The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, March 3, 1947 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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tom
afte.
4
i
Drew
Pearson
IINIW fWiMiai Ml MUM I
at iiih in w its m4 I
p4 tkm iM? Mimnl frf 11
IImM lMf M
Four Councilmen To Be Elected Tuesday --It's Your Duty ToGo Vote
Washington
Sty
.30 OSU-JlH
lAUOplO'X
talja Satlg Express
IIN IIII4 PIMOKt (Itllll
Cloudy. puMibte rain tonight
and TurJy.
Lrl m4rilum 1pm. tw
day H: kiHiilny night's low So;
huiiiUy high 3J; bsiurttaj night's
low Si.
lUTlI YEAR NO. S2
; Chickasha Votes' Changes In School
Tuesday In Threej Lines Seen As Must
Alderman Races
(Editor'! Note: Draw Pearson's
brass ring. good fur on IrN riilt
Ml lilt UiilKli'll StrnvdiiM
lUiunit today g-s to Lewis Doug
Is nrw unkowJur to Lt-gLuul
Low 1 1 William Douglas
ppniniH amlMMailor lo tha court
of PL Jamaa hu three Unique
clmractrcbtin:
It oraa nno of tho ftw who
(tiuld outcharm franklin Boose-
veil; ho ia only ono atm removed
from bring a British subject him
elf; and bo ran talk longer ssy
ea and !till mako peoilo bko
him which la laying a lul fur a
diplomat r anyone olaoi
In addition Lew hai rrowded a
groat deal of valuable guvrrnmrr.t
osperlenro Into ate relatively
young bio. and all-in-all should) foglitrrod voter In CMcfc-
mako an aatuto and a Wo nvoyiih with tho exception of Ihoao
to tho nation whero wo so badly re.idinc in Ward 3 will bo eligible
need capable repreaentalion. to vote In tho city flection Turs-
lamglaa clmo klnahlp -ith tho day c. A. Hardesty secretary of
British Is through hia grandfather I Um county election board an id lo-
a geedtiah professor of geology I dy.
who migrated to Artowa wa fjti jimry Ross alderman
Canada whrra ha r-JablUhed tha fnJ wartj I has no opponent
beginning of tho i'hclpa - Dodg 1
copper milliona.
But despite the fact that the I
family drew milliona from tno
USA and that tho town of Doug-
In Aril- la named fur him I
Grandpa Douglaa refused to bo-1
nano an American rillzm. In fart I
ho amt hia wife back to Canada
LIGHT PAGES
CHICKASHA OKLAHOMA MONDAY MARCH 8. 1917
(associated mess
TRICK B CENTS
I Oklahoma City March I CH Mho upkeep nf tho arhoola which
Gov. jtnf J Turner aaid today ho I tlirir children ottmd.
CAM. Mag FOR
Ll.llTIUM REXILT8
Tho Dally Express wilt
tabulate vraulla af tho oily
demon aa rapidly aa tha ata-
ri art acyorti ara received. With
tho yet la elating at I gat re-
aalla ahould ho fwnglrte by
ehont am Call tMI far result
would inilil upon Bio poa-aao ol
a school di-trirt reorganization
loll in an rffurt to provide elr-
quat terol financing fur common
ctKwla.
A ntraauro now pending In Iho
houta of rep reen Lilivra would
mako tlie transportation area Iho
taxing area fur arhool purpose
thua making It mandabiry upon
oven thoao dUIrlcta which do nut
maintain arhnula lo cvniributo lo
whenever a child woo expected
ao that all hia children mlaht bo
HrHivh suhjert Of hia two eon
Waiter Dougina remained British
to tho end. But Jimmy Douglu (hero will be no election In the!
LeVO father fell In love with I ward Mr. Hardesty pointed out.
Joaephinc William daughter of I- Mr. Ilardcaly grrdlrta acn
a cruaty Arizona miner who flat-1 ISM vatra will ho rant In the
ly refuted to let hia daughter
marry a foreigner."
Only because of thl did Lew
Douglaa. the new nmbauador to
Grtai Britain happen to be born
nn American citizen.
Law haa kept extremely dose I are aa follows: (tho .
ties with Canada however and I derman la lilted first In
election. Approximately MN
voters reside la tha warda la
which etreUana art being held
be painted eat
Candidate! in the three wards
where the election ia being held
al-case)
at one time served aa chancellor I Wkrd I
of McGill unlversilyjn Montreal. Emmart Mayo and George
And hia father despite tha mai I Knight
rlage to on American wife went I Ward S
J Canada.icunhl R. B. Patterson and T. W. Dor-
Canadian citizenship and epentl-.ii
tha reat of hia life aa far from I . tfard a
tha hated New Deal aa possible. I j an jj KnMt
25! hSathS krill bo open nt u. and
Douglaa has sometimes hated thel-in at v n m.
Jjjfjr 5? I The following are tho voUnr
nut Placet along with descriptions ol
the precinct Urns (center of street
of government uko en iDUnaiea i myenue is tho boundenr 1b evenr
sbuttlo-eockp never qulto happy oounoy m ww
Township Filings
To Close Friday
A general county election for
varinue township offices con-
stables and Jnatirra of Iho peaco
will bo held on April 1 C. A.
Hardesty aecrelary of the county
eleetlan board said today.
The filing period fee Iho riee-
Uea will eteee on Friday of tide
A number nf persona hove al-
ready filed fur the various of-
fices tho election board
At present eppruxlmalely le
IM stele arhaal di-lrkte da net
maintain erhaoto bat transfer
their atedenla te sdjarenl ekul
dlstrlrta end pay ealy allakt
lalltan fees
The arhMil people are handi-
capped In working el home on Hie
matter of lural financing" Turner
aid. "Thw rant fua at home
about lural taxaa. It tiiey do
U try re liable to get firoL We
tump on them fur rumlng up here
In Die rapibd wanting things but
after all 118 about Urn only place
j liirr've gut to come.
"Wo nerd some lawa wtilch will
produce a balanced financing plan
between state end loral Sub-
divisions. Instead of having In pour
mare end more money out of the
general revenua fund all the time.
"When they work out the rislit
kind of reorganization bill tin
rtady to l anything 1 can to get
it aed.
Turner comment on tho re-
organisation bill followed hia bi-
weekly report to tho people Satur-
day In wlilrh ho declared $1S-
000000 a year lo ho Iho tup gen-
eral fund figure fur erhoote.
The mmmon ochnol finance Mil
will be before the senate commit-
I Wurd South of
UtUe too Independent I or govern- MiMOlrl and cut of Fifth; Negro
ment service. park ISO! Henderson.
DOCGLAS AND FDR Ward L preelnet f: South of
Actually Low came to Wash-1 Missouri Fifth to lfth; Baptist
ington five yean before Franklin I church 12 th and Georgia. -Roosevelt
aa a very young very I Ward L precinct at West of llth
ensigetla Dtinocraiic congress- land south of Missouri; Lows Gar-
man. Congress at that thno was age 1128 South 18th.
packed with tha dignified seif- Ward S preelnet 1: Missouri to
satisfied colons of tho Coolidge I Dakota and cost of Fifth; Tucker
era to whom Douglas was a hot I Store 1001 South Second
breeze of radicalism right off tho I ward 2 preelnet 8: Missouri to
desert . Dakota and Fifth to 12th; Church
Low saw In Franklin Boaaevelt I of Nazaiene Ninth and Texas
then governor of New York a re-1 Ward preelnet I: Missouri to
freshing contrast He also saw In Dakota and west id 12th; G. E.
Roosevelt a chance to upset the I Venable residence 1601 Dakota
drawn-out Republican era. I Word 4. preelnet 1: North of
I himself to the Room- Chickasha and east o( Fifth;
n entourage; ha be-1 Courthouse.
FDR's clom friends Ward 4 pradnet 2: North of Illl-
and eventually the New Dealt note and west of Fifth; McGraw
first director of the budget residence B2S Mtrtitpn-
By this time however Lew Ward preelnet 1: Chickasha
and others found that he wasnt to Illinois and west of Fifth; City
nt all tho radical tho Coolidge-1 Hall.
Hoover boys thought ho was. In
fact his ideas on economy were
exactly opposite to Roosevelt's.
Low was dead against government
spending. Ho even tried to slash
agricultural college appropria-1
tions recommended tho abolition
of eight collectors ot internal
revenue opposed tho public works
rim and urged n sates tax.
i he wn accused of being tho
Jaycees Sponsor
"Gef-Ouf-Vofe"
Chickasha Jaycees in keeping
lory reported. Since all have filed
as independents no primary elec-
tion will be held. In raws where
there sro no opponents no elec-
tion Is to be held.'
Towns In which elections ore
likely are Tuttle Rush Spring
Mince snd Yerdcn Mr. Hardesty
aitL
Foreign Budget
Report Asked
Washington March I COl Sen.
Tobey (R) New Hampshire pro-
posed today that Secretary of
State ;. mhall tell congresa be-
hind bolted doors exactly how tho
situation stands In tha troubled
Mediterranean and tho near oast
before the lawmakers are called
upon to vote for bigger cash out-
lays abroad.
- Tobey who beads the emote
bonking committee charged with
on foreign loans told
(RdlteFb notet Wyatt R. lira-
drirk af Ion Imi eoMsulllag
engineer who Made plans ter
tho highway depart meat for
urban development Ihrapgh
CMekashg has written Iho fat-
ten Inf glory explaining plans.)
Tho highway program fur the
stele of Oklahoma Is now illvldrd
lute three ralrgnrles: . ft) Tlie
regular federal-aid slate highway
system which Includes the high
ways going or mas tho stele and
connecting tlie various towns and
cities (2) Iho farm-to-market
county mails serving the farmers
In getting to market centers (1)
the urban highways applicable to
that pari nf the regular highway
system passing through tho elite
lee on eduactinn tomonow a" popuUUw
written. It would rail tor tlie ex
Chie? ReeoEoHiruieradls Solouns
Le MeasMie Enpire
If Enlisfmenfs
Drop Services
CouldTakeSieps
ho think tha crisis pre-
by possible withdrawal of
British military and economic old
to Greece can ba met only by
an informed "
representative of J. F. -Morgan with national policy will sponsor
to whom his family has been clom a gei-out-the-vote drive Tuesday
--inside the New Deal. I lnu rn-dn eh-trman nf tha
Before Douglaa split with Rome- Stoe tadiawM toda?
vett he did one Important thing thaHaSteM rf mnunittS
to which he now owes his present wlu contribtfte their time and the
appointment as amtetmador to urn of their care to take people
London. Ha helped get hie old I m tha nuit-.
friend Dean Acheson appointed
undersecretary of the treasury.
didnt agree with Roose-
velt Inflation either and also re-
; IS years later It was Ache-
son now undersecretary of state
who put Douglas' appointment
across with Truman as ambassa-
dor to England.
OOTCHARMDfG FDR
. Though Lew Douglas split with
FDR -over government-spending
ho remained one of tho few In-
dividuate who could outcharm
Boocivdto
Despite the fact that ha voted
for London In 1936 and organized
S Jl For years it has been a nat-
Wendell Willkle In 194 Douglas lm-i project for Jaycees to spon-
back to FDRs bosom when oor tourmdtizens to
1 id FDB whose vote at all elections.
MLrSJnMrmcmahv I K been plehied that the
OTicnmiS national as well as state and loral
JFee offidM thatmii
EftJSL1!: to vote Is baste
1 to th ftwwttonlng of democracy
6!-lo8 with peppte w? ono-and that "if tha American wayli
(Continued no Editorial Psga) to achieve lie fullest success neo-
pte must go vote!"
QUICKIES By Ken Eeynolds
The Jsyeees will work out of
no Chamber of Coasmerce of-
fice and are inviting all those
needing trapspertatien Just to
raU 77.
Members of the committee
winking with Mr. Erwin
Charlie McCown
Bob White; Everett
Bitsche Leo Graham
Norite .
Junior Social Workers wtik
Mrs. Carl MoConnick aa pi
denL ara eaeperatiag with
In tha ret-out-the-vsto
Tha women will tele-
Tuesday to remlad dtt-
te go vote.
ien. Wherry of Nebraska the
Republican whip said that In his
view if any political loans" arc
to ba mada "they should bo dis-
cussed frankly on the floor of
the aenafo."
Marshall outlined the state de-
portment's financial needs far the
next fiscal year at a closed door
session today of a house appro-
priations 10000111011(100
Chairman Stefan (D) Nebraska
told newsmen the committee called
Gen. Marshall out of turn to per-
mit tho secretary to present the
department's needs before leaving
- (Sen ft ig I No. 7)
$6250 Stolen
From Rush Store
C 01 C Banquet
To Be March 18
The annual banquet
Chamber of Commerce
of tha
will be
"Mary look la the Express
Want Ada for a plumber and
dent ask me whyf
held at tha American Legion hall
I at 7 p.m. March 18 Roy HolIiday
announced Monday
Vagtborr president of
the Mid-West Research Institute
at Kansas City will ba the guest
speaker. Hie subject will be
"The Unseen Wealth About Us."
Reports of the past yearb work
an detection id officers will be
other items on tha schedule far
the evening.
robbed the W. E. Boner
merchandise store at Rush
of 86360 overnight
Arthur Wilson
Grady and stats
lied m to
assist in the crime.
Wilson said late this
that either the safe was
left open or tha burglars war
the combination to get the money.
The burglar or burglars entered
the stars through a back window.
DANCE PROGRAM
TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT DOOR TONIGHT
An evening filled with laugh-
ter and enjoyment is promised to
those who attend tonight's dance
program to bo presented at 8:13
oclock In tho Chickasha high-
far her satires an
dancers will ba
at tho piano by
Tho program b to be tho sixth
number on tha Okahoma College
for Women Artist Series. Indi-
vidual tickets may bo purchased
ait tho door.
Daugherty Is Employed
In Fire Department
Fred Daugherty 809 Iowa has
sen employed aa o fireman at
the Chickasha fire department;
City Manager John Hamman an-
pounces. Mr. Daugherty who h a veter-
of World War IL fills a recent
an
J vacancy ia tho department -
penditure of gMAuOAM a year
fur arhoola an inerraso of $10.-
000000 over the figure for tlie
current biennium.
Opponents of the largo op-
propriattoo within the commit-
tee will attempt to cot it to
llt.SM.CM before repertlng It
eat altheas h the heavy school
btee membership may be able
to report M without n rhange.
Should it bo reported a Is
the senate leadership wiU prob-
ably band together to refer it
either to a special committee or
tl tho appropriations committee
One hitherto staunch mem her
of tho senate school bloc; who
declined to bo quoted by name
said he was ready to go along on
o 15000000 reduction in the $26-
800000 total.
On senate leader Chairman
Bill Logan of tho taxation rom-
' tee declared that If better
il financing methods were not
out ho would be forced to
vote for the maximum school op-
proprUtton. aid tho revisions In the
!j
ite tomorrow ara neces- highways at Iho entrance to tha
If loral subdivisions sro to cities. It has been determined that
(See Page 2 No. B) lover 60 per cent originates within
the city or b destined for some
point within the city. This per-
centage of local' traffic at Chick-
asha was found to bo 66 per cent.
Ae-tlte highway continues
through the city loral Intrs-dty
traffic increases tho traffic load
on tha highway route until a peak
ia reached In tho center of the
businem dbtrictxTha percentage
The threat of nationwide tote-1 of through traffic at this point
trite simmered today as I which in Chickasha Is along
he president of a telephone work-1 Fourth street at Chickasha and
era unionwhlch hassetApril 7 1 Choctaw avenue amounts to only
as a strike deadline prepared to 16 per cent of the total traffic
testify' before the house labor flow.
ooowotttoe. A more studied approach to the
Fbe unfen. the NaUenM-Fed- problem shows the need to take
wwkers Uk q( that part of the traffic on
Mbehaif gmmwthaa MLM6 highways that haa originated
In 36 state
to sa sport Ba demands for wage
and ether
general assessment tew propoeed
in a bill which will bo before j On checking the traffic on tho
To expedite the phnalng si see
of Ite nr baa htebway the elate
highway commission has re-
tained reasahlag easlneen to
collect ibo aerrtaary field falter
mallea aad make aladlee M the
proper rente eetarttaa for high
ways la passing through ite
elite Buck sledlre are new
ander way la Ofctehema City
Tab Enid McAboter Ads
Da rant. Hmhegee aad Chirk
ash The Aidnmre plans have
been eompleled and the eon tract
let roe tha ceMlrartiea of the
new highway.
The preliminary study In Chick-
asha haa been completed and b
now under review by the federal
bureau of public roikl The re-
port brings out the following
points
In considering relieving the
traffic loed on city street by
reason of tha traffic directed over
them from federal and state high
way ones-first approach to a
solution b to think of directing
tha highway baffle around the
town by means of by-pass mad
within the city or b destined for
some point within the city es well
as that port of the traffic that b
jSSh"ATIteta Sof the city. Such a
the national federation of tele-1 would necessitate the
phoite worker previously highway passing through the city
thesenatelabar eanunlttee that 1 11 selecting route through the
"personally I would be tickled to city consideration should be given
arbitrate rather than ran a strike. to affording tha maximum con-
However he has accused the tele-1 venlcnce or usage of the route by
phone industry of stalling" in I the larger volume of traffic within
1 because; he said
"are waiting for con-1 tha convenience of through traffic
pase legislation that will I A major factor In saute so-
li ve tho companies a bargaining leetlau af a highway through a
advantage. city b Ha conformity with the
The 30-day strike notices were
filed in tho main last weekend
although some posted on behalf
of other unions not affiliated with
tho NFTW were filed earlier.
In Washington labor am
said nation-wide negotiations were
under way.
WAR II VETS BONUS
BILL TO GO TO
VETERANS' BODY
Oklahoma City March 3
Proposed $50000000 bonus bill
for World War Two veterans will
be cent from the house veterans
affairs committee . to tha bouse
committee on constitutional
amendments Dick Rigs veterans
affairs chairman said today. .
Ite bill call log for a bond b-
election by tho people aa
March 25 waa Introduced early
In February and tea
In the veterans affairs
since that Item.
If the constitutional . amend-
Ffurth
me mite to Ms
ment at s point six
of Chickasha. AU
north -south
traveled
committee give it a favor-
torn to tho
to tho
truffle and ia
yean ef
rent
U. 8. Highway 277 enter Chick-
asha on tha south tuns east on
Choctaw avenue at Fourth atreet;
and b directed bade couth one-
half mil after croming the Wash-
ita river two and ono-half miles
east of the dty- Through traffic;
travelling this route; lose
mite of travelled dbtance in go-
th is distance.
economic factor to- the
the use of
routes through
Group Is Studying
Best System Of
Military Training
Washington March 3 (nPresU
Truman today urged con-
Violent Death List
22 In Three Days
Jerusalem March 3 (05 Deaths
by violence in Palestine mounted
to 23 in three days with the shoot-
ing ot e Jewish curfew violator in
Tel Aviv today aa the British
army maintained martial law
a third of tho Holy Land's
700000 Jew
British officiate reported that
Isaac Poll 30-year-old Jewish ex-
scrvlceman was shot and kilted
white bicycling in Td Aviv when
ho failed to heed a soldiers order
to halt
His death was the sees
traceable to central measures in-
to facilitate a hunt for
fighter
Congress Faces
Two Deadlines
date may
1 accomodate the tratticpamlng
This opposition haa teen the
main reason the bill tea teen held'" 9. end at the aamo time
In the
The
Wetting ..
Co and Malcolm Davi Okla- traffic lame In addition to tha
ham City members af tha VFWtwo high speed through traffic
legislative committee. The bill j lane adjacent parallel local traf-
aska payment of from 3100 to $300 1 fie mada must be provided to ac-
tor each veteran depending on I commodate the adjacent residents
tength of service 9 Page $9. IX
Washington March I (A The
10th congresa swings into its third
month of business today with little
to show tor its efforts so far and
with two .deadlines looming ahead
This b tha month the law-
makers must decide what to do
about tho draft tew which expires
March 31 and In which their lead-
ers ted hoped to finish work on a
general labor tew to head off
possible now coal strike April 1.
A presidential message on the
draft law may go to congress early
this week possibly today.
White there tea teen ne offi-
cial announeement; army and
U officiate predict
privately the president will ask
that the draft aet be left to die
on schedule. It hunt teen used
taut October.
tor getting a new labor
law on tho statute books by the
end of the month when John L
Lewis' current soft coal truce ex-
pires were dealt a blow by the
announeement of Chairman Hart-
ley (K) New Jersey that the house
labor committee may not wind up
Its hearings before the middle of
tho month.
The senate - labor committee
plana to end Its public bearings
Saturday but both committees
may mend considerable time- be-
hind closed . doors writing their
separate bill
Even when they reach the re-
spective floor the measures are
expected to provoke long days of
debate;
But the month promises to bo a
busy on tor eongrem.
Tho house appropriations earn
mlttea. has half a desen de-
partmental supply bills aim set
ready. On of then appropriat-
ing IMS fiscal year funds far
the treasury and peuteffleo de-
partment may te 1
floor by the end ef
Another for tho
SM fa go X. JS fl
Jewem died In a hmplial yes-
terday afflcbb said ate wee bit
In the back of tha head and ter
mother waa wounded In the leg
by bnlleta fired at KetUi fatter
leaving the bourn in violation
of a earfew. Tbe two were stand-
ing on a balcony at tho time tha
ufflciali reported Shalom walked
eat after o quarrel with hie wife;
.Martial law waa in force far
more than 250000 Jews In Ji
salem'i oldest and biggest Jewish
district tli Mea Stearim section
In a northern coastal-plain
area measuring some tour by 10
and embracing Tel Aviv
Ramat Gan Petah Tiqva
' otter Jewish
A curfew keeping residents to
homes waa lifted at dawn
today In the coastal section. In the
Jerusalem martial-law are hous-
ing some 15.000 Jew Inhabitants
were allowed oUt forth e first time
since 1p.m. Saturday aa a dally
three-hour suspension of the cur-
tow became effective at 10 a. m.
Ninth-brigade infantrymen be-
gan a- search tor Jewish ex-
tremists today thsengh twisted
street clattered alleys and
Eabblt-Waren homes of tha
poverty-ridden vicinity af
Stearim the pise of a
By
Gold)
In aearchea af
institution
The. army report that soldiers
searching Tel Aviv had found a
(Sea Page Ifa 3)
gross fai Irl the draft law expire
March 31 and tlie anny announml
it is releasing approximately ion.
DUO nun-volunteer by June SO
Sir. Trnman Md leg teuton
In a memoir that Ite drafted
mite ara brief dterharsed lo
brine tho armv down to its pro-
Jerted atevMtk of 1A76.MS by
Joly 1. Tbo war department
announced detail
All runimandera In this coun-
try and oversea tha department
saiil Hava been on lured to start
roleas of eligible men.
Tho army's strength on Feb.
14 wo 1.126422.
The department's schedule rails
fur tho dikrharge nf all oligililn
men in (te United States by May
Oversea commander w e r o
given an additional two month to
mate tho releases because ot ship-
ping and other problem They
must however return eligible men
to Uiia country for completion of
terminal leave and discharge not
later than Juno 30.
Exceptions will te made In
coses of men awaiting trial or held
as a result of trial; thasa held an
cert II testes af disability: or Jhoso
who voluntarily submit to fur-
ther medical care. They may te
retained beyond tlie deadlines act
for other .
The first leeeUnn smeog ren-
te Mr. Trnnua's draft
s favorable.
Chairman - Gurney (R. tenth
Dakota of. the senate on
aervlees eemmlllra said te 1
glad tha presides! tea
this derision.
' In s message I the legisla-
tor Mr. Trnman advised that
tho war and navy departments
will request re-enactment ot
selective service act later If they .
are unable to keep tha army
at 0 strength af MIMN men
and the navy at Its aatberlzed
strength - nf 1 57M66. through
voluntary eallatincnt
He requested that tha services
te authorized to hire from funds
already appropriated the neces-
sary civilian help to of Act any
hurtaga ot enlisted men If
strength falls below the required
level
The White House dispatched tho
message to Capitol Hlu white tha
E resident himself war flying to
fexico City. tor a three-day good
will visit
Last spring eongrem extended
tho draft law until March 81 of
this year and raised pay scales
of enlisted men. The idea then waa
to see whether the armed forces
could get all tha men they needed
ss volunteer
Tho White House decision that
the law need not te extended is
a short term one so tor u general
future military manpower policy
la concerned.
President Truman ha re-
peatedly said that te wants
eomo kind of universal training
bw enacted eventually. Its now
has a remmiasioa af educators
and public leaden studying the
queatloa ef what system would
te test far this country. This
group b expected te report In
two nr three months and Mr.
Truman tea aaid te will send
eongrem detailed raeommendn-
thme then for a training law.
In today's message Mr. Tru-
man told congress that tho only
assured way of keeping the armed
(Sen Page X No. 4)
Aleman Welcomes
T ruman To Mexico
Mexlro City lfarch 3 (ff) Fres!-lng. Then It taxied toward tha
mt Harry S. Truman - arrived buildings
dent
her today tor his three-day state platform
visit with President Miguel Ate-; tha race
"The Sacred Cow" which
Oft Kansas City at 3:69 a.m.
' CST) landed- at 937 ajn. (CST).
aa the airfield by Fresl-
hto cabinet the
ef the federal district
Fernando Casas Aleman not a
relative af tho president; and
other dignitaries;
Truman cam in seven hours
from tho cold and snow of Kan-
sas City into tho summer warmth
and sunshine of Mexico;
Tho airport was transformed
tor tho visit A grant platform
and stopped before tho
and the balcony whero
receiving party was aasem-
Truman waa the first man out
of hia piano. He was met near
tho bottom of tho steps by U. S.
Ambassador Walter Thurston.
They stood talking a tow minutes
white President Aleman and For-
eign Secretary James Torres
Bodet ahead ot the Mexican
party stood 30 fori away for
photographers to get the scene of
the meeting.
Aa artillery fired a 31-gun
salute the presidents advanced
and shook tend Then there was
round of introductions among
flanked by high columns was j the several score officials and tha
erected for Iho unprecedented of-
ficial session of the consultative
council which mad President
Truman a "guest of honor" of tho
dty. Gov. Casas Aleman present-
ed the president with an inscribed
gold medal and a parchment
Tho "Sacred Cow" circled the
tat fixq mlautca before Jand-
U. S. embassy staff.
The two pres ideate met ot
11 :M sa (EST) and six min-
ute later iutrsd set ions con-
cluded. they advanced te the
platform for tha presentation
nf the medal.
President Truman replying to
Scq aga ft N ?
O
1
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The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, March 3, 1947, newspaper, March 3, 1947; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1891684/m1/1/: accessed June 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.