Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 127, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 16, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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City Edition
Six Pagot
VOL. IV, NO. 127
United Preee—<UP.)
GLADEWATER, TEXAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1952
Station KSIJ—1430 On Your Dial
5c PER COPY
TO TREASURY STAFF.—President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower announced the appoint-
ive business specialists to serve under George M Humphrey, Secretary of the Treasury*
uesignaie. Left to right: H. Chapman Rose, Cleveland attorney and a specialist in corporation law,
Assistaot Secretary; Marion B. Folsom, treasurer of Eastman Kodak Co., and chairman of the Board
of Trustees of the Committee on Economic Development, Under-Secretarv; and W. Randolph Burgess,
chairman of the Executive Committee of the National City Bank of New York, as consultant and
special deputy to the Secretary on Debt Management and Monetary Policies.
Last Of Seamen Huddled On Stern
Of Ship Are Snatched To Safety
LEGHORN, Italy, Dec. 16 (U.R)—
The last of 39 American seamen
huddled on the broken stern of the
U. S. Navy supply ship Grommet
Reefer were snatched to safety
Tuesday.
The last man was brought off
by one of four U. S. Navy heli-
copters from the carriers Midway
and Leyte. The carriers had raced
through the Ligurian Sea to this
northwest Italian port where the
Grommet Reefer, with its cargo of
Christmas turkeys from American
troops, smashed on the rocks and
broke in two Monday.
“Ail hands removed. No Injur-
ies," came the ward from res-
cue headquarters which told of the
happy, dramatic ending of the two-
day rescue operation by breeches
buoy, boat and helicopter.
In keeping with the rigid tradi-
tion of the sea. the Grommet
Reefer’s master. Capt Henry P.
down a_ dozen times in the storm
the worst in the Leghorn area in
two years.
The wreck was listing at an an- ----- — ---- --
gle of 90 degrees to port from its for the past 19 years,
the q
Commander Of Pongam Prison
Tells How Reds Staged Riot
Services To
Be Wednesday
For Mayo, 65
Funeral services for La Fayette
Mayo, 65, who died in a local
hospital Monday afternoon, will
be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday
at the Emmanuel Baptist church.
The Rev. H. E. Blackburn, pas-
tor of the church, and Rev. Leon
Mathis, pastor of the First Metho-
dist church, Greggton, will offi-
ciate. Burial will be in Nevada,
arrangements under the direction
of Everett-Stone Funeral home.
Mayo, a retired Texas company
employee since Jan. 7, 1952, has
been in and around Gladewater
Visited Folks: Pvt. Bobby G. Ly-
rrun, ton of Mr end Mrs. Levi
Lytnah, was visiting home folks
Other guests were Mr.
Lyman and tom,
of noor Mar-
*. L. Lyman
•mm, of Long-
la stationed at
Texas and la In tha
Division.
Boar L«Merman: Russell Barnett
of Gladewater Is one of 39 varsity
football lettermcn with the Baylor
Boars. Russell has two more years
of eligibility left, and much is ex-
pected of him come next football
season.
Saukant, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was I cr.
position on the queen of Leghorn
reef and the plates were buckling
under the constant pounding of the
sea. But no leakage was reported.
A helicopter of the U. S. Sixth
Fleet was alerted for possible use
iu taking off the men if line trou-
ble continued.
An official of the Italian naval
academy warned that if the wreck
Is dislodged from the rock, "There
Is hardly any possibility any of
the men could survive in the wat-
the last man brought to shore.
All Hands Saved
A Navy helicopter landed him on
the green lawn
football stadium, and at 4:05 p.m.
<9:05 am. cst» came the report
from rescue headquarters that all
39 of the crew had been saved.
The Grommet Reefer had started
Navy spokesmen said the men
were warm and comfortable in
their perilous perch. They had
of ‘ the^ghorn j *****
had been hurled
the “Queen e
• it broke
ragging its anchor in a sale in
i=s*33a«Isiss
u-jgTr Mortal trnHH
Happy Birthday: The South-
western States Telephone company
celebrated its first birthday in the
new building on Dean street yes-
terday. Exactly one year ago Mon-
day, the new building was com-
pleted. Friday night the employees
and their families will have u
party In observance of the first
year anniversary and the ap-
proaching holiday season.
Christmas Danes: Lambda Xi
chapter ol Beta Sigma Phi sorority
extends‘br the public nn invita-
tion to attend iheir Christmas
dnnco'at the Pineland Golf and
Counter club on Wednesday, De-
cember 17. Ken Bennett and his
orchestra Will provide the music
and hours will be from 9 p m. til
1 a.m. Proceed* will go to welfare
projects and tickets, which arc $1
each, will be available at the door
The helicopters arrived at a crit-
ical moment The stem, hammer-
ed incessantly by wind and water
against the jagged rocks, was
weakening. It was listing so that
the breeches buoy could no long-
er be used, and every man would
have had to jump into the Icy sea
—as some did—to be picked up
by two Italian Navy launches.
Boms Jump in Wster
The flying "choppers" had ar-
rived after some men had been
ing—a breakfast of bacon and
eggs, fried potatoes and coffee
A huge sack of mall waiting at
Leghorn for the all civilian Am-
erican crew was sent over Monday
during op* of tha testa of the
breaches buoy, giving the men
tram their families at home.
FORT WORTH, Dec. 16 <U» —
Livestock;
Cattle 2,300 Fairly active; steady
to strong; some cows and stockers
.50 higher: 1.00 and more higher
for two days; good and choice
slaughter steers and yearlings, 20-
28; utility and commercial, 13-19;
beef cows mostly 13-15; few com-
mercial, 16 and above; canners
and cutters, 9-12.60; bulls. 10-18;
medium and good stockcr steer
hauled across 100 yards of raging yearlings, 15-21; common, 14 down,
water and menacing rocks, in the Calves 1,100. Active; strong;
shaky canvas seat of the breeches spots higher; some sales sharply
buoy and others had jumped into above last week’s close; good and
the sea to be picked up by the I choice slaughter calves.ui-9-25; util -
Italian boats. ity and commercial, 12-19; culls.
The Navy announced Monday I 12 down; medium to choice stock-
that 40 men were aboard the ship 1 cr steer calves, 15-22
Minor Mishap: A 1948 Buick.
belonging to Bill Waters, was
slightly damaged Monday after-
making!# .turn off Melba The "hi" ,n*” ,h" ku *" ,J"°-
when Its anchor dragged In a gale
and it was smashed on the deadly
rocks. But It was announced Tues-
day that the crew total was 39.
"At the rate wc arc going we
hope to have them all off by mid-
afternoon," a U. S. Navy official
said.
Italian and American sailors and
cadets from a nearby naval ncad-
cmy worked furiously to string a
new breeches buoy to the wreck-
age 100 yards offshore of the
2,460-ton Grommet Reefer.
Ship Split in Two
The 37 shipwrecked saliors had
patiently awaited rescue since 3:30
a.m. Monday (8:30 p.m. cst> Sun-
Buick w*s‘'purkcd ;,t the curb in
front of his home on Wood street.
Investigating Officer was Horace
Grayson.
Hsrs From Florida! Mr. and
Mr*. Jimmy Don Tipton have been
In Gl|8cwater this week end for
the funeral of Mrs. Tipton’s father,
H. L. Fhiett Sr. in Tyler Sunday.
Jimmy Don has been stationed in
Florida, but will be transferred
to Grind Rapids, North Dakota
Ur first of the
after
year.
Entoriainmsnt: Union Grove will
present an entertaining comedy
Prida/I Dec. 19, at 7:30 p.m. The
title ia* “The Eighteen-Carat
Book." Monte Senko as Bob, im-
personating a girl. Dolly, will bo
hilarious and well worth the price
of admission, 25 and 50 cents.
Extra Fain There’s an extra
of men’s gloves here in the Mir-
that probably belong
That sounds reason-
(It’s In the book!)
They’re1 brawn and a size 9.
HappY Anniversary* Coy and
Ernestine McEachern celebrated
their 25th anniversary Saturday
night at the new Knights of Co-
lumbus Hall in Longview. Ken
Bennett and orchestra furnished
the music. Shu ring the occasion
with the couple were Oeorge and
Marjorie Wilkins. Steve and Mar-
garet JOneL Pete and Venus Moos-
sy Ralph Massed and Miss Fay
Hcnshnw. Kilgore; the N. E. Form-
bys. The party had more fun —
especially doing the bunny hop.
Following the dance, they ad-
journed to Johnny Cares for a
steak! *
ship smashed into the rocks in Leg-
horn Harbor and split in two.
They faced another uncertain
day of pounding sens, flying spray
and cold as they huddled in the
listing aft section impaled on the
reef.
Three members of the 40 - man
crew were brought ashore by
breeches buoy Monday before res-
cue operations were abandoned for
the night.
Breeches buoy cable lines broke
Hogs 500. Butchers steady to 25
cents higher; sows steady; choice
190-275 lbs., 17-17.25; choice 155-
185 lbs . 16-16.75; few 285-300 lbs.,
1650-1675; sows. 14-16.
He is survived by his wife, |
Ethel; two sons, Albert of Glade-
water and Leland, student at SMU;
one daughter, Mrs. M. K. Howard,
Greggton; his mother, Mrs. John]
Mayo, Lubbock; a sister, Mrs.
Stella Boyce, Lubbock; five broth-
ers. Gordon, Lubbock; Clyde, Bon-
ham; Charlie, Ojai, Calif.; Bob,
Garland and D. T., Floydada; and
three grand children.
Pallbearers arc Jeff Wilson, S. |
I. Hill, D. E. Young. J. C. Me-
Michael, J. B. Lilley Sr. and J. A.
Dyass.
Resentment Rises
Against Dewey
WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 <U.»—
A wave of resentment against
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New
York was building up Tuesday
among Republican senators who
tear that “Dewey domination Of
tho Eisenhower administration,
may deprive them of patronage
rights they hate waited years to
exercise.
Grumbling has become wide-
spread, even among senators who
were early supporters of Presi-
dent-elect Elsenhower. They have
been waiting in vain for definite
assurances that Eisenhower will
follow the tradition of “consult-
ing" majority party senators about
federal appointments.
Senatorial blood pressures began
to rise when Eisenhower filled
Cabinet and sub-Cabinet posts in
some cases without consulting or
notifying interested senators. The
appointments themselves persuad-
ed many senators that the Dewey
influence is already dominant in
the new administration.
This suspicion has been heigh-
tened by the fact that Herbert
Brownell, a former Dewey lieu-
tenant who will be Eisenhower’s
attorney general, has emerged as
the key man in passing out jobs
under Eisenhower.
JC:
HOT AIR TREATMENT.—-The freezing cold in Korea loses its
battle with ground crewmen as they pipe 300-degree heat into
U. S. Air Force Sabrejet engine at the 4th Righter Interceptor
Wing in Korea. Using a portable heating unit and two hoses,
the men heat the outside of the aircraft as well as the jet’s engine,
melting all ice on the Sabre with searing blasts of hot air.
Striking Printers Picket
Four Newspaper Offices
Some 10,000 Persons File
Past Casket Of Killer Cook
COMANCHE, Okla., Dec. 16 (U.R)
Some 10,000 curious persons who
filed past the casket of "mad dog"
killer William E. (Billy1 Cook have
left $25 la small change to buy
flowers for the executed gunman's
funeral.
Gene Boydstun, director of the
funeral home where Cook’s body
lies, said that the donations were
mostly pennies, nicklcs and dimes.
Cook once said defiantly that he
"never had a friend In the world.”
Men, women and children have
been parading past the casket of
the young slayer of six persons
since Boydstun returned the body
here Sunday from California.
1NVESTIOATK RIOTS.—Maj. Gen. Thomas W. Herron, left, com-
mander of the Korean Communication* Zone, and Col. C. V.
Cadwell began an Immediate Investigation of riots on the small
late of Pongam where UN guards killed 82 Communist civilian
Internees and wounded 125 other* In smashing the demonstration
Cook was executed in the San
Quentin Prison gas chamber for
the murder of Seattle salesman
Robert Dewey. He was serving a
300 ym sentence for killlnff the
Carl Ul----r family of five of
AtwooU 111.
Killed Family of Five
The 24-year-old badman became
known as the “mad-dog killer” in
the Southwest after he kidnapped
the Mosscrs and took them on a
2,000-mile terror ride before kill-
ing them and dumping their bodies
in an abandoned mine shatter near
his home town of Joplin, Mo.
Boydstun said the crowds view-
ing his body have been “pretty or-
derly and sincere.''
“In fact, most of the women
have been crying,” he said.
The young killer, who grew up
with the philosophy, “I hate every-
body’s guts, was laid in a plain, in-
expensive casket and dressed in a
conservative dark blue suit and
black tic. His motto “hard luck,”
which he had tattoed across his
knuckles as a youngster/ was
plainly visible.
School Children Past
Two-hundred high school stu-
dents from Byers, Tex., were
among the curious who viewed
Cook's body Monday. Boydstun
said they made the 23-mile trip to
Comanche in six school buses.
Other persons have come from
38 state* and Canada and Alaska,
Boydstun said.
Cook will bo buried at Lone
Elm, Mo., in a cemetery named
Peace after the Rev. David Roper
says a 10-minute service for him in
Comanche Ht noon Wednesday.
Boydstun said that he and the
Rev. Roper have had letters from
some 250 different church groups
saying they have prayed for the
dead boy and his family.
Two of Cook’s sisters from Jop-
lin, Mo., came by Monday to look
at the body. "They looked pretty
sad,” Boydstun said, “but they did
not cry.
MOLN1E, 111., Dec. 16. tU.R) —
striking printers picketed four
newspaper offices in the tri-cities
of Davenport, Ia„ and Moline and
Rock Island, 111., early Tuesday,
but editorial employes crossed the
lines and prepared to publish.
However, it was uncertain
whether stereotypers and press-
men would honor the printers’
Student Confesses
Stabbing Artist
SAN DIEGO, Calif., Dec. 16 (U.R)
A husky 16-year-old high school
student confessed Tuesday that he
fatally stabbed artist Ida C. Mac-
Kcown, 67, "because she called me
a marijuana user,” police reported.
Police said Donald S. Crosby ad-
mitted in a tape recorded confes-
sion that he killed the elderly min-
iature portrait artist, whose body
was found in her fashionable La
Jolla home with 35 knife wounds.
The divorcee and grandmother
was found dead in the bedroom of
her lavish studio home Monday.
Crosby, according to police, said
the crime occurred Saturday when
"she threatened to call police and
1 couldn’t shut her up.”
Crosby, booked on suspicion of
murder, was arrested by detective
Sgts. Paul Walk and Anthony Ma-
Guire who traced the youth on a
lead that "a mysterious prowler"
was seen talking to the victim Sat-
urday.
7
Our beloved friend J. P. Jack-
son, one of Gladewater’s promin-
ent, pioneer citizens, celebrated
his birthday recently. He was 80
years young.
When one mentions the name of
Jim Jackson, he involuntarily
smiles because the association re-
minds him of happiness, friendli-
ness and witty, clever sayings of
which Jim is well known.
My wife sent him a miniature
cow that bawls. He says it is the
most popular cow in town. People
borrow It to take from house to
house.
Congratulations and many more
birthdays, my friend.
Noticed the Rangcrettcs will ter-
minate a three-year contract when
they appear in the Cotton Bowl
New Year’s. They are to be enter-
tained extensively the two days
they are in Big D. The Rangcrettcs
have become a tradition tor this
important game and we hope they
accept a new contract.
The Rangcrettcs are also accept-
ing the Invitation to return to
Chicago this summer. Arch Ward,
sports editor of the Chicago Tri-
bute and director of Chicago
Charities, which sponsors the
game, says the Rangcrettcs appeal-
ed to the crowd more than any
half-time entertainment ho had
found.
picket lines. The stereotypers and
pressmens' decision could affect
plans to go to press without the
striking printers.
The two groups met Monday
night to discuss whether they
should support the strike by local
170, International Typographical
Union.
The printers struck Monday at
the Hock Island Argus, Moline
Dispatch, Davenport Times and
Davenport Democrat. The Demo-
crat is a mOrning newspaper and
the others are afternoon papers.
All three afternoon papers pub-
lished Monday, although the edi-
tions contained fewer pages than
had been scheduled for the day.
The Democrat printed a small-
sized morning edition.
It was considered unlikely that
any negotiations between publish-
ers and union representatives
would be held Tuesday.
The printers struck to win con-
tractual assurances that they
would have the right to veto any
"new process of typesetting and on
any new composing room ma-
chinery or equipment," a joint
statement by the publishers said.
Wages were not an issue in the
contract negotiations, which have
been in progress since Oct. 31.
"The question of Joutside tape'
for teletypesetter machines,” was
also an issue in the strike, the
publishers said.
The phrase ‘outside type’ means
tape perforated by impulses trans-
mitted from outside the news-
paper offices. The perforated tape
is fed through linecasting ma-
chines which convert it to type.
Harold Clark, secind vise-presi-
dent of the union who was sent
here from ITU headquarters at
Indianapolis, said the union want-
ed contract clauses assuring them
that only members of the ITU
would be allowed to procerjs the
tape through the linecasting ma-
chines.
He said the union has no objec-
tion to handling tape carrying spot
news copy but wants security pro-
visions in the case of tape per-
forated with feature or syndicate
material.
"Hypnotized"
Into Staging
PONGAM ISLAND, Korea, Dec. i
16. (U.R)—The commander of this]
prison island told Tuesday how
more than 4,000 fanatic Commu-
nists "hypnotized” themselves in-
to staging a riot that ended only
when UN guards fired point blank
to save their own lives.
Lt. Col. George D. Miller,
Columbus, Ohio, said he ordered
his 300 American and South Ko-
rean guards to fire to prevent the
prisoners from breaking free and
wiping out the UN detachment.
The uprising, which took place
Sunday afternoon on this wind-
swept island off southern Korea,
cost the lives of 84 prisoners and
caused injuries to 118 others. Four
guards were injured.
Pongam Island holds a total of
9 000 Communist civilian internees
of whom more than 4,000 took part
in the uprising.
Face Bullets
Miller said the Communists
stood straight up and made no at-
tempt to dodge bullets fired by
light machine guns, shot guns, car-
bines and rifles at less than 30
yards. Some tried to fight hand-to-
hand with the UN guards.
"They were standing four ranks
deep with their arms linked,”
Miller said. “They were singing
and swaying back and forth.”
“After our first volley, the
wounded were held upright and
kept on singing. The ones that
were down were pulled up by the
arms."
He said the prisoners were so
“hypnotized” by their own sing-
ing that one wounded man still
was trying to sing as he was car-
ried to a hospital at Koje Island,
10 miles away.
Resist Movement
Miller said when his men tried
to remove the dead and wounded
after the battle, the prisoners "lay
on the ground with locked arngt.
“Our men had to fora* them
apart. It took two men to get one
separated from another and drag-
ged out.
“It is impossible to convey the
frenzy thev had worked them-
selves into.” he said. “I looked at
them and could see their eyes were
glazed, they were so wrought up.”
He said the prisoners made a
“tremendous" noise singing pro-
hibited Communist songs, cheer-
ing. chanting slogans and shouting
“Banzai.”
Miller, an expert on prisoner
problems, said the terrain was to
blame for allowing the prisoners
to get such an edge over their
captors that bullets became neces-
sary.
POWs On Slop*
The slope where the prisoners
have their compounds and bar-
rackr rose upward at a 30 degree
angle. It was terraced to allow the
construction of barracks and other
installations.
Themselves
Big Riot
“It was a tactical situation in
their favor,” Miller said. “They
were perched 15 feet higher than
my troops, with their backs
against the barracks wall. It
would have been suicide to send
my troops up after them on the
narrow paths. If I had, I would
have lost every man I had.”
In summing up the results of his
stem action, Miller said:
“I think that the 30 per cent die-
hard Communists in there would
have forced the others to die just
to have us lose face.
“They would have considered
this a victory if just a few of them
had managed to get out."
Miller predicted the prisoners
would be auite for a while
“But in six months when they’re
built up again, the same thing will
probably happen."
Gangsters Hanged
Back To Back
TORONTO. Ont., Dec. 16. (U.R)—
Two of Canada’s most notorious
gangsters, handcuffed and their
legs strapped together, were hang-
ed back to back at the Don jail
Tuesday for the murder of a po-
liceman.
Steve Suchan and Leonard Jack-
son, one-time members of the in-
famous Edwin Alonzo Boyd gang
of bank robbers, went to the gal-
*°ws in the same prison from
which they once escaped last fall.
They were recaptured after Can-
ada s greatest manhunt.
Jackson hobbled his last steps
without his artificial foot. It had
been confiscated before his break
from Jail and was never returned.
i*k»n;«ctBiiis. *uard« *Hi.«
for the ambus^ri
March of detective Sgt
Hong. The witnesses said
ers faced death unafr»H
“They went to the gallows as
real men die,” said the Rev. John
Kelly, a Roman Catholic priest.
"They knew what was happen-
ing, as they had known a long
time, and they took it on the chin.
“Men in much happier circum-
stances have behaved much
worse.”
Jackson, 30. and Suchan, 24,
walked only 30 paces from their
death cells in the Don Jail to the
scaffold. The trap was sprung at
11:14 p. m. Monday, CST. They
were pronounced dead by jail sur-
geon W. H. Hills at midnight.
Forty minutes later Sheriff J. V.
Conover nailed execution notices
to the jail’s oak doors.
The sheriff said neither man had
any last words. “They died as they
spent the day—calm and collect-
ed.”
Ike Bides Time About Making
Appointment With MacArthur
NEW YORK, Dec. 16. (U.R) —. However, there were signs that
President-elect Eisenhower bided the two might meet at the Elaen
his time Tuesday about scheduling
an appointment with his old boss,
Gen. Douglas MacArthur. But
everything pointed to an early
meeting.
Eisenhower schedued a full day
of appointments at his interim
headquarters in the Commodore
Hotel. MacArthur was not among
them.
The President-elect’s press sec-
retary. James C. Hagerty, said
there had been no liaison between
Eisenhower's staff and MacAr-
thur's staff regarding the meeting
and that the Eisenhower office had
not been in touch with MacArthur
or his office.
SUDDEN DEATH PLAY-OFF.—Jack Burke Jr., left, of Houston
beat Dick Mayer of St. Petersburg in a “sudden death” play-off for
the championship of the Miami Open golf tournament. Burke
rammed a 10-foot putt on the 5th extra hole to
tonship
take the champ-
hower headquarters some time this
week to discuss MacArthur's plan
for solving the Korean problems.
The Eisenhower press office has
conferred with cameramen about
how many newsreel and television
tripods, plus sound equipment, can
be squeezed into one room for in-
terviewing Eisenhower and impor-
tant vlsitore.
Whether MacArthur’s “dear and
definite" solution to the Korean
war, which Eisenhower has said he
will be glad to get, will dovetail
with the President-elect’s Korean
policy was a matter of speculation.
It was recalled that MacArthur
in speeches has said the Commu-
nists understand and respects
forceful action. Elsenhower when
he returned Sunoay night from his
Korean inspection tour spoke out
tor a policy of “deeds” calculated
to “induce” the Communists to
want peace.
Eisenhower meanwhile plunged
into the work of fleshing out the
skeleton of his new administra-
tion. He conferred Monday with
Sinclair Weeks, secretary-desig-
nate of commerce, and received
from Weeks recommendations for
filling two deputy Jobs in tha
Commerce Department.
He reviewed the whole subject
of European unity with John J.
McCloy. former U S. high com-
missioner for Germany, and John
Foster Dulles, secretary-designate
of state. He discussed the mutual
security program with Harold K.
Stassen. who will be his director
jar mutual security._
ttlnnlkna EaaoAJtaatff
vwtnnvr iwmvn
Fair, a little warmer Tuesday
night. Mild Wednesday. Law Tues-
day night 24 to 42 degrees. Oaatlo
to moderate southerly winds an
the coast.
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 127, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 16, 1952, newspaper, December 16, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022002/m1/1/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.