Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1952 Page: 1 of 10
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
’~sJrasr~
IIN
CluiHIWS. toslslr Son
HIT
flnad New*. »ws
Jamas Belb
NX
Villa Wrifht
mi
liki Onn
(Slabpuratpr laii« fHtrrnr
T#n poqt
VOL. IV. NO. 29
United Prats W
UN Planes Deliver
Attacks Against Reds
SEOUL, Korea, Aug SI. itUJW t dm Pyongyang deplored this week
—United N.limns warplane* (te u* "barbaric.’
live red Iwn .mashing attacks a-
gainst the Communists Wednesday Ti»r*» wm
night and curly Thursday, blasting II wan llie second nay of heavy
two targets In n four-hour nmht air attack* against the Commu-
ruid at Pyongyang und following nists, who in the sumo Pyongyang
up with u HHI-plane attack on a broadcast made It dear that the
cement factory. repeated Allied attacks arc begin-
Fighter bomber* and B-26 light mng to hurt
bomber* hurled bomb*, bullets and | Allied plane* Tuesday destroyed
napalm on the cement fartory. de- three Hod MIO-IS jet planes and
slmying S3 buildings, damaging damaged two more, heavily dam-
20 more and leaving the entire aged a troop and supply center at
area a muss of flames and smoke. Namyang and blasted two targets
F-B4 ThunderjeU, F-80 Shooting .n « four-hour night raid on Py-
Star jets, pro|icllor-driven F-il ongyang, capital of North Koica
Mustang* and twin-enginesi H-2H Thirty-eig.d Air Force H-29 Su
/iKimed down on the target area |rr(i,rtN from Okinawa hit Red
at Osu. southeast o| Suriwon. with manufacturing plants, troop* and
laimbs, rocketi maehinegun* anil supply dumps in the Pyongyang
deadly napalm, the jellied gaso- raid
line whose use the Communist ra-
Officials Assured
U. S. Won't Weaken
Armistice Terms
wasiiingion. Aug 21 turn
|Denies Charge
ifl
JR *
|V
j^Farm Implement Workers
Strike Brings New Crisis
Charged with living off the
earning* of prostitution, compul-
sory prostitution and conspiracy,
ulii, lieu Minot F iMickeyi
Jcikt III at rives at the district
attorney’s office in New York
prior to appearing before a
giand jury probing a cafe society
vice iing Jelke, 22. denied
charges < Internationa I *
Walkout Called Against
12 Harvester Plants
Iy united mem tract, no work ” However, the pre-
A strike try Mimr 25,<HMi Inter- *ent contract doe* not expm until
| national Harvester Co. furm im- Sept. :’9, leaving plenty of time for
1 pleinent workers brought a new negotiation,
crisis Thursday in the nation’-' Fo(l| Mediation Chief Cyrusi
already turbulent labor seem* s chmg pleaded with sonic 23.000
And the jarfisibility of a crip- AFI machinists not Ur strike
pling strike by 100.000 non-fci rous again>| thc Lockheed Aiuraft
metal work, rs bccami cleat ..Iter c .,lan,a p, Southern Calt-
the International Union of Mine, I f0rnja because a walkout "would
Mill and Smelter Worker* ashed sin((U„|y affect our national de- J
its member* for u strike vote. cn*«- effort.”
The Independent Farm Equip- CTluii*: summoned repreavnta-
mint Workers Union called a tjve?l thc machinists and Lock-
strike against 12 Harvester plant* h(p(| (o meeting in Washington
m three state* after eleventh-hour 1(< xl wacg ln „n et(ort to settle the
negotiation* for a new work con- jf,c. union, whose con-
tract broke down The strike t|.act ex„irc* Friday, has author!*-
Iiegan at 12:01 a m Thursday -r. . -------*—
Instigated A Riot, Must Hang
Struggle
For Control
Started
Says 'Steve' Must
Run On Truman,
Roosevelt Record
Boms Pickets Appear
Picket* were on the scene at the
Harvester McCormick works in
Chicago a few minutes after the
strike was ca’led.
The mine, mill and smelter
group .said results of its vote would
be mfiHiunced Sopt. 2 or 3 and if it
call* for a strike, a nation-wide
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21 <L»Pi— walkout will begin m soon a» the
President Truman said Thursday vote result is released The 100.-
ed a strike but has set no date for
it.
Communist anti-aircraft fire was
heavy hut It stopped as the H-29,
flew over the city to drop more
than 35<* tuns of bomb*.
Night fighter* described as "not
very aggressive, made only one
firing |>a*- during the four-hour
strike All the Superforts returned
safely to base.
Hed Bean Warned
Civilian* living in the Pvong
>ang area had been warned to
Pr« ddent Truman ha* assured j,..,ve the previous night by leaf
diplomatic official* that the United k-li dropped by other H 29*
States will not weaken its Korean More than 200 Air Force fighter
truce terms in order to gain •> bomlierx and Navy carrier-based
peace settlement before the No plane* hit eight separate cluster
vember i lection, it wui learned ,,f troop billet*, storage buildings
Thursday and a factory in the raid on Nam
Authoritative sources said Mi yang, 10 mile* southwest of Suk
srsirra, sssrsr ruTas*™
might induce the Democratlc ad- chon on he c.,*t c«teat m fo o,c* ni ,aTth .c' . o m the cop^r, lead, zinc and othe, Commission Wednesday afternoon.
-r».....*.....-......... «ar
(units Wednesday to give public ,mk* •m<l **viial ^ O'Neill Jr., chairman of th? Na- ley. city engineer.
- • - - - w,'r*‘ cenorted This. Mi. Truman told a new , Mediation Board, had some I It is the recommendation of the
conference, is all the Democratic ......-
party had to
and this make*
City Commission
Accepts Bentley
Recommendations
1
notice to the woild—and particul
larf/ to Communist leader*- that
this country I* standing firm on
the ortsnner of war issue that ha*
deadlocked the Korean truce talks
,n an open letter to an Aimy
captain lit Korea, Mr Truman de-
clarrd anew that the United States
will not force any prisoners to re
Girl Quintuplets
Born In Brazil
SAG PAULO. Brazil. Aug
—Girl quintuplets born to a j when asked if lie had any coin-1
♦on^te' Communist rule against poverty-stricken rural couple were nwnt on an exchange of letters
then will. reported progressing satisfactorily between Stevenson and the Ore-
rwui .1 lioiMMi urn Thursday in an im uhatoi at the Kr,n journal of Portland tn which
w'Tl,^d bv United nI- *•" -naternlty hospital inc Democratic presidential nomi-
m m nl^. liav, balked d gm.w The five girls were bom Tue* 1 IIM. *atd he would do his best to
,.a,s forces have balked at going ^ tn Mr* Maria Aparectda ...... tlic mem In Washing-
n,,,,,r _ ., . u I Albano, »« wife of Jo»c Alhano, mn
Mr Truntan *od there
l>e
inoi.il icii*ok l"i Um t ’- I-"- 1 „1||I,||||.!, 1 h.i-.Ai. tn m.«» i - i .,i. .1
Mu*”' ... , . crates vice pr<
■"Wc mict not use t»-<.>onets to The governor of the slate of San |h . |ho ,trjgc j,;id hern mia- the UMW U.ulitlon of ”no con
force these prisoners to return to puulo ordered the late treasury >anrtvd throughout Spark -----------
slavers and almost certain .tcalli t„ estend financial .ml tojhc fair.- ^ lhr statement m an In- . _ . ,
■n rv cw with the magazine U. S Sgry C6S FriaaV
W i Um..... ^ ’
Pi-mi—
He said lie know, nothing al*out |(.rrhn,s without a strike. The di*- awarded to the low bidder, the
any me** in hts administration put# RVolvt'S around 58 unsettled Wychc aird Hammond Construc-
Tl.c I'icsidcnt made tio -tatiim nt ,nl.Villll; tion Company of Dallas. Texas, at
had g h| *■ —* -||gu| Thc hard COMi mdustry and the their low bid submitted on June
United Mine Workers Union 24, 11*52. of *288.07 1.39, subject1 to
fthcdulcd a n o t h c i conference the contractot being furnished
Thursday in their contract nc- w|th a .work order approved by
gotiations. The UMW i* demand- ,h cit<. Commimion to proceed
Ing a wage increase for 75.000 an- vvjtH the work after receipt of
thrncitc miners but ha* not made pomi sale funds,
public the details of its demands And that the contractfot^hc
Thousands of Egyptian textile worker* assembled at a football
field In Kafr El Dawar to hear a military court sentence Mustafa
Khi.mis 'above, a 20-year-old millhand, to death by hanging for
instigating a riot at the mill in which two soldiers were killed.
i International.*
Negro odd Job* worker The* •* Truman had no comment
became the third set of surviving ^ J ,^™t ^tement by Sen John I ..
unintuplot, known in modern , si,,>km:.n of Alabama, J«mo- fail to agree on a new contract a |-)rivc be awarded to low bid- was wary of federal aid when ni
UMW Bulks Been I paving of Pacific Avenue ex ten- shmu-* "Thuili'.v^h^^d ^te
If the miner* and the industry ,lnn Ames and Taylor slreet* and bhhci-# Thuisday sh wen nc
turn, and added _Z[t*lmes ' 1!^*^“ i’v,^l‘',,|,r>‘sii?.-niiai' 'nominee, 'trike Is "virtually certain because ('mr, thcPolphrey Construction Co. demanded more information on the
||v, which include, two other chil-
dren. and advised the state'* wel-
in a letter to Capl fate ervice to give them all |»os-
F.wtug. oi tin- Arn>> slblc lirlj.
at the hand* of the Communist*
H«- mate his ‘‘no compromise
statement
Charles C!
For Dick Simmons
of Glade venter. Texas, at their low political implication* of emergency
hid submitted on Julv 13, 1852. of U. S farm aid for drouth-ravaged
*45.022 80. subject to the con- Tcxa* agriculture
tractor trcing furnished with a ^ the same time, State Agri-
work order approved by the City i cu|turc Commisslonei John C
Commission to proceed with the White said a heat wave and below- ,. „ ........ lh„
work after receipt of bond sale normal rainfall this summer will clared a disastci aiea Ihi go « n-
cost Tcxa* farmer* $100 million, merU would sell hw to stockmen
1, unless the state gats at bt low-avci age price*. He said
BONN. Germany, Aug. 21 (OR>—
A struggle for control of West Ger-
many's second largest (jolitical
parti started Thursday after the
death Wednesday night of Kurt
S l h u m a c h i r. embittered onc-
armed. one-legged Socialist lead-
er.
rhe 57-year-old head of the So-
, u.l Democratic party died of heart
I (incase at his home near here.
Schumacher was a violent foe of
communism but also opposed west-
ern policy m Germany. He insist-
ed 'hat German unity come before
alliance with the West
In the struggle for power be-
tween Ins supporter* and foes
within the Socialist party, it ap-
peared that the pro-Schumacher
uroup would win at least tempor
ary control when the annual party
congress meets Sept 24 at Dort-
mund. .
Six hour* before he died, Schu-
tnachei made In* political testa-
ment in a recorded tatement for
a film 'March of Time' interview.
Thi* si t the line of continued op-
position to western policy which
the part' i* expected to endorse
at Dortmund in the platform Schu-
macher wro'e
• The partition of Germany is the
greatest source of strength of Sov-
iet foreign policy,” Schumacher
said in the interview "In the opin-
ion of social democracy, the reuni-
in of Germany is an aim
pressing and more important
paSOM" *--
of Eurti
form of integration of one _
of Germany with other European
countries.”
That had ix.cn Schumacher’s
thing to do with Washington’s of- policy since 1945.
f.-rs of aid. He evidently meant i But a large group of Socialists.
election year. i including the "three mayors" —
Check* on Hog Feed Ernst Reuter of West Berlin, ex-
ii v sn .imi, American citizen Max nrauer or
it ". *2SSS g-y —
Sijya^TKsras
Shivers Wary Of Asking
Federal Aid For Texas
if Texas were dc-
Tlu President gave tnc *«mc no
?o«th counter iiitciliumix detach-1 Doctors at the hospital, where i comment attewer to a t|iieaMen , H
mi-td m Km.., who ha* been m-1 the bahles wen taken alt« i ixing whether h< n ’••dn tu< \ i Richard <Dick Simmon* j>H**.-d engineer b«- authorized bv Sept . .... „.,
ter viewing prteonri* ..-i*tiog ir delivered with the help of a neigh- way *^','^.1^ ®^Km ""iiw.iy at a local hospital at 11:13 th(, )ri^Larv contracts dharjl?,‘increased rainfall in the the Agriculture Department was
........... , T rtsw(Wsrs ss•.ssssfjws ,, . ....... sra.s.’ssawi
• c ar tisr-j*™. ss. iwrarjvsrw £• rr'tg ?5SH5rs!*r!‘. syss;? £r=a.‘ "r'-vrSu-r^'
rztns sssrsx. ss. wTh" ! ......... ----------s- ...........
repatriation Issue • ,taped by tlte event, said he would Republican ^presidential nominee I simmonh Wils born March 29
rearmed West Germany
Into the Europc-Atlantic commun-
ity
Army Drags River
For Flood Victims
name them M aryl be F i rs t. Mair y ga'.ght D ^-c■nte merV*,.*erh .« lt^ .nVlt-T^. »te h,« ^-n m «*ed Commissioner McK.ug
the Second. Marv the Third, Mary Boi*.v lea . Wednesday The I real- jjladewater for ihe past 18 years,
the Fourth and Mats the Fifth "If dent aid lie hadn t read tt ^ with the Humble Oil and Refining Qpg Killed By
cepted following the motion bv what kind of program the led-
Commissioner Hunnlcutt and sec- government would put into
operation.
Vance raid he did not know.
Sh.vers next demanded, ’ll a
farmer feed* h«: to a
»5TH DIVISION. Korea. Aug. 21
U.8)—The Army dragged a river
PHI Thursday for thi bodies of 26 men.
yearling part of a group of 30 soldiers who
Co.
Survivors are one son.
D. A.
Tornadic Winds
SMUGGLING CHARGES FILED
_______T-
n,y or chargt * of attempting Aire*, who were nine on July 18 think hr then can show Hint the a|M, Mrs M.ible Meek* Kingsville; SEDALJA. Mo . Aug 21iUJt>—
to smuggle 6666,000 in United The Dllllgenti uuint* lire thm- Republtram wcie categorically four brothers, J. D. of Homer, La., One man wa* killed early Thurs-
mi.,1... mVrrenrv out of Cube girl* and two lx»v* wrong oilell of McCarcy: Carroll of Ash- day and mote than a dozen per-
T!”-----:--——.......................I down. Ark., and D. W. of Tek-jaon* were Injured when tornoite
arkana; hi* motlier, Mrs Nada winds, sweeping out of the north-
Simmoii* of Ashdown, Aik,, and west, struck the fairgrounds area
three grandchildren j where the Missouri State Fair ha*
Pall benrera will be Jake Teas- been In progress this week
Icy. D. E. Overman, Leroy Decker, The state highway patrol identt-
It. W Rogers, Joe Propes and R. fied the dead man as Henry Pyle.
The governor met Wednesday calf Instead of a mot he i cow. what drowned when a flash flood swvpt
wJh U.* XVrTcu..'S Dor.irKwni ... **,.«.*« «*W. «» „.vc
official* and spokesmen for Tcxa* penally
farmers He a*kid whether 'this Vance again said
being a particular year” had any- know.
he did not recovered, the Army *atd. The ac-
cident happened Monday.
Stevenson Keeps Program
Of Recruiting New Faces
Ike Calls For A Government
That Will Serve Citizens
band in death in 1939.
jcrsfc'ntfsiii-ss *Jr irtagiisrg r&^wstMj’Sicoet of Living
In hi* pmjtnMn wrulltiui ne% that Huml hml nccrplort thr joli of /« ns _ rnmnultw^ working fni Rr-
fia«< . for hi urrxnlrntiMl nimpniun rMinpMitfn fund rMlMllflt Ruml. n puhluan Son. Kobcrt A liiit in
by ijamlng Beardsley Huml New^ Yorker, was unm reeei.l^ iMd'’‘new*n.e.»
i hairman
Muev Co
of the
a* finance chairman of the Ucm- tmi*urei and
oritic national cianmlttce board of K II
,„ "7,;“srsi «.« n^-i
Kometlme crltt. of administration The governor *.nd tiie appoint
Wednesday that he fell “very com
fortahle" about hi* prospects of
I tenting Dwight D Elsenhower, the ........ ...
Hk ANSAS CITY Kan* Aug 21 I to the right, there is lc** and les* Missouri. Nebraska. Iowa, North
HSkIIs!! iiii'I fp
into * he* air. a state trooper re- 0f°,^™tenms ridher*th>»n rtnny tuNcwYork Hewtll address the
I ported their master "Now let* go to the loft And .-rrimm
Pyle's ioui-year-old *on. Thom- The GOP presidential candidate the government does more and York Moni,*‘ “r crnoon
» . .. .as. was among eight pci sons ad- . Boise Ida Wcxtnesdav more of these thing* that are to R* "*? ^___—____
WASHINGTON Aug. 21 iUAV- nutted to BofhwcU hospital for >• ' , vowed iiolitleal be done, .i* it takes vout property At Boise Wednesday Ei—otewscr
Fhc govei liinem re|H„ um tour*- tlCBtment "ddreJs tt would C necessary to and compel* you to work on It, ^ “‘.L r!^!
jui_liv >iu> iPnc Most of the dwfUifl© nmi> ivnti'i • — juncv hi wi n ihi it© pup
Hits New Record
travel the “middle road” back to
KK'SJM six-tctitn* o. one per cent to a ihjw ,,n at the fan gnn.nd* although by' the lory or whatever It. too, ftmi. » . whT. IZuX* "*
8TS55S SW be OZ+tZ? the wind,, accompany by heavy * lc and end. up —,ucd whot he hm» te|
say at
Boise this way.
■ “! should like to pledge to you
in ;{,™*iior,rw^i^rdSU5a
Tremendous croud* hwie ^xm |itw|1 ((u, mwW|C( tK, p.,th of prog delayed one hour and 20 minute*. u> ^ ,haj We can have a govern-
re** that will never allow tviann* Hi* chartered UC-6B airliner mvm that doe* not grow compla-
asiKi ms *s mm ^ ^
' t link Nt Imnerui In hr n iM1|M ||(,| wlsj„.,| iimi "good luck pushed to new peak* hot it it. (h the fan grounds, also had Ixxiihit Eisenhower said he chose to *uvim The pilot dieted the Held to th,.,,,. that do*- not bnewme
tent old line mdlUciart*
(l*hillK tli.it i*'
Announcements
WATERMELON PICNIC
There will be a watermelon
Picnic at Ihe J. C. Park. Frida?
nifM. Awfosl ««. •» *'*•
All Odd Fellews and Rsbskeh*
and tketi lamiltes ate melted te
attend and bring an tee <teld
melen.
Winn Services To
Be Held Friday
Fundnl service* vmII lx- held
Friday moining at 10 o’clixk at
the Method!*! church lot C O
*iytc and new ty»x yardstick* tor „ reported. travef the “middle road b»eau*c until 2 35 am A crowd of 300
mcaniniig consumer prices. state troopers am Sedaila i*> the other alternatives, the left and rainso.ikert admirer* at the air-
The m*w Index slooit at iiioBixm |Kr V(j,j the injured were living evcntuallv lead to the same inut stood bv patientlv
wni ot the 194a-39 average, i2 . on th» ground*, sleeping in auto- ^bnation—’’tyranny.*
|wr cent above the pre-Korea level, mobiles and trailers m J
10.1*1 \ announced tor Ihi* naatthUi ■
I’alilx'iirvi s w ill ta1 Hoy Oliver la'raxt neat month Salat ted cur
and 2 9 per cent higher tlran a -Wc don’t know ln>v malty we
rear ago. rhe old index wa* 192 4 treated.” a hospital spnhesman
pn cent ol the twrse level ..ml •‘They have been corning In
liotli General Motors i’orp., and night ’’
Fold Motoi IV, promptly an- Authorities Mid they had “no
nnunecd they will start paying idea’ of the estimated damage tnd
then hourly latcd wiokcrs the tt„-\ iH>mtcd out ‘hat one perman
Ihm cent hike mi the llrst j*ay mi building, which housed the
Lead te Tyranny
A* vou go further and further
RJC RAND
Th# Rtlfa*# CMtee# Rand will
haM IH Ural r#h#at#al Beptenc
bar f. at I'M p. m All hand
m#asb#r» ate argwl la attend.
wnid* tic w.i — ni t mail''. f""1
aroimd. loaInn: mil motoi b.■ d
mg. iiltbougii hi via* al*o li vmg i ■
* outline somi mm'ccIii"
Meanii lull it n a* leal nrd Hi <1
si. w 11Min i* ill opi a im ia< . a ii
tlnl lamiailgll ivilti a l.abni l»n
*|MX*cll ill Gland It.ipld*. Midi
Vincent F G Neill, Giand H.*|ad-
Democratic and I'lG leailei *.ml
Wednetalay tli.it SIcvcummi will
*peiik in Graml Hapld* ......... fir v,. ,„a, m, ivi. », u o.cx
ling no to Detroit fin the ...... " ! x'1‘
I l<ahnr Day »tn*eeh '
Sleve.iMHi .aid »wmtetid.xt todo |t » Mat tem R L 'tktnuVuKm'itetl I ptem pel Mi es'uVvahmlTuoVp .Wtn .tr'.Vy’Vd at the tan gtouod* T** men w •• e
1 *«w© miihiimih m*' • j ss litiikm 4»n»i JmK imymnil ih»iI IKwmUh'I iHNw rhr ifamuBf iHfff W#iIihw4h> * *
,35 tatund mtixkie was .roecoUv t'lva. tt IViitbtt TTBfcte HSi***** laatSTat^l at 6MM.WB. fat.
Eacitement In Wyomm#
At Cheyenne. Wyo, where the
rrmtt
1rv||trrl garden* rxhibit, wa* de-
Two Men Injured
In Truck Mishap
tunoe on latke Kawagtb'aagM
None of the mboeit " >.* Iwltei v*l
tn get Deal eorydittun Hospdat au
thorttie* said m»<at »ufl* usl fi*a»
............. inu-kle wa* leeenllv
.ai.ghi not »H ilioie Ihe tiomiud ‘ .ui mditaain will tn cipittiment industry, with which eial* *aat
V r Hhcpixid S.uii Mean, Dr the t'AW ha* e»ealate*i eootlaet*.
But He Leak ,1 U Mi Kean Di t H Miami. w HI loltew suit
________________ : ________wet a Une hit the Ik I'aHNWhol#. • * t'ook I. W I Iv.cubing the big hast ytev
"»B.........TiVrrKS C&mmm!......... 3 * < W**w SyTasi ay
ol the distent will the got cum. Had yaw sttthv twit Fiabk tote Bill latglie itadtey
or me - ,. TT*. RhyaHtP* Miawia Niwman
,'iiUtih ,t in li e 4BB block i«< North
Mam Sulletuig min til itvjurie
plane made a oriel stop te uetmt
Gov* Frank A Garrett ««f Wvom
ing and Edwin t Meehenr ot New
Mexico to get oft, there wa* .a
.hurt tinny of excitement when
Mime gasoline lumen tram *me of
I |the engines caught fire and bum-
boapitaluxxl cd briefly No n>maa» Was done.
The plane vxaitmui-d tat to Kan*
|a* Uity without further UKubmt
tlw captain, M W Wytey
hi ruganl in the exercise of it* pow-
er*. nut strives to be the partner
and the servant of the people and
not their master."
He urged that Americana reject
the philosophy ig both the extreme
right and the extreme left and
take "that straight road do'./n the
middle ”
until
tv V F Mill* Gl 'cw I***!. amt icpotled hx wa* going to delay hia
Naytmaul Hoy. Ml l'ieasant
Itaugld
tVnte't Ituikbn
New oltevei I
list; which lUoiwit tiigbtiy amt
| which
Hfhe ' iwtncittal twctoi’ tn the
. .welail inmt its* was a »hatp
I’aitl i metease tn egg pttry# »hwh r»tse
!* Ntte ftsrstlU'-g'WteWi •*r^J?.r,Vv*,fc
Ivao lu iavTiLi * amt W I htemttetot. a do uni and o A Watd ^twesn June 13 stwi July U
TERMED A FRANK
Mil te M'teFF Aug 41 V*
Finn teeo iged Uw* ad wilt ted
UihIik ,il.i ihe i plan leu a ihi*
vtom on the lawn id a Nemo
lamtlj • twawe and In oh* a win
dow They »*w it was “a p*anh
WIh'h Ho>. hHm hi«a» itiuntil nit
asphalt buck
twbwyatng to the
\otei k in 1 -itss t
ty yhl i'o iwi'itnl
io an etb'ii «<>
imss Mi IN. driving
a 31 pnkw»i hi
a Inst eve i tin net I
and « 3t* gallon
van ol butane ex
nhwlvn Fur co
in, ,etvli tvwtlOMM
dw temh
Ficait end of
Mole' pntM'ip was
ivcdly daioar* .1
landing Ixx'.UMr of the heavy rain
When Ihe inaiw totally hit the'
iwitwav tt did h> with such a mil
that d bounced tt or tt* feet in
the att
Mniw'wsletii ddl' »»i dhlales tut
tiling have been invited by thwn
twiwvi to meet turn ten to disewas
then entitle si piubtem*
xtate* iwptvss'Uteti at the coo
tetvurw weiv Rawsa« ytRUkum*
Partly
v teat
•te> NtoM l
tuml n a ]
m term
«#ts
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View three places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1952, newspaper, August 21, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021679/m1/1/?q=RIO%20VISTA: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.