Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 56, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 2, 1948 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gainesville Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cooke County Library.
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HE WORKED ON?
IF YOU'RE SURE I
WASN'T IN ON IT,
WHY DON'T YA GET
ME OUT ON BAIL?
WEEPY'S
COUSIN?
EDDIE/// KINDLY
SCRAM.'.'.' I LIKE ’
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NO.’ BUT
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In each precinct, officials also ward totaling the votes cast for
agreed that the questions asked the various candidates, and one
indicated many people were split- presiding judge said the ballots
ting their ballots—voting for can- were “very hard to count.”
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company had been killed. He does
not believe the war will last much
longer.
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had voted in each ward.
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countries will never achieve such status until
relief is cut off.
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30 Years Ago...
(From the files of The Daily
Register, Nov. 4, 1918.)
Tillman Westlake, who is work-
ing in the Santa Fe shops in Cle-
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Office, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Subscription prices: By city carrier 25 cents week-
ly. In Cooke and adjoining counties by mail, 1 month,
75c; 3 months $2.25; one year $6.00. Outside Cooke
county 1 month 80c; 6 months $4.00; 1 year $7.50.
price, high tax system which certainly cannot
be alleviated greatly so long as this country
furniture and hustled back to Manhattan.
This, then, is the clincher among my wife’s ar-
guments. I am in the same nostalgic boat, she says,
as Bill was. I subconsciously hope, says my little
psychiatrist, to regain the fun of my salad days
when I chased fire engines and a girl or two, po-
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WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3
Welch’s Pure
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says it will not be in that position until 1952.
And the suspicion is growing that many
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Our pledge to you: Consist-
ently low prices ALWAYS!
TRY US!
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The report that one maker will announce a
1949 model auto with a clock that runs may
have resulted from garbling campaign prom-
ises and automobile news.
H
W
r BUT I HOPE TO GET YOU
OUT BEFORE THE HEARING
-AND ALL THE WAY OUT ’
THAT'S WHY I'M HERE.’
The Word of God . . .
Shakespeare said conscience doth make cowards
of us all. A clear conscience is a mighty stimulus
to daring.—Pr. 28:1 :The wicked flee when no
■ man pursue th; but the righteous are bold as
lions.
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The American people must lead the way in the
practice of democracy if it is to provide the an-
swer to the vexing problems of human relations,
members of the Twentieth Century club were told
by Mrs. Gertrude Hart Day, executive director
and originator of the New Haven, Conn., Neigh-
borhood project.
“Living in a country unravaged by war and
knowing freedom in its largest sense,” she said,
“we must be willing to use our individual skills
and resources to strengthen the character of our
own community. That means creating the spirit
of democratic citizenship in the home, the school,
the church, within civic organizations and wher-
(Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939).
Published by The Register Printing Company, 308
East California Street, Gainesville, Texas. Entered
as second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas Post
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2 pint jars 25c
Copr. 1948, Walt Disney Productions
World Rights Reserved
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2—Gainesville, Tex. Daily Register Tues., Nov. 2, 1948
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By JANE EADS
YIT ASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (P) .— Former Senator
VV Hiram Bingham of Connecticut is in Peru to
open a highway which will climb from the Urum-
baba valley to an ancient city in the clouds high
in the Andes. The highway is named the Avenida
Hiram Bingham.
Mr. Bingham, accompanied by his wife, will be
the guest of the Peruvian government. A banquet
and ball is being given in their honor by the presi-
dent of Peru, Dr. Jose Luis Bustamante y Rivero
and his first lady. Mr. Bingham, besides his other
achievements is a well-known archeologist. From
1912 to 1915, under the auspices of Yale univer-
sity and the National Geographic society, he
headed an expedition into Peru to uncover and
excavate the fabulous Inca city of Machu Picchu.
The search for this seat of ancient learning,
which had been lost to the world for centuries,
ended in its discovery on a mountain peak of the
Andes which towers above the valley of Urum-
baba. Finding it added a revealing chapter to the
colorful history of the ancient Inca civilization.
After his adventure Mr. Bingham wrote two
books and several articles. The city is now a mag-
net for tourists.
WJASHINGTON, Nov. 2. (A)— the oars but being carried along
VV The little man, any little man by a dark tide.
■going to the polls, cast his vote to- Somewhere in the years ahead
day with hope in his heart. 111 ... ., .....
It was an humble hope? Hope would he and all the other little
that he was doing the right thing men like him go, sick and stum-
for himself and his children and bling, into a depression?
■ his country and the future. It also was a number of things,
; He knew hope was all he had to he thought: “It’s the way things
WINTHROP WILLIAM ALD-V ' —- - -------- fe- re onine in the "
--o--
CARNIVOROUS SPLURGE
NEAT PRICES are somewhat lower, but
-v- they may contain the seeds of higher
prices several months hence. That much is
evident from a survey which shows that as
prices decline the demand increases. Higher
demand may result in scarcities with cor-
responding increases in prices. Some reports
show meat sales up 10 per cent recently.
On January 1, 1945, there were 86,000,000
head of cattle and calves on America’s farms.
Today there are 78,500.000. The hog popu-
lation, estimated at 55,000,000 head this
year, totaled 61,300,000 head two. years ago.
Two years ago Americans could have 155
pounds of meat per capita annually. Now
there is approximately 140 pounds per capita.
So a carnivorous splurge while prices are
■tn a temporarily declining stage could result
Sg higher prices later, warn the experts. Sev-
Irai years may be required to bring the hog
population up to the level of demand. In the
case of cattle, three years may be required.
And that can be accomplished only if feed
crops are abundant.
The big factor in meat prices and availabil-
ity of beef and pork, of course, is the war
scare. If conditions settled down to normal
in Europe, there would be plenty of meat at
reasonable prices in the United States.
--o---,—
An Eastern editor goes to considerable
trouble to explain what makes water wet.
Because it isn’t dry, Martini?
--—o-----
John L. Lewis has had his union declare
his birthday a holiday. Coal consumers pre-
sumably can spend the day ruminating on
their depleted bank accounts.
---o---
Disciples of the late Voliva still insist the
world is flat geographically. In certain other
respects many would be willing to go along
with them.
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MORNING-AND eA •
HERE'S WHAT HE E,
schoolboy crush on Buffalo. My wife may prove
that I can’t go back, but I’ll sneak back in my ; e8
imagination. Walter Mitty, I must admit, is a g
plodding and unimaginative piker alongside some 8
of my daydreams. "
444288
RVANIIREN-E2
DO YOU KNOW WEEPY'S A
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Postal Receipts Rise
During Month of October
burne, is at his parents home Postal receipts at the Gaines-
here suffering from influenza. ville post office showed a slight
Lt. Cai son Rollins, who has increase during October over the
been here several days visiting . •
friends and relatives, left today previous month, according to
for Memphis, Tenn., to spend a Postmaster Cecil Tinsley.
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AMERICAN BURDEN
URING THE war America poured out tens
• of billions of dollars through lend-lease
to arm and supply nations fighting Hitler and
Japan. Since the war England has been given
a $4,000,000,000 loan which probably will not
be repaid. Now thereis a European recovery
program costing $5,000,000,000 or $6,000,"
000,000 a year in gifts.
On top of that are separate aids to Greece,
Turkey and other nations to stop Commu-
nism. None of this money will come back
except indirectly in trade if the world’s econ-
omy recovers.
Now it is proposed that the United States
rearm Europe, which will cost many more
billions of dollars. Restoration of lend-lease
is advocated. There’s increasing talk of
stepping up aid to China. Several Asiatic na-
tions are organizing for advocacy of a new
Marshall plan. The U. S. is getting Japan
back on its feet in addition to the heavy costs
of occupation forces in Germany and else-
where.
South America is waiting eagerly for an
outpouring of American credit billions which
would probably be defaulted.
What does this add up to? • The United
States is in a high debt, goods shortage, high
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Town Topics. • s by A. Morton Smith
WJARYING CIRCUMSTANCES didates of more than one party.
V marked voting in the various In one precinct, an official said
e . ... . . .lu;oc +1 there was much ticket splitting
Gainesville precincts during the and another worker in the same
first three hours of the general precinct said there was not as
election today. much ballot ticket splitting as had
We visited each of the precincts been anticipated,
and questioned election officials
about the progress made in the WE HEARD A REPORT during
first few hours. the morning that a white Demo-
Voting was heaviest in the first crat had been solicited for “gaso- .
ward where 243 ballots had been line money” by a Negro citizen
counted at 11 a. m., but the absen- to haul voters to the polls,
tee votes had already been count- That the Negro vote is heavy is
ed there, whereas other precincts indicated by the fact that the
had not added their absentees to third ward, where the larger pro-
the total. There had already been portion of Negro citizens live, had
10 mutilated ballots thrown out, voted during the morning heavier
however, reducing the count to than the fourth ward, which is
233. the largest in the city.
On the other hand, one precinct In another precinct, where Ne-
which had voted 140 total, the groes live, only four colored citi-
fifth ward, had but one mutilated zens had cast their ballots at 11
ELECTION OFFICIALS in all
precincts agreed that there were SOME OF THE PRESIDING
many questions being asked by judges so arranged the work of
the voters, mostly concerning the their helpers that they, had full
eight proposed amendments to the time to assist voters in properly
state constitution. There seemed marking their ballots. This per-
to be much ignorance as to the haps had something to do with'
purposes and advantages of the the fact that in one precinct only
amendments. Some people voted one ballot had been thrown out
for only two or three amendments because of mutilation of the first
and scratched the remainder, it 140 cast.
' 2 KSTERN W
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Copr. 1948 by United Feature Syndicate,ne;
Tm. Reg. U. S. Pat. OH — All righh re>crvod
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ever people come together.”--
Mrs. Day said that in New Haven a group of
^Lengthening Life Span Mmama-u
,, Q’R-n An R,vt BY ROBERT E. GEIGER was worked out as one answer to The older people and their fami- Maupin, who is now visiting with €4, , g
J~-M ~ —--mo-- VAl —--ouv—J s . • WXJASHINGTON_Babies born in the problem. But government of- lies represent a big bloc of voters homefolks here. f f p
■ • 1 V9 1948 can exnect to live an ic;,1 ,i, .1,4 +. 4, rm ,1 who might hold the balance of Dr. J. E. Gilcreest has received H EAggA
NEW YORK, Nov. 2 (PP)— Bill Saroyan, the infant average of more than 17 years rounded ith .to late devised power in elections. If they did, a letter from his son Dr. Edgar
Ik terrible of the drama, is back in New York aft- longer than babies born in 1900. „ .. 1.1 they could hold any gains they Gilcreest, inFrance, stating we ERAAg pAIE MEpe,
er having a try at living in Fresno, his home In the past seven years about for meeting all the problems of an made m social security, are very enthused over the gen- FFrS TROVER MERCER
town. Bill and I and our wives were on the way 22,000,000 babies have been born, aging population. 4. If the old assistance plan is eral war outlook. Grover Mercer who died Sun-
to a first night the other evening when we got Their increased life span means Here are some of the things the liberalized, this means more older Mac Wheat, formerly of Valley -yin the Brid^nort 1s9i
on the subject of home towns. Bill’s affection for ultimately enough people to government officials and others people will leave jobs for pen- View, is moving with his family , Ae15 the First M^
Fresno is paralleled almost completely by my own nearly fill three cities the size of are thinking about as they keep sions. But taxes might have to be to Gainesville today, having pur- AdH-"Rigpnrt230"
big municipal crush on my home burg, Buffalo. New York for 17 years. In 1900 an eye on our vital statistics: increased to pay the liberalized chased the home of Mrs L. A. Rey*
I’m constantly being heckled by most of my the average span oflife was about . 1. If older people have to con- pensions, or the additional num- Gibson on East Scott street Travk T nX nX of £
friends on this frequent yen to see the home town, 49. Now it is more than 66. tinue to compete with the young- ber of pensions. Younger people Manager O. M. Dooms of the lo- m--‛ m
old friends, and even have a gander at the Lake This is raising some big orob_ er ones for jobs, it may mean a with jobs or businesses might ob- cal Harvey house, has received a "MMerce, yas Lorn une 26
Erie waterfront neighborhood where I grew up. lems Smng hnonle DoPave great reduction in working hours. ject to this. flag with stars representing 571 Mi. Meicer as bo n June ‛
The eminent drama critic, George Jean Nathan, 6 himh out Pr future popu- One authority says it may mean Government officials say they employes of the Fred Harvey sys- r, ini eerrs parents whfn a
thinks nothing of taking a pleasant pot shot at my ation. Besides the fact that the auworkswe6 less aron estimates have no sure answer for these or temoteatinshouseswhoarenow child. He became a Christian when
home town crush. Eleanor Holm Rose, a buddy length of life has been extended or possibly less. (Ke estimates other important questions. But in government service. voing man and was a member
of my wife’s, gives me the amiable shivvy in the th U s birth rate has gone up that unless a great change occurs they add that you can be sure of A. L. Davis has received a let- Methodist church He was
ribs L frequently as not Jack Pearl nudges me Within ®a Pewttyeats ther Wib inconditionstheremayasur onething: Older people are the ter from his, son W.llram T.-Da marhiedin9oistoMissksteopai
on the subject whenever he sees me, needling two a still greater increase in the PuS 01 ,mogtnan,r-- VIPS (very important persons) of vis, witn tne iu«n ^ngmeers in Cannon.
burgs with one tone of derision, thereby having number of older people. workersby 1980. But J16 adds the American tomorrow. France, telling of some of the in- surviving relatives include his
a dig at his wife, Winnie, who hails from my part mhe latest census forecast is that conditions are almost certain --------------------------------- teresting bouts he has had with vg ■ &nsam‛n. eight grand-
of the geography. They give it to me in spades that by 1975 we will have about «tochange, either for better or College Movies smash Hits the Ger manshells andsngplosiyes; children; one brother, Andrew J.
whenever I note excitement about such former 20,000,000 people over 65—about "s sciaj security rules are MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (U.R)- he“GainesviinddoysPruentiy, Mercer, Gainesville; and two sis-
Buffalomans as Katherine Cornell, George Abbott, double the number today. The social secuiny rules aie I.m 7EAnnNWeE‛Viroini"ne ne-aesv-e ouys skdmen2‛
Monty Woolley, Franchot Tone or Stuff Smith, Census bureau forecasts that from not liberalized, some experts say, Arcord5onopestsyiginiant addingtheyareuallinfine health —---
the jazz fiddler. And I'm afraid the Bill Saroyans then on the proportion of the old- the present social security plan went to the movies last year but and so far none have been
have given my wife ample ammunition for the er people should continue to in- probably wouldn’t solve the labor ?eat“n Budd Gambee d?rector wound edm,. cammed vester- EopSmaFLTEUp - A
moments when 1 start on the subject of My Home crease until science can't extend ituatntno? unemployment Thiels of West Virginia university’s au- day from New Orleans, where he group of neighborhood children
Town. Mia ,,- the life span any more., because the present law requires dio-visual aids department, said visited a brother. put on a backyard playlet and do-
„Billedecidedisomeswhi the merry-go-rounds of Upto.now there hastbeenalot a worker to be more than 65 to the number witnessed the 3,000 Miss Mattie Harral is in receipt nated the $21 proceeds to a polio
house and settled there. ‘ frequently seemed to prefer, for pensions. By 1830, due to the adoption of
But Bill reckoned-without New York. Fresno younger workers. But oldpeoplel 3. The growing number of old- cylinder presses, newspapers be-
was fine, but New York is the center of theatrical had to live too, and they com- er people is impoitant politically, came larger in size.______
culture and the theatre is Bill’s job. Sure, tech- peted with the youngsters for •
nically, he could remain aloof and write his undy- jobs. P NT L° T J
ing prose from the faraway reaches of Fresno. The social security program he Naton OCAV , by James Marlow
But going home didn’t quite work out, and with ---------•-----------------— * Z
the blessings and joyous whoops of Carol, they
sold the house at a loss, packed youngsters and
lice calls, quite a few murder,yarns, heckled the
maxo that radsdyagninsts thisnderthatbigertwin an WINTHROP WILLIAM ALD- go on in picking one man to are going in the world/’ ' _
my life, I’m still sure I’ll keep that great big RICH, born Nov. 2, 1885, in Provi- president over another, since he Well, like what. Oh like the
schoolbov crush on Buffalo My wife may prove hence. R. I., son of the Republican couldn t read the future. War in Asia, the war in Palestine,
scnooioov ciusn on -—m- - "5 • -----—p 1 senator from But what was it he hoped for? the trouble at Berlin, the endless
$ T T i ° - The things that little men like talk-talk-talk in the United Na-
mnode i siana himself everywhere have always tions and so little done and-
who sponsored hoped for: Peace and prosperity. Here we are and there the
high tariffs. Now The war finally ended, all right. Russians are, the two giants of
chairman of the -But peace? It never really came, the world. And the two giants
i g 4 board of Chase'. And now, with the war only are struggling. The . little man
“ 3 National bank three years over, he hears his thought, where does it end? Or
Lhe is mentioned neighbors say: will it end in my lifetime? .
880s as D e w e y’s “Do you think there will be He had all that on his mind
i choice for secre- war?" when he cast his vote today, hop-
________ ; tary of the treas- ’ Some place deep, deep within ing he. was voting for the man
18 90, by JOHN T. LEONARD ___ 9 Y . His sister :him something troubled him, who somehow might steer the ship
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, E888% .2 uiy. ms Sisten, 8 £1nc drif+inc +6. olm and Dio riishino tine
standing' or reputation of any person, firm or corpo- am,;<■!, Abby, was mar- It was like a feeling of drifting, of the gloom and the rushing tide
ration which may appear in The Register will be Winthrop Aldrich . d to John D like being in a boat, pulling on and get it into quiet waters,
cheerfully corrected upon being brought to the at- . , . ------------------------------------;-------------——:---------
tention of the publisher. Rockefeller, Jr., whose friendship ■
Member of the Associated Press, which is entitled started Aldrich in banking, a field
exclusively to the use for republication of all the 1o in which he is internationally fa-
cal news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP -
news dispatches. mous.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 56, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 2, 1948, newspaper, November 2, 1948; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510442/m1/2/?q=Birth+of+a+Nation: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.