The Wynnewood Gazette (Wynnewood, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1957 Page: 5 of 8
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Ilist Plug- ging i: otrIto'gact ItnAlihnoiwpi g
n
he a rtil
tha weeplA UA
We have a new law on the
books after the past session of
the Legislature which is a good
law but which is almost unen-
forceable Thatlaw makes it a crime to
abandon any animal on the pub
lic or private roads or property
It was aimed at those people
who like to abandon dogs and
as they do not want
Many people in town have a
bad habit of carrying cats and
dogs to some farm home and
throwing them out of the car in
the hopes that the farm family
will take them in and care for
them
It has been proven that a
bouse cat gone wild can cause
more damage to young quail
and rabbits than all the hunters
in the area And a cat turned
out to rustle for a living will
soon learn to catch young birds
If it survives
Now this new law is good if
it can be enforced But how in
the world will one be able to
prove who dumped that stray
cat at your front door? Even
if one sees a car stop and drive
off a moment later and then you
find a stray cat at your home
can you prove who left it?
In other words to make the
law workable it is necessary
for someone to actually catch
CALIFORNIA FANCY
the world are the 'enforcement
officers going to be where the
animals are left at the particu-
lar moment when the crime is
committed
The law is good but a much
better method of preventing the
abuse is to abolish it through
education Of course there are
some people who seem never to
learn the good things but it lo
possible to get enough other
people educated to the foolish-
ness of abandoning their un-
wiilted pets till some of the
realization -of the seriousness of
the situation will rub off on the
ones who don't seem to care
Let's all remember it is bet-
ter to destroy an animal than
to abandon it In the country—
LLS
BIRTIlrAl"S CELEBRATED
The home of Mrs Edis Ayres
was the scene of a dinner and
party last Thursday afternoon
honoring the birthday's of her
granddaughter Zada Ayres
Phoenix Arizona and two
nieces Janet Tripp of Wynne-
wood and Bonnie Smith Pau ls
Valley
Those present included Mrs
Edis Ayres Jr Phoenix I Ariz
Mrs G P Smith and three
grandchildren Jerry Bonnie
and Marsha and Mrs J Vance
Miller all of Pau ls Valley and
EDCE:10
Good Value
PINK SALMON a-lb can S'
Fleming's
COFFEE 5141) can 9L1
IGA—Whole Sweet
PICKLES 22-oz Jar 350
IGA—No 303 Cans
FRUIT COCKTAIL 3 for 69c
Betty Crocker Angel Food-812-oz Pkg
CAKE mix 2 for 59c
MOItM01MMMMIW
malitIMMINimonniMoNIMIN
Mrs S O Richardson Mrs
E Marshall Connie and Janet
Tripp and Mrs Daisey Pruitt
all of Wynnewood
FAMILY REUNION
Mr and Mrs George Smith
of St Louis Mo left Wednes-
day for their home -after several
days visit in the home of her
mother Mrs Eva Shipley Oth-
er daughters present Sunday
at a reunion in the home were
Mrs Glen Tutor Oklahoma City
Mrs Arthur Woods Mrs Joh-
nece Wagner and Mrs Gene
Collins
500 In Graduation
Exercises at O U
Sunday Aug 1 lth
Graduation rites for more than
500 University of Oklahoma
students completing degree re
quirements this summer will be
held Sunday Aug 11 OU presi-
dent George L Cross has an-
nounced A large percentage of the
graduates will be state elemt
tary and high school teachers
winding up work on their mast-
ers' degrees Each year nearly
half of the summer graduating
class falls in this category
Commencement exercises are
scheduled for 7:45 p m in
-1T1!E :rrnmtwa c Azrivrz
Osien- Stadium - Baccalaureate
services will: be vbserved Sun-
day morning in the various
Norman churches
An August 15 deadline is
creeping up on new University
of Oklahoma freshmen who
plan to go through fraternity
and sorority rush week in Sep-
tember That's the final day applica-
tions will be accepted by the
Panhellenic Association govern
ing body of OU's 16 sororities
and by the Interfraternity Coun-
cil composed of the 25 national
social fraternities in residence
on the University campus
Rush week proper begins
with registration on Sunday
September 8 for both groups
and continues through Friday
September 13
Most members of the 41 Creek
organizations will be back a
week earlier to complete final
rush plans and to put their
howcs in tip-top condition The
latter means countless hours of
sweeping dusting painting
lawn-mowing and the many oth-
er household chores that will
help members put their best
foot forward
Mr and Mrs II Carl Schneid-
er and son Gene of Oklahoma
City visited in the home of her
father Gene Settle Saturday
GOOD VALUE-WHOLE KERNEL
C
vommENNINOD
E
IGA SLICED
P '1
VAN CAMPS
pomK
r GA - GRATED
WYNNEWOOD OXLVIOUA
Let's Tall - -
Oklahoma:
By WALDO E STEPHENS
E The things
that affect us
- personally our
4 family and our
neighbors
come first in
' u r thoughts
ol a n d conversa-
tion Since we
: a r e concerned
-' most with
what happens
to us Let's Talk Oklahoma
Our personal well-being is tied
up with what is done to improve
living conditio-ns in each com-
munity for an increasing num-
ber of peop12
We can point with pride to
past achievements in our state
But many of our old methods
and policies which were accept-
able a few years ago will not
meet present demands or future
requirements of our people
New forces are at work in our
society which compel us to
'take ready tc take advantage
( the many improvements and
oenefits that are within our
reach
We will have a larger popu
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SHOP NOW SAVE THIS WEEK LOOK FOR THE ITEMS WITH THE RED TAG
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—Frozen Foods-
TV PEAS 2 pkgs 3:
—Frozen Foods—
Tv
PEAS 2 pkgs 33o
4 Frozen-Rite Cloverleaf
ROLLS 3go
:1 Tv
v
ORANGE JUICE cans Ago
Tv
STRAWBERRIES 2 pkg 4360
Pig
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—Dairy Items—
trD Eloal 10E OULT
Pints 230 12-Gal
TV MILK
Quarts 12-Gal1on Galt
243o 626o :S
FERGUSON'S
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Iation in the ilextf few years
Many niore'cars arAtrucks will
be operating on our highways
Real safety controls will have
to be found to put a stop to
butchering and killing more and
more people Industries a r e
moving westward looking for
suitable places to locate Costly
floods and soil erosion must be
checked More children of
school age more students seek-
ing college and university train-
ing will demand improved facil-
ities and guidance More uni-
form and better medical services
will be required
As our population grows
there must be a corresponding
advance in support for law and
order The awakening of the
deep motivation and moral pur-
pose of our people will present
a real challenge to our religious
leaders Increasing thousands
of handicapped disabled sick
dependent and aged persons
must have improved methods
of effective care and sincere
consideration A well balanced
and stable economy must be as-
sured to support our people in
all employment and a higher
living standard Whatever the
tax load may be it Trust be jus-
tified and receive acceptance by
taxpayers
When the citizens of Okla-
homa are ready to make known
their demands and purposes in
behalf of the changes and im
LI No 303
VIII Cans
No 2
Cans
No 212
Cans
Reg
Cans
LB
LB
LB
Gallon
The brand of milk that brought the price
of other milk DOWN
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linvoirris APv ev on 'IN "11 eV
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TilUltdDAt Ittuor If
provemeilts thel know: are posw
sible we will be onthe way
The challenge is before us Next
week we will discuss some ways
and means of meeting this chat-
lenge SMALL FARM FAMILY
BEING ROOTED OUT
OLARGES SEN MONRONET
Washington D C
Senator Mike Monroney an-
nounced today that he has ask-
ed the Senate to vote a sweep-
ing investigation of the extent
to which large corporate farms
are displacing family-size farms
in the United States
The Senate Agriculture Com-
mittee would be directed to re-
port back "what steps should be
taken to protect and preserve
the family size type of farm op-
eration" under the terms of a
resolution introduced by Sena-
tor Monroney
The proposed "complete study
and investigation" also would
try to find out:
1 The extent to which trends
are developing toward larg-
er farms particularly those
owned and operated by cor-
porations 2 The effects of such trends
upon our agricultural econ-
omy as a whole
3 The special effects of dis-
placement of farm families
by the encroachment of cor-
porate farming and of large
farm units or urban areas
with attention to dangers of
unemployment in such cen-
ters Senator Monroney declared
that the establishment and oper-
ation of these large-scale cor-
porate enterprises n o t only
threatens the family-size farm
but also introduces new social
problems He mentioned espe-
cially "large-t nart-time mi-
gratory farm which up-
roots children from homes of
their own and condemns them
to a nomadic life spent without
proper housing schooling or
recreational benefits"
Legal Publication
(Published in The Wynnewood
Gazette August R 15 and
2'2 1957)
State of Oklahoma
County of Garvin ss
IN THE COUNTY COURT IN
AND FOR SAID COUNTY
ANI) STATE
In the Matter of the Es-)
tate of Joseph H Fork-)
ner Deceased)
NO 3039-D
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
All persons having claims
against Joseph H Forkner de-
ceased are required to present
the same with the necessary
vouchers to the undersigned
Odus Forkner at 119 West Paul
Pau Is Valley Oklahoma within
four months of the date hereof
or the same will be forever bar-
red Dated this Eth day of August
1957
Odus Forkner
Administrator
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IL Li OWENS
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and Across the Street from the
Back Door Open Nights II
8:30 Monday thru Saturday
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I NOT only do Palm-Aire
coolers deliver MORE
COOL AIR they cut
cost 'way
' down bccause
they're ruggedly built to
LAST YE
' ARS LONGER!
161
summer be
Get DEPENDABLE
LOW-COST relief from
at! See our dis-
play of Palm-Aire models
- - - - —
1m13
DO IOC
4 9
59)
79
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Peterson, Harold C. M. The Wynnewood Gazette (Wynnewood, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1957, newspaper, August 8, 1957; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2145623/m1/5/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.