Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 3, 1954 Page: 1 of 10
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1954
■
DENTON, TEXAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 3, 1954
PRICE: FIVE CENTS
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Renewal Of War
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Ex-Tax Head
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SILVER GET
e
PASSED
trail under new management.
»
Sunday. They were Arthur Bary,
time the engineering
Al
$291,523.
Since Everest
Benefit Dance Is
Italians Reach
I
4
"emphasize his
A strike of some 1,200 American
Weather
Wilson Hits
an-
l
2.00
I
moisture.
NEW YORK-BOUND PLANE
f
FALLS IN NEW ENGLAND
paign office, in the Roberts Build-
5.00
A. W- Goodwin
Employes Piggly Wggly
The local developments, stack-
ans will be
t
but some were sped to nearby
A.
Guatemalan Army
H
It was a. this point that Wilson
Auto Fin. end save money, C4054.
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Shivers Forces Slate Rally
Here/ ‘Loyalists’ Eye Tyler
Woodring Raps
Gen. Marshall
For “Sellout’
Brown, the FBI said, was named; the dance and all Venture Club
in 1950 to the Communist party’s I members have available tiekets.
Monday’s Total
Total to Date
10.00
5.00
15.00
2.00
2.00
r' ' at
12"
A benefit dance sponsored by
the Venture Club of Denton will
be held Saturday night at NTSC
with all proceeds going into the
Commissioners after the Monday
session invited the six to attend
Utility Bond
Issue Studied
$ 140.00
$4,019.65
in 200 feet of an occupied dwell-
ing.
ARS,
T
Both factions of Denton County's
Democrats today pushed details for
campaigning in the four weeks re-
maining before the Aug. 28 run-
off election* between Gov. Allan
Executive Committee after serv-
ing as organizational secretary of
the Communist Political Assn, in
Buffalo, N.Y. " '
High Monday
Low today ..
High year ago
Low year ago
Everest, K2 is considered the more
difficult climb because of the steep-
ness of the final stages ot the peak.
The successful Italian team in-
cluded 11 climbers and 8 scien-
tists. The group was chosen by the
Italian Alpine Club early this year
and trained at the famous Italian
Alpine climbing center at Monte
Rosa.
Tam Leder Ardit Desio, leader
of the expedition, held detailed
consultations with Sir John Hunt,
leader of the successful Everest
expedition, to review his plans be-
fore the ascent
Desio also collecte 2 every photo-
graph and every line written on
K2 by climbers who had tried be-
fore him. Once they reached a
Airport, where the FBI said she
was waiting for someone.
: (
"more than twice the amount of
money donated for the runoff cam-
paign than for the entire primary
election." .
City Commissioners Monday
night passed two ordinances
after their discussion of a pro-
posed bond -issue — the two
new laws concerning livestock
in the city limits and utilities
outside the city limits.
The livestock ordinance pro-
vided that no livestock, horses
or cows, could be located with-
for nearly two hoi
desribed- it as
‘Fessor Graham’s College Aces
will play free for the dance which
will be held on the "Slab” behind
the NTSC Union building.
Tickets for dance cost $1 and are
on sale at Tobin’s Drugs. They
will also be on sale the night of
Y
eir
hey
A
ast
Of Ignoring Korean Peace
7
E
4T
HT
time the American people take a
close, realistic look at what it
wants to do about getting the max-
imum potential defense within the
nation's meas to pay for it.”
Wilson said the plan as outlined
by Hannah was prepared at the
Defense Department after consul-
tation with the Office of Defense
Mobilisation and that it had been
We finance late Model Cars.
Complete Insurance Service.
C. F. Whisenant, BAW. Ins, Agcy,
can-
sion-
The plane mowed down a row
of trees on the farm of Valentine
Sebastian. It then plowed into a
garage, demolishing an automo-
bile.
- The plane left Paris last night.
It was due at Idlewild Airport in
New York at 8:15 a.m. (EST), but
rain and low ceiling prevented it
from landing.
Rosenstein said the plane crack-
ed up at about 9. a.ma minutes
. 96
.75
5.00
4.00
5.00
5.00
3.00
10 00
100
10.00
*25.00
1.00
1.00
meet
fake
Hits.
vp st
Shotvers Soak
West Texas •
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Crackling thunderstorms which
gave West Texas' South Plains its
first good soaking in more than
a month vanished early Tuesday[
but were expected to boil up again
in afternoon heat
Rains up to an inch pounded a
big patch of the piains Monday
night. Thunderstorm*: boiling out'
of a squall line dropped the needed
A
)
Or it is not known what the cost i rnyvs A NT MTI
will be to build a pipeline and in- I W U LVLW
Garza Little Elm lake, r from the ORDINANCES
[ Airlines pilots went into its fourth
day and 20,000 ground (Yew work
ers authorized a walkout against
six other major airlines.
The new strike threat was di-
rected against Capital, Eastern,
National, Northwest, Trans World
and United.
The National Mediation Board,
moving swiftly to avert new walk-
outs, called in representatives of;
the AFL International Assn, of
Machinists (IAM) and the six lines
to meet in Washington today.
An IAM spokesman said there
would be no strike on the six lines
while the mediation board tries
for-a settlement.
The IAM is seeking a uniform
wage on all airlines, asking a 5
per cent increase over present top
classificaitons. This would give a
mechanic, now paid $2.27 an hour,
Reserve Plan
WASHINGTON UB—Secretary of
j Defense Wilson said today that the
; military reserve situation' "would
and file work was to begin and
See BARKER, Page 2
Those now in violation of the
ordinance were given 15 days
to correct their situation.
The previous limit was 50
feet - 2qore-za-
The motion on utilities grant-
- ed the City Engineer the power
to negotiate a utilities contract
with people southwest of the
city limits near where the new
Highway 77 will be located.
after the passengers were ordered
to fasten their safety belts.
The Wreckage burned furiously
0,t 4
-- -
J. C. Penney Co.
Bess Peterson
Claude Doty
Mr. and Mrs. A. W.
Woolly and Pa
V
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d
398835
1622 2813238
" -98288
tdmrldum---
DARKER
FUND
Mr. and Mri. Willie
McCrary , 1
District Fund of the
Methodist Church
Skidmore Implement Co.
Reagan .Vestal Jr.
’ Mrs. Juddie Martin
Mr., Mra. E. F. Helton
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Brenholtz
Mr., Mrs. J. A. Stone
Jimmie Waldrip
John Mark Waldrip
Mrs. Mark Waldrip
Mark Waldrip
Mrs. R. L. Fowler
-G. E Taylor
For Evasion
NEW YORK u — Joseph D.
Nunan Jr., once the nation's head
tax collector, was senteneed today
to five years imprisonment and a
$15,000 fine for income tax evasion.
Nunan was sentenced by Judge
Walter Bruchhausen who said that
Nunan’s conduct “cannot be con-i
doned."
The judge said Nunan’s erime
was made greater by the fact that
he had been charged with en-
forcing the laws.
Nunan was appointed U.S. com-
missioner of Internal Revenue by
the late President Franklin D.
Roosevelt und served in the post
from 1944 to 1947.
He was convicted on a five count
indictment in which he was ac-
cused of reporting his income for
The dance will begin at 8:30
p m. and a special entertainment
skit is planned for intermission.
The Barker cash campaign stood ;
at $4,019.65 today. This does not
include the Opti-Mrs. benefit show
iast week, which' realized an esti-
NEW manager Two More On
Red Charges
ingup as quickly as election re-
turns came in during the first
primary battle looked like this:
for
and r_____.__________ ___
On the other side of the political
fence Tom Laney, president of
the Denton County Yarborough-
I "
aF
I'
Slated Saturday
ml
for-Governor Club predicted that
his candidate would again carry
Denton County.
And he was quite optimistie
-e
LiHla
ason
th a
•ark.
nron-
Highest Peak
RAWLPINDI, Pakistan (fl - An
Italian mountain climbing expedi-
tion messaged, today that it has
conquered 28,520-foot K2—Mt. God-
win Austen — the world's second
highest peak and since the con-
the cost of such improvements.
That will be the first step in re-
financing the entire city utility
department.
Tentative plans call for bringing
in all bonds now issued, combin-
ing them with the ones citizens
will be asked to vote into existence,
and re-issue the whole financial
program under one set of “utility”
bonds.
In the early portion of the Mon-
day session, Commissioner Talia-
head of many states officess and a
supporter of Adlai Stevenson in
the 1962 presidential election.
' Since that election McCaw has
come out in suppurt of Shivers
and, as Joe W Nichols— spokes-
man for the local Shivers forces
—put it, “He’s gut quite a story
to tell."
Nichols also said the tally will
be a planning session for tactics
the "conservatives" Intend to use
in campaigning for the governor.
“The way things look now, we
------
PRESTON, Conn. I—-A four-
engined Paris to New York Con-
stellation with 37 persons aboard
crashed and burst into flames on
araln-sodden farm today. First
* Scandal’
hospitals.
A witness reported the big Air
’ France plane barely missed a
. house before landing in the field
with a terrific crash. Almost im-
mediately. flames enveloped the
ship.
Air France reported in New York
that the plane carried 29 passen-
gers and a crew of eight. One of
the passengers, state police said,
was a baby.
Aaron Mosenstein, New York
clothing manufacturer, was among
the passengers who fled the flam-
. ing ship.:
about "the way pevp’e
for Yarborough." He at
ed donations had air
the total raised here
ing the primary camp
- The workers who wi
Tyler meeting will be
local campaign tactic
the state picture, Lan
Dulles Labels Reds Guilty
— ------ L-
Associated Press Leased Wire
this time concerned with the actual
collection of tax that Nunan had
j only served to
guilt.’
Lengthy Probe
Due Following
Censure Move
WEATh
2g * z.roomee
2e
By SCOTT BROOKSHIRE
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Unless the best laid plans of city
Commissioners and civic leaders
go astray, the voters of Denton will
be confronted with a multimillion
dollar bond issue within the next
60 days.
As the situation now stands, vot-
ers will be asked by the city to
approve the refinancing of present
water bonds as well as furnishing
the money to build a new power
plant and water intake system.
City Engineer Grady Creel in-
dicated in the special Commission
session Monday that the city should
have a steam-turbine power plant
in operation before next summer. I
It is not known yet just how I
many millions of dollars will be 1
needed for the project.
night that he wants his senatorial!
critics put under path before the , down.today:
special committee to repeat their
"scurrilous false” charges.
If they do that, he said, they
4
; .3 4'
{
MS
(•own with i. bang. It just barely
missed our house." (
The faim on which the plane
cracked up lies between the cities
of Norwich and New London.
Miss Denyse Hebert, 26, of Long-
ueuil, Que.. returning home oh the
plane from a three weeks trip to
See PLANK, Page 2
h ’
P.-
4-
lie
commission wiped out.
Under Indian chairmanship its
members are Sweden, Switzerland
and two Communist governments
—Poland and Czechoslovakia
Dulles said the nations which
1946 to 1950 as $416,144 when it-
actually was $543,396. The govern-
ment said be paid itazes- tolaling- —4
m should have paid f
Supervisory Commission which has
kept representatives of Communist
governments in South Korea.
The United. States, Dulles said,.
would be sympathetic to seeing the 22004437 when he
M.j- -HI
"* - \
h—--NI“ *
i -.
am
mated $400. This, coupled with
what the Venture Club dance will
gain, is expected to push the fund
past the $5,000 mark by Sunday.
Mail or personal donations are
still being accepted by Tobins,
First State Bank and the Record-
Chronicle.
The construction of the house,
oelayed some by rain Monday,
was back in swing today. Brick
the shut- hunanww“nwtxaconeinton with
’ • > ' ■ $ee » a 2h
‘s. One witness
•'r scrambled!—
Nunan’s attorney, Richard J.
firms hired recently by the city
will report on their finding thus far
in power and water studies. They
will also make recommendations
for improvements and estimate I
—----------- —----- The big rally in City Hall Audi- ___________________
Shivers and Ralph tarborough, ' torium by the Shivers forces will /ing, will be manned everyday
The local developments, stack- have as its main speaker attorney — — -- ----— •———•—
Bill McCraw of Dallas, former
seized two more alleged top Com-
munists in a 24-hour roundup that
has netted seven arrests.
Agents picked up Joseph William
Scherrer, 34, and his wife Maia,
36, yesterday. Scherrer was ar-
j rested at his home in Pueblo, Colo.,
and his wife at Denver’s Municipal
arrested in Colorado have been set
for Aug. 16. They ate expected to Charles Barker Home project fund.
——
TENrAGES
nounced it is buying control of the
Statler chain in “the largest trans-,
action in the history of the hotel
industry."
The announcement by Conrad N.
Hilton said the purchase involves
753,000 shares of common stock at
a cost of $50 per share. The shares
are owned largely by the Statler
Foundation and various trusts
created by the chain's founder,
Ellsworth M. Stater.
A similar offer is being made
to all other shareholders and
should all accept the total pur-
chase price would be about 76 mil-
lion dollars, Hilton said.
- .
But Commissioners Monday in-
dicated that no matter what the L
cost, the bywords for both projects
should be "the sooner the better.”
In looking into what Com mis- I
sion chairman Claud Castleberry
termed a “serious situation,” the
Commissioners had as their guests
Monday six local men who repre-
sent Denton banks and business de-
partments of both colleges. Those
present included R. W. Bass, Dr.
O. N. Curry, R. M. Barnes, E. L. ;
DETROIT WPV/-The Lone
Ranger will pound the next
appear before a federal grand jury
convening here Aug. 23.
The FBI said Scherrer and his
Brooklyn-born wife have been ac-
tive in the Civil Rights Congress,
an organization on the attorney
general’s subversive list. Mrs.
WASHINGTON W—A 75-12 vote
of the Senate last night consinged
to a special bipartisan committee
a censure, move aimed .at Sen.
McCarthy and evidently signaled
a lengthy new investigation of the
Wisconsin Republican’s conduct.
Sen Knowland of California, the
t GOP leader, predicted appointment
j by Vice President Nixon “within
Draws Prison
ferro told visitors that “we can
squeeze through two or three more
years without more power.”
“But we’re just spinning our
wheels by adding one gas-diesel
engine at a time,’ 'Taliaferro said.
See HUGE, Page
passengers leaving the wreckage.”
_ ______ He himself escaped "With a '
reports saldthat none was kitted, scratche hand although he said
but some were sped to nearby he w as the last to leave the plane.
e.“e
. ■ *072
k 3382229
I
I
■
■ • 333833
HELD BY FBI—Mrs. Patricia Blau, 42, right, identified
by the FBI as a Communist party leader, was arrested
at her home in Los Angeles on a Smith Act charge. Six
others have been seized in Denver, Colo. Mrs. Blau,
awaiting arraignment, is shown in custody of an un-
identified FBI matron. (AP Wirephoto)
LONE RANGER, FBI Seizes
1 - • m
k 4 } I,
n -4 A
A Los Angeles-Dallas-New
York group put out three mil-
lion dollars cash yesterday for
the Detroit-originated radio and
television show.
The Lone Ranger, plus all
Lone Ranger enterprises, were
sold to Jack Weather and Mrs.
Mazie Wrather, Los Angeles
and Dallas oil operators and
television station owners, and
John L. Loeb and Associates,
New York.
The Lone Ranger, who has
been chasing outlaws over De-
troit station WXYZ for the last
22 years, was sold by H. Allen
Campbell and Raymond J.
Meurer of Detroit. They were
co-owners of the Lone Ranger,
Inc.
against any enemy attack but4
that this government has not
made any decision to enter
into a formal alliance with the
Chinese Nationalist govern-
ment there.
As for Southeast Asian defense
arrangements, Dulles said he
hoped decisions would be made in
a week or 10 days on the time
and place for holding a conference
on conclusion of a defensive al-
liance.
Dulles told questioning reporters
he could not go into detail on the
latest U.S. protest over the shoot-
ing down of the British airliner.
But .he said the main U.S. argu-
ment is that Red China is com-
pletely wrong in arguing that
because the aircraft was British
the United States government does
not have a claim to present on
behalf of the damages suffered by
its own citizens
The Korean truce situation came
in for discussion. It has been dra-
matized in recent days by the visit
here of South Korean President
Syngman Rhee who has demanded
an end to the Neutral Nations’
---- K
mess."——----
“We're satisfied that all aboard
are accounted for and there are no
deaths." said®Lt, Osmus Avery, in
charge of the Groton State Police
barracks.
Mrs. Elizabeth Bennett, who saw
thegrlamatenocgstdie. « cmTold ToDubmdx
; bert D. Vogel, in charge of the
Army Engineers Southwest Di-
vision with headquarters in Dal-
las, was nominated Monday by
President Eisenhower to be a
member of the board of direc.
i tors of the Tennessee Valley Au-
I. thority to succeed Gordon R.
i Clapp. The White Hous? said
; the President plans to designate
Vogel as chairman pt the board
after the Senate acts on the nom-
ination. (AP Wirephoto।
m
h.
Bb /
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,-dn
a full-time Shivers campaign of , , .. .
flee th th Roberts Building. .. Finance Yur Car with Waldrip’e
4. "Lo§alists‘ reported having
> . / ,
be a scandel and very disturbing
to the American people if the na-
tion had to go to war now.
Wilson “aid also the administra-
tion has approved “in a broad
sense the principle of a reserve
program based on compulsory
service. "Proposed plans are sub-
ject to modification and improve-
ments,” he said.
The secretary made his state-
ments at a Pentagon news confer-
ence at which he was asked for
comment on published stories
about the new military service
plan as outlined by outgoing As-
sistant Defense Secretary John A.
Hannah. .
“I Joni think any particular
harm was done by the stories,”
Wilson said
He commented that publication
tion ty Sen. Flanders (R-Vt) —
which Flanders punctuated by
reading a list of 33 counts against
McCarthy—plus six specific accu-
sations against McCarthy by Sen.
Fulbright (D-Ark); seven some-
what similar charges by Sen.
Morse (Ind Ore) and proposals for
study of anv charges in the Senate’s
investigating rules.
Knowland said he expects the
Senate Republican and Demo-
cratic Policy Committees to meet
quickly to select the “fine, able
men who have not become parti-
sans in this matter” he said ought
See CENSURE, Page 2
1. The Shivers—or “conserva-
tives”—forces planned a county-
wide rally In City Hall Auditor-
ium Wednesday at 8 p.m. when
a former state official will speak
and campaign plans laid.
2. The Yarborough—or loyalists"
forces—planned to tend a carful
of workers Wednesday at 10 a.m.
to Tyler to attend a regional cam-
paign meeting.
3. The “eonaervarivea” opened
h
“ 33 ■ 387T
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1
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• Ea
NOMINATED — Brig. Gen. Her-
■ 11 •..... .......—■
DENTON AND VICINITY: Clear
to partly cloudy and warm
through Wednesday with isolated
afternoon and evening thunder-/
showers mostly in west portion./
Denton County rainfall for 24-
hour period ending at 7 a.m. to-
day: 1.25 inches; so far this
month: 1.28 inches; so far this
year: 14:62 inches. Sun sets to-
day at 7:26 p.m., rises Wednesday
at 5:44 a.m. Fishing today and
Wednesday: poor.
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Station Report)
48 hours” of a six-member inquiry
committee charged with sifting! fought the Communists in Korea
nearly 50 overlapping charges I have discussed the possibility of visement.
t against McCarthy, the Senate’s ! ending the commission because of Nunan made no comment as he
I controversial Red hunter. , See DULLES, Page 2 was sentenced. His attorney had
. Thought Unlikely
WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary of State Dulles today
sharply accused theCommunists of violating the Korean •
armistice. But he said that on balance the violation were
not serious enough to justify resuming the war.
In a news conference, Dulles also disclosed that a new
protest has been sent through Britain to Communist China
over the loss of three American lives in the shooting down
of a British airliner almost two weeks ago off Hainan Island.
Dulles said, on another Far Eastern question, thst
United States warships and airplanes would protect Formosa
50 YEARS
of Daily Service
'2.00 , .
' +25,00 tof the reserve prepesels had "‘stir-
red up the eountry but that it is
will “either indict themselves for
perjury” or “prove what consum-
mate liars they are.”
The Senate’s vote sent to the
special committee a censure mo-
he thought the general “sold out”
Chiang Kai-shek on a Fostwar
peace mission to China for former
President Truman.
Woodring was secretary of war
in 1936-40, but was critical of many
nf his colleagues in the Franklin
D. Roosevelt Cabinet after that.
He opposed third and fourth terms
for Roosevelt.
McCarthy said he had obtained
the letter from another senator
who got it from Harris, and that
Woodring had no objection to its |
publication. <
As made public by McCarthy, the
letter dCa.l largely with the hear-
ings into McCarthy's how with Sec-
retary of the Army Stevens and
Army Counselor John G. Adams.,
Stevens and Adams accused Mc-
Carthy and Roy M. Cohn, then
chief counsel to his Investigations
subcommittee, of using improper
pressures to obtain favored treat-
ment for draftee G. David Schine,
a former aide. McCarthy and Cohn
retorted that Stevens "and Adams
used Schine as a hostage to try to
block McCarthy's search for sub-
versives in the Army.
FSince th? hearings ended June
17, Cohn has resigned. Adams, re-
turning to the Pentagon yesterday
from a vacation, said he had not
resigned, "do not plan to resign
and have not been asked to do
so.” There had been reports that i
Adams was on the way out
The text of Woodring’s letter to
‘Harris, as released by McCarthy: ■
“Dear Bob:
“First I want to thank you for!
the book you had sent, 'McCarthy'
and His Enemies’—I thought' the
chapter on Gen. Marshall was very
illuminating—but inclined to ad-
vance the thought that Marshall
acted from judgment; while I
think he knew better in the China
question and acted under instruc-
tions from the State Department
and the White House, which ty me
See WOODRING, Page, 2
ternoon and evening sessions” of । nI q
the group ;o draft a speedy report. Won "frI za — •
“All I want is a vote by the I IdaI Ull IAU (ailed to pay, but was interested
sengte," ” declared in an inter- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESs only in "adegute punish-
McCarthy dramatically told the. A large segment of the nations
Senate jus* before it voted last1 air transportation industry faced
★ ★
Denton Record-Chronicle
The Hometown Daily Newspaper for Everybody in The Denton County Area -
k -—*
quest of Everest the globe’s highest
unclimbed mountain.
The message received here said
the victory was scored July 31 but '
did not name the expedition mem-
bers or members who reached the
top.
Although slightly lower than
4
GUATEMALA (fl — Guatemala s
ruling military hinta ordered Pres-_____________________
ident Carlos Castillo Armas' pri- presented to the National Security
rate army to disbanc and go home Council
today, but the acton generated
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K F
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WMhh '»
Morrison, W. C. Orr and Dr. Roy
i Welborn.
g —I They were told of plans and '
. Four others were arrested hereasked for advice.
Hilton To Buy
Statler Chain
BEVERLY HILLS Calif.,
Hilton Hotels Corp today
in the face of a setback in his , asked that his age ok 57beconsid-
efforts to force an immediate A J A iered. ... • —
1 show-low on the censure issue, (wrolne FAWS In sentencing. Nunan, Jidge
McCarthy called for “morning, af-1 -- Bruchhausen said he was not at
rising public resentment An Amer- said “in a broad sense its princi-
lean Embassy spokesman said plea have been approved/
there was a possibiliry of a popular. Wilsons remarks were generally
uprising in the capital j See WILSON, Page 3
"The passengers were screaming
and then there was a terrible
crash," he said. "I saw mny
, 0
' -e
VOL.52 NO. 1
42; his wife Anna, 29, Harold Zep-
elin, 28; and Lewis M Johnson, 34.
Almost simultaneously, Mrs. Pa-
tricia J. Blau, 42, was arrested
at her Los Angeles home.
All seven were arraigned before
U.S. commissioners on charges of
I violating the Smith Act, which
I makes it a crime to advocate fore-
। ibly overthrow of the government.
The six arrested in Colorado
were allowed individual $100,000
bonds by U. S. Commissioner
Joseph Neff. They are held in Den-
ver County Jail
Mrs. Blau is in Los Angeles
j County jail in tieu ef $20,000 bail.
I A hearing on her return to Denver
is scheduled Thursday.
Preliminary hearings for the six
.nent" for Nunan’s deeds.
The judge said that the fact that
intend, to organize vast. county-
wide door-to-door campaign,” Nich-
ols said.
He explained that the new cam-
a rate of $2.38. • y
Burke, said the verdict would be
appealed. He asked that Nunan be
permitted to remain free in the
81,500 bail previously posted. The
judge took the motion under ad-
I .
: ' - {
DENVER • — The FBI has
Former War Secretary
Once Thought Highly’
Of Ex-Army Staff Chief 1
WASHINGTON (fl—"Former Sec-
retary of War Harry H. Woodring
aays he once “thought very highly”
of Gen. George C. Marshall "but
I lost faith in him.”
Woodring had a hand in having
Marshall named Army chief of
_ staff in World War II, but a letter
made public yesterday' by Sen.
McCarthy (R-Wis) quoted the for-
mer Democratic secretary as say-
ing six weeks ago that Marshall
“would sell out his grandmother
foi personal advantage.”
Marshall, reached at his heme
in- Leesburg, Va., declined com-
ment.
McCarthy offered the letter,
dated last June 23, for the Con-
gressional Record during Senate
debate on a move by Sen. Flanders
(R-t) to censure him.
Some ot McCarthy’s critics had
cited as a reason for censure the
Wisconsin senator's 1951 speech
saying Marshall was "steeped in
falsehood.”
Woodring’ confirmed in Topeka,
Kan., that he had written a letter
to Robert M. Harris of New York
City to thunk him for a book about
McCarthy. He told newsmen he
lad lost faith in Marshall because
+,
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____14______
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 3, 1954, newspaper, August 3, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430857/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.