Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 91, Ed. 1 Monday, December 13, 1954 Page: 4 of 8
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Insult to U.N.
THE WORLD TODAY
Soldier Turned Communist
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iments.
Much fundamental research is done by
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We sat in the blackness, tense
have for centuries, and as they
always will.
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(Coyrtght, 1954. Kina Fentures Syndicete. Inc.)
THESE DAYS
Universalist Is Rare in These Days
By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY
proficiency in the use of a par- richest gift to man. When a uni-
ticular tool.
For Better Health . .
The interview was not just a tale of cops and
other by Father
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fiber of employes.
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novelty
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spondent killed in a blackout acci-
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one achieve
The Word of God ..
ige. training.
as he spoke was that Notre Dame
30 Years Ago ..
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Have A
LAUGH
method of discovering items in a
Time
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Mon., Dec. 13, 1954
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losses of merchandise are traceable to ad-
ministrative weaknesses, which expose nor-
mally honest persons to undue pressures and
temptations. The result is economic loss to
the retailer and a weakening of the moral
eistic, materialist concepts so cur-
rent throughout the world that
science is the be-all and end-all of
human effort, that man can sur-
WASHINGTON (UP) — Great
technical advances have appeared
mechanical wear the annual num-
ber of replacements of these ties
has been reduced nearly threefold
since 1927- from 87,000,000 to less
than 30.000,000 last year.
V
I
THREE NGHTS!
o
LOOKED LIKE A
FLOPEROO,THE
COMMITTEE
APPLIED THE
PRESSURE
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a reporter from a retail trade publication, sor, Gilbert Highet of Columbia
— ‘ - - university: t h e muum
“5i.o52 •
! count,
zenasageurpstesmaanez
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s
NEW YORK, Dec. 13 .(A) — T ally we must wait and see about
civiliza- wish Ernie Pyle were alive to that.
write this story. Among the performers who are
It is about the dedication today contributing their art and time
of the Memorial Press Center are Bob Hope, Sid Caesar, Martha
THE COOLIE CLUB DINNER-
YoULL JUST HAVE TO KNOCK
OUTA WALL To ENLARGE >
THE BALLROOM-
1
dent of Notre
Dame.
The Highet
speech was de-
livered to a fa-
moral consciousness. Science is.
after all, a tool, a technique, a
MAKING IT EASIER TO BE HONEST
DID YOU EVER WALK through a depart-
• ment store or five-and-dime and wonder
how it was humanly possible to keep track
of the handling and sale of such mountains
of merchandise? Obviously it’s possible, but
it isn’t easy. Protecting the stock of a large
retail establishment from shop lifters and
“fifth-columnists” working within the ranks
of management and personnel, is a man-
sized job.
EDITORIALS
Many Industrial Concerns Give Money
For Fundamental Research in Schools
MORE RESERVATIONS//
1 WELL WAVE. TO RUN IT/
States, Italy, France, En
Holland and Sweden.
Raye and John Daly.
As of this writing a great sol-
dier under whom a number of the
now-dead newsmen served will
take part in the program. He is
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower. Presi-
dent of the United S:ates.
The Memorial Press Center—at
35 E. 39th St.—is the culmination
of a dream of a group of 20 vet-
eran foreign correspondents who
formed the Overseas Press club
in 1939 under founder president
Wythe Williams. The club, now
headed by Bob Considine, has
more than 1,000 members.
Rufus Dudley and son. ________
here visiting the former’s brother. Dock Dudley,
chief of police.
able return in a reasonable length of time.
The shorter-range objectives usually are
given precendence. So, to quote him again,
"Experience has shown that industrial lab-
oratories are not the environment best suit-
ed to produce results in fundamental re-
search.”
As a consequence, a number of compa-
nies, both within and without the chemical
industry (which budgets some $300,000,000
a year for research) are making substantial
contributions to college, university and other
laboratories removed from the commercial
world. The only restriction is that the funds
be used for fundamental research alone.
In Mr. Foster’s view, “The problem is
here now, but the solution is a long way off.
More support, both moral and financial, is
needed, and American industry has the great-
est reason to provide it” It is clearly a prob-
lem that affects not only our prospects for
future material advancement, but our secur-
ity and survival as a free nation.
■
one of these firms, Norman Jaspan of Inves- speecnesewh i chtimpressed me
{
2
and skill in addition to giving
pleasure. Developing a hobby
or learning to get the most out C. A. Dean, MA),
of one’s leisure will help put old age further away.
An old proverb says, "Enjoy yourself: it’s later
than you think.”
vase treasury of data that science
discloses: how is it all to be re-
"aac8
4*588
blegg3f
Seeking Solace in Music
By DON WHITEHEAD You knew they were combat men
For James Marlow by their young-old faces. They
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (P)— stacked their carbines and went
Behind the Bamboo curtain of to the bandstand and the Bel:
* ins handed them the musical
THE DECEMBER DNNER-WE HAVENT J
GOTTEN YOuR RESERVATION YET rd
AND SINCE THIS IS OF
.UTMOST IMPORTANCE- JaT 9 8
WE K ANAUAL T98IS4YNESRERTF
for me. In my
day, at the Geo. Sokolsky
TNI LITNE $TORE)
NN TNC SQVARL 1
hh see • enesowav s
complicated cosmos. The ques-
tion is, what does one do with the
Hobbies may help
experience, knowiedg
(Q) “Do you recommend plastic surgery
for a large nose? Can the operation be done
without leaving a scar?”—J. M.
*ncXKTW
TWANT
versity gears its courses to a
It is obvious that, in these chaotic and
"t moving times, any nation which fails
• keep up with the march of research—both
ndamental and applied—is inviting trou-
ble. And, according to an article contrib-
uted to the Journal of Commerce by William
C. Foster, president of the Manufacturing
Chemists’ Association, we are lagging behind
in fundamental research—“both in compar-
ison with our needs and with advances in
other countries, particularly Soviet Russia.”
He points out, incidentally, that it is diffi-
cult to narrowly define the term fundamen-
tal research, and for the purposes of his dis-
cussion he regards it as any research which
produces new fundamental knowledge. Al-
so, he does not think that the scientist en-
ed by T
Salifornia
a mall a
Act of C
files of The Daily Register, Dec. 13, 1924)
1. Robert, of Paris are
THENTy A
COULDN'T /,
TURN IT / W
away his cameras an<
bee-line for Leicester.
1 corrected
iisher,
ntitled ex-
ther-son dinner
at Columbia
which was in it-
♦ 4
By
BOYCE HOUSE
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Tuesdey- 14
Pure
Black Pepper
Save at Mitchelrs! LOOK!
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If
will be chaerfully
gaged in fundamental research should he re- Larger retail concerns often employ
garded as superior to one engaged in appli- . firms of trained specialists. The head of
-egqam
Tep *
Red China today there is an
American boy who can’t forget
id those
always will. and afraid. waiting for H-hour.
Even in war, they found com- And then came the thin notes of
fort in music ... a harmonica, rising and falling
In North Africa, soldiers gath- with the bittersweet melody,
ered around their radios at night "Night and Day.”
and searched the wavelengths un- Somewhere in the darkness a
til they found the music they youth was voicing all the loneli-
wanted. Always it was music. ness. yearning and hope that was ,
Perhaps it was a French song or inside him. The music made you
an American dance band or their think of those you loved and of
favorite. “Lili Marlene,” The Ger- what you would return to some
man ballad. • day when this thing was ended.
Across Italy and France and It seemed as if hundreds of
Germany the soldiers paused to men were holding their breath so
play the pianos in the battered they wouldn’t miss a single note
houses. Sometimes the notes of the music that came out of
self a
tors claim most of it—starts in childhood. To gannot be as long as God is. I
prevent some of the trouble and to help parents like the word. universalist. as ap-
select proper shoes for their children, the Chil- plied to the scholar whose ‘ *
dren’s bureau has put out a new pamphlet en- is big enough to try to el
titled “Your Children’s Feet and Footwear." pass the whole of human Hnow-
Miss Clara Arrington, physical therapist for edge.and experience, and whose
the bureau. wrote the pamphlet after conducting SPirit 1S so rich that it can in-
WISE USE OF LEISURE IMPORTANT
TO HEALTH
By C. A. DEAN. M. D.
A EDITORIAL: Our leisure time comprises ap-
JDL proximately one-third of our lives. Do you
toe yours wisely?
How leisure time is spent is important both to
physical well being and to mental health. Well
used leisure can act as a tonic to the system. Ev
eryone has definite physical social, and emotional
needs which must be filled in
some manner. Leisure time of-
ers an opportunity to take care
of all these needs.
Leisure-time activities do not
have any real practical value to
be beneficial. The important
thing is that the time be used
to do something—not just to lie
idle.
Gainesbille Qail Regisker
Foundea August ». i®o JOHN T. _
“ lle Signal, February,
ie.. may appear in
aa upon 65
The December issue of Fortune offers a
graphic example of this. The newest addi-
tion to the arts and techniques of mass com-
munication is television. The first experi-
mental U. S. broadcasts were made only
about a quarter-century ago and the first
regular broadcasts didn’t start until 1939.
Progress in both broadcasting and receiving
equipment has been astonishing. But, as
Fortune points out, television never had an
> inventor. It was, instead, a development,
and is the result of a century and a half of
experimentation and research, “much of it
conducted by inspired dreamers who had no
way of knowing where their work was lead-
ing.” Scientists from a long list of nations
made essential contributions — the United
Boyle's Column ... HAL BOYLE
If there were not a constant effort to
control unnecessary losses in those moun-
tains of goods you see on store shelves, re-
tail prices would soon be seriously affected
to the detriment of all consumers. Investi-
gating stock shortages in the nation’s re-
tail stores is a profession that is unknown
to all but a few persons, yet it affects the
pocketbooks of all of us.
Teachers have told her that when they spot
a child lagging in play or preferring to stay at his
desk during recess, one of the first things they
check is his shoes. However, if a mother finds
her small baby pulling off his shoes and socks,
it doesn’t necessarily mean that his feet hurt.
Most likely he is simply exploring, she says.
Close attention should be given to the first
shoes a child wears because a poor shoe can mold
and shape a young child’s foot out of its correct
growth. Miss Arrington says it should have a
soft leather top, a leather sole about one-eighth
of an inch thick and no heel. The leather sole
ought to be tough enough for protection but flex-
ible enough to bend easily so the child can make
natural use of his foot. She advises mothers not
dent in darkened London in 1940, ' ■ w. a ■
and Bob Capa, regarded by many Weeden Tie Best
as the greatest combat photogra- ■ ww "TT-
pher of his time. Bob bumped FAr PeIIrAmele
into a land mine this year in Indo- ■ VI RQIIlUQUS
(A> In the hands of skilled surgeons plastic
surgery" has accomplished wonderful results in *
correcting certain physical defects.
Plastic operations on the nose are common,
and the cosmetic results are usually good. Many
of the operations can be done from the inside of
the nose so that there is no visible scar on the
face. The indications for plastic surgery vary
with the individual. The individual problem
should be discussed with the surgeon who would
do the work, since he is the only one who can ac-
curately estimate the end result.
Have a pressing health'problem? Dr. Dean
will try to help you in his daily column.
(Copyright 1934, General Features Corp.)
thopedic surgeons, pediatricians, and other spe-
cialists.
immy Hado
burgh, presi-
his home and those he loves. They poured out their hearts
=gH==
Korean war prisoners. their carbines, and.walked_into
.12 M.Aic ctin ore the night where the darkness
..But th memories, stit: are was broken by the flashes of ar-
there. Even now hes haunted by tillerv fire
memories of the music of Amen- ' Iie +L., banner he.
caemelodieswhichswil tearat cause the music had brought
h is.heartand conscience as, long them nearer home and the things
as he lives, so. help him God. they would return to in a few
Recently Tenneson wrote his more months.
mother in Minnesota asking her
to send him sheet music of such off the coast of Sicily, the
sentimental songs as "White troops filed into the black hold of
Christmas” and “Dear Hearts an invasion ship and clambered
and Gentle People ” into the amphibious trucks which
Richard Tenneson is groping would carry them ashore behind
for solace in music as our people the German lines.
one 01 tnese Lrms, •orman Jaspan 01 inves- speeches which impressed me A man may be chairman of the broader .understanding of these
tigations, Inc., was recently interviewed by profoundly. One was by Profes- board of directors of a bank or a problems, it will surely turn out
- c ‘ ”*-1 • -f *-i -- general in the army or a success- only skilled manipulators of ma-
ful manufacturer of automobiles chines and techniques but intelii-
'or a doctor or lawyer or any- gent men with some knowledge
thing without training his mind of the universals of our civilne
to think in universal, philosophic tion. , '
terms. While he can do his job (Copyright, King,Features
excellently and achieve astonish- ---------—---‛:-----------
ing success, he may also be as - . - m. . .
stupid as a backward child about InHat e Kirrhrat
a great historic problem that ulti- | VUCy > Dll I HUUj • • •
mately can destroy our civiliza- ..i. ■ ------- — -
tion and therefore him and all VAN HEFLIN, born Dec. 13.
his achievements. 1910, in Walters, Okla., son of a
It is even difficult for him to dentist. The noted stage and
a t h , g, » . - - understand how narrow his com- screen actor fol- r
m- d..ne H€0- POKOISKY pass is because he is so elevated lowed the sea to 1
same institution, the only rela by his own success in his small )
tionship that a father had to the world This. Professor Highet 4 I, J? . a
university was that he signed conveyed to the young men when n a ctor He ■
his name to the checks, and that he opened to their view the was a success- V
he was piven two tick'tE tn Eep glories of continuing civilization f . star™
ne was given two tickets to see and the richness of a life devoted 1u.stage.tar i
his son get a diploma, to their understanding. Ing he°ohe
The idea of fathers and sons Father Hesburgh was address- Wood Won an I
sitting down to turkey and the ing a private dinner on the pro- Academy award te
ed--:_______*-- • . ~mm nf hensine mrrinnla t (10^? f'o r his 888
fixings among deans and other gram of changing curricula, at
For his sake I have suffered the loss of all university big shots intrigued Notre Dame where the various
things.—P.3:8,"25 - me and so I went, anticipating a colleges ar .. adeover on
Paul lostt material things but gained immor igingarzynin Eriinsneadddmas on teiligen man can Ye
tal joy while still on earth. - • ‛
-..................
way. Duanee- ing of Gainesville Community cir-
Most of the governmental jur- After Payne received a west cus will be held at the chamber of
isdictions also ban any of their coast discharge, he worked in Los commerce Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.,
workers from asking for money Angeles for a time and then de- it is announced by Dr. A. A.
for political purposes. cided to come home. He boughta Davenport, acting president.
Other restrictions cover mem- second-hand ambulance for $295, The group will elect new offi-
bership on political committees, installed an air mattress and ex- cers for the 1955 season at this
distribution of campaign leaflets pensive photographic equipment meeting, Dr. Davenport said. A
.________ ___________ or buttons, and marching in po- and started driving. nominating committee headed by
baed on morality which is God’s litical parades.- En route. Payne indulged his J. B. Saylors, will make its report
hobby of railroad photography at the meeting.
and followed the railroad lines. Dr. Davenport said all persons
When he reached Chicago, he put interested in the circus, whether
id made a previously members of the group
or not, are urged to be present.
' THE GENESIS of all material progress is cation research—that is, research which
found in endless research and expert- has a definite objective, whether it be a new
Articles running the gamut from ma- drug or a' new bomb. Both types of re-
Shines to drugs may have their roots in dis- - search, he believes, are of equal importance,
coveries that were made in past centuries .......... ______i 2__
and which had no practical value at the time, industries. Yet there are obstacles here. As
They may be the whole which is made up of Mr. Foster says, “most fundamental research
parts contributed by scores or even hundreds 4 is highly speculative." A business concern
of scientists, living in different eras and dif- naturally expects its research investment,
rerent lands. like an other investment, to show a reason-
Theodore Hes-
robbers. In Mr. Jaspan’s opinion major
hey'l Do It Ev
______ . ... ,
/ DEMANDS THE SUPPORTOF ALL'
/ LOYAL MEMBERS " AND SOON..
I SEND’EM SPECIAL DELNERY-yg
NAND GIVE THIS LIST TO
shnt JOE TO CALL— /55
Hal Boyle
Press corre-
Phrtnmostrortne many of 7-0 -called greatmen a wa...................
time a child won’t complain about his shoes. If jeem sma., so cowardly at is answering the challenge'of
han'ortmhukeagcwitstoxegthemtoorybengveonhe trgretnhs‛arbesiomtthenrMa,ism. of the pragmatic ath
thing that requires standing or walking.” ■■ ■
here in New
York for 82
newsmen and
women who died
serving, as our
faith goes, “a
free press in a
free world."
Ernie Pyle, of
course, can’t be
there. H i s elfin
smile is about
midway between
in most aspects of railroad trans-
Like Ernie before him, his good portation, but the old wooden tie
friend, he wore his luck too far, will continue to support the mod-
Death took in his passing a won- ern streamliner for years to
derful Hungarian smile, a fine come
artist, and a lousy poker player Richard G May, vice president
Tonight in an unusual tele of the Association of American
all vision s how a 1182 ll be honored Railroads, said that various sub-
between 8 and 9.30 (EST) over stitutes such as concrete, steel
performance i n 1 M K...
“Johnny Eager” vgteu
. ii- z » , . Other top roles china, while trying to grab an-
,_________ telligent man can learn how to have been in “Tennessee John- other of the shots he was famous
the pleasures of learhing by a use tools, but first he needs to be son." “Outcasts of Poker Flat,” for
Scotsman who apparently has intelligent. It is much easier to “My gon John” and “Shane.”
I • . a .. learned everything fibm Aris turn out a lawyer or an engineer --------------:--------------
Washington Letter... e to the game of thansotharhhenunaerstinds Wh§ Public Employes
Tn +Le,, ye nf , np;,) he is a lawyer or an engineer. It _ E •
(First of Two Articles) iltion rhe -Syo°6 SPa comes down to the question that A e e Cen*rellee
i Akiacoouposeed
dernteroretheghivets:which‛n mrsrr.mtttsomanisuntyaprah
his livelihood. Karl Marx was mix politics with the public’s but although it is a tribute to re- the wood tie in low cost, light
1. -. right. But if man is more than business, according to the Civil porters who knock at portals be- weight and relatively long life.
.Hind that, if he possesses understand- Service assembly, yond our present knowing, many May said about 3,000 ties are
gcom ing, personality, the capacity to The assembly cited a study of: US in the.newspaper. business used for every mile of track.
Know, differentiate between right and made by Richard Christopherson think the public will find it worth There are about one billion ties
wrong, then, he is a moral crea- of Philadelphia’s personnel de- watching. t * in all maintained railroad track
uevuicau, w:meepapucta: -v--15 - enth-ia-m L, ture whose grounding is deep in partment. Christopherson sur- We hope it will have both heart in the United States, he said,
workshops with parents and consulting with or- an emnusiasm among me the philosophy of the Judaic- veyed 119 civil service jurisdic- knocks and fun in it, but natur- Through improvements in treat-
..... * “ fSunynore than to train Christian civilization. tions at the state and local level. --------------------------- ing and in protecting ties against
I . ‘ , Father Hesburgh did not put it Of the 119, only five had no amame.. I en .
Perhaps the reason why so that way but what came to me control over the political activi- NoThenG LIKe CHI
man e"" ereled --------- -- ties of their public servants. The _ _ . ” (.
great majority, 89 per cent. exer- Ambulence Kide
cised at least some measure of "“-T
restraint. LEICESTER, Mass. (UP)—-An
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| Oer to y—: C»Ml«torfh f
I tow tototo ALWAYSI TKY US1 |
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Keg,
John Egbert of Fort Worth visited relatives
here Saturday
The members of the cast of the Little theatre
play. “Clarence.” were given a supper Friday
evening at Gossett court by the board of directors
after the evening’s rehearsal of the play. In the
party were Misses Marie Crudgington. Una Min-
nick and Wilda Reeves. Messrs. Arthur Lee Joy-
ner. James Ford, Floyd Armstrong, Morton Smith.
J. J. Lindsay and Felix M Johnson, Jr.
The T. E. L. cass of First Baptist church
elected officers at the Thursday business meeting
as follows: Mrs. P. C. Sparks. president: Mrs.
O. P. Ryan, first vice president; Mrs. Tillman
Hedges, second vice president; Mrs. Gilbert Hol-
man. third vice president: Mrs. A. P. Miller. sec-
retary; Mrs. George Hobbs, reporter; Mrs. W. E.
King, teacher; Mrs. Tillman Hedges, assistant
teacher.
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Brooks and Miss Ruby
Boyd entertained the Senior class of Gainesville
high school Friday evening at the former’s home
on Lindsay street. Attending were Misses Olive
Grimsley. Larue Myers. Man- Ellen Coursey.
Leota Bell, Eris Echols, Louise Smith, Elizabeth
King. Ruth Turner, Berrian Webb, Ann Ruth Mor
ris. Olive Costen, Kathleen Nichols. Zola Tippit;
Messrs Ralph Atkins, Charles Johnson, Jr.,
George Brown, Linnie Pietzcker, CJV McFadden.
R F Hillbird, Travis Watts, Gerald Fulton, Rob-
ert Kennedy, M. A. Brooks, Jr, Theodore Crumly,
and Jack Bell.
Clyde Milan, former outfielder of the world
champion Washington Senators, was a visitor
here today, attracted by the oil play in the county.
4 Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
could be heard above the rattle the darkness. For a fleeting time
of gunfire in the streets outside, they remembered another and
better world.
In Liege, Belgium, the Ger-
mans had retreated. The little Richard Tenneson will remem-
night club opened its doors for ber, too, when he hears the mu-
the first time in months. A sic he asked his mother to send
makeshift Belgian band was try- him. But if Richard Tenneson
ing hard but it was a pretty dis- has begun to understand the mu-
mal effort until the blackout cur- sic of America—it won’t bring
tains parted and six GIs strode him the solace that came to the
into the room. men in the invasion ship that
The six Americans had the night. There will be only empti-
grime of the infantry on them, ness in his heart.
to keep shoes on their children all the time.
The child from one to six will need a pair of
shoes every four to eight weeks. Miss Arrington
says. She says a child has outgrown his shoes
when his toes touch the end of the shoe, when
the toe cap presses down on the toes, or when
the widest part of the foot, just back of the toes,
spreads the top of the shoe over the sole.
Even though outgrown shoes are in good con-
dition, don’t hand them down to the next child.
Miss Arrington cautions—"They have been
molded to the foot and walk of the child who wore
them. The next child will have to conform to the
shape of that shoe which may affect his natural
walk.” .
One simple test which she offers to find out
if the child has outgrown his shoes is this: Have
the child stand on paper and mark the heel and
big toe. Then cut out the paper and slip it into
the shoe. If the paper buckles, it’s time for a
new pair of shoes.
(Tomorrow: Forestalling foot trouble).
the picture of
; Webb Miller, the
brilliant United
lated to she life and growth of
man? r .
Shortest campaign speech in ’ Philosophy points the way to
history: “Fellow citizens, follow a synthesis of human knowledge
ne into yonder saloon." beed en morality which is Gnd‛
. 4
ag
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 91, Ed. 1 Monday, December 13, 1954, newspaper, December 13, 1954; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1580135/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.