Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 289, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 31, 1951 Page: 7 of 10
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New Nazi Party Alarms Allies
Muenster News
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E — Screen actor Van Johnson,
MEETING
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8/8
Classified Ads Bring Results.
S8
Dollar Day Value!
BLOUSES
1
ONLY
Formerly to $10.95
Group No. 1 —
Formerly to $12.95
Group No. 2 —
Formerly to $13.95
Group No. 3___
BUY TWO
AT A PRICE
LIKE THIS . .
1
IT’S TERRIFIC!
Men’s Summer and Year Around
SUITS
I.
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agad0o9
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$28533
Em
49
9
2333333
No Charge for Alterations
NOW
$100
BOB BROWN MOTOR CO
Gainesville, Texas
Commerce at Broadway
SALE PRICED
garbed as a priest for filming in Rome, chats with Marine S/Sgts.
Wm. E. Daniel (I.) and John E. Hoaglin of U. S. Embassy guard.
Don’t miss the big television hit,
“TOAST OF THE TOWN” with
Ed Sullivan, Sunday evening, 7 to 8
P. M. Station KRLD-TV, Channel 4
Thanksgiving days have been
observed in America on various
dates ever since November, 1621.
$29.95 SEWALL
“GUARANTEED”
SUITS
II
Is it famous for long life? 92% of all
Mercurys built for use in this country are
still on the road, according to latest
annual official registration figures.
Will trade-in value stay high?
Mercurys keep their value; used-car
market reports consistently prove it.
• Assorted colors
and sizes .....
Does it have a down-to-earth
first price? Mercury wears a price tag
you can understand. Good looks, com-
fort, luxury, convenience . . . Mercury
has them all, yet its price is kind to
your budget.
Will you be sure of good gasoline
mileage? Mercury has won official
economy tests two years in a row.
Will upkeep stay low? You'll save
money year after year. Mercury's
famous stamina keeps repair bills at a
rock-bottom low.
5
I/2
PRICE
8a
“KE—
(00K
ATW^f
‘The Aadhion Shon
JULIA STRADER
WOMEN’S . .. GIRLS’ SUMMER SHOES
These Few Hundred Pairs Are
Further Reduced for Quick Clearance!
Beginning
9 A.M. Wednesday
$55.00 “CURLEE”
SUITS
All Wool ..........
LADIES’ “HOLE-PROOF”
HOSIERY
Formerly priced at $1.98.. Pair
Budget lest,
a Metcuty!
(GET proof of Value)
Notice: We will not carry ladies’ hosiery any
more ... So we are practically giving them away.
C
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PLEASE . . .
NO PHONE ORDERS
NO REFUNDS or EXCHANGES
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was accompanied by Misses Dor-
othy Gross and Margaret Mann-
ing of Fort Worth.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Pick, Mr. and Mrs. John Fette
and Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher
during the week have been Mr.
and Mrs. Julius Gerald of Calif-
ornia. Mrs. Gerald is the former
Miss Noema Naughton whe re-
Standard equipment, accessories, and trim illustrated
are subject to change without notice.
Commerce Street
113 N. Commerce St.
£333332338
§:338
838
M
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
NOW S400
k,
NOW 600
1*
COTTON
SLIPS
• Sizes: 34, 40 and 42
• Sanforized cotton......ONLY
NOW 5200
Store
Phone 467
—
8)
aesss
Western officials say the great
danger is that all Nazi-thinking
elements will rally to the SRP.
Many of these joined the moder-
ate parties after the war. One of-
ficial said: “Right-wing elements
in many of these moderate par-
ties think exactly as the SRP
group thinks. Some of the politi-
cal parties which hold high posts
in the West German government
are infiltrated with Nazi sym-
pathizers.”
SRP leaders make plain that
they intend to join battle soon
with the democratic forces nur-
tured by the allied powers since
1945—and that they aim at the
political conquest of Germany.
You will have to see
these shoes to appre-
ciate how ridiculously
low these shoes are
priced.
SV ILIE, TEX
Roadlest,
a Mercury!
(MAKE A FEATURE-gY-
FEATURE COMPARE)
{ 11
sided south of Muenster with her
parents when they lived in Cooke
county.
Mrs. Dick Cain and mother,
MrS. J. S. Hogan, who are visit-
ing here from Amarillo, went to
Greenwood last week to visit
their mother and grandmother,
Mrs. W. T. McDonald, 95, who
has been quite ill.
f ■ UM
EARRAR
GOODSHOES • CORRECTL FITTED
’’This is no Neo-Nazi move-
ment,” one high allied official
commented. “This is Nazism. The
philosophy is the same. Only the
leaders are changed.
:3388 83888
J
Pvt. Billy Joe Hackler, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Hackler,
602 North Taylor street, was
among the airmen assigned to
the Elmendorf Air force base’s
fire department, who recently re-
ceived a commendation certifi-
cate for outstanding records in
the prevention of fire during the
last fiscal year. Brigadier Gener-
al Walter R. Agee, base comman-
der, made the presentation. Hack-
ler attended Gainesville high .
school and entered the Air force
in October, 1948. He has a broth-
er, Pfc. James R. Hackler, stat-
ioned at Austin.
nounces that the Muenster band
will change their practice nights
from Thursday to Tuesday at
8 p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Clark and
daughter, Eunice of New Mexico
are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Biffle and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Crad-
well in Myra. Mrs. Clark is a
sister of Mmes. Biffle and Chad-
well.
Miss Louise Ann Flusche of
Corpus Christi is a guest of her
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
H. J. Fuhrman and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallis Toothaker
of Beaumont are visiting his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Toot-
haker.
Mr.'and Mrs. Joe Luttmer an-
nounce the birth of a son, Julv
19, who has been named Jospeh
David.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Boeskin
have returned to their home in
Los Angeles, Calif., after a visit
with relatives in Cooke county.
Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Hellman are
spending the next two months
with their daughter, Mrs. Vincent
Baker and family in Milwaukee,
Wis.
Floyd Lehnertz visited his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lehnertz
and family the past week enroute
to Washington where he will be
employed. He has been working
in Houston for some time.
Mrs. H. J. Fuhrman and daugh-
ter, Rosalee have returned from
a visit with relatives in Iowa.
Miss Ruth Fisher attended the
wedding of a former OLV college
classmate, Miss Peggy Scott to
David Horne in Plainview. She
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“Hitler’s foes were German
traitors,” the SRP leaders say,
spreading the myth that the Ger-
man army was stabbed in the
back by agents in American and
British pay.
Gen. Remer violently attacks
the West German government as
an “allied puppet” and blames the
allies for starting the war.
American officials say the SRP
and the communists appear to
have formed a common front to
sabotage German rearmament for
western defense. The communists
are suspected of being heavy fi-
nancial backers of the SRP.
Allied officials said the SRP is
strongest in the rural areas. It
has not scored significant suc-
cess yet in the cities or among
the millions of refugees from the
east.
“Nazism retains its strongest
hold among German farmers,” a
well-informed allied official said.
“Under the Nazis all farm prod-
ucts were sold, the old customs
respected and their farms pro-
tected from seizure. The farmers
suffered less, too, than the city
dwellers from the Nazi war.”
1/2
PRICE
..... •' .
93 ■ 030
GEN. OTTO REMER
is planned for the industrial
Ruhr with Otto Grone, former
Nazi Gauleiter of Cologne, in
charge.
Allied officials admitted today
they are shocked at the bold
comeback of a formidable Nazi
movement just six years after
Hitler led Germany to defeat and
ruin.
They say the SRP’s success
shows that many Germans still
like Hitler and the Nazi ideology.
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Lots of Excitement
On Deleware Bridge
PHILADELPHIA (U.P.) —The
Delaware River Bridge is 25
years old this year, and the men
who take care of it say it’s not
as idle or boring a task as some
might think.
Since the 720,000-ton chunk of
steel and concrete was opened to
traffic in 1926, these are some of
the things that happened on the
bridge:
More than 335,000,000 vehicles
have crossed it.
One boat crossed over it, not
under it. That was a 35-ton tug-
boat carried on a huge trailer
truck. The toll was $18.75.
Forty-seven persons plunged to
their deaths from the footwalks,
now closed. Thirty-two others
were prevented from suicide
jump by alert bridge police.
Traffic lanes were increased
from six to eight and a high
speed line was established.
Bicycles were banned. Horses
were not but they rarely make
the crossing. Only two horse
drawn vehicles crossed last year.
Joseph K. Costello, general
manager of the bridge, estimates
that costs and expenditures dur-
ing the 25-year period were near-
ly $100,000,000. Receipts in the
same period totaled $86,000,000.
The present toll for automo-
biles is 20 cents. There have been
some large cranes on which the
toll was $25.
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MUENSTER, July 31 — Wilbur
West, of Memphis, Tenn., joined
his wife and children for a week’s
visit with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. C. Rosson. The family
will go to Gilmer to visit with
relatives before returning to their
home in Tennessee.
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Jennings
are the parents of an 8 pound
14 ounce daughter, born at a
Gainesville hospital July 21. The
baby was named Karen at bap-
tismal services. Mr. and Mrs. Jen-
nings are the parents of four
other children, two boys and two
girls.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reiter
and son of Kerrville, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Knauf of Bandera,
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Elmore of
Krum and Mr. and Mrs. Anton
Doerr, Sr., of Cleburne were
here to attend the funeral of Mrs.
August Reiter last Monday.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Cain were, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Hogan and two child-
ren, Mrs. J. S. Hogan of Amar-
illo, Mrs. Pete Smith and family,
Mrs. John Hogan and children
of Lubbock, Mrs. T. C. Rhone and
family of Bowie, Mrs. W. H. Ho-
gan and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Ho-
gan family of Gainesville, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Hogan and family
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Volk-
man of Fort Worth.
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Knabe
are the parents of a son, born
July 15.
A family reunion was held in
the home of Mrs. W. F. Burk at
Myra with her children and
families present. Those there for
the occasion were Mr. and Mrs.
M. T. Burk of Denison, Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Burk of Niles, Calif.,
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Burk of
Springfield, Mo., Mr. and Mrs.
W. B. Wilson of Muenster and
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Richardson of
Gainesville.
Director John Hoffman an-
3-WAY CHOICE! For "the drive of your life!" Mercury now
proudly makes available a triple choice in transmissions. Merc-O-Matic Drive,
the new simpler, smoother, more efficient automatic transmission—
or thrifty Touch-O-Matic Overdrive are optional at extra cost.
There's also silent-ease standard synchronized transmission.
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#IN THE
SERVICE
Bulb Burning 45 Years
Interests Electricians
HUMBOLDT, la. (U.P)—Miss
Elizabeth Burley can’t understand
why an electric light bulb in her
dining room continues to burn.
Electricians have tried to buy
it to discover why, too, but Miss
Burley isn’t selling.
She bought the bulb when her
house was wired in 1906 and it’s
been burning brightly ever since.
By BRACK CURRY
AP Newsfeatures
FRANKFURT—“We like Hit-
ler. Join us for the defense of
German blood and honor.”
It is Gen. Otto Remer, a pet
of Hitler’s in the dying days of
Nazism, speaking. The old Nazis
at the mass rally cheer and
stomp.
A brass band strikes up the
“Badenweiler March,” Der Fuehr-
er’s favorite song. Former storm
troopers and SS men, Nazi party
members and war veterans snap
to reverent attention.
This is the socialist Reich party
—a frank, open attempt at reviv-
ing Nazism in Germany. This fa-
natical movement, launched in
the British zone three years ago,
is now rapidly expanding into the
American occupation zone in a
brayen bid for national political
power.
It has invaded the big U. S.
occupied cities of Frankfurt, Kas-
sel, Munich, Stuttgart and Heidel-
berg. Former storm troopers and
SS (elite guard) men are roam-
ing the states of Hesse and
Wuerttenberg-Baden to enlist
farm support.
And in Bavaria, the birthplace
of Nazism, the rabble-rousing
Alfred Loritz claims he is about
to merge his radical “Economic
Reconstruction party” with the
new Nazis.
In the British zone, the So-
cialist Reich party’s (SRP)
growth continues, allied officials
report. The SRP scored a sur-
prising success in the British
zone state of lower Saxony in its
first bid at the polls this spring.
Nearly 400,000 West Germans
wooed by Hitlerian campaign tac-
tics voted for the SRP, giving it
14 seats in the 159-member state
parliament.
Now the SRP is sinking its
claws in the neighboring state of
Schleswig-Holstein, officials say.
And an intensive organizing drive
Want more new car for your money?
Then take the wheel of a Mercury
and start adding up the extra values.
Here’s a car with pace, balance,
hustle. It eats up miles without dent-
ing pocketbooks. Here’s a reservoir
of power that barely gets tapped
even on steepest hills.
Swing a Mercury out onto the
open road. Discover how it clings to
the highway, even on curves. Ease
up to a stoplight. See how swiftly it
comes to a velvet-smooth stop.
Yes, any way you figure it,
Mercury gives you a big, value-
packed dollar’s worth for every
dollar invested. Arrange for a dem-
onstration now. You’ll be ready to
make"the buy of your life!”
And these leaders are unre-
pentant, unreformed Nazis. They
are just six years older than in
1945.
Forty-year-old Dr. Fritz Doris,
the brains of the SRP, boasts,
that he joined Hitler in 1929 and
never deserted in the dark days
of 1945 like so many others.
“We shall revive Nazism in
Germany,” Doris says.
And Gen. Remer brags of his
“proud role” in quashing the 1944
generals’ revolt against Hitler in
Berlin. Remer, who struts in the
traditional Wehrmacht fieldcoat
and a Bavarian green felt hat re-
cently placed a wreath on the
grave of the Dachau Concentra-
tion camp’s commandant.
The SRP leaders stress nation-
alism and socialism—the early
Nazi creed—and tell Germans
that the “fuehrer principle of
leadership” is the only answer to
Germany’s economic ills.
“They don’t threaten to perse-
cute minorities and burn books
yet but they would get around to
that if they came to power,” an
allied official said.
U. S. officials point out that
America is one of the main tar-
gets of SRP orators.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 289, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 31, 1951, newspaper, July 31, 1951; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538425/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.