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National Forest Timber For Sale Sealed bids will be received by the Forest Supervisor, Nan tahala National Forest, Frank lin, North Carolina, up to and not later, than 2: QO p. m., Jan uary 8, 1951, and opened im mediately thereafter for all the timber marked for cutting, live or dead, standing or down, lo cated on an area embracing about 130 acres within the Cherry Cove Unit, Cartooge cliaye Creek, Nantahala Nation al Forest, Macon County, North ' Carolina, in the total numbe: of 697 trees of the following speciey: yeitow poplar, red ma ple, northern red oak basswood ! b'ao.k oak, chestnut oak, ash (blark cherry, cucumber, birch buckeye, chestnut, white oak srarlet'oak and black gum. N< bid of less than $5249.00 as r lump sum payment for stump age will be considered. In ad dition to price bid for stump age, a deposit of $212.00 will b required for sale area better ment work. In addition to tht above amounts, any unmarked ' timber which is authorized for cutting in connection with road construction and other Improve ments, or which is otherwise cut or subject to payment, will be paid for at the following current rates for stumpage $40.00 per MBM for northern red oak a!nd cucumber; $30 0C per MBM for black cherry and white oak; $23.00 per MBM for yellow poplar, red maple, ash basswood and birch; $16.00 per ? MBM for chestnut oak; $11.00 por MBM for black oak; and ' 5.00 per MBM for buckeye, i liestnut, scarlet oak and b'ack gum. $1500.00 must be deposit ed 'nth each bid to be applieu on the purchase price,1 refund ed or retained in part as liqui date 1 damages, according U cond tions of sale. The right to reject any and all bids is re served. Beio'e bids are submit ted, full information concern ing the timber, the conditions of sale, arid submission of bid. should be obtained from the Forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Carolina. D7 & 'D28 Naticna! Forest Timber For Sale '? Scaled bids will be received by ? the Forest Supervisor, Nanta hala National Forest, Franklin, North Carolina, up to and not ' later than 2: 'JO p. m. January 8, It .j ' , and opened immediately r thereafter for a'l the timber marked for cutting, live or dead, , standing or down, located on ; an area embracing about 500 acres within the Barkers Creek * and Fail Franch Unit. Betty's Creek of Little Tennessee River watershed, Nantahala National Forest, Macon County, North Carolina, in the total number of 2382 trees of the following species: black cherry, yellow poplar, cucumber, northern red oak, white oak, ash, basswood, red maple, chestnut oak, birch, black oak, chestnut, scarlet oak, buckeye, hemlock, beech and black gum. No bid of less than $20,200.90 as a lump sum pay ment for stumpage will be con sidered. In addition to price bid for stumpage, a deposit of $815. 00 will be required for sale area betterment wojk. In addition to the above amounts, any un marked timber which is author ized for cutting in connection w th road construction and im provements, or which is other . wis.' cut or subject to payment, will be paid for at the follow ing current rates for stumpage: ,?48.00 par MBM for black cher ry; ".37.00 per MBM for yellow poplar and cucumber; $35,000 per MBM for northern red oak; f 34.00 pe I IBM for white oak; : 2:j 00 par MBM for ash; $28.00 per MBM for basswood; $26.00 per MBM for red maple; $20.00 -r MBM for chestnut oak and ?rch; $'4 00 per MBM for black wk; $10.00 per MBM for chest nut S9.0o per MBM for scarlet oak $8.00 per MBM for buck eye, hemlock and beech; and ?7.00 per MBM for black gum. ? .'2500,00 must be deposited with etch bid to be applied on the purchase price, refunded qr re tained in part as liquidated damages, according to condi . tions of sale. The right to re ject any and a'l bids is reserved. ?Before bids are submitted, full In ormatlon concerning the timber, the conditions of sale, and submission of bids should be obtained from the Forest 6upervlsor, Franklin, North Car olina. D7 & D28 r- . Say: saw it advertised in The Press" Dec January 7? Forty-one die in week oJ rains, sleets, blizzards. flood and cold across U.S 7- rorty-one d;e in firt ai Catiiohc Mercy hospital. Dj venpirt, (a 3? Thirteen die in arni\ par. iroop glider crasli at L.iwson Field. Ga. :t) ? Crash of Bolivian transport plane rear Yncopartijo kills 32. 26? Iran earthquake kills 20. February 12? Tornadoes take 43 lives in Shrev? port area of Louisiana 17? Thirty Killed in Long Islann KR wreck. 28 ? 32 survivors ot British ship Clam lost when lifeboats c.ipsize off Ice land. March 7 ? Thirteen perish at. vVashtngton Seatt'e plane strikes flagpole in Minneapolis. 23 ? B-50 crash near Hyder, Ariz.. Kills 12. 29 ? U.S ambissadoi to Canada. Law rence Steinhardt, and four, others killed in Ontario plane wreck. April 20 ? Collision of Communist steamer and American liner kills 70. 21 ? Crash of air force transport near Tokyo kills 35 May 18 ? Sixteen U.S airmen die in B-29 crash' in Azores. 19 ? Ammunition barges at South Amboy, N.J., blow up. killing 30. 21? Peru earthquake takes 56 lives. 25 ? Collision of Chicago streetcar and gasoline truck causes 33 persons to bi|rn to death. June 19 ? Explosion of British frelghtei in Red sea kills 72. 24 ? Plane's fall into Lake Michigan kills 58. 25 ? West Virginia floods take 33 lives. July 4 ? July 4th accidents taKe 856 ilvea. 8 ? Colombia quakes kill 128. 13 ? B-50 crash near Lebanon, Ohio, kills 16. 23--Air farce crash near Myrtle Beach. S.C.. kills 39. 30 ? Series of plane crashes in week kills 121 August 5? B-29 cr. \sh at F'airfield-Suisun air base. Ci.lif., kills 17. injures 60. 15 ? 200 killed in India by second neav iest earthquake ever recorded. 16 ? China floods cause 409 deaths ?5 ? Navy hospital ship Benevolence col lides with freighter near San Fran cisco, killing 18. September 5 ? AP reports Labor Day death toll at 565. l~Coal mine cave-in near New Cum nock. Scotland, kills 13. 9 ? Indian government reports that 1.000 died in August 15 Assam earth quake. II? Train wreck takes lives of 33 Penn sylvania national guardsmen. 19 ? Navy air transport crash off Mar shall Islands kills 26. 26 ? Eighty miners die in colliery fire at C.es*,vell, England. October 17? -London plane crash kills 28. 18 ? Worst hurricane in 24 years batters Florida, causing $15 million damage, killing t'.iree, injuring 65. 31 ? Second London air crash takes 28 lives. November 4 ? Bombay to London plane missing with 48 aboard. 8 ? Wreckage of plarte found near Butte, Mont., containing 22 dead. 22 ? I.ong Island, N.Y., train crash kills 77. December 10 ? Three killed, 15 seriously Injured in Cincinnati plant blast. FOREIGN Aid, Arms and A.lliances January 5? Truman rules out American defense of Formosa. 5 ? Britain recognizes Communist gov ernment of China. 9 ? U.S. says it will help Yugoslavia re sist invasion. 12 ? Secy. Acheson accuses Russia of grabbing Chinese territory. 19 ? Bulgaria demands recall of U.S. minister as a spy. 26 ? India becomes a republic with no ties to British crown 31? Truman orders U.S. production of hydrogen super-bomb as warning to foreign aggressors. February 3 ? Top Br tish scientist. Klaus Fuchs. arrested as Soviet atomic spy. 7? Western powers recognize pro Frencli Viet Nam. 14 ? Russia and Red China sign 30-year pact. ?1 Two Americans sentenced in Hun gary as spies. 'I U.S. ore. ks diplomatic relations w?th Bulgaria. iareh -Chiang Kai-shek reclaims Chinese presidency. Klaus Fuchs receives 14-year sen tence as atom spy. Belgian King Leopold wins narrow 1 plebiscite victory. West Germany offers plan for unl? fication of Germany and a union be tween Germany and France. (I? U.S. *oi''e passes foreign aid bill. April t? Unified Atlantic defense plan off. d ered Into effect. 8? India and Pakistan end strife, i*? IlfMJ rfjtcts Arab peact terms, 22? U.S. promises to defend west Berlin against Rods. 23? Chinese Red Invaders .overrun Hainan island. Moy 3 ? Chinese- Rods announce full surrend er of Hainan. 8? U.S approves arms aid for Indo China. 10 ? Acheson w..nt* west Germany as partner in cold lyar. 15? Trygve Lie talks with Stalin In Mos cow. 28? Berlin survives east German youth rally June 4 ? Pro-Lcopoldists win narrow election victory in Belgium. 14 ? Trusteeship council gives up U.N. rule of Jerusalem. \\ 25? North Koreans march on South Ko reans. bringing biggest war crisis since Worl.i War II. 27 ?President Truman orders U.S. for ces to help repel North Korean com munists and says they will act as part of UN police force. Navy or dered to repel any Formosan in vasion. July 13? U.S. -South Korean retraat con tinues during third week. 24 ? Reds strengthen dictatorship in East Germany. 25? U.S. forces lose Yongdong. 2fl? Five more nations offer troops to UN as U.S plans to de-mothball 48 warships. August t? Belgian King Leopold agrees to abandon throne after uprisings. Rus sia returns to security council as M.iiik presides, but fails in move to expel Nationalist China. 3 - Security council rebuffs Russia, votes to continue Korean discussion. 10 -U.S forces Soviet to admit in U.N. that Korean Reds have Russian weapons. Russian chairman dead- ' locks security council over pro cedural question. 18 - Belgium's Communist leader assas sinated. 20 ? "Burma Surgeon" Seagrave held as aide to Karen rebels. 22 ? Canadian railroads tied up in strike. 24 ? Red China asks UN to oust U.S. fore es from Formosa. 27? Red China says U.S planes have - attacked Manchurian targets. 31? Russia's Malik ends month as se curity council chairman. September 6 ? Russia vetoes anti-North Korean measure in U.N. 19-- Atlantic foreign ministers announce their nations will fight if Reds at tack west Germany, 'agree to in crease west German police and steel production, ease occupation curbs; disagree over use of German troops 20--U.N. assembly convenes as U.S. proposes world peace plan. 26? North Atlantic foreign ministers agree on creating joint army. 28? Indonesia becomes U.N.'s 60th mem ber. 29 ? U.N. security council invites Chi nese Reds to November hearings on Formosa. October 1 ? Fighting intensifies In French Indo china. 12? Russia vetoes new term for U.N. Secretary General Trygve Lie. 19 ? U.N. approves U.S veto-proof plan to enforce peace. 19 ? Sir Stafford Cripps resigns as Brit ish chancellor of the exchequer. 25? Chinese Reds announce they will In vade Tibet. 27 ? India denounces Chinese invasion of Tibet. 31? U.N. adds three years to Secretary General Trygve Lie's terms and favors ending boycott of Spain. November I ? Puerto Rlcan revolt crushed. 4? French army routed again in Indo China as Reds threaten Hanoi, the capital city. . 4 ? U.N. rescinds diplomatic ban against Spain. 6?Yugoslavia will side with U.N. on China policy. 8? Yugoslavia asks that Italy be ad mitted to U.N. 6 ? Burma court reduces treason charges against Dr. Gordon S. Seagrave. 8 ? U.N. invites Chinese Reds to answer U.S. charges of, aggression in Korean war 8? -Chinese Red Invaders near Tibetan capital. 30 ? President Truman's suggestion we use atom bomb frightehs world. December 6? Truman, Attlee reject appeasement of China. 10 ? Reds say Europe theirs If U.S. start* war June 25? North Korean Reds invade Souln Korea. 25 -U.N security council Issues cease fire order. 27 ?President Truman orders U.S. air, naval forces under General Mac Arthur to help repel North Korean invaders and orders navy to defend Formosa. 27 Security council, minus Russia, in vokes military sanctions against North Korea. 28 Seoul abandoned to Red Invaders. July 1? First American troops land In Korea as British navy goes Into action. 5 ? U.S. troops enter Korean battle and Reds advance 15 miles. 7? U.N authorizes U.S. to establish unified U.N. command in Korea. 8 ? Chonan. C.iechon fall and Truman names MacArthur U.N. command er. U.S. second infantry alerted for Korean duty. 12- U.S. troops retreat across Kum as 10 U.S. tanks are destroyed In first tank battle at Chonul and Chochl* won. 18 South Koreans repel Reds above Pohang. U.S. first cavalry lands at Pohang and the 25th infantry division at Pusan. 20 U.S. abandons Taejon. 24 ? Reds in western Korea reach south coast and turn toward Pusan. 31? First marine division and second in fantry reach Korea. August 1? Americans counterattack 30 abUm west of Fusan. 3 ? Americans fall back to Naktonf river line eight mllei from Tatgu as Reds drive to within 40 miles of Pusan. Security council rebuffs Rus sia and votes to eontlnue Korean d If cuss las. Weekly Publishers Select Top Ten Stories Here are the top ten news stories of 1950 as selected by a representative panel of week ly newspaper publishers, polled on their choices by The Publish ers' Auxiliary: 1. Chinese Red intervention in Korea. 2. The initial invasion of South Korea and the U.N. deci sion to send military assist ance. 3. President escapes assassina tion attempt. 4. Alger Hiss convicted of per jury. 5. Trial of Dr. Herman Sander on mercy killing charge. 6. Brink's robbery in Boston. 7. Senate investigates McCar thy charges. 8. MacArthur sends troops north of the 38th parallel. 9. President orders H-bomb production , 10. Pope proclaims dogma of assumjftion of Virgin Mary. 10 -Reds strike at Pohang on east const as Americans near Chinju. Soviet has to admit North Koreans have Russian weapons. 13 Reds cross Naktong as U.S. air forces stop using Pohang airstrip. 18 ? B-29 raid results in recapture by allies of Waegwan and repelling of Reds southeast of Taegu. 17? Reds near Taegu as South Koreans re-entei" Po/iang. 18? Reds halted at Taegu. Reds' Naktong river bridgehead eliminated as U.N. starts offensive north of Pohang. 28 ? Allies retreat near Pohang. 27? Reds take Kigye. Red China says U.S. planes attacked Manchuria. 28? Reds ou#ed from Kigye as first British troops arrive in South Korea. 31 ? Malik ends month as security coun cil he. id Pohnng battle subside* September 15 ? U.N. forces land Reds in south. 21 ? MiPVtoes approach offensive. October at Inchon, stop Seoul In Korean 4 ? U.N. gives green light for all-out drive against North Korea. 6 ? MacArthur sends U.N. units across 38th parallel; Wonsan falls. 15? MucArthur-Truman hold meeting on Wake Island. 19? U.N. troops enter Pyongyang, North Korea, the capital city. 26 ? South Koreans reach Manchurlao border. November 1 ? Red Chinese stop U.N. drlv* la Korea. 3 TJorth Korean and Red Chinese drive back U.N. elements 50 miles and trap several thousand U.S. troops. 6 ? MacArthur officially lashes Red China's intervention In Korea in note to U.N. 21 ? U.N troops reach Manchurlan bor der at Hyesanjin. 26 ? Enemy counterattacks stall U.N. push. 29 ? General MacArthur says we face new war in facing Chinese In Korea; Reds continue advance. December 3 ? Two Red drives threaten rout of U.^J. forces. 5 ? U.N. forces retreat to new line above Seoul. 5^-Army spokesmen say our position in Korea "not hopeless." 11 ? Encircled marines reach escape port. 11 ? India's U.N. delegate drafts cease fire plan as Reds group Just north of 38th parallel. DOMESTIC January 3 ? Congress reconvenes. Truman asks passage of Fair Deal program, slight rise In taxes. 9 ? UMW begins series of "wildcat" strikes, neightening coal shortage. 9 ? Truman submits third deficit budg et ? income $37.3 billion, outgo $42.4 billion. 21? Alger Hiss, convicted of perjury, gets five years. 31- U.S. S Missouri Is pulled out of tas mud. February 6? Truman invokes Taft-Hartley set against coal miners. 1 1? John I Lewis miners refupe tils advice, they obey two court ln? functions and return to work. 22- -Senate votes to Investigate Senator McCarthy's charges there are Reds In state department. March 9-UMW acquitted o? contempt of court. 7 ? Soft coal tndusir> signs new con tract with miners 15? Senate passes $3 billion housing bill. 26 ? McCarthy names Prof. Owen J. Lattimore as top Soviet agent In U.S. April 4? Thomas Finleuer becomes air fore* secretary. 10? Harry Bridges gets five years tn prison fur perjury. M? Administration asks for dsfsnM> budget Increase. Moy f? Pruldant miuu "wkfitl* itof" la defend r?lr D??l 10 ? Twenty-seven state railroad strike begins. 18 ? Six-day railroad strike ends. 23 ? General Motors signs five-year eon tract with UAW June 18 ? Second (J.S. chemist. Alfred Dean S' ck. arrested as Soviet spy 25? AFL switchmen strike five western and mid-western railroads July 8 ? Strike against four of five railroads ends. 7 ? Truman asks for money for the H-bomb. 7? Army calls for 20.000 draftees 9? W. Stuart SymingW>n become* civil ian mobilization chief. 12 ? Government reports say profiteers send food and other prices climb ing. 17? One atom spy corfesses. fourth ar rested. 24 ? Truman asks for S10.8 billion to in crease armed force by 600.000. . 28- Truman calls for S4 billion increase in foreign arms aid. August 15 ? New York Mayor O'Dwyer named ambassador to Mexico. 17? Congress votes extension of soda) security coverage. 18? Eighth atomic spy suspect seized by TBI. 23 ? Nationwide railroad strike called for Aug. 28. .25 ? Truman seizes railroads to forestall strike. 28? Truman rebukes MacArthur on Formosa statement Septer.ibe. 1 ?Senate votes 84 Va billion in emergen cy taxes for Korean war. 12 ? Genera] George Marshall replaces Defense Secretary Johnson. 20 ? Congress passes Communist con trol bill. 25 ? Supreme Court Justice Jackson de cides 10 Red leaders may stay free on bail. October 1?280 U.S. critical A-bomb target areas mapped. 2? Defense orders given priority. 7-~-Dr. Alan Valentine becomes stabil ization chief. 15 ? Dewey Indorses Eisenhower for president and denies he bought gu bernatorial nomination. 18 ? Second Communist atom spy con fesses. 23 ? G-men round up 88 top alien Reds for deportation. 25 ? Trutn&n says high rate of draft re jections calls for U.M.T. November 1? President Truman escapes assas sination attempt by Puerto Rlcan Nationalists. 3 ? Peter Collazo. Puerto Rican Na tionalist. who was wounded in at* tempt on Truman's life, indicted for murder of Truman's guard as New York police round up New York Nationalists. 7? Democrats retain slim margin 1? house and senate. 30 ? Ways and Means committee approve* excess profits tax of 83.4 billion. December I ? Truman asks 817 billion for military program. 8 ? General Motors. Ford refuse to sus pend price raises. SPORTS Pennant for the Phillies January 1 ? Bowl Games: Rose Bowl ? Ohio State 17. California 14; Sugar Bowl ? Oklahoma 35, Louisiana 8tate 0; Cotton Bowl? Rice 27, North Carolina 13; Orange Bowl Santa Clara 21, Kentucky 13. 14? Seven NCAA schools defy "sanity code." March 18? CCNY defeats Bradley in national invitational basketball tourney. 28 ? CCNY becomes first team to win both national invitational and NCAA net tourneys by defeating Bradley. April 8 ? Barney Cwall sets world 2$0-yd. dash record ? 20.8 sec*. 9 ? Jimmy Demaret captures waters tourney in Augusta: 30 ? Fred Wilt runs Atlantic City Board walk Mile in 4 mln.. 5.5 sees., fast est outdoor mile run by an Ameri can May 6 ? Middle ground wins Kentucky derby. 30 ? Johnny Parsons wins Indianapolis speedway Memorial Day classic. June 2? Jim Fuchs. Yale, sets world'* 12-lb. shotput record, 67', 1". 5 ? Ray Robinson defeats Robert Vllle main for Pennsylvania recognition as middleweight champ. 17? U.S. team takes Wlghtman tennis cup. 23 ? Joe McCarthy resigna as manager of Boston Red Sox. August 9 ? Ray Robinson retains welterweight title in fight with Charlie Fusarf. ll ? College All-Stars football team beats Philadelphia Eagles. 17-7. 27? Australian team wins international Davis Cup finals. September 0 ? Sal Maglle. Giants, pitches fourth straight shutout to tie N.L. record. 27? Ezzard Charles retains heavy weight title by beating Joe Louis. October 7? Yankees take fourth straight world series game from Philadelphia. 7? Notre Dame loses to Purdue after 38 straight victories. 16? Eddie Dyer resigns as St. Louis Cardinal manager. 18 ? Connie Mack retires as Philadel phia Athletics manager. November ? 6 ? Branch Rickey takes over general ship of Pittsburgh Pirates. 6 ? A. P., U.P polls rate first four grid teams in this order: Army. Ohio Slate, Oklahoma, Kentucky. 8 ? Eddie Sawyer, Phillies, selected baseball manager of the year;* Walt Dropo, Boston Red Sox, eelected rookie of the year. 27? Ray (Sugar) Robinson KO's France's Jean Stock. 28? Joe Louis outpoints Cesar Brlon. December Nsvy eleven upsets Army. 14-1, 1-Jfoor win* 9100.000 Hollywood Odd Cup. January 17? Nine men in Halloween masks nold up Brink's, Inc.. Boston, and escape with SI million in cash. February > 3 ? Ingr.d Bergman Rives, birth to a ton in Rome. 1? Carol Faight acquitted in Briage port Conn -?f "mercy killing" ot V hmr /!>?'? 28 ? Escaped .eupafd returns 10 UkIc homa too, eats drugged horsemeat die*. March 9 ? Dr. Herman Sander acquitted of "mercy killing." 29? Circus elephant kills schoolboy and is poisoned in Sarasota. Fla. ^ April 6 ? Kansas City political boss, CharlU Binaggio, slai.i. 27? Mrs. Elizabeth Bender Cloud, West Linn, Ore., half Indian, chosen mother of year. May 14 ? Sen. Brien McMahon urges U. S. lead mightiest peace crusade in history. 22--Florida gets ail-Negro court to try all-Negro cases. June 7? Roy Shelton. third of notorious Shelton grng. slain. 17?Thomas E. Dcvvey announces re tirement from politics after present term as governor of N Y. July 26? AMA plans to spend $1,100,000 In advertising-lobbying pronram to de feat national health insurance August 7? Two Americans scale Peru's 21.769 ft. Mt. Yerupaja, highest unsealed peak in the Americas. 15-- Wisconsin farm wife claims seeing her seventh vision of Virgin Mary September t ? Maj. Gen. Orvil Anderson suspend ed as commandant of war college for advocating preventive war. 5 ? Army asks for 70.000 draftees. 6 ? Truman apologizes to marine corps 29 ? Two men investigating crime in Chi cago killed by gangster bullets. November 1 ? Pope Pius XII proclaims assumption of Virgin Mary. 4 ? Former circus roustabout admits . setttng 1944 Ringllng Bros, circus fire. 4 ? Miami housewife booked for toss ing children hot coins Halloween night. 6 ? Stocks decline In response to war news. 8 ? Capt. Daniel A. Gilbert, world's richest policeman, trounced in Chi cago sheriff's race. December 9 ? Gallup Poll says 55 percent of peo ple feel World War III has started. 8 ? Truman threatens to punch music critic in nose for rapping' Margaret's voice. DEATHS Shdw,Ar'nold,.Nijinski January 15 ? Gen. Henry H. (Hap) Arnold. World War II commander. February 13 ? Rafael Sabatinl, Italian author. 26 -S r Harry Lauder, Scotch comedian and mins.rel. March 11? Brock Pemberton. theatrical pro ducer. t9--;Edgar Rice Burroughs, novelist "creator of Tarzan. ;25? Frank Buck, wild animal hunter. 30? ^Leon Blum, president of French Socialist party and former permier April 7? Walter Huston, stage and screen actor. 8 ? Vaslav Nijinsky dancer. May 4 ? William Rose Benet. Pulitzer prize pqet, critic and editor. 24 ? Field Marshal Earl Wavell, . British military leader. June 22 ? Jane Cowl, stage star and play wright. July 17 ? General Evangeline Cory Booth, formerly Salvation Army Interna tlonal comm mder. 18? Carl Van Doren, literary figure and teae' er. Pulitzer nrize winner 22 ? William Lyon Mackenzie King. Canadian Liberal party chief and formerly prime minister. August 26 ? Ransom E. Olds, auto pioneer who developed the Oldsmobile and Reo September 11 ? Jan Christian Smuts, former prime minister of South Africa. 25? Eugene O'Neill. Jr.. son of the playwright. October 10 ? Edna St. Vincent Millay, poetess. 20 ? Henry L. Stirnson. state secertary under Hoover, war secretary under Taft, F.D.R., Truman. 23? A1 Jolson. singer. 29 ? Maurice Cosfello, former matinee Idol. 29 ? King Gustav of Sweden. November I ? George Bernard Shaw, playwright and wit. 4? Grover Jleveland Alexander, bate ball pitcher. December t? ChirUi Rom, Presidential prtia ???. Crisis Conference! Troop Train Crash i 'in > tviwv-.um*.*: 1*11 For Freedom, a Crusade mm A New ChampSSHraM Murder in Korea "iiKiHfl Producing for Defense fe-,1 I To War Again Miss America v ^ ? " : *
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Dec. 30, 1950, edition 1
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