Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 71, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1952 Page: 8 of 12
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LEFT WITH THE DISHES
-385
4
23
a
mustache out of curiosity or to
Did she ever,
\)
9 the novelty wears thin and off
r
STEVEN§ON
resistible
P
e r -
HAL BOYLE
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C. A. Dean M.D.
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Washington Letter ..
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ASTEACH
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CHY
GOV. MeKELDIN
IDMEAOpAhs
EATROCSGS
EDYEDEENS
MC
AH
B
GOTTE
1
OB
I
A
ALL
TEE
chusetts, told me women in her
Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle
/
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9
//
71
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AP Newifeatures
DRILY SPECIHL
Friday, November 21 st
f
MEXICAN BEANS
SHARON SMITH
McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
)A
Mitchell's Fresh-Baked
22
•L
28
Gainestile iMa Regisker
11-20
1
“Do you think my pearls would be too much?’*
_
i
i
HE
SARAM
OLIG A
Ever notice a nian with a mus-
tache? Notice how he toys with
it, reaching up now and then to
i
AIDA
GRAT
0
6
t
4
comes the mustache.
But one who grows a mustache
mur:
“You yourself
have an utterly
DOWN
1. Sewed edge
2. Wallaba
3. Prickly sen-
sation
4. Sound to cal]
attention
■
16
ACROSS
1. Head cover-
ing
4. Asiatic
9. Cut down
12. Slender finial
13. Turning point
14. Southern con-
stellation
15. Eating place
for cattle
17. Staggered
19. Jewel
20. Work with
the feet
21. Soft mud
23. Rubber tree
24. Slave
27. Indefinite
pronoun
28. Greek letter
29. Hold back
30. Like
4
5. Title
6. Among
7. Think alike
8. Require
9. Wooden
hammer
10. Seaweed
11. Soft mass
16. Receive
18. Relieves
20. Table dish
21. Flies high
22. Inlay
23. American
Indian
25. Soldering
material
26. Fore part
28. Fish
29. Light
moisture
31. Withered
32. Heated
35. Hun
37. Chaff
39. Pluck
40. Genus of the
blue grass
42. Shift
43. Guiding
thread
44. Chess piece
45. Turkish com-
mander
46. Piece out
47. Feminine
name
48. Stitch
51. Along
characteristic skin eruption which usually appears
on the feet. It is caused by the young form of
hookworms found in the waste material of cattle.
Obviously, it is contacted by bare feet in areas
where cattle have been.
It is more common in warm, moist areas which
favors the growth of the hookworm eggs, and is
seen more in the south than in the north. After
the young hookworms enter the skin they get
into the blood stream, find their way to the lungs,
through the bronchial tubes, and finally into the
intestinal tract where they mature into adult
worm. Symptoms such as anemia, weakness, pale-
ness, slight fever, slight loss of appetite, or a de-
sire for unusual food vary with this disease.
There are several satisfactory drugs used for it
all of which should be prescribed only by your
personal physician.
For a copy of Dr. Dean’s new 56 page “For
Better Health” book, write him care this news-
paper, sending a self-addressed stamped envelope
and 15 cents to cover cost.
(Copyright 1952, General Features Corp.)
31. Boils
33. Thus
34. Take great
delight
36. Pull
37. Place for
keeping
coal
38. Headliner
39. Clear profit
40. Breathe
quickly
41. At no time
43. Study
44. Old world
herb
46. Puffs up
49. Wing
50. Call forth
52. Night before
53. Nothing
54. Resume
55. Cold and
drizzly
The Word of God . . .
Whatever our interpretation may be the fact
remains that the human machine is best served
by a day of rest from our accustomed tasks.
God did rest the seventh day from all his
works.—Heb. 4:4
v
B
if
29
Maeo.S
J. E. Jones, clerk at the local post office, is re-
cuperating from an operation for removal of his
tonsils.
Mrs. George Burch left this morning for Wich-
ita, Kans., to visit her sister, Mrs. Frank E. Bird.
J. E. Razor went to Whitesboro this morning on
business.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Frantz went to Sherman this
morning to visit relatives for several days.
Sam Pitman returned this morning from a busi-
ness trip to Fort Worth.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Baines of Breckenridge are
parents of a baby girl. The mother is the former
Miss Willie Peitzeker of Gainesville.
e- ■. -4
-32
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v) )
Io
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L-
npe hg
-.. ■ ■
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Y-
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longer matters.
For a prolonged
M
‘TheCdilonialPage
8— Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register Thurs., Nov. 20, 1952 •
22
/0
2
FRIDAY IS PIE-DAY
at
MITCHELL'S
nV
3)
a®B
&
9’
TN£ UTU£ $T0RE
00 TOC $QUABL '
»e wa omsaewat
soon finds
Have A
LAUGH
By
BOYCE HOUSE
washing machines. . for other maga-
This was clear in interviews I had with home zines. Suddenly
management specialists from dif-
ferent parts of the country meet-
ing in Washington recently to
discuss the family living outlook
for 1953.
Miss Barbara Higgins, state
home demonstration agent-at-
large of the University of Massa-
Ah, I can fight against it
By ARTHUR EDSON sented? Should a southerner get
(For James Marlow)a cabinet post? Sen. Harry F.
,2" Byrd of vrginia, for instance,
the election returns had a chance has been mentioned as a cabinet
to cool, will continue until possibility.
Kimbell’s "Roundup Style"
HE,
2 (5
\•
\ -22*-
\
des.,
d.
Qet26,
PARTY
(f 1
Henry Cabot Lodge the older
was speaking in congress on a
bitterly-contested election case
from Alabama and he quoted
Shakespeare’s lines:
“In the most high and palmy
state of Rome,
A little ere the mightiest Jul-
period after
1937, things hap-
tor starts to worry—for this toe
is not natural.
Moreover, rather characteristic
types of fevers occur during
various maladies. The fever dur-
—
h-
,--------- --------------_
state are especially interested in " : g
money - management programs. 12
They want a higher standard of xa
living and want to buy things but
« to cure himself of inferiority
will never yield it until death.
FRUIT PIES
Apple, Pineapple, Apricot, Cherry
Each 29
IT’S NOT ALWAYS GOOD
NOT TO HAVE A FEVER!
By C. A. DEAN, M.D.
VEDITORIAL: It’s not always good NOT.to have
IVE a fever, a University of Missouri School of
Medicine researcher, Dr. M. P. Neal, has disclosed.
Dr. Neal points out that rising bodv temperatoros
88888
1 1393338888888
j ga,
I W a
2:36080522222
pened to me.
By JANE EADS Before then, I
KN/ASHINGTON — Housewives the nation over had written a
V V share a common worry—how to divide and large number of
stretch their budgets to house, feed, clothe and articles for “The
educate their families and give them a feeling of Atlantic Month-
security. They all want to improve their homes, ly,” and occa-
are all interested in home decoration and all want s i o n a 1 articles
Today s Birthday THE BIBLE... Can You Quote It?
------------------------i ( Copyright 1952, Lavina Ross Fowler
THEODORE ROOSEVELT-Me- 1—Stand still, and consider the wondrous works of------Job 37:14
---------- . __ .. 2—Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, and serve him,
and shalt swear by--------------------------Deuteronomy 6:13
3—The sun shall not smite thee by day, nor the moon __Psalms 121:6
4—How are we commanded to teach our
ggg children? ----------------------------------Deuteronomy 6:6, 7
‘mds" 5— In your patience possess ye your----------------St. Luke 21:19
6—And there shall be signs in the sun and in the____St. Luke 21:25
s 7—Lying lips are an abomination to the____________Proverbs 12:22
Six correct--------excellent. Four correct________good.
For wisdom, courage and peace read the BIBLE daily.
Many women have married a the most widespread. And the
man because ofhis bankroll. But average mustache carrier will
did any woman E2asesevrgna , 28:. ,
, d admit it, if pressed.
*..................The bey or man who rears a
ever marry
32
K
N
Our pledge to you: Consistently
low prices ALWAYS! TRY US!
30 Years Aqo . .
•» 1 • o +L 4 1 +1 r • , UUCS 1L ddlI>lY dll IdCUIUIIS Ul IlY U I CI I UICdI 1Y •
inne ne .3 2
editor-in-chief; Miss Lucy Mae Pearman, assistant 1ng.and terate anticommunist mendations. of tremendous size. In a depart-
editor; Miss Consuelo Smith, literary editor; Miss a-rdeet°tnescoumns,hun How does it stack up geographi- ment like State, it’s an organiza-
Leatryce Murrell, society editor; Morris McElrath, aredi,O Amercan, newspapers, cally? Are all sections repre- tion which is world-wide,
exchange editor; Clarence Hayworth, business Wa aso a subject ioi discussion------ --- —--------
manager; and Jack Bell, athletic editor. thaqlrti opined that both men BUTTONS AN’ BEAUX
son andss. Minnie pikes; samuel Floyd LaFever 1 ncticed. Re asked, how so mhdny
Mrs. C. T. Hughes and granddaughter. Miss qther wwrit rs thad gone outmo
Patsy Hushes are spending a few days with persons? He smiled pridefully.
Dr. C. T. Hughes is in Dallas on a business mis- Sdea,sKwasnanaroisulararget cHe
SMrs. Alex Huston of Valley View is visiting haastakenotaremorriskoisryndy
relatives in Gainesville. ____ ___J__-
•Te
Founded August 30, 1890 by JOHN T. LEONARD
(Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939 )
Published by The Register Publishing Company, Inc., ' T
306 East California Street. Gainesville, Texas. Entered as
M-igo
I m
2 ng
Mgaggg sd
my dear. But
your mustache!
SAVE at Mitchll’s! look!
2 CANS 198
.9
13
I
.c
2
longer. It has swept me quite off from the fear someone will take
my feet.” it awav from him or shave it off
A boy, rubbing castor oil on shilehcomnaseep.
his upper lip to stir the slow What I have against mus-
growth of the reluctant fuzz taches is that I once tried to grow
thereon, mav davdream of such one out of curiosity—and found
situations. But I have never .could n‘t. Itudidn’t grow. It
heard in real life of a mustache poped and dribbled. ■ f •
with much romantic influence. •, oWwdoY oucur e, an inferior-
Becoming More Popular ity complex arising from the dis-
What is the actual social im- cove yyou can tear u telephone
pact of the mustache? 1 book.in half.but can t,grow a
This question arises because it measly, piddlin g, worthless, un-
appears that this form of male sight Y,,0 it-of-date,, impractical
facial landscaping is getting more thing like a.mustache that no-
popular. It seems to me I see body i eally wants anyway.
more and more mustachesg o
around. I would like to believe Query on Fame
this is only because there are Y
more people in the world, since GHUuMAMK Pmume
I like to look at the bright side 6 ® “
of things. GREENVILLE, S. C. (UP) —
I would hate to see mustaches A Furman University student in
become a badge of valor or a English still wears a pained ex-
measure of achievement, as in a pression when he thinks of a
society in which that were true question he missed on an exami-
I would have to become a hermit, nation.
Men grow mustaches for only The question: Who wrote
three general reasons: “Common Sense?”
1. They have an inferiority The answer the student didn’t
complex. know: Thomas Paine.
2. To pay an election bet. The student’s name: Thomas
3. Curiosity. Payne.
ing undulant fever is up and down; during Hodg-
kin’s Disease it is present for awhile, then disap-
pears, only to return again; and during Relapsing
Fever it relapses.
(Q) “What is meant by “ground itch”?
A. L. R.
(A) “Ground itch” is the name given to a
fellow solely be- . U %
cause of his mus- gs . J
tache? ®
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 adjoin-
ing counties by mail, 1 month, 90c; 6 months $4.50; one
year $8.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month $1.10; 6 months
$5.50; 1 year $10.00.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing
or reputation of any person, firm or corporation which
■
■_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________.____
These Days . . • by GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY
Boyle's Column . . . by HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK, Nov. 20 (A) — The first of these reasons is
„ I
( — ■;
may appear in The Register will be cheerfully' corrected ius fell
uponemngr W ksscfatetteption, 06 ex. The ' graves stood tenantless
elusively to the use of republication of all the local news and the sheeted dead
patches in this newspaper, as well as all AP news dis- Did squeak and gibber in the
The publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, Roman streets.
typographical errors or any unintentional errors that Lodge added, “The sheeted
occur other than to correct in next issue after it is ded did much better than that
brought to their attention. All advertising orders are ac- • “d.d ° un.DeLi..3,
cepted on this basis only. hi Selma, Alabama—they voted.
are part of a physiological proc-
ess. That means sometimes fevers | 1
are natural—particularly during gs”
infectious processes, glandular ? ®
disorders, acidosis or pregnancy B 3
toxemias, and when the tissue ors $
muscle is damaged with dimin- g8
ished vitality and blood supply, p
If an elderly person has pneu-2
monia and lacks a fever, his doc-aad
be comforted by the fact it is
no still there? He never is safe
WVK
<-22-222
SHIVERS AND DANIEL
PECAUSE GOV. SHIVERS and Attorney
General Price Daniel of Texas saw fit to
support the Republican nominee for presi-
dent, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, against
their own party’s candidate, Gov. Adlai Ste-
venson of Illinois, much effort was put forth
by so-called “loyal” Democrats to get Texas
citizens to scratch these gentlemen’s names
when they voted in the presidential election.
Quite a large number of persons did not
vote for the governor or the attorney gen-
eral, but they were, nevertheless, greatly in
the minority and the number of Cooke county
citizens who scratched them was much less
than the state total, percentagewise.
For example, 324,780 persons who voted in
the presidential race did not vote for Shivers
on either ticket. But this represented only
15.7 per cent of the total vote, which means
the governor received 84.3 per cent of the
vote of those who took part in the election,
a total of 669,521.
In Cooke county, only 11 per cent of the
voters scratched the governor’s name.
Which means that 6,330 voted for the gov-
ernor on the Democratic or Republican
ticket, while 7,050 voted in the presidential
race.
Price Daniel, whose stand was as decided,
but perhaps not as aggressive as the gover-
nor’s, received 92 per cent of the Cooke
county vote, or 6,502 out of the 7,050.
Daniel received 1,156 votes on the Repub-
lican ticket in Cooke county while General
Eisenhower received 4,393 votes. That means
some 3,287 voters in Cooke county either
voted a split ticket or wrote in the name of
Eisenhower in place of Stevenson.
While Texas and Cooke county went for
Herbert Hoover in 1928, it was not by any-
where near as big a majority as General Ei-
senhower received in the Lone Star state and
in this county.
And the vote of Texas and Cooke county
shows that Governor Shivers and Attorney
General and Senator-elect Daniel still have
the goodwill of a great majority of the
state’s Democratic voters.
----o----
PROTECTION FOR 90,000,000 CITIZENS
PY THE FIRST of next year, more than
90,000,000 Americans will be covered by
some form of voluntary health insurance, ac-
cording to an American Medical association
official.
This is a fact in which every one with an
interest in the public health mav take pride.
The first voluntary plan came into existence
only 30 years ago, in Seattle. Now every
state in the union has voluntary health insur-
ance, sponsored either by medical societies
or lay organizations. In late years their
growth has reached the spectacular stage.
There has also been a remarkable growth
in community health councils. In 1943 there
were but 48 of these councils in the entire
United States. Now there are 1,190.
Here is one of the compelling reasons why
the scheme for compulsory government
health insurance—a scheme which, incident-
ally, President-elect Eisenhower is solidly
against— failed to gain a sizable following
either in congress or among the public at
large. No one argues that the voluntary
plans have solved all our health problems.
But they ha ve solved many of them, and the
extent of their coverage has been steadily
broadened. The remaining problems—some
of which, such as catastrophic illness, are ex-
traordinarily difficult—are being extensively
studied and experimental efforts at solutions
are being tried.
It is also significant that the medical pro-
fession warmly supports soundly-conceived
and administered voluntary plans. Thus the
battle to mitigate the economic impact of ill-
ness and accident forges successfully ahead.
----o---
MOST TRAVELED MAN
P)OWN THROUGH the years, Gainesville
— has had many visitors, distinguished in
one way or another. And the most recent
was Fred C. Zieg, Fort Wayne, Ind., manu-
facturer, who spent a night at a local motel
last week.
Mr. Zieg’s distinction is in the field of
travel, and it has taken him 20 years to ac-
complish the goal he recently reached—of
having visited each of the 3,073 counties and
parishes in the United States.
The feat required travel to the amount of
more than 280,000 miles by automobile, bus,
train, airplane and boat and some 1,147 days
were involved, more than three years.
Mr. Zieg has reason to be respected for his
ideas on what he likes best about his country,
by reason of his extensive travels.
For example, he thinks Ohio has the best
highway system and California’s Lake Tahoe
region, the most beautiful scenery. But he
saves one “best” for Texas. He has found
tne best overnight accommodations and food
in Texas, something very important to trav-
elers.
If one had the time and money that Mr.
Zieg has spent on travel, he would be tempted
to travel to the far corners of the earth to
see things of historical interest and scenic
beauty.
Mr. Zieg is to be commended because he
has found it desirable to “see America first.”
are stymied by high prices. ,,
“Women are becoming more Jane Eads
TEP I DETARSMANT
MmTOMEROSIVE
SlDEMANIW
I SMDIOgHSV E|
RARER IWAIP FUL
APSsTREAM
shg
-
I ' .
xu S ".2
ne
ebe,. i M 2
For Better Health...
" ge gamen pay an election bet
crumpling shyly
against his man-.
ly bosom, mur-
g
A
leuue pel-o"
sonality, F — a
STRICTLY PERSONAL using their influence with such
it is not often that events un- senate committees as the Nye KELDIN, born Nov. 20, 1900 in
fold which throw light on a Munitions Probe proun ana the South Baltimore, son of a stone
perplexing personal problem 58 ,p mason who be-
years after it no -a Follette Labor rights com,- came a police- gmg
mittee. These groups, he chor- man. Governor ashh.
tied, had been led out of their of Maryland and
way to take cracks at Sokolsky’s n 0 m inater
activities. It was easy for me to of Gen. Dwight J
see how the leading had been D. Eisenhower g
done. at the Republi- 99
“Under the carefully guarded can convention
pen name of Gordon Rend, I had in Chicago this j
exposed how the La Follette year, McKeldin
committee had been penetrated is known as “Mr.
by such subversive agents as Republican” i n
John Abt and Charles Krivitsky, Maryland.!
known then only as Charles Kra- A lawyer and a
,— mer. (Eleven years later both former mayor of
10 magazinein Geo. Sokolsky Elizabeth Bentley and Whittaker Baltimore
sus the United States Chambers were to confirm my he started as an office boy at $5
would . Iwr the story by their own recollection a week when he was 14.
I could not get work on the and Chambers, in his monumen- •--
rad1o- ,, , tai tilt with Alger Hiss, was to he organized his committee in
I Ihadbeen acusedsby theNye feree into the open the fact, the senate investigate the
committee of trattickmg in arms among many more amazing, that gicce nf war L, nnt sus
JI for Japan which was obviously the Soviet’s man Alger Hiss had causes 01 War, he ad not sus
untrue as I had never bought or been playing on the red team pect that the Harold Ware cell
sold arms, individually or on a while serving in a key position was using him as a front.
fc large scale, for myself or any- on the Nye committee. Gibarti I often wonder why none of
a one else, much less Japan. Iwas was not idly boasting when he the so-called liberals who now
M smeared without benefit of a explained how the party could object to what the house com-
hearing by the La Follette com- use the senate committees to hurt mittee on Un-American Activi-
mittee. Curiously, I noted at the anti-Communists.)” ties or the McCarran committee
business-conscious and are now bearing much time , that, some of my best Actually, Gerald Nye, senator do, did not object then to what
more financial responsibility in the home ” she friends believed that where there from North Dakota, had no idea the Nye committee or the La
said. “They are interested in programs that tell Was SO much, smoke, there must what all this was about. He was Follette committee, both manned
them how to buy, build and improve a home. They alse he fire, but they never asked a Republican, a conservative, an by C o m m u n i s t s, were doing,
are eager for help in planning insurance and sav- Who.buit the -ire... +u . g: T American Firster, a pacifist. When They praised these committees,
ings programs, how to plan a will, and ways of tne"houtothat.h ren
protettingtfamiliesagainst emergencies, death, falkjn/about'what they wereTL \AT, T.-I,
h«e»=!^e management specialist sattots"Mhat S heworid ‘ oday • by JAMES MARLOW
at Oregon State college, say.women are interested Clifford Durr, sister-in-law of
m methods of simplifying the work in the home Justice Hugo Black, wrote tcthe -
and how to make money go further They were editor of The Atlantic Month- -
worried about inflation, but in the last few ly.» I knew then what Alger
months, they seem to be adjusting themselves and Hiss, John Abt and Charles Kra-
learning to live with it, she told me. As prices mer (Krivitsky) planned to do
kept climbing, they began to show more interest tome .g. TT
in home baking and in canning and preserving mLEn as+ yee t nicked n a Dwight D. Eisenhower announces Have I paid off my political
food, with a definite trend toward the use of home book “Crime Without pum,_ hischoice: .. debts, rewarding those who ran
freezers and community locker plants.” ment, by Guenther Reinhardt, nWho will be in the new cabi- P° litical risksrbesupportingme2
Willie Vie Dowdy, home improvement specialist whom I do not know He had nel , .. I .cou1 De argued that. Lodge
with the Georgia agricultural extension service 33 worked for the FBI and the U S Already the rumors have piled might have been able to keep his
years, says every Georgia housewife wants a wash- Counter Intelligence corns f up enough names to fill the cab- senate seat had he been working
ing machine after she gets lights and water in her glanced through the index when inet,, with enough left ever fora for himself when he was work-
home mnq iniuugn LHC muex "5_ couple of alternate teams. mg for Eisenhower.
Miss Dowdy, who says she knows “every pig ared °5 ° ’ - na5 aP Among those mentioned: Is each man capable of organ-
track in the state,” says the Georgia housewife is Reinhardt at that point is deal- c John. Foster Dulles, Sen. Harry izing and handling his depart-
equally interested in landscaping her yard and ing with a Soviet agent Louis Cabot Lodge, Jr.,cof, Massachu- ment effectively. In short, does
str-mininRer Lithen Sw8 15nnh L.I. 8 /• M-I. 851101 4 ? setts, Sen. Frank Carlson of Kan- he have executive talent?
streamlining her kitchen. Some 15,900 home- Gibarti, who was sent to his sas ‛H-rie S+Ssen TL t Ne Eler nresiHentelicfce
maovrhavepeenibepedsto.improvtneirgith- countrto so,aobforstalin. 1 civ. Patrick J. ±uley,PGi the samePrprobiem,lebut ASEisend
company cooperating in the extension service pro- “Under his guidance, in 1937 Hoffman, Gov. Dan.Thcrntonof bowers may be the toughest of
gram. and 1938, the weapon c.f the dead- of Washington Gov irm n For n, thing th?
Currently Miss Dowdy is working on a living ly word, the smear campaign, AaaKssh &on, Hampshh-e Gov have onntthin8, therE epuhlicans
room improvement program, with some 1,500 was ordered into the arsenal of a Warren of California and waste sPentutYeasstsssing
women.vying for prizes.i a contest sponsored by communism in America It was Arthur summerfield, Repub federal government They haOe
a department store at Athens, Ga. a special assignment of Gibarti s. lican national chairman. said they could manage it much
nltined smn? ofATt^meinMaS .In picking his cabinet, a pres- better. Now that they have their
1938. We Were discussing the dis- ident may consider such things chanceuithey, known theylabe
natches tn +he (Nevxy Vork Times’ da . . , eyed CTiicanY — ana pronaDly
patches to the mew -or —.mes. Does it satisfy all factions of hypercritically.
A-
9 paaqe
‛rs—e--
'^46
aza.___
51
S
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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/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.