The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 36, No. 180, Ed. 1 Monday, June 23, 1958 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Cushing Citizen and The Cushing Independent and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PEW
NW
STAR GAZING in this astronomi-
cal age has gained popularity
with giant steps Since sputnik
this country of ours is more will-
ing to spend Money to go to the
moon than to spend money to
keep people employed We need an
Aesop to tell us fables
Gazing at the Milkmaid's path
misty with myrids of stars we
can recall--
The little milkmaid was on the
way to market and as she was
walking she dreamed with the
money I get for the milk I shall
buy a dress I shall buy a beauti-
ful green dress I shall wear it to
the Fair Everyone will want to
dance with me Then if I don't
like somebody who asks I will
Just toss my head with disdain
like this — and again and again—
and that's right where her dream
ended Down came her castles in
the air down came the milk and
the pail
Maybe Aesop only wanted to tell
a tale to illustrate why the milk-
maid's path in the sky is white
with milk But it points a moral
too If either the U S or Russia
become too enamored with their
outer space and missile projects
if they dream too much and toss
thetr heads in disdain great will
be the crash
DR HENRY BROWNE a loyal
Tulsan and long-time resident
of that city passed a great com-
pliment on Cushing Here over the
weekend as a houseguest in the
home of Dr and Mrs Bassett he
said:
"I have visited in towrs of this
size and larger in all sections of
Oklahoma I consider Cushing one
of the most progressive and alert
Oklahoma communities It is the
kind I would like to live in if I
wasn't living in Tulsa It has the
advantages of a small community
and the spirit of a larger one It
Is stable without being staid You
have every right to be proud of
your city"
Words of praise always listen
well but didn't the visiting Doctor
say it neatly?
Dr and Mrs Forester chimed
in quickly on the same theme
Oklahoma City is their town and
they were also guests in the Bas-
sett home Their comment:
"Cushing is one of the friendliest
nicest towns we have ever visited
The atmosphere is really differ-
ent It smust bea greand place to
live"
- Now—that ought to pwt us on
our good behavior ought It not?
-
MRS BENJAMIN DAVIS Ls off
to Europe again! And the fact
that this is her fourth trip is not
the most interesting part
The newsworthy angle is not
merely that this wide-awake and
travel-minded lady likes journey-
ing about Europe but it is that
she is quite determined about hav-
ing her grand-daughters see it
This year C-Ann Anderson ac-
companies her on a junket which
will include Holland the Brussels
World's Fair Czechoslovakia and
various other countries with a fi-
nal week looking at London Mrs
Davis and grand-daughter will then
go to Reading England for a visit
with Mrs Dorothy Isted and her
family Mrs Isted is the mother of
D J Isted Cushing resident and
son-in-law of Mrs Davis
Last summer Mrs Davis was
accompanied to Europe by grand-
daughter Jill 'stet! Still coming
up for Europe are Jar Isted and
Delores Sue Anderson
SUMMER 1958 is offering us
pleasant reprieves from the r:g-
on of Winter and sonic of the prob-
lems which beset us during the
other eight or nine montiv of the
year
Rain has been plentiful the sun
shines warm but not too warm
harvest in spite of storms is ab-
ove the average
As far as the eye can reach
the hills are green with grass
the trees are heavy with foliage
and every prospect pleases
The financial and economic situ-
ation is not solved But days such
as have been recently enjoyed
tempt one to follow the poet's
fancY—'gather ye flowers while
ye may' and make the most of
the more pleasant days of the year
New Chief Named
For Highway Patrol
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)— Carl
Tyler Oklahoma City today be-
came the new chief of the High-
way Patrol succeeding Jack Rol-
lins who resigned effective June
I
Tylers appointmento was an-
nounced this morning by Safety
Commissioner Jim Lookabaugh
who said "Tyler is well quelified
by both training and experience
for the position of chief
Tyler 49 had been the patrols
field capolin for western Oklaho-
ma since Feb 22 'I he new ap
1
VOLUME XXXVI
A 69-year-o1d Maramec man
suffered head injuries and
bruises early today in a car-
truck crash on Drumright's
west city limits
Jasper can Hover a pass-
enger in a pickup truck was
taken to a medical clinic for
treatment His injuries were
not believed serious
Trooper Carl Pugh said two
other men sufered minor bru-
ises in the 9:20 am mishap
See BALL—Page 4
Courageous Cityan Is Dead
Refuved to Surrender
Riley with a damaged heart
from birth lived his entire life on
borrowed time so to speak but he
lived it without surrendering to his
handicap and in the -faee of a
short span of years and illness
moved determinedly along the road
of achievement He won a de-
gree from Oklahoma State Univer-
sity (then Oklahoma At Mi in
1947 and qualified for a podtion
with the U S Department of Agri-
cuure Until recently he also held
down a teaching position in the
Sunday School of the First Bap-
tist church here
At the time of his death Riley
as working with the O S U
agriculture branch as a specialist
from the agriculture department
spending his time on a research
survey project
A plastic ball which plugged a
hole in his heart and prolonged his
life more than five years apnar-
ently worked itself out of the
damaged wail between the ventrie-
les about 10 days ago an autopsy
disclosed Riley never knew the
plastic plug about the size of a
ping pong ball had fallen away
from the spot it was placed by
two prominent surgeons in an ex-
perimental operation in October of
1952
Hole Is Discovered
It was a rare and riOty °twin-
tion that liad placed it there after
Grain Cutters
Remain Idled
By United Press International
Rain and heavy morning dew
combined again today to keep
Oklahoma's wheat harvest Idled
The State Board of Agriculture
said the wheat market towns 01
Shattuck Elk City El Reno Clin-
ton and Watonga received more
rains this morning The morning
wheat prices were nominal at
$155 to $166 with Guymon and
Hooker at tlie low figure
Wheat farmers hoped to be able
to cut some of their moisture-
heavy crop in the western part Of
the state late today They faced
the task of combining some 400Pou
uncut acros which have lain un-
touched through the past days of
rain wind and dewey mornings
The statewide harvest was
about 70-73 per cent completed
and southwestern counties marked
the virtual end of their harvest
It was in the high-acreage ex-
treme west and Panhandle where
the harvest was stalled in its
early stages
One attempt to harvest at
Blackwell Sunday was sopped
when the moisture content W118
found to be too high In some
areas the dew was a more el
pointment womoted hlin from fective damper on combining than
captain to major I the rains
tt"t4440
4
4
GUSHING DAILY -
Main tike netaiipapetto-
latared at Cushing Da Inborn'' Poeta( las asi second Maas mall ander act at )&arc I 1172
SIX PAGES PRICE 5 CENTS
Man Is Injured In
Drumright Crash
lie said the accident occurred
when Olen Birchett 48 Okla-
home City slowed his car due
to traffic ahead and was struck
from behind by a pickup truck
driven by Millard N Gripe
51 also of Maramec
Both vehicles were damaged
The patrol said damages to the
Oklahoma City man's automo-
bile wculd iun la excess of
$300
Ball Pops From Heart
To Kill Young Father
Five years ago after surviving a rare 1-chance-in-a100
operation W J Riley a young Cushing father told a
reporter only one thing could happen if a plastic ball
plugging a hole in his heart came loose "I'd just drop
dead" he said flashing a courageous smile
And Sunday at the home of a brother-in-law in Okla-
homa City those words uttered by Riley to a Daily Citizen
newsman in February of 1953 came true
He died suddenly at 10:15 a m
Funeral services for the 34-yearold
father of three small sons will Nowata Child
be conducted here Tuesday at 2 P
m in the First Baptist church The
Rev Rebert R Chambers pastor
will be in charge and burial un Responding To'
der directien of the Ziavis Funeral
Home will be in Fairlawn ceme-
tery Medic s Care
Other survivors include his wife
Betty and several brothers and sis-
NOWATA (UPD—Tiny blind
ters
NOWATA (UPI)—Tiny blind
Laura Jane Irons gained five
pounds in Just three days in a
Nowata hospital following her res-
cue from a filthy shed-like sealed
room at the home of her n 'Vier
and foster father last
her doctor disclosed toda
Replying to a statement by the
mother's lawyer that the emaci-
ated 14-pound four-year-old girl
had been "taken to specialists in
Nowata Coffeyville Kan and
Oklahoma City" Dr Lynn Barnes
said today "they must have
ried everything but food"
Meanwhile the possible filing of
criminal charges against the
mother Mrs Raymond Murphy
and the stepfather was delayed to-
day because of the illness of
County Attorney Lloyd Colter
Attorney Ailing
Colter was taken to the same
hospital where Laura Jane is be-
ing treated suffering from "laryn-
gitis and a sore throat" Dr
Barnes who also is treating the
prosecutor said
Colter charged last Friday that
the Novvata couple kept the girl
"penned up like a dog" in the
squalid room with only a tattered
T-shirt to wear A deputy said she
and the room were "unbelievably
filthy"
Outside Murphy—who is em-
ployed by a Coffeyville dog ken-
nel—kPra a pack of hound dogs
in good health according to the
officers Two of Mrs Murphy's
other children were apparently
well-cared for Colter said
Legal Action Started
Little Laura's father Jack
See NOWA11A—Page
40 Said Dead In
Mexico Train Crash
ORIZABA Max seven-car
pasenger train roared
down a steep mountainside Sun-
day with no one at the controls
leaped the rails and tore through
a valley railway station like a
great steel juggernaut
At least 40 persons were report-
ed killed and 80 injured many of
them villagers waiting on the sta-
tion platform who were crushed
by the screeching avalanche of
twisted steel and shattered glass
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON (UPI)
—The Supreme Court to-
day granted a hearing to
Edward Leon Pete Wil-
liams facing the electric
chair for kidnaping Tom-
my Robert Cooke a theol-
ogical student in Tulsa
Okla June 17 1956
The court will hear ar-
guments in the case some
time next term 14 n d will
follow with a written opinion
Ak04- 41"fth110141wre074!W4
Soviets Meet
Mew Defiance
In 2 Nations
Soviet Russia's revival of
Stalinism brought new de-
fiance today from Yugosla-
via and Poland
World wide demonstra-
tions continued against the
new hard line demonstrated
by the execution of Hunvir-
ian "freedom premier" Imre
Nary and there were steady
indications the East-West
split was deepening
Hungarian refugees in New
York demonsixated before head-
quarters of the Soviet UN &le-
gation Sunday Seven policemen
and several demonstrators were
injured when violence flared
Student protests were reported
In Manchester England and in i
Buenos Aires Opposition political
parties in India denounced the
executions as murder Atlendance
dropped at the Hungarian pa vilien
of the Brussels Worlds Fair Com-
munist labor leader Arthur Horn-
er said in London he was shocked
and horrified at Nagy's death
Authoritative reports reaching
London said Polish Communist
leader Wladyslaw Gomulka has
sent a letter to Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev "disassociat-
ing" himself and the Polish Com-
munist Party from the Nagy ex-
ecution The reports said Gomulka was
expected to carry out a "blood-
less purge" of the Polish arty
to remove the hard core Stalin-
ists There were other reports that
Gomulka himself might be ousted
but these appraently were dis-
proved during the weekend
Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia was
reported drafting a note to Hungary-
protesting the executions
which Yugoslav spokesmen have
' denounced as a double cross Yu
goslpvia had granted Nagy asy-
lum in ils embassy in Budapest
The official Yugoslav press de-
fiantly reminded the Communists
they failed in 1948 when they read
Tito out of the Cominform called
the latest charges against Tito re-
visionism an attempt to create
dissension and said Nagy's execu-
tion was a "terrible warning to
these who resist the present resur-
rection of Stalinist policy"
Diplomatic reports in Paris and
London blamed the rise of Satlin-
ism on a power struggie within
the Kremlin 1
C J Hudnall
Dies Suddenly
Chester James Hudnall 61-yearold
city resident of 206 S Central
was found dead Sunday about 8:30
p m at his home following a heart
attack
Funeral servivces will be Wed-
nesday at 10 a m in the Memorial
chapel of the Fair ley Mmtuary
with Rev Homer Young pastor
of the Freewill Baptist church In
chart B!nIal under direction
of the Farley Mortuary will be
In the Fairlawn cemetery
Hudnall was born Sept 5 1893 at
Santa Fe Kansas where he at-
tended schools and on March 12
1918 enlisted in the Kansas State
Guard and was in Company A of
the Itith Battalion He was honor-
able discharged Sept 9 1918 Most
ot his life he had worked in land-
scaping business' In 1910 he can
to Tulsa and to Cushing in 1911
where he spent most of the re-
mainer of his life He was a mem-
ber of the Freewill Baptist
Church On Sept 13 1911 he wgs
married to Mrs Dora Stallworth
at Sapulpa Oklahoma
Survivors are his wife Mrs
Dora Hudnall of the I'lmet three
daughters Mrs Howard Stallworth
and Mrs Earnest Strow of Cush-
ing and Mrs O G Kenney of
Hchart 11 grandchildren and other
relatives and friends
WEATHER
OKLAHOMA — Partly Cloudy
and a little warmer toniiiht and
Tuesday Widely scattered !how-
ers and thunderitorin over the
siale tonight and Tuesday Low
tonight Vs high Tuesday 82 to 92
Partly cloudy Ith widely scat-
tered thunderdtornis and sari Wednesday
CUSHING OKLAHOMA MONDAY JUNE 2r 195S
0400i44ostt
N
k
e g
ro Leaoers Ask
to Take Stand
President Is Asked to Order
Justice Department Intervene
In Little Rock School Case
Judge Harry Lem ley
refuses plea
rP
Judge Refuses
To Stay Order
On Integration
LITTLE ROCK Ark (UPI) —
their cause "had been advanced
Federal District Judge Harry J The others meeting wiIt the
Lem ley today rejected a requeE'
president were Martin Luther
by we NAACP to stay his order
King Jr who led the Montgom
suspending integration until 1961 ery Ala bus boycott and Lester
at Central High School B Granger executive secretary
The action of the plaintiffs to of the National Urban League
stay enforcement of the judgment The four leaders told the Presi-
in this action rendered by us on dent that he could "well set the
June 20 1918 pending appeal example toward restoring liar-
therefrom having been given due monY between white and Negro
consideration by the court is Southerners by calling a White
hereby denied" House conference on ways of coin
then explained: "As we un- plying with the Supreme Courts
derstand the law we have a dis- school integration ruling
cretion in this matter and we The Negroes also suggested that
feel that discretion should be the President request that con-
exercised in denying the motion gressmen "lay aside partisan-
primarily for the reason that from ship and enact stronger civil
a practical standpoint to grant rights legislation
this motion and st-iy the enforce- Extend Rights Commission
merit of our judgment would to a Other points in their program in-
large extent nullify our order in chided:
the cause since i' will in all prob- I —Justice Department action un-
ability take months to carry the I der existing laws "in the wave of
case through the Court of Appeals bombing of churches synagogues
and the Unitcd States Supreme home a n d community centers:
Court also in murderous brutality direct-
The Itidge issued his decision I ed against Negro citizens in Davv
See JUDGE—Page 2 See NEGRO—Page 4
Aboard Trujillo's Yacht
Bomb Hunt Fails
To Stop Dancers
LOS NGELES Gen
Rafael Trujillo Jr's Per sonall
''man of war the luxury yacht
Angela° floated peacefully at
docktide today and a search for
a bonb didn't stip the social life
aboard
Police demolition e Pelts fire-
men and Coast Guardsmitn scour-
ed the 350-foot four tnaster Sun-
day following a "sea story" hatch-
ed alorg the waterfront that a
bGmb had been planted In or near
the ship
A 12-plece band made tip of
crewmmibets played NI as of-
fice s searched the ship and In-
spected pilings of the ncaltY
whatf for the bomb
Guests inducting actress Zsa
Zia Gabor and her former hus-
band George SithderS danced to
nr1041
By LEE NICHOLS
United Press Internationst
Oklahona RiatorlAl Zo-lqty
Oxlohoma fdltyo Okla
Latin Rhythms or sunned them-
selves in the poop deck as the
search went on
Four hours later the search-
ers had decided there was no "in-
fernal machine" aboard the lux-
ury craft brought here to take 29-
year old Trujillo home l the Do-
minican Republic and were look
ing for the longshoremen who re-
perted the "plot"
Police Sgt CA Baldridge of
the Los Angeles police harbor di-
vision said a man who may
have been four ti hrets to the wind
came to the police station report-
ed tlie "bomb" in the afernoon
"He told me some drinking bud-
dies told him that a small bomb
had been placed near the ves-
sel not to kill anybody but tit
scare hell out of them" the serg-
eant qtwted the informant
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Four Negro leaders urged
President Eisenhower today to pledge in a special pro-
nouncement that he will "vigorously" uphold school inte-
gration "with the total resources at his command"
The Negroes also urged
the President at a White
i
- I
House meeting to direct the
- ' '77'71 - Justice Department to inter-
' ' '''''' vene in an appeal from a
s 0044 ' : federal judge's suspension of
er
school integration in Little
-' I Reck Ark
suistaw-ascet: tooPli:t: Eisenhower made no commit
'c --- -4 1 ments or promises on these mat-
t :4 I ters or others included in a pro-
' ' it 1
yr gram of preposed presidential ac-
44 -414f: tion which the Negroes submitted
'' ' aok 4
in a 45-minute conference
''' " 4 Atty Gen William P Rogers
said consideration was being giv-
' -N7xh4le''''-'-''12-':'r: en to federal intervention in an
i
!?:s appeal from US District Judge
''-A-!''''7 Harry J Lemleys decision last
Saturday to call off integration of
' Negro and white stodents at Little
Rock schools for 212 years
Believe Cause Advanced
1'
r'11A The four Negroes told newsmen
-''' ' ta s after the meeting that the Pres-
Judge Harry Lemley ident received their suggestions
refuses plea "very sympa'-hetically but did
r not go beyond that
Roy Wilkins' executive - seem-
Judge Refuses tary of the National Association
for the Advancement of Col-
ored Bennie said that neither the
To Stay Order President nor Rogers commented
on the Lithe Rock decision
s
Although I ley got no commit-
On Integration vice president of the Pull-
ment Nap L Randolph AFL-
CIO
man Porters Union said be felt
LITTLE ROCK Ark tUPD — their cause "had been advanced
1'edoral District Judge Harry J The others meeting with the
entley today rejected a requeEt
president were Martin Luther
iy we NAACP to stay his order
King Jr who led the Montgom-
uspending integration until 1961
cry Ala bus boycott and Lester
t Central Hign School B Granger executive secretary
'The action of the plaintiffs to of the National Urban League
Lay enforcement of the judgment The four leaders told the Presi-
t this action rendered by us on dent that he could "well set the
June 20 1918 pending appeal example toward restoring liar-
ierefrom having been given due monY between white and Negro
onsideration by the court is Southerners by calling a White
ereby denied" House conference on ways of coin-
He then explained: "As we un- Plying with the Supreme Courts
erstand the law we have a dis- school integration ruling
retion in this matter and we The Negroes also suggested that
!el that discretion should be the President request that con-
xercised in denying the motion gressmen "lay aside partisan-
rimarily for the reason that from ship and enact stronger civil
practical standpoint to grant rights legislation
its motion and st-iy the enforce- Extend Rights Cninmission
lent of our judgment would to a Other points in their program in-
irge extent nullify our order in chided:
UPI and NEA Service
OF0
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
4 PM Day Before
Ad Appears
10 A M Saturday
for Sunday Paper
NUMBER 180
4
IS
4411
la 11 N
V !!
rn a
Amkeq1
11"
will scenes such as this one be repeated in Little Rock? This
photo taken in 1951 shows crowds gathered hi front of Central High
school as National Guardsmen bar Negroes from classes Later
these troops were federalized and joined by 191st Itirborne to clear
the way for Negro students to attend school
Missile Plant Hit
By Wildcat Strike
By JIM KLOCKENKEMPER
UT! Automotive Editor)
DETROIT (UPI)—A wildcat Alice by United Auto
Workers forced a partial work-stoppage at the Army's
Redstone-Jupiter missile plant today
Union members who number
less than 500 of the 9500 employes K
endrick Area
at the plant threw up picket lines
at the beginning of the day shift
Sheriff's deputies arrtved an hour
later to maintain order Vn Al Pytnntinfl
The union pickets did not try to
prevent nonunion personnel from
entering the plant operated by
Chrysler but there was consider-
able confusion as pickets required
all persons to show their Identifi-
cation cards
At mid-morning Lt Col N S
Greenberg Army offficer in
rharge of the plant estimated
that three-quartees of the day-
shift workers had entered the
plant and would be able to work
on the missile-building
But a United Press Internation-
al spotcheck of the parking lots
around the plant showed they
were less than half-full
Many 11011-tiniOn workers were in
taverns restaurants And filling
stations nearby and sotne of them
expressed the opinion that less
than 50 per cent of the normal
week force Was inside the plant
Milan Matich president of the
UAW Local 1245 chargel that
Chrysler which opt rates the mis-
sile plant for the Army was "try-
ing to disrupt our whole union"
Be claimed union members were
See MIsSILE—rage I
Cityane Kin Is
Dead in Tulsa
Rites will be held Tuesday at V)
a in in the Nmde chapel in Tulsa
for Mr Evelyn E Ashwell dau-
ghter of Mrs Al lie Rawls and
sister of Mrs George Kitchen b'gh
of Cushing Mrs Ashwell 42 col-
lapsed and died suddenly Sunday
aPrarently of a heart seizure
She was the Wi IP of Marvin F
Ashwell secretary-treasurer of
the L B jackson DriI1in Co
Tulsa Other survivors include two
sons Marvin Jr and Ken and a
daughter Christie Lynn
A native of Carthage Mo She
lived in Oknudgee before movinr:
to Ta a Following Tuesday's
the body wilt be taken to Ok-
inuNce fcr burial
Kendrick Area
Pool Extended
The Mini Oil Co has extended
the Southeast Kendrick pay area
In Lincoln county and the Nation-
al Associated Petroleum Co has
an indicated discovery in Creek
county to highlight oil reports In
the Cushing district
National Associated's No 1
Claude Harrington in SE NE NE
of 14-1111-7e a wildcat a mile east
of ttie Stroud field recovered 61
feet of gas-cut mud on a two-
hour drilistem test at 2645-731
fret with shutin pressure at 500
powids 'ale operator is now drill-
ing ahead below 3 495 feet
The Southeast Kendrick area of
Lincoln was extended to the east
by Minis No 1 Seaborn in NE
NW SW of 20-15n-5e making 8-
n0000 cubic feet of gas a day on
initial test after frac-treating per-
forations at 342499 feet Testin
of the new IA ell Is conintiing
Also in Lincoln the Arthur Plos-
ion No 1 Peterson east of the
South Sparks area in NE SE NW
of 20-I3n-5e was plugged after
drilling to 4270 feet and getting
the Prue at 3715 feet
In the Ntannford district of
CI eel( the Bradv 13rady No
3 Barton completed for 19 bar-
rels of oil and 75 barrels of wat-
er a day from the Bartlesville at
24iil-ne fret It is in NW NW NW
of 32-19n-9e
Harvey Crouch
Receives $200
OU Scholarship
Harvey Crouch was one of six-
teen Iligh School graduates award-
ed Abiniot Dovelcpment fund
scholarships of $200 en eh for thil
UmversitY of Ok1ith3ina schocl
year bTinning in September ms
Crouch Is the srn of Mrs E1i71-
1)Pth Crouch 411 East Maple Mrs
Crouch is librarian at the local
School
-
k4-4
I I
i
e
s
'
'
' ' -
'
I
Oklahona RiatorlAl '- 4 t
aistoriral BuiLlInz l'-' -
Oklahoma City Oki
- a sko --4-4
' ' '''-' 'i
— - L ' 41164
t ADVERTISING
: 17 YAW '!
frA or
0 OC1''
I
I
Cl Imowsw
D
GUSHING DAILY 1 DEADLINES
-
ON PARADE '
p 1
I
4 P M Day Before
re'se
I
iee41"--"""'-----40se - --'''' '4
‘ '
Ad Appears
‘ --"-- BY
s !!'- --see? -:!''- )166 nothing 99eef4 Pike new4papeito 10 A M Saturday
i for Sunday Paper
4
i ST GAZING in this astronorni-
Entered at owtbing lekeaboma Paste:trim air wane elan mall ander act ot March I pen
e AR
t - cal age has gained ' popularity t
VOLUME XXXVI sIX PAGES PRICE 5 CENTS CUSHING OKLAHOMA MONDAY JUNF 2r 195S UPI and NEA Service NUMBER 180
1 ? with giant steps Since sputnik
—
I ' s this country of ours is more will-
Il ' ! ing to spend money to go to the
- so
t o
1 moon oon than to spend money to man Is Iniured In Soviets Meet t
- -r
L r ' ''' '' k
: keep people employed We need an
! Aesop to tell us fables
et Gazing at the Milkmaid's path '
'en misty with myrids of stars we Drumright Crash Mew Defiance arKh
esel The little milkmaid was on the '
s way to m wh the
arket and as she watt
A 6e-year-old Maramec man He said the accident occurred In2Nations
: money I get for the milk I shall
Sd
"-- walking she dreamed it
-
suffered head injuries and when Glen Birchett 48 Okla-
G
bruises early today in a ear-
: buy a dress I shall buy a beauti- home City slowed his car due
truck crash on Drumright's
e ful green dress I shall wear it to to traffic ahead and was struck Soviet Russia's revival of !11 k
west city limits Stalinism brought new de- t 0
S the Fair Everyone will want to from behind by a pickup truck
Jasper Carl Hover a pass- fiance today from Yugosia- ' I a k (a tan
t dance with me Then if I don't driven by Millard N Gripe
' '' like somebody who asks I will enger in ' a pickup truck was 51 also of Maramec via and Poland
taken o a clinic for '
just toss my head with disdain tk t medical c World wide demonstra-
like this - and again and again- treatment His injuries were Both vehicles were damaged Lions continued against the t
and that s right where her dream neW hard line demonstrated
not believed serious The patrol said damages to the resident Is Asked to Order 4
' P
Trooper Carl Pugh said two Oklahoma City man's automo- e -Ie' ''Ai':' 4' 4': 't"t ' ::': :': ' ' 4
— ended Down came her castles in oy the execution of Honlar- i - " '"' ' '''' ' ' '41 m
'ill ' : !
other men sufered minor bru- bile wculd eun la excess of ian "freedom premier" Imre j
ustice Department I ntervene
' the air down came the milk and ises the 9:20 am mishap $300 ei s ' t:k -g011114 IOWA
:Womelp :: :i
in
' "5- :
i
- the pall Nagy and there were steady 4" - '' i - - ::- et
Maybe Aesop only wanted to tell indications the East-West I -----: :'--t' : ' ft " ' e !-1----- ''''rl
a tale to illustrate why the milk- Courageous Cityan Is Dead split was deepening a
In Little Rock School Case -
4 :!!:-!:-- 2
maid's path in the sky is white ' - 'etre''' i 'e tees e ss:s eten'-'e e e e es
' with milk But it points a moral Hungarian refugees In New ea '' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' s" ' s t '' in: ee O'-: te - ' ''' So's '
te ea sekees e e g"- a - -se e e- se esns i s
too If either the U S or Russia York demonserateci before head- ! By LEE NICHOLS S ts SI !see iesee e 4 - S ' '''S '-'s ' -'-' se geve
UN eset ' e ''
' become too enamored with their Ball Pops From Heart quarters of the Soviet N dude- United Press Internationel 'es 0 e see s 'e
- a ' "I ger '' - : 'Settee t!:
er e '''
ese t e i ' s s'ese nst:a "-"' "O I t s t ' s--
outer space and missile projects gation Sunday Seven policemen 4' 4 ' t f r 'A 1 ' 4'i ''''''t' I ''''' ''' - t ! t
if they dream too much and toss and several demonstrators were i l' '' :
-44 444 IAi'
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Four Negro leaders urged 1 s -: : : !'--::: 7k
z
thetr heads in disdain great will injured when violence flared President Eisenhower today to pledge in a special pro- 4 i '
' r7 ' '7': r '''':" " 7 ' i °‘!!!' el4 !' I 2 :
be the crash To t(ill Young Father Student protests were reported nouncement that he will "vigorously" uphold school inte- trene "'Ig ' '' " tr !:leifsi WI 4 '''' 011
gration "with the total resources at his command" -11i 4 4 1 q: t:
DR HENRY BROWNE a loyal in Manchester England and in
The Nl urged a is — I 'eels --ied s este
Buenos Aires Opposition political ' :!e e-
- ' ' ' ' ' -
-i'i---1( ' i10
Tulsan and long-time resi egroes a so
dent Five years ago after surviving a rare 1-chance-in-a- parties in India denounced the !
the President at a White
House
meeting to direct the 1-f- : "-n-r:'?-t f- s ' 't l'11e-
a greacom 100 operation: t- 1
of that city passed t -
' W Riley a oun Cuhin father told a executions as murder Atendance 1
J yg sg e es - - 'e 'esee-esseese -" "ne' ''' 1'"' e ' t I 1 1: re A a te t e e s sees k s
pliment on Cushing Here over the '-wN
1 ' 4')i:0:' 4 ' i - i ''' t V 4 A 4-
' reporter only one thing could happen if a plastic ball dropped at the Hungarian pavilien '::: ": ' 714essie s- Justice Department to inter I 1
- -'?''' i
r zi r 40 : -
o weekend as a houseguest in the of the Brussels Worlds Fair Coin ::s : 4 tn ' ''''' - 't ' - ' 4 fc:'s
plugging a hole in his heart came loose "I'd just drop vene in an appeal from a
' home of Dr and Mrs Bassett he Alb 1-' rill 1
said dead" he said flashing a courageous smile munist labor leader Arthur Horn- ess
es e ee federal judge's suspension of
1 t - - -4 ')
se school in
e
was shocked 1- e see tegration in Little
"I have visited in towrs of this And Sunday at the home of a brother-in-law in Okla-
er said in London he
and horrified at Nagy's death o
' sokokelhan a tenie: Reck Ark
size and larger in all sections of hotna City those words uttered by Riley to a Daily Citizen ! - - s1 1
4liKkowa---aswitte- toJ: '
Oklahoma 1 consider Cushing one newsman in February of 1953 came true Authoritative reports reaching Arkt- eres' r-e 'teaser:Fee Eisenhower made no commit-
' I "-- eee i - sesni:1-al!'''' ':! TA! Pr -- -!! --1 -:- - "4 i--i- -
of the most progressive and alert He died suddenly at 10:15 a tn London said Polish Communist - 4 t e 1 mente or promises on these mat I 7 !
: ' "''- f
ters or others included in a pro-
Oklahoma communities It is the Funeral services for the 34-year- leader Wiadyslaw Gomulka has ''''' f 1- 1 i I
ill k t i § i sent a letter to Soviet Premier e e se e es- gram of preposed presidential sc seeress ' e - I es e
( D es 4117 Of so: -6 - :el" ote- eti -?
kind I would like to live in if I old father of three small sons w : et
wasn't living in Tulsa It has the be conducted here Tuesday at 2 p Nowaa Chita Nikita Khrushchev "disassociat- - a' 11'4'1i'- 14-0-
: tion which the Negroes submitted e Nee ees east ere eel:teen L 4 -
t
A 7-i:::4rett : - - 111-- 4
- '' : 000L e
in a 45-minute conference
advantages of a small community no in the First Baptist church The ing” himself and the Polish Corn- ':e !4: -eet- '''s ir - f
so
)
Atty Gen William P Rogers ' O o" 'see V illit' ' ' 4
and the spirit of a larger one It Rev Rebert R
Chambers pastor ae a' now' tunist Party from the Nagy e x-
Is stable without being staid You will be in charge and burial un- Responding I o' 111:-- f7'7-
ecution : n'11'64'teeesei'eile::Oe said consideration was being giv-
' have every right to be proud of der directien of the enavis Funeral The reports said Gomulka was s en to federal intervention in an - e - - ''' e" ' '
‘ e-Yes e 4ee s es
your city" Home will be in Fairlawn ceme- e ex expected to carry out a "blood-
- '''"eitaeti- appeal from U l es ea
S District Judge - ' o se Fi eseesees
' ' e ISO'S Ate nese ' ' s s nee ere'
Words of praise always listen terse edic s Care less purge" of the Polish party Harry J Lemleys decision last e 1 - Oør
' 'Itt iV4 '' e
:
' 'StS' se- ' '4 '': ' l'-': '' ' ' -
well but didn't the visiting Doctor Other survivors include his wife M to remove the hard core Stalin Saturday to call off integration of
- '
say it neatly? Betty and several brothers and sis ists
' Negro and white seidents at Little
NOWATA (UPI)-Tiny d fi
-Tiny blind '
- Dr and Mrs Forester chimed ters- There were other reports that Rock schools for 212 years Will scenes hitch as this one be repeated in Little Rock? This
Laura J Ie
- in quickly on the same theme Refused to Su Gomulka himself might be ousted ' '
'44 Believe Cause Advanced photo taken in 1957 shows crowds fathered hi front of Central High
rrender p ounds in j ane ust three rons gain days in ve a a
Oklahoma City is their town and Riley with a damaged heart Nowata hospital following her res- but these appraently were dise
prove g --e e e ereest: The four Negroes told newsmen echool s National Guardsmen bar Negroes from classes Later
A 44 arter the meeting that the Pres-
they were also guests in the Bas- from birth lived his entire life on cue from a filthy shed-like sealed d during the weekend these troops were federalized and joined by 19Ist lkirborne to clear
sett home Their comment: borrowed time so to speak but he m at the home of her n etner 'Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia was Judge Harry Lemley ident received their suggeseions the way for Neer() students to attend school
"Cushing is one of the friendliest lived it without surrendering to his and foster father last n te !reported drafting a note to Hun- refuses plea "very sympaehetically but did - --
se nicest towns we have ever visited handicap and in the -faee of a her dt ld d ' -' ' gary- protesting the executions 4- ' not go beyond that
- ' s ' ' - r
The atmosphere Is' really differ- short span of years and illne oc or dis ose to a
c
ss !'' svhich Yugoslav spokesmen have Roy Wilkins executive seere-
ent It smust beta geand place to moved determinedly along the road Replying to a statement by the denounced as a double cross Yu- Judge Refuses tary of the National Association
live" of achievement He won a de- mother's lawyer that the mad- goslevia had granted Nagy asy- for the Advancement of Col- issi e an Hit'
Now-that ought to Pwt us on gree from Oklahoma State Univer ated 14-pound fouryear-old girl lum in tes embassy in Budapest 1- c Od ored reople said that neither tele I
our good behavior ought it not? sity (then Oklahoma AtMi in had been "taken to specialists in The official Yugoslav press de- ild
1 0 13 1 President nor Rogers commented
1
4 ay r er
a - 1947 Nowata Coffeyville Kan and (lately reminded the Ccmmunists e L on
and qualified for a poeition on the Rock decision
y Wcat Strike
IRS BENJAMIN DAVIS is off with the U S Department of Agri- Oklahoma City" Dr Lynn Barnes they failed in 1948 when they read ea a
Un integrat ment Nile) L Randolph AFL-
ion Although toey got no commit-
to Europe again! And the fact culture Until recently he also held said today "'they must have Tito out of the Cominform called
that this is her fourth trip is not down a teaching position in the ried everything but food" the latest charges against Tito re- CIO vice president of the Pull- By JIM KLOCKENKEMPISR
Sunday School of the First Bap- Meanwhile the possible filing of visionism an attempt to create LITTLE ROCK Ark (UPI) man Porters Union said he felt (
' the most interesting part Cel Automotive Editor)
' tist church here dissension and said Nagy's execu- - their came "had been advanced
The newsworthy angle le not criminal charges against the Federal District Judge Harry J
merely that this wide-awake and At the time of his death Riley to Lernley today rejected a requeet The others meeting with the
mother Mrs Raymond Murphy tion was a "terrible warning DETROIT ( UPII—A wildcat stike by United Auto
was working with the O S U these who resist the present reser- by tme NAACP to stay his order president w
' - travel-minded lady likes journey- and the stepfather was delayed to- ere Martin Luther workers forced a partial work-stoppage at the Army"
log about Europe but it is that agriculture branch as a specialist day because of the illness of rection of Stalinist policy" suspending integration until 1961 King Jr who led the Montgom-
Redstone -Jupiter missile plant today
agriculture department cry Ala bus boycott and Lester
she is quite determined about hay- from the County Attorney Lloyd Colter at Central High School Union members who number
ing her grand-dangeters see it spending his time on a research Attorney Ailing Diplomatic reports in Paris and B Granger executive secretary
'The action of the plaintiffs to less than 500 of the 9500 employes b I
survey project London ble r of Satlin- of the National Urban League t
This year C-Ann Anderson ac- Colter was taken to the same amd the
The four leaders told Kendrick Area
companies her on a junket which A plastic ball which plugged a hospital where Laura Jane is be-
ism on a power seise ruggle within stay enforcement of the judgment the prose at the plant threw up picket lines
hole in his heart and prolonged his at the begineing of the day shift
s will include Holland the Brussels log treated suffering from "Iaryn- the Kremlin' in this action rendered by us on dent that he could "well set the
appeal example toward restoring ear- Sheriff's deputies arrtved an hour eo e
life more than five years appar- June 20 ' 1918 pending
World's Fair Czechoslovakia and gitis and a sore throat" Dr later to maintain order
worked itself out of the therefrom haying been given due monY between white and Negro Fool Extended
various other countries with a ft ent13' Barnes who also is treating the
consideration by the court
damaged wall between the ventrie- C J Hudnall is Southerners by calling a White The union pickets did not try to
nal week looking at London Mrs h prosecutor said
" es about 10 dys ago an autopsy y "
Davis and grand daughter will then ld b a hereby denied House conference on ways of coin-
prevent nor union personnel from The Illini Oil Co has extended Colter charged last Friday that
iecose Riley never new e "
He then explained: As we tin- Plying svith the Supreme Courts entering t
go to Reading England for a visit dl d Ril k the tile Nowata couple kept the girl rik he plant operated by the Southeist Kendrick pay area
t
under direction with Mrs Dorothy Isted and her plastic plu e o a "penned up like a dog" in the es u en derstand the law we have a dis- school integration ruling u
g' about the size Clster but there was consider- in Lincoln county and the Nation-
Im Sddly
ping ball had fallen a cretion in this matter and we The Negroes also suggested that
family Mrs Isted is the mother of g p way squalid room with only a tattered able confusion as pickets required al Associated Petroleum Co has
from the spot it was placed by feel that discretion should be the President request that emi-
D J Isted Cushing resident and T-shirt to wear A deputy said she Chester James Hudnall 64-year- all persons to show their identifi- an Indicated discovery in Creek
two prominent surgeons in an ex- exercised in denying the motion gressmen "lay aside partisan-
son-in-law of Mrs Davis and the room were "unbelievably old city resident of 206 S Central cation cards county to highlight oil reports in
5 perimental operation in O r filthy " was found dead Sunday about 830 puma' ily ctobe of
Last summer Mrs Davis was for the reason that from ship and enact stronger civil the Cushing district
accompanied to Eorope by grand-
192:
a practical standpoint to grant rights legtslation At mid-morning Lt Col N S
daughter Jill 'stele Still coming o le s Discovered Outside Murphy-who is em- P no at his home following a heart
li this motion and sery the enforce- Extend Rights Commission Greenberg Army offficer in National Associated's No
up for Europe are Jae Isted end our judgment would r po 1
It was a rare and reky opera- ployed by a Coffeyville dog ken- attack
m
ere of dt ld to a Other r program in their in- charge of the plant estimated Claude Harrington in SE NE N
Delores Sue Anderson E
tion that liad placed it there after nel-kept a healthpack the according t of hound dogs m
Funeral servivces will be Wed- large extent nullify our order in eluded: that three-quarters of the day- of 14-11n-7e a 'elldeat a mile east
" in good o i
See BALL-Page 4 nesdaY at 10 a in in the Memoriel the cause sine' ie will in all pi oh -Justice Department action on - shift workers had entered the I of die Stroud field recovered 61
et r tn Fi
QUMMER 1958 is offering us officers Two of Mrs Murphy's -
MertuarY obility take months to carry the !der existing laws "in the wave of plant and would be able to wurk feet of gas-cut mod On a two-
te
o 1 hour drilistem test at 2645-731
pleasant reprieves from the rig- rain Cutters well ther -cared for children Colter vowe apparently nape o e a r ley said el the Freewill with Rev Homer young pastor ease through the Court of Appeals bombing of churches synagogues on the missile-budding Baptist church in
ors of Winter and sonic of the prob- Il Action Started chart- Berta' and the United States Supreme I home a n d community centers: But a United Press Internation- feet with shutin Pressure at 500
lems which beset us dur Rga
ing the Little Laura's father Jack of the Fairley Mortuary will be Court ' also in murderous brutality direct- al spotcheck of the parking lots politick 'Die operator is now drill-
other eight or nine month s of the r The aidge issued hie deCiSiOn ed against Negro citizens in Da vv- areoruend less than half-full they tog ahe fe ad below 3 495 et
year Kemain died See NOWAIA-l'age 4 in the Fairlawn cemetery
Se JI'DGE- 2 See NEGR u
O-l'age 4 The Southeast Kendrick area of
Rain has been plentiful the sun liteinall was bor e n Sept 5 1893 at Page Many non-union wor ke rs 'sere in Lincoln was extended to the east
shines warm but not too warm By United Press International 40 Said Dead In Santa Fe Kansas where he at-Aboard "Is s ae taverns restaurants and fmg ill by Illinis No I Seaborn in NE
harvest in spite of storms is ab- T Crash tended schools and on March 12 Trujillo s Yacht stations nearby and some of them i NW SW of 20-15n-5e making 8-
ove the averdge
Rain and heavy morning dew expressed the opinion that less ! n00000 cubic feet of gas a day on
M exico rain 1918 enlisted in the Kansas State
As far as the eye can reach
combined again today to keep than 50 per cent of the normal initial test after frac-treating per-
m harvest Oklahoa's wheat hart idled ORIZABA Mex (UPI)-A see-
Guard and was in Company A of
the hills are green with grass the Itith Battalion He was honor- werk force was inside the plant !orations at 312199 feet Testine
The State Board of Agriculture en-car paeeenger train r o a r e d
the trees are heavy with foliage down a steep mountainside Sun- able discharged Sept 9 1918 Most Bomb Hunt Fails Milan Matter' president of the of the new bell Is coninitinge
said the wheat market towns of of his and every prospect pleases Shatettek Elk City CII s life he had wOrked in land-- UAW Local al 1245 ch'Irge l that Also in Lincoln the Arthur Fins-
day
El Reno II with no one at the controls
The financial and economic site- feaping bueinese In 1910 he came
site plant for the Army was
Chrysler which opt rates the mis-
ton and Watonga received more ion No I Patterson east of the
leaped the rails arid tore through -
to Tulsa and to Cushing in 1911
ation is not solved But days such a valley railway station like a
rains this morning The morning where he spent most of the re- ing to disrupt our whole union" I of 20-I3n-5e was plugged after
as have been recently erelos'ed great elect juggernaut try I South Spat its area in NE SE NW
He claimed union members ANT eseeng
wheat prices were nonenal at mainer of his life He was a mem-
tempt one to follow the poet's At least 40 persons were report- her To Stop Dancers
$155 to $166 with Guymon and ot the Freewill Baptiet
fency-'gather Ye rowers while Hooker at elle low figure ed killed and 80 injured many of
Church On Sept 13 1941 he was the Prue at 3 715 feet
See elleSILE-Page 4 - ' -
to 4270 feet and getting
ye may' and make the most of Wheat bunters hoped to be able them married to Mrs Dora Stallworth LOS leIGELES rUPD----Lt Gen Latin Rhythms or sunned them-
villagers waiting on the sta- In the Mannford district of
1
the more pleasant days of the year to cut some of t h e i r moisture- tion platform who were crushed at Sapulpa Oklahoma Rafael Trujillo Jr's p e r s o n a II eaves in the poop deck as the Cityane Kin Is
Dead in Tulsa noc1( the Bradv te Brady No
by the screeching avalanche of 3 arton completed for 19 bar-
"" h
' New Chief Named heavy crop in the western part of man of war te luxur y yacht search went on
B
the state late today They faced twisted steel and ehattered glass Survivors ar Mrs Angelito
e his wife floated peacefully at Four hours later the search- rels of oil and 75 barrels of wet-
For Highway Patrol the taek of combining some 400Pett Dora Hudnall of the temp three is and th dockeide today and a search for ers had decided there was no "in-
Rite
uncut acres which have lain un- BULLETIN daughters Mrs Howard Stallworth
anti Mrs Earnest Strow of Cush- a bones didn't step the social life fermi' machine" alsoard the lex- !
' IA'111 he held Tuesd rom the Bartlesville at
ey at in 2 i n NW NW NIA'
4' 1 re t 'et It s I
a m In the Ninde chepel in Tulsa of 3219n9e
er a day f
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPD- Carl touched through the past days of aboard ury craft brought here to take 29-
log and Mrs O G Kenney o e
f for Moe Evelyn E Ashwell dee-
Tyler Oklahoma City today be rain wind and dewey mornings year old Trujillo home te the Do-
:ht f el All R' le n I
g le PA S Et (
' came the new chief of the High- The statewide harvest was WASHINGTON (U(UPI) Hebert 11 grandchildren and other Police demolition eeperts fir e-
sieer of Mrs George Kitchen bsth Harvey
way Patrol succeeding Jack Rol- about 70-73 Per cent completed e upreme our
Crouch
relatives and friends men and Coas ing for the longshoremen t Glittonmen scour- minican Republic and were look t
1 —Th S Ct t
lins 1A'ho resigned effective June and southwestern counties marked day granted a hearing t''o ed the 350foot tow master sun men who re-
of Cushin Mr Ashwell 4' ol
perted the "plot" g s c-
Receives $200
lapsed and died suddenly Sundae
-0 (lay following a "sea story" hatch-
Police Sgt CA Baidridge of aPrarently of a heart s
the virtual end of their harvest Edward Leon Pete Wit- eizure
I WEATHER ed alorg the waterfront that a
the Los Angeles police harbor di-
Tyiers appointment was an- It was in the high-acreage eX- hams facing the electric
e bamb had been planted in or near She was the wife of Marvin en ' 01I Scholarship
nouneed thls morning by Safety treme west and Panhandle where chair for kidnaping Tom- vision said a man a Ito may Ashwell secretary-tressurer of Harvey Crouch was (me of eix-
Commissioner Jim Lookabaugh the harvest was stalled in its the Si If) OKLAHOMA - Partly Cloudy "-
- my Robert Cooke a lheol-
who said Tler is
"y well gunned early stages have been four sheets to the wind
and a little warmer tonieht and A 12eiece hand made up of came to the police station report - i Tulsa Other sur visors include tvo) ed Alumni Dev elcpment fund
o ical student in Tulsa
g Tuesday Widely scattered !how- erewmonthets played en as of- ed ilie "bomb" in the afernoon I tons
daughter Christie Lynn
the L B eackmen Drilling Co teen 11101 SChool graduates award-
by both training and experience One attempt to harvest at se s
for the position of chief Blackwell Sunday was sopped
Okla June 17 1956
eunderstorme over the beer searched te s
s hhip and in- -He told me some drinking burl- :
A native of Carthage Moe UmversitY of Oisitthema !whorl
Marvin Jr end Ken and a seholarehips of Saie each for the
The court will hear at state tonight and Tuesday Low epected pilings of the nearby dies told him that a small bomb
Tyler 49 had been the patrols when the moisture content was
'
field cap'oin for western oklatio-i found to be too high In some guments in the case some tonight sos high Tuesday 82 to 92 what!' for the bomb had been placed near the ves- i lived in Oknutigee before moving Crouch is the Ell of Mrs Fleet-
she ' year beginning in September MS
ke -
nia since Feb 22 O he new np- I areas the dew e as a more el- time next term And will P e !tr
artly cloudy e ith id' ete Gueets including aett cc' se
esa I t not to kill anybody hut t1 1 to Tul a Following Tuesday's r It beth Ctnu F
ch 411 eet Ms ide Mrs
potntment womoted hin't from feetive damper on combining than follow with a written opin- lered thunderstornis and aerie I nsa Gebor and her tenter bus- I scare hell out of them" the eerg-j es thp body will be Wen to Ok- !Crouch is librarian at the local
t captain to major the rains ion Wednesday I band Oeerge Sanders danced to cant (Wed the informant inulgue ler burial i 'Leh School
:
es
1 I
i
eeee seeeseseaeseeessessaeseesesseseaseeee-sesee-eseeepeaseeseseeeeeness----a----seese---e-s---e-assee- --esseeesneeeeee ere' --s aesseess ee--ne----eeseeeseeasteeeseeeseeaaesaa-esteeesseteoseeeeeeasteasseeseeeeneeeseoaseeeeaesesseseesee-seeneesese -- see------- 'see —
1
1
I
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allen, Robert B., Jr. The Cushing Daily Citizen (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 36, No. 180, Ed. 1 Monday, June 23, 1958, newspaper, June 23, 1958; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2175236/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.