Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 190, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1949 Page: 1 of 12
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1
NUMBER 190
(TWENTY PAGES)
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 7, 1949
59TH YEAR
Order UN Debate
p-'-'W
889
• 88
Of Clergy Trials
85338
83388
4s
Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister
By MAX HARRELSON
LAKE SUCCESS, April 7 (P)— Jakob A. Malik insisted that Hun-
The United Nations steering com-
mittee beat down bitter Russian properly in the trials and de-
89
3
•A
. j
8
Deputy Sheriff A. S. Meador
Weather Forecast
28
»N
Texoma Report
30
2 Witnesses Oppose Anti-Red Bill
After him came Wendell Add- ion the campus have given the peo-
signed on Saturday.
House Refuses Quit
Work Until Monday
Missing Convict Is
Believed Surrounded
New Farm Program Aimed at Giving
Consumers (Real Breakf Offered
Truman Nominates Stephen
F. Early for Defense Post
TEXAS
LAUGHS
aft-
to-
Fri-
Louis A. Johnson more time for
dealing with policy matters.
Early, 60, is now vice president
of the Pullman company and of
its manufacturing affiliate, Pull-
velt.
He stayed on briefly at the
SHOT — Former Congressman
Ellsworth B. Buck (above), 58,
was shot down in front of his
Staten Island office and seriously
wounded. His assailant was cap-
tured moments later. (AP Wire-
photo).
cents; roosters, 12 cents.
Fryers: 30 cents.
Turkeys: Hens, 35 cents; toms,
30 cents, No. 2 turkeys, 25 cents.
Eggs: 39 cents.
! Hope Held for
Early End of
Taxicab Strike
By The Associated Press
New York city officials were
h -a
CROWE ARRIVES FOR ARRAIGNMENT—Richard H. Crowe
(right), arrested in Daytona Beach, Fla., on charges of taking $884,-
660 from the National City Bank of New York, is shown in the hands
of a federal officer as he enters Federal building, Tampa, Fla., for
preliminary hearing and removal order. (AP Wirephoto).
Temperatures: Today noon, 76;
low last night, 49; high yester-
day, 86; high for year, 86; low
—g
Truman Holds Hope
Atom Bomb May Not Be
Needed to Keep Peace
By ERNEST B. VACCARO
WASHINGTON, April 7 (AP) — President Truman held out hope
today that world peace can be maintained without the need for
---—---dropping another atomic bomb.
i
1
F “
F . aha :
By
BOYCE HOUSE
:g9
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. 33
WASHINGTON, April 7 (AP) — President Truman today nomi-
nated Stephen T. Early, long time former White House secretary,
The appointment fills a new;
post created by a law Mr. Truman
h
L g
g
IT IS NOT ALWAYS easy for
one to see all the things that
might be removed from their
premises to improve its appear-
ance.
They may clean up many ob-
jects and leave something even
-more unsightly, just because it
has been there a long time and
they have been accustomed to it.
When one starts to clean up his
premises, it would be well to take
stock of everything that is in evi-
dence, and weigh its value to the
scheme of things, so that a maxi-
mum of cleanliness and attrac-
tiveness may result from the
clean-up drive.
COOKE COUNTY FREE LIBRARY
GAINESVILLE, TEXAS
9
Lake level, 611.89 feet; temper-
ature of water, 58 degrees; river
gauge below dam, —5 feet; baro-
metric pressure, 30.09, steady;
wind to the south, 10 to 15 miles
per hour this afternoon; light
south winds tonight; south wind
15 to 20 miles per hour Friday
afternoon; high today 86, low to-
night 50, high tomorrow 88.
Deputy Sheriff A. S. Meador reported hopeful the week-old
said armed posses equipped with taxicab strike would end by
bloodhounds have surrounded an. Tuesday night. Union leaders,
area of six to seven square miles i . ’
about nine miles northwest of however, said the walkout would
here. 1 be intensified.
Secretary of Agriculture Bran-
nan outlined the plan before a
joint meeting of the house and
senate agriculture committees. It
is the administration’s substitute
for the Aiken farm law passed
by the Republican 80th congress.
The new program — like the
present one — would use the
mechanism of government price
or income guarantees to farm-
ers.
But unlike the present program
the government would not at-
I
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38838899
188888
White House after Mr. Roose-
velt’s death, then accepted the
posts with the Pullman compan-
ies.
But it’s in a dense part of the
piney woods country, and the
search necessarily proceeded
slowly.
The bloodhounds are from the
Texas prison system. Also in on
the search were several planes,
among them Texas Forest service
craft.
Meador said Ward, 35, is known
to have eaten breakfast yester-
day at the home of a Negro
northwest of here. Meador said
the Negro described the man
who ate with him as pretty badly
cut up and bruised. Their car
was wrecked when it was over-
taken by officers Tuesday.
“He has some broken ribs and
his leg is pretty skinned up,” the
deputy sheriff said.
The convicts escaped prison in
Brazoria county by cutting a bar
in an upstairs window. They then
kidnapped two oil workers near
Peach Point and forced them to
drive toward Houston. Later they
set the oil workers free and fled
in the car.
Lemay was serving a life sen-
tence for burglary, theft, robbery
by firearms and robbery by as-
sault. Ward has a 50-year sen-
tence for robbery and forgery.
MaAheiA,
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, April 7 (AP)—
Cattle, 600; calves, 200; steady;
common to good slaughter steers
and yearlings $19 to $25; choice
$26; beef cows $17 to $19.50; can-
ners and cutters $12 to $17; bulls
$16 to $21; good fat calves $24
to $26.50; common to medium $19
to $23.
Hogs, 1,000; butchers mostly 50
cents lower; some sales 75 cents
off, sows steady to m o s 11 y 50
down; feeder pigs unchanged; top
$19.50; good and choice 190 to 260-
lb. butchers $19; good and choice
150 to 185 lbs. $18 to $18.75; good
and choice 285 to 400 lbs. $16.50
to $18.75; sows $14 to $25.50; feed-
er pigs $14 to $18.
Sheep, 2,000; steady; good and
choice spring lambs $30 to $31;
good and choice shorn slaughter
lambs $28 to $29; medium and
good shorn slaughter lambs $27
to $27.50; common to good shorn
slaughter ewes $11.50 to $13;
feeder lambs $22 to $24.
Bv OVID A. MARTIN
WASHINGTON, April 7 (AP) —
The Truman administration of-
fered a new farm program today
aimed at giving consumers a “real
break” on food prices and farm-
ers a stable, fair income.
It would use many of the eco-
nomic devices now employed by
the government. But it would
make a major change designed to
put more meat, milk, other dairy
products, eggs, and poultry in re-
tail stores at lower price tags.
Hens: Light and heavy,
By A. MORTON SMITH
NEXT WEEK IS annual Spring
% clean-up week in Gainesville.
This town could be made the
cleanest in the state, if every man,
woman and child put in a few
hours next week gathering to-
gether all the rubbish that accum-
ulates during the year, and pre-
pare it to be carried off by the
city street department trucks
which will be put in service for
that purpose during the six-day
period.
Every individual profits by such
a clean-up campaign.
In the first place, it would cost
many people a considerable
amount of money if they had to
pay truck drivers to carry off the
rubbish, which the city street de-
partment trucks will haul free of
charge during the campaign.
In the second place, the health
of the community will be im-
proved by the ridding of premises
of all unsightly and unnecessary
objects.
Take tin cans , for instance,
There are thousands of them scat-
tered over yards, vacant lots, and
piled into boxes which are over-
flowing. Everyone of those tins
cans are potential breeding places
for insects that carry disease
germs to human beings. Rid-
ding one’s premises of the tin cans
alone may prevent a costly and
painful illness in a family.
And in the third place, the ap-
pearance of the community may
be greatly enhanced by a genuine
and thorough clean-up campaign.
PEOPLE ARE ALWAYS talk-
ing about wanting more indus-
tries, more payroll, more economic
support for this town. A study of
why industries and payrolls and
businesses show up in towns,
•often is due to the impression a
community makes on individuals
visiting the town.
Week after next, Gainesville is
going to have a number of visi-
tors, some of them high ranking
people in industry and commerce.
If the town presents a favorable
impression, or it will so be im-
pressed upon the minds of these
visitors. If it looks seedy and
unkempt, they will remember
that even more vividly.
The Maggie House Garden club
is cooperating with the municipal
government in the campaign, de-
sirous of cleaning up the city be-
fore their homecoming celebra-
tion in connection with the Circus
Roundup the following week.
Mayor Crawford, in issuing the
proclamation, also announced that
city street department trucks
would be employed during the
week to pick up and carry to city
dump grounds, all rubbish, tin
cans, and other objects, which are
placed in proper containers on
the curb in front of the house-
holders’ property.
The text of the mayor’s procla-
mation is as follows:
“Whereas. it is customary to
have an annual Spring clean-up
campaign in Gainesville to rid the
city of unslightly objects and to
improve the health conditions of
the community, and
“Whereas, the Maggie House
Garden club is cooperating in the
movement to improve the appear-
ance of the city for their annual
homecoming celebration, and
“Whereas Gainesville will have
many visitors in town for the an-
nual homecoming and Circus
Roundup the following week.
“I, T. S. Crawford, mayor of
Gainesville, by the authority in-
vested in me, do hereby designate
the week of April 11 to 16 inclu-
sive, as annual Spring Clean-up
Week in Gainesville, and I hereby
call upon all citizens of Gaines-
ville to cooperate in this move-
ment by assembling all rubbish,
tin cans, junk iron and other un-
sightly - objects, so that it may be
carried to the city dump grounds
by municipal streets department
trucks.”
(Signed)
T. S. CRAWFORD, Mayor.”
Fair Park Opening
To Be Held Sunday
The official opening of Fair
Park amusement area is sched-
uled for Sunday at 2 p. m. it is
announced. .
W. T. Bonner, Fair president,
and F. E. Schmitz, Chamber of
Commerce president and Fair di-
rector, will welcome the visitors.
All the rides will be in opera-
tion the remainder of the after-
noon. , .
An additional entertainment
feature for the public will be the
making of television movies of
the Gainesville Community cir-
cus acts by an NBC cameraman,
Maurice Levy, of Dallas.
gary and Bulgaria had acted
Fair this
e r n o o n ,
night and
-
And his administration leaders
hoped at the same time that his
heavy emphasis on foreign affairs
last night in a talk with Demo-
cratic freshmen in congress might
bring new peace to the party.
The president said he made
the decision to drop atomic bombs
on Japan in the interest of sav-
ing 200,000 American lives, and
perhaps 300,000 to 400,000 of the
enemy.
“Now I believe that we are in
a position where we will never
have to make that decision again,”
he declared.
“But, if it has to be made for
the welfare of the United States,
and th edecracies of the world
are at stake, I wouldn’t hesitate
to make it again’.
“I hope and pray that that will
never be necessary.”
The setting for the cocktail
party and buffet dinner was the
same room of the Carlton hotel
where the president entertained
the signers of the North Atlantic
pact Monday night.
There was no mention in his
off-the-cuff remarks—or in those
of Vice President Barkley and
Speaker Rayburn—of differences
within the party on domestic leg-
islation. There was no talk of
civil rights, labor or other con-
troversial issues.
The party was jointly sponsored
by Democratic freshmen senators,
the national committee and the
party’s congressional campaign
committee. Its object: To get new I
congressmen better acquainted
with the president and more in
sympathy with his program.
The president joked with din-
ner companions and laughed
heartily as Barkley regaled the
audience with a couple of stories
for which he is famous.
One Southerner, Rep. Frazier
of Tennessee, sumed up the reac-
tion of the lawmakers. He said
he thought the dinner had brought
about “a closer relationship” be-
tween the administration and rhe
party congress. _____________
OLD TRAIL DRIVER DIES
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., April 7
(AP)—Funeral services for Phil H.
Tom, secretary of the Old Trail
Drivers association, were held
here today. Tom, 83, died Tues-
day.
a 1
Mhh
Circus Roundup
Edition to Come
Out Wednesday
By WANDA JARROTT
Register Advertising Manager
The special Circus Roundup edi-
tion of The Register, with 1,500
extra circulation and increased
readership of 6,000 will be issued
next Wednesday, April 13, in time
to be circulated on the booster
trip the next day.
These 1,500 extra copies of The
Register will be distributed by
car and carrier boy under the
personal supervision of The Reg-
ister circulation manager, War-
ren Flowers.
Accompanying the booster pa-
rade between towns, the carriers
spread out in the communities and
distribute the newspapers chiefly
in the residential districts.
Towns to be included on the
booster trip are Valley View, San-
ger, Denton, Aubrey, Pilot Point,
Tioga, Collinsville, Whitesboro,
Sherman, Denison; and Durant,
Madill. Ardmore and Marietta,
Oklahoma.
Advertisers, this is your op-
portunity to spread the buying
possibilities of Gainesville
throughout neighboring towns
and cities. Let the Circus Round-
up edition spread the excitement,
fun and wonders of the three-day
celebration far and wide, and in
addition, let it help to build the
fame of Gainesville as a leading
North Texas trading center.
Week of April 11-16 Set
Aside as Cleanup Period
In Gainesville by Mayor
In an official proclamation issued Thursday, Mayor T. S. Craw-
ford proclaimed the week of April 11-16 as annual Spring Clean-up
week in Gainesville, and called upon the citizens of the community to
observe the occasion by cleaning their premises of all rubbish, junk
iron, tin cans, and other unsightly objects.
to be undersecretary of defense.
Gainesville Produce
Prices paid by Gainesville
wholesalers to farmers and other
producers.
Butterfat: No. 1, 50 cents.
pie an incorrect evaluation of the
school.”
Bob Doss, a law student from
Grayson county, said the bill
would cut out a “bunch of junior
grade commissars using the stu-
dent groups and newspaper as a
sounding board.”
Rep. Sam Hannah lit into com-
munists and declared: “Some of
the screwballs that have been
here should be locked up in an in-
sane asylum. I’m not concerned
about them so much as I am about
fellows like Ayres. That’s the
kind of professor that ought to re
thrown out.”
Hanna is author of a bill which
would require students, teachers
and employes in state colleges to
sign a loyalty affidavit. Crosth-
wait’s bill would affect students
only.
protests today and ordered wide-
open general assembly debate on
the Communist prosecution of
churchmen behind the iron cur-
tain.
The Russians thus suffered a
sharp defeat in their first major
clash with the western powers at
this spring session of the assem-
bly which opened Tuesday.
The test was on a joint Aus-
tralian-Bolivian proposal that the
asembly act on the trials of Josef
Cardinal Mindszenty in Hungary
and 15 Protestant clergymen in
Bulgaria. The vote was 11 to 2,
with Iran abstaining. Russia and
Poland cast the negative votes.
The United States suggested
yesterday that the trials be con-
sidered by the assembly as viola-
tions of the Hungarian and Bul-
garian peace treaties, but the
U. S. agreed before the vote to
support the joint Australian- Bo-
livian proposal.
'"3
eg
Steel for Ball
Park May Not Be
Here Until April 19
Steel for the grandstand at the
municipal ball park would not ar-
rive in Gainesville before April
19, scheduled opening date of the
1949 Big State baseball league
season here, according to a let-
ter received Thursday by Dr. W.
Herbert Locke, club president,
from Central Texas Iron Works,
Waco, low bidder on the steel
for the stands.
However, Dr. Locke telephoned
the company and in talk with of-
ficials, learned there was a pos-
sibility of earlier delivery, but
the date is “indefinite,” he said.
The ball park and swimming
pool bonds, received here Tues-
day, were properly signed and at-
tested, and were returned Wed-
nesday to Austin for final action
by the attorney general’s office,
and registering of the bonds by
the state comptroller’s office, City
Secretary G. G. Holman said.
The convict, Willard Ward, is
known to be partially crippled by
injuries suffered when he and his
fellow escapee, Walter Lemay,
were forced out of their stolen
car Tuesday.
Lemay, 41, was recaptured
about midnight Tuesday night,
standing waist deep in water of
a creek as bloodhounds bayed at
him.
renewed against creation of a
Texas Citrus commission.
Evans Addresses House
The fight on the veterans bonus
and a speech by Congressional
Librarian Luther H. Evans
caused delay of the Gilmer-Aikin
debate. School bills held the whip
hand today as they pressed for
passage of the first reorganiza-
tion measure.
They could point victoriously to
yesterday’s substantial 88 to 51
vote against a substitute amend-
ment that virtually would have
kept the school administrative
setup in its present form.
But they could not press too
hard for an immediate final vote
on Senator Jim Taylor’s much
amended bill.
The strongest advocates of the
measure were slapped on the
wrist yesterday when they tried
to rush to conclusive action. The
house voted 98 to 40 against
bringing the issue to a direct vote
on second reading.
Several representatives who
have gone along with the Gilmer-
Aikin leaders on various tests of
strength indicated they wanted to
consider amendments yet to be
offered before making a final de-
cision.
Substitute Measure
The complete substitute which
the house defeated was offered
by Rep. W. R. Chambers of May.
He would have kept the present
system of an elective state su-
perintendent of education and an
appointive state board of educa-
tion. He was willing to go along
with the Gilmer-Akin bill in ex-
panding the board from 9 to 21
members.
The Taylor bill calls for elec-
tion of the board by districts. It
abolishes the office of state su-
perintendent and empowers the
board to appoint a commissioner
of education.
Chambers argued it is better
to have a single state officer, the
superintendent of education, re-
sponsible to all the people of Tex-
as than to have 21 elective board
members, each responsible only to
the voters in his district.
Mrs. Rae Files Still, teacher
and representative -from Waxa-
h a c h i e, countered that an ap-
pointive administrative officer is
needed to carry out the policies
formulated by the board.
She pointed out that local
school administration operates
that way, an elective board of
trustees hiring the local school
superintendent.
Mrs. Still wore a bright cor-
sage of pansies. She said it was
the gift of a school child’s moth-
er who sat in the filled gallery
during yesterday’s four hours of
debate.
tempt to hold up, or put a floor
under, market prices of foods
making up 75 per cent of the
farm output. Instead, it would al-
low prices to move freely under
influences of supply and de-
mand. It now buys and holds off
the market enough of these foods
to keep prices at farm guaranteed
levels.
In times of big supplies of most
items, prices would drop below
present levels. The farmer would
get government payments to sup-
plement money he received from
sale of his products.
For example, under the pres-
ent program, the government
strives to keep prices of eggs from
dropping below 35 cents a dozen
on the farm. It does this by buy-
ino and removing from the mar-
ket enough of the supply to keep
prices from going below 35 cents.
No Interference Planned
Under the new plan, the gov-
ernment would not interfere with
the price movement. If prices
dropped to 25 cents, for instance,
the consumer would be allowed to
get them at that price.
The farmer would get a pay-
ment from the government cover-
ing the difference between the
market price and the return
which the rrosram said he should
receive. In this case the payment
would be 10 cents a dozen.
This new support system would
be used for meat animals, milk,
butterfat, eggs, poultry, fruits and
vegetables. These products pro-
vide three-fourths of the annual
farm income.
The present system of support-
ing prices of non-perishable and
storable crops—corn, wheat, other
grains, cotton, tobacco, peanuts,
soybeans, flaxseed, dry beans and
peas and wool—would be kept.
Brannan said he could give no
close estimate at this time as to
the cost to the taxpayers of oper-
ating the new program. But he
felt certain it would be less than
costs under the present program.
day. Warmer in
southwest and
extreme south
portion tonight.
Moderate south
and southwest mn=spZVo3
winds on the — -
coast \ FAIR
West Texas: Fair this afternoon,
tonight and Friday. Not much
change in temperatures.
Oklahoma: Fair and continued
mild today, tonight and Friday.
Highs today 75-85, lows tonight
45-55 except near 40 in panhan-
dle.
Louisiana: Fair and mild this
afternoon, tonight and Friday.
Moderate southwest winds on the
coast.
ington, university student and
self-avowed communist, who had
appeared before several other leg-
islative hearings this session.
“It’s been my observation,” he
said, “that the students feel that
communism is not the concern of
the legislature. They .feel the
legislators should spend their
time repealing the poll tax and
other such legislation.”
Rep. Billie M. Jobe of Putnam
requested permission to ask Add-
ington some questions.
“This is the closest I’ve ever
been to a communist,” Joe said.
Addington answered his ques-
tions politely with “yes, sir” and
“no sir.”
Three students appeared in be-
half of the bill. Woodrow Bean
of El Paso, former house member,
said the “antics of a few persons
dinstille Saito Registet
AND MESSENGER ved 49
The idea is that the undersecre- । Known to thousands of news-
tary will, in effect, be “general men as “Steve,” Early was the
manager” of the military estab-! close confidant and press secre-
lishment, handling many details tary of the late President Roose-
and leaving Secretary of Defense
§88:3888
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Am
A party of city sportsmen was
out on a hunting expedition dur-
ing the deer season in Mason
county. From the woods near the
cabin came a cry, “Hello, this is
Henry!”
“All right, this is Bill!” one
shouted back.
“Bill, are all the other boys
there?”
“Yes.”
“Is the guide there, too?”
“Yes, he’s here.”
“Then I’ve killed a deer.”
AUSTIN, Tex., April 7 (A)— The
house state affairs committee last
night unanimously approved a bill
to keep communists out of state
colleges.
The bill would make it unlaw-
ful for any member of the com-
munist, nazi or fascist party to
enroll as a student in a state-
supported college. It was sent
to the house with recommendation
that it pass.
Two University of Texas stu-
dents testified that the legislature
had no right to tell the students
to what organizations they could
belong.
Clarence E. Ayres, economics
professor at the university ap-
peared, he said, for the American
Civil Liberties union. He called
the bill legislative intervention in
education. He insisted that he
was not appearing as a faculty
member.
By BO BYERS
AUSTIN, Tex. April 7 (A) —
The house recessed until 2 p.
m. today without taking up de-
bate on the first of the Gilmer-
Aikin school bills.
Leaders of the reorganization
measures knocked down an at-
tempt to adjourn until Monday,
89 to 50. They considered this a
minor victory over forces trying
to stall the bills.
A veterans bonus bill which
In Washington, D. C., publica-
tion of four daily newspapers re-
turned to normal after a 25-hour
wildcat walkout by AFL press-
men.
Police said two-thirds of New
York’s 11,000 cabs are back in
service. The larger companies
claimed the strike “is broken” but
the union, a branch of the United
Mine workers, said the stoppage
is 80 per cent effective.
The cabbies’ union is seeking
wage increases, a closed shop and
other benefits.
Orders from the international
president of the Printing Press-
men’s union ended the brief news-
paper strike in the nation’s capi-
tal. The walkout halted publica-
tion of the Washington Post, Eve-
ning Star, Times-Herald and
News.
In San Francisco, Harry Bridges
claimed an overwhelming vote of
confidence from his left wing
Longshore union in his attack on
national CIO policies. Union
headquarters said the member-
ship voted 63212 to 1112 in sup-
port of his stand on union “auton-
omy.”
Bridges was among signers of
a convention report accusing the
national organization of interfer-
ing with autonomy of the Inter-
national Longshore Workers un-
ion.
Queen’s Contest to
Be Concluded Friday
The queen’s contest of the Cir-
cus Roundup will be concluded
Friday at 11 p. m., contestants and
their friends were reminded
Thursday by Jimmy McCrorey,
general chairman.
Mr. McCrorey, who resides at
209 North Clements street, will
be at home up to 11 p. m. Friday
to receive last-minute contribu-
tions. Merchants are asked to re-
move bottles used in the contest
from their counters at 11 p. m.
The results will be announced
as soon as vote counting is com-
pleted Saturday morning.
Miss Bobbie Claire Robinson is
candidate of the Lion club and
Miss Carol Rike is the Kiwanis
club candidate.
n.uoomz
dad 2-
e—e0,s
0-—
scne
manded that the UN keep hands-
off.
Malik said the charter of the
world organization specifically
forbids outside interference in
the domestic affairs of nations.
Malik added:
“The charter does not contem-
plate shielding criminals and
traitors and renegades.”
He assailed Cardinal Minds-
zenty and 15 Protestant clergy-
men imprisoned in Bulgaria as
“inviters of a new war.”
The Hungarian primate was
convicted in February of black-
market activities, treason and
plotting to overthrow the Com-
munist-dominated Hungarian re-
gime. The Protestant group in
Bulgaria wasconvicted of treason
and other acts against the state.
Mindszenty is serving a life sen-
tence.
Cites 1947 Resolution
Malik cited a 1947 assembly
resolution against war-mongering
and said the assembly should “be
thankful to Hungary and Bul-
garia for catching these crimi-
nals.”
A majority of the committee
members, however, were under-
stood to favor full discussion of
the trials. The main issue still to
be decided was the form the ques-
tion would take on the assem-
bly’s calendar.
U. S. Delegate Warren R. Aus-
tin proposed yesterday that the
assembly consider whether the
trials violated sections of the
treaties guaranteeing respect for
Hungarian and Bulgarian peace
religious freedom.
The UN morning program was
(Continued on Page Eight)
c
fl
0
- - ,
8=52
18004352238
for year, 4; baro-
metric pressure,
30.10.
East Texas:
g
man, Inc. He is a Washington
resident.
had been revived two days ago
through transfer to a favorable
committee was tossed back to the
committee on constitutional
amendments. The reversal was
the lesult of a tie vole, 65-65, on
whether the bill should have been
taken out of the original commit-
tee.
The senate adjourned until
Monday after a fruitless morning
session in which opposition was
।A
Ee
In Nacogdoches Area
NACOGDOCHES, Tex. April 7 (P) — Officers thought today
they may have a desperate escaped convict surrounded northwest of
here but admitted “it’s like hunting for a needle in a haystack.”
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 190, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1949, newspaper, April 7, 1949; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1534857/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.