Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 182, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 13, 1948 Page: 1 of 16
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1
9ember
L
—,2- ~ -
President Truman Calls Red Beh
im;
ith
his
ar-
A
id
er-
i
and his bride, Princess Anne of
in-Par-
11
the matter for further consid-
Eight, Drowns
9
Mayor T. S Moon reported that
BIRMINGH
— County
' . j
for
in name was received
on that street. Final
commander refrain from taking ae-
from
tion where necessary,"
A’
I
robed and hooded men.
ti, Bob Kimbro, Doug Pegues,
I Aubrey Preston.
Mr. Rose was an outstanding min-
the
its
Arab
Christ
ed that Arabs "cannot stand
' Survivors are his wife, Mrs. W.
Fort
rotary-treasurer.
there
where he
BY PROCTOR
held Thursday at 3 p. m. from the
owned by J Doyle
5,“.
only
vee
9
square in the bo*
iter line.
ciour
a
had
petition in iederal district
ru|
A1I
1 A. A 1 1
Council Issues
$6,500 Note for
Garbage Deficit
Unhampered in
Russian Zone
William K. Rose,
Minister, Dies
At Fort Worth
Complete Coverage
Of Cleburne and
Johnson County
43rd. YEAR, NO. 182
Girl
Miss
Batl
and
ick. Alder-
any action
> ths
space
sistant Fire
timated late
•d portions of the ship
that saloons and cabins
O. V. Raburn Dies
At Burleson
thanks from
church sent <
Swimming Lessons
To Begin at Pool
nd picieed the ehud up He held
M child on her stomach in an ef-
ort to remove some of the water
White-Robed Men
Warn Leaden of
Negro Camp
to ten free swimming lessons, Mr.
Parker said. No one younger than
six can be accepted for swimming
lessons, Mr. Parker stated.
later, and widely known in
Cleburne and Rio Vista areas,
was a resident of Clebumne
thirteen years, and had been
minister in the Church of
for sixty years
Furniture Company
men voted to postp
again, was unable ‘to
A She began searching for
De. Yater sont -for his doctor
and injected a strong heart
lulant without success He con-
to apply artificial respiration
11 the Dillon ambulance arrived
Funeral Services Set
For Donald Burt
Funeral services for Donald Burt,
who was wounded during the bat-
tle of Okinawa and died shortly af-
ter in a hospital on Guam, will be
first time since the h
Nations observers air
on reported truce vk
Holy Land. A
Four U. S. officer-m
U. N truce team di
uneasy Holy Land truce
broken The newspaper ,
I
Mrs. O.
mis. Joe,
Jowdy R
Survivors
V. Rabum, I
Waco Boy Drowns
in Brazos River
pi I
I a
'■ «A
1%
ill gen
■ 1
vrolt
more than an ho
re the efold was 1
be little girl was
I her two bred
Haifa early today and at <
gan examination of Israel
•10
> tedeurees in past
» M desrees s year
• • Her
and when JeldSSd
Chief Dewey Jiles es-
Saturday.
section just be-
1. They inspected
a "number of days" unless emer-
gency shipments were flown in.
(The Arabs also claimed that
AS
‘AsSOCUMGNI
l eration.
The resignation of Bill Bouldin as
fire chief was accepted by the coun-
cil. His successor will be named lat-
ir as United
'ed to check
itions in the
redo and Santa Fe had been in Cle-
burne surveying the drainage situa-
tion at Boone Street, and that the
railway company had agreed to
have one of its engineers make
maps for drainage improvement.
A ‘request for a street light at
Main and Madison Streets was re-
ferred to the street lighting com-
mittee An ordinance changing the
name of Hollingsworth Street to
Mansfield Street was placed on its
Frank C. Coombs y
Dies at Rio Vista
Fvank Collins Coombe, 63. died
at his home in Rio Vista Saturday
at 1 p. m. Funeral services will be
held at 4 p. m. Sunday from the
family residence in Rio Vista. Lloyd
Frederick, pastor of the Rio Vista
Cleburne's newest but in sea i
prise. CEW BABY srTTNe.
set to do business with four 4
sitters. . . Four bright young,
just out of junior high en
competent sitters. . . They are
at the Greek Royal Palace in Athens
Ju
Wallis Awarded
Contract to Remodel
Country Club
At a called meeting Saturday af-
ternoon the building committee and
the board of directors of the Nolan
River Country Club voted to award
the remodeling contract to J. R. Wal-
lis.
Mr. Wallis states, "that he ex-
pects to start remodeling the club
house immediately."
The building committee consists
of Herman Custard, chairman; Lee
{
CMRh. will officiate. Interment will
bo in the Cleburne Cemetery, with
The Israeli operations offlev
sorted that Syrians, Trana-Jord
ians and Egyptians were still f
ing at widely separated points,
added that "on no front will i
was posted again after 10:30
. . . Western Union closed.
Only connection with the
world waa outlet by telegraph
train station. . . These moder
. . . Lovely DUS REED ha
taxicab in a hurry.
An ancient vintage (936,
Chevrolet drawing speed 4
attention. . . Driver getting
low the wa
the meibmers
and reporter
i people to whom the
clothing, and thesot-
- ,
swing through the welt.
' s Asks World to jota
"The American people, from the
. mighty rostrum of the United
Nations, call out to. all peoples of
Swimmipg
Cleburne
IHAM, Ala., June 12. (UB
_____- officers and the FBI to-
day investignted the story of two
white girl scout leaders who said
they were intimidated at their
Negro camp by a band of white
her letters came as a result of
the church’s widespread mission
program.-, 10 '
#22532
anpNok m0
Ess In tempera-
Ky inar“i‘2
=m
==i"
-d
that Arabs had fought on past the
truce deadline yesterday at two
points—in the Jordan valley and in
the Lydda area near Tel Aviv. *
Foreign Minister Moshe Shettok
charged today that Arabs were
shelling the village of Kefar Szold,
near the Lebanese border.
Shertok’s claim was the only new
charge of truce violation today.
S'
Cemetery under the direction of
Crosier-Pearson Funeral Home.
A retired salesman, Mr. Coombs
was a member of the Rio Vista
Church of Christ. He was a member
of the American Legion and a vet-
eran of World War I, having served
fifteen months overseas with the
Quartermaster Corps. He had been a
resident of Rio Vista since he re-
tired three years ago.
Survivors are his wife Mrs. F. C.
Coombs, and a daughter, Miss Mar-
garet Harrison, both of Rio Vista.
Pallbearers will be J. H Williams,
Walter Reed, Pat Simmons, Wallis
Simpson, Chalmers Reed Sr., and
Bill McClellan.
K. Rose, and a daughter,
Katherine Rose, both of
Worth.
John H. Gregory, who w
Sept. 27. 1944, in France
held at 3 p. m. today fi
Dillon Chapel.
Miss tirely domestic issues that have
- occupied the first half or what
originally was a "non-politicar"
Fire Damages
Stalcup Cleaners
Fire, apparently started by naptha
spilled on a cement floor, caused
several thousand dollars damage to
the building and equipment of the
Stalcup Cleaners, at the comer of
Anglin and Henderson. Friday night
Fire broke out shortly after 5
p. m. Ute building which is owned
by Sam Wofford, was damaged ap-
proximately twenty per cent. As-
war world is primarily a disagree-
ment , between this country and
Russia, he said.
"We have no hostile or aggress-
ive designs against the Soviet
union or any other country, he
said. "We are not waging a cold
war."
He said Russian interference In
the use of "coercion or open ag.
gression in international affairs"
left "nothing to negotiate” be-
tween the Soviets and other nat-
ions of the UN.
s"Ae"atppl
to continue on I
or campers for the past week were
pointed out in solemn Indian cere-
monies.
Among those chosen for the high
honor was Nolte Crosier of Troop
213. Cleburne.
These Scouts, picked by secret
ballot among members of the troop,
will become members of the Order
of the Arrow. national honor camp-
ers society of Boy Scouts in Amer-
ica.
Each year, ten per cent of those
attending camp on Circle Ten Coun-
cil sites—Camp Wisdom. Camp Con-
ma, appear_______—_ — -----
where they were married on June 10. NEA Teephoto.
Patsy Jen W ...
Saturday Night in Cleburme Pool
Duties at Anglin
Street Methodist
The Rev. E R. Stanford will
Named to Order
Of the Arrow
CAMP WISDOM (NEAR DAL-
„ LAS) June 12— (Special) — While
The Johnson County Bar Associa- , over two hundred . Scouts stood
tion. meeting Saturday just before, shoulder-to-shoulder in a single line
the candidacy of a former cndnen ' fvie thatabronrcaynaig none
attorney for judge of the court of ”
10c per copy
Orlando Vinson Rabum died Fri-
day at 12:15 p. m. at his home on
route two, Burleson. He had been
a resident of Johnson County for
thirty-four years.
Funeral services will be held at
3:30 p. m. Sunday from the Cro-
sler-Pearaon Chapel with the Rev
Joe Schumach of Fort Worth offi-
ciating. Burial will be in Cahill
literature we had was on
Scout training procedures,”
Nickel said.
They asked the girls if
were any ether white girts err
his, wife,
»n; two
in, Burla
Interment will be In the Grand-
view Cemetery with the Holloway
Funeral Home in charge
The Rev. Erwin M Gathings will
preach the funeral services. Hutt-
Crouch Post No 347, Grandview,
will be in charge. ' •
Survivors. are his mother, Mrs.
J. E. Burt 6f Alvarado; a daughter.
Beverly Sue Burt. Fort Worth; three
brothers. James, Dallas; Charles W.,
El Paso; and John Burt, Wichita
Falls; and a sister, Mrs. Lewis J.
Odum, Alvarado.
Thermometer Hits
103 Degrees Saturday
Saturday, to put it in the verna-
cular, was a scorcher. The temper-
ature soared to 103 degrees, ac-
cording to the Times-Review ther-
mometer. shortly after 3 p. in. to-
day.
Saturday's high was still below
the mark set last week end. when
the Tim4s-Revlow thermomater
showed 107 degrees.
COULD~ BE ......'
OKLAHOMA CITY, June 12. un—
Never Fell, e salesman filed a bank-
The boy’s parents reported the
youngster missing and firemen be-
gan dragging the river after his
clothen and bicycle were found
on the bank of the river. The
boy’s body was, recovered ninety
■
BERLIN, June 12. MD — The
Russians backed down today and
let 27 Allied freight trains roll
across the Soviet zone into Berlin
after the American military com-
mander said their action in halt-
ing rail traffic was endangering
the city's food supply.
Col. Hans W. Holmer, American
Transport chief, said normal freight
traffic into Berlin would be re-
sumed torght. He said the Rus-
sians agreed to release the trains
after discussions with the British
on the zonal border at Helmstedt
and in Berlin.
Twenty seven freight trains were
allowed to proceed Immediately
through Helmstedt into the Ger-
man capital. They had been halted
by the Russians at the Helmstedt-
Marienborn checkpntnronthebor-
dar between the British and Sov-
iet occupation zones.
Gen. Lucius D. Clay, American
military commander, had denounc-
ed the Russian action in halting
the trains. He denied that "con-
gestion" in Berlin freight yards
required a reduction' in incoming
traffic.
' Rail traffic into Berlin has hlt-
ed suddenly earlier today after
Soviet transport officials notified
the British that "trains to Berlin
cannot be accepted at Helmstedt
because Berlin Is congested with
traffic and can not accept trains
until further notice.” Last night a
British freight train' was not al-
lowed to enter the Soviet zone
because the Russians said Its mili-
tary cargo had not been itemized
on documents accompanying the
train.
There are about 3,500,000 Ger-
mans in Berlin and nearly two
thirds of them are living on Amer-
lean-imported \ food which is
criminal appeals, and elected officers
for the coming year. •
. ,r.,. „ , । Jack C. Altaras, county attorney,
caa.special resuscitator . .. was re-elected president of the bar
Others giving artiriclal respiration association. Willard Baker was elect-
' “ effort to revive the childiwere ed vice-president. and Miss Carol
Butner, Bill Brown. Doyle Marie Kilpatrick was elected sec-
Weldon, and R. J. Lay.
has been pastor He has been pastor
of several other churches In the Cen-
tral Texas Conference including
chiurdhs in Breckenridge. Waco,
and Fort Worth.
The Stanfords, who have five
children, will reside at 807 N. Anglin
His children, two of whom will live
in Cleburne, are Bd. Harry. Earl,
David and Harkiet
Mr. Stanford is a graduate of
Southwestern University. George-
town, and Yale Thgological School
His morning topic ■ "Magnetism of
Christ" and the evening service
topic will be. "Let's Go.”*
Two Men Hurtin
Alvarado Accident
Two Alvarado men were injured,
one seriously, when their automo-
bile overturned Friday night at 11:30
p. m. on the Barnesville Road, two
and a half milee from Alvarado.
Lewis Reynolds, who suffered a
back Injury is still in the Cleburne
Hospital The other man, Ansel
Moore, received only minor injuries
and was released after treatment
Both men were brought to the
hospital in Dillon ambulances.
The Weather
- _________________, and JEAN EASH, SANDRA I
Airport. Huge traffic signals and and DOROTHY WOFFORD,
warning signs ask motorists to be firm takes its name from
First Methodist church at orand- broushi in by train from Bremen
view and Hamburg. Clay said the Ber-
lin food supply could last only for
Worth at 1:55 p. m. Saturday. He
redded at 2340 Lipscomb, For
Worth
New Pastor Assumes The bar association voted to sup-
port the candidacy of W. E. (Billy)
on the lookout tor low-flying air- of the firm members - 2 1
craft. BETTY GANONG jogging al
The army's public Information a motor bike, apparently
office reported that the car ap- for the swimming pool. iE
parently ran through a red light piped the snazzy new cisaret
warning motortsts of a takeoff and tag machine at the emt
was struck squarely by the jet CAFE Cleburne’s
plane, which makes better than eating spotr .
100 mes per hour on takeoff. Long distance callers in a hi
No explanation was given by I last night were out of luck. •
the army as to reason the plane delay of thirty minutes to ah k
loot altitude before crashing into “
3 ) He charged that Russia had ob-
? । structed all attempts toward in-
t | ternational conferences' over-used
' the . veto in the United Nations
1 ' security council and has used
2 | "indirect aggression” against
N eastern European nations.
Reds to Blame for Unrest
>i j Mr. Truman founded his entire
8 ' indictment on the premise that
K Russia was "largeiy" responsible
I, for the world being today in "a
i । twilight period between a war so
* | dea rly won and a peace that still
I eludes our grasp.
"The refusal of the Soviet union
world recovery and world peac:
I to work with its wartime alites for
I is the most, bitter disappointment
of our time," he said.
— The presidental party pulled In-
to the Berkeley station, across the
bay from San Franciso, at 12:14
F. M. (PDT and the chief execu-
tive, Mrs. Truman and Margaret
and the presidental party left al-
most immediately by automobile
Cleburne Times-Review
United Press Full Ledsed Wire Service Established 1904 — Published Daily Except Saturday —NEA Tetephoto Pictures—
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 13, 1948 ‘ 16 PAGES IN 2 SECTIONS
Four Killed When
Jet Hits Car
.11, and Billy John. 14. nd
Ister. Margie Mae, IK was
ing her from the bank when
chosen for Uta novtaed mamharship*
Following the completion of the
camping periods, probably in August,
the above Scouts wil return with
other candidates for their Ordeal
Honors, or initiation ceremony into
the Circle Ten Lodge.
The society prides itself on being
composed of the outstanding Scouts
throughout the nation, basing their
claims on the fact that the Scouts
themselves designate their desired
choices from among their own
Scout unit They are chosen on the
basis of camping ability, helpfulness
to fellow campers, and daily ad-
herance to the Scout Oath and Law.
Local lodges have as their ob-
jectives the promotion and improve-
ment of camping skills, methods and
facilities throughout the Council
area.
Camp Wisdom activities for the
week does this afternoon as
the present units depart but will
reopen again Sunday afternoon as
some doeen units register for the
qouncil, requesting parking
for the Dickson Hardware and
FORT KNOX, Ky.. June 12. cu.m —
A P-80 jet propelled Shooting Star
_____________ crashed Into an automobile on a
Cleaning and pressing machinery , takeoff run today and killed all
owned by J. Doyle Stalcup was four occupants of the car.
damaged fifty per cent, and clothing The pilot, Capt. Williams Meyers,
being cleaned and pressed was dam- of Elgin Field, Fla., was uninjured,
aged approximately twenty-five per i The Dixie. Highway, on which
cent l the accider occurred, dips below
. Damage to the upper story of the 1 the level of Fort Knox's Godman
building total slight — — —" -----
Church of Christ will officiate. 1 . . .
Interment will be in the Rio Vista imecond week of the season
LaowaaKapTb >#/ < ' ‘
W
mdamG
E J
ma nt the City’s Department of Sanita-
mE tion
E H, Councilmen took the action
E2 Ehm
Ea city charter, which provides that the
Eei council may issue s note to cover
mEcN- ■ extsting debt the city.
‘PA
m pointed out to the council thd al-
m mid M though the increased rates would
•R WMP3
mu w I (penses, they would not .provide the
NmT wnk si" ' '
W mNM ready in the Sanitation
: partmen t.
WEDS ANNE Michael, former King of Rou- Avon Williamson appeared before
Divers Say Bodies
Pack Danish Ship
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, June
12—<UJb—An estimated IM men,
women and children were trapped in
the cabins and engine room of the
Danish Steamer Kjoebenhavn which
sank yesterday / after striking a
magnetic mine off the coast of Jut-
land, Danish davy divers reported
todmy.
The United Steamship Co., owners
of the vessel, said Mi persons sur-
vived the explosion and sinking.
Nineteen bodies have been recover-
ed. Company officials estimated
more than 400 persons were aboard.
Navy divers said the explosion
blew a hole more .than 30 yards
andagbal Funeralseryices wil first roading after • request
ared D- m- today from the Dillon run- ’ 4 mna, G nam. wma rex"*
swtamtag oral Chapel. The Rev M. M. Mose- the chanse in name was rece
s, Garland ley. pastor of the Cavalary Baptist
i WACO, Texas, June 12. (u.m —
afternoon 1 Firemen today recovered from the
Brazos River the body of Eugene
«.— M.Chase, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
---- 188 Brooker of Weco.
He and his family have moved
to Cleburne from Kleen
their Intruders were members of
the Ku Klux Klan — said they were
ordered to "get out by tomorrow
night."
Some 100 yards away 21 Negro
girls, being trained by Mias Nickel
and Miss Ijams, were not awaken-
ed by the night-riding band. They
said the convoy included about 20
cars but only "eight or ten" men
came into the camp.
"They entered the tent and
woke us up by shining flashlights
in our faces,” Miss Nickel, a na-
tive of Montgomery, said. “We
were dressed only In night gowns.”
Miss Jams said the men de-
manded their names and when the
girls hesitated the men started
searching through our billfolds and
other belongings. One said he
was looking for “cards with ham-
mers and sickles on them.”
“We assured them that the only
the car.
The army withheld announce
moat of identification of the vic-
tims Officials said that sine the
. -n. . -------“ on the post.
in the camp. They left after re-
peating the warning to break camp
within the next 24 hours. Miss
Nickel said, the Negro girls were
sent home yesterday.
Miss Ijams and Miss Nickel said
the men wore sheet-like uniforms
that had emblems about three Inch-
es In diameter above the heart.
The emblem was red on a dark
background and was cross-shap-
ed.
The girl scout leaders claimed
they had separate bath and sleep-
ing facilities at the camp but ate
and used the same toilet facilities
with the Negroes.
William Kinchin Rose, who was
for seven years minister of the
Cleburne Church of Christ died at
the Methodist Hospital in Fort
। BERKELEY. CALIF.June 12. (U.B—President Truman leveled a maj-
or indictment at Russia today, terming Soviet'behavior “the most bit-
[ ter disappointment of our time" and declared it was responsible tor
l keeping the world in a “twilight” zone between war and peace.
The President outlined his views on American foreign policy to-
l ward Russia in a speech at the University of California commence-
f ment exercises one of the two major addresses he makes in Cali-
fornia during his western tour.
His blunt Indictment of the Soviets for disrupting world peact .plans
| was the most detailed declaration of this country’s policy that he has
I ! offered in many weeks and his strongest anti-Russian statement to
—date.— , ------—* e ..... "
stantine, or Camp Texhoma are
He was born at Saulsbury, Tenn.,
on Aug. 15, 1871.
Funeral services will be held at
10 a. m. Monday from the South
Side Church of Christ in Ft. Worth.
Robert C. Jones, minister of that
church, will officiate.
Pallbearers will be C. E. Lewis,
Cy Owens, Ray Ewing, Frank
Towles, Tom Echols, William
Braun,. Joe Mann, and W. B. Cayce.
Interment will be in the Paris, Tex-
as, cemetery, under the direction
of Dillons.
Myres of Fort Worth, first assis-
tent district attorney of Tarrant
County and candidate for judge on
the court of criminal appeals.
Myres wgg born in the
“part of Johnson County. snd prac-
ticed law in Cleburne until twenty-
nine years ago, when he moved to
Fort Worth, where he is engaged
In the practice of criminal law.
Members of the bar present were
Willard Baker, Jack Aitaras, Judge
H. G. Littlefair, ■ R. A. Kilpatrick.
Jewel Bauldwin. Judge Penn J.
Jackson, John A. James, Ruel Wal-
ker, Judge Roy Anderson, and Miss
Kilpatrick. Robert Craft, candidate
for flotorial representative was a
guest
were "packed tight with bodies just
below the surface"
HURTS HARD IM MIXER
Mrs. Robert E. McMahon, 832
Featherston Street, suffered mi-
nor injuries Saturday shortly af-
ter noon when she caught her
hand in an electric mixer, she was
tkenoA local elinie in a Dion
W. Clark, commander of the 6th
army.
Mr. Truman began speaking at
4 P. M. (PDT).
Open for Honeat Negotiation
He said he still held the door
open "for. honest negotitations
looking toward genuine settle-
ments."
But he abruptly slammed the
door on "any deals between great
powers to the detriment of other
nations or at the expense of prin-
ciple."
“We refuse," he said, “to play
fast and loose with man’s hope
for peace.”
The president side-stepped en-
the world to join them to preserve
__________ wtl} the peace." he said--
the cieburoe pool about June 15, Mr. Truman quarried with con-
Howard Parker, manager, announc- tenttons that the world cleavage
ed this week. Mr. Parker has ask-1 is primarily between Russia and
ed that everyone who wishes to take , United States.
swimming lessons sign up for lessons “Not a single one of the major
immediately st the pool office. Each unsettled questions of the post-
holder of a season ticket is entitled ---------•
The two girls, Kathrine Nickel
and Elizabeth bams, said they--—------
were "speechieswhen the,eight -gaz----------
iu Mfif Allied Freigh
The girls not kure whether
.. picnic lunch for the party was laid
,* Chester W. Nimitiz and Gen. Mark earl
,p-,
Chattel Cemetery. • ‘
Mr. Rabum was born Aug. 14, NAFE.GuKh.a antn
in wiGrecimm; iis* HAN haan 1 names would be withheld until
-nurem L - — Fadiy mangled in the mishap
identiticatlon was difficult
Church of Christ
Receives Letters:
Can't Read Them
ReudT Lemmons and members of
the Central Church of- Christ
were' in the market for a lin-
quist today, as the mall received
by Ute church became more and
more confusing.
Mr. Lemmons, who is minister,
has been able to “get the drift”
of some of the letters from his
limited Latin, but many of the
letters leave him stumped.
For instance. Just this week he,
received letters from Japan, Afti- '
ca, Italy, France, Germany and
Greece. The letter from Germany
was from a prisoner of war, for-
merly held near Cleburne. The
Greek letters were letters of
regarding these Zioniat viola-
tions . . .
The Israeli officer also reported
that the Jews had opened a "secret
road" to besieged Jerusalem, by-
passing the Arab,held road hub at
Latrun.
(In Jerusalem, U. N. MedintE
Count Folke Bernadotte predieteg
after conferences with Jewish lead
ers that the "life line” highway
from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv would
soon be reopened.)
—"om—:---
James M. Hearne \
Buried at Blum
2% 5457852
Funeral services for James Mit
ehell Hearne, 80, were held at Blum
at 2 p. m. Saturday from the Meth-
odist Church. Mr. Hearne ded at
7:30 p m. Thursday at his hote in
Blum.
Willard Morrow, minister of the
Blum Church of Christ. offtctetaK
Pellbeerers were his grandsoni C
M. Hearne Jr, G. L. Hearne, wr M
Hearne. J. W Heeme, B. W. earn
and L. V. New.
Survivor are one son, W. C.
Hearne of Blum, one brother, w. F.
Hearne, Norman, Okla.; and a sis.
ter, Mrs. Callie Buchanan, Itasca; '
seven grandchildren, and six great-
grandchildren.
Mr. Hearne wax a long-Lim resi-
. dent of Blum. He was born 4 Ala:
bama. A retired merchant, be waa a
member of the Blum Church ot
Christ Dillons was in charge.
GREGOBY irrM TODAY 1 5 J
Funeral services for First Sgt.
'Most Bitter Disappointment of Peace
Major Indictment Leveled at
Russia in Speech at Berkeley
for the Berkeley campus.
3.000 Greet Trman
Three thousand persons, most
of them school children, greeted
the president and party at the
station, and an estimated 15,000
spectators, held in cheek by pol-
ice reserves snd white-helmeted
military police, lined the route to
the earn pus.
University President Robert
Gordon Sproul accompaniea the
President to the campus where a
action on the ordinance will not be
taken until councilmen have an op-
Dillon in eharo. of arrangemayte portanity to fovagU^te the change
^County Bar Nolte Czosier
an«, three feet of water. Association
Margie Mae screamed, and Dr
Endorses Myres
---—
U. S. Uniforms
Seen on Streets
Of Tel Aviv;
TEL AVIV, Israel. Ju 12-—um.-
U. Sr- uniforms appeared on the
streets of Tel Aviv /today for the
Palpy Jean Wesson, sight-year-old' According to the statement of the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Wes- victim’s brother, Billy John, the
son, 606 Sabine Street, drowned four brothers end sisters had been
Saturday night shortly after 7 p m. | in swimming since 5 p. m. He stated
in the Cleburne Park swimming that they had not eaten since noon,
popl. Her death waa the first fatality However, the child’s body showed
Mace the pool opened in 1936. evidence of cramps or possibly an
Life guards and ambulance at- injury received when jumping into
tendants gave artiticial respiration the water
aume his duties as pastor of the
Anglia Bireel -Methodist enuret it
the morning service today
MANY DAOWN IN SHIP/DISASTER The vamsn passenger ship Kjopenhayn lies
partly submerged off the Jutland coast near Hals, after it struck a drifting mag-
netic mine with an estimated 400 persons aboard. Unoffical reports indicate that
over 150 persons are missing. (ACME-NEA Radiophoto-Telephotoed from Copen-
hagn to London and radioed from London to New York.)
0,.5 KN
fune”‛
from her lungs, then laid
bank and began artificial
on the
iiration.
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 182, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 13, 1948, newspaper, June 13, 1948; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432811/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.