Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 263, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 11, 1950 Page: 4 of 8
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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Editorials... Features
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
,. .
Page Four
Gladewaier Daily Mirror
Problem Of Survival
Wednetday. January II. USO flQ(JrT/THE
The sudden demise of one ol the nation’s
i,K a test newspapers, the New York Sun,
n*ch sold out to its alternoon rival, the
\. w York World-Telegram, last week, has
11 the nation s editors speculating. 11 the
.Sun, one ol the oldest anu most prosperous
u.iiiies in America, couldn t keep going in
lace ol rising prouuctiou costs, what is go-
iii to happen to ttie hundreds ol small
uaUies widen are running on a shoe-strmg?
Uiey ask.
/lnt* 11 s quite a legitimate question. What
is?
In announcing the sale ol the Sun to the
Scripps-Howard-owned World-Telegram, the
putnisAer oi tile deiunct Sun was quite
uank. He said that production costs—par-
ticularly, the costs ol tabor and newsprint—
had been rising taster than the revenues ol
the newspaper, and lie saw no ciiance to
bring the two into balance. Therefore, ra-
ther than permit the paper to keep on losing
money, witn the possibility ol going bank-
tupl, lie decided to sell out to his competitor.
A ,‘*od part ot the stock ol the Sun, he said,
uas owned by employees, who could not ai-
I• 'id to lose what tney had saved.
Most newspaper publishers, harassed by
i ising costs and chminshmg returns, will un-
derstand what the publisher ol the New
\ui k Sun was up against. More than a thou-
aiid daily newspapers have pased out of
t.i picture during the past two decades be-
lie they could not stand up against rising
Some have suspended publication;
"thers have merged with their competitors,
but the held has been narrowed either way.
Since the close ol World War 1 competi-
tion with other media has been keen, and
during the past ten years, production costs
have been climbing taster than revenues.
I he publishers, through their research or-
ganizations, have been seeking some cheap-
er method of producing their papers, but
without much results. They have experi-
mented with all types of processes, ranging
from oilset, which was developed about 40
years ago, to the newly announced micro*
lilm process, but all ol these have proved
more expensive and less satisfactory than
the conventional mode of printing. So, to-
day, pracfwaHV all standard-size dailies in
America are printed by letterpress.
However, we are not convinced, as some
seem to he, that the day of newspapers is
COST OF ■
“OMPETITION fi r, a
BROKE MC jf tli
about over. There will always be newspa-
pers They may have a difficult time making
the grade and some will go under, but others
will survive. The people will see to it that
they do. The press, in America, lacks a lot
ol being licked, much as political demagogues
and montebanks might wish it otherwise.
Ticklish Situation
The argument over whether or not the
United Stales should intervene if the Chin-
ese Reds attack Formosa, present seat oi the
Nationalist Government, is becoming in-
creasingly bitter. Some of the senators and
congressmen are strongly in favor of such
intervention. Others, including Sen Tom
Connally, chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, are against it. The
Slate Department policy is "hands off” in
the Formosa affair. Whether or not this
will prove to be the wise course in the long
run, remains to be seen.
It is difficult to know just what is the
wisest course to pursue. The average Ameri-
can, watching tne steady encroachment ot
the Red forces toward Japan, the outpost of
democracy in the Far East, would like to see
us send troops and planes to Formosa and
stop the Communists in their tracks. He be-
lieves it would be better to fight in For-
mosa, which is Chinese territory than to
light in Japan, which we are occupying.
But this decision is based on the idea that
we are going to light the Communists, any-
way, sooner or later, and we had just as well
light them now. It is a rather drastic con- „ ,
elusion and one that we should weight well ’ wrJm- wnh ^«w-!.glin?,,i
belore we fully commit ourselves. For inter- am a -cup ol black coffee for
vention in Formosa means war. There is no breakfast’ type.
a.,ub< about that Formosa „ Ch.rn.su turn- UrT'j^ ? uZ
lory. It we send an army to Formosa at Lois Hallman of tho home nu>
the invitation of the Chinese Nationalists, nation bureau of the U. S. lie-
we arc interfering in Chinese internal af- of„A*r;cull1ure. » «
lairs, any way you can look at it. That will ,lot measurably better than no
make us a belligerent. If the Chinese Reds at- oreukfa.st at all.
tack our forces as they certainly will—wo Nutritionally that is.
will find ourselves embroiled tn a local war
Labor Tax Fraud In Mill Town May Be Next
Case To Sidestep Government Prosecution
By DREW PEARSON
•'•Ftp y
Union V*. Company
Inprevious years, the Binim..
Company had supi '
(Copyright. It 10. by th* Bell Company had supplied aevnun-
Syndicat*. Inc.) tants to help workers make „ut
WASHINGTON. Jan. II.—This their taxi**, but Chief Organizer
column recently exposed the man- Melides (old workers (flat the coin,
ner m which Mid-Continent Metro- pony did not have their interest at
I(>iiiii had fixed a HM«Hi.ooo in- heart and that the union would
come tax evusion case for only $3, save them money,
oon ooo, aft-i internal revenue Meudes also claimed that he and
agents had recommended cnnunal the two other union organize;*
prosecution were former Internal revenue
Her? in another fraud case, this aifi’nts, knew the intuti* ropes on
one involving a labor union The how to save money Later it tun
V 1 \AEnN T0tV
ed <>ut that only ime of the .»■
«a inwrs ever had been comic, n d
with internal revenue, and then
only as a file clerk in Wushu,
lou.
After T men unearthed the
phony tax returns and In the
course of their investigate m,
Meudes und Bartholomew tiur t
into the lax collector's office m
warnmm
See Editorial, “Problem Of Survival”
MY AMERICA
By
HARRY BOYD
n. s, trembling of the hands and well stoked with energy through
feet, lack of energy, irritability nut the
and other things that go to make
a person unhappy.
That’s me, to a
nt anting.
Sometimes you ran feci It "a-
chief differente between the two
ease's i* that the Truman Adnuni
stratum, despite Its great ami
avowed friendship for labor, has
not yet let the union get away with
it Although the union tax fraud
has tieen delayed for one year, it
may still tie prosecuted The big
oil company case, on the other
hand, was i|ilielly fixed on the in-
side and was never ullowed to get the basement of the post office
to the Justice Department for huildmg at Hoanohe Rapids, four
criminal prosecution Tmen were m the room Jam.-
The labor case involves tin ee White, Woodrow Blue, tioth deputy
organisers of the United Textile collectors, and agents Arthur Selby
Workers 'CIO* —Toby Mendes, and Joseph A Taglleri of the in
Frank Bartholomew, and .1 H telligenre unit
Turner, who are charged with en- "I tmderetand you are looking
com aging w'orkers to falsify their for me," said Mendes. "You don’t
tax returns at the Simmons Mat- have to look for me. Merc I
tress Company, Roanoke Kaput*. am "
N C. There tieing no comment.
The Simmons Company was hi Mendes continued: “I understand
the middle of a fight nvei whether you are investigating the return
the plant should or should not iw we made out.”
organized by the United Textile Agent Selby admitted this wu
Workers, and as one inducement to a possibility
Join the union, the three orga- "Well, I wouldn't if I were you
Inzer* offived to show workers Mcride* wanted. "You may get
how to save money on their tn- into trouble
come taxes Wire Pulling in Washington
They saved money all right, hut The fraudulent tax returns wetc
largely by swearing out false for the year 1947, and the Tree
church contribution*, travel ex- urv licpaitnient concluded its in-
l>cii*es. gambling loss*- cti vestigahott in IMi More than a
Phony Church Contributions rear elapsed after that, during
Gifts to churches in Koenoki which Mende* apparently trust to
not
read a patent medicine lidad or
a health column or a vest pocket
doctor book that pegged my
a tcu£ symptoms more accurately
Anil tho beauty of it is that
those Government re-« irehcrs gn
Thev are to l*®»erlb»» as a remedy Minn,
the eslnetic
. ...... - to churches in
1 v mg there a nourishing you |{apul: iccordutg to tin Murat For no prose
ver until the middle of the after110011 t..s were so higti tti.it . c ,1 iri Waste
Union officials claimed that (in-
ly knew from away "If we had received .1! ", ... (Ia % h-.l inspired th. t*.
m
mtue- of ailwtitntina * hitter 11 "<tld • • hope tn find III
k .«****,.'. qharm.i<-o|»<' i.i They choice organizers cncoui igcd
around with cmlliver The truth is that the black eof- “tit fraudulent tax return- Hci
talking about
which ultimately will lead to another World hial-k^taste fmTV^' dark bn'wu ■••nybody'* ph rm ienp.. 1., They choice
war. It is a ticklish situation we face in the taste a person waken up with .....m....r 0
Far East und we can hardly blame the State
Department for wanting to move slowly hc‘,t"of 'the ..7fec wha‘n Ip*
in handling it. loosen up the Joints and shift the
—---- bodily .in. humsm oat *f' low.
ft* ar.
Of course, these are things «tv- preacher remarked:
erybody already knew from away "If we had m-elnd all the
back, w’lthout benefit of scientific tnliutionii tiiat have tain deducted |.|..t.«- that d was a part of m
experimenting. from the income tax returns timidation tactics used by the Sim
The flaw in the researchers' around here, we wnuldrt t tiav.- to mons Company to prevent U»e 01
theory h. their apparent asxiimp pass the collection plate again gamzation of tlietr mills. Inter-
tion that must people who gulp Treasury investigalois teemed nal revenue agents, however,
of the most appetizing medicines only black coffee for breakfast in- scores of -.worn affidavits from claimed M1.1t the company kept
■ stead of liarn and eggs do so by mtllworkets telling how thi niion hands off They said that Frank
Williams, manager of the imll, tnl.i
don't mi iroimd with codltver I he truth is that the black cof- nut fraudulent tux retina M« . h. - want to luivr an
oil. vitamin pill;, c.dcium tablets fee breakfast I usually a pro |s cx.impb 1 ■ ■ ‘ " *l------•*—
or any of Miat tmttled stuff. duet of unmatiagcd eireumstanres between Toby Mende* and .. null
The thing to do. they *siy. is ,l «f utmicoe*:.ful efforts w':,.k,'r
to eat a breakfast of ettrus juice, *° Juggle dressing and shaving
Nothing is more useless than a discard-
All they say, after a series of* and preserve v
ham and c. g* or >ayuu ami egg-;, routines, bathroom priorities, kit
two pieces .d to. 1 ,t with butter chon timetable*, school schedules
/-■*» . . . , . , . , ran uir; nun u BNiiri ' - • *•
Christmas tree unless It is a last years studies, they huve been making urcam and sugar.
.1.1 ,1 Willi UUllt'l ................. . 1
.md coffee with awl working hour* *o they come ‘ IV ,
Meudes “How much do you d.
natc t.i church"
Millworkei "I don't go t
out even.
Mendes
'Do you pas
calendar.
LOOKING AT LIFE
EKl< H mrandeis
Like on|a 1 mi
lirfltNied
I think she knows full well that offset all the adverse criticism of
probably liideocd to hfid gurat peo|ilc don’t crowd the concert her voice.
Truman when she mug at .1 radio hulls to hear Margaret Truman, “One was prepared for the
rental in Carnegie Hull during the singer, but Margaret Truman. Krace, warmth und refinement of
Christmas week. the President's daughter. her presence," he wrote, “but this
lake millions of others you • « • reporter, having seen only the
I m d.|v pit orry for r. while But must a person remain 11 grinning photographs that present -
1 heard her and miner till nonentity in her own right just day publicity sanctions, was not at
1 1 < :id what the critics because bo is a famous man's all jirepared for the beauty of her
face in repose. Few artists now
“i h< I felt I don't believe that any more appearing before the public have
than I hold it contemptible for u Miss Truman's physical udvaii-
n*1 " cause h. will girl to t.ill in love with und marry tages, and almost none other has
u rich man's son. her dignity."
And that is why I loci sorry for Then u few sentences about her
Margaret Truman. singing, and, at the close:
II she as sincere alwut her sing- "Only at the end of each piece,
ing every adverse criticism will when she stopped singing and
bring her even greater heartaches, smiled und became the lovely Miss
By (he same token, if she were Truman again, did she seem to
. \ .in <m- ot ner really a great artist she would make real contact with the guests
I '1,11,1 01 always wonder whether it were of the evening."
her father's job or her own artistry « • *
that made her. ^ ^ If I were Margaret Truman, I
would Ik* quite happy after read-
l-et me quote from one of the mg this criticism.
New York critics.
for 2 years is that the amount ot i Or, if you prefer, you could
sugar in the blood after .1 cup ot substitute largo helpings of cor
black coffee for breakfast m n<v awl ami tnilk for tho eggs and
greater than after nothing fm Toast. And if you’re a herd work
breakfast. Tho amount of sugni *r you might throw 111 a few pan
in the blood is a measure of ener- cakes.
8>- That's the kind of breakfast
Moreover, they found that pen- that gives yon something to g"
pic who drink only black cof- on. The investigators' tots show
fee for breakfast develop dizzi- that it will keep you cheerful and
It is the inevitable result of the ^ *“-v w,,,k
•arlv y. ..Whilt church’S
confusion generated by the
morning rut race in an unmet hod
icil household
Getting eoffre hreakfasters on
a ham-end egg basis .* a job not
for a nutritionist but for a traf
fir engineer.
Copyright, IBM). King Features.
Inc.t
HOLLYWOOD
I.OI KI.LA PARSONS
A "The Methodist Church '
Q "Fine You gave ,1 $3tHi do-
nation to the Methodist
lust year "
W "Do vim ever gamble’''
A "No"
lj "Do you ever play cards
fun?"
A "Yes."
Q Fine you lost $,HHi
gambling debts last yeut '
thing to do with the matter, didn t
•■ver, want to heat anything abon’
lit
Finally, alter more than urn-
•>’*i s dickering and delay in
•YatbMtghio the Justice Depart
1 cut sent the <'«*«' tn Bryce H
Holt, U S atturnry in Graeo-
lairo, N C , fee < rimmai praae< u
tuai.
Bolt, however, luta infiamtodlhe
J ust 11 e Doportinent that ha le «ij>
iMweft to jiroaerution He RtgtN e
('lull'll tin I that the *h'.
union organizers got no financial
return for preparing frnudUlc •
leturn* and that prosecution of tin-
,- ise tn rou-t would holt down to a
buttle between tabor and manage
inent
That is the status of the rase a*
<>f today
-ingcr. but l»e-
»n- so sincerely
I 1 career and
II n tei 1 ific di.s-
rti.it Margaret Tru-
1 /.t-s that it is
<1;
Is con-
money
she is
1 dent's
Isn't it much better than being
"T he voice is small in size and a great singer, to tie a woman of
hunt ■'*m«<‘ and not at ail la-uiitiful,” charm, of ilignity, of loveliness'.'
have )>•' said. So. apparently, she is a success
But then he said something else *™t all-
Which, to my mind, should make 'Copyright. 1950, King Feu-
Maigaret Truman very happy and lures Syndicate. Inc.i
'I'.iuli-
to at-
Ptogram Continued
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. !!, iINS'— who is always meddling in her
As soon as Gmrge Marshall fin- faliier's affairs and gets into dif-
ishes “Come Share My Give" at ficulties.
RKO. he goes immediately to * * •
Paramount to direct "The Mack Sam Goldwyti is very excited
Sennett Story ” Well, George is about Ann itivth in "Our Very
the boy who can do it. Of the 3ti Own”—-and well lie might be.
years he has spent in the movie He's now trying to borrow Ann
business, twelve of them were us for a second picture, and to star
head of the old Fox Company her and Farley Granger with his
Comedies. own little birl — Joan Evans, of
Meanwhile. Betty Hutton, who course,
plays Mabel Normand m the Sen- "What is the name of the plc-
nett story, is having the time of lure?" I asked Sain.:
her life skiing at Sun Valley. With He said. "Oh, I have several
every bulletin on how "good” she stories, and as soon as I find unt
is, her bosses shudder. They’re whether William Goetz will lend
keeping their fingers crossed that her to me we'll start to work."
she doesn't turn thi* comedy into * * *
a paraplegic drama from her an- Snapshots of Hollywood col-
tics. lectcd at random:
As for the- star who will play Sharman Douglas, all-time A-
Maek Sennett that still isn’t set. merican glamour girl and one of
Hut Paul Douglas is tin one they
want if the deal ran l>c made
with 20th.
We — and all in all it was nuitc
a night
Patti Lyndon and Johnny Me ver
are not seeing each other as much
a* they did One reason is that
Patti has been doing the town
with Steve Stanford
Nancy Olson has just returned
from New York when* she visited
her fiance. Ai Lemer.
Gene Grant, brother of At-
torney Arnold Grant, exhibits his
paintings at the Axsoeiata-d Art-
ists Galleries in Beverly Hills for
a month, starting today.
Singer Patty Millbanks liecame
the bride of Julius Gordon in
Chicago last week She guve up .1
big broadcast musical to mar-
ry Gordon, who owns sixty thea-
ters in Texas, and is the head of
the Jefferson Theater chain Pal-
is will live m Beaumont—Texas,
by Moray!* S. Rukoysor . kr3
Business men and other prar
tit loner* of the Amrrtran com
l>etitivc system, which pays off
in high living standards, should
tie on guard lest vote-seeking |io
litleians and pressure group get
them off the beam
The stockholders meeting was
tranarrdied, and later hroodra-d
by radio Exeerpta were recorded
with a narration and commentary
by Cedric Adams, local radio and
newspaper commentator,
.......f.cally, baton, " h"uW
should lie dear In their own
. mr
When Margaret O'Brien's mo-
ther came to see me she said that
Margaret had been very unhappy
about leaving MGM when' she
had grown up.
Now it looks as if voting Mag-
gie may go hack for at least one
minds and should unpait clarity
to employe**, stockholder*, cus-
tomers and others that thev .11 e in
the business of providing welfare,
or wellbeing, on the one hand,
and eeonomle .security, on the
other.
the
the
the most unsjKiiled, was at Ciro’s of course.
wttti Peter I .aw ford—and what Bull Montana'* many friends
a time they had dancing. will lie happy to hear that he has
Quite a night, too, with Dan weathered that heart attack and
Dailey playing the drums and Ma- reports from the French Hospital
rllyn Maxwell, who with her are all giwid.
bridegroom, Andy McIntyre, had The Negro singer, Billy Kek-
been guests at a cocktail party of sline, who signed a contract with
the Daileys, giving with the sing- MGM. has bought a ranch In
mg. Enetno district
The John Moo evelts were on It's wedding bells for Elizabeth
picture I speak of "Violet", the the sidelines (Trains Caldwell Worthington, whose father, A. P.
Whitfield Cook story which the wn- there with Jimmy Van lieu- Worthington, wax F. D, M s Call-
child actress is to do on the ra- sen and at the next table Bob Hut- fnrnin campaign manager. Eliza-
din. Cook is very sold on young ton with Marie Allison. hrth will marry wealthy Sheldon
Margaret, and he would like her Zachary Scott was there with Saekett January .10, and honey- nanelally feasible for small stock
lo do the screen play, so I guess Mrs. Loul* Hayward — and that moon in Mexico and F.uroia- She, holders to croxx the Continent to
It's as go*id as settled. was a surprise, to put it mildly, at one time, played in movie*. attend stockholder*' meetings
Most people know the "Violet” Evelyn Keyes and Charles Feld- That's all today. See you to- Merogru/ing thi* fm t 1 »•
story — about the terrible child man were also at u ringside tn* morrow! ..... '
It Carrie* one step forward s
program for selling the American
system, which this writer pro
jiosed a decade and a half ago.
The original suggestion was
tti.it corporation* streamline then
f111.1i111.il report* to Mock holders.
In opposing socialization under '7mT"
c guise of the Welfare m ,1, lepoit the spearhead of Ini
troc of I «'th the puhlK
the •" the grave .security", proponents 0',"' ',,H ‘‘b.il.ler* meeting give*
of free enterprise *1,,mid leave " ' , ,r' boldefs opportunity
any doubt of their sympathy with ">«bagement enneom-
concepts of welfare Z’ .ZZur *""UnU"* *" “*
security. 1
• • • * • •
Obviously it would not be fj.
In the vast global competition
between concepts of freedom, on
the one band, and regimentation,
"ti the other, corporate executives.
1 trustee f,„ the tlulft ,.f the
IT SAYS HERE
By BOB HOPE
(Copyright, lilt, by Kioq Feature
Syndicate. Inc.)
Santa Anita, you siren of the
two dollar window.
Yea, sir, the most famous
fads of movie stars wen- at throwing themselves off the top.
the opening . . . a-. for instance, The night was .still and tho
Betty Grubb-, who owns horses only Found to be heard was the
... . , , , oeeasiotlnl substitute for string
lo be there. They took away his navy beans and green jicas.
Tests .-.ill )>e made In two
I should ii.iv* u |«-,t«d "tne turns m en ell "f ix Aims u. 1
people, should not Im> Inert and
passive
In an objective and candid
manner, they should make a
Last year, Reese R T.'.vioi "-ntribull.m lo alert the
..... i public a* to tin. authentic nature
Bell, format chairman of General
Mills, Inc., pioneered in <'.-tabllkh-
Ing regional stnekholder meeting-;
at key iMiinta around the country
■ .......*...... ’ non.-, m 1* r*f my ,oc.. ........i , , rvn ». . . imioih ;iS ui the aiitlientle null
'King was wrong with the horse in the United Slates to determine [. nf " ,' ’n 0,1 ( "mpanv of ,,f M ,,f fr,^i„„,
Alien I lad on him I |.ut >2 on whether more general use of '''•»•'•.....»«wra»««ia freedi.in.
his nose and hla hind legs went blm-keyed |N-as ran be made in ' - ,u*nl ,,r essence n( the
ti|i in Ihe air. Army menus.
Mut we did get excited when one The iieas-—which really are
of my iitcks wax in a photo fin- lie.-ms—are prodin-ed prinelpully
| oh Of course, Inter they found in Texas and California. Their
ruum cleaner In the West n|*'ii- out that he was in*t starting. adoption by the Army, therefore,
ed lb. Starting date to an unstss- Hut at the end of the day Santa would be of measurable effect
prcting public *-n (Tuistinas Day Anila surely dbl look pietures<|Ue upon ihe Texas agricultural rcon-
and everybody is still wondering with all those high, towering ,
what tli»- Santa Anita stands f«ir. mountains . . . and thh losers Whether the Army adopU
them, however, wtll depend tip
on whether the men eat them or
leave them noon the plHte I’et
sunnily, we think that if black
eyed Jie;i* are served up propel ty,
well sraxone*! with hawg Imenm
amt brought the essetu-*' of the • ” lesx wtll lie lo default at
annual meeting to shareholders -' time when inaction will play
annmd the country through tel. the hand* of ideologists who
V anal u "I* 'r>'n* •” make <iuasi-slavery
riii* idea was adopted also at glamorous throgh associating their
the last annual meeting of Pills objective with seductive words
»urv Mills. Inr, at Mitine..|M.I|s. sl|,-h „H wr|(lir,. fM„, „H.llruy,
and likes to lalk alHitd them. I
know liecnusc everytlm.1 I call her
up In Mis . li IS
Sinatra came out and imme-
diately Micro was a rush to the
$2 window . . .lilt the horMCH want-
ed to le-t agate t linn.
But when the ra.s-s star tod I
thought it was good tlioj my
horse had post iwltlon right on
tha rail, 'till I lound out he had
®kr •lahrtnatrr Radii iRirrnr
v:.".r'?^S'5£rr^
I Walter iIreen liriitnr and'ri2f "i 12T4,r,*i 1'*'.?!'* Phillips, I’rrsldmt
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Current Comment £*> 5TS
wind whistling through their emp-
ty wallets.
Bt.ACKEYED PEAS
(Fort Worth Star Telegram!
Sometime 111 February the Ar
my ptojroses lo give hlaekeyed
peas a tryout in messes as an
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Southern liean xiioiil.l lie requir- Six monlli* M .TO and )9 00 ner year' r ni H,,n
rd In make a debut under such By Mail 7ft. a month, or V/iO uer
able u> ebu. 9 T
ne-zmpaper
the aMeoiton of the
circumstances.
■n payable to advance.
There months ta.tft.
All mad sulrsiriptiuna
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Greep, J. Walter. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 263, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 11, 1950, newspaper, January 11, 1950; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008042/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.