Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 83, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 5, 1938 Page: 2 of 10
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2
$
A
■ EAGETWO
SATURDAY \r
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 5, 1938.
9
■
'HE fact that deficiencies in diet
can cause
6
specific disease conditions, of course, has
I
A
js
and
dez
•CZECH MINISTERto
alarm was given?
Mr
One year. li
t
•I
— $2.00
hing of
a
Mrs
i ly-
the im-
through!”
Men in grotesque cost
at that.
umes came
running out, slipping oxygen tanks
_ W. O. DAVIS, dean of Gaines-
♦
birds that peeped with
a
end
nd
along
In Other Days
$
i s
♦
E
authentic
ing Bridg-
Daily
devices. I
Ambassador Grew mentioned several
early
haul
to
fan
is
Ely
Late Deaths
A
li
He was command-
I
Revival Continues
Smile Awhile
Word of God
I
&
"YUR ELECTRIO
SERVANT”
i
L
U. S. is Col. Vladimir Hurban
who recently returned to Wash-
ington after visit to homeland.
there’s
Doctor
wondering if he had heard a voice,
then adjusted the gear, stepped
into the skip : and dropped from
package,
"Young
Kildare.”
She scanned each face. They
were mostly strangers to her. And I
• they were all younger men than i
Balmy. Why couldn't they waken
of Manchoukuo. Protests about
result.
8
And each trip brought with it a
stretcher and on the stretcher a
silent figure, but with life.
new lunch stand on West Broad-
way.
Red Cross Drive
To Start Nov. 15
. ■
Two classes of people are never popular—
those who know it all and those who refuse to
admit you know it all.— Winston-Salem Journal.
flotillas in European waters dur-
ing the World war.
joyed. 1
J. T. Harris of Dallas,
attorney in that city an
local citizen. visited here
Three months, la
___________________
One month, ia .
advance_________7S«
chants and business men have been frozen out
that brought no
REAR ADMIRAL
S. W. BRYANT
ASHEVILLE, N. C. — Rear Ad-
miral Samuel Wood Bryant, 61, U.
lence.
His clumsy hand patted Kath-
Town Topics
By A. MORTON SMITH
i sensitive to poison air than any
■ living thing, they would collapse
* before the insidious air crept into
the lungs of unsuspecting men.
urned.to
sence of
pened a
claim
about
hand, and when the thread
tween tumbler and pencil is t
let someone ask the Spirits a q
but the message say
the sort.”
That 'was taat, an
We
next c
six montha. In
__________
W ashington
By PRESTON GROVER
Contemporary
This is the time of year when a good many of
the college graduates are very gloomy about the
future of education, because the good old college
football team is losing.—Salem (Mass.) News.
>1 team
al field
-CLOCK Lb
owner. watch
with Seabise
commissary. He was
et home.
“You’d better get
4
n-
on,
an
ry
that if there are. Dale Harrison
h they are an indifferent lot—people
who, having died, have decide it is
' • hardly worth their time to come
back and tip tables or blow trum-
pets.
Mrs. Stams is the latest aspirant
WEEKLY REGISTER
BY Mail, in Gainesville or in Cooke, Grayson.
Demon, Montague, Wise counttes, Texas, and Love
.A ----=
Hollywood
By ROBBN COONS
M:
: "How
trick <
mystif
CHAPTER 31
"They’re Through”
T WAS impossible to be gay, or
. even happy in such surround-
er of a torpedo boat destroyer and
cn the staff of the U. S. destroyer
Texas Progress
Tn’
Foreign merchant ships are barred from opera-
tion on the lower Yangtze because of the "emer-
and tell her of him?
(Copyright, 1938. Jeanne
Bowman.)
Tomorrow: Danger for Donald.
Japan is next door to China and is determined
to dominate it as a trade zone. It has spent gome
two billion dollars or more in the 15 months’ con-
"I overheard Kit-Smyth dictat-
ing a letter to father. He said he
was at a flying field out of Car-
sted.”
"But you don't know why he was
there. Then listen and! see if you
can understand why Donald talked
to you as he did. When you’re en-
gaged you'll understand how time
flies without you being aware of it.
Norman and i hadn't time for any-
thing but ourselves until dinner
was ready, then Donald came in
and asked where you were. I felt
conscience-stricken and told him
you hadn't come over yet. He went
after you. He found the note you
• v ? H
One year, in advance-----------
RY MAIL in Zones 6, 7 and 8:
Cleo, they won't Be through before
mid-morning,"’
The name Cleo sounded sitrange
Gr-r-r:
Noticing that little Joan was struggling with
an ear of corn, her mother offered to cut off the
kernels. However, she was quickly rebuffed when
Joan replied:
“No, I like it on the bone!”—Christian Science
Monitor,
ouhty, Oklahoma:
Six months, la
pioneer citizens of Cooke county
now residing in Grapevine a: ,
BELLS AN
latest in g3 m:
Here are three
• • the 50th am
— 88-50
-WEDDr
Fzaret Adco
e with-Cleet!
men are all there. He says there
is life. That's all for now.”
Later, a second report. “Jock
Arthur, unconscious but breathing,
first man carried out."
had left for me. I don't know what
you wrote, but there, was some-
thing in it that sent him flyin
She opened her mouth with wis-
dom; and in her tongue is the law
of kindness,-+-Prov. 31:26.
Here is a top for afternoon tea:
cut a lemon into thin slices, add
two drops of mint extract and
cover tightly. Store for an hour or
so and then arrange the lemon
slices on a small dish with edges
overlapping.
that
Place a com. preferably
ter. in a tumbler. Tie one <
two-foot thread around th
of the glass. Tie the ot
arcund the center of a ri
pencil.
Hold the pencil in th
you see, dear. Donald was rushing
after you to bring you back be-
cause he loved you. He was giving
up every MacDonald tradition and
prejudice because you meant more
to him than they did. And in this
mood, this eagerness to offer you
everything he had, Kit-Smyth
found him. I don't know what Kit-
ings, yet Kathleen felt a load had
been lifted from her heart and
that it was winging up past the
singing cables, past the topmost
light on the superstructure and on
to the mountain stars.
“Have you talked to Donald at
all?” Bridget continued.
“ “Yes,” Kathleen answered slow-
ly. “First, he told me what he
thought of me, then, when I could
catch my breath, I told him in
equal detail what I' thought of him.
We didn't seem to care for each
other," she concluded dryly.
"Tell me,” demanded Bridget.
Kathleen told her; told her
much more than she realized.
"That explains so much," Bridg-
et observed when she had finished.
i “Kathleen, have you i any idea
where Donald was at the time the
M. C. A. parlor last night and a
debate, wih Messrs. Clem Potter
and Murphy. R. E. Cofer and Prof.
L. C. GeV. participating
feud, everything." ।
Bridget frowned in ; concentra-
tion. “I m piecing things together,”
she said. "Thal was it then. He
thought you had left for New
York.’ He went after you. Don’t
Got it? Very well. R
kiddies. and have fun.
(Cppy right. 1938
I ■
l sh
i .
Kathleen knew the next hour s N retired
was the longest in her life. The ____15
skip was coming up slowly now.
some' rest,
A
S3*mc
E 205
Preston Grover
as American trade is concerned.
To get a better appreciation
of the developments being
made in Texas, watch this
space.
By the Associated Press-
MRS. SV SAN C. YEOMANS
NEW YORK Mrs. Susan Cleve-
lnd Yeomans. 95. lone survivor of
five sisters and three brothers of
President Grover Cleveland.
es or
swinging cages with
canaries in them;
42 YEAS AGO
(From the files of the Daily
because business does not thrive unde - the bay-
onet. But the methods Japan has adopted in the
conquered territory annot fail to destroy compe-
tition and leave virtually all export and import
business in the hands of Japanese.
In his message to the Japan foreign [minister.
no Spirits,
WJ[ASHINGTON—Japan has bitten off a section
|| of China ing half its population and
most of its h.
The end resuit that is as certain to realistic
gy ' observers as the rising sun,
S Japan’s share of the historic
over their heads as
C. O. S. MAWSON
BOSTON—C. O. Sylvester Maw-
son, 66. internationally-known lex-
icographer. .
■ TEXAS FARMERS 24 Point
for the $10,000 prize. It is my un-
derstanding that some Spirits have
been dictating a movie scenario to
her at odd, moments, and that the
$10,000 was to be used in getting
it screened, or something. I'm al-
ways hazy on things like that.
A Mr. B. Franklin, a Mr. Wood-
row Wilson, a Thomas Edison and
a Harry Houdini are a few of the
Spirits whom Mrs. Stains has
found using her as a medium out
in Sabina. She told Mr. Dunninger
about it. so he arranged for her to
put on a seance.
Yp-. -
.a”
China trade will increase by
1 leaps and bounds and the share
I of other nations will decrease in
r proportion.
। The methods by which it will
I be brought about already are
r being demonstrated with such
marked success that the state
. department, through Ambassa-'
dor Grew, has protested. By one
I trade device or another Ameri-
"can and other foreign mer-
The brilliant and beautiful Irish lady, the
Countess of Blessington, had befriended Louis
Napoleon. later Napoleon III, when he was a
fugitive, exiled in England.
After his rise to power, having never invited
her to the Tuileries Palace, he met her one day
accidentally in Paris, and said: “Do you expect
to remain long in Paris?”
She gazed at him coldly and replied: “And
you?" walking on. Later Bismarck drove him
from the throne.
The revival meeting at the
Pittsburg football fans have
two favorite backs to watch and
they both wear the same number,
42, Goldberg of the Pitt Panthers
is one, his rival is Georgia Muha
of Carnegie Tech.
advance _________ 75e advance_____________
BY MAIL, in all other counties of the United
OLLYWOOD — The biggest.
1 loudest item among the new
pictures is “Suez." The most
ing J. L. Morter and
• week.
Mr. and Mrs. O I
Suez tells how Ferdinand de
Lesseps (Tyrone Power) built that
very important canal despite (1)
an unrequieted love for the Em-
press Eugenia; (2) all manner of
political opposition: (3) the per-
sistent wooing of a desert gamin
who would have driven a lesser
hero to distraction: and (4) two
of the Zanuck lot's most thunder-
ous technical triumphs. to wit. the
blasting of a mountain, and a des-
“They're through! They’ve broken line writer merely wrote "Gaines-
throngh’" | . ville Again, 27 to 0,” and let it go
they ran.
missary, Kathleen hurried to him. .
“What news?” she begged.
“Not much. They gave up try-
ing to break through first, drilled _
in with an air hole; hope to shoot
through medical supplies if there’s .
anyone on the other end who can !
use them.”
"And when was that?”
"Several hours ago . .1 wait,
here comes a skip.”
“Dog-weary muckers stumbled 1
out. There was no' sign of hope
on their worn .faces, nothing but
abject defeat. ■
“Yes, the air hole went through. ■
MacDonald called, there was no !
answer.” '
They went cm their way and
Kathleen and the man stood in si-
quest. So far, reports from the _
the net returns have been comparatively small
proved diet. For control, ahother bunch of 25 in-
fected mice were housed with 100 healthy mice
which had been bred and reared on the standard
diet.
Within sixty days after the beginning of the
experiments, it was observed that the mice i fed
on the diet containing dried skimmed milk proved
more resistant to natural contact infection than
were the mice fed on the standard diet.
Seventy-five per cent of the mice fed on the
improved diet were alive; while in the group of
mice fed on the standard diet only 39 per cent
survived.
Monday—Virus Disease.
was en- i E
Joseph Dun-
ninger, head of
the Council, who'
has more or less
dedicated his life
to the job of
chasing Spirits,
is becoming dis-
couraged.
Mr. Dunninger is
about convinced
that there ain't
• gency.” Japanese ships continue hauling goods up
and down the river. But they refuse to haul
equal slowness.; These lives which
had been so close to death must be ------—
brought back slowly, lest the (H-pAW A€ rI4
feeble connecting line break. •luICil UI V 111 131
ert tornado. The production
photographically magnificent.
• * *
Tyrone Power succeeds
tion that can be answere
front" indicate,
face white.
“MacDonald is
De- j
ut. ,
Kathleen nodded. “Yes, I know
how he felt because I felt just like
that I’ve laughed-a lot over ’mor-
tal wounds and stabs in the heart.’
but they're real, Bridget.11 felt as
though I'd been mortally wounded.
I didn't care much about living for
a while." 1 '
Al ject Defeat -
Budget stood up. "Let’s go over
to the commissary, I'm cold and
hungry 'and I’ll bet you haven't
New York
By DALE HARRISON__
AW YORK—That $10,000 which the Universal Council for Psychic
IM Research has posted for the first successful demonstration of
psychic power of a medium, is still lying around, and Mrs. Ruth oh-
inson Stams has gone back to Sabina, Ohio.
Henry Killgore has
Gainesville, after an
several years, and h;
the Spirits do I said:
showing me a good
count of I wish to
friends?” So he said
and here is the trick h
DEFICITS OR CASH
AEFICITS in public funds grow larger in
I proportion to the greatness of the de-
I mand on the treasury, and the distance of
the funds from the demanders. Thus the
federal deficit is enormous, because of the
demands made by a nation on the treas-
ury, though it is only fair to say that •
many of the demands were made by the
members of the congress with little or no
urging from the people “back home.”
The deficit at Austin is not so large, yet
considering the source from which it must,
be covered, if and when that comes to
pass, it is plenty large and then some. Its
size is not attributable to the voluntary
action of the legislature so much as to de-
mands of the people, who are dissatisfied
with what they have been getting and call-,
for more. • . '
In most cities there is no deficit at ail,
I and this is because the governing bodies
are closer to the people and are occupy-
ing' offices with comparatively little pay,
so are free to say no without fear of be-
, ing supplanted, or with little if any care
if they should be. Some cities, it is true,
that overspent in boom days which they
thought would last forever, are in bad
, shape financially, but most Texas cities
are able to meet their obligations and
leak the world in the face. . ' J
Paris is one of those able to do this,
and it is because the administration obeys
the charter and lives within its income. U
has not always done this. In long past
years, city warrants were discounted, but
that time is gone and will not return so
fun the r e ’sl
“Brother Rat,”B
and for simple I
pleajs ant ne ss I
mirably as the ei.gineer who forees
his ditch-digging dream to tri-
umph despite the machinations of
man. nature, and Zanuck's sound
effects. Loretta Young is charm-
ing but necessarily ’negative as
Eugenie, and .Annabella (just
Annabella) is cute as the desert
kid who can't help lovin’ that
man. J. Edward Bromberg, as the
gluttonous Egyptian prince. leads
the extensive character parade,
with Joseph Schildkraut in there
pitching his usual tricky curves.
All in all, “Suez” is on the credit
side.
no.
If the answer is “yes.” turn the
pencil slightly, and the coin [will
strike the glass once. For "no,"
two slight turns will do the busi-
ness.
W /y g
h4,-3
K' 7
l igh
partd; and the
Starns got on a bi
Only a relay crew; the others, the
picked men were already down;
they’d been there waiting for
hours.
Then Kathleen saw Donald Mac-
Donald and she felt as though her
heart had welled up and was
pushing on out of her breast to-
wards him. He was running. Some-
one was handing him an oxygen
tank, shouting at him as they kept
pace.
Kathleen called to him just as
he slipped the mask over his face.
Business By Bayonets
The latest protest mentions what
pened in Manchoukuo and cautions Japan against |
letting it happen in the rest of China. But the
odds are, we get from more than one
source, that the results will be no better as far
100 healthy mice bred and reared an
tents of any of the three
the $10,000 is practice
Mrs? Starns relaxed.
scon she said Mr. Edisc
her from Beyond wh:
written.
“What is his messa
Dunninger.
“The message," rez
Starnis, “is: ’The veloc
wind! will never superset
ers of the human mind'
Dunninger reached f<
Te ias Power
Light Co.
American or other foreign goods.
In the Matter of Shipping
Ambassador Grew does not mention it, but re-
ports had reached here earlier that American and
other foreign goods were left standing on the
railroad platform while Japanese goods were
routed hend. That has worked so well that in-
• terior m Gants, unable to be sure they will get
American goods, now save themselves disappoint-
ment and delay by ordering Japanese goods. It
does not take much of that to ruin foreign ship-
pers. [ „•
The same processes will operate as effective-
ly in the rest of China more recently brought un-
der Japanese sway. If Japan had no other ex-
planation ready, it could insist for several years
that “emergency” conditions continue to exist. By
that time other foreign business men in China
would be ruined and the competition gone.
i * ♦ ♦ ■ •
there’s "Listen. H
Darling,” sappily
titled but good.;
And then, fork 4
th e s u r prise -
Smyth said but it’s safe to believe
he destroyed this image Donald
worshiped’ And Donald, heart- He seemed to hesitate as though
broken over you, came straight
from Kit-Smyth to you.”
of the mine, looking for one.
Norman found* the girls in the
dead they would endeavor
turn in spirit and reveal. •
a medium, the contents of h
sage. If you can tell me t
long as affairs are administered as they
now are.
The example of the city should serve
to remind individuals that overspending
brings trouble and that pay as one goes
is the best practice. That way, depressions
do not come so often nor are they so hurt-
ful when they do come.—Paris News.’
----—-----
Strength for the Day
By EARL L. DOUGLASS, D. D.
Members of the Associated Frees, Texas Press
Assoclation, Texas Daily Press League and Inter-
national Circulation Managers’ Association.
Entered at the Gainesville (Texas) Postoffice
as second-class matter.
DAILY EEGISTER
BY MAIL, in Cooke. Grayson, Denton, Montague,
Wise courties, Texas, and Love county, Oklahoma:
month. !d ad- Six meaths. fa
vanee___—-----Me _________________
Dne year. In advance--- -------------------------
When subscription is no paid in advance or re-
newed within one week after expiraion, straight
price of 60 cents per month will be charged.
DAILY RK«I9TMH
BY MAIL, OUTSIDE OF Cooke, Grayson, Denton,
Montague. Wise counties, Texas, and Love county.
NO DIFFERENCE HOW YOU FEEL
‘ERQOUELE makes us either better or bitter.
I It is remarkable how courageously some peo-
Pie endure trouble. A woman told me recently
how twenty years ago she had lost a son in a
manner indescribably tragic. Certainly no one
yould know what a burden she has borne all
these yars. She is cheerful, eager to help others,
resgutceful in every variety of Christian service.
1 he words "better" and “bitter” differ only in
one letter, but it is significant that the one -let-
ter is ' i”. “Better” becomes “bitter” when the let-
ter i rowds out the letter “e”. That mischie-
Voui littie letter “i” causes no end of Fouble in
life. When "i" crowds itself into any situation,
look out. Starting out as. “i” will grow quickly
intos""t beginning in a little assertion of self,
it win end up at last the giant of selfishness
which rules our every mood.
W hen people think of their troubles in term's
' 9 self, of how much it is hurting them, then the
letter i’ gradually wins out; and a sorrowful ex-
. perience leaves them bitter.
Keep yourself out of your sorrow. Say re-
peatedly to yourself that it makes no difference
how you feel about it or how it affects you.
* lunk of what this sorrow means to some one
else. Above all, think of it in terms of a loving
God who in the cross has shown that He shares
our sorrows. - -
<All rights reserved—Babson Newspaper
Syndicate.)
The annual financial campaign
of the Cooke* County chapter.
American Red Cross, will begin
Tuesday. November 15. F. X-
Schad, chairman, announces.
Mr Schad has appointed his
committees, supplies are ready,
and the drive will start simultane;
ously throughout the business and
residential sections of the city.
“I have three messages in my
possession, and I am the onlyliv.
I had any dinner?'
has hap- [ Kathleen followed her but she
was pot looking towards the big
building, her glances were search-
ing the few men areund the mouth
ME Dunninger argu
can duplicate by phys
all the things that med
children are guests of her parent
ad- Mr. and Mrs. Ira Cook.
Madam,” he said, "I
To slide from .the epic to the
amusing, call for "Service de
Luxe,” Connie Bennett, assisted
by Helen Broderick, offers it to
all corners in her modern business
enterprise, an the tangle comes
when the one man, Vincent Price,
is roped in on service he didn't
want or bargain for. Charlie Rug-
gles, Mischa Auer, and Joy Hodges
help the laughs. Vincent Price,
from the stage, makes his first
movie bid rather impressively al-
though he’s a bit camera-conscious
still.
"Brother Rat" takes up the case
of a kay-det, secretly married
against V. M. I. rules— and what's
worse, about to become a father.
The role is a click for Eddie Al-
bert, an artist in projection of
this dazed, inarticulate, comic-
pathetic character. Jane Bryan is
good as the wife, and Jane Wy-
man steals a few tricks as the
commandant’s daughter. The
nominal stars are Priscilla Lane
and Wayne Morris, the latter so
bad at times that it’s embarrass-
ing. Ronald Reagan’s good, though,
and on the whole "Brother Rat”
stacks up as fast and funny com-
edy—once it brings in Eddie Al-
bert.
“Listen, Darling” shows that
Freddie Bartholomew, too, can
grow up gracefully. He and Judy
Garland kidnap Judy's mamma,
(Continued on Page Five)
! Broadway Church of Christ will
continue through next week with
services at 10 a. m. and 7:30 p.
m. daily.
Evangelist C. C. Morgan will
speak Sunday at 11 a. m. on “Ty-
ing the Hands of Jesus,” and to-
. night will conclude a series on
“The New Testament Church.”
Large crowds are attending and
eight were baptised Thursday night
and two will be baptised tonight.
The public is invited to attend
the services.
a former
his week.
to Kathleen, then she caught the
import of what he had said. “Mid-
morning. . . ” :
Six a. m. had been Balmy's dead-
line: thirty-six hours. J
'Where's Donald?" she asked.
Norman gave her a quick search-
ing glance. "Below. I can't pry
him loose. He's wrecking himself
with worry.” ’
Kathleen made. her ' decision as
they drove away She would go
down there to him.”
She couldn't? The technical ex-
perts were in charge now. the
trained rescue crews from United
States Bureau of Mines. They
needed the skips.
Kathleen loeked at I the objects
they were carrying and shuddered.
Canvas ccts and canvasebags. The
bags would be needed if they
broke through too late.
The mine doctor rushing along,
stopped and looked at Kathleen.
"Go to bed, girl,” he ordered. "I'm
setting up an emergency hospital
on the 1580 level. I’ll need the
girls down there. I’ll need you up
here, get some rest?’ :
“But the hospital down there
; .. .what does it mean?"
“It means we’re preparing for
life,” the man answered stoutly.
“And the only life there’ll be left
will need resuscitation in the
shortest possible time.” •
Kathleen nodded. The medical
;, men were prepared to save min-
utes. Time was, that precious.
She knew she couldn’t sleep, but
she did to awaken with a start
and find the sun . high in the
heavens. She sat up alarmed. A
deathly silence hovered over the
place.
No one was in the hospital, no
one even in the emergency room.
She rushed out of doors. It seemed
the entire place, was deserted, the
only sign of life the swinging
cable, the throb of the motor.
• Ten o’clock. Mid-morning.
A man appeared from the com-
ing person who knows their co
tents. One was written by Edise
another by Sir Arthur Con
Doyle, and the third by Har
Houdini. Each of these gentlem
assured me that after they
NEW FUR JOINS THE LIST
PARIS (AP).—Add to the die-[
tionary of furs, /the word “guan-
aco”—and the definition—South
American skunk. As for the de-
scription, the fur is long haired,
with light brown under-hairs, and
top hairs of dark brown. Its chief
use is for sports, in long or short
swagger coats. Vera Borea fea-
tures a long coat of guanaco, worn
over a suit with a plaid wool jack-
et and a plain rustry red wool!
skirt.
Kathleen was called into action.
There weren’t ehough nurses. Oxy-
gen had been fed slowly, now there
must be nourishment induced with
Mrs. S- M. Wallace has returned
from - visit with relatives and
friends in Sherman.
Reaches to Banking, Too
Japan has set up its own export banks in the
conquered territory. American and other export-
ers have to allow these banks such wide dis-
counts that they cannot make their trade prof-
itable.
The Japanese operators are allowed to pay
smaller discounts and get the business. That sort
of thing, Mr. Grew reports, already is going on.
Speaking for the United States government,
Ambassador Grew has demanded that the “Open
Door” of equal opportunity in China be preserved.
If Japan refuses, will the United States go to
war about it? Will we retaliate by putting bar-
riers against ent of Japanese goods to this
country?
The immedia answer to those questions are
already written. What may happen in two years,
five, or ten years, is yet to be written.
Hesperian. NOv. 5, 1896):
W J. Jaynes, private secretary
to the Hon. J W. Bailey, visited
relatives in Sherman today.
Dr. H. B. Stiles gave the open-
ing address at a meeting of! the
Athenaeum society held in the Y. >
leen's shoulder. “Don’t take that
as final. They may be through to i
another level; may be only a
pocket there. Then, too, the men
fall in a stupor sometimes; lay |
there for hours before it’s too
ic
entertaining
"Service deFE
Luxe.” For fast 4
through. The
Dne year, in
advance_______- $7.50
Six months, in
. ____________________
t r
GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILLE, TEXAS._____
Gainesville Daily Register How’s Your Health~ Don’t Marry the Man
FOUNDED AUGUST. 1890, BY JOHN T. LEONARD RTAeIATAc,i , 7 T * HUAA • FA-} A J . UAR • AVAUIL
Published Each Afternoon Except sunday BY IAGO GALDSTON, M. D. •
„nEi,crgpnpp- '-- By JEANNE BOWMAN
rils1,*iNEESVILL28OK2.Ka. PIET AND DISEASE --
Editorial and Business Office, 108 E. California st 1
tiny fluffy ville’s lawyers and one of our old-
li ttle yellow lest pioneer citizens, views with
dismay, un- more interest than most people,
aware of their hero roles. More the remodeling of the old Hes-
perian building for the Chamber
of Commerce; offices.
It was 60 years ago in the fall of
the year. Mr, Davis recalls, that
he had the building constructed,
and he has lived to see it serve its
usefulness arid be torn away to
make room for a modem structure.
He recalls also, that the building
cost approximately the same
amount s was paid for the loca-
tion by the Chamber of Commerce.
now been well established. The relationship
of diet to resistance to diseases of bacterial
origin has not however been fully clarified.
There is much presumptive evidence that
gross malnutrition predisposes human beings to
be more susceptible to a number of diseases. In
those countries where there was a marked short-
age of food during the World war period, the tu-
berculosis mortality rate increased by several
hundred per cent.
One cannot of course conduct planned experi-
ments with human beings to test the effect of
poor nutrition on resistance to disease. In the
study we must therefore use standard laboratory
animals.
A highly significant experiment of this na-
ture was recently reported in the English Jour-
nal of Hygiene. Mice were employed. It was es-
tablished that when part of the oatmeal of a
particular diet fed to mice was replaced by dried
skimmed milk, the animals thrived uncommonly
well. The mice proved more fertile, and more of
their young survived the first eight weeks of
life.
It has also been experimentally shown that
mice bred and reared on the improved diet ac-
quired an increased resistance to infection
against certain bacteria which ordinarily are
highly fatal to the animal.
On the i is of these facts, experiments were
made to determine whether improvement in nu-
trition increased the animal’s resistance to the
disease when exposed by contagion, j
Twenty-five infected mice were housed with
late.”
'There Is Life’
Kathleen nodded, then tensed. _
Another skip was up, a man in a VIVHE MONOTONOUS REGU-
slicker, engineer or official was A larity ot the Gainesville High
running, calling as he ran. “We’re foethall teams victories is appar-
through . . . get the canaries! Get ently telling on the store ofat '
MacDonald'” i * jectives in the bort Worth star-
* "They’re through!” Telegram headline writer’s vocab-
ulary.
Where the scene had been de- When the story came over the
serted it was now thronged and wire last night 'that Gainesville
mad cries of joy took up the,song. -had done it to Paris,” the head-
“My work consists of many
phases, and everything I do it as
much a surprise to me as it is to
those around me,” Mirs. Starns told
the Council. Just before the seance
began in a speciahy prepared suite
at the Hotel New' Yorker, she told
the Council and the rest of us that
anything might happen; the door
might fly off its hinges, the table
might jump up and smack the ceil-
ing—things like that.
Mr. Dunninger said: "Very well,
let us proceed?'
Nothing happened? Mrs. Starns
talked, but the door stayed on its
hinges and the table didn’t make
a move. After two hours, Mr.
Dunninger said: "Come, come,
madam. The hour grows late.
Bring on the Spirits." He indicated
it didn’t have to be Edison or Wil-
son or even Houdini.. Practically
any Spirit would have sufficed.
• $ •
Everything else having sort of
petered opt, Mr. Dunninger said
to Mrs. starns:
Sale of hogs, pork and lard
in Texas this year will ap-
proximate $20,000,000, an in-
crease Lf more than 5 per
cent ovr last year.
sight. • J
She ran to the mine collar.
“He’s going in first,” someone
said. "He served his time on the
crew; felt he ought to take the
first risk. That’s Young Donald;
if anyone has to |die to find out
what's on the other side, he's going
to be that one,” •
Kathleen sank onto the timber
pile, tears coursing down her .
cheeks. “And I said I never want-
ed to see him again.”
She sat huddled in a tight,
tense, position. He had loved her,
Bridget said he had and she, well
she knew it too. Yet she had let
him go down believing she hated
him. She could; have given him the
chance to explain but she’d lis-
tened to her pride.
Moments pasted. Cars came down
from Neutrality, came over from
the MacDonald mines. People
crowded into a compact mass,
miners’ wives in the foreground.
Kathleen marveled at the stoical
calm of these women who waited
at this, the eleventh hour, with
no show of emotion. Yet, how they
must feel! After their long hours
of waiting, how they must wish to
rush through the cordon and fight
their way down to that walled-off
hole to learn for themselves the
fate of their men.
Moments passed, melted into
half hours, hours. The spring sun
beat down in a silent golden pall.
Few words were spoken. The skip
hadn't come up, it geemed, for
eons. x
l f,
And then the cable; rattled, the
rear of the approaching cage was
heard. Every breath in the crowd
was held, then expelled in .a long
sigh as Morgan stepped out, his
and pretty
on had told
at he had
States:
Six months, Im One year, fa
advance________$1.00 advance__1
BY MAIL. In Zones 6, 7 and 8:
‘,7
C. I
my
One year, la Six montha, la
advance______- $2.50 advance________*1.75
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Ay erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm, individual or cor-
poratioa, will be gladly corrected upon being called
t » the publishers’ attention.
The Aeoclated Press la exclusively, entitled to the
use jor republication of all nevi dispatches
credited toit or othe. wise credited in this paper and
also t> Local news appearing herein.
Di case, of errors or omissiona'qccurrlng in local or
। Giber advertisements os of omissions on scheduled
^ate, the publishers do not hold themselves liable
for dartages further than the amount received by
’hem for such advertisements.
Oklahoma:
One month, in
advance ______L- 7M
to Sabina. The $10,WK
ing around.
15 YEARS AGO
(From the files of the
Register, Nov. 5, 19231:
The Gainesville football te
feated the Nocona highschoc
in a game played dr. the loc
this week, the score being !
D Q. Morter and wife.
AS THE NATION joins Will
Rogers'^family in dedicating the
memorial to Oklahoma's famous
son at Claremore this week, we
call to mind the last time we saw
the cowboy humorist motion pic-
ture actor, writer and political di-
agnostician.
It was down at Houston, just 10
years ago last summer, and at the
moment, Rogers was standing in
the lobby of the Rice hotel, chas-
tising a New Yorker, because the
latter was complaining about the
weather.
Regers was oblivious to the ever
increasing crowd around him. and
when he had his say and glanced
about, he seemed surprised that
he had attracted such a gathering.
He ducked through the gathering
and disappeared in an elevator be-
fore the autograph seekers could
et their books in his hands.
GAINESVILLE F O O T BALL
fans who withstood the urge to go
to Paris Friday night because, of
the distance and general feeling
the Leopards would triumph hand-
ily. were a bit panicky at the half
when the score was only 6 tb 0 in
favor of the spotted aggregation.
There were many fans who felt
an immediate urge to rush to the
Lamar county capital to offer their
support and find'out what was
keeping the score down, and if it
hadn't been that there was a hun-
dred miles intervening, there'prob-
ably would have been a mass ex-
odus to the Paris stadium.
Maybe these fans will take it as
a lesson and let nothing stand in
the way of being cn the sidelines
when the whistle blows for the
Leopards to begin their games
hereafter.
There's always possibility of an
upset, and this possibility grows
into a probability for the remain-
der of the schedule.
Former Kaiser Wilhelm, interviewed at
Doprne, declined to discuss “anything less than'
2,000 years old," indicating that meditation
brings its own wisdom.—Bangor Daily News,
some place.” :
Kathleen smiled ruefully. “I
congratulated you on your engage-
ment to Donald and told you I was
leaving: I only reached Balmy's.
He made me come, in and we had a
long talk. He told me about the
egd ‛
/Je"uE /
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 83, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 5, 1938, newspaper, November 5, 1938; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1459348/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.