Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 351, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 11, 1952 Page: 2 of 13
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Pttgt Two
Ctadcwati-r Daily Mirror
EDITORIALS
Mem3 N$wz For Tlia 3cvs In 'Corea!
World Mother
* F«ir ideas have grown from such a mod«t beginning to
the world-wide acceptance that has been accorded Molhei ’*
Day infife* short span of forty-five years.
Thf states and territories now name their official State
Mothei£
• Th* nations of the world name their National Mother, and
the American Mother of 1952 is unique in that she is Mrs. Toy
Len Goon, the Chinese-born mother of eight talented children.
Modest^-, she says simply she tried to teach them the differ-
ence between right and wrong and gives them the full credit
for their achievements.
And the World Mother is Sonora Rosa Markmann dc Gon-
zales Vldela, wife of the President of Chile, who is in this
country to receive the annual American Mothers' Committee
award as "Mother of the World ”
• If Anna Jarvis could have lived to know how her beau-
tiful tribute to her mother. Mrs. Anna Reeves Jarvis, has been
taken unto its heart by a world anxious to show its affection
for mothers, she would be the most surprised and grateful of i
mortufct Happy, too. that she has given so much joy to so many '
Kllina
It afas on Sunday, May 10. 1908. that Miss Jarvis instituted 1
Mothers Day in memory of her mother by giving white car-
nation* to all mothers who attended service at Andrews j
Methodist Church in Grafton. West Vi-ginia. Though we wear
white carnations for mothers who have passed away and red
ones for those who are with us. the custom as begun by Miss !
Jarvis.is continued in Andrews, “the Mother Church of
Mother’s Day," which gives carnations each year to all *
mothers who attend the services.
The annual selection of a Mother of the World is the (
inevitable consequence of such a beautiful idea in a world
that pyramids every good idea to its ultimate peak But the
secular'Mother of the World is that devoted daughter who
conceived the idea of setting aside one special day each year
to honor her own mother, and thereby all mothers the world
over, living and dead. Anna Jarvis is the perennial world
mother.
r
A\Xf P
/
/>
/<
4;
'V*
■v
OittnbuUd by Kl*a 'fretl**** Syndics'*
by arrangement with ll.* Weehirjfoi 'tar
%
pi
...
|T
The Glade water Station
KSIJ
1430 op Your Dial
SUNDAY
8 AH Sinn on.
7:00-i:LS ( )i gan Meloda s.
-W.likei Brother..
-Moinms Melodies
-Church ol t‘hn-1
M. pie Spring;.
B.ipt.st Chin h
-Showci - n| M!i -iiik.
Funny I'.ipi i •
Fust Baptist Church.
Clack Creek
H iptot Church
Bel Canto Choi u>
Friendly Five.
New
11 dibit l* Hit-
Hymn . >>i all
ChUlches
-Fil: t Methodist
Cl,in ell
Noontime Tuium.
Noon N' lv*
Noontime Tun* ■
Proudly We Hail
H.mti-t Mom
T«>p In Pop*
Hii- of Tcmiipi row
New.- *
Serenade In Blue.
Clue-: SI.,i
Sl.ti'M for D* top i*.
C S. Navy Hand.
Fi t*eOom Story
{ 1 |i v 1,. >11 i n, 111,, 'I'one.
Si.-ms Up Spin Is
Tex.i A World New*.
Hex-dp-.- n .u Swuinw n
7:14-7311
7:30 7 45
7 4.7 8:00
8 00 8 15
8 :15 8 30
8:30-9 oo
9:00 Si '.5
!» 15 9 30
» 30-9 45—
si 45 10:00
Hi oo 10:09
10 05-III 45
10 45-11 (Mi-
ll IHI-12 oo
Sunday. May 11, 1952
rJlCt! v Cg)
rSUME
12 00 7’ 15
12 15-12 30
12:30-1 (lO
1:00 I 30
1 30-2:00
2 00-2 45
2 45-3 on
3:00-3 15
3:15 I 30
3 30-3 4ft
3 45 4 00
4:00 I IS
4 15 4 .10
i ;io .< on
5:00-5 05
5:05 -5 I ft
5 15-8 1.
8 48-
S, v .
MONDAY
DREW PEARSON
Changing The Guard
Washington Merry-Go-Round
WASHINGTON- Big .lim Duff.
•lie of the best recent governur-
‘•iiatoi, ul Pi i.nsyK i.niu, has been
1 the iwnWi "1 ••!!*'. nation regard-
ing Ins present relations will New
I York's Govermu Dewey and in*
] future relation.-, with (inn. i,.l Fi>
i ■ nliiMVei.
Bet’ttus
n ,!t
•Ii.it the G4 )J
t
it all
Almost every other American male of 18 to 60 knows, i
from personal experience in the two world wars and their,
aftermath, the significance of the ceremony of changing .he
guard, when a new Officer of the Day takes over for a twenty -
four-hour tour of duty.
Our far-flung miiitarv installations have become so much
a part of our daily life, that a change of commanders in the
two top field commands of our military services—in Tokyo I
and in Pans—are being made with nearly the casual ness of1
the coming of a new Officer of the Dav. ! -m ■
General Mark Clark flew from Washington last Monday ■*>'■"» 1
with a godsend from the Secretary of the Army, the Army I 11 ‘
Chief of Staff and others, after final instructions at the Penta-
gon.
General Matthew B. Ridgway leaves Tokyo next Monday,
hich means there will be at the mopt four days of consulta*
ions as he turns over his important responsibilities to-Clark.
' Another week of travel and stogovers will see RidgYav
in Washington by the third Monday of the month, and he ac-
companies the President to West Point the following day. so .,
that he will have but f*ur days for instructions at the Penta- tUlt «
gon from the Chiefs of Staff. I laying the «roundwurk tm ih. hi
The fourth Monday, Ridgway is due to arrive at Paris,
which will give him barely four or five days with General of
the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower to go over the complexities
of the European command.
All this may indicate one of several things, or the sum of
all of them. Our senior commanders are men of such wide
experience, that they can fit into the most exacting situations
with very little indoctrination Their chiefs of staft and both | ..n.’ri
c«pr «r*i <»m. t>r is* «*i> •Txatoot*. la*.
■rotitl to claim the* uiniii, Hot spi n
I! 30 H
3,r>
Alai
in (, Um k <‘Ui’
*» 7
no
Ni '\v
7 (K» 7
10
S|M»I
ts H<M'd»e
7 iO 7
15-
Fun
a! Breakh '
7 13-7:
\\
Ai.it
CU* k <‘Uti
7 45 H (Ml
Voiii
A :ii Iti ,\*
8:00 H
4ft
Alai
fo COM k
8 45 8
33
VmUJ
t Mornmg
M <i
tit; < t Min
8:33 9
\ * *v
11 HI
4ft
Hdll
tulli Hvitoi T
Dm pis
on. Du It!
tght • *i thi
’he
pic
Mctnortbrt
i oku. <lrop-
eveeu* col-
Hi- callers matured Mr Truman
ihut hr had the affection .nut ail
mir.itioo oi .<11 the steclworkci -
■ out on the buck which thi
1’resident returned literal!* .*; tin
visit ended.
D..1I,.
P
K lot
9 4ft III .Mi
10 IN1-10 05
HI 0ft 10 2ft
10.2ft in 3u
to 30 11 no
11 00-11 0ft
11 05-11 I ft
Par,
eRICH BRANOil*
m>
Dm, I
in irusiii’.
P< nris
d
(.■oncer i h
This ,
continue
leeling;
bristling
given lam tin i. .Id
thi' W.iy Govciitoi
man. uvci* • him. elf
i “ ■ i ■. ii* : k. r( hi- way nr
i What happened is that well over fto be collectoi Dullas. wm .,p
pointed head of the racketeer
probing unit art up us a result of
the Ki (uuver hi imgs. finally
enhowei campaign. At that time -topped mte George Si haem-roan
he and Dewey were not too inen.n • ilf,r ........ , mi-sinner ju t
!y, Dull having led the fightf the storm feitflati breakm| ovar the
or
Ikv o-
*‘Sorr>. .V i t- hot
! 141 v ’ v, u ‘Hit ai iv
r. Dt
m w»It
lobla Without
"!U" n * on«r«»s^
rCH^Mormm-fjihg then
u, tho colk'vtoi
lk«
bl|t ii t >;
vonol uf O'-d,
Dunl.t
l> iHt a }bt. t»l
k« fi "
}!'*"• quahtiaittori-i;,
wai#
houl<
D \N
,n i a f m i
» hoffY ' "* °
no cal! that !»"
into
tht* tn
Dunlap h.t.s i>tr**n
colh'ttmu
against Dt wry’s nomlnution at
Philadelphia in 1948
However, after Dewey came out
publicly fm E. ,<■ ii hi j we Duff and
Dewey patehnl up their differ
Slice; For a time. 1k«., rim.-. Ir
51), !,*fit I i
i lunch-
UeaM.ry.
Sell-Supporting Agency
One >»( ill** little all/ed qiiuk
t l itltfl i f I l taftsils-. t
Itghth let.,
Gen. Allred M Gruenther in Paris and Lt. Gen Doulc O. i 11 o'ked to Duff
Hickey in Tokyo are remaining at their posts—arc also picked
men. who guarantee continuity of policy and administration.
From a non-technical viewpoint, the casualness ol these
changes may also r fleet the ease of mind of our High Com-
mand about the military situation in both theaters It must
foresee no great crisis is expected as a result of the stalemate
in the armistice negotiations in Korea, or of the build-up of
the Atlantic forces in Europe That is the most heartening pos-
sible meaning of all.
Cwpyri^iM. IHI, by Gtob* %n4l««b
l M‘hi’
f,l i in {
lit in
Try and Stop Me
-By BENNETT CCRP-
lAvarn.J*
TWO we* t Kir 1 graduates of the Simsbury Finishing School
a were happily carving up an ex-roommate over the tele-
phone Arid rny dear." continued one. ‘ Who do you think she's
been dating like mad the past
month’ Her X-ray special-
ist!" "Hmphh!" commented
the other ! wonder what he
sees in her'’ ’
* • •
A plane enroot* to !>••
Moines mi down »t Cedar
Rapids unexpectedly one morn-
ing to refuel, and out slipped
Knglands dapper diplomat.
Anthony Kden A photographer
ran up to lake hiR picture and
the habitual crowd of hangera-
on at an airport gathered round
to gape
Mr Bdon made it hia btiRineRS
to shake hands with everybody in sight betor. h» reemlmiked As fto-
plane winged oft a spokesman for the group demanded of H e pho
togmphet "Who was that aoteinn looking bloke v , just hook hand;
with anyhow "
*'«l>rn*hi l*»J b> R. ntn C»rl DMWraiw e» Km* loom s p.onai*.
1.
con, Nov ill, !9ftd
Dewey pioboblv . ndm
cauhc he has, no kIc,.
cundihate and nu iiopo.
bonetici:.ry t a-n from.’’
D«w?y W«rm: Up
A> the Ki cnhfiwef campiilgii
progressed, howevei. it be. ume
apparent: i, that Dewey .va pi. >
mu ah increasing iiai loh*
in directing the campaign; 2, that
Dull W.i: playing i * - - ol role
The first Duff rebuff, Uiougl,
probably accidental, came Iron.
kiMtnhowet him ■'ll v.lun. whiii
Visaing the- United States la * Ij«
cetiioer, he told the pD hi had
no plans foi conferring with Jim
Duff.
fa.t' i, ike comt icd the II.
stated that Doll was an old aid
| warm tnend wnom he hoped tn
have visit him m Paris.
Six month., have now passed,
however, and Dull h.e mat ;mn
Pans. Inside reason is mat he
hasn't been invited. And being
semitive person, despite hi1 giiili
nun,nei. Dull dm n t go win i t n>
isn't invited.
On top of this, Senator f.orige
of Mussuciiuselt not Doll. w„
tnaneuvt red into the Icadei ship ol
Kisenhowii - >ampi.ign. and in,
was chalked up as a score for
LM way.
Fiillhenrioii , wlilli Duff laved
in Wasiimgton, ten. Lncne Clay
uegan commuting U'tw< i n Ni *
Yoik and Pan ., the chief ad
visci to Eisenhower. Clay it ex-
IrtiRiniy i lose to Utwcy and i
credited by Dill fninds with
knocking the enatui from Peqn
- ylvama out ol the immediate
circle of Ike intimates They1 umy
la pt-momed tin hatchet Job ex*
pnssly for Dewey
hit
oilei
< luu.nhn niio
V-
da hi
Looking at
Life
Jopyrlyhl. ISM. Sin* r*aiur** Synd l*c.
■Pour Dnigoltuh Ivosevtc i • ally
ha . nothing to do with the column
Hut hi- story is so touching that
I thought I'd tell it to you, any was
Dragoljub, who is a student of
theology, and a poet who-c works
have never been published, wanted ;
to come to America from his na-
tive Yugoslavia.
.So he crawled Into one of the
long metal boxes under the mil |
{road cats that are u ed foi carry-*
trig batteries, and started on his
way.
Hot, in Trieste, he was discover
ipitd Hi ! how. j,n,t pulled out
Hi was taken before the Circuit
Court, together with urn. other-
wiio,ha<l tried to work the same
stunt.
The Judge asked him why tie
wanted to go to Amerh a
W ain't Yugoslavia good enough
for him -or for anybody’
Dragoljub replied that he went-
erl to see the world and parttcu ;
■ 11 ha I hirly America
in ,;;i nt:, '*. tins jilt,, j Whii i to see in Amet ur»?" the
■ i t pp i|.ii.,i* o a I Judge asked
foi t|i rn "Well, there is the Statue of
t If* -kn i.v'u fact a trout Liberty. And then there is the
■ in1 i that in 1951 flea circus in New York “
:i7'MNkl,iNW> a, penal- ''Fleas?" queried the pelge W<'
h i :. which v.as ham d» m hen •
i <ii d took to "Yes," replied Draft'lliub, "but
11 the American fleas are trained
tax«s,» fh,. judge gave him eighteen
"xi ise months in the hra»s#*uow where he
would have plenty of opportunity
*’*' to train his own fleas
11 15
11 311
1 I 4ft
12 no
11 30
I! 4ft
1.! m>
12 15
12 15-13 3o
12 30 I no
: 80-2 on
2 80-2:05
2 05 .1 00
3 w-i or.
3 05 3 ; 5
3 ! 5 4 >10
I ■ > i 30
l 30-.i oo
5:00- 5 0ft
5 Oft-ft lift
5: t ft-5:20
H.liodiv Hit P,n.ii
Heo Palm Me.
fill Unity lid lone
Hillbilly Hit .Parm
N eon t on> ■ Tun*
Nimhi News
Noontime Tun*':
Ore Hour With Y<»i
Ni W»
Mu-n I Varieties
New
Organ interlude
Tin Pan Valiev
1 430 Club
JjV* Til 4 ( VC
String Up SiMirt
Texas A World N*".
Party Lin*
i h jtlrrr n Wide. Thut is #M*.rr* *
in •* s> • tt m »! at lull n ini i oi, < >
iilifun iwnMira i at hi oh idw k mu
nittr il* ntUih Ht* In unpin Imil nml
ul Ii* h/n lh* H mi1 Iuimi ’I uu
i pr it./h it'll JHV/MSref In) P'rim
l'/i 11 Imul ami in it pn
I i ti ll/ti nil mu I. 'Ill hi XI
</«•!', ty ililrf Ihi prtih • xlo '.x /
C JIFAI Rl'5lfJESS
It hi |,' iii eve.mildly to enter
> i >nftv huMinesi or stall one
i jruar ovni 0 you an* tiller-
I m h tin*- .i m oee;einent ni
lire ■ alive I 'I or ml end to
d -r law who,>t a g ■nei d I asi-
|i i ni. e Inch leads to a
. ■ a a* d mauw! Ufa **t this nu
and th>* woitd'a lies ness
s ■ ,»***. ta de«'qn at for m
i i I If* I**) Fie: ts
V .It giul .de in g' ral
e a is *j iHdeit to rritT mmy
I a anil gtn ", t nno*ttt ii fi *'i|a
■... t es "rn ch, aahrn lid.-inee
I i mu. la n jeitienl and law
i h fit -'.el a u nr*>fJ*l ■ 1 soli',
ni i,. :n ng m Iiumi. »s admin
at.on ed I'xt.re utli'S
ll i *• Vfja -MiJem in
l 1 u., ■ ui I t inti sltl* I d In
III* of 11*1 ell SI* in Ml ly ll
.i ruble program for Mi s* |
* Ilf* (l i e not •,. I de idttd
i .ver.atTy pr«*t rnm
t ,ii i re Ian null f’l'e It ,-, ness
Sri* nd
;■ u (dan to out tune on to s
,i or graduate htisno « •„ h I
i general hiMoiess progtam is >i* !
■ ■' ,■ ut the undergraduate level
Mi » great volume of today *
«• rendered on business
' j eueral background of
mi him i and erotinriik* |*r,r.< ->!*■
I tie very to- fill f« you Infer
nil the formation and orsanrtn
s ef c, i p*trntions an t partner
,;■ a_ invr ',m*nt,> e*-,' >*,. nank-
:*•:- .1. rre■ i i i iu• * and trust
. it11 »■* TO.
1. tint V oi \\ .cold Hindi
The program n built around
tt* couruc* >li RCrourUing our
ting, economic * ft sai < e ami
1 SI.S. ernent all dess;r ed to pi<e
vMi! yph with a thou, nth kv*o".l-
*-11 *3c• of all I iSiiMM* Del s and
• heir Hit or ■ r -da. t k*M ; hin
SCm rtx*Titt f:* a.’-miii.o r>ort
mi.', r oJ ln.'t a Dm
knowiojgi et fan oral Ii ..!*n
V I ill >1. 0 have III t ripjMl*
lenity to fake an ar t i *nrae
in a* j of tt*. se Helds in wh . ii yn,
lire iffy , ti I u :i so I
mend ouf your e,he ■' in by tall
tug (ii n iio hutory liter slur,
and v*-mpc>sd ion
lour I ul lire Is V.h.I V Ut Mike I
The nail Ml a hitsoteiM i (lect*
'he job oppiutunities In the com
met, a! fields today they ai<
.'■•* b " *i they ii a> U- lSi
In any rase the acreage ^mdua'
in gi nc ii Mw c.rsa should cap ■
to start ut a n jfinring ob st*i
clerk, pr-> tind! >n e'e-c! nr, crei'
inter,e-wer pavr< N or * **t ekrr'
marke, irk,' hi h .0 , i vat
Sugrjetfcd Rendicq
IVl «*!». t) ll . If* u ( Hi. *i
ii* m an n i or ii*. 9*. ra> ua- Uru*
versify. Ht4« limed flcardsley.
tnnuirin i t /Is* ss f.irner.
HH.5 Gore M , l i n I'.'u g.<
r-■ M I <»• ■ nu i ti is. Areo
Pul. shins 4*0 1945
J
ON JOB VOCALLY
GAI.F.SV1I.I.E, Wis ‘Ul
j vung * 4-rmon even Uiougii then
-.......... I’.' ■ 'or w„ qu.o u '..i d w ith - <-.»* -
■ nchionw* *»l Zion Doth* ran ,ei fever The past or recorded ha
Church hi.ii'l the B*v S K Vc sermon and rnt it in rlupch.
:iat*
r
^ , “
^ r
■BB'1
ihw fund
1948 'i ii
ii HOt ti Ci,
i.i Bur*•s*u
II icncy
i, rts torert
vi.nh Con
to
ii
Mix-col
sfancc. ih*'
• lushed
tkrliiw tin
us cut has
■ wantr* u
lit to M'MJ
inuerwfirld |
r
rh'i
I t,^ r •
6*
>' -a
V
\
It I
d! tli*- fcdtt.i
i security to
mu alcohol t(
527 1 lilMi OOP
rifiU pays for
527ft.0fKI.lMWl
i i on inick
it i*i|i,,
no null tn.
,u. utii'. t i
tii'di
t 'oilgl
.Ini
Gi'fl*'ii*l Clay is not i -nowncd i I',,
* ooltn
yowl idxiid i.ix collcctltit
fuair.g 't< pay lw rl.
Trutnan's New "Employe**"
Following tin- brickbat he got
from Congi foi seizing Hit .t*s*|
inrtu t»>. Pu lud* ui Truman got
*
Sjmkcsmt n for tin teelwoi kei *
tiie *»t hi i day,
"We cm ere to say ’Hello.!
H«,‘ foi Clip,Unit i,i w I'mplriyee,
working foi !
Molotiv, o
ii !, told Mil-
Who
tile girl
Mutt do
1 D
foi hu. ability lo gel along will)
eivthum Clay did .i good pth ■*
• lurking down haul, oil the Hu;-
atari.'' in Ihuim, hut itkewu • crack -;
ed down hard on l.dmi dnnng the
wat ll he ha liow aiien.tleii tin
GOP en.itni from l’« nnhylvuma,
Ihi situation will be wall lied
clo-' h by uUki IIOI’ politii o to
-it how tt,* faithiui oi n w.od i
* <1 On tin j mini they nev*i did
have min ii t online nt < in Tmu
Hew. ..
Taaat Tax Collector*
Ii inntrml te* u ,* *,i >iwvi- wdi*-t
tie Ik...... ol lid.ei nai ihveme
i lent.
Ac* ofnii med
nml John Dote
Huftldn leiuei
drelwurk'i w*
h> .hu (h I'tnnno
■ ol Chieagn, the
added that lire
i< grateful to Tru.
•u^MMTteUjr
MUf, Im, OMi a
mmmf Th* Mirror iMb
Mi Dim WM, Ulodawslai
MpanlMMi*
* TtmMTrtMMlIiv M IM8
»» MM 84 OlaMwtMl
mail**•• *.f in
wll
«f 4a Mu...
I
i*i
Du
man for “ymu inli ie t in mir |
i.iotileiu anil idfmi to prevent
trike, W III ll i; till' lied tiling we
wind,
But tie men m the mili.H are
• h peiulely ni nei ol a i.ns*.
on tinned Melon,> lake lively
lasiy else, most of them have .
fait I,* with kuis tn i (aud aim'
it* doing tiieir 1.*'-1 to gel along
t hi writ-! they ,,it him: tin iu*t
he npotisi dp high ie .t ni hymn .
Fury.if* -it* iiirit ifientm tsti*f
lamgri to |,i o\ uh the t*.1 c
■ 1 a. Iissl i I* it lit
•Ui). ,.i, non h ieWR nei, In
You must have mad aboul I’aoln
(Tei-eeii/ii, th*- 88-year old foimet
rolto.nl taborer from the West
Cnuat. wh*i whr recently found
> ampitiM in New York fit anil
Central Terminal with he life
■ vings of 523,350 in WMne pupltr
•tags.
When uue-.tioned iiv thi fmliet
he told them that tie w.ei on In
way hack home In Hal'.
Some thirty nine years ago !»•
left his wife and came to this
country to make he fortune, he,
said.
Now it will, lime to go back.
Ills wife would It*- waiting foi
him. He war getting old anil it w.e
time to settle down.
They look the rrionev away from
him, deposited it ui a hank and
arranged for d liair lei to a batik
iti Naplf
We||, in- got hack to Italy all
right,
l iie homrromihg was touching
I fin wife, now an eldejly wo ,
man, watted for him
Hello. Angela, how ate you'"'
.aid Paolo
"All right," said Angela
Th* two h’sik hand and got
■at a lim which took them In Hum
fat in neat Vini itdttuio. in lh< Pro
Vlliic of Catn|«tt*o>-*>, ti* at N',*| te« '
llllt la (me embattling on the |*IC
l*a*ilo wax heard to «'<k
Win ti *, nu nu mi *
(
■ \ UJii
• ? J
v. ■) %
fey
*
v-
’.r*; r )
1
l
■* **;,
tfe
e»ater Gty ^
< i 11 u
t ltn*t
»< «* vt* t**tv Mk |NPt \
11« 4 1
Am* in a i iti
»' • what V oil ft let |k I
«i.
ll vnutyelf
To ,**im it t
i* lipuiol 1U«<< To
I »»it H
•rfheia it’s Minis
M u . ” *
til* tl
Ihd lo most •
4 « wlwi «afiif
JBf „Sf
»*i< i
it will
to these shin*
i Mltl otllv lit "MH
J 4
th* St.dim of 1
*iIm 11 \ IhiI K» i »«
yi^yv
llh Mk*
k | JNiP* • u t ■ v Ife tt m
r ■ -'lilt' ' " lw
i IV)
i4ii f h*i
klilflHl'B., 0 h. .«**
1,8 18*4 it t'fl'i Is
H Im«*4 iii
lo lilt: VOO 'VlHi
SUpep
VAtuc
Days
MAyt
• •
. •
• •
• •
p •
• •
.' . •
• •
• •
• •
• •
J» • •
tr •••
» 0 M m
• •
I w
V*
k
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.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.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.
Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 351, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 11, 1952, newspaper, May 11, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021571/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.