The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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Hatlg Nms-Sfetegrant
THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSOLIDATED IN 1915. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
Forecast
Partly Cloudy
#**'■■
SULPHUR SPRINGS. TEaAS, FRIDAY. JUNE 27, 1952
* t'AGKR— h CENTS
Mi MMKR ASSO. |\TED PRESS;
(By i**Or atnl Prenn)
London, June 27 The United
States,-Britain and France have
agreed to a Big Four . meeting
with Russia o,n the unification of
Germany. The decision came at a
Big Three foreign ministers' meet-
ing in Londofr.
Earlier, the |!ig Three agreed to t
consult more cToseftl|iv the future j
cn military operations in Korea
The British labor,party is stiilj
protesting over the failure "of th" |
United States to notify Britain 'in-
advance of power plant bombings ;
in North Korea. THREE QUEENS—Three queens of the sea find themselves docked side bj side nr North Rivet in New |
The opposition patty h*s U'lfd; York. Representing maritime pride of three nations, the vessels are, from bottom to top Queen Mary,
a formal motion demanding that R land*s UlKMt
the conservative government make
Congress Overrides Truman
On New immigration Bill
Improved Mail
Service Planned
Control oi Flies
On Dairy Farms
Called Hard Job
what are termed ‘‘improved ar-
rangements” for prior consulta-
tions on such matters in the fu-
ture. The motion will be debated
next Tuesday. »
Parliamentary press veterans
say the resolution is worded mild-
ly enough so that Prime Minister
Winston Churchill need not con-
sider it as a censure motion. A
censure motion —if carried —
could force him to resign and call
new national elections.
But even though their motion
is not that strong, the opposttion
group is making confident pre-
dictions of Churchill's overthrow.
Former Prime Minister Clement
Attlee said: ”1 think we shall be
in power acain very shortly.”
Secretary of State Achoson is
said to have apologised to mem-
bers of 'Parliament yesterday for
U. S. failure to notify Britain
prior to the Yalu raids.
The Libeite, France's biggest, and America’s newest and latgeat, the United States,
The United States will start her maiden voyage across the Atlantic July 5. INK A Telephoto).
NATION SUFFERS
Death Toll in
Wave Mounts
Heat
to 44
(By Aniuu'Uited Pre**)
Chicago, June 27—Refreshing
breezes from Canada cooled off
some areas in the nation’s sun-
baked eastern half of the country
today. But for other millions in
the east and south there appeared
no quick end of the early •summer
| heat wave.
The death toll front the record-
I breaking hot spell in the last two
days mounted to 44.
Temperatures were generally
around the 100 degree mark again
\ yesterday in most of the vast
j area hit by June's oppressive
weather.
The hot and humid belt extend-
ed from southern and western
New England southward along the
Atlantic coast and westward to
the lower Great Lakes region, the
Ohio and Mississippi valleys, the
Central Plains states and over the
Gulf states.
A storm swept into New Eng-1
land from Canada last night and
within minutes temperatures tum-
bled as much as 20 degrees from
record highs which reached 102
degrees during the day.
At the same time, violent
thunderstorms hit eastern parts of
New York state and cooled off the
wilted areas. There were drops in
readings from around 90 to around
70 in less than 30 minutes.
The cool front may bring re-
lief for some of the Middle Atlan-;
tie states today. No 100-degree j
heat which*-hit the area yesterday
was in prospect.
Soldiers Treated
New Jersey reported 10 deaths
from the effects of the heat in,
the last two days. It was 102 in ]
US Marshal
In Illinois
Discharged
An improved mail setvne' si he
I dull' for Sulphur Springs 'as »'
rtOuhretl Friday l>.v ■ IV \\ Aew;
[bold of IVrnt k rtlu,. post*! itMilct
superintendent of transportation.'
Acheson Blasted
By Two Senators
On Two Fronts
* July 1, two huW*
will !•*' uhuvI h' wVrK day ,i»>
m*|p run v ihmU H«*t\a tVn
krt»M inti
Thr Mwi roottyp*' sri-j
\ it «*, which i* thr r4'^u11 of « turn
pm»i v po«tof I i« v ilt’pHi t nu*nt t‘o»; ^
Irnct .vkilh South* vttrni iiiry-
hound I ,un‘4t v% ill r*f*totr HppiOQi
mafrl) thr Nttinr wail ti*n»n>it#-j
tiwn fi»i!lili«*N which weir. hv*t U'*i
v* with thr rlnmrmtion iif;
( vUon *mlnui»t tram* No,!
h nn<l h
Thr lit*** will c iiny .ofklv fic*t j
Senators
Back Up
HouseVote
About 76. pet sans attended t,he
j annual ptenhe .of : the mplii-nxj
County SriuJij 11rui improvement
Vstiortafioii Thui May afternoon
...! the f$r*w>«»inaily and 8««*:
farm In the IVetleaa community, j »* ungtou, uoe »i
* KpVakei for the session w »• !L" ,**. ”
Paul G.egg, ,S„. Aalntfit, euto Truman s veto of a
i . . . . • lion Imw thui liummi » 'alien
who told thr group lhat
| rout ml of fl»r* on ilmtv I*
poNtihlti |»ut 14 h hird ilmIv jdh
Nrutoan Hirt.lhod um| Rohriti , . . ,
Cai ............... their Hate I"" 1 Wdenl a, veto
ihamiu.mship dairy demon.tr. ,h'' M‘' ,H" W “"*r Art
th»n, ■'
. Ciift-
idth n j
orw intmi;u
| Thr Denatd followed thr Imil
[of thr hou-tr tjn Voting todnv to
thr Ihrutdrot4* veto of
Thr vote in thr Srngtr
fHp 4»mu>ntr*l
Washington, June 27 •Sec-
retary of State Dean Aeheiwuj is
used to attacks fi’om
Senator*, -wtlaeks
l ast have mostti
to 2It, five votes mole than
h in
The
will not ope-
*Wv Aw-'Htril
Washington, June 27 — Presi-
dent Truman has fired the U, S.
Marshal foi the Southern District
of Illinois, on the recommendation
of Attorney General McGranery.
The White House said the presi-
dent dismissed the marshal, Robert | member*^' "f Pailiameut. lie's sup
,, . , oi«sl buitfltl
KeriUolien M | ,|
which in the.i
l I tie i,e\v service
/ r»nteiu on us (nl<( (in Sunday* ot holidays,
softness, O. alleged soflmss. lo-j Hyuoi Williams
Hard cornnuinlMii. Is u( iixiuv i ... ,
. . ., .j it tru' Jim m! iMinofflrr wul li»'
Acheson is in a Senate KepuM • j(1|1, # hl|,. Ilf ^ fll| „a|U, Bt
can eros.fire on two entirely dif.;„ w Teemkam.
fluent matters
,las mat and newspaper- 1 be ( , I^bn#r 0M ,hr;
wee otind mail bus will leave fort ,h# "^tssa. y two thirds m.|ont)
*" 10 15 I’ «*'• H,'a Je,>ey < atile f bib in < olumblls.
O.
Gerald Stephen, pronounce^
the Invocation.
hr
the
Inis for
in
Texarkana
The first one concerns a talk
made yesterday in London by
Acheson, a private talk, to 2-fM)
at P ...(I a in.
Incoming Tnail also will be te
reived Here thimigh the two new
conneetions. '
Legion to Elect
New Officers
On July 24th
Searchers Sight
Missing Plane
On Mountain
(By Aamoriatrd Prr$»)
Los Angeles, June 27—A search
plane has sighted th’e wreckage
of an Air Force C-47 missing since
Wednesday, and it reports no sign^
that any of the six men aboard
sulvlved.
The shattered and burned re-
mains of the twin-engined craft
has beCn._;U)CHtod at the 3,000-foot
level on the east side of Mount j - ,,
Wilson in California. j toy A.m'xaud r<»u)
The Los Angeles county sheriff's I Vienna, June 27 — American 1
office said the Wreckage was dis-jand Austrian police have arrested Gordon, Augusta, Ga., were treat
Grant, because of what were
termed "irregularities."
McGranery told reporters at the
White House that it appeared
Grant had become involved with
a man charged with a mail fraud.
When a newsman asked whether
the marshal was being fired with-
out trial,’ McGianery replied:
"That's right.”
McGranery said that Grant al-
ready has , given him enough in-
dications concerning the case of
Newark yesterday. There were j justify the action
seven heat deaths each in Ohio
and Pennsylvania; four each in
New York and Massachusetts; I
three each in Maryland and Ten-1
nessee; two in Indiana and one In PsrPAl Dnpl
each in Alabama, (ieoigia, Iowa, ® Ql wCI FUjI
and South Carolina.
Hospitals in Washington, I). G.,
area reported 183 persons had
been treated for heat prostration
in the last two days. i <Hu Amriaud /•rtuf
. „ j Washington; June 27
Thirty-five soldiers at Camp roitoff|c# wanU to
for placing signs ed at the Post Hospital yesterday 1 jt ol "
States sector of | for heat prostration. The mercury ij^ese ,,, i, i*s
leading “Acheson, go j climbed to a mzling 107 yester-! ,!|lt p()atm„ter „olm)d.
iday, one of the highest readings^, „ th.t „vcn wlUvth(, J,,
Ifi
Anti-Acheson
Signs Bring
Austrian Arrests
Another Boost
Rales Urged
posed to lm\ e apologized Jo them
because the British were not in
formed in advance of the 1 .
aerial attacks oil the electric pow-
er plants in North Korea. Ach*»e
son is supposed to have explninfcd
to the 200 that the whole thing
was a mixup. Ttiat the state de
partment thought the defense de
partment was going to tell
British about it, and vice versa.
Senator Bridges, (he Republi-
can leader in the Senate, says that
if all this is true it's a very slunk-
lug thing indeed, Republican J4a«-
ator Knowlaiut agrees, and flaw ^ sound
demanded that the full text of
Rodeo Boosters
Carry Ponies
On Area Tours
the I
raise
i The
parcel
was only last October that
went up 2b per cenl.
covered by a search plane from 12 communists
March Air Force Base at River- in the United
side, California, ihe sheriff's aero Vienna
squadron flew 41'er the crash home.”
scene and reported there was no j Austria’s small communist par- in the country.
sign of life. jly, backed by the^Soviet occupa-j Miami reported a high of 80 as | for itself.
When the C-47 disappeared on ’tion authorities, Is engaged in | compared with a record of 01 for j irtn<»r«t*te
Wednesday, it had taken off from busy anti-AcBesOrt propaganda in j June 20. Other top marks in the | for a further increase
Norton Air Force Base near San connection with the two-day visit
Bcrnardina, California, for a 35- of the Secretary of State to Aus-
rninute hop/to Van Nuys, Califor- tria beginning Sunday,
lit** j Workers froitQ Russian-owned
Originally, the crashed plane factories in Vienna are. effected
had left Biggs Air Force Base, at to stage several protesTjffeFfTrtgs
El Fgsoi Texas, carrying ferry j Monday, while Acheson meets
pilots. - Austrian government officials.
Plum for tin1 of
iffi * lto|»k»HN < ounty
I Vtnoi iiMM ! 1‘ifinii,
hy ihr N( itn Ulrit ,
• 111»ic 11nn «lav nitfht
‘i j A noitHfmtltiy fommiltfr wiH j
I In* up4»t fh** nrnt |io«( j
niuttinir July 10, it mm (IrcUtai,
; iitul th« rlwiiun * ill t»r h**ld July!
Almu! 20 cart, gaily decorated j, N'„w ^,|| ^ |
w itkJruntmg, left City paik at I j stalled than. |
P m. Friday ..n the fust of two A fiosnclal report on the Woild
tours to advertlae the VVurl4f< hnnipionahip Roden, which taj
( hampionahip Rodeo her*' next sponsored by the post, «U„ wiil,
, , . „ , .i1** prewnitod July 10.
that thr full t<*xt of * ......... »i'“k HMtl »«| ftripK iil
Achesoti's rema.kx he made avml-' ^ f i!!^" !wUI '’** lh* r***t Kr"''
;Mie tout Its plenty :pf .Mention. „„ h), „p,r|ynt-„ ,, t|,r p^j-,
lhe 'our Shetland pomes being ,epraWlt.tive at the Lon# Ht.r
owl im ••.*)«** aMt»vii»i*<- xtui iuc (;*,). Nialc al Atctw, —.....-.-I
the trip in o tiuek and were to!
give riding demonstration* . at
each -top. — .___
The rodeo boostpi/* plaiined hi
visit Mi. Vernon, Mt. 1'lnasau.ls
i'ittaburg, W innsboro and Quf-
man.
The ponies will be a'adable for
Th« measure sponsored bv Hun
ator l‘*t MeCarr.n of Nevada and
CoogreWani.n Francis Walter rtf
TQnnaylvani. r#yi«a« ami consoli-
dates in one . law all lhe existing
Iinmigi a* ion Segi.slal ton
It lightens ie*tllet(<m» on aliens
becoming eitiiens And Truman
*aid that w-liite he liked some <*f
its provisions, to him the hrtll
•macked of thought control
Democratic Senator ■ Hertiert
Lehman of New' YoVk aigueil with
the Senate todav to uphold the
veto. Lehman elttielxed the M*
( t arran-Walter Art bc-ause while
t allows Immigration for the fir 1
time from parte of Ana and^the
1‘arlftc, it Bnt>is immigration from
the countries Involved vary
small mini tiers.
Lehman told'the Senate;
"1 beg of you don't inak«
immigration a myth by reducing
tt to a trickle ”
able to t'ohgrese,
j lhe Acheaon ha- aroused tin-
1 animodty ol I’epidrlban Senator
Morse iin another stoic, Mor-u-
thinks Arheson ought to be
thrown out of the cabinet because
of the way the State Department
is -handling_ passports Morse ay
the department !-• denying pass
ports to American ctit/eii*.., w ith
out giving them specific reasons
Striking Sailors
On West Coast
Boycott Vessels
And that the department won’t Tree ridesT«+’-’children at lhe park
give explanations of its passport , Ei iday and Saturday night*,
denials tp anyone else, either, not j The second rodeo tour will start
Hopkins County
Youths Sign
At Draft Board
(He ,lHn> vrt /**»»>
rranrtaeo, June 27
The
picture
parcel}'oust service is not paying even members of the 11, 8. Senate at I p. m. .Saturday,
So he has asked the
comrugiee- commission
south included 107 in Bamberg, ' Xhj* j,emjpn does ' not reveal
S. 107,it. Morehead City, N. C.;
105 in Albany, Ga.; 103 in New- i ter'General
part News, Va.; 102 in Richmond,;
Va.;'100 in Jiashville, Tenn.
St. Louis continued to swelter,
with a high of 99, the same read-
ing reported in Kansas City.
how much moit* the Pbxtmax
has in mind.
who want to know what is going'
| on.
WEATHER
35,000 Houston Children
To Take Anti-Polio Shots
Kidnaped Child
Found Unharmed
At Levelland
(liy A »*Or imtrii Prrg»i
South Central and East Texas
Cumby Airman
Injures Foot
San
wit, roast waterfront
tighten..
Mlftklng AF of L sailors will
sign'only oh rtiilltary ships earry-
j Ing military cargoes A union of*
I fil ial -ays . re%s w ill no longer i.e
provided for privately owned v*
sels of the • struck Shipowners'
-Six Hopkins county youths aad>j»Mtflr Maritime Asao. ietion.
, f"”" ,"',u • ounty irgUtrredj Up to the new .1*. ,sion. the
'With the local selective service j union had been manning roimnrr*
luard in the last week on attain-’ ,1*1 ships carrying .military tar-
ing' their (Nth birthdays. [ goes.
T>ie «|w regiatranlw J,me- This.,)rwi, the beefs «f
ii rf>!)np*«» In Ulk.4. Sn fur-
•r«
Conferees Rush
Bill lo Extend
Some controls
rtl» A moult'd Prttt)
Washington, #une 27 — House
d Senate conferees are racing
ami
against
(Bn AturMUi! PrrtM i
Houston, June 27—Thirty-five
thousand childreh will participate
in a giant experiment with a medi-
cine researchers believe may pre-!
vent paralysis due to polio. The'
mass experiment was annbilnreil t
-n Houston by researchers from |
the University of Pittsburgh. It
vvill cost an estimated one-half
million dollars, and will be financ-
ed by the National Polio Founda-
tion.
(By S—tKmUd P*ry$)
I.evclland, June 27 A lonely
woman who longed for children
arid her oil worker husband are
Japan Re-Affirms
Stand on Chiang
(Hy AuofMU* Prttt)
j Levelland authorities In the kid-
naping of a New Mexico child.
The federal officers say Mrs.
Tommiy ELod, 22, told them »he
and her 25-y»ar-old husband, Fred,
i took Tittle Johnny Wade from his
front porch May 4th because the
Tokyo, June 27 - Prime Min*!',ttT“C,ted h"
old youngster, healthy and happy,
th ' ■'
'Calvin Me (toil, frank I'enriv, We|.
don laiun .‘tione, Afvtn Itay Kif-j
jkpatrig.k, Weldon Eugene Barrett
and Lewi* Dean Watts, all of
2.......... w S......ska asu Usa
change In temperature this after- Friday afternoon for Ueatmen; of «** - * ?f K
nbon, tonight and Saturday. ! , p*j„(u||y |«, er.ted right foot.
North Central Te*a* Clear,to | The young An- Force man is ata-
partly cloudy with no Important) tiom-d at < arawell Air Korea Base
i temperature change tonight and j in'Ft. Worth and is spending «
Saturday. Widely-scattei id after-j three-day pass w ith hr* parent*,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry A, Finney a'
Cumby, '
The *<'indent oiruued when
Finney dropprol a heavy piece of
iron on hi» foot while helping with
sryme work at Harold Fnllili. Wreck-
ing Yard. ____
• her ‘ negotiating
rebedtiled
«< »|oni
noon thundershowers in the ex-
treme northwest portion.
WestTexa* Partly cloudy with
no Important change in tempera-
being questioned by theiFBI and j tu"'> tonight.and Saturday. Wide-
ly scattered late afternoon
evening thundershowers.
and
Hospital JosTin '|ie|ta
Thr Mrxt indurti'lri rail for thr
\\w$t * lounty hoiirtl i» for »«r%
jmon on July 14.
Judson Earharl,
Pioneer Citizen,
Dies Thursday
EVERYBODY LOSES
ister Shigeru Yoshida ha* reaf
filmed that Japan recognizes
C hiang Kai-Shek a- rtie ruler only
[of Formosa and the Pescadores
• VS S-- II, , V I | VI III VI IS c 4 ’ , ' ( v * l X aw- W MSI
time in tiyinff to ^ot Children ajred one to «ix will! inlands •—- territories now held
out a compronwse controls exten- rt,ccjve inoculations at tight clin- the Chinese NationalUt*.
aion bill acceptable to ongiess. jcs Houston, starting next Wed- Yoshida's statement to » ■—*
Unless an acceptable cempr°miae nes{jay. ff,„ medicine to be used ;ionpl diet committee reversed a 1
is reached and approved by bot'1 j (gamma gobulin) has completely foreign office statement to _the‘; "**
chambers,^ federal controls on whopped paralysis in monkeys *nd ; Diet on June
wages, prices and rents will ex- )f*e*rchers are certain it will do [statement said
pire at midnight Monday. the Ml1,r }n humans.
Present indications are that the
conference committee meeting last
well into the night. And newsmen
hav? been advised there’U be no |
word concerning progress until
after tonight^,session.
fran Burpet Maybank -pf i _
■sked . Attar.tud rrttti The
is the son of the Reverend and,
Mrs. Anthem W ade, of Alter, New
Mexico.
The Elrods may face federal!'
charges, the FBI »aysJ and ntimi
countsJn._i£gw Mexico.
The Lubbock A va anche Jour-
quotes Mrs, Elrod a* saying;
Bones Rolling Winner
Bashed With Bottle
Judson II Earharl, 97, died
Thursday afternoon a! th* home
of hi* daughter, Mrs/ Kitettf j
i ' lumbley in Overton where he had
t beeri visiting for only a few days. The Raltillo t-ommungy le*d»
: He had been in-ttHiealth Gw-xom.c >fl the competition with 27 m’ein-
i time. ‘ In-r*, and Pine Forest is second
Born in Georgia on October 29, with 23.
1864, son of the l»t<- Gi»dfrey-Eai •
Swede Admits
Spying Role
18th. The earlier
Japan recognizes
Nationalist * hina as the legal
government of all China..
Three day* later a foreign of- get him.
fiee spokesman backtracked and
said Japan—dirl not recognize the
sovereignty of the Nationalist
government over the
mainland.
“Yes I would do it again. I pi-
ways wanted a boy of iny own. if.
they put me and the real mother
side by side hi* mother wouldn’t
Porter Admits
Starting Fire^
Senate group was asked ^ («»Attocmud rr*,ti The Prime Minister today ap*
whether Congress might vote a Stockholm, June 2%—Sweden is oaiently returne^/td Japan’s long-,
brief extension of the present in the .midst of a big spy trial—istanding.^p<rH'cy'/ of making |*eac'u
controls act, if s conference and today in Stoidiholm another of.yyiHi Chiang, while keeping the
agreement cannot he reached in the seven prisoners, the thuai-wh'^door open lor possible agreement a 27-year-old Porter, Irving ated by the,
time, The South Carolina senator far, pleaded guilty jUs-^rjPCing for with Red China. Many Japane*- Greene, has confessed starting a r0mpany.
Aameimttd
New York, June 27—Police say
hart and Polly Ann M atdon Ear-
hart, th,- deceased came to Texas
. when only a small child Hi* |iar,
A bunch of boys, fiyc Negroes eetRcl in what i* now Como
to be exact, were rolling the |,one* wy,er(. lh(. ha, re*»|.ol since
in a va< ant hotiiw* in the Hu c?n time
Creek community 'Ltuirxday night.^ |t, )HM„ Mr y;arh„, w„ ,nar.
The bones were rolling heavily ri„, Ul Mi*s |'aiza<b- Smith al*o
in one directisn and the money (/f Comci, who pa**ed away a nurn*
ended up In the *ame plai e. Iwr of years ago. He ix survived by
Suhxequent going, didn’t' prove four *on«, Roljie Eaihart of (.'onto;
i ' ___ smooth for the winner, however. j it .Kaihart of Richland, Calif.;
>H, r*—/ (>f»* "f ,h« launched an An,)y J,;attiart of
Washington, June 27 The De- argument. He tmeked up his word* -Qscar Kashart of Waller; two
fens® Department announced to- by hashing the winner overv the diyightei*, Mrs. Molly Hannabats
day that the World War Two Blue' head with * »»ilk bottle, Inflating 0f'y .*ti add Mr Crumb-
Bonnet Ordnance plant, at Me-- severe Luts, " by of Overton, There are a niim-
Gregor, Texas, will be re-ar^.vai- The injured man took his case ),er-„f grandch^drei,, gteat-grand
ed. Plans call for the plant to, pro- tp the lijidriff’s office and then , hildrcu’ and
Ordnance Plant
At McGregor
Re-Activated
Allied Infantry
Uses Bayonets
In Close Combat
v. ■
I
200 Members
Of Farm Bureau
Sign in Drive
tu
Alin *r 200 mrrafrei * ha1 « Jinn-
ed the Hopkin* County Farm Bsc
trail in th»* week’s membership
rampaign, David Lemon, farm bu- ■
leau ircreiary, -aid Friday.
Lemon estimated the drive is
atmut half rocnpleted, with all
the county being r*pre-
I Hy 4<MR',4t*>4 Pf — )
Seoul, Korea, June 27—Air and
ground fighting hi ' Korea Cftfl-
1',,’wj,, City' Una*'- A" A.nM,n' •" Sl,l''y H '
pilot, Captain John Spaulding of
Downer* Grove, Illinois, *hot dwwri
s Communist MIG over North Ko-
rea today Allied infantry on the,/
western front used bayonets -end
refused to haaard a guess. But ob-
servers say the liklihood of such
a step is growing in view' of the
wide differences in the House and
Senate hills.
Russia. ■— support some sort of a working tenement fire which killed seven
Thi* one is Hiigo Gjerswold, a j agreement with the communist persons last week.
32-year-old reporter on a Commu-, rulers of China, in hopes of re-
nist paper and a former memlier capturing part of Japan’s pro-
of the Swedish artillery. , iwar trade.
, ........... gre.t^eat-grdwl. "*** *£*«,*"•
due* fuel., propellants for use in wa nt to Memorial hospital for children al*o surviving ,!"1 hattaljon* off two •
aircraft takeoffs and will be oper- emergency treatment. Funsial srtvicex will he held at rn'’"' h|1 N'
Phillips Petrolsum The bottle wlolder pleadsd guiL th# Black Oak Bapti*t churih Sun- Fighter* and light homherg.gup.
ty In county court Friday on a ,j-y after;-ion ported the ground artihh, while
‘ m
*
'h
* wl
Congressman
Waco says several
nedlately in im- Ail We of the players were . - ,
^r'i«T
The poliee say he told them: will be speat,immediately in im- AH five of
“I've l*een setting fires for years, pfovrmertte a' the McGregor in- charged In justice
I like the excitement.” 4 • rtallation. gambling.
other UN warplsnes struck at two
big power plants at Changjm fdr
court
in xtdte st
time ror'thr^etv'revlRiv'^rJ!! ^ flr*' .**"•* They aim, pounded
twm others which had been hit be-
fore.
I
(Continued on I'age Six)
•K*,V
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1 -
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1952, newspaper, June 27, 1952; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth813072/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.