Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 275, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 1, 1952 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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CLEBURNE TAMES-REVIEW
5c DAILY
• '
10c SUNDAY
i
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Win Report of Un it fl Pnu. - Wotldt Gnotfi News Agenoy
X-
3
4
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1952
X
2
47TH. YEAR. NO. 275
4
4
4
#
Newspaper Week From Allied Gun / N
rANMUNJON, Korea, Oct 1—W• •
N
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7
/
I
t
ur™ TEXAS
I
i“iz
S
I
"uge
bj
. 8,
I
Lt
t
l
4
‘ 7
making them money
1
7
Anything
of the prisoner casualties ware
Workings of Lunch Room Program
lust two year* in Cleburne
ih-
School Superintendent Dean Mur-
10V
al
tary schools.
Kills Baby Sitter
returned Tuesday in the death of
concerning the lunch program and es, or burn them or dispose of tnem
than the kind of beverage most
INDIVIDUAL FREEDOM would up suddenly by a Stalin or a Peron.
; baby sitter
press
Costly Blaze
caliber rifle in a closet and appar- | autocratically taken in hand the
ently was playing with it when it
It was explained that during the
8
2 7
1
.1
• M he seme thing in a lai
A
said the door was so de
and mayhe walk a lot
home was overheated.
n
?
-=*
I and cremated herself
Q
day.
Guided Missile
on hand
#n
*
World Series fans
has launched its first true guided
....
Excellent Results Reported
+
met.
ctowm-
n." )
Koreans had
The
61
but w
no 1
lead and an
' Char
a fine
*
important tem
LE
-
(Men ma
20
-
-4
02
Mr
LOSS WILL BE FELT IN MOSCOW
American Bombers Level Chemical Plant
Let’sallworkforT
"SEE YOU ATT
uarters said 300 women from
exas towns and cities were
20-year-old Claire Maric Barnabel
who was shot Monday by the five
i
' -.273
12
g
Hecke -said "All we found we
some torso bones." ’
should die.
And — short of the worst —
2
; 1
companied by Annice Jagge
sweetheart
Warship Tested
PARIS. Oct 1—UP—U.S Secre-
tary of the Navy Dan Kimball said
► not enjoy
This consent was born of the pub-
lic NEED—and DESIRE-and th
(See NEWSPAPER on page 4)
111J
ra
I
ship
Dalton Cum hie and Rev. tibert
aim mn
ra — at Tuo
vv, United rrens Tetopneto Pie Curew
‘CP Central Press Feeturem
Kina Veaturem
Korea.
B-29
folks drink in the larger cities.
Think of the difference in mil- perish if freedom of the
I
than neighboring larger cities. Stop PER WEEK—i
and think a minute about the ad by America’s I
in 2 2.
vmgN
ed ' '
1 1
T^is
*
unselfish
..... ........ ... ........ Our journalistic freedom comes
just that degree in which sources from a CONSENT on the part of
of useful information are wilfully the people.
nk-mg I
sti 4 1
OTHER DEPARTMENTS
133 and 134
of the school program but had not j food commodities and they arc ay-
‘ ‘ ‘ " allable for school children’s lunch
R/
underprivileged elementary school
children One school received in
p—
/
IP .:
• <
M<
equipment, $3,367.92 has been paid
for out of lunch funds, leaving $2,-
an unconscious hint of her plans {
when she commented to her broth
turpentine and other inflammable
painting accessories Fire Marshal
j Reggie Reagan, who made the
| damage estimate, said the origin
j of the blaze was unknown, but that
"She had been in the furnace I it may have started through spon-
taneous combustion.
American ( an Co., plant here, said several hours,” Hecke said
he noticed the house was overly .__—____—
warm when he returned from emm-ama
Damage was estimated at (79,013
Wednesday from a fire that swept
through a warehouse In downtown
Nacogdoches Tuesday night.
The warehouse was filled with
The day is strictly a day ,of ap
preciaton of past favors from cus
tomers in the trade territory
UN Admits Shell
« ommpusue», out as long as our ।
government creates a surplus of
one year $887.10 from local organ
izations for free lunches hi that
school.
Murphy also quoted to the group
the types of allowable expenditures
under the school lynch funds, and
gave the results of a recent survey
conducted by the Commissigner of
Education. *
Family Nas Alibis'
Hecke and officers assigned to
missile warship and it was "only a bombed and wrecked a vital chem- l ly.
> “ ... " " ■ --ical plant only 400 yards from
TABOO CELEBRATION
- , Two Americans
some pt it from Manchuria,
Forty-eight B-295 from Okinawa
work When his brother, Herbert j
told him of his conversation with i
caused by "bullets."s »'
Prison command officials heard
1
The superintendent then issued a
headqi
1 100 T<
Pastor Addresses
Optimist Meeting
Rev Jeff Moore, pastor of the 1
1 Field Street Baptist Church, was .
। guest speaker for the Cleburne Op
I timist Club at its regular meeting
Tuesday at Liberty Hotel.
"The club which loves the boys
and girls of the community is the
chib with the greatest outlook, one
that will presper the most." Said
Rev. Moore, further, "The leaders i
of tomorrow are the boys of today. I
-
• 3
Inf
' g20
au J
| Her husband, Andy, discovered to the switch and then crawled into
; the suicide when he came home the cold furnace.
: from work and noticed that his | Poljce said the door was so de-
-4
. ; 88
+a
___ —,k -u. X -ti. T'school lunch program. The program I es, the Cleburne Schools will avail
discharged once. the bullet strik-1 in Cleburne is not new, as Adams themselves of them,
ing Miss Barnabei in the heart. . land Washington schools have had I • - • - ■ ■ • ■•-
a
j challenge to the group to face the
real issue, and tha it was not the
use of surplus commodities for the
school chud's lunch, but that the
real issue is whether or not we
munist anti-aircraft guns and 18
lost to other causes.
On the ground, UN troops recap
tured a central trout heigh< east of
Kumaong, then beat off a Chinese
ComaHMdot counter-attask In two
hours of handto-band fighting.
Fragments Fired
I t (19
type fired by the artillery of our) — 4
side," McCarthy said in his det- * l
ter, "and it is conetuded that they I
accadentally fell in the area after I • hi
v
\
favor price supports for farm com
mudities which makes the surplus
possible. Thus, he said, the use of
surplus commodities for school
lunches simply boils down to who
ther we use them for school lunch-
yA
'G
Ing ol____________
gute. They included Maj
Thomas W. Herren, comma
the new Korean common
c?l
A Big Vote
Returning airmen reported "ex-
cellent results," with numbers sec-
/L
it does not discourage madjoeN
men and political hacks. When
the voter loses intereet in hip I
government, lie opens the door
to corruption and waste.
Injure yourself or others. '
A
Going a little farther suppose dammed up by selfish or spiteful
your purchase proves faulty. You interests. just so is individual lib
will have to make many expensive erty irTperiled.
45 CHINESE POW'S KILLED
--
ondary explosions and fires pock
marking the 4.71a by 1,200-foo Ur
get area. a
"The loss will be felt in Mos
cow,”-one officer said "The site
was left smoking, burning and ex-
pioding.p
The chemical plant, three miles
down the Yaka river from the con-
eape, difference in traffic. You
might even have an accident and
mbecomseyou •
onjnfhe yorld.
by-day bottle to t
Murphy's refusal to assne such I
A | blame, or credit, was prompted by j
recent controversy among the mo-
thers of the elementary schools !
CLASSIFIED PHONE 2000
• am i . Xu 1 hereby -m•
e--an ieth areeke -
(_
. ” O---- W Tua-
Offirlal Armrana
3
• .
UNVEILED Army Ordnance Cot pa has unveiled a 280-inm artillery plece which 1
is capabte of delivering an ntomie shell in close support of ground troops in nil
kinds of weather, day or night The 85-ton, completely mobile unit is said to be
tour times more accurate at long ranges than any mobile artillery piece devel-
l question of time" until atomic- | ica l plant only 400 yards from j
L powered aircraft carriers are de Communist China Wednesday de
veloped.. • spite intense Red anti aircraft fire.
----ma
8 PAGES
Weather
MANE AND VICINITY
‘toparty cludy thro.
"uasaered right guara
an* family had "reasonable all i bert investigated and found his
bis." ' wife’s remains.
Albert, a stock clerk at the !
Although the initial annouhce- .
mint did not specify what weap- 1
ons were used by the Americans, i..-‛
prison command officials sald moat '
c; -
which an Air Force officer describ-
ed aa “one of the few remaining
important targets left in North Ko
rea." 1
United Press correspondent Rob-
ert Udiek, who rode Fin the sixth
plane of the long B29 formation,
said "fierce Red flak" burst
around the Superfart* and aight
W
L %
k V
SHOULD and what it SHOULD
NOT know about the PUBLIC BU
SINESS under their direction -
Yet our people generally seem
■ never to pay more than casual at-
-set apart each year assailed throughout the world
---- ------ _ ......—-----— — J, Aa . Tree democratic jour 1 Witness the almost complete
vantages of trading in Cleburne I nalism as a period of self-examina- blackout in Russia and its satell-
To begin with .Cleburne mer- l tion and re dedication. i ites.
Head - Lines This Is National
By Clyde Head
i
I A
g officer* flew to
And the newspapers ALONE
can’t hold the line.
I ; among Communist war prisoners
t j since last February, , '
The diehard Chinese Reds.
men ana*
eked the
arger city furnace, let the door swing
shut and then used a home-
of the members of the dead worn Mrs Albert about the furnace, Al
me
Finally, Cleburne has everything
---2 Horror Death
ef parkim© space. Of course you
may have to stick a penny or two
br a taupia of nickase in a park- IT?—A despondent house* ।
tow meter, tout you would have to wife crawled inside an oil
J
■ 1 dg
ijjA
p?
To the East, South Korean Third
Diviaion infantrymen dug in on the
MMitheni slope la hiueast
'of mendip
At Nacogdoches
NACOGDOCHES, Oct 1-UP—
that it would close—but not
Only Bones Remained Mock—by itself after being opened
it was a complete cremation,/. Mr« Albert then evidently tugged i
| on the string, igniting the furnace
Justice of the Pesce Alfred
Baass said the small son of Mr
levision sets around and i
view the first game of thd
-.Blackface.actorswho.
for the BAPW party last ni
W
Women Meet To
Aid Eisenhower
FORT WORTH, Oct 1—UP—
Women from all over Texas were
in Fort Worth Wednesday for the
meeting of "Womanpower for Ei-
senhower ’
A spokesman for Eisenhower
Value Day cennot heip but weld
residents of the trade territory into
a closer band, the farmer, stock-
men, merchant and professional
men.
Such honest effort shall without
a doubt be rewarded by a better
O understanding between all concern-
ed and create a confidence and
trust between Hie different factions.
A . I
Cleburne has a great deal to of- |
1 fer consumers, a great deal more
-
"Your Right T
Itinonaot.d
; ge.......-s-
—p---
You will find a welcome tot Clo- . .
bum* mt found in larger citios. made device to trip the fur-
We ere all homefolk here to* Cl*-1 nace controls and cremate
_ । ng..I ! Dr. L. J Van Hecue, county । He said he left the house to shop
D.nAe K.ic,e. medical officer, said the childless ; for the parts, leaving Mrs Albert
KUIC DUICIUC woman had suffered mental dis- alone
j turbances recently. He said the pos- Police found a length of cord and
i sibility that she was the victim of rubber band—tied together dan-
a gruesome murder plot wss still gling from the switch that ignites
being investigated but that he was , the furnace
inclined to believe that she took They reasoned that Mrs Albert
her own life attached the cord and rubber band
ve other Allled War died to a a
-= == -
; 2,
years, ,$2,968 worth'of zone command, ancol.cv. Cad.
have been served to -well, commander of the prisoner of I
- ..... war command. 2 rGss.
Riot In Compound No. 7 2
The riot took place at Compound .
No. 7 in prison cam 3-A, which N I
holds 20,060 Chinese prisoners, in- l
chiding 5,000 diehard Communista. iN
The other 19,000 have told the .
United Nations they would rather 1
die than return, to communism.et < I
The prisoner of war command I
said diehard Reds in compound, 1-I
No. 7 began a '‘mass disturbapre" ; I
when guards appeared to Torm - I
Work details to continue construc- 2 I
tion in the vast winterization Mro: a I
It inpurenthat.adecininn wi
dc -nA9e oy G4 Ue POP
A small vote fa vote tight machine
rule. Th* machine always vote*. L .
Voter indifference dincovmasei
able men from running for
220.39 yet to be liquidated. During
the last two years, $2,1108 worth’of
free meals I
Sup*r-V«lu« Day in Cleourne to
day, the first day and the first
Wednesday of Octcer. Current
plans ar* for the merchants to
stege the appreciation day once
eacn month, an the first Wednes
day of each month.
If ten's often ther we g elong
with such plans, but this plan is
sound as e Miler, with no gimmick*
Certainly, the merchant of Cle-
bum* enould / be commended for
originating such a method of show-
ing their appreciation for past bu-
siness.
W* took a look at the ads in
the Times-Review, checked price*
on Super-Value Day items, checked
whether such items were plentiful
or herd-to-get merchandise.
☆
Here is what we found in these
advertsements
Most of the Items advertised as '
Super Value Day bargains, were
priced at wholesale cost or less, t
Who could ask for more’
Another thing in many instances,
the items priced at cost or less,
were hard to get items What more
would she customer need to prove
-—the sincerity ol the merchants
Of course, local merchants will
realize additional business by spon
-4pring Super Value Day, but the
extra business will cost instead of
j phy stated that the Cleburne School
! Board had gone on record as not
■ling to provide surplus
Oct l—UP—ling passes at the bombers How- The bombers which struck the planes were shot down by Com;
Superfortresses' ever, all the B-29s returned safe I chemical factory were part of a
id a vital chem-1 ly. fleet of 60 Superforts which roam .
ed over North Korea early Wednes-
1 as distinguished from — -----
-tary—to tecidte what th* publiav
9: ’ 21p
a P
1 EM
f1 gon
S' Sta
a*-
tu
• Wednesday that the United States SEOUL,
1 American
ricocheting from some nearby °
land mass
"Action lias been taken to assure i
I that there will be no recurrence. 1
( "This accidental violation of th*]’
conference area is regretted.
Two days ago, while McCarthy ।
was investigating the protest, three |
American enlisted men accom- l
panying him were captured by Chi- i
1 nese Communist front line troops j
l and held lor seven hours before j
i being released
I The three men had parked their !
• jeep accktentally outside the neu- ■
' tral area
I ----------------
rj&Kp
'---^Snitrtwi 'iin ■ i'i—.1... i.ii ..-k./m.'. a----------
minglng Rod songs, atta---—- .
American* when two platoons
about 70 men— charged" Into the 1 j
j prison compound to quell the dem- f ]
' onstration. "
Entrenched behind four foot high ( i
; stone wall foundations of their new 1 J
winter quarters, the Chinese fought
' with stones, vicious barbed wire- ,) ]
l wrap,ted staves, and sharpened 02
I tent poles.
bullets Cause Most Deathe .-.la
nesday in smashing a wild,
forbidden celebration of the
! third anniversary of the
Chinese Communist repub-
1 lie.
Two Americans were injured
slightly in the bloodiest rioting
elementary #
esa-mu-a
oped prior to World War II. H is carried suspended between two engine cabs,
front and rean, which can transport their load across country as well as on high-
ways up to a speed of 35 miles an hour. The gun, which is the Army’s largest
caliber of its kind and also tires conventional shells, can fit into any landing ship
designed lor amphibious operations. Top, a civilian gunnery expert test tires the
huge artillery piece at the Aberdeen, Maryland, proving grounds. The overall
length of the mobile unit, bottom, including its Iwo transporters, is HI feet, 2
the fact that the new equipment/in some less useful way Mr. Mur:
... . . - in the elementary kitchens is being ’ ’ ‘ ‘ — -L “atac
year old boy for whom she was a paid for by the cafeteria funds of
KoHv cio»r the individual school*. doing anything
He stated the school board had commodities, -bi
the authority to operate all phase*! 1
fefri
rm -E,
UP The United Nations admitted
Wednesday that pieces of an ar ‘ -
tillery shell found inside the Pan j l •
ruunjnm ucutkal aone came fum——
an Allied gun.
the program for a number of year*, 1------ —
Hhsrarnarsaosaibanaredbein+qmmahok.
to Cleburne, sald Murphy, and last elementary m
year Fulton ent Long sehqols also " "
cooperated in the program
Injured in Row
CHEJU ISLAND, Korea,
Oct. 1—UP—American sol- M
dler guards killed 45 Chi-
nese war prisoners and
wounded 120 others Wed-
MILWAUKEE, Oct. 1 —
| The admission came in a brief
liaison officers’ meeting at which
Col. Charles W McCarthy, senior
1 UN officer, handed over a letter
to North Korean Col. ('hang Chun
San.
Chang protested Monday that
fragments'of an Allied shell fell
into the 1,000 yard tone the day be
fore
Examinations of the fragments
j recovered at a point approximate
I 100 yards within the are* dis
dosed that the shells were of a
_________ chool cafeteris. I
school board, laid Murphy, opera: Kf
tes under a policy that the Pocat "the 1
tax shall be used to provide school hend
lunches. Of this $5,612.69 worth of '
the detective bureau said they had
! - > a needed new part*. i work. However, they said that all
Mtey ■ rejusedada, esume i
Foust had charge of the program, ihe Warne, or to el a i ft crodit for 1
The speaker was introduced by | operation of the Federal Lunch
Rev Foust._____—— | Room program in Cleburne, at a
Bill Burton, Musical director of meeting ol the City Council of P-
Field Street Baptist Church, sang i TA in the J. N. Lons school Mon-
two negro spirituals He was aciday.
, club | Murphy made hta remarks fol-
| lowing an invitation to explain
some of the operations of the hot
lunch programs which are being
carried out in the. local Women-
‛ • In your problem than a stranger ‘
it just stands to reason.
☆
Latureshanee
rlrn
The Fifth Air Force announced
_ it destroyed or damaged a record pun., du..
dh zfanhuua"nenbcNan""naKe
fronline nflSw, hh
chants know beyond a shadow of If you ask: -so WHAT’"—well | Witness the suppression and con-
a doubt that they must offer just ! for In. homll' YOlR wek'lfiscation of "La Prensa" in Ar
as good or better bargain., than quite as much as the newspapers! gentina. .
thLotsorilkssrorrneretason or kig’ht^'know 1952 to YOUR the president of the Unired states
another, mostly another, are just One of its chief purposes is to I about a year ago authorizing civ
looking for an excuse shop in a inspire better journalism—5o that 1 ilian, agencies of the government
big city. Therefore, Cleburne mer- YCu mav bebetter served bv vour as distinguished from the mili
ch. ate must otter something fi i nAAnAN-PF V, • — •°
ficiently attractive to turn the . P . . .
- ..... Another is to remind every Amer-
GAELTINCA
in rhe rght of international events, our cMrUMd right of
freeoce or the proto takes on added importance. For at we conelder
the pattern of aggresalon by forge seeking to dominate ! he w rd,
we find that the gacging of the press it invariably a prelude to
IM destruction Of free government.
We have reason to take pride in th« alert and vigorous prese
that has been bullt up in oat nation under our traditional freedom
of the agent and expresalon. We cannot, however, assume that it will
aluays be that way. In our own hemisphre we have wltnessed the
deah of La F rensa, one of the world's great newspapero . Klsewhere,
we At vw seen the pertie that veset the town and women of our free
presa in their pursult of the truth. We have the example of willlam
N. Get it. now 1hcarcerated behind the Iron Curtain in a mockery of
juatice by oppressors who know that the printing of the truth Lnter-
feret with their ala to dea troy individual right a and freedom.
In view of these and other disturbing eventa la the world today,
it it appropriate that the slogan "Your Newt paper bighte the Way
of Freedom" hat been selected far the 13th ancnl obeervanoe of
Natl nil Xewspuper Vewx.
TEREPORE, I, at Oovernor of the State of Texas, la oooperation
with tnis,program o* the free press of our nation, do hereby deslgnete
the period vc tuber 1 • 8, 194, at
XATlSNAL XBSPAPEN XX
in Texas, and urw« all the
hhddfdhA.. poop le of qyr ttabt wo take
„mfsddda. the opportunity during
gEEEEEEMMhe to be
„NMeg, ulin the
dinr iv he r ew
-aera tod their contritutlon
P ‘ ve t 1 .-a o1 our way
of
L Kimball told a press conference
r t si
closed place.
3s
By PROC
I 2 jlduemcin.
- h.«
troverrial Suiho power plaht in
northwest KMiLrproduaed Tung
den, carbide, .
chemical:oil use
_ ing munitions. „
—•-------------------------
vHIggtaMM-----ree......F mrmem-*m
Bram.
"The guards not only found
prisoners demonstrating, ml
around and ringing, but found
they had put up improvised '
munist flags In the compot
(Ba* CHINESE:an pag•
=n
HOUSEWIFE CREMATES SELF IN FURNACE
togM ohehaehmthey Jo shop- ican ot the importance of। guarding
ping | the treedom ot information guar:
• •' A, J anteed to our people by Article 1
Suppose you go out to buy some of the Bill of Rights. , tention to the ever recurring acts [
particular piece of equipment May The individual reader and his Land threats against freedom of in
to* you go t* the larger cities think- newspaper have an inseparable iormation.
ing you might save a littie money, common interest in that constitu i They apparently, have no cons . . _,
At the same time you may catch Qur people must be free ciousness ot the slow strangulation Accidental Shot
• show or a couple of cold bottles. To remain free, they must be in and vindictive interests seem de
First off, you won't be eble to ormed , .0 . termined to bring about
buy the merchndise any cheaper 1° be adequately informed, they •
We hove some very fine show. And. so. NATIONAL NEWSPA I permit self serving interests to chi ,
righe herein Cleburne end drink.1 PER WEEK is a period belonging sei away our precious rights bit
which will do you a lot more good equally to YOU and YOUR NEWS ; by bit than we can afford to per
- -...... PAPER. i mit those rights to be swallowed
-
' • 1
burne. herself, police said Wednes-
, day Mrs Marguerite Al-
NIBYe.MY." bert’s remains were found The 44 year-oid housewife ga
"interauknow they Appreciatoby her husband in the fire-
you coming into their stores. box of the furnace in the
and Mrs. C. D Sims found a 22
.,7,7, %
a to te-
l "
■
PuUttM aa apuhile werula in.co
eration with The AthartMlnf Cou
" .........,
and Japan dropped 425 bomb* on
the Yalu River plant at Namsan,
Tuesday that the Chinese prison- "
era might try to celebrate the aq-
niversary of the founding of their
Communist republic. The com-
mand immediately issued an order
banning demonstration*.
The riot came only two daysseft-
_ at Cail. Richard Bncrcn of PilU- _______J
burg, Calif., took command at I
Cheju. Orders for it may have been I
given by secret CommunUt agent* ,1
landed by boat on the South Ko-
rean coast. * ;
Gen. Mark Clark, supreme Unit-
ed Natios commander, announced 1
last Saturday he had orderd a M- |
val blockade of the entire Korean
coaet becauae the Ped haA itund-
This is NATIONAL NEWSPA Freedom of information is being
nauntinu Communist banne
‘ inches. (NEA Telephoto) -
TO SETTLE CONTROVERSY____________
School Superintendent Explains
the youth program.
Witness the executive order of "'They Inspire them to follow
j them Put the right things in their
hearts and let them know you are
। looking to them for future leader- '
,81
aaw ceogaea ~lmma-
Aetsz"icj . ie
—— -:—
V ■ i-ip-—f T*"”
........T ;
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 275, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 1, 1952, newspaper, October 1, 1952; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1402945/m1/1/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Johnson+County%22: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.