Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 260, Ed. 1 Friday, May 22, 1953 Page: 1 of 6
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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TUI WEJITHM
Partly cloudy Friday
nlfllit and Saturday
with widely scutercd thunder-
■mover# In north Saturday.
ClladpUfatpr Bmlg HHfrrnr
City E^Stioo
Six Pog#$
VOL. IV, NO. 260
United Pr— (U P.)
GLADEWATER, TEXAS. FRIDAY. MAY 22. 1952
Station KSIJ—1430 On Your Disl
5c PER COPY
President Signs
Giving
States Offshore Lands Title
Lapl Fight
WASHINGTON, May 22. 0Mb-—J ecutive outer, issued last Jan. 18,
declaring the tide lands to be a
federal naval petroleum reserve.
President Eisenhower Friday
signed a bill giving coastal states
EVACUATED.—Residents of the little to wn of Mermentau. La, 40 miles east of Lake
• have been evacuated as the Mermentau River reached Its highest peak since 1931.
Threat le Reeded Lentsiana
NEW ORLEANS, May 22 lUP'- pounds into the coastal town
Contaminated water posed a new Orange.
threat Friday to the flooded south-
western Louisiana city of Lake
Charles as Texans slaved against
time to fortify dikes before a
mighty crest on the Sabine River
At Lake Charles, where the fanned out us much as two miles
i.mipaging Calcasieu River was on each side of its banks
holding Its highest crest in 40 Mayor Price and Sheriff Henry
vears, Mayor Tom Price said the Rent uppealed for more aid from
the la.uuiana National Guard for
BROWNSVILLE. Texas. May 22 I
<UJb -A smuggling ring which
snubbed the amutl time but would
sneak "Communists, criminals and
anyone else with 13,900'’ into the
United State* has bean tiro hen, i
i authorities announced
danger from contaminated water
was the newest problem to weary
residents in that industrial city of
50.000
“A maior problem is now fac-
ing the city," he said "The danger
is from contaminated water, re-
sulting from overflow of sewerage the east, water swirled over
mains." *—• “-------1---------*----*—
Urge Vaccinations
Price urged families tu keep
their children out of the water and
title to offshore lands that may
hold a billion dollar oil treasure.
Mr Eisenhower thus made good
on one of his 1953 campaign prom*
, ises and wi ote a new chap'er in
a bitter legal fight dating from
I 1945.
The House completed congres-
sional action on the controversial
measure last Wednesday by ac-
cepting the Senate’s version. The
Senate had passed the bill the
week before alter an historic five-
week debate.
The new law gives coastal state
title to submerged lands out to
their historic boundaries. These lie
three miles seaward for all state'
except Texas and Western Florida
1 whose boundaries arc recognizee
.is lO'i miles into the Gulf oi i
Mexico.
Truman Vetoed
Formei President Truman twicr
—in l'J4tl and again in 1848—vc- I
toed similai legislation. The Su- [
___________ __________ ____________ preme Court has held, in a st rtcr
evacuation of many others who ,,f decisions, that the federal gov-
were marooned in wafer surround eminent, "not the states. ha- ' ;alk> ends
3. The federal government is de-
clared to hold rights to resource?
in the continental shelf ijeyond the
state bouiidanes The shelf ex-
tend n> far as 50 miles offshore
in some places.
of homes in l-ike Charles as the
i waters from the surging Calcasieu
Mt’NSAN. Max 22 <U*>—The
text of the United Nations' "final"
proposal for ending the long war
prisoner deadlock was believed to
t>e in this Allied truce camp Thurs-
day
Lt Grn. William K Harrison.
| chief UN negotiator, will present
, 'he proposal to the Communist at
Paninunjom next Monday when
’he eight-day recess in the truce
wn,u sism ntAsinas.—siieaxer josepn man in announced mix inc nouse ways ana means
Committee will start hearings June 1 on President Eisenhower's request for a six-month extension
of the excess profits tax Left to right Rep Charles Halleck 'R -Inci.>; Martin, and Rep Daniel Reed
•R.-N Y.\ chauman of the committee
ed homes
In some sections of the cast and
north sides of the city, water was
surging \vaisi deep Two miles to
all
■paramount rights' to the off hurt Harrison was still in Tokvo con-
lands, commonly known as tht 1 ferrjng Alth Gen Maik W Clark
said he and parish health author!
ties were urging vaccinations
Some 35 miles to the southwest
a crest bore down the Sabine Riv-
er in Texas uaon the city of Or-
ange A main levee on the Sabine.
"tidelanris."
Mr Eisenhower's signature was
expected to touch off another le-
gal battle m the courts Even Ire-
fore the measure went to the
White House, three states—Rhod
Island, West Virginia and Arkan-
■ would
M- ana. (Tumbled
was probably it* heed
in*
Whltaher Mid the ring anertaUxed
in smuggling wealthy Europeans
The blunde woman, who used the
name Marla Elena Sanders, was
arrested A|Ail 24 at the Gateway
bridge.
"The woman’s real name is Hel-
en Esparon/.i Trinidad Midngnl
Guevara, from Cost.. Rica," Whit
aker said "She is more or less of
an international adventuress " She
also ia talented in languages, he
said, speaking and writing Eng
lish, Spanish Portuguese and
Italian.
Hr said Mrs Guevara likewise
was well traveled SIw* went
throughout Central and South
America on a Hi dish passpoi t ait
er marrying a British subject, then
illegally crossed into the United
States and traveled throughout
this country during 1948
Whitaker smd she organized her
smuggling ring at Galveston. Tex-
as. arid that ~hei pait was to la-
go-between here at Brownsville
A Mexico City contact man was to
supply Euto|N>an aliens who could
«B-,sr3
1 Daweyvktle to flee
Hundrads of Navy reservists in
southam Texas and I-akc Charles
and Texas National Guardsmen
were called out to help fight the
rampaging Sabine
Txvclve persons have died as the
result of the mighty storm and
floods that have raged along the
Gulf coast for nrarlv n week Eight
died ill Louisiana, one in Texas,
two in Mississippi and one in Ten-
nessee
Two Thnuaand Flea
Damage to property, crops and
livestock was estimated at nearly
$150 million in Louisiana alone,
and an estimated 27 000 persons
have been left homeless
Two thousand families fl«*d their
but the pai kins area for planes at
the big Lake Charles Air Force
Base
The river crested at Lake
Charles at midnight. 5' feet over served notice they
flood stage, but it was expected to Bgh: it in the courts
hold it (or several hours However, x xigresslonal ad-o-
A fresh southerly wind *hat was cates of state ownership, antici-
klcking up high tides in the Gulf patmg a new legal test, wrote a
of Mexico 50 mile* to the south "court-proof" clause into the bill
hamgarort the Dow of water into .Known as the "separability
(Be marshlands where it drains In- i clause, it provide# that even if
to the Gulf • state ownership ia overruled by the
"Naturally, the (Mod situation courts, the coastal states null ha
wilt get worse during that time.'
said forecaster Raul Cooke, "be-
cause as long as the crest holds
the outer edge of the back water
will increase
The weather station was flood -
ed Thursday night the tide swopt
away generators and all but emer-
gence radio oouipment Weather-
men read river gauges by flash-
light during the night
The Sahmc was expected to
crest by 8 a m Saturday at 8 5
feet a foot and a half above most
levees protecting Orange. Tex
There, sailors from the Orange
nax'nl station .mined other workers
in tossing more sandbags on the
levees
the right to develop offshore oil,
gas anf other natural resources
xvlthin state boundaries
Other Provisions
Othei principal provisions of tin-
bill:
1 California, Texas and Louisi
ana aiv to be given revenue from
oil and gas wells already .level- i
oped within their historic boun-
daries. Th.s money, totaling about
$57 million has been held in es
crow |lending final disposition of !
title to the lends.
2 It erases Mi Truman's ex
and negotiators here refused to
comment on terms of the proposal
which is expected to resemble the
Indian plan adopted by the UN
General Assembly in New York
last Decern tier
While the truce delegation a-
.xatted the return Saturday or
Sunday of Harrison, the Allied
ramp watched for developments in
places far from Panmunjom.
The United States. Britain and
other Allied nations involved in
the Korean fighting held consulta-
tions in Washington and New
York on the next move.
In India Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles brought up the truce
crisis in talks with Premier Jawa-
harlal Nehru, whose country
would serve on a five-nation neu-
tral commission accepted by both
sides.
Sabine River Reeds Abent 50
Homes la Orange; Fandhs
ORANGE. Tix.. May 22 <U.R’— Col. Hcrt Vogei. chief U S of Lake Charles. La., to prevent
The Subtile River flooded about Army Engineer for the Southwest. Texans from dynamiting the road.
50 homes m Orange Friday and said at Dallas '.hat the xvatei rush- Only Link to Lake Charles
four to six inches of xvator was mg over U S Highway tk) shoula H,.im.,v an thrnnah
rushing over U. S Highway 80 tend to reliex-e pressure on Orange. n * J it . ()00 ncr, *
uthi/'h ft irnts uri i.mhnnlimnnt W». sii.i that hie clntonxmit -. iv >• > I * ' * " * , _ *
north of the downtown district. It
Sail b Mart I#
Smite's Third (mU
FilihisUr Falls Thraafb
Hmnlom Attacker
Strikes Again
HOUSTON Mav 22 OIF* — Th.
"phantom attacker" of the south
west section of Houston struck
, again Thursday night, in full vicxx
; of two imlico officers, and escaix i
.. „ for the 13th time by running down
At STIN, May 23 •UP' The opening pension rolls to public In- j a atrOTt *„<( )nl0 the dwrk pciwoeb
Tcrub Srnatr a third, and most spoetton two houses.
crucial, filibuster of the session in the Senate Thursday, Moore The attacker’s intended victim
n’t get legal entiy papers Into die ' ‘ Miradav 7(7™ -2L ■ "£ Juu . r TP The attacker , intended victim
U S The ring also handled Mex- l tnd a I «'S “W<^ *" h“ ,f,‘l,bU?T b*V *•"*, wi"' M's* B*‘,,v Lc° -«
leans, he said, but M "didn't want q*! ,.* , * f ^r.3h‘ .Tkmmm^ittll Htiyne w ,of I™1 4 P«W‘c ivlations worn
...... .i ....., .... thn at of a fourth talkathon still Kilmer Corbin of Lubbock, the an who was w .ikina from .. hm
any $5 and $10 stuff
"Two Puerto Ricans in Galves-
ton wcie to supply false Puerto
Rican birth certificates She was
to meet the customers In Matamo
roa, Mexico, comb them thiough
hung over a logjam of major legis-
lation
Sen William Moon* of Bryan,
who staged the 53rd session's sec-
ond filibuster, staged this one. too
His "extended remarks” techni-
Kilnicr Corbin of Lubbock, the
same senators xvho assisted Moore
when he filibustered 27 hours and
10 minutes against the loll road
proposal Max 4-5.
But a ruling by Lt Gov Ben
an whu was walking from a bin
stop two blocks to the home of ■>
friend on Richmond Avenue
Patrolmen M E Clark and .1 II
Bel! watched a blond, curly hane ■
man. about 25. folloxxcd and
ssf"T "i" .................. - HT.u~-wn.v-d Kr$L7^.2r,,AJ5J,t:!
collect $2,01X1 and drive tbem|
Galveston."
He said Mis Guevara earned
foui forgrxl Puerto Hu an Inrth tvi
tlflcates when aiiestixl
An Italian, Miguel C’liluilihtno.
was with Mi • Guevara when she
was arrester!. Whitaker said He
told immigration officers he paid
her $100 cash and gave her a
$1,000 watch as security for the
rest of her $2,000 fee tor smug-
gling turn Into (lie U N
measure ri'gulating the sale of
commercial feed a "had, bad old
bill "
Moore's filibuster, actually,
paced opposition to four major
bills state-wide toll road legisla-
tion giving top priority to a Dallas
Fort Worth protect, revision of the
seldom-used 'gag rule' on
Moore, prohibited thu Bryan sena-
tor's sympathisers from giving
him periodic breathing spells by
"asking" lengthy questions This
herioualx hampered the second
Moore talkathon
Miss Jamison troni behind and
threw her to a sidewalk
She screamed and the attacker
tied down the street with the offi-
cers and two men who ran from
a nearby lounge, in pursuit They
didn't catch him.
Capt Frank Murray of police
homicide said it xvas the 13th time
within a year that women in that
ai-ea have been attacked .nut be
lieved all were by the same "ph.m
"We figure the ling was just i ured as the most erueial one Ih’-
beginnmg to .qierale on a big eanso the U>gislature has votrxt to
Texas election code, a enntrover - ALDRICH. CHURCHILL CONFER
sial labor measure and judicial re- ■ ljONTX)N M;(V _.2 (UP, Amert-
<lls rictmg. ^____ t _________ can Ambassador Wmthrop Ald-
r, ,T ., rich conferrml with Prime Minis-♦ tom" attucker who generally wears ! Communist simply trucks
i nr laiesf enaio laixumoi ng (rr I'hurchtll at No 10 a bright-colored s|*ort shirt Rain limited ground action to
Downing Street Friday, prvsum- | So far, only one has actually patrol engagement, with Ameri-
SEOUL. Max 22 (UP‘—Seven
Superforts bomoed a !H>0-foot-long
stone and earthen reservoir dam
north of Pyongyang Friday in the
Allies concerted effort to wash out
kex roads and bridges
The U-2S a.--auit came as Chin-
ese Communist radio screamed
"atroeitv" over the destruction of
two other dams in the same area
earlier this week.
Peiping radio called the bomb-
ing of "irrigation reservoirs" a
"crime" and “obviously provoca-
tive acts designed to stall the ar-
mistice talks "
The target of the latest Super-
qxrt attack lioli - back waters of
the Hapchang Rixei To the south
of the dam lax kex rail and road
bndgi s along the Sunchon-Pyong
'.tug supply route
Results of the bombing were not
known Immediately.
Red radio broadcasters admitted
wide areas had been flooded fol-
low-tng the first two attacks. Earli-
er the Communists claimed 800
villagers had been drowned ill
flood waters
Ftx'e other Suoerforts hit a 80
acre supply area near Tokehoii
and light bomhers raided a rail-
wax sxx itching y ard at Sitigosan
near the cast const, destroying 28
which forms an embankment He saut that his statement about
around part of the city breaching the highway was made liT'the^ oniv Toad ~Unk~*brtvragn
Ten or 12 families fled from the from a purely technical viewpoint 0ranite ana t-u,, Charles. La. to
flooded homes, but the others were ;ir,d 'bat the Corps of Engineers .u „a,t
staying on. At last report, the wat- bus neither responsibility nor au-. Mo#. ' of Oranue’a rralrfantlsl
er in the flooded northern sector - thority in that matter "So obvi- areag are north of Era highway,
was about three feet deep and was ously." he said. "I have no recoin- Th highway on the
backwater, rather than water from mendatlon to make." side—east or the Sable
a levee break. < Vogel said he talked with, ls built on „
Generally, the situation was be- °,ran*f,, clty„ J*7Lurs*ia> The embankment senree gg a
lieved to have improved Four to j dam, which slows the runoff, so
five thousand men and boys work- c,«™consider cutting the high- the w ater north of the highway ia
ed throughout the night building '•yay because of possible repercus- a|waVs about two fact hlgnar tnan
up a three-mile auxiliary dike. from the Louisiana Highway lt lg south of the highway,
which extends along the eastern Department. Thus, if the highway was cut, it
and northern edges of the city. Ho sald ’ *>’ xvould allow some of the water
Dika is Built Un breaching l S Highway DO on the threatening Orange to escape into
Dike IS Bum up Louisiana side is extremely in- the Louisiana sxvamps. Only emer-
With bulldo7ers and draglines, '■‘'■exi and «>f course is for the rtl.ticy traffic was permitted on the
they built the dike up to a level of eofisiderata n of others highway and it was expected to be
12 feet—txvo-and-a-half feet above At New Orleans, it was rejiorted cut off by noon,
the flood crest which is expected that armed Louisiana state police Labor Ferae Reduced
to arrive at 0 a. ni Saturday were patrolling the highway west While the men and boys
strengthened the levee Thursday
night, women manned canteens at
the foot of the levee to provide
them with hot food and coffee. The
labor force was reduced Friday,
but the new levee was being
strengthened and built up further
with 100.000 sandbags
Official? said the main job noxv
is to hold the emporary levee.
Above Orange, meanwhile, lit-
tle Deweyvllle, Tex., and the sur-
rounding area were four-fifths
Hmwin Kg 3 Views
WASHINGTON. May 22 <U.R it Bertmiu i, the President will
President Eisenhower will go to onsider Big Four parley latei
next month's Bermuda conference n the year, officials said But
determined to harmonize Amen he administration is dead set
ean-British-Freiu-li view* on key .gg.nst risking a meeting in which ^^S*wt5^atgrup to'flVe'fSrt
hr Riuvums oouUi exploit Allied
Iwunitv tiiui confusion
• calc" Whitaker said He said it w^LTi^ w-fin.,, 11V »!>!» discussing arrangements for lxeen railed The rx'st esc.qxed t" cans killing 13 Reds and xxounding
.«al«. Wh.take, sain. if. said it finally adjourn next Wednesday,^ ^ Thlw loM(t.r. frightening the man away with two near Jackson Heights in the
would smuggle Communists, crimi-
nals or anyone else who could af-
ford the 98,000 price tag.
and time was running out.
FORT WORTH. Tex.. May 22
(U.kr Livestock
Cattle 900 Slow, weak, some
cows lower; mostly a cow run,
few head utility to good slaughter
yearlings, 13-31; utility cows,
11.50-13; rannee* and cutlers. M il;
Moore promiaed Thursday night T
after, by a 17 to II vote, the Sen- j
ate approved the conference com-
mittee report creating the state-1
wide toll road authority that, "if
' 1 have the chance. I'll probably ,
| make same extend»>d remarks to
I morrow "
xx orld issues before agreeing to
Big Four meeting with Russia. a<i-
inimstration officials said Friday
The word was that Mi Eisen-
hower's primary purpose in get
ting together with Bn'ish .ini'
French leaders was to put a quick
-top to recent Trans-Atlantic nann
calling and huge unity where dan
gerniis -phis are dexoti'ping
It Western unity can tie achix'Xt a
W«ldon Musicians
Entertain Rotary
The Weldon High School Chou
under the direction of Mt* F F
Green, xx.is presented at the Ro-
tary y'lub nnvttng yestemay bx
Garth Cochran, manage' of M>
Williams Furniture Store
Featured sxxloist on the program
was Jimmy Sutphom and the tenoi
xx as Dari Dedman
The Kotarums heard an an-
nouncement to the effect that
Gladexvatcr xx'i'l attempt to oi.'.in- ;he l.dt«. p..c June , ixxx.n
ize a civil defense program, rtn -inco ho ha> sjv - a igagcmenU.
purposx' of the organization will m the Mi al ■ \3 < >t an N.'xx York
be txi serve in case of emergencies • ung Jt It
The Dewejrville levee gave w»y
Cautious Stand to the Sabine about 2 a. m. Thun-
The administration's cautious day. thwarting a desperate battle
-land against advance commit- to save the town, iiesieged with an
•it' tm a meeting with the Rus earlier Sabiqe flood about two
i.o - jibed xvith views of key weeks ago.
umber' »<( Congivs- They ap- The ri\*er xv is measured at 19.97
!a...a-d the :oea of Big Three feet there early Friday and dts-
.d o is starter bu» warned a,ter workers it Deweyvllle said
iganisi „ x iug the Russians a the water still was rising. It was
eady i:.,dc opportunity to widen expected to hit 20 feet and begin
n -tm. outerc.ee* between receding
X\ gto l.i'iiiioi; .ilia P.i. s I ----
Thursday'* sadden fail of the.
Fix ch gov ci niiHMt headvxt by
i’n riloi Rene Mayer xast a tem-
Miiaiy cloud ovei the Big Three
."»!< rcticc plans which laid been
aniHHPued less than tx'ui hours
oefere.
Am. i.o: otlnais -..l.i sp.nie-
xxoik. on conun.a’c preparations.:
including ‘.......1 ‘
Fort Worth
FORT WORTH. May 22 lUM—
\ Fort Worth woman said Frtdxy
three bandits torced their way
u itc. uiumubtx'dly xxill intxt her home Thursday night and
>e xnlaycl until the* French gov
in mi nt gets reorganized again
.oi tlm 18th time since xlic end oi
Wo a W ii 1 M E.M'nhowoT
count not :lx to Betinucta until
The House, meanwhile, worked
feverishly toward the Wednesday
deadline The lawmakers Thurs-
day approved two more constitu-
tional amendments, providing for
soldier vote and an increase in the
fund from which pensions and
such as a storm, flood, fire an-
other instances when such a group
is needed
Visitors at the meeting were El
mcr Phillips of Kilgore and l.axx
ranee Birdsong and son of Long
viexx
Point* in Squabble
OtV eason toi the moderate
C S reaction to the French x.itn
>c.ipcd with "more than 938,1
m jewelry" alter terrorizing her
out hoi three daughters and three
icietibor children.
Police <aid Mrs Gtme Tyson
May related that her husband—a
ormer used cat dealer—was un-
uiployt'd at present and was In
West Texas on a business trip
jxhen three men apiwared at her
mine about 8 p.m.
Her oldest daughter. Ruby Jean,
net ci ims - th.it the most heat has 18. answered the doorbell and
been goncratexi recently m Ainei
Ix'iin-Bitush relations over the
Korean xx.ir, tin pn -ivit of Reu
9^ tew eutst.fr that range; bolt*, .qhcr urtfarc payment* are mode
A proposed constitutional
amendment by Rep. Floyd Brad
shaxv of Wealhernird extending ;
voting privileges to members of ■
the regular armed forex*? who ful-
fill civilian residence requirements 1
and obtain a poll tax received 133
to ii approval by the llouae.
10-14; atnellris scarce.
Calves 150 Weak, conxmerrtal
and goad slaughter calves. 14 21.
rhflke nearer; cull to utility. 10-
II: atneBgin* scarce.
Hogs tti. Butchers steady; sows
aearee; choice 2581b*. 24.50. light
er weights absent, lew medium to
BHtea No. 3a. 23.50 ___
I STJ2!%™ 12! The*tnrar"chamber also ap
to 13; Ort 33 75. even lo down 2. proved, 103 to 13,' a proposed
New orlean? Julv 33 97. down I anwmtntgnt tA Men Doyle Willi*
11; <Vi 33 74. up 2 of Fort W«»rlh to mereaiu' the fund |
1904 Fwtnraa from which old age assistance, ant
New York Mny 33 78, down 4; to nreriv blind .md .ud to depend
down 2. j wnl childun me paid from $.ia
mi? May 33 77. down million to‘*42 million a vear The
I; July 33.40, down 2. 1 measure also x an tes a provision
fount! a tall, husky' man in kraan
work uniform Two other man
xx eio behind him, she said.
'hum g, tung into ‘he United N.< They forced their way InaMM
Man to OslaQig uuil. tot atti i i N Mean ti.u xiicn* they produced pistota, the
r’”" eeirw Chuichill's out.-i'okin uil. i* st it laughter said.
gfllg Kilted HlNbond in eailj m.vtmg XXIill the Rus Mr* Mny sant her two other
’ in* Fortnei Primx* Mimstei laughter#, Penny, 13, and April. Ox
HOUSTON. Mav 22 .police xix...... Af.Lv U. it the tXBTV. •«<! »h?f» **».gMw i*»|Wa?i fOWW-
1 Fridav planned to ivI.mm* 28 wai xxith Hi' chuiges that *oim in from a backyard swimming
vear-old heusewils* who si tot and Anicm-ns didn't wan* i truce n* ****'l *l*out Ihl? time The hOMlHa
. killed Iwi husband at their apura
ment Thuisday night appaivntlv
l by mistake.
Mrs Mary Maigmvt Bakei sanl
she xx as in the kitchen <*t then
K.ac.. Tins prompted fiery anti denied them all into a
Hi dish spacvlU'K and statements in and organ ransacking the
C'lgi
Bx taking the initiative In pro
i>o>mg a Big Three iin'eting, Mi
Mrs May said the
more than 93S.gg0 in
neluding *everal diamond
inti a wrist watch with a
inoiid band They also
cash from her, she said.
July 30.40) dn
New Orlean
i.—RoK Fresntent Hyngman Rhee pins high Korean military medal on C.qn ,lx>seph
Mev'otMwIi J*., of Apple Valley, Calif. ns Capt M amiel J Fernand.-/ of Miami. Fla., waits to be
similarly ileeornted McConnell, with a score of 18 MiG’s to his civxlit. is the world's leading jet ace
and Fernandez n a close second with 14 MiG’s downet!
apartment xvlien h c i- luisband. '• ** olu xx a. h..,. !■ taken the
Charles M Baker. 28. ii xx tdei 'team out of the Tiaus-Atlautk
handed hx*i a 33 calUt-r pistol and bickering, and 2' scutiiexl Church
said it wasn’t l.Miied df* *a-nit gly hell l*ent drive foi -------,
She MM Iwr wnehand had been > qtmk .r«*«*img xvith the Rus ’Into tne bathuanu and
"axtlliK cute" and >-ho play fully *iati« lime nas urw gauosu to ibc *kw** a Un llwy found it
t.mk the “unloaded" gun fiixm him R*i*si..n ?ine«iitx it the K<> not i«r l.Kkni from the m
and (Willed tin* trigger A bullet icon note I .Iks and d a Big Four Mi* May said
'truck non m the ch.*»i .o.d b. dcputl. rn-vtmg n t.omlon Mny open alter heggmg the
xx..* xlesti when police rortx.d on an Auutnau ticaty .(I.ive off.
Thcx left after forcing Use gram
mSumm
■
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Belk, Jeanne. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 260, Ed. 1 Friday, May 22, 1953, newspaper, May 22, 1953; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008673/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.