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The Selma Times-Journal from Selma, Alabama • 3

Location:
Selma, Alabama
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THREE THE SELMA TIMES-JOURNAL, SUNDAY, JULY 24, 1949 If --I Chinese Kicked Out By Rulers Of Tibet CANTON, China, July 23 (P) The priestly rulers of" Tibet have kicked out Chinese government officials in the latest effort to smash Chinese influence in that remote land at the top of the world, qualified Canton sources reported tonight The Chinese Nationalists claim suzerainty (a sort or feudal control not so definite as sovereignty) over Tibet. A Chinese diplomatic mission, a radio station and school long have New RUFTEX a paper RULED CHANCE FOR T-H FOES Truman Has Opportunity To Prove Merits Of His Controls re-jnnte BY HOWARD DOBSON July, 23 -Wt- Administration leaders in Congress are depending on President been maintained at Lhasa, the mans intervention, in. the -threaten ed steel strike to pull them out of capital in the Himalaya Mountains. drapes by $enTant! the hole on repeal of the Taft-Hart-ley labor law. They say some sort of settlement based on recommendations from the presidential fact-finding board, is likely in the steel dispute, and yy Canton sources said that on July 7 the Tibetan State Council the Lamas who rule in the name of the teen-age Dalai Lama ordered all.

Chinese government personnel out of Tibet within two weeks. I it will demonstrate the workability The "Informants said the Chinese of Mr. Trumans proposal for handling national emergency strikes. departed immediately for India. They hinted that British influence Taft-Hartley repeal, bogged down in the House Labor Committee, is may have caused the Tibetan action.

have Only last August, the Dalai Lama, spiritual and temporal ruler of Tibet, reported to the Nationalist government that he had launched a protracted anti-Communist prayer meeting. This he described as the only way his non-military na tion could show its aversion for dead for this session of congress. A prominent House Democrat said privately today. It will not be revived until next spring about the time congressional primary election campaigns begin. Britain and China long vied for paramount position in the country.

In Canton, it was said that the weakening of the Chinese Nationalists through Communist civil war victories have influenced the may Tibetan action but that it was not directly instigated by the Reds. Look like smart homespun fabric I 1 on both side. Use like at gronnd-floor window wfceredrapenee show fro outside -a portieres between rooms. Made to too solid-background, decorator colors: blue, green, wine. FuH window-width valance, and tie-backs.

AH last cetera. No harshness, no dripctog. OsHtinato flam Mialaa, to 56 to. wide. EAGLES (NEA Telephoto) GANG BOSS SHOT Gang Boss Mickey Cohen receives blood plasma hi Hollywood Receiving Hospital after he, a state attorney generals investigator assigned to guard Mm, and two others were shot and wounded in a restaurant on the exclusive Sunset strip.

Dr. C. C. Dickie holds Cohens head. (NEA Telephoto) EXPERIENCE REVOLUTION Two Guatemalan Girl Scouts enroute to a convention in Chicago, 111,, stopped off in New Orleans, La, to tell of their experiences In the Guatemalan revolution.

Elizabeth Leiva (left) and Irma Rojas said they were pressed into service in a hospital after the fighting began. They arrived by air with some 30 American tourists, businessmen, and Guatemala Jean de Reszke (1859-1925), who was a baritone, developed into one of the greatest tenors of the lOtfc century. The Washington Monument is 555 feet high and 55 feet square a the base. The top is reached eitoer by stairs or elevator. By next spring," this Democrat explained, tempers will have cooled off a tittle, and we will have the example of the steel strike to point to.

Things will be a lot different then, with the primaries coming up 1 When steel producers and the United Steelworkers (CIO) reached a deadlock early this month, the president stepped in after a strike date was set and askeA-foy AC-, day truce He offerel to name a three-man Board of Inquiry to study the con-troversary, and emphasized that the situation did not require invoking the Taft-Hartley Law. This referred to authority the law gives the government to enforce an 80-day cookBg off period by an injunction against the union in national emergency disputes. President Phil Murray of the Steelworkers accepted the offer promptly, and the steel companies followed along. The board it at work. This is in line with the formula proposed in the administrations Ta-ft-Hartley repeal bill.

Under the bill, the president would call for a 30-day truce whenever a labor-management argument threatened the national JfetefouW appoint a board to mveetigateT-hd the board could recommend terms of settlement The administrations bill was approved by both the House and Sen. ate Labor Committees early this vear. But it never got any further. A Senate coalition pushed through a btti carrying essential features of the present law. Most of it was drafted by Senator Taft (R-Ohio).

The House Committee, with the Senate bill and several proposals by 'ts own members before it, has been deadlocked over the question of handling national emergency strikes. Lakeland Municipal hospital. The dead identified from driver licenses were Robert Ogburn and his wife Inez of nearby Lake Alfred. William Wilson of Sampson, died enroute to Lakeland Municipal hospital. Wilson's five-year-old son also was killed instantly.

His name was not known. The lone survivor of the wrecked car was Wilsons wife. Wreckage was strewn for 200 yards at the scene. The auto struck the four-ear train between the engine and the first oar. The first car toppled over but remained upright.

The other cars remained upright but were derailed. GOP (Continued from Page former ehairnan of the Senate-House committee, has contended that A-bomb making comes under the industrial clause and thus bar: the exchange of information. Lilienthal Differs On the other hand. Chairman David E. Lilienthal of toe atomic energy commission is reported to hold the belief that the Preside has inherent authority to exchange atomic information with toe British by eneeatfve agreement.

Such a agreement would bypass Congress, a development that Knowiand signified he doesnt want to see take place. A Democratic official has emphasised that Mr. Tr unmet a at toe Biair Ifcone meeting was not threatening to act without officially consulting Congress. The British have a lever, if they choose to use to their seautei for the. technical information which seems to have been denied them since the 1946 act was passed despite their wartime pwrtnerrtttp in developing the bomb.

Anaeteean contracts with British-owned mines in the Belgian Congo, whese a large share of toe world's usable uranium comes from, expires this year. they should have brought us down like tote and given us sueh hard times during tfour years when they have not only been eating up our savings but have enjoyed the enormous advantage of outside help on a scale never known in the hlntory of any country in time of peace. The United States and the Dominion of Canada together have given to us subsidies which amount to nearly two billion pounds one billion, seven hundred fifty million pounds ($7,800,806,000) have come into this island by loan or gift from these two great capitalist countries, who also have their own troubles and burdens to bear. Our socialist spendthrifts and muddlers have dissipated evesy overseas asset they could lay their hands on and, in addition, have exacted and extracted from our people a higher rate of taxation than was required at toe Very height of toe war. ChueteriH said toe greatest help Britain can give toe world is to stand ereet hi her native strength.

Every country west of toe iron curtain has made a bitter postwar comeback than Britain, he said, even defeated Italy and Geamany. He shagged that nattonetieetioh sped the doom of trade unionism and that toe workers themselves in nationaltaed industries are far from content because of toe wage freeee, rising costs and loss of freedom of bargaining power by union leaders. Labor unions form toe baetebsn of the Labor Party. NfW, CRISP art D0UQHTFUL! The Pamoue 'PHWZESS'1 D- DVcfflu CHURCHILL (Cou tossed from Page 1) Attlee said toe new conservative platform pledging among other things to do a fetter job with socialist laws already enacted and to halt further nationalization of industry was dishonest and only a great piece of window dressing. He said every page was a damning indictment of what the conservative pasty did not do white It held the mins of the government.

The conservative party has never been atoie to put forward a real alternative pokey to that of toe labor party toe prime minister said. I shudder to think what would have happened had they had control oi Britain. ChussMU told the Wolverhampton ratty wtohn ts a eostSy fallacy and its most dive at eupnes-sion, nation attention, is a larfuse." The so tea tints have brought Great Britten Jdut alike in prosperity and reputation both at home and abroad he stud. They have squandered the reserves and reeoorees wMsh had been gathered in toe past and have darkened mod narrowed the future of every naan woman and child in this famous island. It is all toe more amazing that LEVY (Continued from Page 1) He stressed, too, that it would give widows and orphans more protection against foreclosure sales or attachment proceedings to make good old debts.

The lower chamber passed a bill, by Rep. George Wallace of Barbour, to waive tuition to state colleges and trade schools for wives and children of servicemen killed In World War H. It also would apply to dependents of veterans of the last war with' service-connected disabilities of 40 per cent or greater. ur Lose Lives As Tram, Auto Collide HAINES CITY, July 23 W) Four persons were killed tonight when a-car and a passenger train collided at a crossing two miles south of here. Three persons were tiled instantly.

A fourth died ea route to the COLONIAL by PRINTXEar Two coats in one Made of the nations finest DOESKIN GABARDINE and COVERT, for LESS MONEY THIS FALLl New Hearing Denied To Murdock Hinton WIGGINS, July 23 UP) Circuit Judge L. C. Corban refused today to grant a new trial to Murdock Hinton, accused killer of four persons. Hinton, 48-year-old Lucendale farmer, immediately began a move for an appeal to the Mississippi Supreme Court to sjt aside his death sentence. Defense Attorney Bidwell Adam said the appeal was being taken on grounds that the trial court failed to instruct the jury properly and allowed testimony regarding Hintons moonshining activities and morality of the late Sheriff J.

Nelson of Lucendale. Hinton's execution has been set for Aug. 26. I A Stone Circuit Court jury con I victed Hinton last Thursday nigh of murdering Nelson during a bloody Christmas week shooting spree. He also is charged with killing his own ex-wife, his daughter, Gloria and her baby girL ACTION (Continued (horn rage 14 Chairman Kee CD-W Va) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee said that he would begin hearings on toe highly complicated measure at once.

He expressed confidence that ft would be passed by the House after considerable debate. Secretary Aches on probably will be the first witness ifthear-ings expected to start Tuesday. But the House like the rest of Congress, appeared to be deeply split on the issue of supplying arms to other governments in peacetime even with a cold war going on. In fact some experts doubted whether the administration would succeed in getting it through both branches of Congress before the hoped-for adjournment in early September. One possibility is that Congress may authorize the arm program but run out of time to consider appropriating funds for it.

If that seems likely as debate progresses, the administration probably will try to enlarge the sum in the bill which could be advanced by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to finance the first months of We project. This sum is presently fixed at $125,000,000. Tfje Truman proposal for the emergency fund is designed at least in part to answer the desire for flexibility as the Presidents advisers in the State see it. For example, should one of the countries in the southeast Asian area become in-a threat from Commun-Mr. Truman might employ some of this money In an attempt to help block that threat PROGRESS (Continued from Page II Speaking again in the absenct of the chairman of the Industrial Development committee.

Manager Turner said that a sub-committer had decided that publicity pham-phlets should be mailed first to manufacturers making furniture pumps, and cans. Many pamphlets have already been mailed to furniture manufacturers, he said, anti the sub-committee had adopted the idea of printing and attaching stickers publicizing Selma to correspondence going out of town One concern, he continued, is still interested to Selma a an industrial site, and contact have been with another company. SEE THIS PRE-VIEW OF FALL1 FASHIONS AND CHOOSE YOURS NOW. LAY IT AWAY NOW FOR COOL WEATHER LATER. A SMALL' DEPOSIT WILL HOLD THE COAT OR SUIT YOU CHOOSE.

DR. LELAND DIES Ualloi See what a quality house paint can Mo for ysur home! Colonial In ready-mixed sparkling colon that create new beauty Choose famous Colonial white that renews Itself by allowing dirt to wash away Leaves surface bright and clean. BIRMINGHAM, July 23-UP) Dr. Joseph Leland, 67, prominent Birmingham surgeon, died today at his residence. He had beer in ill health several years.

A native of Tuscaloosa, be was a graduate of Tulane Un versitv Medical College and did postgrads ate work In Europe. He was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons. Surviving are the widow, Mrs Joseph Leland; two daughters. Mrs James L. Pugh and Miss Norflrete Leland, both of Birmingham; sons, Joseph Leland, Jr, Colum bis.

S. and Robert Leland, New York City. Exclusively TILLMAN DRUG COMPANY 100 Bread Street Phones 1 and 11 ROTHSCHILDS Selmas Loveliest Ladies Sieve i- waL 1 Melchancholy critics insist that 1 the North Atlantic Pact is bom of a purpose defile, if not I I scuttle, the United Nations. 1 am certain they are wrong Sen Arthur H. Veodenberg (R) oi I Michigan.

The name America originally was applied oaly to South America, according to the Encyclopedia.

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About The Selma Times-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
511,071
Years Available:
1897-2021