Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 214, Ed. 1 Monday, March 13, 1950 Page: 4 of 8
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Editorials... Features
f>l« Four
QltdtwaUr Daily Mirrot
Monday. March IS. 1SS0
Camp Fire Birthday
This week marks the fortieth anniversary
of the founding of the Camp Fire <. I iris.
Since this organization is well-represented
in the Glade area, being the only girls' or-
ganization of national scope active tn Glade-
water. the people of this city are huppy to
join in the celebration of this birthday week.
We know what Camp Fire is doing to help
the girls of this community find expression
for their talents in creative and construc-
tive activities. We are aware of the whole-
some influence of this splendid organiza-
tion in the family life of this city and its
neighboring communities. We need not be
told that the Camp Fire Girls is a worth-
while a n d highly beneficial organization.
We have seen it at work
The Camp Fire Girls was lAunded “To
perpetuate the spiritual ideals of the home”
amt "to aid in the formation of habits mak-
ing for health and character.” Though the
forty years oi its existence it has touched
the lives of more than three million girls
and women who have either been members
of it or have been active as its leaders. These
have been,guided into paths of service to
their communities and have received valu-
able lessons in the art of creative living.
The Camp Fire Girls has adopted as its
National Birthday Project ‘‘Discovery Un-
limited- An Adventure in Creative lav ing "
Although this project is a year-round act-
ivity. it will reach its peak during this week,
which is Camp Fire's Birthday Week.
It would be impossible in a single edi-
torial to call attention to all the manifold
activities of the Camp Fire Girls in this
community, or to give due credit to the
local women who providing such splendid
leadership for the organization. From time
to time, this week, stories will appear in
the news columns of The Daily Mirror, out-
lining the activities o| the organization and
giving the names of those taking part. We
take this opportunity, however, to congra-
tulate those who are serving as local lead-
ers of the Camp Fire Girls upon the splen-
did work they are doing in helping to build
young womanhood in this community, in
strengthening family life, and in pointing
toward higher ideals all those who come un-
der then superv ision Camp h ire is doing
a great and needed work. May it> inlluence
continue to grow as the wars unfold!
Who Will Survive?
A number of prominent Americans—
mostly members of the So-called intelligent-
il
m
sia were asked recently to name the per
sons they would like to see preserved to
start a new civilization should the present
one be destroyed by atomic or hydrogen
bombs. The list they compiled was inter-
esting. It contained the names of most of
the leading stars of the screen and radio,*
a military man or two, and a few scientists.
The President of the United States was not
included, nor was there a prominent educa-
tor, clergyman or businessman in the list.
No farmers were included, nor laborers.
The next civilization, it appears, would be
one devoted to entertainment, with clowns
as its leaders.
Of course, the whole thing was done in
fun, but the result does indicate the trend
of our modern thinking. If the persons nomi-
nated in this poll could be hidden in some
airtight underground compartment when the
holocaust strikes, and, by some miraculous
means, should be preserved while all the
rest of the human race was wiped out, they
would be the ones who would give tone
to the next civilization, granting that there
would be one. And the next civilization, un-
der their direction, would be even more
cockeyed than the present one.
It is difficult to see why radio and movie
comedians should be preserved to become
tounders of a new civilization, and one won-
ders why scientists should be favored, since
by that time, they will have done to the hu-
man race about all they can do. And if the
new civilization is to be composed solely
<>f down-worshippers, there is little reason
why it should be created.
When and if this civilization is wiped
out and another set up, we may rest assur-
ed the new civilization will not be fashioned
and sustained by radio comedians and the
painted dolls of Hollywood. The ones who
will surv ive the collapse of this civilization imitator*
will I). md women oi brains and b*wn ‘ • .
hardy sons and daughters of the soil, in- “I'm tired of letting them steal
telligent laborers, educators and thinkers my act ”
who are capaole of planning a better world Ever Mine Laugnton crested
than we now have. If the next civilization f?r M,Ul,o on the
is to be directed exclusively by the glorified SiE.3^!"dependable prop/per'
morons of the entertainment world, it doesn t formers have used hi- accent to
matter very much whether there is a next
civilization. 'Ve had just as well call it
quits after the present one is wiped out.
HAPPY
IRTHQAY.
KEEP UP
YOUR FINE
WORK 9
WASHINGTON MEHHV OO-WOMHP
American Propaganda Efforts Behind
Iron Curtain Are Now Purely Routine
See Editorial, “Camp Fire Birthday”
HOLLYWOOD
By
PATRICIA CLARY
HOLLYWOOD, March 13 'UP'
—Charles Laughton, who can't
go out of his house without find
:ns someone doing an imperson-
ation of him, is working out a
fiendish revenue.
Next time Laughton goes on a
tour, he's going to imitate the
from Maine to
it a man is good at any occupation, lie
doesn’t have to tell about it, and if he isn't
good, all the boasting he can do will not
convince anyone.
pa me audience*
MocamiKi.
In Australia, a comic named
Sam Blowings made a name for
himself with a takeoff of Laugh
ton as "Rembrandt." In England
Tom Wells murdered them in the through
Hluih as thoroughly as the uudi-groui»
enccs did. 1
Hut many >ears have made me
more tolerant; occasionally I act-
u. Ily > njoy the performance* Af-
tcr being and hearing 2(N» of these
n min . Mime K'hsi ami some hor-
rible. I have become so detached
I don I identify the sketeh with
myself at all. "
When Laughton was making
‘Man mi the Eiffel Tower1 In
Pails, In went to a Montmartre
t-.ifi one night after work The
highlight of ihe variety show was
an miei|Ji elation of Laughton as
"buggies of Red flap."
If you ran imagine the spec
ti« le of a very typical French per-
formci doing ,tn impression of an
Englishman doing his interpreta-
tion of an American, you may
have an idea of what I went
Strange, isn't it, how few politicians claim
exemption when they are "drafted" for of-
fice?
LOOKING AT LIFE
Is nothing sacred lo Hi
L i"
I have novel had min •
mosquitoes
Their extermination
sary and 1 am in favoi
decent means of cradica
pest from the face of Ha
Hill when the i-ihii;>
done by tricking ihc fi
(|iuto while sin
is going a tilth to" I is
Useless as the n .
must admit ilui imn
see there i: n t m n-ii fi,
insert's lil*-
Living in w.aril
places. I h c
must get awful!;,
notonv
So J suspi-el l ’ 1, t -,: •
a human being d
hunger as envy <,( Ha
colorful life
ha
i claim it is Ihe FEMALE
'i...Min in that does all the biting.
So what do you think they are
w oi king on iiow?
They are making records of the
tTUiio mosquito's love call.
These records will be hidden
in the .-w.iinps
scientists', have
By
ERHH BRAN
II may even work.
I hale mosquitoes Hut, like
of you I love LOVE
music halls doing Laughton as
“Henry VIII." In Mexico City
Juan Garcia clicked last season
with a twach-comlnm impression
of Laughton.
Tired of Captain Rliqh
"At first it was annoying, ‘ the
actor said. “I couldn't turn on the college mans ideal
radio or see a nightclub act with- Miss Roman said she
out catching a caricature of my ceivcd glowing
self I grew to loathe ‘Captain way or another.
As m- says, though. Laughton
has become more tolerant
I lourtd it hilariously funny.”
he said.
Ruth Roman, who never went
to college appear* to be the 195(1
has
ributes, "in
at 35 different colleges
and universities.
"I don't know what it means,"
|he curvaceous brunette said
“But if* very complimentary "
A fraternity at the Univarslty
of Virginia wrote Ml* Roman a
letter begging her to be then
house-mother.
"Thank you for the invitation,"
she replied, but I hardly think
I m qualified "
Another fraternity picked Miss
lioiTGiii ,»e "our f.ivmiu* room
mule .Seniors at a small mid
western college named het the
girl they would most like to ..la-
in a cap and gown
Curves PU«»t,
Representatives of southern
fraternity decide.t Ruth was "the
girl we can’t live without ' A
Texas group named her the girl governin'
we'd most like to be pinned to "
Other colleges asked her to pre
- ale at proms and offer her curve*
as inspiration for their athletic
teams.
"I've never been to college mv-
se!f. site grinned "I struggled
flh rough hitfh «*hi*i| and th«*n
went to dramatic school Wh.it
more, I never thought of mvself
as the kind who would
to undergraduates I'm
By DREW PEAHHON
(Copyright. Hf»u. by th# Bell
Syndicate, Inc.l
(Editor s Nol# - Drew Peai
son continues hi* diagnosis id
the cold wer end a program lor
winning Ihe peace.)
WASHING ION. March It
During the wai, Slalm olten held
up the United State» lo die lb.
siun people as an example ol tin
goals winch might «»• attaiaan to
Russia As a result ol the md "Hi
er factors a great deal "t toil
was built up for ill*- Unite-• Slat*
inside the Soviet Union A a lot
ther result it u> no* requiring
great deal of propagation mi th*
part ol the Moscow radio t" eh
the Russian fieople on hatred
the U S A
And despite tremendoo • 11< ■■ t
mi lar it hasn't lieen don<
This is why the problem "I 'oi.
mu* the peace h> making Hie
witn ttie Russian tienple. dim
long and diftu-ult, ha-
some points m out favm
To lull) understand "HI
lem of winning the peat
iiiims of Russian puhln
mi|rortant
tew people outside Hu-
izeil it, but during HitU-i
tile C'ominuiust icgimc
thing bm ixipuiai in Hm-i
tact, there was such n > ntn « i
against the Kictrdm that
Moscow resnlent., Iilci.t
the Uvrnians winild take >>v.
city and help give then,
government Hosiiliu
tense ttiat U h diplomat i-
expetlient to lam tin- Ac «
Hags ott ihc11 titi'ii.oi m
cause they wen no." i i
stoned lot iliippil<k .i
Itlc I'nini'iuniM n.
Malm Hrli nts
(alter. how (III
i hangetl a., a icsiill •<
tors rust, Russia -cr
But more intmcili.de ..
moic important Slain
shrewd nmv a
nt'ilil"" A r
tl'llllei
no mi:
from men* either too nasty or Uni rurr
appeal
usually
pi i\ an
united
penph m 11
nev er « i,jo ,
Lcadei a
rat he i tmm
rnodilied foi
fiermltted n
t’ollci III I
to sell pa it
market m- ti
evervthiog <
els who chi
sortui garden
Tn.s resulted
feeling toward Ha i
gttne, and. coupled
tt brought the iim-
lienplc closci logetla
Soviet Isolation Return
A lew month.,
however. Inc .,
all ,
jllil-
tnn-.ijuitos, not the
'; > .' nests.
At undown there will ling out
ih«‘ lovely strain* of the "Mo*-
<|tiilo Love ('all
Being done seienlifically, the
pt< ic will amiul as if Frank Sin-
.it.i a Bill Lawri-mi- were do-
:i it
W'li.it happens? All the enchant
ert lemitle in the tietuhhorii'iod
w ill fly Hi the source of ihc song.
Th' . will fall into a booby trap
ariit, in,'(oii l can say Bing Crtwby,
Hv-v will la- dead.
And, . It. i a while, riot a fe-
rn .V mosquito will lie left So
Hiik will no more love, no
more in. ting, no more
By the way, in the same mail
that brought me the report of the
American Mosquito Control As-
where they 'the sociation with the description of
this new cruel method of getting
rid of mosquitoes, came Mime
literature from a Canadian mining
stock promoter.
Will you risk Sill?" it said in
large letters.
The text was beautiful II pic
z lured me becoming rich on an
investment of SIO in a mining
project In the immediate vicin-
ity 'only perhaps a couple of hun-
dred miles away of olhc*r pro-
jects that have made their in-
vestors wealthy.
CAPITAL CHIT CHAT
WASHINGTON. March 13 'UP'many Hags there are in the conn
The United Slates may la- try half a billion, rnavbe He add-
headed toward the biggest flag- ed that he wasn't too much wor-
burning since Arizona joined in nr-d about the new business that
the Union in 1913. would come ins ciinipuiiv's way if
If the Congress decide* to grant the flag takes on another star! or
statehood to Hawaii and Atft.-kn, two Every laxly would have to
that means a new flag. A new flag have .• new ting Adding a star
And, would you believe it? It
was this mining stock literature
that gave me the idea for the
mosquito mosquito-love-call and booby-trap
column.
(Copyright, 1950, King
wondciful. Features Syndicate, Inc >
The 67-MiJf
hi \
NOW JOHN ... WHAT
68EAT ORGANIZATION
AND VETtRANS f
Answer!
means that it's bad manners to fly
an old one anymore.
The only decent thing to do is
to burn the old ones. It's against
the law to touch an old. Old Glory
to the ground and it’s considered
unpatriotic to pitch it on an ash
heap or sew it up into a nightie.
All of which jioses a lol of
problems.
I called C. R Beard, a vice pres-
ident of Aioiiii and Company in
New York. Annin makes inure
flags than anybody.
Beard was a great old tizzy
Wc don't know.' said hi-,
"whether either Hawaii m Alaska
will l»e tacked onto the union. But
if one or the other—or Ijoih— are,
#f’vr got a big job to do '
Heaven knows, he said, how
one at a llii'ii" would la* fine with
Beard, Ih-chum- it would add up to
good Ijumiic double business.
Bi-aid is a man who looks the
luture squarely hi the eye He's
already got up a couple o| sain-
plcv %
If only one new stale is added
would he "tunparalively simple.
met- any college graduate knows I’”’"1.1.**“’’I ,,r
that seven times seven equal -ill
That would make seven rows of
tars
IIARMON W. NICHOLS
mighty pretty.”
Another person proposed that
we leave the blue space the way
it is and crowd in the extra stars
"We still don't know what we re
going to do The last new Mags
came out on executive order hi
1912, aftei Arizona was admitted
to the union on Feb. 14th '*
Here in the capital Arthur K
Dubois, chief of the heraldic
branch >d the l^iuu termastei Gen-
eral Corps, ought get the job of
redesigning a new Mag He said,
however, that nobody yet ha* con -
-allied turn about it He aid tin-
President could create a special
assign the job to
«il The
inurust i "lit,
W ith a VI ngea
place short|v
to let Auii't n .
from ttu Hi,
and iIhhi! 11 ■
Molotov hau
mg allied i< i
and Sail F
arid San F i
Appiueidh tt
up its muHi t
must remain
iaud begin an aggressive cun
paign to spread Cominumsin in t|„
itst of tin- world.
\t no rate, there followed a se
i , of repressive measures, a
j on ge of iiitclleeluais and a gigan
lit >ioi>«K4nda campaign U» ISOUI,
I,a •,< tnan the West intellectual
were even purged not tor what
tile .lid and wrote against Com
iiiuniMii but for what they failed
to „> ami write fur Communuiii
t nuplcit with liieae reprassn -
■•aures the Kratnlin has gt.eti
no Hu tan |M*upia 11101x11 censum
nib and tried to improve then
c", a a Mine .la,os fins has bclpi, ,
tail raft enough
t ticic till leuiatn* wnieapre.i.
iv i-ntment against the regnm
.mi.iti ha come near irrvaking into
pen it volt in such plucea as the
t ,.. oc In addition, the transpoi
t.i iuti and tlistritnition systeiov
. ic " poor that temporary deprn
at,on and even sturvatiun have
i idled in big rilies because ship
a foods did not arrive >>n
F a Ito ■ mine, some ul the
ivsian executive* have
■ in i ,i. , i bei auM- they ware nut
. t ..... s i ominunista, and this
t up govei niueiitu! elti-
,-teslhinfl Satellite States
■vc itualion inside No
' to". i> rrportad to u
..uevi with the potitual
. t i h exists insioe Hun
< is and Czvehisiiov a
Ei nst the New Yorh at
'irw to Vienna to try
■ >nert Vogelet, repm
i» tiurning with m
. tia a kitliut Amen
. i.i drive, it was th
. • which finnliy <>i
■ iv 4 uorn the Hi*
■ it IS this Ilf If C: !
i >»tMbly the runt caum
V .., i« r •qupkov tnais in
lluigxiia in orvUci to
.topic of any Iffie Who
t:i t u w ith Am* t
v.iti- Department ,
■ i- doing a mm
• amiitg Atnertca:
■ n|.i And ttie fact
, have taken *m ti
tin- Vote*- indicate
>s* • at.e impact.
i»f opagiiitita oi -
Caen tiaOilu iipjant
idio, t|ie fact fft.it
.idmirtit m inhibited
: at««*■»* merely tw
State Dt*oar1mi i '
v in gitimtirnl
entrusted wit),
orngn ictatlon* «
naturaUjr shrinks
sto- imaginative
t ate its put aero-*
Bill ' Hutuivi't •
• w.o when he had
it* working behind
Wort I.I S
d Salerno
Jit de Depaitmeid
• nd tmagbialioc
ii# of Ihe -jin bo u
i move* rotHflvnl
• in Office of W..
.tieo thousands <>f
iiig Min Attliur
11 ■ k| |aHt over the
.•. hen Bob Parke i
laiixl thousand* of
.■inutg greeting'
inside t 1 ■ ■
ingat'
THE PIED TYPER
I tv
N \T L \MH
»he fine arts commission -or Con
erra could step in anil take over
Other tdotileiuh came up, tiM>
,, ..... .. .. ., . For instance, take St latui* and
ia i".' Hawaii olid Alaska arc Chicago. ( Some ncwspa|Mtrs m
’ • "7” •"••••- ........• these cities refe, to It....... as
.ippaici.tlv a math sharp, has that q,,. mu, „.,lT ••
all figured out, too
Wed have five tows of stars
wdii 10 stars in cacti tow Both of
these Mags lisik mighlv pretty
Rep Fiank M Karsten. D of SI
Louis poke ini hi* city
"If both go in, we'll just call St
IsHM'y the 51*1 stale," he said.
THAT* EASY...
.... THE
RED CROSS !
VIEW OF THE NEWS
i. r.
B.v
OKSTRKIMIKR
Ttie Soviet Government tias
gone lluough ttie artificial routine
of new elections to the Supreme
Soviet; Premier Marshal Joseph
Stalin remains firmiy in charge as
tofi man of his gigantie dictator
lint the tag question remains un-
answered
Just what did Russia'* lop lead-
er* mean when in their pre-elec-
lion speeches they harped coni in
iiallv upon the Soviet*' presumed
willingness to live in |>ewec with
the western world"
A Holy of Hit camp.ilgl# talk-
leveals a studied plan of affinity
The |as»p|e ol Ihe USSR are in-
doctrinated oaiiy through the
page* of (lie Communist Party
newspaper Pravita and Ihe official
government publication l/vrstm
They are dinned at day ill «uid
day out by the Government radio.
Statisticians and planner* tel!
them endlc d.v how great they are progress and exuansion alwav-
have been preeenerl by a propa
m every Held of endeavor: \nt
then un|ily, by *ly innuendo or
ouliight threat, that they had l>et-
tcr become even mine efficient
Mill Slalm never got into Ma-
li.did of delivering the .Saturday
aflei noon tirades which for year*
comfortable position
There lias lie«m a constant and
recurring emphasis upon the dan-
ger of war. lint coupled with t It it
a frequent admission of Soviet
shortcomings.
The various five-year plans cn
acted or formulated for
%
guodistie claim Mud Russia is
working constantly for peace
Wake up to.-
Ttiat s Hu .ui .
maga/tm ,utu |,
ply it to youi ii i.i
tin I. no fovihni.
Why tin « i„.
up, you .iv
cover* ti.u k . i
Very stinpli
It's all in V".
this getting up i„,v
pic hit the ..Ho
Itlg as if Tlicv wc
file wiMinui , • ,..
eyes, iM'i-aiiM- tin
limit ehedidc
The link t.....
Is to set void . i , ,
tiles aitead .if vi„l:
hum Then, when
Mnng go#* ..ti
oft and tin ii in, i,
way, you'll ,.n 11. tu
Lie Mat on yom l>
a series ni „t< |,
Ti y In utidi. , v i i ,
• a kink v<ui \ < pi, i.
the mglil Willi,
all your taut ru i.
Soviet realize you Ii
111 you tiy Mn even
urely planning q„ .
Decide Wind you
throw lldn van elf
nil
I ii 11 h« i
li |j(H
.......
arming ttu-m Mial went traiglit Tilbwl the it I eel* of Berlin and
down ttie line from top man on
the totem pole to itte lowest.
In brief-
I Soviet Russia ha* the atomic
laimti amt knows all there is to
know about atomic energy in ap-
plication to peaceful enterprises a-,
well a* to war.
8—'The hydrogen bomb -.till o
m the expei tinental nr trlauiung
3 Soviet R'l.v.ia allegedly want
peacn and piesnmably nerds tt to
survive
4 The western world t* ruler!
by warmongers who have no de-
sire but to upset the present pre-
carious stability and then guaran-
tee themselves Mime sort of safe
UprtNii allet titter than- has en-
gulfed the world
Mima Ii with ra'ibm loud .peakar
tila t and the world presi, wilji
headlines,
Not has he cvei developed Mh-
u "i atm y ol Benito Mm o-
11m who foi the sake of hi* own
pride and sclf-satp fact ton had to
declaim to the Italian frenple in-n-
od i • ally on hi* values and virtue*
and th# weakn#s* of democracy a*
a principle of national tepiesepla.
non
lia developed thnl the
Jlgn^y
They have iusisterl that avoidance I.
nl war in n«*ce* ;ary if the peopk- kqi Mu most imp.,
are to replace what was de-.lroycd Mte day And . m
by Germany in the second wot Id
war and then to naive eastward
for exlpoitatton rd their vast Ni
tierimi resources
But at the nunc lime Soviet pol
try has called for active tnterven
lion in foreign eountues, a* wit-
ness the IhiRKinamration of East
Eiiioih- and |>«rtii-ipation in CTii-
iih’x civil war
There is at least a iMisxilubty
that hta duality of government
strategy has aroused wane giave
fear* among the Snviet population
d'a*lf. which ••ould be reflected
■ d lia- "iiiiii !.. o, ,
leery to e* t • ft * 11 to-, i , ,,
breakfast
After working op m .,p,„ v
for orange pia-e ,,od i. , i
out what v«ni w.mi tu .,. ,,,,,,,,i, i
during the dav M .k. ;
either m your head «»i m, i
of wiiat hits to t«- done ,u.i ,, t,
you ougld lo have d'»" tin- /
Aftei .■ If
IHflf'N A t.Ml
ip (»ri your wink, ti
‘«»k* t vain tiviu* out
• ? t * • :■ * I» t iitR* ft»i* uvn > •
i * 11
"it V c m.qqx’d
• *.u t" get Up. I>n!
iirotiiMi liefoie
• ' iornpletely awake
"1 >mir k-isuredy et
Ht« day right It"
• ' iji <>n the slow side
• ! m < id of the wioli.
mid i <•-, q \ *ui prism
" ti" " ind by smiling
ten, imitt foe*
tfd' • ven tty humming
.< bum, teeth brush
■ to la Ij, \ out glHal im
ft* the time you K* ’
- | .i|im at Mh break
mght dot tile Hint
iioiukmg with Feat
!* k i> ii-.dly funtlV
*"tl> vail watch TIhh
wo k five tninuh
<1 "i i" i t- IIh- turns Oet
in e.uly will let yni
i k ynut tiudgel o**i
h How yinii -’lowed dow"
HI dav long for a few
iirpriM* t
i von get more thine tha"
t •
n seemw, Uu* hi"
dowii ja-etis tiling! up
'" d your I teal when
11 n ten tty tinning o"1
a ”in'll you're rushing
. i" n g,-.,
t nc day mm ’Hint at*'1
' metnhi i, -c*t tluil alarm
wake up slowly , .
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11 v Mirror,
page "I
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I’uhitshed daily and Simdav t v tin
jWtrrnr
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t.sten with undivideil atieniton France arid eventually crippled li.r Entered gg second-ele s rnatn ,
when Malm apeaks nation when it became obvious Tcxa*. under Aet of ( omirt ,,i -t
i>'aunittiiljr—ludging that Nazi German .irenglh and AnyZZ., ,tfkZ '
lull, the campaign dynamism wa* dealiiad to l.„u> ......... ................ .
There is a
by the line winch Ihe campaign dynamism was destined m bring
iddtease lias taken- that the po- about conMict and uievilabl#
In attempting to mod'iab th* Ittburo is making ome attempt to French defeel II 1* difficult ever
real motive* undei lying mm ti dc< curb suspicion, feai and unrest to pm down Soviet mettiodh and
la ration*, it may le- nupmtant to among the Kumsiuiii theimielve*. approarhe*. But the pre-eleeliou
lememher ttiat public high policy There seem* to be but little uue*- pcei-hes may have la-token an in-
statements by Soviet leader nr# 'ion that the bnvtet leaden nave ternal crisis of enorrnou* impnt•
lew and far between. maueuveied tlmuelves into an un- Luica lor the world ns a whole.
pc. ..h, firm. Ol im pm ........ . '" cpu,„,„,„ ... .
c ....................................- re -Ki'Tir-aSi!
' lit Office at Glndcwater.
t> a t«7«
or leputution of any
earner ?*k
WnMK?NIITI<lN HATES
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Greep, J. Walter. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 214, Ed. 1 Monday, March 13, 1950, newspaper, March 13, 1950; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008053/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.