Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 88, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 12, 1947 Page: 11 of 14
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-A
BROWNWOOD (Texas) BULLETIN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1947
Truman Will Ask
1
.1
Li
)
de
Boosters
Rescue—
33
CONTINUED FRON PAGE ONE
11
■
di
I Vsuma
•elf.” he said, "but it may go lower
many other radio and movie stars.
nt China, perhaps under
investigating committee when
war
5
The Senators
munitions empire.
at 5 45 a m. EST, Dec. 30 on a
In Saskatchewan
)
Becomes A Law
to be heard a second time—and
By NEA Service
bust.
worry of the past this year for
ing Canadian province.
operations started. But dense fog. council was dissolved during the
war.
snow pro-
Stough. sheep; Lee Guthrie and
steadfastly maintained* that
geographical
area as large as Wyoming. Utah
the tires of her bi- ‘
TOKYO —(UP)—’ Tokyo
Alaskan Pulpwood
are considering tentative plans to quire broad-gauged reorganization
Alaska
your old
la'
can
ring.
It was not immediately kown an inner;
consumption of the United States.
ment are entitled to hospital serv-
toice/
l
GOOD CLEANIN
$e
T
4
V
Bargain in Pianos
Here’
je
99
e.
T
4
da
When
88830885*
FE
1
Denman Music Co.
n
Brownwood’s Music and Appliance Center
I1V
Dial 2526
\
Dial 9515
408 t Lee
---
I
.■ *•
et8e
$
u
11
Garssons Probe
Is Found Dead
special Health Services Planning
Commission, affiliated with the
hid
iwa
provided. He said Abney McInnis,
representing the horned Hereford
breeders, and Jim Gill, represent-
fair-play. The extent to which it
develops will determine our final
ice under the law with the gov-
ernment contribu.ing their share
efforts to communicate with the .Numerous
plane failed, search and rescue school s |
ROY ACUFF—America’s most popular hillbilly singer, bringing
his entire Grand Ole Opry gang to the Memorial Hall. Saturday
night, January 18, for one night show, Roy also brings the famous
Cackle Sisters, direct from Chicago, National Barn Dances, and
has been set aside as one of two
for exhibition of Hereford cattle.
PLANS TO FINGERPRINT
ALL JAPANESE WEIGHED
•44
gur
jackets, two life rafts, six two-man
tents, four stoves, sleds, shovels
blankets and a 30-day supply of
“K" rations and special foods.
top "Garsson firms.”
Jacobson also was one of the
mTN
r -s
BUTTER PRODUCTION
Approximately 72 per cent of
United States butter was produced
on farms in 1899; today, it amounts
to only about 17 per cent.
Owt
Ree
dg to th
top in toe
loins in pia
i
2
all times.
“The State Department and the
Officials of the metropolitan po-
lice said such a gigantic project
would prove so helpful in swift
crime investigation that it would
be well worth while the cost and
effort.
Japanese press reports predicted
that the nationwide fingerprinting
may get under way in April, 1947.
fords and will divide equally facil-
ities in the mam building between
the two groups of breeders.
Nearly all of the show superin-
tendents and officials attended the
Vandenberg, saying he spoke for
himself, addressed this statement
to the rest of the world:
“We plot no conquests. We st
neither condone nor appease t
conquests of others. We ask noli
S'
ii
SYRACUSE V. REVIVES
•SUNDAY BREAKFASTS’
SYRACUES, N. Y. (UP)—Sunday
morning breakfast has resumed an
important role in the School of
Journalism at Syracuse University.
. Before the war it was the favor-
ite meeting occasion for faculty
BUTTER SMUGGLER
A woman smuggler in Germany
heard from at 7:25 am. the same
day, when it reported its position
■ about 250 miles to the south.
Rescue operations were held up
until late this week by low clouds,
fog and blinding snowstorms.
Charles V. Griffin, general super-
intendent of the show organization,
presided.
Arrangements for the big live-
—b
ceived "
The ill-fated plane took off from
Letbetter's..
2.. ""
2 4
I
Dramatic moment from "Meet Joln Due." ile -rank Capra pre-
duction, starring Gary Cooper and Parbara Stanwyck starting a
return engagement today at the Ljrin.
y and look over our many real bar-
ios, each one perfectly reconditioned.
।
attempt to Introduce that mode of
transportation on the American
deserts.
Herefords; Joe Bob Shelton, dairy
cattle; W. H. Simmons and John
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
Saba, Goldthwaite, Mullin. Zephyr
and back to Brownwood. This is
the 175-mile route
The committee in charge of the
tours arrangements is composed of
Mr. Waisman, Joe McDonald and
I Billy Lyle;
A later message from Ball- re-। counted six live men at position
ported that three men' had per-171-03 south. 98 degrees 47 minutes
ished either in the plane'crash or west Dropping survivors gear by
parachute. More details when re-
sation and expediency.
“Our top representative in the
United Nations should be a per-
manent undersecretary of state.”
Vandenberg is known to feel
that Austin is not quite the kind
of man this country should have
representing it on the UN Secur-
ity Council. In addition to a per-
e
till E. Baker
*
PKSE ELEVEN
Names of the dead and surviv- . . . . .
orsare not yet available. t the : seaplane- tender Pine Island
e
.. was a, cycling fan. She was ar-
d 1 rested for smuggling live pounds'
1 of butter into the country from
$98)
E «
d.e
IS
2
Fess service al
Nhy not have
ress made info
c
e advocating a strong and
N X 2
Rr30
v- vA
%
hC
k‛‛
a,
41 3
ip regulated
m felts replaced
pected for moth damage
Expertly tuned
Ke aboye check list represents the exectine
andards of the Natioda Assoclation st Musie
lerehanta of which we are member.
G
tea A.v8
28w
Mom,
accused him of submitting to the.
committee a “whitewash” report
of the Garsson brothers wartime
dealings which they said nearly
“sidetracked” the investigation.
The attorney, after his first ses-
sion with the committee, demanded
Ae«f
38%
" , g
hospital years of “man-made destruction
6. “Chaos and disaster" threaten
Germahy unless the Russian and
French, zones are' fused economi-
Slogy
H
f
5}
of about $300, after Inflating to
nearly $500, furriers said.
But rabbit which soetimes poses
as sable-dyed lapin or Chinese
beaver, was the only stable fur in
the Pine Island at 4:35, a.m. (CST)
Dec 30 ', "
It had left for a 750-mfle re-
connaissance flight over the deso-
late low peaks which lie beyond
the Walgren coast, an almost com-
pletely unexplored area of ice.
stock show were discussed and
a*- .r a’aink)
a private room,and the physicians ; of the foreign policv as/
or surgeon's own fee) is paid bymeeung ol ineioreign policy 457
the government. sociation and the American Acad-
.. ... , .. emy of Political and Social Science. I
Cost to the citizens of the prov- —___________
ince is $5 a year per person (maxi-i
mum $30 00 per family). Should American Camel Driver
LOS ANGELES VETS PROTEST HOUSING—Los Angeles veterans, protesting the bottleneck in
housing, spent the night in MacArthur Park Friday night to bring public attention to their hardships.
The vets and their wives and children came prepared for a snappy Southern California night, erect-
ing cardboard windbreaks ana bringing heavy blankets and bedrolls. They also brought placards
warning President Truman and Governor Warren of California that they too are voters.—(NEA Tele-
photo).
hibited rescue planes from taking
off until early this week.
Rear Adm. Richard H Cruzen,
an overflow building has been
enthusiastic and
before it goes higher.”
In the everyday fur coat line.
aquirrels were selling on the aver- first men questioned by the Senate
age for their prewar price of $348. war investigating committee when
but they almost invaded the beaver I it began its investigation of the
market during the war when they i 1 The Senetere
Mid for as much as $598. Muskrats
are back in their old price element
7 13
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (UP)—
Albert W. Jacobson, former Chem-
ical Warfare Service consultant
and a key figure in the Garssons
munitions probe, was found dead
late today in his automobile.
Police said Jacobson. 41, suf-
fered a heart attack and lost con-
trol of his car which smashed into
a telephone pole. He was pro-
nounced dead of a heart attack at
emergency hospital.
Jacobson, portly legal consultant
to the Chemical Warfare Service,
was an important figure in the
government's probe of the Midwest
“paper empire” headed by Murray
and Henry Garsson.
In his War Department job, Ja-
cobson passed on advances of
fingerprint every Japanese subject, i to keep pace with America's un-
regardless of sex, age or class, as avoidable world responsibilities,
be converted into 1,000,000 , part of a new nation-wide crime and particularly to develop more
nowenrin* o” mora than I ------•— —j --—•-------- long-range planning so that .there
be less catch-as-catch-can improvi-
well attended.
Sable At Rock
Bottom-Just
S16,000 And Tax
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Jan. 11 (UP)—
The price of sable is hitting rock
bottom, fur experts said today. A
luxurious, soft sable coat now
costs only $16,000<-with tax.
Traders at the largest primary
fur mart in the world said the
price of sables had slumped from
a wartime peak of $22,000. Mink
coats, on the average have fallen
off from $9,000 to $6,000, while
beaver is down from $1,300 to $900
Leopard hit a peak of $1,400
sometime between the Battle of the
Bulge and Hiroshima, but it has
dropped to $1,000 now, only $100
more than normal, the experts said.
Furriers blamed the slump on
the invasion of the red fox from
Russia, the general price conscious-
ness of the public, the disappear-
ance of war wages and profits, and
the stock market break last fall.
Operators said the Wisconsin fur
market has dropped sharply be-
cause women are waiting to buy
I Antonio and Kentucky after the
| United Press spread her proposi-
' tion around the country.
After all this, Mrs. Hendrickson
said she was just kidding. Swap-
l ping Wyoming game is against the
law.
cords of pulpwood annually. This
Last April the Saskatchewan
legislature passed the Hospitali-
zation Act. Everyone who has
lived in the province six months
or longer, as of Jan. 1, is eligible
under the plan, although the na-
tional government continues to
be responsible for hospital care
of veterans, the Royal Canadian
Mounted police, soldiers and some
Hospitalization nyrhopeofeds.
cation that he is expecting the
I chairmanship.
Moffett brought with him to the
session a bill designed to end the
long deadlock over legislative re-
districting. It calls for a board with
authority to redistrikt if a legis-
lature fails to do so after each
federal census.
0 ‛
the Expedition.
3
40%
veterans* commission to co-ordi- been investigating the paper em-
nate veterans' organizations. Sharp pire" and the wartime dealings of
divisions marked a possible pro- former Rep. Andrew J. May. Da
posai for a state bonus. however. Ky..its alleged guardian angel.
Veterans also will be affected by who was chairman of the House
legislation on the constitutional . military affairs committee.
amendment approved last Novem-
Songs That Made Her
Agreement appeared prevalent
that teachers' salaries should be !
raised, that increased aid should
be given to rural schools, that
neater appropriations should be
. . ------- that rural
E
M.r 7
s,‛
rS .. ■
! and for housing concessions and
herdsmen. Griffin said five bar- that
' racks, with facilities for 100 men.! movi
I will be available for use by herds- i Unite
men as sleeping quarters.
Synthetic Rubber
Industry Support
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11—(UP)
—As a security measure President
Truman will ask Congress for per-
manent legislation to support the
synthetic rubber industry.
The decision was announced to-
day by presidental assistant John
R. Steelman. Steelman said if Con-
gress follows the recommendation,
the government's program of pub-
lic rubber purchase will be aban-
doned on March 31.
Steelman said the president will
ask Congress to set up a house-
senate committee to study rubber
problems and draft long-term leg-
islation.
Pending its enaction he wants
extension of present war powers
under which the use of rubber is
controlled. Present legislation ex-
pires March 31.
Since early in the war the gover-
has bought and controlled all
rubber, allocating it to industry
and specifying proportions of nat-
ural and synthetic to be used in
each product.
to cover all costs, the province! Ory of Hadji All. colorful character
will make up the difference. , who came to that state from Syria
to drive camels in an unsuccessful
I wheiher any . of these supplie:
v.i.d lost in the crash aad fire ol
the 11 nip. Likewise, it could no'
te determind if the three dead
crew members lost th ir lives in
the lot. to be heard a second time—and
Rabbit. by its own and every then accused the Senators of "ruin-
pelt* thia season are way down,
while the number of animals
eaught is increasing.
But the St Louis experts don't
expect the lower prices to last
long. A levelling-off of prices will
follow soon, they predicted, and
whatever the cost, furs will con-
tinue to take a sizeable chunk out
of any bankroll.
Nelson Darragh, who handles the
bidding here at the only open floor
sale of skins in the nation, took
time out between auctioning foxes
and mink to explain that the re-
cent fur price plunge that bank-
rupted two large New York fur
dealers and one in St. Louis was
due mainly to the “flood of skins
from Russia, mostly mink, sable
and fox."
"They piled up a suge backlog
during the war, and now they're
flooding the New York market
with pelts to get American dol-
lars." Darragh said.
P. B. Fouke, head of a fur com-
Saskatchewan. a
Saskatchewan needing
You'll olwat
anything isk
expert clean
With our CM
your finefr
smart IgA col
until July 10, when 10 per cent of ---
the excise tax is due to come off. n/ r. ■
Livingston E. Osborne. Illinois 1 Kev Firnre 111
state conservation director, said I\Y | IUUI V III
prices being paid trappers for / -
sonal aversion to Austin, Vanden-.
A spiked helmet was standard I berg is believed to feel that the
headgear for U. S. Marines in Vermonter is "too easy" with the
1895. 1 Russians.
tons of newsprint, or more than prevention and detection program,
one-fourth of the present yearly
Rr
fee
The meeting of livestock show
officials and superintendents was i course. We are not interested in
“We should ever strive," he
reciprocal trade program. Another
Republican, Sen. Hugh Butler. R .
Neb., has repeatedly denounced ;
this program in recent weeks.
In a broad discussion of inter-
national cooperation for peace.
kl
2 1
commander of
Mne
Pat Stout. goats; Rex Lanford, said. to hammer outapermanent
hogs; Juston McBride and Jesse American f oreign,,Po licyrin an
K. Barton, fat steers. essentials, which senes al
________________________________ America and deserves the approval
of all American-minded parties at
'ill lile; even if the outside isn't the latest
We ( ffer you pianos reconditioned accord-
exacting standards shown above.
A thgfoug ly reconditioned, musically sound
pianghas d mellowness and sweetness of tone
you
Local governments register the
people in their own areas and
collect the tax.
Hospitals, whether government
or private, will continue to be
managed independently. Rates
have been worked out with the
hospitals themselves.
The Saskatchewan plan is the
first publicly established, complete
hospital service on the North
American continent.
findpfot Iha bast of
ug after ... ond
6iis no axcaption.
Jul cleaning service
nents have a fresh,
inually... proving
was a “clear note of hope” for i
REGINA. Saskatchewan (NEA world harmony despite peace con-
—Hospitalization costs become a ference disagreements last year. !
Inverchapel said the first efforts . -
the 900.000 people in this sprawl- to build the new peace were be- ing polled Hereford breeders, will
- " gun in a "haggard. desolate and make allocation .of space for Here-
Every man, woman or child in brutal setting" which followed six
| "i”
--
' , fl
' Icd
"v,
An
e.
For World Harmony
PHILADELPHIA Jan. 11—(UP) This also has fluorescent lighting
—Inverchapel. British ambassador Griffin said this building will not
to the U. S, said today that there | hold all the Herefords entered', so
can produce 1,500,000
SUNRISE DRY
CLEANERS
990 Austin Dial 2294(
i alterations in the
program resulted The
other name, has stuck at an average (ing his reputation" without cause
price of $79 through boom and Jacobson was suspended from
his War Department post for 30
q„ami**tee
Ne w
_h., ‛#
" -22
58-'sa; p* 98288
’ vg2d<b.
p-dtf-,3*,k
. .ce. -' 46*
Byrnes—
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
expressed hope that before long
Argentina would comply •with the
Act of Chapultepec.
MORE i
That act provided for negotiation
of a mutual assistant treaty among
the American republics.
"But we do not wish to proceed
. without Argentina and neither our
ambassador (George S. Messer-
smith) nor any official of the State
Department is of the opinion that
Argentina has yet complied with
1 the commitments which she as well
as the other American republics
at Chapultepec agreed to carry
' out,” he asserted.
“It is our earnest hope that be-
- fore long there will be such reas-
l onable and substantial compliance
by Argentina with its obligations,
■ that the American republics after
■ consultation will convene the Rio
matter).”
Byrnes told the Council that
i there had been times during the
i past year s peace negotiations when
, he was "deeply discouraged.”
Vandenberg expressed the hope
. that U. S. foreign policy would
continue to be bipartisan. More-
over, he gave qualified support—
the first from a high-ranking GOP
, Congressman since the Nov. 5 elec-
tions—to the administrations 1
care can be admitted to a hos- ( and cataclysm.”
pital simply on recommendation Those who expected a quick and
of a doctor and may stay as long „ mi. af hie mic l
ent were:
Griffin, and John Kuykendall, total confidence of Congress" and
general superimtendentsi W.C. others at home and abroad and that
Monroe, secretary, and Bj ron he wished “him well in his great
Higgins, assistant secretary; Ab- _ rnap,me ,h. S.natoriyp------w- -
ney McInnis and Viron Higgins, responsibility. Then the Senator | low clouds and swirling
Herefords: Joe Bob Shelton d.irv Proceeded to summarize what he
believes needs to be done
missing men. if uninjured, had _,
better than 50-50 chance of sur-1
viving until rescue parties, could 1 Lithuania 11
locate them. ' ; cycle.
The lost plane carried, emergen-
cy equipment, including 12 life’
cally with the U. S. and British
S Wu -rmmsh oeXtton i seanvandompsianaanao minutes anter
until the !ob is done' .. rta i it took off, the plane radioed an
Vandenberg said the United urgent message to The Pine Island
States must continue to present "Very low celiing. less than 10.000
one face to the world. But this he feet, objects not visible two miles
emphasized, does not mean tnat . Heavy snow and -sleet.. Sky very members- in the school with the
we cannot have earnest, none t. completely overcast." school: In a spirit of critical give-
easy, peace to rise out of "this mis- । meeuing saturday afternoon. Pres- cesnofopsmontonorretgn poliey, ’ | 250"aesanut“ar thlipne sbana tuodunt orlperacecsurs
He said Marshall enjoyed the at the time of the message. When ces and recommended changes.
Hd2/ ..
2 ' -)
-1
V < i taaeg shpug
E 2+ *a w
" 4 426- 2
The ill-fated-plane, missing ini ....
. ... Itiating the long-delayed mutual de- theleast-knownregion of the rout me patrol flisht. It Was last
A huge glass-lighted buildingfens treaty anticipated by the world, was last heard from some
of Chapultepec Strained two hours after it took off from
Amercan-Argentine relations have
cause* the delay.
i.ru irdd
i ; * MB
.
23 3399
. _ "63
h ' wg
poaczeaza sg $38888
Famous Sung At Bier
Of Carrie J. Bond
wanted to’colleges. that rural and Nevada together, long has
roads should be improved and cr ENAAIF Cal Jan 11—*' found medical care a problem. Its
be done about uSEESongs Ehat made hertamous turonanaveapdoscarctyonompom;
-penstonrstanked. . month unattractive - both doctors and
grant. Meanwhile, some gioups , was entombed as an “immortal in
aired off to fight for and against ' Forest Lawn Memorial Park's
. leg’elation—including airlines and Court of Honor.
private operators, and doctors and The 84-year-old composer, who
• niropractors. died ‘Dec. 28, was the second Amer-
The air operators fight was set । .can to be honored by entomb-
on bills recommended by thestate l ment in the court. Sculptor Gut-
aeronautical commission. Chirop- zon Borglum was the first one
ractors attacked a basic sciences , voted as- an "immortal" by the
act sough by the doctors, and said Forest Lawn regents.
•hey wanted a regulating board of In accordance with her wish, Indian tribes on reservations.
heir own. the body of her only son, the late | Indigent persons supported by
Political legislation was itnmi- Fred Jacob Smith, will be placed local or the provincial govern-
nent, too. ‘ beside her. ---- a entitlad * hnenital car-
Austin’s Senator.JamsStant Fifteen hundred friends attend-
bin onnouncrdt ballot. Control of ed the final tribute Jopn Charles to the general fund.
lobbyists__requiring registration Thomas sang I Love Y u y. The Plan, worked out through
•nd annual statements of income - one of her famous songs, and the the cooperation of the medical
wd favored by Rep. Jim Wright, Pasadena poxeccboir ” sana “The profession, the hospiuls and local
J “of Weatherford. Hand of You ' governing units, provides for a
And gtate employees wanted an . .
Andes salary raise, permanent Dr. Herbert Eaton read the pro-
emergency s ■ ( ti bill nouncement that immortality is a Saskatchewan Department of Pub-
raises inane uw«Prop a state em- spark that ' can be created only 11c Health, to administer the law
and wstem by Almighty God. But by honoring
"women will not be left out of this great artist,. appreciating her Eaaaaeam
.Womenawa for the legislative work and cherishing her memory, :
bills headed for the legsiauie bright the unseen fires
hopper, either A bill allowing Of achievement that may smolder
women to serve on.Texas within others."
will be presented by Sen. Kyle j ------- . . , ,
Vskn.°"ameso Taylor of Kerens. THAT ELK MEAT OFFER
who was elected to the Senate WAS JUST IN FUN
while oversea, with the 36th Di- EVANSTON, Wyo. (UP)—Mrs.
vision. Is reported slated for the | E F. Hendrickson of Evanston
top senate committee post of fin- didn't expect the response she
ance ehairman. Sen. George Mof- got from her offer to swap 350
fett of Chillicothe today was mov- pounds of Wyoming elk meat for
ing into the office used by the | sugar. It was during the critical
state affairs committee—an Indi- 1 days of the meat shortage.
-—— --। Swap offers, she says, came in
l from Vermont, New Orleans, San
police foreign service themselves re-
pany, blamed the stock market
breqkforuthemartnsunrnigsit- funds Basin and Batavia,
----- - metals products companies—two
pounding bygffeexperienced pharmacistsi
gzdensDHRmACy"
oLUU- * V PHONE '
UFVcZENS BANK BUILDING2644
' 2 . .a. , oo e4,. *•
• Not so well, eh? Then, by 7 means, use
your head to get back on yur feet! Go at
once—today—to the Phyjan who has your
fullest confidence. Aywhen you have his
prescription, brinphere for precise com-
soat nown route to The thrfecaneaneiinaboard plane
ing for ourselves except reciprocal Mariner
from open water, hessaid, making "\ a . L william H Kearns,
it possible.for the rescue Diune, ,10 L.t. Mal ph P LeBlaL .
. . , land and for i s crew to reach the iiartii’ville.LaEnsignAax-
unity at any pricesurvivors quickly. Weli V Lopc2, Newport R l;
He also asserted that. (The rescue plane is piloted by AVition Machinists Mate lc
1. Excessive use of the veto pow- a Lt Cmdr. Howell and, in addi prederick w Williams, Hunting-
er could reduce the United Ni^ tion to its regular crew, carries ton, rum Al iation Radioman
t ions, t • mockery" and block । two pharmacists mates R K Con- 3-c James h RObbins, San Diego,
world disarmament. He obviously ger and O M Tribbey, who will Calif Aliation Machinists Mate
the superintendents were given; was referring to Soviet Russia. administer first aid to the suruv 2- William G H Warr Reading
final instructions on handling en- 2. In the current “clash of eco-1 ors Hannes said. The plane winch Pa. chief Photographer'* Mae
trie. nomic ideologies” the United first sighted the wreckage ha, ow{n Mc^y* Sonoma ctiif
Griffin said the route to the, States "will not draw.back from dropped "brilliant orange dye Aviation Radioman 1-c WendeU K.
show grounds at Camp Bowie will our essential responsibilities, and flags on the snow to mark the Henderson Portsmouth Va
be well marked. Entry will be from1 3. This country will not disarm spot * The Nvy sa d the following
Fourth Street on Stewart Street or give up its “dominant advan- (The weather is holding good, met age had been received from
right Into the cavalry area whichitage" in connection with the atom- Hannes reported The rescue Plane the commander of the task fore,
has been leased for the snow. bomb until the world has set is equipped with rcket he in the Antarctic:
Stewart Street entry will be thelup adequate protection against said. 1o enable a short take-off • PBM .on search mission from
only one into the show grounds: treachery. with the extra load of the six eastern group has located burned
Other Camp Bowie gales cannot 4. American policy in the Far survivors ) . wreckage of missing Manner and
1 be used for that purpose, as the East should be altered to encour-1 -
■ । show area will be blocked off I age thi
___ from the rest of the camp. , compeL
The leased area has ample i the Nanking constitution of, ....... - .
buildings for exhibition purposes Chiand Kai-Shek. in the two-week battle against
1 - ' ' “ere is too much evidence I starvation and extreme cold
“Communistic upsurge is
into" Latin America. The
States should lead in nego-
------- " days following the committee’s in-
a a | A ... vestigation. But he was cleared of
I 00ie ATIIrA—— [complicity in the probe and rein-
UvgIOia IMI W stated in his job.
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 88, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 12, 1947, newspaper, January 12, 1947; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1487940/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.