Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 53, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 1, 1938 Page: 3 of 6
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EVEN A WAR SCARE didn't halt London's basket-
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AS A FOSTER-FATHER, Uncle Sam rode on the one float in a Manila parade aarking the
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TOEING THE MARK, Duquesne university gridders boot a few pigskins into the air, with
several skyscrapers in Pittsburgh's Golden Triangle in the background.
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GET REAL LOWD OW N on bossy, Mrs. Frances Gray measures one of cows raised by
herKather-in-law, Otto Gray, near Stillwater, with a yardstick. Gray has eight midget cows, averag-
ing 400 pounds, and hopes that his herd will eat half, as much and produce just as much mik.
LIFE SEEMS GOOD to Samuel Dangler of A
hobby, wood-carving. using always a sing le i
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EUREKA COUNTS THE DAYS until residents will be using new water supply following
completion of Eureka's $890,000 dam (above), key unit of a $2,000,000 water supply project. Archof
the dam—which is on the Mad river in Humboldt county, California—is 50 feet high but an earth fill
nearly 30 feet deep conceals much of the dam structure. P
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f-om “Pop" Warner starts campaign. It’s Pop's 44th season.
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forces. Uncle Sam is handing a Filipino flag to a hative girl. A sign on float read: "Far b. ei t .ine
a nipa shack than a golden house where I am not the lord"
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CIRCUS DAY CAME in Buffalo when Walter A. Schmidt (above) of Allentown, Pa., shoved
his 22-car circus train. complete in all details, at national model railroad .convention. »
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HALF-PINT BOSSY GIVES UP A PINT —and then some—to Farmer Otto Gray who
. raises midget cows near Stillwater, Okla. The usual milk stool was too high, so Mr. Gray sits on a
tile: even the pail seems a runt size. Gray says his cows, which run from 30 to 33 inches high,
• duce five gallons of milk a day, testing high in butterfat. This bossy measures 33 inches.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 53, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 1, 1938, newspaper, October 1, 1938; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1459313/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.