Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 161, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 27, 1952 Page: 2 of 14
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Page Two
Gladewater Daily Mirror
Sunday, January 27, 1952
S
i
that's the
ay I 'Heared' it
BY GEORGE!
Just Plain Old Bobl
WE MUST NOT
MB'
MBr
“Luck's biggest letter is ‘U’ ”
PORTRAIT Of A FRIENDLY MAN.
It is so tough nowadays having to get along with so many
things that our parents never had that it is rare to find some-
one happy with his job and with enough time to be friendly.
In Gladewater there is a man who spends most of his time
in the gutter It is his job to be there, with his broom and his
basket, carefully picking up and sweeping up tYie trash, cigar-
ette butts, and rubbish scattered about the down town area by j
thoughtless people who care little what their city looks like.
Time after time von see him doubling back down the
street he has already cleaned to pick up the sweeping from a
store that has been pushed into the city gutter, or a bunch of I
papers tossed from a passing car.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
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Distributed by Kit* Faaturss Syntlicat. ///
by arronj.m.nt with Hte Waihington S»or '
jl a / / jr ’ iJr
»—■ — // M
DREW PEARSON
***
■« • ■
ill t ■■ .
I
Dewey Got Favors From Colonial
Airlines; Vaughan Likes "Ike"
Copr t«ht. Hit. by a* Ball Syndicate. lac.
WASHINGTON — Some people 1 the hospitality of a Colonial air- Dick Keenan, are strong for Eisen-:
say that a denial never catches up hnes cottage used by the governor hower. However, like many Re- |
ERICH BRANPEIS
Looking at
Life
OcpTffBt mi. Rm imm,k lyid.. Im.
“Trying to mane a federal case
of of it?”
If you have ever seen Milton
Ber’e on television you’ll remem-
ber that fat fellow Marco who
uses the above as a stock phrase.
Graft, extravagance, waste are
not confined to Washington.
Every city or town of any size
seems to have its share of it.
* * •
On the other hand, accusations
of graft and crookedness can be-
come ridiculous.
For instance, the other day 1
told you that the Roquefort As-1
sociation sent me a five pound
block of imported Roquefort
| Cheese because some time ago I
I wrote that 1 liked that kind of
I cheese.
Literally speaking that is
GRAFT
It is in payment, or rather as
a token of gratitude, because per-
haps 1 helped the Roquefort cheese
j industry a little bit.
Hut that cheese smelled so nice,
j 1 cut a piece and ate it.
| After the second and third piece
j my consclene had beome dull, and
I the rest of the cheese went into
I our deep freeze for future enjoy-
I ment.
• I assure you, however, that I
| PAID for the deep freeze.'
Legally, perhaps. I am a grafter. ■
| Possibly I could go to jail for a i
year or so 11f I do I am going
I to take thc> cheese with me >
Hut the whole thing would be !
Hut the whole thing woul dbe |
ridiculous, wouldn’t it?
| * * * j
i Quite a fuss is being made in |
New York City by Rudolph Hal- j
ley, who is now the city’s Council J
Presdient, because he has dis- j
covered “irregularity” in the ex- i
penditures for official receptions.
There is an item of $8,158 to L
pay for the deficit of a $17,158 re- |
ccption for fifty wounded veterans
of the United Nations forces who;
recently visited New York. It :
Federal Budget RECEIPI i and tA: -•‘•’.ilS
lOsfklt /1
flu* tins
IM0IM3
< I IMV, IMMI •
CHART TRACING ilelleits since 1040 accompanies Picsnlcnt hudg>
message to Congress. It shows how deficit is climbing tIntrnmtumai
FEDERAL BUDGET E X PE N D ITU RES BY ;FUN
ainoir
uniat
SKE2
IMIIIMSTI0NS1
WtlllSI
«turn
Mllllll
mourns
son* i
WIIUI!
tUktroiOliQk
toasumuiKW
UIKUUUlt
umnt
COVtlkMIkl
IWUtlW I
Housmc
'sum in
UIOI IK
Pol If
To
Gr
W«
Gregg
nounc
of stuf
trict.
In
wish
distric
for m|
ally
later
make |
plcte
platfol
give il
eratiol
do my[
flee, il
intellij
tercst T
for wi
Insc|
eral
City,
peace.I
fiscal Veete - Billie** •( Della**
ieia tuts i••<••••«
TOTAL
BUDGET
lir»*Cl«
l.nF
1952
• O .' « ... • ••’•<
• •< k . ... •
i
19S3
It ••u prinitV, ... In St,,,,
THIS RRfStDENTtAl budget nw'-.-.jgf chart inmpnirs alto, itions of vari-
ous rxpendltiirvs foi the coming Useal year 111,Id I beginning' July Ji
and tlkcnl years of 1952 and 1*51. (Inlet intHuiia!>
Famed "Vinegar" Bible
Back In Bank Vault
with the original news story. How-
I ever, it also takes a long time for
i the real truth to catch up with a
(denial. Here are some eases in
i point:
Cops and Automobiles—In No-
vember 1949, this columnist re
for a vacation in Bermuda. publicans—not to mention Demo-.
Dewey promptly issued a denial, ‘rats—,ho New Yorkers have been
claimed both the cottage and the confused by conflicting news ac- i
airplane transportation were paid counts as to what President Tru- j
for. Technically he was right. | marl thinks about Ike as a possible (;
However, records of the Civil successor.
Aeronautics authority now reveal i The other day Keenan spotted
ported that Washington rolice I the following: the uniformed and biribboned fig-
Chief Robert Barrett had bought | On Oct. 4. 7, 12, 2(5, 29 and 31, Jure of Maj. Gen. Harry Vaughan,
three new automobiles in quick 1950, Dewey, while campaigning White House military aide, sitting
succession, reselling them at a; for governor, flew around New fn the Congressional Hotel. Decid-
profit in the postwar days when York State in a special Colonial *'ig he would do u little detective
cars were scarce: also that Lieut, airlines plane, running up a total i work, he fished one of those red,
Jacob Wolf of the D. C. police bill of $4,453.34. This bill remained white and blue “I like Ike" but-
force traded in a large number of unpaid for approximately one tons from his pocket and ap-
new cars ... This was denied year. In fact, it remained unpaid preached Vaughan. ,.nri «n,«n
But this week. Lieut. Wolf, until Colonial airlines got into “General," he said, handing over infi vol. ,.,,,,1,1 ‘ ..ourself i,.t«
called to testify before Senator trouble with the CAA, as a result the button, "take this and put it 0f nublicitv bv fiLi.nu , ihV.v
Neely’s D. C. crime probe. ad-!ff which the Justice Department at the top of your other campaign I you? mayor r vuuol,, , n
filerl n ™mr,lair,» in «h» fn^r-rut , . ikUnn. ” ,,‘a*V°l V‘ V,,Ul P°,,r< taP"
tain or your selectman or what
have you, accepted free drinks or
from the April 8 Illinois state Re-
publican presidential primary.
Don Butler, clue, electaiqcterk,
received Mai Arthur's fnrrnjj With-
PORTLAND, Me., (U.P; |'he diaw.,1 Thursduy mortiing
was held at the fashionable Wal-! famous “Vinegar" Bible of Treble MacAitliur sent a telegram to
dorf Astoria. (Chapel has gone back into storage Hutlei Tuesday after his name
Mr. Halley claims it is perfect-1 *" ■* uank vault after a brief dis- was entered by lair Daly, Chicn-
ly all right to do honor to those | al the chapel's centenary K". and requested Ids name be
veterans. I ceremonies. 1 withdrawn
he asks, that | The nand-tooled, leather-bound Butler lephed
1 there is an item for eight rented volume Is one of the few existing
tuxedos on the bill'’ And how, copies of the edition which re
about ten corsages at $8 each, j oolved its odd name from a print-
only iwu of which went to the ers mistake 234 years ago
wives of service men? How about' 'The printer, John Haskett of
189 free dinners at $12.50 each for , Oxford England, set up the word
officials and guests other than "vinegar" for vineyard In the
service men" | heading of the parable of the vine-
1 yard.
That sort of thing happens in -— ------.—
every community. I MacArthur Takes Name
that the Ken-
cral would have to a no*
turned fd.iternent
Former Hitler Youth
Gets Citizenship Award
RAC1NK. Wi- fU.P) A
ship award at Wiiliam
m
HSHM
Wmm
mitted he had bought and sold 22 1 filed a .complaint in the federal libbons
cars. Earlier. Police Chief Bar- , court. - , Vaughan kxiked slightly sur-
rett. •■'signing under fire, officially This complaint then became a i priseil. then grinned,
admitted under oath the purchase mattcr of public record. Only after 1 “I like Ike too.” he replied "He’s
and sale of various cars. t this became known to the public ft°t a good job where he is and he
Coal-Mine Disaster — Owner of almost one year later, did the Re- ought to stay there."
record of the Orient mine where publican state committee rush a Note—Vaughan kept the Ike
119 miners lost their lives recent-1 check to Colonial for $4.453.34—-on button,
ly is the Chicago, Wilmington and Aug. 9, 1951. j
Franklin Coal company. When it I in April. 1951, Governor Dewey Msrry-Go-Round
was reported that this firm, in flew to Bermuda where he stayed When Los Angeles' veteran
turn, was owned by the giant at “Rock Mcrrcll." the cottage Democratic lender John B. Elliott
Stone and Webster Engineering j owned bv Colonial airlines. Before ; inquired how things were going in ....
firm, the latter denied it . . . j Dewey took the trip. Alger Chap- Washington. Congressman Clair '! . , '
However. H. A. Treadwell, vice- man of 30 Broad street sent Colon- Engle of California replied: "We’re 1 lls ‘ v' "" 1
president of the Chicago, Wilming- ial his check No. 1913, dated April Iin :l turmoil. Billy Graham 'The
ton and Franklin Co., has now' ad- 13, 1951, for $500 anti 'arranged for Evangelist' has half the town
mitted under questioning, that Dew'ey to use the cottage at a rate d-'mglinK between Heaven and | ",nKS J'*
Messrs. Stone and Webster, indivi- of $25 a day plus extra charges Hell, while congressional invest!-'01 m'°
dually, not as a firm, have con-1 for mail service, food, etc. gators are working on the other , .
trolled the coal company in the On June 22, 1951. Colonial ren- half, separating the mink from the flllM inu “ 11 l"' ,,f politicians
p ur ’• A/t pi 1 , . • , ,, u • l past and stil1 own much of ltR : dered an additional bill foi S649.43 sheep." ... Just before his speech I , w;'nt t.<> Ka"1 s<>mething for
L. W. Mac McElroy does hts job well. He IS a busy man j stock. He stated that stone has'covering the cost of maid, food, to Congress, British Prime Minis-1 u,rmsclvts t,v
This man does not have a position, unless you want to call
him vice president in charge of cleaning up the mess of a
thousand people
The hardest job in the world is to do a little job well.
free cigars from his constituents.
Or maybe their wives accepted
free lunches or free afternoon tea
from the local Parent Teacher As-
sociation.
It seems to me that quite a few
of the things about which we get
excited nowadays are just per-
fectly human characteristics
Just don't let us gu overboard
Just don't
let us develop a neurosis
Oh sure, let us go after the
crooks and real grafters hammer
anil tongs. Let us chase them out
jail
Rut don't let us Hist go witch
citizen
Hoi Tick
•bool went to ,1 former
mepilKT of the Hu lei Yi^utii pro
IP alii T|^
Faculti and students elected
Hans Fnedrich Krausse, 19, u na-
uDBiuenn n in 1 n of Nordctibeck, Germ*# The
i! I ELD, III., Jan 25 (UP1 award recognized his abiliH^to get
- The Illinois Muetai v ..f slate'- along w ith all students anrl carry
office reported it had received , < ut in-trui’tions, a spirit of cootrer-
a a notorized withdrawal state iitlon, roikI grades, .mil .1 willing-
ment from Gen tyougln-, Mae ness, to give freely of hi,, foi
Arthur and had stricken his name group betterment.
Off Republican Primary
liohei-thaii-thou
With a busy broom and ft smile and “Hello” for everyone that {scld much of his stock, Webster [mail, telephone and other tniscel- ,(>r Winston Churchill took time j
passes him as he works in the gutter. “I like to be friendly, it!stlU 2)vns a considerable amount laneous expenses incurred by the j out to sign autographs for three
! comely Capitol secretaries. "For a I
The
fact that we ARK
is a real enjoyment to greet people After all, all I have'left ' which‘pli'rUdlla^nTlhe M48 MromaScd unpaid- i man'of hTiTycara.’rd”’sav’ he’ was I ('wakl' •"ul INDIGNANT is.....ret-
in mv life is my job and the hundreds of people that I can be ing of $18,000,000 from the RFC to until the Justice Department filed still quite n blade with ihe worn-1,v slan' ,hou«h " s,"’Wv
friendly to. Being friendly doesn't cost a cent. Lots of people finance Carthage Hydrocol Co. at i its complaint in the federal courts, en," remarkeij House GOP Leader |, fi* s,l1,11 ■’ "r Rl,,jnk
are too busy walking to answer when I say hello, but I don’t j Brownsville, Texas, along wilh Only after this became a mattcr of Joe Martin of Massachusetts ... 1 ,f coun,ry ,s'
mind I have boon swppnino Glaripwatar's street*; fnr four -inH such ,jthc>rs as Guy Gabnclson, public record, was check No. 202 Besides being the only Korean war i 11 •'s,' ,a"lv sa"
. b. if , 1 1 . . ? T 1 I 1 f d ! chairman Hf th0 Republican Na-1 for $649.43, dated Sept. 21, mailed vet in Congress, young Hep. Al
a half years and I sortu feel like I am working for everyone in tional committee, and the Texas
town.” Oil company.
“1 haven't got anv familv, all that’s left is me." Deweys Airline Trips—-Last Do-
1 ‘ comber, this writer reported that,
Mac likes his job fine. He doesn’t complain. His quiet whereas chairman Bill Boyle of
“hello” spoken to men and women and children is his way of 'he Democratic National commit-
enjoying life, because, like so very few in the world today, this l'.? onl-v n W0 bill-clip as a
i;i__, l 1 ■ • 11 Christmas present from Colonial
man likes to be friendly. : airlines. Governor Dewey of New
A POKTKAIT OP A FRIENDLY MAN. ; |I” jSl g,
In Western North Carolina there are 223 mountains more
than 5,000 feet high, 40 above 6,000.
to Colonial by Dewey's friend,1 Siemlnski of New Jersey won the j LIGHT,.®Wf,.T.9”r?..F?1^ DHCKS
Alger Chapman. bronze star for bravery in World] *AL 1 LANK t 11 Y. (U.R)--Ducks
Dewev, a busy man. can be for- i War II. He also won battlefield al t,u‘ T™l'y av,ar>' T"'’'1 B'1'-
given for not knowing that his promotions from enlisted man to ,rtv l ark m.iv get a little sleep
campaign headquarters or his major. now u'at.h'.' ll,v commission has
friends did not pay these bills.'--I come to ‘heir rescue A brilliant
However, denying the facts is an-] ........ ___^ h!! p"!Ml
other matter.
"I Like Ike"
j Lincoln Ellsworth claimed 81,-
! 000 square miles of newly-diseov-
rnn ' ered land in the antarctic, for the
,,“«c^ri^nh!!c2St£S;1 ............... "> •*»
and disturbed the bird's nesting
so the commission ordered the
light moved into the middle of the
next block
Try and Stop Me
-By BENNETT CERF-
V ATESf "kibitzer story tells of one of the true 1 persistent
■ z of the bree ' who hovered behind a card player for thiee
solid houis giving advice What's more, the player wo»>, con-
sistently. Suddenly he found/
himself in a quandary Turn-
ing to the kibitzer, he wins- * ' “
pered, "Well, smart guy.
what do 1 play now. the ter,
or the queeh?" The kibitzer
answered. "Fust you've got
to tell me this: what game
are you playing?”
• • •
Ssrnuel Johnson, tlinpleasi I
by the reception accorded him
In Dublin, observed tartly. "Our
Irish cousins spring from no-
body at anybody!"
* • «
A brassy young busher. who
thought himself too good for thr Three-Eye league, walked off his
uh and wired John J McUraw of the (hunts. "T>, .u M,,. y,,., „ ,||
Lr: happy to hear I'm loose' McGrnw wired tmrk. Tighten up."
Cspyrifkl. l*SJ. hr flinn'U Ccrf tHalr huo.i |„ King I rniurra Syndlial*.
CROSS WORD - - - By Eugene Sl\ jjer
In the month-long campaign in the Wilderness in
Uninn forces lost 50.000 men, the Confederates 32.000.
l86v txsss. vra:
The U. S. Public Health service concludes from mai riage
statistics from l to 3 per cent of marriage licenses issued are
never used. i
Passenger miles flown by airlines of the world in 1950
totaled 10,115,000,000. an increase of 15 per cent over 1940.
Per capita coffee consumption in the 1935-39 period was
14 pounds, but rose to 16.6 pounds in 1949.
HORIZON T A I,
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name
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rltru* fruit
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it tip*
41 palliatrd
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GLADEWATER DAILY MIRROR
Published Sunday and daily except Saturday by The Mirror Pub-
lishing Company, Inc., Glade avenue and Dean street, Gladewater,
Gregg County, Texas.
T. W Lee, president, publisher and general manager.
Consolidated with the Gladewater Tlmes-Trlbune Nov 28, 1940.
Entered as second-class mailer at the post office at Gladewater
fexas, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879
Any erroneous reflection upon the character or reputation of an*
p-raoii, firm, or corporation which may appear It. this newspuper will
be gladly corrected upon It being railed to the attention of the editor*
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«s,Si£&£KSS si S&X t7M
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law ful
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Congratulate
mu pomCt*!
You’ll find jtm
the right card
in our finer
GIBSON selection.
Tho
for ovary illnotsf
Send a cheery
GIBSON Get-Well
Card from our
complete selection.
Thtlr day fo
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 161, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 27, 1952, newspaper, January 27, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008297/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.