Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 248, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 11, 1951 Page: 1 of 10
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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_X„. j.~
OX 7 :1
?.aflowitbr, 1 ’oxrift
THE WEATHER
GLADEWATER area -
Increasing cloudinosa Mils uf-
U-rnuMi and tonight Friday,
mostly riiaidv witn rising
temperatures Luwcst tonight
near 4 it
(Hlaiteuratpr Daily Mirror
CITY EDITION
TEN PAGES
VOL II. NO '24H
United Pres* -UPi
OLADKWATKR. TEXAS. THURSDAY. JANUARY 11. 1951
Station KSIJ—1430 On Your Dial
5c PER COPY
Allies Expected To Build Defense
Line In South Korea War Sector
Red Troops Driving to
Old Pusan Beachhead
W
WASHINGTON. Jan. It. <U.P>
—Tha United States hat inform-
•d Britain that if olans to con-
tinua tha fight in Koraa by
throwing up a dofonia lino in
tha southern war sactor. it was
laarnad today.
Reaffirmation of the American
policy not to withdraw voluntarily
wan understood to have been com- |
mumcated “several days ago" to
British Ambassador Sir Olivei
will buy time for free world
mobilization and expose Commu-
nist willingness to uae force in-
stead of subvention to gain new
territories. During such a hold-
ing operation, Red supply lines
can be hummered from the air.
thus increasing the cost of aggres-
sion for the Reds
The British inquiry about Amer-
ican Intention* In Korea was marie
in connection with the curreid
I
A
A
Vf.
Vr
Franks by the State Department. Commonwealth prime ministers
FOUR AT ONE TIME—Sister Mart Niceta, left, with proud Papa Kenneth Roeebuch. looks down at
Ins four new children born at St J*. i ph Merry Hospital in Pontiac, Mich The Rcwebuotis have four
other children Two of the children were girls and two were laiys 'Acme Telephoto'
1950 Bank Deposits Show
A $497,986.56 Increase
*D<moh
Slddc Tcujn
StnccU
Deposits in the First State Bank Loans and discounts
of Gladewatet totaled $497,986 56 more, also, than reported
more on Dec 311. 193u than a year
earlier, statement of condition te-
IImAu «»t kill* 1.11*1 Ui IC H V id | Ulh-
cknvd
The year-end figuic was
*59.3115 7«» highci than at Oct 4,
IttftP, on tile preceding bank call.
Biggtr Draff,
Biggtr Taxes
Bathtr Congress
Four Gone: Fom Glum- buys
who hate avwith guni ."t<. tlie
aervicr and are at ihe present sta
tamed at Lackland An Foi ce
B«s< m San Antonio arc Herbert
Humphries. Joe Ned Hancock,
Jimmy Gormlcy and Charles
Gary Pretty soon, there just won't
Ur any troys left around lie tv
Inducted Twi Cm <Lewis’ Man- W VNIHNGTON. Jan II Uh—
iaut ia lea* in Saturday tq tie, Manpower and money—a bigget
mdiM-ted Into tha army You know draft add bigger take*—bothered
lum from Duboae Rhamuic* Congress today
...... - j A draft of IS-ycar-olds seemed
Falic. Blotter: Arrests irv the lwaded for congressional approval, i
l«M-al "(•endaroH's yesterday "ere Hut some legislators doubled the
only thiee Two for intoxication wiMiom of a possible 020.flti.000.-
totaled
a year
earlier. The increase .is compared
to the end of 1949 was $60.492 69
However, loan* and discounts* had
dropped $333,570 50 as compared
to the report three months earliet
Total resources stoud on Dec.
31. lit Ml, „t $4.905..>46. which was
S59M.690.51 more than a year
earlier and $515,284.39 above last
OH.
Dec
4
Deposits
31. 1949,.............
$4,041.779 81
CKt
4. 1950
4.480.260.61
Dee
31. 1000.........
4,538.706 37
Dec
Loons and Discounts
31. I860.......... $2,032,301 93
Oct
4. 1850
2.426,365 12
Dor
30. I860..........
2.002.704.62
Dor
Oct
Total Rom
31. 1948
4. I860
4.022.122.68
Doe
30. I860 ..........
4,005,546 110
Franks had been instructed by
he government to octet mine U s
intentions in Korea following
United Nations troop withdrawals.
The outline of battle plans was
not made available by diplomatic
or military officials. But it has
boon regarded as likely that UN
forces would seek to establish a
defense perimeter around the
former Pusan bridgehead and re-
ly on superior firepower ar.d air-
powet to battle the Communists
The American attitude, as
communicated to Britain, was
that a defense line should be
held if at all possible. This gov-
ernment hopes that a stiffening
dafenaa may prompt tho Com
munirta to racontidor and entar
peaca negotiations to and tha
war.
Additionally, the United States
believes that continuing the fight
Dulles Appointed
Ambassador to
Work on Treaty
unit one for mtoxic.it ion
lex* driving.
md rock-
000 tax botx.l
The defense department'* pro-
|him*I progn.it to strengthen the
nation s .irinrd forces will be pre-
sented to Congress next week
legislators appeared lead* to go
along with lowering of the draft
age from It* to IK Hut Chairman
Richard H Russell. D, Ga of Hi.
Doublahaadat I u, 1 Commit-
School Ho*: and Girl* basketball
Single Convention: Tile Gir.;,;
C'ountv Singing Convention Will
tte Ill-Id Suoda* at the Clarksville
Baptist Chinch from 2 Oil until
I (Ml The public n cxtidiailx incit-
ed to attend
tenno will play the Pans Gibbons
High .School boy and girls team,
tonight at . 3b ill the Weldon High
Nehnni Gymnasium
Tape Recording A Ksl.l em-
ployee rc|Hi!l«d at noon tixtuy that
the tats' recording of the Wash-
ington cetcmunlcs in w inch Pi cm
dent Truman presented Mi- Trav-
is K. Walkin', with the Congr-
sioi ia I Medal ot Mown has not ai
lived She reeei'eil the medal
IHjsthuii'oosi* for her husband
who was killetl in Korea An*
tmvneeilieitt Will be r. -id* i. tel .'-
to hroadea-t time,
To Avert War III
Free World Must
Marshal Resources
te« oppu-ed a section of the pluti
which would lengthen the ser\ ice
period from 2I to 27 months
As for tuxes. Rep Robert L
Duughtnn, D. NT . chairman of
the tax writing House Ways and
Means Committee aid he would-
n t want to sa* that even a $15.-
iKHi UOfl.OOO tax increase is “prac-
tical" although It Is possible
Dallas' Ford Plant
Will be Enlarged
DALLAS, .lun II 'UP' The
Kuril MdI.m I’ontp.ifM I>.*!us-
i>!unt will U (Milargfit t«i
Altnoii Houblp its pn*M*nt flow
p.icr t. l» CrusiBt. m ncial man-
.tm’r t»f th« K»*i«l (Hvmitsn and vkt-
pivvidt n| of the nimpitnv nil id
hfiT tndwv
$3,000 Purse it
Approved for 1951
Annual Round-Up
A $3 000 purse tor the annual
Gla-iewaler Round-Up ftiMieo was
yesterday approved in Denver by
the Rodeo Cowboys AssociutMMi.
it has been announced.
Tile Gladewatcr rodeo, which
will l>«- held this year on June IS-
IS. will offer $600 in -ash award*
to the cowboy contestants who
arc entered in each of five event*,
including saddle broin riding,
bareback orotic ruling, bulldog-
King, call roping and bull riding
Tin- i ash award Is ottered by
;lu- Round-Up Association arc add-
ed to the entrx* tec which tlie cow-
boys put m> m each event.
Labor Asks Halt
In Living Cost
now meeting in London.
TOKYO. Friday- Jan. ~lE
'UP—Rad forces slicing through
South Korea drove through the
center of tho peninsula haltway
to tho old Pusan Beachhead
Thursday while other forces
began swarming south again ea
ths western highway below
Seoul.
An 8th Army report said a
'large number" of Communists
were found by patrols near Tan-
..mg. 7n miles south of the 38th
parallel and 70 miles north of the
old Pusan beachhead line above
Taegu
Spearheads of another 25 Com-
munists divisions reached two
miles south of Osan, 25 miles
south of Seoul, while the high-
ways behind them were clogged
with war traffic.
Allied planes blasted the Reds
in a raging blizzard. They killed
or wounded 1.100 south of Seoul
.mil 300 elsewhere One pilot said
he found the roads below Seoul
"so crowded we finally ran out of
ammunition "
The Reds central front drive
through the Wonju area slackened
temporarily in a continuing bliz-
zard of sleet and snow. To the
southeast, however, a new Red
column slashed within six miles
of Tnnyang. major road anil rail
leave hub 35 miles below Wonju.
But with
Ikii lilBFMi
mmmm
roe. Rfcnftf
hock into
the (tret tin
struck oil 1
reaa (rent.
250.008 Red trope have mm*
for an imminent offensive.
In the three clear hours before
i tha 70-nUle Ee-
WASHINGTON. Jan II. 'U.P>—
President Truman today designat-
ed John Foster Dulles as his spec-
ial representative with rank of
ambasaadoi. Dulles will
shortly for Japan to work on a j
Japan****- pence ti-wtv , ^
| Dullea. as chief of a jour, stole-
defense department mission, will
confer on a Japanese peace set-
tlement with Gen. Douglas Mac-
Arthur and Japanese leaders, the
state deportment said.
The republican foreign policy
adviser visited Japan and Kona
last vear on an initial survey mis- dusk, they killed or wounded
-i.m He had planned to return to more than 1.400 enemy troops In
the Far East again after talks with - 215 sorties All but 300 were
12 othet nat ons on the Japan set- caught on clogged roads neat Su-
tlrment However, his designation won, IT miles south of Seoul
lal repre Th« lighting -potlight shifted
-dilative came a- a surprise It temporarily to the east-central
was regarded as anothei admin- flank of the 8th Army, where the
istrutiun movi to strengthen bt- Reds drove a deep wedge Into the
partisan foreign policy procedures, allied line beyond Wonju.
First State Bank Stockholders Hold
Annual Meeting, Add Two Directors
Stockholders of tlu- Fust State
Bank ol Gladewatet' received re-
port ot a very profitable year ot
operation md added to members
Prap
fc. v
m
COMMUNISTS SAY THESE ARE "FLEEING AMERICANS —This photo was received from a Com-
munist source-. East photo, and according to the caption supplied with the photo, "fleeing American
soldier* . . . intercepted by the Chinese People's volunteers, after the Wensen battle." The spelling of
Wenscn was also supplied by Communist source 'Eastphoto from Acme Telephoto1
Shivers Tags Civil Defense
an Emergency Priority
AUSTIN. Jan. II <U.P'—Gov
AJlan Shivers today tagged civil
defense with an emergency pri-
ority and warned the 52nd Legis-
lature that Texas must spend
••whatever money is necessary to
protedb it* citizens."
The Governor, in a message
HUM. a Join MWiull of Uh
mn to spend less and pre-
pare to tax more.
Members, gathering in the
House of Representatives, rose to
give the state's chief executive a
standing ovation as he entered the
lower chamber.
"The lent shadow of another
war." he said, "has fallen across
our notion, our itato and our
homos. Stalo probloms become
secondary."
National mobilisation, ho said,
must come first.
should bo prepared to w rite a '.ax
bill, or revise existing tax meas-
ures. so as to raise the required
revenue—-and no more—without
overburdening anv segment of
• It is not too much to ask. he • ^ mdu,trv '
added. “. . . that every state , “
undertaking not necessary* to the
with the threat of war, maintenance of a strong, sound
home front be eliminated «u liras -
tically reduced."
He called for a financial beit-)j
tightening and frankly warned.
“our financial picture is not on- j
couraging. The state comptroller
has estimated a two-year deficit
of $110.000.000 in available gen- t The first meeting of the year for
oral revenues at 'he current rate the Flight B. 9800th Volunteer Air
of spending." Reserve Training will be held at
"Obviously." he pointed out. ' ® P- m tonight in the Fine Arts
we must spend less—tax more— R‘“>m at Kilgore College, accord-
or both "
He called lor a hold tha-lina
stand on spending and expressed
hope the legislature would pro-
tect the slender balance in our
general revenue fund for civil
defense.
Collage Toaight
East Taxas Revue
Rehearsal is Set
tlu- dircctoi's at thetr monthly
meeting following the stockhold-
ers’ meeting.
Re-elected directors were W W.
to tin.....aid ot directors at then Bradley. Dell J Eicrett. Howard
1 .iitmiai meeting Wednessla* alter- Hall. Glenn Kincaid. U F Phil-
lips, and Paul L. Rounsaville.
THE HAGUE, tlu Ni ttu i lands
Jan II UF' Os-n Dwight D
Eisenhower said today then* will
not lx- .mothei war it the tree
world marshalls its spiritual, in-
tellectual and meterial resources
Eisenhowei told a news coptei
SUIT Ik-tore lie left the Hague foi
Copenhagen. Denmark, that the
Attuiilu I’m-t cuuiitrHs are trying
to organize an army to defend the
dignity and value id the individual
against dictatorship
"Much greater social progress
remains to lie dune," the Europen
arm) commander said "Hut it eon
In- done m a sense id -ecm it * Wi
a-*- not -eeklng nnv land W. arc
not seeking any i il'toi * \V«- are
only ses-kma the right to l;vc m
ponce."
Eisenhowei, who is touring the
Atlantic Pu-l capitals to liiul out
what niild.iiy irsourcc* they can
coulrtUi te to Ins army, made an
overnight stop here to confer with
Auu-riran and I'luteh officials
The Dute'.t told him they have | urv i-hdi VinI«*
tin- will atH the men to make a
nial'" colltrlhiition to the Atlantic
Pact Army, tint lack the neces-ary
money and equipment
Foi the most part. Elsenhower
lias confined liimselt to h'tciimu
Since Ins arrival in F,iiio|n-. he has
made only ont formal sluteiiH-nl
WASHINGTON Jan II 'UP' -
Organized lalxir today dem.uuh-d
an overall program to halt soar
mg living costs, but the govern-
ment said it can't do mrch but
"hope" tight now-
The Unttod Laboi Policy Com
How eve. .i company spokesman i mittce. which speaks for most of
.tld thi enlaigenw-nt was design lalxir. put most of the blame on
. t chicfl* to relieve crowded con I'ongrcss. saving there is no hope
. i d ton - ,d tlu present plant and of putting a brake on living costs
.mild not nni .hIIi mean .un until it enact* an "effective, acros-
i ii-al mileas. In tin- numtx-i of the-board. .inti-mflation program."
worker hiisxt Tticrc must be a "substantial re- .
fi .ml Mi ik on th. new visual" of the defense production censorship ’‘stay
ui lining which sill admin the act. it said, to permit the govern
noon
All directoir were n elected and
two additional ones named.
The animal stink dividend ol
10 |M*r cent was dedaicd and ail
employees wen- awarded a bonus
amounting to 10 per cent ot thetr
annual salaries
The officers were re-elected by
Added to the board were Wilson
Godfrey and C H. Moore.
Tlu- officers an- Rounsaville.
president; Bradley, vice president;
B F Phillips, vice president; G.
H Grayson, vice president and
cashier, and James H Little, assis-
tant cashier
The third rehearsal ol Ken Ben-
nett's third East Texas Revue w ill
be bold at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
High School choral room, the au-
thor has announced. The show,
which is scheduled tor production
Korean Censorship
Is 'Camoutiage"
NEW YORK. Jan It 'UP’ Tlu-
Armv described its Korean war
as "a form of
camouflage" and dented it ivas de-
I end ol 1950 show ed the bank's
capital structure now is $344.-
.'■59 05 Deposits were $4,539,766.37.
President Rounsaville said the
bank looks forward to another
profitable year. “It is our desire to
take care of the final needs ol the
entire community and area.
ing to Mai Phil Hurwitz. com-
manding officer
A prominent out-of-town speak-
er has been scheduled to address
Flight B on a subject of imme-
diate interest and concern. Major
Hurwitz said. In addition. Master
. .5. _____... . Sergeant Baugher of headquarters
Other emergencies, however SqUilf|ron in T*ler. will have tin-
urgent pale. he said, before the tHiml s>>tem compiled for Flight
------------------------ ,------------ n.-c-sMt* if protecting our home,. p w ,hat ,„v member mav learn
Jan 25. is sponsored by the Amer- business and public facilities his individual standing in the m-
lean Legion. against sabotage, and our own Mmfatlon
The product ion will be strictly in»' a iKissiblc enemy at- Applications to affiliate with
a musical revue with no dialogue ‘'V.7,.............. u . ...... Flight B will be made available
or plot It will be staged m eight “ i , ?'d; 'arB0 to all Alt Reservist- w ho are cut
scenes. Th? lirst scene will depict t 'unl!‘ "J ln,‘-' 'a"‘.,0 cx‘ rentl.v uruissigned Also the latest
Western Life; the second Scare- tw™*0d in this program information affecting air reservists
crow Dance; third If I Lived in •* .l1* i'?’ will be given. Col Dick Brown
the City; fourth. Style Show; fifth. '' J.°m t’!% ill! T>ler. commanding officer of
Music in the Night; sixth. Rural; "huh ''u s,a,° aJ r‘x”** ,nu*1
seventh. Night: and eight, a Pa- Pwpored to -pend whateve. mon-
tnotie Scene *'•' neiT'-ar* to protect its cit-
, . tzens That is the project we call
Soloists foi the play who have cjv,| defense ••
alreiuly been chosen include Carl Th, l(,lllllurl h, ,.id.
B Everett. Danny Steuber^ ot Ty #xp#ct eivi, d#f#nM r#com.
mendations which “will be sent
to you as toon at pottibla."
In discussing taxes, the Gover-
nor urged that the lawmakers
"strive for a situation in which no
one shall pay more than his share
—and no one less "
However, he pointed out that
"cognizance will have to be taken
of the fact that the Fi-detal gov-
been chosen yet, Bennett eminent, now as nCvei before, has
pre-empted the income tax field:
lor. Richard Herbsl. Marilyn Mc-
Gowan. Rosemary Bruce. Betty
League. Opal Rankin. Bob Pate.
-------- L.v.iunv, v/”iti ndiiRiii, uuu r.iii'.
Statement ol condition at thclDott> Bumpus. Jo* i c McGill. WII-
on->-nt t ia let i: 11 will lx* carried | ment to put rigid controls on fixsl J?
out as rapldt* a- possible." Hut
he giiii- no definite slatting date
prices, and to regulate rents and
•-ommodlly market speculatuxi
Gladewater Negro College
Movement Expected Soon
IVopIt- ol the Gladewatei com- i be commended for what it is do-
Mai Gen Flovit l. Parks. Army
chief of information, discussed cen-
sorship before a meeting of the
Radio Executives Club of New
York <at the Waldorf-Astoria Ho-
tel'
He said censorship was "a word
that is repugnant to mn demo-
cratic wa* of life but ne American
reporter wants to cover wai ac-
tion without the guidance of the
military to prevent the premature
disclosure to the enemy of facts
Drouth Roliof
Rato* Grantod
AUSTIN. Jan. II (lMt»—The Rail-
road Commission today granted
drouth relief freight rates for 37
parched Southwest Texas counties
Commission Chairman Olln Cul- j
lierson. announcing the rates, said
they will remain in effect until 1
April 20 and will reduce freight
rates 30 per cent on hay and will
cut rates one thml on cottonseed |
iminit* -M.n w ill lx- given oppor- Weldon Schix.l I ho|>e we ,h. , m u,l|Mnl, sin. ‘'utlonseed meal, cottonseed
ran I hr anti* on t hr J uniat Col- u m |ltl •%$ ■• t— u.tiu ..*-4 -•*!*
lumv\ to .ij)>4»«t .i movrmrnt («m
I'Ntnl^nhim'iit h«*rc of u juni(*r col
leg, lo N.-grix- Ihe Rex Gene) Neal Cornier was program chair
Hauls, pastor ot the Methixlist
Church, told mendx-is of the Ro-
ot main
Hi emarks came following a
program piesenU-d by the Weldon
. Inml chorus directed by Mi-s (’.
M itixx-n
The Rev Hams said In- was u
tm-mbri ot a committee that hojN-s
to present to tin- eonnminity an
that tiurope, it prepared to fight, opportunity to ixpres* thetr faith
mav not have to tight. "• d^ eitizena, that was his
_____ deseription ot the Junioi college
movement
Ti e heard leading men of East
Texas say we -iced to wait iiihhi
the Supreme Court lo give justice
lo all said the minister "Gob toi*
bid. the Suiiituh- Court, Gixt for-
bid that we await Its decision to
hi pi'.t to all We've -ol tornaki
duisiuiVai; worL (jldUiwetuf u, to
KOREAN ASSEMBLY TO MEET
Tt)KYt). Jan It 'UP' The Pu-
san radio Mild lixtuy that the South
Kon-ni National Assemtily would
meet again lit Pusan on Jan 15
The Iasi meeting was held Dec
*6 In Seoul, Ciwmmndct held cap
it.l o| .outL Ui’rtto.
AtTheHospital
Hancock Hospital
...... ................................ Admitted Nell Burm-x. Mr-- S
as soprano soloist and John Sut- I Hill. Dixie Markham. E C E. h-
fflwi The ehiinis sang Our Mighty
l.atid. Pale Moon. Mighty Like a
Rose. Sometimes I Keel Like a
Motherless Child, and Old Man
River with Wilma Jean Riehairison
hulls, peanut hulU and salt. I
Tlu- order will become effective
Jan 15
plt.-n baritone soloist Fixe Ixivs
sang A Little Close Harmony and
Joshua at the Battle ot Jericho.
C D Ptttmou was introduced as
.. now dun member by President
Gicnu Kincaid
Tlu- club voted to sponaoi Boy
Scout liooo 194 another vear
Charles McChesney was unani-
mously naimxt seyut leader an-
other year with James Little as
assistant leader. Claude Dalle) was
named institutional representative
Guest* were Crantill Cox, Si .
Gilmer, district governor of Rotary
lnterMatiup.it and FUk Ray nt
ILL f.
C M Moon- and John
ols. Mrs
Barnes
Dt-ims-ed Mis Doyle May. M
O Nichols and Mrs H C King.
County Modical
Mon Moot Horo
The Gregg County xtedicid So-
ciety met for their regular month-
ly meeting Tuesday night at the
Mnneoek Clinic in Gladewater.
and guest s'x-'kcrs were Drs. Tom
Barr and Sidney Galt ol Dallas
About 16 duetois were present
tor the first meeting presided over
by the 1931 officer*. A round
table discussion followed the talks
by the Dallas doctors
lie Mae Butler and Donald
Vaughn.
Dance soloists include Fvelyn
Monnngo. Lax-on Lovell and Bud-
dy Stow There will also be a line
of dancers, but those dancers have
not all
said.
Leon Waggoner will be in charge and of the furthet fact that tnfla-
ol the corned' sequence*. Bennett | Ron has w pinched the little man
announced There wilt also be a I thut a general sales tax. never de-
lull orchestra in the pit. and Ben- sirable. is entirely nut of the ques-
nett himself xx-III play tin- piano tion "
and organ. The legislature-, he suggested.
City Buys 68 Acres
of Land for Lake
At the regular meeting ot the The Slupn brothers stated that
lily Lommtssiou this nun umg, it mt., werenipp' to cixipx-rate with
was announced that about 08 acres t||t, n|y ,n lin, ixxisible and
ilf lllllzi Bilk 'UM'IX util islviuul I.V 111... . .
the 98tmth VART squadron, will
attend the meeting
BULLETINS
TOKYO. J*n. 11. UP'—Mem-
bers ot the foreiqn 'correspondents
corps in Tokyo appoinied a "fact-
finding committee todae to gath-
er information on the strict new
censorship of the Korean war and
make suggestions to armv authori-
ties.
WASHINGTON. Jan. II. U P>—
President Truman todae nominat-
ed Rear Adm. Herbert V Pugh to
be surgeon general ot the Navy lor
a four-year term. He will succeed
Vice Adm. Clifford A. Swanson,
who has not been reassigned.
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE.
Calif.. Jan. II. <U.F --Search parties
reached the wreckage ot a B-SO
bomber which crashed on tho de-
sert todae and found all eight per-
sons aboard dead.
of land has been purehased by the i „ateit also that the lake w ill lie a
City toward the municipal lake .u.finitc impnwement
project
The land meluites Ml acres oft
the east end ol the 154.3 acre* tract
owned by H. M. and P. C. Shipp
and (tom the same men, 18 acres
Wixxt told the Commission that
he is (mriuu wonderful ctxipera-
tion with cxcryone w'hi ia cvn-
nected and staled that it seems
that exreryone >s interested m get-
ting the lake
About 1.200 aces of land will bi-
LANE SUCCESS N.Y.. Jan. II.
U»'- The United Nations cease
fire committee recommended to-
day a program tor peace in Korea
based an an immediate halt in
lighting and the withdrawal ol all
foreign tmope from the country.
WASHINGTON Jan. II. UP
The atomic energy commission an-
nounced today it will stage tost
atomic exploeions in this country
at the bombing and gunnery
range near Laa Vegas Nov.
The land amt .til minerals were xtx*to. tlu l«ki pu>p». and 3tHi
included m tho transaction Thi shoii-lim- which must be av-
ixyrtion which the City bought lies quiroii toi
at tin north end of what will to- Itu-pose* Atxnit 36 property hold-
the lake head This land represents have the land which must be
the first which has to-en purehas "cquuxxt for the lesultmg lake
ed for Ihe lake, but W W Wood. Othet business whien eommis
pure-husing agent, said that several ' signers attended to this morning
CHILDRESS Jan. II. MJP A
15 year old Childress High School
sophomore, brooding because his
parents wouldn I lat him marry a
classmate sweetheart was in set
a sell millet
otf the J M Stout Survey directly
adjoining on the east the 68 acre
plot
City Hospital
Admitted Vtetoi Dorreiugh,
Richard Blown. Dana Harris, Mrs
l. I' 1 aim.inter, Goorgr Pawn.
Mrs Glenn Lange and Handy
Hairs- ____ _ j——' —
Dtsmiasml Ronald Mct’hesney. BETS AOAIN8T WAR
Nellie Minter Mis Lonnie Stoker, LONDOH. Jan. II <U.W—Veteran
Mis N S Grantham, Jackie Med- Hsxikmakcr SkI Hales offi-red I.OOtt other traets are being workint on nclunt-d th approval oi a plan today issued an erder lo _____
nn. Mis Norman Carr. Mrs Hattie to I ixtds totiav against ths- out- , now and it t» twllevi-il that Ihe for Pint Ridgi addition on the hoarding at automobile tires, lum-
NsxJen and Mi .Via llartlmait and break of World War III In 1851 | deal will hx- elosrd on thoae tracts north end o' town, submitted b\ bet and deaons ot other scarce ms-
’jab/ JuO to fur 1 xiTHtla tEt r.ta* ttxv JL r.-n-thv M;tubs.I! jiJ Roy Lt.-'- tcru!.
healthy and sanitation ,out condition from
ed gunshot wound loday.
reported.
WASHINGTON Jon. II. 'UP'—
The Mtienol production authority
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Bedichek, Wendell. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 248, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 11, 1951, newspaper, January 11, 1951; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1035362/m1/1/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.