Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1946 Page: 1 of 8
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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A
Cleburne TIMES-REVIEW
1 >
United Press Leased Wire Service
Published Daily Except Saturday
41ST YEAR, NO. 81
t
NATION WILL
DOUBLE PREWAR
GUARD FIGURES
PENDING ATOMIC TESTS
feet
8 8
%
Harbor Strike
1
/
to
jobs
indications
e--gt"
i
«
T.
I
1
I
a
-
and
N
I
*
258
HUSBAND
»
her husband
; •;
Photo.'
and
provided
Texas’ assigned quota 'will be
The postwar national guard con- shore across, the Hudson River to
would discourage collective bargain-
Wage Stabilization
4
activated.
the president after he had rejected
a
for wages. The revised draft was
Booster Club
Pending Changes
Plans Annual
Football Banquet
formally.
I
The Pope was sandwiching pri-
i
Retort
v
questioning,
General
(U P—
st 7:30 and ticket
will be sold at
tory:
the
Precedent Set
Negroes on a -petit jury, in federal
Reilly. "As
—Local clothing collection lead-
The Weather
era wondered whose heart
was
Doesn’t Want Job
broken when they came
across
HOUSTON. Texaus, Feb. 14 tu.m-- RELEASED AT NORMAN
p.m, .
from
14. (U.P)—
FORT WORTH, Feb
news-
in parenthesis.
_ f
Roy* mostly 1390 Few good stock-
MILK AND ICE FUND
11.50.
3.500. Slaughter lambs ac-
Lowest temperatures 28 to 82 de-
tem agreement as a basis for set- mond junior Bascom. Fainter 3/c
tlement
(30), Gen. Del.
T
4 1
-d
t.la
nE
nags
Tugmen Return
To Work in N.Y.
Pope Improved;
Works on Talks
For Consistory
Texas To Have
Total of 29,321
Guardsmen
lective
after —1
The imn
ing doubt
two
Rusk
including
couldn't
OKLAHOMA CITY. Feb 14 .P
— Gov. Robert S. Kerr hinted today
.that he did not want to be „secre-
Funeral Services for
Howard Hampton to
Be Held Friday
Houston Plants
Will Meet Pay Hike
New
their
to
on
that
had
Wilson
Motors
says
and
Under
vealed
ecutives
When
arrives
O. Sartor and Miss Marv Lou Myres
of Cleburne; and J. B. Wesson and
Mrs Wynonah Hodges of Alvarado.
Gordon
ces Leah
l
F
Krueger Given
Auto by City
Of San Antonio
te result was grow-
i the Senate would
it
had
ted tentatively,
in the past, the states have
vided armories and provided
3
r
ar
cd
MARRIAGk LICENSES ISSUED
The following marriage licenses
have been issued at the courthouse:
Lt.
over
3
4
J
and 2,229 in the air forest which
brings ths total to 29,321.
pro-
Per-
th*
men that "I hired out here a little
over" three years ago ana ram
not quite finished with my job"
Kerr said he had nothing more
to say regarding speculation that
tary of the interior--even
could.
The chief executive told
rten
are
A
who
greee north. Friday warmer in the
afternoon.____________(.......
where
(NEA
re-
ex-
in-
Thursday
am......
a.m.
am .....
a.m. v....
a.m.
n
31
31
33
34
45
63-
"e
F fl
mancabinet.
The old curmudgeon is Secretary
of interior Harold L Ickes. He will
cease to be secretary of Interior to-
Hogs 300 Active and steady Good
and cholce 160 Iba up 14.85. ceiling.
viving wage controls in the war-
time pattern was a victory for Sec-
retary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellen-
are. Just as they came from the
Interior. Department mimeograph:
Tort N. •
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
PHONE 133
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
PHONE 134
Ickes' successor. Almost any wes-
tern Democrat in or out of office
may exgect to figure in the pre-
nominatiop stakes.
Livestock Market
LI
. 42/4
:41«
371 5
3« in
■r •. 333
F--g '
—a l
L z
WASHINGTON, Feb. 14. k.p)—A bach and Chairm
newnwag-rice policy was in Pres- of the Wage st
ident Truman s hands today but ef- They argued that
forts to end the steel strike were ■
move millions of tons of oil and
coal piled up on the New Jersey
bl
(By United Press
York tugmen returned
I
$2 apiece. CU
that whte thh
ner may appea
side sale mus
the cost of
\
h
ent may have bron set I
week by the appearance
SERVING
CLEBURNE
— ---------- --
JOHNSON COUNTY
FIVE CENTS PER COPY
if he
met with steel
4 4
Pauley’s Chances Paling As Result
01 Harold Ickes’ Blast at Truman
l. -
Above
YUM! YUM! BANANAS!!!
an unwise
ibv United Press) . :
EAST TEXAS; Tait nt a colt
was to
Pacific.
The general was greeted at the
airport by his wife, his son, Col.
Walter Krueser, Jr., and son-in-
law. Col. A. D Smith. There to
greet him, also, was another hero
Kvuexer was pwesented the new- Aetive ana
car last night st a banquet given
him by the military aftsirs com-
NAVY ASKS APPROVAL ON
Cleburne High
Didn’t Need It!
—a.w9
14. 0.P- Veteran
belive a pieced-
bAofficials point out
* pi ice of the rtfn-
■ a bit high. the out-
be made to cover
the entire football
audience with the Pope
reported snagged again by a dis- ing and provoke industrial unrest,
pute over the forthcoming steel
ago
sig-
up-
rds
/ice
late
veu
. \ J. , ,__n" 1
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1946
CLEBURNE — Norman Rranklin
Hill, Seaman 1/c (»r»l a. Fronb;
Jack DeMent Swatzell, Carpenter’s
Mate l/o (21), 804 Prairie Jack
Leroy Pritchard, Beaman 1/c ID.
Rt 1; Jack Eward Bowen. ■Ignal-'
man 2/0 (34), 735 N. Robinson
KEENE-Lewts Ray Sullivan,
Ship's Cook S/c (22), Bos 1M: Ray-
$— .5
and the president. They can be
curtailed and paraphrased. buti Mrs Mary Emily Seals. 91. widow
they are too good to cut. Here they! of the late Judge W. N Seals, life-
' TYLER: Feb
court observers
The jury on which the
Negroes served aquitted a
' •(Tex), County Ngr no a charge of
Examiner Gerard D.
LARGE TRANSITION FORCE
In afternoon
Texan*. Mr. and Mrs. Wilkins
will live in Waxahachie, Texas,
which is a long way from Wel-
which represents about 75 per :
cent of the output of the basic NN - .
steel industry Vay V etoes
Spokesmen for the 750,000 st' ik- *
ing United Steel Workers (CIO) P.mi.. D,Ako
and the steel industry have been ILdPIU I I UDC
marking time for more than a week 1
the navy would
templates the continuation of many
of the units closely identified with
the history of their states of or-
igin Of necessity, the expansion
of the national guard air forces
calls mainly for the activation of
new units but all the former na-
tional guard air units will be re-
said to call for more liberal price
controls to encourage employers to
grant wage increases.
time resident of Texas, died Wed-
nesday night at 10:45 o’clock at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Char-
lie F. Snyder. 209 North Pendell
Avenue. She had made her home in
Cleburne fer the past 16 years.
Born Sept. 17, 1854. in Grimes
County. Mrs. Seals was the daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H M.
Rogers. She was married to the
late Judge Seals and resided near
Corsicana for many years before
moving to Walnut Springs in 1891.
She was a member of the St Mark's
Methodist church.
Funeral services will be conducted
Friday at 2 p. m. at the Crosier-
Pearson chapel with Rev Cecil El-
lis officiating. Burial will be in the
Walnut Springs cemetery and pall-
bearers will be her sons.
Survivors include six sons, John
D. Seals, Eastland; B E Seals. Dal-
las; Henry Seals. Del Rio; Jester
Seals. Fort Worth; Herd Seals,
Odem, and Tom Seals, Delight.
Ark.; two daughters, Mrs Lov Hill.
DeLeon, and Mrs Charlie F Sny-
der. Cleburne; eight grandchildren
and six great-grandchildren
squad, coaches and other guests
Any surplus which may occur,
though none is expected, will be
placed in the Boosters Club fund
for future activities.
Tickets may be secured, starting
tomorrow, from any of the follow-
ing: Texas Power and Light com-
pany. Snow-Flake Creamery, Tim
Aubrey at the Cleburne National
Bank and the Burton-Lingo Lum-
. ber,compaay
• "9
5 - S 388838
3 3®
Hampton of rowley.
The deceased was scheduled
200./have received his discharge
Railroad Oompany. Meanwhile of-
ficials of Hughes Tool Company,
largest Texas steel plant affected
by the strike. Mid not agree that
Texas firms should accept the eas-
the fuel-starved city. Scores of
ocean ships were waiting to be
warped into docks for loading or
unloading.
operating an unregistered distillery.' of' the outfit's effective strength
=-----===--========- wskockettoutm the region-----
The Secretary of the Interior,
Washington,
February 13, 1946
My Dear Mr. President,
I deeply appreciate the generos-
ity and graciousness displayed by
your letter of February 13. What
particularly appeals to me is your
statement' “I also consider that
this (my resignation) terminates
all of your other governmental ac-
tIVilies."------------c---------
You will pardon me if I remark
that this is in the nature of au-
pererogation. I assure you that
I have had no secret design, hav-
ing resigned a* secretary of the
interior, to hold on to any other
office under your jurisdiction.
Sincerely yours.
, (8gd.) Harold L. Ickes.
Ickes told President Truman in
morrow after having tom into
President Truman and his advisers
with a double-barrelled attack the
like of which has never been seen
around here.
He spont 18 months over-
seas in the Pacific area aboard
the U. 8 S. Hutchinson and had
participated in three major en-
The following navy men
Burger, 22,
an earlier 3,500 word letter , he
At Left
THERE'LL
WAITING
Mrs. Hilda
in Houston
BE NO
FOR HER
this afternoon and tonight Friday
on their way to join John
Hunnicutt of Odessa. Texas
has just re enlisted in the
-27,082 men in-the grona rrees.- -by a three-man hoard.-
The strikers' first task
today amid growing
that the nation-wide
Throe Houston steel plant* an-
nounced today they would meet de-
_mands.for M) 181 2 cents an hour
pay increase if the “big steel” strike
in the Hast is settled with United
. Bteelworkers of America (0IO) on
that basis.
The three companies were Shef-
field Steel A. O. Smith Corpora-
tion and Tennessee Coal, Tron and
equipment and funds for paying
the guardsmen.
Day" by Mayor Gus B Mauermann
--saw all other-activity stop, while ] would quit on March 31, or sooner
. — . --the cis/ paid tribute to, Ki egeri as the president wished Mj Truz
- GARFEELD Kan., Feb 14. tum ton his teturmnehome from the man said tomorrow would be about
> "i*" - -right* The town to speculating on
Wayne Parks and Fran-
Kirkham of Cleburne: V. warmer
Alization Board,
wage ceilings
a package labeled “For the bride."
They opened it and found a
complete bridal outfit
Stevenson, rode, wih General er
Krueger in the procession aup a,uu. onuxaatz az00
Staff members were reunited’tive and fully steady, other olasses
with their families at s reception poorly tested Good lambs with a
given at a downtown hotel. I medium end 13% and 13.50!
awaiting a White House move on eomx ~ . 1
steel prices. Swift settlement of the WASHINGTON. Feh. n Kv
25-day old walkout was expected to Chairman Andrew J. May T Ky ■
follow the price announcement of the House military affairs com-
Mr Truman's decision against re- mittee turned thumbs down today
on requests for an investigation
SHE'S DELIGHTED WITH TEX-
AS—After being met at the
Union Terminal in Fort Worth,
here this
■ of two
The White House, Washington,
February 13, 1946
My Dear Harold:
I have your letter of February
twelfth tendering your resignation
as Secretary of the Inter! w. The
letter leaves me but one choice of
action.
I therefore accept your resigna-
tion, effective at the close of busi-
ness on Friday, February fifteenth
next. I also consider that this ter-
minates all of your other govern-
mental activities.
Under the law Mr. Oscar L
Chapman, assistant secretary, will
serve as acting secretary of the in-
terior. With every good wish.
Very sincerely yours,
(Sgd,) Harry Truman.
a matter of fact, it is too bad
those men can't make some decis-
ions for the country right now."
— — ---a---------------------------—------A
price increase.
Administration officials submit-1 .
ted the revised wage-price policy to | The rejected proposal was said to
" . pCrou.. Ir. 1™ ; .030. call for the Wige Stabilisation
proposai to revive strict ceilings Board to enforce wage ceilings pat-
terned after recent collective bar-
mittee of the San An ton lb Chamber
of Commerce. The affair qlmax-
ed a hero’s welcome that earlier
included a (downtown parade.
Wainwright, Mrs Krueger Mayor
Maucimann and Gov. Coke R.
Wednesday
p.m. d... 39 2
W. W. Wirt* 3 Makes specirie provhion roe
address for the consistory Feb. 18
and a broadcast in Italian Feb. 21.
The audiences scheduled this
morning included Archbishops Sam-
uel A. Stritch of Chicago and Ed-
ward Mooney of Detroit
Only Russia and Japan will not.
be represented at the great con-
clave of Catholic prelates while
Germany will be represented
only by three new and two old
cardinals.
All other nations will have of-
ficial diplomatic representatives at
the consistory ceremonies.
As a sign of the[r respect the
whole diplomatic corps attached
to the Holy Sec deoided last night
to request an unprecedented col-
$200,000 Damage
Estimated at Ardmore
..-.x-.. j0
ARDMORE. Okla., Feb. 14. (U.P-- J
Oklahoma highway patrol officers
today estimated at more than
3200.000 damage from a torrado
which struck Ardmore early yes-
terday. destroying 30 homes and
Thjring 15 persoms;
One of the injured, Frank Bell.
50. was reported in critical eondi-
tion. but other victims were re-
leased from hospitals after em-
ergency treatment . —-H
Ardmore, a town of 20,000 in
South Central Oklahoma near the
Texas border, was isolated from
the rest of the state for several
hours yesterday morning when
telephone and power lines were
disrupted r- -.....—-t-— ■ t-
gaxements
The proposed force would
have-571,000 officers and men, in-
the ground forces and 47,600 in
the air force*. This compared
with the pre-war, strength of
295,000 in the ground forces and
5,000 in aviation.
To My Valentine
WICHITA, Kan.. Feb. 14. (U.R)
—Local and federal authorities
today investigated the possibility
that a disgruntled landlord might
have mailed a home-made bomb,
whipped in Valentine trimmings,
to OPA Area Rent Adjustment
Officer Wayne Lanning. 50.
Lanning, in serious condition
at St. Francis Hospital, lost part
of his right hand and suffered
cuts about the face when the
bomb exploded.
Hospital attendants, said a
piece of shrapnel or glass tore
into Lanning's right eye and they
were not certain whether • the
vision was affected.
Mrs: • Margaret Wilkins
sonnet for guard unite;
War Department has
it had been indicated earlier that
the steel price announcement was
ready but was withheld pending the
announcement of the policy chang-
es When the recommendations
went to the president, however. it
was reported that a disagreement
had developed over application of
the price increase.
There had been reports pre-
viously of a disagreement over
whether the price adjustment of
about 35 a ton would apply to all
steel or merely to carbon steel.
of the army's Judgment in ordering
the costly Rapido River battle in
the Italian campaign
-—Ho, vaid the Pmiiilu report issuoyl
earlier this week by the War
Department had eliminated the need
for a formal congressional inves-
tigation as far as he was con-
cerned.
The inquiry was demanded by
members of the 36th Army Divis-
ion. which fought at .the Rapido.
at a recent reunion at Brownsville.
Tex. they adopted a resolution
which questiohed the judgment of
the U. S. commander, Gen. Mark
Clark, and pointed out that half
ROME. Feb. 14. (UJO—Pope Pius
XII was reported almost recovered
today from a slight ateck of in-
fluenza as the date neared for the
consistory at which 32 new cardi-
nals from 19 nations will be elected
a L. /
court. Certainly, • they said,
marked the first time they
served in many years.
Yeary, his assistant Tructt Rattan
and all of the grid squad members
of the battling Yellow Jackets, who
foiled through last season with a
record of eight win out of ten,
will be the honored guests of the
Cleburne Boosters Club at the
Annual Football Banquet Tuesday
night. The affair will be held in
the dining room of the First Bap-
tist Church.
The principal speakers of the
evening will be Dutch Meyer, head
couch of Texas Christian Univer-
sity xt Fort Worth, and Mike Brom-
below, chief line coach of the
same school.
The dinner is planned to start
won't ba there to greet her.
Burger was shot down
France just four weeks
they were married. Mr,.
—.......aj;
6
gaining and the wage recommenda-
tions of Rovemmept fact-finding
boards The boards have proposed
pay raises of 15 to 20 per cent.
After Mr. Truman vetoed that
proposal, he was given a revised
draft which was understood to
provide a new classification of
wage increases for which employ-
ers could ask immediate price re-
lief
Wage increases for which Im-
mediate price relief could be asked
would follow the same pattern es-
tablished by collective bargaining
hortie
e and
rvice-
wear-
WASHINGTON, Feb 14. cu.n—
Die Navy asked Congress today
to approve a peacetime" "trzu-
sition force of 558,000 officers and
men pending the outcome of atomje
bomb tests on warships and of
United Nations efforts to stabilize
world conditions.
It told the Senate naval aflairs,
committoc that many men would, I
be needed (or its proposed ficetl
of 319 active ships. 3.731 planes
and 35 bases scattered throughout
the world. ) ’ .
Secretary of Navy James For-
restal testified, that anything
less than the program asked by
bananas. she just
believe her eyes Mau-
l Mrs. Ruby Hunnicutt
rn8
____________ —288
J
Cleburne and community ware re- ।
leased recently H the separation
center at Norman, Oklahoma.
Months spent oversee* ere listed J
of the Facifie -Gen Jonathan
Wainwright, now commander of the
Fourth Army , with headquarters
here
WASHINGTON, Feb. M. (U.P—
State governors today were called
I town to raise a national guard of
622,500 officers and men, more
I than twice as many as were in the
pre-war organization.
Tentative allotments of guard
• personnel, as . announced by the
War Department provide -for re-
’ activation of all the national guard
unite existing before World War
I II and the formation of many new
| ones.
go along with the president and
okay his controversial choice of
Pauley for the navy post it was
Ickes' differences with Mr. Tru-
man over Pauley's qualifications
that led the old curmudgeon to
resign in a huff.
After an exchange of letters ad-
justing the matter of resignation,
and a press conference in which
Ickes foresaw no future for Mr.
Truman other than trouble, three
Truman other than trouble, three
consisted of the distribution by the
retiring cabinet officer of an ex-
change of letters between himself
Maximum temperature 53 de-
grees for past24 hours
Minimum temperature 30 degrees
for past 24 hours
gamble, de,pits ths atomic bomb.
Adm Chester W Nimitz. chief
of naval operations, urged prompt
approval of the program. He said
it was the minimum requirement
for the nation’s need and was flex-’
iblc enough to meet any changes
in navy makeup which may be
neco sary later. - — '
Nimitz Talso held out the hope
that the nation’s military re-
quirements could be reduced in
the next few years through
more effective international ce-
opration and the eliminatiqn of
conditions “which breed wars"
"During these years of tran-
sition." he said, “it is my confi-
dent hope that world conditions
will improve and become stabiliz-
ed."
Nimitz said the program also:
1 Includes sufficient forces in
each ocean to meet commitmenta.
to the United Nations Organization
and to the regional organization
for the peace of the western hem-
ispherc. . _-6._ -
2. Supports the foreign policy
of the United States and sup-
ports the ’ occupation forces over-
dustrialists and packing house ex-
ecutives at the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel in New York after the
Washington labor-management con-
ference and before the first meet-
ing of President Truman’s fact-
finding board in the General
Motors- cse.---------- • - T-
"The only people there wore
those who were looking down
the guns--those who had been
threatened with strikes." Wilson
said. He said that Benjamin
Fairless. president of U. S.
Steel and spokesmen for the
steef industry, was not present
"There was nothing sinister about
that meeting," Wilson told NLRB
common and medium grades 9.00-
12.00. Good and choice cal vet
13 00-15.00, b ’ 1
They proposed that all old anti
new cardinals also attend.
If granted, the audience might
equal in importance the four con-
sistory mooting* themselves. The
Pope might choose the occasion
to make a public statement since
he would have the attention of all
princes of the church and the
world's diplomatic representatives.
Need Half Million
Men to Activate
Fleets Claimed
k
--
—
DETROIT, Feb. 14. (U.P- Charles
E. Wilson, president of strike-
bound General Motors Corporation,
denied today that his company, the
■steel industry and meat packer.*
have adopted a coordinated policy
against CIO unions.
Wilson testified st a ‘National
Labor Relations Board hearing on
charges that General Motors had
failed to bargain in good faith
during the 86-day old strike of
175 000 CIO United Auto Workers
against GM: •' ” ’ x,-
„vate audiences in between work
Coach Howard on two major speeches—a Latin
rmy x, a Serocant. Mr, Hunni-
cutt i, from Colchester. England.
•(NEA PhotoA
(
FORT WORTH, Texas, Feb 14.
(U.P—On this Valentine's Day,
: District- Attorney Clyde of Fort
i Worth received a lacy Valentine
•with the inscription “To a Friend
of Mine.”
Inside the Valentine, Clyde re-
ceived a personal message from
the sender. ..
“Understand that you are com-
ing up for fe-election," the mes-
sage read. "Let me knowthere
is anything I can do to help you "
The Valentine was sent by an
inmate of the State Peniten-
tiary.
(USDA—Cattle 500 calves
rFew good
ter steers and yearlings 15.00-
1500 Good beef cows scar**,
he might be chosen to succeed"
Harold L. Ickes, who resigned
yesterday
lingburough, England.
Mr,. Wilkin, i, from.
WASHINGTON Fed. - 14 (U.P)—
The chances of Edwin W. Pauley
being confirmed as Wdersecretary
of Navy apparently lay shattered
today in the wake of the old cur-
mudgeon’s departure from the Tru-1
f2-pmre98N2 noon -r
and government fact-finding
boards The oly government con-
trol of wages would operate indi-
rectly through the limit on price
I relief.
Funeral services for Howard
Wade Hampton. .22. Si c, U S.
Coast Guard, will be conducted at
2 p. m. Friday at Crowley Pres-
byterian Church with Rev. M U.
Conditt of Fort Worth officiating.
Pallbearers Will be Fred Halburt.
Jr.. Darwin Farmer. Johnnie
Hampton. J. W Hillcry. W 8.
Horn. Jr., and C. W Key Burial
will .be in the Crowley cemetery
under the direction of Crosier-
Pearson Funeral Home .
Seaman Hampton,- a member of
'tUE CWWf ' (JtttHJ crowhe om
February 6, when the small craft
of which he was a crewman was
caught in a storm near Seattle,
Wash. He was stationed at Aber-
deco, Wash He was born on
November 16, 1922 in Crowley and
was the son Of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
be
u
185 »
•labor crisis which has idled 1,529,-
000 workers might ease within the
next week' . -----S------z
The Major Labor Development,
1. New York harbor tugboat
crewmen called off a 10-day strike
which had brought the city's
7,454,995 residents to the brink of
a fuel famine.
2. The magazine Iron Age pre-
dieted , that 750.000 CIO steel-
workers , would be bsck on their
jobs by arly next week.
3. Ford Motor Co- announc-
ed that it had laid off 40,000
U. S. worker, because of steel
shortages. Eight thousand -Can-
adian workers were to be sent
home at midnight tonight.
4 Twelve hundred AFL mill-
workers left their jobs at a Detroit
Chrysler Corp., plant in a juris-
dictional dispute.
5. The four major rubber com-
panies and the United Rubber
Workers Union (CIO) agreed to
meet in Washington Feb. 18 to
work out a settlement of their
dispute on an industry-wide
basis.
Mayor William O'Dwyer of New
York announced the end of the
tugboat strike last night. He said
the 3,500 AFL crewmen and the
4 tug companies had agreed to
arbitration of their wage dispute
Mmiitfmt
Casper, a local radio announcer,
question, Mrs. Ruby Hunnicutt
about her impressions of Amer-
ica, ’ especially Texas, while her
12-year-old daughter by a for-
mer marriage delights herself by
eating bananas. Maureen. 12
years old, hadn't seen a banana
in six years when the good reo-
pie of Marshall, Texas, came on
the train With all kinds of fruit.
6 vp.m ’
8 p.m.
10 p.m. ”
experimental and developmntal
work in order to make dortin
that none of our effort is wasted
and that our thought and practice
remain /abreast of the late de-
veloyhents, 9 I
GM President
Denies Breach of
Faith With Union
SAN ANTONIO, Feb. 14. (U.P—
Gen Walter Krueger, commander
of the famed Sixth Army until its
Inactivation in Japan last month,
today drove a now car—a gift
from the city of San Antonio,
Wednesday—proclaimed “Krueger
/ A $1 contribution has been re-
ceived tor the Milk and Ice fund
from the T E L. Class, Field
Street Baptist Church.
x H >
’ % 'I r
1 sh delighted with
after I
Sus -Steel Peace Efforts Snagged Again
learn to love Texaa as he did. i UO •nii
(NEA Telephoto.) n) n• . A n • f ’
--- By Dispute Over Price Increase
Mrs.W.N.Seals,
Aged Resident,
Dies Wednesday
2” r
The ground forces would com-
prise . 29 infantry divisions, two
armored divisions and 18 regiment-
al combat teams
- The air force would have 12
wings. 27 groups and 84 squadrons,
in addition to 12 control and warn-
1 ing groups • >
Governors were requested to re-
4 port to the War Department on
their ability to recruit and main-
tain the national guard as allot-
henttu . JBWMteiiBMMMNtexmsMwe^ wuean
. - 8818
. / • 883 • ' 258522208300598
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Morey, John B. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1946, newspaper, February 14, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432479/m1/1/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.