Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 39, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 2, 1953 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 18 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:
And Now...
from America’s Newest Bakery
comes a Fresher and Better Bread
The Mrs Baird’s Bread now
at your grocers’ comes from
America’s largest exclusive
bread baking plant.
Forty-five years ago the first loaf of Mrs. Baird’s
Bread was baked in Mrs. Ninnie Baird’s home kitchen.
I
From this small beginning to the nation’s largest ex-
clusive bread baking plant in less than half a century!
Only in America could this happen. And only when
product quality is outstanding. Mrs. Baird’s new auto-
matically controlled plant makes possible still greater
uniformity and day-after-day goodness. You’ll dis-
cover that your next loaf of Mrs. Baird’s Bread is even
fresher and better than ever before.
Page Six
Air Tour WN Publicize
March Of Dimes Campaign
Tne fifth unnuul All Texas Air. As in years past, members of
*L°r VmV 1Q*17, W,“ th<’ T.-xas Legislature are invited
commemorate the 50th unniver- .
sary of powered flight unit again i ;,n< ;m. '"vi-
publicize the -March of Dimes'' t*}‘Vn »* ^tended to all interest.-.t
campaign Pilots from more than ,u J',m ,his ,m"' 1,11 >*>'•
a dozen states Mexico and C ,n PUtpose of celebrating and paving "Hies south of Malakoff Well
a da have already expressed their ilribute lo, t,u' Wl“;ht l,'“tinis. tst.-.i pjpe l.neoil on dr.llstern
intention of ioiriina this year's I,lonw>r» ,lf aviation, and to eon- lest at .45, to ,49, feet, reenv-
tour said Asa Burroughs -.ssist tril,ute tl) the further advancement > red 90 feet of 43.2 gravity crude.
«nrdl?«tor of“S aVZ!: ?f‘*» branches of aviation, and to ' Another Ust a, 7546 to 7597 feet
ties Commission and manaerr of '“‘P l>uoliei/.e In.- -waun ol ‘'.,c„Ud H'.ss.Ui. s.,s ptoduUioii.
theairtour The tou^ wflf Lki Dimes” e. mpaign for 1953. Final however, had slight amount of
wu tout will tag, st.hedule o( th|s tou|. W1|| .salt wat.r in the recovery. This
include t.,ke-off at Temple at t iva is about six miles west of
12:30 noon, Oct 10, and stop in the Tri-Cities pool, nearest pro-
Bryan and Eagle Lake before I dilution.
landing in Galveston for an over- In Red River County, Seaboard
night stop. Sunday, Get. 11, the Oil Company ran final gauge at
Oil News
East Taxaj
In wvstcir Henderson County,
Magnolia Petroleum Company is
in aring eon tract objective of 8200
feet -t No I lieoige Idddlcspcl •
gel. semi-wildcat IV a. a recent
dual gas strike four miles north-
w, >t of Cross Roads, and four
pumping 19 barrels
Ha III XV perforation* 4!
Gladrwatcr Dally Mirror
Well was driflor
.tolly
IMR to
4(1 to
WiultU'Mlwy, ScptcmlH’l' 2, 1
off from Temple at 12:30 Oct. 10.
fly 3,000 miles counter-clockwise
around the perimeter of the state
and end in Corpus Christi one
we--k later. The chambers of com-
merce in all the towns along the
way Lave announced plans for
tour will fly to Anahuac. Hoau-
the reception and entertainment of j ,.eJ’' m
the tour participants.
Reactionary Dog
Begins Trip Home
INCHON, Korea, Sept. 1 (U.R>-
estine, Marshall and Beer Field
1 for overnight Monday, Oct. 12.
the tour will h ave lb er Field and
stop in Texarkana, Paris, Terrell
for lunch, Denton and Mineral
Wells for overnight. Tuesday, Oct
13. will find the tour in Olney, feet for completion.
Vernon, Childress for lunch, Pam- Meanwhile, Austral Oil and Ex-
pa, Borger, Amarillo and Plain- ploration Corporation abandoned
Spike, the “reactionary" dog, hap- view f(" overnight Wednesday, the No. 1 B A. Rust, wildcat 11
pily trotted aboard tbe tioopship 0< t I-*- flyers take off from Plain- miles soul .east of Annona, total
Gen. Black Tuesday t . join his vitw ancl B<> I" Littlefield. Hobbs, dentil 5080 feet.
the No. 1 Coline, new oil discovery
from the Travis Peak formation,
10 miles northeast of Talco. From
perforations 4920 to 4926 feet,
well flowed 155 barrels oil daily, I
37 gravity, plus about 7 per cent,
water. Well was drilled to 7500 I
feet and plugged back to 4985 j
fe. t.
feel.
Grading and CoUUtbn No !
Peter Bridges, Anders, n County
wildcat, eight miles west of Elk-
hart, Is drilling at 5500 feet, near-
ing a projected depth of 5700 feet
Meanwhile, Grot p Oil and
Ralph Spence decided to quU the
No. 1 W. T. Todd, wildcat five
miles north of Neches in Ander-
son County and abandoned at 3505
fe t, after finding non-commercial
show of oil in top of the Wood-
bine sand.
I In Cam,. _____________________
southeast of Newsome, W. D. Mc-
Bee recovered shows of oil on
drillstem test at No. 1 Hatley,
Samuel Sexton Survey A-106, and
is drilling ahead at 6800 feet Five
hundred seventy feet of oil was
recovered on interval from 3856
to 3863 feet.
Arkansas Fuel Oil Corporation
cored the Woodbine sand from
3606 to 3607 feet at No. 1-C Har-
rison Unit, one mile west of Wil-
low Springs field, Gregg County,
found no shows and is drilling
ahead at 5000 feet.
repatriated master o i nis trip to
the United States.
A little sore from inoculations,
Sjjfke ran frantically around the
decks of the ship until he found
M. Sgt. William Stone, Wichita
Falls, Tex., who brought him back
from n communist prison camp.
Stone boarded the ship Monday.
Spike had a canine pal named
N. M., and stop in Carlsbad, N. M. In the Mindan area of Rusk
for lunch and remain overnight. County, Natural Gas and Oil Cor-
Thursclay, Oct. 15 will find the noration decided not to drill the
tour in Pecos. Fort Stockton No 1 Joshua Jones, an originally
Odessa for lunch and overnight projected 5500 foot wildcat’ four
stop in San Angelo. Friday. Oct. miles northeast of Minden and has
16, the flyers will take off for
Kerrville, Crystal City for lunch
Cotulla, Falfurrias. McAllen and
stay in Brownsville overnight.
Saturday, Oct. 17, the last clav of
Mike who turned out to be a "pro- t e tour, will find the fivers leuv-
gressive." j ing Brownsville and flying to
Mike jumped from a truck car- Corpus Christi for lunch and
rying returnees only a few min- winding up the tour,
utes before it reached Panmun- This year's tour is sponsored
jom.
by Texas Flying Farmers, Texas
abandoned-tile drill site.
At Sugar Hill, Titus County, I
John B. Stephens and A. O. Phil-
lips fin'led the No. 2-A Anschultz,
Private Flyers Association, Texas \
‘p >te Aviation Association, Texas
Ninetv-Nines, Texas Wing, Civil 1
Air Patrol with the Texas Aero- i
nnutics Commission acting as co- !
ordinating agency. |
Fair
Smiley (Frogi Burnette. Holly-
wood's No. 1 cowboy comedian,
will highlight opening day festivi-
ties at the 1953 East Texas Fair
in Tyler, September 14. Fair Man-
ager C. R. Heaton has announced.
Burnett, who has appeared in
Camp Countv throe mil... more ,ha" 50 m°vies with West-
zn suir Crz Au,rv r".
two special shows on September
14 from the stage of the Mayfair
Building on the Fairgrounds. A
talented musician as well as a fun-
nyman, Burnette plays 52 differ-
ent musical instruments.
Another headliner on the Bur-
nette shows Monday night will be
Bob Shelton, WFAA’s hillbilly
comedian of Early Birds fame.
Shelton will emcee the shows,
w ich will also feature his own
five-man string band.
Burnette is making a special I
trip to Tvler from the West
Coast for the Tyler performances.
East Texas Fair this year will
feature six cattle shows and three
cattle auctions. Breeds entered in
competition for more than $10,000
in premiums will include Aber-
deen-Angus, Brahman, Hereford,
Shorthorn, Zebu and Jersey cat-
tle. Swine show will be open to
four breeds.
Free shows on the midway each
night will feature colorfui East
Texas high school bands. Ted
Gouldv and the Texo Hirad Hands
on Friday, and The Streamliners,
a trio of music makers employed
by the Texas and Pucific Railroad
Tuesday through Saturda y
nights a professional stage show
featuring stars of Radio, TV and
AwMHmi U Rid* | calls ‘other woman* a dummy
Hwm Across
Ex-Model Wants
Marriage Annuled
NEW YORK, Sept. 1. (U.R) —
Mrs. Sloan Simpson came home
from Spain Tuesday and said that
although she still considers her-
self married in the eyes of the
Catholic Church she no longer
wants to be known as Mrs.
O’pwyer.
The beautiful former model said
she opes she can get a church
annulment of her marriage to Wil-
liam O'Dwyer, former U. S. am-
bassador to Mexico and ex-mayor
of New York.
Mrs. Simpson said she would
spend about two weeks in New Broadway will be unreeled for
York at the apartment of a friend, fairgoirs twice nightlv in the Mav-
Mrs. Walter Beford Sharp, and fai-Building at 7:45 and 9:15 p. m.
then go to Mexico | Patsy Montana, the singing cow-
CauscWay Realized
SAN BENITO. Tex.. Sept. 2 -
When the $2,250,000 causeway
connecting the south end of Padre
Island with the Texas mainland is
completed next February, I’ryaii
Long of Sun Benito will get iu sat-
isfy a ('hildh(M)d ambition - - -
40 years later
He 11 ride a horse usioss ‘.be
causeway.
Back in 1913, Long, then a
youngster of 14, lode his horse
from San Benito to Port Isabel.
A causeway to South Padre was
being planned at that time for
completion the following year.
Long decided right then to come
back and ride his I, rse to the Is-
land.
The
But
| Just recently, he inetioned tie
matter to County Commissioner
Andrew D Bowie of San Benito.
Commissioner Bowie discussed
the subject with o.her members
of the Cameron County Commis-
sioners Court.
The Court which will preside ,
over operation of the county- I
owned causeway, came up with a
unanimous decision: Long will
horseback across the causeway as
part of the opening-day ceremony
Now 54 years old and a succes-
sful farmer and cotton ginner.
Long was delighted by the invit
atiion. “That was a genuine boy-
hood ambition - - - and. as a mat-
ter of fact, I still want to make
girl of National Barn Dance fame,
will be a headliner on this show
Bill Hames Shows will furnish
the carnival atmosphere on th*
m.dway during the six day run,
September 14 19
SUED FOR DIVORCE by his wife, Zeiila (right), who said «ha peeked
through a window un>l saw him dancing with another woman, Loa
Angeles dry cleaner Delbert Gerber hauls a dummy of a woman
(left) into court and proclaims, "This is Sugar the only other
woman In my life." He was ordered to support the Gertiera’ three
children pending trial. (lnt> matiunotl
that ride," he explained 1 MONDAY BLUES
Long is a brother of William |
Long of Dallas, or.e of the pionc KNOXVILLE, Ttnn. (U R> — It
ers of commercial ; \ .ation in tin w,‘ •' pretty gloomy Sunday, two
Southwest Mondays decided Tuesday. Broth-
To make the occasion complete J *'■ “"J1 Monday were
Long will ride a hone that *'th »•***‘kii»K into a cafe
descendant o. the horse he - ode to wm‘ brt)'Kh‘ to jail
Port Isabel 40 years ago ? were tr,od 1,1 court
Conservation ofiici.L estimate
that more than 174.000 water fowl Tourists bring in S600.000.000
spend their winters m Miehig.ui annually to Michigan.
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.
Belk, Jeanne. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 39, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 2, 1953, newspaper, September 2, 1953; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021495/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.