The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 105, Ed. 1 Monday, July 14, 1958 Page: 2 of 8
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THE ADA EVEN7NG
ADA OKLAHOMA MONDAY JULY 144958
177
O C LIVESTOCK
- OKLAHOMA ' CI T Y (AP) --
' (17SDA)--Cattle 4500 calves -
000 -slow not established orl'
' slaughter steers: early sales fed
heifers about steady cows steady
' to 25 lower instances 50 off bulls
3 weak to 25 lower slaughter calvr
es uneven mostly steady stock-
ers and lightweight feeder s
steady feeders over 750 lbs slow
- and not established: early sales
good fed heifers 2500-2600 load
1 good and low choice 87 lb heif-
ers MOO and commercial
bulls - 1955-2250: good slaughter
calves 2600-2750 utility and
choice 2600-280Q good and choice
stork steer calves 2800-3300: few
choke at 3350: good and choice
stock heifer calves 2500-2800
- Hogs 900 barrows and gilts
2-50 lower: sows steady to weak
' barrows and gilts 2250-2425 sows
lbs 2050-2150- heavier
sows 1850-2050
Sheep 800 few scattered early
sales spring lambs about steady
slaughter ewes steady and feeder
lambs steady to strong good and
choice spring slaughter lambs
2050-2150 cull to- good shorn
slaughter ewes 400-700: medium
and good spring- slaughter lambs
60-75 lbs 1900-2000 r
O C 'PRODUCE
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—The
state Board of Agriculture today
reported the following prices:
Wheat NIS' 1 hard 10 a- m
Monday—nominal 156-166: El Re-
no Frederick Yukon 166: Bison
- Hennessey Kingfisher Medford
Watonga 4164: Clinton Enid 163:
Blackwell Vici 162 Alva Okla-
homa City 161 Guymon Hooker
156
Broilers No 1— weekend-clearances
Only fair: fbb farm: Mus-
kogee Oklahoma City Tulsa VI-
nita 18
hens No I — steady trading
Pauls Valley 8-12 Clinton
Shattuck 8-13 Oklahoma City Vi-
- -pita 8-14 Blackwell 943 Elk City
-'9-14 Watonga 10-13 Tulsa 115
Lawton 10-17
- Eggs — farm clean steady 24-33
Elk City 24 Pauls'Valley Shat-
' tuck 25 Watonga 26 Enid Vici
29 Blackwell Clinton: El Reno
30 Tulsa 31 Oklahoma City 32
Lawton 33 '
Butterfat No 1 — steady 48-
50 Clinton Elk City El 'keno
- Enid Lawton Shattuck Vinita
IrVatonga 50 Pauls Valley 48
Oklahomans Do
Right Well at
'Lions Convention
Oklahomans including Adars
returned with some high honors
from last week's Lions Interna-
tional convention in Chicago
' A C Kidd Wewoka attorney
who is well known here was
elected InternatiOnal- 'director
The Oklahoma parade float in
the fabulous Lions extravaganza
won second prize—$400
From Ada Mr and Mrs J A
Richardson and Mr and Mrs
Sidney Sachs and daughter at-
tended Richardson a past In-
ternational Director hims e I f
guided Kidd's campaign for the
high post in the civic club's in-
ternational organization
HrSSEIN PROCLAIMS SELF
HEAD OF JORDAN-IRAQ UNION
ANEMAN Jordan tAl —'1ting
Hussein proclaimed himself head
of the Arab'Union of Jordan and
Iraq today '
A communique issued at the
royal palace said that accordIng
to the Arab Union constitution and
due to the absence of King Faisal
of Iraq Hussein had taken ofer
powers as head of the Arab ed-
eration as from today
There was no clear word here
as to the fate of Faisal
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11ew Turko-Greek Warfare
Causes Drastic
By ALEX EFTY
N1COSL Cyprui (AP) —
A round-the-clock curfew was
clamped on Cyprus today to halt
mounting communal warfare be-
tween Greek and Turkish
Cypriots Terror gripped the is-
land The British governor Sir Hugh
Foot ordered all persons to stay
in their homes until further no-
tice except civil servants and es-
sential public workers It was the
most drastic - security move since
the shootings bombings ambush-
es and riots began on this Mediter-
ranean island three years ago
Cubans Scheduled
To Start Freeing
r
-
Yank Servicemen
GUANTANAMO Cuba (AP
Cuban rebels were expected to- be-
gin releasing 'their 29 captive
American servicemen this after-
noon after holding them more
than two weeks
The evacuatlon from the rebels
isolated mountain 'camps may
take four days or more
Word of the anticipated release
tame from -US Consul Park Wol-
lam who has been dickering 'with
Fidel Castro and his lieutenants
in the mountains of Oriente prov-
ince for the captives' return
We are hopeful all will be re-
leased" Wollam messaged Rear
Adm Robert B Ellis commander
of the big American naval base
on Guantanamo Bay cwhere the
prisoners are stationed
Twenty-eight of the:sailors and
Marines were kidnaped June 26 on
a bus ride through the Cklban
countryside c and two 'More were
grabbed near the base One of the
latter has been retailed
Ellis said he was not sure how
many men would be freed-today
'The Navy :helicopters- which have
brought back 20 US and Cana-
dian civilians seized by the rtbels
usually can carry only four pas-
serrgers on each trip
The copsers have been the only
foreign aircraft alloi!ved to fly
over rebellious Oriette province
by President Fulgencio Batista's
government Yesterday a US
Marine-Flying Boxcar apparently
strayed off its prescribed course
on a flight from Guantanamo to
Opa-Locka Fla and was forced
down by Cuban army fighter
planes -
Baghdad Radio
(Continued from rage 1) -
Iraq tild planned to give military
aid to the Lebanese government
Baghdad radio named Brig
Abdel Karim Kassem leader
of the coup He was said to have
pamed- a 13-man Cabinet and a
three - man Sovereignty Council
headed by Lt Gen Naguib el
Ribaei The Council it was - an-
nounced would exercise sover-
eignty until a plebiscite for presi-
dent can be held
Orders from Baghdad radio told
the people not to attack foreign
embassies or other establish-
ments and announced that the
lives and property of foreigners
would be safeguarded
F The revolutionary regime pro-
claimed martial law throughout
Iraq and a curfew in Baghdad
The army chief of staff Ahmed
Saleh Abdi was appointed mili-
tary governor general of the na-
tion Amman radio announced that
Jordan's King Hussein Hashemite
cousin of iFaisal had assumed
power as -head of the Jordan-Iraq
Federation and would attempt to
restore public security and order
The cOnstitution of the Jordan-
Itaqui Federation r provided that
Hussein should succeed Faisal if
the latter should die or abdicate
Observers saw little hope- Hus-
sein could hold the federation to-
gether in the face of a successful
Iraqi revolution but theoretically
he could call upon the armies of
the federation to subdue the reb-
els and could call upon the West
for help
L)-
COmZ DrD A SgOrif
THE
ALDRIDGE HOTEL
t
FE 2-3000
AMMIEMEIMINIEll
COND ION
Cyprus Curfew
' The Greeks and Turks 'here
have been fighting esch other
since June 9 ever since the word
got out that the new British plan
for the island would not satisfy
the Greek majority's desire 'to
unite with Greece or the Turk de
mands to partition the Wand to
protect their rights
Greeks Go Os Warpath
The Turks took the initial initia-
tive in the communal attacks But
last week EOKA the Greek unt
derground terrorist organization
which had been generally quiet
for months announced it would
take: the warpath against the
Turkish Cypriots
There was a rising tide of Greek
attacks on the Turks and of
Turkish retaliation Three Greeks
and five Turks died - yesterday
bringing the toll in the past five
weeks to 31 Greek Cypriots and
20 Turkish Four Greek stores
were burned out and the Chapel
of St Mamas in Limassol ' con--
taining the island's finest wood
carvings was badly damaged by
fire
Two British soldiers also were
killed in a mountain hunt for
EOKA fighters but this was an
accident Another soldier's auto-
matic weapon went off
Ignore Peace Appeal
The 'attackers igilored an un-
precedented joint appeal for peace
issued by Foot and the heads of
the Greek and Turkish Cypriot
communities Nicosia Mayor
Themistoeles Dervis and Dr Fazil
Kutchult
Foot also invited Greek and
Turkish Cypriot delegations-to dis-
cuss new security measures but
it appeared the Greeks might not
take part
Last week the island's Greek
mayors accused the British ad-
ministration — which has 40000
troops here—of being unable to
deal with the situation They
asyed for United Nations observ-
ters and a UN police force The
'Greek government has suggested
a UN trusteeship for the island
In London there were growing
fears of a civil war between the
400000 Greek Cypriots and 100-
000 Turks on the island The
gravity of the situation increased
chances for a meeting betweclo
British Prime' Minister Macmil-
lan Greek Premier Constantin
Karamanlis and Premier Adnan
Menderes of Turkey
Britain's new partnership plan
announced June 19 asked the
Greek and Turkish governments
to take a hand in admin!stering
the island with the British but up
to now they have been cool to the
idea
MARRIAGES
Ronald Dean Matheny 18 of
Ada to Linda Ann Graves 17 of
Ada '
K P Larsh Jr 22 of Rolf to
Jane Anderson 17 of Rat
Joe F Stie 24 of Mill Creek to
ShiLley M Arrington 21 of
Creek -
Samuel Louis McAnally 21 of
-Ada to Myrna Loy Stotts 18- of
Ada:
Sam Robertson 75 of McAles-
ter to Margaret Jones 61 of Mc-
Alester SAN PEDRO Calif — The
raft Lehi IV and its four-man crew
was bobbing on the high seas to-
day '
The 18-by-28-foot raft was towed
Sunday by a fishing boat and cast
adrift about 150 miles at sea Skip-
ptr DeVere Baker hopes to pick
up ocean currents that will carry
the raft to Hawaii -
CAPE CANAVERAL Fla (AP)
—The launching of an Atlas inter-
continental ballistic missile was
postponed Saturday because an
electronic part failed at the last
second it was learned today-
Another attempt to fire the twomillion-dollar
missile fully pow-
ered for the first time is expected
sometime this week
NEWS Want Ads Get Results--
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the Famous -
Statesmen
Quartet
Of Atlanta Georgia
TONIGHT IN THE
N Al al IN II II oak It a m Aak um Ai& 41k um Aii a no& Ain
-Statsidli
- Of Atlanta Geargia
TONIGHT IN THE
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
14th and Constant St Ada
PROGRAM TIME 8:00 O'CLOCK
Admission: 50c and $100
)
Both Lebanon
Sides Agree on
New Leader
By WILTON IVINN1
BEIRUT Lebanon (AP) -- Both
President Camille Charnoun and
the rebels warring against him
are reported in agreement today
on the man to take over Leban-
on's government- and attempt to
end this nation's 66-day-old rebel-
lion -
But there is disagreement On
how -the man should take over
This disagreement could blow the
country apart
Parliament meets July 24 to
elect 'a successor ' to Chamoun
The name of the figure both sides
-want to take over cannot be dis-
closed in news dispatches from
Lebanon because of censorship
He is a nonpolitical personality
who has played an important role
since the rebellion began -
- -
He's Army Chief
(The compromise candidate is
Gen Fued Shehab commander in
chief of the Lebanese army He is
a 14aronite Christian with some
strong Moslem support By
custom the president of this half-
Christian half-Moslem nation is a
Christian the premier a Moslem
When to Take Over!
Beirut is bubbling with political
activity Here is the situation ' as
of the moment:
Charnoun is reported to have
okayed this promirient personality
as his successor Because of his
support in Parliament Chamoun
can almost guarantee his election
Cbamoun wants his successor
elected by the normal constituion-
al process which would Put the
new president in office Zept 24
The opposition bloc inside Parli-
ament will probably insist how-
ever that he take office immedi-
ately The - rebels have vowed to
go on fighting until Chamoun re-
signs Speaking--
(Continued from F-a ge 1)
"go around proclaiming loudly that
he is a personal and politcal dry
whatever that means" -
In the other talks RepEd Ed-
mondson answered charges that he
and his brother were financed by
oilmeh with importation interests
He- read commendatory letters
from Russell B Brown of the In-
dependent Petroleum Association
of America and Senator Mike Mon-
roney The congressman called at-
tempts to pin- the oil import tag on
Howard "a dastardly misrepresent-
ation of the facts" He also read
a report lkym the Civil Service
Commission which stated that the
commission has no tnsis Jor in-
vestigation of Atkinson charges
that he and the gubernatorial candidate-
pressured federal emp'o-yes
in the first primary
The rally which began at 3
o'clock was over at 5 An over-
flow crowd sat in the sweltering
hot sun to listen to the major poli-
tical event of the-runoff campaign
Edmondson was slated for trips
to Durant Monday and a Fourth
District rally at Seminole Monday
night with “Industrial Development
and Public Welfare'' as the topic of
his speech The remainder of the I
week he will follow this schedule:
Tuesday on "Agriculture" at Enid
Wednesday on "Prohibition" at
Lawton Thursday on -Education"
at Norman and Saturday on "The
New Oklahoma" at McAlester Fri-
day he will speak on “Common
-Schools" over a Tulsa television
station
t 11
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Okra
H F RICHMOND
Hobart Franklin Richmond 62
Alien died at a local hospital
Saturekay funeral Tuesday at
2:30 Allen Church of ChrIst Bro
Glenn Jeffries and Bro Perry
Blue Allen Cemetery Smith
Funeral Home
Richmond leaves the wife
Vessie daughter Mrs Barbara
Ash lock Allen ' sons Gilman of
Norman and Wayne of Allen
sister Mina Richmond Waldron
Ark brothers Fletcher of We-
tumka Jack Lester and Earl of
Waldron 2 grandchildren
Baghdad Pad
Meet Blown up
By Iraq Crisis
- By WEBB McKIINLEY
ISTANBUL Turkey (AP) --
Turkish leaders waited in vain at
Istanbul's airport today for King
Faisal of Iraq Crown Prince Ab-
dul Ilah and PremierS Nun i Said
to arrive for ti meeting of the
Moslem members of -the Baghdad
Pact -
Then Turkish President COM
Bayar Premier Adnan Menderes
and Foreign Minister Fatin Rush-
tu Zorlu took off unexpectedly for
their capital Ankara -
Despite the itartling news of the
coup in Iraq the Turks and diplo-
mats of the -other Moslem mem-
bers of the pact—Iran Pakistan
and Iraq—waited at the airport
for hours
When it became evident the
Iraqi chiefs were not coming the
three TurktiEh leaders held an em-
ergency s9ion Then they sud-
denly re'-seared at the airport
with a heavy police escort which
shoved aside- assembled newsmen
and photographers and took off
They were Sollowed in another
plane by Pitkistan's diplomatic
representatives -
Iraqi diplomats continued to
wait but the military band and
'guard of honor marched off
The Baghdad Pact conference
was to have opened here Tuesday
I
U S HAS HELPED IRAQ WITH
SOME MILITARY EQUIPMENT
WASHINGTON (AP) — US
military aid to Iraq has been o
a relatively small scale totali r
less than 50 Million dollars in th
last 312 years '
Historically the British have
organized trained and equipped
the military forces there But Late
in 1954 an agreement among Iraq
Britain and the United States
brought American rnilitary aid in-
to the picture -
The United States agreed to-concentrate
its aid on improving
Iralfs ground forces
The United States maintains no
military bases in Iraq i
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Iraq Crisis Could
Mid-East Bring
Editor's Note—William L Ryan
has just completed a six-week trip
to the Middle East He visited
Iraq Egypt Syria Saudi Arabia
Lebanon and Kuwait -
By tVILLIA3 L RYA'
AP roreign News Analyst
BELGRADE (AP)—Iraq's- revo-
lution can be the beginning of the
worst of all crises for the Middle
East It carries a reel dangerto
world peace I
The West had more reason to
fear such a development in Iraq
than in almo-st any other place in
the Middle East One way or the
Hilngarlans Picket
Red Headquarters
At United nations
NEW YORK (AP)-- Hungarian
tickets marched noisily around
the Soviet headquarters at the
United Nations yesterday shout-
ing intermittently "Drop dead
Khrushchev" "Red murders" and
"We love Hungary"
New York City police mindful
Of-a recent violent demonstration
by Hungarians outside the offices
took:extra precautions
There were about 250 marchers
and 147 uniformed policemen and
35 detectives around the Manhat-
tan building Other officers were
in reserve a few blocks away
The leader of the latest demon-
stration the Rev Imre Kovacs
pastor of the First Hungarian Re-
formed Church in Manhattan
asked the pickets to return every
day this week through Saturday
"We should have 10000 Ameri-
can boys and girls marching with
us"he said
The pickets say they are trying
to annoy the Soviets out of the
United Nations
They carried signs pleading
"Now it is your turn to get out"
"Stop butchering Hungarian patri-
ots" and "Khrushchev is Soviet
crime minister"
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BUCK CARTy1RIGI-1-r
State
(ilerewith below is a reprint from a front page editorial
from the July lOth issueof the Allen- Advocate Allen Okla)
This nefspaper is supporting Buck Cart-
Nyright for State Senator because
Cartwright has made a splendid record in
the State Legislature and has served the people
faithfully
Because he is a friend to the school teach-
er the aged pensioners the farmer business-
man and the daily laborer
: ::: : : H :
Because he owns no mowing nachines
Because he is for good roads' and is es-
- teémed by the State Highway officials and con
do more for Pontotoc and Seminole Counties than
anyone else
441 Because his demeanor in our legislative
halls commands the confidence and respect of
- í
every legislator
Because he will
roll colt time
And because we
Setoff Turmoil
Real Danger to
other the events in Baghdad are
bound to spill out into other sensi-
tive areas
Hussein Needs Support
If King Hussein of Jordan is to
survive the overthrow of his Iraqi
cousin Faisal he will need mas-
sive support from the outside If
he gets that support the Middle
East will become a cockpit for a
deep world political crisis
But it the Iraqi revolution -is
made to stick its effect also will
be felt far beyond Jordan -
The turmoil is likely to reach
Kuwait with its oil riches and
even- Saudi Arabia and the rest
of the Saudi Peninsula where The
fever or Arab nationalism al:
ways strong will get new impetus
Cools By Desperate Men
What happened in Baghdad ap-
pears to have been a coup by
desperate men who had been eying
art opportunity and who feared
that opportunity might slip from
their hands'
The opportunity was- afforded
by the Lebanese rebellion For ex-
tremists in Baghdad it must have
been' a CiftleStiOn of now or never—
no matter what Gamal Abdel Nas-
ser's own opinion of their plans
might have been 1
I was last in Baghdad a little
more than a month ago
One could feel the tension being
generated by the Lebanese rebel-
lion Not Nasser's
Today's developments foreshad-
ow all sorts of chaos Because of
this it is difficult to !believe that
Nasser wanted it to happen in just
this way and at just this time He
has grown fearful of Soviet influ-
ence in the Middle East and his
talks here in Yugoslavia with
President Tito have indicated his
desire to remain in the middle
betwein the two world blocs
The Soviet Union surely will at-
tempt to seize every advantage
from the developments to apply
pressure against Western inter-
ests in the Middle East:
Europe Must Have Oil
The future of Europe for years
to come is bound up with Mideast
oil resources The United States
can get by without those re-
sources Western Europe cannot
Where intervention might have
been considered foolhardy in a sit
Senator
be on the job to vote at
don't think it wise to send
across '
World Peace
uation like that which aleyeloPed
in Lebanon' Britain and possibly
even France cannot regard lightly
any threat to the flow of Middle
East oil
The United States too may 7
take a second look at the pros
and cons of Intervention Events -
in Iraq are going to give a big
boost to the forces of extreme
Arab nationalism throughout the
entire area '
Premier Begged far Aid e
Premier Nun i Sa1d the man
whose strength and determination
kept the extreme nationalists and
the Comtnunists ' at bay in Iraq
had been desperate to win sup-
port from the West- to keep the
Iraqi-Jordan federation in busi-
ness He had been imploring the t'
British to induce the ruling sheik
of Kuwait to -join him in keeping
Jordan from those who Ni-anted to
turn her over to the Egyptians
and Syrians
Now the blow apparently hag
been struck Inside Kuwait the
pressure on the fabulously wealthy
ruling sheiks will be severe Their
position is a dangerous one The
pressure of the Egyptians Pale- -
stinians and Syrians is tremen-
elms The fever of nationalism
has Infected many young Kuwait-
is all eager to turn overthat in-
credible brie- taxpayet's paradise
to Nasser -
Even in Saudi Arabia i whose
American-extracted oil helps nour-
ish Western arope support for -'
Nasser reaches-highly placed per-
sons Crown- Prince Feisal gov-
erninz the country now for his
brother King Saud is likely to
have great difficulty maintaining
the position be recently assumed
as a neutral between the two
Atab blocs
If the Iraqi 'revolution: there-
fore consolidates itself the real
payoff crisis in the Middle East
is at hand
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Little, W. D. The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 105, Ed. 1 Monday, July 14, 1958, newspaper, July 14, 1958; Ada, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2113160/m1/2/?q=no+child+left+behind: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.