Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 242, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 27, 1950 Page: 1 of 14
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-T
V
Cleburne TIMES-REVIEW
YEAR, NO 242
14 PAGES IN 3 SECTIONS
Trap 2,000 Reds; Begin Starvation
$
mericans
13
*
*
#
*
*
A
*
A
A
A
1 2
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REPRESENTATIVE'S RACE
rosperity. Solidly
9.
"near miracle
t w /-year
nly
Maddos, commissioner of Precinet
but
umns of North Korean troop* mid
who lived in Sand Flat during the
I
3
theft
led Merce Brooks of Dalia*
overnor in early
wife and postmarked at the ubaed vessel prepartory to salvage op-
iaturday’s Texas Dem-
Commu-
school
1100 to repair damages and re-
Third Divisions. The 2nd Corps was
Nat
Jones, Mrs E. T Byars and John
2V
ilckens, too, come In for their
Army All Set to
Seize Railroads
•ops are still
however,
it
3
its start at Sand Flat. Bill Meals.
Whole-
bach knifed into tne port side of , river Allied fighters and bombers
1
sciousness today. Bacon denied the
curve today, injuring 12 passenger* "'than reflected in the July pri-
mary.
Ind.
1g
heen
5
before the accident. Glenn Havens, kers from the navy yard.
Ing Paul Moss of Odessa in
Pampa
LUM INMATE CAPTURED
zanagg
Weather
EDIroms wont u. Gas
Hr*
L.
, of us together put
raf in-
ana
to the water- I
i ew them and
were
iqof
to have
J
jacket on but
t
We 1
A
ol
-d
1
d
P
6
-W' W.
upker •
■
GHOST TOWN HERE
and Flat Reflects
nal to abandon ship. All survivors
said they heard no abandon ship
f Woolridge and Meals
Lie Grocery, handled
roads
vice."
RAMSEY. WILSON. QRIFFIN.
WHITE LEAD IN JOHNSON
school house and noticed a pick-
up truck parked there. The wom-
Like most communities In John-
m County, Sand Flat, known of-
daily a* Cuba, is dependent up-
i the Grade A dairies, which dot
iainstays for years, are rapidly
iding out ol the picture. The two
the
corn.
Ite nuid
ready lor
the
race
for
re-
fer with bar head in the water.
The waves had thrown her feet
‘0Y
from n woman, who passed the
prunary a month ago.
tain road north of Kigye.
CENTRAL NORTHERN — (Tne-
gu*—South Korean troops, follow-
pain. they kept trying to shield
us, I tost them when the res-
cue tug got near. I hope they
made it.
The wg was only a few feet
head seven regional offices
The promises of full cooperation.
Bendetsen said. should assure nor-
mal operation at the railroads and
relieve the Army of a burdensome
job at a time when it already is
burdened by war.
Bendetsen said he has been as-
SWIMMINC POOL
CLOSES WEDNESDAT
The City Park swimming pool
win be closed for the season next
Wednesday. Park Director Howard
Parker announced Saturday.
at commis-
M a heavy
it was awfuL
I took alt my shoes and all
sliding away. ..
I went back to when the other
nures were. The loudspeakers
The store at Sand Flat. on* of th* few communitites in Johnson
County to enjoy an unbroken chain of prosperous years There <a just
one store at Sand Flat. There was never more.
that appar-
i one a
his
M
508
spare. She
girls and e
Ea
fensive line west of Taegu.
Lt. Gen. Walton H. Walker, UN ground force
CLEBURNE, TEXAS. SUNDAY. AUGUST 27, 1950
* - - ----------- ——....... ■ ---------------
5
v, g
■ "S
Johnson County
"A friend of the family
23")
KILLED ON WAV TO VOTE
HAN ANTONIO, Tex., Aug. 28—
(U.P) Frank Clark, 75, was struck
and killed by a city bus today a* he
walked to a polling place to vote
in the Texas Democratic run-off
primary election. His death was the
30th in traffic this year in San
Antonio.
/
Michian except Floyd Laidlaw, 57,
•t Eikhart, Ind., who suffered mi-
tor injuries.
list. Only one lifeboat and three
life rafts were launched success-
fully, due to the Ult of the vesuel’s
hull.
ian spectators. None of them was
seriously hurt
VMM
au.PL
took
W As a
ently
. . ■ - -55 .
• 4 '
wee eme WH Navy
trem a ran after ehe
r <
dare_
! •'
more than one store. Closing
•e ■
-2mtze
Brahma cow escaped.. J
Lariats and normal oowbba tactics
were no match for the detertined
bossy and the cops finally khjot her*
after she had run down three civu-
1
-
uuTY: Paru» cloud
A lev scattered
I tea «—ate la
• esat and ■■Umi
Mill a too
____ thunder-
j. Except sen-
Paus area. Not
Bouth Piains
„USTIN, Tex., Aug. 26-U.P-
Dt. C. Rowell, superintendent of
r-1
1 8
Interest in a
Mraers raeeg y
to ML. I want to • ger Nanto eat
the port side and I could see
way. it |
the road
a?
is 1ost, ’
1
l ment has taken "all steps necessary knot*" when he sighted her just
before the crash.
the Austin State Hospital, today
announced the capture at Houston
las night of Carter Jamtson less
(Mo 11 hours after his escape
F
and operation of the U. S systems
tomorrow. This included recall to
active duty of seven rs 11 road presi-
•ents, who are reserve colonels, to
nists pushed back elements of
the Republic of Korea eapltol and
ocratie runoff primary election.
Texas Election Bureau return*
nt 7 .Mi pm, Hom 64 of 254 coun-
tie*, one complete, gave Ramsey
71,421 vole*, Brooks 46,812.
roetim)
-6
a general attack,
134
Wrght,
equipment moving down a moun-ed 1o be Mile, as the three unre-
10c PER COPY
3, polled 6:16 vole* againnt
opponent, (uy Shirlet’s 576.
Our chiet nurse,
rington. was wonde
■ , "T9 L VNHY
when the waiter wae
the wavs were b
sbemea to have
board* together
Rigesdidmt even have a lMfe-
— — "5 "was wonder-
Dallas Policemen
Kill Runaway Cow
rDAwagABowTexnacug-awnra «!
storm* tell the same old tornado
county, hnd made complete re-
portn al presa time
Halls lend of 336 votes appear-
Trains Collide;
Twelve Injured
PETOSKEY, Mich., Aug 29—IU.P)
-A local passenger train of tin*
Pennsylvania Railroad collided head
on with a freight train on a hillside
try Division trapped 2,000 Communists on the Naktong
id began starving them to death, but
South Korean forces were thrown back by a sudden
North Korean offensive on the east coast.
Her officials that there will be
over $50, failed in hl* bld
the navy refused to li*i anyone a*
missing. pending a complete check
of the names of all persons aboard
cut us apart Next thing I knew
I was aft by myself.
The waves were terribly rough
and one threw me completely
over th* raft Then I became
frishtened.IwassocloseandI.
couldn’t *wtoti I went under.
18 persons
votes against 488 fur hl* oppon-
ent, J Earl Dean, in Preeinet I
All total* in the commiasioner’s
races are complete
It was believed the three boxes
person* and gave a policeman quite
a battle today before dying like a
gengstov, in a fusillade at police
gun fir*.
Eight officers were in an the
kill, three mdles away from the.
packing house pen where the big
of the injured were from
of Johnson
*.5 '
TJES^P^I^
cold and ao weak that I couldn't
manage to do anything.
You just don’t know how it
foata. • " m*
I tatow gbe was in a bad way.
There wasn’t anything I could do*
for her Then I could see her
i—— - the moutn.
ported boxes each had small vot-yet to report, would not alter the
ntrength. No roportx were re- picture as it stood late Saturday. __J
- •....... ••—-*- 1 The commiasloner’s race In Pre:.,
cinet 4. was hotly contested all 1
I he way. One box at Grandview,
Box 17, reported 165 votes tor
each candidate.
forced to withdraw from a mile
, ■ 0212
_ post office. Th# letter* are highly eration*. They were also seeking conxt wher. reinforced
meaps the community prized by the judge any bodies possibly trapped in the - ’ ....
1 following the general trend of Lee Brambleit, one of the early vessel,
onsolidation. Good highway* and settlers at Sand Flat, operated the I Another navy tug, the U S. S.
Mferent transportation methods, first telephone exchange there J Cahokia (ATA 186) approached
■courage such consolidation for Other oldtimers, who added color i the submerged hulk of the Benevo- l i. w. miles under the pressure
he benefit of students. and glamour to the past history lence while on a search for bodies or heavy artillery and mortar fir*,
of Sand Flat, Included Mike and The tug reported the ship is ly-1 MacArthur said
John Kennard. Di- Di----4---- " ------ —* ---
live sandy land, never boast-
pung bulge, 15 miles southwest of
, Taegu, and then sat down to try
the hulk to starve them out.
to probe, Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s mid-
1 night communique told about the
: reverse near Pohang. on the east
ppm-
'LA*.*
iare in the , prosperity of
at spring, but the community is
osperous.
The little community, located
I the divide between rich black
Boyd, once sheriff
County.
222
9k'w&
with impairment
terms. Vern
untty: Cotton and
The vote at Grandview was one “
of the heaviest votes cast In th* E
history of the town. Election
Judges failed to obtain enough *1
ballots and ran out of the votirg
material before the polls closed. 4
The precinct polled more votes in
the second primary than was poll-
ed in the first.
I saying "My
naysntamhey
evrerrkmeg
#6" 222 4
Ma
"I didn't order abandon ship,”
Bacon said, "because I didn’t think
it would sink."
Bacon spent two hours in th*
Icy water, floating in a life packet,
before he was picked up. He was
taken to Oak Knoll Naval hospi-
tal, suffering from shock and *X»
posure.
N* Patients Abotr
There were no patients aboard
the 800-bed hospital ship, but ah*
carried two crews, a complete motto
an gave the description Ot the
truck to Deputy Crook.
"The description fit just one lo-
cal vehicle, which had bean oper-
ating between Cleburne and Min-
eral Wells,” Crook said. "I had a
hunch the stolen property would? *
be found in Mineral Wells.".
a civilian harbor pilot who later » Most of those aboard had Just
died, reported he hear da whis- started their evening me AI at the
time of the accident. They rushed AV!
i to the deck and grabbed life pre- - Al
servers as the vesel started to
SOUTHERN (Masan —A lied
pianes infantr battallpn desperately try-
prahter ing-604 dvivehehe Mite divlelon
...— from strategic Sobuk Mountain,
lieutenant g<i
turns from Hi
‘P"Spuspdccayaasda &
to the stolen pump. The tip came ""
st rhoc •he
----------
Motorist, beware < dsYui
hot-rod jockey* hav adopted,
open stretch of Highwayt7t
the feetbell --4--4
ground* M
mg up a massive American air
strike northeast of Taegu, threw
the Oi
in the agriculture commissioner’s
contest, Morrison 59 55 per cent in
the court of criminal appeals,
Wilson 61.19 per cent and Griffin
69.57 per cent in the two supreme
court contests.
Kennedy County, the first to
make a complete report, had 59
votes: compared with 71 in the
first primary a month ago.
Over the state, It was expected
that a comparable decline would
be registered. Most estimates were
l hat upwards of 700,000 persons
voted Saturday, compared with
more than 1,113,000 in the first
yesterday by President Truman to I , ... . ------ — . ...
aven a crlopling railroad atrike »U "a t .inve st izate the accident, underwater bridge acroaa the Nak-
called by dg Brotherhood of Rall- faced with conflicting report* a* tong River where it curve* west-
rodd PimneenBothleod.rdeF of । to the speed Q the two vessels at । ward and vehiele tracks were ob-
road Trainmen.and tne order or the time the bow of the thicken- served on both sides of the
Railway Conductors. The unions/hach knifed anin ,n. I-, 2110 . r ■ , on . 00. O..n
w . . . , oacn Knird into tne port side of river Allied fighters and bombers
promotly called off the strike winch the Benevolence, • •55
thy had scheduiedfor Monday | - — . -
City Manager Is
A 1 icket Writer
City Manager J. B. Early has
joined forces with city police
in writing cut meter violation
tickets.
Early, however, hangs ths
meter violation summons on just
one auto, his own. Anytime the
busy city manager returns to
his auto and finds a parking
motor with a rod flag, he writes
himnel a ticket.
The manager then takes the
ticket to City Judge Aaron
Stophens, enters a plea et guil-
ty and plunks down a dollar.
So far. Early has written him-
self two tickets. He has also
received several tickets, written
by members of th* police force.
Policemen like to hang a tick-
st on the city manager's auto,
because it is always good for a
cup of cotta*. Early likes ef-
ficiency.
runes while working in hi* fa-
her's store at Sand Flat V Barr,
another Cleburne grocer, I* a pro-
uct of Sand Flat. Sam Barr, V's
rother, is a used car dealer here
I Dr. L. I.. Harris, beloved Cle-
t at Sand Flat and the school several homes,
sed its door* for the last tune ~ ’
flee fol
15 miles west of Masan, were
HFhKslEEre Xeuchoan UteTtS1 sured personally by union and car-
uore was operated by Dr. Seal
end his brotner, who also ran the continued operation of the rail-
uba post office. Bud Bennett
Ivas the next store owner in Cuba
After Bennett. Mrs. Fannie Franks
an a good sized general mercan-
LUe store in the little community
W. J. Meet*, who later moved his
lat. now
The little community has al-1 to assume full possession, control,
ays had a Baptist Church. The (
esent church, located across the
place the pump. Pipe leading into
th* well waa sawed in two allow-
Ing II to drop into the “““ -hafb
when the pump was rei
i Wood entered
ilurda/s court se.
"then a few second before it hit,
T taw a ship. They were bearing
down on us at high speed. I
sounded a collision warning Then
anm-—
dtoiegdwohaa-
his first
ahead of Mrs. Altavene Clark of
Amarillo in the 18th district.
The Election Bureau had tabu-
lated more than 118,000 votes by
10 p.m. Ramsey had 58.72 per cent
of these east in the lieutenant
governor’s race. McDonald 61.59
lat. J ’ M Peacock, for year* a
E.Strate- beaten off by doughboys who re-
tee -Par fused to give up thelrfox-holes.
guns on ths best bank of the
Naktong weal of Taegu, possibly
establishing a new line from
which to spring a new attack on
th* city.
NAKTONG RIVER—(Hyonpung
Bulge*—United Ptesn Staff Corres-
pondent Jack Burby reported that
the enemy was cut on from all
escape from th* pocket The Am-
ericna dominate the Communists'
narrw supply line across the ri-
ver. he said, and the enemy no
longer can get either food or am-
munition.
Check Underway
Although only 507 of (he Benen ■
olence s crew was accounted tor.
report of a lookout aboard the . . - .. . .
I Luckenbach, who said the hospi- order, but that they Jumped into
tai ship was making "about 18 the 1cy water because others were
leaving the ship. .
awey, police sgid.
42,,32.
m“zi
By LL Gail Matthews, v8N
OAK KNOLL GENERAL
HOSPITAL. Calf.. Aug 26—40
— have a fear for the number
thirteen from now on. Hie Be- t
nevolence’s number was AIMS. '
I was sitting in a lounge chair
kept repeating "man your iMte-
coat on so I took my jecket o«.
put on my coat, then put my
"*
Captain Riggs (apt Cecl Rigus
of Arlingtoh, Va» found some
rop,J don’t know where. He
lashd 11 of us together Then
he and some men tied some
surrounding country side.
Officers recovered the pump be-
fore they arrested Mitchell. "a
Dick Beasley, board member of 9
the rural school, said it would cost
to the water- 1 couldn’t get
my breate, IB* wteOC wpg. te
f°rmemberea to mm * 1 "
adarmzuj
I was tied to J
Mite Ledbet
derful person.
long col-
for freedom at a habeas corpus
hearing Saturday morning in Dis-
trict Court here.
Mitchell, an ex-convict, had been
held in county jail since his ar-
rest Friday, in Heu ol $5,000 bond.
The hearing Saturday reduced the
bond to $2,000, At noon Saturday,
Mitchell had failed to post it. >
The ex-conviet is charged speci-
fically with theft of an electric
pump from a water well at liberty
Chapel school The pump was re-
covered by Deputy Sheriff Boyd
Crook and Sheriff Houston Wal-
ling, working with Mineral Wells
AU. Even I
rough and
nile at the L
in other statewide races. J. E.
McDonald had a sizeable lead in
hl* bid for renomination to his
11th straight term as agriculture
commissioner; Will Wilson of Dal-
ia* and Meade Griffin of Plain-
view were out front in two su-
preme court races, and W. A.
Morrison of Cameron led in the
court of criminal appeal* race.
First inconclusive returns show-
ed Congressman Ken Regan lead-
ore to Cleburne and father of
ie present wholesale merchant.
Might the store from Mr*. Franks.
Sand Flat, has had the misfor-
ihe of two cyclones. The storm*
ere almost identical, dipping
Irie land* and equally pro-
uw et ne
• ■ ack 1126
u;gm.....•a- - n rE
, .61
“nzla irea P‘. Eh
gs • £ £ --egm
aaa-peegmEEm#mF342
of child support at 112.50
beginning Sept. 8.
The cases of Marie
msruw
Navy Nurse Survives Disaster At Sea; Describes Horrors
2 We boud see • ratt close by.
n was green and white. We
-----n‘ understand why they
, pick us up. Then I saw
were picking up Single
» MH *< th* water I guess
■su aM right . . Ws had
[ WMM on to.
rere two young:wmilors,
to dust kids, really.
16th congressional district
and Waller Rogers of
in the. washroom, waiting for
mpaa. dinner, when the crash came.
Everything in the room started
charged in four apses of forgery,
and Marvin Stubblefleld, charged
in several felony cases, wet* pas- 7
ed until the ngxt term ot court,
scheluled for Sept. 5.
included Miks and The tug reported the ship is ly-1 MacArthur said "
Billy Richardson, Ing on her port side about three I A., wa— mn. .nA
*-" szI a- ma
water No,xurv ivors or bodies were i front Unes. en. George 1 ‘ ‘
•ighted. but three wracked lite* er, t ihe.
boats protruded from the sea EaNt Alr Forces said U. s planes
Helicopter Report* I already had heavily damaged
grown, however, p * D ef j A coast guard helicopter report- Communist supply lines with 1M,-
•n farms east of Cuba, down to Seize Kailroads ed.no,hodies or survivor* along 000 tons of bombs, 10,000,000
vard Grandview in the black- .. . . . . rounds of ammunition and 33,670
and. WASHINGTON Aug 26 -(U.P)— | Debris from the wreckage was rockets, and the relentless strikes
it is doubtful if any community Assistan Army Secretary Karl R scattered over San.Francisco Bay. I went on.
n Johnson County ha* furnished Bendetsen said today that railway sarred in D,an inbound tide dur- Here is a picture of the war
(lore business and professional . brotherhoods and railroad otficials l inK hernisht and earlv morning fronts, based on the latest re-
olk for Cleburne than has Sand have promised full cooperation" ' , ours: 1 he port had. been closed leases and front line dispatches:
with me Army when it seizes the i “ shipping .until daybreak to pr EAST NORTHERN —(Pohang)—
iromlnent grocer In Cleburne, got nations major railroad systems at 1 ' any. surivors who might haveiIn addition to flushing back South
-------- ’ 3 P m CST tomorrow Whu .b °\ on Korean elements in this coastal
The seizure order was issued ,.Whileuthe, search still was , on, ! area, the enemy was reported by
vesterdav hv prozidcni Triman m | the navy convened a board of in- j air observers to have built an
Capt Barton E Baeon, 49. of ■ , ... _ ,
Vallejo, Calif., who was in corn- I he hlt us a few reet forward of
mand of the Benevolence, de-the iort side. 1 felt B terrifie im-
dared his engines were stopped pact. „ . ,
Just before the two ships came to-1 Bacon confirmed a report of
gether When he regained eon- survivors that there was no slg-
of fun. But now she wee vez «
Erightened. 3 '• m
Mis Harringon « Mleanor 1
Harrington, Lweir, Masa) ale
Heard Whistle
Bacon, in turn, reportea the
id from the only store in Cuba,
ports a full time preacher. Rev.
Y. Brown served as teacher of
। Cuba school and preacher at
I church. In the emnly days of
* settlement. Miss Walks Me-
rkle. Jim Hartfield and a man
nembered only as Dr Long,
re other early day teachers at
id Flat.
vet* tsi Johnsoh County yeator-
day in the various stats race
election runoffs.
In complete returns from El
of the county's M boxes last
night, Ben Ramsoy. of Ban Au-
qustine, was leading Pierce
Brook* of Dallas in the race for
lieutenant governor, 1.953 votes
to 1,165.
Dallas District Attorney Will
Wilson was ahead pt Fagan
Dickson In the race lor Place 1
on th* Supreme Court, by al-
most 1,000 votes and Meads
Griffin of Plainview, was lead-
ing George Harwood of Dallas
by more than SOO votes for
Place 3 on the Supreme Court.
John C. White. Wichita Falls,
had a lead of more than 600
vote* in Johnson County over
incumbent. J. E. McDonald in
the race for agriculture commis-
sioner.
Johnson County voters gave
W. A. Morrison of Cameron, a
lead of only 100 votes over Bob
Lattimore of Dallas in the race
for a place on the court of
criminal appeals.
Rsturns in the 25 boxss last
night, indicated the total John-
son County vote for candidates
In the various state races would
exceed 4,000, considerably more
। down and destroying buildings in
the community propei. with only
slight damage to property in the
surrounding area The natives
Then, someone wes giving me U
“ push and I was going up R
th* side of the Wg. e
Mary Luckenbach was moving "at .
high speed" through the heavy fog. j ical starr, including 15 navy nurses
Bacon said that several minutes and a large number of eiyilan wot*
thers, practiced medicine in thela nationwide rail trike in Canada
ittle community before seeking threw an estimated 300,000 person*
rider fields. i out of work. Late reports from Ot-
Truett Bailey, manager of onetawa indicated a week end settle-
if the most successful projects in ment of the Canadian strike was pos-
exas, the Johnson County Elec- sible
nic Cooperative, lives at Sand Bendetsen said the Army depart-
and crewmen.
The Diesel-powerea passenger I
train, en route from Grand Rapids.
Mich., to Petoskey, coasted down-
Mil into the 18-car freight, five
miles south of Boyne Falls, Mich.
The trains, both Diesel-powered,
were able to brake their speed suf-
Tielemly to prevent a more serious
•••MenL None of the cars over-
hips Collision Death Toll Set At 18; More Bodies Sought.
of ser-
AIR WAR-Lt. Gen Stratemeyer,
said the U. S. ha* lost 58 plane*
and suffered 94 casuallie* in the
first 60 days of the war. These
figures included 26 dead, 23
wounded and 45 missing. The
Communista have lost 72 plane*,
ill tanks and hundreds of bridges,
locomotives, box cars and instal-
lations.
NAVAL WAR -The big bombard-
ment of Aug. 24 and 25 hit the
east coast marshalling yards at
Songjin, 180 miles north of the
88th parallel Two hundred box
ears were destroyed, heavily dam-
aged or destroyed and the mar-
phailig yards, trucks and road-
bets, Were damaged. Another 50
boxcars were destroyed or dam-
aged In other rail centers
a ummum Gdunu a year
seeeh=.......- •
gemri ?
By Clyde Head
It has been said that Sand Flat, tales, which are told by anybody
little community 10 miles south-fortunate enough to live through The navy hoped to have a veri-
nt of Cleburne, s a ghosttown one of the dangerous storms fied passenger list and casualties
"n
Sand Elat has been her nest, after the chicken house persona aboard the b g wh le hos-
immunity for more than 60 was destroyed pltal ship when she lert Marc Is-
ars ! Actually,‘the storms destroyed land yard yesterday for n trial run
True, there is only one store the school house church and after being taken out of the moth-
,,3 balls for Korea duty. Authorities
PeNce JusticV R I. Derryberry were still not sure of the exact
married a Sand Flat belle. Miss number aboard
Eula Byars, daughter of G. N A* the fog lifted a navy tug with
(Natt Byars, pioneer farmer of divers aboard reached
the community The Peace Justice! The divers had orders
has several letters, written by hi* under the surface of the submerg-
right full rudder" Bacon said
For awhile, we la
4 have to leave 1
togetainto.ther s
W (Slim* Roland polled
tie.
"I ordered a full stop and a
tence was Withheld, pendin
tution. The woman was «
withpasging a forged h
Pyoau'siJewelry Store.,
ChariM Mason waa given____
year probated MntenM wheh hi
pleaded guilty to wife and chili
desertion. The court Mt paymen
HALL LEADING SMITH in
SAN FRANCISCO), Aug. " . . a.m ,,
26. UPi_ Navy divers reach. TOkYO, Sunday, Aug. 21. "n- The U. S. 2nd Infan-
ed the submerged hulk of ... . .
the rammed hdpital ship River today an
Beneyoeneegeto Asa North Korean offensive on the east coast. j >>m Hal, youthful college stu
mnipqogn, (ther South Korean forces on the northern front anti dent ot tin Vistn, nmetee twbei mg
kteniturvivorsthgrewst io the U.s 25th Divisionin the south, claimed minor suc-
489 cesses, and U. S. 1st Cavalry Division observers said as reilected by partial, unoffieial bones out
Naval nuihorti., said that II Communists were massing to form what may be an of-runotr election return* here last Both commiasloners in Precinct*
f- - >1 . • "---- night 3 and 1 were returned to the of-
com Al a late hour last night, Hall
navy nuts.- died when th.navy mander, told United Press Staff Correspondent Ralph hidwoehMoMr*smite
hoyitalshitwas,, ammed Iast Teatsorth that Communist firepower is on the wnne, but I only ihree small boxex in ine
Xh.’ "Mary "ckeKtah. Ihe that ‘he enemy still holds the offensive. count .had notgrerpurigg A "mJ
Benevolence sank within 3 min- ' he said the aiues are not yet -- “ - - j out.
utes readv tor a general attack but 1 . - . - county, harl made
United Press Full Leased Wire Service — NEA Telepboto Pictures - Established 1904 — Published Daily Except Saturday
f T 5
—5 pm—5
braimeauebmaca.on
ate teaMS*— endsnn 1,‘w.
T— M rtetenix , T . II
rocketed and strared
y" janegb. - " »
ErnTm Po " (
Bw**” Mevarommm---p• -----— -m
LastWrdn
er ship Just eh. It was
B tad than Bau told
r MjHit
g
-oAus.teek
hucitmtmmnon j 1 mrman
"We didn't go 18 knot* all day
long," Beacon insisted. "Before the
accident when the engine* were
on, we were traveling about 15
knots. The engines were stopped
before the collision, so we were
■lowing down, although, I can't
say exactly how fast we were go-
ing."
nTou * not* Thin h the nirn
• peries of stortes a boat tewns and
mmmunities in Jehnson (•«■<> Oth
l wigi avvear in aech Bunday Iwa*
the Times -Review
Ramsey Leading Set Bond For Man Charged In
W Mi- vasz a mu-. "mB : 2y |. Theft Of School s Well Pump
WEST CENTRAL — (Taegui Margin LoCally Doran Mitchell, 34, charged with
North Korean* were digging in1
lank, and BOMlbly self-propelled । WUsen, White, Griffin
Take Early Vote Lead
(United Fr***)
nen Ramsey of San Augustine
they are prepared to slug it out
with regrouping North Koreans
anywhere they choose to strike—
and they may strike nt any mo-
ment, probably towards Taegu
again
"Ominous Lull"
Despite what Walker called an
"ominous" lull in the fighting,
(lie 2nd Divinion, In its first unit-
ed dvislonal action of the war,
encircled 2,(MM) Communist troops
in the last enemy bridge-head
across Ilie Naktong River.
The doughboys, armed with the
new, heavy equipment, isolated
the North Korean* in the Hyon-
Eover close to the
y,bung on. They C
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 242, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 27, 1950, newspaper, August 27, 1950; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1563171/m1/1/?q=waco+tornado&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.