Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 277, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 14, 1951 Page: 2 of 6
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Editorials . . . Features
fI1a«J**wator Daily Mirror
Pane Two
WASHINGTON MEHWY GQ HQtTVn
Lyndon Johnson's Future
Stain's Mother Unimpressed by Mh
Wt*tiiu-sda\. FHm.arv ii i m Achievements; lost Cause Rescued
In Korea; Hoover Mentioned at Meet
Where Do We Go From Here?
By DREW PEARSON
tCopwright. INI. by th» 8*11
Syndicate. Inc.i
WASHINGTON - Probably th*
1 *ni\ Aim-1 nnn who tun rvrr mot
St.’rlm'v nwiihiii' •• ..a.
Cvv"'ir'a L“sl‘“ C»«*l»nwr. who with h,s
on Sen ft fV.ash,n«u‘n corrwpondent. cI.h-s a piece
uues Lee.mV J“h.n80n that muv w*» **» |x*li»ual ton-
h-.nu? ™ Carpenter says the Texas senator is quite
Snson wr?, f,Vh“ m2 T* Pres,iden,lal ,w>m>nation
iv,i V ‘ Carpentw. is very close to President
rn.man, as he was to the late FDR. and as chairman "of
th.- 1|),7>,d,V< nt'S,s w-"(hd,,« committee he hews doaelv to
the line to,lowed by the then Sen. Truman m winning tame
5"j| I, '?!™ iUTlaim for e^icient and relentless watch-
‘MtJlinti Johnson s election by his party as majority whip
h^reT Ther‘‘a“ Mii,on,V deader MiVarland got
tlurt |»> a divided vote) was an accurate reflection of the
Texan s popularity with all factions of the party
Mark,1V-v chooses not to run in ’52 he will
hen b< 1.1 years old—Johnson will have the inside track
"i \ier presidential nomination. Indeed, it is not at all far-'
fetched to suppose that Johnson might get a crack at the
presidential nomination itself.
1“ •« «M, .uMm.*- than ihTi"'! ■
Malm * mother i* Uurlrtnti Smith,
nireetoi of the Nations' Arts
foundation, who while traveling
near Tifli.- m HIM was taken to ..
Village where Stalin's mother
lived t
Her hmne was a mud hwl a us
mil iiu the side of a hill, and she
proved to tie .» wrinkled, kindlv
nln lady Telling Sinilh how she
had raised her son to bo a priest,
the old lady added
I hear he's now running all of
Russia, Inn | Ron'! believe it."
A yont later. Smith was in Mos-
cow at the ttnlshm theatre when
Sialm was also present, and had
hi interview with the Hussian die-
tator Among other things he told
......cut the visit to his mother
Si.dm maintained an ic.v silence
lie did not seem interested in Ins
mother
r"i t
hope to aspire to th«* vice presidency. It is conceivable that
J , S"n c'°.u,d destroy the belief that no southerner
tould hope to net the presidential nomination. The conserv-
ativesouth would not go for a northern Democrat who swaV
lowed whole I in man's labor and civil rights program, but
Johnson opposed noth Northern Democrats would not fn «b. Yet he
low an anti-labor Dixiecrat. but would he less resentful i -11 vv,,-h no reinforce-
,s
on M —
Victory in Korea
Gen Matthew Ridgway person-
all> is largely credited with turn-
im: the most humiliating defeat in
H.s years of American military his-
tory mto gradual victory in Kon a.
Military men say that Ridgw.iv
Chinchillas Enrich
San Diego County
SAN DIEGO. Sal. <UEt—A mil-
BOYCE HOUSE TALKS
A colored woman was eating
when neighbor- brought hei the
new- that her hu-imml had been
Killed in «iii accident she con*
I ion-dollar industry has developed tinned r-aling so thru .........
III San Diego county. It i„ raising maybe -he had not under*toon m
chinchillas was so stunned that -h. did not
.......... •••••» ui
Willard Sinclair, president of d,nou w*lat sh‘‘ was doing
the San Diego branch of the Nil- She - no'
tlonal Chinchilla Breeders of till* ?'h uh“l,.am‘
fSSIssnR
tiny animals. The chinchillas are __ , 'can war after Washington re-
valued at SI,<MMi a pair j _ ———_ j fusl,,l j„ him the four national
he requested early
minis, and with a larger number
of enemy forces against him than
faced United Nations forces when
Gen MacArthur was in direct
command. Foi an estimated Chi-
nese force of 276.000 men plu-
UU.OM) revitalized North Koreans
face Ridgway. more than the Com
■■■ ■ M ,.
Arthur off balance in North Ko-
rea and drove him back across the'
:i«th parallel.
Not generally publicized is that
almost -ole responsibility in Ko-
rea has not been given to Gen
Ridgway Foi all practical pur-1
po-es, MacArthur ha- been reliev-
'd of *h. fighting Korean com-
mand rechnicailv. of course, thi-
M i Arthui
-'ill remains -upiohu- lommandi-i
Actually, how. ver. MacArthur vir- I
HiM.ver replied that, although
he was not familiar with the In-
dian problem, he had great reaped
fur Mr. Truman's judgment, and
he was there to listen
Secretary of State Dean Ache-
son explained that while we do
have our difference with ihe gov-
ernment of India, I do not believe
Rial should stand in the wav of
helping suffering people."
Secretary of Agriculture Chai I
•*> Brannati was cautious. He ex
plained that we do not have any
great surplus of wheat Rnl," he '
added, "if you sai n is necessary
we can get 2 million tons oi what
is needed foi India without '
creating a shortage at home "
Di I) A Fitzgerald. El'A food
director, outlined India's needs
He said that drought, floods,
earthquakes, and about .-V*-i \ oth-
er natural calamity had hit India
and cut its grain production by
J» million to 5 million tons
"This is especially bad." he said. I
"beenus*' HU |x*r cent of ihe caloric
intake of Indians is gram They
are not meat eaters "
Some cold water was thrown on
the project by James K Knud-on
.if Ihe defense transport adminis-
tration. who said Run with the’
railroad tieup n would lx- -quite
difficult" to gel the wheat lo the
ports and he uuderslooil ocean
shipping wqs tight
Several iiiiu - during the discu--
-ion. President Truman interrupt
ed to ask Hoover for hi* views and was -ignifn.nt that Ifoovct w
■ ■WTS'.'JK:
rhn country has never failed to t„ tho
come to the rescue of the hungn,
and this appears to lie a worthy Tragic Jeep Accident
. N"r mu. h got into the papers
** * j"*** UP' 11 ab<iu'
\!r*V' rrr:;-.:
| United Slates automobile mtinu-
fariiirers have built more than
11li.lHNMMMMMMI motor vehicles
since IIMMI
Matiwr and Child
Praise Hadrtoi
HADACOL Supplies Vitamin*
BI. B2. Niacin and Iron
Which Their Syatem*
Lacked
killed ffen w.ilion 1 '"’"k Han Pah and Man Jo..
f'hong were released after Hive
ligation of ihe accident
Three Ainerii-an soldiers in fhe
e.-p with Walker uiviv.d and
crash that
W.dkei
However, the South Korean
haw quietly -entennil the Km
iMO dnv. i who crashed into were evacuated To the'"K>'k\ " (i.'i
.11!“"' ,M ,,lrw‘ vc.iw hard erul hospital fhey .... Lieu!
The Rnve. wa Kwmg Ne, . ‘ d l,..s h.o'Tvae,M sJT G.-o. ,a
,K Hl p-'-s'iig.-i Kuk Sonin Ih lton and Sgt Franei- Renan
Mi> Charles Reynolds, Route
2. Fayetteville, Ark., and her
little daughtei six- to It eueh day
thal neither of Hioui forgets (ii
- laki I heir HAD
A col. n„
M-md.-i the.
'.I III
,4/^Hi h < . ’ Ml
H VllMiUnl fo,
W IIADACOI.
plied Vitamins
Hi H2. Nia.in
and Iron, which
| their systems
lacked, and help
Mr*. Reynold* «1 Ihern to ovei
come those- ilefI
eleno .an .-d ailments that had
trtwihled them n Mrs Hevnold-
ees in it that they continue tak-
ing 'hen HADACOL to help pre-
vent tho.-t deficiency-caused all
riient- from eotuing back
Here lx what Mis Reynolds
says
I am -’!» i ears old anil /
h.i>i I wen weak and run-down foi
"tee time I bwik one bottle of
vo nr HADACOL and I feel so
n rh better I have a tx-ttei np
pc’Re «nd sleep much better '
I- • gave HADACOL to m.v littl,
8 u-ai old daughter She had no
• ppotlte and Wi* draggy and
• ' ink- After taking a bottle of
IIADACOI. he eats better and
,V.
-I'lmnng to take IIADACOI.
\1am doctor- recommend
IIADACOI, A-k f.,r n tislay and
gel ’» .! ' Wonderful IIADACOI
( IVM TH# 1 wBlunr r<M^tMOtl«ei
lift v
Sint itiu no th* ( lim.ttc .1 round TIME TO QUIT
San Dictfn is ideal for raimriK the ,
valuable fur animal# because they UETROIT U.P1—Willum, A Pet*
become ill in extreme heat and *old retired as Nice president oi w....- .
cold. The\ are almost extinct in Hudson department store * be# n mort mdc^iendent
their native Andes mountains lltlvr .v*nrs’ service Pet Hold wu< I !hl'! Held en«*rals who had
.JlSfi*!' «-».■«- ^vw.T,£s.............'^hSTUT^.aE'NS:
guard division
in January
Furtfiernior*-. Ridgway, coming
illicit to Korea from the United
State-, has been inon inde|M>ndent
Almost all chinchillas in the
United States are being kept for
breeding purposes. Sinclair says.
since there are far too few a! pres- During 1048. a total of 12 8Vi
eni to be used commercially for ooo.oor, -elephone call* were made
in ,hc United States.
HORIZONTAL
1 acorn
S Japanese
sash
k metallic
droas
12 feminine
untie
1.1 wen' quieklv
U narrative
15 nslerixk
16 Civil War
battlefield
Ik t w died a (Mil
faliru
2b illctaten
21 heaii
2.7 female rufT
24 sparkled
27 miners I
-pr i rig
l" eternities
If sister
:2 masticate
i:i clothe
rcnlloq r
t *poon -li.ipi I
. 6 edible green
seed
37 pierce with
pointed
we* pan
:tk Jewish
42 live <oal
I ready
’ primitive
Japanese
independent
Ireland
1 epoch
gains
exploit
beaded
moisture
allowance
for waste
VERTICAL
aggregate
poker stake
growling
harshly
things
shot at
Anglo-Saxon
money
Answer to yesterday s putsle
fUb’MclAlPTEiRl
ir
H SJtaWI:lH :4Li
duos lanaa
n KiidHonrsiH
(?1K tinQB
a..
to^iauij ^cisip
pihmw aiaiaH
EJUMCILI
uwm atjar^H rjo
aas jqqbb
l-KS
Airtsse lime uf seiatia* I* mlaatrs
li,,ir l-il-a (,, gm| C-s-.ret a>n4it«it
2-14
6 musical
group
7 concern*
k cubic metric
unit
9 rerent
10 wings
11 precious
stones
17 fronted
19 corrode
22 abandoned
hope
24 obtain
25 game of
■ fiance
2# narrow inlet
27 more ragged
2k fondle
29 reverential
fear
12 clamorous
84 bristle
85 Shoshonesn
Indian
i« whistled
7k hurried
80 Great l-ake
4b nothing but
II wax
4 1 grafted
'her i
44 impair
46 jackdaw
parcel M'1 v,d unrtt’f MaeAitiUii in Japan
I and who. having been close to
him, looked to h.m for direition
Pentagon officials emphasize
that there h«.- been no frictuin be-
tween MacArthur and Gen Ridg-
way The latter has merely used
different tactics He ha- quietly
shaken up his command at the di-
visional level, has profited from
MacArthur mistakes, ha* given
'he United Nations army / new
snot in the arm and has turned a
defeat complex on the part of the
troops into a new fighting spirit
Hoover and Truman
Though on opposite sides of the
political fence, and vigorously
disagreeing on foreign policy, the
President of 'he United State- and
the only living cx-President of the
United States -rx-tn to have a
I strong bond of affection for each
1 id her
Heibial Unovel once paid sin-
'« !< tribute to Harry Truman at a
Gridiron , tub dinnei He has
la-ell known to be grateful to Ti n-
man foi having lifted the ban
against mm which for 17 long
, ' if' was imposed bv Franklin
I Roost-vi ll
Som* WInie House friends have
argued ih. t Truman made a mis-
t 'ke In inviting Hoover to Wash-
| iiigtor, lor frequent couferenees,
i i.-iii- ihe administration's bless-
[ mg lias put tint! iri a position
i when In could damage Truman's
i foreign policy However, the
, President has not agreed, and the
I othei day invited the ex-pre-i
i deni to help him regarding n-ln-f
I foi India,
■ rneeiing of cabinet
j ineiMa-i and o!hcr advisers, Tru-
J man ihiiixltaitil Hoover bv -ai ■
'ig
I have invited p r e s i d n t
lloovei Ix-cauHi- of hr vast cxpcri-
• in i and humanifnrian policies to
advise- u* on sending grain to In-
dia
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njulB,! wl(h th# Giadcwater Tlinea-1 ribune November 28.
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Bedichek, Wendell. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 277, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 14, 1951, newspaper, February 14, 1951; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1036146/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.