he were nervous about his own power
brandish a big stick so boldly if he did not think ours was
growing ciitically smaller?
SECRET AGENT X9
BLONDIE
( tM HAVING
-4 BIG FIGHT
WITH EVERETT-
THINK HE S i
'71 HORRID
CAPTAIN EASY
ALLEY k
(Tomorrow: The American response)
CON IF 14E1ZKLE 1
YA5H'T FRtGHTEWSD
BY WU MAT DID
TERRIFY HIM
HELLO-SORRY )
EVERETT COOKIE
DOESN'T WANT
TO TALK TO
A
A'
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VVA5 TW 0131T THAI' KM
TOWARD HIM As I CAME IN!
IERRIFIED OF
A ftABBITc
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WHEN HE RED TO
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NEWS - PAGE
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"This set comes complete with a recording
of local gossip!"
I- DIDN'T MEAN To —
CAusE 1415 DEATH! VET IT
MAY 13S BETTER Ti415 WAY!
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Inn —WEDNESDAY Mar 11 1979
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MAY B BETTE THI DISCOVEED IN HE at 4 :-1
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I NONE OF US I wHy
POOR P:ISCILLAI CAN HAVE NOT?
YOU MUSTN'T FEEL ALL THE
BAD ABOUT NOT T H 1 NGS
GETTING A HORSE WE 'VA
FOR YOUR WANT!
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Millirons, Don. Holdenville Daily News (Holdenville, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 163, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 18, 1959, newspaper, March 18, 1959; Holdenville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2092715/m1/5/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.