Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 24, 1948 Page: 2 of 8
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Meet the Candidates
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DRILY SPECIRL
TUESDAY, MAY 25
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M-MAYBE THE EDITORS
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SEE THE NEW
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(Sixth of a Series)
By RUSSELL BRINES
AP Newsfeatures
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to his chief’s office. Whitney was
a lawyer in pre-war Manila and
later a guerrilla commander in
the Philippines. He is believed to
I WHEN YOU HELPED ME INTO THE
CAR-I DROPPEDMY COMPACT INTO
YOUR POCKET. AH, YES-HERE IT Is:,
AND-NOW-GOOD-NIGHT-A---“
IT UNTIL SUNDAY
-FORTHEIR FEATURE
- SECTIONS/
The
NEWSPAPERS
HAVE HIT
THE STREET
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HEADLINES
THAT
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Our pledge to you: Consis-
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TRY US!
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Since 1900 there have been variations of nearly
five feet in the surface level of Lake Erie.
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rights reserved:
I FORGOT I WAS )
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ment was imperative. None came.
So military government teams
have broadened their range of ac-
tivities to include pressure on
Japanese officials for the proper
collection of taxes, increased pro-
duction of coal, a balanced budget
and similar necessary improve-
ments.
The desire to avoid ruffling or
upsetting the “old man” appears
to be always present at headquar-
ters. He has become visibly de-
pressed over newspaper criticism,
and he is known to have a sharp
tongue when aroused.
He relies upon the advice of nu-
merous experts and other offi-
cials, but none can be considered
so close as to exercise dominant
influence.
One of his evident favorites,
however, is Brig. Gen. Courtney
/ THIS I
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2—Gainesville, Tex. Daily Register Mon., May 24, 1948 •
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DRIVE-INN AND GET GOOD SERVICE
The Word of God ...
Yes, we can invite all our friends to our Fath-
er’s house. There is abundance of room.—Gen.
24:23: Is there room in thy father’s house for
us to lodge in?
V
22212284522885 &885
GEN. DOUGLAS MacARTHUR
Copr. 1948, Walt Disney Productions —-U
World Rights Reserved Distributed by King Features Syndicate
I‘M TRYING AWFULLY W
’ HARD TO APPEAR <9
) THAT WAY...EASY... )
/ HERE SHE COMES. 24
pital at Bath, N. Y.; “The Beach-
combers,” for the VA gang at
Manhattan Beach; and Puerto
Rico, which comes under the ad-
ministration of the New York
state office, came through with
an enthusiastic gambol of its own
called "Rebeldes Regulares."
V/
TOKYO — Gen. Douglas Mac-
Arthur sat alone in his study at
the American embassy, writing a
statement with Pencil, as he often
did. A few minutes later it was
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Sunmount, N. Y. The show is being prepared for eran, explained:
their own amusement, and no outsiders will see it. “Once, few cadets at A&M had
And the reason “Mister Roberts” will have its their own cars. Then came the
first presentation outside the Hayward jurisdic- war and afterwards the invasion
tion is that a good many folks were concerned of the campus by student Veter
whether the public would forget the fellows who ans. Such a large number of these
fought a war and were stuck in hospitals long veterans brought their own ayto,
after the fracas was finished. mobiles that it no longer be
difficult to obtain rides. The vet-
WAS DEFINITELY A
.MISTAKE/
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$,7
I now have a car hop on the day shift so you can get service
any time of the day as well as night.
Have you tried one of my genuine old time Hamburgers. They
are really good. Lots of meat on a bun with pickle and onion.
J. K.’s DRIVE-INN CAFE "
A Good Place To Eat Before or After The Ball Game
FIRST CHANCE I'VE HAD T’TALK •
T’YOU . YA SURE SEEM T‘BE FEELIN'
--------O--------
TROOPS AND THE LAW
THE USE of armed troops against civilians
• is repulsive to American minds, and is a
step which any conscientious official hesi-
tates long before taking.
But the situation which arose in the capital
city of Minnesota, in the strike of packing
house workers, seems to have offered no al-
ternative. Police of the city had been beaten
back by violence in their efforts to maintain
order, and neither city nor county seemed
capable of mustering enough force to re-es-
tablish its authority as a matter of fact.
Any government, whether a people’s gov-
ernment or any other form, must insist that
its law be respected and obeyed. No group
of citizens, large or small, be its fundamental
< cause right or wrong, can be permitted to of-
fer violent resistance to the law. The law
in this country is subject at all times to
change at the will of the people. But the
law which exists, as represented by the
courts and the established police forces, must
at all times be supreme to the will or whim of
the individual.
If a crowd of citizens—any crowd—should
be allowed to divert police officers from their
duty by fists or clubs or a barrage of eggs,
then government would no longer exist.
--o--------
SUNSET IN THE PACIFIC
rHE COAST Guard has released for public
- distribution a short documentary film on
war actions in the Pacific, made up from
choice bits of photography by its own com-
bat cameramen and those of the navy and
marine corps. It is titled “Sunset in the Pa-
cific.”
It is a piece of color-film artistry. It is
also, at brief, moments, a photographic essay
on war.
Every American owes it to himself and his
neighbors to see something, such as this brief
film, which will offer some inkling of the na-
ture of war. Too many persons who talk so
glibly of war today have not the slightest
idea of what war is.
yes-
THAT
MUST
BEIT. )
Whitney, head of the govern-
ment section, who is one of the
few men with “backdoor” access
1878, is a “lib-
eral” leader in
Pir
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-AND NOTA WORD,
PHIL/ 2
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with the “fun-
d a m e ntalists.” E
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Now retired, he M
Wife' worked w i t h K
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build Riverside
church in New
Founded August 30, 18 90, by JOHN T. LEONARD York City. He
' ™eh-------• 1939) „„„ . Any erroneous reflection upon the character, mrgquyarnam85.ev#p59 sprang to world
standing or reputation of any person, firm or corpo- Eha2MSMEdk2d ntie, in 1099
ration which may appear in The Register will be . . , ,, -e In, 1944
cheerfully corrected upon being brought to the at- when Wide attacks forced him
tention of the publisher, from a place in the. New York
Member of the Associated Press, which is entitled First Presbvterian church desnite
exclusively to the use for republication of all the lo- E 7, nnesDytnan enuren aespiie
cal news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP full support from the congrega-
news dispatches. tion.
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FREEDOM FOR WEYGAND
(EN. MAXINE Weygand, former French
commander-in-chief, has been freed of
the charge of collaborating with the nazis.
This is the latest chapter in a career unusu-
ally full of ups and downs.
As aide to Marshal Foch in world war I,
Weygand shared much of the credit for the
final victory. When, following the war, Po-
land was overrun by the Russian armies, she
called to France for help. The French sent
Weygand, whose strategy won the Battle of
Warsaw and saved Poland’s national exist-
ence for another score of years.
These achievements made him the natural
choice for commander-in-chief in the dark
days of 1940. Gamelin, head of the armies,
had enjoyed a great reputation in peace
times, but in war showed himself unfit for
the job. The world expected great things
when Weygand replaced him.
Actually Weygand lost the war as quickly
as Gamelin could have done. Opinions have
differed whether he took hold too late, or
whether his reactionary political views made
him think a nazi victory preferable to the
triumph of the French republic. At any
rate the nazis spared him for a time, and
allowed him to command the French armies
in Africa. The allied appeals to him to come
to their aid fell on deaf ears. Later the nazis
came to distrust him, and kept him in cap-
tivity for the rest of the war.
Now he is freed of the charge of treason,
but at 81 he has lost all his reputation for
generalship.
7
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PHIL-OR ABOUT THE .
RIVER FRONT KIDS
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TO DATE, MORE THAN 75,000 have been en- born May..,
tertained by some 3,500 VA patients and person-
nel. Shows have ranged from “Joan of Lorraine,” ggmq
which was presented while it still was a Broad- s
way hit, to an original caled “Slightly Disabled”; — i
“Ward Healers,” another good-natured poke at —
their own predicament; “Bubble Busters,” aptly te < 4
titled for the benefit of guests of the VA hos- . F
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(Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February,
Published by The Register Printing Compan
East California Street, Gainesville, Texas. Er
Town Topics... by A. Morton Smith
ARUM MAJOR OF THE crack and he met many old-time friends V/A~AtAAA I AWo f )yopf A Afy Am
• Fort Worth Moslah Shrine on his visit to this city Saturday. if A —UM WL 4 A“VUV•
Temple band which took part in D. MARTIN THOMAS, potentate
the Shriners’ parade here Satur- of Hella temple, Dallas, and R. W.
day afternoon in an impressive LINDSEY, potentate of Maskat
manner, is SPROESSER WYNN, temple, Wichita Falls, were also
{Iy1• t whose father and grandfather on hand greeting their many
Achinoton I ttey were in business together in friends here.
’ ’ -—-5--- —A----- • • • Gainesville many years ago. Gainesville has 44 members in
—■— -------------------— His father was WILLIAM C. its Shrine club, and they are mem-
d‘ By JANE EADS WYNN and his grandfather, L. J. bers of various temples, including taken , Lis Lgd-u+Arg ,
WASHINGTON, May 24 (AP) - Mrs. J. Borden WYNN. They were in the hard- those represented in the parade minutes distant and mimeo-
VV Harriman, former U. S. minister to Norway, ware business here in the early Saturday. graphed for the press in the cus-
, " , , pc . , „ lf„ 1900 s, the family moving to Fort tomarv wav
ledkiledto ski when she was 67. She rides, golfs Worth in 1913. AN EXPENDITURE OF $2 to Until then, no one in Tokyo
joys fishing and is still, at 77, one of the Young Wynn was a frequent $2.50 per capita per year to im- knew that the "old man” has de-
Etargretic women I’ve ever met. visitor to Gainesville during the prove street lighting in Texas cided at last on perhaps the big-
Wr day she was reelected president of lifetime, his great-aunt, the late would save,6live annuallyein gest personal gamble of his long
thp W.mn National Demoerati, 16 which she MRS. H. WATERMAN, who re- the state, the Street and ralt1c career.
the-Womans hi 1922 A? Democratic national com- sided on East Main street. Safety Lighting bureau, Cleve- The brief statement, which an-
tounded nere in -9-2. As Democrauc nauonai com land, Ohio, reports, after an anal- nounced his presidential avail-
mitteewoman for, thenDistrict.ofSolumbia the FRANK DINKINS, director of ysis of the latest traffic accident ability, put MacArthur’s extensive
anticip4tes a DUS!Smmer 1 attend the Moslah Shrine band, organ- report by the Texas Department military record on the political
convention at Ph 1adephia, ized the musical group 10 years of Public'Safety. . block. It made him a target for
She s also launching a campaign to raise $10,000 ago, with 12 musicians. Today he State reports show an average of the roughest kind of criticism. It
for fire-proofing the club’s handsome residence, has 50 members in his band, one 141 fatalities per month. Two of signalized the possible end of his
To get the fund rolling, Mrs. Harriman has of the best non _ professional them, the Lighting bureau says, career as supreme commander for
planned a huge garden party to be attended by groups of its kind in the south- occur in darkness, at dusk or at the occupation of Japan, a project
a lot of Democratic big wigs. Wives of cabinet west. dawn, when visibility is poor. At for which he has fought and
members will pour tea, and there will be special Dinkins and A. W. WELLS, least half of them are chargeable worked extensively.
entertainment. The affair will be held at Mrs. Har- sports editor of The Register, to inadequate light, the bureau’s The decision, therefore, hardly
riman's, estate, “Uplands,” which she recently sold worked in the post office together studies indicate. was made lightly. But once made,
to young James Ryan, grandson of the late famed in Fort Worth 28 years ago, and In the light of this report, this it was disposed of quickly and what to expect next in the way have political ambitions.
Thomas Fortune Ryan. Mr. Ryan has apparently met for the first time since in Fair writer wonders if the city council finallY. . , Of reform from headquarters In his office, he is known as a .
bought the house to rent. But in the lease he has a Park Community center audito- is exercising its best judgment in Thirty minutes after the state- Agn'n 41,_ fair but driving taskmaster. He
clause that, no matter who moves in, the tenant rium Saturday afternoon. turning down a recommendation ment W as relleased MacArthur maintainsa, he a V Y personal '
must permit the ladies to have their party just for 250 watt globes in street lights reached his headquarters office. P b , 84 schedule, without pause for hoh
the same. HWARDTOILIER-llustrious formoowattdgrobesmredidthe tionPaunasrdaisandesintewocsUrer t,nuing controversy wiL°com^u.- dapectsundayrierrsyacamianh his
MRS KARRIMAN, WHO dubbed herself Daisy former resident of Valley View, ly from an economy viewpoint? thantooriscu ss.roliticswithhim. Japan long More’offSumted hourslana his energ out younger
inwesn-igpnanasrcdscormea t—td7------- = SSI? Sr men
looking Washington and the Potomac. She told exas loday ... by William C. Barnard “You know how the ‘old man’ On the other hand, he refrained cNent rtheles, errey physicians
us its story the other day at a tea in her residence ___________________J works,” he answered. carefully from using his exten- constantly watch him. A year ago,
in Georgetown, as she moved about, the room Agaozotoq ppge staff erans offered space in their cars That was the closest thing to sive authority to intervene di- they reported his reflexes were
lighting candles. —:Assiated 2 art isnassing on a share expense basisHand‛ca- saying MacArthur had calculated rectly in Japanese affairs dur- those of a man of 50.
It seems that back in 1774 a Mr. Foxhall came tTtchh K8 college Once Srn dets quickly accepted. It made the risks, made the final choice mg the early part of the occupa- Throughout his career, MacAr- ‘
over from England in a sloop, and as he sailed d ritual mass hitchhik- getting around on weekends much and put it into execution on his tion . Democracy at bayonet thur seldom has lost. He has
up the Potomac to Washington, he noted the site, img by the Aggies was a casualtv easier and you can be certain own point," he said, would not last, climbed steadily in. the army to
He decided that there was where he wanted to 8-5 885 " „ that Aggies still travel as much This carried over into politics and the Japanese were to be giv- the highest honors it could offer,
build a home. He got King George to give him No longer do men of A&M seek as they ever did. They leave Col- the essential methods which the en the opportunity of working out In each position he has thrown
the land and he built the house of raspberry rides from the squares of every lege Station and Bryan in search general has utilized in war and their own destiny, as far as prac- himself into the job with conli*
bricks he had brought over from England. The Texas town on weekends. The for weekend dates. There are not peace, during more than fifteen ticable. . dence. In late years he has pushed
house is exactly as it was then except for two entreating thumb has been dis- enough girls in close range of the years, of toP command. The swi In recent months, the growing himself onward, as if following a .
porches. Of course, Mrs. Harriman had to intro- placed by a beautiful chromium campus to meet the date situation, and final decision the calculated economic crisis brought repeated restless destiny.
duce plumbing, gas and electric lighting dated bulletin board “Now the process of getting gamble, the direct .action and warnings from MacArthur that
P ing, gas ana eieciric ugnung. plated Puiietin Doard weekend rides has become great- questioned authority—these make action by the Japanese govern- (Next Earl Warren)
She also put in some marble floor tiles she got today there are Aggie sopno WeeKend. ga. "ri5 MacArthur.
from an old hotel near the capitol where Andrew mores who have not learned, the ly refined.StudentsW arting.rides He has the military man’s
Jackson and Daniel Webster had once lived. There meaning of unstreaming, a an dstudents. on the college bul- preference for direct action. In
are a couple of tobacco spots still traceable in the campus crime during the mnetee p g not popular did this combat he was noted for his ag-
tiles thirties and before. letin ooara. DO popular —d. crpceie jrqtpav +1, +hrst and
1 eS To upstream was to break a practice become that the college gressive strategy, the thrust, an
Mrs. Harriman, who escaped from Oslo when cardinal rule of hitchhiking and had to install a new bulletin counter thrust, designed, to keep
the nazis stormed the Norwegian capital back in -re sed to be many such rules board, dedicated entirely to Ag- the enemy off balance. Hit‛em
1940, was decorated by King Haakan a couple of A&M. If agroup of cadets ar- gie travel."________/.0 where they ain’t, itwas a favor-
years ago. He conferred upon her one of the coun- raved themselves along a high- Lindley took us over to see the ite neaaquarters mono.
try’s highest awards—the Grand Cross of the Or- way seeking rides, and a new- chromium bordered board. About In the formative days of th-
der of St. Olav. “omer Walked up the highway so 65 ride-notices had been tacked Japanese occupation1+his SfXd
--as to be the first to meet oncom- up. Some were elaborate, penned Wereuth government never knew
T I Am • TX l ing traffic he would be guilty of by artists. Rides were sought or Japanese government never k
ack ( ) KIAM An KvAAAIyAty upstreaming. In the old days this offered to such points as New
JO-M • Ullu.ll Ull •IUdUWVdY «• • was actually an offense punish- York, Boston, Philadelphia and or Brownsville and another comes
------------------------------- able by demerits. Today it is rare- San Francisco. A student adver- along and pencils on a corner of
NTEW YORK, May 24 (P)__The Broadway hit, ly mentioned and almost forgot- tises space in his car to Amarillo the card that he wants the space.
I “Mister Roberts,” will be produced at the ten.
Veterans Administration hospital, Sunmount, A faculty member said that a
N. Y., sometime next month. The production is not few years ago, eighty-41V6t0
being prepared as opposition to the Leland Hay- ninety per cent of the s
ward production at the Alvin theatre. Nor, even, were members ofthe adet more
are any of the principals kidding themselves that andninaur fne students are in the
they 11 be competition for Henry Fonda, David “rps. That is another reason why
Wayne, et al, of the original cast. the boys of A&M are less fre-
The Sunmount players is a stock company made quently noticed traveling about
up of patients, doctors, nurses and other VA per- the state.
sonnel at the Veterans Administration hospital And Vick Lindley, student vet-
HOMES!?IT'S there!
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as second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas .Post
Office, under the Act of Congress, March 3, .1879.
Subscription prices: By city carrier, 20 cents week-
ly. In Cooke and adjoining- counties by mail, 1 month,
70c; 3 months $2.10; one year $6.00, payable in ad-
vance. Other rates on application.
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52
THIS WAS NO IDLE CYNICAL concern, for
after the first world scuffle, the public seemed
almost to be making a crusade of ignoring hos-
pitalized vets. Two years ago the VA pioneered
with soldier shows and experiments at army hos-
pitals designed to burlesque the hospitalized GI’s
own frustration. It was established as a “shock
absorber” in the event the wounded were forgot-
ten, “which would have followed the unfortunate
pattern of things after world war one,” a VA
spokesman said.
“To date, even though the public has been most
generous and show business has demonstrated it
hasn’t forgotten, the idea, has caught on. The hos-
pitalized veterans liked the idea of their own
shows so well, they average about one a month in
each hospital.” “Regular Revels” was the title
originally given the servicemen’s intramural
frivolities. “Mister Roberts” will mark the 200th
production in the series.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 24, 1948, newspaper, May 24, 1948; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510334/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.