Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 187, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 26, 1952 Page: 2 of 6
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tM ■- r.rirsrrt \ “
I —
• * s
• »«
Pan* Two
* »■**•**■
Gladewater Daily Mirror
way I
that's the
Heared'
BY GEORGE!
The Second front
W£ DON'T KNOW
WHAT'S GO IN' ON
HERE... BUT THERE ,
SURE ISN'T ANY *
CEASE-FIRE
i BACK HOME!
j>~ -
r.
<r
l * 'T
Looking at
Life
mi.
1 New York iv supposed, to be u
| hard-boiled town.
1 Yet, occasionally you c ome|
across something in litis Bagdad- i
Ewing Issues Taxpaid
Relief Propaganda
£*yt*rj>
,.V.W
ir
The first news releases concerning the suit against the
City of Gladewater carried the fact that the Humble Oil
& Refining company was among those petitioning the courts
of the State of Texas for the action against the city offi-
cials. The Longview News-Journal carried this release in
their Sunday paper.
It would add a great deal of prestige to the suit if this
was a fact.
It is not a fact. At least not at this time, and undoubt-
edly not at any time in the future.
I took it upon myself to telephone Rex Baker, a top
executive of the Humble Oil & Refining company in Hous-
ton. and ask him of his company was in any way involved
in the suit filed against the City of Gladewater concern-
ing the annexation completed on the 27th day of December.
The answer that Mr. Baker gave me was “No." and he
added, “If the name of bur company is involved in any
way, please- delete it from the story, for we are not."
The editor deleted the name of the Humble Oil & Re-
fining company from the story at press time yesterday.
Sometimes it is hard to be able to print the truth for
there are so many that will add to it for the sake of po-
litical prestige.
The staff of the Gladewater Daily Mirror that is ex-
pected to sift and write all the stories that come to the j
office is very small. At present the editorial staff consists! DREW PEARSON
of only two people, the society editor and the editor. It j.
is their task to handle all material that enters the paper. [
When you stop to consider the fact that a full typewritten J
page, double spaced, makes less than six inches of type in |
the paper, and that a page like the front page, or sports. |
or society contains 168 inches to be filled, or 28 typewritten |
pages that must be completed before 1:00 p.m. daily for
the technicians to handle the copy and have a paper out j
by 4:80 p.m , 1 think that you will realize why I take it
upon myself to help out in this corner every day.
It is a wonder that the editor and his one assistant
must work at an average of 12 hours or more c^ailv to pro-
duce the paper. Can they be expected to analyze the news,
too?
If they were expected to consider all
■at/*!
as
Copyright. I til. King rnaturni Syndleai*. Inc.
______. _______ , WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 Fed- nuinths and on greater ‘ban in kov-
, on-the-Hudson, as O. Henry called I cnll security Administrator Oscar eral stales
'it. tbut renews your faith in hu-1 . . u|n„ ba|,.s „f laxpnid **IIUnois opened m Nov-
inanity and your belief in the all- i 8 ' . . , . . tbat ember, but lagged behind othci
i rightness of things in general. 1 propaganda in which he gloats mat s).)U>s m |(s |)(.(.,.mb,.r caseload
We were having our periodical making public the names of iclief
recipients has had virtually no ef- "Widespread publicity in both
feet in reducing their numbers s,u,os m, Ewing reported, la-
in every page of this propaganda f()| rwjpiont* of public assis-
you cun almost see the mad mullah ,but lbt.,, names would be
of National socialization smirking m.ut(1 available to the, public if
uiith uuliufnctinll lit* HIS , , ____• t(mir dlnimc
with satisfaction He keeps ms ^tiV ((H( |U), withdraw their claims
multigraph machines working abj during the month before
over-time turning out jibes aiui ro|js were opened,
jeers at members of'Congress who blu. to name
thought making public the names » caseloads, spec
of relief recipients would shame ^ul 'r Xel.nes shouid have ^p-
many Into going to woik for a liv- ^ ^ ^ |m(iuna Novcfnbci,
and m Illinois in December,’ Mr
Ewing said. ‘This did not hap-
pen.' "
The jeering, mocking socialize!
/ U
Distributed by King Featuret Syndicate
by arrangement with the Washington Star
Ike's Loss Of
Truman Urge
^J—
Power Gives
To Run Again’
fact
Copy lght. 1SS1. by the Bell Syndicate, tee.
he thinks he can lick: second, bo-
WASHINGTO N—Real
about President Truman's inner j cause the palace guard is cleverly
debate with himself over ttie ques- coking him up as the indispen-
tion of "to-i-jin-or-not-to-run" is sable man.
,. . , I that it's intimately tied up to Gen- i On the other hand, no less a
tactors Ot tnO F.ivpnhnwnr It is hkr* n st»t»
news, it would not require much thought to figure out that
the suit filed against the City of Gladewater last Saturday
evening was not too much more than a political move on
the part of a few citizens and companies. It is seriously
doubted that the names signed to the petition of suit are
those most interested, but are the victims of fast-talking
persons that have to pay a few dollars additional taxes in
return for city fire, police, garbage, and lower utility rates.
They probably have no utilities and that is why they are I he so expressed himself. At that
preaching from atop their soap boxes. j time, however, he firmly cxiiected
The group that filed the suit have had since December ' Eisenhower would be the Repub-
26 to file their official complaint. Saturday was the last1 nonu,M‘L' -im ium‘,n
asked in return
•' 'Oh, any time it's convenient
to him.' "
foreign policy. Furthermore, even. "We let it go at that and at one
if ho ran and won, he would face | o’clock I left Shoe s place and
a split in his own party which went back to iny office,
might endanger his foreign policy. '|At 1:15 PhonV r‘"]u: .
Naturally these arguments have ?.11V'S TfK‘.,'s 1 just talked to
counted heavily with the Presi- the C animal, he said. Can^you
eral Eisenhower. It is like a see-! personage than Chief Justice Fred dent. He knows they arc disin- '' at ”tl,w
saw The more Eisenhower's poli- Vinson, one of the closest friends leivstod and come from his best ' Needless to say, i
tieaPstrength goes down, the more the President has and in his day friend. ru^e<' r**h.t ov*r *° th* at be
Truman’s inclination to run goes a shrewd political observer, has on the other hand, the men tin- ’ na ‘s., j’1 ,,co jn< •*
up. I Ix-en spending some time at- the mediately around the President,.wanted. . « *
Approximately one month ago White House strongly advising Mr. mo*t of "whom are rabidly intent . Frirk h.lt.k tn
the President had definitely de Truman not to run.* . „„ keeping their jobs, know that
tided he would not permit him- The chief justice took this move their only job-insurance is to have |'v,i . i,,i t
self to be drafted. In his own mind after a talk with Speaker Sam Truman run again. ° “ '
this was categoric, and to one or Rayburn Both men have a great ^ q result thev constantly
two of his most intimate friends, | affection for the President, and , m those’callers who they
both are in a far better position k wi„ their chief to run.'
time, however, he tirinly expected to gauge the political winds than te|. bjln bc w tbv onjy |na|l wbo
r.: —.------- -----u - •»-----*- tbl, palace guard. —
i dinner of Sigma Delta Clii, the
Journalistic fraternity, the other
evening at Toots Shot’s restaurunt
I in Now York.
Ford Frick, the new baseball
commissioner, was scheduled for
a talk.
1 must tell you right now that
talking to a bunch of newspaper
guys is no easy task. We are in-
clined to be cynical, somewhat
boisterous—and not the least bit
sentimental. .
Although sometimes 1 think that (lf ,hl. con«ress
down under their skin newspiqiei u 1 , , ( tbl, .. „m.s
people are about the softest in- men who voted make h. nam >
dividual* m the whole wide world, i public, in the *n**£*‘
Wi-ll Ford Frick told us a little ed by cheaters. I'd tempted t" doesn't say what he makes of this,
W«ll. Ford Flick fold us a ■ d^wn to Ewing's granite and but I'd like to suggest this as the
Toots Shor. probably one of the I marble palace at 4th and Indepen- most logical ahswer.
country’s greatest individualists, deuce and ram a handful "t nis |b. alu| his multi-million give
and certainly a unique character, | handout* down hi* taunting throat aWa\ schemes have been pauper-
was sitting at one of the tables— Foj sheer, mocking supercill- ,/inK bis clients foi so long they've
trying to look tough. iousness try to beat this handout of pecome hardened to public pan-
“Look at the fellow,” said Frick, his aimed at Congress: handling
pointing at Toots. “He is one of the i “Statistical evidence that making -----
best friends newspapermen have I public the names of relief recip- The Senate Republican Policy
ever had. I jonts has virtually no effect upon Committee, of which Soi^alor Rob-
"Last year I was working on I jht. size of public assistance case ,.It \ Taft i- chairman, enjoyed a
the Heart Fund. I wanted to enlist; joads has now been compiled by f,.vv minutes of high hilarity the
Cardinal Spellman’s aid, but lithe Bureau of Public Assistance. ,,lb(., ,j.,%
didn't know how to get to the Federal Security Administrate Uwkin* up from a batch of job
Cardinal. ! Oscar R Ewing announce*! Uxtay upplu.atlous. Winnie Sanborn.
I had nevei met him. and I “Indiana opened its di-hurse ■manage,, crierl hyirtericalty
knew that he was a vei> busy mcnl ,-ccords f»n public msiwction ..0u, who\ nist Applied foi a
mhiniH-n to eat mv lunch here'0" °c,ober 3°' »M,Lbu' th** '"U"' as mi................ with us
-,t Toots- nlaro every dav and I: “ons “ n't)ol tc“ *" Wl“ K. publican-' II .rry Truman '
tit loots pmcc o\n\ nay, »»nu i sanu* as for previous ,
knew tiiat Ttxits knows about | __ _ “Send lor him' said Senator
everybody in town. , j Taft “But be sure mid check hi*
“So I asked him how I could get Amt this is what the "big qualification*."
an appointment with Cardinal I roughneck" said: ' Mr*. Sanborn sent for the job
Spellman. I "Gosh, what a country I wish applicant who turned out to be a
I "‘When do you want it?’ he| that all the crum bums ■“—* * ‘
• that'*
his favorite expression' could
realize what a wonderful country
thi* is!
“Just imagine, here I am a plain
Jewish boy from Philadelphia. A
big Protestant baseball official
comes to me and asks me for a
favor. So I call up the higiu t
man of the Catholic Church in
New York and make an appoint
mont for him
personable fellow in the early 30V
He also came well recommended.
lie's laiiig seriously considered
for a jD-p*'writer-P*»undlng port-
folio with the GOP policymakers.
The only flaw in the gag is that he
spell* himself "Harry Trueman."
He thanked Toots for hi* help.
Rep Norris Cotton, the salty-
tongued Republicans from New
Hampshire, concluded n 600-word
“In ‘fifteen minutes the Jew has newsletter to his constituents the
cot the Protestant to the Catho- "'her day with this lugubrious
",ci thought
"Where else in the whole wide In the few iwtment* it took
world could that happen " ' you to rood thi- report our govern
Where else in th<- whole wide mint spruit $I,H06.03» and hiird
world could that happen' 54 new civilian employees.”
official day that they could act. It was also just one week
from the date that the announcements for candidates ii.
the city elections could be filed. When this sort of tactic
is utilized what other conclusion can be reached?
It is known that the city officials have asked for and
have never received an answer for an expansion of the over-
crowded school system. This would require an addition of
several classrooms or perhaps, even, the addition of another
elementary school. A few have protested this. They don’t
want the schools in this area to become adequate to handle
the children that you and I send to school, in a proper man-
ner.
The majority of the oil land holders in this area have
cooperated with the growth and development of the City
of Gladewater. Several have no’
If the present city administration, that has worked and
achieved a lake and water supply for the city, that has in-
cluded the surrounding area in the services and protection
of the city services, and laid the first foundation in the last |
decade for future progress, can be overthrown in the com-
ing election, those who wish a recession rather than devel-
opment could regain control.
Several have expressed the opinion that there is poth-1
ing to the suit against the city except a lot of mud slinging. \
All that I can add it> if this is the way that the majority [■
of the people in this area feel, then it is time for all those !
that have blood in their veins to leave town. They had an
opportunity to express their disagreement on December 26, j
and apparently failed to vote. , j I
*, I would truly like to hear, and will publish in this space,
with your consent, your own attitude concerning the dis-1
agreement in the expansion of the city. I have already heard '
so many that live in the annexed area express joy and con- j
tentment, 1 would now like to hear from those who are
pained by the development move.
All that I ask is that you sign your name to the state-
ment that you write and grant publication permission and j
provide proof of such statements and it will be published •
If those who threaten not to trade with the Gladewater
merchant and not to smile on the people that live within I
the city limits are serious in their belief that the city should j
not develop and expand, just write to "By Georgo’bin care
of the paper and your words will be printed in this space!
alorjg with your name and address.
This column is in full agreement with the fact that
there are two sides to every question. Let’s just bring the
other side out of the beer halls and into the public if it is
to be considered on an intelligent basis.
I have, in the few weeks tiiat this column has been
printed, stepped on several persons toes rather hard. These
people have been ladies and gentlemen enough to appear and
ask further consideration, or offer explanation, or endeavor
to end the fault that this column has found in the actions
of the criticized.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
There is no fool like an old fool.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE DAY:
Let's all go to I’aris tonight and support the Bears. They
are amazing kids. They play games for the fun of playing,
not for what they can get "out of the deal."
Iican nominee, and Truman had,
no relish ;for opposing Ike. !
only because he personally mad>
pledge to help Ike become Pres,
dent but also because he regarded
Ike as unbeatable.
Since then, however, the politi-
cal scouts, both Republican and
the major issues is now assured , „uite friendly to Senator
No one e«.n ever detract from his KoU,uv^r> the palace guard has
J*1™ si«"d, '"budding up the j nnw ,alined hl, jealously to a
Noith Atlantic PacL putunR^across ^(lin( wbl,le bc. WOuld almost like
ld,‘ Marshall PLn, opposing a t„ run u only to put the Tennessee j
Democratic, report that Eiaen- Communist aggressor in Korea. S(.|1Ht()|. ln bjs „iacl.
hower's organization is limping blocking Communism in Greece .....y „"
and that the General, though hav-, and Turkey; and championing <
To illustrate, Governor Adlai
Illinois, interviewed i
CROSSWORD - - - By Eugene Shcfjcv\
GLADEWATER DAILY MIRROR
Published Sunday and daily except Saturday by The Mirror Pub-
lishing Company, Inc., Glade avenue and Dean street, Gladewater,
Bregf County, Texas.
T. W. Lee, president, publisher and general manager.
with the Gladewater Tlroes-Trlbuna Nov. M, IM*.
j••oi—
Aar erroneous reflection upon the character or reputation of any
per jeer.
□FHIEinnB □BE3DB
HEnniuciP ntintaH
□ □□ CJUD UQB
\ \ I’Njtr time* «t anltiltort Jl minufr*
As result, the President has But it flu President ran and, always been friendly, so the Gov
Uen toying with the idea of run- wen defeated, the chief justice1 ernor made the natural obseiva-
mug Again—first, because he i- ha.- argued, he would jeopardize! tion that Kcfauvcr was *fine mar
itching to take on Bob Taft whom all that he has won—especially his ul,ll would make a go*xt cunol- |
— date.
Immediately a mem tier of the
palace guard clipped the Steven-
son quote, rushed it into Truman,
| exclaiming that the Governor of
i Illinois had betrayed the Presi-
dent, was now rooting for Kefauv-
cr. The palace guard, of course, i
wants neither Kefauver nor Stev-
enson to run. They only want the
man who can guarantee continua-
tion of their jobs—Harry S. Tru-
j man. j
Sometimes it takes the youth of
the nation to get away from the
hackneyed ideas of the profes-
sional writers and the professional
■ diplomats. At any rate, 'school
children all over the nation are
now responding to the idea of
people - to - people diplomacy by
writing messages to Moscow to bc
broadcast over the Voice of Am-
] erica.
Here is the fresh, simple mes- 1
sage of a Kansas farm boy, Gene
Manahan, age 14 years, of the j
Ridge School, Peabody, Kans., to
youngsters behind the Iron Cur-
tain:
“I am a farm boy and writing
you about niy experiences in a
boys’ and girls’ farm organization
called a 4-H Club. This Is a very
democratic organization. We elect
our own officers and chortle our
own projects. We learn practices,
in 4-H Clubs which will he very
useful to us when we grow up
and become voting citizens in our [
own country.
“In a contest sponsored for 4-H 1
Club members by a large free en-
terprise company, I won a young I
female pig, who will have little
pigs in the spring. This shows 1
how even a boy like I muy get 1
ahead in this country. I made
enough money off of a pig 1 raised ,
Inst summer to buy myself u
radio and still have some money
left over.
"I wish that all children in Iron
Curtain countries would have this
i kind of freedom as I do.
• Gene Mannhnn"
The Voice of America, by an
i arrangement worked out with this
columnist, will broadcast the best
message* from the youth of Am-
erica to the youth behind the Inin
’ Curtain. Messages should lie about
ISO words long. Local school
principals are working out plans
with state schixil officials to pick
the l>est messages from each town,
city and state.
1
2
3
4
5
6
-J
&
I
9
|C
7^
IZ
13
i4
15
%
lb
%
17
IS
I
%
19
20
///
Y/<
21
%
22
2 S
%
24
25
2b
27
28
%
2^
30
%
31
32
is
34
35
fb
37
38
I
%
39
d
40
%
p
4l
41
%
43
4
44
45
4b
4/
%
AS
49
%
50
51
w
%
55
HORIZONTAL
I vein of a leaf
I sports
U. the heart
12 Ivrir poem
13. field of
eonrbnt
14 hlaekhmi
13. deface
1*> Palest iman
coin
17 crippled
1 f*. eager
21 purplish
In own
'2'i Lucifer
24 married
women
27 god or war
2* affray
2U hnmliycid
ninth
•>0 French
article
31 valued
32. m favor of
33 near
34 uncovered
3.T globular
protubi ranee
36 testifies
under oath
3k ventures
:t« decay*
40 large li e 111***
4j Itahaii-makc
**■—vmtnr■—
43. advance
guard
•14 epoch
4 7 parcel
of land
1H clinches
,ri0. edge
31 American
author
32. open
space
in a wood
S3, variety
of bean
VF.RTK AL
J gypsy
gentleman
2 mountain
in Crete
3. rhides
severely
4. street Arab
3. dry
*i. honey
7. half an cm
k greeted with
sign of
deference
Answer to yesterday s puzzle
Rnnnn ana □□□
nmnnpi ananann
irnnnci uanricnn
nouanaa rcnnnc
unnn aan □□□□
GDsnaB
smoQEin
hu
7 il>
striated stone
carved in
relief
tfl, single unit
II free
lk land measure
20. duct
21 lost color
22. dish of
greens
23. sharp
mountain
spur
24. allots
23 daughter of
Tantalus
26 affliction*
2k female
horses
31 talking
wildly
32 fabricators •
34 high shoe
33 Ktrnseanggd
37. babble
3k thick
40 uiindornvd
41 lofty
mountain
42 low
43 by way of
43 city in
Brazil *
in feminine
name
40 diminutive
OLIVIA DEHAVILLAND MAKES HIT ON TOUR
BUT BABY SON'S THE BIG STAR TO HER
•y IUCIA MRRIOO
Cent rut Prett Corrtepnndenl
CHICAGO - Like tba United
States mail, theatrical road ahowt
must go through and of the 26 cur-
rently alogging it out through ileet
and snow around the ninterlanda.
none can compete with the grosses
being ground out by Candida, a
comedy by Bernard Shaw starring
a serious young actress, Olivia rie
Havilland.
It was a ease of 17 etties down
and 22 more to go for Miss D. as
the cast calls her. when we caught
up with her, galoshes In hand and
a grin on our face.
We knew about Miss D the ac-
tress. who catapulted to fame from
the Saratoga tCahfomia) Com-
munity Players production of A
Mid.inminer Niqht't l)rram to one
produced by Max Reinhardt In the
Hollywood Bowl where a film stu-
dio discovered her.
We had heard aU about the
1200,000 per picture ahe can com-
mand even In this day of ahrlvel-
ling hudgcla, but we hankered for
the lowdown on Olivia, the married
ladv and mother.
ft was 11146 when ahe married
Marcus Goodrich, whom ahe calls
“the masterful type," and settled
down to apartment life with ihls
author of /Jcflfo/i, Orst in Holly-
wood and then New York. In tell-
ing of her engagement, the gra-
cious girl with the honest brown
eyes recalls:
"W hen we became engaged,
Marcus asked me what kind of a
ring I wanted and I told him. ‘Any
old ring that orlginailv belonged
to a happy woman.’ ” That la In-
dicative of her.
* a a
SHE RECEIVED a golden Circlet
set with two heart-ahuped ame-
tuvsts. She ive«ri tt with her old-
fashioned gold wedding band.
No other Jewelry except two
tight atranda of pearla and pearl
button earrtnga relieved the aim-
pllctty of her black dreaa and black
velvet Baaque cap atop har aleek
brown coif drawn back, enda
turned under in a net.
She looks and acta like a deeply
contented woman, one who ta _ ___ - -
happy to comply with her - nua-; blond hair he looked like n picture, activities since "I hnVe to be Arm
AUTO TAOOER8 THOROUGH
MERIDEN, Conn. (U.R) — Police
court clerk Eliot Stretch *mile<1
contentedly when he banked the
week's “take” from parking ticket
violations When he reached hts
1 I . 1 car. he hod further proof of police
--^efficiency—Mr ear was Rigged. J
hand's wiah that aha shun even
buslnesa date* with othar men. In-
cluding mala drama crltica, unless
she is chaperoned by a third party.
Goodrich, In New York working
on another book, did not accom-
pany hit famoua wife on her tour,
hut another "man" of tha family
did. 27-monlh-old Benjamin Brtgga
Goodrich. Thia beguiling hoy,
whom Mlaa D never rerers to aa a
baby, waa named for hla great-
great-grandfather, a pioneer of
Texna Republic daya.
He la hla mother'a amaalng and
amusing traveling companion, hav-
ing hla own little theatrical trunk
with hla nama printed on It and
a "Candida Oo." atlcker on the
■Ida.
•Whartvar my stag* caraar
takaa me," Mtad 0 tap id in ad,
"Bcnjle and Ma nuraa go with me.
On lIMe- currant tour we have
christening."
'a a a
SHE RECALLS w 11 h pleasure
that although Benjamin was a One
sarran baby, surgeons at Isis An-
gelas’ Good Samaritan hospital
gave bar a spinal anesthetic, en-
abling her to "stay aware of what
waa going on."
"I’va always been thrilled to
think I heard hla Oral cry," *he
axulta, "and I try to attach some
■
'It-
V
*«
Mil* 0—a* hat fallaw player* coll hat. Sha won’t let laky Bon
Im photographed uniat* it i* for special occasion of hit ewn.
<
trekked more than 10,000 ntilcn .significance to the fact that I told
and ne lovea It, learning his grog- him not i<» cry and he obeyed!"
raph.v as he goes" | However, she ndmita that this
A beguiling blue-eyed boy with beginning belies soyie of hla later
but hla mother declined having It because lie seems id tie always
taken saying: | testing me to see how strong or
"He never has his picture taken how weak I am."
unless the occasion Is for him, I : The I act ihat she never had a
don’t think It lair that he should . brother nevei hindered Olivia's ex-
be photographed simply because he'trema Interest In little boys. Burn
la m.v aon. In Tokyo while her father, an Eng*
"l want him to develop ns an j lisli patent attorney was practicing
individual, to realise bis own |s>- i law m Japan, she later moved to
tentlalttlea. He has had Ills pldure Sarnioga and there, to eke out her
taken only twice, at the hospital' allowance she “used to coach
where he was born, and at his backward boys,"
Does she intend lo desert tllme
rot the stage? Not at all, but at
the present she is having a love
ufintr with the legitimate theater.
Of It she declnres:
“1 believe that all performera
should try to acquire a. good bust-
nean sense nnd n knowledge of tha
economic structure of tha theater
— nut only for their own aakaa, b"'
for the future- Ufa.yf tba theat' i
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 187, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 26, 1952, newspaper, February 26, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008047/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.