The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 240, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 22, 1957 Page: 2 of 30
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PAGE 2
Corpse less !flutter
Case Ends with s
Husband Convicted
LOS ANGELES Dec 21 LP--A
jury convicted L Ewing Scott-today
of first-degree-murder in the
disappearance of -his wealthy 6-1-
year-old wife Mrs Evelyn Thros-
by Scott
The bizarre corpseless murder
case attracted wide attention be-
cause it had the ingredients of a
good mystery: wealth social posi-
tion and an inter-national man-
hunt The case had everything ex-
cept a body -
Scotts lace scarcely moved as
the jury returned its leerdict He
watched each juror as the polling
was conducted individually
His counsel P Basil Lambros
was stunned "1 didn't expect
this" he said didnt think it
would happen- this way I don't
know' yet about a motion for a
new trial"
-The jury will decide Monday
whether the suave silver-haired
former investment counsellor dies
in the gas chamber at San Quen-
tin Prison or is imprisoned for
life
The jury convicted Scott wholly
on circumstantial evidence He
maintained to Police that his wife
is alive-z that she vanished volun-
tarily May 16 19S5 But he did
not take the stand to deny the
accusation that he killed her to
gain control of her 1600000 estate
and the state pointed this up re-
peatedly in its closing arguments
Girl Unconscious
For Months Comes
Out of 'Darkness'
- SAN DIEGO Calif Dec 21 ill—
A pretty little girl who was unconscious-
from July almost to
Christmas arrived home today in
nearby Escondido -smiling and
alert
Maurine Schow 12 -looked into
her father's face -and offered a
happy smile
The mother Mrs Joseph Schow
wiped at her eyes and said:
"Daddy's been waiting a tong
time for that"
Maurine nearly was drowned
last July 1 in a swimming pool
She was revived—that is started
breathing again—after b artificial
respiration but did not regain con-sciousness
The family sent her to a Lattzr-
day Saints hospital in Salt Lake
City Utah last August
The mother kept a constant
vigil at Maurine's bedside
One day two weeks ago the girl
looked at Mrs Schow and moved
her lips Then she said "Mama"
Doctors say Maurine may be
able to become completely re-
habilitated but it will be a slow
process
BEST FOOT FORWARD
HUNTINGTON W Va
The National Association of Chi-
ropodists is changing its name to
the American Podiatry Associa-
tion effective January
Dr Jonas Morris president ex-
plained to the Middle-Atlantic
Association of Chiropodists -
clitrists that the change results
from a more accurate interpreta-
tion of the Greek bases for the
two words
The base for chiropody he said
mean "of the hands and feet"
while that of podiatry meant of
the feet"
- Morris professor of practical
administration at the Temple
University College of Chiropody
estimated that 5000 more podia-
trists are needed in this country
He said there are fewer than
7000 in practice now and that
many cities and towns have none
He also estimated that 70 per
cent of Americans have some foot
disorder
a
-
Er DOROTHY 1110E -
DAMEN Conn Ifi — LIVING
PROOF that an artist teed not -
be a hermit starving in a dedi-
cated garret is Rutzt Ray who
has manage ci to bit the top ranks
of American artists while raising
three small sons running a big
house in the country and riding to
hounds twice weekly with her bus-
band: Dr John R Graham
The Graham menage here in-
cludes three horses and assorted
dogs and cats in addition to the
lively young sons — Ian 8 Wil-
lard Reid 5 and Lyle 3 -
"Sometimes it's a little hectic"
says the tall attractive Mrs Gra-
ham "But in spite of everything2
I paint from 9 am to 3 pm —
every day except Tuesdays and
Saturdays when my husband and
I ride with our bunt 'club
"On those days we get up about
4 am and I cook up a batch of
hot cereal for everybody Then we
saddle up the horses and are on
the road by daybreak -- the bunt
is 20 miles away from our home"
Ruth R a y has been painting
and riding most of her life She
paints everything — people hors-
es and landscapes has had more
than a dozen one-woman shows
of her paintings and is well known
for her Christmas cart work for
the American Artists Group One
of her best-known paintings is a
portrait of her husbands mother
and another is of her youngest
son But also prized by collectors
are her paintings of horses and
landscapes with a slightlysurreal-
ist flavor
"I prefer to call My style
romantic realism" says Ruth
"I don't think anybody is inter-
ested in my subconscious"
Before tier marriage Ruth
taught for a while at the Art
Students League "I had a horse
to support" — and took her paint
box abroad to Europe Egypt
Mexico and Guatemala How does
she manage such a full life?
"I couldn't do it without an
understanding husban d" says
she
Weather Bureau
Goe Practical
Seavins
WASHLNGTON Dec 21 LP—
Winter was supposed to arrive
across the nation at 9:49 tonight—
but the Weather Bureau said it
was more fiction than fact
Forecaster Ernest Rampey said
the bureau no longer regards Dec
21 as the first day of winter
Rather he added1 the bureau
classifies the seasons according to
a monthly system that breaks
down this way:
WINTER — December January
and February -
SPRING March April and
May -
SUMMER — June July and
August 0
FALL —September October
and November
Dec 21 is the day of the winter
solstice or the time when the sun
reaches its farthest point south
Ike Hits Golf -
Bolls Works on
Monday Speeches
WASHLNGTON Dec 21 Lft—
President Eisenhower worked to-
day on two speeches he'll deliver
Monday took a brief fesspite to
it a few golf balls on the White
House south lawn and returned
td his office for further work--
The President's main speech
Monday will be it 8:30 pm EST
when he and Secretary of State
Dulles will discuss by television
and radio from the White House
the accomplishments of the NATO
summit meeting in Paris
The other presidential speech
will be a brief :Christmas greeting
delivered on the ellipse back of
the White House before Eisenhow-
er lights the national community
Christmas tree
The President and Mrs Eisen-
hower willgo to the tree lighting
called the Christmas "Pageant of
Peace" at 5 pm
Mk" A“1
- TULSA Dec 21 L4'--An open The President and Mrs Eisen-
flame stove today was blamed for hower will go to the tree lighting
a fire which took the life of Turner called the Christmas "Pageant of
Trice 88 Tulsa Peace" at 5 pm
Firemen said his two-room frame
home was -destroyed early today Simple toppers for scrambled
It was believed he got too close eggs: grated cheese chopped pars-
to the flames igniting his clothing i ley or snipped chives -
Artist- Mom Leads Busy
IF YOU FAIL
TO GET YOUR PAPER
Dial FE 2-4433
SPECIAL SERVICE PROVIDED
FOR ADA RESIDENTS
' In spite of everything it seems that mistakes will
sometimes happen REMEMBER when y6u miss your
paper a special service is provided at THE ADA EVE-
NING NEWS to insure that you will receive your copy
Remember Monday through Friday from 5:00 until
7:00 p El and on Sundays frola 7:00 until 9:00 a m
&phone call will do the trick
Monday through Friday circulation personnel are on
duty from 5:00 until 7:00 p m 4f when yoti get home
from work your paper Ls missing call FE 2-4433 and a
Copy will bp brought toyou- This same service is avail-
able for NEWS subscribert every Sunday from -7:00
until 9:00 a m
t'
- -r
k IMEMinikNEEN
et
aTh
geiAed
SERVICE IS
tien)Y
an11153
I
I
- 4 k
Elvis Ch4eerfully
Reach to Go on -
With' Induction
MEIW"HIS Tenrt Dec21 Ift —
'Ready to go—glad its now
That was Elvis Presley's Cheery
comment today on his orders to
report Jan 20 for induction into
the Army
"I don't know what all the fuss
is about" the rock 'n' roll idol
said "I'm -just a guy who makes
music—no different from anybody
else"
Hollywood didn't share the side-
burned singer's cheerfulness
Paramount pictures said the
Memphis draft board would be
asked for' an eight-week delay of
induction Studio head Y Frank
Freeman said Paramount stood to
lose $300000 if Presley doesn't re-
port Jan 13 to start work oó his
new film "King Creole" That
much already has been spent on
filming preparations Freeman
said
The draft board's "greetings"
reached the 22-year-old singer yes-
terday As the word got around
last night scores of teen-agers
swarmed around the gates-of the
Presley' mansion glumly- discuss-
ing the prospect of losing Elvis to
th! Army
"It's a crime" said one "Just
awful" -
-OKLAKIMA CITY Dec 21 MI—
A meetint of the Grand River
Darn Authority Monday was dis-
closed today by Gov Raymond
Gary but he denied that it would
be secret or would take up con-
troversial attorney fees
tiary said he bad called the-
breakfastrneeting for 8 a m to
"smooth out ruffled feelings"
A fight in the authority reach-
ed a peak last week when Wheeler
41
THE
- I
cf'Ini
THE ADA EVENING NEWS
-
-0111-- Jileinamoloeln
RUTH RAY ith Ian Willard Reid and Lyle
Gary Calls GRDA Breakfast
Meet to Sooth Ruffled Feeling
Mayo Sallisaw publisher resign
ed a a member
4 I don't know what's wrong
with Wheeler" Gary said"There's
ceitainly nothing secret about it
If there was I wouldn't have sent
out telegrams to members three
or four days in advance And I
don't have secret meetings to dis-
cuss public business?'
Gary said be felt an informal
breakfast could 'eke care of some
problems since he can't attend
the GRDA pre-ctganizational ses-
sion Jan 6 L -
Mayo has been a sharp critic
of Gary and fought a power-exchange
contract with the Publte
Ssrvice Co wlich the governor
pushed so that the Markham Fer-
ry Dam could be built
"If the press wants to interview
the board mernters they can come
around after the breakfast and
do it" Gary saA
"I want to give them my ideas
cn reorganization I'll say it in
pudic and it'll be what I tell them
I'm going to recommend that
thcy re-elect the officers and the
same counsel too?'
DR SCHWEITZER HEADS
FOR HOSPITAL IN AFRICA
LIBREVILLE French Equatori-
al Africa Dec 21 LT--Dr Albert
Schweitzer left today to return to
his hospital and leper village at
Lambarene aftera visit of several
months in Europe
Asked about his plans f o r the
future Dr Schweitzer replied:
When one is almost 83 years old
he can live without plans and from
day to day" 0
DENVER (W)--A cleaning com-
pany employe found five $100
bills in the pocket of a mark's suit
left by a customer He telephon-
ed the man's house and got the
wife She seemed amaled but
lost no time in rushing down to
the cleaner's and collecting the
$500
eksr
2glittC‘T':
Lit--1) 7) 1714::)v
CAN STILL MACE
e ry
-
ADA OKLAHOMA
We Sooners
Have Gained- -
In Numbers
kORNIAN Dec 21 LIII-Oklahoma's
population rose 82 per cent
from 2104000 in 1947 to 2176874
in 1957 according to figures re
leased by the University of Okla-
homa's Bureau of Business Re-
search 'There were 34 counties showing
population gains ranging from
Jackson county's 473 per cent in-
crease to Haskell County's 78 pan
cent jump Aotal ot 43 counties
registered losses in population
Of the counties showing losses
all rural Mc Curtain in the south-
east corner was the biggest suf-
fererwith a 258 per cent drop
The top gainers in population
from 1947 to 1957 were:
Jackson 181r21 to 27825 Com-
anche 51975 to 76068 Tulsa 237
130 to 337583 Oklahoma 308535
to 418216 Washington 30979 to
42015 Carter 34347 to ' 48598
Murray 10152 to 13884 Osage
31159 to 38 888 McClain 13832 to
17412 and Gamin 27794 to 34-
502
Academy of Sciente
Backs Fight against
FL Sill Expansion
OKLAHOMA CITY' Dec 21 IP—
Southwestern Oklahoma residents
who are fighting proposed expan-
sion Of the Ft Sill reservation re-
ceived support today from the Okla-
homa Academy of Science
The group released a resolution
approved at its business meeting
in Enid last week opposing the
pr000sed expansion
The resolution said the Army's
announced plan of obtaining land
to the west and northwest to Ft
Sill for a missile testing range
"is tantamount to the ultimate ac-
quisition by the Department of De-
fense of the Wildlife Refuge unique
in the region not only as a refuge
but also as a public recreational
area"'
The resolution also cited farm
and ranch land in Caddo Coman-
che and Klowa counties as "high-
ly productive and of immense val-
ue' as another reason for locat-
ing the range elsewhere
Meanwhile it was disclosed that
Hobart residents have raised more
than $7000 of their S14000 goal for
a 550000 fund being gathered by
the Southwest Oklahoma Survival
Association The group of farmers
ranchers and businessmen was or-
ganized to fight the proposed ex-
pansion
OKLAHOMA CITY Dec 21 (RI—
Iona Chapman Oklahoma City po-
lice woman managed to subdue
a woman shoplifter here today —
but the loot got away
Miss Chapman said she spotted
a woman lugging stolen merchan-
dise from a downtown store and
grabbed her The suspect handed
her loot to a friend and shouted
'Take these and run"
RIG-HTTC1HICE
It can be theP firightest" choice you
ever made if you give her a modern
GAS APPLIANCE
You know what your home needs
you know what she'd rather have:
Go down to your gas appliance
dealers andY make your selection now
while there's time for Christmas -deliv
tc
Southwest Natural Gas Co
a
ADA OKLAH031A SUNDAY DEFE3IBER 22 1957
Quiet GI Who Kne w Racing Cars -
r
Turns out Son of C hryster Head
TT HOOD Tex -Dec 21
The Army Army has converted an un-
assuming soldier who already
knew plenty about racing cars in-
to one of the maintenance experts
who keep its trucks rolling His
father knows considerable about
cars too -
The soldier is Pvt Nicholas
Colbert 19 of Bloomfield Heights
Mich a Detroit - suburb '
But few acquaintances learned
before soldier Nick Colbert fin-
ished basic training here this
week that he's also a son of Lester
L Colbert president of the auto
industry's giant Chrysler Corp
Now the younger Colbert quietly
has gone his way taking leave
Boy Uses His
New Arms to
Decorate Tree
BLAIRSVILLE Ga Der 21
thit—Evan 'Patterson hung orna-
ments on the Christmas tree ale
by himself today for the first time
in his life f 41'
innisnie
The blue-eyed boy was born
virtually without arms 14 years
ago in-this town hign in the north
Georgia mountains a
Friends in the Yaarab Shrine
Chanters Of Atlanta and the Al-
legheny Lodge No 114 of Blue
Lodge Masons at Blairsville
raised money for an artificial left
arm about two years ago
Two months ago a specially de-
signed right arm costing 1450 was
given him by the Ancient and Ac-
cepted Scottish Rite Hospital at
Blairsville -
It took time to learn to manip-
ulate the arms and their hook-
like "hands: but Evan said they
were "the best present anyone
could have"
They enabled him to feed him-
self and carry his books and write
a bit They provided an incentive
to keep practicing and to hope he
might go to college -
But best of all he was able to
help decorate the tree and to go
shopping for a Christmas present
for his widowed mother Mrs
Thelma Patterson
ELK CITY Dec 21 (Ai — The
Christmas Basket Fund here re-
deived a ngte reading: "I am en-
closing chetk for $4 for Christmas'
Basket Fund Please list as anony-
mous contribution Merry Christ-
mas" The donor didn-t sign the note—
or the check
4
I
IHÁT'
s -
C'
'
before rejoining the 4th Armored
Division for its January move to
Germany in the army's Operation
yroscope -- ' -
Army Vehicles Different
-Before his departure the youth-
ful private confessed a discovery:
"There's a big difference be-
tween souping up your -own hot 1
rod ricer and maintaining Army
cars and trucks
As a boy Nick picked up many
an idea about auto- mechanics
from haunting the Chrysler 'engi-
neering plant near his home town
He had free access there because
of his - father Presumabli that
should have been a handy step-
ping stone to a career but the
sou had other ideas 1
"It's a lot better to go out and I
get it for yourself 'z he told of-
ficers at this fort-before he went
on leave priorto going overseas
He thinks it only natural to be I
fascinated by -cars although not I
aU the Colberts share this pre-
occupation 1
- Calight Hot Rod Fever
"I am the ' only one in the
family except my lather who is
' interested in automobiles:— mean
their insides" the soldier said
This interest was whetted two
years ago when be rode home
from a Florida vacation with a
hot rod enthusaist Young Colbert
proceeded to Put together his own
racing car a Dodge and entered
competition in Illinois- Indiana
and Ohio --
Last May at the end of his
freshman year at Williams Col-
lege in Massachusetts Nick start-
ed building a new hot rod He took
a stripped down 1932 'lord and in-
stalled a 400-horsepower engine—
Chrysler-built of course
"I got it finished the day before
I went into the Army" hi said
"I had never driven it when I
-
got drafted"
Colbert was inducted July 12 at
Fort Wayne Ind and sent here
ior basic training He wound up
assigned to Company B in the 4th
Armored Division's 4th quarter-
master Battalion
:lis Company B commander
Capt William E Wall said Col-
bert was "an excellent soldier and
a very willing worker"
'TWOULD GET RESULTS
MN-DIANAPOLIS Dec 21 (A') —
Associated Press photographer
Larry Stoddard visited a large
department store looking for a
human interest p'cture of a child
visiting Santa Claus
"I'd like to get a picture with
good facial expression" explained
Stoddard
"Want me to pinch one of
them?" asked Santa
r - A 4
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All of Us at
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- Mmitor Federal Deposit Intioronco Corporation
THE BANK
FOR MY
TENNISON - -
Frank Charley Tenrilson M of
Pauls Valley died in an Oklaho-
ma City hospital Friday at 9:45
p rn funeral announcement later
by Smith Funeral Home
Surviving are the wife Maggie
stepdaughters Mrs Ray Schutta
of Tupelo Mrs Juanita Bolin of
County Line stepsons S -M
Hays of Ada J J Hays of Lau-
penter Calif brothers Oscar
and Lonnie Pauls Valley sisters
Mrs Lillie Welch of Pauls
Mrs Maggie Burnett of Nocona
Texas
MRS JENNIE HARVELL
KONAWA Mrs Jennie Har-
veil 78 died -at the home here
Saturday morning at 8:30 funer-
al Monday at 2:30 Watts Funeral
Chapel Rev Jess Kirkley We-
woka Cemetery a
Surviving are sons I S and
Preston of Oklahoma City
Geofge of Helena daughters
Mrs Artie Ahrend of Tulsa Mrs
Eunice Barker of Konawa Mrs
Jermiev Robertson of Phoenix
Ariz brothers George John
Lee- Everett and Byron Rose
sister Mrs Leola Parks 15
grandchildren 13 great-grandchildren
'
Du Ich Leave-
- (Continued from P-age 1)
Dutch: only as their second lan-
guage They are leaving under
orders by the Indonesian govern-
ment that nonworking and - no n-
essential Dutch nationals must get
out of the country
But there are indications many
more than these will' be going
putting a further strain on Indo-
nesia's faltering economy
Foreign Minister Subandrio :told
Parliament the government h a s
ordered only about 9000 Dutch out
of'the country But he said the
Netherlands goverritnent is ad-
vising its subjects with important
lobs here to leave immediately
DAY Installation
Scheduled Monday
' A called meeting is announced for
ttr new local chapter of Disabled
American Veterans for Monday
night ate1:30 in the county court
room comas court house
Jess -c Fike is chapter com-
mander -He annotmces that there
will be installation of officers
There are now 35 men on - the
chapter roll as the second meeting
goes on schedule
OLI DAYS
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MONEY
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while there's time for Christmas -deliv-
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Little, W. D. The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 240, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 22, 1957, newspaper, December 22, 1957; Ada, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2112190/m1/2/?q=Ensemble%3A+Wind+Symphony+9%2F29%2F2011: accessed June 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.