Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1955 Page: 2 of 8
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4
1
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Thursday, January 6, 1955
2
Biblical Bit
11 Pays attention 35 Freebooter
15 Cooking
1
1
sheltered side 42 Wireles
43 Mohammadi
om
1
9
that faint smile, "I want to go
J
y
Z
#
5
r
4
the
rim
k
- - ■ -wS, 4
1 N- ;
can prison, his lawyer reported.
tions- Secretary General Dag Han-
Instructions Are Simple
year-old international agent whose
real identity never has been deter-
in agreeing to
to
the
' Theme of the 4
terence will
The New Year With
Vista Vision Screen
TODAY THRU SAT.
First Showing In Brownwood
‘seek and yo shall find," or as
NEW SHOW
TODAY THRU SAT.
BLUE RIBBON CABTOON
tow;
TWO BIG HITS
LAST TIMES TODAY
VISTARAMA NOVELTY
2 BIG HITS
1
TEcMNICOton
“^Drive-In
1
BBADY
2
>
HIGHWAY
\
LSabrno.
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[-AMACASE-SIDMETBUACNM
ATTILA THE HUN
NO. 2
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DON TAYLOR 1
ahinkT
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933
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Feature Begins at 7:35 &
See everything after 9:05
PLUS 2 COLOR CARTOONS
Di
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>
2
208ae
1
&Lyrin8
OWPF
MO M t
EBowicl
OHNNY
DARK
Sunset
Drive-In
White Wildcat
Test Scheduled
Near Grosvenor
Boz Office Opens 6:15
First Show Begins at 7:00
TODAY AND FRIDAY
Texes Oil Well Drillings
Show Increese in 1954
Ac08S
I Hahn i
ers with a reopening of the overall
prisoner situation and of the Ko-
rean peace question as a whole.
She started out in her career
with the Oregon Journal, in Port-
Si
P
Sot
Abi
Pie.
let.
Important Secretary
Uses Own System of
Typing, Shorthand
By HARMAN W. NICHOLA
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 —UP—
Saint Am very
A broad smile
to get the Western allies to accept
a resolution by which the conferees
would have agreed to continue
their efforts to reach a Korean
on h
Chur
Soutt
. plane
and 1
behin
layed
phoot
grout
4
4:
19
20 Spires
28 Facility
28 Toward the
I
1
accomo-
s family
Te)
Thr
Ag«
AC
Bruc
groui
from
tions,
three
and
Au
know
mam
mate
lost 1
Ad
comt
Hammarskjold told him that the
imprisonment of the airmen was
none of the UN’s business.
But Chou also disclosed that the
OF
THE
{
I
“MASTERSON OF KANSAS,” toughest lawman of the West, is
portrayed to color by Technicolor at the Lyric Theatre by George
Montgomers, Nancy Gates and James Griffith.
38 Forma notion
3 S Musical drama
41 Bat away
2em
though she holds an Important
secretarial position In. the govern-
ment.
She is the executive secretary
to the boss of the Department of
the Interior, Douglas McKay.
"Fog,” as all her close friends
eak the lovely little lady wil red-
brown hair and the pleasant smile,
likes to think of herself as s news-
paper woman. As a matter of
fact, she was and still is one.
ed her own system of
h she calls "Bible”—
TONY CURTIS
PIPER LAURIE
MM TAYLOR
(to see you!"
bed Modest’s
pected in about three weeks. He
added that be expected a favorable
decision.
He said that Mornard had com-
s
" EDMUNDS CLAUSSEN
Qs—. Ato ■erw. imwtoe Mli m 11
one of the most baffling political, .
murders of modern times in 1940. raise again the whole Korean sit-
••Tardy
M Retar disk
FT Goddam of
the dawn
mematarnks
day checking on housin
dations so he may move
here Friday.
Cartoon and
CinemaScope Short
JEFFCHANDUER
/ JACK PALANCE
L LUDMILLA TU1ERINA
_____
50 Diminutive of
52 Palm*leaf
16 part
. 17 Mature
18 Vegetable
19 Iron
21 Moses ----
Acem
accur
witht
later;
tions
loss 1
indivi
Moi
artiel
dal l
every
and I
Fede:
from
are n
check
retire
was 1
ings
to th
paper
perso
visit
office
book!
that
still
will <
for t
defin
fit pr
be de
the s
as se
eligib
check
Alt!
farm
matic
bility
fits,
the
will
tects,
They
Seem
with
them
strati
Coi
coupe
more
farja
»O Old
Testament
(ah.)
31 The soul
pt)
34 Mount---
to children of men killed in World
War II or Korean war combat.
The measure, introduced in the
AUSTIN. Jan. 8—UP-Oil well
drilling last year in Texas in-
creased 1,640 over 1953. but there
also were more dry holes and less
gassers. Railroad Commission fig-
ures showed Thursday.
The state agency said 12,011 oil
wells were drilled in 1954, com-
pared with 10,391 the previous
year.
At the same time, the 6.971 dry
holes were higher than the 6,813
for 1953 and the 1,119 gas wells
last year were less than the 1,179
the year before.
coueni
News Mm anew
SMU Such Fer
M*r MieiM MM
W1M Bm Hickok MM
l tat Rewseast MM
Red China May
Try Reopening
Korea Question
By CHARLES M. MCCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
By agreeing to discuss the im-
prisonment of 11 American airmen
jailed as spies, it seems probable
that Red China is attempting to
reopen the entire Korean peace
question.
Both the Chinese Communists
and the Russians were deeply dis-
appointed when the Western Allies
broke off the stalemated Korean
negotiations during the Geneva
Conference last year.
: HUMPHREY BOGART
: AUDREY HEPBURN
W
E
l..
gram
tlal r
the a
2. 1
zatio
const
from
herd:
3. .
to al
tage
catio
recot
healt
said penal authorities were ready
to rule on a bid for liberty for
the cold-eyed killer who committed
68NKsa RITA GAM-
- JEFF MORROW-GEORGE DOW#-tOWMi FRANZ-ALDUNDER SCoumer (
qualify for the benefits that would
be good for four school years (36
months) at 8110 a month.
Teague said the bill rules out
deaths from other than strictly war
causes, and is limited to children
whose fathers died either in com-
bat or as a result of an "instru-
mentality of war."
marskjold and Chinese Red Pre-
mier Chou En-Lai give the Com-
munists side an obvious chance to
PLUS
LATEST NEWS IN BROWN
WOOD — CARTOON .
I
1
UNDERWOOD'S
PIT BAR-B-Q
Served Cafeteria Style
494 West Commerce
on Coleman HIway
DIAL 5118
TONY CURTIS, co-starred with
Piper Laurie end Don Taylor in
"Johnny Dark,” geta plenty of
opportunity to burn up the road
and to get involved in romantie
complications. Now showing at
the Palace.
Soc
Exp
Far
ED
first
parts
Tule,
Socia
effie
ers, i
and tl
folks
what
enten
single
Secur
Amen
Bec
group
newsy
of Inf
artiel
affect
to the
props
- and f
ready
quest
what
the e
em pie
pulao:
I
NA
-Da
E
I
4957
da I
XXVIII
SUGAR LOGAN wasn't waiting
• at the appointed place as
Crotch put his steamboat against
the mud bank at Yuma. The
captain stepped ashore, hurrying
toward Fernand Modest’s store,
stm searching for Logan.
The trading establishment was
a long, barnlike interior, with
shelves piled high with merchan-
dise from the East Modest did
a prosperous burin rm with nost
soldier, redman and miner on the
tral
The trader stepped out from
behind an aisle
goods. “A Merry
“Bible system” of typing and her
own brand of shorthand even
mamumemus
m-m"T MU.T VUMa
apnuwumrmerm
Vertis D. Ashburn on
Week's Leave in Tokyo
Bpeetai te The Bunen
from Egypt to
Canaan
22 Transposes
(ab.)
23 Assault
34 Bitter vetch
25 Was viewed
27 Auricles
29 Bustle
31 Babylonian
deity
38 "They---
forth for
Bethlehem"
38 Animal
34Mlmlcker
34 Sosi of Jacob
St Boundary
(comb form)
40 Weird
ciyge - 2 Transporters
3 Oxidising
enzyme
• Oriental coin
• Acquire
knowledge
• Shield
bearings
7 Faster
• Weight a<
•nOg.
• Wickeder
10 Drunkards
: WILMAMHOIDEN
pleted all requirements for parole,
including a good-conduct certifi-
cate from the federal penitentiary
here, where he has served more
than two-thirds of his 19 1-2 year
sentence.
Ceniceros said Mornard, a 50-
Lindsey's appointment was re-
commended by District Agent
Dick Miller of San Angelo, and
was approved unanimously by
members of the county commis-
sioners court.
For the past six months Lindsey
has served as assistant county
agent in Runnels County, and
prior to that held a similar posi-
tion for two years in Coleman
County. He is a 1950 graduate of
Texas A&M College.
As assistant county agent he
has had some work with adult
farmers and ranchers, but his
work principally has been with
4-H Club boys and girls project
supervision, training of judging
teams, and livestock show demon-
strations.
Lindsey, who soon will be 29
years old. is married and has a
15-month-old son, Sterling Edwin.
Pearsall is the hometown of both
Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey.
Sterling Lindsey
Accepts Post as
San Saba Agent
epeetat to The Bumettm
SAN SABA, Jan. 6—Sterling
Lindsey, newly-appointed county
agricultural agent for San Saba
County, was in San Saba Wednes-
N2
Sap
sponsored in the Senate by Sen.
Lister Hill (D-Ala.), Teague said.
The Texas congressman esti-
mated some 100,000 children might
OFKANSAS
flHe 18:87
STAMMO
YONY CURTIS
FIFER LAURIE
we say in the trade, "hunt and
peek.”
"Peg” also developed her own
kind of shorthand, which is really
PAROLE BELIEVED
NEAR FOR KILLER
OF LEON TROTSKY
MEXICO CITY, Jan. 6—UP—
Plans were underway here Thurs-
day to parole Jacques Mornard.
the mysterious slayer of Bolshevik
chief Leon Trotsky, from a Mexi-
Answer tPrefous Puzze
■EBS
qug4$4234Ee2e
CLIMBING onto Ms gangplank,
he found his Conegahs had al-
ready transferred most at their
cargo to the landing on their
becks. A woman stepped up be-
side the gangplank, waiting to
talk to him. It was Queenie,
completely outfitted to skirt and
new coat that had kept him from
recognizing her until he was
elose.
r
133
«g
;e
Off-Duty Officer Shot
By Mistake in Chicago
CHICAGO, Jan. 6—UP—An off-
duty police officer who was shot
by another off-duty police officer
Wednesday who thought be was a
holdup man was reported in good
condition Thursday.
The victim was Victor Heady,
24, who had spotted two narcotics
peddler suspects and pulled a gun
on them. Along came Detective
George Smith, 33, who was on his
way home. Smith thought Heady
was a holdup man and drew his
own pistol.
like Ben Goos and Malott and
me- Crotch nodded. But be
knew the combine was fighting
ruthlessly up and down the river
to prevent him carrying a pound
at cargo.
land, Ore., as a correspondent.
She devel
with you."
Her presence put undeniable
new life into him. He felt the
rebound at a lighter mood that
had been completely out of him
for weeks. But her appearance
was complicated by other trou-
blesome matters and his face
lost little of its frown. He said
shortly:
“It would have been best had
you gone with the stage.-
“But not nearly so exciting.
Everybody’s going upriver. AU
the strays and the miscasts you’ve
sent to Lavinsky. Will there be
room in camp for me?"
His voice was sharpened by
regret “I’m sorry; I’ve got no
stateroom to offer *
She gave him a half-believing
side glane. “You’re not lying?”
-No. The preacher—Armond
Snodgrass—took my last."
She gave an expressive move-
ment with both her hands, laid
one tightly against his chest
"The man who bought Dreyfus's
claim has followed me to Yuma.
Captain, I don't want to meet
him.”
He gave her a long, fun study.
There was no despair in Queenie,
44 Augment
44 Golf term
47 Mites
-48 The----at
Galilee
49 Pertaining to
an age
11 Harem room
52Eskera
53 Proportion
S 4 Obscured
itennial celebration, and money to
•OnMM • study, at the question '
-being raised? Mount said.
3 The,Houston group has been con-
MMq 1959 as the year for its
-talr, but no date Is set.
Wortsworth Seeks Divorce
LONDON, Jan. 6—UP—William
Wordsworth, great-great grandson
of the poet, Wednesday filed peti-
tion for divorce from actress Eva
abartok. He charged desertion.
Ceniceros said the ruling was ex- uation.
assassin reportedly has asked po-
lice for protection against reprisals
by either Trotsky’s followers or
Russian secret agents.
Mornard, 14 years ago, crushed
Trotsky's skull with a pick-axe
after what de described as an
argument over the Russian exile's
"betrayal” of the Marxist move-
ment.
The assassination of the “Father
of the Red Army" removed one
of the major threats to the late
Joseph Stalin's grab for power in
Soviet Russia. But, it still is listed
as “unsolved" because of Morn-
ard’s refusal to talk.
Ceniceros said Mornard, if pa-
roled, would be required to remain
in Mexico at least for the remain-
ing six years of term where he
would be under close watch by
penal officials.
Mornard never has swerved
from his original story that he was
a disgruntled Belgian follower at
Trotsky. ’But, secret police believe
he was the trigger man for a
Communist "perfect plot” to elimi-
nate the bearded Bolshevik.
TOKYO—M-Sgt. Vertis D. Ash-
burn, son of Mrs. Ernie Smith.
609 W. Anderson, Brownwood, re- -----
cently spent a week’s leave in Alene (Peg) Phillips uses
Tokyo from his unit in ““Rihle svetem’ nf tvnin ahe
Tokyo is Japan’s largest metro-
politan area and one of the largest
cities la the world.
I
o. But asked her the
instead. She answered
Horace E. White, Brownwood,
No. 1 Becca Byrd is slated as a
1,600-foot cable tool wildcat four
miles west of Grosvenor.
The Brown County test is 150
feet from the north and west
lines of the southeast quarter in
Section 36, HT&B Survey.
A regular field project was
spotted eight miles southwest of
Rising Star as Sam Broadhead of
Meridian, Miss., No. 2 J. L Fost-
Site for the proposed 1,200-foot
rotary project is 1,410 feet from
the south and 700 feet from the
east lines of Thomas Benson Sur-
"Frumter Petroleum Corp., Fort
Worth. No. 1 Smoot Heirs, A
Scott Survey. regular field pro-
ject eight miles southeast of Cross
Cut, was plugged at 2,035 feet.
no anxiety. He didn’t believe
tear held her back from meeting
this man. It puzzled him bow a
woman thus zmplicated aa she
had b scams with Cafhoon in
salting a worthless vein could
remain so calm.
“Do you have any luggage?*
“Oh, yes! China Boy has al-
ready taken my bags to a state-
room. Ho told me R would be
No. 3."
"That Chinaman^
Crotch pulled his look back
over Malott. “Now what's upt”
ba asked.
“You didn't mast Gosa?*
"Where should I have met
him”
A brittleness came to Melote’s
vision, a hard wisdom that the
river had taught to its own grim
ways. “Ben got a message. One
of the Mexican street boys came
up and said you wanted to see
him. About Sugar Logan—“
at the union message “to the far
corners of the world." The agency
said the speech would be short- .
waved to a worldwide audience on tpins.
the spot —k
mmmunowurcnm
NO. 2
House Wednesday, will be co-
A feature of each weekday
“Break the Bank " show on KBWD-
Mutual (11-11:15 a.m) is the phone
call by emcee Bud Collyer to a
listener. Numbers for these calls,
and the names, are submitted to
the show by friends Recently,
one such proved herseM true
blue-In an unforgettable man-
ner. She postcarded the name
and home phone numbers of a
month-old baby girl, listing the
child as Miss ... It happened to
be ona of the numbers Collyer
called. The bay’s mother answer-
ed and embarrassedly explained
Miss . .. ana too young to talk on
•.. 3
..» t .
STEPHENS — Fletcher Oil &
Gas -Drilling Corp., Dallas, No. 1
S. G. Tomlinson was spotted as
a wildcat one mile south of Gun-
sight. Having a proposed depth
of 4,000 feet with rotary, it spots
330 feet from the south and 2,-
280 feet from the west lines of
Section 446, SP Survey.
A motor sergeant in the Ser-
vice Battery of the 7th Infantry
Division's 48th Field Artillery
Battalion, Ashburn entered the
Army in 1939 and was stationed
st Fort Bliss, Tex., before arriv-
ing overseas in September 1954.
Thrirttontey^ Edu^do'c^'j^sJ betyeaa Valted-N-- thkVMatThnfnhleresot tired of
Chou tried desperately to pre-
vent a complete beak. He tried
ERichland Springs Ta Ba
EHost To Baptist Moating
• . speelal to TM numetan
SAN SABA, Jan. •—The Rich-
.land Springs church will be host
-Jan. 14 to the San Saba County
^Baptist Workers’ Conference, with
ifcixar&srj a
liver the convention sermon.
A CROWD before one of the
liquor dens confirmed his worst
fears. The place was a retreat
that catered to the river crowd,
a aqualid adobe building known
as El Manzana—the Apple.
Ben Goss was inside the cleared
barroom, sitting upright on the
floor. He was in wretched condi-
tion, sawdust and floor refuse
matted against one side of his
head. The blood gushed from a
knot on his forehead. Crotch
burst into the liquor - reeking
chamber at the same moment a
marshal was stepping up behind
his mate and jerking him to his
feet
Crotch grabbed up a stool that
had rolled near the street en-
trance, set it beneath Goss as
the marshal lifted him from the
floor. Goss sat with his back to
the wall, a thick, dull stare about
his face. “Water!" Crotch yelled
at the bartender.
(To Be Continued)
TODAY AND FRIDAY Boxirrtishopanttst5n..
____________ settlement. The resolution pro-
Hammarskjold’s orders from the vided that “thetime and place for
UN General Assembly are simply resuming negotiations shall be de-
to seek the release of the airmen cided by the states concerned."
and of other UN war prisoners He asked in a speech that the
still held despite the Korean armis- United States, Great Britain,
tice. France, Red China, Soviet Russia
But there is nothing to prevent and North and South Korea hold
Hammarskjold from listening to secret meetings in an attempt to
whatever Chou may say, and re- get.together.
porting back to the UN on it. . It would certainly be logical, if.
Chou in agreeing to receive in talking to Hammarskjold. Chou
linked the issue of the UN prison-
will Uve in |
of his life. The
—
___ “It’s Jamison!” Crotch groaned.
-Captain,- she said, giving him Benetntsthamsesutthroats has 8ot
mined, probably
Mexico the rest
Speech to Be Worldwide
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—UP-
The Voice of America announced
Thursday that it was planning to
carry President Eisenhower’s state
Demo Viewpoint To
Be Aired Tonight
The Democratic viewpoint of
“What’s Ahead for ’55?” will be
sought by KBWD-Mutual’s “State
at the Nation” tonight, 9:30-10
o’clock, when New York Congress-
man Emanuel Celler is guest
Hardy Burt moderates.
CALLAHAN—Howard L. Eric-
son, et at of Houston No. 2 Hugh
Ross, Section 103, BBBa Sur-
vey. was completed as a King
Sand discovery two miles north-
west of Baird.
Daily potential was 43 barrels
of 38 gravity oil, flowing through
a 1-4-inch choke with 350 pounds
casing and 115 pounds tubing
pressure. Production is from an
open hole at 1.532-34 feet, pay
topped at 1,530 feet. Gas-oil
ratio was 225-1.
Johnson & Warren No. 1 John
F. Dunn was spotted as a wideat
six miles west of Cross Plains.
Having a proposed depth of 1.995
feet with rotary, it spots 2,414
feet from the south and 2,596 feet
from the east lines -ef Wm. C.
Hays Survey IM. —
R. Denny Jackson, Brownwood,
No. 1 Jay Kirkham, Section 90.
Comal CSL Survey, wildcat one
mile west of Cross Plains, was
plugged at 1.484 feet.
A regular field project was
plugged at 1,865 feet six miles
northwest of Oplin. It was F. W.
Lattner, Abilene. No. 3 D. A.
Booth. Section 7,. Block 6. SP
Survey.
HEWGRL
BRIGRDE
k: atorring
ROCK HUDSON ML£NEDML
COMING SATURDAY MID-
NITE A PICTURE FROM
M.G.M. HALL OF FAME.
Dishwasher Nabs Chef
In Undercover Job
PASADENA, Calif., Jan. 6—UP
—The chef was arrested by the
dishwasher at the Huntingon-
Sheraton hotel here Wednesday.
The dishwasher was vice squad
officer Pete Ellena who took a job
in the hotel’s kitchen for a week
to gather evidence. It took Ellena
only as long as was necessary to
get his arms out of the suds to
arrest night chef Leon J. Ulrich
on bookmaking charges. Ulrich
and his assistant, Jimmie Galarge,
were charged with accepting bets
from hotel staff members.
E
correctly—.and netted 8500 in a
cash prize.
" Ml
DaYsOf “4
IN A
wuEns.g
A ' eh
• Mi Was
V ann.
tevmr
Meer
6
THURSDAY
F 4:00 Radio Baart Party
4:25 Mavs Headiines 5
4:30 Radio Ranch Party
5245 Interlude
Maw* MM
TIM Home MMoe of the News
• 6;15 Dinner Date
; 6:30 Gbriel Heatter mm
- 6:45 MuMMI on a Star -
Air
28:00 rhe News ft Brief
•MMMMgiit Mary MM
5" MB
9:00 Official Deteettve MM
9:30 MMa ot UM Nation MM
19:00 Tan O'clock Mews
10:45 MgM Watch
10:55 Elventh Hour News
11:00 Prayet
MIAY
6:00 Morning Prayer
• 6:04 Voice of Agriculture
• 11 Wake Ui Uw >
6:30 Johnny Lee Wills Show
6:45 Farmers Edition of the News
77:00 Hymn Time
:42 Breakfast Melodise
3952WsHporter Bandou TBN
T4Tme, Tunes and Temperature
B M Bight O Clock News
8:05 Tour Community and Mine
8:15 Coffee Caravan
• :M Neli's News and Cuss
9:30 S Star Newscast MM
3:30 Quest Time
10:00 iqrida Calling MM
10:25 5 Mar Newscast MM
10:30 Queen fer a Day MBS
11 os Break the Bank MM
11:11 S Mar Newscast MM
umMim imp*
11:30 “—“h
u se Cedric Foster___
12 IS Organ Melodies
12:30 Noon Editiop et the News
12:45 Western Bit Parade
1:00 Bits and Means
1:25 S Mar Newscast MM
1:30 Wonderful City MM
2:00 Lyric Lane
2-25 News in Brief
23 r tow
>:M Hruge ud pan MM
#adi Reee Paft
1‛-c. ya
d / a
College Scholarships For
Children of Men Kitted in
Combat Sought By Teague
WASHINGTON, Jan 6—UP-
Rep. Olin E. Teague (D-Tex.) pre-
dicted Thursday Congress will pass
his bill giving college scholarships
- r
face.
"rhe same,” Crotch acknowl-
edged. "Where is he? What hap-
pened to that chiseler from La
Pax Milling Company?”
"Too bad, Captain. This man
Logan, the one you persist in
calling your friend, went upriver
this morning as the Claramore.
I tried to call attention to the
fact that you are dependent on
his contract for La Paz ore—but
tt was no use. What can mortal
man do, when the devil works
his way in us?" and Modest
quickly made the sign of the
cross.
“The end at our contract,"
Crotch murmured. “If I could get
my hands around Jamison's neck!
Don't these poor fools know his
smooth talk is only s Ue? That
man will triple our rates as soon
as I’m off the river."
“Of course. And his Amador
has been towed to dry dock at
Port Isabel. I saw her go below
Yuma a few weeks ago."
The prize Navigation steamer
that for years had fought Crotch
tooth and nail was indeed being
rebollered.
"Always something for men
Melott nodded, turned in be-
side Crotch, starting with him
oyer the gangplank. But Crotch
stopped him short.
“Jim, you better watch the
boat I’ll go after Ben.*
L I e
1*
i Speakers on the program will
=nelude Rev. C. I Lancaster end
ZRey.Oval Walker.
S A stewardship and evangelism
report will be given at 11:10; and
following a covered dish luncheon
at noon, the WMU and Board
meeting is scheduled st 1:15 p.m.
.The conference will be adjourned
sat 2 p.m.
Chinese Communist government is
still keenly interested in the over-
sU prisoner situation.
Chea Speaks
“The ease of the United States
spies has nothing to do with the
question at the prisoners of wsr in
Korea," Chou said.
“It is the United States and the
UN command side which has vio-
lated the Korean Armistice Agree-
ment.”
Chou charged that the United
States "connived” in the release
by South Korea of more than
27,000 Communist prisoners before
the armistice. He charged the UN
command with "abducting” the
more than 20,000 Communist pris-
oners who refused repatriation
after the armistice.
Casos Unaecounted
"Up to now these cases are not
yet accounted for,” Chou said.
This is a clear indication that
Chou will raise the issue of the
Communist prisoners when Ham-
marskjold talks about UN prison-
ers.
It must be remembered also
how vigorously Chou and Soviet
foreign Minister Vyacheslav M.
Molotov protested when the west-
ern allies broke off the Korean
talks at Geneva last June 15.
The allies had held out for all-
Korean elections supervised by
She tells about the comings and
goings of Douglas MeKay and Ma
wife. Which Republican leader
went to visit the boss, or who had
pears and salad and the rest of
an Oregon innch with Mabel Me-
4 . i
ms
—
"I keep politics out of my col-
umn," Peg, dressed in a blue-gray
worsted suit and red blouse, and
wearing pearls under the ears and
around the wrist, told me.
“It—the stuff I write—is about
the events that other reporters
I pay little attention to," she said
I during our talk-in her private of-
fice adjacent to that of the secre-
tary. “Like who the McKays were
en teraining. What Mrs. McKay
was wearing."
just an informal system of ab-
breviation similar to one used by
many newspaper reporters. For
instance, "pox” in my notes
means “police." Things like that
Miss Phillips doesn’t have to do
much typing or taking of notes
any more, but she claims she can
hold her own with a Gregg grad-
uate, hunting on the typewriter
and cutting the corner on the
notes, "If I transpose my notes
qutekly enough."
To keep her newspapering hand
in, "Peg" writes two columns back
home each week and almost every-
body in Salem, Ore., and other
parts of the state reads them.
Each column starts out with the
standing headline, "Peg in Wash-
ington” and is addressed to "Dear
Marian.” Marian is Marian Fisch-
er, the women’s editor of the
Capital-Times.
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
puenuhea e nems azegi BMaMM. JAt sundn
-==-:*rs-m ":
"L.CCE
CONDITIONED
A ypwn wowarsmarme
He K 5 W U 5wArM .
W “ “ 1380 OR YOUR DIAL.
W aaowwoovs REGIONAL RADIO STATON
Oregon Centennial
Event Due in 1959
' PORTLAND, Ore.. Jan. 8-UP—
Aa Oregon Centennial Committee
said Thursday it will have a cele-
bration of some sort in 1959 despite
-pians by Houston for a world's
-fair the same year.
Chairman J. A. Mount at the
committee appointed by Gov. Paul
IPatterson said the oy question
here to how big the celebration
will be.
1 “We're not going to be scared
away from 1959 by Texas," Mount
said, “even if the Texas group has
; purchased an 835 acre site.”
» The committee believes a
world's fair can be tied to the cen-
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 72, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1955, newspaper, January 6, 1955; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1492092/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.