Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 225, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1952 Page: 1 of 13
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VOL. Ill, NO. 225
United Pr— QJ»
GLADEWATER, TEXAS. THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1952
Station KSIJ—1430 On Your Dial
Sc PER COPY
Seek To Nullify Seizure Of Steel Companies
*
uman Will Not Accept
Draft For Renomination
Attorneys for stool companies seized by the government as a result of the threatened steel strike ar-
rive at federal court in Washington for a hearing on their petition to nullify the seizure. Front row,
left to right. John T White, Republic Steel; John C. Gall, Youngstown Sheet and Tube; Bruce Brom-
lay, Bethlehem; Fdmond L. Jones, Republic; T. F. Patton and John Brookes, both Republic. Back
row, left to right: Fontaine Urown, Bethlehem; Wm E Howe, Youngstown, and Howard Boyd, Re-
public.
States
That He
t'
Taft Wins In Illinois Primary
Will Back Demo Choice
WASHINGTON, April 10 <U.R>—
President Truman said flatly
Thursday that he will not accept a
draft for renomination, nor does
he intend at present to attend the
Democratic convention in July.
Mr. Truman said he does not
plan to attend the nominating con-
vention because he sees no neces-
sity for being in Chicago.
I about his feelings toward Gov.
i Adlai Stevenson of Illinois but he
declined to comment.
Another reporter asked him
whether he would support Sen.
Estes Kefauver iD-Tenn.* if he
, won the Democratic* nomination.
, The President said flatly that he
| would suport the Democratic can-
| didatc whoever he is.
Government Renews Wage-Price
Negotiations With Steel Industry
WASHINGTON, April 10 (U R)—I "wants an immediate court do-i Informed government sources
The government renewed wage- cision." He said the companies said agreement on a new con-
price negotiations with the steel want to "find out if the govern- \ tract for the 650,000 workers in
industry and the* CIO United Steel* I ment ts stalling" on a test of the the basic Meel industry could be
workers Thursday as company legality of the seizure reached if the price hurdle were
lawyers pressed for rapid court If the government objects to cleared.
action to void President Truman’s j pushing the rase ahead on the The industry insists it needs a
seizure of the industry. icourt calendar, the industry $12 a ton hike to offset the 26-cent
Acting Defense Mobilizrr John I spokesman said, it will mean that j wage package recommended by
R. Steelman scheduled new bar- I federal attorneys are not sure of ihe wage board's public and labor
gaining talks at 9 -a.m. <csO. in ’ their position and are "stalling " members over bitter management
a reported move to consider again The industry contends that Mr dissent.
a compromise wage agreement Truman does not have the "in- j So far. the Office of Price Sta-
that would permit all parties to herent power" undei the conxtitu- bilization—backed up by Mr. Tru-
"save face." Talks Wednesday got Hon to seize the steel mills. It said , man—has refused any boost above
no where . the seizure would cause "irrepar- the $2 or so a ton permitted by the
* The meeting opened amid new j able damage " Mr Truman an-1 so-called Capehart formula,
warnings from federal officials nounced Tuesday night, shortly be- Industry sixikesmen frankly ad-
that steel price hikes still arc the fore the strike deadline, that Sec- mit that a price increase some-
key to peaceful settlement of the retary of Commerce Charles Saw- where m between may pave the
rr dlspu
Asked whether he might express |
a preference for candidate prior
to the convention, the President
said he hoped this would not be
necessary. He added that he has
a right to a preference just as
any citizen does.
He promised to campaign in be-
half of the Democratic nominee—
whoever he may be—to the ex- Cub Scouts and their dads will
tent of his ability and to the ex- show off their "cars" and work-
tent desired by the Democratic manship at the fourth annual
S national committee. j Cubmobile Derby scheduled for
{press * _ .
,K Cud Scouts, Dads
Ready For Annual
Cubmobile Derby
bitter dispute.
Industry Rebuffed
, The industry, rebuffed In its first
to have the seizure nulli-
yer was taking over the industry, way for a wage settlement.
dgc Walter M.^Baetter
era) Judge Walter M. 'Haitian
Thursday to hear immediately the
steelmakers' motion for an Injunc-
tion against the wizure. I TOPEKA. Kans. April 10 <U.R>—
Federal Judge Alexander Holtz- i Republicans in Gen Dwight D
off refused Wednesday to grant a Eisenhower's home state opened
temporary restraining order. their state convention At Topeka
As the nation's sleel plants roar- Thursday with Eisenhowei -for-
ed back into production, there; president forces apparently in full
were these other developments in ‘ control.
Supportcis of Sen Robert A.
GOPs In Ike Home State
*pen State Convention
bickered over who they'd support
as a presidential nominee, there
was complete harmony on one
subject, the Democratic national
administration. All pledged their
efforts to oust it in 1952
the eritleal steel dispute,
1. Chairman Nathan P Fcinsing-
er of the Wage Stabilization Board,
who has been Steelman's right
hand maivin steel mediation talks,
was reported set to advance again
hi* proposal that both sides accept
—with whatever variation is nec-
essary—a 2fl-rent hourly wage-
fringe package in a two-year con-
tract, Feinsingcr's board first sug-
gested the package, which the
union accepted but the industry
rejected, in an 18-month agree-
ment.
Delivers Reply
2. President Clarence Randall of
Inland Steel Corp delivered the
official industry reply to Mr Trp-
mnn't Seizure speech Tuesday
night, orcusing the President of
a “corrupt political deal" with the
CIO and of "transgressing his oath
of office."
2. Reaction to the seizure Ixiiled
among congressional Republicans,
and senate GOP members consid-
ered a proposal to have it investi-
gated by the senate judiciary com-
mittee.
4. Philip Murray, who heads
^^’l^union^S0,^ | p™);* j*- *
meetings here Friday for a full
report on the steel crisis. The
us a delegate to the national con-
vention?"
But it appeared the cards were
stacked against Bentley, the sub-
ject of u convention-wide contro-
versy.
Young Republicans vowed they
would replace him with "our own
The President, responding to re-
porters who sought additional
background on his decision to fore-
go a re-election campaign, said he
decided not to run again simply
because he did not want to. He
said he made up his mind not to
run again more than a year ago.
The President said that while he
had known for a long, long time—
for a year or more, as he put it—
that he was not going to run again,
he timed his anouncement for the
March 29 Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner here for two principal rea-
sons;
1. The Jefferson-Jackson dinner
audience, plus radio listeners and
TV viewers, constituted the big-
gest audience he though he would
ever have.
Jubilant workers at Taft headquarters in Chicago crowd around
Harold E. Rainville, executive secretary of the Illinois committee
for Taft for President, as he receives results of the voting in the
Illinois primary. Taft claimed a "smashing victory" and described
Gen. Eisenhower's write-in vote as "pitifully small."
Two Hour Chase Ends In
Capture Of Ex-Convict
A car speeding up south main i nixed as being reported stolen in
Friday afternoon at four o’clock
on Gregg Ave., behind the First
Baptist church.
Should the race be called off!
due to bad weather, it will be run 1
on Monday, April 14, at the same ;
time.
An added feature at the race
this year will be a pick-up, loaned
by McKaig Chevrolet company,
which will pull the winners back
up Ihe hill after each race.
The Cubs are urged to get their
entry blanks in at the earliest date
Tfstreet" In Gladewater yesterday I Houston.
dLS'lhfcute a terno^n set offT two h£r chasil The local police notified Long
» btis to he ,h>t ended when a well aimed view, and the Longview police
a „ 8 8 bullet tore into the left rear tire patrol car spotted the men as they i
,‘z‘v *•szsrs! i nr1
, I’ltock tol tars lor constrSc.ion and j *V"llda,Cll.2! S?" X* ZlXZ? iV
2. He wanted to make the an-1 safety, and to check their weight.. ,®r ,o d dter Plant
mvuncement in person and in as Judge, have been selected to pick, on_^ Sabine nver. „ ——
plain English as possible to avoid f the winners. Garages participating i T**}’ .i
any distortion. | will be McKaig Chevrolet. Modem and two sma11 children,
Taft lor the GOP presidential man"—William Horton Jr., of At-
nomination hoped to gain three wood Horton has not publicly de-
commitments on the 22-member j dared his support for either Taft
Kansas delegation to the July na-lor Eisenhower, but the Eisen-
tional convention. Eisenhower's hower forces claimed him.
backers conceded the Ohioan only ‘In an opening address at the
two delegates. * | convention, Gov. Edward F. Am
Hut while Kansas Republicans concentrated on unity within the
"Are there any conditions un-
der which you would accept a
draft?" he was asked.
Mr. Truman answered by the
flat statement that he will not
accept a draft.
He refused to express any pre-
ference for a Democratic candi-
date. He was asked specifically
Motor WriseUs Garage, Phillips ! •*»££ Gladewater police and sped
Motor Co., Beavers Motor com-
pany. and Bill Allen Motor Co.
John Stoner will furnish the
scales and the high school will
loan the crash helmets and a p. a.
system. The starting ramp was
furnished by Wm. Cameron com-
pany and constructed by Lyman
toward Longview in a car recog-
Timing Left Up To
Ike, Says Truman
Longview patrol cars, a motor-
cycle patrolman, and two State j
highway police cars.
The chase moved into southwest
Longview where all roads leading!
from the city were blocked. The
car finally appeared on the old
Kilgore highway which was block-
ed by W. S. Granberry's State pa-
trol car parked cross ways in the.
road.
. A The driver refused to stop, and
WASHINGTON, April 10 (U.R)— swerved into the ditch, and around ;
Loyal Troops
Move to Help
Resist Rebels
LA PAZ, Boliva, April 10 (U.R)
Loyal government troops were re-
ported marching on La Paz Thurs-
day to join loyalists resisting re-
bel forces who seized the center
of the capital and several interior
towns Wednesday.
First aid stations and hospitals
in La Paz reported seven persons
killed and 70 wounded in the
fighting raging in the outskirts.
A clandestine government radio
operating in Viacha, 15 miles
southwest of La Paz, said loyal
troops were moving north to join
the Boliva artillery regiment and
the Lanza infantry regiment, still
holding out against rebel troops,
police and armed civilians.
In Buenos Aires, Victor Paz Es-
tenssoro, exiled leader of the Na-
tional Revolutionary Movement
iMNRi which staged the revolt,
said he hoped to Jeave “for the
frontier" Thursday night. He said
"the situation appears to be very
confus- but he hoped to get
travel documents and transport to
Bolivia late Thursday.
The MNR leader said he did
not know if he could leave aa
planned because of the situation.
He said that according to mes-
sages he received, the rebels
claimed control of the important
eastern agricultural city of Cocha-
bama and the town of Tarija.
In the August, 1949 revolution
staged by MNR elements, the
movement seized control
eral cities and sent two
machinegun La Pas. 1
ment troops crushed
a 20-day campaign.
Traffic in La Paz'
still except for truckloads
ians moving to rebel
public transport si
stores and offices i
The whereabouts
van and his ministers
known.
ranks of Kansas Republicans. His
sentiments were echoed in the
keynote address by Glee Smith of
Lamed.
Differences of Opinion
"There may be sonic differences
of opinion among good Republi-
cans in Kansas as to presidential
candidates," Arn said. "But after
ready have been selected. Of these,l,he nomination Kansas Republi-
10 .said they would support Eisen-' cans w'11 ca,it as,de nva,rie!‘
hower, two said they would back
Twelve Alreedy Named
Twelve district delegates to na-
tional convention from Kansas al-
Taft.
Thursday, the 1,013 delegates
will approve or disapprove six
more district delegates recom-
mended to them Four more stut*
"Our goal is the election of a
Republican president."
Arn said the "average" voter
was strongly inclined toward Re-
publicanism.
"It is now clear that our federal
dcleca'cs-at-lame will la' named • KOVt’m,,u’nt ,s af5,K,cd w,th a
It seemed assured that the four I ‘'am-or of corruption so
Ht-l. zTT ozX w. W lv r Widespread that it threatens the
F i sen hower men * ! body politic," he said.
A pro-Taft delegate recommend- I Th<' 80Vcrnor said that «•"
cd at-large from the sixth district
I the state convention, "even if the
j cards are stacked against me.
union has postponed a strtke ftve
times at government request.
Wants Immediate Test
A management spokesman said
the Industry is forcing a legal test
of Mr. Truman's powers and
Controversy Arises
"What I want to know is,
Bently of Gove said, “do they I
want to establish a precedent
whereby the other five districts j
tell one district who it will send
though President Truman is not
a candidate for re-election, the
issues of the campaign "will be
the same."
The actual election of the dele-
• gatcfr-at-large was scheduled to
r(HI take place late in the afternoon.
House Investigators Summon Newbold
Morris To Nail Down His Charges
WASHINGTON. April 10 (U.R)—
House investigators summoned
Newbold Morris Thursday to nail
(town hi* charge that "entrenched
politicians" scuttled his anti-cor-
ruption campaign.
The towering New York attor-
ney was scheduled to testify under
oath before a House Judiciary sub-
committee studying his angry
backstage dispute with former At-
torney General J. Howard Mc-
Grath which blasted both men out
of the government.
Subcommittee members had a
big stack of questions to throw at
the ousted corruption hunter, rang-
ing from hia connection* with a
profitable surplus tanker deal to
nls statement that he was ready
to bring grand Jury action against
"corrupt" officials when McGrath
fired him.
He also was expected to be asked
"where the bodies are buried."
Morris has said that FBI files
are "loaded . . . with scandals,”
but dlractor J. Edgar Hoover can
do nothing about them because he
Is powerless to do more than dig
up tha facts.
"He knows all about those
bodies,” he said. “He delivers the
facts and then they are buried."
It was Morris" second appear-
ance before a congressional com-
mittee. He drew eongresional ire,
when, while testifying before the
Senate's permunent investigating
committee last month, he said that
some senators have "diseased
minds" and were trying to ruin
his reputation.
Rep. Patrirk J. Hillings (R-
Callf.) said he will ask Morris if he
knew the justice department might
st'ck an indictment against him in
connection with the tanker deal
"before he got his Job as corrup-
tion chief."
"If he didn’t," Hillings said, "I’ll
also ask him if he descloscd that
fact to McGrath."
Committee sources disclosed that
the group would take secret testi-
mony later Thursday from a jus-
tice department lawyer who, ap-
parently without McGrath’s know-
ledge, was cheeking into Morris’
part in the tanker rase before he
was offered the corruption clean-
up Job.
Europeans Must
Show "Self Help"
WASHINGTON, April 10 (U.R'—
A House Foreign Affairs subcont-
| mit tee said Thursday "there must
be greater evidence of self-help"
before America sends further aid
to its European allies.
The group, in a report on its
European inspection tour late last
year, criticized all the Allies for
not doing enough toward strength-
ening themselves and building to-
ward unity, but was especially
harsh toward Britain.
The report criticised Britain for
remaining an "observer," and said
the British argument that joining
n European union might hurt the
commonwealth “appears to have
little merit."
Further U. S. aid, the subcom-
mittee said, must depend on "crea-
tion of European unity" to avoid
wasting billions of American dol-
lars.
AGGIE ANNOUNCEMENT
The East Texas A. k M. Club
will hold its annual Easter
party on Friday night at the
Do-Bi-Do Club Irom RtOO p.m.
until 1:00 a.m. The Do-Bl Do
Club is located half way be-
tween Longview and Kilgore.
Admiesion Is 12.00 drag or
stag. Como out and join the lun.
Steel Leaders Go
Into Operation
PITTSBURGH, April 10 (U.R)—
Leading steel producers swung
Hnar»L(To.* ‘°n Some reporters got the impression | the roadblock car. The state high-
I«n 8fT Ume'and The from Pr*»ident Truman Thursday, way patrolman shot at the car, it-
vLnr *k i^fcns nent storeTH ,hat he alread-v has G*n Dw‘8ht tjng the left rear tire as it sped
Vogue. K. Wolens Dept, store, H. p Eisenhower’s resignation as su-, a wav.
; E. (Bill1 Bingham, and McKaig preme Allied commander
Chevrolet.
away.
in e.u- Cranberry was prepared to fire
Jerrv Poole elementarv school1 r0p6’ bUt that the of thc againwhenthetaceofasmallboy
ari teache^ made a posted ad! announcement is up to E.senhow- appeared m the window was
vertising the derby, and it has i
been placed in the window at J. C.
the first time during the chase that
Mr. Truman refused at his news | it was known that more than two
back into op.r.lta TWd.y In | Co., .. romplim.n1 Irom | “JETSJS
compliance with the government’s
last-minute seizure order.
The advance guard of 650,000
CIO United Steelworkers filed
back into mill yards to hasten tbe
gradual process of re-charging
blast furnaces and coke ovens
whose idleness has cost the defense
effort an estimated one million
tons of vital steel.
In Pittsburgh, Jones & Laughlin
Steel Corp., fourth-ranking pro-
ducer, posted work schedules at its
plants. Steelworkers joined with
supervisory personnel in "setting
up" the machinery which is ex-
pected to be operating at full blast
in four or five days.
Meanwhile, about 8,000 miners
in captive pits owned by U.S. Steel
in western Pennsylvania reported
. piloted airplane was ---------
for work. Thirty-nine other dis- strewn down a mountain slope be-
trict mines employing 16,000 men low the crater of Mount Mihara,
w M Rn.n.r Pennrv m inanei- received notice of Eisenhower's in- j The small boy stuck his head out!
The Cubmobile Derby commit-1 ten,ion to re*‘8n OI' ,he actual ies' 'ht'w'ndow and the Patrolman
to. con,ists of C. R. Stov.n.„'«^'»d mheh>dno(i) : V'crWcO coo.inocd to.
to sav on that matter. ward the railroad crossing near
h Ts tfe'w,1;rr rssar ■ srs ■
riihnh^".r a out of control on the road. The po-
re^\ to hate it made H lice“ were covenng thc car before
reaay to na\e it made. the driver had an opportunity to
It is up to Eisenhower, Mr. Tru- start the car again.
man said. j Lying on the floor of the ear the
From the way Mr. Truman par- police found a woman, who said
ried questions some reporters at \ she was from Avery, Texas, and
the news conference got the im- two small children, a boy about
pression that the resignation al-1 five years old and an 18-month-
ready is in the President's hands j old baby girl.
and that an announcement awaits I The driver of the car, a 34-year-
onl.v a signal from the general. 1 old DeKalb man, was reported by
Eisenhower is expected to resign the police as having a “string" of
so he can return home—probably penitentiary sentences. The other
in June—and campaign actively man, about 40 years old, gave his
for the Republican presidential home as being Chattanooga, Ten-
nomination. nessee.
chairman; Jack Phillips, Lee Mit-
chell, John Ward, Dale Brooking,
Gene Causey, and Calvin Bran-
nen.
Japanese Pledge
Safety Measures
TOKYO, April 10 (U.R)—Japa-
nese officials pledged Thursday
they would “redouble" safety pre-
cautions to prevent recurrence of
an air tragedy in which a Japan
Airlines plane struck a volcano
with the loss of 37 persons.
Thc wreckage of the American-
discovered
remained idle with production off
nearly 50 per cent.
In West Virginia and Kentucky,
an additional 5,700 miners awaited
recall to the diggings, but a coal
official said resumption of opera-
tions at the mines depends on how
soon the steel Industry gets back
to normal production.
Source Reports Police
Near Schuster Killer
NEW YORK, April 10 (U.R)—A
longshoreman cracked Thursday
after an all-night police grilling,
and a district attorney's office
source said investigators were
"very close" to the killer of Ar-
nold Schuster.
Schuster, a 24-year-old pants
salesman, was shot dead a few
doors from his Brooklyn homo 19
days after giving police the tip
that led to the capture of bank
bandit Willie Sutton.
Police have gone all-out in the
search for the murderer of the
"good citizen" who did his duty
in turning in thc notorious Sutton
after recognizing him on the sub-
WH V
"We haven't got the killer yet,
but we are very close to him,"
the source said.
The longshoreman was one of
two Brooklyn dock workers who
police say stole the gun with which
Schuster was slain March 9.
Thc investigation was being car-
ried out in secrecy.* Reporters
were barred from squadrooms,
ami detectives wore threatened
with demotion if they tnlkesl to
them.
a volcano on thc island of Oshima,
75 miles south of Tokyo.
Two American paratrooper
medical aides, who jumped from a
United Nations Air Force rescue
plane, reported from the crash
scene there were no survivors of
the 33 passengers and four crew
members.
Four Americans died in thc
crash. They were thc pilot, E. G.
Stewart, Miami, Fla.; co-pilot Ray-
mond W. Clevenger. Kalispell,
Mont.; Air Force Capt. H. L. Reed,
a passenger, and Kyushu Yamas-
hiro, manager of a Honolulu hotel.
The volcano struck by the p>lane
Wednesday is called "Suicide
mountain" because unhappy Jap-
anese lovers have favored it for
double suicides, leaping from the
2,000-foot rim of the crater.
The twin-engined atrliner char-
tered from Northwest Airlines
slammed into volcanic ash and
rock near thc lip of the volcano at
about 8 a.m. Wednesday.
Southwestern Bell 'Phone Employees
Back On Jobs In Nine Texas Cities
AtTheHospital
City Hospital
Admitted—Mrs. Robert Tuttle,
Mrs. C. R. Skelton, Mrs. Jewel
McGaha, and Mrs. F. J. Rowan.
Dismissed—Roy Foster, Herbert
Parker, George Winslow, C. W.
Davis, Mrs. Peggy Newton, Dallas
Roper, and Mrs. Myrtle Minor.
Hancock Hospital
Admitted—R. R Gullett. E E
Willbanks, Rev. O. H. Griffith,
and Mrs. S. T. Tucker
Dismissed — J. M. Tuel, Mrs.
James Boles, Mrs. L. F Wells and
Mrs. O F Floyd.
DALLAS. April 10 (U.R)—South-
western Bell Telephone Co., em-
ployes returned to their jobs in
nine Texas cities Thursday, but
5,600 employes at other points in
Texas and Oklahoma refused to
work, though they aren't officially
on strike.
The 5,600 non-strikers who rc-
Southwestern Bell in Dallas re-
ported service lestored at Sweet-
water, Edinburg. Arlington, Mes-
quite, Cleburne, Granbury, Mineral
Wells, Taylor and Weatherford,
Tex., where employes returned.
Some of the 29 points still ham-
pered by walkouts. Southwestern
Bell spokesman Will R ,.rs said.
Red Team Rejects
Renewed Demands
PANMUNJOM, April 10 (UJ0—
Communist armistice negotiators
flatly rejected Thursday renewed
Allied demands that they with-
draw Russia as a “neutral" truce
inspector and accept a ban on air-
field construction.
The Reds suggested the dead-
lock might be referred back to
staff officers of both sides for an-
other attempt to find a compro-
mise solution. United Nations dele-
gates indicated afterward they
were willing.
Maj. Gen. William K. Harrison
of the UN spoke only two words
during the short session. When the
Reds proposed a recess, Harrison
said, “I agree.”
Despite the continued stalemate
in the truce supervision talks, both
sides were hopeful the war pri-
soner exchange problem would be
solved when debate resumes on
that issue. The prisoner negotia-
tions have been recessed a week
to give each side time to seek
ground for a possible compromise.
fused to work arc operators and ! haven’t been picketed since the
maintenance personnel. They
would not violate picket lines of
the Communication Workers of
America (CIO>, who arc striking
against Western Electric, a tele-
phone company affiliate, in 43
states. Some refused to work even
where there are no pickets.
action began at noon Wednesday
These include Ranger, Seminole,
McKinney, Odessa, Monahans,
Cuero, Temple and Pecos, all in
Texas.
Continue Until Settlement
Among the major centers where
the tie-up remained unchanged
Telephone exchanges in 29 Texas ! were Amarillo, Austin, Dallas,
cities remained unmanned by reg- Houston, Lubbock, Big Spring,
ular personnel, although not all
of them were picketed. Employes
at nine Texas points returned to
work, and these cities had a full
restoration of service.
Picket* At War*house*
The number of telephone work-
ers involved in the walkout in-
creased by 600 Thursday morning
when pickets appeared at tele-
phone company warehouses in the
major cities, including Dallas,
Houston and San Antonio.
The pickets are from the Texas-
Oklahomn local of the Communica-
tions Workers of America install-
ers' union, which has about 1,000
members in the two-state area.
Tyler, Abilene, Fort Worth, Mc-
Allen, San Antonio, Waco, Wichi-
ta Falls, and Midland, all in Texas;
and Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Mus-
kogee and Shawnee, Okla.
W. P. Hargrove, secretary of the
CWA local, said picketing of the
telephone centers wilt continue un-
til a settlement is reached in nego-
tiations at New York.
El Paso was the largest city in
the two states with normal service.
The Mountain States Telephone
and Telegraph Co., exchange is
using Western Electric workers
1 belonging to a different local.
Pickets were withdrawn late Wed-
[ nesday.
Estes Kefauver Calls
Off April Texas Trip
HOUSTON, April 10 <U.R>—Sen.
Estes Kefauver wired hts backers
in Houston Thursday his scheduled
trip to Texas, set for April 15 and
16, would have to be called oft
but that he would try for a trip
here in May.
Originally, the Tennessee sena-
tor, a presidential aspirant, plan-
ned to speak here in City Audi-
torium the night of the 19th than
go to Dallas on the following day.
Cyril J. Smith, attorney and
local head of the Kefauver cam-
paign, said Thursday the Demo-
cratic presidential hopeful had de-
cided to campaign In only thoee
states where there are presiden-
tial primaries in the next tiw
weeks, thus eliminating Texas.
Partly
Gladewater
cloudy, continued eold
Thursday night, Friday partly
cloudy, a little warmer in Um
afternoon. Lowest Thursday night
near 3« with froat.
East Texas
Partly cloudy and colder Thurs-
day. continued cold Thursday
night. Friday partly cloudy and a
little warmer. Freeh to strong
northerly winds Thursday, dimin-
ishing Thursday night and hsc—-
ing moderate northeast to east
Friday.
iiMHH1
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 225, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1952, newspaper, April 10, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008163/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.