Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1953 Page: 6 of 10
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* vV iW voA
^ sv
r T
I tor Mia to
days must be
m. on days ui
f Sunday edi-
be In otftee by JO a.m.
Saturday.
CLASsanso rates
first InaarUun 4c per word
Second Insertion Ic pea word
error<or^nlsclasstftca-
ICirror will be
lor tint insertion only
I— ros SALS
FOB SAI.E OR TRADE — IMS
Kaiser for equity in later model
car Call 7588.
Is cose olern
ujb the Daily
responsible lor 1
CaU SSS6.
1—SfSClAU WOT ICES
WHITE’S MOTEL-CAFE is now
open for business, 6 a.m. to 12
p.m., Highway 80.
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR
OLADEWA1BR CHAPTER 831
LEQNA GULLETT. W. M.
MARY H. BROck, Secy.
GLADEWATER MASONIC
LODGE, NO. 852
fleet- and T^fd Tbursdayt
C. a BLALOCK, W. M.
, DEAR WALKER, Secy.
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous invites
mss> ami women who want to
■top drinking. Mo dues. No lees,
inquires treated in confidence.
Address, Alcoholics Anonymous,
Bnc 2S7, or Phone SS42.
MoEp WA8T8D
HOUSE OF STUART sales oppor-
tunity. Full or part time pro-
gram fits into busy household
ditties. Phone 8522.
LB—FEMALE HELP WANTED
VAllHESSES and carbops wnnt-
ghSK
CRQSSWORL - By Eugtm Sbtffir\
after 11 un. Mary’s
or Round-Up cafe.
fAJTBESS^
car hops wanted.
WAITRESS WANTED—free room
and board, plus salary and sood
ana at The Mint Club.
ju-fOR R8NT~
FOR RENT — Furnished 4-room
apartment and garage. 712 Quit-
man Avenue. H. O. Williams.
Phone 2528 or 5652.
FOR RENT—3-room unfurnished
house. 101 Paul St. Phone 7451
after 4 p.m.
APARTMENT, attractively fur-
nished. private bath and garage.
Phone 3564.
rOR RENT — Furnished 5-room
bouse,. water paid. Phone 3844
or pie. Mrs. Hanley at 316 Melba.
FURNISHED or unfurnished du-
plex. apartment, 310 Gregg,
rive-roam unfurnished house,
118 Bobo Street. Phone 8562 or
8480. >
HOUSE FOR RENT—3 rooms and
bath, furnished with washing
machine, refrigerator. 110 W.
Miller.__
FOR RENT—Unfurnished apart-
ment, $25 per month. 805 W.
Upshur. Phone 6481. I
FOR RENT—Modern 3-room fur-
nished house, bills paid. Phone t
4613 or 2616._
8 BEDROOMS for rent, one with
private entrance. 406 Melba.
Mrs. J. W. Dorsey.
FOR RENT—5-room unfurnished
house, newly decorated. Call
Mrs. Sanov. 8844.
FOR RENT — Four-room garage
apartment, $30 per month.1
Lights and water furnished.
Phone 8607 or 5732.
8-ROOM unfurnished modern
house. Phone 2687.
MODERN 4 room duplex. 704 W.
Quitman. Phone 1627F31.
SMALL PIANO
Would like to transfer to reli-
able party in thi* vicinity on easy
monthly payments. For full detaila
contact Credit Mgr., Philip Wer-
lein, Ltd., 311 Texas St., Shreve-
port Store, Shreveport, La.
FOR YOUR green acres pasture
and soil improvement, I have
reseeding crimson clover, re-
cleaned and tested. R. E.
O’Byrne, Union Grove, Rt. 2,
Gludewater, Texas.
1949 HARLEY DAVIDSON
74 MOTORCYCLE, windshield,
saddlebags, buddy seat, other
extras, bargain. 324 Melba or
see Bon. E. Irby at Dawson’s
Grocery.
TRAILER — hunt.r and fisher-
mans' special built for camping
in comfort, full innerspring bed,
cook stove, icebox, water tank,
plenty storage space See at 324
Melba after 6 p. m.
FOR SALE—58V4 acres, 7-room
house with bath, butane gas
system and water pump. Call
7696.
3-ROOM house with bath and
screen front porch. Located an
Tyler - Kilgore intersection.
82.800. Call 2478.
SLIGHTLY used Serve! Gaa ice
box. $125.00 Call 7644.
FOR SALK—v*-ton pick-up. 1948
model Chevrolet, runs good.
$595. See at Winn’s Furniture
Store er call 5161 after 6 pan.
13—BUSINESS SERVICES
FOR YOUR BUTANE and
PROPANE Gas and appliances,
call 214 or write 303 Wood
Street, Gilmer, Texas. BU-
TANE GAS St ELECTRIC CO.
NOTARY PUBLIC—J. Roy Knox,
Room 201, Phillips Bldg., Glade-
water
L W. PELJ-HREY
Longview Hwy Dial 2111
Win Cameron ar«* Company
801 N Main Ph 2123
RCA TELEVISION SALES
AND SERVICES.
KEOUN MUSIC COMPANY
SAMUEL C HARRIS
Attomey-at-Law
201-205 First State Bank Bldg
SHEPPERD
CLEANERS
AND HATTERS
All Garments insured
205 N. Main Dial 2845
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
Everett-Stone Funeral Home
DIAL 2121
SEPTIC TANKS -.-LEANED, mod-
ern equipment, fully insured. H
W. Kisick. Phone 8080 or 4807
Kilgore.
SEPTIC TANK PUMP1NG SERV-
ICE. Plenty concrete and clay
drain tile. Wolfe Cement Prod-
ucts, Longview highway. Phone
7754 for quick service.
for delivery at a meeting of C'or- .
pus l'hi i*li service club*, warned,
however. Democrats will not I
‘‘.ibandon our light to criticise."
"We will oppose Kirn Ttift Hen-
son if .n trie* to weaken the sup- {
port system that has brought agn- i
culture closer to parity with the |
rest of our economy. We will op-
pose the secretary of the treasury |
should lie sock to Inflict a sales
ti.x upon this country., We will
oppose the old guard Republicans (
,n and out of Congress when
granted the'President has not been ! “»>' »7 *® ruiw ‘°Ith* lU"
the support of unthinking par- ! of ^mtry. Johnswn
, tisans committed to his political j ' i
’faith It ha- rather been support The senator i.«i.-*d what he
I of those of his polices which are I ti rmed an "outcropping of pre-
I clearly in tlu> interests of -our ! dictions that there will be 'a
•country,” he said. change in the Democratic party1
Johnson, in a spi>ech prepared I line’."
Minton Porotoos
Support For Iko
CORPUS CHHIST1, Oct. I. <UR>
—Senate Democratic Leader Lyn-
don B. Johnson predicted Thurs-
day President Eisenhower wdl re-
ceive the same kind of support
next year from congressional Dcm* j
ocrats he received m the last ses-
sion of Congress
"The support that we have
Torropin Dipt
Molont Tho Mott
GUTHHIE, t ill la. IU.BI
S. Tharp’s melon patch
her*' s<*ems to la-
least one terrupin.
Tharp told today of trunsiairt
mg several of Die turtle* from Id*
"Speaking for myself- and m.v
i self only 1 cannot see any change
I in the months ahead or any need
for a change, if it takes place, it
wdl do so without mv approval or
! my support," lie added.
"The Demon ub in Cungrc:.. ,"
I he said, "have followed only one
line—the line of responsibility. I
do not believe that my colleagues
I want to veer from that path.”
Tlturgdgy, October I, IXH
• melon patch, where ttwy eat can-
i tulouiNrs, to a Guthrie park about
| a mile and one-half away. The
fanner said lie |Ndnled the shell
Widtci >>r1,1 11111 hTrapins white, then
*mith of1 i'*'lht< d lu* initials on it In black,
irrostible to ut
Thur
Thimble Theatre
Twenty-four hours later. Tliarp
declared, the cn-atute was back,
inching hi* way towurd the covet-
ed cantaloupe
Thinking someone had played a
Joke on him Tharp aguili trans-
ported ttie painted terrapin to the
park, ttd* tune making sure no-
body knew of the trip. The next
day the turtle was back.
"Ttie only thing I can make
l out, I»,»,»p *aid, is tiii' tui tU.
I cither dislikes parks or likes can-
I taloupe an awful lot. If he likes
1 them that well, the least 1 can do
! is accommodate him."
By Tom Sims and B. Zaboly
WIMPyS 600LOSH)
MIGHT SAVE U55 F8CWS
-THEMM
'5 oOOLOSH ) ((Bill
HORIZONTAL
1. skin
mouths
6. profit
20. religious
denomi-
nation
(abbr.)
12. muse of
lyric
poetry
13. bodies of
rites
15. talk wildly
16. morays
17. knots in
cotton
fiber
18. sacred
river of
India
20. remain
21. personal
pronoun
23. eagle
24. Luaon
Negrito
25. sailor
26. til
28. mystic
ejaculat.on
30. onslaughts
32. wavelet
34. paid
notice
35. used with
a
mortar
37. the tur-
meric
38. assistance
38. be vic-
torious
40. eternity
41. solid refuse
of grape*
43. expres-
sions of
contempt
45. slender
finial
46. Spanish
gentlemen
47. taka out
50. placing
52. esoteric
53. Roman
money
54. arrow
poison
55. the des-
tinies
VERTICAL
1. by
2. Anglo-
Saxon
money
3. forest
wardens
4. feminine
name
5. conse-
quently
6. salad in-
gredients
7. suffers
3. possessive
pronoun
Answer to yesterday's puasle.
CWF3H E1L1H arJilMI
nrarsM wtiu
WrA
';-rj-]M»i 'Hi.-; si HUH
MldHH IdMfl i: KfdM
EHS IdLlil
HHMEldii Kill"
muHfn ubi;j imim
U'NUi HPGU kil:itlf3
aiauid araa aiiKJu
Average time of solution- B minutes.
Distributee br Kmg Fentures SyMtest*
9. Greek
letter
10. supplica-
tion
11. catch
sight of
14. pilaster
16. exit
19. placed one
inside
another
20. degree
21. portico
22. part of
forelimb
24. city in
France
27. English
actor
28. oil: comb,
form
29. stingy
31. heroic
33. gift
38. mental
pang
38. operatic
solo
41. high, flat
tableland
42. imitates
43. sharpen
44. Mias Ferber
46. continuous
loud noise
48. shelter
48. bitter
vetch
51. note in
ICilf
52. whether
Bringing Up Father
By George McManus
HIM HOW VOU
Su=CEP=D LAST
vV' erC
TmJ5 cold
is all «oht-
fT’S Ml TMAT'S
PBEL.Si' ROCKY •
Kh)
$
\ i
0*0 VOU
rollon tvfi
PRESCRPTOM
I L£PT POP
VOU VEiTER^AV >
hr
■i
/ V
• r?w A't-
S* JV? f f.y V, vv Xi -'•KT
'l i&W ^ 1 1
it
71.TL
7 ., H
r/y i'\ i
L
Mickey Mouse
By Walt Disney
4 ( W*-AT AS _'-5ANT
^ CiGHTj IT LOOKS
WAS VM5ECKEO
AS i“ T>hE PALACE
ENTIRELY/
'V \ C YC>U SE NOT
1 \ KiPC?iN3.f
MONOGRAMMING—Call 7385 or
come by Edmunds Little Drug
Stoic in Wood Heights.
Steel Joints Aid
Crippled Pets
CHICAGO. <U.P)—Household
pets, crippled by bone disease or
fractures of the hip, can be helped
to walk normally again on stain-
less steel joints.
Spokesmen for the American
Veterinary Medical Association
said the operation was first used
on human beings 10 years ago. Its
adaptation for use on cats and
dogs is a recent one. they said.
The operation replaces the dis-
eased or broken part of the hip
with a steel ball and shaft.
The AVMA referred to a report
by Dr. Roger E. Brown, veterinary
graduate student at Michigan
State College, on the techniques
used to make the substitution.
X-rays are first taken to deter-
mine the size needed for the re-
placemen’ part. After the ball and
shaft are shaped to fit, surgery is
performed under anesthetic to re-
move the diseased or broken bones.
The replacement part is then in-
stalled.
Brown reported that dogs re-
gained full use of their legs and a
normal gait within a week.
Humans are right or left eyed,
as they are right or left handed.
Business Directory
ONE-BEDROOM furnished cot-
Mge with garage. Close in. 211
Weat Otadc._
FURNISHED HOUSE for rent.
Phone 4955.
Scientists now know there are
nearly 1,300 different kinds of
atoms. In the past century, it was
believed each clement was a unit
and existed in only one form.
With only 7 per cent of the
world's population the United
States turns out half of the world's
CONTRACTOR EQUIPMENT
R. B. Gtorg*
Equipment Company
Longview Hwy. Dial 8108
LAUNDRY It CLEANING
FOR RENT — CLEAN, furnished industrial products, because we
garage apartment. Bills paid., have the most tolls and the most
Dial 7984. i efficient business organizations.
HER MAJESTY’S NAVY VISITS
SPORTING GOODS
Holcomb*
Houso
Drag* aa4 Rarfvi
Cotta* 4 Opabat
DM IMS
RADIO It TELEVISION
Glado Applianco Co.
TaUrlaioa tt Radio Barrie*
Hoffman Danlnr
Complain TV lnatellatton
UT W. Camaane Dial 8816
Johnnv Hazard
§
'vt
BjT no one
SEEWS TO BE
SORE AT
ANVSOPY
sOw..,!
Jr
o* colbse not: \
LAC?! COME... )
LET'S SEE TO - ^
THE *INS...!
y
10-1
<^1
V -
8v Th= OSEO?8Jf- .T-E > W
PlNEST Z VOLLTON I VE vE« ‘
SEEN in,..E\EN =IOP_OSE>
1 TI
By Frank Robbins
Noeopys sons to be. s/e
*/ STCRi ABOUT PNP SS ThE
t»EAtis in those oy»TEM/:vi
SCT TO TA<E sens PfiAfirc
here ARE >OUR
"EAKL6, mlle.
roiBSON/ you
I AALL COMB WITH
ME QUiETty,
A
7/XL
M'SifiU/t
f m'BiEu fiAVErr onRATts
AN 0UT9TANP*N9 RESTAUKANT' 1
ANy kuXTUER SCANPAh woulp j
Cm, I ASitEB,
OFFICE*.'At'P’NI
FOOPi« SBEAT
TOO /
i '
ME*E ...Tty SC vs 0= SAvt*-- S
4*60 AL BCu u-ABA SSE ... MM
Phantom
CAPES
DELUXE CAFE
SpodaliriPfl la Luachaa
107S Dnaa Dial 2807
CLEANERS
Dix Cloanort
Qaalitr ■
884 W. faaMa
Dial 8818
Builders Supply Co.
EVERYTHING FOR THE MULDER
OLADEWATER. TEXAS
Dial 2424 Cat. W. Upahot and CnMaa f. O, I
SITACNMINT ol royal d.arinea atanda atlftly at attention aa HM8
Superh arrive* In New York harboi for an 8-<J*y viait. The 8,000-
in, $•** crulatr, flaga)ii|> of VJto Admiral Sir William Andrewea, is
an a summer cruise. (International Round photo/
VOU SOUNPED
, BRAVER WITH A
SfiUN IN V0UR
HANP,
BARON.
WiPNAP THESE WOMEN* SESP1
FOR RAN30M-TUEN PLAN TO . _
MU6PERJHEM»WWVT A
CURf vni.
WE CAN ESCAPE \ ESCAPE t’WE PE
IN THE MOTOR8CAT 4. TAKING THI5
BEFORE THE OTHERS) WHOLE CROWD
COME TO/10 SHORE/
By Wilson McCoy
THIS MAN OF VOURS^ N£g, MV
Bfc"EVF3 IN c< I.1AN COEft
FINISHIN6 A JOBJ V AUNT ELSIE,
Pi ANA.
Buz Sawyer
By Roy Crane
•UT t WAMT W BABt BACK.
IF ANYTHING GOES WRONG,
HOOGE-IF anything happens
TO MY BABY BECAUSE I'VE
COOPERATED WITH THE
POLICE, MY WIFE WILL
NEVER FOUitVE ME.
1 DON'T 0ENY THSRE'S A »SK, BUT W« >
H098 TO GST EVEN YOUR MONEY BACK,TOO.
IF EVERYBODY IN THIS COUNTRY PAID OFF
WITHOUT COOPERATING WITH THE POLICE,
WE'D BE UP TO OUR (AM IN GANGSTERS
AN0 RACKETEERS.
~ 1 i — r-r—
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
By Fred Lattwel
FAIOVROYR don't
STAND THAR SATTIN*
YORE EVES LIKE A
HOCTTV OWL-GO LET
iDOC PRITCHART IN
m
Z ASKED
HIM IN, SIR**
BUT HE DIDN’T
BUDGE
/^nV
WHAR
AM I
M* /
f 'r V
/tt »y i /»
0
i
( WELCOME TO NCW V0RK.
DOC PRITCMART II
I SEE VC RIO
TM' SUBWAY
.UP HIM
^ A
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Belk, Jeanne. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1953, newspaper, October 1, 1953; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021914/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.