Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 130, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 16, 1949 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 19 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
features
2_ GLADEWATER. (TEX.) DAILY MIRROR Tuesday AuKuot 16, 1949
According to reports frorr Washington, certain
friends of President Trumnn's side, Gen. Harry
H. Vaughan, have been scattering deep freezers
around ratner lavishly. According to one at the
President's close friends, Vaughan requested
these freezers sent to several men in high of-
fices, including Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court Fred Vinson, Secretary of the Treasury
John 1. Snyder and others. And one of the
freezers went to the President's home at In-
dependence, Mo.
Vaughan said there was "nothing improper"
shout sending these gifts. But there are others
who will disagree with him. Eventually, the
freezer scandal may become a "cause celebre."
It could become a factor in the nest presidential
election, or, at least, in the congressional
elections nest year.
This freezer issue is not altogether unlike
the "swimming pool issue" which precipitated
* bitter political battle in the state of Kentucky
a few years ago. When Gov. A. B. "Happy"
Chandler (now Baseball Commissioner) was
running for the Senate, his opponent accused
him of accepting the gift of a swimming pool
from a building firm in Louisville. The firm had
been awarded several state contracts. The
swimming pool had been installed at the Gov-
ernor's home at Versailles, Ky. The alleged
gift of the pool became such an issue in the
race that it crowded out all the other issues.
Although the Governor had helped to abolish
an obnoxious sales taz which his predecessor
had helped to enact, and although he had placed
the state on a firm financial footing, his con-
structive accomplishments were forgotten while
the battle was waged over the swimming pool.
The Governor won his race, as we recall, but
the ghost of Chandler’s swimming pool will
not run down, it still pops up in almost every
Kentucky election.
It would be too bad if this should happen
in 1950 or 1952. The deep freezers may be for-
gotten by then, but not likely. It would be an
ironical commentary on our form of government
if the outcome of a score of congressional
races, or even the race for the Presidency it-
self, should hinge on whether or not certain
persons received deep freeze units as gifts
of certain corporations, which later were a-
warded government contracts. But such a thing
could happen.
• • • • •
Maybe they call it the "cold war" in Europe
because Russis and the Western powers are
trying so desperately to freeze one another out.
Signs Pointing Upward
If some of us were as good economic pro-
phets as the government economists at Wash-
ington, we might be able to foretell the end of
a recesaion that never has happened.
At least, that's the way the government ex-
perts figure it. For weeks now, economists
close to the President have been telling us
thst there was no recession; that business was
booming, employment holding up as well, and
outlook was bright.
Now come the experts to tell us that a rise
in business loans • • the first in twenty-eight
weeks • • presages an end of the recession and
an upward swing in business. Those who have
been saying that business was not declining
now ssy it has hit bottom and started back
again. Maybe these are not the same economists
who have been making the optimistic predic-
tions, but they belong to the same circle.
Those experts who foresee an early end of
the recession base their predictions on the new
demand that has been made for loans by busi-
ness men the country over. They think this
indicates that merchants are replenishing their
stocks in anticipation of heavy fall and winter
buying, and other types of business men are
planning to expand their plants. All of which
shows that business is on the upward trend.
Against this is cited the fact that unemploy-
ment in this country now stands at the highest
figuie in seven and a half years. The Census
Bureau last week released figures showing more
than 4,000,000 unemployed in the United States,
which is practically the number we had before
we entered the war.
Prosperity and business volume depend upor
sales, and sales depend upon worker income.
If unemployment continues to rise, workers
incomes will be reduced, sales will fall off
the recession will grow worse. It is all a part
of a vicious circle.
But this may not happen. The downward trend
may be halted and the cycle reversed before it
goes too far. Apparently, the recession, which
was little more than a period of readjustment,
is passing. There is no cause for us to get the
depression jitters just yet.
• • • 0 •
Have you ever stopped to think how the king
business has declined in the past few years’
Before Vlorld Vlar I, almost every country in
Europe and Asia had a king. Today, about the
only place you find them in is the "king row’
on a checkerboard.
CURRENT EDITORIAL COMMENT
TO* au
e
t,VM
You remember the case of Vivien Kellems,
the lady with a manufacturing plant where there
are no income tax deductions from the pay en-
velope. Miss Kellems says that she is not
Uncle Sam's tax collector and that she isn’t
going to collect any taxes until she is duly
appointed, sworn in and paid for the work.
Miss Kellems takes no "deducts," but her
people all pay every cent that they owe to
Lncle Sam, and they have the receipts to show
that it is all paid. However, the bureaucrats
at Washington, acting under the terms of the
law, go to the bank where Miss Kellems has
her money on deposit and deduct the full amount
of the tax (not owed by Miss Kellems, but al-
ready paid by her employees.
The.c is no lawsuit. There is no order of
court. There is no judicial determination. She
is simply fined by a clerk and another clerk
walks over to the bank and takes her money
on the say so of a piece of paper which he
carries with him.
Miss Kellems was "fined" fl,600 last year.
So when she paid her own income tax, she de-
ducted that tl,*i00 and dared the United States
Government to prosecute her. She even notified
the government that she was withholding the
money intentionally and not by mistake. No
prosecution. No action, except to go to her
bank and take away, this time, (6,100.
Presumably, if her personal tax is big enough,
she will hold that out, and the situation will
develop further from there. Meanwhile, under
American law, there seems no way that Miss
Kellams can get to the Supreme Court to test
the law, unless the Attorney General has her
tried in a criminal court. A jury, you know,
might side with Miss Kellems. Even the Su-
preme Court might side with her., Apparently
somebody is afraid.
- —te taxes amount, Mo in the retail price of a
lo.ro! btwwtL But taxes definitely are a part of
the selling price. The taxes on each producer
and handler of the various ingredients of bresd
add the cost into their selling prices and it is
passed on down the line to the ultimate con-
sumer.
It is probable that few consumers are con-
scious of the impact of taxes on the price of
the bread they buy. That is the insidious thing
about hidden taxes. They can't be seen and they
may be painless. But they nevertheless are paid.
WO RELIGION?
(Dallas Mo mint News)
New York City's police department checked
the religious affiliations represented in the
homes out of which come the city’s juvenile
delinquents. In more than 80 per cent of these
homes neither parent has any such affiliation at
all.
Deputy Police Commissioner James B. Nolan
puts it this way:
Most of them will say that they are Protestant,
Catholic or Jewish—but in name only. There is
no real participation in church activities, either
by the child or parents. V’e all appreciate the
value of religious training. It gives the child
his moral content, which has greater substance
to effect good social living than any other
principle of living.
"To discuss ethics without morality is to
emit hollow sounds, so we need the help of the
priest, the minister or the rabbi to become
interested in the erring youngster and his parents
and to develop in them a sound religious af-
filiation.”
That is a policeman talking. But it sounds
like a good sermon directed at the makers of
IN 41 I I IS I LAHSK It4 41 I 4
(Idler Morning telegraph)
TAX ON IIHI All
(Fort north star-Telegram)
Vr imagine the American people would rise up
en masse to protest any serious proposal to levy
a direct tax on a loaf of bread. But we pay
man> indirect raxes on every loaf we buy and
only rarely is a word of complaint heard.
Researchers for the Tax Foundation report that
the price of a loaf of bread today includes about
120 federal and state raxes. These include in-
come taxes, the tax on freight shipments, tele-
phone and telegraph taxes, social securiry and
unemployment compensation taxes, motor ve-
hicle fuel taxes and license fees, stamp taxes
on security issues and transfers, and the various
state taxes on corporations and individual busi-
ness firms which make and sell bread.
These taxes must be paid by the companies
that make and sell the bread, and also by each
of the concerns which make and supply each of
the ingredients that go into it. And the whole
aet of federal taxes has to be paid by the rail-
roads which haul each of the in^edienta to the
bakery.
Hie researchers made no effort to list the
local taxes which enter into the cost of produc-
ing aad aelling a loaf of bread. Nor did tney try
m determine just what the known federal and
Ever since Americans had the word that
Margaret Truman's piano was in danger of
falling through the second floor of the White
house, they have been waiting to hear what
is going to be done about the No. 1 residence.
For months, while President Truman occupied
quarters in Blair House, the only tennants have
been a staff of watchmen, and presumably, a
mouse or two.
During this period a congressional commis-
sion has had two plans before it. The first was
to raze the present dwelling and build a brand
new executive residence of steel and stone.
The other alternative was a complete renova-
tion, which would comprise keeping the familiar
outside shell, and rebuilding the entire sway-
backed interior from scratch.
Several days ago, the commission, whicH has
final authority on the matter, handed down its
decision. The White House will be renovated,
not rebuilt. A total of (5,400,000 has been
appropristed for the project.
Many Americans will be glad the decision
fell the way it did. Admittedly, it might have
been cheaper to rebuild from the ground up,
but there are sentimental, traditional and his-
toric reasons why the White House, as it stands
today, should continue to stand in all its clas-
sic beautv.
ON THE LINE
By BOB COMlIDIlfE
(Distributed by International Newt
MY AMERICA
■y
HARRY BOYD
Some of the upllfters labor
arduously to persuade people that
bigness In business, in Itself, la
wicked and dangerous.
1 think that's baloney. And of
s poor grade of meat, at that.
It'a like some other half-baked
notions that had considerable
currency until their absurdity
became obvious. In the early days
of the horseless carriage there
were people who thought It wicked
and dangerous-impertinent flouting
of Divine law-to entrust a human
being with the awesome power of
a two-cylinder Maxwell.
There are attll people who think
It suicidal to carry the mechaniza-
tion of industry any further. They
think It cuU down the number of
Joba, statistics to the contrary
notwithstanding.
Pear of bigness In industry Is
a place off the same bolt. It
assumes that hulk rather than
booriaiinesa la what makes a
ballr.
1 see nothing vicious In mere
size so long as It benefits people
as a whole. Up to a point, large-
scale operations enable Industry to
cut unit costa and give people
more for their money.
If that’s bad. (hen why aren’t
hard work, careful bookkeeping
and all the other things that help
business give people more for
their money equally bad’
It's not the size but the abuse
of size that la dangerous. We have
laws to kt*> big business horn
throwing its weight around, and
can get more If we need them.
Pven a bull In a china shop
does no demage If It sticks to
the aisles. Careflilly watched, tog
business Is no menace until Its
size mekes it ro clu/nsy it can’t
serve people satisfactorily.
There Is more evidence that
government business has reached
that muscle-bound stage than
that any private enterprise has.
A truck-line operator was telling
me the other day about an income
tax set-to he had with the givern-
ment. After going around and
around for five years they whittled
the difference of opinion down to
S4.000. Lawyers said the com-
pany probably didn't owe even
that but could aare money fay pay-
ing It.
Unfortunately the company
didn't have the *4.000. |t had
been drained of capital and
saddled with defat while the govern-
ment was managing Its business
during the war. The government
owed It *65.000 on that account
hut hadn't paid up yet.
The government was not dis-
posed to wait for Its *4.000 until
It paid the *65,000. The revenue
agent said that was another
matter that didn't concern him.
He made some sarcastic remark*
about buslneares that try to
operate without capital and
suggested that maybe the govern-
ment should take over the trucking
fadllttes again.
The head of the company said
the government would find It
harder to give them back next
time. He suggested a place fbr
tbe agent to go and returned to hie
office to find In the mall s govern-
ment acknowledgment of a *15
Mil I* couldn't pay at the moment
because an appropriation had
petered out
Things like that go on all Ike
time. I don't say they're anybody's
fault. But if anyone is hard put
to prove that an enterprise can
grow too Mg to move wound
without hurting eomebody, they
make dandy example*.
(Copyright, I94B. King Features
Syndicate. Inc.)
iTATT YwnnnBy LouELiiA
Elvy-Lli X W Vy v/ X-/ INS Motlon plc.ure Editor
RV ROKOrilY M ANNULS
INK Staff Writer
iWhile louella O. Puwaii la on
vacation her column will be written
by Dorothy Manners )
HOLLYWOOD. Aug. 1&-HN8!
At laat it’s settled. Ezio Pinza’s
first on Ms half-million dollar
contract with MOM is Saadis
Guitry's classic, "Deburau"
with Mann Lanza aa his co-star.
However, they aren't sticking
to Gultry s anginal characters of
the great circus clown and his
son. Producer Sidney F'rsnkltn
Is switching the setting for the
father-son story to the opera
stage.
I heard an amusing new slant
on Pinza’s supposed tendency
toward flirtations the other day.
Beams he never does any hand-
clssing unless there's somebody
around to comment on IU-re ally
loves his wife and Just plays the
Don Juan for the publicity value.
automobile racing thrtller. .tarring
Mickey Rooney and Tom Mitchell.
•'1*11 make one-pertiaps two-
sports features per year." Jack
told me, ‘‘and not confined to
boxing. We'll take In baseball,
football, racing."
That big lovable lug, Jack
Dempsey, loomed up at the office
the other day with more news
shout his producing Ue-up with
Harry Popxin and Karr KUefel.
The champ says there's more to
It than merely officiating at the
birth of his life story on the
screen.
Truth Is, Jack's first fling as
s movie Impresario will not be
the Dempaey story. He will be
pwtner with Popkln and KUefel In
filming "The Big Wheel," the
• • • • •
Nice chatty letter from Greer
Gar son to Lou el la Parsons which
1 opened, and read without con-
science, reads:
"Buddy gave a delightful party
for Nina (GiwePs mother) who has
been visiting us at FYirk Lightning
Ranch. We had a .Spanish orchestra
and wonderful fun and music.
Buddy Is trying hard to arrange
his affairs an he can m> to Europe
with me, but may not be able to
come until ten daya later.
"Nina also (fallows me there
and will visit Mends In Scotland
before coming on to London. We
hope to be back here for a Merry
Christmas In either California or
Texas.
"I've certainly taken to ranch
life and have switched from
buttons and bows to levts and
boots. It's a great life and I hate
to leave It even to renew acquain-
tance with dear 'Mrs. Miniver."
• • • • •
Kteve Cochrane, who has al-
ways managed to keep In the lime-
light by romance publicity 'Mac
West was supposed to be made for
him and vice versa during tin
revival of "Diamond Lll"), ha<
a good acting contract to tout these
days.
Jack Warner has given him a
There are .1.1.604 mllea of rall-
raoda In India, with capital as-
sets of *3.100.000.000 Grom
earning* for 1647-46 were over
*600.000,000.
• * •
In years gone by It was styl-
ish to cook pea pod* whole
They were dipped Into sauce at
table, peaa licked out and pods
discarded
see
Taraaque is a monster in
French folklore He la Mid to
have been subdued by St Mar-
tha In early Christian days.
"Click beetles” emit a brilliant
greenish light and are sometimes
referred to as fireflies, but are
more properly called "fire
beetles.'' They range from aouth-
em United States to Argentina
and Chile.
e e •
The origin of the word "to
Sacco" is thought to be from
tohago. which was an Indian
pipe.
e e e
Watermelons grown along the
rigrls river, in Turkestan, have
grown as heavy as 37B pounds.
American mining Is claimed
to he twice aa safe aa It was
40 years ago on the basts of
man-hours worked
The state of Oregon has every
character of climate and soil
and production known to the
temperate aone
e e e
The Teton mountain range. In
Wyoming, has 11 peaks of nrajoi
rank.
e e e
Diamonds were discovered In
Murfreesboro. Ark . In 1600
NKW YOKK Aug. 16-<INt»> seeg the comfort of unopeoed
PMS'-H Islltsp
there Is sn odd pattern of sdde, fathers In the ayslar world. Oyster*
an incoherent hum in the ears... are HpaeMng end farmers of
and ee look apprehensively toward the tea are nervously pacing
the sky fbr the sign that will their boats awaiting word that the
nvean the end of man. ** »pal token. *«o •* UBa
Th'« day ®t «ff to such s start time..." The exude began to run
whan a Swiss muric box if >ura, together.
mute tor a year, suddenly began There was a long one loo from
to play selections from Gutter- the International Circulation
dim me run ft. A sun til wind-uj) Amro. dgmftAatnt
motorboat floated into Ihe room at the world, as of now. slop calling
the seme time. The cook, babbling youthful neespaper deliverers
into s telephone, had let the sink '•newsboya" It prefers "carter
overflow and U had picked up the salesman." Sounds like an off
child's toy while flooding one spring of Typhoid Mary.
section of the apartment. indimaot Keeners
Badly shaken, we waded in to
the living room to turn on a light There eaa a noU from the taoaa.
and a minute later, there came s He said that the s* rankxi Tribune
stem command to eat Blintrtea. nad called to say ! was wrong In
the breakfast food that doesn't attributing to Mark Twain the
»n*>. crackle or Mte back at you. expression "Everybody talks about
Just' sulks there, all sodden, the sesther, etc." Twain didn't
Seems our television aet Is hooked say It. Just happened to be stand-
up to the light-switch, through mg around whan a fellow thought
It up. Teali. nad the rep. see’
No It eas pinned on him...which
mokes Twain s fur-bearing Gold-
wyn.
A lady *h<> lives In Los Angeles
»aa very mad. she wrote. At me.
'■ Before you allng mud hi
some devilish alchemy or other,
and If we want Ittfit ee must take
nowdy-doody with it.
Then a wavering figure an the
screen said he eas (Sanding at
the comer of something and Mad-
l son «td that he was going to feel
the pulse of the people...catch Nature Itoy main, by suggesting
the heartbeat and brittle wit of |
tbe man-in-the-street. The first
man-in-the-street he grabbed ean
a lady. He asked her shat lean
she liked in (he American League
this year.
Odd sights and Sounds
'The New York Cardinals,'
hi» clothes need s treatment In
t sheep-dip. get your facta from
eyesight. not hearsay." She
stormed.
"Cbm* to Los Angeles, watch
Naturr Boy nin pink and white
towheaded tally, hu Ingrid Berg-
man resembling wife, as 1 to daily.
You won't find a more fastidious
she said. "No. It'a the SL Louis gentleman, gad it's gentleman
Yankees, or Is U7 I mean are they’ In (he age of chivalry sense.''
What 1 want to say Is..." We got Heat offer re -iv*,J in years, we
to the light-switch In time, unable thought, fueling that pritisps this
to bear hearing Mm give her the was the turning petal of a day
house, car. plane, four refrigerators which might have r*en better
and a mynah _lrd as a consolation spent in s )>>a» n mr. Maybe there
prize. would be peat * In our time after
Them we waded outdoors and all, found In slating rapturously
hurried oil to aee a fallow named at Nature Hoy in toe intimacy of
Edward Allcard, tbe bearded young hla home. But toe spell snapped,
man who r>t fed up with life In The Washington offi e rammed
England and tailed his little through a news item tost began
yawl to New Yolk la shout three
months. He couldn't talk much. He
was eating for a change las,
orders of ham and eggs provided
by hammy Goldstein, the INP
‘President Ttuman will speak to
the women of the nation tqr radio
Sept. 37."
How will he get a word In* And
•hat chance has ha of getting
photographer, who. now that I've througi the family loudspeaker
blabbed It, won't- be able to put If tnwe's a ball game an tost
In any eipunse account for atsaks. night’ And ehat's ail tMs shout
"You want bam and eggs or Hess's deep-freeze? Will that be
bacon and eggs." Hem my had tbe topic? And ehat's he going
asked the adventuring expatriate, to do about that fallow a# the
"la there a difference?" Edward flaopols la Cleveland’
naked through Ms beard. Hold it a second. Want Id take
Unnerved, we got talhe office to awther little look at that Mur.
BAFBINU HOW* ON INK N*Wk
By Ardorr "Bage" Baer
Diatribe ted by laleraaUoaal
News Service
The trouble with ail our legis-
lation in August la that Congress
should have been an a vacation.
The lads six uid have adjournea
“It Says Here”
By Bob Hope
(Copyright IMS. by King
Feature Syndicate. Inc.)
Hospital aeries Number Four.
Today we leave the hospital.
Yea. sir. the nurses and lie
long-term deal al Warners following
a good performance with James
Cagney in "Mute Heat." which
la tn exrWIehf picture, Cajgiey
back at hla Jim-Dandy best.
But getting back -to Cochrane.
Ms first on toe new enntrert will
be the good looking menace In
"The Victim" opposite Joan
Crawford.
• • • • •
Milton Berie has had some
pretty shabby treatment from other
comics and some of the press
since he has been here.
He does so many swell things
and plays so many benefits for
nothing eicept a possible nervous
break-down, they should be gist'
to have the mothballs shaken out
of the old gags.
latest swell gesture from Berie
Is doing gratis a two-reel special
trailer for the Salvation Army
which will be shown In all theater*
• ••>••
Hollywood In shorts
The Dennis Days In Chicago,
have been told to expect another
Day. There's already a six months
old Day In (he Hollywood iiursep.
(Meriting of do.ngs on the Kiv-
era. the Darryl Zanucks threw a
tumptuoua dinner at the Carlton
Hotel followed by a preview of
Tyrone Power's "Prince of
FVixes." It was s misrkllng affair
avan though the ladles, almost
without exception, arrived pract-
ically minus Jewel w-the whole
vicinity being In a state since
the robbery of Ihe Aga Khan and
the begum.
before to«> started petting cabbage terns# °*> the third fli-v finally
leaves metde U>elr hate. They are “eu way ami I leave today
beina led like rabbita. » •*" **»?
1tdn t mind giving me food or
* * * water, but thay refused to feed
Tbe only Issue they haven’t me straight 4lnea.
voted for thla year Is square Since |'ve been hare I've
portholes so sea-going diplomats picked up a lot o' bunwsous
can gel their heads out.
The laat thing congress bought
was the world. Ilut who would
think that *5.647.724.000.00 waa
inly an Installment?
iMtfllEfB M IIHh
LAB VEOAJ, HEY
leal ileutha are facing a
lag "whodunit "
The mystery
doodling* found on the steep cliff*
•ad rock-strewn fleer ef near-by
Keyhole canyon la tbe heart of the
Mojave desert.
Two diver lifted schools have their
own solution, but both agree these
latest find* af .the primitive art of
leaving a mark, date back at lead
1.066 year*.
The doodle*, or petroglypus ••
Ihe pi ore technical folk call them
anecdotes about hospitals. Ail
I have to do now la find an agent
who ran get me bookings In nurs-
ery.
Hut the rooai* here are wonder-
ful and tome fo them even have
television seta. The room next
to mins haa on# and they were
lice enough to give me a larae
keyhole.
Of euuroe I didn't get much
,bonce tn look si It with Dr.
Htralhram running in every five
minute a to eiamifl* my lumbar. I
didn't mind Mm tapping on my
<P'ne. but no matter how gentle
he Bled to be. It kepi coming out
"Wuanta La (•unis."
Of course I do want to take
this opportunity to thank Mian
Johnson and all the other nurses
and doctors who’ve l,een so swell.
And I want to thank Jack Benny
for giving me the Idea to sell all
my used bandaida.
And so It la with light heart
and dragging torso that we bid
fond farewell to Hollywood Hon-
havs Intrigued archaeologist* and piui. As we slowly make our
students of Indian tors ever since way toward the exit we can hear
their discovery. the natives chanting their old
One school, hesdod by Dr. Georg* familiar cry . . . "Doctor Jordan . .
BaldwM. archaeologist with the na- DocUx Joyce Jirdon . . Call
tional par* service, says It waa tha auraerr."
work af the Patayana who dlsop- ——................ ■ ■■ .
peered from Nevada culture around American Homer
IM6 A. D. Twenty three million of ^he nati-
on the other hand. Dr. Bohert mated 2S.OOO.OOO homes In America
Fan Ion af Boulder City, Nev., eon- nrc built of wood.
tonda the potroglypha arc the work-—---------------- ■ —--
af the "little men." The "little" two feet tall, who Were the 'r-f»ng
men." Dr. Fenian laser!s, were ciUaons qf Km area In the Brat can-
formed midgets about tor let of the Christian are.
Iby tha
■way. I
■reap, I
Su perln
ftifo (RUhrtoitlrr Daily iRirrar
r*» nev, see"
7 morning (except Monday) and Sunday by
* Publishing Company, Inc, Longview High'
as. Loyce Phillips. President: J. Walter Oi
b, City Editor; A. It. Moore. Mechanical Supi
Published every morning (except Monday* and Sundal
Artrraft Printing A
Gladewater, Texas
Editor; Nat Lamb
tendent.
Entered os second-class matter at the Post Office at 0tidewater.
Texas, under Act of Congress of March I, 1676.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character or reputation of any
person, firm, or corpora lion which may appaar tn thla
will be gladly corrected upon
editors
SUMC! . TION RATH
By Carrier 60c a week 76c par month Throe man tha *6.36
Six months 64 50 and 66.00 par year.
By Mall; 70s a month, or 66 06 par year AU wall
are payable In
the attention of
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greep, J. Walter. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 130, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 16, 1949, newspaper, August 16, 1949; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1008319/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.