Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 51, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 13, 1946 Page: 1 of 11
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IT
i ■
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K
W
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the diseae
d•
of
is j
men’s organizations in the capacity the
of Women’s Vice Director Orland chapter
.2
Hair Jr., Grandview; E. L. Prest- Cash in bank Jan. 7. 1946 $380.59
J.
$1,155.68
--
T
ON PH LEADERS
One for the Books
I
The C,
bn*- beig
a mammouth, rib-tickling evening
of entertainment has been planned
Late Bulletins
i
■
1
A
I .TI
L
1‘ 1
and 60 cents for adults.
a
com
plaints to the senatorial commit-
WAN
Mi-mnriaL_Hrap.lt tl at Shroveport,
F"A
headquar-
That
the haraased admnistration it had
The Weather
peace on the belief that the board’s
Increase for OM
(-Camo Bowie, Texas. In Nvem-
Murder Case
permanent exemptions have oeen
abolisheda Those making such
Maximum
Richardson said
Mr*:
ement the first
Stilwell states.
Mr.
MOME ON FTRLOUGH
M. Honea. Lockney, and
premeditnted.
the call
and MrS J. Honea Rendle Austin, north shore Chicago suburb.
tra! portions tonight.
i
• -•
h
••
Daw.
6
AE
Needed-in Orient
For Occupation
16 Days Left To
Pay Poll, State
And County Tax
Mrs. Eliza A. Clark
To Be Buried Today
WSDA WARREN—western song-
stress who will appear nn the
Another Suspect
Arrested In Degnan
The local counterpart of the Na- cial gatherings and civic meetings »
tional Foundation's March of Dimes are being planned, the proceeds of t
quested to meet at the Central
Church of Christ at 2 15.
»nxt
of 1
four sistrs, Mig Pearl McDonald,
Mra, W. H. Hopkina and Mrs
$ 1 536.27
$1,155.68
Denies Any Disunity
Between Himself,
General Short
Colonel Thomas Criton Honen.
81 year old cleourne physician and
mecentiy. discharged army veteran.
$50 Prize Mony to
Go to Best Amateur;
Talent Performers
sullivan
Wibur
Seth Pyeatt, Rio Vista; J. Rice Fin- Case No. 2-
ley, Venus and J. W. Norwood of Case No. 3
her home with her sister,
111 Archer on North Wilhite
made the first successful landing
of a jet-powered Navy fighter plane
bord a carrier,‘accoraing to re-
2 a,m ,
4. a m,..
S am.
8 a.m ..
10 a hr .
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
- Out of his own determined fight
£. De Lario Post. Ameri- i
rom announced today that
persons who have reached the age
of 21 since January!, 1945
— 349.24
298 50
___ 13.50
260.00
223 00
-luded courses at Bellovue Hospital,
Nev York universttv cfenifernia
end Tulane University..
He was a member of the John-
-g-
too
what
-
a new
year,
Hillbally Hit Parade to be spon-
sored by the American Legion
Friday. Jan. 18
home in Lavernia, Texas. neat San
Antonio.
Mra Scull resided here for about
30 years and for the past five years
had been in Lavernia. She was
2 It.s
A wat
*-
3b
Persons in Military
Service Exempted
From 45 Levies —
PRESIDENT HARRY S TRUMAN (above). In a tetter to Basil O'Con- of Keene; Miss Louise Davis. God- National foundation
' - ley; w w Galbreath of Joshua; Case No. 1
Washington Alarmed
President rrunuur’s swift actir
ling board
posed ।
Accuse Wedemeyer .
Of Making Evasive,
Deceptive Reports
pilon claim '941 in Se ptember 1943. he was
Duo to recent legislation former
I
provide a formula for the settle-
ment of other disputes.
Fortner Resident
Dies at Lavernia
---- ■..........
Friends here have received word
. Rarb. where he held the position
; of hospitat inspector, until placed
' t
I
- L
( Ensign West, who has been in
service for three years, is some-
where in the Pacific Area at the
present time •
A total of ISO in cash prizes will
be paid to the best local singer of
hillbilly and western tune* or mu-
sicians First prize is $20, second
...4!
...30
A.M
.. 37
y
fort to delay the procecdings was
voted down. The first five non-i
germanent eeats were quickly filled
but the selection of Australia did!
not come until Canada volunterily
-
“ani
r amm
mf
f
ST
Col. T. C. Honea
Dies Friday At
Home in Cleburne
Names 6 Nations To
International Board; •
Canada Withdraws
• Fhowelter nf Austin officiating.
Purial will be in the Rose Hill
' qematerv under the direction of
Dinon’s Funeral Home
from the leading citizens .of
surrounding areas include: M
Foreign Minister Ernest Bev-
In of Britain supported Byrnes
against the Russians. Terming
the proposal a very dangerous
precedent, Bevin urged that a
vote be taken without lobby-
. ing.
"Nothirg would be more harmful
than mareuverirg ilk? In I he old
Says Conference
‘Must Not Fail’ To
Avert Strike Crisis
said the postponement wasn’t a
matter of jconveniene or mon-
mnience to Russia. He said if
nwh a postpsonement were grant-
ed Russia. It would set afprecedent
which would crippit the nssembly’s
-uture work •e
traraferred to Qamp Mnxey at
-----
1 A ‘11 n A J 8/ 00 ml': ,^4,
served it T E. Schumper
the Paid out
L.
---
Director J. W. Patterson Names
Leaders for Johnson County Drive
FIRE SNrURDAY
Smal dhmage was reporyed to 8
the bulldir f Saturday morning when 5
a skillet of grense becaine inited -
at 714 South Walnut street in the
house occupied by • W. Ford: -
he Central Fir station answered
Ro?* Arnold Honea, a daughter.
Mias Mariah Honea. Cieburne; two
methers C ■ Honee, Clebume.
! League of Nations," Bavin said.
----
street prior to leaving Cleburne.
No funeral arrangements are
known here 6“
Guard. HIs msjority followed in
W T. George will lead the wo- port on the present condition
suneny nt 4 p. m. at the Dillon
chapel with kenel Lemmonw • of-
fieleting. Intermeut will be in the
Cleburne cemetery.
recommendation of
Mr and cthester Brardsley, all of Cleburne.
workers weuld
claims ere now required to make on terminal leave.
statement the first of every Survivor? are the widow
icully czmpted from both the poll -..... . .
tax and the necessity of filing an ‘feutenant colonel on February 14,
Professional aad local amateur
talent will be interspersed to pro-
vide a program that will highlight
th* original Hillbilly Hit Parade of
radio station KRLD in Dallas This
show was first made famous by
Hal Norton throughout the South-
west. Cousin Herald Goodman will
serve as master of ceremonies and
will bring with him his Saddle
Mountain Roundup gang which is
, well known on radio networks.
Alvarado:. M r S
IBM!
seriously eripnie reconversion.
1- vislting hie parent8.
Mil Marvin Jones.
• DIME BOX, Tex. Jan. 12.
'U.B—Tomorrw will be one for
the books here, or at least
- I list’s the way the town's 250
tit liens were viewing the cere-
monv which will atart the na-
t tonal March of Dimes for the
National Foundntion lor Ian-
tile paralysis.
Despite lire telephone strike,
a specinl line will cany a na-
t ton-wide broadsst fre here
Sunday when Basil O'Connor,
New York, chairman for the
. national foundation, officiates
in the ccremony.
a 19 5 cent i
I third ballot showed neither had
I the required two-thirds Canada
| withdrew The vote on the third
i ba"ot was Australia 27. Canada 23
This was the same as the vote
| of the seen nd ballot.
The Russian defeat fndlowed
a speech by By:nes, his first
before the assembly. In which
he chided Russia • for seeking
to delay action on an issue
which it had long known was
going to arise.
Soviet Ambassador Andrei Gro-
myko requested the postponement
1929 He entered on active duty
rrechfor past 24 hours
Min'munt tempernture
crees for past 24 hours.
। until next week for consultation
Would Oripple Work
Byrnes immediately arose and
Ai) persons who wore in mili-
tary servite or who have been dis-
charged flam military service since her 19404 ind was'trainfeired in
the first of last year are automat- onuary 1042 to Fort Sill, Okla.
He was prompted to the rank of
t
CHINA GOVT.’ POLICY
at her
•mEmmmheeemm.
FLEET ADMIRAL ERNEST
’A. His postgraduate, studies in-
conventiona ltype engine used for
landings faded, Ensign West switch-
bd on the jet engine and landed
the craft safely His pioneering
event was successful although un-
selinquirhed her candidacy-
Canada Withdraws
The deleuates took three ballots
By United Press
East Texas Cloudy with rain in
extreme south this afternoon and
in squth tonight and in west and
south portions Sunday Slightly
colder in northeast and north cen-
KING, Commanderin Chief of
the U. 8. Navy urges nation-wide
support of the March of Dimes
and adds: - A.
TTh roughThe teamworV"of BUT
armed services, supported by all
Americans on the homefront, our
nation achieved victory over her
enemies overseas. We must now
exert the same united effort in.
a war against an enemy within'
our shores—infantile paralysis.
AT ONE OP THI FASTEST union negotiations ever held, the Kaiser-Frazer plant officials signed in De-
troit with the U. A. W.-CIO giving the employes an approxmat 30 per cent increase asked for in the
other plants. Prticipants in the rapid-order settlement, which includes a |S per car bonus to be di-,
vided among the employes' at the end of the year—netting an approxmateioper cent incres alone,
are, left to right, William Frazer, R. J. Thomas, UAW president and Henry Kaiser, (fnttrnatiomil)
Burleson . Case No 4
Reports have been received to the
National Foundation's local
tee headed by Sen. James M.
Mead, D., N- V- which i* in
Shanghai investigating disposi-
died Saturday morning
KIMMEL CLAIMS Telephone Service Back to Normal
prize is $10. and the remainder of
the prize money will be split five
ways.
.Alt singers, musicians and bands
wishing to enter the contest may
do so by auditioning for "Cuz"
Eash of the Cleburne Drug Com- Cash in bank Jan
pany has been named treasurer for Donations
____________
Additional vice directors chosen
pinned its hopes for , industrhu
“ “aw-mdnm
making
Mrs. W
WASHINGTON, Jan 12 (L»— i
Rear Adm. Hushand E Kimmel •
told thie navy'a Pearl Harbor board i
he had beep "forced to the con-
-chision" that he and Gen Walter |
■ C ‘short had been victims of a I
"deliberate siar campaign."
Malicieus Lies
eie dewcribed os "malicious Has'' J
report । that he and his army on- ]
. no he at Hawaii went aunfriendly
aud didnot epmpernic. am 4 |
The admiral, who was reliev-
, V > ? ' '
Annual Campaign Carries on
Without Franklin D. Roosevelt
present a written list of
By United Press •
I American troops in China added
their voices to the worldwide demo-
bilization-protests today with a deJ
mand that the U. S Army stop]
what they called its policy of "lend-
leasing" them to the Chinese Gov-
ernment
More than 400 soldiers, meeting
Un the Shanghai Y. M. C. A. ad-
dressed a letter to Secretary of.
War Robert P. Patterson claimnz
that unnecessarily large numbers of
American troops were being kept
in China.
The protest letter asserted that
CHICAGO, JAn 12 Police
investigating the kidnap;slaying or
elx vear old Sunnne Denan today
took into custody a Negho handy,
man who hud workud at I he build-
ing whew the child's tody wna
Fi r si al services will be
under its sponsorship, to be held
at the high school gymnasium on
Friday, January 18, at 8 p. m.
NOTICE TO ROTARIANS
The Cleburne Rotary Club will
s‛t in a ledy at the funeral ser-
vices of Col. T. C. Honea this
fterncen. All members are re-
00 rficers: except tor thoneri -
the medical corps, will be eligible
to go home and be diseharged * N e
47 months of service or 68 poin".
. ‘ .2
' ■ • —--— —
‘runnin’! Say They’re Not 9
but beore DirrPox roes on
the eir, there'll be a big Texas
barbecue.
The town was chosn to ztart
the national campaign when
hearchers discovered 11 in a
methodical search of U. E.
postal guides. Incidentolly the
name of the postmaster here
is Stamp.
Ky.: eluh grand-
two great-grund-
i calling the steel negotiators to
Washigton reflecfed cdmlrlstm
tion alarm His associntes describ-
ed the President ns "quite on-
cerned’ over th OMC strike and
the threatened walkout in steel.
But officlals sil were hopeful
for a quick solution tn the mount-
ing erisis
Herald Goodman at the American
a" afternoon between the hours President Calls
of 1 and 5 p. m. Singers, who use -
piano accompaniment must furnish Ew AlAn Ao r M.n+
th«r own accompanist. Emergency IVIceL
The advance sale of tickets and .
reserved seats will be available at I Ktppl I Dienut a
a place and date to be announced ill HLCCI •APULC
later. The price of admission has (' __“
been set at 30 cents for children • .
The body, will lie in state at the
residence until Hine for the ser-
! ■ ires.
A native of Johnson Covpt
rolonel Honea was burn on Sep-
tember 25. 1884 and practiced here
from 194 urti hr wen celled into
native service with the National
Aargi in 1940 He speelalized in
disenses of the eve ear, nos« and
' hront after six yars of general
prncttee.
He received hi A- B. degree front
dissected.
* Pollce Onpt, Jnhn L
irlenrtifted the man as
‘ ra Scull,
urne, who 7
Text.* Christian University, his
M. D. degree from th? University
f Tennerseo, and his internship
There are just 16 days remaining
during which the public may pay
their county and state taxes with-
out suffering a belated' penalty as-
sesment; W. J Sttwek county tax
assessor-collector announced yester-
day, January 31 is the official dead-
line for non-penalized payments. on county Medical scelety, the
T 1 ttelce period expires at.the Texns Medical Association, and
same S texes A axmin for ex'- ' he Cenira chureh of Christ. Ke
KitoT may be niiedArom ^s was a charter, menhe and,firat
iatdernax under the following con- eronjdent 01 the Cleburne Rotary
' -diAenSpersonsroniaingan-acyor--chtomet- rronen: wm-wn mromot
town of 10,000 or more population; nd to that rank on December -0,
all persons who were 60 years or/1945 began hli military service
age as of January 1, 1945; and ah ‛n 1022. when: he was commission-
- - ed captain in (he Texas National
Phillips, 40, who at one lime was
a part-time janitor in the build-
ing where the hlonde child was
butchered.
Sullivan said Phillips was seis-
ed at a rosidefiod in Wilmette, a
, -
Li *
ed of his command 10 days
after the attack voiced his
opinion in secret to the naval
court of inquiry. It was dis-
elosed in c document supplied
io the dongressional investi-
gating committe
The navy board asked him to
comment on reports that “your re-
larionship with Gen Bhert were
not cordial, shat you did not co-
eerate, thal you had lew confer-
ences. anti ro forth."
"I believe every man, woman
and child in the United States
who ran read, has read such
statement*.” Kimmel replied.-
" wish to state that all such
statements are malicious lies.”
No Basis
"1 here is absolutely no bests for
the rumors," he added, "and I am
For the first time since its incep- tions totaling oyer ejgh million dol-
moearn anapxaaar"ronanuan sa msgam-r
for Infantile Paralysis will be con- However long it may take, how-
ducted without the inspiring pres- ever much money may be required,
ence of the man who inaugurated the program of research will go for-
this great humanitarian service— ward with unflagging zeal until
WASHINGTON. Jan. 12. OJP
—A government fact-finding
board today rerommended wage
increases of 18 per cent for
140,000 employes of the oil in-
dustry. ...
L
■y* • 4.352
F
h ■ “
12
SMEAR ATTEMPT InCentral Texas; May Not Last
>B' Diird Pres +m. , D AI
it tcok a series of restraininig I limp Kax FlanS
orders to restore part of Texas’ •-A - -—19
aying that every union telephone
worker in De lias was ready to walk
out in s strike against the com-
runy ns a means of combatting
the court older
■ ■ : .......
..............................-.........th ′
ecun ; , , )
i ..... l
■ t:
I . 1
1 1915 $801.44
734.83 J
• The program wil} be broad | in an eifort t- ctecide between ‛ .
enol from the srhol house FCanndta end AWei but uthen the can-
only a negligible number of
American soldiers wer being
used for repatriation of Japanese.
The recent tale of American
equipment in Wett Chine to the
Chungking government reduces
the number of Americans needed
to guard surpluses, they claimed.
"We contend that the army has
Pvt M arvin Ocnn Jenes is home 'nd L
General A. A. Vandegrift, Com-
mandant of the U. S. Marine
ima e" "a. •W'wtt
i' two the congressional committee
when it resumes hearings ' next
week.
cent Navy releases
The landing ocourred aboard the ot the death gtMrs.ia
de- escort carrier Wake Island off San former resident of Clebur
Diego on November 6 when the
IONDON Jan. 12. ‘UP— The ' , ’
united Nations assemkly today; Can You Twang a Geetar? Come a
--Legion PM Plans My Shew
was completed after a Rnssian ef- aumammamdamumnmmumma
Saturday
. 42/12 noon, ..
...4(l|2 pm ....
. *. 4l4 4 em - -
. ...4216 ........
-.438 p.m.....
1 tenwperature 45
_______। is finally qonquetd.
............ ........... . _ Throughout the,.. United ' States,
to overcome the crippling after- nearly 3,000 County Chapters of the
effects of poliomyelitis grew the National Foundation provide an
idea of a national organization to ever-expanding program of services
carry the fight to the foe, to trck to infantile paralysis patients,
down and eliminate- infantile par- The year-pound volunteers who
alysis from the list of childhood staff these Chapters uphold the
mm,.-,..__________________________________
With compassionate understand- infantile paralysis shall go without
ing of the suffering caused by the care and treatment for Jack of
disease, he evolved a two-fold plan funds. ’ ,
from which all might derive bene- Now again, through the March
-fM*-V* pointe care and treatment of Dimes, January 14-31, the Na-
for those striken, and to search tionalFoundation fr IhrnnePar-
for the cause and possible cure of alysis appeals for funds to carry ,_____..u
infantie paralysis. on its invaluable services This year nor. National Foundation president said:
On the research front, scientists let us give all that we can, > In • “There can be no sTow-down in the fight against disease. Our victories
work continuously to solve the. memory of Franklin D. Roosevelt abroad must be followed by a victory on the home front against this
__ .. problems of this baffling disease, whose intrepid spirit remains our common enemy of all mankind. I am certain that no American can fail
Carps, states that the Marines are. Bi nce organization of the Nationat inspiration in the fight against in- to respond to such a challenge."
“always willing and glad to be of Foundation, grants and appropria- fantile paralysis. "---- _ .. _ ■___y effect that a large number of so- Total expenses
assistance to the March of Dimes .--4 -a a-
——= Cleburne TIMES-REVIEW
cfor,We-anachievevictoryoveriinu... . : lag
4 this enemy in our midst As we ' —g PailpExeeptSaturdau, - — United Preee Lenaed Wire Sereiee
have over our enemies abroad.” 4-----— :—— ------------------ ---------------e~d .............................. . -eem
--;------- ------------------—_— ----------------- TEXAS, SUNPA¥7 JAKUABY 1W---------FIVE CENTS PER COP:
no moral right to lend-lease us to
the Chinese Government,” the let-
ter said.
Say Statement Evasive
The Shanghai group denounced a
statement by Lt. Gen. Albert C.
Wedemeyer. American commander
in China, that personnel for a mil-
itary advisory group would be vol-
untary They said it was “evasive,
deceptive and does not reflect ac-
tual conditions in the China thea-
ter " . .2
Wedemeyer recorded a speech for
broadcast to his troops which ap-
pealed to their sense of fair play
anp told them they were in China-
to do a Job for their own country.
A second Shanghai protest -
meeting named a committee to
ar"
~ ■ 896gu
week would, brine a series home!
national strikts that wouMale
An furlough from Dodd Field, Fort
Aam Houaton, Fan Antonio. He,
Oae source at Dallas quoted
.. j c. r u Ray Hackney, president of the
rue. Lemmons and Reva G. H. Texns iant divislon, wrU, as
Survivor Include tiee duugh-
L1 ters. Met. Tranrie McClure. Wich-
hjita Falk; Mrs. Archie Giruham
; and Miss MAy Clark, Cleburn;
j a step-daughtor. Mra. Amanda
' Hardy. Irownfield: a step-son.
--FHman elerk, -Beeature~Alas -a
brother. Jess Syherts, Mulesho«
2 Texas: a sister Mrs. Pannie Ruy-
picketed telephone system but ser-
vice was reported virtually normal
today at Daitas. Houston San An-
tenio. and Austin.
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
whose exchanges were picketed at
nine pointe in Texas yesterday by
strikirg members of the Assort-
ation of Communications Equipment
Workers Union, went to cort with
its problem and came away with
-enough restrainihg orders to ease
th* situation in the southwest.
Not only were the main Texas
points relieved of pickets by the
injunctions, but relief was ob-
tained throughout Oklahoma, where
a blanket order was granted, at
five important paints in Kansas,
ind ection promised today and
Monday in Mtspuri’s big two-
Eansaa Citx and St. Lcuis
a state ■leaked test vight
throuzh the orficis of Clyde L
Stowart Bell’s divinion commercial
sipcrintendent at Dallas, declared
that the court orders were not di
rented at any employe of the
compary or at memtcitof tho
Fouthwestern Telephone Workers
I Union.
"These orders are directed
against picket of the ACEH
in order that vur employes may
have free access to our build-
ings.” the statement assetted.
The action followed the an-
nouncement that operative mem-
bers of SWTU would respect the
picket linos thrown up by the
strikint union, whose members are
not employes of the telephene com-
pany. but are employed by West-
ern Electric to install equipment
in telephone exchanges.
Company officlals continued to
enphastz• thal there was no dis-
pute bntween Southwestern Bell
and memhern of the SWTU,
27 de-
"L
.ame0
will get under way in Cleburne to- which are to be donated to the —1
morrow with the sincere pledge of March of Dimes fund The county . U
all outstanding merchants to do committee emphasizes that this type 10
their utmost to promote an over- of cooperation is to be commended Wu
whelming drive return in this comr and greatly encouraged if Cie- .t
munity. County Director J. W. Pat- burne is to produce a contribution !
terson announced Saturday to the paralysis cause of which 1763
.01: ... it* citizens can be proud "
Judge Roy Anderson will serve
ai County Vice Director, while Mrs The following is a treasurer’s’ re- aad
Funeral Services
To Be Held Today
_____ er, Louirville.
Pioneer Landing Made children and
J By Glen Rose Pilot,
Ensign Jake C. West, son of Mr.
12 and Mrs. L. E West of Glen Rose,
Pat Nichols Expenses, uhvnc calk, clc _____1134
L .: ‘TROOPS ASK CESSATION
□ecunty Council;
• Russia Protests OF ARMY’S ‘LEND-LEASE TO
JERUSAIM, Jan -12. URl-
Terrorists derailed a train with
explosives south of Haifa to-
dav, held up the train crew.
- and escaped with a $140,00
payroll.
workers but one high government Mo»t Figgiga j
nf’iclal said the meeting "abso- A mass meeting called last night
lutely must not fall.” at Frankfurt, European
ci. cat. nar. Iters, fizzled out when only
Gioom G to Darker demonstrators appeared or
The suddenly gloomy labor pic- was intended to be the third sue-
(tire was darkened hy General cessive night’s protest. They were
Motors’ rejection of the wege re- outnumbered by the guards posted
commendaticpa.cf.theEresident i avoud.Gen. Joseph.T. McNarnex‛s_-.
Cant-fiuding bogrd. headquarters. There seemed little
a new rrvblem for disposition for another meeting.
• ------- .. , t Gen. Robert C. Richardson, 3
fCommander of the Middle Pacific 2
forces, announced in Honolulu that 3
army enlisted forces in the Central 1
and South Pacific who have 38 13
months of service or 48 points will 1
start mbving to replacement cen- fl
it al raised the possibility that ters immediately for shipment d
A W
ags Jk
--___
1 ".J
1946 MARCH OF DIMES STARTS TOMORROW - DO YOUR SHARE
/ Apsanhdhhu.ei ",2288 N ’ 8 i .■ YA1 ' ,v ka"Ahiuocro"eetira * " __ __ ____■_ .. _ _ .
Mrs Eliza A Clark. RA. died WASHINGTON Jan 12 (U.P-
Saturday mornine at 9 n’rlock at; Prerident Truman nt ide an 11th
-errAene--anNarthRobinsonhorictfort.tostavt,off n nation ,
etreet A native if Decatur Ala. wide steel strike today ns tne j _ _
was the daughter of Solomoninodiorkat negotiutions moved into j tion of surpluses and shipping.
•nd Fliza sandiin Syberts. the White House, Patterson, at whom many of the
held Mr. Trumnn refused tecommonttseldier proteats have been aimed.
nil hi# efforls to prevent a walkout । left Tokyo today for Seoul. Korea 1
tomorrow midnight by 700,0c0 steel aboard a transport plane.
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Morey, John B. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 51, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 13, 1946, newspaper, January 13, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432451/m1/1/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.