Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 87, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 26, 1949 Page: 9 of 12
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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4.
'V
♦ W
25 Wells Are
Cleared To Drill
Tkto Water Oil
Employs M
PERMITS TOTAL
TO FIFTEEN TO
DRILL IN WEEK
TTiwv war* flfta*n retgi*«t» to
drill ««IU filed In th# Kilgore
Office of to* Railroad Cbmmlaalnn
this W+Offa .
All of tha na» walla are tn ha
Incatad In U»e Knot Taxaa Held
with tha exception of three, one
wall la slated for Potter and
three walla are going tn be put
down In the Waakom Meld.
Greta County la tn have only
two of the walla.
Permits according tn well,
aurvay and county are
l.outer Petroleum Onrpomtlnn
No. 2 Burr Amen. 1047.5 acre*.
Potter, 10S0 feet north of the
south Una, 3000 feat. Potter.
Marlon County.
A. F. McMillan Ho. 2 Kanieraa
Broth era. 07 acres. Wood. 467
feet west of tha eaat line and
MO feet anuth of tha north line,
4 150 feat. Rusk County.
Oulf Oil No. 4 0 8. C. Ftnhiwro.
300 acres. Johnson. 65M feel
atuth of tha north Una and 2541
feet seat of wall No. 30. 3500
feet. Gragg County.
Qulf Oil No. 10 H. Saxton -t
al •‘A”. 54 acres. Cooper. »16
feet north of the south line ind
780 feet anuth of the north I'ne,
3700 feet. Rusk Cnunty.
Oklahoma Tetaa Trust N . 5
H. H. Leach. 51 acres. Itsmett.
100 feet east of the waat Una ar<1
150 feet north of the south Una,
3700 feet. Rusk County. 4nc well
No. • on the same survey is to
be ISO north of the anuth line A. I
3700 feet. Rusk.
This Lawyer
Always Assists
Really hnocent
PHILADELPHIA -1 am tone.
Lawyer Herbert L. Mans hears
hat pier almost daily from men
Dehrnd prison bars Sometimes they
•ay dry didn't commit Uis crime
(or which they wars convicted
Sometimes they Insist the sentence
eat un>«*t and Illegal
la aaarly 488 such cases, span-
nine ** years. Marls has proved the
prleaner was right He has won
ibart freedom or shorter tail
/mi
His work started out aa a hubby
Today K Is a full time Job. necessi-
tating employment of three Investi-
gators
Marts began as • corporation
lawyer Now 88 hlr hair gray and
thin, he spends little time on his
civil practice
Marls Is bespectacled heavy set
Hla brown eyes twinkle as he peers
at you from a desk top cluttered
with paper* A five cent tablet
serves as his appointment book
V*4re Carries Aathorttv
He la a conservative dresser,
favoring gray and brown suits Hu
mellow voice carries authority and
conviction He once was in politics
and served several years on Phils-
delphia s city council.
Marla first hearo the cry "Fm
innocent" la 1888 The son of a
Methodist minister was convicted
ot forgery Marts proved the youth
was the victim ot a prank and won
hla release Since then he has
gained freedom for several acrused
of murder
Marls never takes a rase at the
defense attorney at s trial He steps
In after sentencing and only if he •
convinced justice was net done.
"Somebody mutt tend for me."
Marls says "Then I check up nn
the case If I believe there haa
been Injustice I step m I send
Investigators to the place where
the crime occurred We start from
scratch.
"The first thing-the most Im-
portant thing—la Ip learn If every-
body tn the case told the truth m
court.**
Marla, bom a Quaker but now a
member of the Christian Science
church. Is ertUeal of "overtcalous"
police officials.
"Whon a serious crime It com-
mitted tom* on* usually goot to
1*11. even If It's the wrong person
Authorities want the crime marked
*--a----a g **
iOlVM
ON N«ws
Aik an*a* Fuel Oil Lyons and
.vrentlaa No. II M. 8- Ballon,
56.6 arroa. Robinson. 545 foo*
north of the south line and 127
feet northwest of file mat line.
3600 feet, areas Cnunty.
I a Gloda Coipoihfios No. 2
Mr a. L. B. Dawner unit No. 1,
702.8 acres, Holloway Survey,
500 feet weal of tha east llns
and 962 feet south of the north
line. 6504 Net. Waakow Mold.
Ilarrl son county.
|,a aiarla Coipomttnn No. 2
C. M. Abiev Unit No. 1. 40 acres,
Holloway. 407 feet west of the
»aat line and 4 67 feet south of
the north line. 5000 feet. Maaknm
Meld. Kant non County.
Hu-nble No. 50 John h. Turner.
182 acres, Scntt and Smith, 619
feet south of the north line and
422 feet weet of the east line,
3900 feet. Hurt County.
Humble No. 12 Kmma Wilson
Naulla, 74.9 wren, Martin. 772
feel mirth of the anuth line and
1 I9g feet west of the northeast
lie. 1900 feet. Push.
Humble No. «s John ». Turner,
182 acres, Scott an ft Smith, 330
feet anuth of the north line and
14 4 5 weat of the eaat Itna. 3900
feet. Rusk.
Hum hie No. 13 t-tmma Wilson
Naulls, 74.9 acres. Martin. 654
feet west of the northeast line
and 504 feet north of the anuth
line. BRIO feet. Rusk.
Humble no. 18 C. W. Wilson,
96.4 acres. Marttn. 4 38 northeast
of the south line and 545 feet
west of the east line, 1900 feet.
Rusk County,
Arkansas Fuel Oil No. 2 C. M.
Abney. 682.7 acies. Shandnln.
1407 feet anuth of No. 1 and
logo feet anuth of the north line,
5000 feet. Waaknm Meld. Harrison.
No Hands, Pianist
Marts shies from personal pub-
licity. He prefers to remain behind
seenea. Insisting he work better
without newspaper headlini
*1 guess my work can't remain
anonymous, but I csn.” be says.
That's why ho refuse* to pose for
It was t buay week of the Rail-
road Commission'* Kilgore Office
with g total of twenty-fly* permit*
being (rented including g wildcat,
one wall aack in tha Cartilage.
Wood lawn, Falter and ffhgko
Melds and the re at of tha wells
for tha Eaat Texas Field.
just on* of tha twenty-five imw
well a la for Gregg County.
I'rimita show that tha following
well* have naan cleared fio drill-
ing:
R.W. hair No. 1 Ctiester Wynn*,
wildcat, Kaufman County.
Stanolind No. 1 Highland Club
Lake. Woodlawn, Hairlaon County.
Loutai petroleum Coipnreilon
No. 2 Muir Ames, Potter. Marlon
County.
Atlantic No. 7 R.W. Fair. Ruak.
Humble No. 78 R.F.L. Stlvey A,
Ruak.
Humble No. C-15 Henry Heston
tl Rusk.
Humble No. 16 and 17 Henry
Sexton et al. Ruak.
Stanolind and Pipe No. 77 W.H.
Baler, Ruak.
Jim McMurrey No. 5.6.7. and 6
F. Newton, Ruak.
A.F. McMillan No. 2 Kangerg*
Hrothern, Rusk.
La aloft a No. 2 Mr*. L.H. D. wri-
er unit No. I, Waakom Field.
Harrison County.
Houston oU No. 6 Carlos Bann.
Husk.
Houston OU No. 14 8.8. Laird,
Hunk.
Houston oU No. 3-A and 4-A
Carlo a Bsan "A". Ruak.
Houston OU No. 5 Dora WeUa.
Ruak.
Houston oU No. 7 DJd. Peterson.
Hunk.
Houston OU No. 28 After Tlump-
son. Rusk.
A.O. and L.BL PhUUps No. 2
h.B. Reynolds. Greg* County.
Humble No. 73 Mr*. L.E. Cool-
edge. Rusk.
Earl Hoi I and* worth No. 1 Mattie
llell. Carthage Meld, Panola
County
Vest-Pocket
Weatherman
Hi International Newt Vnlr*
i OH ANGBLBfi
— Nlmiods and flaheimen can bold
thru own with professional met*-
oinloglal with t new gada*l now
on the market
The (immirk It a veal pocket
eired wealhei appaialue in whim
you merely look al the «hv ang eel
the gadaet foi the wind direction
and you gel a 74-houi fotecaal for
that flahin* trip or busineaa ap-
pointment.
Announcement of the sadfel mi
made hy Dr living P Kilrk. mete-
orological cawaullanl who nard that
the thlngamajig haa hulll into ll the
weather data roller red during the
war.
Thaws, Chari*a R. Bllaon and
Itoaco* L. fiouBt. Loagvlaw
atwployaea of tha Tld# Water
Associated Oil Ootwp—y. have
Just returned f»m TliJaa test*
they attended the Compete'*
1648 Servlet Dabltm Dtnaar tor
toe Mid-Con On ant Division.
Osa ot toaos dinner* Is haM
each yaer at Tulsa to hooor Tide
Water employee to tlw MltoCoo-
tin ant Division who are ocas-
plena* 25. 30. 35 or 40 yaars of
sarrloa.
South and Tosws recstvad
30 year emblem*, geld pins with
two diamonds. Maher and Mlaon
received the 35 rent emblems, tel'
pins with on* diamond.
Twenty-six ampiaven received
25 yenr emblem*. 13 received
30 year awards and E. H. Salrtn of
Houston, vice-pronldant In char*#
of Mld-Conttnant operations. wan
presented a 35 year award. HU
was the senior award mad* this
Crocby Aid Hop
Laid Powdered Egg
Brought Ii Do*t«
ms rare llmas has oo-
lite Crook* Md took
tlmy are a failure at
Tha two oomadtaas toil lad their
..ret wildest U Central Scurry Coun-
ty and the report haa ocmm that tk*
well was a “duster."
Create ate Hops war# co-partner a
la tha snterprtss with veteran oilman
W. A. Moacrlef. The well waa known
aa tea No. 1 Dewar Moors. Prepara-
tions was mad* to plug red abandon
tha wall altar drilling wool to 7.978
fast without any indication of oil.
OLDER RESIDENTS.
NEW YORK.
More than taa percent of the na-
tion's M-ysars-end-ovsr population
rsaigas la New York Itat*. aceoid-
leg le Information rscslved by ths
sials labor department from Ih*
Social Security Admlalatralioe.
The number, la 1848. waa 1,173AM.
Active fir* prevention campaigns
re saving Uvea and stopping fir**
to many cities. Among them 1a
■stumor*, where the Baltimore
Safety council reports definite re-
suits from aa Intensive Christmas
safety campaign last December.
There were only four fire* attributa-
ble to Christmas trees and Yule-
tide baxardt last December and
January, while la December, 1847
aad January. 1848 there were fif-
teen. Each December tor the peat
five years, aa average of 10 persuns
died a* result of burns and scalds
la Bkltttnor*. Last December there
were five such death*.
Bill Setting Ip
Cos Measure Is
Passed In Senate
A compromise van ion ot the
House MU aettlng up a standard
measure for natural aad casing
head gas has been passed by the
Senate by a vote of 2to0.
Senator Gaorge Morten of ChU 11-
cot he said that both aides agreed
to coaapmmte*. Uattl to* measure
wag passed. Moffett waa la opposi-
tion to to* plan. H* agreed that
"tola bUl establish** a fair meas-
urement tor gas that should have
been provided tor 25 years ago."
According to the amendment,
enactment of the Mil would cause
a change In existing contracts
"than the price for gas. Including
royalty gas. provided for in such
contracts, shall If cither toe pur-
chaser or seUer so desires, be
adjusted to compensate for toe
change in toe method of measuring
the volume of gas delivered."
The bill mutt now go back to
the House for approval of toe
amendment.
A PLASTIC
SCHENECTADY N. T.
i INSi — Genera! Electric seism-
icts cay rubber really la a plastic.
It fulfill* the definition of being
capable under Influence of heat,
of being formed Into a permanent
shape.
-netegdftj
Sunday, June 26, 1949
■AY IIIZI8 who lost both hands
nghtliig with Haganah. the Is-
raeli army. In upper Galilee in
| IMS demonstrates his piano play-
ing technique the really playsi
for Ted Mm k director of "Orig-
inal Amateur Hour," on which
letter played (I nr er nations/ J
newspaper plrtures
Generally, he gets little money tn
fees from cUonta—prisoner clients,
that ia.
"I try to get the prisoner to pay
eapenses of ths Investigation. I
can't afford to pay the money out
of my own pocket. Of course. It
a man has no money and I’m cer-
tain he's Innocent I take his cage
lust the same.''
Msrls visit* penitentiaries In the
Philadelphia area two and thro*
times a week. He Interview* pris-
oners—usually 10 a week—and
checks their stories. It he's con-
vinced a man la tolling the truth
he'll help.
Old Playground
Of Movieland Great
Now Just Dateline
PALM SPRINGS CALIF -Thia
world-famous playground of the
movie stare is becoming—like
Hollywood just a dateline
Palm Springs is going rommer-
ri.ll and celebrities sre flre.ng out
into the desert, far beyond lour
ists eyes
The three newest lusury resorts
<835 to 335 a day> are all more
than five mile* from town
There waa a urn* when movie
people were aa thick an to* street!
as to* gnats which are Palm
Springs plague That wet when
businessmen her* regarded tourist*
as a low form of animal life
In those days, during the war
and for a while thereafter, hotels
refused overnight guest i There
were only a handful of places where
the casual tourist could get a meal
Hotel and club restaurants were for
guest* or members only
It's different now. especially
tuice the recent economy wave in
Hollywood. The tourist la wel-
comed. Collectively, he's got more
dollars than the movie crowd
Rut If ne think* he's going to get
a glimpse of a movie star along
with it he's likely to be disap-
pointed Those who have their
own places here, such at Bob Hope
Eddie Cantor or Frank Sinatra,
generally stick close to home base
Work Halts Till
Opossums Arrive
8) International News Morale*
PARIS May <INS> - A
Hiooklvn es-G I psychology stu-
dent is losing sleep toes* nighu.
worrying shout the (stayed ait-
shipment of si* opossums fiom ths
V *
The opossums sis tn hs hisd by
TS-yeai old .Simon levin m connsr-
tinn with a doctors thesis hs is
wuting foi the University of Paris.
They ware dut to he flown fmm
the U S early this month, hut dif-
ficulties In nbtsinin* an rspoit ll-
rente have kept the Atlantlc-hop-
pmg oppoaum* ginundsd
'I'm wauled sick they wont set
heie until after the matin* season."
said levin "It will he too 1st* to |
hieed them then."
levin is writing his Ihssia on
'The PtSsCoitlcsi Behavior of Ik*
Oppoaum."
It -ferns Ih* opossum an animal
mad* famous by Uncle Remus. Is
the only mammal hern without a
cortex the Seel of intelligence and
that pait of the hiam t-onlrolling
behavior. It dsvelopa after birth.
4*
Fddle lire chan. Hollywood Film
alar who will ****** la Me Mlaa
Gregg County of 1848 beauty par
al red ail-stor show at fi*
colonial Drive-In Theatre aa lb*
Longview highway Jwly 1. The
girt ia PdaeUla Lane who played
pertto itiahsa 1* ‘‘Ftm On A
ttaahaad." If Rrack re givaa up
astoly. aa he seams a be to tog
bare, when only one woman ia alter
him - what will he to when 35 of
Gregg rotmtte* prettiest gits
parade acmes Me stage at die
Colonial ’ George Flatter, presi-
dent of die cow leal- epos aottag
Civltoa ctoto nigen all Gregg
Counties* to be present tor Ml*
l.li show Friday Jwly I.
Radis Play* Sapid Raid
la U.S. baplayts' Raaiaaaa
BOULDER CITY. WEV. -
"Love at first sight is the popu-
lar way of beginning toe "they
lived happily ever efler" story.
Two government employees.
Bill O'Bann on and Kodie Lloyd,
pulled a switch on that lino,
though. They fell to love "al
first hearing."
O’Barmen Is an engineering
boa* of a reclamation bureau
crew far up the Grand Canyon,
while Kodl* operate* the short-
wave communication system of
the bureau hare.
She sends out routine mean
ages to the bureau's field groups.
Whon Bill first heard them ha
trying to solve a biological put-
hit days off romancing and to*
coupi* were married
They honeymooned in a "post-
man's holiday" fashion — at the
Grand Canyon.
TC.MA0
S CAL. WATER JUG HOLDERS .... S2.WI
OPEN FIRE GRIIJ.H----$1.00
FOLDING CAMP STOVES
ALL STEEL DOLL BEDS----
MERCHANDISE DISPtJtY RACKS
MM end vev MM
(PAY. pgMMNU l»N *14. ttSBCM»\hia*»
A-A-A DISPLAY CC.
Longview Nwy. Near awe rat Camp (PO,
4*1 —
CLEARANCE
MLE!
ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER WEAR
U TOU OFF ed LESS
Museum Curator
Works Overtime
Spotting Relics
By laterwattawel News Service
LONDON. .. 'INSi - Mu-
seum* are not gsnsisUy isgardsd
aa being hlvst n( industry, but
tbs aaeioat Guildhall Museum ia
toe City of London i* tn eaception.
As ths i exult of txtsnslvs bomb-
ing in Britain tbs archeologist's
spade has been working overtim*.
Ths curator of to* Guildhall Mu-
seum A. H. Oswald haa hla hands
full sorting out to* kit* aad pieces
sf Roman aad Mediaeval relics
Tbit fascinating job goes on daily
ta aa upataos room of the Guild-
hall. where nil to* finds sis deliv-
ered ia large brown paper bag*.
Oswald caa read tbs contents of
seen bag as aa Egyptologist itads
hieroglyphic* or ths average per-
son issds a railroad tinasttbl*.
Finds Get A Bath
Aa assistant washts sad brush**
the finds in a big sink There .*
a drying tiay and t bath of castor
oil. which ia used far leather ob-
jects such as El'tabsthan stippsia
and baits or for isstorleg cloth
that might have been worn by 'h#
ancient Saaons.
A large portion of the finds ar*
pieces of glass and pottery Oswald
instantly .iscogmree tos ireriod
when they wsr# originally mad*
and can toll you what the ougiaal
object was.
"This Is a plec* of Venetian
glass and whs* i wash it you will
a** whit* enamel on it. It was
mads about 1400 at Wanfisld. near
airmen ths curator eaplsmsd.
Spots Cardinal'* Effigy
A piece ot potttiy with an ugly
head of an old and bearded man
waa token out of on* of tot paper
bags Immsdiatsly Oswald said
"That is a Bellarmtne. mad*
from 1M0 almost to the end of
tha sUtssnth century. Bellarmm*
was a cardinal who waa natsd and
h* pottgre stuck hit head on
hair wars* making it as ugly aa
hty could. This pot was uadtt tor
win* and had a cork.'
Many of the ftads were artgra-
ally pitched into tos dumw ey
London’s housewives of tbs Middle
Ages. Broken cook pots, stlu black
from tot bom* firs* that burned
under them hundred* of years ago.
racism ahugs and glassware, ar*
constantly being dug up.
OU Prodactioa
Host to ta* United Statog to on
production la Venezuela wtt*r<» 1.4
wwilron barrels e day ar* produced
aad the Middle East, which pro
duces 13 million a day. ia wastari
Canada, a great ell davalopmen
ha* started which already ia pro
tettog enough oU tor to* con
auonpuv# demands of to* tor*
Wiatorn Canada provinces.
Argtntine Voters
Look Aht«d to '58
By laleraalieaai Newe hereto*
BUENOS AiREB. .. ' INS I
— With tos 1863 presidential elec-
tion* virtually decided by Presi-
dent Pei ea t tacit acceptance of a
second lira poll-happy Argsottass
ars already looking forward to the
186* race
Peronista boats*, to avoid a
party split aver the 1883 elections,
pushed through a constitutional
amendment eorlior this year enabl-
ing presidential r*-*i*ctlea for suc-
cessive terms.
With mass swaying Psroa la to*
Casa Rotada piesidsnttal chair un-
til IMS Argsatiaa political ohsorv
art saw litti* likelihood ia to*
Poruaiata Party becoming a min-
ority group during th* neat aia*
yearn
Party 'oadois alioady ar* reck-
ing a potential candidate to bo
groomed for th* presidency la 1*6*
and sovsral factions withta tha
party ars jocksylag for position*
Two ntmos overshadow all
others Buenos Aires Province
Governor Colonel Domingo A. Mor-
rent* tad Minister of Transporta-
tion Juan F. Castro.
HURRICANE
FENCE
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
3 YEARS TO PAY
Rscogaliad by F.H.A.
I roe rod or Ueoroctod
All work (aores rood re too*
••tit Fee tie*
-FREE ESTIMATE—
CROLEY
HWD. & SUPPLY
109' W Commerce Ph. 25
MORI PEP... MORE SPEED... MORE POWER
Now Scientific Machines Reveal
AIL MOTOR OPERATIONS
WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO COME IN
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MOTOR OF GLASS — Ii your car actually had a
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FREE MOTOR CHECK
SUN MASTER
A FACTORY TRAINED MECHANIC at your
service to operate the equipment and test your car.
Make it a point to come by —
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UJouldiiL you. JikfL Jo, S**- Jhe. ^
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By means of thee* marvelous new. scientific machines
YOU. yourself, can virtually SEE THROUGH THE
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Greep, J. Walter. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 87, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 26, 1949, newspaper, June 26, 1949; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008145/m1/9/?q=%22~1~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.