The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 258, Ed. 1 Monday, January 13, 1958 Page: 4 of 8
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WfriaR
WAS DRIVINTO
A LEAPNER'S
PERNIrr HIS
POP WAS
EPrromE OF
- -SAFE-ry—
LET HER STAY UNTIL SHE SEES THE
ENO OF THAT TELEVISION SHOW-EVEN
IF WE DO HAVE TO PAY HER A
LITTLE EXTRAYOU KNOW HOW - -
HARD IT IS TO GET EIABY-SITTERS
THESE DAYS
t
PAGE 4
THE
W D La-rnz' Editor and Publisher
WILLIANT D LITTLE JR- Business Manager -z
GEORGE E GURLEY - 7 Managing Editor -
J H Biles Advertising Manager Clyde Alletag - Circulation Manager
Roy S McKeown -s - News Editor - Helen Tinsley ' Business Records
-
' Marie Hickey - - Classified Advertising
-
Published Each Weekday Evening (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning by
NEWS PI:ItLISHDIG AND PRINTING COMPANY
114418 North Broadway Avenue Telephone rE 114433
Member of
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
ADA EVENING NEWS
IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION
Wednesday of the past week we -were
returning to Ada with state game ranger
Virgil Williams after taking some pictures
at Ned Bill le's ranch -
Aboutfour miles east of Ada we topped
a small hill on the section lineroad we
were travelling It was just at dusk The
ranger suddenly pointed off to the right
"Look at that" he exclaimed
r
We looked Some 40 yards from the road
- was a small thicket of persimmon trees
Standing motionless half-hidden by the
trees watching the carears swung forward
was a herd of six deer There were two fine
bucks two older does and two young deer
We stopped the car The deer white tails
flashing in the gathering dark bounded
off but only for a short distance Then as
if on command they all wheeled and stared -
at-the car again It was a thrilling sight
and one that is repeating itself more fre-
quently these days in Pontotoc County -
If a few people will just cooperate it
won't be long before this county will have
an outstanding herd of wild deer -
Generally thé deer have infiltrated from
'
the east There were lots of deer on the
Manahan Ranch now owned by Billie The
Hamilton Ranch had lots of deer and grad-
ually in epite of everything the animals
have increased and fanned out-
At his ranch Bifhe has labored day and
night in a long uphill fight against dog
men that run deer and take a heavy toll
of fawns in season He deserves everyone's
support There is still some deer poaching
in'the area but this too is gradually coming
under control t
One of the big problems now according
to Williams outside the dog situation is
the casual hunter r who is afield with a 22
rifle perhaps hunting squirrels or rabbits
Williams has checked several deer recently
that have been felled with shots from small
calibre rifles Deer must of course be
hunted in season and in this county only
shotgun slugs-are legal
He pointed out that the state department
has a standing offer of a $50 reward for
information leading to the arrest of anyone
taking deer illegally '
Deer oddly enough- can get along very
well with man They adapt easily and in
many parts of the east and on the west
coast are common in heavily populated
areasThe same thing is beginning to hap-
pen here
Deer are sighted regularly at Judge Orel
Busby's 4-B ranch and at the Adair ranch
east of the city Deer are common on the
Mayer Allison Agee and Jared 'Ranches
They are sighted frequently at the Thomas
Ranch just north and slightly east of
Ahloso
For a I ew days golfers at Oak Hills were
rubbing their eyes stray deer had even
moved that close to Ada Recently one was
killed accidentally near Asher in an area
where they had not been seen previously
They have spread steadily to the south
particularly in the rugged country east and
south of Fittstown and on into the Law--
rence uplift There are deer on the Rhymes
Ranch and on across to acreage owned by
Sherwood O'Neal Guy Shtpe Carlton Cor-
bin and Norris interests t
There isasizeable concentration of deer
near Lawrence on the Spears Ranch and
Lester Cummings says he sees them almost
daily on his ranch only a few miles south-
west of the city
A doe will regularly produce a fawn each
year and twins are not at all uncommon
And our deer are considerably larger than
the animals living in the southeastern part
of the state '
They are larger simply because they have
a superior range and get more to eat
They have demonstrate 4 they can thrive
in this county and they will continue to do'
so if given half a chance
Stricter legislation is needed to control
deer running dogs -
Known poachers should be reported and
they should be prosecuted vigorously
- With everyone vigilant we will all be
They'll Do It Every Time
No -4c:tio 552
National Advertising Representatives
Burke Kutner & Mahoney Inc
Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at thy? Post Office Ada Oklahoma Dec 1 1903 under Act of March 3 1379
Yearly Subscription Rates: In Ada by carrier11300 In Oklahoma by mail MOO Outside Oklahoma by mail $1320
pleasantly surprised in how short a time
it will be before we can drive along rural
roads and see deer one of our most splendid
native game animals grazing at random in
distant fields
BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY
He passed by en the other side—Luke 10:31
A priest and a Levite might do that but this
parable has inspired- the founding of a thousand
hospitals in heathen as well as in Chrittian lands
It illustrates our love for our neighbors as ourselves
umn o
eo t Iomment C
'KOS LATEST NOTE TAKES STEAM JUT OF
BULGANIN'S PROPAGANDA PROPOSALS
By JAM'ES 3IARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
-
-
WASHINGTON LATi — Russian PremierlBulganin
is getting to be a regular pen-pal of "resident
isenhower The President has been a little tardy
linhit correspondence Over the weekend he made
--
tip for it The result: still a standoff
-
Bulganin wants a meeting of himself Eisen-
hower and other heads of state Eisenhower says
he's willing but — It's a big but The two men
disagree cin how to go about having the summit
meeting
-
The RUSsian proposed this big get-together in Emelt ILI01111 I 1641
a letter to Eisenhower Dec 10 and another-Jan
9 The purpose: to try to settle the sorld's ills
by disarmament and the stopping of nuclear tests Childiden
among other things
Bulganin wants the talking to start it the top LONDON Jan 11 11?--The Sun-
11 T7Itrevte IPtftmAs 1y-11 elALA cAoft In I clay Pictorial said tonight the
The Russians have brushed aside the idea of
preliminary talks in the United Nations They've
done the same to the suggestion that the 'foreign
ministers meet first to arrange details
And in all his talk — or letter-writing — about
disarmament Bulganin says nothing about a fool-
proof inspection inside Russia and this country to
prevent cheating by either side
Yesterday Eisenhower answered Bulganin's Dec
10 letter It took him weeks to compose the reply
but it had the effect also of answering thu:' letter
of Jan
Eisenhower said he's willing to meet with the
Russians but before there is such a gathering he
wants the details of the discussion subjects worked'
out by experts on the various problems and -by
the foreign ministers
Both letters — besides discussing the problems
between the two countries — are meant as propa-
ganda too The people of not only the Ilnitedtates:
and Russia but of therest of the world will be
-
looking' in on the correspondence
Bulganin's Dec 10 letter — very shrewd and well
written — had a broad appeal because so many
people particularly in Europe are anxious for
some peaceful solution before there is war
And Bulganin timed it for the moment calculated
to do the most damage to tbeIlnited Statcs: just
before Eisenhower went to Paris to talk with
American allies in the North Atlantic Treaty -
Organization
His next letter — broadcast last Thursday —
no doubt was intended to take the play away
from Eisenhower who on that very day delivered
his State of the Union message to Congress- And
in Europe he did offset Eisenhower
But the President's reply was well done from
' the standpoint of trying to knock the steam out of
Bulganin's proposals The basic American position
— one that both Eisenhower and Pr-esident Tru-
man followed — remains unchanged
Its this: before this countr disarms — or -
agrees- with Russia to disarm and stop nuclear
testing and so on — it wants to be sure through
an inspection system that RussA can't run out
on its agreemeror plot war inIsrcret -
Eisenhower laid down as the primary condition
for any disarmament agreements that there be
foolproof guarantees against cheating
- The next step seems to be Up to Bulgania He'll --
think of something no doubt Last week Secretary
of State Dulles practically admitted in so many
words Russia -is doing a better propaganda job
1 3 than this country 1
& &am leo
By Jimmy Halo
SW-OWL'
TAKa iT EASY! STOP
AT EVEW corzNER orve
'NE PEDESTRIANS THE
RIOI-IT OF WAY! PUIL
AWAY 51-0-0W1
5 Black and 3
Red 4
9 --- Island
NN 5
10 Grows white- 6
12 Fault vein 7
angle
13 City (Wis) 8
14 God of war
4Gr)
15 Fruit of 9
buttercup Il-
l& Exists 13
17 Jumbled 17
type
18 Boy's -
nickname
19 Recover -
22 Compassion
23 Worthless
thing i
(colic:Kt)
24 Owns
25 Of the pia
mater - i4
27 Hesitate
30 Particle of r'
addition
31 Greek
Island
32 Music note 2
33 Exaterior
wu
covering
35 Timber wolf 3
37 Scorched ---' 3
39 Incite
39 Come in 3
40 Smells
41 Letters
42- Observes
DOWN'
1- Unrefined
THE ADA EVENING NEWS
VITAMIN
Ex-diplomat's Wife 'Living Nightm
British Turncoat's Wife Won
Children out of Soviet Union
lAmerican-born- wife of runaway
British diplomat Donald Maclean
has split with her husband and is
desperately trying to get their
three children out of the Soviet
Union
- The tabloid newspaper said 41-
year-old Mrs Melinda Macleanhas
appealed for help to British and
US authorities She is the forther
Melinda Marling of Chicago
The Pictorial story said: "Mrs
Maclean has made it clear in mes-
sages rfrom Moscow that she is
prepared to be parted from the
children if necessary" to get them
out of the Soviet Union
-Drinking Wrecks Marriage
Mrs Maclean disappeared be-
hind the Iron Curtain from Switz-
erland in 1953—two years after
her husband 43 and fellow dip-
lomat Guy Burgess fled from Lon-
don to Moscow 'Their whereabouts
was unknown for years The Pic-
torial first reported in 1955 that
the pair were in Moscow working
for the Soviet Foreign Ministry
I'm 1956 they confirmed this at a
news conference
The Pictorial said Mrs Maclean
has been living - a nizhtmare"
and parted with her- husband be-
cause of his thinking" She was
described as -making frantic ef-
forts to persuade her relatives' to
do all they can to get the chil-
dren—Fergus 12- Donald 10 and
DAILY CROSSWORD
Melinda 6 out of Russia'
He's Lost Soviet Job
Maclean was reported by the
Pictorial to have lost his job in
the Soviet foreign languages de-partment-Some
political observers in the
West have suggested that Mac-
lean is responsible for the word-
ing of many Kremlin notes to the
Atlantic Allies
The ex-British diplomat once
worked in the British Embassy in
Washington and was head of the
American department of the For-
eign Office in London He de-
fected eastward after making it
(j
are'
- Fashion is pretty important to
S urgery Regarded men
wo who tak sew and ManY
v-omen have On to creating the
a newest styles on their sewing ma
chines In addition to the obvious
ave found that
Best Cure for Hernia th
eceoynoma3n-
achereveh better fit and
more individual styling by mak
0 -- ling their own
re) e 1
A I II cct 2t-ic1 with 1rte l'hg I There is one more factor to
TIFANT A
-
Ve C A DEAN M D I most p
MEDITORIAL: I treated an
elderly man recently for anemia
It turned out that the anemia was
due to a bleeding stomach ulcer
During the course of examination I
ncted a rupture or hernia in hiS
groin The patient stated he had
noticed this for several years It
didn-t bother him so he did nothing
font -
This case is fairly typical- of
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5 Black and 3 Dregs ally sera eCIENICII00
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9 ----- Island to me - 22 Chum - gss A P e E
N Yz 5 Room 24 Owns P A IN i germs
0 Grows white- 6 Apiece 25 Anti- omma E A 5
L Fault vein 7 Apsychia-ousted Mallrellia05° stil
angle trist - 2-6- En' nuou climauxam
3 City (Wm" 8 Stage - grossed moon M A fag
4 God of war trumpet ' 27 Nour-
4Gr) signal call ishment 92turases Aimee
5 Fruit of 9 Seat 28 Live 34 American '1
buttercup Shabby coals Indian
8 Exists 13 Shower 29 Uprisings 35 Dip out
7 Jumbled 17 Apple 31 Cake 36 Hautboy
t seed 1 frosters 40 Esker
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MEM waGINECIE
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DAILY CRITTOQUOTE— Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAkR
Is LONGFEDLLOW
One letter iimply stands for another In this sample A is toed
for the three Va X for the two as etc Single letters apos-
trophes the length' and formation of the words are all hint&
Each day the code letters are different e
A Cryptogram Quotation
XQG GWQT XPWX ECWXP - QG "CPH
KWGX XPQMV QM ver 3WM XL VCLE
LET—WKUWHIPG
Saturday's Cryptoquote: 7RUTH CRUSHED TO EARTH-
SHALL RISE AGAIN — BRYANT
- -
Distribuisol by King Failures STadleat
9
00-- y A? Newsleatures -
11
FORTY MILLION American
1 woAmsenthcaln'tgboeveurTnomnet
releases
-
I monthly bulletins concerning the
-
- rising cost of practically every
thing women are turning to their
sewing machines in droves corn
bating inflation in their own quiet
but effective -way '
- : According to a recent survey
- conducted by local sewing centers
-
- throughout the country 40 million
women spend an average of a full
-
working day each week at their
sewing machines This comes out
-
to a cool couple af billionr total
- -sewing days a year and it doesn't
take an Einstein to figure that a
- lot of sewing gets done during that
-' period
million of these Ife WantsA About
make dresses 26 1 ts e w i o rrl e n
on
make -children's clothes 22 mil-
lion make blouses 8 million make
suits and 5 million make coats
t Union - On the home furnishings front 29
million make curtains and dra-
peries and 1114 million make slip-
t covers Some of them sew in all
known to tils colleagues that he
'
opposed much of Western foreign categories
i When you considfr that V the
policy
!equivalent of a $15 doUar dress
Last November a California can be made by the home seam-
congressman who had visited Rus-:stress for about $5 at a saving
sia the month before was quoted V of $10 the savings accomplished
as saying that a letter slipped into by women who sew reach an as-
his overcoat pocket hinted strongly tronomical figure
that V both Burgess and Maclean Economy in itself is not the pri-
may have been liquidated !mary reason for home-sewing the
survey found In the first place
The copyrighted story in the
Los Angeles Examiner said Rep sewing is not done prima114 by
! low-income groups Sewirtv ma-
Lipscomb (R-Calif) lotmd the two-
his !chines are owned — and used —
page letter after retrieving
coat from the checkroom
of a by 75 per cent of non-farm fami-
Leningrad hotel last VOct 9 flies with incomes of $140 per week
I and up
I High Fashion
I I I Fashion is pretty important to
most patients with hernias They
note them and -usually do nothing
more Obviously this is the wrong
approach to this problem
Hernias can appear- in many
areas The most frequent spot is
the groin or inguinal area This
typepis found mostly in men al-
though women can develop it
The exact cause of hernias is
not always apparent The feeling is
that most hernias occur in patients
with a tendency toward them If
such things' as constant standing
and straining are present then the
hernia will develop Regardless bf
the cause the best treatment is
Thieves Swipe
tslew Cori to
Haul Away Safes
by surgical repair
Surgery can be done at any age
provided the patient is able to
stand it For example the patient
referred to above was not operated
upon He also had a heart attack
during his hospital stay This plus
his bleeding ulcer indeed made
him a poor surgical risk After
complete convalescence he may
become better one
Some patients will have recur-
rences of hernias -after operation
The chance of this happening is
small and should not prevent one
from having this operation The
risk of developing a serious com-
plication from an untreated hernia
is greater than the risk of recurrence
(Q) "I have been told I have low
blood pressure Need anything be
done about this? I have no com-
plaints" -
(A) The finding of low blood
pressure means nothing unless
there are other symptoms and
findings From what you describe
in your letter I would say you need
nothing done at this time
For Dr Dean's new 56-page
medical book send 25c in coin (no
stamps) care of this newspaper
(Copyright 1958 General Fea-
tures Corp)
REALDTON Jan 11 (VI—Carter
County- Sheriff Enoch Watterson
said today he doesn't know the
names of burglars which hit auto
firms here twice in a week —
but he's plenty familiar with their
"modus operandi"
On Jan 3 thieves broke into the
Baker Motor Co loaded the firms
safe into a new car sitting on the
showroom and drove away
' Last night Watterson said the
- burglars came back This time
- they hit the Cornish Motor Co and
again they carted- away the safe
in a new car The Cornish safe
contained 11300
Both new cars and the safes
were found abandoned in the same
spot northwest of Healdton The
safes Fatterson said were empty
ADA OKLAIIMIA 310NDAY ZAN'TJARY 13 19S$
At Inspection :Tiolo
H'd:-:'-:5-i4401
NORFOLK Va tfi -- Railroads
have modernized their signals and
communication systems with
some pretty fancy electronic gad-
gets But railroad men still hang
on to the old hand signal — for
personal conversations as well as
moving a train
The Seaboard Air Line Rail-
road good naturedly discloses
that it has discovered a large
family of –home-made"- hand sig-
nals in use along with those in
the line's official
40 Million
Women Can'
Be Wrong
i There is one more factor to
- this sewing boom By caving mon-
ey with her sewing machine the
American housewife- has more to
spend on other things She can
buy better shoes h3andbags and
hats
1 There is another interesting
side to all this Psychologists to-
day worry about the effect of in-
creased leisure time what with
automatIc washers andl such They
contend that Grandma got a lot
of creative satisfaction from mak-
ing her own soap churning her
own butter and so forth and that
m gdern women are suffering from
lack of creative fulfillment
The increase in sales of sewing
machines indicates that women
who sew are - getting plenty of
creative satisfaction a n d that
the brain trust twould do well to
worry about something else One
leading sewing machine company
reports that sales of the higher-
priced automatics account forr a
quarter of their complete unit
sales and officials of the com-
pany attribute this interest to the
growth of creative sewing withthe
accent on fashion'
Creative Sewing
I The automatic machines have
played a large part id the x-
pansion of the sewing machine
market since the new devices
i make it easy to do decorative
stitching create 'specie effects
and add extra fashion appeal to
any garment Women also appre-
ciate the convenience of construc-
tion sewing done on an auto--mg
tic machine Such jobs as over-
casting seams hemming bar lade-
ing and buttonholes may be done
quickly and easily
Of women interviewed in the
ALL IN A LIFETIME
Like the bottle of catsup in
the dining car galley windowf—
the traditional warning that a
company bigwig is 'aboard—many -
are designed to tip off a colleague
to look sharp
Here are some of -them-- all
tipoffs on the approach of a imp-
erintendent: Brushing hair back — bald head-
ed superintendent around
Raising arm high palm down
—tall superintendent -
Sawing off arm with hand —
short superintendent
'Doing hand in yak-yak molion
—inquisitive superintendent
The railroaders depart from
the book too to improyise time-
saving signals for purely business
purposes on local freights The
Seaboard listed these:
Tap the back of one hand with
the other-- engineer tack up
Tap it and make a roof with
hands — back up on company
loading siding
Tap it make a roof cut throat
with hand hold up fist four times
— back up in the house track
cut off four cars
Hold nose with one band tap
head with other — hot box on the -
bead end touch waist — its in
the middle: touch back — it's on
the tail end -
One superintendent reported
that he was on the scene bit
failed to see what must have been
one of the most expressive 1:ina1
communications in t h e Sea-
board's history He became aware
of it when an engineer slightly
ruffled swung down from the cab
and headed back for the caboose -
'Where you going?' siiked the
superintendent -
"'Back to the caboose for a
minute" the engineer replied
"That brakeman ain't going to
get away with what he just called
me with that lantern"
Fly
cAwr clur:-14 MY
1-taAc wtmou-r You
"7- YELIANe
l'gp-izir-LIPr
Or
m4 xi"
-
00011111
' HOWL GLASS:- We spook of
time 'running our becauso of
the °Id fashioned timepiece tho
hour giiss In this rnechenism
sand woulcfrun from on charts-
her to another and the quantity
of sand was measured so that
it would run from one chambor
in an hour
survey a hefty percentage listed
"creative sltisfaction" as their
primary reason for sewing A
lar :er percentage put economy
first but 89 per cent put creative
satisfaction in either first or sec-
ond place
Popular People
WORM& WRONG WAY
SUNBURY Pa Local po-
lice were sent to investigate ItEL
accident in which a moving car
had smashed into the rear of a
parkedcar pushing it into a
ond parked car
The motorist explained that bit
had glanced behindr him as he
passed an intersection to make--
sure he didn't go through a red
light and hit the first parked car
before he could turn around to
look at the road ahead again 't
F 1
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Little, W. D. The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 258, Ed. 1 Monday, January 13, 1958, newspaper, January 13, 1958; Ada, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2112486/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.