Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 226, Ed. 1 Friday, August 2, 1946 Page: 1 of 10
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Cleburne ' TTMES-REVIEW
’ R
United Press Leased Wire Service
Published Daily Except Saturday
. 41ST YEAR, NO. 226
EIVE CENTS PER COPY
•11
Argentina W
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HUGHES FLYING BOAT TO BE DREAM COME TRUE
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Recalls Bad Shell
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avoided tory and purpose yesterday.
■
The rural electric administration
in
parations,". Tass said.
owned companies to build too. which
War Probe rigure
area with electric power
a
COLLECT PAPERS
western rone. Sat-
> »
»
The Weather
(UP)—Public ' what of those who died in
Thursday
•9,58
94
were in 1936.
he faced a courtmartinl in France.
manufactured by the Bat am Cam
whoeannettegatty
soMe W HWiiTW iteH fi«h fbbave Junetl *wtli N inifM.' A driver
Rumors circulate!
try.
t manta.
.tempt might be made to liberate I British officers last month.
V
I
*__2
Industrial Firms
Sold to Germans,
Agency Charges
Join U. S. in
Event of Wars
Rites Will Be Held
For Mrs. Mary Ray
Saturday Afternoon
CARS DAMAGED IN
STREET COLLISION
Ernest May Speaks
For Jackson Tonight
J
fl
II
11
Johnson. Ellis, Tarrant, Hood, Som-
crvell and Bosque Counties at the
JERUSALEM. ‘Aug: 2. (Ul»>—Two
bombs exploded1 today outside Tel
Aviv where the British werewmd-
REPUBLICANS TO HOLD
CONVENTION SATURDAY
be accomplished just as fast as ma4
terial and sufficient labor are avail-
Maximum temperature 97 degrees
for past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 76 degrees
for past 24 hours
Maximum temperature 96 degrees
for a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 72 degrees
for a year ago today.
follows: Robert M. Armstrong, pres-
ident; Dr. Martin C. Cahill, vice-
The Brazos River
Electric Cooperative
power for ae lines comes from the
Texas Power and Light Company for
the Brazos River Trasmission Elec-
tric Cooperative which is owned by
the Johnson County Electric Co-
operative and 17 other such co-ops
House Sustains
Tidelands Veto
reported profiteering in connection
with treasury procurement for lend
lease.
IN HI8 OFFICE in Batavia, IU„ ex-
Capt Joseph H. Garsson, son of
Murray Garsson, relates the details
of his army career for reporters.
He declared hat he wasn’t aware
that Rep. Andrew J. May (D-Ky.)
had interceded in his behalf when
Congressional
Reorganization
Bill Is Signed
President Pron Says
His Country a Part
Of*‘American Line’
Group Led By
Herbert Evatt
Of Australia
Investigators
Have 500 Leads
To Consider
i
%
PARIS, Aug 2. (U.P—Soviet Fot-
eign Minister V. M: Molotov chal-
lenged the right of other members
of the Big Four today to change
their minds on the rules of pro-
cedure submitted to the peace con-
ference by the council of foreign
ministers
"2
adjourned without reaching a de-
cision on the chairmanship.
of rheumatic heart diseaseT"
Only sure guard against the little
known rheumatic heart ailment is
.; N
. ■.
-
Funeral Today for
Jesse Evans, Rio
Vista Farmer
. 80
. 78
76
. 64
92
97
1
A i
Black Widow Spiders
Killed by DDT Spray
7aa
rayed
T in
Inspection Refund
"Amertean authorities at Lands-
berg refused permission to inspect
the Dornier Aircraft Plant, also on
the reparations list, declaring there
was no equipment whatsoever In
this plant."
..(Severalweeks ago the United
States announced that shipments of
industrial reparations material from
the American zone to Russia had
been halted. The Potsdam agree-
ment gave Russia 10 per cent of
removable industrial equipment in
the western sones, plus 18 per cent
for which she was to pay' in goods.)
Boy Scouts will collect papers and
magazines in the
THIS LATEST VIEW of Howard Hughes eight-engine flying boat shows it in the last phases of assem-
bly. Hughes, who is rapidly improving from injuries received in a plane crash, will live to sss his
dream come true—that of launching the world’s largest flying boat. (I at tr national Soundphoto)
Dr. George W. Cox, i
Officer, who said that in 1948 there
were nearly 3,000 more deaths in
Texas from heart disease than there
units of no value, at the present
time in many plants listed for
Paag,»
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2. (U.»—DDT
kills black widow spiders. Dr. Wal-
president; L. C. Jo
treasurer, and Tom
Harrison Clayton t
W Hutchins, all g
..s
The Johnson County Electric Co- homes to their system. ’
operative, which has its annual meet-1
ing in the courthouse Monday, Aug-
1 . 12
• ' ' '!
their for-
Friday
3 am.......
4 a m.....
I k e
The revocation
ould
Tass Agency charged in a Berlin
dispatch today tHat industrial plants
1h the American and British zones
of Germany earmarked for repa-
rations. have been stripped, looted
or sold to German firms. A.
(Today is the first anniversary vf
the Potsdam declaration, in which
Britain and the United States pledg-
ed to deliver to Russia a percentage
of the removable industrial equip-
ment in their zones.)
No Equipment
"As a result, there is no indus-
trial equipment, or only incomplete
---- At the end of the month the total
collections, for the . parking meters
*. ihstalled at the first of the pi on th
was 82,140, it was announced by
Mrs Cox, city parking meter clerk,
today. ,
Until the meters and their instal-
Busy painting speed limits on the
lanes of the city streets is Chief
Junell’s police department. Around
business section ah the thorough-
fares will be in the 20-mile-an-hour
zone and those outside business aec-
tion to the city limits will be in
the 30-mlle-an-hour song. k
"All the paved roas" said Chief
4
lation is paid for, the city obtains
one-tourth of the proceeds taken
bv the meters. It is approximated
that the meters will be paid for
within the next 12 to 18 months ।
r after which time the total proceeds able During the past 12 months
will go to the city. I the cooperative has added 300 farm
f
/
will have no excuse for not seeihg
the painted numbers on the road."
4 . A ' •
Mrs. Mary Ellen Ray, formerly of
Cleburne, died at 8 55 p m. at the
home of her son, J. C. Ray, in Dan-
ville. Ind
is to serve eyery farm home in the
ind this will
Armingly increasing rate of death
from heart disease
The program was started here by (
30388562225829265862
1 • ' “ J
—-----
temmen -ome
-ma.x
i
i 288
• doo 25005 E
The official Soviet news agency
Tass earlier had condemned Byrnes
’ • for his actions in the procedure
commission. Tass charged him with
betraying the Big Four by failing
to vote for one of its prokedural
recommendations in yesterday s scs-
"DSion.xa*"admemem m - 7
is now underway to add 216 mre
miles of line to serve 650 additional
farm homes.
• Rural Area
"Since its inception," .stated Mr.
Bailey, "The aim of the cooperative
-.--4
. 2 2 02230
• -1
j tion to be held at Mineral Wells
; August 13.
ties or fifties from coronary disease?
What of the young pebple who died
ONE DEFECTIVE mortar shell in
tie New Guinea campaign was
responsible for six killed and 24
injured in one mortar battery, ac-
cording to one-time Pfe. Weston
Hodges, above, of Portland, Ore.,
who suffered 13 shrapnel scars,
a missing thumb and forefinger,
impaired eyesight and a wound
still draining since that unlucky
May 13, 1944. - (International}
Public Health Workers Alarmed
Over Increase in Heart Disease
I
1
open peace conference split between been manager of the Co-op since the
the Soviet bloc and the Western first lines were energized, revealed
. pany, a type projectile criticized in
the Senate probe. (International)
2 4
ilc- of the public toward heart all-
A
"3s-,*
sutm“2a
E
going on since then so that today
the cooperative operates 670 miles
1760 farm homes in
Paz
2
4 p.m. ..
6 p.m. ..
8 p.m. .
10 p.m. ..
12 p m... .1
same time
to the Rural Electrification Admin-
istration to enable the Co-op to build
32 miles of lines and accordingly
in May of 1939 342 miles of line
were energized.
Construction Program
Mr. Bailey, "has been continually
AUSTIN, Aug. 2.
Proper living with attention to
diet and work habits together with
periodic check-ups was advised to
prevent coronary heart disease and
cases due to high blood pressure
Dr. Cox said the chief bar to a
POLAND'S
REQUEST
PARIS, Aug 2. (UP—The first
nations merged today, but a test something of that organization's his- i in this area.
* ’ Transmission
Two More Bombs Explode in Holy
Land; Unrest Grips Palestine
war contracts.
7. Whether to hold hearings on
cs to testify about reasons which
led Rep. Andrew May. D., Ky . to
itervene twice with Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower over the court mar-
tial of Murray Garsson’s son, Capt.
Joseph H. Garsson.
Highway
5. Whether to investigate the ac-
tivities of Gen. Brehon B Somer-
vell, (Ret.), former chief of Army
Service Forces, in connection with
the Canol and Alaskan highway pro-
jects in Alaska.
6. Whether to press an inquiry
recommended by Comptroller Gen-
eral Lindsay C. Warren, who testi-
fied this week that untold billions
of dollars were "given away" by the
health workers ft Texas today
launched a campaign to halt an al-
Mr Bailey
---------J examination at frequent intervals,
state health the State Health Department ad-
_ *445 vised. -
stimulating privately
hundreds of illegal immigrants de- -
tamed at Haifa V .l.2s
Without explanation the British
army suddenly revoked an earlier (
order lifting the rigid curfew on
which had been scheduled
A. E. Morris Brings
In 37 Pound Catfish
From Buchanan Lake
A. K Morris, 401 South Caddo,
brought into the Times-Review of-
fice today a 37 pound catfish caught
at Buchanan Lake. Morris and his
companion, H L. Foster. have been
on a three day trip that took them
17 miles above the dam at Lake)
Buchanan.
Morris, proudly displaying the
beautiful fish, claimed he had al-
readv dressed a 60 pound catfish and
that he had another 37 votmder olus
explained* that the
. 93 6 a m .\ ..
. 86 8 am.....
. 84110 a.m. Xa .
81; 12 noon ?..
Tass voiced belief that Byrnes will
Support future attempts to weaken
decisions taken by the Big Four which serve
oounej.
Meters Bring $2,140 |
During Month of July at —least satisfies the government
Huu8 V ‘{the purpose of the REA being to
> ** supply -farms wit light and
headquarters are in Waco.
The officers and directors of the
Johnson County Electric Cooper-
of voting strength was
islation today improved the chanc-
es of Congressional adjournment
by nightfall.
Administration leaders conced-
ed that their plans to send Con-
gress on its longest vacation in
eight years stilt cotids encounter
stumbling blocks.
But they were optimistic that
Congress in a few hours would
complete action on the last three
major items. They were:
1. A 82,795.000.000 appropria-
tion including 82,479.000.000 for GT
terminal leave pav and $126,000,-
000 for OPA.
.. 2. The hotly contested social
security measure freezing the pay-
roll tax at one per cent on both
employer and employes for 1947
and giving some additional federal
benefits for dependent children,
and the aged and crippled needy.
3. A resolution by which the
United States would accept com-
pulsory jurisdiction of the new
World Court on all matters affect-,
ing treaties and international law.
ust 5, at 2 p. m. was organized in
July 1938 by seven local men A
talk with Truett W. Barley, who has
ing ft British counter-measures
"A fleet of small craft were re-
anceu ■ vrwunurum a prunoe: ported cruising somewhere off
Garsson’s holding part of a 44 shell IPalestine with some 10,000 refugees wanted persons. One had
HOLDSTILL CRITTER, I WONT BURN YOU This action shot of
lovely Miss Ambr Ann Cooper, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Hal Cooper, who. reside on their sprawling ranch near old Fort
Supply. Oklahoma, proves that western girls aren’t only pretty,
but useful also. The famous Indian scout General Custer used to be
stationed at Fort Supply in the early days of the terri-
tory. Miss Cooper has been selected to reign as Queen of the 16th
annual Woodward Elks rodeo which will be held August 9-10-11.
(NEA PHOTO)
MOSCOW, Aug. 1. (UP)—The
"One reason for the 10-year jump
from 10,279 fatal cases ih 1936 to
13,880 in 1045 i that more people
•re living to the age when heart j successful campaign was what he
On August 1, 1936. Truett W.
Bailey was named coordinator and
with the help and assistance of 50
community leaders enough members
were secured to make an application
Byrnes, speaking out for the first
time in the commission sessions,
said he would vote against Poland.
Britain and several small nations
supported him, until it was clear
that only the Soviet bloc would vote
for Poland. "
After an hour's debate, Poland
withdrew the motion. She did not
want to put the east-west split to a
formal voting test at this time
The Potish motion had faeed cer-
tain and overwhelming defeat. The
Polish delegate withdrew it amid
applause He said his proposal had
not been animated by a desire to
determine which countries had made
the greatest war contribution.
» • •
Agency Comment
Johnson County She was a member
of the First Baptist Church in Cle-
burne.
Funeral services will be held Sat-
urday at 4 p.m. at the Dillon chapel,
with Rev. S. B. Culpepper and Rev.
Edgar Glover officiating. The inter-
ment will be at the Cleburne ceme-
tery. The. body will lie in state
at the home of J A. Browder 207
Madison.
Pallbearers will be J. A. Brow-
der, W. W. Homburg, W. C. Orr,
h. R. Costmer and Dirk temman
of Dallas, Elmer Jones of Houston.
Survivors are two daughters. Mrs.
A. W Browder, Corsicana, and Mrs.
Billie Jones, New Orleans, two sons,
J. C. Ray of Danville, Ind., and
George Ray, Chicago, and three
grandchildren.
es, secretary-
। Senter. E. J.
ffing, Horner
petors.
r ■» x
The agency. listed several plants
in the American zone from which
it said equipment had been removed,
although they were listed for repa-
rations payments.
In the first place this applies to
plants of the aircraft industry,
namely 10 aircraft plant branches
of the Messerschmitt firm in the
American zone from which all
equipment has entirely disappear-
Ernest May will apeak over
radio station KFJZ tonight at
6:45 in behalf of Judge Penn J.
Jackson, candidate for Congress. '
Citizens and voters are invited
and urged to hear the radio ad-
dress. May was defeated in the
first primary and has announced
- .o
_ ■■ -
----------- --
—NEA TELEPHOTO PICTURES-
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1946
The Johnson County Republican
convention will be help a the
County Courtroom Saturday at 2 30
p. m . Earl Baird; county Republican
chairman stated today.
Delegates will be elected to at-
__
ker Van Riper of the Colorado
Museum of Natural History has
found in an experiment whi 9 he
reports in the new issue of -
published here today. He
a 10 per cent solution of
ueuse stove
Mid. "U this were the whole
ture we might be complacent.
I
atye Who are clected ahually. by hi support for Jackson..
members of the cooperative areas J—;---
lends money to Co-ops or to any
other organization meeting the re-
quirements of the act.
First Meeting
At the time of its organization
there were only seven men who
were members of the cooperative.
They were Robert M. Armstrong,
Cleburne; Dr. Martin C. Cahill, Lil-
lian; James T. > Hill, Burleson.
Truett W. Bailey, Sand Flat, Ernest
J. Harrison. Fair view; Tom S. Sen-
tor. Alvarado; J. Wallis William-
son. Bono.
City Police Mark
Speed Limit Zones
. WASHINGTON, Aug 2. (U.P— The
Senate s Mead committee mapped out
a series-of new war profits inquiries
today after hearing a New York fi-
nancier say he still was trying to
collect a $5,000 loan made to muni-
tions maker Murray Garsson more
than five years ago through Rep.
Andrew J. May, D.. Ky.
Sen, James M. Mead, D„ N. Y.,
chairman of the special war investi-
gating committee, said he would an-
" Bounce later' in the day the sched-
ule for the committees new war .
profits checkups. He told reporters,
however that no public sessions
were in sight for the immediate
future
power. ______________-________-Ml," Tass said.
Mr. Bailey said that construction
ing up an intense search for ex-
tremists, and a military kordon was Tel Aviv, which ha
thrown around the Rehavia Jewish | for this afternoon.
quarter of ‘Jerusalem. (said the ending of the curfew wi
All of Palestine teethed with un- not be announced until half an hour
rest Sporadic gutcroppings of Vib- before the four-day search of the
lence were matched by the tighten- city was over. 11
Many more suspected extremists
were arrested ii. Tel Aviv. At least ;
some of them were on police lists of
1a prM
-s ■■ ■
_L
. 4 . '4 z ,
....."V
Poland Withdraws
Request to Sit In
On Hungary Treaty
— --------———-T
ORDERS TOMBSTONE.
DIES IN ACCIDENT
ALTON, III., Aug. 2. (U.P— r
Charles E. Uelman, 63. ordered
a tombstne for himself a fort-
. night ago..
Wednesday night he was kill-
ed in an automobile accident,
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 pThe
House today sustained President
Truman’s veto of the bill to give
the states title to oil rich tidelands.
The action kills the controversial
measure for this session of Coh-
gress.
The measure would recognize
state title to rich oil and mineral
resources submerged off the coast
within the three-mille limit.
rased upon the entire catch would
have been quite a treat.
■----- ....... . — ...........-............. • .......... m- x ■ - ---
Small Powers Back Bidault"semsmmitt
As Conference Chair man0" Profiteerimg
kerosene on the threads of a black
widow's web, being careful not to
get any on the spider herself. She
must have climbed into the sprayed
part of the web and got some of
the lethal stuff on her feet, for
after about 24 hours she showed the
characteristic trembling, jerking
symptoms of DDT poisoning, and not
long afterwards she , was found
dead. Five other spiders, placed
successively in the same web, met
the same fate.
Black widows are sometimes
found in considerable numbers in
one place. Dr. Van Riper points
out. and where this occurs a chem-
ical warfare campaign against them
would seem justified
Last Rites Saturday (government in the termination of ! tena the state Republican convcn-
For Mrs. Nancy Rope,
I— Formerly of Cleburne
An accident that hurt no one oc-
curred at the intersection of Brazos
avenue and Olive street at 12:06 p.
m. this noon R L Wilkerson travel-
ing north on Brazos and Leonard
Graham (c). traveling east on Olixe..
caused considerable damage td Wi-
l kerson's car and slight damage to
Graham’s when they collided at the
intersection. No injuries to persons
was reported. Police Chief Junell's
department investigated , -i
— Mototov aunched his alt ark tn the
midst of a fight by the small pow-
ersto make French-F6reign Min-
ister Georges Bidault the permanent j
chairman of the peace conference <
instead of rotating the chairman-
ship among the Big Four as the
- m ’• /
-nu
urday, according to Rev J W
Bruner, scoutmaster.
a committee member, told reporters
"The committee, if it wanted to, i . •
could stall 500 new investigations r
Up for ta.m-i: s-i... today i Congress Expects 1
were arguments over; m A 7 TI I
1 New steps in its inquiry into] | g Amn I AA UMnpy
the of defective 4.2-inchi I || I GBITRHBIHE P VV(DK
mortar shells which exploded pre- I * • ••-H-V-V 11 UI II
maturely in combat, killing and rI
maiming American soldiers, Stark 1 4.. "TL I
new < yewitness acounts of such ] I 111 I hrAA IGKIIAK
' incidents by former Gs were dis- { IIIVV1J•UU>
COMMITTEE TACKLES
INVESTIGATIONS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (OP)—The
Mead commiUee today tackled one
of its toughest jobs—selecting from
500 leads the war profits investiga-
tions it will make next.
The senators met in closed session
to set up priorities for the inquir-
ies.
Sen Homer Ferguson, R.. Mich.,
closed late yesterday.
Auto, Shipbuilding
2 When to undertake a spot WASHINGTON, Aug 2 (U.pLA
check of possible war profiteering compromise on social security leg-
in the aviation, automotive, alum- i - - --
inum and shipbuilding industries
Plans -for this are under way to
learn whether renegotiation of war
contracts, and high wartime taxes
actually "took the profits out of
a -scrttdnmerstuon seau; ansa oe-rrar VSr-
she had not been technically at war ol.gervingusunserved
-T." ..__v m N-lta anK areas with electricity. Inis was to
with Hungary. • M . be done in a manner to satisfy the
Soviet supporters stronely end rs- specinications of the Rural Eleetrini-
ed the request. --uer cation Act passed by Congress in
Byrnes Speaks 1935 tor the purpose of financing
। electric power lines in rural areas.
Secretary of State James F The rural electric , administration
BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 2. UP-
President Juan D. Peron said today
that should there be another World
War. Argentina would fight on the
side of the United States and the
other American nations.
“Argentina is an American coun-
try, placed geographically in the
American continent, and, conse-
quently, my country inevitably,
forms anintegral, part of ufoat ,,
might be called the American
Line’." President Peron declared in
an inteview in Argentina's famous
Casar ossa da.
"We all know that there is a.
potential danger of other conflicts
and if, unhappily, the statesmeh of
the world cannot prevent it Argen-
tina will be found ranged alongside
the United -States and The—ether---
American nations. .
"A chain of mighty airdromes
may prove to be far more neces-
war" as Congress had intended.
: mem’Peart Harbor
3. Whether to assign a top prior-
She was born Aug 5, 1868
dy to the case of Col. Theodore
Wyman, much-investigated former
district engineer at Hawaii at the
time of Pearl Harbor. The joint
congressional Pearl Harbor com-
mittee held that his activities needed
special scrutiny, and the Mead group
is considering suggestions to send a
sub-committee to Honolulu and the
west coast to conduct a preliminary
investigation of Wyman’s affairs.
Garsson’s Son
4. Whether to call new witness-
■■a.,...—____ - — -------wJ. . ..... ----4
Jesse Edgar Evans, who died
Thursday at 11:45 a m., will be bur-
ied at 3 p. m today at the Rio Vista
Baptist Church., with Rev Jesse
Northcutt, officiating Interment
will .be at Grange Hall under the
direction of Dillon Funeral Home.
Mr. Evans, 37, was born in Kauf-
man County on Feb. 14. 1909 His
mother is Mrs: Callie Sergent Evans
and his father was Edgar Evans <ft
Route 1, Cleburne.
Survivors include his mother, Mrs.
Callie Evans; three brothers, Clyde
Evans, D. E Evans, Otis Evans, all
of Route 1, Cleburne, and fur sis-
tors, Mrs. Thelma Stamper, Mrs.
Ida May Noble, Leona Banister, all
of Kaufman, and Mrs. Ella Terrell
of Blum.
The deceased was found Thursday
at nooh by a brother dying from
self-inflicted gunshot wounds.
« ■ ■ »whhl fiiw—rf----nu nuiw wi----
East Texas: Partly eloudy tonight'
and Saturday- j !
sary in the future, through the
length of the American continent,
than the Pan American highway.
Argentina already is building such
an airdrome at Ezeiza—outside; of
Buenos Aires—which will aecom-
modate the greatest airplanes that
can be envisaged during the next
10 years."
Among the many accusations that
have been hurled at me was that I
was seeking to form a bloc of South
American nations to be headed by
Argentina, so as to counter-balance
the United States. But how could
a President of this country be so
stupid? For Argentina to risk her
destiny in such a bloc would mean
that in a conflict she could be i-
olated and cut off from the great
resources represented by the United
States.
ter thie touneten HU N—t, Anrrmtr was tetentt
a that an at- l fled as one of the kidnapers of five
4 < ’
", I
".c ;■
Mrs, Nancy Adeline Pope, 614
Almas street, San Antonio, died
Thursday at I A. imi at her home.
She is a former resident of Cleburne
and is survived by a brother, W M.
Mason of this city. . -
She was born on Feb. 14, 1875,
in Texas Her mother was the for-
mer Miss Annie Elizabeth Sellers
and her father was Thomas Mason
Pepe. -"Shet- —rjoined the - Baptist
church when she was a young girl.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p m. Saturday at the Dillon
chapel, with Rev. J. W Brunet*
officiating. The interment will be at
Lane Prairie The body will lie.in
state at the Dillon Funeral Hone
until the-services. —g
Pallbearers will be her nephews,
William 'Mason, T. J Mason. Cart
Mason, Floyd Rennels, Roy Hutson.
H B. Hutson. -
Survivors include one daughter.
Mrs. Jack Ammann, San Antonio;
two slaters. Mrs. Ella Hutson, Gene
Autry, Okla; and Mrs Bessie
Lyhman. San Antonio, a brother,
W M Mason of Cleburne,
r "1 ■ T-T
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (U.P) —
President Truman happily signed
the congressional reorganization bill
today, terming it "one of the most
significant advances in the organ-
ization of the Congress . .
! The new law boosts slaries of
the nations lawmakers from 810,000
1 to. $12,500 a. year, overhauls Con-
1 gress bulky committee system and
’ otherwise streamlines its operations.
Mr. Truman, saving "special
, praise” for the boost in senators and
representatives salaries, said re-
1 organization would permit "easier
] and closer relations" between the
executive and legislative branches
of government.
i
58
r
foreign ministers proposed.
Herbert Evatt. Australian foreign
=- Johnson County Electric Cooperative Schedules
manship to thetnselves. B
a--Annual Meeting for Monday, August Sat 2:30P.M
The commission session finally • • •
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 226, Ed. 1 Friday, August 2, 1946, newspaper, August 2, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423124/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.