Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 346, Ed. 1 Monday, May 5, 1952 Page: 2 of 6
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P«K« Two
Gladcwatrr Daily Mirror
111
way I
that's th#
H eared'
Washington Merry - Go - Round Looking at
Life
t HKtlWlUl llllUlt'IU'V-IMHl
Copy. I* XI. Itll. *l«* PNiutH *yn*
IY GEORGE!
WASHINGTON — When Ohio | Imlrad. DvimIiI Coir, .in insm -
mill ' "*«•! * «*» to ilie ihjIU tmnorrMr, |tuv agent, was puked .in a Ke-Im.i
•hex will vole under .1 primary fiiuvw (Mtflto Npwtw, ha was I
sy stein supposed to Ik* a model warned that hi» insurance client* 1 h" pulling wires, Clifford 1 not A young H*u yard graduate gave
for the nation, but which tho would be pressuicd to seek other averse to having .1 i< xx friend- on 1 me .1 l»'»n in juvenile phxrludogy
party bnooea have war pod and! agents if he persisted in buckingI'he °*her end <>l the wires, ami hist Saturday
prostituted to a point where it the Democratic machine, lie a|*oj‘'' ,I|M recommended iii*. dor. Thi* chap had come out into
** *"* * 1 * «|fifrii tui Baltliidge .in chiei ot the .......in lm tlie weekend In
| cheap lubtu ' when their parent*
\ a*k them to ik> soMielliiiig.
Conte l<> think about it, many j
, times when I wa* a youngridr I j
1 resented mv father ni mntliei a*k
| iltg me to tin something aiolilld tlie
| hnuar or to iuii an enawi f«u ■
I them.
, Cheap labor, they cWt*u1ei mr,
II thought.
Monday. May S, If
Sun Rises Again
mmpletelv substantiates I'ie*ident . bowed out.
Trumim'. .uirnml Ihal i»biiii,M| At Ihl. point. h.,PM Uov frank' \v„V• — ■'
iasss?*Jfevss:cis-t unmT; tt......-"£«*........
' H ‘ ‘ nowex. i. nap- wa* going on. culled a halt on the „ ,-ha.ge nt the claims di\t ' He has an apartment in New
rough stuff So. .it the hi* min • 1ul York fitv. wear* nice ct •'i.i,«.
Hollo Motherly, city council ! It n mtei e*tn «. if not cm.ic.iI, n an
of Hellevuc. filed a* a Kefau- | illuatr.itlnn of how lobby isU opt I
, |ien to Ik- rotqainsible for making
I it NO.
„ , , . . .. • a i The Ohio primary law is rap.
Dui you ever wonder Just how Uncle Sam received his Kivr th<. ptlt,pll,
all-around man <>f the world.
• ni not ac<|tiuihled with In
mtnoc and when he was first originated* You know, there are (clad chame m nominate as well 't?llmVDaMo,U'Vh.''!r!\,^‘'! '«■’' n'...'.1 V“^d/.• *,*'\".:i 'aiiTtSi Jliow 'thai r.'X ' mgh.^Satu!" i '*• . a
Now let's n Imw cheap this
young Harvard man laiioi realty
is
Ills father dirtl some year ago
Since then his mother, a business
woman, had le.ned him
Willi hei own little inheritance
she had \
managed to send Inin in Harvard,
li> pay for Ins tuition, his board,
in* fraternity dues, he clothes, and
a whole heap of historians wondering the same thing
It seems that Uncle Sam is somewhere in the neighbor-
hood of 140 years old which would set his creation sometime
during the war of 11112. There is a tale about an Uncle Sam
that has more or less become the accepted legend that origi-
nated during that war
It seems that there was a government supply inspector by
the name ot Samuel Wilson employed during the war that
was nicknamed Unde Sam" by his workmen The name was
switched from Wilson when the men noted that U S. was
stamped on most ot the supplies that they handled, hence the
c M5«sr.sfc jztzrxr **.«*,• ......■■ v.......'..............
r,;r‘ ,h“V KO* ‘he W,n'' «hc niuic fact mif; wlSe'Ihe Sd? T, n
dent HOo car-old William A. Julian. ■.21,’.:!*['!. ... • ntl. m.m, who wrote an .-sc. ih-ut .m.-h •• .me ; .nth, • v. mm;
treasurer of the United States, and ve. m 0,n*V,, I” '1 h" '’"l ' • ..... * ” Hi m„ ......... wi.eth.-i h.
wnt him to Philadelphia as th» u ' t;>'mucil .vheti he aigued die .., ,• j would n. ciK.Vl cn.mgli to fIV the
favorite sort. This year the favorite m favor the steel com that It. never lioulo Imv. bee,,1 ‘ u‘-
son is 79-year-old ex-Sen. HntHTi K.anl'’* "'U brf>u*"’ 1,1 f>t',>-ident , pemulnd to do o He wa- given
- - irum.an, he was sore i hi . •!,. ,
geie out in front for het
It seems that one of the posts
had lotted aw.iv, or -oinetlimu.
and the gate wouldn't stand up
Helm t,.nll\ he went out into the
yard to see what was wrong with
tin d n thing
I happened to pass by the place
*......— ........- ” — — r— — — ..... ,uin f ...I .......... j I.................... , m.ii i i *'*" ' o 1 a VC toi gotten ‘ I 'lit 1 ‘ ' '
southern planter, or a clean shaven dude with colonial stvle , Pressure dridge was aimomted to tin k. \ i""1 " direct to lum m .dm "lleiio. Jim. I .mi I re you're
too hat and tails ' ,rr■, °r bust- lob through the persausive inthi- i*. clinch Haldi tdge's apiMimtmeut making wur .If useful
• , a. tl.*# , , of Kefauvfi deletfateh un- viica '»f ihe Pi'm»Klent’K own v\- riiis* mm ma> »h* paving oft M *1 V**a, hr irplicMt, **I uui* s I’m
It was during Andrew Jacksons term as president that less they withdraw For example. , ounsel. Clark Clifford wmie m <".d«e chief of the ^«,m d!-1 cheap lahoi
the red and white striped pants and star studded vest were here is how they operated in, the White House. Cldford was one v'>"">• • atniut to ettl. the a .o j
added to Uncle Sam s wardrobe. Abe Lincoln and Uncle Sam °hio . 13th DUirM. of Tinman's !*■*• ..<tvi Hut, tm • »• *m... ,f tor tnu ktim .....
grew their heard at about the same time Pir P*f v*5,**J!** sinw leaving the White Hou.m he hu"" 1 ll«""' "hun w.i uc
, . . , . ._ , I, rust. Kefauver leaders lined un1 has become one of the cm, ’ . 1 •' s-d tee of abnut S.nin ooti t,.
Uncle Sam gained international acclaim when he began i Ed Conley, able vot ng -q. ------- ^ „ in< ‘“’"“l. ;h. „ w.isiungton
making appearances with John Bull ot England in cartoons tor of Lorain .is .i delegate The
ment when they applied t he term. , So when brash vouna Senator I the power of the ‘dtm uev general, was ts.gg, ,i
The Uncle Sant ot 140 veara ago was a tar vounger gentle-1 Kefbuver dared upset this plan surpassed the Constitu ;,,UI: ,>ti.<*: ,mtie that he|
man that the bewhtskered character that we ill know today • ,h*; What the President apparently ' '"S^x he'“f!' '' dent
In those earlier days he was often portrayed as a well-to-do <*»**•• ietaiiated with the unfairest didn’t rcmembei wu- th;tt it ,i
.......... -economic pressure dridge was ,.|.noir
Ml the jobs or busi- job through the p
luver delegates un- ence of the Pre.i
draw For examnle , ounsel rturk r-t,
how
The Gladewster Station
published m newspapers and magazines. minute this became known. Demo-
Unde Sam was not the first character that was repre- £r,l,ic bosses reminded Conley that j
sentitive of this nation In the very earlv history of the United ®'lv bcld a job with
States a gent called Brother Jonathan was the symbol of : trolled bv org?m"atioi!'‘ctnicrat!i’ I
America It seems that Jonathan was a younger brother of ind that he might lose his job
John Bull, hence the creation was appropriate in the colonial; .ium ,i year before getting his pen-,
days. sion. To protect his father, Conley j
Just how it all happened may forever continue to be a „
legend, but legend or not. Uncle Sam has become a mighty delegate ^waT^mes*4 V “rt3nr.r
prominent figure during the last 140 years. prominent Menduskv lawyer How-'
Another symbol that has become associated with the ever. Flynn's law partners were
United States is the eagle This bird’s start as a symbol of thir ; |iUb,ly advised that the firm might — — .....
nation had quiet a rousing beginning. The founding fathers of hi"? s“r”t' ot '•* practive around 710-7 15—Fun at Bre.iki .o
this country placed it on the first seal of the United States -hey ci“d not*kwp FKmn^X'.f af f-wu ro.'!
after weeks of bitter argument. Benjamin Franklin, opposition hot and bittet primary. They mu
leader did not go for the story that the eagle was a symbol of ceeded, though Flynn is still
strength. ”
franklin called the eagle a bird of bad character moral
that did not get ft’s living honestly and it was a rank coward.
Ben wgs tfgyhng out for the turkey He pointed out that
the eagle WjgMtund everywhere while the turkey, a peaceful
soul, was a native of America.
Had Ben Franklin had his way our bands would not be
KSIJ
1430 od Your Dial
TUESDAY
fl:2S—Sign on
6:30-6:55—Alarm dis k Club
6 55-7 00— News
7:00-7 10—S|w>rt. Reveille
attorney. The
niattei ins lawn undci pioi, ,ii«, ,1
■ ieti.ite .old could lx dei'idi it on,
^ *,v ’lie 1 it he 1 The W ishinutoii
attonu V IIIIIIIH IIS to IK' Clark Clti-
femt.
'lull
Alarm Clock Club
News
8:00-8:40— Alarm Clnek Club
8 45-8:55—Your Morning
Meditation.
8 55-9:00—News
9 00-9 t Hillbilly I! n n Time
quiet booster for Kefauver
As alternates. Kefauver leaders!
had picked Mayor Oscar Stierwalt
of Fremont and William H W.i
I'finis of Vermilion Mayor Slier- 1, 45 10 00 ...... ,h"
wait was bluntly warned by the 10 00-10 05 \vis ’
ruts'Vfor'^hLm'h.“'a1 10 0511 ,M» ddlb.llv Hi: Pat .de
moi rats, for whom he had ob- II 00-11 05 New
playing "Under the Double Eagle" but would probably be wSB beSr^VK d*ld not^wSh• H-,t.p,,rn*'
marching to "Turkey In The Straw '
Horn Kefauver to Hulklev. To save 11:30-11 45— Hillbilly Hit Time
" SJinfnd*’ h<> sw'«lh*^- 11:45-12 00—Hillbilly Hit Parade.
Williams was also pressured. In 12:00-12:10—Noontime Tune:
* I happened to read in a comic book the other day a storv ___________ ... ............................
based on the fact that wofnen controled the world Women 1 ff*ct' ,hc kwt his mb a* clerk of* 12:10-12.15- Market Report
fighter pilots, women in industry, and in government. The \ ‘.mVi'efCsed'n^h f1ow,‘v,*r' Wi|-1 !f:i5*J2li?° ^.*011 New
basts for the tale was the manner in which women out num- KeTau^r SSewte “ now “ , l? 50-|. 9°-^n-t'm<’ Tl1^
bered the men until men became in minorit.' and were forced Honest Governor intervenes
out of what we today call‘ manly duties.” Next. Kefauver backers turned
This comic book story may not be too far wrong. In the !° Sl,'lf,"sk.v’s William Didelius,
19f)l census report the Census Bureau reported 1,500,000 more ; whTrUeJ-^U>..«'oun,w.. ,>r"se<'u’01
women in the United States than men. and the indication is Hearing „f thb**he nime !9?9
that this trend will rapidly increase during the next decade bosses promptly 'told Didelius that
Should this keep up, perhaps the smart thing to do would ,hev w«’«9 thinking of running him
be to send out girls to school to play football and study ROTC ",uU‘ a,,orn‘‘v general in 195«.
while the b<ivs should be instructed in home economics and °ut T’iJ10. no* do so lf hc "'*P-
short hand ported Kefauver He bowed o>C
1 can just see a two hundred nound male perched neatly I
on his 12H p" t«pl bosses knee taking dictation and asking for’
a mink coat Still it is a thought of what things to come might
bring.
Remember twenty-five years ago when Buck Rogers first
appeared in the tunny papers what a screwball we all thought *
the author tblie predicting in his storv that in 2000 years
We would have rocket plane*, atomic powered, and weapons *»'• «m
would be of radiation type rathtiP than missile? That was pro- WASHINGTON. May 5 Wash- t>, keep
1:00-2:00— One Horn With You
2:00-2:05—News
2:05-3:00—Musical V’ai ie*ies.
3:00*3:06—News
3:05-3 15—Organ liiterl*nli».
3 15-4:00- Tin t'ati V,.lleV
4 00 4 30 1430 Cliih
4 30-5:00 Jiv, Til Five
5:00-5 05 Sizing t.’p Spiut
5:05-5 15 Texil A W • \ v.
5:15-5:20- Patty Line
5:20-6 45 Hucdowu a* s mriewn
6:48
GEORGE DIXON
Washington Scene
-;»*t vm • mc-i
f’lrmi ’ht* |
dieted 25 years ago. about the time Lindburg startled the ^ci'n^'iute'had ^articu* ’'u^camp.nui
come a long wav from the world of Buck Rodgers in a bit j tl anybody all week tl-stinx hen . ..,mt f„,
more than a score ot years. 1 This utt-Bravermanlike conrluct feathers to leinovi ,»<toi »nii re-1
Maybe it would pay to consider the comic book authors a I may be due, ot course, to the fact (tain natui ,1 n ill* ■
bit more earelullv Some of those bovs have presenter! miBhtv 0,s W1,b Maigaret QM
serious food for thought Truman is warming up again, ..ft I u. u
j .... ... lL‘ l /*l at a , , .or sho cooled him off But lm titles of wool m «xp«» to n* |
I ij 1 \v«t\ s think of the ROH(| thut ffoes . . . iney laup[h^*^l convinced it’s the humidity. ; .suit from th< u • <>f pio< « • «*d
a! Christopher Columbus when l.e said the world is round
I saw the loving swain .ibout chicken feathei
Try and Sfop Me
ay BENNETT CERF-
intdway in the multi-day lain at ,■ j ferial
111 A I
party given by Julie Ansbarry and | byiatioi
j he looked droopy and dispirited | *'* whnh
army wool :
f Atm\ bra i,.,t■ hav<
iiwuserl of woolgatla 11:
tiles II lie .a t 11 ,,t f, ,11 \, 1
oi-ifoi 1 |
It looks lik
1 .1 fast Hack
he rlor-s bettei on,
IN’ THE HEART of the Ozark . novelist Louis Bromfletd lost
1 his way and inquired of a native. "Am I on the toad fot
Kansas City ' Not exactly Bud, said the native. That road
just moseys along fer a piece,
then it turns into a hog trail,
then a squirrel track, and
finally runs up a crub pine
and ends in a knothole. '
iV,
V
fin a radio pan<-l. Jfoljert Q
I/ ais asked a girl what she
wanted most in a husband
money. Iiraitis. or appearance
.Stic answered, without hesita-
tion. Appearance - and the
ms ner the b*-tter'
A draftee, just up from Har-
vard, finished his flint day of
rlose-order drill under u lin'd-
boded top sergeant and at the
<, nunund At ease, murmured
Mv literal v fi lend R. .1 , • , ,
rort. aotlioi of T.naw.i, • Jr Ti
Westward, et, , if,,
sensor of two young on , .lofn
14, and Hooert .li . 12
The other dnv. lohn , > ..irie*
for extraoidinai \ t,i , v«>r I, th,
* • * >
r
\
If Reji Flank Boykin success-
fullv through the Alabama Uerno-
cratit primary tomorrow 'Tuesday
he is gouu to give the major credit
to Evangelist Billy Giuham.
Mr Boykin had a lough piimarv
fight on tils hands against a cou-
ple ut othei eager Democrats, Joe
Thompson and Ben filoyei Hot roi extraoidii. il \ la ,• r
Mi Htivktn totik the pluv away J Car iegie Fund < on 1, ,
from them by havltijf Hilly Graham lumped into th» si<.,.tt Kivm
travel with him around the dls- Annajioli , Md I , • .1
trict. (tied a !l year ol<l Washington
Wherever he went campaigning. Samuel Senvei ■ 1 ft
Rep. Boykin beaminl upon hr 1 e
vivalist traveling companion and
said, in effeet, to the voters:
"Look wiio's on my side' Shun
mv opponents, the miserable sin-
ners!"
- 1
How wonderful is death’’" 'Who
said that’’ barked the Marge wheeling about The draftee meekly j will gel no sleep after 5
milled Shell, v. i believe, sir
For Ihe next couple of weeks.
Rep Orel 1 llnins, of Arkansas,
m
Shot toil I’ere 1 ur '.i fiubl v proud
of his heron- (Id. 1 not 1,1 ;
equally proud ot Bobbie, In
youngest The latter h,> liown 1,
markuble lm in. ,<t>ilits
The niujoi e*tia , uiinuliir ac-
tivity at Hoi due > , lio*,l iiglit n.iw
is til., wappmg of piesiitrntikl '
campaign hutton ihneto ally |
every kid h.,- , large 10Ilection of
hlltlon put out te. h. .idquai tei
of the V.1I100 ••pliant] ..lot r
GLADIWATER DAILY MIRROR
Published Sunday and daily •irepi sa.umay ay The Mirror Pub-
■Uhing Company, Inc., Ciladn aveuue and Dean afreet. (J lade water
arena County. Texaa.
T. w I-ee, president, publither and general manager
loUdated with the Gladewater Tlmae-Tribune Noe
There’s a nemesis at work on him
It. p Hum we 1 h..u man of thi trading ........
House District of Columbia sub Young Shcnnd , ,.i i„gelhf. .
(orruiultee that okayed daylight 1,oxful of I ,ft Ei , t...v.. K,
savFtig foi the naUtm's capital funvei . Hu , 11 , „f„t St„ ,.»-
There’s an anonymous denizer- j „ftei „ .11. „t „iv.,nUu. ons
( onsolidaud with the
Altered ee eeeond-claee matter at the poet
under Act of» ungreee el March 3, liH
ttnee-Trtbune Now. 36, IH6
- (|
lane where in nui midst who up
liaientiv holds the Arkansan pn
on.ills responsible
Suite daylight saving came in
again this fellow lias Iwcn 1 ailing
It.'ii Harris piomptiv at 5 a m
ar,d i fill ping In iglitlv
Come now, »ive|iv head' Time
| to get up Time to get up and
i.'tiiny da v light saving '
the on quartettna,ter reveal-
1 Rial , liltk.l. fiMihei will he u>ed
trad. Then on. night III father
liiuuglil him .1 new hutton l tm
touting sonutoi K*li of (ikla
tiom.i
Next • yeluiig Itohliil h oil.al f|p.
lalh.'i 1 dim.
Notiinl. * 1-1111 >1 to li.ive la,ud
of 'ho K*ii fellow , la . xplumed.
So A Ken ti(itt*iii it 0141 1 laail
1 vei ( l m
I old Ha oiic you g .ye mi to
aiioMiei kat fm . inter md | m
• Utting vou III fill III ian.nl
I didn't answet him at the time
I Wo talki d ibout 1 ith.-1 things,
'-•bout |>rmg in the country and
, lif. in New York .md o forth
Hut when I got home I started
tu ponder
I war wondering how many
modem kid ennsldei themselves do it
tioiih into which he got him id 1
She Uiught turn an uiiUnnobtle
and jiaid for its upkeep.
He was wry sick for n while I
So she paid Ills hospital hill- ami |
his dnehu bills and ill the othei
exponaes one incurs when sn km
strikes
And not only that She worm li
at least twenty pound- oil la-i a lt
over the kid, and he lived ulmn-t
her entire life tin him
She kept up a lovely home pit |
manly fm him, and she looked I
forward to ever' weekend vln-i
he .fluid sjM-nd .1 few Until with I
her
And even then she diito t <-e
tiai much of him There wen- all !
kinds of parties he'd have !■
to." and that cost hei money Hi.
ts at present engaged III .1 1 ailed
husine s enterprise With wluit tu
'•alls "a future" At pi< 0.1 it
only an expense .,nd that mean:
money out of hei pocket
The way I figure it, tin mofhei
could have saved h.n elf .1 lot of
money if she had lined out 10.
lutaii ut $1(10 (Hi an hour
Bu' that isn’t the way mothf 1
THI first time since Japan
iitn-ndei d six and otie-half year*
go. lei ling, free again, la ran sell
- • * • 1 the h.-adquartrra of i^n
»lntthaw Kujgway in the Dal Ichi
-od-ling ut togv». Ai4n going up
10 in Stars and Stripe* and th*
'N flag </.if*-.null.,nat 1
I'h. tu 1 nominating convention,
t! It tinaiie in 1832. choar Presi.
lent Andrew Ja< k on for a second
term In at 1 tarnation
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Gladewater Daily Mirror (Gladewater, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 346, Ed. 1 Monday, May 5, 1952, newspaper, May 5, 1952; Gladewater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1022092/m1/2/: accessed May 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lee Public Library.