Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 81, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 29, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
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WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 29, 1937.
WEDNESDAY AFTER N
GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER. GAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
PAGE FOUR
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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replacing: of a small
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as a huge arc on the
The arc is anchored at
CLENCHED FIST OF L A B O R I T E Clement Atlee
(left), British M. P., gave the communist salute as he and General
Miaja (center) watched government troops parade in Madrid.
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SALE
Monday of this week
- run out to Lindsay and
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"DON’TSHOOT BARNEGAT P E T E ’ is fervent plea
of children In Barnegat, N. J., where Pete, for three years, has been a
town pet. Pete wears a red checked coat and a white plaque reading,
“This is Barnegat Pete; don’t shoot,” during the hunting season. Even
- traffic is halted for him.
m
386
IF BOMBS RAIN ON BUDAPEST from raiding planes, Budapest will be prepared.
Mock air raids in which a dummy plane was downed were staged to train residents for war. In gas
masks and protective clothing, firemen quench burning plane.
BABY’S CRIB WAS CRUSHED but 17 - month - old
Richard McCarth escaped injury when a bus collided with a train
and bounced back, burying self in this Cohoes, N. Y., building. The
bus driver suffered minor injuries, while train passengers and bi ild -
ing occupants came out of the crash unscathed. ’
12 ms
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CAME A CAMEL to 1
London as the gift of King Saud
of Saudi-Arabia to King George 1
VI of England. The camel eyes
his new home.
9 pa
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FUNNELS FADE OUT ON STREAMLINED L I N E R proposed by French engi-
neers who claim that the boat, shown in a model, could cross the Atlantic in 84 hours. Smoke ducts
would be at the side and propulsion would be turbo - electrical. Glass encloses the superstructure.
coast line ...”
• A Vast Area "
More Important than
else to a battle fleet are
A baseless fleet soon
IN ORANGE BOWL
at Miami will be Coach Charlie
Bachman’s Michigan State elev-
en playing Auburn. At Fort
Worth’s Cotton Bowl Colorado
plays Rice Institute.
14
1358
1
PARIS IS IN A LATHER over the “shaving brush”
coiffure originated by Rambaud. Brown aigret brushes emerge from
a nest of curls. The flowers are brown and white.
ON HIGH.JUMPER
Enid Soult, grazing the bar at
Arlington park in Sydney, Aus-
tralia, does New South Wales
pin high hopes for victory in
British Empire games. She per-
formed well in meets this year.
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GOING TO THE NORTH POLE for winter sports?
This hotel is about 500 miles from the pole, near New Allensund.
Norway. A man and two women care for the guests.
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times last week but I i m
ful of the fact that I ha
been in a place that I did
out of. The roads in th al
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ROSE BOWL game at
Pasadena will see California’s
Golden Bears, coached by Stub
Allison (above), battling Ala-
bama’s Crimson Tide, never
beaten at Pasadena.
Illinois Bend and I ha
there so much it seems
with the warm welcome
always give. ,
I got stuck in the m
g
TO THE SOUTH SEAS has sailed George Palmer Put-
nam. husband of the late Amelia Earhart, who was lost at sea in mid-
Pacific last February, and a zoological expedition. With Putnam
aboard the Athene as she left San Pedro, Cal., is lone Reed, a movie
stunt girl. Putnam heads the party.
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THEY R E COM IN"DOWN THE S T R E T C H for a railful of anxious jockeys at the
ropical park race track in Coral Gables, Fla., and what those boys mean—they’re a-comin'. The track
recently opened at the start of Florida's 96-day horse racing season.
but Commissioner Beznke
ing to fix them. The road
«have been putting in ‘pi m
needed bridges and oth r
pairing the bad- places. (
I met them with two ti u
t of lumber and other mat
- the Virgin Islands. in th»
and at the other in the .
off the coast of Alaska.
In between, it swings <
I again stayed at the I
Mr. and Mrs. Artie Wil
while at Myra had lune i j
and Mrs. Pilgrim and h er
Mrs W. A. Cauldwell. T
Howard Visits Bule ch
Illinois Bend in S
the Muddy Highw
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were stuck on a slick l ill
boys did not do any o hi
that day, they earned th ei
digging out that old tr ic
mire the boys who build o
and they should have th e
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Navy Forges
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Illinois Bend. On Tuesdy
stayed in the home of 1
Mrs. Robert Dennis at
They have both lived in th
, munity all their lives < in
now cultivating the sam > |
; which he was born. The r l
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d the Virgin Islands to th
Zone, west to the Samoan
thence northward to Hav
the bleak Aleutians Its ol
extremity from the Un ite
bumps the 180th merid al
The United States fleet
subsidiary units have the
base at the hub of the a
Pedro. Calif. Ships and ill
radiate outward to any j
the arc, like the spokes of
half-wheel.
To Replace Old Craft
The navy has a mill! on
armored ships, 1,000-odd
and 130,000 men to shoo l e
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HALF-SIZE DRFS:
GREATLY REDI (
THE
Dress-Up SI
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Mrs. Virgil Keel
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SHIPS THAT PASS BY DAY NEAR S H A N G H A I have no signal to give each •
other in passing. At the left a bleak troop ship heads for port bringing more Japanese soldiers to the «
battle fronts in China. On the right is a hospital ship sailing back to Japan with a full cargo of Japa-
nese soldiers wounded in the conquest of Chinese territory. The ships passed each other in the Whang-
poo river below Shanghai. Meanwhile, the hope of Russian aid spurs on China to put up a more for-
midable defense against the invaders. -
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By GREGG HOWA
4 Christmas is past and
■all soon be back to et ri
and will forget most ol
that happened. It has bee n
ure to have our friends as
our own family with is
home and Santa Claus w
"to us and brought sere
things to add to our hap
Our travels were cut s if
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state an enemy must » n
attack before it reaches t
able and vulnerable cit es
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SUGAR BOWL oppo-
nents at New Orleans will be ’
Louisiana State, coached by Ber- »
nie Moore (above), and Santa 4
Clara. At El Paso’s Sun Bowl 3 1
Texas Tech plays WesVirginia.
ws < 4 “8
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Cauldwell of Desmit, Te x
laying off my work thi s
to attend the funera I
wife's aunt. Mrs. M a
ncy, formerly Miss Mai y
‛ She has been one of th e
tial citizens of Gain* si
many years and belonge i
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TEAM-WORK AND HEAD-WORK made Ruby and
Bobby Maxon ef Duluth, Minna popular skating team at the Ice
Follies in New York. Theykated on sunshine-yellow ice.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 81, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 29, 1937, newspaper, December 29, 1937; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1459038/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.