The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 159, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1951 Page: 2 of 8
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THZ ORANGE LSADB?
ORANGE. TEXAS, FRIDAY,
JULY «, 1*51
"-Xi'aSi
Labor Heads Urge
Veto to Form Bill
—1—
(Continued from Page 1)
be taken in
bJodTriJ***fire department were
vl
enuunea *» to* Chester. Tex..
Whiteheoa Orange Recreation
commission director who is form-
erly of Chester, accompanied the
taken by the labor men.
BP
W-.-
.
WASHINGTON. July « (AP)—
pic -y « at the most powerful
tenor groups in the U. S.—the
asl, ene tio-urged Presuieat
i ruman to veto lesisjetton that
ttouio aiiow Mexican term work-
ers to be bitx-xnt to this country.
They said tne bill’s provisions
would unuermine conditions of
Anurncan lat m wo. kens and re-
sult in heavy costs to American
At present, Chester has no fire mxpayto*. ?
department, and the Lions club con*.ess passed legislation
members are taking the primary June JU ^ would permit the
stet» in planning to organize « ^ s oepa:t:nent of Lwoor to
unit for city fire protection. ^ recruiters to Mexico to sign
Chief Smith showed pictures of Mexicans to work on Amen-
JCwMSSiSfJSfe! ■'Sit'*-*-' «™*» <£»»
ed out tne type of equipment tnat and CIO f^iden' ^Tj
I, needed and would best suit ray wrote the president and urged
Chester** needs. a veto. . . _
Mexicans are used mainly <m
Since Chester has no water main Ianns ^ the Southwest. They arc
to.____^.cvcuuoo and protection, terme<j -wetoacks” because
the chief pointed out that piano- maay ^ them enter the U. &. ti-
er truck with a water tank prob- -jy by waaine the Rio Grande
ably would be the most important
piece of equipment that could be laoor union heads said the
used by that community. bUi is contrary to recommenda-
The local fire chief invited sev- tions by a presidential commis-
ml members of the Cnester Lions sion on migratory labor, which
dub to study this city’s fire equip- generally deplored importing
■dot and procedures. These mem- Mexican workers, their pgy end
bers are doe here Wednesday, July working conditions-
In Mexico, government officials
__ . had no comment on the stand
Alao, Chief Smith and White-
head were invited to attend a car-
ah al planned hy toe Chester Lions
club July 17. At that time, toe
carnival will be held to celebrate
JirSMJtSS Headed for Prison
curbing of its streets. Gov. Allan ■ ICTIWfcM sws a *
Shivers, and a Texas senator are __* „
prospective speakers. Proceeds of NEW YORK, July 6 (AP) —
toe carnival will be used toward Seven of the 11 convicted Amen-
* -*----* can Communist leaders and an
atom spy boarded an armored bus
today for Lewisourg, Pa., to be-
gin serving their prison sentences.
The other four convicted Com-
munists, who jumped bail, are
the object of a nation-wide FBI
! manhunt
i Eight guards stood by as the
i seven Reds and convicted atom
i spv David Greenglass took the
| one step from the federal house
I of detention doorway to the door
I of the bus.
“Where are your friends? a
j passerby among a handful of
spectators shouted. The Com-
munists only smiled.
The Communists were convict-
ed of advocating violent over-
throw of the United States gov-
ernment Each of the seven was
sentenced to five years.
The seven Communist prison-
ers were: Eugene Dennis, the
party’s genera! secretary; John
B. Williamson, labor secretary;
E'snjansin J. Davis Jr, former
New York city councilman and
i national committeeman of toe
Mity; Cart Winter, of Detroit
: fiehigan party chairman; Irving
I ’otash. vice-president of the In-
! ernational Fur 'and Leather
orkers union; John Gates, for-
bs knowing that you were the
cause of such a tragedy.
The boy’s conscience has pun-
ished him. And toom a statutory
standpoint the toss of hh driving
privilege tor one year is tmgh
punishment.
He didn’t come from a rich
family, and toe fine of about $135
will bite into a pocketbook
There had been considerable
public sympathy for the defend-
ant But that public sympathy
should not be interpreted as be-
ing a permanent viewpoint of
such accident*
We reiterate that all court cases
are different There may have
been sympathy *r. this case, but
that sympathy was due to all cir-
cumstances involved. The nm
circumstances may never appear
■gain
We should be thankful that our
courts have toe freedom to use
their hearts as well as tostr law
books in dishing out Justice.
by British
m
LONDON, July 6 (AP)—Brit-
ain has agreed to high level talks
with bar Atlantic pact partners
on whether the British army
m
Sunken Towboat To
Be Raised, Probed
NEW ORLEANS, July *~<A
-____, July •—(AP)
—Engineers planned today to raise 2V)0 Demons was markea on ««- a wvr>—« —r~ TT—
w'sttsagaiS :s is^TtfrjS *
2500 persons eras marked off to-
Radio Signal Might
Have Petered Pilots
WIESBADEN. Germeoy.July
6 (AP)—A decoy radio signal
American Jet
their course
fighter planes off
into Communist
should adopt a new M-caliber gun
mi Ms itin4i rrt rifli-
Defense Minister Emanuel Shin-
waU told the House of Comoro
today the conference will take
place “at an early date.”
Decision to start producing the
new semi-automatic rifle eras an-
nounced by Sbinwall last month.
There were Immediate repercui-
stons. both here and among offi-
cials of the other Atlantic pact
nations, roost of which use the
standard 30-caliber rifle.
Conservative Leader Winston
Churchill complained that use of
different caliber guns Se-
riously complicate the ammunition
supply problem of the poet part-
-in the event of war.
rail said Britain had
to the UBb after bafn
iTAVr
j£y1
me maw w uw OTjmw "»«i«»- war minefield—one
s~b?SSS3£ SR SI~ «- i
posure. They escaped as the tow- slighteat friction, *uch fake signal from the Cxach capi-
BgjgaLgs'JSB uT%er«a,-s^r-->
phis; and Peak hands Fred Haney, form from the National Fireworks Norwegian studont pilot,
24, of Joiner, Ark., and Jerry gompany- .. __Bjoern Johansen, were
Cannon. It, of Memphis.
■5-KcS.vir*i"p«i»i ■
Memphis sank if
300 feet offshore
utneers worked t
“approached by other North At
lantic treaty
known to ait down on It Only
briefly, of course. The exhaust is
going elsewhere In the
tanks.
Reds, A-Bomb Spy
UK taiuivoi wiu •«. ' —
buAdtog tbe planned fire depart-
ment.
Here are soma of the features
the engineers envision—
A smaller tank, not larger one.
The giants may be impressive,
but they are slow, less mobile and
require enormous bridges to bold
them.
The key to the smaller tank
will be in the angle of its armor-
plate to deflect shells as much as
possible, toe more central posi-
___treaty countries.” He die
not name them.
Conservative Duncan Sandys
whether this meant there
had bean no previous consulta-
tion at ministerial level.
Shin well replied that there had
bean no such talks, but the matter
bad been taken up by a Joint
military “working party” of the
Atlantic powers
TAXES SHOULD £ bH-
whqt happena
a tw tournee conistHtoe to
Wftfthmcton. " (IeIwimBIwuO
l £ , ■: ,*v. . w fw■■■*<•■
Cease-Fire News
Coverage Limited
_ while Army en-
n>— frantically to cut
an escape hole through toe hull to
the men. Would-be rescuers said
{^r^s^5?aIn^our andVhalf
^s^'bS?&overei^from
Experts said the explosive Jltfy g after lour weeks de-
didn’t go off when tossed out ot terrtion in Czechoslovakia. Tbe
two had made forced landings at
the field near Prague on June 8.
alcohol. When
however, the
an exploeioo.
crystals cap set off
Probe Is Ordered
In Caytoia's Refusal
Round, of HummeUtown, Pa.,
told a news conference Thursday
he had radio difficulty and bed
followed the Nuremberg beam
“ - before becoming
four sunrivors. E-ritHh transport Empire w“
- . . . ' the refusal of toe was usei
refusal of
U. S. Air Fores official, rim
to be identUUd, grid It
very likely a decoy Signal
was used.
her rifle for all treaty members.
The recommendation has not been
accepted by toe United Nations,
among other mem bers.
gun, said an of Britain’s technical
experts “agree that this is the best
rifle yet produced or projected.
The present British army rifle,
tbe bolt-action Lee Enfield, dates
beck to the Boer war and uses
30-caliber ammunition, the stand-
ard caliber of the United States,
Canada and most other Atlantic
pact armies
tion of Ms crew and, ^boreal!, a
1
“COULDin SLEEP
LAST NIGHT?"
Tonight, enjoy real Air
Conditioning with this
FEDDEIS ROOM
All CONDITIONER
lighter but tougher
Danger Paint
Today when a tank is hit the
inside wall glows a cherry-red
for an instant at the point of
contact. This is a dangerous in-
stant. If the inner wall splinters
—even though it has not been
actually penetrated—a piece will
break off and ricochet around
/nside the tank at almost the
same speed at the original shell.
Hence, the ballistics experts
are working to produce a type of
steel, hard on the outer wall but
“soft” inside, to reduce that dan-
Daniel Hits Rule On
Texas'Tidelonds
ger.
(Continued from5 Page 1)
Air coediripocs-Cools, fillers, de-
theory that “A day’s sober re-
the court the hUsnaatioa M
aafiap^Ss;
-T~a_<;il rtin* ia aav ttaadara a
or tetephoac today. Or sMp oi
Li
OH Week. Us to 15 We. to Pay!
mral/ltHtM/
SABINE ELECTRIC CO.
1SS3 - l««h Fheae $-3544
ner editor of The Daily Worker,
nd Jacob Staehel. the party’s ed
cstional secretary.
Christmas Is Late
/or AF Corporal
saesseee
whippy
SAUaK kliAOOUC CO.
tees - ldthTE.
READING, Pa., July « (AP>—
Christmas carr*e six months late
or the Hobert Aukamps and their
.2-year-old son. Donald, an Air
orce corporal.
Donald enlisted in September,
15)48. and hasn’t oeen home for
Christmas since. Last Christmas
>ve his parents decorated a tree
,nd heaped presents around it for
their soldier son, who was serving
in Korea.
They wrote him: “We will ede-
-rate Christmas when you come
tome—not a day before.”
Donald left Korea a month ago
and arrived home Thursday
night.
He opened the door to find toe
tree ablaze with colored limits,
the gifts exactly as they had been
>laced last December.
Ryan held' that identities
of tbe bail contributors are need-
ed to help trace the missing men.
The missing men are Henry
Winston, toe party’s national
chairman; Gus Hall, national sec-
retary; Robert Thompson, New
York state chairman, and Gilbert
Green, Illinois chairman.
They were among tbe 11 Com-
munist leaders convicted of ad-
vocating violent overthrow of
the United States government.
Ryan ordered the WHO bail
for the four forfeited 24 hours
after they tailed to appear last
Monday with their seven com-
rades to start serving their prison
terms.
DALLAS, July « (AP)—State
Attorney General Price aDmel
gu^oS'«i^.s-«..aS
government paramount right to
the tidelands in a speech before
the State Bar association.
He said Thursday that Iran*
nationalization of her oil mdus-
try is less of an overt act than
our own ovemment’s seizure of
tidelands from toe States.
The Dallas Bar association was
named the outstanding one in
Texas hi the targe city category
Wichita Falls’ bar group was
named outstanding in the me-
dium-sized category and the
Bryan Bar association among
smaller unite.
Marvin Collie of Houston was
named head of toe tax lawyers
group. George Ray of Dallas was
chosen vice-chairman. Earl May-
field. Dallas, and Wesley Seale,
Corpus Christi. were named ex-
ecutive committee members.
TOKYO, July • (AP)—News
coverage of toe Kaesong cease-f .re
talks will be limited to official
daily communiques and briefings
at Seoul, Gen. Matthew B. Ridg-
way’s headquarters said today.
If agreement is reached, how-
ever, a headquarters statement
said, “it is hoped toe signing cere-
mony can be arranged at allocation
which will permit the fullest cov-
erage by newsreel, voice broadcast,
television and tape recordings, in
addition to normal press cover-
age."
Headquarters gave no hint
where this might be.
“Considerations of international
importance require that toe (Kae-
song) conference be held in se-
cret,” the statement said.
Another factor effecting press
coverage is that Kaesong has no
communications facilities and lim-
ited road approaches.
The dailv briefings to Seoul
probably Will be given by Col.
George Patrick Welch, General
Ridgway’s press information of-
ficer, or members of his staff.
Drank Won«n Bomb. ££»£? J2& S in"”’** *
Street* With Bottle. £y
The esntain ordered Uw troeps lucres** pf MO Per Cent
liw pec* wim me worio, MJ a» CaDtaln Rave- .,enrar.mv Jnl* « (
Pedestrians on a , downtown
street cowered to doorways for a
time Thursday, afternoon as bottles
s plungtanxdown t
HH plunging dc.— ---
skies and crashed on the sidewalk.
r«H
came
from the
identified only as Captain Rave- WASHINGTON, July « (AP)—
ly. A 80 per cent increase in the
The troops, with toe exception number of polk, cases during the
of five witness**, were flown to we«|£ was reported by the
*££££■'*. n* .<«. mt-
reported during the week
clow rive scones up. •. ■
He guessed that was where the
bottles came from and investigat-
ed. .^r., |fi|
Traffic officer ^ H. Lytal final- ito commonwealth occupation r^orted during the week
ly spotted two. candy wrappers forces said he visited the Medway etMj_d Jun€ 30, compared with 211
floating slowly .from an office win- Tjmrsday night. during the preceding week Dur-
dow five stories, up “I saw a group of soldier* on
* tbe- dockside,” he said. “They
were behaving in an orderly mane
ner. I boarded toe ship The mas- _
““S CYCLONE FENCE
King said he told the captain
the soldiers were quiet and order-
during the preceding week- Dur-
ing t’! corresponding wd m
1950 and 1949 the totals were 389
and 481. respectively.
R i
He toundn 40-year-old secretary
to palled her on si drunk charge.
“SreTtold
her on a' drunk \ _
' she had some
home
And
the
she had -rarv» more IF when he saw them on the
“Anyway, she was mad at tbe tain to reembark.
Dept. Store Sales
In Texas Decline
MAFGAVrr HEADS HOME
. NAPLES, Italy, July « <AP>—
Margaret Truman began her voy-
age home last night after a whirl
wind seven-weeks of hobnobbing
with royalty and visiting old
MATTHEWS U CONFTEMED
WASHINGTON, July 6 (AP)—
The Senate today confirmed Fran-
cis P. Matthews as U. S. ambassa-
dor to Ireland. Matthews has
been secretary of the Navy.
DALLAS, July « (AP)—-De-
partment ‘tore rale*
)«arfing Cities last week slumped
below the similar 1950 week, on
a dollar volume basis , ,
The Federal Reserve bank of
Dallas said today in its weekly
survey that sales for the district
were down approximately six per
cent •
Greatest drop, 10 per cent, was
at San Antonio. Both Dallas and
Houston reported decreases of
five per cent and Fort Worth was
down four per cent El Paso sales
rose four per cent.
For the four-week period end*
ing June 30, however, district sales
were up two per cent. Houston
sales were higher by 10 per cent
El Paso sales were up seven per
cent, but Dallas and San Antonio
showed a three per cent drop.
Fort Worth sales were virtually
unchanged!
work! landmarks to Western Eu-
rope.
DEDUCT ADVERTISING COST
WASHINGTON, July i (AP)—
An advertising man has quoted
Secretary of the Treasury Snyder
as saying •‘normal and reasonable
expenditures” for advertising will
continue to b* deductible as a
business cost to income tax re-
turn*.
refused
but the captain
SOLD and ERECTED
Call Cyclone 8-32M
& F. THOMAS. Agent
HOME OWNERS
Make three
w
Aid a roam, belli a garage, now
store*— riding, print aai paper. tew
cabinet*, Venetian Minds,__attta_f*a,
fie— revering*, new brihr—as. These
are jnst s few ef tbe thing* that eaa
be done tinier ear easy
CaO #1
ONLY 19% DOWN
CIRCLE LUMBER CO.
99 MOS. TO PAT
MacArthar Circle
f-rm
(Continued from Page 1)
\rmy Estimated Casn*lties
Of Enemv at Over Million
soiNF. MAN SHACK FOR
FILL DIRT
YELLOW SAND
TOP SOIL
| WASHINGTON. July 6 (AP)—
The Army estimated today that
enemv casualties in Korea rose to
j 1.191.422 by June 25. an increase
of for the week.
I Of the new total. 606.219 were
North Korean casualties and 585.-
ht Chinese Comimnusts
lapsed into silence, as if afraid
to talk.
All attempts at conversation
were brushed aside. They mut-
tered something incomprehen-
sible, pointed to one member of
toe group and seemed awaiting
for orders, as they had done all
their long years on Anotahan.
Still Had Guns
Lt. Cmdr. W. J. Hagerty from
Fresno, Calif„ attached to the
staff of naval forces in toe Mari-
anas. had accented the surrender
of the group. He flew here with
them. -
He said they were skeptical
about boarding the surrender
tfhip.
Hagerty said two machineguns
which the men had were left on
tbe island. However, the Japanese
brought two rifles, well greased
■»~d wrsnned carefully to para-
7 COAL MXNEES Ell JED
HETTON- LE-HOLE. Eng, July
6 (AP)—Seven cori miner* »***
kin»ri and two injured in an ex-
plosion at Rppfcfcn colliery early
today. About 800 oti*er miners
GIRL BURNED TO DEATH
pital today from burns received
Thursday night wheh a stove ex-
ploded and her home at Zapata
was burned. Her mother, Mrs.
Pedro Garcia, also was burned
and was in serious condition.
■ V”
RADIO CLUB TO MSET
The Or—Be Amateur Jtadw
club has scheduled a dinner meet-
ing for today at «:*0 p. m. at the
Tower cafe, W. Chester Campbell,
activities manager, announced.
EDEN WILL STEAK
LONDON. July 9 (AP)—For-
mer Foreign Secretary Anthony
Eden, deputy lead— of tbe Brit-
ish Conservative party, will make
speeches to Denver mid Chicago
this
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 159, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1951, newspaper, July 6, 1951; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558274/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.