Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 54, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1954 Page: 3 of 14
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Malaya,
8
Jan.
14 —UP—Royal Australian
29c
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2 for 27c
0
3 for 50c
1
27c
$
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45c
33c
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15c •
_ 19c
FROZEN FOODS:
8c
35c
2 for 25c
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53c
TALL TORN BACON, 1b
ROUND STEAK, 1b
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59c
VEAL CUTLETS, 1b
75c
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PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
401 E. Henderson
Phone 5 2281
Australian Airmen
Hit Commies Hard
cause he thought Pierson had caus-
ed officers to raid Hoppe’s House
of Blue Lights Club.
Minute Maid, Large 12 oz.
ORANGE JUICE ..
the Santa Fe, is expected to con-
tinue into next week. The employ-
es claim that the Texas right to
work statute guarantees them the
right to Work regardless of union
affiliation. The labor’ unions claim
that section 211 of the Railway
Labor Act allows union shops and
permits strike action or threat of
a strike to force a ballot on union
shops on railways.
REGULARLY 25c
NOTEBOOK PAPER
DEL MONTE, NO. 2 CAN
SLICED PINEAPPLE
PREMIUMS, THIN CRISP
CRACKERS, lb. box
DINTY MOORE, 11/2 LB. CAN
BEEF STEW....................
KIMBELL'S, 12 OZ. GLASS
CRAB APPLE JELLY
”I got 3 lbs. of
your Meadolake Margarine
at the store yesterday and like
it be.-r than any I have
ever used."
Mrs. William Witt
Clinton, Iowa
I think Meadolake
is better than better..
I wouldn’t think of using any' other
brand of Margarine."
Mrs. Evelyn R. Goin
Waco, Texas
BM
2:323233333
#33323
Both Mrs. Williams and Vogt
testified that they were against
joining any organization that charg-
ed them dues or assessments to
gain them the right to work.
When attorneys for the 17 non-
operating unions who are defend-
ants in the suit, asked whether
their advances in salary and better
working conditions were not the
results of lawful bargaining by the
unions for these benefits, they said
“not entirely”.
L. N. D. Wells, counsel for the
unions brought out that Vogt’s
salary had been increased from
around $8 a day to over $16. That
he now worked five days instead
of six for the same pay and wanted
to know if collective barganing was
not responsible for shorter hours
and more pay.
“Not entirely” Vogt replied. “Ec-
onomic conditions had a lot to do
with it.”
In referring to his long service
with the railway, Vogt said that
he did not have an individual con-
tract to work but that it was in-
conceivable to him that he would
be fired without cause.
Mrs. Williams said that she did
not think “it is fair or constitut-
ional to pay for the privilege of
working. I say that is taking away
your freedom.”
IMS*1
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Prospects for an early resump-
tion of Korean peace conference
talks faded Thursday as the United
Nations insisted on a Communist
retraction of an insult against the
United States. I *MG
Liaison otficers of both sides
held their first meeting since the
Allies broke off the talks Dec. 12,
but failed to make progress. A
second meeting was set for 11 a.m.
Friday (8 p.m. cst Thursday).
UN liaison officer Edward Mar-
tin told North Korean representa-
tive Ku Man-Sun the Reds must
apologize for charging that the
United States helped South Korea
free 27,000 anti-Communist North
Fiiim iCTH
We Give Pacific Stamps
Meadolake Margarine is
better than other margarines
I ve used ... the family requests more
and more toast with Meadolake!”
Mrs. Beatrice B. Ferguson
Shreveport, Louisiana
Demand Removal Of
Jet Plane Operation
LONG BEACH, Calif., Jan. 14 -
UP—Angry city officials Thursday
renewed demands for removal of
iet plane operations from Long
Beach municipal airport as the
death toll rose to seven in the
crash of a jet fighter into four
homes Tuesday.
2
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—080
i.
"A Pound of PROOFIs Worth a Ton of Promises!"
Yes, you, too, like the thousands of
delighted home-makers who’ve written
unsolicited testimonials to Mrs. Tucker
in recent months, will sing the praises of
farm-fresh Meadolake once you’ve tried
it! Mrs. Tucker is so sure you’ll like
Meadolake better that she makes you this
unheard-of guarantee: If you don’t say
Meadolake Margarine is—(1) The
EASIEST-Spreading and FINEST-
Flavored.... (2) The TASTIEST for all
WORTH 104
on Purchase of 1-LB.
of MEADOLAKE Margarine
' Selection.of Jury
. Moves in Houston
HOUSTON, Jan. 14 —UP—A jury
which heard the murder trial of
Clyde Pierson of Baytown was
g
Hope Bible Meet
Will Be An Annual
Event In Texas
CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex., Jan. 14
—UP—A South Texas Baptist Bible
conference will be held at the Uni-
versity of Corpus Christi Feb. 22
to 25 and sponsors hope it will be-
come an annual event.
Dr. Philip C. McGahey, pastor
of the First Baptist Church in
Alice, Tex., and general chairman
of the program committee, said
speakers will include:
Dr. D. D. Tidwell, professor of
Bible at Howard Payne College,
Brownwood, Tex.; Dr. John P.
Newport, Southwestern Baptist
Seminary, Fort Worth; Dr. Perry
F. Webb, First Baptist Church, San
Antonio; Dr. T. A. Petterson, First
Baptist Church, Beaumont; "Dr.
Forrest Feezor, executive secre-
tary, Baptist General Convention
of Texas, and Dr. Allen Webb,
First Baptist Church, Bay City.
I
I
"Of all the spreads I’ve
fried, none of them equals Meadolake
in flavor, spreadability, and nutrition."
Mrs. Wesley W. Puckett
Hot Springs, Arkansas
CURIOSITY—Sven Backlund, press attache of Swedish
Embassy, took advantage of heavy snow which blan-
keted Washington area to ski the 31 miles round trip
between his home and office Monday. Backlund said
he found himself "quite a curiosity” and decided not
to repeat the performance Tuesday, but did don his
skis for some exercise in the neighborhood. (NEA
Telephoto)
air force planes carried out a
furious attack on a suspected Com-
munist hideout 10 miles from the
heart of this capital Thursday.
The Australian Lincoln bombers
unleashed 60,000 pounds of bombs
in a bomb-a-minute attack begin-
ning at 10 a.m. Ninety minutes
later the area was plastered with
500 and 1,000 pound bombs.
Thursday, Jan. 14, 1954—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW-3
SANTA FE EMPLOYESyESTIFY
THEY OPPOSE UNION TIE-UPS
=
Dear Dealer: Mrs. Tucker will redeem this coup n for 10e, 1
plus 20 for handling, on the purchase of 1 lb. of Meadolake I
Margarine. Payment to be made by our salesmen, or by 3
mailing to Mrs. Tucker’s Foods, Inc., Sherman, Texas. Will 3
not be redeemed through Agency or Coupon Redemption |
Service. Void when taxed, restricted, or prohibited. Offer I
expires February 28, 1954. 8
Mrs. Tucker's
Meadolake Margarine is so
much better in every way than
any other margarine!"
Mrs. E. G. Funk
Peoria, Illinois
would not return
AMARILLO (Spl) — Two veteran
clerical employes of the Santa Fe
Railway testified today at the hear-
ing on a petition for a permanent
injunction against imposition of a
union shor contract on the Santa
Fe system, that they were unal-
terably opposed to being forced to
join a union to keep their jobs.
They were E. J. Vogt, 60, who
began working for the Santa Fe in
1910 and who now is senior clerk
for the railway, and Mrs. Elaine
Williams, who has been in the cler-
ical department of the system since
1924 except for a brief layoff from
1938 to 1942.
Vogt said that he became a
member of the plaintiffs in the suit
"Meadolake's flavor is
delicious and it spreads so
smoothly — I'll say it's better
than better.”
Mrs. T. C. Taylor
Joplin, Missouri
because he was against compulsory shorter hours and she, too,
unionism, that he never would join “not entirely.”
the union unless it meant that he '
/ I
KUALA LUMPHUR,
-
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—------- ------- Labor attorneys asked her, too,
Koreans or UN negotiator Arthur whether or not the collective bar-
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Resumption Of Peace
Talks Growing Dim
PANMUNJOM, Jan. 14 — UP—
s E
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dEsseela
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------ — The hearing, which affects some
would be deprived of a means of 40,000 ncn-operating employes of
Texas Solon in
Query Regarding
Sea Power Cuts
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 — UP—
A Democratic congressman Thurs-
day called on the administration to
explain its “mysterious formula”
for gearing the nation’s defenses
to a possible Red attack while cut-
ting ground and sea strength.
Rep. Olin E. Teague (D-Tex.) ex-
pressed “deep concern” about the
administration’s “new look” mili-
tary planning as the Navy an-
nounced it will put 50 ships in
mothballs as a result of defense
spending cuts in the fiscal year be-
ginning July 1.
Teague, a Purple Heart combat
infantry officer in World War II,
compared the administration’s de-
fense plans to former Defense
Secretary Louis Johnson’s military
cutbacks before ■ the start of the
Korean war. He wanted to know
if the administration has informa-
tion it hasn’t passed along to Con-
gress about a lessening of the Com-
munist threat.
“In substance the administration
is asking us to believe that
through some mysterious formula
recently devised, our nation, de-
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to gaining of unions was not responsi-
ble for her increased pay and
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Meadolake has
a sweet mild taste
and it spreads so quickly
even though very cold.'
Mrs. R. A. Drake
Oklahoma City, Okla.
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seasoning.... (3) The Best of all mar-
garines for baking — send the carton
end flap and your recipe, if any, to Mrs.
Fucker, Sherman, Texas, telling her what
you don’t like about Meadolake, and she
will pay you for ALL ingredients PLUS
a dollar for your trouble!
Use the coupon below today. Get your
pound of TRIPLE guaranteed Meado-
lake at less than you’d pay for ordinary
margarine!
Guaranteed MEADOLAKE
Is Easily the BEST for: -
(1) SPREADING, (2) SEASONING, (3) COOKING
■ ’ I. N ) -
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' ■
8888098 28 ’
- • = " i
:Asceruitied bySouthwesiem, Laboratories a
&883
up to. 25C per pound
? ♦ t yet enjoy the richest coffee of alL l
Smart housewives know that the true cost of
coffee Is pleasured by the number of cups a
pound of coffee makes... not by the price they
pay for it in the store.
Good coffee today costs at least two cents per
cup. But with Maryland Club, because of its
extra richness, you can use less to make each I
flavorfulCup . .. thus, as many people tell us,
you can get 10 to 15 more flavorful cups out
of every pound ... actually save up to 25c per
pound.*
Try Maryland Club and discover for yourself
how really good coffee can be . . . and how |
economical, too! Buy coffee the smart way and
save up to 25c a pound... buy Maryland Club!
1 " “ ' a
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locked up at 6 p.m. Wednesday aft-
er failing to reach a verdict in
( some seven hours of deliberation.
They were scheduled to resume
deliberations Thursday.
Pierson, a slight, 116-pound man,
said he shot gambler George
Hoppe on Nov. 25, 1952 when Hoppe
3
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pending primarily on air power and
atomic and nuclear weapons, can
deal successfully with an enemy,
which also possesses atomic and nu
clear weapons, a numerically su-
perior air force, tremendous num-
bers of well-trained, well-equipped
ground troops, and their support-
ing units,” Teague said in a speech
prepared for the House record.
Teague questioned the cut in na-
val .strength and said the United
States has been “repeatedly warn-
ed” of the rapidly growing Rus-
sian submarine, fleet.
“In the face of a drastically re-
duced naval arm, what solution is
being advanced in the new look
to deal with this growing threat
to our naval superiority?” he
asked.
H ImnT
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Mad.7eer3 ...the ONLY TRIPLE Guaranteed Shortening
whirled on him after Pierson had
gone to Hoppe’s Club 25 to pay $1,-
0000 of a $1,200 gambling debt.
He said his gun went off during
a scuffle and that he had carried
the pistol because Hoppe threaten-
ed his Hfe.
“Why did he go there himself
if he was afraid of Hoppe,” Assist-
ant District Attorney W. H. Teni-
son Jr., asked in arguments
Wednesday. “Why didn’t he send
the money?”
Several witnesses heard during
the trial said Hoppe had made
threats against Pierson’s life be-
o
C
Pictsweet, Cut (10 oz.)
CORN _____________________________17c
TOMATOES, ctr.
Texas Navel (Large)
ORANGES, lb. ....
Cello - Pack
CARROTS, ...........
RUTABAGAS, lb.
Red
more
KLEENEX, 300 carton
SUNSHINE
MO CRACKERS ,lb. box
POLAR BEAR, 303 SIZE
POKE SALAD GREENS.............
.............19c
POTATOES
50 lbs.................. 1.39
■ -omI
p,th
".,7 4 "R‛.1/
-,3 4
'........ "13g w
EAauuax" voW
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NOW smote itgcoftee „
’: • ler to use 16 to 15
thale.you.- nd
that" per PUUB!
mote CIRYLAND Cl
MAK
6441
stave
Pictsweet, Cut (10 oz.)
BROCCOLI ____________________17c
=2..
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A-
$ggK8.Vg
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eV,”"
I like the freshness and
downright goodness of Meadolake.
It is the tops for table use and ,
also for cooking ... so smooth
and creamy."
Mrs. L. H. King
Leonard, Texas
/
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 54, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1954, newspaper, January 14, 1954; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505395/m1/3/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.