Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 113, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 2, 1951 Page: 1 of 10
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IS (iloimatpr latlu Mirror
Partly cloudy
City Edition
Tan pages
Cease-Fire Showdown Due
R. P. HARGIS, pimictcrit »f Premier Oil Refining com pony of Texa*. turns the v*lw placing in
operation f’lvmicr'n new $790,000 platforming unit Itwaled nt Ft. Worth. Standing l*aik of other
control valve i* I. G Dufllho, general superintendent of refhiinjt operations Watching ‘left to right'
are .1 E Uulloek, I. H ('ontielley. N Y .lone , un«l Elmer Smith, Premier refinery superintendents
of liuirit. Ft Worth, Aip. and Longview, respectively. All Three ixtints will receive plntformeil gas-
oline from this unit. _
Premier Is Making
New Type Gasoline with Politics
Platformer) gasoline is here, mi motorists about plntformeil ttuso
staterl It P Hargis, piesutenl oi Ion. the new t>|>•• motor fuel, pro-
I’reimci t>'l Refining company oi dued throm ii a unique priKvss
Texas Weilm**ilay when discus mu that u.« a platinum catalyst Plat
WASHINGTON. Aug.
President Truman .aid
2
today
TEHRAN, Iran, Aug. 2. <U.*>—
Iranian general staff sources said
today an Iranian Irontier post hail
fired Tuesday on a 700-ton Soviet
naval vessel which entered Iranian
waters.
The Iranian sources said the
frontier post fired machine guns
at the Russian vessel after the,
Soviets threw searchlight* on the
post.
The sources said the vessel re- j
tired after 30 minutes fire from 5
the Iranian post. They did not say !
whether the Russians returned the
fire.
The Iranians said the craft en-
ti rod Iranian waters in the Cas-
pian Sea near Astara.
— Then' was no immediate expla-
nation foi the Soviet ship’s alleged
actions.
The Astura garrison commander
protested that >h* Soviet ship had
trained its searchlight* on on Iran-
ian post. Meanwhile Theran police
onnounce'd a ban on all demonstra-
tions in the city’s parliament
square, where a number of clashes
have oocured during recent dem-
oastrntions.
Last month unermfirmed rumors
in Tehran said Soviet troops were
being massed oil the Soviet border
Infantrymen
Advance Mere
Than Three Miles
Eighteenth Session Is
Set For 9 p.m. Today
A LONDON paper reports that
Soviet Marshal Goorgi K. Zhu-
kov 'abovei has been appointed
commander of alt Soviet satellite
forces in central and eastern
Europe in what may be an at-
tempt to set up a counter-part of
the North Atlantic Treaty organ-
ization. ZMRknv was in charge of
defense of Moscow in World War
II. later commanded all Soviet
ground forces. 'International'
The "vest pocket" offensive, i
aimed toward the Communist
stronghold of Kumsong, 29 miles
north of the 38th parallel, wa>
made against only scattered resis-
tance.
Patrols ahead of the main allied
forces were reported engaged in
small-scale but brisk fighting at
close quarters last evening.
The main force* gained 3.000
to 5,000 yards in their attack
toward the anchor town of the
Rod lino on tho central front.
Patrols thrust farther and
threw back enemy patrols in
brief platoon-sited skirmishes.
The attuck, a reminder to the
UNITKD NATIONS ADVANCE BASE BELOW KAE-
SONG. Korea, Friday. Aug. 3 (UP)—The cease-lire talks in
8TH ARMY HEADQE ARI ERS, headed for an imminent showdown today.
!Sr&.^^rvLrtS£ The showdown may ~mo...ho l«<h cae-flr. *».on
ETXf SK.-StrSJffE v!oc“ Adm C Turner uSSd Nation. nMotiator.
rugged central front Thursday in tolf) lhf> Communists flatlv at Thursday’s session that he
their biggest push since the toe- ( , accopt a truce une which left the Allied forces
• mg peace talk: started Jul> 10----------————+open to a Red double-cross
offensive. ^
I Chief Communist negotiator
Gen. Nam II said he would not
accept the present front as the
truce line as the United Nations
demand.
At Thursday’s meeting Nam II
j asked Joy a question which im-
i plied he 'thought the United Nn-
WASHINGTON. Aug 2. <U.P>— tjons might make a sneak attack.
President Truman expressed re- -The Unite! Nations command
Regret Expressed
On Sen. CennaHy's
Views Fer Aid
enti of the foreign aid program.
Connally, the outspoken Texas
Democrat who heads the senate
foreign relations committee, re-
Reds of the potential striking potv- tellt|v took out after the economic
er of Gen. Matthew B. RidgwayY cooperation administration on the
8th army, was made at a point sut>jt,ct.
about 65 miles northeast of Kae-1
song, where cease-fire talks arc
deadlocked.
grot today that Sen. Tom Connally has no intention of violating anv
-aw lit to the Fat eastern military armistice agreed upon,’’
Joy said and added bluntly:
"Rut neither will the United
Nations command place itself in
sn indefensible position in tbo
•Tint of sn srmistieo Tiolatien
by tho othor tido."
The Chinese Communist Peiping
Connallv told ECA Administra- ra<q0 reported that Nam II said
j tor William C. Foster in an open in ,urn
ECA was planning
Texas.
Dm mg part several month.
Promt* i has town telling Texas
Eight File For
Gossett's Post
WICHITA FALLS. Aug 2 <U« -
The speruti I3th district emigre*-
Tobacco Trade
Asks No Raise
On Smokos Tax
tic
••• ■■ iik • ;< • ;>.lit.t n
Ei-ciilniw • i .i.-Mgiimii rt in Eu- .....H.........
the opriritinn nt I’uinn: a " •Ini' >' ben j ■ i«>| «4-i 1 \ l"|‘< wnui'l Intel feu- .1 tie tciaial j 7i hind from Astiirii
platforming * .,• Ft W no ii,' 'it.iiii.t-i« t„ • < i ...... 'uliti. w.u.t- >" ' nb i politi. in ’• ,\t tl»*.t time rumors .dso said
first of it km< i to t* i I, '« !.•'•••" to« l • itii -ill tti in ■ - ■ ■ * * rii, [■!,-no nt ’."lii I;. i.• w • «"t.- Soviet warship was in the Cas-
ino I opei.'teo hi 'in Slat* "I ihaiiitei ta "I t"i qouliti *»••• '.-ron< • Mi i''s|Mtnsc to ail' •lions pi..n Sea off the poll.
■ leu . "In .....i\.nt.m«.- "t Ingt: Unit lie thought Et'-enhowei i- do- Meanwlule, the 5,450 toll Bluish
•!' ..• i a ,i„- "'"I a.....i.tii * Eut") « Ci tn-, t Euryalus staged "niocu-
' .••• ...... ,.t (a 'ton at • . .mil...; ct .a •'! s' t. in -Ii v t - ' in the Persian f III If all* t
t i ■■ tan. m, • I. i, •- t- Ain i •■n'.i.ui ti.it" notifying the Iranian government
it. tone, n. t «., , iat i" till- job ... ,c in I • .11 • It '.votil'l do so
...............a -Ii.ls a.i . t "A A !■■),.ii'.i A a! •' •• k i ii • -s' bow N'.itiomil Front Depute Abol
. .|.. , I’ i ... i :m,r I'-iii,. iic i.,ng it .soldi is ......... .u » I"' Hu- Hussen Haenzadeh censured Bu-
ll Ft Worth. Maud. Art* and generil to remain in Europe|
I Longview with platformed gas" , ______ HI .. ________________ ____________________„__— H _
Him- fur delivery to ail Pm met porter apparently was referring to mosphere" necessary for settle- Red "iron triangle" Vo the south- At his news conference. Presi-
de.ilcrr and to Inrooo station* who 195* and that he did not think ment of the Anglo-Iranian oil dis- ,r,Jl nn- ,‘rKl ' east. dent Truman was asked what be
. will have it in their pumps on Elsenhower’s duties would Intel- pute. their product might ruin them. y^n army communique re- thought oi Connally’s stand that
sHmaJ cle* non next month will ^uau„t j j„ cuiouirnting on this fere with possibilities in 1952 if The deputy hinted before the Growers, dealers and the cigar little more than patrol | ECA should be lass active in the
be a seven man-one woman at- entirely new gasoline. Mr Hargis the general happened to be in that Caspian Sen incident was disclosed makers appeared before the senate acthin along tW>o#T of the 135-1 Far Ecast.
‘*'r- *nt|iha*ized that the pLatlornung frame of mind. that such British “iftirplays” might finance committee to protest a —*•- —------* -~*
The rnginight deadline 1 u' ' Inetaliartme mark* ah tmt*ornmf He added, that he thought Risen- encourage the Soviets to do like- treasury suggestion for tax hikes
filings pawed without additional <tcp ,n premier's program of ex-1 howvr. under any condition, would wise. of three cents on a trackage of
put duty to his country first. He pointed out "Russia is much cigarettes and about a penny on
The president also said he is more powerful than Britain and a dime cigar. The house has appro-
still looking into the repotted eon- has extensive borders with Iran.” vcni about a cent more "ii a track-
net ion Im-i ween Denroeratic N..t- The soviet incident allegedly ag,. of cigarets.
tonal Chairman William M Boyle oecured off Astara which is on the j Co„ Lamioi of Greenville. sy united Pittas
l.iiui an RFC loan 1" the Atnern .in western side of the land-locked y; (- who said he raises cigarct
C i-pian Sea. ' ...
•The United Nations represen-
auiocKco. i ht..,r.na that EC
ri»ri.‘'»,.i.......-...........r........-s-v
objective attack” aimed mainly at “J**^** bUKmesr Hc !ihigUd out the ‘‘ary demarcation !. n e cr.rssing
a key hill position south-aouthoost f d ' th $n,500,000.00*1 arms det'ply over the 38th parallrl ui\ -
of Kumsong. .nU ccoiiomic aid program to sup- ln« ;,s rcaM,n ,hl‘ construction of
UN infantrymen jumped off be- * , , h ca^l(1 -wobbling" defense positions. Thi- insistence,
for. dawn, favored by clearing *»'**«'™ Asia' Connallv sotc. however, has no basis and
rsuj'sss ““ISSHSSS
3^3is^5sW'«ss, Jiy-rJSrjM ■
WASHINGTON. Aug. 2. S‘h i lo^U^clatau that ihc’^vern-
_________________ ____________ The tobacco trade appealed to con- Kumsong has become the prin- ment would let Asia go in favor
-------- --------- . — , I tain s "display of force” and said gress today not to raise the tax on | ^pai enemy supply and reinforce- og building up Europe s resistance
Mi Truman at first said Ihc re- |jt jeopardized the "favorable at- sm„iUs, cigar makers said, in fact, mint base "since collapse of the old to Communism.
At Thursday’s session, how-
ever. Nam 11 teemed stalling for
time. There wee some feeling in
United N a 11 e n s
here that he had asked for.
waa awaiting, no
from tbo North Korean and Chi-
in
entrlee for the top-candidatr-tuke
ail voting on Sept 8 to plrk a „|n ,l(pinioti to expending our
» W, u'T e'li ** refining facilities as required by
(tosiett of w:ohita Pans an ,,ver broedetung ojieration in
Crnaaett loft conanoe Aug. 1 to (HJ, marketing areas. Premier re-
become acnernl attorney in Texas fineries are being constantly mo»l|
for Southweftom B*'ll TcIcphnuiH
Isolated Sections
Receive Rainfall
napngi.
Of the < ight candid.de*. <Hif
weurs the R< publican hdx'l—Joe
Jackson, oil opi'iiitor. Wiciilta
Fall* GOI* Itad.'i in the Drnai-
crxtic-iioiumated North Texas dis-
tnet hotie that the sever.-way split
of Ih-mtMi at tiallot* will vault
their man into naigtes
ft was such
•rnized througli the employment Lithofold Coip. of St Louts, H«
,r the very latest prnomi ing aaW h«'would be willing to dlseuss
teeh-
thc results of this investigation at
1 Inter date.
Asked whether he favored a
enate investliatlon of th«- case.
Mr .......... ................ply "»■
,x|uipnient ..nd refining
niqtie. Mi Haigit .-aid.
Pr*‘ttuer i* tixlay «aie of *lu-
leading independent refiners in
the Denux'i dlf vote split I* ways
thin i« lying integrated as tat as
ItoMSlblf mi ; - lo gt\e the motoring
public every adxantage of coo-
- ituation With „.)|tlv. u<^ ............
this wa- up to the senate.
Mi Trumans discussion "f
Fechteler Plans
No Top Changos
NORFOLK, Va.. Aug. 2 (U.R>-
The deadlock is in its eighth
Tlie president answered simply day. The United Nation* team to-
that he is verv sorry Connally took ststs on a truce line along the
that position present front where it has excel-
Connaliy’s outburst came after lent defense
hi was miffed over .1 scrap with The Reds demand the line on
tho senate armed services commit- the parallel where the United
tee whicti insisted upon sitting in yjations forces would be wide open
the foreign commit- to nttnck in territory which of*
IHIHHPHIPaPHIHHHU^Mgcuttorcd showers gave isolateii tee in considering tiie foreign aid (0r, no aooci defensive terrain,
tobacco, testified—while puffing a sections of Texas some relief Irom program. Connally was against the ^ apjK,arPtj hare that what waa
cigar—that an increase would be the heat in the past 24 hours with idea but lost. becoming a crisis must break soon,
•terrific discrimination against one Brownsville reporting the heaviest Meanwhile republican* wJ?r‘ There might be a sudden and un-
commnditv that already carries a precipitation of LSI inches. All niwnding an evra dw^r ^sh m l>xpocte<i propo(,ai which would
monstrous livid of taxation. The t,ut 04 inch oi Brownsville s rain foreign aid funnds than ttu f«ou. compromise There might
tax on a package of cigarets now fell between 4 and 6:30 u.ni. today OOO.DOO' M' proposedbi Charma n J where both sides could
»"*«*" >' i! James P Richard. «D„ Er^offtto m,tnv their positions. There might
is seven cents.
Edward J. Regensburg, repres- change in the weather picture house foreign affairs committee
^\ew,s:rfiiis Mnysttoff
U providing Texa- -t.,t.*m^» hyjle..uirt M Bwtwh. JlS War II and a raise in taxes might in temperature with widely seat- Atomje Exp|ogjon
be a Itreakdown followed by big
scale fighting.
aa££’w?.s 551SS-3 .......
Ouill. Ion** Republican in that
>.|nhuiI election, lost his seat later
in a regular eh'< tiou when la
faee<l imiI.v • t»e Democratic randi-
itate. Walter Rogers, the pgrtv -
official nominee.
i n-'erotic* • ince his nomination, ( mi nts:
-Mrs. Heded Massing.
l*e*. its io«|M-nsibility as .< loud- the most mnimmcm cruxuor sltux*
f om* ' 'it *' It* \l*'t a |'i \' * cm* «■! Tned" * with ''ivtiy tip* llermit pn lehetl the said he considered the policies Security
tin 'sin.." of 1 .vie .'ffati ,nd no "< in Europ* in the .............. down by the late Adm. For- the ftmttir wife of Communist of
takes an active interest in them ag>
Ml ilaigt* further stated that
I’remiei s rtegrity o oi pat.
mount ...................... OUfo Mfa Co Is
,, moullt '! I .... , .....mi l Hi II,c* a II cmieaioi V-TISCO IWg. •»
to ciaitinunlti merit the cmfldence QA| J TA ^nrrott
c\ ideui-ed li.i the putilic during 3010 IO wOiiwii
next
will be W D Me Far lane
Oruham. wtm held the emigres
siiiiihI job three lei ins until t,i»s
sett beul him In 193K. Frank Ik.ml
and Wallet Jenkins, l«»tb "I
Wichita Kills State Hep Doug
Crouch "t Denton. State Sen
Wayne Wagtmwller of Etvnehurg:
Mis IVHth Wilmana, Jack counts
rancher, anil James A Beniamin.
H2 year-old Benjamin attorney
Liens Hear Safety
Talk Wednesday Noon
J U. Packer of Tyler, an etn
ployor of the Humble Oil and
tered thtmderfhowers expected.
■"S Tto’XSrS WASHINGTON. Au,. - m-
at Lubbock .11 at Beaumont: .13 Iniotmed quarter* believed today
at Victoria .md lesser amounts at that the navy is on-paring to set
Big Spring. Galveston. Midland, "ft history’s first deop underwater
Wink and Mineral Well*. atomic explosion.
Some light shower* fell late The purpose would be to cx-
111 Dallas county but plote the poasibility of twins
none at the Love Field airport atomic depth charges against Rim-
sia’s huge Mtbmarine fleet in event
de- of war. and to find out if Ameri-
U. S. Refuses
Russia Thirteen
German Vessels
WASHINGTON. Aug. 2.
The United State* announced to-
day that it will refuse to hand
Premiei’» twenty years oi updat-
ing in TcXa*
Truman To Spaak At
Jap Psaca Parlay
WASHINGTON, Aug 2 «UP>
President Truman announced to-
day that he definitely Plans to ud-
rest P Sherman "sound for nu- ftciul Gerhart Eisler, told the sen-
tioiuil secimty ” * ate internal security committee she
Adm Lynde D. McCormick, recruited Nm l Field and Law mice veB«el ljav
forme 1 vice chlet of naval op- Duggan, b<ith formerly with the • ^ ^ ^
nations, may be nameii supreme state department, into a Soviet wea(lu‘,. obsVrviit'ion "station
commander oi the Atlantic Pact espionage ring in the 1030'*. Dug- rlM„. points reported 101 ... .............. .........
naval forces, he said. Fechteler gam is dead; Field has disappear- yesterday Tht-v were Ptc- ca's newest submarine* and ship* over to Russia 13 small German
himselt was to have been com- ed In-hind the iron curtain. *dj(| t'otu'la Ft Worth and Min- would stand up against »uch a vessels claimed by the Soviet
mander of thi* force until he was Judges—An airing of Son. Paul q,,, |ou w-eapon. Union.
mimed to xuccixxt Sherman. H. Douglas* objections to Presi- th| morning of «3 degt *e* The tests also would fill one of \ p|an to split up the Nazi fleet
...............Slier man’s leadership of the dent Truman’s appointees to di»- _ the two big gaps in basic scicntif- which was drafted by U. S.. Rus-
,,l Gieggton to the Garrett Oil ‘ navy was "niperlutive.' Fechteler trict judgeships In Illinois was de- mqrE POLIO CASES ic knowledge about atomic ex- stall and British shipping experts
T.*ni company "f Houston l"l*t reporters Hu said he is Uyed by a senate judiciary sub- WASHINGTON. Aug. 2 »UP‘— plosions. A-bomb* have been test- ivccmber. 1947. called for
The cunsiiieration was "some- humble, and "fully aware of my committee Ikiuglns is objecting ^he U S Public Health Service ed in the air many times and once transfer of the vessels to Russia,
thing "V. 1 S' 090.000 Kfcat re*|torsibillty. to two of the appointment* but the ’ snjd todav ggs nvw c,„..s t.i —at Bikini in 1946—m shallow This government, in a note to
The Ols, firm, operated l»y The navvY job "cannot Ik- per- Nubeninmittec reported it has a .johoniveliti* were reported in the water. But so far a* 1* known, no Russia, said it ha- decided against
Tom Cook, during the past tour formed without an adequate air ri.(|ucst fora hearing on opposition iu,thm ’ last week, an increase of atomic explosion* over have beer | carrying out the proposal. Since it
LONGVIEW. Aug 2 Spl.' -Of-
ficials h«\ • announced the sale of
the Olsco Mamituctuilng company
26 per
week.
ve ,1 . ha-, u.anufiictuml a gas lift arm," he said. He added that tll the third hi ., Chicago citizen,
tool devel< o<- 1 and patented by President Truman agreed with xhe heiiring will start tomorrow,
di' - the opening ol the Japanese ,illlvU (),| fixtl company him. Tlie appointment ol Vue- picture- Hep. W Sterling Cole
•ace treaty conference in San Hugh Garrett of Houston is head Adm. Donald B. Duncan, “the ,« . NY' asked the pentagon to
of Hie latte Him which has mar- nai.v’s ton aviator." as deputy dr.iw (um pu-tun-—.1 picture, CALLED MEETING
geted Ob' '* entire output chiel ot iijival^jui opeiations, em- ,„,j it rS|int -of a 53-page bill to
cent over the preceding -ct off in deep water or undet Wa* drafteii by shipping experts.
ground.
Francisco on Sept 4
He said the trip prwhidc*
Mefiiiing company mid assistant whistle stop lour of the eountry \ new ompany has tn'eii form- pluisizwi Mr. Trumans views,
division industrial relations man- m the early tall as tar as he can Wdh U Mik ictiuning a ixution said.
AT AUSTIN WEDNESDAY
alter, spoke on highway safety at 1 tell at this time,
u meeting l the Lions dub W>-d- The chief executive told hl-
nesdnv noon in the Community „ews conference he plans to fly
hiiilding. to Sun Fia.icisin. possibly leaving
Parker presented driving vot'o' ,,i„. day and n-tuming tlie next
tions peettliat to the East Texa*. ............. - ...................-
afeu Ol the Texa* Highway Ik" j
I Hutment and gave a report on
accident* i.nd their causes with
facts based on figures compiled by
Cupt. Guy Smith ol Tyler, who is
Iteiul of this district of the high
way tHTrol
Guests were Danny Sleukor ol
Tyler and J O. 8i-k of (, lade - .
wider Highway Palrolmun Jimmy
O Nall wi>s welcomed us a new
momlM’i.
Ias>n Waggoner will In* in 1
or tlie stock and becoming a metn-
Im-i of the board ol directors.
Chairman of Ihc board is John
M Stephens, president of the
Peoples National Hank of Tyler.
reorganize the military reserves,
lie s..id it is too complicated to un-
derstand. The defense department
said it can and will furnish the
picture.
Secrets—Rep. Charles B. Brown-
son <R. Ind.' complained that th*
No set tuu* injuries were sus- military has a tendency to "over-
i tamed early this morning at 4:05 information which really
‘ a.m. when a 1948 Ford convertible |an’t secret He raised the objection
No Sarious Injury
Rasults From Wrack
Local Men Attend
Hi-Y Youth Meet
and a 1941 Chevrolet coach col ltd wm.„ .g, ,,miy colonel urgixi that Hicnaro ft. tterost was mstaueo "
,d two and three-tenths miles west , security pnivi»ion
•he -aid. the plan i- not bltld-
1., on tho U S govetnment.
The contentior. "f the Soviet
embassv that the Soviet govern-
j ment is 'legaliv entitl'd’ or 'ha*
'a legal light : > the vessels is
therefore erroneous." the note
added.
flic Soviet embassv sent the
United States .1 note oil March 20
pressing for .1 dvot-ion on the
t!'4't plan. Its note commented sat-
cast lea 11> that .1 three-vear pet-
tod appears mure than sufficient
Richard A. Herbst was installed representative from Austin, at tilt for the examination and apporval.”
'■ ’ The 13 ships represent wily
Herbst Installed As
VFW Commander
isurtzz'ixrzzz
Guy Cecil Elam Jr., a soldier at ment activities abroad
Donaldson Air Force Base, Crecn-
l ville, S. C.; was going cast and
1 apparently went to sleep and side-
swiped the Chevrolet, according to j
Jimmy O.
conduct'd by J. O. Lonon, ticid er; Wiles Wtnegar. junior vicu
■ eommuiidci: Julius Mor*e. quar-
, . Highway Patrolman ..........
^PIPHilPIHNMBaWa^*AU.STIN. Aug. 3 Mark Day of ns teen agers study •ov.unnici i.il N (ll 0nwr th,. Chevrolet
charge of next week's meeting A ! Gladewaler, member of the state- theories and mechanic- and . Carl Johnston Williamson of llol-
board ol dnotoi meeting will y vooth and xovemmeiil ^t up a inock i.oscimnent |(.N c.rove. Ark.
)H> held Tuesday, Aug 7. at 7 3" ; « 1 J at ' 'a;"t i ni,vting m ,ht* *,1,u* Nummeea for Williamson's left arm waa aUght-
B^&the r.imnuuntv building ' “ ’ .att^ ' ......... ^ state officials arc made at four lv m,uml. He was admitted to a
",f"T "f .'h . K, Vl’o Sh< > s,’,Mons ,m’M *" Mmeola hospital for treatment
" ..." x?' i ; | various parts of the state m ate I F.lnm wa* fined for driving on
m m “ were ‘Vtolier and early Novemla-r Ucc h;m,, >uu. of ,hc rom, ,,,
U ! !. lu ll K,n, W I •"'■ held in Austin on ‘he | the JP court at Big Sandy.
nn sent 1111 hiding Di . t. opening dav of the legishdutxv j Donald R Thompson, owner of
'linn 1M,-V ,lr Ik'legi tes prepare hills which arc 1 th,. Ford convertible, was a pass-
Groundwork plans were laid for introduc'd in the mock house 1 engrr In the ear with Elam. He is
the fifth annual youth legislature j senate and pushed through reg ,,|so st.ition.nl at Greenville, S C
to Ik' held Ik'c. 14*16 m Austin u|ar legislative procwlure, j ----- — -......— ......... -
for HI V and Tri Hi Y club rep-) ciov Allan Shiver* and other ! SUICIDE VICTIM
resentaltves of T« xas sch'Ntls The Ntnte officials pmticipote in the
vouth and governnn til progr.im 1- tim e d.n piojed. which will In'
sponsored In the YMl’A Sbcp ,tt, t,de«l by approMinateli 250
|perd is serving as chaiimnn of the <tn,t,.nts
Don Newton of Dallas, a rep-
resent.di\ c ol til'1 Si "dli w I \rea
council ••( the YMt \ 1 1 st' • I with
p.tn. in
Report Predicts Huks
To Attompt Overthrow
WASHINGTON, Aug 2 <U.Ft
Communist Htik gtterrtllas will try
to overthrow Hie Philippine gov-
ermiH'nt lietweefi Novinlwr and
next Mav by "f"H'c. araon and
murder,” Hie stale department re.
I sir ted today. _
In a spec »I pamphlet on Philip-
pine uflgirs, the ih'pai tnient’* of
flee of iiulillc affair* warned Hud
the Red movement and its threat rtrtewldr eommlttra for the si-c-
0 llw island .. public should not suo^ssive year
lw» underestimated It said mill- Thi' moth legislature Is a lab
lo< |||H MlTxllllHMO' ■* I * ------------------ |------
tar.v aclloii might be ni'—mary ' oratory in government where Tex-1 the Wednesday meeting
Naw Jet Plane Will
Cost 21 Million
WASHINGTON Aug 2 'U.P'
The .111 to: 11 s.inl tixlu' the tns!
tom rinxtc1- e! .1 new eight let
mtcrcohtnii et.il plane capable el
Liropi'ing .1 iHiuib load from
above 30.000 tect will cost more
than 521,000.000 each.
The iKimiHi 1- the It 52 The
ail force de.-ciibcii it as so com-
plex that flic Pen h -ig'itmg device
alone costs ue.c Ilian $250,000
It predicted spare pacts tor one1
year's oper 111.n 1 - vioulil , weed tin-
| cost of the plane itaelt by almnat
HOUSTON, Aug. 2 tUJS—A 41-1 *1.000.000.
vxir-old woman, dnqxmdent over | Tlw w happing price for each ot
ill health, wa* found shot to the fust four model* includes
death in a closet In her home to- aim'd >12.300.000 each to M
(luf.
Justice ol the Peace D K
riiompson ruled the death ot Mis
Hazel N Allen a suicide
termanter; Brady Galionl. ad- '
julant James Bird, truste* and
James Jaggns. service officer.
Six new member* t<s>k obliga-
tions to the oigamziition They
were Il'Ts'u I Baku, E B lam Ji .
K C MeCollough, Wiley Wineanr,
Tom Sawyer, and Charles Slielbi fast T*xa*
Following the installation *erv- Partly cljudy thi* atternoon, to-
i«x*. the new commander aptximt- _m,( Friday with widely
1x1 various committee* to serve Sia!tere»t daytime thunder* ho were,
with him Not much change in temperaturea.
Fhe new .mine ot tlv VIW 1* Moderate scut her lv winds on the
Igggltll at 40U W Commerce
llarri* office
coast.
GUdewater-Gilmer Are*
Partly cloudy, continued warm
cover
tooling ixwts. The air toree esti- |
mated that the unit price would
diop to $a.mm.000 II 100 plane*
were ordeied. ,
Hie old Spencer
I |hv ciimmuisity itn(«r buiklmg.
All member* and prospective dci'h«iwei*. Lowest tonight near
I member* ire iir«t*»l to attend '*■
It was "ointixt out during the
I meeting thi t the 1931 member shin
Richard A. Herbal
^t i» tx'lieveti that the local post;
I* the only one in Texas with this
record
Sabina River
ThwiMlay 10 a.m.: 4.85 feet
Tamperaluraa
Thursday ituuimum: 70,
Thurnday maximum: 07
Thursday. 10 30 a m 80
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Burris, Emma Dean. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 113, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 2, 1951, newspaper, August 2, 1951; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021506/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.