Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1956 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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■
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
5c DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press, — World's Greatest News Agency
8 PAGES
☆
☆
☆
☆
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1956
☆
☆
☆
A
52ND. YEAR, NO. 37
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UN Forced Into
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DEFIANT HUNGARIAN REBELS
BROADCAST BLAME MESSAGE
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Rotary Members Hear
Santa Fe Fire Prevention
Talks On Classification
Chiefs Will Convene Here
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basis for discussing at the meet-
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UN Head Confers With Nasser
On Stalemated Mid-East Peace
Debate on Plan
For Red Chinese
Contracts Let
On 2 Road Jobs
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
Oklahoma last year for killing
detective during a holdup.
“I smear lipstick on his shirt
when he’s not looking, and he
lets me buy anything I want,”
Attending will be H. D. Wells,
Cleburne; J. P. Settle, Gainesville;
K. C. Scales, Temple; L. B. Mc-
Gahey, Brownwood; F. S. Penton,
Member—Texas Press Association
Texas Daily Press League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
(UP) United Press Telephoto Pictures
(CP) Central Press Features
(KF) King Features
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Fair and rather cold tonight with
lowest 28 to 38. Saturday fair and
warmer.
TEMPERATURES
RECONDITIONED—The SS French Creek, a
I ' ’ ' .
Another Freeze Grips Cleburne,
But Winter Weather Is Pleasant
8688
LEAVE FOR CANAL—Danish troops, part of the first United
Nations police force contingent, board Swiss air plane in
Naples, Italy for air hop to Egypt. Advance units, some 93
Danish and Norwegian troops, have landed safely in the Suez
Canal Zone, (NEA Telephoto)
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Dulles Ready To
Leave Hospital
WASHINGTON (UP)—Secretary
of State John Foster Dulles plans
to leave the hospital next Sunday
and fly to Key West, Fla., to con-
valesce from his recent operation.
Dulles was operated on at Wal-
ter Reed Army Medical Center
Nov. 3 for intestinal cancer.
Doctors originally estimated that
the 68-year-old secretary of state
would be able to leave the hospi-
tal within two to three weeks after
lib
tanker, is shown being reconditioned at the Bethlehem ship-
yards in Beaumont, Texas. The 10,680-ton T-2 tanker has
been in Maritime Administration's mothball fleet in the Neches
River for several years. (NEA Telephoto) ________
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§ 88838
The 27th annual meeting of the
Santa Fe Railway Fire Chiefs from
Gulf Lines territory will be held
here, Tuesday at 9 a.m., O. G. Pier-
son, Mechanical superintendent at
Galveston, announced today.
A total of 10 men, representing
■
Kiwanis Dinner
Is Cancelled
The Kiwanis Farm-City Week
dinner planned for Nov. 26 at high
school cafeteria with Congress-
man Jim Wright, as principal speak-
er, has been cancelled, Fred Lloyd,
president of the club, announced
today.
Lloyd said Congressman Wright
had been called back to Washing-
ton for Nov. 20 and would be in
meetings until Nov. 24 and would
be unable to make the trip back
to Texas at this time.
A number of tickets to the din-
ner have already been sold. A re-
fund will be made on all tickets
sold, Lloyd said.
$50
the operation, and that he could
return to his desk within
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
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Floyd Hamilton
Will Be Freed,
But Only Briefly
DALLAS, Tex. (UP)— Floyd
Hamilton, whose name is well
known to veteran Texas lawmen,
will return to his home state from
federal prison soon, but faces an-
other prison term.
Hamilton, brother of Raymond,
Hamilton who died in the electric
chair in Huntsville in 1935, is due
to be paroled from the federal
penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan.
Dec. 29. He has been serving time
for bank robbery and car theft.
When he went to prison, he had
a 25-year robbery-by-assault sen-
tence hanging over him in Texas.
When he goes free in Kansas, he
will be brought back to Texas to
begin serving time in the state
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32 W
Maximum temperature last 24
hours 57 degrees.
Minimum temperature last 24
hours 33 degrees.
Contracts totaling $307,666.13 for
building two roads in Johnson
County were let today by the State
Highway Department, Judge H. G.
Littlefair announced. The Cleburne
firm of John F. Buckner & Sons
got the contract for 5.829 miles on
Farm Road 2331 with a low bid
of $95,943.64. The new road is from
Highway 67 via Bono to Farm Road
1192.
The contract allows 130 working
days for completion of the work.
Work must start within 30 days.
W. O. Pelphrey Construction Co.
of Fort Worth was awarded the
contract on 3.977 miles on High-
way 171 with a low bid of $211,722.-
49. The contract calls for the road
to be rebuilt and new bridges to be
constructed. The section of high-
way will start four miles north-
west of Cleburne and end 7.9 miles
northwest of Cleburne.
A total of 180 working days is
allowed for the completion of the
job and work must start within 30
days.
-38
ass".
Lain said mutual companies op-
erated somewhat like a coopera-
tive in which policy holders reap
the benefits or loss. He said the
capital stock companies owned un-
derwriters laboratories which guar-
antees home appliances to be safe
from fire hazard. -
Lain said there were two types
of insurance agencies, the captive
agency which works for one com-
pany only and the local indepen-
dent agency, which represents
many agencies. This latter works
for the insured and his agency ra-
ther than for an individual com-
pany. Lain pointed out there was
no such thing as “insurance bar-
gains.” “Yo get only what you
pay for,” said Lain.
i
prison.
The Hamiltons ran with
leaders and among Iron Curtain ing.
officials generally over Russia’s
Carl Huddleston, principal of
Cleburne high school and Edwin
Lain, local insurance agent, gave
classification talks yesterday at the
Rotary club meeting.
Huddleston gave statistics on the
high school saying both college
and non-college prep ar a lory-courses
were available. The college pre-
paratory course consists of 12 solid
subjects the non-college, eight so-
lid subjects. In the 838 enrollment,
568 students are taking college pre-
paration, while 270 are not.
Huddleston said the school offer-
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the Steel and Iron Workers Build-
ing but disbanded when a number
of men described as “Kadar
agents” tried to introduce a back-
to-work resolution.
Soviet tanks and troops sur-
rounded the building in Budapest
where the council resumed its
meeting. All persons in the build-
ing were searched and held under
guard. The Russians withdrew and
allowed the meeting to continue
after a council leader complained
to Kadar.
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Spurned Suitor
Sets Fatal Fire
CINCINNATI (UP)—A spurned
suitor set an apartment building
fire that killed eight persons be-
cause he wanted to scare his girl
friend, police said today.
Arthur Redmond, 29, a Negro
handyman, confessed to police
Thursday that he set fire to the
building Sunday. A mother, five
of her children and two children
of his former girl friend burned to
death.
Redmond said Mrs. Johnetta
Clark had broken off their friend-
ship two weeks ago.
S 0283
Vague Promises Unacceptable
With 200,000 Soviet troops and
4,000 Red army tanks still in Hun-
gary/ the Hungarian freedom
fighters were not willing to accept
vague promises.
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FOOD FOR EGYPTIANS—Egyptian civilians
swarm over truck as British troops distribute
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food to residents of ravaged city of Port
Said. (NEA Telephoto)
ed a total of 49 courses, 13 to
freshmen, 14 to sophomores, 17
to juniors and 22 to seniors. He
explained the greatest problem was
in staffing all these subjects with
qualified personnel. Also, according
to the records, the school enroll-
ment is growing steadily. 284 fresh-
men make up the largest freshman
class in the history of the school
said Huddleston.
The school expects to graduate
around 170 this year. Last years
graduation shows 45 per cent con-
tinuing formal education, 35 per
cent working and 5 per cent in bus-
iness schools. Another major pro-
blem is drop-outs, 105 last year,
with 44 moving and 61 quitting. An-
other problem is the operation of 10
buses traveling twice daily over
550 miles and carrying 200 stud-
ents.
Edwin Lain told the group about
the various kinds of property in-
surance. He explained the capitol
stock company which is owned by
stock holders and any profit goes
to the stock holders. 85 per cent of
all property insurance is written
by capital stock companies said
Lain.
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Observers said the Yugoslav I
president’s words could only re-1
kindle the hones of Hungarian pa-
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Wrangling in
Soviet Circles
Is Intensifying
WASHINGTON (UP)— Diplo-
mats today reported signs of in-
tensified wrangling among Soviet
ton .66, Corpus Christi .93 and
Brownsville .03.
Reuben Herrera, 2, and his
Brother Amaro, 3, were burned
to death Thursday when the cold
weather forced their family to
turn on a gasoline stove which
exploded at their home 15 miles
south of Lamesa.
Bright and clear cold weather
greeted Cleburnites this morning
roll owing the move-in last night
of another cold snap which sent
the mercury skidding to the 30-
degree mark.
It was the second sub-freezing
weather of the season, but this time
the weather was not unpleasant.
It made for perfect football weath-
er and the forecast called for
more of same tonight and tomor-
row, with a gradual warmup to
follow.
A bright sun sent the mercury
climbing this morning, but it
failed to take the winter nip out
of the ozone. The cold snap this
time descended without frost.
The coldest weather of the sea-
son chilled the Panhandle and
North Texas today, while showers
fell along the Gulf coast in the
wake of a frontal passage Thurs-
day night.
The weather was blamed for
the deaths of at least two persons
and the critical burning of three
others.
The mercury dropped to 12 de-
grees early today at Dalhart and
15 at Amarillo. Lubbock recorded
22 and Childress 29, Wink 24, Salt
Flat 25 and El Paso 28.
Rainfall in the 24 hours to
6:30 a.m. included Port Arthur
1.09 inches, Houston 1.04, Galves-
mn ■ -—w <
—17 °
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UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UP)
—India and the Soviet bloc forced
the United Nations into a second
day of debate today on their ef-
forts to oust Nationalist China
from the world assembly in favor
of Communist China.
The debates caused postpone-
ment until at least this afternoon
of a series of policy statements
in which Herbert Hoover Jr., act-
ing secretary of state, planned to
make a major policy address.
Hoover is to follow the Brazilian
and Iraqi delegates.
Washington sources said Hoover
was expected to arrive here this
morning anyway for possible Big
Three talks with French Foreign
Minister Christian Pineau and
British Foreign Secretary Selwyn
(Lloyd.
Debates Continue
Three and a half hours of de-
bate Thursday night failed to set-
tle the explosive Chinese Commu-
nist admission problem and the
assembly was forced to call an-
other session this morning.
The assembly had hoped to start
its general debate this morning—
a parade of statements on foreign
policies by foreign ministers or the
highest representatives of the 79
members in the world today.
But when the clock moved
around to 10:56 p.m. EST Thurs-
day and the Soviet-Indian led de-
bate still was in full swing, the
United States agreed to an over-
night adjournment.
Knowland Expresses Shock
While the battle of words raged,
U.S. Senate Minority Leader Wil-
liam F. Knowland (R-Calif) ex-
pressed shock that India and
Krishna Menon “apparently have
become the floor leader of the So-
viet drive to bring Communist
China into the United Nations.”
Knowland had sat in on the de-
bates both in the general commit-
tee Wednesday and the plenary
session Thursday night.
“Member states should not over-
look the unchallenged fact that
Communist China was the aggres-
sor in Korea and was so declared
by this organization,” Knowland
said.
Kadar was a member of the
revolutionary government setup by
Nagy after the ouster of the pro-
Soviet regime of Andras Hegeudes.
He took over the government Nov.
4 and called in the Soviet armed
forces.
Hungarians found ample evi-
dence of insincerity in the “’ap-
peasement” package offered by
Kadar in his desperate attempt to
end the nationwide strike. Reports
from Budapest said thousands of
Hungarian youth were still being
deported to Russia in spite of Ka-
dar’s assurances that the mass de-
portations would cease.
The General Workers Council,
representing all industrial work-
ers in Budapest, termed Kadar’s
promises “unsatisfactory.” In a
new resolution presented Thurs-
day, the council again demanded
Nagy’s return and the withdrawal
of Russian tanks and troops.
Conditions For Work
The council said that if these de-
mands are met, workers will re-
turn to work. It added, however,
that the right to strike would be
retained if all the demands are not
satisfactorily carried out.
The workers council met first in
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12 Noon ______ 48
Santa Fe fire prevention commit-
tees from the various points in
the territory will attend along with
representatives of other depart-
ments of the railway.
F. L. Lodle, chief elerk of the
mechanical department at Galves-
ton, will be chairman of the one-
day meeting which will be held at
the Santa Fe shops.
Prior to this annual meeting,
city fire marshals in Gulf Lines ter-
ritory are requested to make in-
spections of the Santa Fe facilities
in their local communities, and sub-
mit a letter to the local Santa Fe
fire chief as to what their inspect-
ions disclosed. The Santa Fe fire
chiefs then use these letters as a
Elvis' Music is
Good for Insane
INDEPENDENCE, Iowa (UP)—
A music therapist credited swivel-
hipped singing star Elvis Presley
and his guitar with being helpful
in curing mental patients.
Dr. Florence Chambers of the
Iowa Mental Health Institute here
said rock and roll music aids the
mentally ill to restore their
rhythm.
Mrs. Chambers, a former con-
(At pianist, said the mentally ill—
according to Freud — have lost
their rhythm which music can
give back to them. She added that
music therapy was not a soothing
therapy, but a cure.
As for Elvis, she said, “I can’t
stand the boy. . .myself, but his
music is very good for the pa-
tients.”
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Longshoremen
Launch Strike
At Gotham Port
NEW YORK (UP)—Twenty-five
thousand members of the Inter-
national Longshoremen’s Associa-
tion went on strike today in the
Port of New York.
Leaders of some 35,000 mem-
bers of the independent union in
other East Coast ports from
Maine to Texas began reporting
early today that they would follow
a general strike order issued
Thursday night by ILA President
Capt. William V. Bradley.
Mayor Robert F. Wagner sum-
moned union and employer repre-
sentatives and federal mediators
to meet in his office at 11 a.m.
EST. All agreed to meet.
Statement Follows Talks
Bradley’s statement, issued aft-
er he met with representatives of
tne New York Shipping Associa-
tion (NYSA) and federal media-
tors, said, “the union has de-
clared a strike for all ports whose
contracts expire starting midnight,
Nov. 15.
“All officers, members and lo-
cals affected are instructed to
conduct an orderly and peaceful
strike until our demands are won.
United, and with the help of God,
we shall win.”
The ILA’s contract with the
shipping association had been ex-
tended twice past its original
Sept. 30 expiration date.
Special Police Assignment
A special detail of 1,000 police
was assigned to strike duty at 7
a.m. EST at piers in Brooklyn,
Manhattan and Staten Island.
The longshoremen were expect-
ed to set up picket lines on the
piers before their usual 8 a.m.
“shape up” time.
ILA members in East and Gulf
Coast ports from Portland,
Maine, to Brownsville, Tex., tradi-
tionally follow the lead of the
New York dockers.
Ralph Massey, ILA district pres-
ident in Galveston, Tex., said
“I’m sure they will go along with
New York.” There are some 10,-
000 ILA members in Texas ports.
satellite policies.
The dispute centers on this ques-
tion: Should Russia relax its grip
on the satellites, as it has in Po-
land, or rule with an iron fist as
it is doing in Hungary and others?
The conflict promises to grow.
The State Department was
watching particularly for the out-
come of current talks in Moscow
between Kremlin leaders and a
delegation from Poland led by
Communist party boss Wladyslaw
Gomulka. These talks should pro-,
vide the first hard evidence of
whether Russia is willing to go
farther toward granting its satel-
lites more independence.
Moscow has shown in Hungary
how far it will not go — it will
not let a satellite spin entirely out
of the Communist sphere.
New support for reports of a
Kremlin split on the satellite con-
trol question was provided by a
speech of Marshal Tito of Yugo-
slavia which was publicized Thurs-
day.
Tito charged that “Stalinist
forces” in the Kremlin are holding
out against “democratization” of
the satellites. He blamed them for
making the “fatal error” of using
Russian troops to crush the Hun-
garian rebellion.
Tito denied Yugoslavia was re-
sponsible for the rebellion. But he
said there are those — apparently
in Moscow — who are again be-
ginning to bully Yugoslavia.
Tito named no names, but ex-
perts here believed he referred to
Russia’s ex-Foreign Minister V.M.
Molotov, a long-time Stalinist who
has been a Tito foe since Yugo-
slavia broke with Moscow in 1948.
Molotov is believed to be the lead-
ing opponent of relaxation of Rus-
sian control of other satellites.
Sweetwater; C. R. Hanson, Gal-
veston; A. B. Gray, Bellville; W.
R. Marutzky, Silsbee; W. F. Kam-
merer, Somerville; W. A. Ash-
worth, Beaumont. Also on hand will
be J. D. Nimmo, master mechanic
at Cleburne.
A tour of the Santa Fe facilities
at Cleburne will be held in con-
junction with the meet. Changes
and proposed changes in fire rules
plus localized fire prevention pro-
blems will also be discussed, Lodle
said.
LONDON UP—U. N. Sec-
retary-General Dag Ham-
marskjold arrived today in
Egypt for talks with Presi-
dent Gamal Abdel Nasser
on the worsening diplomatic
stalemate that threatens
another round of the Mid-
East war.
Hammarskjold flew to the Abu
Suweir air field near Ismailia in
the Suez Canal Zone with 50 Co-
lombian reinforcements for the
first contingent of the U.N. police
force. Another flight of 50 Norwe-
gians boosted to 192 the number
of police on hand.
The Secretary-General inspected
the first police units before con-
tinuing on to Cairo and his talks
with Nasser. It was understood he
planned to send for 24 signalmen
immediately to speed up com-
munications in the Middle East.
Burns in New York
Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, head
of the same U.N. police force, ar-
rived in New York almost at the
same time as Hammarskjold ar-
rived in the Middle East. Burns
was conferring with U.N. delega-
tions in hopes of pinning down the
as yet uncertain duties of his po-
lice force.
Burns and Hammarskjold had
conferred in Italy.
Hammarskjold was faced with
the difficulty of reconciling the
Egyptian demand for immediate
withdrawal of Anglo-French troops
and the equally firm insistence of
the Allies that they stay until
peace returns.
Both sides appeared to be hard-
ening their positions.
A Cairo dispatch said Egypt
was still demanding the immedi-
ate withdrawal of Anglo - French
troops and would refuse to discuss
any other phase of the Mideast
crisis until they leave the Suez,
area.
Britain, France Determined
Britain and France were report-*
ed equally determined that their’
troops remain until some sort of
permanent settlement is reached
and the future of the Suez Canal
seems assured.
Egypt was reported as seeing
the U.N. emergency force as only
a means of getting the. Anglo-
French and Israeli troops out of
Egypt. A highly placed source
said if Nasser loses confidence in
the U.N. “no alternatives can be
ruled out — including the bringing
in of Soviet volunteers.”
The directly opposed positions
were made public even before the
exact duties of the U.N. force
could be determined.
Withdrawal No Condition
In addition, Egypt was reported
determined that withdrawal of
the Anglo-French troops could not
be made a condition for a final
settlement of the canal and Pales-
tine disputes.
Hammarskjold’s flight to Egypt
lent urgency to a move developing
in the United Nations to postpone
other work until a final settlement
of Palestine and the Suez ques-
tions are worked out.
Hammarskjold left Capodichino
Airport outside Naples at 7 a.m.
(1 a.m. EST) for the five - hour
flight to the former RAF base at
Abu Sweir near Ismailia in the
canal zone. He was going on im-
mediately to Cairo.
With him were 50 Colombian
(See MID-EAST page 4)
Clyde Barrow-Bonnie Parker and
other gangs during the 1930s. His
brother, Raymond, was executed
for killing a guard during a pris-
on escape. A nephew, Hurbie j
Franklin Fairris, was executed in
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MRS. KENT is opening her home
dining room again Monday at 301
South Robinson street...Hefty
CHARLES BROWN, the great
CLEBURNE tackle, filing his week-
ly entry in the TIMES-REVIEW
football contest...OGLE FORD chat-
ting with a friend...BLACKIE
SHERROD, the world’s champion
sports quipper, says a great uncle
of his invented an intricate device
for seeing through the heavy steel
of a ship’s bulk head...Says the
gadget is known as a port hole....
SHERROD can pull more good
ones than a cross-eyed dentist...
Football fans who go out to JAC-
KET STADIUM tonight had best
bundle up to keep out the frigid
ozone...It will be quite nippy in the
stands tonight.
The last time the YELLOW JAC-
KETS met WAXAHACHIE on the
gridiron was in 1950...The Jackets
ran up a 68-0 score, 19 points in
the first four minutes and the
WAXA coach asked to cut the
quarters down to eight minutes in
..the second half...His request was
granted and this is the first time
it’s been told...BILL HUGHES and
BOB FULFER, tough Jacket line-
men of last year, now students at
NTSC, in town for the game to-
night. _
(8
, >
Thursday
3 p.m.......... 56
6 p.m. ...... 50
9 p.m........... 46
12 p.m........... 41
triots for freedom.
Rebellious workers turned deaf
ears to the Soviet - puppet re-
gime’s newest “concessions.”
They called them “frail promises”
and fought on with the only weap-
on still at their command — the
general strike.
Western observers regarded the
broadcast as a warning to the
Kremlin from its puppet premier
Janos Kadar that Hungarians are
determined to throw off Soviet
domination. The radio is controll-
ed by the Communist regime.
Strike Continues
The broadcast came even while
millions of Hungarians continued
their defiant general strike which
had brought the nation to chaos.
Strike leaders vowed workers
would not work until “Titoist”
Imre Nagy is restored as premier
and Soviet tanks and troops ar
withdrawn from Hungary.
Puppet-Premier Janos Kadar’s
refusal to accept these essential
conditions turned his other “con-
cessions” to the Hungarian people
VIENNA (UP) — Radio Buda-
pest, in apparent defiance of the
Soviets, broadcast today Yugoslav
President Tito’s charge the Rus-
Slans were responsible for the rev-
olution in Hungary.
Ine Communist - controlled offi-
cial radio broadcast the text of the
speech made by Tito, the leader
of the independence - from - Mos-
cow movement. Tito’s address
was made Sunday but released on-
ly Thursday.
Tito said he had warned the
Kremlin that the satellites would
seek freedom unless Stalinism
was scrapped. And he criticized
Soviet armed intervention in Hun-
gary.
Tito said the Russians had prom-
ised to pull their troops out of
Hungary as soon as order has
been restored.
Broadcasts Full Hour
Budapest Radio devoted a full
hour to the broadcast of the text
of Tito’s speech. It promised a re-
broadcast later today.
j
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1956, newspaper, November 16, 1956; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505729/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.