Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 212, Ed. 1 Monday, May 4, 1953 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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THE WORLD TODAY
PETER PAN HAD NOTHING ON THEM
EDITORIALS
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er’s throat in no
time.
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Malenkov
was
JAMES MARLOW
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The Word of God ...
PAPE,
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Washington Letter..
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Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle
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John A. Dix, an eminent poli-
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THE BIBLE... Can You Quote It?
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65
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By Jimmy Hatlo
Registered U. S. Patent Office
68
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57
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$3014
£ =
Tuesday, May 5th
,V
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Tender-thrifty! look!
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2—-Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
Mon., May 4, 1 953
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■ 57. Bird’s beak
58. Terminate .
time the National Association for
Mental 'Health has conducted a
Little Man Finds Russia
Is Not Changed After All
ground. Molotov
was low man on
the totem pole.
of
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DOWN
1. Merchandise
22
33
29. Resound
31. Sensitive
32. Pertaining
to certain
mountains
-27*5*782,
52
34. Fencing
sword
36. Encircle
37. Castoff
39: Went ahead
40. Fashion
42. Instigate
44. Roman
official
46. On the ocean
50. Lead
53. Rose
82
£
(
Up a side street stood a big tin
“This is New garbage can. A man in blue over-
4. City in
Oklahoma
5. Worm
6. Apelike
7. Jewish month
8. Scented
9. Chum
260#
225233323
Copyright 1953 .... Lavina Ross Fowler.
1—Ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be .... St. John 16:20 •
WHAT TO SEE
AND WHER >
TO GO WHEN )
WE GET /
, TEREMA
/ OUI,OUI/AND
TE LA LINGUA-SO
WE’LL BE ABLE TO
CONVERSE WIT THE
NATIVES-N’EST
utes and then she wouldn’t be
able to watch one all the way
through anyway.
One hour of reading-loud took
some of the bounce out of him.
And maybe for an hour after the
reading she could watch one pro-
gram all the way through, till he
got his bounce back.
Tn an effort to get young men to look upon
■“■their years in the military service as an in-
vestment of time that will pay dividends in
the future, General Paul L. Wakefield, state
director of selective service, has distributed
to newspaper editors a booklet entitled “Mili-
tary Service an Be Creative Years,” written
by W. Jack Lewis, who served as a navy
chaplain during world war II.
Lewis declares that a young man’s months
or years of military service “need not be
wasted. In fact they can be a definitely crea-
tive experience, a time of helpfulness and
service beyond the call of duty.”
At the same time, he declares that men
can live “lower than a snake’s belly and ut-
terly ruin your life (not to mention other
lives) in a couple of years with the army,
navy or marine corps.”
Lewis found during his service as a chap-
lain that when a young man entered the serv-
ice he tended to double his speed in whatever
direction he was going when he entered.
“If you come from a background where
you have known the love of parents, the
companionship of good friends, the love of
God, the warmth of fellowship within a
church, and a personal relationship with your
pastor, then there is every likelihood that
you will continue to grow in the direction in
which you have started,” Lewis declares.
But if one does “not have strongly rooted
faith in God and no solid basis for moral
conduct, you may be so weak-willed that
you’re afraid not to do what everybody else
is doing.”
Chaplain Lewis asserts that a young man
may find what he is looking for in his years
of military services. It is just as true in serv-
ice as out that “the thing that gets your at-
tention gets you.”
He adds that if it is liquor and women a
man is interested in, they will “get him” in
no uncertain terms, regardless of prior
claims of wife, sweetheart, parents, friends
or the Lord Himself.” Lewis asserts “No-
body’s going to spoon-feed or wet-nurse you
in the service. You can live like an animal
feeding the tapeworm of your desires.”
But military service offers opportunity to
the young man who desires special training
in line with aptitudes and capabilities. Fur-
Our pledge to you: Consistently
low prices ALWAYS! TRY US!
3. Those who take refuge under along Madison Avenue in New
the Fifth Amendment or who re- York finds it easier to kill
money
55. College in
Cedar
Rapids.
Iowa
56. Perch
ACROSS
1. Squander
6. Japanese
coin
9. Small
explosion
12. Early Alex-
andrian
priest
13. Seaport in
Peru
14. Wonder
15. Rivulets
16. Organs of
contrac-
tion
18. Wild animals
19. Masonic
door-
keeper
20. Invisible
emanation
22. Artificial
channel
26. Existed
perfume
54. Anglo-Saxon 59. Contends
with
41. Draw forth
43. Mark on the
skin
45. Sacred image
47. Cease
48. Relieve
49. Crafts
50. Study
51. Native metal
52. Grab
53. Part of a
curve
2
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k
43
e"
< $
to any medical doctor are suf-
fering from illnesses which are C. A. Dean, M.D.
tied up with mental or emotional disorders. Right
now there are as many patients in mental hos-
pitals as in all other hospitals combined. The cost
of all this to the taxpayer alone is over one billion
dollars a year.
All of this is not as hopeless as it might seem.
About 85 per cent of these unhappy people could
be cured if given proper treatment early enough.
We probably are not getting our money’s worth
but of what we spend, because our hospitals are
so overcrowded and understaffed that patients do
not get the best out of the available facilities. We
need about four times our present supply of trained
professional people to care for these patients.
The Mental Health Fund contributes to the im-
provement of conditions in mental hospitals, spon-
sors new mental health clinics, supports research,
and produces materials for mental health educa-
tion. Any contribution to this campaign is certain-
ly a contribution to building a better world in
which to live.
Have a pressing health problem? Dr. Dean will
try to help you in his daily column.
(Copyright 1953, General Features Corp.)
by contemporary American and European artists.
“Painters who have shown in New York are
becoming interested in showing in Washington,
and things are being offered to us constantly,”
Mrs.. Eichholtz said. The directors had a double
show by Fulbright scholarship artists Sam
Fischer, an American, whose work Mrs. Eichholtz
saw while in Italy, and Manlio Guberti, an Italian
on a travel grant in this country.
“We practically sold out Fischer and did very
well with Guberti,” Mrs. Rubin said “In Europe,
everybody goes to look at pictures. You are more
likely to find them browsing in an art gallery than
shopping during lunch hours. If more small, con-
venient galleries existed in this country, Ameri-
cans would be apt to do the same.”
The two young women hope that through gal-
leries like theirs the work of good young artists,
already recognized, can be made available to
American art lovers before it becomes so expen-
sive only the wealthy can afford it. One painting,
an abstract called “Lookscape,” I did “appreciate”
but—alas—could not afford. It was tagged $450.
I figured the artist had a street scene in mind
when he painted it.
TEMWLASH
NA V EaA 1 Tm
, Everybody
had a theory,
Mi
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an
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221
al
tician in the period after the
Civil war, changed parties five
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6
- , v - woe in a world of windows . . .
or ugly, except 30 stories in towering glass, still
for a 11 g h t or looking for a happy ending . . .
ture hioh in a and the
sun going down.
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Pretty soon, the guessing went, He had a hard time getting
there’d be an awful struggle for started because it was the Com-
power and maybe Russia would munists who interested him. But
fly apart, he knew he might understand the
$,
7,2
9524
A§0
By JANE EADS
<17 ASHINGTON—Capital! tes were somewhat du-
VV bious a year ago when two young matrons
Have A
LAUGH
By
BOYCE HOUSE
30 Years Ago . . .
(From the files of The Daily Register,
May 3, 1923.)
J. A. Corbitt arrived in Gainesville Wednesdav
from Fort Worth and has assumed his duties as a
member of the firm of the Tanner Furniture com-
pany. His family will arrive here next month to
make their home.
Virgil Keel has returned from Missouri where
he recently purchased a saddle mare for Mrs.
H. E. Wilson of Gainesville. The animal is named
Golden Mary and is said to be one of the finest
ever brought to this city.
Marriage licenses have been issued to Ottla Les-
ter and Miss Sadie Burkhart; Henry Brown and
Miss Elizabeth McDaniel; A. E. Streeter and Miss
Ruth Lundstrom; John Murphy and Mrs. Pearlie
Vance.
Dave Lowe of Valley View was here on business
Thursday morning.
D: B. Tate, Jr. of Whitesboro is in the city on
business today.
Rev. E. V. Cole went to Dallas on a business trip
this morning.
Misses Marie Hedges and Winifred Ramsey
went to Denton today to visit friends.
Mr. and Mrs. B. L. McKinley have moved to
their new home on West California street.
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Nislar returned yesterday
from a trip to Lubbock where they visited their
sons, Oscar and Joe.
Mrs. A. L. Ecoggins and son, A. L., Jr. of Mexia
are here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Sims.
Mrs. E. B. Lawrence has returned to Denison
after a visit with her sister, Mrs. Alex Canon and
family on South Grand avenue.
Miss Elizabeth Bell has returned to Marietta
after a visit with her brother, Ralph Bell and wife.
9
(82
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"Harvest"
VIENNA SAUSAGE
N n Second Avenue, all going one wav toward the
and had the night . . . like dying elephants
dreamlike feel- groaning through a cobblestone
ingof seeing the I came to a street corner . . .
death of the hu- and the light turned red. Over to
man race ’ ’ ‘ the left loomed a luminous United
)
" 32333 1
Me 3333: 1
FRENCH \
SELF 9 ea
TAUGHT 82 &
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19
8 or six times and always wound
8 up with a high office, which
a, caused Chauncey M. Depew, the
888 after-dinner speaker, to declare,
8
DAILSPECIRL
zmemmaasaazmmozaaanamasaamsmmsnnsss
TERAL
AR
MEWS
STrlO P P E R
ventured to open a modern gallery for contem-
porary art in the city’s exclusive gasggsggagagsgsgaasaseg
2. Seed covering 10. Be under
3. Fine fabric ,, , obligation
11. Footlike part
17. Easily *
broken
19. Attempts
21. Vase
23. Labor
24. American
Indian
25. Drove
26. Moves to
and fro
27. Dismounted
28. Active
30. Swimming
bird
33. Loafed
35. American
humorist
38. Stopped
Years in Military Service Can Be Creative
Time for Young Men of the United States
TNL LITTLE STOREa
ON TNE SQUARL
MH va pesas WAY add
They’ll Do It Every Time
zzzmuz--E=E
]
THEY FINALLY /MADE IT-
2
I A
8
who by their conduct show a sin- in radio and television, some
s * cere change of heart, or who risk of those who have worked hard-
H themselves by providing needed est for the success of this pro-
information, must not be regard- gram are still controversial per-
ed as Communists and must be sons because some lazy bureau-
permitted to work; crat in the advertising firms
on shaky
. -
1
337
333328
<■ I
thermore, if a man is in foreign service, he
has great opportunity to make friends and
study the country and its peoples.
One may create good will for America in
foreign lands and render a greater service
than one’s military function. One may build
personal friendships that will result in mu-
tual understanding and mutual appreciation,
and when one returns home after military
service, he can help his community to under-
stand and appreciate people of other lands.
There certainly is no lack of opportunities
for a man to improve himself in military
service if he will look for them and will not
take the position that his time in the military
is wasted months or years.
0---
THE SOLDIER VOTE
rhe state senate ha,s voted unanimously to
— submit to the voters of Texas an amend-
ment to the state consititution that would
permit Texas citizens who are members of
the regular armed services to vote in elec-
tions.
As it now stands, men in the regular
armed services are not permitted to vote in
elections, this prohibition dating back to the
early days of the state when it was consid-
ered possible that military coups might con-
trol state affairs.
But time has made a change in this situa-
tion that the ban is entirely outmoded and
undesirable.
There are no more patriotic citizens of
Texas than the men who have given their
lives to the military. Furthermore, they have
given much thought to the best interests of
their state, politically as well as in other P i I ■
ways. And their votes would be among the THESE DAYS Boyle s Column . . . by HAL BOYLE
most intelligent cast in any election. * w 1 w /________________________________ -
The serce man would be required to vote — » . N _ • « i A1 NEW YORK, May 4 — Some 5 cents.” The last refuge of the
in the county in which he entered the service ontroversla Fersons 10 the eWS days,nomatter whatstreet.cor nickel,
and he would be required to pay his poll tax , , , ... ner you come to, the traffic light
9c nr +her ci+;en Tbna Le’ti ente. By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY of outsiders was quickly accepted of the motion picture industry is always red.
as any —-ne., cntkn wouia enter In the radio and television in- by most of the companies. The were-used in any way. It had to
the polls on the same basis as his neighbors, dustries, a category of human program might be stated simply be an activity in which money
The citizens of Texas should approve this beings has been devised known as follows: did not pass hands and no special
...... “ ~ l. A person makes his own interests were served.
record. Only he can clarify it; it has been a success. There is
2. Those who can establish that not a Communist front operating
they are no longer Communists in Hollywood today that matters,
or pro-Communists, or sympathiz- There are many in New York
ers of Soviet Russia or engaged and the radio and television in-
in anti-American activities, and dustries are affected by them.
The little man really didn’t ex- Russian Communists better if he
pect that but it was the kind of knew something about the Rus-
thing he wanted to hear: He ate sians before the Communists,
it up. But it didn't happen. After all, the Communisits were
Now the little man is recon- Johnny come latelies in Russian
ciled to the idea that maybe it history-
won’t happen and that Russia But going back to the very be-
and the Communists may be ginning was painful and embar-
here for a long time, intact. rassing. He couldn’t pronounce
But it made him start thinking, some of the names of those early
He was paying higher taxes on Russian tribes which kept shift-
account of the Russians. He felt ng around.
it was about time he found out .After a while everything
something about these people Straightened out and instead of
who were costing him so much the Russians moving every which
money way, they seemed to be moving in
. a straight line at last: they had
He got a book on Russia. Every a government
night after supper he sat on the They really didn’t have any-
sofa, tilted the lampshade just (Continued on Page 7)
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guessing game, r; this was an hour she felt she was
wenmecasvaryone if 1
new mob in theB She knew if he wasn’t reading
Kremlin would ' gm s B out loud he might be changing
be at one anothf the TV program every five mm-
; d A
ad
W|YET>
SHA M P 0 01
m2
o
EWE GOTTA
STUDY UP ON
AP Newsfeatvres
I CHICAGO..
S"HERFRMEKZSPGHP,PRACTSAHEy
WHY JOES AMERICAN OASIS,OF COURSE! 3
09
By JAMES MARLOW right, and for at least an hour
IVASHINGTON, May 4 (P) - read some of the history out loud
nine Theelittlesma nwasabegin- so his wife could learn at the
11 lI I & L O LCCcI d 11 L LIC IIUl C d L ~d>—• ,
For a while there after Stalin’s same time.
death he had been excited. She was polite about it. She’d
That was the time of the erand rather see a TV program. But
Georgetown section. Today the
Obelisk Gallery of Art, though
small and intimate, is the mecca
not only of local art lovers but
of those from New York, Phila-
delphia, and Baltimore.
Financed by husbands of the
co-directors, Kathryn Eichholtz
and Janet Rubin, both private ii
collectors and former art stu -
dents, the gallery is now self- .
supporting. “If anything we’re
eNo.4 5 M
28%7NeWA" J
. ....
Gainesbille Hailu RRegisker
Founded August 30, 1890 by JOHN T. LEONARD
(Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939.)
Published by The Register Publishing Company, Inc., may appear in The Register will be cheerfully corrected
306 East California Street, Gainesville, Texas. Entered as upon being brought to the attention of the publisher,
second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas, Post Office Member of The Associated Press, which is entitled
under the Act of Congress. March 3, 1879. exclusively to the use of republication of all the local
Subscription prices': By carrier where carrier-boy news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP news
service is maintained, 25c weekly. In Cooke and adjoin- dispatches.
Ing counties by mail. 1 month, $1.00; 6 months $5.00; one The publishers are not responsible for copy omis-
year $9.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month $1.25; 6 months sions, typographical errors or any unintentional errors
$6.00; 1 year $11.00. that occur other than to correct in next issue after it
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing is brought to their attention. All advertising orders
or reputation of any person, firm or corporation which are accepted on this basis only.
\k
aMbd=* N
e"s pp . ’ •M
45 ■! "
$,5 : Ae
.*
nationwide fund-raising cam-
paign.
Cobblestone Jungle
.. . . 1 came to a street corner . . .
Rme ain stinking tacks umidied"By The
A l
9898 2 8
0/c
even more inspired than when “When the Pilgrims landed, Dix 2—Receive with meekness the engrafted word, which
we started,” Mrs. Rubin, chic -one E018 was standing on Plymouth Rock is able ............................................................................ St. James 1:21
little brunet wife of international lawyer Seymour and he threatened to join the 3—Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife, nor............Exodus 20:17
Rubin, told me. Indians if they didn’t make him 4—Why and how did God create woman? ................ Genesis 2:18, 22
“Our husbands are thrilled with us at success j. p.” 5—Drink water out of thine own ................................... Proverbs 5:15
of the gallery,” said Mrs. Eichholtz, wife of Robert 6—Who can understand his errors? Cleanse thou
Eichholtz, general counsel to Mutual Security Ad- a judge interrupted a lawyer me from secret....................................................................Psalms 19:12
ministrator Harold Stassen. who was arguing a case, “You 7—Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise
The gallery, formerly a private home, opened have already said that, though the dead, cast ,....................................................... St. Matthew 10:8
last October with “Italian Renaissance, 1952,” a you may have forgotten — it Six correct................excellent Four correct................ good
collection of oils by a group of Italian painters, was a long time ago.” - For wisdom, courage and peace read the Bible daily.
This was followed by a continuing series of shows — -— - - -------------------------------------------------------—----------—
0‘ ilan iace .... the left loomed a lun
Weverything.was Nations building . .
,noisy or shabby woe in a world of v
gj -36 or ugly, except 3n etoriec in +neviv
'o"l&nI
skyscrape
g-
Some facts are startling. One 3 l|
of every twelve children born i
(his year will have to go to a ( 8
mental hospital at some time in
his life. Approximately 250,000 ] g
people will go to mental hos-
pitals for the first time this year.
Sooner or later, the radio and would-be forger picked out the
television and the advertising in- worst possible name from a
dustries will have to accept the phone directory to sign to his
motion picture program, which is check. He used that of J. Mor-
the only one that has been effec- burn Hardy who has been wide-
tive. In the operation of this pro- ly publicized here as having dis-
gram, no lawyers, no fixers, no appeared last October,
public relations counsel, no offi- ------------------—------------
cials of the national associations Classified Ads Bring Results.
•MMWLuttw
5fNee- ' ' jd'hns'
ponz1 '■ . ■. //N
5585--., THOSE FLING (y/ \ '
8- H. INVESTIGATORS--
fe, 0=-TNGSERNGKr,
(l f ■ mf.
York City,” I alls lay with one arm around it,
ral boyle thought. “A few his face turned down, his sprawl-
---------------------------- ------- a tall spires in mire, and millions ing legs stretched out moveless
fuse to aid in anti-Communist ac- man’s career than to work on a of faces made out of fog.” on the sidewalk . . . Was he dead,
tivities have made their own anti- serious public problem. I came to a street corner ... or sick, or only drunk? ... In
American decisions and as their However, it is not believable and the light turned red. A cab this honeycomb of hurry few
choice is voluntary, they must that those who spend their money whizzed around the corner. The pause for a fallen bee.
accept the consequences which on advertising on radio and tele- driver leaned out and cursed a I came to a street corner . . .
flow from that decision; vision can afford the involve- pedestrian. and the light turned red. The
4. All this work must be done ments that this attitude will bring The sidewalk was lined with dirty windows in vacant tene-
without vindictiveness but rather upon them. It is not only a lazy second rate antique shops, full of ments had the film of dying eyes
ieg +CLf/11y before con^res- in the missionary spirit of win- attitude; it is unjust; it is a re- sad merchandise . . . Things peo- ... A frowsy middle aged wife
eunoi —mmi-eps men who lied ning Americans back to Ameri- jection of every decent American pie now dead once thought beauti- bawled out her husband in a
3—Be cognizant of what is around you 7 .L , oaces' arE all lumoed can life. principle of life, for it not only ful, things the people they left high, whining voice that neither
and new in world affairs together as controversial persons I cite the example of John rejects a person’s right to princi- them to sold as junk. A sign in a of them listened to . . . When
4 ".-4 ,,L,, ref Thfrp is no adeauate; evaluation Huston, who had organized the pies of life, but it denies him the window said: “Old comic books- (Continued on Page 7)
4--Qu t postponing the disagreeable. Get There is no adequate evaluation^ committee for the First Amend- opportunity to change his mind, -------------------------------------------------------
it behind you. noEPsee-neenmmoomion of ment which the Communists cap- to confess, to be contrite and to
5—Have close friends in whom to confide. PIo. eS, from the pmts A rule tured. Recently, Huston, in Italy, remedy his situation. It fails to
6—Appear happy, no matter what the cir- of thumb decision to keep con- Euhuuassghonagainsteemrlozing Marxism in significance of anti-
cumstances. trryersi alnpeoplepawaviromspon in that country which was heroic (Copyright, 1953, King Features
“ guide."' 0 ‘ 17717? se “ussme tn_____syndicate, in.
StaYatiyanEthrMarshaniPlan; Fore Worth Four
Even tho we could fool all the people all of. preventing Commu nistsrrom in Cannes, France, kicked up a HARTFORD. ConpU.P. a
the time we cannot deceive our own conscience, tsingtth Communist party has roworagainst, an insult to the golfer four hundred — dollars,
nor escape our own memory. Memory is eternal. I L 1. Ii ;P4ioane American flag. .. . . Frank T Calan0 wa
He that speaketh lies shall not escape—Pr. 19:5. been, handledwith intetligence Men like these, whatever their traerd t any that sum to 1
and has met with an outstanding past, are todav valiant in their orderd IO, Pay at Sum, ro a
degree of success. A program de- defense of their country And fellow golfer who was hit in
vised by a self-appointed group that is al that counts. Yet, Rob- theneck.byaball calano drove
--inson has been rejected by radio ulthouT warning.
and television as a controversial
person by some ignoramus who Plenty In A Name
refuses to get at the facts. OGDEN, Utah (U.P.)
amendment to the constitution when it is as “the controversial person.” By
presented to them for balloting, probably that is meant an actor, writer,
later this year, if it goes through the legisla- etcWh 0 h as
.five hurdles successfully. at some time in
___O—_____ his life taken a
ACCIDENT MINDED? Posit ionsona
gome people are accident-minded which Whic h'has at-
— m,I 11 lil — causes them to be more susceptible to in- tracted a 11 e n-
For Be-er —ean * • • dustrial accidents than other people, accord- t^-
______________________________________________ ing to Dr. Edward McFaul, psychologist of new. During
MENTAL HEALTH SITUATION • Buffalo, New York, most of the New "8
CRIES FOR IMPROVEMENT Dr. McFaul offers six suggestions for in- Deal many Re g
ByC.A.DEAN,M.D. ,, dustrial workers to help them reduce the pubicanser.e E _
IVI in recent years, the mental health situation rate of accidents in which they may become troversial p er -
in this country isn’t good enough, involved. sons. Even John T. Flynn, Fulton
The week of May 3-9 is being observed as Mental Here are the suggestions for “good mental Lewis, Jr., and I were rejected
Health Week. This is the first egg, , health” and avoidance of accidents' as controversial persons at one
"5-*-ed--1 dnd dv-aA--e ur decuenu5* time or another. Now, Commu-
- 1—Good physical health. nist, a n t i-Communist, friendly
8808888809 j 2—Stop trying to keep up with the witnesses who at great risk testi-
Joneses; have other interests, fied truthfully before congres.
e nd you
-----
o
)
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 212, Ed. 1 Monday, May 4, 1953, newspaper, May 4, 1953; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1572171/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.