Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 212, Ed. 1 Friday, July 18, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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Be DAILY
( 10c SUNDAY N
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ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Loased Teletypeseller Wire Repor •/ the UnM Pr^u. - Worldt Greatest News Agency
-lshers
CLEBURNE. TEXAS, FRIDAY. JULY 18, 1952
-
47TM. TEAR. WO. 212 ,
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ash
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New
the White House for the night
HILLS FOR
73c
Work On Other Plai
. Size
Rauch after the
officer arrested the brothers on
23c
ed as extremely dangerous," and hike the 38 miles from Potesu to
MV
F.D.R. Jr. Boomed
☆
☆
13c
Large |
29c
er’s guns and fled on foot.
Truce Teams In
itey
‘0
At the 1948 convention in
In Thefts Herd
. I < I ( leburne youth was
A I ,
did not produce.
been settled by the Supreme came up with their experted com
Neiman-Marcus
demolished
pare a new proposal to resolve the I
At KERLY, Tex., July 18 aP— A , last dispute blocking a Korean arm
istice.
27c
A
☆
lines snapped like
large
power
area.
after the exp.
29c
e
27c
☆
☆
■
Personal letters of apology are to
damage in the Hokkaido quake.
department store
y
■
pemocratie national committee, on
CHICAGO. July 18 IB—Rival
I
guy
volved in the
18.
2
11
on
’ went tn
man
roz
79
I who finally
mm an
i
gotorj
is i
is
12
22
i
W
» •
Sa
ant
-9957
Will Seize Steel Industries
Under Selective Service Act
Truman Spends
Restful Final
* X A
Dav in Hospital
Two Killed In
Pipeline Blast
Texas
The
on the
The <
Mass, home and took him into custody. (NEA Tele-
photo)
Thursday Rauch was found semi
conscious and bleeding on the high
Sessions Again;
Findings Secret
PANMUNJOM, July 18IP-
Sizol
2
For
dy, and an
I held at 11
1. Wind had blown off soil covering
the slight rise in the pipeline. It
never
( ourt.
of advice from the
very important to
loyislatien serving private bus-
inesees rather than the people
teau Memorial hospital
Rauch was unable to give a de-
tailed account at the attack, but
ular" or anti administration sides
Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas fs
ion set for the Democratic national
convention in Chicago
Mr Truman still plans to go to
Chicago next Thursday or Friday
to address the convention after the
delegates have selected the Demo
cratic presidential and vice prest-
tusk of cleaning up the debris were
hampered by strong ruins that did
not let up until daybreak
When the shock came at 1 10a m.
Mo 10 p m. cat Thursday), terrified
promise plan to break the prison*
exchange deadlock
The. 41 minute meeting was the
-
2
=-
Pullman Rates
Will Be Hiked
WASHINGTON, July 18 Hit The
formal recogni-
l Democratic na-
ir t'witea rrcas Tele phete ricturea
t < • • (outral rress tvaturen
। K t > Kin. t
J
l
—2
Large
Vhe successful tenure of these el-
ected public servants.
-------J
large |
!■ n
r i
posse j Fort Smith
------- They attacked Oklahoma state
OTHER DEPARTMENTS
133 and 134
.. a
Kimi Sen Hubert H Hum
Minnesota. "It will be IM
Sen .Rich-
to. If aotb
Anay MW
way at
he had been beaten and stomped
Oklahoma state police said it occur
red as the trooper drove the broth
oerate pledge to end the Senate .,
faliiters that have blocked anti-
first since Sunday Communist _
armistice delegates had asked the Suit Settlement
four day recess, presumably tn pre -
spoke extemporaneous!
other meeting will be
in Hyogo prefecture, a man was |
electrocuted touching a downed I
power line.
The quake was not so strong as
the disastrous Fukui earthquake
of 1948 and the Hokkiado quake
see allotted at
for arguing me
menutestoech
Saturday.
____wi Ehd in • Fight „
No mater what the aubeommlf-
hour to each 64
Texas case and;
side to the Miss
w
considered" because industry and
the CIO United Steelworkers still
have fulled to settle their industry
crippling dispute through collective
bargaining
A White House spokesman admit
tod everx possibility ol getting the
mills back into procuc.on was un-
। Governors of both states were in
vbived as principals on the "reg
, a
h N
L 2
.ng Ore burned 12 hours
«phslon
c./8nm
12a
,c"9e
edndad
Ums from Texas and Mississippi
appealed Friday to a credentials
• ------
.2, T pea
20128
6 PAGES
‘#2
- 20102
dsv from independence. Mo., hud Aa ■ c
lunch and dinner at the hospital Murder of Keautv
with the President but returned to! ‘
,8 188g5*
p.a"4,8
reverse that and predieted f
vention itself would baek Um
"I think we're going to w
civil rights fight in the com
and the Dixie!erats Will ha
work from the convention I
was revealed Friday.
tractor plowed over an exposed
section of an abandoned pipe line
supposedly containing only water.
Large ।
The platform writers laid aaide
the e.vU rights issue Friday if
take testimony from a long list at I
witnesses on such varied ubjecta J
Erg
Fort
luppart and consideration, to
‘‘ " • • 111", IT- MIKI M-U-F V“D -°11 “."512""1*
| mains before the federal court,; Fires broke out in scattered parts
j however । of the city, but firemen, aided by
der’bgnsideration.
Buhe said no decision has boon
reached.
American Legion
Watermelon Feed
zen of the United States" can hold
born citizen because both of his
parents were American citizens and
were only temporarily living out of
the country at the time of his
chairman of his state's "regular”
delegation. In Mississippi, I
Hugh White has a similar role.
i Rule On Legal Convention
1 optimistic about the President’s I oq • • 01
physical condition Apparently he Uyenus Blaver
I ha thrown off most of the effects
Mrs Truman, who arrived mur, Faces HearingIn
NEW YORK Jul y IM IP A por
tion of the libel suit brought by .
Neiman Marcus, Dallas department
Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols, • store, against the authors and pub residents sprang out of bed. but
off.cial United Nations spokesmen. Ushers of "U SA Conf.dential" has found they could not stand because
would say only that Friday's meet-1 been settled with the ‘publishers’ of the
ing was "businesslike," both sides
as women's rights, taxation, air.a
transportation policy and farm
programs
The subcommittee plans to fin-
ish hearings Monday afternoqn,
and write a tentative platortn for.
submission to the full, 108-membet
platform committee which may
revise it at will. The finished prod- i
uct goes to the convention floor
next Wednesday for approval by .
the delegates.
Of these items the hunting knife critically injured a third
and the binoculars were recovered The result
tS
13
mg their own needs above the
J
Young Roosevelt was born at
York Daily News artist Steve Kidd from descriptions
given ny witnesses to the shooting ol Eileen Fahey
<<i her c’olumbia University desk, alded in the cap •
had been used by Shell Oil Co screening of war prisoners. These and Los Angeles.
! to transport butane gas. but was suggestions, it was said. arc now _______ — — . ----
abandoned four months ago and being studied by London and Wash- be sent also to employes of the tidal waves which caused so much
supp sedly wa filled with water. | ington.
TEXAS GROVP INVOLVED .
turn! it. There is not much
vm arriving at en answer to
a preblem withovt teking some
aciien or means to correct the
errer.
The decision to workup Ibo Neiz-
urc strategy cami in a meeting
Thursday between Acting Defense
I Mobilzer John K Steelman and of
Lobbyists should not receive all
i 4 the blame Being strictly honest
I m the past, the majority of our
J ' American citizens have been plac
National Democratic Chairman
Frank McKinney sat with Rawlinga
subcommittee Thursday night in
brief, “pre-trial” conferences with
leaders of the'contesting detoga-
Head - Lines
Bv Otyde
—78 at 117% votes towards
ture ol Bayard l’eukes, right, who has confessed qiserimination tows in
killing the gill Ading oil a tip by an unnumoct’ot- ! ’ .
iimbia professor who said t h<* sketeh resembled a
tormer student, ofticers surrounded Peakes Boston,
; a .. day of medical teats at the Army‘a
. - e w alter Reed hospital
membership drive. .
The shirt was a gift from stat
Legion Commander, Charley Gib-
son, in appreciation of outstanding
Legion work by McWilliams
Other Poet officers elected for th*
1952-1953 tenure were Lewis Presh-
er, first, vice-commander; Hershel
Howe, second vice-commander;
I move pending a rate investigation.
The study was made at the re-
quest of the Defense Department
and other federal agencies.
In Its action Friday, the ICC lift-
ed the suspension effective July 28.
The increases are expected to
produce $4.3 million annually in
... • ■ ... . ! new revenues.
Me I the rain*, soon put them out. —____________________
In Nara, one man died of shock m-aasmwaaazu
and a second died in jumping from ‛seA,t ILadMi
his second story bedroom window A -MPNAI
night from a parked automobile setting off an explosion and fire
belonging to Billy Lloyd Morse which burned to death two men and
Herman Smith, finance offi
Jesse Northcutt, adjutant; «W
Reid, chaplain;Jack McClure,]
service officer.
4-.,.%
------
tee decide* an th natonal com-
sortant to the
. |
lent J
2
for
15c
Largad
.
92
Ji
i d iuu mu inner -ulWI, tor Becvr
more than 100 members for
Cleburne Poat during a roe
E
Size [
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
the Supreme Court in Us bid to
seive Ilie stcel plants under the
Applications lor such claims will
be mailed to 18c,00a ex Pows, who
b«vr already fued claims under
the old law Appuicants, not apply
mg under the old law, may pick
up application blanks trom Veter
ans Service Officer, Dennis Me
wihams, alter nug 15,1952.
Two standard forms will be av
aitable, one for living ex PoWs and
Seventy convention votes were In-
volved in the two contests—-52 for
fevamment. It's the people.
Now, it la one thing to discov
er an errer, anether thing •• u .
a
Th, administration, balked by
WOW..... -- --MN - dcEM*edwKaj5UNN - - M--
RELAXES- ('.DP presidential candidate Dwight Ei-
senhower gives a friendly tug on the hat of his end-
dy t'ha i les Brendlinger, as the General finishes
a relaxing round of golf at the Cherry Hill* Coun-
try Club in Denver. Eisenhower is just beginning a
long rest before slatting his campaign bid for the
presidncy ol the l inted States. (NEA Telephoto)
U •58qkummka A
CONFESSES Artist’s sketch, left, drawn by
chances ters. Russell will enter the
Fday Democratic National Con-
-------77 vention with a minimum
■ Akn.
—*
the office of president or vice
president.
In our opinion, the American
public hat realized finally, that 1
H has been lying down on th*
jeb. More than that, Mr. Aver
age Guy it going to co some
mhing about the problem.
: '.Y
A leading manufacturer said the
other day, "the trouble with us is
Kidding ourselves, dishonesty,
voting one way and thinking
another, has caused us no end
of trouble.
Take the big butt, prohibition.
Why did it foil? Forget about
the right or wrong of the issue
Just remember that the maj-
ority of the voters In the elec-
tion voted to prohibit the manu-
facture and sale of intoxicating
beverages in the United States
A good many complaints were
filed against the election by mon
serving the U.S. during World
War I. These men said the vot:
on took advantage of them and
if they had been home and able
to vote, the country would rot
have gone dry.
.. WASHINGTON, July l» IP Fres per day tot the perits spent ml
- ident Truman, comforted by thejunon caups uui bused labui
— I presonce of his wife. Friday spent and ahumane teaiment
what he hoped would be his last
- Mr Tfuman is scheduled to
leave the hospital sometime Satur
day and return to the White House
for a quiet weekend before setuing
down by his telephone and televis
tions. Rawlinga said the talks ac-
complished only a definition of the
"heac fssues" to be argued be-
Civil Rights Issues
Question May
As Gain Control
Whet is wrong with the govern
memi?
Any sixth grader can and will —
anower such a simple qvestion. ; —-
There la nothing wfong with the • -2
paper office in
some editors
purpone "
LO U@uI »•» a --- ----o ee s
never write him a letter. send him
■ telegram or call him on the
telephone He has no way of know
ing whether he is doing the things
we want him to do."
The man went on to say that
every citizen should keep ur with
trends and let public servants know
whether they are supporting an is-
sue or opposed to an issue.
' dw*m
CHICAGO, July 18 40 — a
New Deal Democrats whoop- ■
; ed up the civil right* fight. E
' Friday us the big issue oft ■
which they hope to grab E
control of next week’ll con- E
vention and write their own M
ticket for November. 3 ■
The Dixie Democrat! appeared E
to be in full retreat, putting out E
compromise feelers In an effort to E
avert an open break in the party. i
Ot tneir own uUIIN Htv mgpmmm
Ue platform writing subcommittee, E
on the long chance that the fire E
might die out if they left it alone. .
They writhed - but silently
Thursday was a parade of spokew:. E
men for labor, liberal and Negro , E
organirations demanded the 1048
civil rights plank plus a neW Dem.- E
son County audience from
place last Saturday ... 1
local gala enrolled at
special work the other s
for beautootto AyFALENl
youth director iVVUHTB
----------
( ■
- *nGw
•
----e-es
There is ne argument about
the feilure of such issues at the
prehibitien issve, when voters
are dishonest. The results are 1
proven over and ever again and
we are bei-9 mere dishonest if
x»e de net admit the mistake.
HI* the majority of the people >
hod not wanted a drink, why
did Al Capone get so rich out
of the baeHagging business
Uwti the American voter becom-
ea honest, takes an interest in
the government and backs it up
by action, we are going to be
............. +
If it contains the civil righte, j
plank the New Deaton want, the
southerners may bolt, as the) did
in 1948 over the same isse.
Put Dixiecrats to Ho*'
'Ilie New Dealers expeeted the
subcommittee to come up with a
compromise containing no compul-.
sory Fair Employment Praetico*
। Commiselon 4* gand pbe
; on the filibuster. But they.„wert..
confideht the full commftkeejjould <
Campobello. » Canadian island off
the easternmost tip of Maine, where
his parents used to vacation each
summer
Many legal expert* believe-and
Roosevelt himself contends that he
must be regarded as a natural
one tor survivors of deceased
I POWs, who died either in PoW
camps or after turning home
trom these tamps
Additional mini mation may be!
obtain at the oftue ot Veteran'n
obtained at the oKlce ot Veteran's
service olficei . located in the i
in ills fail today on a theft charge,
after plice ms estrgated a lip gis
in them by a tax', miver
Several items recently stolen
from parked automobiles were re
covered
W i W ilson fireman (or the
S.nta Fe railroad, reported a cam
eia valued at $80, stolen from his
auto parked near the Yale Thea
ter May 15 Also stolen from the
.same auto was a pair of binocu ,
lars, which were not recovered.
A pair of binoculars, a hunting
knitc. a woman's hanabag and a
flashlight were stolen Tuesday
ran, on . a m Saturday (8 p.m Friday cat), j against the authors, Jack Lait, ed ----- ------- ------
c..m .. .. . . i on If the Reds did submit a new itor, and Lee Mortimer, columnist, j threads,gas and water mains burst
keny, about M^lto. northwe.t orproposlitscppprenzwanenotlim. - the New York Da, .Mirror, re ! and furniture was tosaed around:
I Big Spring. .However, both sides have agreed ----------
The dead men were identified as nothing shall be disclosed of their Federal Judge John F. X ....
Bill Oakes, driver of the tractor, discussions until further notice Gohey granted permission Thurs-
and J l. Brown, owner of the Belief the talks have taken a I day for Neimar Marcus to drop the
farm, who. with Holly Alejandro new turn stemmed not only from portion of its suit against Crown
Casares, was picking up stump* the prolonged recess requested byPublisher , Ine, and American-
■ already broken from the ground by the Communists, but also from de l Statford Press The withdrawal of
| the deep plow. velopments in London, Washington charge* was made under a provis
need* of the country
These selfish people nictitate
They refuse to see the final out CMICAGO, July 18 "P. If the
come They shut their eyes to the Democrat’, should nominate Rep.
evils thereof and think only in Franklin D Rooseveit Jr for vice
terms of, "what difference does pienident. as some of his admir ।
It make to me, what the outcome ers hope, his eligibility for Hie Post
will be. just so I feather my nest could be challenged in court
You got to look out for No 1 Article II section 1. Clause 4 of
I "Loyalist” and "regular" delega-
no matter how unsound the plan the constitution staies inat "No
»r how it will undermine our coin person encept a natural born citi
mon welfare "
Did you ever meet such a person: Youth Arrested
22— Nn.
emkhetgn
. yusm
"o ■
---
JEri c --psee
that we elect somebody to repre _
foil, t, ,1*001
, 1 -20
10a
CLASSIFIED PHONE 2000 e
Casaret was critically burned on and New York. | ion that the publishers advertise
about 20 per cent of his body London quoted high sources as their apologies in newspapers in
aying Red China has made in Dalia*, Houston. Fort Worth and _________ — --------
formal suggestions for a new i tan Antonio. Tex , and in New York this year. Because of the fact it
*— —j ‛ — •—... was so deep-seated, seismologists
said there was no danger of the
...79 hit bid for the presiden-
28 l ial nomination. (NEA__
• -86 Telephoto) handed to Mt
t" -2
NEW YORK. July is ti’ Maine's
mud "seientist ' laces arraignment
Friday for taking the life of u
1 young girl because her emplojers
would not believe he could make
। them live "torever ''
As Bayard I' l’eaken, 29, of Do
verFoxeroit, Me, went to court
to hear a first degree murdet
charge against him. u Boston pro
feasor revealed the self styled elec
tronics genius novel went beyond
his first year in physics
Dr Reginald G l.af’ount, chair
man of Northwestern University's
physics department where Peakes
wa* enrolled from 1946 to 1949, suld
Howd, SAn
_Brmnoc
Senatorial candidate, 1LEy
BECKWORTH, of Upshur Count
: will »peak from the enststm2e2
the coyrthouse here at # Pclk
Saturday afternoon .Hisoppometk
HH€» DANIEEaddressNENfN
Actually, the country would have
gone dry, even if all of the Dough
boy* had been living on tne oid
homestead
Prohibition was a failure because
the voters were dishhest, by and
large. They voted one way and
thought and acted another. A ma-.
jority of the voters wanted to pro
Mbit the sale ofiquor to protect
their neighbor, who was drinking
entirely too much. So far as the
individual voter was concerned, he
eouid handle a drink or "two. He
voted against the issue to protect
his neighbor A very noble :hought
and action if it had been sincere.
I ,
the slayer of Eileen Fahey, 18, .
“was afraid he would learn some WASHINGTON. July 18 IIP 'The m ted thedunti"" Dparmen1 to
thing that would disprove his White loune han ordered paporadrnw up stand-by xtuI" odt
theory" that he could give humans drawn up for partial seizure of the under the WIN Selective Service
eternal life. steel industry in a move to force Act.
La Count said Peakes believed settlement of the 47-day old strike A high government source sald
reu «■ «nr uuupex uruve mw uUn- । he could prove the non existence of and keep war production going. It | the seizure waa beinu "serlously
er* toward Poteau in hl* patrol 1 electrons and had written a 33 page
car. . । booklet entitled "So You Like I’hy
a — _ ■ m The men began beating Rauch on । sics 1,1 explain hin theory.
For -Veep s Post "............... "
• * , in the chest wb«n vnhchor Kennetnas no theory, at all lat mint । D ■ ■
wiams drove up. "He wanted to be « great Ouake HOCKS J 30
William* aaid the fugitive* drew man, but hewasa erackpol. w l
a gun on him and ordered him to Peakep 29, admitted, to police A.. rp. TA ■
leave, then gathered up the troop I after, hi; arroat inBonton ‘Thurs; Qitv: I hree IWaO
■ - ■ " ’ (lay that he klled Miss Fahey, at:* 9. »iuvv
the office of the American l’hynical A _ _
SiH.ely on Ilie < olumbia’University Koareg Are IIhfI
campus last Monday because the. k 7% -P.. V
I society hud rejected hin theories" nSAKA i“nan hdv 18I‛Threc, ............... ......
Assistant District Attorney karilpAE wer killed ana nt least j fieinin the Justiev and Defense
irehos said Peakes came here/k w( injured oarly Friday in aDepartmenta ant Munitions Board.]
[ from Boston last weekend for the Nirong cai thquake that rocked the | It was reported the neizure would । down...
express purpose of committing rity id Osaka and u 650 mile area I necessarily lie "very limited," with 1
murder to publicie Ins theories. -
"He felt if he killed a few phu
sicints in Ne w York, he would get
Truce poblieity and an opprtumty to seven They suid the toll was rela
teams resumed negotiations Friday, devclop Ims theoricn," (irebos said tively small because its epicenter
birth But the precise question of but a secrecy agreement prevent MHealmuannetosotoanewa wan unusually deep seated abort
who is a natural born citizen has ed disclosure of whether the Reds PAPer ofie" in Boston and kill 25 miles below the earth's nurfae
"em" "" for the bame , under the mouutains of Nara pre
fecture.
Police said 31 bruises and build-
02220
Demo Delegates Appeal For Recognition |
- ■ ■ - — ' - ------ ------- ■- । were the "legal" ones. I
Additionally, the matter of "partv
loyalty" in the Texas case figured
• iniiinliiently,- Rawlings said.--
.... Maury Mayeriek. leader of the
Gov ' "tnyatist® Texans, charged the 1
Shiners faction vtolated Texas law
A- - A+ 4 4
Pay Application Democrats Whoop Up
The War i laims Commission j
awih retene claims of expnsoners
oi war. entitled to receive $151
ait.mitmmretpmmrr
em —
arcentrat Japan Die govei nment ( hanneling defense , delphia, the Democratic
seismologlst rated tne sirength contartn to nrified producers* loininiitcc rejected the New
of the quake as four on a scale of Under the Seleciive jervice Act i er s civil rights proposal but HuUb
these plantn could lie 1.11/ed if I hey phrey brought it to the floor as a 4
minority report and won. That wa
when the southerners walked out.
2
for
21c
-------r
Sa~yA--
" conventions
T • ■ IF.......H -
.. wuae
qqg szgk-ae ’
SEARCH OKLAHOMA
2mma BROTHERS WHO BEAT OFFICER
up agai-at some pretty tough’ PoTi. \t .Okla . July IX IP Ok spokesmen for the huge
hembres. The hombres he had lahoma and Arkansas police aided trailing the fugitive* said they were j -
veforence t were men who make by a pack of bloodhounds and an primed for trouble trooper Otto I.
e b’sinesa of spending s lot of airplane, searched Friday for two The pair, identified as Denver officer arrested
manty to entertain our govern- brothers who beat a state trooper Baker, 26, and his 21 year old | BS. 271 as drunk driving suspects
mene officiais and otherwise in- senseless, then disappeared in the brother, Henry K Baker, were be I
Auence thorn to’’ put through- rugged ( avanal mountain area heved seen last about seven miles
with the officer's pistol, rifle and north of Poteau Fort Smith. Ark ,
shotgun police threw up road blocks on the j
One of the brothers was describ theory the men would attempt to and was in serious condition at Po
2 _
for
25c
_)
. Size 1
Weather 1 sell of Georgia, mops his tionai convent
— ' ■ । am....... » ----- brow as he ponders a • Seventy c
CLEBURNE AND vICINrry - question during his press
Pardy cloudy with widely scattr conference at his Conrad
ed showers threugh Saturday No Hilton Hotel headquar-
toagurteat typarature changes. ters. Russell will enter the
2p.m.___maam
--------- 4a,
4p.m----- Sam
by refusing at their at a to conven-
tion May 27 to pledge support to
the party’s presidential ticket thia
tnt, no matter who to nominated.
Maveriak and his followeis bolted,
and held their own conventton.
* news conference he
lug* were seriously damaged or
Rescue work mid the , . .. . -------------
Interstate < ommeree < omminson ( Nowly elected American Legid
Friday authorized the l’ullman o.commander,Hank Riza,and Walte
to increase minimum sleeping cur] Pou, sponsored a watermelon auf
rates 23 per cent । p r or members of the local Lt
The higher charges are expected i Eten Post et egion Hal last nigh
to go into effect about July 28 । Dennis McWilliams, put Pot
they coula notstana necauze ptomied'to^ike MoepinVcar rates j commander, wasnwardeatanspa
agreement to pubiisn half page 'Lder ' 1o Member Button, for
read from prepared statements and newspaper advertisements of apol- desks andi "closets until the rock
| ogy in six cities ing stopped! 1
The store’s $7 4 million suit in Osaka, certer of the shock
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 212, Ed. 1 Friday, July 18, 1952, newspaper, July 18, 1952; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1402882/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.