Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 114, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 9, 1954 Page: 2 of 8
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CONTRARY
BARTON SAYS:
BRUCE
IDEOLOGIES
1
t
I
I
the next five to six months in this ci y re-
ment
man-
of
H
ng is
b
t off their backs
-
The crews of workmen must visit
every
business establishment and every home in
L 5
I
Ei-
President
be applauded •
JAceahu
i
For Better Health ..
GEORGE E.
of
F
Chamber of Commerce presidents.
execu-
More liberal tax treatment of
at present. It would be like the
m-- •
managed opera- h j
of
chronic.
RUDOLF BMC
season from 30
such a
The Word of God . .
-
mighty motor car indust
possible
do believe.
LAUGH
something about
built
they
117 ASHINGTON—One of the busiest and most
” responsible hostesses in the capital is Mrs.
1T
L121
but a fellow
BOYLE
has
iresiden
S;
, assistant
Claude
ini view’.
it
on a business trip.
went to Hope. Ai k., today
2
6
ILSPECIRL
<3
€
Monday, Jamuary 11 Hi
l
4
i
F
i PINTO BEANS
a barber-
i
hot work at
world.”
SAVE at Mitchell's! look!
2—GairmvilU (Texas) Daily Register
MEETNG?
4
29
ted
#}7
of the
which
■
1*
to
- 4
)
IIHIH
©
1
14
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2857
rotrude from the car window he may
such an accident as has caused so
Interna- 2
Festival “
it. He
them.
er were
‘s sister
.1
true
were
/TECHAR
RECOGNZES
MISTER -
CRILDY-,,
nual
is in
hone
S N THE AUDITORIUM-*
7, ANDI GOT THE MAYOR "K
TO OKAY USING THE CAFETERIA
TOO--AND UNCLE PHILO AND
r----
Sat. Jan. 9, 1954
dat gate open de next • time
come by."
4
diplomat. or seeing to it that Kings and Queens
sleep well and prime ministers get to appoint-
ments on time.
f
OUR HORSECHESTER ROPS Y
TEAM IS USING THE YM \
L ALL WEEK-WHERE'S YOUR }
Dora Ritcherson and C. A. Fai
married at the home of the bi
New Payroll for G
50 to 60 Men to
4
asuaxt
I
i
If
i gi
I •
1*5 •-E3-V-3•
When history-making figures from foreign
tions all over the world are
i
l
burgh
tional
manager of the
Met in 1950. he
cut the number
elected president; W. O Davis and J. M
vice presidents: J. W. Gladney, cashier;
Thomason and J. W. Schad, assistants.
National reelected S. M. King, president;
X
Potter and O. E. Powers, vice
mond P. King, cashier; A. Lee
_
or household affairs with the passing of the
years. And Gainesville will soon have the
most modern available service and equip-
ment.
exclusively to the use of repub
news printed in this newspaper,
2‘Shejpubushers are not rasp
U em
can always get a lot of votes by without public subsidy. AU they
telling the people that their trou- ask of their government is to
bles are not their own fault.” please get off their backs.
That was the theme song of the (Copyright, 1954, King Features
New Deal and the Fair Deal. Syndicate, Inc.)
995555
g"h".
Washington Letter...
By JANE EADS
arm pi
avoid
only small plas-
tic models of
and wage controls, promises of depreciation would allow busi-
tax reforms, cuts in govern- nesses in general to write off
for tax purposes the cost of
new plants at a faster rate than
was re-
Potter.
Ben R.
Lindsay
Roy T.
F,
when
ATNt LTTLL STOREa
? M lit SQUAR{ 3
Mhz, SOT • eneaowar dd
N
50
8888882 J
Our pedge ♦» yeu: Consistently
low priest ALWAYS I TRY US!
ALKTMAUD ARE GOING to
LSLEEP IN THE INFIRMARY-
ing on programs to better the physical and usnd on
mental health of workers. Modern industry themouth or the tongue, to the
has learned that human assets, even though delight of my enemies. Also, if
they don’t show up in financial statements, you drink too much, you could,
are invaluable. become an alcoholic but if you
don t drink any. aleohol at all.
you will get hardening of the
(3. *r
22
THEl
—
g4
of operas in a
TsubLow CRLY, SPOKESMANL
AND MIS ANT-VRYTHNNG
GROUP WERE FLATLY .
AGAINST BUILDING A
NEW HIGH SCHOOL- J
teqistered U.S. Patent Omie
m---asma
5
man’s adminis- a
tration."
after one year _
of what has7
been widelyii
tagged as a I
b u s i n ess-3
-igl 1
"Woe UNTO THEM THAT CALL EVIL GOOD,
AND GOOD EVIL! __ /4.5.20
__________i_______|--—
THESE DAYS
70
21
).ANE
**pod
. W. Jordan of Chickasha, Okla., is hi re visit-
: his brother, W. R. Jordan.
many persons to lose their left arms.
--------o--------
COMMUNITIES IN ACTION
ANOTHER COMMUNITY Action confer-
-- ence sponsored by the East Texas Cham-
ber of Commerce will be held in the neighbor-
ing city of Sherman next Friday, and local
business men have been invited to be present
B^muny Hado
placing local manual telephone equi
with dial system equipment.
The diai system will replace the m
Method of conducting telephone ca
Gainesville as soon as the new tele
They’ll Do Every Time
- ...... i™
Millions repeat this creed every Sunday, but
our lives show whether we rea ly do believe.
I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker
of heaven and earth.—Apostles’Creed._______
Drama. Ap- !
pointed general j
pondering how
to begin
K2
- -
arteries. Also if you
---
guests at the country’s most ex-
clusive boarding house, every-
thing is done to make them com-
fortable. Mrs. Geaney. a pleas-
ant. solidly-built woman with
quizzical hazel eyes and calm
manner, has been making things
tick (including the grandfather
clock > at Blair House for more
than a quarter-century.
This sometimes involves a 16
tic groups in 4
Europe. includ- ’ I
ing the Edin- A
sen how-
er. in listing
what his ad-
ministration has
done and what
only.
ness slump will
by many.
to make autos
out of plastic, ,
* .213
But the school
WAS BUILT OVER
THEIR OBJECTIONS-
SOWHOSES rr
EVEN MORE THAN
THE STUDENTS?
DON’T ASK I!
• By N
BOYCE HOUSE 7
shouted, ----- -r . -
idle conversation. woman;
• 1
aa
i
■ Eli
People Pay for Mistakes
in the New York subway, I “You aren't responsible. Wall
overheard the man in charge of Street is responsible for your
the change booth arguing with troubles.” “The Wicked Interests
an angry woman. She had left have done you in." “The banks
her train, gone out through the are your enemies.” “Vote for us
turnstiles, and then discovered cast y our burdens on Uncle Sam;
that she was at the wrong sta- he will take the money away
tion. She demanded to be allowed from the rich and save you from
to go back onto the platform. worry and work.”
The company employe was po We are now reaching the pay-
lite but firm. “There's no way off on this philosophy. We have
• to get back on the platform with- had our free meal and the waiter
out going through the turnstiles,'’ is bringing the check. Even the
he explained. “I have no key to most stalwart “liberals” are be-
the gates. You’ll just have to put ginning to be afraid of the size
up another 15 cents.” of the public debt.
She was unconvinced “But I A successful man once said to
didn’t mean to get off here.” she me: “I never hire a man without
protested. "I made a mistake." asking him, ‘Have you saved any
“Lady,” he said gently’. “that’s money?’ If he says, ‘No, I pass
life. People have to pay for their him up. He may have many good
mistakes. Everybody has to pay. excuses, but I still am not in-
There just isn’t any other way.” teres ted. If he hasn’t been able
I felt like lifting my hat. Here to manage his own life so as to
was the Voice of ‘ Experience. show a profit, how can I believe
Here was an echo of America’s that he will make a profit for
past. when every American glor- me?”
ied in his ability to “stand on his The great majority of Amer-
own feet and to make his own ca's young people will show a
way.” profit on their lives it given a
Calvin Coolidge, an old fash- chance. They are willing to shoul-
ioned American, said to me once der their own mistakes. They
in his sharp nasal drawl: “You want to make their own success
( ANESVILLE WILL HAVE a
M roll beginning next week.
Between 50 and 60 men will comprise the
, crews of Western Electric, which will spend
Mrs. Emma Cassady went to Green’ille this
morning to spend several days.
W. L. King went to Berwyn, Okla.. this morning
on a business mission.
pregnancies are impossible. Careful supervision
by the physician can successfully carry
will be cheerfully
attention of the 1
Gainesville having telephone equipmi nt to
change the machinery to dial sets. Since
, . Sam ran past his house about
Victoria Geaney. who presides over Blair House, two jumps ahead of a man who
the government’s official guest residence for vis- had a razor in his hand. Sam’s ----. .
iting big-shots. wife yelled, "WTherefore is you somewhere, doesn’t he? And to- the models.
When history-making figures from foreign na- runnin’. Sam?” Sam made no day, a tycoon of the toy
reply but: disappeared around try at 36, Glaser turns oul
the corner. When he came back cars than General Motors ---
. she again asked, the second Henry Ford put to- But the truth is we thought
“Wherefore is yourunnin’?" He gether — and he’s stepping up we had only a, one - year toy
ehented, “Don’t Stand dar in production for 1954.
have “I look for it to be a
30 Years Ago . . .
(From the files of The Daily Register, Jan 9.1924»
I year than. 1953,” said
who pyramided a $750
ment into a $5,000,000 ------
A colored man was telling a business in only 12 years. t
friend about the now preacher. Here’s how Lew. a Brooklyn- satisfy a big need in people to-
“He preached for two hours.” born boy who took Horace
The other asked, ‘What was I:; Y -----*
his subject?” QHe never did was still in rompers, did
say” was the reply.___________ “7
to dial operations.
Construction of the telephone build _
some two weeks behind schedule due o the
change the machinery to dial sets.
there are now 5,000 telephones connected
Officers of the local banks were elected Tues-
iy. At First National bank D. T. Lacy
morning on a business
Mrs. Louis Bringman
to spend several days with her son. Jack Bring-
--——o------
ONE-ARMED RACE
‘HE AMERICAN people may become- a
- race of one-armed people, all with missing
left arms.
News dispatches from over the country
tell of men in Muskogee, Okla.; Mount Ver-
non, Mo.; Walker, Ran.; Leavenworth, Kan.;
Branson, Mo., and Nevada, Mo., and a girl
in Knoxville, Tenn., losing their left arms,
all in similar accidents.
In every case, the victim of the accident
had his left 'arm resting on the opened left
window of his car, or with the elbow pro-
truding from the car. And in each case, the
vehicle struck an object outside the car or
was sideswiped by another motor vehicle.
In each of these cases, the-accident victim
would not have been injured if his or her arm
had not been resting on the driver’s window,
for-in each case the victim was not otherwise
hurt.
Most motorists are guilty of the practice
of resting an arm on the window on the left
side of a motor vehicle at some time* or an-
other. Some do it regularly, spme only occa-
sionally.
But if a motorist remembers not to let his
and since pregnancy is the greatest test 1D which
we can put the kidneys, the toxic state s likely
to recur with succeeding pregnancies.. 1 n most
cases, the condition, is apt to become incr easingly
worse.
This does not mean, however, that ai ditional
rains which fell while excavation was under
way. /
But the job is expected to be completed
late in the summer and equipment in tailed
for the switch-over.
Prairie for the past four years.
Ana since he is experienced in dial opera-
tions, he is particularly well qualified t) take
over the management of the local exc hange
at the time of the transition from manual
hearten most businessmen. His
k7 promise that continued cuts in
A spending will move the budget
mi closer' to balance will please
■ them.
19 His plan to adjust taxes so as
A to stimulate consumer and busi
P ness spending in case of a bust
Have A i
l ll ■
Currently Mrs. Geaney is getting Blair House
polished up and the larders laden for the visof
Turkey’s President Celal Bayar. scheduled to ar-
rive in Washington Jan. 27. As per custom, he will
spend the first night at the White House, then
move to Mrs. Geaney’s for the, rest of his three-
day official state visit here.
“It’s no job, but a joy,” says Mrs. Geaney of
her responsibilities, though she has not had a
vacation since 1949 and had to give up her fa-
vorite hobby—fishing in the Chesapeake. Even
on holidays Mrs. Geaney, who now lives at Blair
House, has to keep on her toes. “There’s always
something to do. even if it‛s only seeing to it that
the flag is out and in again," she told me.
Mrs. Geaney has had an Irish cook. Jane. for
years; two maids and a houseman, James. When
she gets a program of a guest’s scheduled activ-
ities from the State department, she knows how
to plan and talks over menus with Jane. who she
says is “darned good, and her pies are out of this
street.
J. S. Griffin left last night for New Mexico on
a business trip.
Bert Davis is recovering from the effe ts of an
operation performed last week at the sanitarium.
Tom Lynch is recovering from a rece it opera
forth Commerce street.
rah Mahan_ahas returned to Denton to
Music and L
<
occur in another pregnancy ?” .
Mrs. C. V 7.
iainesville! Crew of J A
Work Here for Six Months
new pay- dial any number in hia or her local exchange.
Already the dial service has been cut in over
the country between cities.
Telephone service has become more and
more necessary to the conduct of business
building on East Broadway is complet ed.
The Gainesville exchange has a new
ager in Pete Brazile, who has been in c large
of the Southwestern Bell office at Grand
with the local exchange that in itself is a
big task.
When it is completed and the dial s ystem
in effect, Gainesville citizens are go ng to
have more prompt and satisfactory service
than ever before.
And Gainesville has reached the stage of
her development where such telephony serv-
ice is not only needed, but should be ex ected
of the telephone company.
Before many years pass, the telephone
subscriber may dial any number in the Unit-
ed States, justas a dial subscriber may now
(A) Most toxic conditions of pregnancy.
not caused by acute infectious diseases, are due
to kidney disease or high Mood pressur. Since
the majority of such kidney diseases are
New officers were elected by Gainesvi le chap-
ter. Order of DeMolay, are William T. Johnson,
master councilor; Charles R. Johnson, Ji , senior
councilor: William B. Kinne. Jr., junior councilor;
Morris McElrath, scribe; and Earl Bell., ti easurer.
ier. First State elected J. W. Down 4 rd. resi-
; J. F. Morris, vice 'president, and
S, cashier.
ort North Commerce street Monday afternoon.
Rev. R. E. Joiner of First Presbyterian church
officiating. Mr. Faulkner is proprietor of a ..lc
Business Mirror. , . by SAM DAWSON
H82
to 18-hour day and a share of
headaches, but Mrs. Geaney en-
joys planning breakfast for an Jane Eads
Arabian prince or a reception for a European
O. G. Dietz is the new storekeeper for I he State ,
Training School for Girls, east of the i ity. He
comes from the State School for the Blind, where
he held a similar post, and succeeds Mrs. 1 Aargaret
Wekins. A
Clarence Irvin went to Wynnewood. Okla., this
ition of all the local
i well as all AP news
It is
Si _____________________________
Office Member of The Associated Press
NEW YORK, Jan. 9 (P) — The Eisenhower state of the
Businessmen can tally today union message, however, eon-
their gains and disappointments tains many things that will
i
it would like g
coming i e th Sam Dawson vance. ’
offers a scoreboard. Let’s look The president s suggestion for
at it, from the business point a tax change to help businesses
of view only, wanting to expand or modernize
—„ w.-uuaG penivrzs•,Tr you eat w men »“»« ten., o, wont “Pofnt““”
tovgheonmrtingee chairmen other leaders z2meB2"0the,t9dd Srownt hav atather complexi "2 ASung pie
The meeting will be an example of com- much sugar and . rn---------------------- - - Te Rmownie onnased nears he •
munities in action in that a panel of experts sgrtchtVU |
on community affairs will be on hand with a betes. if you,
moderator, to answer questions from the smoke ciga-
floor. , r e 11 e s, you
Such meetings are most commendable as msot the lungs-
they give business men excellent ideas on if you go to a
how to solve community problems and how psychoanalyst,
to take the lead in worthwhile community you might dis-
projects. Gainesville citizens should be Sy‘er that nYou
pleased that this city is being asked to be wife, if you —---
represented at the conference. * read a 11 t ne Geo. Sokolsky
tax plan used to stimulate
building in defense industries.
patieni through an additional pregnancy.
Readers’ letters are welcomed by this no ed med-
ical authority. He will answer as many as
in his daily column.
(Copyright 1954. General Features Corp.)
old style cars.
2
a B I
Twelve counties of north and north cen- What Should One Do About It All?
tral Texas have been invited to send their - ---- - "OKoLky much milk, xou
CM TE NEW HGH SCHOOL-DD OuB
FOREFATERS NEED A LOT OF J
Pe, FANCY GYMNASIUMS, ± ]
AUDnORtUMS.ETC? —g I
toha
e
.A.
-)\
4 -.c
Mrs. T. L. Berry of El Paso, Texas, i visiting
her mother, Mrs. E. B. Allen, on Nortl Denton
young Lew |
Glaser did a
Gainesbille Haily Register
Founded ugust ®- 1890 by JOHN T. LEONARD
- ,„ovk
/
■ {
Some may find the bogey of
a business slump reduced by
his proposal to have public
works plans laid well in ad-
; I
1 til
' I
I I
■I ...........
ex, H
WWr
ovurag at JI a you put germs .
into milk and turn it into yo- Is Brownie opposed to pears be reforms c"ts -in povern.
ghurt, your arteries will stay cause her father scowled at her ment spending and the “sympa-
soft but you will get fat. ‛ when she was young or is it the thetic ear” for business prob-
You can take any choice you subconscious that makes her pre- lems.
S ma= am s m Todays Birthday
but if you believe in the “good physicians are doing to prolong dudrs 4 L, stOr If ,054 it
neighbor policy,” you will sacri- my life.1 But if they take every- there was at the start J of BING, born Jan. 9.
fice yourself by keeping Brazil thing away that gives enjoyment, 19-3 1902, impresario of the Metro-
and Colombia and Haiti affluent, what is the value of the pro- , , politan opera in New York City.
-— ----- ----- Do you remember the old ad- longation? If a fellow cannot eat .And some businessmen, who An Austrian, he
----------O--------+- health advertisements, you are age, "an apple a day keeps the apple pie with a thick chunk of at first had hoped for a red uc-
HUMAN ASSETS foul with odors and need green doctor away”? I am sure that cheddar cheese on it; if he can- tion . in the federal debt, are
•TNNI IE v MAC A HIAN :,+.04 . toothpaste to make you pure, and Dave Beck, the labor leader, in- not cover a steak with, onions worried because its ceiling may
INDUoTKY HAS A HLMAN interest and if you read “The Readers Di- vented that slogan to encourage sauted in butter; if he must nev- have to he raised instead.
an economic stake in employe health and gest," you will discover some the eating of delicious apples so er eat ice cream—w’ell, you know Some businessmen with strong
is finding it good business to do something new drug and some new ailment, that truckmen who belong to his the answer to the charge- of conservative leanings may splut-
constructive about it,” said vice president Now. I am a cigar smoker and union would have work carting obesity. Shakespeare said it ter a little at the continuation
James H Pinkin of the Texas Comn-ny re- I also smoke a pipe; therefore apples. Nobody has yet come to about Cassius, who had a lean of public housing programs.
James n. npxin 01 -ne —as company re 4 , the rescue of the pear, which and hungry look—probably from Many business firms will op-
cently. : I haxe been told that; if the pipe must have some’beneficial value, ulcers—and hated the world. pose the president’s plea that
More and more enterprises are concentrat- or the cigar holder always is or harmful, depending upon what I have never liked cigarettes, scheduled tax reductions for
- - ■ - ’ - - - “Hi cr. the same side of the pears do to mice.. My dog, They look silly to me. A full- corporations be held up
mouth, it will give me cancer of Brownie, will eat a-grape but not grown man, if he wantsto Manufacturers who think high
j ' “ | I • excise taxes on their products
D1.I_AI. are depressing sales will fight to 18 and divided the sUbscrip-
DOV 6 S UOlurnn • • • bv HAL BOYLE the proposed retention of these tion season into halves. He also
- taxes on such things as gaso- reauditioned all singers, includ
[ . . , J line, autos, liquor and tobacco, ing stars
., NEWYORK, Jan. 9 (A) — Los Angeles when the war came Some business quarters have —----------------4-----
drink too While the rest of America’s on, and I decided I’d better get criticized foreign aid expendi- Lo .
'-try was into a different field. But what? tures as “a give-away program.” Yield Siens Are
I picked plastics because nobody----------------- "*5 ““"-5 5"
STU myognoranbewboua"t smoke, should put a hefty.cigar Proven Worthy
bltoqmucho ahandicapgn opinion and I have said mine. CHICAGO (UP signs
turminge -tass“igiaveg4n But now that all the advertising may replace the traditional
neersns a series of nut 4znP10- agencies are accusing each other “Stop" signs in some communi-
gether asere kits Putthemio of selling cigarettes that kill, it ties, according to the American
ormrrroensfldriesnthandsbrlght means tatl ngenuity, has. depar Municipal association
adults to assemble and naint ed from the huckster s art. Heis The association said Logan,
models of famous old American onthe defensive,, Actualyheis Utah, has tested the new traffic
cars. They were an instant hit. ssaringthepeopleintofiar.an signs for two years and found
Customers began to demand pipe smoking./Exceptsor.thgs them an improvement.
more and more kits so they whouare r ea red to,be ie likely The signs say “Yield the Right
could assemble a collection of smoking.ia.iinusoks AreAm of Wax-." They are placed at in-
to.smoke something-.nshina tersections where the flow of
indus- “It was a jackpot idea, and I’d when the.cigarett as.in to car in one direction is not heavy
more like to be able to say we real- duced, twasanatofvirtut enough
and teed it," raelu^-admitted Glaser porr pums smncestor Vltei w arantordering,al st P.
. job and is probably the saviour ..-nsapproachingaiixeidu gn
* when w, started - ' of millions of minds. But accord theydriveremustsslowsdonnbut
better “It took usflittle time to un- ine to,the advertising agencins. mherePare no other cars cressing
laser; derstand what we had an inex- most of these PeoP lewil nowdie the intersection.
invest- pensive way for people to build oficancer.of the,iung..bec use At one Logan crossing, there
annua! something with their hands they they.are. notsmoking, t he, ght bad been 10 accidents daring the
“ could be proud of. If seems to cigaretteithat,is, not t he one year prior to installation of the
E • ' * ’ ■ with the evil taken out of it. The Lyi . r» Sin since The chanoc.
Gree- day. ' whole thingsounds a bit mete- over there have been only two
ley’s edice to 80 west he thethe omanboy "Kd aS ’ Ysonc mefntellow.who arfctansosassdhat
"I had a radio repair sore in bled on it We dj."___________ Smbkempprrank, ate and Susseq. theufeyd"stgnsarenotgnored
1 Why don’t the scientists research M btoP frequently are.
him? Maybe his secret is that
he never worried about it and Mine more than 2,100 years old
therefore survived was taken from an ancient wreck
(Copyright. 1953. King Features in the Mediterranean sea by a
Syndicate, Inc.) 1953 archaeological expedition.
It*
1131
NOT EATING BREAKFAST .
DECREASES WORK OUTPUT
By C. A. DEAN, M. D.
N EDITORIAL: The importance of brea kfast is
ill often underestimated by our calorie-co nscious
generation. The body needs nourishment al ter hav-
ing completed an eight or 10 hour fasting period.
Research on a group of college students proved
this. They were studied relative mumesemem
to maximum work output mental I dadh 1
alertness, and muscular fatigue gTa6
during the hour before noon. The 5ir T
students were allowed three Fm7. ’
kinds of breakfasts, varying from | 24
an unsweetened cup of coffee to 16
an 800-calorie meal The omis- 51" .
sion of breakfast resulted in de- ,a
creased work output. A cup of
offee was found to be better than 63228
nothing in preventing fatigue. Em 2028
and efficiency increased in pro- 428
portion to calorie intake.
(Q) “I became toxic during C. A. De in. M.D.
the latter part of my pregnancy and h ad to
have four transfusions, Will this condition
Ji 1-9
#
ppL
0
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 114, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 9, 1954, newspaper, January 9, 1954; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579693/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.