Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 86, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 29, 1953 Page: 2 of 12
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ssziE&
CunaoUdated
aJSTM.
may >|
OLAMWATM DAILY MIRROR
Saturday by Th* Mirror Publtohlus Company, Olade avenue mi
tmri Jeanne Balk. editor; Vivian Dillard, Mrlrtt atfltnr; Eula Burnt,
fobMjjAJ bad bitting dork; Mario Jonu, cUniflad odvortlolng, pi oto-
lllSwiuw Mov. M, 1M9.
pool dHri at Oladrwator. Tanaa, undor Ad of Congress of
poo Um ehnanetar or reputation of any parson, firm, or corporation whleh
will bo gtodty oorrartnd upon It beging - ailed to the attention of tho editor
TSIbCRIPTION RATES
manor at
opoa tho
nowspapor
advance
VVNVnlrl
Homo delivery: Me par wood or W OO par year
By mail: 70a per month; 1455 for alx month*: f
97.50 per year. All mall aubacriptlona payable In
MnukfiZ/ij
Wfaaet*
Ptoa«a< by Bm real
,'Cesyrtfht. liaaTne Wi
Peatsrec tyateelet
Woman. At Variance With
Some Of Church'* Teaching*'
Confcmolates Breaking Away
DEAR MARY HAWORTH: Hen-
ry and I married 14 years ago,
each of us having lost our previous
partners, and being left with
adolescent children. In rebuilding
our lives, we joined a church that
■■ Ur.-eted me-—Henry going along
willingly, as he had no special
t tioice.
W< h:iv worked actively in and
for the church, but after actually
beir.i; inside, we feel restrained
■ id unhappy with many of its
-•ii-inis. wnich don’t coincide with
our sincere convictions. I cannot
believe that any one church or
organization has a monopoly on
truth O! ;:oud; or that any church
should be founded on a hunv. n
]>' rsori ":v to whom I owe m\
entire allegiance.
I n n the sort of person who can-
no* retain my sense of integrity
while (-i! v raly subscribing to
somethin" I no longer believfc in
^ wholly. i believe that I should
stand courageously for my own
convictions about the ways in
wh o i God works to bring truth
to mankind. My husband is in-
cim* ! to rock along and attend
church where one’s friends are,
to ..void the possible ostracism
that might follow dropping out.
1 feel sure we would be sub-
jected to some unpleasantness in
that direction; yet fortunately we
know a number of persons in other
places who still would be our
friends—I hope. We have no ene-
mies in this church so far as we
know; and wc aren't asking you
to discuss the merits of compare -
’ ive n ligionr. But we would great-
ly appreciate your viewpoint on
my feelings about staying in a
church whose methods we no long-
er endorse.
E. B.
Need Religion
Be Combative?
DEAR E. B.: The practise of re-
ligion, at its highest level, is an
ntensely private relationship be-
tween the soul and God on the
one hand, and a loving fellowship
with friends and neighbors and
congregation on the other ham.. 1
Such fellowship is an expressing,
or spending, of the income of life,
i.ght and truth which the indivi-
dual soul receives from God, vi
prayer (through daily awareness
of the loving ever-presence of |
God'.
Can't you find it p...;.-ible to ex- j
perience, ana to express, your!
personal measure of realization o'
the fatherhood of God and brotn-
t l'hooci of humankind wi hin
framework of the church you've
chosen—meanwhile closing you- .
eyes and ears to such distortion
• ■s you oppose, in m nds th. t don't ,
reflect your inferences? Possibly
our difficulty is teat your atten-
tion Is directed too much outward-
ly, rather than inwardly, in your |
efforts to know and worship God.
As a rule, persons who are
faithfully attuned to a realistic
consciousness of God, are able al-
so to mingle harmoniously with
members of any religious group,
indeed even with cannibals. This
feat was demonstrated some years
ago by Frank Laubach, world re-
nowned missioner and teacher o;
prayer, when he worked in New
Guinea to provide alphabet anu
vocabulary and knowledge of God i
' to bush country natives.
It Mar Problem
Really Pride?
Maybe youi problem really has
to do with vaulting pride in your
own personality, and with a self-
eking rather than God-centered
approach to church-going—a dis-
osition more worldly than com-
p.issionate. Your insistence on
ninking for yourself and wishing
to stand apart from those who
clainj differently, may be simply
one aspect of an assertive ego that
I sturbs and antagonizes your co-
religionists.
Perhaps your impulse to quit
;his church is sparked by realiza-
tion that you are disliked, for
reasons you haven’t faced. Your
.lk geo quarrel with doctrine may
be subtle self-deception. Running
.ronea probkm instead of solving
it firsthand usually leads into con-
tinuing difficulties of the same
.ik. Hence I suggest you try to
make peace with your circum-
stances “as is,” by plucking the
burrs from your outlook. By this
method you will get on the beam
of inner guidance to better things.
M. H.
Mun Mum
r
*•29
“If you like polka dots so much, dear, why don’t you pet me likt
' that?”
Erich BrancUis
Looking At Life
KSIJ
Radio Program
TJE3 , WO.. 1HURS.. AND FIU.
A . '! v. k. Club
-A \;.;.:i ioric Club Sports
va A.bl .a „.U!b C.lub
.Vj Ye r W:.Id Nows
o:JU Aiarm Clock Club
L.jS • <t' .V £
a;!jj Hi.io.uy Hyir.n Time
; JO Naws
• :05 Hillbilly H*t Parade
. 9 New*
. j‘j W^s'.crn 3w ngsieri
• *-0 H.Ubilly Hit Parade
.S Poultry Report
.20 News
:30 Huioilly Hit Parade
i 00 ] uke box
JJ Tin Pan Valley
rA Cat* Convention
bS Party Line News
r.’ r ti s
S;15 Call For Music
g;gn Ofi
EDITORS NOTE John F Hem-
bower as a tnemhet oj the inter-
national taw committee of tht
American Dai association is espe-
cially well-posted on the issues
which he discusses m the folio winy
article.
By JOHN F. SEMBOWEf
Written Especially tor Central
Press and This Newspaper
WASHINGTON - Some of the
biggest rows since the Age ot Dis
covery over global real estate art-
headed for the United States 3u
preme Court and the World Court
at The Hague.
The major concern tn thta coun-
try is over tne aftermath ot Con
gress last spring giving the on-
shore oil rights to the nates, but
also in the picture is an angry tilt
between Australia and Japan qv*i
pearl shell fishing rights, and the
title of Canada to vast areaa near
the North Pole.
Also the question of who owna
Antarctica, the frigid land mass
around the South Pole, is involved
Great wara nave been fought In
the past over such issues, but ex-
cept for a possible clash sometime
with Russia In the Arctic, non*
seems likely now.
However, the bitterness of the
controversies is tremendous, start
ing with the argument among
various ot the United States ovei
who owns what on the Continental
Shelf adjacent to our shores.
• • • J
PASSAGE of the Submerged
l. nis Act. advocated by President
Eisenhower, was a great victory
lor California Texas. Louisiana
hiki Mississippi which among the
zo mastal states appeared to bene-
id most from oil potentials gtv*n
to them in the law saying that the
submerged lands belong tc the
stiii.-a instead of the federal gov-
ernment.
Tne Supreme Court had ruled
earlier Unit these lands belong to
the nation as a whole, not |ust to
ttic slates with coastlines Now
five states Arkansas, Alabama.
Montana, Rhode Island and West
Virginia—are going to court with
their argument that Congrasa can
not "give away' aucb land.
They argue that the intaraot
which the Supreme Court sttd that
they nad In the coastal shell as
parts of the nation has been taken
from them without dm proesoa of
law, in violation of the Constitu-
tion.
e e #
A TTY. GEN. HERBERT BROW-
NELL. JR., has announced Uiat
the suits will bo oppoood vigorous
IV. and already a motion Mo Boon
filed by the governmont to dlomloa
the Arkansas suit on the grounds
that the etato boo no right to
protest.
This oooe may Naeh too Su-
preme Court in*, and meanwhile
n
An ail drilling rig with attendant 1ST which acta as its power
plant, off the Texas (here. Settlemen* of U. S. lidelandt dispute
may have bearing on world undersea areas controversy.
the oil companies even in the off,
■hors areas near California, Texan
and Louisians are playing a wait-
and-see game.
The etatee challenging the gtv
Ing of the offshore lands to the
coastal etatee ere sure to point
out that some ot the original
states, which once claimed public
lands ell the way back to the
Mississippi river, ceded these lands
to the federal government in a
generous gesture that helped pay
off the debts of the Revolutionary
war.
However, the Issue involved maj
be even more far-reaching, and
they hold the interest ot interna-
tional lawyers around the globe
Uncle Sam's attitude toward own
ership of land covered by the seas
will be watched closely.
e • •
HISTORICALLY the United
States has favored a freedom of
the eeas viewpoint. This was the
doctnns ot world Isw voiced cen-
turies ago by the Roman Emperor
Justinian in his famous code.
Not all Mtlons have accepted it
though, Sad Portugal and Spain
once tried to divide the world's
seas between them on a line drawn
by tha Pope at Rome. It was soon
discarded.
However, where does the land
end end U» sea basin? Tire shoot-
ing range of shore batteries once
pegged this at three miles, and
during prohibition days in the
United Status the “three mile
limit" became famous as the boun-
dary tor rum runners.
In 1949. however, the United
States adopted the Continental
Shelf Lands Act, proclaiming pos-
session ot all offshore land not
deeper than 600 fathoms. A sub-
merged area greater than that Of
all the original 13 states was an-
nexed.
Australia has just invoked this
new doctrine as the besle for ex-
cluding Japanese fishermen from
an area 80 miles off her shores.
• • •
SOME DAY Canada's hold on
the vest archipelago stretching
| 1.000 miles north of co in -ntai
I North America may be c. >>ged
i in another aspect of this duputed
( issue.
j The Canadians claim the terrt-
I tory inhabited by about 2,000 Bakl-
! mos by right of discovery and on
the sector principle,” giving each
nation a slice of polar regions
nearest its mainland.
The United States never hM
recognized ownership booed OB
anything but actual “exercise ot
dominion” over territory, and OB
this basis denies the claims df
Argentina, Chile, Australia tad
New Zealand t Antarctica. How-
ever, its policy seems to Bo th»t
Canada hoe reduced the northMmd
to posseasion.
The idea that each state owna
that part ot the continental shelf
attached to its mainland la oom*
pared by some international taw*
yers to the "aector principle," and
world jurists probably will watch
closely what the Supreme Court
says in deciding th* argument
among the states. Bo that. Mg ns
it is. the offshore oil controversy
may have even greater fCfsreus
stona than now appear.
W or Id Ownership of Underseas Areas
Becomes Hot Issue Between Nations
I wish there were a law to deal
with that strange and venal ilk of
lawyers who make it a practice
to defend known and confessed
criminals and to do everything
they can do to pervert justice and
to send their clients back to soci-
ety to sin some more.
Every day you read about sup-
posed-to-be reputable attorneys
defending professional Commu-
nists, murderers, kidnap ers,
thieves, embezzlers and al! the
other criminals culled out of the
human garbage can, raising their
voices to high heaven, shedding
crocodile tears for them—and fool-
ing nonotty.
Within 48 hours after those two
who kidnaped the little child in
Kansas City were arrested, they
had lawyers.
Everybody remembers the Ros-
enberg case and how for two
year* they laughed at justice
through the mouths of their law-
yers.
Every gangster, every hoodlum,
every evildoer wraps himself up
in his lawyer’s Blackstone and de-
fies the courts as long as he cos.
• • •
Lawyers have to make a living,
of course. Every man accused of
a crime has not committed the
crime. There have been many
cases of error by juries and judg-
es. A person who commits a crime
tor the first time, Is entitled to
guidance and leniency.
Ypu and I may become victims
of mistaken identity or be. arrest-
ed through spite or malice. So we
are entitled to have our rights
protected and to be defended in
court.
But when a man makes it his
chosen practice to take nothing
but criminal cases, I doubt wheth-
er I personally would want to
have much to do with him.
Some years ago a niece of mine
was very much in love with a law
student. They were to get mar-
ried as soon as he passed his bar
examination.
TV
PROGRAM
KTVE, CHANNEL 32.
LONGVIEW. TEXAS
WEEKLY nOORAM SCHEDULE
H IN.tw.rk) _T (Full-Laaeth Faatara)
THURSDAY
3:58 — Preview* S
4'M) — Holiday Kftehrn S
5:00 — Ranger Round up S
5:45 — Twilight Matinnu F
5:85 — NewrWeathcrSpo.l* S
7:00 — Organ Air* S
7:30 —■ Ship* Reporier N
7 45 — Fin* 4 Foarhor* S
8:00 — Hartiwopn R t»»hn' IJ
8:30 — Countarpo.nt N
'../J — .;tcirtima J
0:45 — Nltn-Hawka Tboatro F
KETX-TV
CHANNEL 19
THURSDAY
4 *1/ — Prog: irn Previews
VQQ -- Cu'oon Carnival
3 — Birthdi/ B'y.k
■- M.dw ;y V : n»
ir-Vfj
i ) • V/r»V' *r
'• ■ Vj - 3porti
7:00 — You Your Lif«
7:30 — L !• Ib Wor'h Living
8:00 — Fuatum Thffatra
9:30 - Sian Off
m 10 YSMS A80
* Tho ftfgt contributor to the War
fund ChMt to Mias H«sel Ponder
With a nMo cheek voluntarily sent
ip. That's the spirit that will put
title drive over.
The curtain was rung down on
the Gludewater Round-up Horse
Show Thursday night with Stone-
Vrair* Choice, from the Oakhill
farm, ridden by Paul Fagan, the
winner of the $250 flvc-gaited
stake, the final event.
0 gay note to the occasion
Miss Jo Ann Milner, who 1*
attending the Baptist Theological
Seminary, fort Worth, 1h spend-
ing the week end In Gludewater
with her mother, Mr*. Ouidif Mil-
ner.
The Laymen’s Missionary Move-
ment, founded 37 years ago, orig-
inated Men and Missions Sunday
n 1981 as a new approach toward
the building of a better world.
Leader* of the movement foreset*
a new era of appreciation for
Christian mission* a* a long-
termed solution of the problem*
now facing the world and invite
gll Christian laymen and preach-
ers.
Idniia Grove No. 221 of the Su-
preme Woodman circle met in the
home of Mrs. Olivia Dodson on
Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock
"or an informal meeting.
Mrs. Joe Tayior entertained the
Tuesday Bridge Club with n de-
ightful party at her home Tues-
day afternoon. Fall flowers added
Frank Sinatra
Quiat Ovar Divorce
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 29. (UJW— j
Singer Frank Sinatra returned,
grim-faced and grouchy, declaring.
“I don't know anything; 1 have
nothing to say.” concerning Ava
Gardner’s consultation with her I
attorney about their marriage.
The slight c oner, who il w in
Wednesday night from Las Vegas,
Nev., after completing an engage-
ment, answered only "no com-
ment” when asked if he planned
to meet with his sultry spouse. At
the same time, he brushed pho-
tographers aside and used strong
language in insisting he would not
pose for pictures.
Miss Gardner's studio revealed
Tuesday she had talked over their
rocky murriage with attorney Neil
McCarthy, but the spokesmen
would not suy whether she planned
a separation or divorce.
GM$ JRNtMMI
Attend Advn|f
Mbi Styfc SIMM
Mr. and Mri. Cdcrm 'ffihieold,
Mr*. T. T. Steven son ^nd Mortg
Sherman attended the Avwrlcon
Fashion Association's ResonL Olt^
Advance Spring Market H» India*
this week Nearly »,0f»!f“tjliyor*
from the great Southfilled
the Dallas hotels to cafuipity tor
the quarterly apparel market, Oct 1
»S-30. Approximately 139*J llfte* of
Wunit'll •» mid CLddiCil »* 'gpptfiil
was displayed by the iuoTw than
400 manufacturer*’ iepry*bntatlve*
who comprise the AmerlcOn'TBOh-
ion Association, at the" Adoiphu*
n i Baker Hotels. ”J.
Market highlight was' tha pres-
entation of the popular'Breakfast
linlc Style Shows held”/ Oct. 27
. rid 28 in the Ballroom o* thu
laker Hotel. The theme"of the
shows, “Tides Of FushRrxf Sw 'ep
In From The Gulf" sot3he tempo
for a colorful array of trarty spring
fa- lion- chosen from luKvithown
at market. Mrs. Evelyn ..Lambert
is the director and commMfUator
if th clinics. .ii., •
The next market week will be
rid in Dallas Jan. 17-22 add will
dure Spring and Sumiperfash-
ions.
Then, one evening, he told her
that he was going to specialize in
: criminal practice.
“Why?” she asked him. "So
that 1 can better support you,’
he replied. "Criminal cases are
easy to get; there is good money
j in them, and if you lose, your cli-
ent usually goes to jail and can’t
bother you lor quite a while.”
My niece broke the engagement
right there and then. She did not
want to be supported by the gains
i of thieves and other law-break-
ers.
* • •
They have just laid the corner-
stone of the new atomic-bomb-
proof building tor the Armed Forc-
es Institute of Pathology in Wash-1
ington, D. C.
As usual, they put several
things characteristic of our time
in the stone, so that those who
I come after us may open it in a
| hundred years or so and see what
! kind of folks we were.
One of the things, put in the
1 stone, was a small plastic block,
containing skin tissue of a victim
i of radiation from the atomic ex-
! plosion over Hiroshima.
I do hope that inside ttiat block
there will also be the story of
that explosion. So that, when the
building is tom down, the coming
generations can see how undvfl-
izer we still were In the 20th cen-
tdry and how very, very far our
! sons and grandsons had to travel
to come even a little bit closer
! to the millenium.
! I do hope that when that time
comes—the building having con-
crete walls and being of extra
thick construction with three sto-
ries underground, will last for a
long time—PEACE will at last
have come to the world and atom-
ic nnd hydrogen bombs will be
shown only In museums as tokens j
of un early civilization.
Or perhaps they will even call
our era -the late barbaric age.
Tipster Queried
pj...
LgJjraAjj
OPCNIY entering the probe Into
the missing 3300,000 of the ran-
som money, FBI questions John
Hager (above), St. Loula cab
driver whose tip to police led to
the arrest of Carl Austin Hall
and Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady,
confessed kidnapers of Bobby
Greenleaae. A blonde woman
and a man were picked up al-
most simultaneously at o hotel.
No reasons were given for their
arrests. tlntemuttonat)
LISTEN
FRED MATHJEWS
And Tha Alarm Clock Club
EVERY MORNING FROM 6:30 TO 8:00
OVER
KSI J
YOUR
DIAL
11
THE BEST
MEATS IN TOWN”
TENDER
VEAL CUTLETS
Ib. 59c
BABY BEEF
CLUB STEAK
lb.4fe
ARMOUR'S BANNER
BACON
Ib. 59c
TENDER \
ROUND STEAK
Ib. 45c
ARMOUR'S STAR.
PICNICS
Ib. 45c
ARM ROUND OR
SEVEN STEAK
lb. 35c
DRY SALT
JOWLS
Ib. 25c
FRESH
PORK ROAST
Ib. 49c
SMOKED
BACON SQUARES
Ib. 39c
BEEF
RUMP ROAST .
. Ib. 39c
WISCONSIN
CHEESE
Ib. 49c
FRESH DRESSED
FRYERS
lb. 49c
BEEF
SHORT RIBS
Ib. 19c
GENUINE
CALF LIVER
. Ib. 39c
FRESH GROUND
HAMBURGER
Ib. 19c
SEVEN CUT
BEEF ROAST
lb. 29c
FRESH COUNTRY
SAUSAGE .
Ib. 59c
FRESH
CHITTERLINGS .
Ib. 29c,
LOIN OR
T-BONE STEAK ... Ib. 39c
WILSON'S
GOLDEN OLIO ... lit 19c
@332-
m~lrJ/s3L(
J/im;sii
no. l
YELLOW ONIONS
Ib. -Sc
— • it
5 LB. BAG
ORANGES or GRAPEFRUIT Sc
Freeh Home Orown
Lb.
Fr#*h Orson
t* Lb.
15c
CABBAGE
*
Florida Lb. Home Grown No. 1 Red lff*L*e.
ORANGES 10c OKRA Ib. 25c POTATOES ftc
Brooke 2—No. 303 Can*
PORK A BEANS 25c
Trellis Early
No, 303 Can*
PEAS
2 (or 25c
Diamond Yellowoyed 303 Can*
PEAS
2 for 25c
Del Mont*
No. 303 Can
SPINACH
15c
Sunaot
TUNA
can 25c
Soavitw
No. 300 Can
MACKERAL 23c
Imperial
19 Lb*.
SUGAR
89c
WfffTT T”*: 1
SI
f. 1 If u
r £,a am
SvT . flpiZ "M Tm
AUSTEX
CHIU
300can . 33c
CR^SCO
3 lbs. 89c
7i30
COFFEE
Lb. 79c
0XYD0L
Lgc. box . 29c
PET
MILK
2 cam. . . 29c
Llqht CruM
FLOUR
Light Crust
FLOUR
-r-
U4ba
$1*9
a
Light Crust
:•
MEAL
We
b*
Gordy's
' I'
SALT
2 for Be
Hunt's
•* ’
No. 300 Jpaae
PEACHES
.....$€
Libby** Pineapple 49 Oa.£aa
JlflCE
.....*
Triumph
l
• • • •
m v
8881
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Belk, Jeanne. Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 86, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 29, 1953, newspaper, October 29, 1953; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022004/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lee Public Library.