Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
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Q. . 0 • * WX } » J ^ * ** i
-.x 791
c >,• ^
Th« Weather
Cloudy, cooler
(SHaiPumtrr laflg Ulfrror
Gty Edition
Eight Pages
VOL. m, no. 31
Station KSIJ — 143i; On Your Dial
CiLADKW&TKK. TKXzYS. FUiDAY. APH'I. 27, 1951
UntuJ Press (UR,
5c PER COP3
ZW*
Glade Team
Street*
Th' Wtnnahs: Ml Jutm Hi ink
.,int Mi
vestcrouy at the Baht Tcxus Ladies
Golf .ismhum.,ii tourney held in
Greggton at the Muninp.il Golf
course Jiiiiii w.is low gross win-
ner in the first flutlit and Joy wiih
low net winner in the first flight
Others attending from Qhute
water wire Mi (3. L Gillespie.
Mr* A. It lluiieock, mill Mi Du
lene Dollilis The East Texas Lu-
itle* assoel.ition holds a tOUt'llU*
went once a month The next one
will be held in Mai shall hut I In
dale hasn't been sc'
Guatt Speaker: Dr. A. S Lon-
don national Sunday school van-
Xillst ol Oklahoma City, Okla..
will speak .Sunday at hath ser-
vices at thi Na/aiene church, ,.e
raiding to tIn- Hev Elbert La-
b-iuike, puslm Di London will
peak at 10 .’ill a rn. and .cam at
7 30 pin. lie him traveled the 4H
state* in the interest of youth
evangelism
I Scream. You an .HI, all
scream for ice cream That HI’
oiii saying will probably nnt
true Wednesday night when mem
ban of th.- Wesleyan bervin
guild of the First Methiatist
.hunt, sponsor an ui' . i earn ..
dal. It wilt follow ihe mid-wix k
prayer servin' and 1% for thi pui
I»osc of bui in* chairs for the new
eduiutlonal building The ice
cream will in' homemade Jinn ;
with delicious homemade cak.
vuin. yum' And by the wuv. every
one's invited'
Do-Si Do. (
pan piekln out dough' Yep, its
<iuare dancing time again The l
Ik.-Si Ik. club of CJUdewater i-
sponMirii.u a school Raturday night
at 7:30 In the Community hm'd
mg for am one interested in c.n
mg all the -ti»p* ,,|| how to -win
vnur partner and promenade
S<|Uaic dun. mg Is hunt wor k blit
i* lots more tun
Guda A Surprise Mi 1. ('
Lancaster had quite a urpris. tins
week Guesting In her home wen
Mrs I'earl Seale*, an aunt, and
Mrs S's duugtei. Mrs Minnie
Perrtgo, whom Mr*. Lancaster
hadn't seen fur ti years. That Vs as
really a pleasant surprise Mi
Scales and Mr- “
Man Diego. Cal
8Si. Glade, Whitt. Oak
Bands Rate Tops;
GHS Gets 'Stakes
CHICAGO SURHFNDERS TO M*cARTHUR Gen Hi a-l.-.s MiirAi’Rur art ! s » ..4rt . -Imvu. it
thi* top of th* r;in*|i «*f \u th*- «t moment lifter it UiiuUhJ in Chirun*i. Chicano, th** rut*
t;t*t s«Hnnil tai ;• t * it\, int iuti'fv t itimplptcly to give* the general on* •; th* ! sti** t recep-
tions m itn histm■> Most b**j5UWj htMiscM, ftu'tiinpi *in<l schools \vt*n* c!tte<*'l so that some fl.tMJ0.000
|M'*r»|itc migtit weiennu* MurArthiiv ‘A< no* TV It* photo*
* * a #*#***♦**•** * ★ *
MacArthur Pleads
Realistic UN Policy
for
WASHINGTON April 27. P
Senate republicans. tacitly
becked by Gen. Douglas MerAr
thur tired a bitter attack at the
nation's military leaders today
and strove to force puhlic hear
mgr on MacArthur's dismissal.
An epic battle between MucAr-
thui and the nation - top millttii'
lotiirruhO . i tn tit* buiMinit
u|i Mpe Arthur up|s»rtcis ir.
runniest., kd by Sen Robert A
T.lt, It O . i util ized Gen orn.tr
N Bradley and the yoint chief* of
• laff in almust unprecedented
ha nth terms
ed to affec* the early restoration
of peace, through victory, with a
consequent saving of countless
American lives," he said.
It is difficult In ask men to
fight .hd die unle- we give them
a r> .ii-tie mission and the mt .li-
lt. accomplish it.**
MacArthur took a slap at "those
nations with but token forces in
ratio to i.ui own ’ in Korea who.
tl< said, have failed to help form
"pc. live" military and political
policy foi the Far East.
He had In-eil e*l>erted to deliver
only an mnoeuous greeting. In
__ . J ... . N j , stead he made a ringing deciurn-1
1 In -itunUun wol l»n oomtnq j (,f ip,. need for a definite 1
to a head when MacAithur
pears next Thursday before
Pot. 1.7. ,.C fri.il. Ill' ' 1 . 1'
1 and foreign relation* committee-
Dallas Trip: Mis Hill Humpu
Mr* joe Outherle. Mi "Snu U
Snell anti Mi- I. <' Unru-'i •
made a trip In Dallas Tuc-.il.it !i>
visit with Mi Ethel ('-•til-ton .. 'a.
b 10 It a hospital there Mr*
CHICAGO. April 27 0J.8' Gen
Douglas M e Art tim said in a
fighting jieeeh la-t mglit rial *he
United aid 1 • t. 1 • v-.
d a ' realist
Mt ..us
Jx .III"
('oulstiai
dent
Is a Glade w
Mothers Day: Hlnel.it - m.
that Is A training si i.m wtl
held Tuesday m the Gladew
Comm tin it V celtlel at 'I 311 .1 in
mothers ..f Bluebird* 'Junior
g.miration of .amp fire girl*' I
ers, assistant leader*. -p.>u
iM.ard men.I.. 1 . friends of |(
bud* and camp fin* girts A .0
isi di-ti luncheon wi'l b. • rvo
Work Day: Hfincmi'. r
W.a k Day 1 Cmm N»i
foi all camp fin girl*, mother
and rinds A sack lunch will lie • 11
invert at noon and a roverod dish
sup|ti*r at 3 pm The day’ work
will include iwiintmg. stnngthr'n
mg bed stands, etc
Phillip Wayne Beasley: I’l
W .vrie He dev, !», son l Mi .t
Mi- A I', .isles who 1 ill w.tl
leiilttmhl. hud a "pretty hind im
last night, his father said tnb«v
I'lullip Wavne tempc :"im soil
up to IlM itegrees in tin mghi but
hart come down sortie today Me
lathe. W'.'ak, but till cheerful
MII WAUKHE Wis.. April 27.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur
arrived in the city of his youth
today, after a triumphal 90 rule
drive from Chicago, for a eele
hration markinq his first visit
‘ home ' in 39 years.
Crowds totaling an estimated
900.000 cheered him ns his red
rer rolled northward from Chi
rego through Kenosha «..J ha
cine in a lour hour dnv in
chilly April temperatures. He
will fly heck to New York late
today.
The general and hi* wile and
son rode alonq Lake Michigan
from Ihe Stevens hotel in Chi
cago where they »pei, the night.
Korea to achieve a clear cut vie
tut * over Communism
Tile general addressed Ml.iKkl
pcp-nhs who .ss»milled ill Soldiei
field, climaxing ,1 day of celebri.
lions in honor of ihe nuited Pacific
commander ,
"I have believed a realistic
policy should till the lonq exist
mg vacuum left in the wake of
Bed China's committment to
war against us a policy design-
*? j stand m the Korean war.
Mur* than 123,000 pemoru, had
been expes-ted at the demonstra-
tion in his honor but chillv lem-
perature* kept Chicagoan* in their
living r>vim* where they viewed
the general on television.
What it our policy in Ko-
rea?" MacArthui asked. "Some
will tell you that the pacifica-
tion of all Korea is the objective
an objective which indsed still
stands as Ihe formal mandate ot
the United Nations.
“Others tend to owi look such
,1 formal -tided policy and will tell
you that out objective is achieved
upon el. .ring South Korea in in-
v.idiiu; forces
Still others ignore both expla-
nations and frankly Miy that out
objective noyv i» to c niinuc to 11-
Ui.gc thi' cm irv torvi'H in Korea
ir, a long and intensive campaign
of attrition notwithstanding the
-te.irtily increasing coat ir. Amort-
call blooit.
"None of these will tell you in
the traditionetly ringing tones of
t ie American patriot that our
objective is victory over the na-
tion end men who. without pro-
vocation or jusul.-atier.. hove
warred against u» , . . "
MacArthur was interrupted fre-
11 lent ly by wild applause Cries of
"no. no” and disbelieving laugh-
ter gm-l.d his remark that " . . .
n.y public life is closed . . "
Me -.aid Attserlenn c:<-ua!ties in
ratio to the men committed in bat-
tle "have already reneheit si..tiger-
ing proportion." and weiv mount-
ing steadily as the allies fumbled
to attain a definite policy
26 Awards Given
White Oak Pupils
Special Offer Period with fxtra
Prizes Opens Today in Mirror s
Fast-Moving Subscription Drive
tune day*, :ti* (..in worker- h i
mg lire i" 1 eldest numlM’i ol 1 m 11 n 1 s
utils the money in the mdci men
turned Holh new siibsei iptlniis ,.nd
renew.il ■ ..'lint And these tout
piues .oe entiiely sepal te from
ttie gland enpit.il prizes to Im
awarded at ihe end of Ihe cam
palgn. alii...111th the votes eoncern-
rti rtt subscript tops l.tken during
this period will anpli on the fnft.l
prize- in th>- usual wit*
You m.i* have been verging on
lire brink of entering ilus cum
piilgli, but (or s.inre n .s..n haven't
<|Uitc made lip VOUI ir.ttld This of
fer shrtttld make \><ti dixlde to get
in without any further delay, for
during this period of nine days
wh.rt vr.rr .le.onipllsh Inis :i double
value N on yvork for one «»f tll.'se
extra prize-., and at the same time
you pilr- mi votes toward winning
rule of the final lug prizes,
Wh\ not come in a ltd talk it
••via with us" You have enough
frigid and ae.iii.iintai.ees from
whom voii could secure subserlp
lions to w ui ant you going out for
ttie *.rU! top prize in this speeial
And ihe voles vntt reimiv** for
vour effort between now mill Mav
ituVi’ r*> Get uhM iiption foi the >'h. - it '• > on , Im 1 t to
(Ihidewatei Daily Mirror latch i ward n* on. .1 Ihe find rand
•M.»iaerintutn you secure get *......... I I'" • t" I* w ......I tune
A « months siib .iipti.Hi nth hunt DKI \Y ANY LONG
u 1 , |mint; a I yo*r I jHdtil. 7 year fit'
2 poinb 3 vent 3 points, I tear Slmx'iety,
u„mts and 3 ye*r* 3 ihhiiI*. Altai I The Gampogn Director
Toiliiv malks the stall of the
Sjiecial Offet the Daily Mu 101 e
making in oiniimetum with it- big
• uhscrlption 1 .mpaign lleginning
IimImv and eontinutn* until ,ri |> ">
Sal unlay. Mat 3, the peeial off. 1
gives one thi opimrtunily of - li.n
mg the ItlNHHl ■ ash prize- to be
awaided for only nine da vs' eft..it
We are going to divide th.
»tim among four people We on-
going to distribute this mm lev lust
Siam aftei the periisl elo-i a
icsults ran be checked and win
fiers determined Who will be
among the foui lucky people"
Well, that depend* on you alone
We play no favoi lies, ever Work
pi.nlitia-i lesidts. and results de
tei mine winner*. Even contestant
entered in the campaign mu* work
.......tie of Ihe special prize
Others can enter now and get Ihci.
campaign stm tixl 111 a big w o
and wilt, ton Kvei vlaaty start
from seratcli ti»da' In this special
event After the nine days have
• I insist, some tutu |m-isoiis are go
,„g to nx.lve IN CASH ........
923 (HI. $13tHI, and >11100 YOU
can hr one of the four.
The way to do this 1* simple
. ... 1*
Twenty-six awards were made
1 1 1.-1 lung . ssembl* to White l »ak
ILgll , it.m>1 students lot then out-
standing scholarship duting the
past yeai the first ot iw<> pro-
gram* in otwery .sure ol S» hol.tr-
-hiji Day dedicated to the students
I’he students wore presented the
I - • Pi UMipa: (' (\ Sun ■
minis following an aitdirss by tor
im-i |1- (net .ledge fCst 11 Hotierts of
laHtgy a-w
Kift**en award* were made to
student* who have maintained .111
ay erage gia.lz of ‘.Hi or more, yy ith
no single glade irelow HU. dining
the past .vent. The remaining II
were special awards tor oullltlilld
ing work in the various depart-
ment* of the curriculum
High . erugz senior*. Dorothy
Hakei nd t-entrlcr Wood, t. were
. icsented ai krts Junioi Donai.l
111 nit..id received a gold medal
Silvvi medal* were given to
Sophomores Jimmy Muekleroy.
Dovli IVi k p*ou, Moll* Mori ison.
I’at s-. t'alloyyay and Frances
Ten y llronze medal* were re-
icived by Fn*shmen Hichard Em
iwtltp, J.h- Simmons. Dniurhl
Wood. Linda i'ox. Helm I’ennmg
ton li.nliar"i lli.idford ai d Junyee
llevnolds
Student* receiving special
aw..ids were not annouiu .si until
.■•senihl* nine They were Jean
Cline, ait. Juanita Alexander,
conunemal Patricia I’ow c 1 I
home>ii.iking Molly Morrison, he
lot', Donald Bladfnid. mathema-
tic*. Donald Wood, scieiu-e. L.-ii
It .e W.swl, F.nglisli, Sue Drake,
diamattes. Marilyn Mi-Gimiis.
Spanish. Li-.line W.md, lolimal
am. mid Herbert ltoltert*on, 111-
du ti nil arts
i'lpnaxinu today'* activities will
Is- a limupiet tonight at the Flame
1. -loinam ■ t the Gi gg Gornty
\ 1 ■ lit Wlttta M rale. \ u <
president in tlniigi' Of develop
meid and publh- relations at
Southern Methodist unitei-ity ,n»d
all is'iileretux’ lack I. - fot SMI' 1
1W3U. will (t« liver tIts* main ad
dies*
Di Tate was dean of students
ut SAID im a numbei ol year*
Iwfeie no was clavatcd to ttie i«>«i
tiotf’VH vice president
lie was ,'ie snlije. I ol a feature
ton ny Frank Tidbert in I'h*
Dallas M01 img News reef.ply in
which Tale's iransltton from .1 hu-
man tackling dummy tor the
SMU team to an ail cnntoivnve
tackle was described.
rote
u a rt.
that
une. i
iii'ent
In could get mad at a
ftenci* ihe
te mikt teeth ultimo Inkle?
lKme-«?n:h<*n»nn blocks tTnt‘l
iiltcrhonn T:*te got tired ol 1
iin#(t «m tii*I ink' «hiftfltT!\. i*ot
iifid almost v rerkeii h^ll the
sltv
Infant Son of Local
Couple is Buried
Funeral setvues feu tl
Si n of M and Mr*. W T
were held at 11 a at lad,
Everett Slope F u n «• t a
ehiiiH’l Hiii-iil was in y!!.
Million..1 '.ok
The Itev Hen I! Stripling. Dap
list p..sliii, ..mi lliv If-y Martin
O Wedge ol Tyler, h’lmerlv % -1
<iladeyvalet .-tin i.iteil
The baby itterl in a local hos-
pital Tumidity at 3 30 pm. alwnit
eigtit hour* aftei lui th
allii
one
icing
iind.
' tr-
c Ulllltlt
' oshIcII
y in the
1 Home
ti "\* atei
The Gladewater Hiqh school
band and the White Oak band
both took first divUir- honors
in conceit olevinq ,..<d sight
reeding Thursday night at the
lnterscholastic region IV meet
in Carthage.
Gladewater's bandstrrs will
receive the swecost Ires award
tor winning first places in all
three contests thi-. yo*r. They
had won first plac* in marching
earlier this year.
Two White Oak students.
John Kunkel and Perry John-
son. won lirzt Diace honors in
student directing.
Bob Monsingo direct* the
local band while the White Oak
musicians are under the baton
ot Jest Pattev.
Mrs. W. A. Ramey,
Granddaughter
Hurt in Accident
Mis. W A Rainey and her
..iu:.iiigh ci. Kay Lee, arc in City
piial sufft.'iig from injuries
.-uttered when the car in which
they were rating hit an embank-
mint aftc. a tire blew out about
1! i.n, Thursday tour miles thi*
.de ..| Tylizt
M. ..ml Mr*. Ramey and Kay
', . . tirmite to Edinburg to it-
t.’t.u tiii- yveddmg at 7 o'clock to-
mgir. "t then son. Dean, and Mi**
H.ii i W--•! Kay. the daughter of
M anil Mi- Troy La*** of Edtn-
tj-i ha- been visiting her grand-
pare it- here H r parents came to
Gladewatcr iter Ijeitig notified of
the accident
Mis. Ramey suffered t yv o |
broken ttiis ami more x-rays were
m.v made t.-day to determine the j doned both the eastern an-l w.-st-
r-xtent ot injuries Kay suffered ern anchor- oi their Korean line
Friday hut were prepared to hold
the city of Seoul or sell it at a
heavy co*t in communist lives.
For the first time in th* Ko-
rean war. it aooeared the Allies
were prepared to defend th*
now-ruined South Korean capi-
tal against onrushing Commu-
nist hordes.
I Hasvv allied artillery was set
up in the burned and blackened
streets of deserted Seoul. All
night long thev fired against
th* onrushing Chines* hordes,
last reported less than 11 miles
away.
Lightning flashes from their
muzzle* played upon the turned
building* and the roar of then ex-
plosions echoed through the
blacked-out streets.
United Pies* Correspondent
William Chapman reported n.—
Seoul that Allied troops were
standing by in previously prepared
defense position* ringing the * it*
to the north, waiting for th«
1 Chinese.
Ammunition and supplies, he
said, continued to pour into the
city.
"Thera are signs the Com-
munists will have to oav a high
price tor Seoul this time if they
can take it." Chaoman reported.
The South Korean :tmv was
forced to abandon Seoul vrr
tually without a fiqht when the
original Communist invasion
ocured down from the 39th
parallel last June. United Na-
tions forces aqain abandoned the
capital without • fight during
their rereat Iasi January.
| The capital city, however, was -
; ruined and laid waste when the
, Com ’itinwi* twice fought to hold
it against ttie Allie-.
Further United Nations yvitn
_______________ MB.
WHERE WAR BEGAN—A C itr-d S'.r- • t - • .r. "t Miking Chine*.’ forces. The
troops are filing part the exact p- • wn- . • . K- an .: ia-gan June 23. 1930. when North Korean
troops crossed the 38th parallel in tl'eu ." , k . ’h«- Republic of Korea. Exclusive Aime Telephoto
by Staff Photographer Bert A hw- rh
********* *********
Allies Prepare for
Defense of Seoul
TOKYO. Saturday, Apr I 2ft U P
— United Nation* force- aban-
:cg bruise* and say* she cannot
walk H ■■ v«r, X-Itfi .-bowed no
bioken bone*.
de during thci
g the trout. United I
■ - tent William Bur-1
• withdrawal* were'
luhten ttie line along
ciitral and central
II U. S. AIRMEN KILLED
LISBON. Portugal. Aon! 27 if »
Elr-'en American airmen wore
K'l'ortC'l killrxt mid five itijurxxl
toriiry when then B-29 suimm to t
res* crushed in tin Azores islands
AtTheHospital
City Hospital
Admitted J>> Ann Ginsori, Mi
C F Wclli'.tin, Mi- Rub' llur
roughs, Mnhtiel links. Jeiietie
Dtmliip. Gt.-ndu Berry, Ka\ Lee.
Mis .1 II Sulliy an, Mrs Olln-
Rainey and Mary Ann IVrklns
Disml cd Kdyvaut Lyman. K
G r'i.*s,ridi:. . Mis Neva Halim,
Mi- Clyde Hogue. Mr- \\ Savoy, j
Shirley W Inin -on. Mis. Hazel i
King, Mr- I. .1 Thomas, Call \
Thompson .nil Mis Wallet Hail
and baby
Hancock Hospital
Admitted Mis .1 s Kvatia,
Mi- It C Bui Irv, Ml- It P
llrtiven- M-- J t M. dUn, t'hui
Ins M.H.ie \ H tlicen, Willmin
I’,uki : and Fl-ae Miule Niemoth
D -nis-.'.t Daibar.i Smith, W
M Humphreys M S Tumi, Mi
Joel Smith ..n,l Mi - 1 J Tiptwcll
and baby
New Airiv.il*
Mi and M A II Weldon are
parent- of a ti pound LJtg ounce
-.in horn nt to St! pm riiui-day at I
Hancock hospital.
Marshall Wives
Throw Book at
Congressmen
MARSHALL. April 27 (U.W—The
rebellious housewives of Marshall.
iMttlmg the social security provi-
I sion covering tax on wages paid
icstic*. today toed off on the
Texas congreamonal delegation.
They sent bitter telegrams to
Sens Tom Connolly and Lyndon
H Johnson and to Rep. Wright
I'.itman. thi- congressman from the
1st Texas district
Patman, the leaders of the;
group char -c<l in a telegram, is i
buaj > : idlng and insulting j
MiicAithur mid rublier - stamping
Wtnti House dictates, we feel • j
'.-u are refusing to support" thy i
constitution.
You are tragically wrong," they j
iiivised Connelly. "... 'in* sup-
• rt mg an un-Aniericsn tax mea«-
m rn lllng irutlv htuglg to buy
nsurance under household social |
j securi* law."
Johnson recently advised the i
women in certiiin terms that "the '
- y eminent ivqunes you te collect .
the tax " T-> him the leader* of the |
- ovement sent a wire of "warn-1
.Mg ' "Out next choice." it said.'
"will not be Lyndon Johnson." j
Hawkins Child Hurt
By Automobile
Mictiiiel Hicks, 7. son of Mr. and i
v' i; vet Hicks of Haw kina,
! tuftained a cerebral ixinou**lon
.,nd pos-iblc internal injuries
vhen tun ovet by a car driven
in Mr M (i Lungiiani at Httw-
lurt* Thursday afternoon.
He was admitted to City ho»-1
| i.itul and the attending physician
-oday described his condition as
t too i ileal." He -ai.i it would
I lie mother 24 hours before he
could till definitely about th«
.Tuld's internal injuries.
Mrs Lung".on was in Green I
, clinic -d Hawkins for treatment [
! fot shock
Michael was wa.king home from
chool toward the Humble camp j
! when he ran from behind a ear |
into the path ot the cut driven by
Mrs. Langham. according to re- i
I ixu ts
ora yen Is v'-r-
..11 ... r J
Cm
.sol' Sill-i l-
1111’;.' to sLmJ
the west
fronts.
"The withdrawal was carried
out in * drenching rain which
turned the powdery road* and
tracks into a quagmire." Bunon
said.
"For the last 36 hours thara
ha* been virtually no contact
. along this front.
"The massive Chinese steam-
roller offensive is believed to
have slowed to give breathing
space to their hard-pressed sup-
ply organisation and to regroup
lor another all-out assault,"
Burton reported.
The pause follows the familiar
Ch-ne-o pattern of an initial drive
in sufficient strength to roll back
the opposition, followed by a
standstill period and then the
final effort tn even greater
strength as the knockout blow.”
Endless columns of refugees
moved out cl Seoul across the Han
rive; and south for the fourth
straight day. Chapman reported.
He said by Friday night tha capi-
tal was virtually abandoned ex-
cept for allied troops.
AEC Told to Quit
Spending So Freely
WASHINGTON. April 27 Ul.P —
The Hott.se Appropriation.- com-
mittee .-wiin,. it* economy axe to-
ri:,' .it two dozen government
agencies .minding the Atomic
Energy Commission, which was,
told to ,juit .spending money so
freely.
The committee recommended
*o the ho-iev a 10 per cent cut
in a budget bureau request for
fund* to run 27 so-cailed "in-
dependent office*" in the fitcai
year siaitinq July 1. AH bu.
three of the ..qencies were hit by
the cut.
President Trutruili asked for a
total of $ti.8S7.tl77.4g5 for the 27
auanck- Tu- committee. Ill ttie
" iciest economy swing so far in,
t nt sens i cl i tigress, pared the:
ar.v. ..tit to .-th . 7 1.777,440—a cut of
sthi5.il0i1.02a
The cd '! ittee said much of the
reduction was possible because of
lowered demand for various serv-
11 ■ Vet n* A-tn-mistra-
tion VA ft. ids were cut $483,378,-
855 belov. the budget request for
94.435.323.000
Most of «h* VA cut was ap-
plied against costs of the vet-
erans training program, which
Ihe committee predicted would
decline raotdly during the next
fiscal vear. Costs oi the pro-
gram this rear already are
running 9200.000.000 less than
expected.
As tor th - Atomic Energy Com-
mission, the comrr ttee said it had
no intention of shutting off any of
the agency's work. But it recom-
mended .. iil3.000.000 cut in funds
tor the A EC's <2,200.000,000 eon-
-• alum nogram, contending the
aiic-ny is oo ng the work "with
' ttie or no regard to cost.’’
Oil Drilling Must Be Stepped
Up, Texas Governor Declares
Winnie Cancels Trip,
Enters Mac Argument
LONDON, April 27 iU.fh—Win-
ston Churchill called off his trip
to the United State- today, pledg-
ed a last-ditch fight to topple the
labor government and stepped in-
to the controversy over Gen.
D -uglas MacArthur.
The wav lone prime minister j
.amvllcd pl.«u* address the!
Umvcisity of IVtinsy Ivania «*n
Mi - 8 because >-f the British po-
litical crisis Fuithcrn.ore. he said,
he felt he should not heroine in-
volved in the MacArthur cotitro-
ni' on United State* soil.
StH'akmg at a meeting of the
I’llnttwe league at .Mln-rt hall
I’hurchlll described MacArthur a*
a "great soldier and great stall’s
man " He blasted the socialist gov-
ernment for causing a wave of
. nil British feeling in the United
States ovn the affair
By BOB BROWN
Un.l#H Pr-», Stall CorrasponHvnl
SANTA FE. N V . April 27 01 P'
—Texans warned the nation to-
day that domestic oil reserves are
being depleted at an "ala. in: i'
rule and that maximum prom .
tlon would lack one-half mtdioi
TEHRAN. Iran. April 2"
- Premier Ala Hussein handed
his resignation to the Shah to
night after the parliamentary oil
commission recommended ex
propriation of th* Anglo Iranian
Oil company's installation*.
barrel* daily of meeting requiri
ments if total war cut off foie .
import*.
Speaking at the spring meet
ing of the Interstate Oil Com
pact commission. Gov. Allan
Shivers of Texas reported that
the reserve producing ability
that it. how much production
could be increased without m»r-
well* dropped 90 per cent to
the past eight months to 439 1*3
barrels a day.
"We are fast approach ig r >
l*oint where the valve can't he
opened any wider." Shivers di
c la tea "The truth is th -t our drill-
ing rate must lie accelerated
\ tort time Inter, W .1 Mur-
ru> Jr. nwntH-t of the Texas!
Railroad corr.nu--i.-ii, pamtixl an
even more urgent picture
"If total war developed today,
he said, "instead of having a re-
-erve producing capacity ot on*
million barrels as wo did when
we entered World War 11. w*
could open all our fields to their
maximum elticient produ'ing
rates and still—if cut off from
foreign imports be approxi-
mately one-million barrels short
of me ing our present daily re-
quirements without any allow-
ance tor increasing military de-
mands."
B-th Shivers and Murray em-
ph--ited that this does not mean
that the country's oil production
is qomg down. On the contrary
-said the qovernor production
was at a record high ot 6.040.-
000 barrel a day during March
and is expected to go higher.
Mutt v r*v.tiled that the com-
mission. tvi'diny m Rilox-, Miss..
. year ago had urged that domestic
production bo kept high enough to
keep the ml industry healthy
Ana. he said, as was predicted
at Biloxi, the nation today is des-
perately in m-e.l of every barrel
of domestic producing capacity
which can !*e developed "
Already he said, we see the
danger ot becoming too dvpen
dent upon foreign source* of oil.
tor now with the Iranian situa
tion becominq more critical
daily, the possibility exists ot
the necessity of rationing pe-
troleum product* . . . should we
lose l~an a* a source . . . even
though our miti.ary did not in-
crease present requirements."
The comnn- --.oner declared that
"as vet we are not increasing our
producin', caj.acil- to the extent
which the M-cUrit' of the nation
require- And he said that whilc
-t.it*’ allowables are high enough
to cncounu;c maximum develop-
ment other barriers stand in the
\\ iy He listed these as scarcity of
materials, loss of skilled manpow-
er, and the threat bv the federal
government to take -top* which he
ould curt, il capital for ex-
ploration and development.
Murny also urged cooperative
rese in developing methods
of jining more of th# oil
trom th* ground. He praised
progress already mad* but said
w* are uncertain" as to tech-
nique* which should be used In
two ot the largest fields ever
discovered in this Hemisphere"
in order to increase recovery.
Hv identified th* fields as th*
Srurry reef reservoir and Ul*
Lpravberry ftvlds ot Texas and
said we recognise that our pre-
sent producing techniques will
result in pitifully small recover-
ies ... "
WEATHER~
GLADEWATER GILMER AREA
D irt I' cloudy to cloudy HMp
afternoon, tonight and Maturdny.
W. tcly scattered showers this
fti iron an-l tonight. Not much
i ll .ngc in tcmps’ruturea. Lowest
tonight near 85
Baoin* River
Friday, 8 am. 7.81 feet
Temperatures
Thur-* Itty maximum ....... ......J|
Thursday minimun ....... . ...„■§
Frida'. 11 a.m ■
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Bedichek, Wendell. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1951, newspaper, April 27, 1951; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1036104/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.