Holdenville Daily News (Holdenville, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 232, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 7, 1959 Page: 1 of 8
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mom
t
t
-
r WEATHER
State—
i
r
State — Generally fair contin-
ued warm through tonight Scat-
tered afternoon evening thunder-
showers High today 83 to 88
Local — Friday's high 83 Sat-
urday morning low 61 Saturday
high 84
VOL )0(XII
Nikita Threatens
To Give Rockets
To 2 Countries
Action to Come
If West Rejects
Balkan A-Zones
MOSCOW (UPI)-- Nik it a S
Khrushchev Saturday threatened
to arm Albania and Bulgaria with
rocket bases on NATO's borders
if the West rejects an atom-free
Balkan Zone and puts rockets in
Italy and Greece
He urged Italy and Greece to
"be sensible" and reject the
bases
The Soviet Premier warned that
Russian rocket bases hidden in
the high mountains and deep
gorges of Albania and Bulgaria
could "d estroy the opponents'
bases with small rockets"
Greece which is considering ac-
ceptance of America n rocket
bases is bordered to the north
by Bulgaria and Albania Italy
which already has accepted US
intermediate range rocket bases
lies across the narrow Adriatic
from Albania
Remove Any Dust
Khrushchev spent 43 minutes
discussing Albania and Bulgaria
and the possibility of rocket bases
there in a "major speech" on his
return from a 12-day tour of Al-
bania and Hungary He did not
once mention the deadlocked Gen-
eva Foreign Ministers' Conference
on Berlin and Germany although
he had been expected to do o
His only reference to diplomacy
was a proposal for more frequent
meetings of statesmen to "remove
any dust" on international rela-
tions The more politicians and
statesmen met the stronger their
friendship would grow" he said
He sharply criticized Italy for
having agreed to American rocket
bases on its soil and denounced
Greece for considering such
bases Both Italy and Greece are
NATO members
He urged acceptance of a Ro-
manian proposal for a de-nuclearIzed
zone in the Balkans Commu-
nist and non-Communist Even
Yugoslavia favors the idea
Khrushcbev said
Crowd Applatuls Loudly
"The Soviet government be-
lieves that it would be most sen-
sible to set up in the Balkans
a rocket-free non-atomic zone un-
der mutual control" he said
"If this proposal meets with no
support and the aggressive policy
of the Western Powers is carried
out in the Balkans the Soviet Un-
ion together with the People's Re-
publics of Albania and Bulgaria
with all the countries of the
(Communist) Warsaw Pact will
be forced to set up rocket bases
closer to the bases of the ag-
gressors" The crowd of 20000 that gather-
ed in Lcnin Stadium to hear
him applauded loudly His ad-
dress also was broadcast and
'televised
Khrushchev sa I d "naturally"
big rocket bases in Russia could
reach Western rocket bases with
missiles
Commies Warn
of New Blockade
BERLIN (UPI)---The East Ger-
man Conimunists Saturday threat-
ened a total blockade of Red-encircled
West Berlin if West Ger-
many goes through with its "pro-
vocative" plans to hold elections
for a new President here
The Reds also hinted at a pos-
sible boost in the already-heavy
cash tolls on land and water
traffic between West Berlin and
the West suggesting a possible at-
tempt to strangle the city by
economic measures rather than
an outright blockade
The threats were made in an
editorial in the authoritative Com-
munist newspaper Berliner Zei-
tung by Gerhart Eisler bail-
jumping fugitive from US jus-
tice who is East Germany's No 1
propagandist
Eisler said "workers" in East
Germany are demand ing the
blockade of West Berlin if the
West German government persists
In carrying out its planned "pro-
vocation"—to hold the presidenti-
al elections scheduled for July 1
in the isolated western Outpost
"If despite all attempts in Gene-
va to reach a peaceful settlement
the Adenauer government lets the
Bundestag (Parliament) mobilize
in West Berlin then so long as
the Bundestag meets in West Ber-
lin not a single transport should
be permitted through to West Ber-
(Please turn to page 3—Col 7)
Legislature May
Adjourn June 19
Sen Hugh Sand lln predicted Sat-
urday that the legislature will ad-
journ by June 26 at the latest
"and possibly by June 19"
Sand lin also said that an equali-
zation bill Senate Bill 333 — now
on the floor of the senate — has
gozd chance cf being pd
EIGHT PAGES
llarhre Thinks Eastern
Oklahoma's Chances To
Be Like TVA Are Good
County Agent Jess Barbre returned last week from a
tour of the Tennessee Valley Authority region and said
Saturday that Oklahoma could have a project equal to TVA
if everybody would work toward that goal
"There is no reason why Eastern Oklahoma couldn't be
another TVA" Barbre declared "And there is a definite
possibility that in the future it will be"
Barbre and several other professional agriculture work-
ers toured points in Tennessee Virginia North Carolina and
Alabama Ile was one of four Oklahoma farm extension
workers invited to learn more about the TVA program The
extersion officials were selected from counties which are
currently carrying out TVA
i ' programs on a local level
de
JESS BARBRE
Disgruntled Farmer
Family Start Life
Anew in Australia
By ERIC RIEL
United Press International
SYDNEY Australia (UPI) —
Yankus arrived here Saturday
with his unhappy wife and reluc-
tant son to start a new life free
from US government agriculture
controls that caused him to sell
his farm id Michigan
Ihe self-exiled farmer said flat-
ly: "As far as I arn concerned
I never plan to return to the Uni-
ted States"
But all son Dennis 12 would
say was "I wanna go home" And
Yankus admitted that Mrs Yan-
kus wasn't too happy either
The Yankus I a mily arrived
abcard the liner Ora des
When the Sydney Harbor Bridge
was pointed out to young Dennis
he cried: "I don't want to see it
—I don't want to see anything'
Yankus said she had never
been more than 209 miles from
home before and "this is a big
wrench for us—I hope it all works
out"
Just Big Zero
Yankus said his wife was re-
signed to the fact that they "had"
to look for a ncw home He said
she met "some nice Australian
women aboard ship which kind of
broke the ice"
Yankus shrugged off as "iust a
(Pkase turn to page 3—Col 2)
Mrs Ky13 Autos
Tecch'ng Pcs!tion
With Dundee School
Extension Cfrcials
Aitend OSU Classes
4 14oL It) ENVELLE
Mrs Josie E Kyle 707 S Oak
has accepted a position as high
school math and English instruc-
tor in Dundee School in Carter
Ccunty for the ensuing year
Mrs Kyle has taught a total of
32 years For th Last two years
she taught in Schutter High School
in Okmulgee County
She was selected "Teacher of
The Year" for that county in 1958
The holds a BA dagree from East
Central State College Ada and a
masters degree in Education from
Oklahoma Univei sity Norman
Jce V Bell who will be serving
his first term as superintendent of
the Dundee school has taught in
the system for eight years He and
his wife are former graduates cl
Schuller ITS
Jerry Turpin da'ualiter of Mrs
Earnest Turpin Wetumka plans to
stay with Mrs Kyle and attmd
highschoal She wil be a 'sopho-
more student She attended grade
school at Dustin and her fresh-
man year in Wetamka
Miss Clara Backhaus Hughes
county home demonstration agent
and Lorena Franklin associate HD
agent will be in Stillwater for the
next four weeks doing graduate
study at Oklahoma State Univer-
sity There were to leave here
today and return July 3
Jess Barbre county agent and
Melford Scott assistant county
agent also will attend classes at
OSU this summer They will be-
gin Monday and continue through
June 28
Hughes County and three others
— Choctaw Latimer and Cherokee
—are the only ones in the state
selected for TVA work Darbre
himself is responsible for a TVA
project at the A J Lawson farm
Associate County Agent Al Feighny
is working on the Monroe Harjo
fi-rm while Associate County
Agent Jim Shed is responsible for
TVA demonstration programs on
two farms — those of Bud Cain
and Horace Shields
In Hughes County the program
consistsof usilig high analysis ferti-
lizer manufactured by the TVA
These fertilizers are of higher nu-
trient content than most and
weigh much less — a big factor
in the cost of shipping
Barbre explained that the Ten-
nessee Valley is rich in vegeta-
tion to hold the soil and prevent
erosion — One of the principal pur-
poses of the TVA The water is
held where it falls by fertilizer-
treated ground A total of 29 dams
— 20 of these built by TVA —
then control the other water re-
sulting from average rainfall of
more than 50 inches per year
The county agent who had visit-
ed the region in 1954 on a similar
tour said he ncticed many im-
provements this year
"It is amazing that so many im-
provements have been made in
the TVA legion due to fertilizers
and god soil conservation prac-
tices Many of the businessmen in
the area sire grateful for what TVA
has done for the economy"
Barbra was irost impressed by
the "general economic structure
of that section of the country" and
reported he saw "no rundawn
homes" The TVA is something
realized and operated by the peo-
ple The TVA he said has harness-
ed the Tennessee River and its
major tributaries with a system of
Please turn to page 3—Col 1)
Names on Garbage
Cans to ncourage
Thefsis Grief Says
A number of persons have start-
ed buying garbage cans to comply
with a new city regulation and
Police Chief Ira Newman warned
residents to paint their names on
the cans to discourage garbage can
thieves
"If everybody will paint their
namcs initials or other identifying
marks on the cans it will discour-
age theft of the cans and make
them easy to trace if they are
stolen" Newman suggested Satur-
day A number of Holdenville stores
now have the garbage cans on
hand Prices on the 20-gallon size
— the si7e recommended — range
from about $3 to $350 depending
upon the type and brand The
cans can be no smaller than 20-
gallon size and no larger than
32-gallon size Recommended gar-
bilge can racks to facilitate empty-
ing the cans and to prevent &gs
from tipping the cans may be
bought ready made or may be
made by persons who have the
equipment
ON THE NEWS'
Editorial Page
EDITORIAL—
Citizen's arrest statute vital
REMINISCING—
Edwards-Crump judge campaign
hot
DOCTOR'S COLUMN—
The hairy tongue cases
OKLAHOMA CITY — (UPI) —
Interest in Oklahoma by out-of-state
industrial firms is running
high Max Genet jr director of
the state Department of Com-
merce and Industry said Satur-
day Genet scid his department is re-
ceiving more requests from indus-
try for information about the state
than ever before He termed the
response "very good" to the lat-
est series of advertisements run
by the department
The ads published in the Wall
Street Journal pointed out Okla-
homa's tax advanttges and tax
stability
14 E1roy Ready
To Crackdown On
Service Rivalry
Principal Weapon
Is 'Master Plan'
To Give Congress
WASHINGTON (UM— Defent
Secretary Neil H McElroy re
turned from Geneva Saturda
ready to crack down on the angrj
Army-Air Force missile roe
which has been plaguing the Pen-
tagon Ills chief weapon for settling
the dispute is an air defense
"master plan" which he will sa)-
mit to Congress later tais month
ft will spell out for each service
its role in defending the nation
against possitale Enemy bomber
attack
McElroy confirmed that the
plan will advocate use of both
the Army's Nike-Hercules and the
Air Force's Bomarc as defense
missiles
He also acknowledged that the
Joint Chiefs of Staff which pre-
pared a roueh draft of the plan
for his study still were in dis-
egreement on some issues II!
said however that they were not
far apart On the main policies
and indicated he should have lit-
tle trouble ironing out final de-
tails in the next few weeks
Blunt Orders Issued
McElroy disclosed that the mas-
ter plan had been sent to him in
Geneva where he was serving as
an adviser to Secretary of State
L'aristien A Herter at the Big
Four Foreign Ministers Confer-
ence on Germany He said he
went over the plan both at Gen-
eva and on his plane flight home
Before leaving for Geneva Mc-
Elroy had issued blunt orders to
the two services to stop their pub-
lic bickeeing He said they were
alienating our good friends in
Congress" He had conferred on
the controversy with President
Eisenhower
The acid dispute has been grow-
ing in recent months with the Air
Force deprecating the Army'
Hercules missile and the Army
scoffing at the Bomarc as a de-
fense weapon
Air Force spokesmen stress the
Bornarc has a range of from 2a3
to 400 miles compared to the
Hercules' 80 and claim their
weapon can be triggered faster
shraild hostile bombers approach
The Army argues that the Bo-
mare is too expensive that it's
sttll in the production stage and
would prove inaccurate
Answers Due Soon
Confusion over the rival claims
has already been reflected in Con-
gress The House has voted a
sharp cut in funds for the Nike-
Hercules the Senate Armed Ser-
vices Committee has recommend-
ed the Bomarc program be whit-
tled McElroy's final answers were
promised for mid-June Thus far
Eisenhower has maintained a
wait-and-see attitude
It is likely the plan will recom-
mend a reduction in the number
of both the Hercules and Bomarc
missiles which had been sched-
uled for installation Some critics
have noted that since both are
designed as anti-aircraft IN eapoiis
they probably will be obsolete in
the near future when intercontin-
ental ballistic missiles rather than
manned bombers are the weap-
ons of attack
The Bomare-Hercules dispute-
was merely one of several con-
troversies facing McElroy on his
return
A fight is shaping up which
could involve the Navy and the
Stenaetic Air Commend
The Joint Chiefs have been
weighing a proposal which could
Place both the Navy's missile-
firing Polars submarines under a
new joint command with the SAC
bombers
VVeturakan Seeks
Beer License
An application for a county beer
license has been filed in county
court by Joseph P McBride for a
package store at Main and Grant
streets in Wetumka
County Judge L W Crutcher set
the hearing for 10 a rn on June
12
"Industrialists seem to be im-
pressed with the fact that we have
no state debt and have held the
line of taxes" Genet said "The
facts are attracting even more no-
tice in the light of the financial
difficulties now being experienced
by some states"
Genet said that while Oldaho-
mans "have a good product to
sell" efforts in promoting the state
should be forceful and continuous
if they are to be successful
"We have found that our adver-
tising program and other promo-
tional efforts have helped open the
ducr for us on our huhu:trial t'ulls"
With which is combined the HOLDENVILll DEMOCRAT — Established in 1898 — A NEWSpaper dedicated to the Welfare of Hughes County
HOLDENVILLE OKLAHOMA SUNDAY JUNE 7 1959
CILlIZTERLD — State president-
elect of the Oklahoma Junior Chamber of
Commcrce Charles Ford of Tulsa left
presents the Holdenville Jaycee charter
to Jack Wi thanks local president The
Ike Wu Moen
Fcr
tSSErigEll
WASHINGTON (UPI — Pres-
ident Eisenhower used the moon
as a messenger service Saturday
to send greetings to Canadian
Piime Minister John G Diefen-
baker and scientists at a new
US - Cinadian research labora-
tory The mcssage bounced off the
moon traveled about 51)0000 miles
in 27 seconds last ‘Vecinesday
the White house announced It
was taped and pLyed Saturday
at the official opening of the
oratory at Prince Albert Saskat-
chewan The Presid(nt said the event
marked "another major advant?
along the road of cooperative ven-
tures Uetwen our two countries
in Mense rosearch and other
fields"
Diefenbaker who heard the
message agreed that the labora-
tcry is a "significant milestone in
our in cooperation in the
defense scieneos"
The President recorded his mes-
sage at the INhitc House last Tues-
day It Avas bounced off the moon
the next day by the Millstone Hill
Radio 01servalory at Westfrd
Mass and immediately recorded
on tape at Prince Albert for Sat-
urday's phiyhack
Engrih Cks!zs
To Stcrt 11'01137
Summur clses in an English I
course will be held at Holdenville
High School beginning Monday
awning kVrtee Ward member of
the IT denville Junior lligh School
tacolty will be the instructor
Th9 class will meet at 8 a m
Monday and anyone interested in
such a cGurso who has not already
contaele4i Ward may enrol when
the group nals Monday
It was announced earlier that
the classes w ill contnue for eight
w:eks cither on a three-hour or
four-hour a day plan Tuition will
be determined by the number enming
Industrial Firms Are Giving Rao
Long Interested Look Genet Says
"AI LY NE
he iId "Indiritrialist have heard
about us and about our advant-
tages "Those really scrious about
moving in43 the Suut:iw:st want
more detailed information and the
department stands ready to give
it to thorn"
Ganet said any prumptional pro-
gram must be followed ap and
continued to be successful
"One-shot efforts just don't do
the job" he said "The competi-
tion for new indostry is grrat and
industrialists have too much ta
think about to ktep one contact
from any state in mind"
A
oslIf
Dads
New Trooper
Due in City
Highway Patrolman Dick Caw-
ley will be stationed with the
Ifoldenville pa trol detachment
starting June 15 it was announced
Saturday
Trooper C aw 1 e y will assist
Trooper Jim Clark in this area
Clark has been the only member of
the local unit since Trooper Harold
Ragsdale was transferred to Ana-
darko several weeks ago
Cawley who will come here aft-
er a tour of patrol duty in Semin-
ole County graduated from the
patrol school held in July 1958 at
the University of Oklahoma Clark
also graduated during this session
The new trooper attended grade
school in Stillwater and high
school in Eureka Cawley former-
ly working in the roofing business
at Stillwater before attending the
patrol school
He will move his family from
Wewoka to Holdenville when a
house is found here Mr and Mrs
Cawley are the parents of two
girls Shelly Jo 21 years and
Cheryle Leigh 16 months
3 Bible Schools
Ready to Start
Vacation Bible School classes
have been comphitcd in three city
churches while three others will
biltin their second week Monday
zooming
Students of the school at Do-
llard ALmorial Methodist Chtirch
‘vill present their closing program
at 7 p m worship services today
Theme of the school was "God and
Iris World"
Commencement for th2 Free Will
Paptist Church school will be htid
at 7:30 p m today with "Living
With Jesus in I h Space Age"
the theme of the school
Classes also wmti completq1 Fri-
day at the Pentecostal Holiness
Church The theme was "Folbw-
ing Jesus"
VI3S sessions at First Christian
Church First Baptist Church and
Capitol Heights Nlissionary Bap-
tist Church will continue through
Friday morning
COMITIVTICCIIIAlt for the Capitol
Church sAool will lie held
at 8 p m Friday evening Their
theme is 'Gods Gift" Open house
will be held from 7:30 to 8 p m
Friday
Closing exercises at First Bap-
tist Church will be held at 7:30
P m Friday Th'ime of the school
is "While I Live Will 1 Praise the
Lord 1 1A'ill Sing Praise Unto My
God" Classes are held from 8:30
to 11:30 a m cacti day
Final program of the school nt
First Christian Church will be held
at 7:30 p m worship services
next Sundty June 14th Theme
for the classes is "Follower' ef
Jesus" and the school is held from
9 to 10:30 a nu ouch morning
PRICE FIVE CENTS
r
n
r
charter was prestnted during last week's
banquet at the Elks Lodge There are
18 members of the city club
(Daily News Staff Photo)
While Slavery
Probed
DALLAS Tex — WM — Fed-
eral agents in Fort Worth Wichi-
ta Kans and Oklahoma City to-
day wt re rounding up 13 men in-
dicted by a federal grand jury on
charges of shuttling girls back and
forth across state lines in a thriv-
ing white slave racket
At last report seven were un-
der arrest: FBI agents found three
already in jail on other charges
A federal grand jury in Dallas
which questiontd prostitutes for
five weeks but found thorn some-
what less than talkative returned
the indictments Friday The
names of the accused teen were
not disclused until they were ar-
rested The charges specifically involve
violation of tho Mann Act which
makes it a violation of federal law
to take a woman across a state
line for immoral purposes
Agents in Forth Worth arrested
Walter Mark Flanagan and Rob-
ert John (Red i Iluddleston They
seized Norman Rex Slid& in
Wichita and Weldon Leroy Good-
bread alias "Godbroad" in Okla-
homa City
Gary Wier and Larry Linden
v'ere already in jail in Dallas and
Fiirt 1Vorth on other charges Rob-
ert Raif was foetid in jail in Okla-
homa City Raif was convicted of
burglary there May 29
Charley C Woods
Taken by 1)eatly
Itites Set Today
Services will be held at 2130 p
m tday at First Christian Church
for Charley Cook Woods 71 resi-
dent of lloldenville for many years
who died Saturday morning at a
local rest home
Rey Grady Ferguson will °the-
late Burial will be in Holden-
ville cemettTy under direction of
Iludsen Funeral flume
Nil Woods was born October 2-1
1888 in Territory County in Okla-
homa lie came to lioldenville
from Ada in 1924 and had lived
here since then Ile was 1 retired
carpenter a member of First
Christian Church anti Odd Fellows
Lodge here
Surviving are his wife Mrs
rt()S3 Lee Woods of the home at
208 E 4th Penn West two datwh-
ters Mrs Ethel Bush lloldenville
Mrs Ruth Williams Portersville
Calif one son Roy Woods Okla-
homa City two brothers Georgel
WoKis Butirinv one sister Mrs
Dollie Rogers Guthrie nine grand-
children and seven gteat grand-
children
Bearers w:11 be Bontie Aberna-
thy Le!die Wallir Sr Orvel Pay-!
kw R B Edrimnds Chester Bow-
la nd and Melvin Hisaw
Commodities Set
CALVIN — Commodities for
District 3 will be distributed Mom
day and Tuesday at the commodity
warehouse Commissioner E a 11
Cotton said Persons should bring
containers and if unable to come
should send 8 written request
q:444211 INL)
otlt y sawnety
NUNIBER 232
orses
m) fit r
:1 TaTe
Firacial Push
In tegislaure
To Begin Soon
! OK1AIlti‘1 CITY
Ildward FidinoniLon tot' the
satarday ingtit Itidor:-
the !mooing ot the soutawest
and eastern too roads ano said t
"push" to finance them will be
Aarted i tie Toiostature Mcaiday
FLhiit)II(:- On had mmtioned the
possibility of a toll road Program
the day he took °Mee but
lic Cr Spveli wally tlidtite:i one
cold now Eiddier tin v eek he
:gale eneuili'agement to turnpike
it gist:won arer a gdup ot 20
Ibuse led by an intr-
aihniinsu 3IAuLI hiwmaker J D
McCarty Uk1111(4na City pledged
choir sup)ort
'I lie governor will mot here at
4 p m Sunday with McCarty his
House floor leauers and several
other repri'sentativcs to try to
agree on a financing plan
"Next Monuiy or 'Tuesday these
rneasu?& h11 be inished in the
!louse of lipTcsontotives follow-
ed by the state Semite" ho aid
'1f you have an opportunity this
weekend to talk to or see your
representative or senator I hope
that you will make sour views
known to him"
Made On TV
Edmondson made his remarks
in a taped television appearance
over an Oklahoma City stabon
The governor did not mention a
riad oond issue io Saturday
night's message moaning he ap-
parently has stropped the idea he
was pushing about 10 days ago
Ile said bills now penning in the
Legislatui e could he amended to
make the toll road bonds salable
by pledging $500000 to S1000000
yeir to a trust fond as extra in-
surance to the bond-holders Ha
said the fund could be set up in
such a way to let the state high-
way department draw upon it for
regular construction
McCarty said the money could
be raised by earmarking one cent
from the gasoline tax colketed on
turnpikes Sen Fred Harris Law-
ton is backing the same proposal
2 Provisions Cited
"I think we're going to have to
do two things if we're going to
have a good road program begin-
ning on July 1" he said "No 1 is
to provide some additional reve-
nue out of the general reserve
fund for the highway department
itsel No 2 pass some enabling
legislation to set up same funds
necessary to make the sale of
turnpike bonds possible and thus
enable us to build some more
turnpikes"
The governor did not make clear
whether his No 1 proposal means
he wants to chop the common
(Continued on Page 3—Col 4)
Elizabeth Parker
of Vietumka Dies
Elizabeth Jane Parker a We-
tunika reident since 1916 dicd
Saturday afternoon in a Holden-
ville hospital
She was born March 20 1873
in Flinpin Ark
Funeral services :-re pending the
arrival of rebeivm Spiller Fun-
eral Home 14:turaka will be in
charge
Sum ivors include her husband
John F (BA) Parker three
daughtf'rs Mrs Bessie Osborn
Mrs Ruby 0A)orn both of 1Ve-
tunika and Mrs Edith Fisher of
DuranJ
Also four son!4 Nin of Wettun-
ka Bill of Flnyonix
Ariz and Jew ‘'entura
half brothor (is Pace Of Wetan-
ka ti grandchildren 52 great
grandchildren znd three great-
' grandchild:1'u
Arab ecrizr Sealed
Follow:ng Quarrels
IIIJ I T Uebanon tUrif —
The horder between th Arab
states tif Jordan and Syria was
1 osed to all traffic Siturday hi
the wake of I seties of quarrels
ali(I at least one frontier elasb
' - —
—
Nosin Around
It to Adkins president of the
Wewoka Junior Chamber Of Com-
merce telling about Cecil Sanders'
fbilitv to fix Oat tires
zdains thanking the 'Lonely Boat-
ing Cumpany for transporting
guests to last week's charter ban-
quet Nlaver Roy Lolti3
describing how"Fexans are able to
I ly inside their houses Airs
Sandws feeling foolish about
getting inside the wrong car re-
It ntly Imogene Pettit
explaining that she hasn't been
tetting lost lately and she hopes
there will be no more reference to
her getting lost in news stories
County Agent Jess Barbre giving
Bob Howell Sr and Doug Hudson
some advice en plants shrubs and
trees
ILt I I I A' A A
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Millirons, Don. Holdenville Daily News (Holdenville, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 232, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 7, 1959, newspaper, June 7, 1959; Holdenville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2092805/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.