Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 303, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 5, 1947 Page: 1 of 8
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4-
—4,
DENTON, TEXAS, TU
NO. 303
VOL. XLIV
-
122
1
d-
9
Ford-CIO Pact
■ 2
British Arrest
conti
to
• f
Nineteen Killed
In Waxahachie
M
ed i l
. m.
‘remist organizatiq.:
2
IE
S
sw
"defense emergency regulationa.
Rains Causing
Attlee Asks New
colonel.
Powers to Meet
II
Britain’s Crisis
MOK
‘4
, American as Stephen Thuransky.
M
CAMERAS GO INTO ACTION AS
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h
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the
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, • 2
the forum's mythical ntonaicov-
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test
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a
Negroes Going To
Mississippi Polls
Egypt Turns To
UN for Freedom
President Signs
Bill for Wool
ANTI-JEWISH
Riol'S FLARE
had 4
■tore
ul10
f 0s
S
2
T
i
lines which existed before the open-
ing of hostilities on July 20.
to «
for
Uhm).
of the
n
102
I
volt and his
On the nl
was at th« V
Meyer, introd
payments to
•jjj *
mushroom follows one
which completely 1
AUGUST 23
Remember the Date!
Vote FOR the College
Bididing Amendment
atomic
the fire
Oartier
McKee Negligent
Homicide Case
In Jury’s Hands
After running into the second
day, the case of Billy Ray McKee,
20. charged with negligent homi-
cide. on trial in county court went
to the jury at noon today.
The jurors were to begin deli-
beration immediately following a
lunch rec see granted byCounty
Judge Qerald Stockard.
Hikory. Wynn fired five times
wih a 28 calibre revolver, striking
Chandler few times. He died in an
ambulance
WEA
■"»»q......
invited all the youngsners who bad brought
- " ------3 _ ,hait the lot, to mke
WASHINGTON, Aug. 5—F—A world at peace "eventually" was
forecast by Presicent Truman today as he talked with more than a
Army ofticers, government
and. others.
cameras with them — and that ihcludea fully___________
batle and maneuvering for posi-
aepted hisinvtatton.
announcing the agreement avert-
ingothe strike was made pubif at
"265
19
:433
hundred boys attending the American Legion-sponsored forum on ,
government.
Heading the delegation of youngsters, who the President said are
"living at the right age" is Edmond Gong, 16, of Miami, Fla.
The Chinese-American youth wag elected last night as president
by the 103 delegates to the Boys Forum on national government.
Addressing the delegation on the terrace of the White House
lawn. Mr. Truman said:
"You are living in an age, and you are Hving at the right age to
live in that age. that I think will be.tha greatest in history.
"I have said that time and again, and I believe it.
“I would give anything in the world if I could start in now
where you are starting in, because the great outlook in the world !■
to come. We will eventually Wind up by having peace to the world
and by having people live as free individuals, regardless of race. creed
or color.
Before the wedding gift
brought up, Roosevelt had:
1. Challenged John Meyer,
Unity man for Thigh ee. to day
fUOBtLJtm “procured" any j
girls for him. Expense accoun
Charles O. Wynn. 52. charged in
Justice court with the murder late
Monday of Ray L. Chandler here
last week, was released Monday
from the county jail on a bond of
$7,500.
The bond was set by Justice of the
Peace Z. D. Lewis at an examin-
ing trial early Saturday. Wynn had
hKm Lmi.a ten ekm aaimban Am ll mAmaa
seen nela in me county jau aince
his voluntary artest a few minutes
after the shoottag Monday of last
week. A charge of murder was
filed early Tuesday by Assistant
County AttoKey Rogers.‘Teel—»
Chandler, 30, was shot after he
the wart end.)
The late Prealdent' am
reply to raquestion tron
- 329
achh
Price Support
WASHINGTON. Aug. 5--
President Truman today signed a
wool price support bill shorn of
controversial provisions that had
led him to veto an earlier version.
The new law will continue sup-
anauhe
v^tntaqdtato. award 0 on. e-
later in the 1
MR. Rev. Li
Tex. was M
saain aamz2.
SmaI TarmnG,
west of here.
. M2 v. 13
Adj
CIO United Auto Workers, in an
agreement averting their Ford Mo-
tor Co. strike shceduled for today,
were given a year's grace from
strike damage suits under the Taft-
Hartley Labor Law.
This the company agreed to in
an eleventh-hour pact which served
to keep 107,000 production workers
on the job as a nationwide walk-
out. set for noon, was called off.
The agreement, under which the
union and company will undertake
mutually to settle their dispute
growing from the act's penalty
provisions, protects the union for
a period of a year from the date a
new contract is signed.
Henry Ford II, president of the
company, issued the following
statement on the compromise:
"The agreement to refer to a
joint study group the question of
the liability of the union for dam-
ages by suit for breach of con-
tract. seems to us an eminently
fair solution to a particularly
thorny problem.
"‘Ahy new labor legislation raises
problems of human relationships.
It has become apparent to ua that
all of the ramifications of such
problems cannot be ironed out im-
mediately around the bargaining
table.
"Under today’s settlement, op-
portunity has now been provided
for finding in leas hectic surfound-
ings a solution within the spirit of
the Taft-Hartley law acceptable to
both the union and the company."
Joint Statement
A joint company-union statement
. ehead
uuton
six-man jury..
Meanwhile. John Robert Ho-
ward. 33 Lewisville Negro, entered
a plea of guilty at noon today to a
negligent homicide charge and wee
aMeesed a fine of $200 and costs
by Judge Stockard.
Howard was charged in connec-
tion with an accident June 3 in
which Andrew M. Howard, Sr., 79.
of Lake Dallas was killed when
crushed beneath his farm wagon,
struck and overturned by a car
ELLIOTT BOOSEVELT TESTI-
. FIES—Elliott Roosevelt, son of the
late President, speaks into a clus-
ter of microphones as he testifies
before the Senate War Investigat-
ing subcommittee in Washington
regarding his connection with the
Jetting of wartime airplane con-
tracts to Howard Hughes. (AP
Wirephoto)
getdaha
Chemical Co., Li
Quebec. Large _________
manufacture of soap W
.) "16.7 f
chine, a suburb of Montreal,
i st chemicals used tn the
destroyed. (AP Wirephoto).
I
t3
snapshots of him. There was great
tion as the group enthusiastically
Gong was elcted president tit______________ _,
ernomnt late yesterday on toe "Fedsrallst" ticket after a spirited cln- .
1
v I
“So, just keep up the good work. I am perfectly willing to turn
coumtry over to you when your time comes."
The president then invited all the
listed a $76 dinner with
than an Army Air Pore
and a |M chrse tor girl
Later — “ my
Colonel Eidson" st toe I
him, referring to CoL Ha
who was a member of a
headed misalon which rw
P
»
Pan American
mum ms tor
.2
iaz"ue,
*»««■»■■ 23! M
that the government byr/Hhe
photo reconnntasance ptaata Ft
(A $22,000000 contnct tor two
plane was tot after Romwstate mm
declared that "approxmately M"
persons had been marked down
for detention, but that "seme
may have gotten wind of it and
taken cover."
acyk,ce,cfv
burimmmpdhieengepmqmkdervemtnr-ee
ssm
Enlow,32, of Sanger, travelloe W
MM IW Parley car, wa enable
tpvoid omblstto.Mawee
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* 2ti (-• '
d-Chronicle
7 . ’I "opnmi"
JACKSON, Miss., Aug 5 —IP-
Negroes were voting today in
Mississippi’s Democratic primary
election despite a new law designed
to safeguard Wnie uommation of
the polls
First reports told of few chal-
lenges. which would require Ne-
groes to subscribe, if they voted,
to party principles as set forth
by the state Democratic executive
committee.
The principles, as adopted after
BATAVIA. Java, Aug. 5 —•P-
Front line dispatches indicated to-
night that both Dutch and Republi-
can troops were respecting cease-
fire orders in the Indonesian fight-
ing zones.
The Dutch won control of 210 air
miles of the north coast of Java
by linking up their eastern and
western forces a few hours before
the cease-fire orders took effect
last midnight, a dispatch from Se-
marang, said.
The Dutch indicated officially
that during attempts at mediation
of their differences with the In-
donesian Republic, they intended
to maintain control of the rich
areas they wrested In the 15 days
of fighting
Associated Press Photographer
Max Desfor, who spent the night
port prices on domestic wool nt .
the 1546 level util December U.
1948. Payments to wool grower '
will be made by the Commodity
ford, Mass., airportwpesenarrow points to Pfc. Raymond Brewer of Milledgeville,
Ga., who can be sen 3 ped in the silk of the parachute of Pfc. Wilbur Burnette j
of Jacksonville, Flaj lcte has just opened his emergency ’chute. A third para-
trooper swinging perilolsy close to the pair escaped entanglement. Fourth man, '
at far left was not involved. Center, the two paratroopers near the ground with t
Burnette’s emergency 'chute tumbling about his head. At the right Burnette is as- .
sisted by other paratroopers after he hit dirt. Beyond a shaking up neither soldier *
was injured. (AP Wirephoto).
.- $ . ■ -aV-
ommendaUop. Earner, Army,Ar
Corps experts had rated---------
plane. No plane was "
reported on-ppjl tax receipt chl-
leges. There B no evidence of, he-
5 । timidation. Nearly all who are
ion atoekings by Meyer to Actress '
Hare Emeron, the pTCMttl Mb.
Elliott Booeeveit.
3. Accused tbs Hepubjican/sen-
stars on ths uMStatiw << MM
him out for taQMy bowmy tosiy^
son of thelate -------
Truck Collision
WAXAHACHIE, Tex., Aug.
N IMS
“21* N 25
gi8en
“I believe on a strict ip-
terpretation of the low I mdgh be
reprimanded for accepting a wed-
dteg pregent trom Howard Hughes-
young Roosevelt told tbe BKAte
War Investigatig Committee. ।
The nomeaittes to inquirine into
the wartimelaward ot 0000000/4
Wynn Released
TRUMANTALKSTO YOUTH GROUP On $7,500 Bond
Testimony on the case began that in
Monday after the selection of a “
Union officials said all UAW
Ford locals in the country would
be notified of the agreement in
time to refrain from Walking out.
The Ford-UAW agreement on the
the company's blunt refusal to
grant the union an "immunity
clause."
When argument grew heated,
Ford accused the UAW of trying
to make the company a "guinea
pig'’ in an effort to avoid the law.
The union, for its part, claimed it
was on legal ground in its demand.
The Ford-UAW pact gave rise to
speculation whether the auto union
and Murray Corp, of America might
settle on a similar basis.
Seven thousand Murray UAW
members have been on strike for
nearly two weeks in an identical
demand. The walkout has led to
idleness for thousands of other
workers employed in auto plants,
supplied with car and bodie* and
parts by Murray.
(central stendard
passage of the new law in March,
include opposition to federal anti-
lynch and anti-poll tax legislation,
opposition to the fair employment
practice commission, and allegi-
ance to "the time-honored and
cherished traditions of the South."
The early reports indicated a
heavy ballot in the primary in
which the Democrats are nomina-
ting a governor, a fun slate of
state and county officials.
Two Negro leaders said that
things were going peacefully.
"We have not heard of any case
of challenges on party principles,”
said Percy Greene, Negro editor
of the weekly Jackson Advocate,
a newspaper, and regional vice-
president of the National Progres-
sive Voters League.
"There have been several cases
02204
" *<
’CHUTES Fo
themselves as tl
Credit Corporation, —t—-m-
"‘rhe ftrot wool pin ipassea at
lant, titttta ot Copsibta wouta
a
existing tarifi, as a means of bols-
taring the support program. •
This provision drew still pro-
tests from Secretary Marshall and
other state department officials.
They saw the move as threatening
the success of the Geneva trade
conferences, then underway, and
said it would jeopardise future
reciprocal trade agreements.
Backing up the state department.
President Tpuman labeled the bit
unsatisfactory and sent it back to
Congress. He indicated in his veto
message, however, that he would
be willing to go along with a
simple price support measure.
This was what he received, and
what he signed today.
Proponents of the wool bill de-
clared during congressional hear-
ings that the domestic wool in-
dustry cannot compete against
foreign growers without protec-
tion. Failure to grant support
prices for their products, they
said,' would mean the liquidation
of the domestic industry.
"awasa
to mteshicens,
I don" "thth#1s ielevantRo
veitsaid. 2 "T. 3
Ferguson (-Michjof the subpom,
mittee that he met Meyer in a hotel
night before teat an tint ehbi
lenged Meyers leting tt the/250
expense for girs ther.
Other Manutactunet 250
When Mayar atarted W teB^SMT
many pepple the $76 dinner covered,
RaawteR Md. "Let’s clear up my
moral record."
Roosevelt said Hughes wag not the
only manufacturer who entertatned
him. ' " "et ., • ’
He read off a tong Matiof • aqore
dr more firm* which he aaid enter-
tained him during the w, mnld-
ing Lock*—* Dudlas. Patred.
Glenn L? Mutt*. OoMoitaated. TIw
Alumtnum Corp, tt America, n
olds Metals, deneral Motot, WML
Chrysler, Victor namanue nd
other*.
Rayburn Will Bgaak
BONHOM, Tez” Aug. 5 - (?
—Cougromama Bam Rayburn will
be the principal penker at a big
free bemeee and program mark
mng forma opeineof the com- rhee" for her-o-
--—---Ely,a1 "
By Hughes Was
Wedding Gift
m
LAKE SUCCESS. Aug 5 —(P?
—Egypt appealed to the United
Nations security council today to
free her from "the orbit of British
imperial power" "by ordering the
immediate withdrawal of all Brit-
ish troops from Egyptian soil.
The appeal was made personally
by Egyptian Premier Nokrashy
Pasha as the council began con-
sideration of Egypt's complaint
that continued presence of British
forces in Egypt was a "potential
peril" to peace in the Middle East.
"We are here,” Nokrashy Pasha
declared, "to challenge the basic
assumptions of nineteenth century
imperialism."
In . his 10,000-word speech, the
Egyptian premier informed the
council that his government no
longer conside:ed itself bound by
the Anglo-Egyptian treaty of 1936.
under which British forces are
stationed in this strategic Mediter-
ranean country.
g ' 3 75",, V,, Tiqq
MMh nn" 22
6.tmim "9
•Deitmmmat4ne. -1 _4-ar1‛
ACHUTE JUMP... Two young paratroopers struggle to clear p
butes become entangled during mock invasion at the Bed-’
cease ftre is a reality lu this
driven by the Negro. The accident
occurred about elgbt miles south-
east of Denton on Highway 77.
The charges against MeKee ac-
crued from an accident Jan. 7 la
which Rev. O. G. dearley, about
30,0 Valley View, and R.T. r
M, at Denton, tote thelr Uvea when
th* heavy truck andsemi-traller
IN BRITAIN
Demonstrators Smash
Windows; Policemen
Injured tn Liverpool
LONDON, Aug. 5.—(AP)
—A Jew-baiting crowd of 700
persons damaged eight Jew-
ish-owned shops in Manches-
ter last night and early today
as anti - Semitic incidents
flared for the fourth succes-
rive day In widely scattered
British cities — including London.
Birmingham and Liverpool.
Police arrested 38 demonstrators
in Liverpool. wher street lights
were turned on during the night for
the first time since power-saving
blackout restrictions were ordered
last winter.
Several Liverpool police were in-
Jured battling the demonstrators as
fremen stood by ready to douse the
Holer* with hoses in case the situa-
tl in got beyond police control.
Although some quarters expressed
lx lief that the riots were incited by
"Fascistilike" organizations, police
said they thought the vandalism
was the work of irresponsible youths
rather than an organized campaign
oi anti-Semitism.
Shop windows were smashed in
london’s Bethnal Green section.
" where many Jews live, and Com-
munist headquarters in the same
district also was battered. Other
window-smashing outbreaks were re-
ported in Newcastle. Collyhurst and
Choriton -on- Medlock.
In Birmingham a wall was dec-
Vorated with a sign nearly half a
block long emblazoned with yard-
high letters proc.aiming
"Gentiles arise, resist Jewish en-
. terprise. Reinember Paice and Mar-
tin."
Mervyn Paice and Clifford Martin
were the two British sergeants
hanged by Jewish extremists in Pal-
estine last week in retaliation for
execution, of three members of the
Jewish underground.
I The Communist Daily Worker,
however, asserted that the anti-
Jewish demonstrations were “in-
spired by organized gangs who, like
Hitler, have embraced anti-Semitism
and who cry the name of Sir Oswald
Mosley from street comers." It
called on Home Secretary Chuter
E<le to suppress these activities.
Mosley, prewar head of the Brit-
ish Union of Fascist*, was impris-
oned during the war. Since his re-
lease he has published a periodical
lulled "The Mosley New* Letter"
disteibute4 publicly at meetings of
the Brifish’ Leagu of Ex-Bervice-
men, which police say includes many
of his pre-war followers
• The British press gave the cur-
rent demonstration* only moderate
attention in news columns and edi-
torials.
, -^4
Java reported that the ndetens. omer.ney rnlatine"
Denton
Stops Strike
----♦ DETROIT. Aug. 6 —(— Th*
LONDON, Aug 5 — UP) — Prime
Minister Attlee introduced sur-
prise legislation in the House of
Commons today to give his govern-
ment broad new powers for in-
creasing agricultural and indus-
trial production to meet Britain’s
impending dollar crisis.
The precise powers sought for
the" Labor regime were not im-
mediately clear, but a highly
placed source said it did not pro-
vide for power to direct labor
Deputy Prime Minister Herbert
Morrison said the legislation would
make possible "th full mobiliza-
. lion of the economic resourcegof
\ the nation."
Anthony Eden, a Conservative
spokesman and former foreign
secretary, protested that the
House could not deal with such
broad legislation before its sched-
uled adjournment this wekend. ■
Morrison replied thut, if it be-
came necessary in the national
interest, the House could postpone
adjournment and "sit a bit long-
er.”
— WASHINGTON, iAug. 5.
(AP)—Elliott RooKV.it MI
senate investigators today
hat he permitted HowaM
HuirtiKto Itaya W7OS W
bill for him in December, 1944
as a wedding present.
leal Gulf storm last week - end
continued to fall in the lower Rio
Grande valley and the Gulf Coast
area today, causing mounting crop
losses.
Elsewhere it was generally fair
and dry, but the weather bureau
offered some slight hope for re-
lief from heat with a prediction
that it would be "not so warm” in
the extreme north portion of East
Texas, and in the Panhandle and
South Plains.
Maximum temperature yester-
day was 100 degrees, reported by
both Wichita Falls and Texarkana.
Low this morning was 67 at
Guadalupe pass.
A few scattered thundershowers
are forecast for much of East Tex-
as tonight and tomorrow.
Showers were reported at
Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Del
Rio, Laredo and Victoria.
Shriners in Mexico
MEXICO CITY. Aug. 5—(P— A
thousand Houston. Tex., Shriners,
who arrived over the week end on
a week's goodwill, visit, dressed in
their uniforms this morning to stage
their first parade in downtown
Mexico City.
SOAP PLANT EXPLOSION’S’ATOMIC BUBBLE—A
smoke formation recalling in appestrance the
. ." "ii
*3,29282223282
" —-t0
front line sector.”
। Sobsie, the powerful central Re-
, publican trade union organization,
appealed to the United Nations se-
curity council for a commission to
supervise, the observance of the
truce. It called upon "workers and
progressive people throughout the
world to boycott Dutch troopships
enroute to the Netherlands East 4rAn I AccAc In
Indies.” The organization also re- UTOp LSSOS 111
peated the Indonesian demand that, I
the Dutch return to demarcation Lower Valley
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rains which started with a trop-
— Nineteen persons iemcig
17 Negroes and two white men,
were killed in Texas' worst 1947
traffic accident at dawn t o a a y
when two trucks collided on a
slight curve near here Six were
injured.
The white men killed, neither
identified yet, were the driver of
a gasoline tenk truck, and a hitch-
hiker.
The Negroes were construction
workers on their way to Dallas.
Hours after the crash the trucks
were still burning, and traffic
on the heavily-traveled main high-
way to Dallas was being detoured.
Highway patrol officers finally
shot bullet holes in the tank truck
to cause it to burn out more quick-
ly
The bodies were taken to a hasti-
ly improvised morgue in a Negro
theater here The injured were in
hospitals in Waxahachie and En-
nis.
The accident was termed the
worst traffic tragedy in Texas
this year, and the worst ever to
occur in this section.
Deputy Sheriff Willis Cox des-
cribed the scene as "terrible."
Floyd Casebolt, editor of the
Waxahachie Light said the situa-
tion still was confused.
Deputy Cox said traffic was
being rerouted through Midlothian
The accident occurred about 6
a m. Deputy Cox said the truck
of Negroes was heading for Dal-
las, where the men were to work.
Cause of the crash was not im-
mediately known.
All available ambulances from
two towns were called. Funeral
homes were swamped and the
temporary morgue was hastily im-
provised
Mayors of Four
Palestine Towns
JERUSALEM, Aug. 5 — (P —
The British arrested the mayors
of the Jewish towns of Tel Aviv,
Ramat Gan, Natanya and Petah
Tiqva (Tikvah) and jailed dozens
of other Jewish political leaders
in dawn raids described officially
as "part of the campaign against
terrorism.” But violence continued
A labor department building in
ttie Street o fthe Prophets was
blasted by a bomb which killed
a British policeman trying to re-
move the explosive. Two others
were trapped in the debris, from
which arose a mushrooming
smoke cloud.
British troops Investigated an
Arab report that six armed Jews
had taken a Briton into an orange
grove in the Tel Aviv area. An-
other unconfirmed report asserted
that five British soldier* and their
army vehfele were missing in the
same area.
The arrests came after two
weeks of Jewish underground vio-
lence in Palestine during which
two young British army sergeants
were hanged and strangled to
death on small trees near Nat-
anya.
Among those arrested were
most members of the Tel Aviv
municipal council and many lead-
ers of the revisionist party—ac-
cused by the Palestine government
last year of being the forerunner
of Irgun Zval Leami, Jewish ea-
wed-men. •+,T,*
lilted out of the grocery
nd was approachtag his cat
on Octet iteaat ntf of West
54, formerly a farmer near Colum-
bus, Ohio, and a naturalised Amer-
ican. They said his escape took
place last Saturday o u t s l de the
Marko jail when Thuransky made
a break for freedom. In the melee
Thuransky was reported to have
knocked down one of his three
guards, while his wife grabbed a
second. The third knocked Thuran-
sky unconscious and he 'fell into
the rear seat of an American le-
sr car parked in front of the
A U. S. official who had been
waiting to see the prisoner, pushed
Mrs Thuransky into the car be-
hind her husband and drove away.
Later the official said the three
Hungarian policeman "just stood
there and stared” when he made
'off with their prisoner.'
Thuransky was arrested Friday
night in Balassagyarmat on
charges of making "undemocratic
utterances” — unprintable re-
marks about th* Communist party
and its leader. Deputy Premier
Katyas Rakosi.
On is, arrival in American cus-
tody Thuransky Mid he had been
beaten by the Hungarian police
Md threatened with shooting.
groes, exclusive oi veterans, who
are eligible in Jackson. With
the veterans, that should be close
to 2,000 voting.”
T. B. Wilson, Negro president of
the Progressive Voters League,
was jubilant.
"I think the voting :s going bet-
ter for the colored people than
ever before," Wilson commented.
"There have been some turned
down 4or rason I don't think ex-
actly right. But the results are
encouraging. None has been chal-
lenged on party principles. They
are not asking the Negro voters
any questiorts, even those voting
for the first time."
Under the aw. persons who
have voted in the last three pri-
mary elections are exempted from
the oath of record.
Senator Theo G. Bilbo, advocate
of white supremacy, has taken no
part in the campaign which closed
last night Bilbo won re-election
last year when Negroes, in size-
able numbers, voted for the first
time in the history of the state.
• ,.....-s‛
85
mn
dt
• ■ 3 NBT2880N928
ta-Me.6 . ... g Hed
- —mbnsngad
Mart Arrtv—
NEW. YORK. An^ 9 —
Both Dutch And 1
Indonesians Are •
Respecting Truce
American Flees
Hungarian Police '
BUDAPEST, Aug 5 —UP)— An
American citizen — arrested for
criticising Hungarian Communitsts
— was in U. S. custody today after
escaping from three politiel po-
licemen with the aid of an Amer
lean legation official while his cap
tors were transferring him from
one jail to another.
American' officials identified the
Brewater R-Mat), chairmn’ot-
th* fun committe, «BM otferecito ""2
W* HOOMTWr. Fit* 9
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'*1 227 - 2
entract "because of any _____
or work stoppage” during the
year's period
In addition, the UAW-CIO was
given the "right to atrike" on the
issue if no solution were forthcom-
ing after a year of deliberation
and negotiations.”
Negotiations on other contract
issues. Including the reported $20,-
000,000-a-year workers' pension
plan, will resume Thursday, both
sides said.
A strike against Ford had been
threatened in an effort to enforce
the union's demand for a contract-
ual clause giving it immunity from
the Taft - Hartley penalty provi-
sions.
Locals NeUfied
The law permits an employer to
sue a union for damage* in event
of a violation of its contract with
management. This the UAW has
sought to avoid by private cortract
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A ‘
ESDAY AFTERNO^ AUGUST 1, 1H7 _______— AmocIbM Pk— U—i WiK
H2RooseveltChallenges:
S Meyer’s' Expense Items 4-
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.. 4
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 303, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 5, 1947, newspaper, August 5, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475401/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.