1953, July 16 - Rich Toy Factory

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LO'l,:'/ LL!:..::, , l\f .

Number 83. - Volume 117.

Entered. at the posi office In '111p1le. Ml••isatppi, •• aeeond.c laaa mall

Tupelo, Mississippi, Thursday Morning, July 16, 1953.

White Plans To Proceed , With Legislative Session

·state Funds Unreported In Five Counties I

I

enough oppo sition to the c·a !f." White said referring to his request for legisla tors to make kno wn their stand on. the special session. White ' s tally today showed 11 senators opposed and six for th e call while 18 house membe rs have voiced oppo sition and 13 have agreed on the session to revamp the s tate's public sc hool system. Ear lier White said if 20 senators or a majority of the House opposed the summons he wou ld not ask for the session . " I fee l 16 or 17 senators will a sk that the session not be called. ;' White s aid. ·· But I am sure , they are not especially opposed to the pl'ogram--jus t the speci al sess ion. " The governor also said a 11ew dormi lol'y will not •be built immediatel y at Mississ ipp i State College at Columbus to replace the four- slol'y structure hit by a $150,000 fire Tue sday ni g ht. The gove rnor infor med newsmen he had " declined wi th re g ret'' an ir vitatio n to speak at a giant Tennessee Valley Author ity celebration a t Huntsville, Als., Jul y 25 . White said he was Invited to appeal' on the program with Sen . Es tes Kefauver (D-Tcnn ) bu t would be unable to a ttend because of a bu sy sc hedule before leaving ,J uly 28 fol' the national governol's' conference on the West Coast.

U.N. Troops Jubilant Says front Reports

Allied Negotiators Meet Briefly With Communists

TOKYO, Thurs ., July 16 (UP- holes in South Korean defense lines. Allied truce negotiators met briefl y The Red stalling prompted LL with the Communists today after Gen. William K. Harrison to break receiving an urgent me ssage frbm off yes te r day' s 21-minute meeting Gen . Mark W. Clark a nd then an - a t Pa nmunjom. He walked out of n ounced the talks would be re- lhe confe rence room without waitcessed unt il S aturday. in g for Red agree me nt to a recess, It was not disclosed who called informants suggested. The Commu nists themselves LIONS' LEADER-Winding up the 36th annual convention in the one-day recess, but t he Allies broke an a gree ment on secrecy at TOKYO , Thurs. , Jul y 16 (UP) had walked out of yeste rday's sesChicago, S. A. Dod ge, right, Detroit businessman , is inaugurated as sion and were reported to be fed Panmunjom to broadcast word that F orty-five thous and Allied troops, supported by swarms of fig hterthe Allies walked out after " unipres ide nt of the 475 ,013-member L10ns Intemational. Turning the up with Red stalling tactics. bombers, tank s, and ma ssed ar• The Allied te a m dela yed the aterall y d eclaring a recess." gavel over to him is ex-p reside nt\ Edgar. M. Elbert Maywood, Ill. tille ry, co unterattacked along the Allied sources confirmed the opening of today' s 24-minute sesKorean ce ntral fro nt bulge today s ion from 11 a.m. to 11:15 a.m . walkout, but neither side said speBLASTS AEC-Accus ing the in the biggest Allied push in two to stud y the urgent teletype mes- cific ally w hat caused it. Atomic Energy Com m·issio n of years. s a"e from Clark's headquarters. barring him fr om atomic te ·ts The Un ited N~ lions a ttac k was · Clark him self arrived iJ1 Ko rea because of "hearsa y" c harges lau nched at da w11 and was still JACKSON, 1\lli ss .. Jul y 15 (UP )· toda y by plane , landing at an airwhich, he said , t he commissio n driving for ward at last · report. The Miss issippi legi lative in ves-port near Seoul. . eval ua ted " unfair ly," Rep. Robe rt Three full divis ions took part in the Clark indicate d that the Alhe d tigati ng committee was told toda y L . Condon (0), Califo rnia , t e lls major United Nati ons e ffo r t to push negotiators left the truce meeting the H ouse of Repr esen tat ives l he Red s back from a thr ee-mile five counties failed to account abruptl y yesterd ay bec a use he t hat he is "a loy al Amer ican." bu lge knocked in to the Allied line fo r s ta te appro priaed funds to Red s violated "executive sec urity" Condon took the floo r on a point alon g a 20-m ilc sector. ra ise Neg ro teachers s alaries. in discl osing the trend of the talks. of special privilege to answer All ied artillery Jaid down a t hun• He a'dded that: "I am not going Assistant Alt. Gen . James T . cha l'ges that banned him from the dero us barrage as the hu ge U. N. atdo. " to do like they Nevada a tomic t est s last Ma y. Kenda !l r eported to the commit.tee tack force moved for ward. One The contents of the message -International Soundphoto American advi sory offi c er des• hi s inves iigation shows Claiborne, were no t disclosed , but today 's cribed the fi r st enemy resistance Jackson , Kempe r . LeFlore and me eting had been billed as a showas " light to heavy ." down session in which the Alli es Stone counties st ill ha ve n ot acThe massive attack crashed into would tell the Red s to "quit s tallcow1ted for unexpende d amounts the Red s along a "wide front," in g" on an armistice. total ing S32 .901.13 to inc rea se Negro and at 10 a .m . United Press cor• WASHINGTON . .Tuly 15 (UP ) WASHINGTON, Jul y 15 (Up) The negotiators sc hedule cl teachers s ala l'ies. responden t William Millei· reported DI'. Robert L. Johns on . outgoing The Senate handed Pres ident Eis- another truce meeting for 2 p.m . The allocations we re made in a it had m ade i mporta nt gains. di rector of t he U.S . Information Saturda y (12 midnight F r iday EST ) WASHI NGTON , J ul y 15 WP) 1950 leg islative g ran t of S3 ,000,000 Gen, Mark W. Clark, U.N. SuService, charge d today that per. ons enho we i· a s ma shing victor y toda y g '. ving themse I ve s a f u JI d a~, ·s l'e- A s is tant Secretary of State Walter to increa se s alaries and S1 ,000 ,000 pl'eme comm ander, arrived at an "in the foref ront of th e fi ght when it s houted approval of the cess. The1·e was no explanat10n for S. Robertson told P resi den t E ise nfo r :r,; egro school tran sportation . airport near Seoul today for con• hower toda y that South Korean against co m mu ni sm " have dam- House-passed e xcess profits tax e x- the one-da y lapse . The grnn ts were fo r use du ring fcr ences with Gen . Maxwell Tay lor the 1950-52 fi scal years. aged America's anti-Red cam- tens ion bill after de feati ng all atLt. Gen. William K. Harl'i son and Preside n S y n g m a n Rh ee ha s a nd a vi si t lo the South Korean T oda y t he i nves tigat in g compa ign . temp ts to amend it. his Allied truce team waile d in ag reed to "collabora te " on a truce sector. He sa id th e situation on the and that onl y the Communists a re mittee a ked the attorney gene John son iss ued the bla st in ant heir tents outside the conference The voice vole ended a lo ng hard embattled east central front "ap. ral's offi ce to in vestigate u ne.,phu t toda y as th e regular 11 a.m. holding up an armis tice. nouncin g a new directive governpears to be in ha nd." e nd ed Jun ds to ta ling Sl14 ,919 a nd ing wha t book s ma y appear on the fi ght by Mr. Ei senhower and con- mee ting time arrive and pa ssed . Rober tson reported to Mr. EisenEa rl y reports frorn the front toda y Kendall told t he co mmittee At ·11 : 10 a .m . a helicop te r ar- hower immediately after he re· shel ves of U. S. o verseas libraries . g re ssional Repub lic an leaders who indicated that the big e igh t to 1027 counties have cleared themAt the s ame time, Sen . •Josepl1 forced the bili through the House ri ved and the pilot handed a yello w tu rned here trom 2 1-2 weeks of divis ion Communist offen si ve either selves by repa ying 582,018.50 t<• the R. McCarthy, John son' s chief crit- ove r the angry objections of Chair- te letype me ssage to Harri son. The confe1·e nces with Rhee in Seoul. He BERLIN Jul y 15 (U.Pl-The sta te Treaslll'y. LONDON , Thurs., July_ 16 (UP ) ic, announ.c ed he was callin g off American negotiators h u d d I e d said Rhee's decision to cooperate Communist East Ge r m a n govern- has been halted or forced into re• verse at key points all along the "I n a number of counties the The Umted States, Bntam and the re tiring official' s schequled ap- man Daniel A. Reed of the House aroun d a t a bl e rea d.m g th e message · means the United Nations can ment announced today that Justice records reveal that some portion France invited R ussia toda :, to a pearance before the Senate inves ti- Ways and Means Commi ttee. They for more than five minutes, and " sig n a n armistice in good fai th Minis ter Max Fech ne r has been line. Strict censorship veiled the Al lied move . of the fund s receiv ed fo l' i ncrea s-- . Jur-powel' co nfere nce t o discuss gati ng subcommittee tod ay for Democrats. then walked in to the hut. whe n the Commun ists are willing." fired as "an enemy of the people." Front repo rts said the attacking in.11 Negro tea chers ' salaries .. .re- powderkeg Ge r man problem and que s tionin g about the dire c tive. Before pass in g the bill and se ndNorth Ko rean L t. Gen. Nam II While officials here were hopeful Ea st German Premier Otto mained unexpended in , the county seek ag re eme nt on the long-stalled ing it to the Pres ide nt for s igna- and his Communist team followed of an ea l'l y end to the fi ghting, they Grotewohl's press office announced U.N. troops were j ubilant as they 8 smashed fo rw ard agai nst the Reds McCal'lh y has said the J ul y tu re the Se na te defe ated 52 to 34, the United Na tions team into t he Treasur y and that no m iss a ppl'Opri- Aus tr ian 1reaty. re ga rded as darkly ominous <level- t.hat "Premier Grote\vohl ha s re- in their bigges t assault since 1951. policy statement on which the di- an a'in endmcnt by Sen. John J. Wil· h at ion of fund s had occ urred." In pa r allel notes hand ed lo Sov iet recti ut. vc was based was "ridicuopmcnt s on the battlefield a nd at moved Max Fechner from his post The big pu sh was under the K endall told the committee. representativ es in the three West- Jou s. " But Jolrnson said the Sta te li a111s ( R-De l\ which would ha ve A few h ours before the negoti- truce he adq uarters . Big Red ar- as jus tice mini ster as an enemy of personal di rection of Gen . Maxwell Funds allotted for Neg ro tTans- em capitals , the Western Allies eased the tax burden on small bus- ators re turn ed to Panmunjom , t he mie s were drivin g the Allie s back the people and the republic." Ta ylor. Allies opened a 45,000-rnan attack portation likewise r em ained un- suggested that the foreign ministers ~i~1~a\'/".ne nt will "stand firmly" be- ines s firm s. The announcement said Feh cner alo n_g the central front and U.N. The three divisions Involved ht ex pended i n ei ght county trea s ur- meet about the end of September McCart!J~, h ad no Im mediate Sixteen Demo cra ts joined 36 Re- a gainst the Commu nist s on the tr uce nego tiators ha d challenged would be succeeded by Frau Hilde ies, Kendall said . e.t a place lo be a-gi·ced upon. comment on th e di rect ive or John- publican s in voling a ga inst th e Wil- centl'al Kore a n front whern Red the Red l1w e te am to a "show- Benjami n, " until now presiden~ <_if the offens ive were not Identified either as American or South Ko• The meeting would be '!of lim- son· s statement, which me ntioned liams amendment. Votin g for the • troops h avf' knocked a thl'ee- mil eKendall said his offi ce \\'ill c oi1· d the Ge r man demo~ratic rep ubhc s re an. tinue its in vestigation of 1.he five it ed duration " and la ke up free no names. proposal were 25 Democr ats and deep bul ge into the main Allie down." A truce appeared to h in ge on supreme court." , Front correspondents sad the failed t o account for their all<>- all-Ge rman election s, the formati on The dire ctive replaces earlier in- 9 Rep ublicans . de fe nse line. whether the Reds would accept There were no details concerning cation $. He said corresppndence is of an a ll-Germa n government, and slru ction s whi c h led to ch r <>es t he Chairman Eu gene D. Millikin Reliable informant s had predi ct- assuran ces from Robertson and Fechne r's alleged offe nses, but ob- U.N. troops , weary of bloody and seemingly purposele ss small battles now being e xc ha11ged between t he a trea ty to end the occupation of E ise nhowel' admin i ·tratiin ° w a s (R-Col? l of th e Sena te F uia~ c~ ed that. tod ay's tru ce ~ess 1on. would U.N. otficials that Rhee actually \f ervers believed he had been im- for hills, lunged forward in the big attorne y ge ne1·al' s o fice and at Au slria. _ "book bu r 1· ig " Th t' ,Comm1t tce, told the Senate 1\11. be cnt1cal. One sou1 ce sa id t.he 1 lea st two of tb, coun(jes . The no tes s tated . the Wes ter n troversy w~~ a·n oul;ro:v~t~r ~~~- E~ senhower wanted !he bill passed U.N. command felt that it ;;'as now had _agree d t.o " collaborate " in an prisoned. Fechner was a . veteran as sa ult h appily. Most of the young soldiers had Kendall said t he amounts for governments' determination "lo Carthy's c hai·ges th:t Co 1 iist w1t'hout change . '!he J:'re s1~lent t une to tell lhe Reds to put u p armi stice . The Commumsts ac- Communist and was considered a c used Rhee of an " arrogant stand" follower of Lavrenli P . Be ria , ne ver seen the 8th Army use the ea ch of ther fi ve counties un ac- make 'a ne w effoi· t so as to bring to books were bei ng ed nm ui foa1·ed that an amended bill might or s hut up " on completmg he against a truce. ousted former head of Ru ssia's mi ghty power held at leash since counted for were Kemper SlB,677 .- .an end the abn onn al situation t o Johnson said he u':.va~ reluctant ~ouch off another House fi ght after armistice a_grcement . . Robertson said on leaving the secret police. Gen . James A. Van Fleet's massive 30; Clai c';Jorne 56,732.05; Jackson which the German people are to give all the details because he 1t came out of. a Senate-House con(In wa.shi ngton , Assi stant Secre- White Hou se · tha~ . Rhee has n_ot The firing of Fechner was t~e $2,993.33 ; LeFlore 52 ,503.91; and subjected." wa anx·ou t ·d · . ference committee. tary of State Walter S. Robertson chan ged his oppos,tion to an arm1 s- first maj or shakeup in the Soviet counterattack a gains t ttle Communis ts in the spring of 1951. Stone S;l ,994.59. Marshall County They emphas ized that "no real sio~ ab;'~ads tl~ata~~~ 1f~~/i~ir:1~; Only a scattering or_ "no" votes s:,id upon ~}s return from the Far The 8th A1·my , wh ich has been ~otifie<.'r Kend all it was returnin g progre ss can be made towards a intended for propaganda rather were hea1_-d a s the Senate com- Ea st that we_ ca_n go ahead and lice that leaves Korea divided "but z()ne government since Beria's ha s ag reed to collaborate" if one downfall. rolling with the Communist punches immediately its un expe nded alloc- general releaxation of tens ion in than information. Bit he aid r. ' ti- pleted ac tion on the measure. s_1gn an armis tice Ill i;ood faith any is worked out. He also said his talks The action against Fechner folatior. for • ' egro transportation. Europe so long as this (the cis m of th e progra~ bass ma~: it It conti.nu~s the ~2 per cent tax tim e,, the Commumst s want to with Rhee ended in "wide areas of lowe d reports from Ru ssia that and suffering setba cks for the past six month s, hit back today with (Germa n ) pro b 1 em remains un- "necessary to tell th r II l . .. on corpoiallons until next Dec. 31. s ign. ) ag reement" and "much smaller Vladimir G. Dekanazov had been all the power at it s command. 1 sol ved." He rel eased It will expil'e at the same time that The predicted showdown was on areas " of di sag reement. 44 _ : u s01~ y.0 dismissed as interior mini ster in " We are going to move and I The Big Three strategy was the ba ck" ro da a ge :ef. t ~ a 10 per cent cut in individual in· Com munist re adiness to ac ce pt Infol'm ed sources said Robertson Beria 's native state of Georgia . don 't see how anything can 6top mapped in Washin gton at the fi ve- the libr a~·y u~rog;am a 1~~vid com e taxes is scheduled to take President Syngman Rhee's lim ited brought back several unsettled It was announced also in Mo scow day meeting of the Western Big that 26 tiUe s b e·ght d C0 effect. pledge to go along with a truce. problems, including details of that Ivan Usenko had been .ousted us," one Allied officer said. "If I Three forei gn minis ters-Secretary munists were yr v!vowe The extension will yield the gov- Mounting signs from enem y prop- plans for a joint walkout by the as mi nister of ju stice in Estonia, the little SOB' s want to fight, we'll of State John Foster Dulles, acting shelves by last ;:~ua~/rl:':a ~e- ernment an estimated $800 ,000 .0~ aganda s~urces indicated the Reds United States and Korea from post- and would be succeeded by Walter fight 'em." The big Allied push came a{ter Briti sh Foreign Secretary Lord moved were 78 titles by 21 persons durmg t_he rest of this year. It 1s were holdmg out . . . ar m istice political talks if no prog- Raudsalu. . heroic South Kortan troops had Salisbury and French Foreign Min- who refused to te tif befo . !VI • retroactiye to July 1 when the old A reliable source s_a1d the AU1es ress is made. Sov iet authorities meanwhile re- stopped a Red atta ck on the wesister ~orges Bidault . , earth 's subcom \te~ re .., c law expired. accused the Commumst of delayrng Other poin ts wer e sa id to i nclud e ported w i d e s p r 'e ad resis t~nce tern anchor of th e new Allied line, At worst, the Allies hoped at Th/ new dii·ec1ri · Nearly all th e Senate debate ce nan armistice in orde r to carry out Maj. John Eisenhower, President COLBMBUS, Mi s. J uly 15 lea st to sm oke out the tr uce mo- thorize replace e1::te 0 1oe~ 110 \ ~~- tel'ed around th e Williams amend- the c ur rent massiv_e offens ive on th~ . am o1mt of ~.S . economic an_d against Com munist rule in Ea st (UP) - Miss Nell ie S. Kiern, act- tives · behind the cu1'!'ent Soviet Communists ' ~ok O a tt O th ~ ment to exempt from the tax. ·the the cen tl'al fron t winch ripped huge nul! tar:\' aid which S_outh Korea is Germ any, and said t hey had Eisenhower's son, was with the to r eceive , and details of ·the pro- smashed "thousa nds' of sabotage South Korean s defe nding the wes• s. n . e o · ei first $100 ,000 of a fll'm ' s earp ings. ing vice pres ident of Mississippi "peace offe nsive." At best, a Bi g . . po sed U.S. mutual security pact and espionage plots. tem "hinge" posit.ion. At 9 a.m . he State College for Wome n, said Four meeting could lead to settle- )1 st, books by my_stery wnter Dash- As fin a lly passed the bill continued with South Korea. At the same iime, East Berliners s aid "Our lin e is stabilize d." He today the college will open on ment of some of the vexing prob- iell Hammett will be . restored to lhe old Jaw's $25 000 exemption. the shelves . An appraisal was or- - - -·- - - flocked across the border into a g ave no details. The Communists schedu led in early September de- !ems that have split East and West. dered of the other books to see if borough in the American sector to h ad hi t tho South Koreans with spite the Tuesday fire at ShatThe British note said tha t "while an y should be put back. buy food at an 80 per cent discoun t. about 6,000 men . tuck Hall, com bined dormitory recognizing the fact that enduring Johnson said the U. S. antiHowever, it appeared t hat the At the eas tern end of the bulge, and dining room , peace can only be ultimatel y as- Communist programs have been Partly cloudy Thursday and "market for the hu ngry" would Communist troops pre sse d a sav• Miss K eirn, in charge w h ile sured when certain basic problems hurt by "unsupported charges that HATTIESBURG, Miss., July 15 Friday and scattered thunder- have to close down withi n two days age 3,000 ma n assault a g a in st President Charles P . Hogarth is such as controlled disarmament are somehow soft on commun(UP )-Sone 100 telephone opera- showe rs. because of a Jack of funds. South Ko rean defender s. on vacation, said only " a few ,ca n be dealt with, her majest y's they ism.'' tors walked off their jobs but reThe Big Allied a t.tack on the cenarrangements" w ill be needed to govern ment in the United Kingdom "I do not s ay that there is a W ASHINGTON , J uly 15 (UP)I.urned 2'h hours later after long tral front was the U.N.'s answer feed students p roperly on their desire to di spose now of those deliberate effort to kill or crii,ple Rep . John Bell Willi a ms (D-Miss ) di stance calls had been put on an arrival h ere . S_he said t he kit- proble m s which are capable of to the big Red push of the past the s e anti-Communis t prog ram s s aid today Miss issippi s tands to em ergenc y ba sis. chen and eq uipm ent w as un- ea r ly s olut ion. few da ys during which nearly 100,thrnugh the si mple device of makJose between 400 ,000 a nd 600,000 The wal ko ut bega n about 8 a .m. da maged in the blaze that de --------000 Communis t troops s m ashed ing tiUCh charges," he said. acres in cotton if the method of and wh en the operators r eturned stroye d the t wo u pper stor ie ~ the ir wa y forw a rd on t he central setti n,t up antic ipated production a t 10:30 p .m. union and manageof the thr ee-storied bui I di ng. and western fronts to knock gaping controls advanced by Western ment repre sentatives met to di sholes i11 the Al lied defense line. sta tes is appro ve d. cuss the cause of t he short strike . STARKVILLE, Miss., July 15 ly be worked ou t on a sound basis An allied offic er said "everyWilliams , pointing out that WestMana ger Julian Harris sa id the (UP l-Sen. John C. Stennis (D- and condu cted in a sound manner," thin g is in our favor" as the all-<iut P ar tly cloudy with scattered em states are seeking to have trouble apparently arose from the Miss ) predicted today Congress Stennis said in an address before U.N . effort to re gain lost ground thundershowers. Aft ernoon tern- acreage production based on plant- company 's firing of a repairman e ventually will work out a 90 per a general assembly at Farm and got underway. JACKSON, Miss., July 15 (UP) pe rature in the low 90's and low ing for the la st three years. said who refused to cross a picket line cent parity scale for storable agri- Home Week at Mississippi College. A meeting 'here of the North Swarms of fi ghter - bombers "The price support program is pounded the r e treating Reds wi th Miss issippi chapter of the Na- Mississippi's farm and home Joan toni ght about 70 degrees. H i g h Miss issippi would be the heaviest at Dixie Pine Prod ucts Co. and cultural commodities despit_e oppo1 repair equipment. sition fl'om Secretary of Agncu lure not a grant, g ift or subsidy ," Sten- bombs and na palm . ti onal Associati on of Bank Audi- program ha s shown a profit to the Wednesday was 82 ·de grees; low lo ser in the South . " Our r ight to produce cotton has There was no interruption of Ezra Benson. nis said. "It brings to the farmer tors and Comptr oll ers th is week state of S944 ,949 s ince it was creat- wa's 68 degrees . Rainfall measured The Chinese attack had threa ten•· r believe such a program is some of the protection that has ed Allied positions guarding the featured a program planning ses - ed in 1946, Director Jack Dale .64 of an inch , the Tupelo Weather never been challenged until no w," local service because of a new dial sion which mapped out plans for said toda y. B_u;;;r~e;;; a ;u ~re; p;;o~r~t;: s ·~;;;::;:::::::;;;;;;:;;;:::::;:;:;;;;;;:;;;:\~\'~ i J~li::aim~.s~ s~a~id~.;:;;::::=:::;;;::;::::::;;:;;:;;;:::::;:;;s;y;:;s::;te:;:;m ;,;;:.;;:::::;;::;;;;:;:::-;:::;-:.;;;;::;;;::;::::;::::;:::: n;: ec:;;•e_s::::s;:a_r:::: y::::a: n=d= th :::a::::t= i t=w = il=l::::e:::v:::e::::n::::tu=a=l• 1 bee~ ext e ~de d ind us tl'y ~ nd,e r o u.r Kumhwa Valley. the comi ng chapter ye a r and Da le said t.he program has pro- , "' ... ,-~----~·· ..,.,,.,. ·- 7 ....... -..... ~...... _ ···- - ·..· - · - ..- - - -· ·- - · · -·• tan 1ff la\\ s and to labo1 b~ gua1The ne w attack on t he western vide d loans to 3,583 fo1·mer service- ,..: an teed high wages." pl ans for a members h ip d rive. hin ge pos ition south of Kumso ng The g roup met for dinner. with men and a t the beginning of July . ..., · Optimistic on the outlook for t hreatened to ope n up the Kumhwa Bob Sh irl ey in charge of pro- had outstanding mortgage loan ha!- ,:•'farmers , Stennis said Congress has Valley and send the great tide of gra m pla nning. ances totaling $9 ,581,723. • ,, increased the extension program Chinese swarming south toward 1::whic h will mean a "more eUective the Hwachon Rese rvoir power plant which provides 40 per cent of program" for Mississippi. Turning to the international situ- Seoul's light and powe r. a tion. Stennis termed the r ebellion of German workers in East Germany aga in st Ru ss ia "a good sig n / ' for us and a warning to Russia. ./ ''We mu st re sort to e ve r y honorA ro ugh s ket ch of Tupe lo's cover a lolal of 84 ,000 square .;. able means to encourage the Ru sproposed R ich Loy fa clor y was fe e t. .I" ~ sia n people and par ticularly t he a ppro ved her e Wednesda y by The o:ffice w ill b e of brick veRu ss ian leade rs to pursue a cou rse local official s an d t wo mem bel's n eer co nstr ucti on t he re mainde r .,· Paul McCullo ugh, Tupelo salesof peace." Stennis said . of t he fir m, M . E. Ric h, Jr., and of steel siding, Mr. McClure said, ; As a highlight of the fifth annual man, was in fair condition in Bryan Ri ch . The fl oors will be co ncrete. Hospital church and community conference Okolona Community While h ere the lwo executives Tupelo's m ayor and board of held in co njunction with Farm and Wednesd ay n ight af ter his left of Rich Iudus lrie. , ·ill a lso try nlderm e n will mee t Jul y 20 to Home Week, te n churches receiv- arm was t orn off in a side-swipt o re ach a definit e dec is ion on a set a d 8te for a bond e le cti on to ed cert ificates for outstanding com- ing accident just north of Okosite fo r co ns tructi on of th e $300,- de ter mi ne wh e th er loca l citize ns lo na . munity service . 000 plant. w ish t o finauce co nstructio n o f According to Hi gh way P atrolThe pr oposed p 1ans for th e the bu ilding for lease to th e Rich men who in vestig ated , the acciT upelo fact ory will be tak e n bac k f irm , wh ich propose s lo mo ve its de nt Mr. McCullough was d r ivto Clinton, Io wa. by th e Ri ch e ntire operation he r e from Clin,.. ing wi th his a rm ou t the window hrolhe r s so ll l the ir ow n en g i- ton. Iowa. "· -. / ne e r., and arc h ilC'cl <:an wor k ottl Bids o n t he p 1·oj cd w ill be o pMOOREV ILLE -Mus ical ta - of hi s a utomobi le and s ideswi ped a fl a t bed tru ck jus t outside of d e ta ile d s pecificatio ns a nd dra w- ened im m ed iately after lhe el ec· lent and a progr am on h ealth Okolona . Pat ro lmen s aid the ac• ings , accordi ng to W. E . Mc- lio n pro vid Ed the bond issue is cond ucted by the Civitan Club ciden t occurred about 5 p.m. Clu re , ice-ch a irma u o( th e 'In - approved. · Mr. McCullough was tak en to of Tupelo will feature a meeting du strial Comm ittee of Tupelo's The contract with t he fi r m will Community D evelopment Coun- provide for its payment in full of toni ght of the Mooreville P -TA. the h ospital by a pass erby. Ac· cording to patrolm en,. hospital atcil. cost of the building over a period Mee ting at the school at 7:30 te nd ants we re wo rking to s top '~ The fou r b u i Id ings to be u sed of 20 years, approval of th e fac '~=~:..........i:i..........._, __,_ _ . ......... ____..._,, __________ .L ,_ ___ __ ........ _ ...,..,,... ....... _ __ ____,_, " .... ·- - - - -------· ~ ~ - -- -' p.m., th e group will eat bas ket bleed ing w he n th e.v i nvestigated , b y the p lant, includi ng- produc- tory proj ect thu s requiri n g no TUPELO 'S PROPOSED TOY PL AN:;-;--;:;;-i;;- ~;;;;;:~d· by R ic h own e ngin ee rs •nd architect will work out detailed dr awings and su ppers brough t by women of and th at Mr . McCu llo ugh was t 10 11 bu ildi ng, w are hou se, p a inl incre ase in Tupe lo taxes, Mr. Mc• very weak from loss of blood. Industries, is ~hown in this preliminary skeld1 from which the Iirm'1 1pecllication1. b uilding a nd boiler 1·oo m, will poin led out. t he community,

Money For Negro Teachers Salaries Is Unaccounted For

Russia Asked

45,000 Troops Hit Communists In Mass Push On Central Front

Johnson Issues Eisenhower New Blast At Wins Viciory 'Red Probers' In Tax Issue State Department 'Firmly' Behind New Book Policy

Robertson Says Rhee Agrees To 'Collaborate'

House Passes Profi,:i Revenue Bill After Amendments Defeated

Envoy Reports To Ike Following Conference ¥/ith ROK President

To Conference By Big Three

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Full United Press Leased Wire

Allies Open Biggest Attack In Two Years Against Reds

Governor's Tally Shows 11 Senators, 18 House Members Opposing Session JACKSON, Miss ., July 15 <UPl Gov. Hug h White said today he expects to go ahead with his plan to call the Legislature into special • sess ion Sept. 15 to equalize white · and Negro schools. " I don't believe there will be

Member Audit Bureau of Circulations

Agreement Sought On Long-Stqlled Austrian Treaty

Grotewohl Removes Justice Minister Fechner From Post

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M. S. C. W. Plans To Open Despite Dormitory Blaze

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State Loss Seen If Proposed Cotton Controls Approved

Bank Auditors Map Plans For Coming Year

East Germans Fire 'Enemy' Of Republic

State Farm, Home Loan Program Shows Profit Says Director

Telephone Operators Return To Jobs After Hattiesb .. rg 'Strike'

Mississippi ¥leather

Stennis Predicts Parity Scale Despite Benson's Opposition

¥leather Forecast

Local Officials Approve Rough Sketch Of Rich Toy Factory

Tupeloan Loses

Arm In Accident

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Talent Program

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