The Vinita Leader (Vinita, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 11, 1958 Page: 1 of 4
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73RD YPAR-NO 36
Published
Every
Thursday
Cloudburst Hits
Southeast Area
By United l'ress International
Thunderstorms cavorted across Oklahoma again
and one big cloud dumtPed 630 inches of rain in a
dance over the Kiamichi mountains
Nloe than an inch of rain wa:
reported trom such scattered points
at KinglilT in the northwest and
Plyor in the northettit Ardniore
reported n 1 but Tishomingo
got 70 inch Miami in extreme
northeist reported 93 and Guy-
Mon's rep irt Oil the panhandle
In asurrd 28 Oklahoma City re-
clvcd 130 inch( s ttt the Municipal
airport but Tinker air force base
12 Miles eaM recorded zero
The 6 30 inches wits measured at
l'helit nail Tower in the southeast
Ileavener in the same area got
243 itichs iid l‘lusliogee 42 inch
For( citAt rs said cooler weather
would prevail along vklth more scat-
tered thundershowers until Satur-
day A cold front lay along Red
river today cau:iing fog and drizzle
along i wide belt north of it The
clouds will converge into thunder-
heads in the late afternoon weather-
Men said
nigh temperatures Wednesday in-
cluded 93 at Altus and Gage and 92
at 1-1Aart while Enid enjoyed a
relatively cool 8I-degree maximum
TEMPERATURES PLUNGE
NEAR R FEZING IN NORTII
By United Pre6s Intvrnational
I I BIM and there about the United
States ariou organizations arel
conducting l'allipligns to see that
all families have their polio :Amts
For the nayt part people have
responded to the advice of medical
authorities and have followed their
urgiigls In Craig county it is re-
ported that the response has been
good h is the only way polio can
be wiped rout
During the first 28 weeks of 1958
there were 791 cases of polio re-
ported in the whole United States
In pre-Salk years (1950-54i the av-
erage for the first 28 weeks was
5379 cam's This year's figure shows
a drop (of some 85 per cent
Effective as it is the Salk vacrine
cannot entir-ly account for this
drop Only about 60 per cent of the
population most susceptible to polio
Ions had 'vaccine
Scientiqs have two theories about
this decrea-e Some think the Salk
vaccine may have created "herd
immunity" Herd immunity is a con-
dition that occurs when a sufficient
proportion of a population is vac-
cinated against a given disease The
"'chain of infection" is then broken
and even the unvaccinated get pro-
tectioit Other scientists say that Salk vac-
cine does not create herd immunity
since a vaccinated person may carry
polio virus and infect unvaccinated
pocple They attribute the polio
drop of the last three years partly
to Salk vaccine partly to iuck They
point out that in certain periods of
the past polio went through cycles
of low rate of attack
Because there is no scientific evi-
dence that Salk vaccine does create
herd inummity The National Foun-
dation v'hich spearheads the polio
fight arns that we cannot trust
to luck What we can trust is the
Salk Var Cine The safest course
then for you and your family is to
get vaccinated now
Vintta Faculty To Meet
Monday Afternoon
A general faculty meeting for all
Vinita public school teadiers will
be held at 3:15 p m Monday in
the highschool building Supt Ver-
non Barnes said today
Thrt school buses will start their
rounds at 3:15 p m when school
is dismissed
Barnes said that grade school
pupils Will be dismissed at 3 p tn
COMING EVENTS
Scpt 10-13 — Craig county 4-H
FFA and Farm Womens fair south
edge of Vinita on ITS 66
Sept 12—Teen Town opens for
season
Sept 17—Craig county demo(rats4
meeting Hotel Vinita 7:30 p m
Sept 23—M P Clem dairy dis-
persal sale two miles north of Vi-
nita SH 2 two miles east one
north east
-'-'‘'' -'
---
I
today
stomp
A blast of cold Canadian air
overvread trarI of the nort hem
half of the nation today plunging
temperatures to near the freezing
Mercury Stops
At 83 Degrees
A comfortable 83 degrees was
recorded as the high tempera-
ture in Vmita Wednesday after-
noon Local Obrver R E Moss
said today
Wednesday's maximum was 6
degrees cooler than Tuesday's
and 11 degrees cooler than
Monday's
The low early today was 66
Skies remained clear to part-
ly c Ioi i dy here today following
Wednesday's rainfall
mark in the northern Great Lakes
Early morning readings ranged
from the tnid-30s over the northern
Great Lakes to the 40s in
cm Great Lakes and the
plans the Ohio Valley
England
the south50i in the
and New
More funds For
Colleges Asked
Cash Could Come From
Liquor Taxes Solon Says
TULSA Sept 11 (ITI) — The Ok-
lahoma legislative council's execu-
tie committee after a hot dis-
cussion today unanimously recom-
mended a supplemental emergency
appropriation of $211877751 for
state colleges and universities
Tive recommendations of the
council will be presented to the 1959
legislature
State Sen Basil Wilson Mangum
who headed a sub-committee which
considered the plight of the state
regents urged the full committee
to go along with the supplemental
appropriation in order to provide
adequate salaries for Oklahoma's
"forgotten people" — the college
teachers
The last assembly appropriated
$3 million in hoped-for surplus funds
to colleges but less than $1 million
of this materialized This threw the
18 state colleges in a cash short-
age Sen George Miskovsky Oklahoma
City said that the "money could
come from taxes on legalized liquor
I think we can safely appropriate
$20 million from that source for the
next biennium" Miskovsky said
Big Three To Air
Nuclear Test Ban
WASHINGTON Sept 11 (FIT —
The United States and Britain have
agreed to meet with Russia in
Geneva Oct 31 to begin negotia-
tions on a nuclear weapons test ban
the state department disclosed today
The state department said the
United States delivered a note in
Moscow Wednesday expressing U S
"gratification" that Russia has
agreed to the negotiations It said
Britain delivered a similar note
Actually the United States pro-
posed Aug 22 that the three-power
talks get started but suggested that
they be held in New York Russia
replied Aug 30 that it preferred
Geneva
The latest note said "The United
States agrees to this Irication"
The meetings would be a follow-
up to recent Geneva talks by West-
ern and Eastern scientists on meth-
ods to police a nuclear test ban if
the nuclear powers actually agree
on one
The scientists said such a ban
could be policed with a network of
about 180 monitoring stations
throughout the world
Three New Teachers
At Sacred Heart Here
Three new faculty members are
cn the staff at Sacred Heart acad-
emy here this semester
The new teachers are: Sister
Anna Rose music: Sister Rosa-
munda science and English: and
Patrick Keeffe coach and social
science
THE VOMIT
South Awaiting
Court Decision
On Integration
Arkansas Governor Is
Predicting Supreme Court
Will Decide Against Him
By United Press InternAtional
The south waited today for a
climactical supreme court decision
that could shape the course of fu-
ture resistance to school integra-
tion The court which began delibera-
tion tcxlay is expected to rule Fri-
day or Saturday on the Little Rock
srhool board's request for a 2'i-
year interruption of integration at
Central highschool
In Little Rock it Wit5 reported
that U S Atty Osro Cobb had pre-
parcd injunctions for use to put
down possible trouble if the delay
is not granted
Sees Adverse Decision
Gov Orval E Faubus said today
that he expects the supreme court
to hand down an adverse decision
in the Little Rock case "because
the NAACP has gotten just about
everything it asked for from the
supreme court"
He said he does not think he
will violate a federal injunction im-
posed upon him last fall if he
orders Central closed
"That is matter that should be
taken up with lawyers" he said and
after a pause "I don't think so"
Although the Little Rock case
held center stage there were other
developments
Hour Of Decision
Trouble broke out Wednesday at
an integrated school in Madison-
ville Ky—the (irst time in two
years ot continuing integration in
this border state that the process
has not gone smoothly
A crowd of white persons stop-
ped a car containing negro students
and police broke up the demon-
stration after a negro man flashed
a knife
Police arrested two white men
and two negroes including the
knife-wielder in connection with
the incident State troopers order-
ed to maintain an indefinite guard
on the school also arrested two
white men as trouble-makers
The hour of decision drew stead-
ily nearer in the taut situation at
two points in Virginia where the
state is prepared under law to
close schools compelled to deseg-
regate Enter New Suit
In Charlottesville Va two negroes
have until Monday to decide whe-
ther they will enter the city's only
white highschool under court order
thus invoking the state closing law
A request for a stay of a district
judge's integration order is to be
aired in court Saturday
Monday also is the key day in
Warren county Va where the
Front Royal highschool is sched-
uled to open on a segregated basis
if local authorities agree to comply
with a federal court order State
Atty Gen Albertis S Harrison was
to appear before the 4th circuit
court of appeals today with a plea
that the integration order be stay-
ed A new suit was entered by the
National Association for the Ad-
vancement of Colored People at
Van Buren Ark asking the U S
district court to override student
opposition at the highschool and
reinstate 13 negro pupils scared al
by demonstrations The negroes
still have not returned to selmol
although the student strike has
ended
TEEN-AGER PAYS FINE
A teenager paid a $20 fine in
city court today after pleading guil-
ty to charges of reckless driving im-
porper muffler and no driver's
license
Storm Over Adams Increases
WASHINGTON Sept II (111)---A
White House source conceded today
the storm over Sherman Adams
in the republican party was becom-
ing increasingly difficult to weather
When and whether Adams goes
through the formality of resigning
as the top assistant to President
Eisenhower this source said de-
pends on Adams determination of
his own political liability
An increasing number of republi-
cans running for office this fall want
Adams out of the White House be-
cause of his relations with Bernard
Goldfine the Boston textile magnate
facing federal prosecution for con-
tempt of congress
Alarmed over the democratic
sweep in the Maine elections this
week and attributing part of the
GOP defeat to the Adams-Goldfine
affair top republicans in New York
IF
VIN1TA OKLAHOMA THURSDAY SEPT 11 1958
FEATURE OF THE CRAIG COUNTY FAIR will be the appearance
of these dancers representing a Broken Arrow school of onisie The
dancers along with other entertainers from Tulsa will present the
program starting at 12:30 ps m Saturday at the temporary fair-
grounds south of Vnnta on US 66 Judging was held at the lair today
when the exhibit tents were opened to the public
Damage Suits
Bring $5000
Court Finds in Favor Of
John Dick Sr And Sons
Damages tot iditig $5000 have been
awarded to three members of the
John Dick family of White Oak as
a result of three civil suits filed
against Mrs Jacqueline Brown 25-
year-old Nlianii motorist involved in
a fatal highway accident 'war White
Oak last Christmas Day
John Dick jr eight-year-old son
of Mr and Mrs John Dick was
fatally injured in the wreck
He was a passenger in a 1954
model car driven by his brother
George Dick 17
Another brother Paul Dick 6 was
critically injured
Mrs Brown was the driver uf the
other car which allegedly was trav-
eling on the wrong side of the high-
way She sustained a hip fracture
and bruises
The court which heard the case
after the parties waived jury trials
found that the plaintiffs were en-
titled to judgments as follows:
John Dick sr adininistrator of
his sons estate was awarded $3500
and costs of the action
Paul Dick 6 awarded $500
George Dick 17 awarded $1000
Escaped Prisoner
Captured In Texas
FORT WORTH Tex Sept 11
dTh—One of the three convicts who
escaped from the Oklahoma State
penitentiary during the prison
rodeo last Friday was captured here
Wednesday
Charles Jackson Kaltenbach 34
was apprehended by FBI agents
when he tried to visit his children
here Agents ai d Kaltenbach was
driving a stoleu car at the time of
his arrest
Kaltenbach was serving a three-
year sentenced for forgery from
Grady county Okla
Two other convicts are Still at
large Tiny are Edward Lee Lyles
29 and Robert Gibson 21 both of
Oklahoma City
state joined the verbal aisault On
the man widely regarded as the sec-
ond most powerful figuie in the
executive branch of government
Adams was aware of the new de-
mands that he get out But he kept
his own counsel so closely that press
secretary James C Hagerty said he
knew of no contemplated changes
in Adams' status Hagerty said no
resignation in any form had been
submitted
Although there lwai a known re-
luctance on the part of the Presi-
dent's associates to bring up with
him the question of Adams leaving
unless Eisenhower first raises the
matter some of these same asso-
ciates believed Adams had seen the
light after the Maine voting and
would not return to his high command
i
School Classes
Choose Officers
Motorkts Warned
To Stop For Buses
CKLAIIOMA CITY Sept II
tin—State Safety Conunission-
cr Jim Lookabaugh has u'arn-
IA motorists they must stop
VdtPU sciaxil buses stop to un-
load or take on passengers
Two school children already
have been killed this year while
alightitig from a school bus
and one other WM eriously in-
jurtd he said
Failure to observe the law re-
quiring motorists to stop for
school buses carries a max-
imum fine of $100 or 30 days
In jail or both
Fifth and sixth grade students at
lalsell al id Ewing alsell
schools have elected class officers
this wk
Class officers at Ewing are:
Fifth grade — Catherine LaCoste
president: Nancy Graves secretary-
treasurer and Larry Hudson Rob-
ert Snodgrass Jimmy ChrLs-
tine Wo41c1 all and Linda Bowen li-
brarians Mrs Ethel Griffith Ls the
teacher
Sixth grade—Rulh Ballard presi-
dent Clyde Scott vice president:
Johnily Giles secretary Jane
Burkhalter librarian: and Torn
Flanagan treasurer Mrs Virginia
Martin teaches the class
At Fifth grade—
Bobby Green president: Biter
Wright Nice president Calvin Bick-
el' secretary-treasurer Sara Beth
Wells and Jo Ware librarians and
Pat BarlitCi Perry Clouse James
Page and Michael Fugate ball cap-
tains Mrs Eulalia Taylor is the
tearlie
Sixth grade — Larry Bob Lippe!
preiident Frances Ann Mayer vice
president: David Daniel secretary
Charles lArest treasurer: David Dan-
iel Berchie lien:ley Mary Barnes
and Charles West librarians Flag
raisers and ball captains are chosen
each week Miss Sarah Rae teaches
the sixth grade
Choral Departments
Choose New Officers
Officers for the junior and senior
high choral departments were elect-
ed at Vinita highschool this week
The officers include:
Junior high girls glee club sec-
ond hour—Kathy Nail presithmt
nose Marie Forest secretary: and
Kathy Lunday librarian
Junior high girls glee club third
hour Helen Smith president
Frances Lee secretary: and Donna
Harrison librarian
Senior high girls glee club —
Helen Foster president Wilirne
Allensworth secretary: and Barbara
Freeman and Thelma Harrison
librarians
Senior high mixed chorus— Lois
Ann Tawney piesident Carolyn
Phillips secretary and Bob Ives
librarian
Nationalists rgreak
Red Blockade Unkud
Supplies Under Fire
a TAIPEI Formosa Sept 11 (UPI) — A nationalist
r Chinese sea convoy t‘scorted by U S 7th fleet warships
b u
broke through the connunist blockade of Quemoy today and
Car firm Union unloaded cargo on a sandy beach amidst a rain of high ex-
plosive shells
Launch Parley The U S TaW
i
all command saki
the supply ships were driven off To
cot by red artillery fire before they rem en
Id un n
load eost of the su
ir pplies
To Avert T FOrillosa
The ohips were reported to b
return e ing to their home port acrom speak Tonight
the Walt
The American ships did not cross
UAW Picks Ford For Third the invisible three-mile (offshore line Ike May Discuss Possible
drawn by the U S government to
Straight Time As Target keep them out of range (of coon- Compromises To Avert War
To Win Increase In Wages munist artillery fire and to avoid
direct partocipation in the Quemoy WASHINGTON Sept 11 (Vigo —
DIMWIT Sept II lITD— Ford defense President Eisenhower was expected
lotor co and the United Auto But three nationalist landing to discuss possible compromises to
Vorkers union today began a series ships dashed the last three Miles to prevent war with communist China
in
I intensive top-level talks in an shore alone unloaded their cargo a speech to the nation tonight
'fort to head off the first nation- amidst a hail of red artillery fire Secretary of State John Foster
Ode strike of the company's plants and raced back into the safety of Dulles hinted at his news conference
The UAW's executive board Wed- the Form Puesday some concessions might be osa strait without being '
lesday authorized a strike against MC made if the communists would re-
II Ford m plants in the nation if an Red shore batteries half-encir-
nounce use of force in the area
greeent on a new contract is not cling the Quemoy island complex The President might enlarge upon
(-ached by next Wednesday held their fire until three nation-
this issue in his address on radio
and television observers expected
at LSM (landing ships medium)
UAW President Walter P Reu- American officials said proposed
her immediately announced he neared the shell fragment-strewn
negotiations between the United
beach to unload
otild switch from talks at General States and red China at Warsaw
d
b
B
t
Mi
40- nue omarmen t
4otors corp to Ford in order to Polougi might eventually lead to a
ThZni the communist goons opened
lake every effort to avoid the " U S recommendation WA nation-
up with a fierce bombardment that
trike alist China give up Quemoy and
lasted more than 40 minutes Matsu -
Ford vice president John Bugas
"All hell broke tome on Liao Lu Beeineas With Beds
Iso announced he would attend the
beach this afternoon" United Press Eisenhower headed back to Wasli
alks but warned that Ford would International correspondent Charles ington from his Newport R 1 ' va-
lot sign a contract it did not con- Smith cabled from Big Quemoy cation headquarters to make the
ider sound just to avoid a strike island "major" address
Ford Target Twice Before Smith and other newsmen took
It was the third straight time The half-hour h was de-
shelter in an underground concrete scribed by White Home press See-
hat the UAW picked Ford as its bunker overlooking the beach dur- rotary James C Hagerty as "a majoi
trike target In 1953 and 1955
log the most intensive phase of the report to the American people and
vhen the union won its supple- late afternoon shelling after watch- for that matter to the World on the
Imolai unemployment benefits plan
election (of Ford as a target paid log supplies being unloaded Formosa situation" '
Their shelter received ' severaP ''' AU Illtjeir tedialtittletkg Old ABC
iff to contract Agreements before
Joe strike deadline In both cases direct hits which shook the un- television will carry the address live
toe union turned on GM and derground foundation so violently at 8 p m (CST) NBC and CBE
that a typewriter on which Smith television networks will carry a re-
:'hrysler later to get even better broadcast at 9:15 p m
was writing a dispatch leaped from
-ontract terms
a flimsy table U S officials said this countri
Because it settled before a strike Two previous convoys were con- would adopt a flexible position at
n 1953 and 1955 Ford still has not Warsaw in hopes of doing busines !
ducted across the strait without
well hit by a nationwide strike dur- with red China -
loss although one LSM was destroy-
ing its long history as an auto pro- ed On the beach Date for start of the Warsaw con
hirer ference has not been settled pend-
Buck High Waves
Ford was the most susceptible of ing word from red China but bott
Today's ships bucked high waves
he auto companies because it wait-
churned up by 72-mile-an-hour sides have expressed a desire fa
d longer to start production of negotiations soon
winds sweeping the strait ahead
959 models and now is just in the of an oncoming typhoon which may Heavy criticism of the administra
process of changing over its plants tion's Formosa policy came las'
stop sea resupply operations for
ror new model production several days
week when a "high administratior
source" (later acknowledged by Dul
Gen (Tiger) Wang Shu-ming les to be himself) said Ameriego
Rogers Grade School chief of the nationalist general fighting men would be used if neces'
staff said the escort duty was the
Classes Name Officers sary to halt any invuion of Que
"trmst significant" move the United moy
Will Rogers grade school students States has made in the China area Former Secretary of State Deal
have elected their new officers ac- since world war IL Acheson said Quemoy was not worti
cording to Mrs Lalah Lloyd There were these other develop- the life of a single American sol
principal merits: dier
The officers are: —President Eisenhower headed Military officials have said in ill
Grade 5 (Mrs Thelma Waldrops back to Washington to make a ra- past the offshore islands had MU
'
dio-television address to the nation
roomo—Sue Jane Price president military value But the administra
tonight on the Formosa situation
l'Iary Ana Rupp vice president tion contended the islands' valu
Sherry Seabolt secretary Ricky 1 Reports Denied r' took on increased importance the
Rowe librarian and Marilyn Rauch I —Secretary of Defense Neil H Chiang Kai-shek put one-third a
reporter McElroy And Gen Nathan Twin- his troops about 85000 men on th
Car firm Union
Launch Parleys
To Avert Tieup
UAW Picks Ford For Third
Straight Time As Target
To Win increase In Wages
DIMWIT Sept 11 WM-- Ford
Motor co and the United Auto
Workers union today began a series
of intensive top-level talks in an
effort to head off the first nation-
with strike of the company's plants
The UAW's executive board Wed-
nesday authorized a strike against
all Ford plants in the nation if an
agreement on a new contract is not
reached by next Wednesday
UAW President Walter P Reu-
ther immediately announced he
would switch from talks at General
Motors corp to Ford In order to
make every effort to avoid the
strike
Ford vice president John Bugas
also announced he would attend the
talks but warned that Ford would
not sign a contract it did not con-
sider sound just to avoid a strike
Ford Target Twice 'Before
It was the third straight time
that the UAW picked Ford as its
strike target In 1953 and 1955
when the union won its supple-
mental unemployment benefits plan
selection of Ford as a target paid
off to contract agreements before
the strike deadline In both cases
the union turned on GM and
Chrysler later to get even better
contract terms
Because it settled before a strike
in 1953 and 1955 Ford still has not
been hit by a nationwide strike dur-
ing its long history as an auto pro-
Ford was the most susceptible of
the auto companies because it wait-
ed longer to start production of
1959 models and now is just in the
process of changing over its plants
for new model production
Will Rogers grade school students
have elected their new officers ac-
cording to Mrs Lalah Lloyd
principal
The officers are:
Grade 5 (Mrs Thelma Waldrop's
room)—Sue Jane Price president
Mary Anil Rupp vice president
Sherry Seabolt secretary Ricky
Grade 5 (Mrs Merlin Sharps
room) — Chris Olson president:
Prggy Ann Lee vice president
Peggy Clanton secretary-treasurer
Clell Goodpaster librarian and
Marsha Ann Hildebrand reporter
Orade 6 (Mrs Earl Keithly's
room) — Rita Daugherty presi-
dent Bill Craig vice president
Rickey Jones secretary-trea-surer
Kay Carter reporter Tomma Jo
Giles librarian and Tomma Jo
Giles and Craig Campbell ball cap-
tains Grade 8 (Mrs C L Carver's
room) — Janet Nichols president:
lia Rodman vice president Sue
Jane Waller secretary-treasurer
Judy Smith librarian: Donnie
Sparks and Dorothy Null ball cap-
tains and R6ger Neal bell ringer
Ex-Vinitan Dies
On Business Trip
Leon Schneider 63 years old died
during the night apparently of a
heart attack in a Kansas City Mo
hotel
He was a brother of Charles
Schneider Vinita
He was born and reared in Vinita
leaving here in 1917 to accept a job
with the Wichita Freight associa-
tion Wichita Kans and was head-
ing the association at the time of
his death
He was attending a company
meeting in Kansas City at the time
of his death
He is survived by four sisters and
two brothers and his wife son and
daughter
Funeral arrangements are pending
ey
—Secretary of Defense Neil H
McElroy And Gen Nathan Twitt-
ing chairman of the U S Joint
chiefs of staff said in Washington
that there was no truth to publish-
ed reports that Adm Harry D Pelt
commander of U S forces in the
Pacific had questioned some of the
premises on which American policy
in Formosa is based Felt himself
denied the published reports
—A communique carried by the
communist New China News agency
and broadcast by Peiping radio said
Red China had issued what it called
a "fourth warning" to the United
States against "intruding" into or
over communist-claimed territory
as a result of today's sortie by
American naval vessels into the
waters off Quemoy
Mrs Emma Hopkins
Dies In Hospital
Mrs Dinna B Hopkins 53 a long-
time resident of the Ketchum area
died at about 6:30 p m Wednes-
day in a local hospital following a
long illness
Mrs Hopkins born April 13 1905
in Marion county Arkansas had
lived in the Ketchum area most of
her life
Survivors include: her husband
Joy D Hopkins of the home in
Ketchum one son Pa11 Hopkins
Vinita: one brother F J Smith
Parsons Kans and two sisters Mrs
Virgie McQuary Wetunika and
Mrs Beatrice Cur lup Marshall Tex
Services will be conducted at 2:30
p m Saturday in Luginbuel Broth-
ers Funeral home chapel The Rev
Curtis Brown Spavinaw will of-
ficiate Burial will be in the Ket-
chum cemetery
r
- mg'
------41
The VINITA LEAD b
Pioneer Newspaper
Successor to The adeiteb
Established 73 Years Ago
Ike May Discuss Fount's
Compromisos To Avert War
WASHINGTON Sept II (1Tb —
President Eisenhower was expected
to discuss possible compromises to
prevent war with communist China
in a speech to the nation tonight
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles hinted at his news conference
Tuesday some concessions might be
made if the communists would re-
nounce use of force In the area
The President might enlarge upon
this issue in his address on radio
and television observers expected
American officials said proposed
negotiations between the United
States and red China at Warsaw
Poland might eventually lead to a
U S recommendation thIA nation-
alist China give up Quemoy and
Matsu
Badness With Reds
Eisenhower headed back to Was li-
ington from his Newport R 1 va-
cation headquarters to make the
"major" addresa '
The half-hour speech was de-
scribed by White House Press Sec-
retary James C Hagerty as "a major
report to the American people and
for that matter to the world on the
Forman situation"
Au sickle" radisaidOurks Old ABC -
television will carry the address live
at 8 p m (CST) NBC and CBS
television networks will carry a re-
broadcast at 9:15 p m
U S officials said this country
would adopt a flexible position at
Warsaw in hopes of doing business
with red China
Date for start of the Warsaw con-
ference has not been settled pend-
ing word from red China but both
sides have expressed a desire for
negotiations soon
Heavy criticism of the administra-
tion's Formosa policy came last
week when a "high administration
source" (later acknowledged by Dul-
les to be himself) said American
fighting men would be used if neces-
sary to halt any invasion of Que-
moy Former Secretary of State Dean
Acheson said Quemoy was not worth
the life of a single American sol-
dier Military officials have said in the
past the offshore islands had little
military value But the administra-
tion contended the islands' value
took on increased importance when
Chiang Kai-shek put one-third of
his troops about 85000 men on the
island as a defensive force
Cherokee Freedmen
Will Meet Sept 27
Members of the Cherokee Freed-
men association will meet at 9 a m
Saturday Sept 27 in the Craig
county courthouse here it was an-
nounced today
Jessie Bobber chairman of the
association said that enrolled heirs
of enrollees and rejected freedmen
are urged to attend
Bobber said an attorney for the
association will be present to inter-
view all claimants
Gunman Gets $5000
At Tulsa Food Market
TULSA Sept 11 (ITD—An esti-
mated $5000 was taken from a
Tulsa food market early today by
a youthful bandit who forced the
manager and three other employes
to let him have the money at gun-
point The gunman about 25 brandish-
ed a 25 or 38 caliber revolver
STREET SCENES
Been to the county fair yet? Its
open until Saturday afternoon
Vinita football fans planning the
trip to Picher tonight Jake says
a woman may not have a whole lot
on her mind but she usually en-
joys talking it off J B Kinsey
on the phone Mrs W A Pitts
in the office
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Campbell, O. B. & Hightower, L. W. The Vinita Leader (Vinita, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 11, 1958, newspaper, September 11, 1958; Vinita, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2289689/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.