Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 71, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1952 Page: 11 of 12
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The Day Heco^U
THERE'
THAT'S BETTER
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OCTOBER REPORT
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First State offers Bank Services for the entire family. . . . Come in early!
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COPR. 1952. KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, Ine .
WORLD RIGHTS RESERVED.
ORANGES
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PURE PORK SAUSAGE
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Save time, money on concrete. Call 2933. Gainesville Ready-Mix Concrete Co.
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Products off The Quaker Oats Company
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ALL THEM
PACKAGES.
63,450.00
4,620.60
Hand Picking of
Cotton Dwindles
LOOK AT WOT YOUR.
BOY FREN SENT, y
OKAY I'LL EXCUSE YOU
.THIS TIME,BUT DON'T LET
MAMA KNOW ABOUT IT )
(325 meters)
Light meters
Gas meters ..
Water meters.
POP IT WAS YOL-
LOOK AT THE MUD .
ON YOUR SHOES )
e BUS SCHEDULES
TRAILWAYS BUS STATION, 201 East
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11 :43
3:50.
8:01
RIDDLES!! I KNOW VORE
DOG TIRED AN’JES’
reserved
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12:12,
Circulation Department
THE DAILY REGISTER
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BREADMAN ON HORSEBACK — Here is the
“pan de agua" man in rural Puerto Rico, the “man on horseback”
who delivers bread from bakery to local food stores. “Pan de
agua” is staple water bread baked in 30-inch loaves.
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Postal receipts .......
City population (1950
census) ............
City altitude ........
4222
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PLEASE HELP
YOUR REGISTER CARRIERR
4:00,
12:30,
FEMuEe ~
Red Potatoes
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THERE IT IS,
MR. CASHBY-
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telephone 2900.
Southbound:
A. M. DEPARTURES
P. M. DEPARTURES:
Northbound:
A. M. DEPARTURES:
P. M. DEPARTURES: •
e RAIL SCHEDULES
2,
A
HE'S A FER-REAL -
A SANTY CLAUS.* /
... .$12,250,825.27
............... 7
............... 8
...............20
........ 4,579
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RAZ DAZZUL'S
TRAVEL BY BUS
CONTINENTAL
PHONE 22
MOTOR COACHES
Corner Rusk and Elm Streets
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DRAPPED OFF, BUT WOULD ME
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LOOK AT IT HARD-ANO SEE IF
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• CITY COURT
One fined $10 for drunkenness
and disturbing the peace.
• BUILDING PERMITS
W. A. Graham, 901 North Mor-
ris street, remodel dwelling, $300.
• REAL ESTATE
Oil, Gas and Mineral Leases
O. D. Sanders, et ux, et al, to
Sun Oil company, 130 acres of
the Anthony Parham survey, ab-
stract 824.
J. Earl Selz, et ux, et al, Sun
44955244
B-BUT THIS IS -
• /MERELY A LIST OF
K THE STOCKS YOU'VE
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§883:
We can wire your Thanksgiving Flowers anywhere. Call Kaden the Florist
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FATALLY BURNED
FORT WORTH, Nov. 19 (AP)—
Three-year-old Gwendolyn Ora
Simmons was fatally burned yes-
terday when fire swept the home
of her grandparents near Lake
Worth.
MA
-12
Mother’s Oats offers
you all-purpose
selection of
DINNERWARE
and
ALUMINUM
KITCHEN UTENSILS
FOR MIXING AND MATCHING
4 FESTIVE COLORS: —
Mexicali Blue
x Leaf Green
> Canary Yellow
k Old Ivory
It’s like unwrapping a present to open (
a big square package of Mother’s
“Carnival” Oats and find inside this
gaily-colored Carnival Dinnerware.
Yes, every package is a double value
because money can’t buy a finer qual-
ity, more delicious, or more nourish-
ing oatmeal than Mother’s Oats! It’s
the good, hot, creamy-smooth oatmeal
your family loves on chilly mornings!
Start collecting this gay, attractive
Carnival Dinnerware for your home
today. No waiting! No coupons! No
money to send! Just ask your grocer
for Mother’s “Carnival” Oats.
New Philosophy
Of Management
For Business
WACO, Tex. (A)—A new phi-
losophy of , management — one
which places the interests of the
public first in all matters per-
taining to the conduct of a busi-
ness—is emerging from industry’s
self-analysis of its own short-
comings.
So says Prof. Arch W. Hunt Jr.
of the Baylor University School
of Business, in a Baylor Business
Studies publication recently re-
leased.
“This new thinking conceives
that a company must be operated
and directed to serve the inter-
ests of all public groups,” Hunt
reported.
“Management is coming to rec-
ognize that it has a moral re-
sponsibility to the public, and
that it must accept this obliga-
tion if its public relations pro-
gram is to be effective,” he con-
tinued. “Public relations will be
effective in an organization only
when social consciousness per-
meates its entire heirarchy.”
Professor Hunt charges that
“not only have many individual
producers and distributors lost
face with the public, but it may
be assumed that in far too many
instances they have brought our
entire business system of capital-
ism and individual initiative into
disrepute.”
It means, he said, “the future
of not only our industry but our
American tradition of free enter-
prise may depend upon regaining
Fire losses (Sept.)
Bank deposits for
last quarter ....
Traffic death for
1952 in county .
Death certificates
Birth certificates .
Telephones ......
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AMERICAN BUS, Curtwood
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Copr. 1952, King Features Syndicate, Inc., World rights reserved.
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Copr. 1953 by United Feature Syndic
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OH,MAMMA...IT'S LIKE
YOU READ IN MAGAZINES
AN' NOVELS. LIKE I'M A
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Newspaper ’Army'
Covering U.N.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UP)
—A small “international army”
of 827 correspondents from 44
countries is covering the seventh
session of the United Nations
General assembly.
Frederic K. Abbott, accredita-
tions officer of the U.N.’s depart-
ment of public information, dis-
closed in his annual press direc-
tory that 396 correspondents have
been accredited from newspapers
and magazines, 132 from radio,
139 from photographic agencies
and 160 from newsreel and tele-
vision companies.
Following is a breakdown by
countries, with the number of
correspondents accredited from
each:
Australia, 3; Austria, 2; Bel-
gium, 3; Brazil, 3; Canada, 10;
Chile, 1; China, 5; Colombia, 1;
Costa Rica, 1; Cuba, 1; Denmark,
4; Egypt, 8; El Salvador, 2;
France, 16; Germany, 4; Greece,
6; Haiti, 1; Hong Kong, 1; Ice-
land, 1; India, 5; Israel, 11; Italy,
5; Japan, 11; Lebanon, 1; Mexico,
1; Morocco, 1; Netherlands, 11;
Norway, 4; Pakistan, 1; Poland,
2; Spain, 2; Syria, 2; Sweden, 6;
Switzerland, 4; Tangier, 1; Trans-
iordan, 1; Trinidad, 1; Turkey, 1;
Union of South Africa, 2; Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics, 23;
United Kingdom, 27; United
States, 194; Venezuela, 1, and
Yugoslavia, 5.
Elm, telephone 22.
Northbound:
A. M. DEPARTURES:
3:27, 8:15. 10:05.
P. M. DEPARTURES:
2:55, 5:15, 7:03, 7:55, 9:50.
Southbound:
A. M. DEPARTURES:
5:40, 8:15, 10:30.
P. M. DEPARTURES:
2:35, 5:20, 7:55, 9:40, 11:40.
Eastbound:
A. M. DEPARTURES:
P. M. DEPARTURES:
5:28, 8:10, 10:50.
Westbound:
A. M. DEPARTURES:
8:20, 11:25.
P. M. DEPARTURES:
There's No Finer Sausage Made Than OSCAR NEAL'S SAUSAGE
■ . ■ "s
-ame
14
‘2 1
For service that says "Come Again" try Gulf Dealers. . . "Shucks" Lesley
..Lb. 49
L 430
He has delivered your paper faith-
fully—please cooperate by paying
him on his first call each Saturday.
He is a little merchant and should
provide you with THE DAILY
REGISTER receipt—be certain he
does. School and route duties
fully consume his time. He is a
busy boy ... a better bov.
if you miss your paper, A P.
please call by........ M.
PRINCESS CINDRELLA. )
ear-
6
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Parking meter receipts
ner J .$ 1,530.42
4,115
€ac3
(64.,
22>g5
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One Mile East on Highway 82
68
AMg
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2795
2.15
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Mgrmes fe
SANTA FE, telephone 344.
NORTHBOUND: 12:15 a. m.,
9:14 a. m., 3:06 p. m. (*).
SOUTHBOUND: 5:06 a. m.,
11:50 a. m., (*), 9:10 p. m.
MISSOURI-KANSAS-TEXAS,
televhone 11.
EASTBOUND: 6:31 p. m.
WESTBOUND: 7:43 a. m.
(*) Denotes Streamliner.
",2
Z ’
chanical pickers are taking over
California’s cotton fields.
Edward F. Hayes, chief of
farm labor replacement for the
state, said that while cotton acre-
age is up five per cent this year,
labor requirements for hand
pickers is down 26 per cent.
Last year, during the nicking
season, California was 21,000 men
shy of filling its labor require-
ments in the cotton finlda. This
season, the state lacked only
4,000 workers to clean up the
harvest.
—7 BOUGHT?
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2%
' Fee ;
W $=*ME 3 /
bF 0
67 426 (11-20
> DONE C
UNLOADED ) E
A LONG-UN K(re\
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MIDFIELD... (2 T.
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FLOWRS...LOOKUT,HE SENT ME... V OH,MAMMA...HE'S
A BROOCH... BET THAT COST A PRINCE CHARMING...
TWENNY DOLLARS...CIGARS FER. I REAL IMMITASHUN
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Ne
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ca
the lost friendship and confidence
of the public.”
Sound public relations is not a .
temporary or transitory activity,
Hunt warned. “We do not im- l
prove our relations with others '
in a few days, weeks or even
months. Good will, confidence '
and friendship require time to
mature; respect and influence
cannot be acquired overnight.
“Good public relations, like the
making of personal friendship,
is the result of an evolutionary
progress in which casual ac-
quaintance gradually develops in-
to friendship through sundry acts .
of courtesy and helpfulness.”
An effective public relations
program is never negative or
static, Hunt said. It must be pos-
itive and dynamic, providing the
basis for all production, finance,
purchasing, sales and personnel
policies.
SD COVUHED.
Mm-
£
Cranberry Sauce Tali’can P"!
SHORTENING Mrs. Tucker's . . . .
54C
10-Lb. Mesh Bag •.*
99c
........... Bag “ “
. . No. 300 Cow 13
iwwax? ■ . 9,*
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Produced by Stephen Slesinger,23 3 . . v
- +-35 1952by King Features* Syndicate, fnc. ssp-d-
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Oil company, 64 acres out of the
David Parkins survey, abstract
832.
Warranty Deed
Leon G. Cox, et ux, to Ell Ed-
wards, lot 10 in block 3 of Hill-
crest addition.
J. J. R. Enderby, et ux, to
William C. Enderby, 158 acre
tract out of the B. J. Thompson
survey, abstract 1006, except two
small tracts off the north side of
said 158 acres.
Lucille Fancher to Etna May
Andress, et al, block 71 of city
of Gainesville.
Mineral Deed
Frank J. Birdwell to- F. E.
Case, 80 acres of lot 16 of FCSLS,
abstract 1248.
W. J. Hickman to Tom R.
Hickman, 100 acres out of
FCSLS, abstract 1248.
E. J. Hyman, et ux, to T. W.
Graham, et al, 63.15 acres out of
the east part of O. R. Smith sur-
vey, abstract 1004.
• 16th DISTRICT COURT
T. P. Frost vs Leland Fikes,
suit for debt to set lien and for
foreclosure.
• NEW AUTOMOBILES
1952 Ford—Bert F. Hann, jr.,
city; Fox Rig and Lumber com-
pany, Ardmore; and Charles F.
Burns, Jr., city.
1952 GMC—Junior Hudspeth,
Era.
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—70 P
II—-Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register Thurs., Nov. 20, 1952
SO|I ( YES, MOM.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 71, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1952, newspaper, November 20, 1952; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1559649/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.