Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 221, Ed. 1 Friday, April 9, 1954 Page: 2 of 6
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QUidewttfff Di
GLADEWATER DAILY MIRROR
except Saturday by Thy Mirror Publishing Company, Cllad* avanua and
gg County. Texas
T W Lee, owner and publisher
Published Sunday and daily
>*«n *traat, Oladawatar. Gregg County.
general manager; Jeanne BeU, editor;
adinj ' !■
trapher; Mare In Bills, reporter and photographer.
r right,
aser; Jeanne Beu, editor; Vivian Dillard, society
proof-reading and billing clerk; Mario Jones. claaaifM
ft advorttotag, phot *’
Eula Coleman,
•dvertSslng; Viola
Ml______ . m _ _
'Consolidated with the Gladewater Tlmea-Trihune Nov. 38, 1048.
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Gladewater, Texas, under Act at Congrees of
darch 3, lfl$®
Any erroneous reflection upon the character or reputation of any person, firm, or corporation which
. av appear In this newspaper will be gladly corrected upon it baging called to the attention of the Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Home delivery: 20c per week or $9.00 per yet
iw:
By mall
rtwanrv
78c per month; $4.28 for six montt
ear
■: $7.30
per year All mail subscription* payable to
Oftatuj J/auhfitki
TttM’
(Distribute* fey Kte« toll
Cam* ISM TW. Wo
Girl ii disturbed by gossip about
har emotional reliance upon
older woman.
DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I
am a girl in my twenties, an or-
phan for 12 years. Since mother
died I have been very lonely. No
matter where I go or what I do,
something happens to bring back
memories. Whenever I see a girl
with her mother I start to wonder
what it would be like, having a
mother to love, and be with—
someone with whom to talk things
over.
Well, a few years ago 1 met, a
very nice woman. She is so kind
to me, and I have takeh a great
liking to her. Now it seems my
whole lifo has changed. I like to
talk with her, and to be in her
company. If there are things I
don’t understand, she seems to
cense it and explains them to me.
She knows that a motherless girl
can’t be expected to know every-
thing. She has giever embarrassed
me in any way.
My problem is this—people are
always watching us, and talking
FLOWERS
TO EXPRESS YOUR
SYMPATHY AT
TIME OF SORROW
Flowers carry your mes-
sage of sympathy so
beautifully. Wc specialize
floral pieces.
TRESSIE'S
FLOWER SHOP
(On Rosebud Lane)
222 W. Pacific
DIAL 2265
C/
about us when they see us togeth-
er. At first they asked if we were
related in any way. We said we
weren’t—but we didn’t know
what they had in mind. A few
weeks ago one of them said we
weren’t moral—that we were two
women in love with each other. |
I have been feeling very sad since
then, and I have decided to ask
your comment. ,
It is said that a mother is a
girl’s best friend. Not having a
mother of my own, does it mean
that I am not allowed to talk to
another woman without causing
gossip? I shall deeply appreciate
ymur help with the problem. Thank
you very much.—f.N.
Neurotic Vein
Of Melancholy
DEAR E. N.: The death of a
loved mother is an irreparable
loss, in the sense that nobody
else can take 'her place in quite
the same way. However, it is
natural and right to rally, i.i time,
from the shocking deprivation; and
*o continue one’s own life effec-
tively, with no after-effects of be-
ing crippled by the bereavement.
Your loneliness over the years
since your mother died isn’t due
so much to her absence, as to a
significant shortage of self-confi-
dence in dealing with people.
Maybe you are inherently sensi-
j tive, with inborn delicacy of feel-
ing. Or maybe you were a reject-
ed child, unduly attached to the
mother by desperate hunger for
emotional nurture never given—
and made inexplicably afraid of
all peoples, by her indifference to
you.
In any case, whatever the in-
side story, the fact remains that
your mother’s death doesn’t ac-
count for your melancholy status
12 years later. But your assump-
tion that It does, and your re-
liance upon another woman to
take her place—and your sense
of guilt in this new arrangement
—all refer to an inordinately anx-
ious temperament.
May Be Going
The Wrong Way
It seems you are a neurotic girl,
much in need of first-hand psy-*
chologlcal help, to work your way
out of the shadows of a frightened
infantile concept of life. It is
with the help of good relationships
that persons are brought to opti-
mum growth, mentally, socially
and psychologically. And reliable
modern psychotherapy undertakes
to make up the difference, when
the family has failed the individual
in this respect.
My advice is, don’t brood about
the gossip; but do take action to
get your life on a sure foundation.
Appeal to the Family Service
Agency in your community, for
guidance in making the most of
your potentials. Join a discussion
group, become a church member,
learn to dapee, find time for out-
door exercise. Thus gradually you
may dispense with “mother’’-care.
—M.H.
Tffrr
TOGETHER BUT APART
NEW BRITAIN, Conn. (U.R) —
Twins born to Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Bonaiuto-will have to ob-
serve different birthdays since one
nrrived two minutes before mid-
night and the other four minutes
later.
TAX COLLECTOR CUT
HADDAM, Conn. (U.R) — After
other town officials were voted
salary increases. Tax Collector Ed-
ward Weiss made a suggestion for
balancing the budget which
Promptly was adopted. His own
pay was cut.
•" t-
TELEVISION LOG
CHANNEL JI —LONGVIEW
, i * Eriday. Aj>rll St
2:0C—-Tent Pattern *
3:59—Program Ht-lltM
4:00—Holiday Kitchen
5:00— Hanger Roundup
5:45—Twilight Matinee
6:45—TV News Room
7:00—The Mortarboard
7:30—To be anounced
%00—I’m the Law
8:30—My Favorite Story
9:00—Starilme
9:15—TV News Room
9:30—Night Hawk'* Theatre
11:00—Weather Report and Sign Oil
Saturday, April 10
2ip0—Tell Pattern
5:58—Program Hl-lit.s
8:00—Sunday School Lesson
6: IS—Bible Story Time
6:30—To bo announced
7:00—Cactus Theatre
8:00—College Playhouse •
6:30—TV Hit Parade
9:00—Mystery Theatre
10:45—Weather Report and Sign Oil
CHANNEL It — TYLER
Friday. April t
1:00—Test Pattern
3:00—Stan On and Program Previews
3:20—TV Sermonerie
3:30—On Your Account(MBC)
4:00—Homstully Yours
4:30—TBA
5:00—Cartoon Carnival
5:30—Western Theater
6)0—News
6:45—Weather
6:50—Sports
7:00—TBA
7:30—LUe of Rilsy (NBC)
8:00—Ten Fingers and Toes
8:30—1 Led Three Lives
9:00—Feature Theater
10:15—Sign Ofl
Saturday. April 10
(No Teet Pattern)
6:00—Sign On and Program Previews
6:15—Who Is Nsw?
6:45—Texas Manufacturers Association
7:00—Wrsstling with Russ Davis
8:00—TBA
8:30 Wsstsrn Theater
9:30 Hit Parade
10:00—Sign Ofl
■ . y
.-.l
mm
mm-
, | J
NORTH MAIN —GILMER HIGHWAY
* \
. • <■ '■
50% OF THE TOTAL DAYS RECEIPTS OF ALL ICE
CREAM SALES ON OPENING DAY-SATURDAY
... WILL BE GIVEN TO THE GLADEWATER HIGH SCHOOL CHORAL
CLUB TO HELP SPONSOR THEIR NEW YORK TRIP IN JUNE.
GRAND OPENING DATE
IT NEVER FAILS'
nr
HA. HA/ Fl ONLY TIEN 0 STARTED THE 0OGG
Yf«,
salesman who
Tried To clinch the
l*IN' (
v t HAVE 0 60! /V FVER ■SlNCL)y~~~r-^
wuie lucky if v-
the boss lets him
put FOR lunch!
— ANO DOL-6U(2NEO
IT IF l OfON’T 6lNK »T FCOM
Trtt TRAP AND GET a BiROiE,
for The eighth/ mow
. , LEMNie TELL VA INHAT I
1 DlO ON THE NINTH--
tA
6E0R6E 0RXK5H
Erich Brandei*
. _ <
Looking At Life
There ought to be a law!” That will probably just use him as a
was the unanimous verdict of a means to get further publicity
number of women who had as- i and then go on her merry way.
sembled at an “afternoon tea” in | No> there necd not be any law
a home not too far away from for that wrt of thing. We men ti»«-
“Something ought to be done fng ‘after'* the girls. BTit I have to^isTt in Dall^during ^he w^ek
about such goings-on,” one of the noticed that sexy men, no matter ,n. _a ,
In my outgoing mall, one en-
velope was to the ball committee,
with our regrets. Another was a
little contribution to the Red
Cross.
GLADEWATER
TEN YEARS AGO
Try and St
By BENNETT CltF-
IVTOTH1NG LESS thun heartbreuking i» Lotiia SdVT» Me
Nnf two shipwrecked jhoadwayUles, marooned «n > *d|th
illwTwX*-. X-.ri.tad VUHJ*
floating In on the tide. With
trembling hands one of them
extracted a note from the
bottle. Then his face fell.
“Oh, nuts!” he exclaimed.
"It’« from us!”
•••*«■,. • •
Fellow, worse for wear, stum-
bled inio a taxi an.l ordered.
“Take me over to Broadway
•nd Forty-ninth.'’ The driver
said. “You're at Broadway and
Forty-ninth right now Ju»h
splendid!" was the response
“Rut next time, d-don’l d-drive
so Mast! '
sS
• Well ’’ slid Pa Simpkins to h.s aon. home front the ataU airtcul-
subatance out of a., ordinary pe.nub M‘lk Otrt of a pagnut.
marvaied Pa. “They must use a mighty low atoo..
Copyright. 1M4. by Seoaett Ccrf. Di.tr.butrii by K.ng Featurae ^ra4»cate.
DtctfptA taken BrtiM do file* of (1m
■ T\o>94r
Rodeo Hand Ranks
Fourth In Nation
C. F. Sealey, Kilgore College
freahman who hails from Over-
ton, is a top rodeo hand. The
American Junior Rodeo Associa-
tion has ranked him fourth in the
nation for 1953 tn the calf roping
event.
mM
ladies who attended the affair, how useless they are, are just as
end with her nephew, Capt. Rob-
ert Pool, who has just returned
j1 disgrace^V'ouTc^^aid8 l^c^blond^wS aT££ ^ ^U J^vfiTh^niesS
■ ■ ®^*cted chassis are t0 foolish i Mrs. Elizabeth Pirce, and then
. ,, | to Cameron to visit her sister,
And. lust as the biggest fools Mrs Charles Sprott.
a
a
makes our women look like
bunch of d—n fools.”
She was talking, of course, about i
are OLD fools, so the biggest
foolettes arc the old an js.
You should have seen the ex-
citement' down in
the Rubirosa affair and how the
five-times-married Barbara Hut-
ton was supposed to have given
him a $200,000 plane, an $800,000
ranch, a fleet of high-powered
cars, a string of polo ponies, jew-
elry galore and many other items.
“Just imagine what such a for-
tune could have done for the
poor, the hungry, the sick,” our
visitor continued, “and to think
that such a man is the minister j that might turn'my stomach?
of his country to
Bob Brutsehe, who Is attending
ammo, uuwn L MUmi“w£n I Southwestern UedicaX Oolloft^
Liberacc made his aPPcaraP«*- Psi fraternity, he wrote his moth-
^Tti*?Z»T^2L ”• Ulltan BWUchc
myself. And then, I just had hot
cakes with syrup for breakfast,
and they are not very easily di-
gestible. So why think of things
A Camp Fire troop of sixth
grade girls will be organized- on
Thursday, April 20, with Mrs.
Herbert Hunter as guardian. Mrs.
This woman and her kaffee-
klatsch-attending sisters are per-
fectly right, of course.
The affair IS a disgrace—but
what CAN be done about it? You
can legislate away crime. You
can isolate the victims of infec-
tious diseases. You can shoot mad
dogs. HUH Ult W, JWUUUVHHH,
But as long as women admire I and committee members reads like
and fail for these “boudoir ram- 1 a page out of the Sotial Register.
I By the way, this same woman \ George Clark will be one of the
who told us about that afternoon i assistants,
tea at which Rubirosa was con-
demned, went wild over an invi-! Pfc. Thomas McMinn has re-
lation to a "charity” ball at one turned to Arizona after visiting
of New York's most fashionable his father and mother, Mr. and
hotels lor the benefit of a for-; Mrs. T. J. McMinn.
egn country- It was lying on my
desk,' reeking of violet perfume.
NOTICE
to toii m mi
‘ Important Schedule chape*
effective .
SUNDAY, APRIL 4
Consult local tickeii
agent (or detailed
information. *
TEXAS AND
PACIFIC AY.
SEALEY
An Easter egg hunt and party
“Subscriptions" were $78 per per- was enjoyed by 22
Wetom,
biers,” “International Casanovas-
and "gigolos,” as the newspapers
call them, no law in the world
will prevent the legitimate theft
of their fortunes from rich thrill-
seekers. -■
* * *
Already this notorious Domini-
can is mixed up with another
woman who loves publicity. I
doubt that this other woman will would
be as foolish financially as the , Rubirosas—or men of similar
many who preceded her.
and the list of patronesses the Wetomarhcick
Girls troop Thursday at thie home
of their guardian, Mrs. Ray Bum-
pus.
Featured was a “gala dinner,” a
“triompho” of French, cooking;
fashions of Paris, French per-
fumes, silk souvenirs, “cotillions
for the ladies and gentlemen,” and
“Les'-Plaisiers de Paris,” — a
pageant of “fabulous Tableaux.”
iter. “Doi
iagei
I wish I could afford to go to i Uves in Houston and her husband,
that affair?’’ I told her that she 1 Lt. Black. )* 811 Proctor at Ei-
osh,’’ said our cal
*, I
to l
Mrs. Vernon Black, nee Beverly
Tucker, is visiting here this week
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
R. L. Tucker, and her sister, Miss
Christine Tift-ker, of the WAVES,
who is visiting here. Mrs. Black
probably
iiiv | isuuii */auS Of
She i aroma—there.
meet several llngton F;eId
MM? ^
mi
RADIO ROUND-UP
run.. WED.. THUDS.. AND nu.
.its Sign On ,
4.i0 Alois Clock Clcb
8:55 N«w*
7:00 Alarm Clock Club Spoil*
7:05 Alarm Club Club
7:45 Your WorM -N«wx
1:00 Alarm Clock Club
<•55 N.w*
7:00 Hillbilly Hymn Tun-
0:00 N.ur.
IV Him ‘y »*•
11:00
11:05
11:20
14:15
W-ii.rn Swinoatm*
H'llbtlly Hit Parad.
Pou try Bapori
N.wj
Hillbilly Hit Parad.
!uk» Box
T‘" “an Vail.y
Cat'. Co- y.ntian
Party Li « N.w»
N w»
C l l For Mjtv
SPECIALS
In Race?
C. IS is :\ graduate of New Lon- j
. don High School, where he wai i
of very native in all speete. Wlolr in i
Fire high school, he pm firlpnted in the |
High School State Championship j
at Hnllestvllle, the rodeos at Far-
mon and Hope, Ark., and the big 1
round-up at Wrighrcity, Okld.
-This year h« took third place in
calf-roping at Bossier City arc!
Shreveport. Some of the calf-
ropers that he has competed with
are Don McLaughlin, world's
champion; Doyle Riley, Madison
Square Garden champion in 1953,
Billy Lucas, Sacul, Texas, and
Billy Leuch of Kilgore.
C. F.’k traveling partner for all j
these rodeos is Joe Chapman of
the Kilgore National Bunk.
Besides all of the rodeo active
ties, he is a very busjr lad around
the campus. Between time for the
tennis team and newspaper con- i
tests, he manages to find u little
study time and also shows up
every place on campus where
there is any activity.
QUICK CHICK
MODESTO, Calif. (ll.R) — The
life span of the chicken is growing
shorter. The local farm advisor's 1
office reports that 10 years ago It
required 12 weeks to produce a
three-pound broiler. Today, this
same job can be done in about 10 |
sreeks. . «
CELESTIAL FIRM
BAYFIELD, ,Wls. (U.R) — Sun
nd moon are ooing well for trout
Isherman. W. W Moon, who owns
l cabin cruiser with his son for
ise by fisherman, signs his ads—
W. W. Moon and Sun.
gjpa
BATHROOM
INSTALLATION^
it costs a lot less tha$ you
think to enjoy the conven-
iences of a modem.bath-
room. Call us now for free
estimates.
DURING CEAN-UP.
PAINJ-UP, FIX UP
WEEKI
Add a touch of new' beau-
ty and convenience to
><>ur bathroom. Hgye.JBto
penenced plumbers install Q
the latest fixtures at the
most i cusonable price*.
Free estimates.
Day & Night Sarvic*
Mack's Plumbing
and
Tin Shop
30$ S. Tyler ' Dial 21M
1953 Mercury Custom
Fordor—Automatic trans-
mission. Radio and hcatci
1953 Ford Victoria—Automa-
tic transmission. Radio and
heater. Loaded with all ac-
cessories. Driven 5,700 miles.
Th. Above 1984 and. 1983
Cars Carry Our Regular
Guarantee of 90 Days
or 4,000 Miles.
Wo Have a Complete
Stock of Other Used Cars
, To Solert From.
CHARLES F. BRANNAN (above), !
former Agriculture secretary,
has declined to comment on re- j
ports that he may enter fa. i
■ace to succeed Senator Edwin I
C. Johnson (D), Colorado, le- j
tiring. (International) I
MB, M-111 j
Friendly Here
PLEASE V
NOTICE!
t \
YOUR
WELCH BURIAL INSURANCE
Can Be Paid At Our Office:
At 801 N. MAIN
,. J|ftL ^
Also - Please Remember *'
WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE;'
UNION SECURITY
ibolv
inus
F* 1
mey
j ■
>ms
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Belk, Jeanne. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 221, Ed. 1 Friday, April 9, 1954, newspaper, April 9, 1954; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021917/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.