Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 115, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1947 Page: 1 of 8
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1
1
GdtinecpiWe
v5
57TH YEAR
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY,
/
1.3
r
1
’ A
the
Bi
■
f i
of
this year and $1,668,000,000 high-
s
with
,000 a
Soar
Marl
irk
and
right, completes
nds. (APTWire-
teen
photo.)
+
-*
we
ours.
to
Elion mark
1
Return Dairen to
who
B. Benchenstein of
News Briefs
— Gen.
The Weather
here en-
%
One of the
the navy’s tw
‘ 1)
crashed and
$483,000,000 to $19,120,000,000 —
cut.
The yield from direct taxes on
of
from foi
coast.
attaches
lings *15 to *20;
I
year-
Stainless steel first came into
northeast
of
n
ville
for tax reduction,” Mr. Truman
eaid.
has been called by Cecil Farr, Chest. These principles will be
president of the Junior Chamber
brought up for discussion at the
ministration are effected.
e whether
or organic-
Chairman Taber (R-
with
e house appropriations
cedure. (2) It
now being waged in East
Members of
unity.
a
up $373.-
/
b
H
1
2
Against Industry
Past Four Billion
; Two-Party State in f48
Aim of Offshoot of GOP
Income __________
Outgo ___________
Surplus_________
Year End Debt --
Defense Cost____
Veterans’ Benefits
er than the budget he submitted
ust a year ago.
Even so, the president said the
treasury will close its books on
June 30, 1948, with its first bal-
with incomes up to
year.
Miami in Carnival
Three-Day Air Show
Squadrons of
including 21 jet-
fighters from Ci
unity Chest,
inevitably
terest charges
Mr. Truman did not mention
• suits today as the unofficial total
5 of claims by labor unions against
pleted the ______
nad been schedu
threats by
NY) of thi
By The Associated Press
* There were new aspects in the
; nation’s portal-to-portal back-pay
Cloudy, little
change in tem-
perature, occa-
sional rain or
drizzle this aft-
ernoon and in
off at St. ___ _ _
promised, however, that another 1 /The Soviets "have occupied
would be sent own before the administered Dairen since v
tempt to wrest from the Demo-
crats the political monopoly they
have enjoyed in the state.
Capt. J. F. Lucey of Dallas, who
was elected president, said, "dur-
ing the last four years four tra-
ditionally Democratic southern
(3) The time, thought and en-
ergies of the paid executives and
to Congress
—
West Texas: Partly cloudy, not
much change in temperature this
afternoon and tonight; lowest to-
night near 32 in Panhandle; Sat-
urday fair and warmer. .
Ohio is the nation's largest pro-
ducer of Bessemer and electric
furnace steels.
194*
$37,730,000,000
37,528.000,000
202.000.000
260,200.000.000
11,587,000,000
7.343,000,000
He said success of the two-
party movement was necessary
to counteract “the propaganda of
the political action committee of
the CIO and its much-heralded
operation Dixie.”
The club proposes to offer a
full slate of Republican candi-
dates for all state, district and
county offices in 1948.
In addition to Lucey and Mc-
Lean, these officers were elected:
I be r of Commerce _______
; information about
pated higher outlays _ _
farm prices, an inrrases in
I
URL
-0,
a
\ -
-e
nue estimates are based on the
assumption that business activkty
will average “slightly higher”
than in boom-time calendar year
1946. TTT
Obviously anticipating Repub-
lican potshots at his program, the
president stoutly defended his
boot—provided there are no tax :
cuts in the next 18 months He
1948 Surplus Predicted
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 (AP).—President Truman pro-
posed today that the government spend $37,528,000,000 dur-
ing the fiscal year which begins next July 1. His budget mes-
sage to the Republican congress thus went more than $8,000,-
000,000 over the limit some key GOP leaders have set for
federal outlays in their determined drive to cut taxes while
whittling away at the mammoth national debt.
ny Doolittle, were here for the
show.
LAKE SUCCESS, Jan. 10 (P)— Australia a
be the only hold-out against the big power fore
cision to place Trieste under the administration <
tions security council ♦—-----— - - .
encouraged.
• (6) Intelligent personal inter-
est in and knowledge ofsocial
services and conditions, on the
part of a larger number of per-
sons, are stimulated.
I
■ J
29 1eg-7%
Eem bdd ' dk tn
PREMIER RECEIVES CHECK — Secretary of the Treasury
John W Snyder (Left) hands a check for $50,000,000 to Italian Pre-
mier Alcide de Gasperi in payment for services, supplies and facili-
ties bought by American armed forces in Italy with Ura advanced
by the Italian government. The ceremony took place in Washington.
<AP Wirephoto.)
L..
0;
states have thrown off the brass
collar of the one-party system.
They have achieved this through
Portal-to-Portal
? Back Pay Suits
Take New Aspects
Claims by Labor Unions
"SAFETY-SCAPE—-Irvin Bassett, 85, of Detroit, demonstrates
fety-Scape" at a hotel in Atlanta, Ga., for firemen and under-
. Desizned to save persons trapped in hotel fires, the simple
. . permits descent by steel ribbon releasd from an automatic
veel. Left, Bassett descends at elevator
the 12-story drop in approximately
urer; Henry
Worth, Jr, L_____________
Beaumont and Murray Sells,
Gladewater, vice president.
Netherlands, Aust
and, Yugoslavia, _ .
and, the Union of Bout
Guatemala and Turkey.
High ranking military officers,
leaded by former Lt Gen. Jim-
payers will have a high priority
among the claimants xor tax re- .
lief.
"Our long-run tax program
must be designed to maintain
purchasing power and provide in-
centives for a high level of ptu-
duction.”
In a statement to reporters Mr.
Truman referred to the budget as
a "tight one".
“It is realistic and as. complete
as we know how to make it," he
said.
Here is the way Mr. Truman
broke down his recommended ex-
penditures by programs, alcng
with how his 1948 estimates com-
pare with the newly revised es-
timates for the current fiscal
year:
1. Nations! cWfcnto army 6,-
658,000,000, navy $4,423,006,006.
GI terminal leave pay $250,000,-
000, stockpiling of strategic ma-
tenaU, etc, total $11,587,000,000;
down $3,558,000,000.
2. International affairs and fi-
nance—foreign loans, army ad-
ministration and relief costs in
occupied countries, $250,000,800.
Relief for “a few countries stili
in desperate straits," membership
in the United Nations and the
like, $3,510,000,000; down $2,884,-
000,000.
3. Veterans services and bene-
fits $7,343,000,000; down $258,000,-
000.
ready been received from the na-
tional headquarters of Commun-
ity Chests and Councils, Inc.,
which outline the important prin-
ampassaaor .ntormation obtained from the underground and
through a former employe of the Polish foreign ministry
also is a co-defendant. - ° .
The indictment charged Grocholski and three others specifically
retsgnspiragretghamnbassadthsgowanmaont in supplyng state sec-
the “English ambassador.”
asserted, making it plain he
wants a budget surplus for use
exclusively in paring down the
$259,300,000,000 national debt,
which costs *5,000,000,000 in in-
year around struggle for financial
subsistence, enabling them to con-
centrate their energies on the
service program.
(4) Coordination of agencies is
placed on a practical basis.
(5) Better standards of agency
service can be established and
meetig, ’ . ;
Joe Leonard, Jr, who has been
in charge of gathering the Com-
munity Chest data for the Jay-
cees, stated that local citizens
must realize that collecting mon-
ey in a single drive each year is
just the heginning for a sound,
well organized - —
“The <3
Mor+LA1., .0, corporations was placed at $8,-
northerly winds on 270,000,000, a decrease of $957,-
000,000.
Mr. Truman said his 1948 reve-
Mr. Truman earmarked $11,587,000,000—or nearly a third of
the total for national defense—and again ignored Republican de-
damnds that this item should be held to $10,000,000,000 or less.
But the chief executive, calling his budget "realistic" and
“tight,” insisted that he had been "more hard-boiled . . . than I like
to be” in enforcing his own economy demands on federal agencies
His recommended total of $37.-•--------------------
Ralph W. Currie, Dallas, secre-
tary; John R. Black, Dallas, treas-
Sweiffel of Fort
HOUSTON, Jan. 10 (A)—The
Dow Chemical company has
signed a contract with union of-
ficials representing 900 AFL
members providing for the pay-
ment of back portal-to-portal pay
and settling a wage-raise dispute.
HOUSTON, Jan. 10 (A — A
bor plans an organization drive
among all crafts in the Rio
Granda valley, T. W. Keyes, sec-
retary of Local 2190 of the AFL
Carpenters union, announced.
funds in accordance year around st
a systematic budget pro- ‘ M
’• promotes effective
irdination and ad-
National positions on a
, ___,____________________. . . „ front along the Sungari
prominence in the early 1900’s I river, 80 miles northeast C
1 introduced by an Englishman. ' I Changchun.
i BULLETIN
WARSAW, Jan. 10 (A)—The British ambassador to Poland was
named today before a military tribunal as having received state and
military, secrets from the outlawed underground organization, ac-
cused of attempting a coup d etat against the Polish government.
The charge^Was disclosed nine days before the scheduled par-
liamentary elections. Both Britain and the United States have pro-
tested that arrangements for the elections did no insure free voting
The British ambassador is Sir Victor Cavendish-Bentinck.
A,1The key figure in.a sensational high treason trial, Count Gro-
Cholski, told the military tribunal that he had delivered to the
ambassador information obtained from the und
Temperatures: High yesterday,
58; low last night, 40; noon today,
47;highforthe year, 58; low
mpu for the year, —2;
rainfall, .06;
barometric pres-
sure, 30.30.
East Texas:
____ of Commerce, to gaug
LONGVIEW, Jan. 10 (P)--The general sentiment is fo_______
Gregg county commissioners ing a Community Chest , in this
court has approved construction city. All persons interested in the
of a $20,000 county tuberculosis health and socia
expanded agricultural research.
8. Natural resourses — $1,101,-
000.000; including $443,000,000
for atomic energy research and
development (no long
as a "defense” item)
000,000.
______...J welfare prob-
clinic to be erected on the Gregg lems of the community are in-
Memorial Hospital grounds here. vited to attend the meeting Tues-
The clinic will aid in .the inten- day, Jan. 14, at 7:30 p. m, in the
sive anti-tuberculosis campign Chamber of Commerce building.
Eas. 1 Members of the Junior Cham-
_ > | ber of Commerce have hern gath-
HARLINGEN, Tex, Jan. 10 (P) ering information about Com-
The American Federation of La- munity Cheat organizations for
several weeks. Books have al-
posals which, respectively, are
about four and six times greater
thn the pre-war average under
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
, its employes, and 2,000 workers
• at an Indianapolis plant refused
: to file a retroactive pay suit.
: At Bridgeport, Conn., the Alli-
son company which employes 60
CIO workers in manufacture of
abrasive wheels, said it had closed
after being named defendant in
a *150.000 portal suit. A com-
pany official said “attachments
: against the company’s two bank
accounts deprive it of funds with
which to carry on its business."
‘ In Houston, Tex, a settlement
Fon portal claims was reached
when the Dow Chemical Co.
wARME Snnytnge assumans there u no incomne tax
cloudy, Slightly wearmen Rert
to moderate no.....
A Connecticut company closed ’ „
its doors indefinitely after being *rouP8
- i sued; a Texas firm agreed to pay w part-
nearly $550,000 in settlement with
DALLAS, Jan. 10 (P)—A group of state Republicans, acting in-
• dependently of the party’s official state leadership, prepared today
the next steps in their state-wide drive to build up their party for
the avowed purpose of making Texas a two-party state by 1948.
■--• The group organized the Re-
publican club of Texas at a meet-
ing here yesterday and announced
that active Republican groups
would be formed in every pre-
cinct of every county in an at-
DALLAS, Jan. 10 (P)—Zeke
Grimes, Dallas real estate opera-
tor, said today a corporation has
been formed to finance a pro-
posed *50,000,000 radio and tele-
SX. center in the vicinity of
The plans will be discussed
here next week at a meeting of
Dallas Chamber of Commerce
leaders with representatives of
New York radio interests, Grimes
said. I . I
The real estate man said he had
received a telegram from Eliza-
beth Blount of a Nacogdoches
banking family, and now a New
York radio producer and script
writer, that she would accompany
the New York group.
Leonard explained that a Com-
1 " "-3 two important
: (1) It raises
anced budget in 18 years—and
—
"Under the wartime tax system
millions of taxpayers with
small incomes are called upon to
pay high taxes," Mr. Truman
said. "When the time comes for
taxes to be reduced, these tax-
---e--g
WASHINGTON, Jan. 18 (—
Here’s where each dollar the
federal girt remit spends, dur-
tag the 12 months beginning
next July 1 would gounder
the budget propoged by Presi-
dent Truman today:
National defense (army-
navy), 38 eents.
Veterans’ services and bene-
fits, 19.5 cents.
Interact on the national debt,
13 cents.
International affairs and fi-
nance, 9 prats
Tax refunds, 5 cents.
Social welfare, health and se-
curity, 4 cents.
Costs on pon-military gov-
ernment agencies, 4 ceta.
cation (highways, 5,40
Agriculture and agricultural
resources, 3.5 cents.
National resourees (ineludes
atomic energy work), 3 cento
Education and researeh, 2.5
cents.
Housing and community fa-
cilities, 1.5 centa.
Commerce, finance and in-
dustry, 1 cent.
Total, *1.00.
Marrs McLean of San Antonio,
______________________a vice president of the club, as-
? industry soared past the four bil-1 serted that the Democratic party
had been “stolen away from the
south by northern left - wing
’’ and that the “Democrat- mu.,
57^*^ Private, Military
6. Education and general re-
search $88,000,000; up $17,000,000.
7. Agriculture and agricultural
—----—----E-------- resources — $1,382,000,000; up
committee to use a “sledgeham- $264,000,000 due chiefly to anti-
mer and meat ax” in order to pated higher outlays to suppott
whack spending down to *29,- farm prices, an increase in tanm
140,000.000 next year. But he re- for rural electrification work, and
marked in his message:
"The responsibilities of the fed-
military
heduled. __________
“Phantom” metpflaternwhenn temt --
is, Mo. The navy siansYn Dairen.
Community Chest Meeting Scheduled Tuesday""" i "
A general meting of Gaines- ' ciples in the organization and op- beingmet, and how they might (2) Economies in the use of vol- - "There is no justification now
ville and Cooke County citizens eration of a local Community bemore.efretively met, unteer service and in the cost of “h M ‘ M - i
has heen callad hv Cacil Farr- Chest These nrinriniat wil he _ money raising and financial ad-
oblique dig at a bill by Rep.
a $202,000,000 surplus to Knudsqn -Minn fora flat20
nrovid.d 1r. ..... nI oX percent tax cut for all persons
signed a contract agreeing to pay
<nearly $550,000 in back portal
ipay to 900 AFL union members
zin a lump sum before Feb. 6
At Indianapolis, Charles E.
Walker, editor of the publication
of Local 1001. CIO United Elec-
stric. Radio and Machine Workers
of America, said 2,000 members
voted almost unanimously not to
fiie a portal pay suit against P.
R. Mallor and Co. The suit would
have involved more than $1,000,-
’000 and Walker said the decision
not to file was taken despite in-
isi tence by the international un-
g5on that the action be filed
• Senator Ferguson. (R-Mich.) in
New York yesterday urged an
immediate investigation of the
iretroactive pay suits affecting
wartime-oDerated plants for the
government.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Jan 10 UH—
Cattle 900; calves, 600; slow at
weak, prices in line with the lows
of the week; medium to gpod
heifers and lightweight mixed
ichrie Group to Finance
Television Center
planning, coo;____
ministration of the social welfare,
health and recreation services of
. _________by China,
with 21 representatives! Hsiung said occupation
reign countries, including Dairen was an international qu
i from Veezuela, the tion which could not be decid..
la, New Zea- by military operations. The gov-
ruguay, Po-1 ernment will take only _______"
ith Africa, tic steps to find an appropria
I solution, he added.
Lags and mature steen scarce;
common to medium butcher cows
*11 to *12.50; bulls $10 to *14;
common and medium calves
$10^0 to *15.
: Hogs, 700; active and steady on
all weights; good and choice
butchers, 180-300 pounds, topped
jat *22; good and choice 325-450
pound butchers $20 50 to $21.75;
good and choice 140-175 pounds
$18 to $21.75; sows *18 to *18.50;
stacker pigs *1* down.
Sheep, 1,600; all classes steady;
eood lambs absent; medium grade
lambs *19; medium and good ewes
5$7.25 to $7.50. | ■ [
Two Cars Damaged
in Collision Here
A collision causing damage to
, two automobiles occurred at 3:50
p m. Thursday at the Commerce
and Elm street intersection.
James M Dennis, 410 North
‘Conomerce street, was driving a
1935 Ford truck north on Com-
merce street which collided with
a 1939 Chevrolet driven by Ray
Dewitt Kelly, 518 Gladys street,
who was going east on Ela.
k
M
AFTERNOON, JANUARY 10^1947 (EIGHl^PAGES)_______ NUMBER 1 15
$37,528,00ft;000 B udget Detailed
In Truman’s Message
Australian Hold-Out
On Trieste Apparen
SS SZS2 ESt ReBasthesTAftscan
"At the present time, in my
judgment, high taxes contribute
■ to the welfare and security of the
country."
The president also took another
been arriving for t
The navy’sfamd _ _
held them on the ground in the route to Nanking, said no formal
north and 15 marine Corsairs negotiations have been held yet.
from Cherry Point, Frifrssomt #e aid National troops that
north.of Dairen weeks ago hav
-----------------
oops halted to prevent any pos-
ibility of incidents with us-
munity Chest had
functions, namely: ______
funds each year primarily for its ______________ ........ ....
affiliated social welfare, health lay managers of the welfare agen-
and recreation agencies, and dis- cies are released from the aU-
tributes these ' '
PEIPING, Jan. 10 UH — Gov-
diplom4- ernment reports from its new
propriate first army today said an esti-
mated 35,000 Communist troop*
If 1
.4.
IN •
27 '
The following advantages of
a Community Chest were cited by
Leonard: (1) More money is ob-
tained from more givers, thus as-
suringduniversal and more ade:
AnathemRRorrviangcensary socip
--------- _----—.administered Dairen since wan
naneuvers end. end. An August, 1945, Sino-Sovie
An army DC-3 Baseanger ship provides the city shall be an opet
anded late yesterday from the port, administere *
capital with 21
By The Associated Press
Year Ending June 30,
1947
------------- $40,230,000,000
------------- 42.523,000,000
(deficit) -2,293,000,000
------------- 260.400,000,000
------------- 15,150,000,000
____________ 7,601,000,000
placed the estimated income for
the coming year at $37,730,000,000
—a drop of $2,500,000,000 from
the current fiscal period.
In addition to reiterating his
plea for congress to leave war-
time income rates in effect, Mr.
Truman prodded the lawmakers
to: •
1. Prevent a $ 1,200,000,000-a-
year cut now scheduled to take
effect July 1 in excise taxes on
liquor, beer, wine, furs, jewelry,
cosmetics, movie admissions, night
club bilks, telephone service and
other items.
2. Increase postal rates suffi-
ciently to wipe out the post office
department’s $352,000,000 operat-
ing deficit.
If congress accepts the recom-
mendations on excise taxes and
postal rates, the president said, it
can increase the $202,000,000 mar-
gin of surplus—which he termed
“very slight"—to $1,800,000,000.
In contrast, he added that he
now expects the current fiscal
year which ends June 30, to wind
up with a deficit of $2,293,000,000.
Upping his 1947 figures for the
second time since his record
peacetime estimates in last year’s
budget message, the president
said expenditures from this year
will reach $42,523,000,000—a $1,-
000,000,000 gain from his August
estimates. He ascribed this large-
ly to veterans programs.
Revenues this fiscal year will
reach $40,230,000,000, a gain of
$600,000,000 over August esti-
mates and a jump of $8,717,000 -
JOO from his forecast of a year
ago. Better - than - expected tax
ollections resulting from high-
evel business activity accounted
for the increases, Mr. Truman
said.
For the coming year, however,
th chief executive declared, in-
come is expected to run $2,500,-
000,000 lower—because of (1) the
scheduled drop in excise taxes,
(2) the end of excess-profits tax
collections and (3) an expected
decline in receipts from surplus
property sales.
Despite this overall drop, Mr.
Truman said collections from di-
rect taxes on individuals will rise
eral government cannot be fully
met in the fiscal year 1948 at a
lower coat than here indicated.
“Even if the cost were less, it
would be desirable in our present
economic situation to maintain
i
ilg Regisker
portal-to-portal pay suit brought
by 19 former employes against
the Hughes Tool company was
settled yesterday by an agreed
judgment. The claimants recov-
ered a total of *3,802.14. repre-
senting overtime pay and liqui-
dated damages for a period
of two years. a
DALLAS, Jan. 10 (P)—A five-
alarm fire at the G. W. Owens
Lumber company on Hampton
road here this morning virtually
destroyed the half-block long
structure, police said. The fire
raged two and a half hours.
MANILA, Jan. 10 (_Two P-
51 Mustangs from the U. S.
army’s jet propelled fighter base
at Florida Blanca colleded in
flight Wednesday without injury
to either pilot, the army said
today.
FORT WORTH, Jan. 10 UH —
Brig. Gen. Roger M. Ramey, a
native of Denton, Tex., has as-
sumed duties as commander of
the recently reactivated Eighth
Air Force, which has its head-
quarters at the Fort Worth army
air field.
The council was scheduled toin 1 f
“aSSS Fant Milling :
port as its first peace-mainte- ( n
nance project under a governor I mnanV KIVQ
be adopted by the ouncil after •VV-HO-J UllJ©
H Whaley Mill
decsdonoB ton Sherman Firm to Take
which began last Tuesday with Over Properties in
Australia dissenting on principle. Gainesville April F' ’
In the meantime, the council "2. 12" Mi
yesterday began a prospectively The Fant Milling company
long and stubborn debate cen- Sherman announced Friday
tering on the United States and purchase of the Whaley Mll
Russia over the world-wide arms Elevator company plant
reduction program recommended Gainesville from theKimheli
by the general assembly in De- mond Mill of Fort Worth,
cember. consideration was not diselo
ing that toe
and spent w
the greatest
it obviosiy
less It knm
4. Social welfare, health and se-
urity — $1,654,000,000, up $84,-
000,000.
5. Hour:
ing and community fa-
6000,000, down $5,-
ly because subsidy
payments for scarce materials sr*
expected to be halted before fis-
cal 1948 begins.
ciliti
000,000
The opening round of debate the Associated Press reported.
developed on a familiar pattern. The purchaser will take ps- i E
Soviet delegate Andrei A. Gromy- session April 1. md
ko contended the American dele- The Gainesville mill has a fldur m
gation is seeking to stall on arms production capacity of 1,200 hn- Na
reduction and American Delegate dredweight daily; corn 400 hun- 1
Herschel V. Johnson stood firm dredweight, and feedmill, 150 V822
for priority of atomic control dis- tons. Grain* storage capacity is 12dn
cussions as the basis of disarm- 600,000 bushels. > I
ings. The Whaley Mill is aing.
At that time, the new members ville’s oldest business establish- E
of the council — Belgium, Colom- ment, having been startec bvj. m
bia and Syria—asked for more O. A. Whaley in 1869—77 years -
time to study the proposal, but ago, on his farm east of Wheeler
since have indicated that they creek, two miles from Gaines- ti
would vote for the project. ville. :
(Australian Delegate Norman J. Whaley former a partnership 412GA
O. Makin, the current chairman with B. F. Scruggs and operated thel Sal
of the -national council, argued a miil on Lindsav street from writers,
that there was no specificcharter 1882 to 1896, at which time the deviee1
provision for an administration plant was wreckd by a boiler ex- Ie
. _ ---------------- such as that arranged for Trieste. I plosion, and Whaley and his
the activities of groups similar to Prior to last-minute consults- nephew th* late J C Whaley
fsomt 0 2" H22"900556 J 6. A. Whaley retired from Bn t ISll A^YTlbcLSSCldOY tO
a proposal needing an affirmative the business in 1905, and J. C. ' 7 T 5-5 “ "
majority of seven. Whaley was named president of 7) • 1 , 7 T T • 1 T TV y • , 2
- —-- Poland is Linked With
Planes Roar Over Attempted Coup D^Etat
--- - - — - - theKay Kimbell interests of BULLETIN
-Fort Worth in 1941 Mr. Honea 1s-d-hiht- bulletin
has since been associated with
* the Fant company in Sherman,
, , J producers of Gladiola flour.
Open*; Navy • Phantom -g-g,.
Crashes at St. Louis
MIAMI, FIs., Jan. 10 UH—Be-1* °
tween 1,500 and 2,000 army, navy,
Marine and privately owned
SSES China Start Soon
Kszawar Troope Pushing Toward.
About 10,000 pilots and air- Port Area Halt to Avoid
midethrislan pograktozsPant Incidents With
flying, military aircraft maneuv- PEIPING, -tan 10 (
ers, and air race*. Hsiung Shih-Hui. C
" iry craft— Chiang Kai-Shek’s 1
•lied army headquarter* at Mui .____,
ia I have told Chinese newsmen that form-
past week: al negotiations with Soviet auth-
lue Angel | orities for return of Dairen to
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 115, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1947, newspaper, January 10, 1947; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1470838/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.