1947, June 9 - Communism

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Wf.A THER: Mississippi - Clear partly cloudy Monday and Tuesday. Scattered showers in extreme South portion.

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Spending Plans Of Truman Hit Bv GOP Chiefs

IRON LUNG FOR BABY LOLITA '; )

\

Asks Approval For Tax Cuts

Majority Party In Renewal Of Promise To Trim The Budget WASHINGTON- (UP) -Congressional Republicans, aroused by President Truman's charge \ that their economy drive en( dangers national security, countered Sunday night that he is ad1 vocating reckless spending "reml iniscent of the New Deal at its '1 height." ( They renewed their pledge to trim off "every ounce of fat" from his $37,500,000,000 spending budget for fiscal 1948 despite Mr. Truman's warning that their efforts to date may sap the nation's strength and undermine its position as a world leader for peace. The House thus far has knocked 3,300,000,000 from Mr. Truman's projected expenditures-or a little more than half of the $6,000,000,000 goal set by its · GOP leaders last January. , Senate Republicans have set $4,500,000,000 a "reasonable savings target" but at least one Democrat, Sen. Walter F. George of Georgia, says they will be doing well to trim away $2,000,000,000. Hiis Agriculture, Interior Cuts The President speaking to a nationwide radio audience Saturday n ight objected particularly to House cuts of 43 and 28 per cent , respectively, in appropria\ tions for the Interior and Agricul/ ture Departments. He argued that: · 1-The cut of $138,581,907 to $156,838,513 in Interior Department funds would put conservation, reclamation and power prograins "back to the level of a decade ago" at a time when full development of natural resources is, essential to the nation's economic strength. 2-The cut of $340,C6:J,3 12 to $848,001 ,976 in Agriculture Department funds was an attempt to "undermine our entire farm program." Senate Republicans said that some of the Agriculture and Interior Department funds will be restored _by the Senate- but not in the amount Mr. Truman considers "essential" and not because he asked for. such action. ·· Chafrman Styles Bridges, R., N. H., said his Senate Appropriations Committee probably will "give some" on the deep cuts voted by the House but that "generally spt'!aking, we will go along in the economy <lrive." ·Senate Calendar Crowded He expressed concern about the "tremendously crowded" Senate appropriation calendar, but hoped that all of the pending bills could be passed by July 15 to clear the way for adjournment the latter part of next month. The Senate still must act on the House-approved Agriculture, Interior, Commerce, and Justice Department bills as well as the Navy and War Department appropriations which represent the largest and hardest-to•cut sections of the White House budget. Chairman Robert A. Taft, R., 0., of the · Senate GOP Policy Committee, and Chairman Eugene Milliken, D., Colo., of the Finance Committee, said they considered $4,000,000,000 as a "reasonable savings tar.get." · But George, a -leading fiscal expert, disputed this. "They are conceding that they will restore· some of the funds knocked out by the House," he said. "And the House drive is only about 50 percent successful to date, with the only major bill coming . up being that for the (Continued On Page Eight)

Retailer Group All Segments Of Big Business Urge The ~~:~::~o!o_~;)~

Pres-

Homes Swept Away As Flood Waters ·Break Levees, Pour Over Farmla·nds Presbyterfan Church Pi_cnic Slated Fr,day

Search Houses 20 Persons Killed By Drownings For Bodies Of Tornadoes, Mississippi Reaches All-Time Crest pOSSI'ble Dead Mighty At Quincy, Ill.; Thousands Made Homeless

ident Walter Morrow of the American Retail Federation added voice President Sunday night to ' thosehis urging Truman The ani:iual picnic of the F 1rst . Presbyterian Church, to be held CHICAGO-(U.P.)-Flood waters and cloudbursts swept to sign the tax cut b ill. He said. Friday evening, beginning at 5 that unemployment and fading o'clock with a picnic supper away homes, broke levees, ruined crops and-with tornapayrolls are the alternative. scheduled for 7 o'clock, will clidoes-had taken a toll of at least 20 dead and more than Morrow wrote the chief execu- max the Daily Vacation Bible 100 injured throughout the United States Sunday. The damtive that the federation repre- School, which ends Friday. The age to farm lands and property was in the millions. Thousents 500,000 retailers "who have picnic .will be held in the backno fear" that tax reduction will sands were homeless. OTTUMWA, Ia. - {U.P.l -Poprove inflationary. yard of the church and members The mighty Mississippi River reached an all-time crest "We believe," he said "that, un- and friends-young and old-are lice, Navy personner and volunless tax reductions are made soon, invited to attend and bring bas- teers began a house-to-house at Quincy, Ill., of 23.6 feet and threatened a major flood search through the flood-batter- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + along the entire valley from the the economic machine is likely kets of food. town of Hannibal, Mo., south to to slow down with declining em- ' The, supper will be served at 7 ed South Side section of OttumCairo, Ill., where the Ohio River ployment, fading payrolls and in- o'clock so that those who work wa Sunday in a search for possible dead. converges with the Mississippi. creasing inability to consume the may be present. The picnic will \ The city was under armed The center of devastation was goods that we can and should also serve as the June meeting ONE OF THE YOUNGEST Iron lung patients In medical history Is guard of Navy and civilian poalong the Mississippi and its prodl..i ce." · of the Men-of-the-Church. 10-month-old Lolita McCauley of Ephraim, N. J., who is comforted All persons were required to swollen tributaries in the MidOther segments of big business Misses Margaret McVay and lice. by her mother in a Philadelphia hospital. The baby suffered an have passes to move into strickwest, but tornadoes in Ohio and as represented by the National Valeria McFadden served as attack of encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain, which )las paraen areas. Pennsylvania, a flash flood in Associataion of Manufactures and councilors at the Pioneer Conlyzed her respiratory muscles. (International Soundphoto) Oregon and Washington and a seThe city, a manufacturing town the Chamber of Commerce of the ference held at Belhaven College, vere storm in Maryland contribUnited States, previously had Jackson, last week which was at- of 30,000 population, had an estiuted to the toll of lives and propurged the President to sign the. tended by Mollie Lawson, Thomas m ated 6,000 persons homeless. erty. They were evacuated when flopd bill on the same gro.unds. McMillan, Betty Jo P_urvis, ~ee waters of the Des Moines River Five persons were killed in the But in his Kansas City, Mo., Ai:i,n Ruff and Corme Waite. tornadoes, 14 died in the floods speech Saturday night Mr. Tru- Misses Bettr Ann . McFadden, surged into the town in a ragin Iowa and Missouri and one woman appeared to hint that his· Mary -Kathrine McMillan, ~velyn ing torrent and covered the man was drowned in a mountain no-tax-cut-now stand is un- Newman, Patsy Murff, Jamee Pa- streets with six feet of water. · canyon in Oregon. Au th o r it i es reported eight changed and that he will veto den and Judy Walters are leaving The swirling brown waters the measure. today for Belhaven to attend this dead, including two women and He flayed the Republicans' fed- week's Young People's Confer- three children who were lost WASHINGTON-(UP) - Rep. were nearing a crest at Hannibal, when a rescue boat overturned. Gerald E. Landis, R., ' Ind., said the picturesque river town which eral economy program, charging ence. Herbert Loveless, in charge Sunday night that President Tru- was the birthplace of Mark -they were undermining the seThe dates for the Presbyterian of , rescue operations, denied reTwain and scene of his books WASHINGTON.-;'-(U.P.):_President Truman returned here curity of both the nation and conterences to be held at Old ports that there were 20 dead. man has "no alternative" to sign- about life along the Mississippi. world peace by haphazard ap- Monroe Camp are as follows: He said he knew only of the ing the Republican-sponsored There the flood waters moved up Sunday to cope with an ominous sttrring 9f European Com- propriations cuts. The President Pioneer (ages 12-14), June 23-28; labor-control bill unless he wants munism that threatened to carry the U. S.-Soviet-''sphere is against tax cuts now for the. Senior Young People (ages 15-18), eight reported dead by city au- to invite another coal strike and to the doorway of a Red Cross thorities. He said two bodies had a maritime walkout. shelter where 85 persons had takof influence" struggle westward from the Balkans. same reason. He and his fiscal June 30-July 5; Atjult Conference, been identifie d . en refuge and preparations were aides argue that taxes should stay July 9:..,u. Senate and House Republicans It was an aroused President who blew back to the CapiThe river reached flood crest are assured of sufficient votes to made to evacuate again. Ten feet at high levels so that substantial tal from Kansas City, lVIo., where Saturday night he sound- payments can be applied against Saturday night, but dropped two write the bill into law even if of water covered the riverfront ed an impromptu warning to po-;i;",------------ - - the hugh national debt. feet in 18 hours. The flood wa- Mr. Truman vetoes it. He has Streets at Hannibal. ters receded Sunday from all of until midnight, June 20, to sign Six Levees Broken tential aggr essors not to repeat Mr. Truman is expected to act the North Side business district the measure, veto it, or allow it Japan's mistake of thinking the Army engineers reported at on the bill late this week or and part of the South Side busi- to become law without his sign- least six levees broken from IoUnited States too weak to fight. early next. He has until midnight ness district. . wa to Clarksville, Mo. The blunt language of that ~tJJ.r~, June 16 to veto it, sign it or' allow . warning underscored the gravity The one hopeful note in the "Horrible And Sickening" it to become law . without his · Landis, a ranking member of of the situation into which the Loveless ordered the house-to- the House Labor Committee Midwest was the Weather Busignature. The House is prepared , President stepped on his arrival house search on the South Side. which helped. draft the bill, said reau prediction that no more to override a · veto and has the at the White House and left litrain would fall in the next 24 He said the stricken area was a in a formal statement: · hours. tle doubt that . he plans strong State News By United strength to do it. But Senate GOP · "horrible and. sickening" sight. leaders admit that th~ir chamber "In the face of threatened coal action to· counter the_ march· of j Press And Journal The Red Cross said 100 homes An estimated 10,000 persons probably would sustam a veto. and shipping strikes, Mr. Tru"forced ~ommunism" across Euwere "destroyed" and 600 others Correspondents were homeless in Iowa, Illinois Sen. Arthur Capper, R, Kan., U · 1 Ult' rope. · . , damaged in the city. Loveless man has no alternative-he must and Missouri-most of them fn said Sunday that a veto probably,, , S , sign the qill or . assume full reTo Protest Hungary "Grab" said he could make no estimate , Ottumwa fa .. where health offi:spQn!:,ibiJi,ty .ior JAG imppi ~t!C~~~u.f dals - Informed . diplomatic. sources would, be sustained. Bllt' he· sug: , of the damage: . ~were''fe\l'ertshly ""p ress.fu1ra Tubb Ope~s Campaign gested in this' . conhection that-·Mr. · , ·"" _i said the American .. camp;:iign Loveless said 15 square blocks the administration to deal ·with campaign of inoculation to avoid future labor unrest affecting the AMORY~State Education Su- Truman should harken to the _ would start with a stiff note o.f on the South Side were under national welfare." typhoid. . .. . · · .House "which represents the Iat. protest to Russia over the Cpmwater· Sunday night and that it Cloudbursts, coupled with vioperu:itenc;lent J . . M. Tubb opened est expressions of the will of the John L. Lewis' United Mine munist power grab in Hungary DETROIT-(UP)-Briggs Man- was expected any additional bolent hailstorms and resulting flash and would go on to concrete .a c-' his campaigl}.,_for reelection Satur- people on major national issues." ufacturing ,Company, under im- dies would be found there. The Workers (AFL) have broken off floods, inflicted more than $2,Morrow asked Mr. Truman to mediate threat of a paralyzing· North Side, he said, was cleared negotiations with soft coal option to safeguard-Italy and France day with·an·address here in which 000,000 damage to crops and prop· against similar red~sponsored up-· he .stress~d p~ogress. made by ed- beat .in mind ~hile :-veighing ?i;; CIO United Auto Workers strike,' of flood waters with exception of erators ·and another "no contract, erty in the fruit belts of Northno work" strike in the bitumin·· t · · · · · M . ·. · · · · d · h' dec1s10n that . capacity operation Saturday night appealed to the'. some small low-lying areas. heavals. · ·. ern Oregon and Southern Washwn .m 1ssissippi urmg is 1· k d t 11 maintained mass UAW International Executive, The note is still. being drafte/1 l.l-Ca tenure 1n office. m e . o we . .. Evacuation of citizens maroon- ous fields appears certain when ington. At the Dalles, Ore., it w~ but will go forward soort. i , Under his direction, Tubb said, purchasmg. po~er is the sur~s, Board to intervene in the dead-. ed in flood sections still was un- the government relinquishes con- estimated that half the cherry These sources said the United Mississippi has increased teach- and effective regulator of price locked contract dispute. der way during Sunday, but the trol of the mines on June 30. crop-covering an orchard are.a States has little hope of restor- ers' pay, impi-oved student trans- that can be found. ·» Emil Mazy, UAW regional co-. outlook for the entire city was Such a walkout would not begin ·of approximately 36 square miles officially, until June 7 when the ing free government in Hungary portation facilities, and expanded director, led his negotiations out; considerably brighter as the wa- miners' one-week vacation ends. -was destroyed by hail and rain. for the present, although it may the school system. of wage and contract talks Satur-. ters receded and adequate supOne woman cherry picker was Both sides share the optimistic take the issue to the United .Naday and issued an ultimaturni plies of boats, equipment, food, government view. He urged that vocational edudrowned and 100 other persons that negotiations on the slim chance that the cation be made available to all that if·no settlement was reached water and medicine were receivtions will be resumed after con- left homeless in the storm's devpressure of world opinion might who want it. by Wednesday morning, the 20,- ed. astation. force a Soviet backdown there. 000 Briggs workers would walk · The homeless were being cared gress finally disposes of the labor The Red Cross, Army and Navy bill. But they predicted that the .deout. _ Rains Delay Farm Work for by public agencies, neighbors, personnel and municipal officials Contracts of five CIO maricisive struggle, and the one wh~ch STARKVILLE- Grass-choked W. 0. Briggs, Jr., , vice-pres- the Navy and the Red Cross. The time unions expire June 15, but were evacuating families froin may precipitate a first-class · dip- fields and' unplanted crops faced ident and chief negotiator, who city waterworks was back in op- there has been no tp.reat thus lowland homes in a 100-mile strip lomatic crisis within the next 60 'farmers in most sections of Misimmediately rejected "bargaining eration and houses in most of the far of repeating last year's natio~- along the winding Mississippi days, would come in •the West, sissippi today after damaging by ultimatum," Sunday night city again had lights and gas. shipping tie up that contri- £rcim Iowa to Louisiana, Mo. Hunwhere the United States has de- rains fell last week, the State Refugees were given typhoid wide sent a .copy of the company's conbuted to the congressional drive dreds took · refuge in churches. termined to draw a line beyond Extension Service reported Suntract and wage offers to top shots with serum flown in Sat- for restrictive labor legislation. tents, public buildings and barns. which it will not submit meekly day. urday by the Navy. Doctors and One levee broke at the juncUAW officials. Landis said he was "thoroughly to the expansion of Gommunism. nurses worked throughout the convinced" Delayed by excessive rainfall ture of the Des Moines and Mis"Because of the far reaching ef- night that the TaftHartley Italy and France will be the throughout the Spring, most farinoculating those who had labor bill was favored by the sissippi and muddy torrents surgfects of the action threatened by been in key strongpoints O!)- this ·. li?e, mers fell another week behind the flood waters. into St. Francisville and AlexMr. Mazy, we hope that the ofrank-and-file of labor. Leaders of ed these informants said, predictmg schedule when rains returned organized labor, he said, private- imdria, Mo. Most of the residents ficers of the international will inthat the United States would go last .week. terest thems·e lves in the matter," ly concede that they have aband- of the towns had been evacuated all-out in bulwarking those; coun.Unfavorable cotton and corn and ·no casualties were reported. Tupelo's summer recreation Briggs said in a letter to president oned all hope of killing it. tries economically and otherwise reports came from county agents Rich Farmlands Flooded program for its young people Walter P. Reuther, vice-presi'I am further convinced," he against Communism. in Leflore, Tishomingo, Simpson, starts this week with a full sched- dents R. J. Thomas and Richar!f Two levees gave way · near said "that · labor's leadership, Will Aid Ka.i-Shek Lowndes, Forest, Lafayette and one~ it cools off and considers Quincy, Ill., as the • Mississippi At the opposite end of the Kemper c"oul)ties. Wilkinson and ule of interesting outdoor and T. Leonard, and Secretary-Treasthe matter in complete fairness, reached a crest there. One was Communist "front," the · adminis- Simpson counties reported large indoor events planned for their urer George F. Addes. abo-ve the town and waterfront will realize that this legislation streets tration is preparing a plan, to re- numbers of boll weevils. enjoyment. In the letter, Briggs -reiterated of the city were flooded. is in labor's best interests. ' For the first week no activities his statement Saturday that "we state American policy - toward The other was south of the town "This measure is a corrective are scheduled during morning are ready to sign wage and conChina and help the Chiang K;aiWest Point to Build Schools the flood water fanned out one. It seems to make more equit- and Shek government by unfreezmg WEST POINT-Awards have hours as vacation Boble schools tract agreements which we beover rich, low-lying farmlands able those laws dealing with la- and covered the $500,000,000 Export-lmI?ort been made for the construction are being held in severa lieve provide benefits for our an area three miles bor-management relations. It is in employes equal to or greater than Bank ioan earmark.ed for Chma. I of three school buildings and churches. wide and 15 miles long. But the The community canning plant no sense punitive. Afternoon activities for both similar agreements reached with Plans also ~re bemg drafted to the remodeling of one other ·went down six inches. "By signing this measure, river get congressional action starte.d school in Clay County, it was boys and girls, however, start · other companies with whom we at East Tupelo High School will Quincy proper, located on a which the nation unmistakeably open Thursday morning at 8 today and on next Monday, June must compete." soon on the long-~elaY:ed Korean announced ' Sunday by B . . D. Mcbluff, was not endangered. The union walkout on negotia- o'clock under the general super- wants, Mr. Truman will be doing aid program, which mvolves a C 11' N f h t t 16, playground facilities will go Hardest hit was Ottumwa, Ia., $78 000 000 quest by the State a ister. ~ne o t e con r3:c s on a full five-hour schedule each tions, second since the UAW con- vision of Hubert Christian, new- a distinct service not only to the be 'arthien/~or social and eco- have been signed and a m~etmg day except Saturday and Sunday. tract expired May 1, capped a ly-elected vocational agriculture nation but to the rank-and-file a manufacturing town of 30,000, where 6,000 persons had been ,~ t· d o Page Eight) of the board of trustees will be working men and women." Miss Ruth Dart will direct the week of intensive talks that fol- teacher at the school. forced from their homes by wa, on mue n held Friday to complete the work Any farm families wishing to 0 games and contests for the girls lowed rank-and-file permission to it er that reached a depth of six on plans before construction be- from 9 to 11 a.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. the Union Negotiating Committee , can products may contact Mr. . feet in the business district when Coach Pickens Nobel and Assist- to call out workers at any time. Christian and make appointments gins. · Partly cloudy with widely the Des Moines River overflowant Coach Bill Leech will superA Briggs walkout would halt through him to handle their pro- scattered . showers today. High ed. NEW YORK - <U.P.l - A wellCity Acquires Airfield vise the boys' softball and base- assembly operations at all Chry- duce. The canning plant will Ottumwa authorities reported to-do lawyer jumped from his GREENWOOD - According to ball games from 9 to 11 a.m. and sler Corporation car divisions and probably operate three. days a temperature Sunday, 94; low, 72. Temperature this morning at eight dead there, including two 18th floor penhouse apartment in I Mayor A.'. D. Saffold the city of 3 to 6 p.m. at Packard Motor Car Company. week, the schedule bemg gov- 12:01, 80. (C&ltinued On Page Eight) Greenwich Village Sunday and I Gree11woc'id has acquired the airAmong the indoor and outdoor Both dependent on. Briggs for erned by the demand, SuperinfiNe minutes later, after looking field section of the Greenwood sports and games available are . bodies. Thousands more workers tendent Webb Allen of the Tupelo at his crushed body his wife Army Air Base at no cost to the shuffleboard, softball, tennis, vol- would be idled in three to five school system said . leaped out the same window and In a seri1;?s of raids Saturd.a y city. l ey ball, badminton, ping pong, days· after a Briggs strike started. The price of cans and for supjoined him in death. night Tupelo policemen seized a The tract includes about 500 shoes, and deck tennis. ervision in canning will be the Police identified the couple as considerable quantity of liquor acres of land, 27 buildings, com- horse Amble Inn Opens Tonight some this year as last, Mr, Allen Horace S. Marshall and his law- and home brew and arrested plete airport facilities, lighting, High spot of the opt ning of the said. yer-wife Amelie, both about 36 {href negro men. sewage systems and other im- recreation program will be at Mr. Christian who will be in years old. Both were practicing One of the places raided was provements. The transfer is es- Amble Inn tonight. There will Leaves of the dandelion make charge of the plant, is at native CHICAGO_ {U.P.l - If the high attorneys and Marshall was a the negro Elks Lodge, where 32 timated to be worth $300,000. be a snack bar, games of several of the Auburn Community and cost of living is more than your a fair to middling substitute for member of the law firm of Win- half-pints of bonded. liquor were kinds and music for dancing in attended high school in Tupelo. pocketbook can stand, have a spinach, and also c~n be used to throp, Stinson, Putnam and Rob- undercovered and Robert Sims, the gaily decorated inn. . erts. . Oliver Burford, junior at Tu- He entered the Army Air Corps look around in the back yard. garnish salads. operator of a cafe there; was· Last year the Youth Center had pelo High School and. the son of after graduation and served for You'll find plenty to eat out "And, of course," Miss Svoboda Neighbors told police that at charged with its possession. He its quarters in the American Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Burford, has three year~ and seven months. there, just lying around ready to added, "There are all sorts of about 6 p .m . they heard a noise pleaded guilty and paid a fine Legion Service Center but this been appointed a rhember of the After his discharge he entered be picked up. , wild berries and fruits." that sounded like a clap of thun- of $104.90. summer it is located in the high Board of Directors of the Univer- Mississippi State College and reIf you care for something tasThere are dandelions, sunflowder. They rushed to the patio BOONEVILLE (Special) Another place raided was a of the apartment house and dis- home on Walker Street where the James Edward Hughes of North school gymnasium. sity of Mississippi Press Insti- ceived his B. S. Degree in agri- ers, wild onions, cattails, and a ty to drink, find yourself a sassMonday and Friday nights tute for the coming year, it was culture education last month. afrass tree. All you have to do is ~overed Marshall's pajama clad policemen, . Buck _Carr, .Henry Booneville died at his home at lot of other things. Amble Inn will be open for high announced by Dean · C. DuBois, body. He is well acquainted with the Authority for this interesting boil the bark. 9 a.m. Saturday. Services were Duke, D. B. Crockett and Ed Walschool students, which includes Coffee lovers can get a reasneeds of farmers of this area backyard state of affairs is Miss A few minutes later Mrs. Marfound 52 half-pints of corn conducted at 2 p .m. Sunday at all teen-agers to nineteen inclu- president of the Press Clu'.J, spon- and ,will assist tqem in any way Marie Svoboda, lecturer for the onable facsimile from the lowly shall, also clad in pajamas, reach- lis, soring campus organization. the Pisgah Church with the Rev. whiskey in . cleverly concealed ed the patio and talked calmly "This announcement- is a great he can with their canning needs, Chicago Natural History Mu- sunflower. You can make a fine Jqe Crawford officiating. Burial sive, from 7 to 10:30. On Tuesday and Thursday pleasure because it offers an op- Mr. Allen said. with her neighbors. She told them hideouts 'in the basement and was in the adjoining cemetery. seum. .1 brew from the seeds-if you know arrested Fred Bingham, who she was going upstairs to call her ----o "The food you find in yaras how. Mr. Hughes, a retired farmer, nights the Inn will be open to portunity to call attention to the pleaded guilty to a charge of posAnd how about a dish of cat{Continued On Page Eight) hu&'band's brother John. Minutes Weddington Cops Golf Title and forest preserves," she said, e x c e 11 e n c e of Tupelo High was 93 years of age. Having been lat er her body came hurtling to session and paid a fine of $104.90. born in February of 1856, he MERIDIAN - Hunter G. Wed- may not be as tasty-looking as tail hot cakes. Miss Svoboda gave School's training in journalism," Eugene Cobb of the Shakerag · Plan Clay County Fair the patio. It landed about five dington of Meridian, Sunday won that served in the swanky cafes the recipe: Mr. DuBois said. could vividly recall reconstrucTake the pollen off the catfeet from that of her husband, area, had a churn bubbling with a tion days in the South and could WEST POINT-R. G. Millard Directors will be called on for the 1947 Mississippi amateur golf and restaurants. But it's just as and narrowly missed striking a batch of home brew, topped with often be found surrounded by old said Sunday that the Clay County advice in planning for the sec- championship. good-and it's healthful." . . tails, add a little flour, baking policeman called in by neighbors. apples, when the officers arrived. and. young alike as he related Fair Association will meet to- ond Press Institute, which is to Weddington won an easy vieTake the milkweed, which 1s powder, salt, eggs, evaporated Neighbors described Mrs. Mar- He was charged with the sale of these stories. day to discuss plans for the an- be held early in 1948. All direc- tory over Eugene Vinson, five supposed to be good for, no~hing milk, water, maple syrup and shall as nervous and high strung intoxicating liquors and the churn, He was a bachelor and was the nual fair to be staged in October. tors are outstanding students who times past champion, 8 and 7 at but lousing up a farmers fields. bacon drippings. But don't throw away the can 'and-said the sight of her hus- other equipment, and seven -gal- last surviving · member of his Improvements to the exhibition will be seniors in their respec- Northwood Country Club here · You can eat it in lieu of asparaband's body had undoubtedly un- lons of ready made brew ·were · family of several brothers and halls and grandstand is now ·un- tiv!:! schools during the next ses- in the finals of the 34th annual gus, which .costs a pretty penny opener. It still might come in handy. ___ _ -·destroyed. nerved her. tournament. · at the store. '. sisters. derway, Mr. Millard said, ::r._ sion.

Estimate 6000 Are Homeless In Iowa Town Hit By Flood

Landis Asserts Bill Veto Wou·ld lnvite Strikes

as

Spread Of Communism To Bring Early Crisis

GOP Solon Contends Truman Must ·Assume Full Responsibility

President Plans Strong Action To Counter 'Forced Communism' March Across Europe

·Briggs Appeals TO'UAW Board I p .

Mississippi News Briefs

·n ·ay 0ISPUfe

n1on 1matum '·'Tlireatens Wti·lk~ o'"'f" Intervention Sought

Recreation At Amble Inn Will Start Tonight

Full Program Awaits End Of Bible School Sessions At Churches

!

Canning Plant Open Thursday

Hubert Christian In Cha·rge At E. Tupelo

Man, Wife·Leap

To Their Death

- From Window Of 18th-Floor Apartment

d Po Ii ce Rai s B0 g Whl•skey· ,Hom'e Brew·

Tupelo Area Weather

Taipeloan Is Named To Director Board Of Press Institute

James Edward Hughes Pies At Age Of 93

----o---~

High Cost 01 Living Getting . You Down? Try Catto-ii Cakes


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