Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 212, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 28, 1950 Page: 1 of 6
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. 212
Full Leased Wire United Press
GLADEWATER, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1950
Station KSU — 1430 On Your Dial
5c PER COPY
U. S. Accuses China Reds
Of Aggression In Korea
LAKE SUCCESS, «. Y., Nov. 28.
(UP)—'The United State* accused
Chine*e Communist# to their face
in the United Nations today of
"open and notorious" aggression
against Korea.
Ambassador Warren R. Austin,
chief of the U. S. delegation, re-
layed to the ll-nation Security
Council Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s
charge that 200,000 Chinese Com-
munist troops have been thrown
ugainst the sagging UN lines in
North Korea.
As Austin hurled his charge
Gen. Wu Hsiu-Chuan, chief of a
Chinese Communist mission sent
here to press the Peking regimes
claim that the U. S. is guilty of
aggression against Formosa, sut
unblinking at the end of the coun-
cil table, awaiting his turn to talk.
“The Security Council,” Austin
said, “will wish to hear the lutest
news from the UN from *n Korea.
Last week, the force# of the UN
opened a general attack designed
to finish their assigned task of re-
pulsing aggression and restoring
international peace and security
in the area.
“This attack has now been re-
pulsed in circumstances which
make it cleur that Chinese Com-
munist armed forces totalling more
than 200,000 men are now en-
gaged in North Korea. They are
supported by heavy reinforements
moving forward from behind the
international boundary.
"It now aupears doubtful that
the war in Korea con be quickly
concluded.
"It also appear* clear beyond
any doubt that whut all the free
world hoped as un intervention for
limited purpose is, in fact, aggres-
sion—open and notorious.
“I use the word ’aggression’ here
in this council and before the
world by direction of my govern
ment.
“The consequences of these fact*
must be faced squarely by the
people qf the world, and more par-
ticularly by this council."
Looking at Wu. who listened in-
tentlv but without expression
Austin Raul:
"The problem Is this: Will there
be peace or war in the Far last?
The world awaits anxiously the
answer to this question."
Glade Town
StrueU
Christmas Parade: The Glade-
water High School bandster*
marchisl in the Christmas parade
in Longview lust night The streets
were jammed by an estimated 40,-
000 who were on hand to see the
parade. Here’s u quote from the
Longview New ..-Journal to show
ya Just what a show the colorful
orange and black unit made —
"Gludcwater’s national champion
band was the last musical group
in the line of march und it dis-
played all of the ability which
won its national honors."
Twenty Saved In Hotel Fire
New Addition! Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Litton ure the proud par-
ents of another baby girl weigh-
ing 8 lbs. and 6 or., born yostlddy
at the City Hospital. The pupa is
a student at East Texas State Col-
lege and Is here for an indefinite
stay. They’ll be calling the 111’ girl,
Mickey. The other daughter Is
named Sherry Neal. Mickey's
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. V.
R. Webster. Mrs. W, you know,
is employed at the Sell-Rite Store.
Police Blotter: Total arrests for
Monday were five. One was for
investigation and affray, two were
for intoxication, one was intoxi-
cation and dope, and the other
was for intoxication and reckless
driving.
Smell Accident) A 1949 Ford
sedan, driven by Fredonin Perry
Thompson, a Negro woman from
Jacksonville, hit a 1941 Chevrolet
coupe, driven by Ernest Taylor of
Hallsville, as it was stopped at
the red light on Highway 80 in
front of Hall Lumber Co. yester-
day at 4:15 p.m. according to in-
vestigating officers H. L. Gaddis
nnd C. D. Reno. Only damage done
was to the front of the Negro
woman’s car.
Congrats, James: Bluford B.
Hestir, director of Journulism. Uni-
versity Interscholastic League,
writes a letter to C. W. Dawson,
GHS Journalism instructor, com-
plimenting James Hall for the su-
perb Job he did in leading a dis-
cussion at the annual Northeast
Texts student activities workshop
conference held at Kilgore College
recently. Heatir said in his latter
that James is a gifted young man
and an able Journalist. He also
stated that James kept the dis-
cussion on "How We Get Names
Into Our Paper" Intereating. James
was the only student leading a
discussion. He la the son of Mr.,
and Mrs. Howard Hall.
A MINNEAPOLIS FIREMAN rescues a woman from fourtlThoor"
of the Tower Hotel where four persons died and six were injured
in a fire. About 20 residents of the hotel were saved by means
of ladders. (Acme Telephoto) t
Martin Is Surprised At
Truman's Legislation
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28 <UP>—
House Republican Leader Joseph
W. Martin, Jr., said today the lame
duck Congress wou'd have to meet
until next July to dispose of all
the legislation requested by Presi-
dent Truman.
"I’m surprised that the New
Dealers want to take legislation
from a lame duck Congress," Mar
tin told newsmen. "It wus called
a great progressive step when a
few years ago It was decided to
do away with lame duck Con-
gresses,
"I am greatly surprised at the
Erupting Volcano
Threatens Town
Of Milo, Sicily
CATANIA, Sicily, Nov. 28. (UP>
—Mt. Etna burst its 38th crater
and sent a new stream of molten
lava (touring toward the town of
Milo this morning as the eruption
of Europe's highest volcano went
into its fourth day.
The new red-hot river of molten
rock moved in on Milo from the
southeast, while an earlier lava
flow crawled on fr*"" the south-
west.
Police blocked u. mountain
roads to prevent traffic Jama in
case evacuation plans are put into
effect.
The 10,000-foot Mt. Etna rumbl-
ed and quivered throughout last
night. Gas exploded into shooting
jets of flame, and showers of ash-
es and leva were belched out from
37 craters.
Prof. Umberto De Flore, of the
volcanic institute here, said last
night: "The volcano’s output re-
mained constrnt regarding the
amount of lava being ejected,
while the explosions of shooting
ashes and incandescent lapilli into
the air have increased during the
last hours."
Rod Troops Closing
In On Port Moncay
SAIGON, French Indo-China,
Nov. 28 (UP>—Communist troops
closed in on the important Indo-
China coastal port of Moncay to-
day with the capture of the out-
post of Chuphaisan.
French troops defending the fort
in the northeast corner of Indo-
China battled their way through
encircling Communists, leaving the
post in ruins.
American Minister Donald Heath
flew from Saigon to Hanoi, in the
north, with members of the Amer-
ican military minion to study the
situation at first hand, official
sources said. It was Heath’s first
visit to Hanoi since the National-
ists began their drive In the cru-
cial northern area.
reactionaryism of the New Deal."
Martin's comments on the 19-
point legislative program outlined
by Mr. Truman came after a meet-
ing of the-House Republican Pol-
icy Committee. Martin said the
policy committee discussed only
the excess profits tax issue und
decided against taking a formal
stand on It at this time.
Among the Presidert’s proposals
for the final month of the 81st
Congress, only his request for
more defense funds is sure of
Congressional approval.
Chances are good for action on
rent control and aid for Yugo-
slavia but there is r lly an out-
side chance for passage of an ex-
cess profits tax.
Most of Mr. Truman's other pro
poaals, stymied when Congress ad-
journed two months ago for the
1950 political campaign, will stick
right there.
Some conferences scheduled fo.’
today were expected to give clear-
er indications of how much op-
position there will be to various
administration programs.
Republican policy committees
scheduled meetings in both the
House and Senate.
Southern Democratic senators
were called Into a strategy huddle
to discuss House-approved bills to
grant statehood to Hawaii and
Alaska.
Mr. Truman urged Senate ac-
tion on the statehood bills yelter-
day in a letter to Vice -President
Alben W. Barkley. Some Republi-
cans oppose one or both of the
measures, but most of the oppo-
sition comes from Southern Demo-
crats.
Southerners fear that senators
from the proposed npw states
would mean more votes against
them in the perennial battle
against “civil rights” legislation.
But some of the Southerners be-
lieve it vould be unwise strategy
to combat the statehood bills by
using all their filibuster weapons.
Modsrats Wsathgr It
Forecast For Toxas
By UNHID MBS
More moderate weather was all
the official crystal gazers could see
In store for Texas today.
Clear skies and mild afternoon
temperatures, with not a rain
cloud In sight, said the forecaster.
Sub-freezing temperatures crept
into West Texas early today, but
even they were not severe. Lub-
i 28
UP Survey Shows
268 Deaths In
Week End Storm
•y UNITED SRCSS
Cold, snow and black market-
eers brought hardship to hundreds
of thousands of Midwesterns and
Easterners struggling today to re-
cover from the effects of the week
end's great storm.
About 154,000 persons still lack-
ed electricity, lights or heat in the
New York-New Jersey metropoli-
tan area and 117,000 were with-
out telephone service. About 190,-
000 telephones were out of service
in New England and thousands in
the area were deprived of lights
and heat.
Snow fell in parts of Pennsyl-
vania and Ohio again today but
the fall was light. Temperatures
hovered near freezing, adding to
the discomfort of heatless families.
Reports of casualties and dam-
age were still coming in from iso-
lated communities.
The latest United Press survey
phowed 268 deaths attributable to
the storm and cold in the United
States and Canada. Damage thus
far reported totaled $200,000,000
and some experts expected it to
hit $400,000,000,000.
A weather-born black market
which had squeezed the price of
milk and bread to $1 a quart or
a loaf to some customers in snow-
choked Cleveland collapsed as the
city dug itself out of the snow, and
prices returned to normal.'
Black markets also were report-
ed in some West Virginia cities
Bread sold for '25 cents a loaf at
Wheeling. At Moundsville, W. Va.
milk could be purchased only with
a doctor's prescription.
bock’a
degrees was the low.
Ozona reported 28 and Salt Flat
90. Amarillo, Presidio, Dalhart and
Junction had 32 degree readings.
At the other end of the over-
night temperature range was Gal-
veston with 58 dogreee.
Yesterday afternoon’s high waa
82 at Junction and San Angelo.
70,000-Barrel
Daily Sloth Is
Order In Wtex
AUSTIN, Nov. 28 (UP) — The
Texas Railroad Commission order-
ed a -lash today of some 70,000
barrels daily in the allowable pro-
dqction of four West Texas fields
for December.
The commission in a special or-
der directed that the allowables
for the CogdelT, Kelly-Snyder,
Diamond "M" Canyon Lime and
Sharon Ridge Canyon fields be
trimmed from 160 barrels to 100
barrels per well per day, based
on a 20-day production schedule
for December.
The order extended to some
230,000 barrels a day the cut or-
dered in Texas' allowable for De-
cember, announced following a
state-wide oil proration hearing at
Austin Nov. 14.
At that time, the commission
ordered a cutback of 160,083 bar-
rels per day in tne state’s allow-
able, pegging virtually all fields
on a 20-day producing basis ex-
cept East Texas, which was set
at 19 days for the month.
The new December allowable
will amount to a reduction of
some 70.000 barrels a day from
the previously announced allow-
able of 2,556,944 barrels daily,
based on the new 100-barrel max-
imum production per well in the
four West Texas fields.
The 100-barrel per well allow-
able was ordered by the commis-
sion to remain in effect for the
next six months and a survey of
bottomhole pressure was announc-
ed effective Jan. 1.
The order resulted from a hear-
ing held Nov. 3. The commission
said it found that the production
from the four fields is obtained
from one common source of sup-
ply.
United Nations Forces Fighting
Entirely New War MacArthur Says
■■■[[^■■■^00,000 Communist Forces
■ m
Lame-Duck Congress Returns To Work
m
*
AS THE LAME-DUCK CONGRESS moved back into Washington
for a three to four week session, President Truman summoned
his Democratic leaders and asked them for quick action to extend
rent controls and grant statehood to Hawaii and Alaska. Here,
leaving the White House are Senator Scott Lucas, Democrat from
Illinois, Senate leader and Vice-President Alben Barkley, lucas
was defeated for re-election. (Acme Telephoto)
GOP Gain In Congress To Help Texas'
Chances For Tideiands, Shivers Says
sylvania, as staunch supporters of
state contrpl of tideiands.”
optimistic
legislation
CHARLESTON, S.C., NoV
Brothman Santonced
For Conspiring
With Harry Gold
NEW YORK, Nov. 28 (UP) —
Abraham Brothman was sentenc-
ed to a maximum Seven years in
prison and fined |15,000 today for
conspiring with atom spy Harry
Gold to obstruct Justice and for
inducing Gold to testify falsely in
an espionage investigation.
Brothman’s co-defendant, Mir-
iam Moakowitz, was sentenced to
the maximum two years and fin-
ed $10,000 on the one count which
charged her with conspiracy to
obstruct Justice.
Federal Judge Irving R. Ka f-
man said he regretted he could
not impose a greater sentence.
publican gains in the 82nd Con-
gress will improve Texas’ chances
of winning the tideiands fight.
His remarks, as chairman of the
tideiands committee of the South-
ern Governors’ Conference, were
submitted today to the convening
governors. They were also releas-
ed through Shivers’ office at Aus-
tin, Texas.
New efforts, the governor said,
will be made in the 82nd Con-
gress "to pass satisfactory quit-
claim legislation. From one angle,
our chances are improved."
“Perhaps," he added, “I should
not say this at a gathering of Dem-
ocratic governors, but it is true
that Republicans have always been
more favorable to the states’ view-
point on tideiands than the Dem-
ocratic administration."
He pointed out that “several
prominent proponents of federal
sovereignty over the tideiands will
not be back next January. Among
them are Representative Hobbs of
Alabama and Senator Donnell of
Missouri, who were quite active
against us. I personally know two
of the new Republican senators,
former Governor Frank Carlson
of Kansas and Jim Duff of Penn-
"Scme of 'the more .
advocates of quitclaim lactation
now feel that we have a real
chance," he said, "to pass a bill
and rally enough strength to over-
ride the certain Presidential veto."
However, he warned that “over
this propitious situation falls the
long shadow of war. The danger,"
he said, “definitely exists that mil-
itary exigencies will be used by
some of the smart federal boys
as an excuse to take over the tide-
lands without further ado. Our
only defense is to make sure that
Congress and the people are kept
fully informed as to the true
facts.”
He admitted that "it is not an
encouraging picture."
Open Gap In UN Defenses
TOKYO, Wednesday, Nov. 29 (UP)—Gen. Douglas Mac-
Arthur announced today that United Nations forces were
fighting an “entirely new war” against 200,000 Chinese Com-
munists who have torn a great hole in United Nations lines
and changed the whole course of the Korean conflict.
United Nations forces were fighting desperate delaying
actions and retreating stubbornly, step-by-step.
Gen. MacArthur, in an amazing communique describing
the disastrous turn of the war, said that new issues had
arisen which could be settled only "within the councils of
the United Nations and chancelleries of the world.”
He summoned his top Korea commanders to Tokyo for
urgent conferences.
Explosive Plant
For H-Bombs To
Be Constructed
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. (UP)—
The Atomic Energy Commission
announced today that construction
of plants to make hydrogen super-
bomb explosives will start early
next year at a South Carolina site
15 miles south of Aiken.
The plants will be built by E. I.
DuPont De Nemours & Co. on a
25.000-acre tract in Aiken and
Barnwell counties. South Caro-
lina. Congress has appropriated
$260,000,000 for the project.
The plants will produce tritium,
a heavy form of hydrogen which
will be the prime explosive of the
so-called super bomb. If the H-
bomb should prove not to he feas-
ible, the plants could be used to
make A-bomb explosives.
No weapons will be mad
site, only their explosive contents.
No weapons
! made on the
The AEC and Dupont spent four
months looking for a suitable aite
for the new atomic works. They
were assisted by a five-man com-
mittee representing leading V. 8.
engineering firms. 1 •’
The new project will be known
as the Savannah River Plant The
river bounds one edge of the tract.
Dupont will start breaking
ground for the plants as soon as
the corps of Army engineers has
acquired title to the land for the
government.
PHYSICIST DIES
VALLEJO, Calif., Nov. 28 (UP)
—Dr. Eugene Gardner, brilliant
physicist who gained international
fame as c?-discoverer of the first
man-made meson, died yesterday
of a disease contracted when he
was doing wartime work on the
atomic bomb. He was 37.
Ono Man Dios Whan
Volosco Hotol Burns
VELASCO, Nov. 28. (UP>—One
man was trapped by flames and
smoke and suffocated today when
fire raced through the Velasco Ho-
tel, but 27 others escaped serious
hurts.
The victim was Leonard D. Cain
failed to make it. The other 27
guests escaped from the two-story
frame structure, some by leaping
from windows. ,
The entire second floor burned
and the upstairs walls caved in.
The fire was believed to have
started In an upatairs closet.
Funeral Services
Held Today For
A. F. Monzingo
Funeral services for Arthur Fos-
ter Monzingo, 54, employee of At-
lantic Pipeline Company who had
resided at Carlisle since 1931, were
conducted at Carlisle (Price) Meth-
odist Church today at 2:30 p. m.
Monzingo died Sunday evening
at a Henderson hospital following
a heart attack.
A veteran of World War I, a
M- :on and member of the Metho-
d it Church, Monzingo was born
at Minden, La., Sept. 17, 1896.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Nora Monzingo of Price; three
sons, Jack Monzingo of Midland,
Robert Monzingo, director of
Gladewater High School Band, and
Clay Monzingo of Austin; mother
Mrs. W. J. Monzingo of Minden,
La.; five brothers, Cliff, Fred and
Aura Monzingo of Purvis, Chireno
and Earl Monzingo of Monroe, La.;
two sisters, Mrs. Claude Anderson
and Mrs. J. R. Bishop of Minden.
Nogro Gats 20 Yoart
Instead Of Death
WASHINGTON. Nov. "8 (UP)—
President Truman has commuted
the court martial death sentence
Imposed on Lt. Leon A. Gilbert,
York, Pa., Negro, for refusing to
obey an order to advance under
heavy North Korean fire.
The Army announced late yes-
terday that Mr. Truman had re-
duced Gilbert's sentence to 20
yeara at hard labor. The Army
also will cashier him from the
service.
Texas No Longer Controfling Factor
In World Oil, Ernest Thompson Says
ABILENE, Nov. 28. <UP>—Rail-
road Commissioner Ernest O.
Thompson said today that Texas
is "no longer the controlling fac-
tor" in world oil and warned that
eventually prices may be set in
the oil-rich Persian Gulf fields of
the Middle East.
market with a 10,000-barrel well?”
"We must recognize" Thompson
bluntly told the oilmen, “that we
are no longer the controlling fac-
tor in world oil."
"One day you may see the price
basing point for oil shift from the
Gulf Coast of the United States to
ciation, told oil operators they
“must learn how to get the oil out
of the reservoir without spending
so much money and using so much
material, if it can be done. It is
being done abroad.”
The Railroad Commissioner,
who surveyed Middle East oil re-
sources during World War II,
pointed out that while Texas pro-
duces about 2,500,000 barrels of oil
daily, the average per well
amounts to only 20 barrels.
But, he told West Texas oilmen,
in the Abaiq field in Arabia “the
thriller” is that from 45 producing
wells <ach day 450,000 barrels of
oil is produced—an average of 10,-
000 barrels per day.
"The cold economic fact,” he
said, “that faces Texas oil produc-
ers is this: can a 20-barrel well
compete successfully in a world
AfTheHosp'Jal
PATIENTS ADMITTED
City Hospital—Billy Haskins, R.
A. Heard, James Brown, Aima
Brown, Mrs. Violet Webb and Mrs.
H. N. Litton.
Hancock Hospital—Mrs. R. An-
drews, Mrs. H. E. Lewis’? Bryant
W. Saxon, Jr and Barbara Nell
Bonner.
PATIENTS DISMISSED
City Hospital — Jerry Avant,
Linda Mickler, Luke Player, Jesse
L. Wells. Billy W. Rogers. Miss
Peggy Tipton and H. E. Bingham.
Hancock Hospital—Mrs. David
Barton, R. H. Harvey, Pamela
Gage and Mrs. H. A. Hamil.
MEW ARRIVALS
A 5 !b. 6 os. baby girl was bom
to Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Litton at
the City Hospital Monday at 2:10
p m.
reported, "they have uncovered
27,000,000,000 barrels of oil reserv-
es already against our present 25,-
000,000,000 barrels known discov-
ered reserves."
"The/ have ... the oil. They are
producing it at the most efficient
rate on a field-wide basis."
Thompson warned that the Per-
sian Gulf area is of extreme im-
portance to the United States be-
cause “this may be the next area
for Russian aggression. It would
fit into their pattern of starting
little fires all over the world.”
Sabina Soniors Will
Prosont Play Thursday
The Sabine seniors w'U have
their play ready for presentation
Thursday night, November 30, at
7:30 in the Sabine High School
auditorium.
The play, "Tomboy”, by Boyce
Loving, is g comedy in three acts.
The plot centers around the three
daughters of bfr Abbott. Mr. Ab-
bot is interested in making
his "tomboy" daughter a
golf champion, but Mrs. Abbott's
hope is to get the daughters mar-
ried off. The complications that
arise offer much amusement.
Students taking character parts
are Jerry HendsAon, Alta Strai-
ner, Norma Lou Jennings, Virginia
Mostly, Carolyn Johnson, Billy
Ralph Blakely, Janice Carpenter,
David Chandler, Mary Lee Black-
mon, Jerry Ann Coffman, Carl
Smith, Jamas Bamberg, Audrene
Todd, and Barbara McGuftey: pro-
moters. Betty Wood and Carol Ann
Verble; stage manager, Nevel
Mount.
The public is invited to attend
the play.
MacArthur's announcement said
that events of the "past four days
disclose that a major segment of
the Chinese continental armed
forces" with a strength of more
than 200,000 men “is now arrayed
against the UN forces in North Ko-
rea.”
"There exists,” he said, “ob-
vious intent and preparation for
support of these forces by heavy
reinforcements now concentrated
within the privileged sanctuary
north of the international bound-
ary and constantly moving for-
ward.
"Consequently, we face an en-
tirely new war."
Tokyo observers believed he was
asking permission to bomb Man-
churia, and saying that we now
face war with the major forces of
Communist China.
On the shattered right flank
of the United Nations line below
Tokchon, the situation was so
confused that not even United
Nations commandsrs know for
sura haw far the enemy had
penetrated nor what his Intea-
lions wti#i
Estimates of the retreat there
ranged from 12 miles to the vicin-
ity of PUkchang on the Taedong
River to as high as 20 miles.
Two regiments of the enemy al-
ready were reported driving west
along the Taedong, some 13 miles
below the jump-off point for the
start of the iil-fated United Na-
tions offensive last Friday.
The enemy’s westward push
threatened the main allied supply
line from the former North Ko-
rean capital*of Pyongyang to the
Chongchon River fighting Tine.
For the first time since the
sntmy’s Nakiong River break-
through on tho old Pusan beach-
head in South Korea, tho Air
Forco had more targets than it
could handle.
Air reports said that enemy
troops swarmed along "every road
every gully and every ridgeline”
for 35 miles north of fallen Tok-
chon.
The pattern of withdrawal was
followed all along the 85 • mile
northwestern front.
* The South Korean 1st Division
fell back 10 miles toward Pakchon
on the western end of the line, un-
der pressure of an overwhelming
enemy force.
To the right of tho South Ko-
, roans, tho U. S. 2nd and 25th
Divisions had boon driven hack
about 10 miles by tho Rod ham-
mer blows, with rear guards
lighting a desperate delaying ac-
tion.
The entire 2nd Division was
moving into the .icinity of Won-
Ni, 11 miles from its point of far-
thest advance at Kujangdong on
the Chongchon River. Elements of
the division were trying to hold
back an estimated three enemy
divisions to give the division time
to withdraw its artillery and ve-
hicles.
The 25th had pulled back of the
Kuryong River before a Commu-
nist advance that threatened the
recent captured walled city of
Yongbyon.
\
l.w
JOBSEEKER ATTACKED
DALLAS. Nov. 28 (UP) — Two
blonde women, wearing blue jeans,
sweaters and long earrings, at-
tacked a job seeker at a strike-
bound hosiery mill and fought her
for 10 minutes.
WEATHER
FORECAST:
EAST TEXAS—rair this after-
noon, tonight and tomorrow. Not
much change in temperature. Gen-
tle to moderate, mostly southeast-
erly, winds on the coast.
GLADEWATER AREA —
this afternoon, tonight and
nesday. No important tempei
changes. Lowest tonight near
TEMPERATURE:
Tuesday, I am., 40.
Monday maximum 88.
Monday minimum 89.
' *■ i
SABINE RIVER:
9.78 feat reading at • a.m.
i
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Bedichek, Wendell. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 212, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 28, 1950, newspaper, November 28, 1950; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008613/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.