Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 220, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1950 Page: 1 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gregg County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lee Public Library.
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VOL. II, NO. 220
Full Leased Wire United Press
GLADEWATER, TEXAS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1950
Station KSIJ — 1430 On Your Dial
5c PFR COPY
A Full Load Both Ways
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FIRST MARINE AND SEVENTH INFANTRY Division battle casualties, evacuated by air from Ha-
garu, unload from C-47 at Yon’po airbase in Korea. Note the Marine replacements standing by at
lower right to board the plane and move up to the fighting front. All transports take a full load
both ways. These Marine replacement ', according to the latest reports, will help the encircled Amer-
ican troops fight their way out of a Communist trap near the Chosin reservoir. 'Acme Telephoto by
Richard C. Ferguson, Staff Photographer* •
Attlee-Truman Will Hold
Another Meeting Today
20,000 Marines, Army Men Successful On
First Leg Of Fight For Freedom In Korea
Transports And Warships
WASHINGTON. Dec 7 <UP>—
British Prime Minister Clement
Attlee conferred with Indian
*Dou»s,
lade ^otun
prett
how until Christ-
r Everybody can hear Santa
kiddies both as they talk
ch other Just dial 516 and
tantu what you want for
Christmas.
Ambassador Madame V. L. Pandit man-Attlee discussion, which re-
on the Korean crisis today before sumes at 2:30 p. m. CST thus fa
Brock Guests: Mr. and Mrs.
Falter L. Brock had us a guest
over the week end. Mr. Hoy W.
Wright of New York City and
Darien. Conn. Wright and Brock
haven't seen each other in 31
years. Th.y served together on
the Phillippi* es during World War
I. Wright wuu enruute to Houston
for the Super Market Convention
to further his turning magatinc
called “Battel Living" which will
appear in Super Market* over the
United Stain; by April l. Mr
Wright who is vice-p.esident and
director ol advertising on the inag
urine, was formerly connected
with "This Week" magazine.
Molina's Gone: Mrs Marie Mo-
lina and sons. Stephen and Hit-h-
ard. who have been visitin’ in
Gladewater for quite some time
now, left last night to return to
their home in New York. They
have been staying with Mrs Mo-
lina's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dell
Honeycutt.
Mighty Glad He’s Home: Cpl;
Watt Graham, who was stationeo
. in Fort Belvoir, Virginia, arrived
In Glndewater Sunday a. in. Hr
received his discharge from the
army and now he’s home for good
Gruhutn is tack working with the
Gulf Oil Corp Maybe that's the
reason for the big smile his wife
Shirley, (at the Famous Show
Store* is sporting nowudays.
meeting with President Truman.
After the conference Madame
Pandit left immediately for New
York where India has taken the
lead in the United Nations in ap-
pealing to the Chinese Reds to halt
their forces el the 38th parallel.
, Diplomatic informants uid
cautiously there still appears a
possibility" the Chinese Commu-
nists wight accept the truce ap-
official atmosphere
. and hope. There
d InoH- tnform»u»«i ui
It'slfc might reply.
•Np^Fthc rntlee-Madame Pandit
xuJsWsations, it was presumed,
■he was in a position to inform the
Prime Minister of the status of
background peace negotiations.
Informan's said that the Tru-
Sladewater Man
Helps Free 30
Men From Reds
Capt. W D. Wilcox of Gladc-
vatcr helped 30 men to escape
iteds in Korea recently, according
o an Associated Press wire story
lirect from U. S. Tenth Corps
Headquarters.
Captain Wilcox, a Marine pilot
if a deadly Corsair fighter, flew
nercy errands over Korea and
ielped screen the escape route of
wo Marine regiments around
Hagaru, the AP release said.
The Gladewater man he.ped
juide a jeep patrol to different
troups which spelled out the
words ‘‘help—hurry" in the snow.
Ball Gama Tonight: Tonight the
Gladewater Hears play their firs:
home basketball game of the seo-
son in the Boys Gym beginmm
promptly at 7:30 p. in. All the fan*
around town are saying the Boar*
have a mighty fine team and
they’ve won all the games they'vi
played up to date. The boys art
coached by Bill Waters.
Hara N’Tharei Judge Starnes hn*
gone to California for ■ a two
weeks vacation . . . Mrs. Hoi
Butcher's momma from Shrcvc
port hHs been visitin' in her homi
for the past several days . . . Mrs
Floyd Wampler is In Abilcm
spending several duys w.th het
hubby
Danton Or Bust: Several repre
sentutlves of the GHS school papei
and the school yearbook left thi*
afternoon with their sponsors, C
W. Dawson and J. T. Cruce, foi
Denton to attend the annual eon
vention of the Texas High Schoo’
Press Association. They’ll attorn
group discussions, lectures, etc
But there’ll be plenty of enter
talnmcnt too. The movie star
Charles Laughton, will be on hnnr
and a banquet will fete roproson
tatlves from all the variou:
schools who belong to the THSPA
Pattnrson To Die In
State Electric Chair
HOUSTON, Dec. 7 (UP*—Jim-
nie B. Patterson will live long
•nough to die in the state elec-
ric chair for the murder of his
livorccd wife, it appeared today.
The court of criminal appeals
has upheld the death sentence giv-
>n the 44-year-old Patterson last
'eb. 16 by a jury In District Judge
Frank Williford’s court.
Patterson, who has tuberculosis
of both lungs and his throat, got
ip from his sickbed in Mart, Tcx-
is, purchased a new six-shooter,
came here and killed his divorced
wife behind the malted milk coun-
ter In Weingarten’s Store.
In asking that the verdict be
set aside, Patterson’s attorney. J.
T. Kelley, pleaded that the de-
fendant already was under a death
sentence.
Patterson has been in an iso-
lated cell in county jail and doc-
•ors say his condition is serious.
The date of his execution has not
jeen set yet, but it is expected
to be soon.
AtTheHospital
PATIENTS ADMITTEDi
Hancock Hospital — Bettye Jo
Foster, Ernest Wells, Mrs. Charles
Mullenix, Brenda Flelden and
lohn McIntyre.
City Hospital — Linda Young-
blood and Billy J. Davis.
PATIENTS DISMISSED!
Hancock Hospital—Mrs. James
Holes and baby and Mrs. Ray
Karnes.
City Hospital — Wendell Bedl-
chek and Mrs. Gena Bohnlng.
have been based on preparatiot
“fOI the worst." Secondary studj
has been given to what might t»
done to meet any peace moves bj
the Communists.
The big question was what pric<
the Chinese Reds would demam
ns a condition tor a cease-' re. Thi
best guess in official quat * wa:
that they would demand Formos;
—a move that has not yet resulted
in agreement between Mr. Truman
and Attlee.
Mwiudim affii-lak indicate*
the possibility that the Paris meet-
ings opening today of representa-
tives of the Big Three western
powers might make a preliminary
move to open thr door for a big
four foreign ministers meeting in-
cluding Russia.
The Big Three representatives
ire discussing a reply to Russia’s
bid for a big 'our meeting to dis
cuss what 'he Soviets call western
militarization of free Germany.
The western feeling is that limited
'ulks on Germany should be re-
iected, but that the door should be
left open for broader discussions
on East-West issues.
Congress Holds
Discussion On
Dean Acheson
WASHINGTON, Dec. 7. (UP*—
Four House Democrats came to
Secretary of State Dean Acheson’s
defense today as Republicans in-
tensified efforts to get the secre-
tary’s scalp. n
On the Senate side, the Republi-
can policy committee began
drafting a resolution for presenta-
tion to the full Senate P.epublican
Conference if approved, it would
be a formal party demand that
President Truman fire Acheson.
The GOP conference will consider
it next week.
On the House side:
Rep. Chet Holifield, D., Cal.,
called Acheson “a great public
servant.” He asked Republicans
to let the secretary alone.
Rep. Emanuel Celler, D., N. Y.,
said nothing would help the en-
emy more ‘than to break down the
people’s confidence in the
handling of foreign aftairs.”
Rep. Richard Bolling, D., Mo.,
called attacks on Acheson "purely
son’s dismissal. He said this coun-
will live longer in history than
his critics.
Rep. Walter Huber, D., Ohio
congratulated his colleagues and
associated himself with theit^,
praise of Acheson.
A Republican got in the las*
word. Rep. Hugh D. Scott, Jr., R
Pa., renewed demands for Ache-
sons dismissal. He said this coun-
try "has lost every diplomatic c"
test’’ since World War II.
Other congressional devi.op-
ments:
Civil Defense—Chairman Carl
Vinson of the House Armed
Services Committee aaid the civil
nistrator under a 33,-
e°*am.o8sfs*?JBs:
the bill, thr eorgie
said, the a dm:. ..atrator
over all the realty in
the U. S.”
News—Chairman James E. Mur-
ray, D., Mont., of a Senate Labor
Subcommittee ordered subpenas
for several Anderson, S. C., radio
and newspaper executives after a
CIO official charged they sup-
pressed news of the union’s side
in a recent organizing drive. The
CIO official, Franz Daniel, said
the press and radio “closed every
avenue” by which the union might
have stated its case.
Peace May Hinge On Decisions
m r v
II
M
Wait For Allied Troops
TOKYO, Friday, Dec. 8. (UP*— carried one fourth of the way to
Twenty thousand trapped U. S. I safety at 5 a. m. Thursday (3 p. m.
Marines and Army men success- i Wednesday EST*.
fully completed the first leg of , At that time a Marine vanguard
their aesperate fight for freedom Gf 15^000 men from Hagaru linked
in northeast Korea Thursday and ; with 5 000 other trapped Amer-
mav already have contacted a re- I icans in Kot0i seven miles south o{
may already have contacted a re
lief column driving up from the
south.
A huge armada of transports
and warships was waiting off
the east coast port of Hungnam
to evacuate the Marines and
other U. S. 10th Corps troops
from northeast Korea.
But in the west the Chinese
Communists smashed into the new
allied defense line 25 miles south-
east of Pyongyang and drove
through South Korean outposts to-
ward the 38th parallel and Seoul.
The new Red attack was accom-
panied by twin thrusts down both
flanks of the U. S. 8th Army’s
Hagaru.
The combined force smashed
south ag in at dawn through an-
other 20 miles of enemy-held
country in the snow-choked, ice-
glazed northern mountains to-
ward other American troops
holding a line about 17 miles
northeast of Hamhung.
An air report from pilots flying
intensive cover for the retreating
column said they were met south
of Koto at midafternoon Thurs-
day by a relief column from the
south.
"The lead tank and the men be-
hind it are just pulling up to the
positions north of the 38th paral'lel j advance element,” an airman's re-
and by guerrilla attacks within 30
miles of Seoul.
The Americans’ fight for free-
I dom south of the Chosin Reservoir
Rev. T. Talbot
Addresses Rotary
Club Luncheon
A talk on the need for readiness
in the world conflict was made
today at the weekly Rotary lunch-
eon by Rev. Thomas Talbot of
Longview.
He asked the question "Are you
ready, America, to face the re-
sponsibilities of the world today?"
Naming these responsibilities, he
listed readiness from the field of
economy, which in our economy
is in the billions, and the answer
Is yes: in the field of production,
with over 60 per cent of all manu-
facture in our grasp, the answer
is still yes: readiness in the field
of leadership of the world. Here,
Reverend Talbot said, the answer
would have to be no.
He went on to say that the moral
stamina of the world is sadly lack-
ing. He quoted Dwight Eisen-
hower when he said "We must
develop a Spartan frugality for the
conflict to come." Talbot said that
the lack of spiritual concept is the
reason for the tow moral and
character standard.
The people of the navion also do
not know what the world conflict
is, Talbot said. It is not just
democracy against communism or
U. S. Or Britain
Not Considering
Pulling Troops
LONDON, Dec. 7. (UP)—British
Defense Minister Emanuel Shin-
well told Commons today that
neither the United States nor
Great Britain was contemplating
withdrawal of its forces from
Korea.
"Quite emphatically there is no
thought in our minds or any
thought on the part of the Amer-
ican authorities of withdrawal,"
Shinwell said in answer to a
question on Korea.
He declined to discuss possible
use of the atomic bomb when
asked if it might be employed as
an alternative to complete de-
struction of the British force in
Korea.
Shinwell described the situation
in Korea as "full of peril and dif-
ficulty," the outcome of which “no
one knows.”
Authoritative diplomatic sources
agreed, however, that Communist
China's price for halting its armies
at the 38th parallel may be too
high for the western nations.
HEART ATTACK FATAL
HOUSTON. Dec. 7 (UP* — Dr.
Phil F. Rosenstein, Houston den-
tist for the past 20 years and a
two ideals at war, he said, but the I long-time instructor of dentistry
basic concept of the conflict of to- a, the Unlversity of Texas Medi-
day is a religious conflict. Shall
It be Christ or the State as leader?
he asked, adding that faith in God
will be the answer to the conflict.
Guests today were J. A. Can-
non, Charles Yonge, Henry Pitts,
Thomas Welch, Joe Z. Tower of
Longview: Jake Long, I. W.
Harper, Bob Parsons and Hood
Crosby of Gilmer; Harry Elsey of
Kilgore and Merman Cassidy of
Tyler.
CHARGES FILED
HOUSTON. Dec. 7 (UP* —
Charges of attempted arson have
been filed against a 58-year-old
former used car salesman, his wife
and her sister, but nobody knows
If tHb "evil spirits" the three were
trying to drive from their home
are gone.
cal College, died yesterday of
heart attack.
DECISIONS AFFECTING the peace of the world for the next 25
years may be in the making during the Truman-Attlee talks in
Washington. Here, with Secretary of State Dean Acheson, stand-
ing left, and Secretary of Defense George C. Marshall, standing
right. President Truman-and Prime Minister Clement Attlee meet
tor the third time on the Korean crisis. (Acme Telephoto)
Report Opt Reply is
Received From Pekin$
Flood Threatens
On Pacific; Cold .
Wave Grips Dixie
>y UNITED PRESS
A big winter storm floundered
aimlessly around the Midwest,
driving rains brought new flood
threats to the Pacific Coast and a
cold wave gripped most of Dixie
today.
The wintry blasts took a rising
toll of lives. A United Press sur-
vey showed at least 34 deaths at-
tributed to the weather
onslaught of
th° Whlartem
LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Dec. 7.
UP*—Thirteen nations which ap-
•>a]ed to the Chinese Communists
not to cross the 38th parallel in
.area mtt secretly today amid re-
orts that a reply had been receiv -
d from the Peking government.
There was no confirmation of
ports that Peking’s reply had
een received, but sources among
tie 13 Asian and Arab sponsors of
he appeal promised an announce-
nent later today.
The appeal, which Indian
ources have said carried with it
n assurance to Communist China
hat UN forces would no{ re-in-
/aoe North Korea, was given to
Jan. Wu Hsiu-Chaun, chief of the
led Chinese delegation to the UN,
m Tuesday night. A U. S. spokes-
nan denied that the Americans
ad been asked “to give approval
0 any implications" in the appeal.
Wu received meanwhile a copy
f an Arab League proposal for
1 30-day truce in Korea and a
hree-month truce in the cold war.
’’he proposal, made yesterday to
JN Secretary-General Trygve Lie
ay Abdul Rahman Azzam Pasha,
■ecretary-general of the Arab
eague, was given to Wu at his
Waldorf-Astoria headquarters at 7
a. m.
While diplomats held hurried
private consultations in the dele-
gates lounge, the General Assem-
m
Keep Fighting
Red Paper Tells
Enemy Nations
LONDON. Dee. 7. (UP>—'The
People’s Daily, official Chinese
Communist newspaper, called on
North Korean and Chinese forces
today to continue their attack on
United Nations troops until the al-
lies stop fighting.
The dispatch, broadcast from
Peking and monitored here, made
no menMon of the 13-nation appeal
for Chinese fbrees to halt at the
38th parallel, which was the divid-
ing line between North and South
Korea before the war.
“Let the heroic Korean peoples
army and the Chinese people's vol-
unteers continue their advance and
their attacks on the enemy until
he stops his aggression," the news-
paper said in an editorial.
• - .....
21 R«lativ«s Of
Brown Contest Will
FORT WORTH. Dec. 7 (UP*—
A will disposing of a $1,000,000
estate of Tom J. Brown, wealthy
philanthropist and former presi-
dent of the Coca-Ccla Bottling Co.,
here, was contested today by 21
relatives, who filed suit in pro-
bate court.
Brown, a bachelor, died last
Jan. 27.
bly’s main poll deal committee ran
headlong into a Soviet filibuster as
it sought to start debate on a six-
nation resolution asking Peking to
pull its troops out of Korea im-
mediately.
Hardest-nitting statement in the
two-hour procedural debate on
whether the “quit Korea” resolu-
tion should be debated ahead of
the Russian complaint of American
Air and Nava* "aggression" against
China, was made by Czechoslova-
kia’s Dr. Vavro Hadju. He said
the demand on Peking was aca-
demic at best.
"Adoption of the proposal
would be of platonic value and
in the realm of fiction in a few
days, even, because of how fast
port said. "Men who were sitting
along the road jumped up, waving
their arms and throwing things in
the air, obviously cheering the con-
voy leaders."
The Americans' drive for
safety was made under a crack-
ling umbrella of allied planes
that blasted Chinese Communist
ambushes trying to bar the
Yanks' escape. Marine. Navy
and Air Force planes flew 307
sorties over the southward-
battling column in the first 10
hours of daylight Thursday.
The Chinese Communist attack
on the 8th Army’s new defense
positions southeast of Pyongyang
was announced by a spokesman
for the U. S. 1st Corps.
Two Chinese companies
launched the attack, and the as-
sault force was followed by a large
It could ex-
it battle in
iuuUjL. f
_ £isc
the beaches in 81
tures—the hottest
yesterday.
People along the north Atlantic
seaboard, remembering the big
storm of two weeks ago, appre-
hensively waited for the mid-
western storm to make up its mind
where it was going.
Forecasters at Ghicago said the
storm didn’t appear to be “going
anyplace."
"It’s just circling around,
dumping snow in some areas and
pouring rain on others,” a fore-
caster said. "It’s the darndest
thing!”
The storm, which originally
swept southeasterly across the
Great Plains, piled snow to depths
of 36 inches at Calumet, Mich., 30
tell
of a new Chinese
to
n 'u%Ttve? But it was noted that the
Chinese attacked South Korean
troops on this occasion just as
they did in knocking the first
big hole in the allied line north
of Pyongyang.
The collate of the South Ko-
rean 2nd Corps two weeks ago
changed the whole course of the
war.
The new frontal attack coincided
with Communist thrusts down both
flanks of the 8th Army.
the American troops are running; inches at Land O’Lakes, Wis., and
in retreat," Hadju said. ; 28 inches at Duluth, Minn. Today.
Russian Foreign Minister Andrei while still piling snow on the Lake
Y Vishinsky backed his Czech | Superior region, it was shoving
colleague. back westward into the Dakotas.
Weatherman Predicts Gradual Warmur
In Texns; Valley Kurt By Freeze
By united press , Friend, who doubles as U. S.
The weatherman predicted a Government citrus expert in this
gradual warmup would begin in | area, said any damage to citrus
Texas today, but the news was would probably come from small
small consolation for vegetable ice crystals formed on the top of
growers in the lower Rio Grande fruit on the outside of the trees.
Valley whose remaining crops ap- There will be no damage to the
parently were wiped out by a hard
overnight freeze.
W. H. Friend, associated county
agent at Weslaco, said last night’s
low temperatures and accom-
panying frost "may or may not
have harmed citrus, but there’s no
hope for tender vegetables."
The mercury dipped into the low
20’s in the Valley overnight. Alice
reported 22 degrees, Cotulla 23,
Mercedes and Corpus Christi 24,
Mission and Rio Grande City 25,
McAllen 26, Harlingen 28, and
Brownsville 29. Forecasts for the
Valley tonight called for much
warmef weather—44 degrees at
Brownsville, 38 at Mission, 37 at
Laredo and 32 at Eagle Pass.
Dalhart and Bonham reported
the coldest readings overnight, 6
degrees. Fort Worth with 10 de-
grees, and Dallas with 13 degrees,
set new records for the date.
The U. S. Weather Bureau at
Dallas said a warm, dry front
was moving into the state from the
west and would force tempera-
tures slowly upward, although
temperatures of 20-30 were pre- Texas,
dieted tor tonight over most qf Partly
Texas.
Friend said he doubted last
night's freeze would be as bad as
that of January, 1949, when most
fruit simply fell off the trees. He
said the previous freeze was three
degrees colder, and it was pos-
trees themselves, he said.
Amarillo’s police said 13 traffic
accidents were reported in one
two-hour period early today as
streets which had thawed froze
over a g a i n—c a u s i n g glazed
conditions.
However, a warm front off the
dry plateaus of Mexico already
had boosted the mercury to 41 de-
grees at El Paso, a 10-degree jump
in two hours.
The state was clear at dawn and
winds were light.
Other overnight low readings in-
cluded Mineral Wells and Wichita
Falls 9, Childress 7, Amarillo 8,
Lubbock 10, Lufkin and«Bryan 12,
Texarkana 13, and San Antonio 14.
Yesterday’s maximum reading was
48 at Brownsville, while Dallas
had the low of 27.
Forecasts called for fair weather
over the entire state, with slightly
warmer temperatures. Overnight
lows of 20 to 30 degrees were pre-
dicted in West Texas and in the
north and central portions of East
cloudy and warmer
weather was forecast for tomor-
row, but the weatherman said it
probably would take "a couple
of days" for temperatures to return
to normal.
Cattle generally were believed
to be holding up well under the
Bible Tuesday night's high winds cold spell, but Panhandle rancher
tempered citrus trees and made George Porter reported at Ama-
them better able to withstand last rillo that he lost some 150 head
night’s frigid temperatures. I of Brahma cattle.
Rabbi Leskowitz
Will Speak At
Leaion Banquet
In observation of “Operation
Democracy,” the American Legion
is sponsoring a banquet at 7:30
p.m. tonight at the high school
auditorium, at which Rabbi David
Leskowitz of Shreveport will be
guest speaker.
His address will be entitled
“Communism is Bad Business and
Economically Unsound.” .T. B. Pos-
ton, commander of . the Gladewa-
ter American Legion Post No. 281,
will be master of ceremonies.
Tickets for the banquet will be
available this afternoon at the
Corral Cafe and will also be on
sale tonight at the door. Every-
one is urged to attend the ban-
quet to hear Rabbi Leskowitz, who
is recognized as one of the out-
standing speakers across the na-
tion.
Attack In Different
Direction. Smith Says
ON NORTHEAST FRONT,
Korea. Dec.. 7 (UP’—Maj. Gen.
O. P. Smith, commander of the
U. S. 1st Marine Division, said
fighting their way south out of
Communist encirclement aren't
retreating.
"Retreat, hell," he exclaimed.
"We are just attacking in a dif-
ferent direction."
WEATHER
FORECAST
EAST TEXAS—Fair and not so
cold this afternoon and tonight.
Lowest temperature 20 to 30 in the
north and central portions to-
night. Friday partly cloudy and
warmer. Mi derate variable winds
on the coast
CLADEWATER ARfiA—Gener-
ally fair and warmer this after-
noon. tonight and Friday. Lowest
tonight near 26.
TEMPERATURE
Thursday 8 a. in. 13
Wednesday maximum 34
Wednesday minimum 14
SABINE RIVER
5.88 feet reading at 8 a. m.
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Bedichek, Wendell. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 220, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1950, newspaper, December 7, 1950; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008611/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.