Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 30, 1950 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Two-Way Belt
h
e
*
(
and
xX
was
Mark Barron
18
5
1
3
■'
383
8
Washington Letter.
their ability as soldiers.
can remain pretty in a civil war.
M
7,8**
Copyright, 1950, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
f
■ j
simply - fashioned,
easy-to-make
zip-sleeve raincoat
to
which'
8
for
3
told us.
r
your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of
reC
3
«s
R
N
W I
sSTE
W
P
/*
Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle
2
6
V
/
3
4
5
7
8
“7
/0
//
/a
/3
/4
/6
/5
/8
1
/?
20
21
1
23
24
2S
2S
29
3o
3/
32
33
34
35
31
38
4a
44
47
J
48
5o
53
52
54
55
50
8- 30
AP Newsfeatures
0
&
II
OMILY SPECIRL
rf
T!
/
'«1
of the board of. a
e
Gninesbille Dailm RRegister
Metropol itan ;
Co., and respon- |
SAV ALAN-
S-30
AP Newsfeaturei
\
---
take a forthright
stand on the res -
olution
called
They are happy, handsome chil-
dren—those in good health—and
as courteous and polite as the
S
P
P U
ER
1
P
R
o
N
548
IAr
3
A
R
G
o
R
A
N
T
A
M
A
if
'7
E
N
o
R
E
E
Latest
F\CION
3. Siamese coin
4. Artificial
language
5. Grandson of
Adam and
Eve
B
A
S
E
R
S
T
o
L
E
N
E
T
Y
E
S
§ resigned for these reasons:
| “1, among oth-
I ers pleaded with
P
Y
C
A
N
L
1
D
7/. advocated that the United States
% government be overthrown by
force and violence?
M E
Eg
A
p
tangle and check every one of your key numbrs,ktttefight. Then
read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
Copyright 1950,by William J. Miller, Diatributed by King Fes tu rec, Inc.6-30
E
L
I
“Mrs. Todd. I refuse to answer _ lUc
that question on the ground my Harold Luke Gets 5.3.
The Word of God . . .
That is a glorious destiny that staggers the
imagination. Even in the Psalms we have a
hint of this, I have said ye are gods. Beloved,
now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet
appear what we shall be; but we know that
when he shall appear, we shall be like him.—I
John 3:2.
pERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every
•a day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune.’
Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or
moe, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is
with Carmen Cavallero.
A curious coincidence is that
when Dale appeared as a singing
star the other day at Broadway’s
Paramount, the orchestra which
played the music for his singing
was Carmen Cavallero’s.
888
,"g2 8
the
of a
1
N
Degree at Texas Tech
MUENSTER, Aug. 30 —Harold
Luke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Luke, received his B.S. degree in
electrical engineering at Texas
Technological college commence-
ment exercises in Lubbock last
059
6. Holds back
7. Backs of ships
8. Vehicles on
wheels
9. Exist
10. Lick
11. Baffled
12. Calyx leaves
17. Greek letter
23. Go by
automobile
24. Abscond
26. Asiatic
country
27. Upright
29. Stain
31. Armed conflict
34. Small bottles
35. With three
horses
harnessed
one behind
another
36. Foliage
_ 37. Author
38. Ceremonially
clean accord-
ing to
Jewish law
39. Daubs
42. Feminine name
45. Heart
46. Cipher
49. Cuckoo
51. Peer Gynt’s
mother
53. Oil: suffix
55. Broad thor-
oughfare:
abbr.
1
HOW ABOUT
7/ GA TEH/HG
UP B/T OH
your END P
U
Our pledge to you: Consist-
ently low prices ALWAYS!
TRY US!
1
h
A agreeable duty that has taken dier saves these tidbits for the
them longer than they hoped and appearance of a particular child
they want to leave as soon as it is he has picked out as his personal
X . done. There are fewer comforts mascot and given a nickname like
in Korea than in Japan and life “Smallbore” or “Little Jughead.”
7
A
Boyle’s Column... by Hai Boyle
“The coat may be made at low m
cost by a home sewer,” Miss Scott^^^^1*8^ J
singer in a contest,” Dale :
“The man who judged me
me that Jimmie Durante and
\
answer would tend to incrim-
inate me.
Alan’s Brooklyn background caught up with
him recently. The Coney Island (which is part of
Brooklyn) Chamber of Commerce honored him
with an Alan Dale Day. Bands were playing, the
boardwalk was lined with crowds and a limousine
drove him to the grandstand amid thundering
cheers. “I was embarrassed,” Alan said, “because
it was the kind of reception that I had always
associated with Lindbergh or someone like that. I
guess they get a kick out of the fact that I still
prefer to live in Brooklyn.”
Besides being a crooner in his own distinct style,
Dale can mimic almost every other well-known
singer with haunting accuracy. His voice has an
extraordinary range. On his CBS “Sing It Again
Show,” Dale sings parodies of songs, and can shift
from opera to boogie-woogie without missing a
beat.
“When I started on television I was frankly
frightened by this new medium,” Dale said. “The
idea that my audience could see me as if they
were seeing me perform in the theatre broke down
that idea of the “iron curtain’ between the audi-
ence and myself that I had had on radio. So I just
tried to be my natural self.”
K
E
Xi
NEW YORK, Aug. 30 (A)— Alan Dale, the croon-
-\ er, is the kind of barefoot boy from Brooklyn
who says his singing was described by one of his
Brooklyn listeners as being "voice-atile."
Dale likes that pun and so proves he is from
Brooklyn.
R
i
G
I
D
The open cape sleeves won’t crush or crowd. The writers’ group
40. Rodent
41. Goddess of
healing
43. Particle of
matter
44. At a point
wthin
45. Village in Ohio
47. Symbol for
selenium
• 48. Mountain in
Alaska
50. Egg-shaped
51. .Sunken fence
52. Character in
“The Raven”
54. Rubber
56. Looks
favorably
57. Wanderers
DOWN
1. Competitors
2. Related on the
mother’s side
I
E
K
I
N
2— Gainesville (Tex.) Daily Register Wed., Aug. 30, 1950 •
---- - . ------ have legs and arms covered with
candy mint. HAL BOYLE sores, and heads so patched with
It wasn't altogether generosity disease the hair looks as if it had
MODEST MAIIDENS
Trademark Registered U. S. Patent Office -
)
6
L_,
Founded August 30, 18 90, by
_ , , (Absorbed Gainesville. Signal,
Published by The Register Printing Company, 308
East California .Street, Gainesville, Texas. Entered
as second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas Post
Office under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy
service is maintained 25c weekly. In Cooke and ad-
joining counties by mail, 1 month, 75c; 6 months $4.00;
one year $7.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month 80c; 6
months $4.50; 1 year $8.50.
Us
Broadway. . . by Mark Barron
VD)
for womer.
C
L
A
fo
:*icih 1,. 38
8
- )t
them to stand in the dust saluting
I yelling “ ’ello, ’ello, ’ello,”
like little birds that have only
two notes in their song.
fashioned somewhat after the
. South American Indian’s poncho
THERE mot Much (ENSE INEUVINGZO0K I +AVEADATE
ALMOST EVERY Might ANDdome -have to READ ANYWAY. /
first singing engagement
was it a large ambassador—replied that this
nation should not and would not start a “pre-
ventive war.”
These things are fraught with possibili-
ties. We could take either or both sides of
any of the issues—if we could pin one down
—or we could slide back and forth or down
the middle. We could cite the United States
constitution, allude to Biblical passages or
quote Jefferson and/or Marx, and/or several
other personages who liked (or like) to
make weighty observations on weighty sub-
jects.
But why bother with all that. The time
to start worrying what to do is when the
hens stop laying and the water won’t boil.
And this leads us to a comment on the dic-
tatorship of the telephone. It rings and we
—and you—answer.
You want to talk to somebody who is at
his office, see. So, you go to his office and
find that he is busy with someone else. You
—being a normally polite being—wouldn’t
think of interrupting him, unless your busi-
ness is really a fire bell in the night. And he
also would not think of asking- his first visi-
tor to wait while he talks with you.
But comes a telephone call and 12 times
out of not many more the person to whom
you are talking will whirl away in his swivel
0
the council
them he is a mil-
itary Croesus
with endless
stores of chew-
ing gum, choco-
on the part of the GI. although been burned out by red hot quar-
he was , notoriously softhearted ters held against the skull.
to children. But he learned As the war goes on, more lost
quickly that through the kids he and homeless children, paying the
could win .his way into favor with price of a war they don’t under-
their familie s—-generally families stand, drift into the cities and beg
With pretty daughlers. on the streets. It hurts your heart
And before long GI Joe was a to see these tiny ragamuffins
one-man postexchange.. He gave stretched sleepily all alone on a
his gum to the kids, his bag or filthy path
laundry soap to their mama, his m L A , .
cigaret ration to their papa. And , The children know that the
all he had left to give the pretty troors generally get their rations
daughter was a chocolate bar and in the evening. They gather at
conversation. However, this often dusk near the billets, patiently
seemed satisfactory. The happy expectant. The boys are now
system of introduction was so bold enough, to say ello, 8um:
well understood in London that butthe little girls hang shyly
when a small boy called “got any back. Only Jive or six years, old
gum, chum?” the soldier joked themselves, they usually, clasp on.
back, “got a sister, mister?” their backs a sleeping baby whose!
But the formula hasn’t gone so shock of. stiffly standing uncut
far in Korea. Few have found black.hair makes it look like a
either temporary or permanent Kingsisner
gill friends and most have taken The children bring gifts of ap-
no part in the life of the coun- ples in their hands. And it is a
try. tough GI indeed who doesn’t
The frank truth is that most shower down with his candy and
Yanks came here to do a dis- chewing gum then. Many a sol-
83888388
- a
“Mr. Russell. Have you ever
through the west side of the city and a sur-
vey was started by the Highway department
January 1, 1945.
Bonds were voted in Gainesville and in
Cooke county in 1945 and 1946 to rush the
project along, and this county became the
first in North Texas to finally approve the
interregional highway and provide right-of-
way. It looked like the road would be built
quickly as funds for much of the project had
already been allocated.
It was on July 9, 1947, that the first con-
struction of the highway through Cooke
county was started, and since then several
other contracts have been let.
But as the situation now shapes up, a two-
lane road has been built south from Gaines-
ville to the Denton county line, and grade
separations have been completed through the
city to the north. Just why the road has
not been built from California street north
to Summit avenue, appears to be a minor
mystery.
In Denton county, some right of way has
been purchased, perhaps most of it. But not
a hand has been turned to build the road
north from Denton to the Cooke county line.
The only construction work is going forward
between Denton and the Dallas county line.
This might not be of great concern at this
time, but for the fact that work on U. S.
_ highway 75 between Red river and Dallas is
going ahead all along the line.
A four-lane highway between Sherman
and Denison was recently completed within
= < —
2 \=
late bars
'
.
• /
AM
pP-.
n
»
4
Thursday, August 31
“NU-CREST” CRUSHED
PINEAPPLE
SAVE at Mitchell’s! LOOK!
No. 2 Tin 20c
WISH I NG WEI
----------
Registered U. S. Patent Office.
ACROSS
1. Raised
7. Climbs
13. Recite in
monotone
14. Mexican dish
15. Large tub
16. Fur-bearing
animal
18. Young dog
19. Near
20. Burns
21. Prosecuting
officer: abbr.
22. Acid fruit
25. Extend
26. Lowest part
of a ship
28. Chides
30. Gutting
weapons
32. Dally
33. Exist
34. Drive
37. Destroys by
violence
ments for women and children.
Her specialty is what she calls
“self-help” clothes for children,
functional clothes for women.
During world war II, for instance,
she designed women’s work
clothes. :
children of France. But many
die Cantor got their start the8
same way. I started singing with
bands after I graduated from 1 g 8
high school in Brooklyn.” ’
M u 6 fig F ’ l i
ERRPE1 D
Life Insurance; j
a THE LITTLE. STORL,
THE SQUARE 7
8282307 W. BROADWAY e5
ae
ngee
e
ga,n.
qsyq
- W/0,
,15
EizsgRegN
628s
This seems not to carry too much of the asked the usual question:
stigma of discourtesy. , Mr. Russell Have you ever
Rr1 . I-C / . been a member of the Communist
What most of us learn is that the ringing party?
of a telephone is not proof that it must be —-----------------------
answered. Perhaps then we will know how T J ’ D’ lL J
to deal with the Formosan and the Korean 1 Oday S Dlihday ...
situations and all those other situations ---------------------—
which beget situations. FREDERICK HUDSON ECKER,
Meantime we should all keep cool heads horn, Aug. 30, 1867, at Phoenicia,
and warm feet. ' N. Y- Chairman
" ” ‘ " ‘ C 2888885833 38§8§8
" I
88888888 3
SL 1
Lna 3
-0. i
$Nes e
V 4
N&s,C.9
The other day she exhibited a
mnlv - fashinned aacv-to_make .M
sleeves zip down the front sides. With the zippers through which
all the way up. The wearer can throw back the writers in all
sleeves, cape-fashion. media could vol-
Diagrams for cutting me child’s poncho may be unteer their
had from the Bureau of Human Nutrition and serVices to our (
Home Economics, Department of Agriculture, country, during GEORGE i. SOKOLSKY Mrs. Todd. I refuse to answer
Washington 25, D. C. (Please do not write this this crisis. In- , , thatduestion on the ground my week.
newspaper.) It's a cape made from a square of stead, the council adopted a peso- , would tend to incriminate Harold completed his work
fabric with hood attached lution which in my considered me. . A -mHepen ms WK
utu • i auacned , , iudgment clalifieg +L, Disi21, There were many Questions during the first summer session,
“It’s as simple a can be—a square of goods with Jud8ment .duanmles me positive /.“U 55 Ty HMslO Peturnen home for a fev‘
a hole in the middle, with the hood sewed in.” and forthright action that the sit- which could have been answered a d Hsds in the naval r^
Miss Scott explained She savs the functional work nation called for.” hy a yes or a no, but for which weeKS,nae. was In. ne naval re
pl, McOl exPanedne says me luncuonai work . Mrs. Todd followed a uniform serves for two weeks duty at San
clothes she designed during world war II are This Was followed by the resig- formuia Or reply pursued gener- Diego, Calif., before receiving his
still being worked out by manufacturers and nation of Daisy Amoury, a mem- -1.mAcurkP:Puisued8enen degree
mail order catalogs. ber of its council, because: X DY Communists . 586 .
Mice g,+ he+e, LnAi co cg,,41,, Lec. +, «p;;o, J 1010, .An assistant director in a radio He was president of the senior
tMi clothes betterknown as,Scott, beganstoEindingmy self completely out studio is quite a responsible job. class, and a member of the New-
sudycothesa soon ssshesouid snrollin sewing of sympathy with certain actions one would imagine that Mrs. man club, Tech Saddle Tramps
classes at school neai Scotland, Ill. She began send- and policies of the RWG council, Todd had had a 18ne exneriene, anA a mtinnal enoineArino EA
md exhibits of her work to county fairs when she it has become necessary for me inoradi^However it appears that andpenationayenginserin8sqi,
was 10, and by the time she went off to take home to send you my resignation as a her exoeHenee had beln e^e Texas 61.2 Pestpresident.ofuthe
economics at Earlham college, Richmond, Ind., member of the council, effective where including the ^ISnesE Subs ech chapter of Newman
she was making all her own clothes. Later she immediately.” Valiev ur Lnn558 a
studiegnatthe University of Michigan and Iowa The resolution over which this member of theLn^n thereWthat sA stendins.hisgradusatingexer-
Stshesnkesfgood-looking clothes. All her styles guarrpfo to™ shouIdehaye switched rromthetA Fcof 7 60 Dan and MarianL Luke and Miss
havesto measuresup organizationmrnsimpi•"ofrered unions. onthilsubjgtShe"was Joyce sims.___________________
colors, attractive streamlined besides being full support to our government in queried:
functional. _______________________________ time of war, when other Ameri- “Mr. Appell. Will you tell the Valley Creek School
cans are dying for their country, committee how the employes of C,1 LI N,gnc+,, R,
20 V A ' Yet, this particular organization, TVA happened to break away -od NYw-uenster board ,,
JU eArs moc the Radio Writers guild, is so from the A. F. of L. local and MUENSTER, Aug. 30—The old
_ _°_O° . . committed and organized and change to the CIO union? Valley Creek school building
“ ' m manned that it could not see “Mrs. Todd. They took a vote which has not been used by the
(From the files of The Daily Register, such a simple matter through. to change to United Federal Muenster school board, since the
August 31, 1920 ) Radio writers are an important Workers. annexation of the district by the
Mr. and Mrs J H. Sims of Holdenville, Okla, segment of the instruments for “Mr. Appell. Was the changing Muenster school district a year
have returned to their home after a pleasant visit expression and education. Our from A. F. of L. to CIO ever dis- ago, was sold for $4,500 last week
With the family of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Crawford, children listen to the radio even cussed in the Communist party? Y the board. The purchaser is
. Mrs George Comegys has returned to her home as they do their homework Was that Communist party Carl Lewis of Sherman, who in-
m McKinney after a brief, visit in the city to at- While the soap operas and west- strategy? tends to salvage the useful mate-
tend the funeral of Ed, Wilkins. erns and murders seem simple “Mrs. Todd. I refuse to answer rials.
raves —eeper. Who has. been visiting relatives enough, I have at times wondered that question on the ground my
and friends in the city for several days, will re- why so little that is heroic in answer would tend to incriminate Petroleum and petroleum prod-
Xot0 Oklahoma City this evening. American life is put before them, me.” ucts are the largest single com-
rs..-. C. Murrell left today for Marysville, Are we so devoted to murder to I cite the Todd testimony not modity imported by Canada.
Okatoisit relatives. .g , shooting and shrieking that little '
Miss May Potts is .visiting in Fol t Worth. or nothing else interests our
To SS -nez Neely has returned to her home in children? Is murder our principal
Jarrell, Texas, after spending three weeks here sport9
visiting her uncle, W. T. Neely and wife. T 41 .1. .. ■
Elizabeth and Louise King, daughters of Mr. andamtold that the advertising
Mrs. W. E. King, have returned from a visit with agencies advise the sponsors that
her grandmother and other relatives at Honey this sort of thing is the best fare
Grove. 1- for radio because it is safe. It is
Mr. and Mrs. K. P.’Belden and little daughter non ’ political, .nonL- ideological,
have arrived home from a visit to many points in non-controversial. But are the
the north and east. They visited Mr. Belden’s par- minds of our children to be cor-
ents at South New Berlin, New York and the rupted because advertising men
scenes of Mr. Belden’s childhood They also visited find that safer than a controversy
Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Toronto, Canada, and then perrssomesfine, character in
madeencboatitrip to Thousand Islands, in the St. ‘ some time ago,'Elisabeth Win-
Mr. and Mrs. John Smart have returned from a ston Todd appeared before the
visit in Denton and Fort Worth House Committee on un-Ameri-
---------can affairs. She gave as her pro-
, . , ,, fession, associate director, work-
cnair ana mutter into the telephone—some- ing for the Columbia Broadcast-
times for quite a while. ing System, Inc. Then she was
•Ebv
....."
hn
pA
848
22238246:2 2 389938883828888
• o
E4l
—
“I got my first job at Coney Island when a pal
dared me to go up and try ddar
dd, h
n si _ _$
and a child’s “shower-shelter’
R
P 6.00
oWu
• Ee)2y
•4,
/
generally is on a lower level. The Perhaps as they get to know
GI has shown little interest in these children better the troops
learning just what kind of people may learn the people here are
the Koreans are, although he has not so different from him as he
developed a great respect for thinks. No land and no people
5
leg '
A- '
A,,
->r.A -
S.adb-,
)- —
mm—-.
(
\A/-ms
h"
g-“
9 9
kao
*4.
#
P A
AREAM
NopWA
IMESL
cASC A
M2
S F
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (AP) — Clarice L. Scott,
V V clothing specialist of the U. S. Bureau of Hu- --------------------
man Nutrition and Home Economics, designs gar- r— I
’ " ” ’ ” ' I , I )., l ~ t a i i i to condemn the Columbia Broad-
anese LaYS • • • by George E- Sokolsky casting System, Inc, which is no
p ------------------- better or worse than any other,
Bi RADIO REVOLT “Mrs. Todd. I refuse to answer but to point to carelessness in the
7 THE revolt of the pro-Ameri- that question on the ground that employment of persons in posi-
g I cans in the Radio Writers my answer might tend to incrim- tions where they can influence
guild continues. James A. Stabile, inate me.” the minds of our children. Many
B executive secretary, on August 17, And this went on for sumo of them attack the very business
time. For instance, this colloquy processes that pay for the spon-
occurred- ” sorship of “entertainment” which
“Mr. Russell. Mrs. Todd, do you can be. and has been used as a ve-
believe in the overthrow of the 1 icle to dest oy.them.. ■ y
United States government by . (Copyright,. 1950, King Fea-
force and violence? Rues ^yndic^.e, Inc./_____
Jane Eads formation
H OREA (A) — The American But slowly the Korean children f
Mh army is being captured—al- are winning him over. I suppose
most against its will—by a young- it is their plight that has touched
er and more numerous force. him. At first they were as strange
it is s-owly becoming the pris- and furtive as their parents peek-
oner of the chil-T 7.: n ing out fearfully from their crude
! aEd. J mud-walled huts when the troops
s , rolled by. Then they learned to
I
3 5 6 248365 2643
S GPWP_ATAOISAU
4 2 8 3 6 5 7 2 4 6 3 7 5
TNDRTLONI 1 D U D
3 6 4 5 7 2 6 3 8 7 5 6 8
Y S E M T 1 O F O D E V R
6 3 7 2 6 4 8 5 7 6 3 4 2 |
E Q Q N R N A D Q DR C G !
5 4 6 387462 3756
aeottrprbilli 1
2 3 7 4 6 2 8 5 7 6 3 8 4 |
RTI AGAIJEHUOY
6 8 2 5 6 3 7 4 6 3 2 5 6
T N WON DESO ENBW
dren of Korea, pgegssegssss.........
In every coun-
try in which the W J
GI has fought he dd
usually makesA ’
fast friends of
the kids first. Tol
: AB
FUTURE OF HIGHWAY 77
TOURING world war II, President Roosevelt
directed General Philip B. Fleming of
the Federal Works administration, to work
out a system of interregional highways.
This system was to include the chief north
and south and cast arid west highways criss-
crossing the nation, which were to be even-
tually constructed as express highways, and
which, it was anticipated, would be used
largely for transcontinental and long dis-
tance travel.
The president received the report on Janu-
ary 12, 1944, and it was revealed that U. S.
highway 77 was a part of the interregional
system. But highway 77 had no great ad-
vantages over U. S. highway 75, through
Denison and Sherman, except that surveys
showed travel heavier on the Gainesville
route. -
Fearful that a paralleling federal highway
might be designated as the north-and-south
interregional highway through Texas if ac-
°tion was too long delayed, the Gainesville
Chamber of Commerce approved a route
JOHN T. LEONARD sible for the
February, 1939.) company’s vast
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, 1 • • . A
standing or reputation of any person, firm or corpo- housing invest- 8
ration which may appear in The Register will be ments he started 888
cheerfully corrected upon being brought to the at- ments, he started g
tent o» of the.nnblisher.. with the firm m^
Member of the Associated Press, which is entitled 1883 at 94 a week O
exclusively to the use for republication of all the Jo- 18863 atd 4a WeeK E8
cal news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AB and worked his
news dispatches. way up. FREDERICK H. ECKER
%/ 4
•/ E
«/ -
gsm(62h
a mile of Denison. Now two new projects
have been started in Grayson county, and
two in Collin county. These include widen-
ing of the road north from the Collin county
line 10 miles at a cost of $400,000, and repair
work and replacing of guard rails south of
Sherman. In Collin county, 8.2 miles south
of McKinney is to be widened and surfaced
at a cost of $275,000.
These are not what might be termed ma-
jor improvements, but the Sherman Demo-
crat, in a recent editorial, ursed auink action
on the proposed routes of the highway
through Sherman and Denison, so that the
highway may be modernized along the entire
route.
And if work is not pushed in Cooke and
Denton counties, we may lose that interre-
gional designation, which would mean so
much when the highway is completed and
through traffic routed this way.
---------o---------
HOW TO BEAU WITH SITUATIONS
PRESIDENT Harry Truman had General
E Douglas MacArthur “withdraw” that
statement that most of us read Monday.
The secretary of the navy said maybe we
ought to start a war to “compel cooperation
for peace.” And ambassador-at-large — or
e,
5
Esgmmseas
—eri.
—
......
wave and salute and say “ ’ello,
G and now it is a great game for
I ilc.
t ' and
_8 0,
88888*383333333388888888858 385883
3888388888333233382888
957 MNe.
7Dge
7 988238
Z)
H\/EHAS8
PP
2627
I '
1
$
6
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 30, 1950, newspaper, August 30, 1950; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510696/m1/2/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.