Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 99, Ed. 1 Monday, March 10, 1947 Page: 1 of 6
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D. YEAR NO 99
FIVE CENTS PER COP)
NATE COMMITTEE APPROVES LILIENTHAL 8 TO 1
W
After Six Weeks
ESDAY
ON
A: !
6
$
Americans Held
2 d
t
Twenty-odd American
crew mem-
—
■ ■
1
DAVID LILIENTHAL
10,—(U.R —The
MOSCOW, March
All of this year.
■round dur
bedside was the Kentucky
ut off from' Infestrfar users+
Soil Movie
Christi for a bit of fishing and a
. Wife SOPHIE
business trip
1:30
schoots.
V
Marshall, Ernent Bevin of Britain
44.
Records
Spastic Society
DEEDS FILED
get her.:.
1 on aid for spastics for
wAs. introduced last week
Avon Williamson. Jr, Cleburne,
in a ninth floor bedroom of
heraton Hotel in Philadelphia | and Virginia Taylor
20, 1884, in
the Crowley cemetery under the di-
Pallbearers were G. B. Turner, Mel-
had
Ville Turner, Jimmy Noel Morris,
| The Weather
White told police the light sedan
her
hated $2 to the milk and led Tund.
52
50
Review.
OVIS 20
Harold Donham, 39, of Grand-
view, died Sunday at 9:45
m.
waa a
38*
f. H.
, 3
I 4
s
7
>
r
nI
Die in Week-End Fires;
sions Cause Heavy Damage
crowd at the bus station this morn-
ing waiting for a bus . . , standing
room oni in the station . . . WIL.-
GENE ANN WHRELER very un-
happy becase of the death of her
dining out on Sunday . . . MRS.
GEORGE. COOPER calling by the
office for her afternoon paper
Mrs. Turner is survived
husband. Walter Turner of
T Washington Negro school build-
ing caused an estimated $50,000
At het
Senato
WASHINGTON. March 10.—UR
- Presidet Truman will address the
nation and a joint session of Con-
gross Wednesday to present "In de
tail" the matter of a loan to Greece
This was announced today fol-
lowing an extraordinary conferene
Classified
-,-70
P i
I A
Ad
DONATIONS
The Homemakers Class of the
Field Street Baptist Church has do-
without confirmation tn have been
engaged to seek the release of the
Ben Hecht chewmen. whose names
were not disclosed A
brary.
The bill
education t
Atomic Energy
Clief Approved
STOLEN CAR POUND
NEAR SOFTBALL PARK
City police found a stolen auto
early today parked near the city
. E.
Mr.
I'm just getting in shupe tn push
a baby carriage thi-**
Maximum temperature 54 degrees
in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 44 degrees
in past 24 hours.
Maximum temperature 69 degrees
a year ago today
Minimum temperature 47 degrees
a year ago today.
Ing; but Donham fell to
and was saturated with c
and gasoline. He was *
enveloped by the flame
He was graduated f
Grandview High School ai
in thejitantyy at the U.
for three and gne-hai Ye
in a Fort Worth hospital of third-
degree bums. *
Donham was severely burned on
January 35. In a filling station fire
at Grandview when he and Elmer
Wilson were cleaning the grease-
rack section of the station. When
fumes in the area ignited the men
started to run out of the build-
Oil Company.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday afternoon at 2 O’clock
from the First Methodist Church in
Grandview, with Rev. J. F- Adams,
pastor, offlciating. Interment will
be in the Grandview cemetery,
with Holloway’S la charge. A
military funeral will be observed,
D. W, Cousens to I. F. Fulton,
two city lots, Alvarado.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
A. H. Pendleton and Miss Mary,
bars of the blockade runner Hen <
Hecht were arraigned before an
Arab magistrate in Haifa today '
Sunday
2 p.m. ....
4 p.m. ...
6 p.m.....
• a.m. >
10 p.m.....
12 p.m. ..,
FORMER CLEBURNE’
RESIDENT DIKE
Charles B. Woodard of Hillsdale.
Mich., former employee of the Santa
Fe, died Thursday at his home after
n illness of some time. Mr. Wood-
ard. who was 77. nesided In Cle-
burne about 25 years ago, and was
the brother of A. R. Woodard of
this city. o
He is survived byhis wife, two
sons and three daughters.
good Slate of Texas. we urge suche
legislation ns will minimise rather
than encourage waste at such a
time, red * this end we pry."
owdy • folks?
BY PROCrOn
Classes for Negto Students Will
Start Tuesday in Church Buildings '
Funeral Today For
Crowley Resident
Funeral services were to be held
at 2 o'clock this afternoon from
the Crowley Baptist church for Mrs.
Ora Belle Turnet, 62. who died in
a local hospital Sunday morning
at 7:40 o'clock. Mrs. Turner, whom
home was Crowley. Route*!, had
sent back in the United States. A ,
Jorusalem attorney wan reported i
, EAST TEXAS: Mostly cloudy.
Scattered light rain tonight and
in ‘east and south portions Tues-
day. A little warmer north por-
Adventists
Oppose Racing
Bill Passage
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY,MARCH 10. 1947
A- ----------------------- ■ -
In Palestine
Immigrant Case
several nieces and nephews
*• 4
34
’ d\ ug
CONGRESS WILL
HEAR TRUMAN
will take care of the business here
. . . OLIVER PITTS driving his
motor scooter from a standing po-
sit ion and hurrying for cover as
it starts to train.
MISS JOHNNIE GORDON stop-
ping in early for a bit of station-
try . . . LLOYD MILES sloshing
around in the rain'. > . OTIS PET-
ERSON being very thoughtful and
sending several gallons of coffee
to fire fighters at the Booker T.
V
Big Four met in Moscow today and
, heard a warning by Foreign Min-
ister V M. Molotov that they faced
n "by no meunu easy task" in fore-
ing the treaties of peace for Ger-
many and Austria
Molotov's remarks at the opening
Wife of Senator
Barkley Dies
WASHINGTON, March 10. -<U.«
—Mrs Albee W Barkley, U. wife
of the Senate Democratic leader,
died today after a long illness.
Death resulted from heart disease. •
She had been 111 for more than four
years.
She died at the family home hete.
The VFW commander told a
stale convention of. his organiza-
tion here last night that more, peo-
ple were living under ditutor rule
ioday than when the wir staffed.
Starr said he feared th possi-
bility of a third world war pless
the United States continued to pour
money into Europe.
' 242
1 Xi
softball park. The car theft h
been reported last night by E.
White, local used car dealer. I
RUM AN CONFERS WITH NEW AMBASSADOR TO BRITAIN.— President Truman, left conferred
more than an hour with Lewis W. Douglas at t he White House, just before the latter was sworn
as the U. s. Ambassador to Great Britain. iNEA Telephoto).
On 10 Day Furlough
Pfc. Truman Johnson has arrived
from Fort Benning, Ga., where he
has just completed "jump school,"
to spend ten days with his mother,
Mrs. Ida Johnson. He will return
to Fort Benning as an instructor
in the Paratroop Division of the
Airbrne Infantry.
The fire which razed the Booker . will be divided as follows: The
first three grades, intermediate
F0
Seventh-Day Adventist Church of
Keene. Texas, by vote taken Sab-
hath, March 8. hereby enter ear-
nest protest against the passage of
the bill now pending in the Texas
Legislature to legalize pari-mutuel .
betting on horse racing, or any
other form of gambling
“We Invite attention to the starv-
ing millions who are now uppeal-
ing to us for aid, and urge the ,
enactment of such laws as will
curb the enormous waste of more
Sen Arthur H. Vandenberg. R.
Mich.. President pro I cm of the
Senate, said after the hour and 29
minutes meeting
"The President has discussed wite
us in great candor the situation
-ealvj2
and the country."
Vandenberg said he would
"no further comment" until
Rio Vista Woman
Dies on Sunday,
Funeral Today
Mrs. Emily Susan Moore,
man, has announced. Tho meeting '
will be held in he Meridian Li-
and a daughter, Mrs Max
O'Roll Trulli of Washington, she
the second in the room. I • Homer Davis vs. Jewell Davis,
mKI Firewall Saves Guests | granted.
EMhuge firewall was credited i —•—
mA saving the lives of 255 guests - , — ,
EMhe seven-story Colonial Hotel Local Paratrooper
ork. Pa., early yesterday when — - —
o,000 fire swept the building.
Unconfirmed reports circulated
that three journalists were aboard
the Ben Hecht and were being held
by Haifa police
The refugees were transferred to ;
the British deportation ships Empire
Shelter and Empire Rest which ar-
rived at Famagusta, Cyprus, early
today
British, troops and police arrest. 1
ed 20 suspects today in n search
-
journ the meeting early and go to
> the district court room for the
I movie it was announced today.
I.-. Barkley to D.C. Joines, four ~ ——
acres near Burleson.
Rockwall county. Texas, the daugh-
ter of w. B. Hamilton and Nannie
Marshall. She was a Member of
the First Baptist Church in Fort
Worth.
Rev. Roscoe Turner, Jr., of Tyler
was to officiate. and interment in
est in imperial Moscow, were well - -
guarded by the Soviet militia men At Meridian to
who .. u.«s coP" in ... Meet on Tuesday
Special meeting of the Bosque
J County Spastic Society will be held
in Meridian on Tuesday evening at
H p. m , Mrs. August Krueger. chair-
, mentaus White Houseconference
arwssonaPrseidant"tumansenacon; MRS. WIIAN WAWI.ANI.....
Greek crirts. Barkley was repre- her way to Sunday school while
pnmaranenwsoprgronesw.sonate | SiMa
Barkley’s office announced that MONS taking his skiff to Corpus
funeral services for Mrs. Barkley Chei" "" “ hi ""in" —a .
will be held at Paducah at
। p. m. Wednesday. .
Truman delivers his message.
"That means he will ask for a
' loan at (hat time,” a reporter asked.
. "He will deliver a mesaage,"
Vandenberg answered.
by Senator Buster Brown of Tem-
ple. The society will discuss de-
tails of the bill and plan a cam-
paign in support of the legislative
measure. -
Several Cleburne citizens will at-
tend the meeting. ,
STENYeySyeinESOiie"orRindCleburnite‘s
ling and thinking what nice stakes Mother Dies
thev would make . . . CLINTON
DILLION, BERRY TAYLOR and Mrs Charles Low. HL member of
PAUL ROBERTSON lunching to- i a pioneer Central Texas ranch fam-
___ Georgia O'Neal of Blum, Mrs.
the Crowiey cemetery unaer WC al- All: M.v workman nt Rllm Mrs
reEtion of Dilon. RuneralHome. ALoutne Vrencn* of Lubbock, Mrs'.
Gertrude Hyles of Italy and Mrs.
was stolen from his tar tot at
731 North Main street.
----------------------------------------_-
Harold Donham, Grandview Fire
Victim, Dies in Ft. Worth Hospital
than FIFTEEN BILLION DOLLARS oyte Alt
spent anhually for liouor and cig- . ‘Tnnirrht: X• I h
arettes. As citizen:, of this our I - V-9--% Vs AV
Members of the Kiwanis Clb are
Cleburne TIMES-REVIEW
-NBA TELEPHOTO PICTURES- Published Daily Except Saturday United Press Leaned Wire Service
survivors are hie parents, Mr.
e and Mrs. D. Donham: three sis-
d tors, Miss Addle May Donham of
y drandview; Mrs. Omer Rowland of
» Grandview and Mrs. Calvin Cox
i. of Cleburne; and one brother, Carl
11 Donham of Grandview.
March 10 (U.W
Washington school blaze
MONROE and HERMAN SMITH
inske .
Mr. .
sponsoring the showing of a special
"soil conservation" movie tonight
at 8.13 p. m. in Ute district Court
room. Business men. termers and
agricultural people are invited to at-
tend the showing of the picture.
Club members will meet at the
Liberty Hotel at 7:30 for the reg-
ular weekly dinner but will ad-
d scores of ’guests to flee । Edgar Doty, Cleburne. and Vera
the building. It was the fifth 1 Fulfer. Blum. • K J been ill for some time.
In the hotel since November, 1 DIVORCES r She was born June
- ‘u1e
Fy‘i% isifl
a"lls 3200. COURTHOUSE
rts of Oklahoma, Kansas and
vuri. Service was continued
me and commercial onsum-
om other lines.
•cause of the explosions was
tetermined immediately. Wit-
s skid the second explosion
a pillar of (lame high into
sir, illuminating the entire
\
and Georges Bidault of France,
drove their limousines through a
heavy snowstorm to the refurbished
aviation house. four miles from the
Kremlin on the Leningrad Chaunee
near the edge of the city.
Streets leading to the conference
hall, formerly the Soviet flyers club,
and in pre-revolutionary times the
famous Yur Restaurant, the smart* I
_; .between the PrwIdaBl and .
gressional leaders of both parties J -----
Thirteen ranking Republican andi
Democratic members of the Houss JERUSALEM,
I and Senate attended the Whitd
House meeting—one ot tht mos
i important foreign policy confer-
onces in recent months.
flames burned out one-third
lie seven-story structure.
passing motorist discovered
fire. Hotel employes quickly
•ed guests and hurried -them
the part of the hotel shut off
le six-story firewall. construct-
ecently after several majof
fires in the nation.
[ 1----. - - — 1-- - a.
”iot
ley: two. sisters. Mrs. Effie Mae
Pfc. Johnson was formerly an Moore of Mead. Okla, and Mrs.
employee of the Cleburne Times- 1 Rose Mahanay of Fort Worth; and
damage. school officials announced
today. The blaze, reported Satur-
day night at 9.29, apparently start
ed in the school office. near the
mid-section of the building. The
four walls and’ the steel structure
of the building is all that.'was left
standing. Books, equipment desks
and classrooms were destroyed by
the fire.. X
Negro school stulents will re-
turn to classes on Tuesday Superin-
tendent Fred Thompson announced.
The students will be placed into
three church buildlags. Students
H-Ar* Lnm- ' P , ». .
yesterday from Oregon Mo., with I
Jimmie Resnick, wanted here for I
one case of check swindling. “ ,
Resnick wai arrested by Missouri i
officers and word of his capture .
was sent hero. The charge againt
the youth grew out of a forged
eheck passed at a North Main
street filling station het* three
months ago
We, Th members YN " The
The Seventh-Day Adventist
Church a) Keene voted opposi-
tion at its'Saturday Sabbath meet- i
ing to.the proposed bill to legalize
horse racing and parimutuel bet-
ting. it was announced today by
Rev. Carl Ashlock, pastor. The fol-
lowing communication has been
addressed to the Texas Senate:
I.ARD BAKER pushing n well-
' loaded grocery basket while the
madam continues to pile on the
groceries . Says WILLARD
---
WASHINGTON, March 10. (U.m •
The Senate atomic energy com-
mittee today approvec, 8 to 1,
the disputed nomination of David
E. Lilienthal to be chairman of
the U. S. Atomic Energy Com-
mission.
Sen John W Bricker, R., O., cast
thoonty negative vote.—
Committee Chairman Bourke n
Hickenlooper said he would ask
the Senate lo consider his corn*
j mittee'a action at the completion
of present Senate business pos-
sibly Wednesday.
Six Weeka Hearing
The committee vote came afteh
six works of public hearings.
8he nomination headed fora bit-
ter fight on the Senate floor. Sen.
Kenneth McKellar, D., Tenn., Ul-
ienthal'a most outspoken foe, pro-
mised the "damnedest fight
you've ever seen.”
The committee also approved
the nominations of four others to
be members of the commission and
Carroll Wilson to be general man-1
ager of the atomie project.
. Bricker and Sen. Edwin C. John-
son, D., Colo., voted against the
nomination of Sumner T. Pike,
former member of the Secupities
and Exchange Commission, 6 be
an atomie commissioner. They
likewise voted against Wilson.
Lewis L. Strauss, former New
York investment banker, William
W. Waymack, formerly editor of
the Dos Moines, la. Register and
Tribune, and Robert F. Bacher
atomie sclentiat, were approved
unanimously as commission mem-
bors.
Philadelphia, a spectacular
-alarm fire, swept a four-
brick building directly oppo- I
historic Independence Hall!
night, but the shrine was not
cened. The two upper, floors
be building, used as a ware-
e by the toy Hosiery Shojis 1
vere destroyed at an estimat-
amage of $100,000. Twenty- I
firemen were Injured or over- ;
। Involved in connection with the
proposed Greek loan.”
Vandenberg satd thePresident
would appear before the joint sesh
sion Wednesday "to present the ,
matter in detail to the Congres
MANTA FE., N, M, March 10. (U.M
Louis E. turt, iutionaf Atom-
mander of tho 'Veterans v. Foreign
Wars; today lashed but al’ Com:
munists whom he charged' .were
"Invading" America’s kovernment
and Inst it ul tons, including his oyn
organizatios.
Starr, scheduled to address thie.
New Mexico House of Reptesen-
tat Ives today, said he had fqund
one VFW post in which (on mem-
begs "hold Compnunist cards." He
c|althed Communists also were
moving into American chuirches and
Sugar Stamp No. 11
Good on April 1
WASHINGTON, March 10
IU.B>—The Office of Price Admin-
istration announced today that
spare stamp 41 in ration books
will become good on April 1 lor
10 pounds of sugar ,
Stamp No S3, now -good for
five pounds of sugar, expires
March 31.
OPA said that barring unfore-
seen circumstances. It will be
posaible to make another 10-
pouind stamp valid on July 1.
The OPA intends to allot 35
pounds of sugar to housewives
this year.
Stamp No. 11 will be valid
until Sept. 30. It will cover both
regular home use and home can-
ning needs.
OPA. however, may not be
F compression station was
o have been the largest of its
I In tke United States and was
"ed on the'20-lch pipeline
h carried an estimated 240,=
ITO cubic ‘feet of gas daily
the Hugoton field of Kansas
ters throughout the Midwest,
tobacco warehouse and five
less concerns were destroyed
| Sunday by a fire which rav-
Lg downtown bualnoas sectiou-
tion tonight. Moderate easterly
winds on the coast
■ *wa ' '
A Senate-House conference has
approved a deficiency appropria-
tomr bmrdiretine that Oh A ba
ended by July 1. Some con-
gresamen claimed that the reduc-
tion in funds would end the
agency in a few weeks.
The Senate banking committee,
however, has approved a bill
transferring sugar controls to the
Agriculture Department
Houston McAlister. Fletcher Me-
Alister and Cecil Moore.
died Sunday at 10:30 a. m.. at her
home near Rio Vista. She was
born Feb 22, 1909.
Funeral services were to have
been held at 3 o'clock this after-
noon from the Rio Vista Baptist
Church, with Reverend Jesse
Northcutt, pastor, officiating. In-
> terment was to be in the Rio Vista
I cemetery, under the direction of
Crosier-Pearson Funeral Home.
' Pallbearers were to be Earl
Moore, Hubert Moore, Robert
Young, Lloyd Young, Burton
Young and Otis Hyle.
Survivors are her husband, J.
E. Moore of Rio Vista; four sons,
James Moore of Fort Worth and
Bobby Ray Moore, Bennie Wayne
Moore and Jerald Moore, all of
Rio Vista; two daughters. Miss
Billy Fay Moore of Rie Vista and
Mrs. Betty Joyce Peugh of Rio
Vista; her mother, Mrs. Eula Lee
Cagle of Blum; five sisters, Mrs.
Birdia Johnson of Hillsboro; three
brothers, Lloyd Young of Mertens.
Robert Young of Fort Worth and
Burton Young of Hillsboro.
Livestock Market
FORT WORTH, March 10—u.p -
(USDA)—Cattle 4400. Blow, most
classes about steady. Few good
and choice fed steers and yearlings
20.aa.jB oa.
Calves 1600. How, about steady.
Good and choice fat calves 18.00:
20.50.
Hogs 1000. Butcher hogs and
stocher pigs steady with Friday.
Top 26.75, Good and choice 180-
300 lbs. 2650.
f
SHERIFF RETURN! MAN
CHARGED DI CHECK FonGEn
Sheriff Houston WaUIng returned
every day. * s
Review lassified m
find quick buyers for furitur
radios, children’s plaything
jewelry, in Met almost anythli
and everything of value. Pho
1M.
TIESIREVIEW
1 T. Roark’
s in Fort Worth
1 T. Roark, who residea at
South Robinson street, died in
rt Worth hospital Saturday at
m He was born March 27.
in Hardeman County, Tenn.,
was making his home here
his sister, Mrs. W. H. Comer.
was 88 years old.
neral anangements are pend-
arrival of relatives, and are
L , the direction of • Crosier-
Lon Funeral Home. ■
rvivors are his wife, Mn J. T.
k of Van Duren, Ark.; four
H. C. Roark of Van Buren.
. Roark of Kingsville, C. E.
k and I. J. Roark of Detroit,
i.: two daughters, Mn. R. K.
gfass ot P*mpa and Mn. Roy
d of Faifield, Calif.; a sister,
W. H. Comier; "seven grand-
ken and two great-grandchil-
2,
ErtK -
ByU.S. Weather Bureau.
Meacham Field, Fort Worth
CLEBURNE and VICINITY:
Cloudy and Intermittent light rain
tonight with lowest temperature
in middle forties. Tuesday cloudy
becoming partly cloudy in after-
noon with highest temperature
near 60.
pel chicken. OSCAR 1 . Large
1 ily add a resident of Brown toun-
I ly for 71 years, died Saturday night
in a Brownwood hospital. She was '
mhe motHer of Miss Gertrude Low,
who foerly resided in Cleburne.
FunerF services were held this'
morning in Brownwood. Survivors
are four daughters, Mrs. -Clifford
Pouncy, Miss Gertrude Low and
, Miss Annie Laurie Low of Brown-
j wood and Mrs. J. H. Keele of Coral
Gables, Fla.; and three sons, Bill
Low of Beaumont and Bob and Nat
Low of Brownwood.
Brother of Local
Woman Succumbs
Earl V. King, brother of Mn.
Ella Daniel of this city, died Sat-
urday night at his residence, 726
Ann avenue in Dallas.
Funeral services were to be held
at 3 o'clock this afternoon from
the Fair Park Baptist Church with
Rev. Steve Philpot officiating. In-
terment was to be In the Grove
Hill cemetery, under the direction
of Camp Funeral Home.
Survivors are his wife, Mn.
Emily Kihg of Dallas; a daughter.
Miss Mafic King of Dall; stepz *
daughter Mrs. Ovle Hodge at
Dallas; brother, Ira King of Dallas:
and five sisters, Mn. Daniel of
Cleburne, Mrs. Lana WilAInghm
of Seagrove, Mrs. Jia Conditt dad
Mn Iva Madewell of Enhis and
Mr. Eula Church of Fort Worth.
I (By United Press)
Ir persons were dead and '
Ige was estimated at more
53,000,000 today from a flurry
es and explosions that swept
dation Sunday.
| Indianapolis rooming house
ook the lives of three men.
Moore, 45; Ralph Dehoff: 28,
Bernard Callon, 42. Fires
A hotel guests in York, Pa.,
ielphia and Gary, Ind.
Gas Explosions
ph E. McCormick, 38, a work-
•a* killed when two explo-
wrecked the natural gas
er compression station of the
Service Company near
well. Okla., last night. Gas
Monday
. 84 , 2 a.m. .....47
'.Ml 4 a m. ......48
. 50 j a.m. . .48
49/8 a.m. .....44
. 48 1 10 a m.......44
48 | 12 Noon.....47
session followed closely a newzde-
mand by Secretary of State Geprue
C Marshall that the great powers
sign a four-power 40-yeur treaty
to keep Germany disarmed and de- <
militarized.
In opening the conference ul the
newly-redecorated House of Avia-
tion Industry Molotov told his asso-
dates that a sound basis for writ-
ing the peace of Germany had been
achieved at the Yalta and Potsdam
confer ences.
The foreign ministers, Molotov,'
Bricker Vete
, i , ■ < * • ' . eyj • t A . i ,
Bricker's vote against Lilien-
thal put him in the same camp
with Sen. Robert A. Taft, R., Q
who has announced he will vote
against Lilienthal when the nomi-
nation comes up in the Senate
The committee Yble yeridled the
aplit in Senate Republican leader-
ship ranks over the nomination.
Senate President Arthur H. Van-
den berg voted for LAienthal.
Alao voting for lallenthal were
Hickenlooper, and Sena. Eugene
Milliken, R., Colo., William F.
Khowland, R., Cal,, Brien Mc-
Mahon, D, Conn., Richard . Rus-
soil, D,, Ga., Edwin C. Johnson.
D„ Colo., and Tom Connaly, D.,'
Tex.
Connally 4 '
Connally and Vandenberg werre
not present at the meeting but left
(heir ptoxies. Connally voted only
for Lilienthal's nomination, ex-
plaining that he was not prepared -
to vote on the remaining appoint-
ments. '
The committee vote came after
Sen. Claude Pepper, D., Fla..,said
President Truman agrees with:him
and Sen. James E. Murray; D„
Mont., that "forces of amblpious
militarism and isolationism'* are
behind the fight against Llienthal, . I
Pepper said the President hhd
registered substantial accord with
the views expressed in a recent
letter to him. Their letter said
the opposition to the former TVA
chairman was based on “greedy
efforts to establish private mono-
polies in the, field of atomic en-
ergy.”
also leaves a son. David Barkley of
Paducah, Ky., and another daugh-
ter. Mrs Douglas MacArthur II.
wife of the nephew of Gen. Douglas
MacArthur.
Death came two hours before
I Barkley was to have attended a mo-
for Jewish underground members i i ’,
- - German Place Treaty Conference
I Opened Today by Big Four Natious
I - --rte--- I m-,,
‛ l --r*-*a A---h in AlADi "T‛hm * •
VFW Commander
Hits Communists
W fu
7pos
grade students, and the older stu-
dents.
Tire Chief Dewey Jlles said today
that the cause of the school fire
was still undetermined, added that
an investigaton was now in prog-
rose. Jlles said that . the school
building had been inspected recent-
ly and no fire hazards were found.
The fire chief said the fire gained
rapid headway for some unexplain-
ed reason, a factor which he said
prompted'an investigation. There
was no indication of incendiarism
in connection with the blaze, it was
learned. , r
i. With smoke, but none serf- DeLois, Cleburne.
.< j Joe Williams and Marie Higgins,
minor fire of undetermined i Cleburne.
and ordered , held for 18 days :
pending trial on charge* of aiding
and abetting illegal immigration
into Palestine.
However, responsible quartors
believed the Americans would be
.. —-d-d-nM-
zw.eudsNa
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 99, Ed. 1 Monday, March 10, 1947, newspaper, March 10, 1947; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562642/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.