The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 293, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 10, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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NEWS-TELEGRAM
Classified Ads
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VOL. 54—KD. 293.
THE EVENING NEWS AND THE MORNING TELEGRAM CONSO LIDATED IN 1815. ABSORBED THE DAILY GAZETTE IN 1924.
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SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10, 1952. 6 MUES - » OSMS afiMUBK assui i/uku
Navy Planes Wallop Reds
6 PAGES — 5 CENTS MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
"wr7r 4
e#Js
Hopkins Conservation
Program Cut Sharply
"SZH-
jij ■ ■ , lpj ;<• v- •! A
!X)R VALOR—Sgt. Lfcuis MlaserI, right, Tunis, French North Africa,
1 oeeives the distinguished Service Cross, the 0. S. Amy's second
highest award for valor, from Gen. James A. Van Fleet, 8th Army
Commander. The French Sergeant, attached to the U. S. Second Di-
vision, received the decoration for courage at last Fall’s battle for 1
Heartbreak Ridge. He holds the Distinguished Sendee Cross, Amer-
ican Silver Star, French Croix De Gutrre with nine citations and
the American Purple Heart with three clusters. (NEA Telephoto).
Shoppers Boost
Retail Business
Texas Gamblers
Avoid Placing
Names on Stamps
SprijifT-? tore owners reported.
The early shopping bug apparent- i
iy had invaded more than the us-
Youth Gulps
Lighter Fluid
Warren, Jr., 17 - nwiuh-tdii
son of Mr. and jSfrs. Warrcn
' Chancellor, 73fi Houston, ap-
parently; hits shaken off the j fore stores close today, 12 full
aftereffects of a stiff “cock- j shopping days remain on the cat-
tail" consumed Wednesday morn- endar before December 25.
jntJ ' j The weather, although cooler,
At last report he. was ron# j filled to cooperate with the
ing about and. ready to resume ' j Christmas spirit and remained
play at Memorial Hospital, .j. ^.i*rht^anfl !,u^hiny under dear
yvhere he is under observation, ' J ■- ‘k-
Two federal agriculture agen-
cies have work underway to cut
back the 1963 Agriculture Conser-
vation Program in Hopkins
County, J. Dalton Mitchell dis*
closed Wednesday.
The reduction in scope of pro-
posed ACP project^, was forced
by the drastic slash in allocation
of funds to the .county program.
<BvA.wia»<l Pr»M) A total 8113,000 will be avail-
Washington, Dec. 10- The M MitcM, AaUI> compared to
Bureau of Internal Revenue re-;the >tj04.216.14 requested,
ports that gamblers in Texas are, Mitche„ ,, adminiHtrative Of-
incorporating to avoid putting f)cer for the t.ounty Production
the.r names on applications for, Markctifl1f Administration, eo-ad-
Wagering Ux stamps {minlstrators with the Soil Con-
The bureaus monthly activity 9ervatioll Servil.e „f ACP prac.
report tells about how the scheme
was carried out in a Galveston Th(, lg|| ,llo^tion is nearly
c“w , . . ,, ! $22,000 less than the amount re-
Three numbers racket gamblers i ceWed 1982 d itc the facl>
| put $75 each to form a corpora- Mitchel, pointed opt, the number
, . of farmers seeking ACP aid has
charter said the corpora- nearI doublcd over ,,st
A siege.«f Christmas shoppers *«• •«. formed to purchase and j Sixt cent of lhe i>m
brought a slight increase in retail i*fl .f00^* WOres and raerch»nJ farms requesting ACP assistance
business Wednesday, 8 u 1 p h u r 1 Th# corpor,tion.g officerg and >£* <^er participated in the pro-
early shopping bug apparent-j direc,tor* ar« ^ree |"Runhe1r8” or/ No farms will he denied assis-
agents for the real operators ofjUnce of the rwiuction
Senator Norse
Opposes Using
Cbiang's Troops
(By Agmx iaUd Prt$9f
Eugene, Ore., Dec. 10.
' '
8
V v;
The
t
■ OMi
......Sf
Independent Senator, Wayne Mor- j WAKE-A-THON ENDS—Sleepy-eyed Jess -Hensley, right, has a last
**• is on a speaking tour of his , cap 0f coffee before giving up and going to bed, after 98 hours and
hbme state of Oregon. He s giving 4J nil mites without sleep. His opponent in the wake-a-thon, Robert
zzzrJ**: other rUSS: i »•* * «.«»• f •«*“ •««^
edns during the election campaign, ! ber »• Both set out on the no-sleep, tmi with hopes of bolstering
i tion.
The
the numbers business.
“ * With” only-a few hours Teft be- The corporation’s attorney files p^^To'^rive om'^xth*'of t*he
Wagering tax returns earh month., H,BisUnce rc^cstcd, Mitchell
An attorney told the bureau a<ue(|
his clients want to pay all their | Thc revamped lfl68 ACP will
concentrate on three practices!
Quick pumping, operations
removed most of the “drink”
from his stomach. But, at-
tendants wert careful with
their matches.
Warren, Jr., had ■ downed
about a half can of lighter
fluid.
Woman Judge
Defends Action
Of Jailing Boys,
taxes but don’t want to be jailed
as gamblers. construction of stock dams and
Last year congress passed a , winter l^umc cover crop*
law requiring .11 gamblers to buy,,nd e,ubHl,hmenWef scrlce. lcs-
skies. Temperatures ranged In the «« .V'»ly occupation t.« «Ump, d„, A minimum assistance
60’s. *"d te W ‘*^r *m°UnUnf.10 guarantee will be given on the
mal Wednesday. But, parking j
fines were not above average.
Court Recorder J. M. Pickett Aaid.
The hustle and bustle of the
EMPLOYED BY U.N.
and touching on many other sub-
jects.
Last night, in a talk at the Uni-
versity of Oregon, in Eugene,
Morse said he was against use of
Chinese Nationalist troops in Ko-
rea. For one thing, he said, use of !
these troops might provoke a gen-
eral %ar. And for another, he said j
the troops were tio good anyway. 1
Morse said he’d been given some
information about the Chinese Na-
tionalist troops from the chairman )
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Omar
Bradley.
Some have estimated Kiang Kai- j
ghek has 650,000 fighting men on !
Formosa Island, ready for action'. !
But Morse quotes Bradley as say- j
ing Chiang would be lucky to get
together 100,000 troops in any
condition, lucky .to get 50,000 who
had shoes, or 30,000 who had fired j
as many as ten rounds of ammuni-;
tion apiece in the past two years.
their Christmas poeketsbooks. (NEA Telephoto).
- r-rr-
Eisenhower Moves
To Heal Breach
Seven Wounded
In Furious Gun
Duel in Gotham
(Rv .'tM0rf«t<l( Prut)'
New York, Dec. 10 — 37 year
old gunman wanted by the FBI
and sought on s homicide charge
in Cleveland, Ohio—was captur-^
I ed today in a furious gun duel f
(Continued on P*ee Six)
Yuletide moved into the Post Of-
fice Monday, Postmaster Byron
Williams said.
! The peak in Post Office busi-
i ness is expected December 18.
“Between December 15 and 20
| will he the big rush,” Williams
[added.
He also reminded folks mailing
i Christmas cards of the advantag-
iHv Atmeiafari Prmi cs using three cent stamps on
Johnson City, Tennessee, Dec. • their carda. The cards mailed with
1° A Tennessee juvenile court; tw# fent slam oan>{ bTTeturned
judge Mrs. Ben Taylor has de- to the „nder or f„,.wardt.d.
fended her action m nendinf two ^ , , , , . , . .
small boys to jaii. After 48 d,ys One headache has already Ukefi
they were transferred to the John*, ^<i, m m t*’c af'! of complete ad-
s.m City Juvenile Home—because , *" «•»■ »s 8 P«ob)em
a plumber had discovered them at | -vcal' round,--Williams explained,
the jail while making repairs. j but muUiplys. with ^he larger e-
Americans Listed
Security Risks
l ------—----—» a»a..ss^ a-. raiHcnnower
Ntw York Police
j Three policemen were wounded | ^ram ajmed ,t bfingi
inmmiwinnpr i seriously in thejtuo battle. The Korea And he said
Blasts Shippers
Sergeant Held
For Observation
After Arrest
tHu A»mlrittU4 Prrun)
New York, Dec. 10—It was dis-
seriously in the jrim
gunman—identified hy police as
Clarence Sims, suffered multiple
wounds. Three passersby also
were hit in the exchange of gun-
j <H» At—rlulf'd rmi) ; fire. - .
! New York, Dee. 10—New York’s The Ohioan is quoted by police
police commissioner George Mon-, as saying he was head of the Cle-
! aghan has challenged the city’s ; veiand “Shotgun Gang,” hut that
| shipping industry to replace coin-) ha had been in New York for
placence with courage'in dealing
with waterfront rackets.
Monaghan's challenge was Con-
tained in a sharply-worded state-
ment in which he ittiMared that the
Mrs. Taylor says the boy:
ed three,and,five years—-required
isolation. They are two^of seven
children turned over to the court
by a single family. The other five
according to Mrs. Taylor, were
placed, in a home-rn Greenville.
The plumber, Carl Bolton, says ,
that when he first saw the boys ' slows handling in the office,
they were wearing only under- j
-hirts. He asked the matron^ Ml*, f
George W i I s o p*, ‘. about them
and was told They had been in wn ■ j .«
the >il since Oetoher 20th He Ueill6(l MOIlOIl
was assured they would be trans-
ferred to the Juvenile home with-
in 24 hours. When they were not,
he brought the attention to a to- j
(Ru A**Oci*ted Prr»$)
mount of mail handled during the) «okyo, Dec. 10.—L^t Sept<
Christmas season. Each letter » **'• two U- S' ^»e8nU Were
1cUiscd..torfSy that the State De-
partment submitted adverse re
porta,on a total of 40 Americans,
employed by the United Nations | W* skipping firms encouraged
in New York. Of the 40, 14 have j lawlessnesS on the plers. Apparen-
| been fired as a result of the State ! tl/ Monaghan s anger was arous-
Department reporU. This was ed by the testimony given by some
| brought out at an open hearing of | HMppmg ind^stry lea^Jefore
the Senate Internal Security Sub-
committee.
some time.
The shooting started when of-
ficers attempted to break up a
fight and Sims tried to flee.
that President-Elect Eisenhower's
exchange of messages u^th Gen-
eral MaeArthur may have more
significance than appears on the
surface.
Whitehead says the feeling a-
board ship ia it was a diplomatic
move to heal a breach, ss well- as
to have MacArthur’s peace plan
for Korea. ^
Elsenhower told MaeArthur he
now in the
future t>ro-
hringing peace in
Korea. And he said he wanted
MaeArthur’i views.
The former Fat Eastern Com-
mander has replied this is the
first time the slightest offical in-
terest has been shown In his coun-
sel since his return from Korea.
The exchange of messages fol-
James Low of Sausalito. It was
his eighth kill of the Wdi*.'
One Red plane was damaged
today, and the Air Force—check-
ing back—said a MIG, listed as
n probable on Sunday, has been
confirmed as destroyed.
the State Crime Commission,
which is probing crime conditions
Cooler Weather
Arrives Here
rested in the far east on charges
of trying to sell secrets of the Sa-
bre jet. Today the Associated
Press has learned in Tokyo how
the sergeants were caught. The
or
card should bear a complete ad-
dress of house number, street and
Sulphur Springs. A name and the
legend “City” is not a correct ad-
! rp«*h’ ri!idr'dp*Costioif 'Si sd ' "ourre* who provided the lnfor-
1 reach their destination. Such mail mation canno( ^ nH(n#df but they
are reliable.
A lieutenant, William Murphy
of Upper Darby, Pennsylvania,
to plot with ibe sergeants. And
while he pretended to play along,
tape recordings jyere made. The j
sergeants then were arrested be- j
fore they Could make contact with i
i* : along New York's waterfront. The
ers of the 40 UN employees ^ j iodustry leaders had. te^fied that
•■•a, n/ll ion 1S»’/V| Pf’11C
Convicted Spies
Slay Executions
r al newspaper, the Johnson City
Press Chronicle.
They were finally transferred
from the jail'last Saturday.
Since then, there have been
resignation or dismissal —
.-he has not commented on.
New York, Dee. 10.-
beled had security risks had rC'
signed.
Three State Department offic-
ials were questioned by the sub-
committee, which has been inves-
tigating the employment of Amer-
icans at the UN. The ^official* de-
clined to name any eases in the
open hearing.
Israel Installs
New President
waterfront police protections was
: inadequate.
Police Commissioner Monaghan
said in his statement that shipping
officials’ testimony falspljr implied
(hat the source of their trouble
was the failure to get fiitt pro-
tection from the authorities.
Cooker temperatures failed to;
cloud’ fair weather in Sulphur-!
Springs Wednesday. |
Weather Bureau observer Ralph j
Hill recorded a 31 -degree dropj
from Tuesday afternoon’s maxi-j
mum of 70 to the early Wednes-
day reading of 39 degrees. I*-—...... ..... |
The noon reading Wedqcadiyj[bwad „ tfew York speech Friday)
was 52. -S?"T j in which the fiye-star General
Truman Want*
MaeArthur Plan
(Bn AtKritlcd Prtml
Aboard Truman Spocial, Doe.
10.—Prosidont Truman said to-
day that General MaeArthur
should givo him nny plan ko
may havo for on honorablo and
reasonable way of ending the
Korean war. Truman declar-
ed: “If we can cut this fight,
ing in Keren short hy one day,
we should do so.”
Truman issued" s statement
from the special train which is
carrying him back to Washing-
ton from Independence, Mo.
Local Schools
Announce Yule
Holiday Period
The strain of a three month
long teenage occupancy will be
relieved and minor scars erased
in public school buildings during
the coming- Christmas holiday.
Classes recess Friday after-
noon December 19, and resume on
Monday morning, January 5.
Np major repair* are planned,
superintendent Jack Gtbeon said
Wednesday. School custodians,
scheduled to enjoy a briefer Yule-
tide vaeaCion, will complete re-
pairs they are unable to perform
whil# classes are in operattou. -
Wednesday night, the Board of
Trustees hold their final regular
session of the year. Gibson said
only routine business and inspec-
tion of monthly hills is on th«
agenda when hoard member* con-
vene at 7:30 p.m. ,.j~r'T"
West Germany's
President Acts
FOR SECOND TtME
a Communist agent, and the sec- j
A Federal ret'1’ therefore, were not transmit-1
judge today denied a motion to!ted' i (Bn Aswrisna Prmj
stay the executions of Julius and 0ne °f the sergeants, John! Jerusalem, Dec. 10—Israel’* kc-
f.th'el Rosenberg, the atomic spies. Jones, has been declared insane con d* president took the oath of.
The date remains set for the Week arid returned to the United States, office today in a solemn Parlia-
•pf January- nth.......And in making Thg. other, Goiaeppe Cascio, is be- t njcpt ceremony in Jerusalem.
which this decision, Judge
| Ryan also rejected applications
--rrr- V*— 1 ret aside the Roscnbeigs’ convic- 1tw,un "" 10 " •"«'u ">
«fi _|_ 1 tion and the ptfiii~tenh of their cou,’t martial. U he’s convicted he I fl8-year-old Jtxhak Ben-Zvi, took
1 anK rroauciion co-defendant, Morton Sobell. could get life. tho-HtwaWimMal oath. He was
•"""""•a -1 elected by Israel's ParllamenKon
Insane Killer Escapes
Austin State Hospital
ii iji’firiHi SVI *k | M 0 0
said he had a plan for solution pf j TA AnAft I riClC
i the Korean conflict MaeArthur 1* Afvll VlWM
! declined to make it public but iti-
j dieated a willingness to discuss it
(By A**Oritae4
Austin,. Dee. 10.—-Two Austin
m HlRKlIltr •**», VSIIVI f X* VOOVIVf U****>J,r > VI VIMVIIJ) SSI »V« .
Svlvester ing held in Tokyo, and is under i The Foreign Diplomatic 'corps. State hospital patients — on* 01
cations to ^ mental observation pending a de-; headed hy its Dean, U. 8. Ambas- them judged insane-after the dou-
«’ ronvir- i cislon whether he’s to ho tried by ; sador M. B. Davis, watched as hle-slaying of hi* mother and fa.
Schedule Bavismt AGAINST TAMPERING
Operators Challenge
tBn AsSsriafrS Ptnnnl
Washington, Dec. 10. — An)
Army official said production of
medium tanks is being cut about
15 per tent fronj .tfie original goal i
set for the springy of’ 1954.
The official added that the move
to level off production does not I
' ‘mVan "any reduction in the total-
amount of equipment being pur-’t
.....cfcaaed-lMl$.,.M$fe*r a rescheduling ’
of delhertea.
ther in 1935—have escaped
a full search is underway,
Howard Pierson, who was
when be was re-committed to the
Austin State hospital.
Although Pierson was involved j
in the slaying of hi* parents, the I
other man, Waggoner, isn’t j
thought to have been Involved in ,
. (Hy f*re«*f .
Bonn, I)er. 10.—West German
with Eisenhower. President Theodore Ileus* he*
Eisenhower's invitation appears withdrawn a request that hi* coun-
to dissipate the coolness which i try’s supreme court rule on the
was shown between the two gen-1 constitutionality of the Bonn gov-
erals during th political campaign, eminent'* rearmament treaties,
when MaeArthur favored the Hbi action apparently fends off
nomination of Senator Taft for what was feared as a threatened
the presidency, it also give* Eisen- government crisis,
hewer’s incoming administration A court ruling that a two-tbirds
the iienefit of MacArthur's ex- parliamentary majority would be
perience in dealing with Far East-- nt.«,d*d to ratify the treaties would
ern affair*. • have endangered Chan cello; Kon-^
An hour-long parada will wel- rad -AdenstrSf’s governments K3-
any crime -he was being held in j epmc Eisenhower when the Hcb i Fnauei has staked the political life
dc-!\he Maximum Security Building) ena arrive* at Pearl Harbor to- of hisacahinet on bringing West
Monday to a five-year-term suc-
ceeding the late Dr. Chaim Weia-
mann.
- = Dulles Advocated
Texas Gas Proration hiss APROinimeni
WEATHER
Fatal Shooting
Seen at Houston
(Bn Anmettlrd rrtmrn
Washington. Der. 10.-
MOUTH CENTKA!. TEXAS KWr .ml
m HttU- eo»lci* lonlshr. )-•***! l-mm-
WW^* T^XAA— lmw«»« XwairsndG
, in f*»nttafHlW> *ad Stoutih rintna nml
n'fc#*rn lt*ni*thf. Tuyitifiw in-
M-l lcrm.mwJlA.il«• (Mr
4 Wlik‘>"*c«iurcd rtSr *ln inUrtur
\ ■ j • -
(Hy \ fitot alt tl !\rr ** t
) Austin, Dec. 10—Operators
i challenged the authority of the
I Tcx»* Railroad commission to es-
tablish ’statewide pVoratlon of gas
! similar Gr that of oil,
- Tim operator* say the commis-
sion should not tamper with pre-
I sent regulatiop* for determining
aa well potential* restricting pro- have told police about a killing;ney, John W. Davis, also declared
durtion to 25 per cent of open 0n a Houston street last night, that all the reporta on His* were
1 flow potential. They saw a ' black eiwcvertibla!favorable. Hi** • former Stats De-
A statewide hearing at Austin drive up In front Of a North Mat**- imrtmsnt official now serving a
hrouirijiP out th* i operator* also ton gun shop. Two men^got ouh : jai) term foe- perjury. The
dared insane after-the deaths of I because of threats he had made)morrow. ... j Germany into an armed allianoe
hi* parenU, Sapicme Court Ju*- agajn*t people. The President-Elect will visit with the wsat. But he eontroU a
tice and Mr». William Pierson, is The background of the Pieraon the famed Waikiki beach and lay aimple majority of the parliament,
one of the men. The other is GU-‘ caM j, remembered by newsmen a wreath at the Punchbowl Nat- H i* considered unlikely he would
l.ert Waggoner of Houston. who. covered the famou'i’’ Slaying ions I Memorial ceremony. bav been able to mutter the
Both men are described )« daD-^t «*.urmi on April 24th, 1936. i Thf 2,.mile moWmde then will ,f 8 coUrt
Pi®'1'on- th*n 21 old- Mk.ed carry the General and hi* party required it. ^
Pierson has been seen near th*|hu 8utc guprvm<. fourt Justice t0 Kaneohe <Jtah-niih-oh'-hay) l_ -
father and his mother to go to Maidn(. station, where the group HURRY, HURRY, HURRY! -
the womis about 15 miles north* wij| g,ay two or three days. ~--------------—
west of Austin. He told he want- — ---—-
ed to show them some Indian rel»j ■
ic discoveries he had made. There, i r
hospital since the escape
Pierson was sent to the hospital
in 1935 after he was declared in-
sane. As a scientific-minded boy
House. who spent hours brooding; he ad-
^.t!*»K»*».«jl SKM SMSIMS i«! i, was ***
incoming Secretary of State, John
j Foster Dulles, had reRjtpimended
Alger His* for the presidency of
; the'Carnegie Foundation for ln-
(As *«« ..** P"»> tcmational Paace.
Houston, Dei . 19 —* Witnesses j A prominent New York attoi
famous Texas murder raa*. He is
now 38 years old. A. \-
His escape with the 29-year-1
old Waggoner came last sight
pair picked a door lock
Mount Vernon
Driver Escapes
In Fatal Crash
^ SHOPPING OATS
TILL CHRISTMAS
£2.
favor a 640 acre prOratlon unit’ There was a sho|. One Jfnan Rod _ gressionai group ik probing tax- institution «m>« Iwtfore, in 1938,
instead of the • IflOaere ruju *d- but Arhtur Johnaon, about 26, lsv\)fr<e educations! and philantborpie “ 11 L1'
foot
-Later that same day, the youth
entered the sheriff's office, dia- j
playing a flesh wound on hi* ainiv j
He said that robber* had killed!
when the pair picked a door Iqck hi# parl.nU and haik wounded him.
und a window grating and then Houra of ,,uestionTn« broke his
lowered themselves with a rope Htolyi though, and he admitted
made of bedsheet* from a third kjmnv hi. moth,.r and father, as
flooe window of the Maximum 8#- a rtf#u|t of yvmft of rt*entm«nt.
■ urity imiidlng in \be h.^.itsl. j j,mM Hart, who it now chanc- 'RoStofi to a'ehr-
Pierson hall of th'. LB,V*,’!,ty ** T*x.^' -truck collision south of Sherman-;
vanedd ^ the commission. ^ -qtehd the' aldowalk.
i, '•«*(**
groiri*.
and had remained free until'hk *«> lh"
i c-captiuf £1 Minneapolis in 1940, hjjjdled the coxc.
/Hy -InfOHMlfrt/ Friil)
Sherman, De^. 10—An
man from Waukegan. Illinois. Ju-
I In a ehr-i
Sherman.;
Attorney whal j^vcr „f the truck, Ralph Gandy
| of Mt. Vernon, escaped injury.
ond foithfel nog,
oet and boy on*/
i ueusJefSk/im
8 4 * ■ *> ;t- 9,w.' * * * * *••*-♦*,.* +
i-h
(By AtKH'atrd Prrtu).
Seoul. Korea, Dec. 10.—-
The full on the ground ia
continuing in Korea, with
most of the fighting beinK
done by Allied planes and
naval vessels.
The carrier strikes made
v e s terdav by American
planes constituted the most
powerful air blow struck so
far ih the Korean war by
carrier planes. They made
B52 individual flights in at-
tacking four rail and supply
centers in extreme northern Ko-
rea—so extremely far north, in
fact, that one target was only a
few hundred yards from Man-
churia. Another was only 12
miles from Russian Siberia.
During' the night B-29 Super-
fort reuses from Japan attacked'
an industrial center in northwest
Korea—only five miles from the
Yaiu River boundary with Man-
churia.
Down near the battleline, the
American heavy cruiser Roches-
ter has return,ed io action, making
her first strike In nine mpnths.
The five and eight-inch shells of
the Rochester destroyed two en-
emy gun positions and damaged
two others. Carrier planes from
Task Force 77 attacked Commu-
nist front positions., And planes
from the British carrier Glory
attacked Communist vehicles.
A Californian, flyinrf a Sabre
(Bn AnmnrMrd Prtt»> Jet, caught a MIG iif Ids gun .
Aboard U88 Helena, Dec. 10 ‘sights over Red Korea today.
Associated pres* correspondent; And ,nnther Kcd jpt went dovvn
Don Whitehead reports from a- in names. The California, Lieut,
hoard the U.S.S. Helena today -
'
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 293, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 10, 1952, newspaper, December 10, 1952; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth814365/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.