Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 122, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 10, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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City Edition
Six Paget
VOL. IV, NO. 122
United Press—lU.P.)
GLADEWATER, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1952
Station KSIJ—1430 On Your Dial
5c PER COPY
Ike Looking Forward To Hearing
Mac's Plan To End Korean War
Former Commander Says He 1
Has "Definite Solution"
I * V •
ABOARD USS HELENA, Dec. | tions” had caused him to revise,
10 <U.R)—President-elect Eisenhow- in part, the blueprint for ending
er turned an ear Wednesday to-! the war which Mr. Truman dra-
EXPLOtlVE ISSUE.—The Supreme Court of the United States has begun hearings on one of the most
expioatveissue* in American life, the constitutionality of racial segregation in public schools. With
*0 reats available to the public, this Ion? line formed in the corridor of flic Supreme Court
bulMIbC waiting for the Chamber to open. Before the High Tribunal will be suits challenging
constitutionality of school segregation practices in the District of Columbia, Virginia, South Caro-
lina, Kansas, and Delcwarc.
Two Dangerous Lunatics Escape
From State Hospital In Austin
AUSTIN, Dec. 10 (UP)—Two airc Hugh Roy Cullen, who had
dangerous lunatics esenoed from \ been threatened by one of them,
the Austin state hospital Tuesday alerted his personal guards.
night and Houston multi-million-J The tWo-onc of them the killer
of his
parents—fled the tiospital
j after picking a lock on a ward
; floor, removing a window grating
and then lowering themselves
I three floors to the ground on a
I rope of bed sheets.
! Hospital Supt. R C. Rowell said I his escape,
the sheets broke and it was bo-1 Waggoner, five feet, nine inches
ward Gen. Douglas MaeArthur,
saying he is “looking forward” to
hearing the former Far Eastern
commander’s plan to end the Ko-
rer.n war.
MaeArthur announced last Fri-
day night, in a speech before the
National Association of Manufac-
turers in New York, he had con-
cc’vcd a “clear and definite solu-
tion.” H? indicated he wanted to
] present it to Eisenhower,
i Eisenhower's response, which
' showed his willingness to meet in-
] formally with MaeArthur, was re-
I vealed Tuesday night following an
! exchange of cables between the
| two World War II leaders.
MaeArthur Pleated
. . . „ , , The President-elect's interest in
road and bus stations and patroled the secret MaeArthur strategy
the highways, and said they Iracl! pieasc*cl Eisenhower’s one-time su-
no idea whtre the men went. i pcrior officer and military mentor.
Pierson was described as five j jj marked the first time, McAr-
inches tall. He weighs | thur said, that anyone had shown
13i pounds, has black hair, brown 10f(iciai interest in his way of
eyes, a high forehead, and sal-: thinking since President Truman
low complexion. He was wearing fired him because of his views on
new khaki-colored clothes and a j the war in Korea,
new tan suede coat at the time of
He said that a "change in condi-
Odm Again
2*er High St
tSJirrj
While Oak the kx
M routing Ippla
marched on the 1
it The famous Glad-
School Band has Uk-
lint Division in a
Last night at
the local baatetori got
um When they
field In the per-
fect precisian that has made them
famous. Tten was a record crowd
of Gladewater people out to cheer
the band on.
Pretty Window: McKaig Chevro-
let is keeping up with the style
now a days. The window there is
beautifully decorated in the true
Christmas fashion. Hear that Son
Cblvin did the job. It's really pret-
ty. Calvin.
both men—Howard Pierson, 38,
who was found insane after ad
mltting he killed his parents, Mr
and Mrs. William Pierson, in 1935,
and Gilbert Waggoner, 29, of
Houston.
Waggoner was found insane
after threatening Cullen's life.
When he escaped before. Gov. Al-
lan Shivers issued a special order
instructing the hospital to take
extra precautions to make sure
lie never escaped again.
Described as ‘Violently Insane*
A Houston doctor who examined
Waggoner shortly before he was
committed to the hospital said he
was "violently insane."
Cullen said in Houston Wednes-
day he had notified the regular
| LT>V injured0' ^ *“* l>OH" ' ban GHS Blind SCOteS
, . ! wearing khaki pants and a green
" __________ ,first DM*, h
Pierson successfully fled the jJU|aawa»||Xanan f niltart
hospital April 15, 1938. and it was IflOrCnillU VAJIlTcM
not until Oct 17, 1940, that Texas
Rangers returned him to custody
from Minneapolis, Minn. He had
orUinally been committed Oct. 30,
HTs escape recalled details of one
of Travis county's most sensation-
al cases.
Following the double slaying of
his |ia rents, Pierson appeared at
the sheriffs office about sundown
April 24, 1935, to report robbers
had killed his mother and father.
He exhibited a flesh wound on his
left arm.
However, after hours of ques-
Gladewater’s champion high
school band scored first division
honors at the Region Four Inter-
scholastic League Marching con-
test at White Oak’s Roughneck ^President-elect's return from Paris
Stadium Tuesday night
The band made 97.5 points out
of a possible 100.
A breakdown of the points
scored by the band is as follows:
required movements, 14.8 out of
15: playing, 34 out of 35; cadence,
4 9 out of 5: alignment, 5 iperfect);
inspection, 5 (perfect); special for-
mation, 5 (perfect); precision, 4.7
out of 5; carriage, 4.8 out of 5;
stuff at his home—which includes tioning, the youth, then 20, told au- general effect, 14 3 out of 15.
a regular guard and a garageman thorities he killed his parents as a
who also acts as a guard, to be I result of years of resentment, and
watchful in case Waggoner should ' related where lie had disposed of
seek him out. | the weapon. The bodies were
Rowell said he doubted Waggon- 1 found about 15 miles northwest of
er would head for Houston. But! Austin on the Pecan experiment
police kept a close watch of rail- station road.
Police Roadblock Catches
Man Who Left Crime Trail
Is thara Enough? Bunch of the
fellows up at McKaig's have my
mouth watering for quail. These
four fellows don't know it yet but
I’ve been promised n quail out of
the bag full they promised to bring
back. E. A. McDonald, one of the
fellows at Mac’s who didn't get to
go, called me Just now and report-
ed that Melvin Jenkins, A R
Sharp, Jack Reed and Ben Adams, i
the nlmrods in question, have just i
returned with the bagful) — one I UVALDE. Tex. Dec 10 (U R)— i port of the amount they took. Next
quail. Oh, me. good thing 1 like a police roadblock Wednesday they beat up the unidentified lieu-
Irish stew. {caught three Louisiana men who tenant at a cafe three miles west
- | police said left a 125-mile trail of | of Seguin, Tex.
Haw Exparianea: Roger Mitch | crime through South Texas Tucs- They went next door to the cafe
ell, delivery hoy for McWilliams day night. A fourth member of the and robbe^i a package store, the
Furniture store, tells us he’s going gang escaped. i “Silver Dollar." of $180 and $10
tomorrow to take his physical.! The gang committed al least two ! worth of candy.
Roger said ihis is all the news he hijackings and beat up an Air I They were next reported at
knows and to Roger it’s news for Force lieutenant, police said, as j Lackland Air Force Base, where
It’s the "first time this has ever j they traveled from Luling, Tex., j they let out one man. A guard
happened to him. Good luck, Hog- j 45 miles cast of San Antonio, to ] hoard one man shout "let's get the
I 1
Gregg County bands made a ra-
marknble showing with six being
ranked first division. Pine Tree
participated in Class AA competi-
tion, Longview, White Oak, and
Gladewater in Class AAA, Sabine
in Class B and Spring Hill in Class
A.
Bill Briggs is director of the
| Gladewater High school band. Co-
1 drum majorette Jean Goar led the
i band on the field.
Band Clast Dir. Points
CLASS B
Arp , 2
Bockville 1
Sabine 1
Union Grove 2
CLASS A
Joaquin 2
Timpson 1
Paul Pewitt 2
Canton 2
Van 2
Troup 3
Chapel Hill 2
Mmcola 3
Daingerfield 2
matically rejected as untenable 20
months ago.
"There has been a material
change in conditions from those of
20 months ago when I left the
scene of action, and the solution i
Vien available and capable of sue- j
cess is not now entirely appli-'
cable,” MaeArthur told the NAM.
The original MaeArthur plan
which caused President Truman
to deprive him of his command
called for economic and military
blockade of the Chinese mainland,
UN attacks on Manchuria and use
Of Chiang Kai-Shek’s National
Chinese forces in an invasion of
the mainland.
Eisenhower Gratified
Eisenhower told MaeArthur in
his cable that he was "gratified by
your continued interest in the Ko-
rean war which so vitally affects
the United States and our Allies."
"I appreciate your announced
readiness to discuss these matters
with me and I assure you I am
looking forward to informal meet-
ings in which my associates and I
may obtain the full benefit of your
thinking and experience,” Eisen-
hower said.
MaeArthur, who had supported
Sen. Robert A. Taft for the GOP
presidential nomination and re-
mained silent during Eisenhower's
campaign, and Eisenhower shook
hands through their cables.
MaeArthur signed his message:
“My best to you, Ike, as always.”
Eisenhower signed his; “With per-
sonal regard”
The first publicized exchange of
communications between Eisen-
hower and MaeArthur since the
South Carolina Defends Its
Segregated School System
WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (U.P> — j ing that the state is currently
South Carolina defended its segre- j spendind -75 million, to improve
gated school system before the Su- j Negro education. South Carolina
preme Court Wednesday in an his- has fully complied with a lower
toric test of state's rights versus j court order to equalize white and
the rights guaranteed to Negroes 1 Negro schools in Clarendon coun-
by the U S. Constitution. i ty, he asserted.
• The state, which already has [ He argued that this compliance
taken preliminary steps toward '< eliminates any right the Negro par-
abolishing its public schools if seg-1 ents may have had to demand that
regation is outlawed, was repre- j the doors of white schools be op-
sented in the dramatic arguments ! ened to their children,
by white-haired John W. Davis,! Gov. James F. Byrnes of South
the famed constitutional lawyer Carolina has said the state will
who persuaded the court last year
to strike down President Truman's
seizure of the steel industry.
The 79-year-old Davis, who was
Democratic presidential candidate
abolish its public school system if
the Supreme Court outlaws segre-
gation. At Byrnes' behest, South
Carolina voters this fall repealed
the section of the state constitu-
GANDHI ARRESTED.—Manilal
Gandhi, son of the late, Mo-
handas K. Gandhi, arrested De-
cember 8 in Johannesburg, South
Africa, with 37 others, six of
them white, for taking part in
organized defiapee, of the race
segregation laws.
in 1924, had just begun his pre- j tion which requires maintenance
sentation late Tuesday when the I of free public schools,
court recessed. [ Marshall, 44, a tall light-skinned
Leading Negro attorney argued j Negro, told the court that the kind
at the opening session of the long-1 °f schools provided for Negroes is
awaited hearing that segregatoin I not the question,
of school children bv races im- “Our position is not that we
plies that Negroes are inferior, and ' are denied equality but equal pro-
therebv deprives them of the j tection of the law’s,” he said in
last spring elated Republicans in
Congress, according to reports
reaching this cruiser.
GOP Sens. Henry C. Dworshak
of Idaho, Andrew F. Schoeppel of
Kansas, Herman Welker of Idaho
and Harry P. Cain of Washington
were said to be "delighted" by Ei-
senhower’s gesture and other Re-
publicans considered it a shrewd
move by the President-elect.
93.5
93.7
95.9
88.7
Toechar's Dream: Speaking of
Roger, Mrs. Ethel Holcomb, book-
keeper at the store tells this little
story about 11 Sunday School
teacher's dream. In her dream she
was teaching u mixed class of col-
ored children and white children.
The teacher was in the net of plac-
ing the colored children to the
rear of tho room and the white
children up front, when suddenly
she looked up and saw the laird
returning to earth. After a single
awe struck minute she looked a-
galn at the elass and every child
present was white ns snow.
Thank Good nett: • Hoard from
very good authority that residents
of Paradise Hill and the Rodeo
Grounds addition are finally get-
ting some long wanted and much
needed telephones Congratula-
tions, you all. They tell me there
arc 60 to 05 phones in all. A lot
of extra gabbing can be done on
that many phones. No?
No Place Like Heme: At least
to one little Gladewater tike there
Is no place like home. It seems
that Mrs, Bill Oliver took her
grandadn to a neighboring town
one day last week and while down-
town they met Santu Clous. The
old gentleman was not ns gener-
ous as our local Santa had been
to the lad and he took note of the
fact. The lad was silent for a long
while after they wont home and
Grandmother wanted to know
why. His little lip tagged for a
minute before he answered, "Dot
Santa Chius didn’t give me any
tandy." We know Just how he felt
, , . Our Santa has everyone In
town spoiled when It comes to
handing out candy. Santa, if you |
gee Utile Randy Hensley downtown
anytime between now and Christ-
mas, remember this will you.
Uvalde, 80 miles west. 1 hell out of here,” and he called Carlisle
They also apparently slipped the police. I Gaston
through another roadblock at lion- I Identity Not Learned 1 Overton
do, Tex. | The identity of the man who was na^-kins
The three men wore caught in lot out was not learned inimcdi- Gilmer
their car at Uvalde. Police found j ately. Four bandits were reported jurison
a .22 rifle and a German Luger | east of San Antonio and four were gasj Mountain
pistol In the ear. The fourth man, | seen at Uvalde. I Spring Hill*
CLASS AA
who wore a red and green shirt
and a green tie with red polka
dots, had been let out at a ^res-
taurant.
Fled Into Underbrush
He saw the police and fled into
the underbrush. Pursuing officers
lost his trail, lie was believed
armed.
The bandits were first reported
at Luling, where they held up a
service station. Police had no re-
Highwa.v patrolmen set up road |
blocks at Hondo and Uvalde. They 1 jjonham
reported the men, driving a 1953 j jjooks *
green Dodge with Louisiana li- Clarksville
cense plates, apparently slipped center
through the road block at Hondo.
But they were caught at Uvalde,
where City Patrolman Roy Boren
said only the youngest—22 years
old-made any resistance. He was
quickly handcuffed and all were
jailed.
i I’
WAKE-A THON ENDS—Sleepy-eyed Jess Hensley, right, has a
last cup of coffee before giving up and going to bed after 98 hours
and 41 minutes without sleep. His opponent In the wake-n-thon,
Robert Cook, left, richer by $1,000, was still awake at an early
hour December 9. Bolh set out on the no-sleep trial with hopes of
bolstering *hrir Christmas poekctbooUs
Jacksonville :
Carthago .... t 1
Mt. Pleasant
Henderson
Pittsburg
New London
Levoretts Chai>cl l
Pine Tree 1
CLASS AAA
Texarkana I
Lufkin :
Palestine I
Nacogdoches ;
Marshall :
Longview 1
Gladewater . 1
White OHk I
88.1
96.1
92
91.7
90.1
86.6
87.2
86
93.7
97 1
95.1
96 5
96.9
89.5
89 2 I
93 9
97.4
89.5
97.5
94 3
99 1
90 3
95.3
96 1
97.7
94 7
96.7
96 5
99 6
86.3
92 l
96.9
90.9
94.7
95 1
97 5
996
Talks Two Gunmen
Out Of Holdup
HOUSTON, Dec. 10 (U.R)—A 31-
ycar-old divorcee waitress talked
two gunmen out of a holdup Tues-
day night, pleading that she was
new on the job and her boss
“might think I took the money.”
Mrs. Bonnie Mac Doolan was
alone in the Snack-N-Pak Grill
Tuesday n.ght when the two men
came in and one asked: "Are you
open?”
Mrs. Doolan said she replied:
“Sure, come on fn."
Then, the second man pulled a
gun and told her to get the money
out of the cash register.
Mrs. Doolan said she could only
stare at the men for a few mo-
ments, then "I came unfrozen and
started talking."
*T said to them ‘look, boys, don’t
do this to me. I just started to
work Saturday. They'll think I
took the money.’ "
AfTheHospital
Leaks Hospital
Admitted: Mrs. Otis Reeves,
Mrs. T. M. Norman and Kenneth
Parrish.
Dismissed: Mrs. Joe Womblc,
Mrs. W. W. Pierce, Mrs. Ada Cox
and Mrs Eva Cooper.
Hancock Hospital
Admitted: Mrs. Mary Chapman
and Mrs, Carmen Black.
Dismissed: Sandra McKinley,
Blaekie Edmondson and Mrs. J. W»
Moon.
City Hospital
Admitted; Paul Selzlcr.
Dismissed: Jimmie Lindsay,
Mary Fulralcsticv and Oaibldine
Hutchinson.
Was pleased this morning to
learn that Eisenhower had asked
Gen. MncArthur's views and
thinking on the Korean situation.
This ice-breaker will probably
bring about a face-to-facc meet-
ing between these two men and
I know no man more capable
of giving advice on the Far East-
ern matters than MaeArthur. May-
be this country can look forward
to peace and prosperity after all.
Also noticed where a Midland
painter lost his part of a $1,000 pot
when he couldn't stay awake long-
er than ninety-eight hours and 41
minutes. Imagine anyone getting
paid to slay awake. I've seen the
time many nights when I’d been
willing to pay $1,000 to be able
to sleep.
Mrs. Timmons was ii#the Mir-
ror office this morning and since
we knew the Timmons were en-
thusiastic hunters and fishers, we
asked what was new ith them. She
said they were Just hunting rab-
bits out their way now!
A neighbor of ours has lost two
net kittens lately from rat poison-
ing. Destruction of rats is pro-
tection to health and property, but
wc should be careful to protect
life, too. Maybe we should check
our promisee and be careful about
having poisoned articles around.
Recommends Hiss
For President Of j
Peace Endowment
WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (U.R'—
John Foster Dulles' recommended
Alger Hiss for president of the
Carnegie Endowment for Interna-
tional Peace, a House committee
was told Wednesday.
Dulles, who will be secretary of
state ili the Elsenhower adminis-
tration, recommended Hiss for the
$20,000-a-year job in 1947, accord-
ing to John W. Davis, an endow-
ment trustee.
Hiss is serving a five-year fed-
eral prison term for denying under
oath that he passed State Depart-
ment secrets to a Communist spy
in the 1930s. He recently was de-
nied parole.
Davis, who served on the Car-
negie endowment’s nominating
committee, said Hiss was given
the presidency on Feb. 1, 1947,
after a careful investigation which
produced "entirely favorable" re-
ports from all quarters.
Davis, Democratic presidential
candidate in 1924, testified before
a special House committee inves-
tigating tax-exempt philanthropic
foundations. A famous constitu-
tional lawyer, Davis currently is
appearing before the Supreme
Court in defense of South Caro-
lina’s systun of race segregation
in public schools.
Davis told the House group that
Hiss "made a favorable impres-
sion on us and we recommended
him to the board." He said Dulles
was “the first person who men-
tioned him (Hiss' to me.”
Dulles had agreed to become
board chairman of the foundation
if a full-time president could bo
found, Davis said, and spoke of
“having encountered" Hiss in con-
nection with foreign affairs and
government matters.
Dulles, who was a trustee of the
Carnegie endowment, already had
been named chairman of the board
when Hiss was picked for presi-
dent, and the two men wire in-
stalled in office at the same time.
Dulles resigned Tuesday prepa-
tory to taking over his cabinet
post. Harold M. Keele, counsel,
said the eomihittee has "no plans"
for calling Dulles to testify.
"equal protection of the laws”
guaranteed in the 14th Amend-
ment to the Constitution.
Mere Segregation Claimed Illegal
Thurgood Marshall and Robert
L. Carter, New York, attorney for
the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People,
declared that segregation ^un-
constitutional even if the schools
provided for Negroes are every
bit as good as those for whites.
South Carolina is fighting the
efforts of Negro parents to enter
their children in Clarendon coun-
ty schools for white pupils. Kan-
sas, Virginia, the District of Co-
lumbia and Delaware also are de-
fending their segregation laws be-
fore the high bench. All the cases
arc being heard at once since they
raise a common issue.
Davis got through 15 minutes of
his argument Tuesday. Speaking in
scholarly phrases, he told the nine
justices that a state has every
right to classify public school pu-
pils by race, sex, age, mental ca-
pacity or any other yardstick it
chooses.
firm tones.
He and Carter cited lower court
testimony to show that the scholas-
tic progress of Negro children is
retarded by the mere circumstance
of segregation, even when schools
are equal in all other respects.
Schools Claimod Equal
Market Reports I
FORT WORTH, Dee, 10 <UP) —
Livestock:
Cattle 1,800. Slow and weak at
recent full decline; commercial
and good slaughter steers and
yearlings, 15-23; choice scarce;
utility. 12-14; beef cows, 11.50-14;
eanners and cutters. 6-11.50; shelly
canners under 8; bulls, 10 - 17;
stocker demand very poor.
Calves 1,000. Slow and weak;
around 2.00 and more off for the
week to date; good and choice
slaughter calves. 18-23; utility and
commercial, 11-17; culls, 8 - 11;
stocker demand poor.
Hogs 350. Butchers 25c lower;
sows steady; choice 190-280 lbs.,
------lbs., 16-
16.75-17: choice 290-350 ----- —
16.50; choice 150-185 lbs., 15-16.50;
He laid down the background of j few 150 lbs., butcher pigs, 14;
the South Carolina case, emphasiz- sows. 12.50-15.50.
U. S. Planes Blast Four
Major Commie Rail Centers
SEOUL, Dec. 10 (U.R' —United
States carrier fighter-bombers in
their biggest air raid of the Ko-
rean war blasted four major Com-
munist rail centers close to the
Soviet and Manchurian borders,
the U. S. Navy announced Wednes-
day.
The raid sent Navy planes far-
ther north than any bombers ever
have been during the Korean war.
Some of the raiders swept as close
as 15 miles to the Soviet Union
border.
The fighter-bombers from the
carriers Essex, Bon Homme Rich-
ard and Oriskany of Task Force
77 Tuesday blasted Hunyung, on
the Turnon River, the most north-
erly point ever hit, Najin, 15 miles
from the Soviet frontier. Hyesan-
jin and Musan also on the Tumcn
River.
Pantherjets, Skyraiders and
Corsairs flying from the carriers
flew 252 sorties Tuesday in blast-
ing the key rail terminals in an-
i
other blow against the Red trans-
portation system.
Cortaix Is Lost
One Corsair was lost. The pilot
ditched his plane in North Korea,
but was picked up by a helicopter t
from the cruiser Los Angeles.
While the Reds still quaked from
the pulverizing Navy raid, U. S.
B-29 Superforts droned to within
five miles of the Manchurian
border to slam tons of explosives
on a military-industrial area at
Yongpong.
The B-29's met heavy anti-air-
craft fire, powerful searchlights
and Rc<l night fighters as they
swept over the important target.
On the ground the entire front
was relatively quiet.
The attack at Hunyung was the
I first against the Reds' main port
of entry for the major east coast
rail line connecting Manchurian
and Russian supply bases. Pilots
reported the entire area was mush-
roomed with thick black smoke
after the raid. The carrier planes
ran into no fighter opposition dur-
ing the surprise assault.
Rail Linas Destroyed
The Navy said rail lines were
destroyed and eight railroad repair
buildings, two locomotives and 30
boxcars were wrecked.
Following the Hunyung and Na-
jin raids, the Navy sent its planes
crashing into Hyosanjin. Six Urge
buildings in a factory sector were
damaged, and two secondary ex-
plosions and a fire touched off.
Lt. Vic Lumpur of Long Beach,
Calif., and Lt. (JG* Charles Cleve-
land of Joplin, Mo., personally
sealed off the city’s water supply,
at least partially, when they de-
stroyed three buildings at the
waterworks.
Meanwhile, the Eighth Army
announced that enemy casualties
during the first week of December
were the lowest since late An
when 1,733 Reds were
wounded or taken prisoner,
total for the first week of this
month was 1.873.
FOR VALOR.—Sgt Louis Misserl, right, Tunis, French North
Africa, receives the distinguished Service Cross, the U. S. Army's
second highest award for valor, from Gen. James A. Van Fleet,
8th Army Commander. The French sergeant, attached to the U. S.
Second Division, received the decoration for courage at last fall's
battle for Heartbreak Ridge. He holds the Distinguished Service
Cross, American Silver Star, French Croix De Guerre with nine
citations and the American Purple Heart with three elusters.
Riiuirr
'asa
rTha
Weather Forecast
East Tams
Fair Wednesday and Thursday.
Cooler Wednesday afternoon and
night. Lowest temperatures 80 to
38, with scattered float in interior
Wednesday night. Moderate to
fresh southerly wind* on the coast,
diminishing Thursday.
;;§§J
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 122, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 10, 1952, newspaper, December 10, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021390/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.