Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 98, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 10, 1949 Page: 1 of 10
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LOOK FOR
YOURSELF
IN THE._____
VOL 1 NO 98
(iladmratpr laflu UUftrnr
WEATHER
mMh
F WT f* XAX l'4rtJ> rluMlt
nmttflfd ihundershm* i-r* ui \<wth
portion liMiiLin iin in Northern
Ml ( mini oortion miiiUi Sot
uuilr mi warm in exBen-r vwtn
west portion* tonight.
•'THE PEOPLE'S PAPER"
FULL LEASED WIRE INTERNATIONAL HEWS SERVICE
GLADEWATD. TEXAS
SUNDAY. JULY 10. UHtt
TEN CENTS FER COPY
TEXAS' ONLY OFFSET DAILY
U. S. Fleet Makes Shift To Atlantic
Chinese Red Police Released
U. §. Diplomat Held In Jail
Services Held
Saturday For
E. W. Clements
Funrval services for Edward
WmIw Cl wn rata, si. were held
at io cm. Saturday In the First
Methodist Church of Ulsdewater.
lUirul *u in Uie family yM
at Rosadala Craiataiy. Pastor*
officiating at the sendees Sir
(tie Clarksville Community rent-
dent were Rev. Eugene Marti a,
astUtted hy Rev. Kenneth Hilton,
pastor of the Clara NVtlle Baptist
Church and Rev. Nay* B. Craw-
ford of MLieola.
Clement* (lied at hi a home In
the Clarkavtlle Community about
& IS a.m. Tliumday after an til -
ness of several yearn duration.
The retired farmer moved to
Ul site water when h - wan IS. He
• aa hnfti on December 21. IK HR
near Grewabnm. Alabana.
HU affiliations Included mitre
hMNS m Mu- Methodist Church
WU the Wnodmra of the World.
He U survived t|jr hla wife.
Mr*. Florence Cl emit it a. three
dau Miters, Mrs. Minnie Mm- Phil-
lips of Uladewater, Mrs. Annlce
Tallent. Maytown. and Mrs. Jack
Oliver of Robb Blown. t*i sons,
1* F. Clements, Min aula, and
J. K. Uwnrtits. Dallas. one
step-daughter, Mrs. Alvin J.
Money, and one step-son, J.W.
Holctoft. tnth of Ulsdewater. one
brother, W.M. Clement* of Gilmer,
and one stater. Mr*. A. F. Wal-
kw. Tallahasaee, Ala.. 17 «ran<k
children and lit great-grandchild-
rat.
Picture Of Week
Will Be Contest
For Glade Area
A picture root eat, designed to
encourage photography and stimulate
the Interest of camera enthusiasti,
will be matte a weekly affair by
the C. lade water Dally Mirror.
A prlxe of $5 wilt be awarded wltli
Hie selection of each "Picture of
the Week". The contest la open
to membera of the Mlrmr staff al-
though they will not receive the
15 award.
Hy inviting citizens of the Glade-
water area to submit their pic tare a
In competition with professional
photottraphera. the Mirror cyt-ect*
to flnl new talent in the area and
to recognize that talent by publish-
the plcttgea.
On the spot news photos at well
aa featurlzed pictures -we Invited.
When submitting a picture, please
Include Information aa to tie type
(1# caii era used. the F-stop, st>eed.
amt l.lnd of film used.
SHAN OH At, duly 9 - tINH
Chinese Onmmunlat police re-
leased U.K, Vice-Consul ailHsi-
OH ve today after a three- dav
detention on a traffic violation
charge In Shanghai, hut OUve
kept allrat publicly about what
had happened.
t'.K. Con ml John Caiiri lamed
a statement saying:
"I have Inafenicted Olive for
hla own protection to mUce mi
public rtaiemrat regarding tdn
case."
When the Imntnn, Mo,, official
was arr-sted last Werkreaday
during a big Comrr uni st-organ I zed
parade cel ebratine the anniversary
of the Kino-Japanese war there
were reports that he had bem
hasten hy police. He had been
- aught In one of the n any traffic
lama resulting fmm the parade.
This it riming the official Com-
muiilig organ. Liberation Dally,
publtitled a purported version of
what It termed Olive’s "slatw-ent
of repentance."
This said that Olive had con-
Him Trial
To Be Tried
In Early Fall
NEW YORK July 9 -<IN8I—The
Department of Justice and members
of Congress moved swiftly tonight
to bring the sensation-packed and
perpleilng Alger lllsa perjury cane
to a final conclusion.
In New York. U.R Attorney
John F.X. McCiohey announced he
will take formal action nest week
to plnce the cnae against the 44-
year-old former State Department
official buck on the court caletv.1 j
for n new trial. * spec ted to be bell
In the fall.
In Washington. Republican mem-
bers at the Houae Un-American
Activities Committee demanded
that the group open a new Investi-
gation of Hiss.
The perjury trial ended last
night when the Jurv was unable to
break a deadlock and was dis-
charge!. The Jurors were eight
to four for conviction.
Top Capitol Hill leaders Investi-
gating Communist espionage acti-
vities In the United Hates slim
criticized Federal Judge .Samuel
H. Kaufman's conduct of the trial
and charged he showed “prejudice"
against the prosecution.
Ren. Niton, (Rl Citl., a member
of the House Up-American Activi-
ties Committee, called for a tho-
rough probe Into the fitness of
Judge Kaufman t» remain on the
bench.
The SVye,u*o|| Faderal jurist,
meanwhile, refused to comment
beyond a statement that "the re-
cord speaks for Itself."
Ku Klux Crackdown
Sees 45 Indicted
HIHJdINilH AM. Ala., aoly <*.
(IN.ni - A special grand lury In-
•Irted 45 persons today In a
dramatic crack-down on Blurring-
her's thrce-'MinUi wave of hooded
tiemrtsm linked with the Ku Klut
Kl an.
Names of Uie perrons Indicted
were withheld pending their
arreM.
Circuit Omul Judge Robert J.
Wheel it trewn* title released one
of the Ku Klnt Klan leaders,
William Hugh MorrfH, Worn loll
on a |V)n bond on the condition
he submit Klan records to another
Jefferwm County drand Jury next
week.
Morns wan tailed on contempt
of cotirt for refusal In show the
Jurv the Kluxer* records.
solicitor Emmett Herrv declared
the Indtctnufits "hardly scrstch
the iwirface" in the ptolie of Jef-
ferson County tnoh violence, The
Jiry advocated continued Invesb-
gallon.
llie grand lury heart a parade
nf H7 witnesses In Its seven-day
as a Ann.
, Moat of then- claimed to he
vtrtlma nf the lash or threats from
m« Med night riders. Persons
who reported themselves hared
to the whiplash ranged fmm youth-
ful war veterans to a fortvish
grandmother and several teen-
aged girls.
In bringing thr flrat Indlctmimts
yet recorded In the nmlonged no-
called rHgrt nf tetmr In and near
HHmlnidiam. the grand lury ex-
plained
"Wherever evidence ban luntt-
fled returning nf a true bill, thla
has berm done.
MnrrtH wan the nnly witness
summoned hy Uie grand Jury who
declined In submit available
raonrds, tail he sknutlv denied
the Ku Kluiers were tnvnlved
In the wave nf violence.
Klraatrra previously made the
same claim whim the o.'ganl zation
. was derraaked by Alabama law
when the floggings seemed to
j reach a peak last week.
The lury recommended a
■'thorough imd migmrmted" in-
vetdlgaUon be ftinducted by
-aic.ee.ting grand luries.
Some of the night raids repnrted
to police Include the burning of
a fieri ctnsa on the lawn nf a
grandmother who lived in nuhut*
ban Htrmtngham. she was i(ragged
rptm her home to witness the
demon at ration.
A young Navy veteran told how
n gong nf masked men lured him
firm bed, forced him to leave hla
two cbtl.tren at home alone, then
Wove him to a winded area to
flog him.
Everett-Skont
Loses Pick-Up
Second Time
Herr- again, gone again.
Ilie replacement for the Ever-
ett Stone pit l.up truck stolen on
Jul* 4 was wrecked at l .:t> p.m.
Snturdav with .mlv " lb ■- mu-
stered on It.
I'he ne-< 1 !>4tt Chcn-pilet tnori,
dm cii 111 Mud !'earlon ri Red
Hook, overturned new the right
hand ditch when the driver skidded
-in wet pavement me mile west of
the city m Hlghwn.v Hd amt lost
rnntmlnf his vehicle.
V vereu-Rlone had mat put the
new trurk In sen lee to replace
the one which was adnlen and
later wrecked on independence
MV.
Saturday's accident ivaa Investi-
gated hy stab* Highway patrol-
man Hob Human.
teased to having violated a traffic
ordinance, of refusing to divulge
his Identity whan challenged hy
police, and nf having beaten a
policeman and damaged police
property.
No Mistreatment .parted
The Unirmimiit'leMjed *at«-
ment Rioted hlni In .vinclualon aa
having said "during (he period
of detention I did not receive
lll-treatm art."
Americans have become In-
volved In several disputes with
Chinese since the Oxriinunliris
conjured Uianshig. U.R. Itrtttah.
and h rench ships pulled out befhre
the conquest In an nhvtoua eflhrt
to avoid Incidents
Meanwhile In TMpeh, Knrmnna,
the Chinese Nationalist Central
Dally News said that the N *1 on al-
ls. airforce Iropped io 000 anples
of lienerallsitimo Chlang KM*
Jhek’s recent statemwt that the
Cbrnmunlsts still can be beaten
In China.
Ihe Oenerallssimn's statement
was made In an eicluigve Inter-
view with Howard llandec an,
Far Ka.stem Director of Interna-
tional News Service, and another
American newsman.
CMang revealed that he would
crime out of attnl-rehrement to
rally the National!stn for a fight
to the flnl ah • a fight he predicted
would PS won.
The Chinese leader's appeal
for American aid In this fight was
in these words "1 lake it that
Uie United .states, with which we
fnudit together and hied together
In the Second World Mar. will not
be tnekfferenr to whM Is aotng
on In China, a former ally."
MAJOR PORTION OF FLEET IN
SHIFT FROM PACIFIC WATERS
"Moonlight Rendezvous" la the
Ihuly Mirror selection a* the
picture n| (he week, stall photo-
grapher IIIi an Faulkner made the
ciguiagr on the hank of the Seine
Itlver near the Place lie Con-
corde. Paris. France, during the
war. % Conte ana Nettel. h by
1 centimeters was used with cut
Him. I ilm Is portrait pan. Ills
Scopes Evolution
Trial Is Recalled
F-atup was 12.5 at | |00 seconds,
rhe sIm»( was made in the late
aftensNtn. shooting directly into
the sun v. itlst ut tin- use of a
tiller, thus the moonlight effect.
World News
In Brief
(INS)
KOMF. July 9 -IINKV Rome
police sought tonight to keep
former New York Vice King Chart•• a
(Lucky) Luciano in Jail hy pm-
durlng a legal techntralit.v-the
discovery of a letter referring to
"bean rdUpriema."
Police Investigating the Sici-
lian's possible link With an Intern
national dope-smuggling ring
thought the "bean shipments"
might be "double talk meaning
drugs."
Igea Ll.ssom. Lucky's beautiful
self-described mistress, visited
the iiintesUng Luciano at Rome's
Regina Coell prison this after-
noon.
She carried fresh clothes but
Lucky refused them and assured
her "III be home tonight."
Police clung to their techni-
cal lty--the "bean shipments" let-
ter discovered In Luciano's apart-
ment-to try to keep Luciano In
Jail ut least over the weekend.
Hut it was obvious they were
emharrnased as Luciano's attor-
neys kept pressing for Ids release
at a late hour tonight. Legally an
individual can only be held -tH
hours for .pi.-sti.-mn.- with- it a
formal charge t-eiug Hared aguir.M
him.
And the police havenl got any-
thlnr yet to slap on Luciano.
Such sensational recwil mats
m those ol Judith t opion. User
••tMg and the t'ommui.ists in New
V«k, today tall to replace another
trial in the memories of llayton,
IkM., ciUarn*. Thla Nirfit
they observe tin Z4th aimivrrsM)
of thr fiiemas Scopes' Kvolution
rttal. Ulorwry Nailer While, who
was thr official prosecutor of the
trial, glvea his recollections In
thr following story written rv
clnsively for Internatfonal News
Service.
Itv Nailer While
DAYTON, TENN., July «»,
(INfk - It was on the morning nf
July 10. 1925. that one of the
frirld’s greatest trials tong place
In the circuit court mom at Day-
ton, Term.
The presiding Judge was the
Honorable John T. Raulstnn, who
still I* active In the practice of
law as he nears his four-score
years.
Clarence Danow, the great
Chicago lawyer, with a .<aff of
able assistants, appeared In bm
half of young John T. Sonpes. a
former teacher In Rhea Central
High School at Dayton, Tenn.
Aoung Scopes was charged
with violation of Tennessee's
anti-evolution law - a law which
prohltkts the teaching of «iv
theory of evolution In the puhllc
schools of Tennessee that dentes
the Divine Creation of man aa It
ttipears In the Hthle - In C»«nesla.
Tennessee law fortdds the teach-
ing of the thwirv that m»n comes
flom the lower order of animals.
At the head of the prosecution
ws* the eloquent and famous
William Jennings Bryan. !i« dad
beer, defetted three time
hirfi office of President
i nued Halt's. Bry an a
able assistants on his
Harrow Versus IV) on
Darrow, who had the walk of a
cat and the smile of a 8U it day
School teacher, showed himself
to be a great examiner of wit-
nesses, but he was not an orator.
Bryan, the orator, appeared at
his best In the field oforafory,
hut he was not a great examiner
of witnesses
The great trial (bagged on for
11 days with practically every
news gathering agmey under the
sun being represented and report-
ing the dally hirpenings.
The dav before the trial ended
many thretts were heard against
the lives of Bryan and Harrow by
"cranks" who had come from dif-
ferent states and who were parti-
sans of either Hiyan or Dnirow.
On Julv 21. 1925. the Jury ,-e-
turned the verdict of guilty lgaiii st
Scopes. He was freed *100 and
costs.
On Sunday following the close
of the Scopes' trial, William Jen-
nings Brvan died In his (deep
here In Dayton, where he fought
his last battle. The citizens of
this town took iteps Immediately
to establish a university known
as the NilIIapis Jennings Biyan
Untvertity.
■ HKIDEI.BKHO. July 9 -(INSvH
The U.S. European Command]
announced today that the first
regular Frankfurt to Berlin rsU|
t aasenger service ainet the lifting
of the blockade will operate.Monday.
_i-
roil
nd the
western zones also will be resumed
Monday.
TAIFEH, FORMOSA, July 10--
(ST NDAyv-aNSV-OenerallssImo
Cltlang Kal Shek left Talpeh for
Manila today.
The Generalissimo left In his
private plane to meet with President
I Elpldlo tjulrlno at his summer home
j at Baguio to plan Joint action to
“halt the march of Communism."
BERLIN. July 9-tlNSr A young
Russian private has been shot and
killed in a border gun duel with
l. 8. troops in Germany. Ameri-
can occupation officials have pro-
tested against the Russians not
only for the shootlng-whlch the
Americ ons say was started hy the
Sovtcts—big against the presence
of the Russian soldier In the U. 8.
occupation zone.
WASHINGTON, July 9 -<INS>~
The Navy announced today that
it plans to bold the greater part
of the vast United States Fleet
In Atlantic and Mediterranean
waters throughout the next year.
A high Naval spokesman said
that neither relaxed tension In
Etrope nor Communist gains In
China have changed the Navy's
view of the overall strategic pic-
ture.
The spokesman made public
plans for maintaining 228 combat
ships In active service through
the fiscal year which began July 1.
The ratio will be about four In the
Atlantic and Mediterranean io
three In the Pacific.
nig ( airier* To Atlantic
The Atlantic will continue to
T«xas Senator
To Bring Out
Now T-H Bill
WASHINGTON, July 9 -(INS)-
Speaker Rayburn. Tex.. Is ex-
pected next week to urge the
House labor committee to bring
ott a new labor bill In a second
attempt to repeal the Taft-Hartley
iaw.
Rayburn's proposal has the
backing of president Truman, who
has let Administration leaders In
Congress know that he favors
speedy action.
Rayburn will discuss labor bill
strategy with chairman Lealnakl,
committee chairman and author of
the original T-H repeal bill which
was sent back to the committee
from the house floor.
Leslnakl Is out of the city, but
will he back In Washington on Mon-
day or Tuesday.
There ? a possibility that last-
minute labor legislation strategy
may be discussed by the President
at his Monday meeting with Ray-
Yum. vice pn ament umkiey,
Senate Democratic Leader Lucas,
and House Democratic Leader Mo
Carmack.
Slight hope is held for the pas-
sage of a labor bill acceptable to
the administration at this session.
Such a bill would have to cairy
out the President's campaign
pledge to wipe raft-Hartley off
the statute books.
The labor bill which recently
passed the Senate dealt the Ad-
ministration a stinging defeat. It
was amended largely by Senate
GOP Policy Leader Taft. Ohio,
and actually was a revised version
of the Taft-Hortlev law.
Senate action on the labor bill,
alfe’r Taft's amendments stripped
■way all Administration provisions,
sent the measure to the House.
House administration strategy
calls for bringing s compromise
hill out of the labor committee and
trying to jam it through the House.
Jobless Figure
Reaches 3,800,000
Owe ol I lie nmte Manta for the
IioIIm inning Moth-1 tnplone in*
leal to be Mammoril hy Ihr Ply-
mouth dealer*, of Gregg CiMMly,
Mops in the minM ol inra hi*
model a pre-Highl leM Io pom
It lor tile raim-ta the tricky m
Mgo on Um- right wins add*
special lift to the flying model
which will do Ma -toll on lul*
lb and 17 ol the Gregg I'ouMy
kljnrt
WASHINGTON July 9 -(IN8V-
Congressional Investigators today
reported a "not unreasonably high"
national unemployment of 3 800.000
persons and said the lay-hffs are
confined chiefly to the manufactir-
tng field.
A 45-page analysis of the no-
tion’s Job picture, prepared hy a
sub-group for the congressional
committee on th. economic report,
produced these "major friot*-”
Giademan At
CampHoodFor
ROTC Course
CAMP MOOD. TEXAS • The
1849 Reserve Officers Training
Camp, which opened here June
Ylth after 800 cadets from
Colleges located In 13 states
from Oregon to Flortds arrived.
Is now Ui frill swing with Its
intense and rigid training program
keeping the ftiture officer* busy
from 4 am. UI after dork.
Course* ui Infantry, Armored
Cavalry and Military Police con-
Mltxite toe summer training sche<F
uie. Local cadets attending the
camp are Hugh F. (.'obey. Glade-
water.
The famed rid Armored "Hell
on Nil eels" Hi vision, stationed
at C«mp hood and commanded
hy Major General Albert C. i*ntth
Is playing an important part in
the training hy augmenting the
ROTC stuff with other expee
traced Officers and Non-com-
mlsMoned officer*. The demon-
stration*, which form a highly
Instructive, as well as Interettlng
part of Uie training pragram, will
he conducted hy the aid Armored
Division's grwck unit is
1. "Employment la higher than
In any previous year In history,
except 1948, and the most recent
data show an Increase of nearly
one million In June over May.
principally In agriculture."
I Z About a million and a half
more persons, are Jobless now.
considering seasonal Influences,
than last fall, when there were
fewer people Jobless than at any
other time In the postwar period.
3. Although most Jobs were
lost In manufacturing, some da-
c'lnes have occurred In transporta-
tion. certain servlcea and mining.
However, trade, construction, and
federal and state government
services "have been holding up."
■ 4. The number of part-time work-
era who want full-time Joba has
Increased approximately half a
million In recent months. Moat
of the overtime prevalent In recent
years has been eliminated.
5. There haa been a substantial
Increase In the labor force by
graduating veterans and natural
growth of the notion, without
compensating expansion In econo-
mic activity luring the past year.
The report said the present
nationwide Industrial employment
slump, which first became notice-
able In the final quarter of 1948.
had struck hanteM at the New
England area
No industrial state escaped the
Job decline, the Investigators
pointed <>ut. and the toll Is "parti-
cularly heavy at present" In New
York. New Jersey, the Carollnaa.
kentrucky. Tennessee. Alabama.
Illinois, ami California.
The subcommittee sold the motor
I toe In nna-ngrtcultunl employ-
ment - down some ’-million from
last year's average - woe felt
moat in textile Industries, and the
metala groups, exclusive of auto-
nomies.
get the three Urge modernized
carriers, approximately six-seventh
of the Navy's air arm, and the
heaviest tonnage of fighting iMps.
The detailed plans, which follow
the present distribution, call for
six heavy and two light camera
In the Atlantic, and two medlun-
heavy and three light carriers In
the Pacific.
The distribution of cruiser* is
to be 12 to fl. of destroyers 117 to
53, and submarines 48 to 12 In
favor of the Atlantic. Although
some shifts will be made, the
approximate proportions will be
m slntained.
The plans refer to strips in active
service, which with auxiliaries
now number 863 vessels. Of the
larger "mothball” fleet. 1.033
ships are In Pacific ports and
874 lu .Atlantic reserves.
Sin Reduction In Fleet
The spokesman said that the
Budget-proposed 600 million dollar
reduction In the Navy's funds for
fiscal 1950 will not reduce the
present fleet, because reductions
have already been made to get
under the budget figure.
His statements were made In
answer to questions submitted by
the International News Service.
Among the questions and answers
were:
Q. "Does the Navy plan to
return to its former policy of a
50-50 dlstribt&lon of the fleet
between the two oceans?”
Q. "Is the Pacific ares equipped
to handle the largest modernized
comers -- the Midway, the FDR,
and the Coral Sea?"
A. “Ye* Ne could handle them
at San Francisco, Pearl Harbor
or Puget Sound."
In commenting on his replies,
the spokesman said that the large
comers, none o( which can get
through the Panama Canal, might
have to be put Into Puget Sound
"with a shoehorn."
Inspector Myer
Finishes Coarse
Bill Myer Is now the official
City inspector of Gladewster since
he attended the two dav school si
Austin Thursday and Friday
City Purchasing Agent N. N.
Wood went with Myer while the
echool was In action.
A certificate, verifying the vali-
dity of Myer as a city inspector
Is expected to strive In Gladewoter
amund the first of the week.
n
Be 10B Tears Old
MEXICO CITY. July 9 -(INS)--
A Mexican General sold today he
had uncovered a 102-year-old
common grave sold to contain the
bodies of 200 American soldiers
killed near Mexico city In the
Mexican-American wv of 1847.
A hair mile away he sold another
common grave contains the bodies
of 100 Mexicans who failed to
stem the march of Gen. Winfield
Scott's army from Vera Crw to
Mexico City.
General Miguel Martinez sold
Identification of the American
bodies was made by brass buttons
bearing the letters U.S.. old
American coins, and fragments
of rusty rifles.
The General sold he was dlggliw
a trench for a brick Klin on Rancho
Anzsldo, near San Jeronimo De
Las Huertas, northeast of Mexico
City, when he discovered the
graves.
A U.S. Embassy military attache
sold that pieces of rifles and wea-
pons found in the grave are being
sent to Uie Washington War Depart-
ment for identification.
latfit Sint Dm lata
Rv flnirrv Um lia DgUigJ
■J Hpjl J EH fra niDUEl
CHICAGO, July 9 -tIN8> A
young bandit was shot and then
beaten to death today by an irate
gnu*? of 50 railroad workers after
he and hie three companions had
robbed them of $2,000 and 30
wrist watches.
The bandits, all masked and
aimed, invaded a barracks of the
Illinois Central Railroad on Chi-
cago's far Southstde.
As they were leaving, one of the
workers shot the young bandit. His
companions abandoned him, es-
caping in an automobile.
The victims of the robbery then
beat the young gunman sc severely
he died later In SL James Hos-
pital In Chicago Haights. Police
Identified him as Richard Dailey,
of Chicago.
Physicians said he hod been
shot in the leg, but attributed
death to the seven* beating.
MMMHMBw
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Greep, J. Walter. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 98, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 10, 1949, newspaper, July 10, 1949; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008371/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.