Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 52, Ed. 1 Monday, January 14, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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■ M
3, 1946
—J
• A
$
CLEBURNE, TEX AS, 1
FIVE CENTS PER COPY
BE
WAR PROFITS TAX, TO
ily
I
%
Elected Chamber
On UNO Panel
! Commerce
rirp$
ipment
VIET ARMENIA
71
I AMI
e
TEHERAN
BAGHD4D •
1
1
IRAN
-JORDAN
CIRO
1
• 1
Cook
Oil
leta for centurles. and thia time she may get them.
(International)
hers
No Progress Made
gers
GICAGO Jan
14 (P-Repre-
sontatives o*
on
ind
8)
2e
itches
davteng Sunday
u
« Inei
mates hye this kfizure ai
reed in bringing suffietent pressitre
upon Eisenhower fur hin tn retin
k Sets
JUDGE PENN JACKSON
s
soon
ives
ACEW
ers
Lambard Reid, Duke Asten, Wal-
President’s Fact
Pins
resident
Pans
died Sunday al 7:45 p.
a few spares.
The price is $5 per
give
tight feet.
zles
no case should
A Proclamation
< 1 the coupty. died in 1955.
I nnera|
terminal I ntesday
that they kelieved it wus brought
ines
er-in-chief of the German • navy.
askets
ACEW. said in Philadelphta that he
14. -
President Truman has urged alr
Jan.
+
The Weather ]
roof
Meximum tempuratire 40 de- T
pol
another con-
children hi
a great-graudchild.
otrselves."
/
I
''
caaumumom
------
Em
Pioneer Resident
Of County Dies
Truman Issues
Victory Clothing
Drive Appeal
79th Congress
Resumes Session
After Holiday
Jorgenson Arrest
Recovers Auto
Of Alvarado Man
Bill Bishop Made
Lieutenant Colonel
am
twe
porce-
coffee
boilers.
Whitney dom.
A favorable reaction was
4 pm.
6 pm .
3 p.m .
10 q.m..
12 p.n..
REDS OceUPY
NORTH IRAN
CASPIAN
E==SEA ,
today
Chi-
Phila-
Conn'
fits and the abolition of holding
companies, a task now underway.
The task of aiding MacArthur's
Stevenson Considers
Present Soldier
Voting Law Adequate
I
m'at strike,
hdjonrring
it— —---1
„4 4
I Penn J. Jackson
Goldsmith Machine
Stolen Dec. 1 7 Aids
In Officer’s Trap
. M
..34
" hU right to vote without
nx payment.
and
to I
laying ans legislation " •
"I don't think its any business
f the CIO to tiy to tell an in-
vestirating committee of this kind-
what it should or shonld hot do
We are able to take care of that
Adopt Resolutions
To Aid Vets. Defeat
If
aVY
oards
operators were crossing the picket
lines at the instruction of their own
union.
However, officials of the ACEW
-
D
)
E ENFORCED ON JAPS
The capital levy is designed to
♦ brmig Jpanese cepitaltem down-*6.
..at
38
38
PERSIANGULF
।
i
gin-
cost
Sunday
2 mm. ..... .44. 2
T
EGYPT
•(
■
-
RUSSIA
said
to 24
Johnson County
Young Democrats
the hizhwy depa-men
tains that the additfoi
..46 4
.42 s
..28 a
..3700
. 38112
HST. YEAR, NO 52
1
7
Homer Rains Dies
In Temple Today
Jugoslavia Named
To Final Seat On
Economic Council
1 (Ind.), withdrew its picket lines at
the request of the parent National
Federation of Equipment Workers.
1. - -
h i j
3 Injured As Auto
Strikes- Btidge Qn
Rio Vista Highway
ox. cast
md uses
SON
WASHINGTON,
"semocrat
P
waits ouVus*!
Had Orders to Kill
Crewmen to impair
American Shipping
t. 3. -——>
Mnjor Bill J. Bishop hes
raw mi IRAN‘[ussAseSWAM
Cleburne
PtMiehed Daily Except Saturday
conaldered Um present soldier vat-
ing law adequate to assure every
promoted to lieutenant colonel ac-
cording to -word received here.
tente to the 7% cent hourly wage
increase already offered.
CTO offit lain have held out for
an immediate 17* cent boost with
he balance between that*.and an
oririnal 25-rent demand to be nego-
ing intensifies their hardships.
Their need Is immediate and des-
perate.
“I therefore urge every Amer-
ican to heed the appeal of the.
Victory Clothing Coilaction for"
Overseas Relief. The spare gar-
mentst contributed by American j
laat spring has helped ciothe
twenty-five million man. women. :
ems to
mention
e stock
Service Climbing
The long lines department of the
American Telephone and Telegraph
Compnay reported that service!
climbed from 10 per cent to 15 per
cent 'of normal Sunday and that I
Transatlantic service was 33 per
cent normal, compared with 10 per
cent Saturday.
There were indications that the
ACEW did not take readily to the
parent NFTW'S request Paul N.
Williams, secretary-treasurer of the
ES-REVIEW
United Pre— Leaned Wire Service
victory in poverty, disease. cold,
and hunger. In all the countries
devastated by war, lack of cloth-
Junkins Rites Held
At Chapel Today
„ ______________,, ,
Premier Peter Fraser announced
Hew Znlancs withttruwatifrom
the economic nd social council
and notifled Fort Worth officers
a 9411,
surplu
ling al
ly demolished
Hmor Hadley 29 of Kopperl
sustained ijurTeo his rleft thizh
and pcesible internal innries, and
EI Moore 17. of Rio Vista suf-
iere severe laceratione on the
Mead, face and hands and shock
Th* other eceupant of the car, a Mr.
Bimmonds. Rio Vida received
miner injunies abnut the head
Hadley and Moore were picked
up by a Dillon ambulance end
breqeht to th Cleburne Hos-
pitn for theutment before being
removed to the Santa Fe Hospital
1i Temple
in supporting Eisenhower.
E p Stackpole. lobby cor re -
!
cohld get the senato to act at uM#
Sen. Harry Flood Byrd. D., Va •
also planned to speak on labor prob-
lems at the opening session
“ capitallevy against mudividuats
and abeltion of war indenni-
ties such is payments for war
damage or penstonm and mus: —
tering oat pay.
The three m rosier* are hosed on j
directive issued by Gen, Douglas
MacArthur on Nov, 24 The Jap- -
anese government, under American
tiirection. soon will put them into
.elicit They are part of the over- 3
-all Janannse centrel program which ’
bo it eludes reparations to the
Allies and confiscation of Japan’s
xternal nitrets.
4 ------—-.221
New York long-lines exchankes
were still picketed early today, but
Their anger was aroused bv a
CTO charge that the investigation
was causing delay in congression-
al action on needed specin) legis-
Intien while the investigators "vie
'or hendlines." The CIO demane-
cd a halt to the inqniry.
Sen. Feott. w, Lucas D.. Ill- a
a maember of the cmmitfee and
•Ind .
The' NFTW postponed for at
least 30 days a general telephone
strike on wage demands.
The parent union said strike no-
nips would be sunk without warn-
U.P——ig with the intention of killing
/
SYRIA /
spent 1” Gcorges Creek church with Rev.
I tre Locker offictating. The body
tialed “when the national wage ____ ________- _
picture, is cla rifted." A FL demands foot and they run from three to
wero substntialty the same.
zation protests and face a possebl* i For this reason we must
pokrsmen for the industrv. has
warned that the walkont scheduled
ty 200,000 CTO packinghonse
workers and 35,00 members of the
Amalmagated Meal Cutters and
Butcher Workers (AFL) would ex-
hnust the nation's meat supplies
within a week.
Reject Offer
Representatives of the Rig Four
comnanies rejected a previous gov-
e and
which
be and
n war'
.t »
- meeting held in Dal-
Institute las last week wes made by Lam-
371 Coke R Stevenson said todav he
for 455 of imprisonment.
orfictals, hove expressed the be-
lief thnt"this will keep the pris-
ener fairly well occupied for some
tine to, tome
own affairs.
Legislative List
---- D
WASHINGTON, Jan 14
band until he was so ordered by
ACEW President Ernest Weaver.
However, he alosed the ACEW's
natibnal strike headquarters and
left fo Pittsburgh.
Mrs Julia V JunkinA 74 died
Sunday at 8:20 a. m at the honva
of her son, O K. Tunkins, 212
Se ch Washington atreet.
A native of Georgia, she was
born on October 2. 1871. She mova
ed to TexAr in 1890 settling in Bell
County, and oame to Johnson
County i 1900, Eh bhd Me
her home in Clebwmne since 1937.
’ Funeral services were held today
at p.m at ihn Crosier-Pearson
chapel with Rev J w , Bruner,
jr, ofttetnting. Burial was in the
Cibure cemetery.
Survivors include two sons. O.
K Junkns, Cleburne, and L. T.
Tunkm» Drilas: two brothers, N.
C. Sorrell, Cleburhe, and W B.
Sorrelk Oleburne; a elater Mrs.
Ma Morton Cleburne: three grand-
mVmM IN
mmemmmmemmmmmmMII
• regress", had been made.
Settlement Hopeful
Warren ndded. however, that he
vas hopeful of a settlement be-
"or the 12 01 a. m Wednesday
Minutes and financial report
. were read by tho secretary, Char
j lie Peyton, and plans were* dincus
rd for the annual rodeo to be
rsumed this year.
Roy Anderson reported on
i - the recent Kimboll Bend bdidee
prolect meeting held in Fort
Worth where efforts were mad.
SAUDI ARABIA
L
Cicek. She had resided in that
community for the past 80 years.
A native of Smith County, Tex.,
he was born on August 23, 1 852
in 1865 she moved to Johnson
County and had resided here since
__________ __ The aCIC blest against the 10-
afTNPffesr*T memer comnittemenae made hgr
the Pearl Hnrbor investigatins ! the monlradens legislative direc-
oommittce today heatedly invited i tor. Nathan 5Cowin, in a lettf
the CTO to mind Hi own business th Committee Chairman Albevy/W.
and let the committee handle ite Barkley D. Kv He listed Aanti--
roll tax legislation, the vermanent
4,037 PRE INC rs IN ( mt AGO
■CHICAGO (U.P)— There are 4.037
। voting precincts in Chicago, 225
i having been adde d due to popu.a-
‘inn increases in industritl areas
where war plants were located.
14. (P—
a wp ? .The yojncfl will meet for
; fb" find time on Jan. 11.
ROMANIA
» - < 1
etike deadline.
The Amerienn Meat
the building of
Measure Designed
To Break Up Nips’
Capitalistic System
erondent of the British Press As-i
> soclation. suggested that an appeal
♦* Peeeld—O Ci moms might sue-
"umity is inore imrortant than any- l
thing else for the world in the ———
present position " , p.ru,.g, +
San Turn Corfhally, D.. Tex., NF1 W Walkout Will
spwraking dor the American dele- । A .. r-r ere
uaticn. praised Fraser’s act as a i Continue Heb. I > it
"vener"t, mrFpminous.srsture." Demands Not Met
Three men were infured nt
n m Sunday, when th" car in
which they were riding struck A
bridge about three miles south
of Cleburne on the Rio Vista
hichway, the car was complete-
New Zealand Out]
. Of Race for Seat
Further business of the meet- MS. Susana Frances Muslin, 93,
ing Included the organization of piencer ’ •
new clubs reports of the legis- County
lative and auditing committees i n at
d- '
Ite
hl
bnp,
Lv 4
her home
Adenuacy of the act ha: been
I questioned by Comma nde» Horace
Shelton of the Veterans of Forelgn
Wars and yesterday by the ex-
ecutive kommittee of the Texas
Young Democrat* Stevenson lik-
ened the soldier's paition at the
volls to that of a qunlified voter
who has lost his poll tux recelpt.
union to call off their pickets
and that exchanges weP still be-
ing picketed throughout Ohio and
non-striking workers were refus-
ing to cross the lines.
ACEW officials in Washington
Retiring presideuLRoAnderep'12
who has served fuithfvhyforihe
naat two* vears) was (harked 1
tehalf of tiro directors by W.
Abbas for his untiring etferts 4
the onetactive program cari.
I on during his tenure of office-
Sepretarv Reports
Brewster. R. Mc.,
rntencec 16 50 ywr in the state .... „„ ________ -1
pemitentiary, for fbbery.HIsto- would nor order the pickets to dis-t
tal criminn record to date calls
' no settlement of. its demands for
a 32 a day wage increase, a return
to the 40-hour week and' a mini-
mum wage of 65 cents an hour.
Government Seizure
The strike was postponed last
night after the government indi-
cated that it was ready .to seize
telephone facilities.
Joseph A. Beirne, president of
the NFTW, ordered the ACEW
picket lines withdrawn at 6 a.-m.
today. For several hours there' was
h2
Ttu. 2,
| Succeeds Judge Roy
• Ande rse > n Aseader
Pair Tmnlovment Practices Com-
mittee bill .and the propesed 65
cents minimum wnge law at ex-
amples of the legislatfon the
CIO feels hs been delayed by i
he Perri Herhor investigation. ---
Lucns pointed out that none
ot thf Senate members of the
emme’tep & Fhetrmar of the 4
AMONG THE MAJOR PROBLEMS that will send U. S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes to the aspirin
bottle during the United Nations assembly conference in London is the easing of Russo-Turkish rela-
tions. The. map above shows what Russia wants from’Tur key, and it also shows what the situation
is tn ran Many observers of international chess-playing believe that Russia's biggest want at the
moment is freedom of the Dardanelles and access to warm water outlets. Russia has wanted such out- s
pans,
INDAY, JANUARY 14, 1946
Of Civic Group
IjFct; t--esern"gn -rH
Dlatrtet Judge penn J. Tackep:
m4a -tegted hreident of the de
burne humher of Commers Ao
1946 el Ao meetThe of the ‛bor
cf directoes hek today. .2
Other officers elected at th
thicheon which ws held at ti>
Liberty Hotel wrec, firm vice
president Marion Canper second
viee-president GerKippa.-al
tzeasurera i mbort lain. " 2
should be borne by the Fed-
eral Government.
A report on th Big Bend Trail
midle rite Orfiglals here say it
may be t he largest in histcry. pos-
sibly rauging upward to 70 per
cent or the largest holdings of
individuals This tax would be
expected to pick up anything miss-
ed tv the recapture of war pro-
pickets would not be formalized (
1 until the locals responded.
IF A
lift! CANM
packerz meet tedny with AFL add
1‛o Ipaders and o"fiolals pf three
feerl amepcies in a last-mninute
attemnt t .avert a nation-wide
• Ambassador Hiroshi Oshim
fter the outbrek of war
An official memorandum
Hitler hopes to put 20
mittee nember, nnted that t he •
scmie met regularly up to Dec1
22. when it adjoured for the
holt-lavs , NN
"I know of no Irgisintien de-
laved because of this investisating
at tivity '• "Brewster said.
in Georges
WI:MEAS the disease of infantile ptralysis rapes
in many cities of our nation every ear, leaving in its
wake hundreds, even-theusands, of stvieken men, wo-
men and children, many of them crippled for life, and
Will REAS the National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, hy assuring care and treatment for all vic-
iims of nlimrelitis and by carrying on its great pm-
mrpm of research for the prevention and possible cur:
of this virient disease, has earned the overwhelming
gratitude of the American people, and a
WIIFHEAS tho March of Dimes, conducted annual.
y 44 the National Foundatien will Le held January
-frt-tu 31: --—F-——-----------.
THERIFORE he it resolved that all citizens are ask-
ad to c< operate with the March of Dimes in Cleburne,
and t‛ depori their gifts in collection hoxes set up by
the Committee.
AUSTIN, Jan. 14 (U.P—Gov
WepeMrenteemmf
.......\
ties would be tiled Wednesday,
hie dutfesAsehter of payipgthewayfo
fbere bv Jogenson.
This lend./coupled with an cf-1
Monday
a. ......
o. .M./.
A l l.. ..', ..
am......
A m--- mga
o.m
no indication that the
would comply, but early
(Bv United Previl
EAST TEXAB: Cloudy, mln west
and south portion this afternoon.
Cloudy with rain tonight and
Tuesday Wermer tonight and in
southwest portion Tuesday. Colder
in northwest part in afternoon.
Colonel Bishp and his wife
ure making their heme in Fort
Worth.
T dNDON Jan. 14. (U.PLL New
Zenlar d vuthdrew from the race
p Tor the 18th vent on the UNO eco-
‘ "nmie and soeind courcil today in
fror of Juanslav ia, breaking a
wojk-end deadlock. ,
unoslavia was immediately elect-
re to the- 18th and final seat on
- the social and ecnnomic council.
pickets were withdrawn at
cago, Detroit. Washington,
delphia, and New Haven.
SiA i soviv cEORGIA
==== WANTS SIG Surct I
=eulornoguuwx
==V4a-ce 0G a
tor the Young Demo- rats District staft in carrying but the Ripgram
12 Johnson counivagattendercahpatementc-lmysdiono
meeting . of committee. mombers Corwin Edwards or the tate De-
held yestday in Austin. , partment. It left for Tokyo Jan.
Remolutions were passed by the 3
assembly intended to aid the vet-”' L.____ ■ •
or luncl
, fiahing
for this pyupose when materlal i
<lil be obtained,
loci rased Estimates
to get a commitmcet from
the Federal authorities that
they would bear the addition 1
cost of the bridge necessitut-
ornment o'fer, granting an increase
cf.50 cents per 100 pounds of
meat sol to the governent on the Holliday
gto'u d- it world add only 1%"
f U-brats intr operation along the
nest of the United States" in
hort order. ‘ ’ *
“The fuehrer pointed out tha
; however many ships the United
I ’tales Built, one of the main
S ! toblems would be lack of per-
i < nrol," the memorandum said.
I For that reason even merchant
Congress returned from its holiday 1 °s man;’ of the crew as possible,
vacation today: to tackle the im* | We are fighting for our ev.
" . . . ... Istence. and our attitvde cannot
mediate problem of army demobii । e ruled by anig* humane feelings.
The criminat dipry of John
Euwene Jorrertnn, arch thirft ar-
reeted in Weatherford" by Parker
r Tarrant County officiels last
wimht contains an entry with a
inhr on Countv datel!ne. according
tn an announcement made hy
May Make Levy
Retroactive For
15 Year Period
1 • - ’ ...
umiinlly friendly to the CTO de- committee considering the legisla-
clared that it was "Just nsinine tion in question Sen. Owen
to say that the hearing is de-
eran in reassuming his legal right I,
to vote withou* the payment ofr
poll tax. The organization pse
went on record as supporting af
move to defeat at"th mHs thteet
who have deserteg the vEy in.
194 4 ”
M Eaa
2
Miss Vanita Curby of Cleburne.
Stat" Executive committeemen
of Johnson
"0
----te
ZOO OFFERS GATORS
CHICAGO (UP’—Anyone want-
ing an alligator should contact
Chicago's Brookfield Zoo, as it has
rink U. S. merchant ships with-
out warrung te kill as many crew-'
men as possible, since a shortage of
trained personne Iwould be a ma-
i or American problem.,.
Doct meuts were presented from
Nazi naval files showing that
Adolf Hitler outlined the U-boat
chmpeigu t gainst the United
States in a talk with Jnpanese
NEW YORK. Jan. 14. UP—The
nationwide telephone tieup ended
today as the Association ot Com-
munication Equipment Worlers,
and children in Europe, China,
and the Philippines and has made
possible the start of their reha-
bilitation this winter.
“In sharing our comparative
plenty with the less fortunate
once again, we make the Victory
Clothing Collection an expressin 1
of our gratitude to the Almighty
for the victory won at so great
a coat.”
their stork to the public at
greatly reduced prices and in
rmall blocks. This would dis-
perse widely the ownrship of
Japanese corpoc tiohs once the
most elesely held in the world.
Reduce Capitalism
ficient bit of sleuthing on the
part of Parker nnd Tarrant Coun-
ty rleteetiveke led to the surround-
ing of Jcrgenson and his ac-
cvmplice ir an eustside Weatherford’
fourist camp
Fheritf Smith will go to Weath-
erford today to return the stolen
untomnbile.
Jorgenson’s criminal record dat-
es.back to 1927 when he was first
vrees for past 24 hogre.
Minimum temper atur 34 de-
wrees for part 24 hours -
servikes will be held
ut 10 JO a m.. at the
conversion strikes foreign seamen be taken pris-
House and Senate were Kavelud , Ohima heartily agreed
to order, at nooh r second ! sid xapan would be forced
session of the ^»th Congress fol, w thh same methods
The session will test President _ . mili. .
Truman’s party leadership on the .Co Ho,. th " seere-
issue of his legislative recommen-tarOethEritishuprjecuttonHe has bren placrd on
dations. Mr. Truman went directly lla ( 1 ifdjth 6 icience, ai leave after 22 months
tthenpesplonzormsuppor d.....&mra" kP "Boehttzhoneandt-AneE.....ot
throp negesslona irusis the presi. defendante and rormer command-
0 Te*.
‛ BULGARIA Z/BAcK
1 jonkDENEu5J==szm
MRS. ELEANOR ROOSEVELT, widow of the late president, and Senator
mce when the Six th UNO plenary Tom Connally of Texas, delegatee to the United Nations general
oriaana igancn. . assembly, are shown in London’s Central Hall on Parliament square
Th 2srmmomneneimaptory.nnar"opevysnumonnataspirewanoy
-REuhef fide Pha "o0 to when) guiding over this assembly" (International Soundphofot
get the necessary 1 wo-thirds ma- ! .1 -i • 1 ‘ ■ • H.-j
sheriff Oran Emith this morn-,
‘"oil the -night of December 17.’ 1ocal at Cleveland said they had
this some Jorgerson stqle an auto- not been instructed by their own
said telegrams had been sent to
ACEW locals throughout the na-
tion. but that the withdrawal of
and- drilling chatters Hr new
clubs thecughout the slate.
dent’s request for a law to create
fact-finding boards to halt strikes.
Ben. James O. Eastland, D, Mies..
I said he would ask the senate to
take up this question immediately.
Eastland said he would seek
unanimous consent to bring the ad-
ministration fact-finding bill to the
floor at once. It is now in the sen-
ate habor committee which has
been . holding hearings it seemed
doubtful however, that Eastland ’
vag
-Bctions of I he British press
kept Up a campnign to "dratt"
" nemrerreta -tern 14. —A L^g
fiscaterv war profits tax, possibly
ttroactive for a .many as 15
-err. wi be r rhief AHied weapon
I- hreakire u» Japnn’s great indus- '
trjl combines, it was learned to-
dav. - . i
The tax will be part of a three-
• int program designed to combat
। flation and also dlemonstrate to
ha Jauans pecnle—especially the
miuT5 rirtl ; mdtarmnm - that w . '
ciocs not pay.
Other provisions are a stiff
J
E- 7
g, • ' , .n,
, —-li a
Gen. Daight D. Eisenhower ns
ireretary general of the UNO. de-
spile Byreh statement that
Eisenhower wasn’t a candidate^
The newspape:s of Lord Beaver-
brook have bern rarticulatly loud
Ward Johnson of Alvarado and
inference vth
"armrot or she homverjs, Edsark,
L. Warrer. If. 8 Conottatior dr k
rector bevowter that "m definite' m
ing the dame will oudls rq
.nd repluce existing fac
Thia, bi idee, cf nourse. wA
an existing facility eucep
iper where tha "Stale Hi
Derartinent hnd a e reed to
the bridge and allocated $
wl" be taken uveranr to Jacks- H
boi- for buri under the direction :
of Grm bi Pearson Funeral Home.
Survivora include two sons, W.
r Mustin, 'Georges Creek, and
I. M Mustin Jacksboro; two j
, daughters, Mrs Cla Bonner, Fort
Worth, and Miss Dora Mustin.
Georges Creck; 10 arandchildren j
l ..nd 28 great-grandchildren.
• "*
ASTERAGAD
mnhile belongine to Cornelius
Goldsmith of Alvarado. On De-
remhrr 19 he used this machine-
In the robbery of a Waco drug
store. Following this escapade
rothing mor wus heard nt the
Cnidemith car until Weatherford
efricials spotter it in a garage
At Sunday Meeting; i
May Beat Deadline ' ed but nothing definite wax ,
— — * ed since the Federal agenoies
Swift- and Co..
" *70
that time. Her husband. 4. 1‛.
been Mustin. one of the early pioneers
t he ma MX’ meat
WASHINGTON. Jan
Nazis, Japs Early Agreement to Sink
U. S. Slips Without Warning Told
Kecapture Profits
The recaptre of war profits j
wnl be direeted againist operating
orporatior.s, and may take in
money earned as long ago as 1931.
However, officinls explain, it can-
not be so severe as to put all the
bis companies in the hands of the
government nor can its effect on *
ron-Japanes interests fn Japan
be . distegarded.
One volution, they believe
would hr bankrupting the cer-
porations, and then velling |
for Pcu, Mike Hopkins, Walter
Munich secretary Charlie Peyton, Board Request Fop
and assistant, Mrs: Jc Forston.
- --- '
----......... —, meme........
_________ . _____________________________________________________________________________________
Attend State Meet
Japen agreed ealy in the wn-to
Homer „shirley Rains, employee
of the Santa Fe for the past 30
years, died this morning at 7
o'clock hi n Temple hospital.
Funeral arranuements have not
been completed as yet, but infor-
mation. mav be obtained by calling
Crcaler-Pearson FuneraI Home
--- >■»' ■■■—■ nA» as -----------
MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED
Marriage icenses have been ja-
med to the following persons at
7 the county courthouse
Marvin Dale Gosdin and Mrs.
. Tudith Gregsby of Cleburne; Frank
West of Georgetown and Betty
June Jackson of Alvarado; Aaron
A Hughes, Jr., of Godlev and
Mios Joyce Hodges of Cleburne;
BiIly Joe Wade nnd .Yera Nell
Abrhire,, both of Alvurado.
L~ 4 ANKARA GR’SuNudemad
\ TURKEY--
EuN"A° -
cert Lain The Asscciation is
setting aside fluids for advertising
of the trail which, runs along
the route of Highway 81 A
Directors attending the meet -
ing wer: Taylor George, Lambert
Lam, Bill Sande re, Wiliam Raw-
land, W E Abbas, Qary Knippa.
Roy Andersn. Marlon Carper.
Kenneth Darden. John Martin,
Penn Jackson. Frank Lacewell,
Im----
I SOVIEI WANIS
FI FAGEpOM Or
“Mind Your Own Business’ Says Pearl
Americans to contribute,,clothing
-aa Harbor Committee to CIO Leaders
'Illis winter more than 200.
'in»R>R—r iRifua .......ai......
the world are payirg the cost of
-zm- Days Grace on Telephone Tieup;
- Secretary of State James F. m . . A,
SS Meat Packers Strive to Avoid Strike
the Whitney Date
he apeoponed estex
showdown on the question of re-lan order that in
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Morey, John B. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 52, Ed. 1 Monday, January 14, 1946, newspaper, January 14, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432452/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.