Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 96, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1951 Page: 1 of 11
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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791
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Cloudy. Cold
(Slaimafpr Satlu ilirrnr
City Edition
Twelve pages
VOL. III. NO. 96
United Press—(U.R)
GLADEWATER, TEXAS. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8. 1951
Station KSIJ—1430 On Tour Dial
Sc PER COPY
Vishinsky Asks World Conference
182 Communist Jets Hit 70 Allied Planes on Terms
ELECTED — Luis Padilla Ncrvo, of Mexico, loft, was elected
president of the sixth United Nations general assembly In Paris,
France, succeeding Iran's Nazrollah Kntezam. Hudolph Halley,
right, former counsel for the senate crime committee, strikes con-
fident victory pose after winning race for city council president.
Halley beat the New York City democratic machine lie said he
proved was linked to the underworld In the crime hearings. 'Acme
Tclephotoi y
Coffee Shortage
Threatens U. S.
NEW YORK. Nov B <U.R>—Thr
nation w;.s threatened today with
a coffee shortage if the 25-day-
old wildcat waterfront striki
continues two more week*.
Roasters said the stocks of green
One Red Jet
Destroyed;
2 Damaged
8TH ARMY HEADQUARTERS,
Korea, Nov. 8 (II.RI—The Commu-
nists threw an estimated 182 jet
fighters—a record number—into
action today in four blazing air
battles against 70 United Nations
jets, only to suffer defeat.
One Communist plane was des-
troyed. Two were damaged and
two more were believed damaged.
There was no report of any United
Nations loss.
Thursday was the first anniver-
sary of the first “kill" in history
in a clash between jet planes. A
year ago 1st Lt. Russell Brown,
of Pasadena, Calif., shot down a
Red plane in the first jet-against-
jet dog fight.
In today's battles the Allied
planes were outnumbered by as
much as four to one.
In the first fight, this morning
one Red jet was damaged in a
savage 10-minute fight between
60 Communist jets and 18 United
Nations F-86 Sabre jets.
The second clash came this af-
ternoon. MaJ. William T Whisticr
Shreveport, La., shot down one
Russian-made MIG-15 jet and
damaged another. In this fight.
14 G-86s defeated about 60 MIGS.
Then 26 Sabrtjels fought about
40 Red planes, without reported
BABIES IN THE NEWS—Making her camera debut at age one month is Romine Francesca Power
in the arms of her parents, screen star Tyrone Power and Linda Christan Power, left. She was
christened at Sainl Martin of Tours in Hollywood, Calif., and was, named by her mother after the
church where the couple were married in a spectacular ceremony in Rome. Act res* Jane Russell,
ri-ht, poses for photographers in New York with 15-month-old Thomas Kavanugh upon their ar-
rival from London. The hoy was "given" to Miss Russell by a poverty-stricken English mother, but
she has not decided whether she will adopt him. 'Acme Telephotm
UN Negotiators Seek Way
Out Of Present Deadlock
HARIS, Nov. 8 (UP)—Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y.
Vishinsky rejected a new Allied disarmament plan today
but called for a world conference to be held June 1, 1952,
to discuss disarmament on Russia’s terms, including the out-
lawing of atomic weapons.
Vishinsky. addressing the general assembly of the United
Nations here, called also for a Big Five peace pact, an im-
mediate armistice in Korea, with withdrawal of all troops
•to the 88th Darallel border within 10 davs, and the with-
Major
Changes
Banned
WASHINGTON, Nov 8 <U.R>—
The government today banned ma-
jor model changes in automobiles,
Acheson challenged Russia to
show its alleged desire for peace
bv accepting it and calling off the
Korean war.
Vishinsky summarily rejected
washing machines, refrigerators, Allied plan. He said that the
television sets and other civilian United States started the Korean
goods after next Feb 1. 'var .that it was planning a third
After that date, manufacturers world war and that the danger
of consumer goods may not re- °f such a war was never greater,
ceive machine tools for making Then, ending a 75-minute tor-
such changes, according to an rent of bitter words, Vishinsky
order issued by the national pro- proposed his own four-point pro-
duction authority. gram.
They still may get replacements It provided:
for worn out machine tools. The j That the United Nations pro-
order permits them to make what- ciaim that the North Atlantic de-
ever minor model changes they fenst, p.lct anc( tbe maintenance
can with their existing tools. Gf United States military bases
The NPA said the action was aj,roa<j are illegal under the Unit-
taken to make way for greater ^ Nations charter.
output of machine tools for arma- _____... ... „
ment and other defense produc- 2 That aU countr,«w tak,n*
MUNSAN, Korea, Nov. 8. (U.R'— head ol the five-man United Nat-1 the Reds a veto over any adujst- ..................... " »» ‘be Korean war stop fighting
wtJrm, clJ1. <1U1IUIKV VI„,V. _______.United Nations truce negotiators ions truce delegation, called to- ments which might be sought by .This will place a severe handi- at.°"ee' c°™-,u«e an armistice,
fw-producYng «,rt had fallen to other Red jetsstood bv ,n support held an urgent eonlerence tonight n.gnfs meeting at base headquar- the United Nations. cap „n industries whose output wittuiraw j^eir tr^ t«» the bor-
a critical low bci-au-e rebel A FI hut did not take part. , to seek u way out of then deadlock tors here to plot strategy tor the Modes said a good part of the has been reduced because of the dcr and Norta Ro-
mo,., horeinen refuse to unload in- In the onlv battle of the daw with the communists over u Kor- joint subcommittee meeting at 11; meeting i was spent in trying to more urgent needs of the mobiliza- r°a within 10 days and tha* “U
coming 'cnrso shms the fourth in which the United | can cease-fire line. a m. tomorrow '9 p.in. today EST>. find out just w hat the Communists ,ion program." Swan Bergstrom, loreign troops leave Korea within
, Nations planes were not heavily The conference followed Allied It was believed that the two meant by "adjustments", after director of NPA's metalworking three months.
1 iKni if outnumbered, 12 F-80 Shooting rejection of the latest Communist United Nations members of the which the United Nations "com- equipment division, said,
u muoYr.Vv rnlv Stars chased off two MIGS during truce line proposal and the United! subcommittee might come up with pletely rejected" the proposal.
. . • ,i rail line bombing. Both MIGS Nation’s rcsubmission of an alter-: r new compromise proposal as re-1---
were reported damaged. nate plan already rejected once by suit of the conference. Dn4e Use>
nwHsasaOMa—Communist .he 111-'- Brig. General William Nuckols, IVIIIQ I UTS TllS
Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy, | spokesman for the United Nations J **
delegation, held out hope to news- DiieiMnee IiifA
men that a way out of the dead- DUSllfwSO llllw
lock could be found. .
"I think we have been in situa- Cup T
tions before which have been in-jWlllvl i VI I lip
terpreted as a deadlock and pro-
gress; has been made," he said. I HOUSTON, Nov. 8. (U.Ri
Cold Wove Is
Break Apart
By UNtTED PRESS
Warm southwestern breezes
broke the back of the worst early-
season colii wave in history to-
day in th.- Midwest but the gulf ‘mm.H^tTYlkout “which"YarU-d Un,ted NaUons ,ank? ?,asn™
coast still shivered in the grip of yalkoul *il!- with Communist tanks last night
MIS VnnT °CV !5;, 6»d bolstered his f0|. thc fir#, ,jmo ln more than a
stop operating.
___—. - - ._* w 1 wwi
Association ffiPLX urged represen- f showd Unitpd Nationfu-m.^^
tatives from nil locals to show up I hill nqrthwtst of Yonchon on
on the waterfront today and as- (ho we8tern front shortly after
sist loyal longshoremen who want mldni(fh, The A1Ues Counter-at-
.. . _ , _ _ tacked behind a heavy artillery
p*n* Sampson, barrage and reoccupied the height
strike leader who has thwarted wjthout opposition.
Rvan s attempt to break the un- Unitcd Na,ions tanks clashed,
More Sunshiny
Weather Forecast
3. That a world conference of
Manufacturers of automobile all countries, including non-mem-
passenger cars, for example, will bers of the United Nations, meet
be ineligible to obtain machine -by next June 1 to study “effec-
tools to make model changes.” he tive and substantial" reduction., of
said. The order applies to ail con-. arms and the prohibition of all
' runner goods. Bergstrom said that 1 atomic weapons. This would in-
ufacc
»i .-.-j II,*.- uni, Iiit.ufc. ..*»,v». rivjvjo 1 Ull, nut. o. \u.r.— Shep- |
There is no reason to believe that paid 'Abdullah' King, almost as I net H|V SOVRu
iiYuir.wc nnf ho tttnrlo from I lmniu< n« if Lo n»/l Cnmin flumol » wM
From Grainship
By UNITED PRESS
Texans were promised nnothei progress will not be made from : happy as if he and Sarnia GamaJ
the ulmnrm 1 chill I”;, ..... ...... ■■■•- f01 (tu, flrst time in more man a 24 to 36 hours of mild sunshine ,H„. present |>osition," were sitting on a sand dune sip-
.. , , R*‘’kr’ *° keep the |m»! t idle. . t Two <n three enemy tanks, weather today. Nuckols conceded that the truce ping champagne, was back in
it wa* warmei in Montana tarty Both Ryan and the New 5 oi k ^.,jcV0(, Russian.built T-34 . cx- The United States weather la|ks during the. past four months Houston today, putting his busi-
thU morning than it w. • >" n r Shipping Association have cl Mint'd ciinae<j firi. with United Nations said the trend through Friday bad not progressed as rapidly as ness in order before a flight to
rrn Florida. Thc merc^iry ^ank Ut that *he jWnlracL_ whiich.^ grants ,ank> wl.st ((f Yonchon in the would be toward warmer temper- bad been hoped. But, he added. Cairo and the altar.
moonlight for 15 minutes, then ature* - -
lumbered back north.
only 41 degrees f.t Great Falls, dock hands a l()-crnt hourly wage
Mont., but it was 33 at Jackson- increase, is valid lieciiiisc it wa*
villc and Pensacola. Fla. New Or- ratified by a majority of thc un-
leans had a minimum of 35 ion's membership.
The wind* blowing up from the The strikers want a new con-
southwestern plains liegan melting ‘met giving them a 35-rent hourly
a blanket of snow left from Okla raise.
homa and Kansas to Michigan and The Regional Office of the Na-
Ohio bv a raging snowstorm Tucs- ti"nnl Laboi Relations Board dis-
dav and Wednesday. a *h'PPinK "stweation com
while civilian goods manufaefurers elude Red China,
w’ill be handicapped. "We do not 4 That a five-power peace pact
believe they will be severely b(? conchjded by the United States,
hurt. • Great Britain. France, Russia and
Communist Cfiina and that the
five powers call on all “peace-
loving" people to adhere to it.
Vishinsky emphasized that Rus-
sia demands, as before, the de-
struction of all existing atomic
SEATTLE. Wash.. Nov. 8 (U.R> bombs, the prohibition of manu-
—The coast guard cutter Wachu- facture of any more atomic wea-
We certainly don't think the time The reason for King's happy sett today rescued the last six sur- P®™- 1 . YIvlRa^'iTeeds °Hc
Mid-morning temperatures ha. been wasted." stage: vivors of a grainship which caught ergy solely foi civilian needs. He
ranged from 42 at Texarkana to The United Nations formally re-' He has his Mexican divorce fire in the windswept north Pa- saj«- T_
67 at Brownsville and were in the I jetlCl| thc latest Communist pro- from w ife Gloria. cific. , ^
50's over most of the state. Winds |Wsal for a cease-fire line and re- | He had plane reservations to The tragedy cost the lives of far control or proniDiuon tne
had shifted to southerly in most submitted its own at a marathon Cairo. six men. the coast guard said. One atomic bomb, uoes ne want to
portions. meeting of the Joint subcommittee i And he had a cable from his perished in the engine room of legalize the ngnt ot tne war mon-
Overnight lows ranged from m the conference tent at Panmun-, Egyptian dancer whom he will the SS George Walton when flames ger to use atomic weapons.
Junction's 22 to Galveston's 49. jon, 11 miles northeast of Munsan. marry as soon a* he can get back enveloped the ship. Four others Acheson s comment, alter tne
y .. ............ AUSTIN. Nov. 8 (UR'—Petitions There was no measurable pre- U. S. MaJ. Gen. Henry I. Hodes to Cairo, probably on Nov. 22. drowned when a lifeboat capsiz- meeting, on Vishinsky s Diast was
itoafls begun opening ns the wP*nint charging five locals with signed by more than 2,000 students eipitation at any official report-' chief United Nations represents-, King disclosed he made plane ^ after the crow abandoned ship, . 4. . #
drifts disapp**are<l. Only one roiid violation of the Iaft-Hartley law. wt're being circulated today on the ing state for the 24 hours ending uve on tlie subcommittee, resub- reservations at the Trans-World ar>(t Ono other seaman was lost The most impressive point as
in Illinois wa* still completely The,shippers ihargcd Uic stiikmg University of Texos cumpus asking , it 6:3(1 a.m. today. milted the Allied plan. airline olfice here for Nov. 20. He from another lifeboat. far a* 1 an1 concerned is Mr. Vi-
Petition For
Holiday Change
blocked. Yesterday, almost nil east
west roads were impassable or ex-
tremely hazardous.
Trafie officials warned, howev-
locals had violated the law by
failing to give 60-dav notice of
their intention to strike.
Regional NLRB Director Char-
les T. Douds said the locals could
er. that road* were still trencher-
ous In places and some had only .
one lone open in splits *
Some towns set new records for . . *
the cold this morning before tem-
neratures ijegan elimbing At St
Louis, the thermometer hit 19 3'
degrees, the coldest for so early
In thc season since 1838. _ . ■
a second building toppled into Beer In Milwaukee
Lake Michigan at Michigan City.
that thc school's Thanksgiving hol-
idays. scheduled to begin Nov. 29.
be moved forward one week.
The student holidays were set
for Nov. 9-Dec. 3. opening with
the traditional Toxas-Texns A&M
Garden Club Rose
Sale Is Postponed
The Communist plan calls for will fly Trans-World from New The coast guard previously ro- shinsky s statement that facts are
an immediate tormal agreement York to Cairo. The plane is sched- j port0d that only five men had stubborn things, because he wres-
am n ..a.«•*a ft —a '* —- i».-aa.-j am • i«- • ■ *J 4•-----— “* ^ .—a . > .. t&0ci W11il likCtS lOT tWO mOUTS 3rtfl
lost."
Ind., where high waves battered
a 60-foot bluff for two days. The
waves undermined a four-room
building and half of thc structure
fell into the water.
Waves swept 300 feet up iho
beach at the storm's height yes-
terday, undermining a cottage, a
business building and e a u sing
$100,000 damage to a 14-mile
stretch of lakeside highway. One
boat was sunk and five others
damaged.
on a cease-fire line based on the uled to arrive at Cairo at 2:15 u.m. been killed
present battlefront—a maneuver Nov. 22. Twenty-five others were rescu-
which United Nations representa- Since getting his divorce in iv1 .-esterdav bv two merchant Thus rival East-West “peace of-
tives said would result in a dc- Juarez last week, Abdullah had , . ‘ '.... through ’0-foot ^en**vc*' w'tb the United Nations
Mrs. Ralph Prince, vice presi- facto cease-fire without provision been on a visit to Dallas, his old -Is. reaiu ,u_ men lifeboats assembly halls as the battleground,
A1""’............... sr’.a
sss, itr* s- • ss, sssarjs a?, 8^lssw5?ssw
the^las^sesYion of the legislature has been postponed until the first milling latei “adjustments" in the Nov 20. North Washington coast l uesuay ................
hereafter will observe the Pal 1 <'f December. cease-fire line if changes occur m "Happy news . . your cable."
, ‘ _. . .. official Many of the rose bushes were the battlefront before the armis- S cud in her cable. "Hap-
Th- tc iviiiir Dav damaged by the weather, Mrs. tier* agreement is signed. piest day in my life. Waiting im-
ranKsgi k • • , , . Prince stated. The definite date ol But, ho said, another clause in patiently my ugly man. Love you
..........-........... - - .stjuicn pc ; ‘ the sale will be announced later, the enemy proposal would give very much. Kisses, Sarnia."
—Milwaukee, thc last strong- 'he holidays l*> moved up to co-• . —- * - -
hold of Iho nickel gliiss of incide with the notional c>b*orv-|
Last Of Nickel
MILWAUKEE. Nov. 8 (UP'
beer, has given up to infla- anee of Thanksgiving on Nov. 22
tinn and boosted the price However, university officials iu-
to a dime. (Rented there was no! likelihood
Wendelin Kraft, president 1 the swap would be made,
of the National Licensed Bev- Dr J C Dolley. university vice
erage association, reported j o r e s i d e n t, said sueli a move
that "the nickel glass of beer “would create two holiday week
is gone, just like the cigar ends" because of the Texas A&M
store Indian a n d buggy game.
whips.” 1 —-
Kraft said the last of the SinatrCJ Ancj Gardner
Truman Flatly Denies Report
He Offered To Back Eisenhower
afternoon.
The two freighters which pick-
ed up the 25 survivors yesterday
were the G r e e k* merchantman
Katherine and the Japanese
freighter Kenyon Marti. Both ves-
sels left the scene and were pro-
ceeding to British Columbia ports.
ers in the Kremlin.
Mark Day On
Kilgore Board
Mitchum Admits He
Was Fight Aggressor
Milwaukee holdouts tossed in
the hnr rag last w’eck when
the new federal excise tax
on boor went into effect. 1 PHILADELPHIA, Pa.. Nov
Many Milwaukee taverns uj.R>—Frank Sinatra honeymooned | dential nomination in 1952.
Honeymooning Today
Mark Day, Glndewater busi-
nessman, was appointed to the
board of trustees of the Kilgore
college district yesterday at a Teg*
ular meeting of the board.
Day will represent the area
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo., north of the Gregg county-Rusk
Nov 8 <U.R'—Screen Actor Robert county line. The area includes the
Mitchum admitted today that "1 following independent school dis-
was the aggressor" in a baroom tricts: Gladewater, Sabine, and
brawl with an army private that White Oak.
got so violent they smashed a The Gladewater school district
WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (U.R)— be “reliable and informed" and1 newsmen that the report "is not
4 President Truman said today there decided to publish it even though true."
is "not a word of truth" in a i he expected "categorical and The President himself was ask- ......
New York Times report that he angry denials." ed about the report during a brief table and knocked over a piano, was voted into the Kilgore College
offered to back Gen. ike Eison- jn an official spokesman l',li,t with newsmen lit the airport Mitchum emerged from the fight district last July.
8 bower for the democratic presi- s„j(( tluH "as far as SHAPE before his take-off for Key West, unscathed. But Pvt. Bernard Roy-
knows" Krock's report'"is purely "There is not a word of truth nolds, 27. an ex-boxer and mem-
A few days ago I was in High- j -
i’r; Job* For Teachers
together and each needed a shave In Greece, Egypt
very badly So one came into *,r
Hightower for a shave and the j AUSTIN, Nov. 8 (U.R)—Jobs are
kept selling beer for a nickel today with green-eyed Ava Gat'd- 1 jjc mac|c the statement to re- Fictional’ ..... in it," he said. "If Walter Winched ber of thc Camp Carson, Colo.,
j -1 ssss ;,r
*- * - ..... e.he spindly cooncr and the . ’ , states that political matteis wen would have thought it of said after the brawl, "but I was
litho film beautv had a champagne . Mr- Truman said he would not not discussed between he Presi- Krock... aggressive like a policeman.”
marriage last night at the home ^,avc .V™" Y a \,smh . . J . that the d.s- A (tecisinn bv E.senhower to He also admitted that "I was
of dress manufacturer U,t Sachs ,t^M,c,i w; Utcr .n CU-tem had mt.y ,-ox creJ matters for ^nt on the demo- the lx,s all the wax" m the huh,
Walter Trohan of the Chicago
to put your foot on n brass
rail from now on," Kraft said.
"IPs too bad."
other went to Houser. And n don-
key brayed over by the railroad
truck so some fellow in the shop
didn't understand the raeket so
Their long-awaited "1 do's" cli-
maxed a hectic romance which
saw Sinatra renounce a wife and
three children and hasten to Eur-
ope when It became known Bull-
fighter Marion Cabre was a rival
for Miss Oardner's affections.
waiting for Texas teachers in
Greece, Egvnt and Turkey, Dr.
Hob Orpv, Director of the Univer-
sity of Texas Teacher Placement sighed Inst night and kissed his
asked “What was that?" The Irish- Service, said today. new wife after common pleas
man raised up and said “I think ' Gray said grants are nvatlnhlc court .lustic Joseph Sloane mar-
thnt’s my partner over there that \ under the Fulbright Art for tench- ried them.
Houser is shaving." ers in U. S. sponsored schools In
- the fields of social welfare work,
Coinse, you nil know how I’m nursing, English, kindergarten,
in love with Truman. I'm very physios, mathematics and other
selfish for revenge. I wish Tru- sciences.
man would come down and visit A minimum of two years clnss-
wlth us and have to lake one of J room experience Is required, he
Houser's shaves. said.
East and South Central Texas
Fair and u little wanner this
cratic ticket would be welcomed Mitchum made headlines in 1948
ii , u ., j ... , . The spokesman gave a similar by Southern States' Right Demo- when he spent 50 days in jail after
lHUunc. util, no anoed, 1 novel answoi to a report by Columnist oi'iits who ore seeking a wav to he was arrested with blonde star-,
would have thought it of 'Arthur' Walter Winchell that Eisenhower block Mr. Truman's re-election, let Lila Leeds and salesman Robin afternoon and tonight Friday pnrt-
lslock had met secretly with New York Moat of them have assumed. Ford at a marijuana party at Miss 1> cloudy and warmer. Moderate
Krock, who heads the Times' Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and agreed however, that if Elsenhower runs, Leeds' California home. "n',h**- *“
Washington bureau, had reported to announce his candidacy for thc be will do so as a Republican. —----------------
We finally made it.” Sinatra I that Mr. Truman made the offer Republican nomination before Jan. James H. Duff 'R-Pa.', Gov ROTARY RIGS UP
to back Eisenhower earlier this 1. Thomas K. Dewey of New York DALLAS, Nov 8 (U.R'—A slight
week, "presumably at their pri- "General Eisenhower said spec- and others of Eisenhower's GOP increase in the total of rotary
Vntc Blair House luncheon on ifiaiIy at his press conferences in supporters are going ahead with rigs active In oilfields of the
northeast to east winds op the
coast, becoming easterly to south-
easterly Friday.
Monday.
was
North Central and Wait Taxas
Fail and a little warmer this
afternoon, tonight and Friday.
CLAMPS ON CONTROLS
LONDON. Nov. 8 (U.R)—Winston
Churchill’s Conservative govern-
ment clamped strict controls on1 posed amendments
household coal today and warned Hartley labor act.
the United States that he had not Ike-for'-President plans without United States and Canada
According to Krock. Eisenhower discussed politics anti we have any evident doubt that the gen- reported today for the week end-
did not accept because he could no comment to add to that," the oral is a Republican. ing Nov. 5.
no! agree with certain ndmlnistra- spokesman said of the Winchell If Eisenhower should cross The American Association of __________ ______ ____ _____
tlon domesti policies, such as pro- report. them up and run as a Democrat, Oilwell Drilling Contractors said jrndav. Lowest tonight near 42.
to the Taft- The first denial came from it apparently would give Sen Ro- its reports from the Hughes Tool
White House Press Secretary Jos- bert A. Taft of Ohio a clear field Company, showed 3.070 rigs active
Gladewater Area
Generally fair and slightly war-
mei this afternoon, tonight and
the nation lt was at the merry of Krock said he got his Informn- eph Short last nighl. After talk- In his bid to win the GOP nomi- compared with 3,041 the previous
the weather this winter. 1 lion from sources he believed to ing with the President, he told nation. ' week.
Tsmpsratursi
Wednesday minimum: 28.
Thursday 10:45 a m : 51.
I
drawal of all foreign troops
from Korea within three
months.
Secretary. of State Dean Ache-
son first outlined to the assembly
the new United States-British-
French disarmament plan includ-
ing a system of inspection to pre-
vent ehenting.
J|
(J
1
v, l
* #( V
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 96, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1951, newspaper, November 8, 1951; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1064925/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.