Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, February 10, 1941 Page: 2 of 6
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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emcime
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Cdiloviala
99
‘e
out a soft fine
ars," he said.
».
a news item in
don’t usually
Because • I
PAGE TWO
lied" so
badly that the county draft board
where did you
tad
him the address
ing over her, and ran away.
va-
se-
But she supposed
the n always. Or,
than that with
h
til
<2
Si nt
some to pay
are five Cooke
)
old guard up and not let him
wilfully,
or
tor Stod-
ding ring.
“I always though t rich people
DEAR NOM;-
know that' the
went around w
law
car.
“I wouldn’t ki
about that,"
low
Roger smiled, ‘Tin j ist Dad’s paid
are anx-
and
JOUS
rules.
him run the
that I had no
r
whose numbers
of money Id
l w a n t e d!”
Very like a little
shop window.
fun it would
be to take that
I
tiful sound that lingered softly
in
Smoot, 79, United
S
from Utah from 1)03
he
Th
na
of
Pittsburgh,
Fragments of Philosophy
na
)
LADY RUSSELL
«
smile if it had not been so sad
CHARLESTON,
S
74. English
She was twice
Gert’s love life, can I?
y on Earl Russell.
ODD.RD
to the los-
Judge
d
Well Van uzer, 78
the purpose of sale and the
PASADENA. Clif.
Joseph E.
•h.
I
his nev
and
Carl Seiter,
university for 25 years.
le
YourInc
eTax
his practice, office
dander
light, water, fuel, and telephone in
his office, the hire c
f office assist-
ants. and expenses pai
of
proportion of
peo]
Ie
d
Many physicians
use their resi-
live
trainin
o
nished these rooms.
Also, he may
for these
eral rule.
hand lotion.
States Marines."
dues in
pro-
little across the table. ’
colorful lips were parted slightly
F" ••
in
their waiting
-he
Emotion was a r i
benefit of their pat
8
ately to take her hands , as they
lay on the cloth — lovely hands
yer’s own
1 books is
ach
$ :
I i
call up a vision of her. It wouldn’t
features were the dazzlingly bril-
ment and liability
ie Register
II
L
mm-
and that
It was a sweeping sort of
words.
sssgggs
5
as a
____ $1.50
2
< led margarine,
a
butterine, nut margarine, and sim-
3
tance —
Over 300,000,-
about $35,000,000.
swell. She’d sell her soul for me.
credited to it or not otherwise credited
in this
Fascist blackshirts, is gov-
the
injury. Last
year
rate in cities and towns decreased.
Three montha, in
-----------
He
gue]
Dallas Wage-Hour Joe Dorsey, Aged
Case Be Appealed Negro, Is Dead
ates Senator
to 1933 who
I SL E S RULE R—Gen. Ettore
Basico (above), 64. a veteran of
-$1.25
-$5.00
- 8225
_$7.0
finished, something fluttering
her face that might have been
1939, according to tie census. An-
nual production now a mounts to
Stock-
Detroit
pub-
was
guava jelly heavenly. And
was a whole pot of coffee.
of desire,
within him.
in the op-
n dutomo-
Andros
former
Uy’s Dodecanese
might become in-
eration and repair 3
bile. based upon the
pos er who was
acuse (N. Y.)
to her. Only
was a fortune
may be de-
qay also be
ents may de-
business ex-
professional
67, pianist and com
a professor at Syi
open road
. invitation
death and
accident
is
its
my
car
ust
JOSEPH C. SEITER
DENVER Josep i
are
less
days
pen
ernor of *
Islands, whi
Howard
of the H. J.
2 .
QUIN
WALL
A cheer for the selectees from Fort Dix, N. J.,
ily in training a month, who marched as smart-
on
a
but accidents in 1
on the open road j
tounding rate.
C L a d y
author who
ly as any veteran regiment ever turned out for
the inaugural. Three cheers for the lad who, ap-
proaching Windy corner at Pennsylvania Avenue
and 12th Street, lost his cap but not his step—
and marched the rest of the way through the
frigid blasts as self-possessed as if not a soul on
the sidelines had snickered.
I ead.
good here. I’ll
Crii ninal Docket
Henry Jones, possession of whis-
The reason for the question: Dross uniform of
the Marines is about as antiquated as an Ad-
miral’s hat. It would take an Adonis to get away
with those gold-fringed epaulets and that gold-
braided cap. Not that Jimmy didn’t wear them
rwell, but he could be and was mistaken for some-
lone from Iraq.
out
It
► 4
’ D
s
tv
fi-
esi
New York
By GEORGE TUCKER
I
ar
c<
so-
to its state of lassitude.
May have quibbled over "versions
D.
fiv.
8
Th
st.
c
I
------------------- Coffee plants yield, their firs
Sea moss is used as a base for crop in their fourth year ns a gen
--O--
J Washington
By JACK STINNETT
000 pounds of oleorhargarine are
mt’S made.
" Love-
1 Ger
I OVEEY thought: He hasn’t
L asked me a question, lie's
swell. But I’d rather keep the pood
As a result of research, self-sealing tanks are
now being made by the American rubber indus-
try into which over 50 machine gun bullets can
be fired without loss of fuel.
The
ported,
believe
I- , i
J
d'
D
f:
L
y
Chapter Five
Sudden Confession
Last night Lovely returned to find back to Gert. And
her sister and her husband quarrel- say she lives?"
ne-___— hted down with
money,” Lovely said;
WEHKLK REGISTER
BY MAIL, in all other counties of the United
States:
WEEKLY REGISTER
BY MAIL in Gainesville or in Cooke, Grayson,
Denton, Montague, Wise counties, Texas, and Love
county, Oklahoma:
a hectic weekend answering
questions. .
for a ticket back to Oscawana, and fifteen dollars,
returned to the picnic spot. Now to her of course.
By O. J. ROBINSON
THE NON-MISSION CHURCH--
Is not a dying church. It is a dead one.
Need not place a motto of “welcome” over its
door. Crepe will do.
Is not failing in leadership. It has failed for
lack of leadership.
Can not face the judgment-bar on the reputa-
tion of its denomination.
Will never fill its mission until awakened
a
&
eP
nr.
"fh
w’
9’
c
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or standing of any firm, individual or cor-
poration. will be gladly corrected upon being called
to the publishers’ attention.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to
the use for republication of all news dispatches
age our place.”
“But if I had lipts
4 9
BASSO TAKES A BRIDE—Ezio Pinza, leading basso
with the Metropolitan Opera, poses in his New York home with
his bride, the former Doris Leak of Larchmont, N. Y.
Mr. Kearney relates other feats of pre-
cision that industrial dynamiters perform.
In remodeling a factory it was necessary
to remove some massive concrete machin-
ery bases 10 to 12 feet high and six feet
thick. The walls and roof were practically
all glass and some extremely delicate
pieces of electrical machinery stood not
more than 10 feet distant. Any disarrange-
ment of them would have been costly. But
the blasters set their charges and reduced
these bases to fragments without even
spilling a glass tumbler brimful, of water
placed on the floor alongside one of the
electrical machines.
A wall was blasted out of a metropoli-
tan bank while business went on as usual.
Sharks are killed by dynamite charges
without damaging their skin for tanning.
Smokestacks can be dropped to a nicety
just where desired.
One'of the strangest uses for which dy-
namite is employed is to “blow out” oil
well fires. Properly set off, such an explo-
sion sometimes snuffs these fires as
though they were candles.
Six months. In
•drawee__________
The invitation of 1 he
too often proves to be an
P.s. GO OVER’T
SEE MURIEL . NQM,
AUD IF SM6 tWb
THta B9oADCAST TEL
HER WAT L WAS
OHLY FOOLING-.
No. 13 !
Deductions for Professional
Expenses ।
A professional man may deduct
all necessary expen ses incurred in
the pursuit of his profession. These
a girl called Lovely Daye.
The Bargain
Words would have come to his
I Ji 'J
1 - n:
I
to greater chances lor <
-3 - th).
Gainesville Qailu Regisker
—ouaea August, 1890. By JOHN T. LEONARD. Published Each Afternoon, Except Sunday
Eouuded 5 (Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939)
The Word of God
The World Looked for Its Saviours in the
Wrong Place: Saviours Are Born in Mangers and
In Log Cabins Sometimes: But I say unto you
that Elias is come already, and they knew him
not. but have done unto him whatever they listed.
-Matt. 17:12.
1
1 8
• fl
I
A
y»on, Denton,
Love county.
---“DAILY REGISTER
Easily the best story that came out of the
whole inaugural was when a young lad stepped
- up to a uniformed policeman in the Court of
Freedom and asked: “Can you tell me which way
I go to get to the Mayflower hotel?”
The copper looked at him sternly for a moment
and then wilted. “I don’t know, son,!’ he said,
“I’m a stranger here myself.”
And he was, too -one of the out-of-town
policemen who had been brought in to help.
U.S.ABM
CANP MIK
{
11 ASHINGTON- Looking back on the inaugu-
Vy ration, there were so many things worth
recording that the crowded news wires couldn’t
find space for, that I am put-
HOWARD HINZ
PHILADELPHI V
Heinz, 63, president
paper and also to local news appearing herein.
In case of errors or omissions occurring in local
or other advertisements or omissions on scheduled
date, the publishers do not hold themselves liable
for damages further than the amount received by
them for such advertisements.
By VIVIEN GREY
Yesterday: Lovely Daye met a pocket and brought
an.
<
35
is THAT v
EFS-YOD-T-FULERUCFTVOUR SUEBTIE,zsz
• ,-3 $
e27y
«FE‛~ 4 _
to business may be deducted
business expense.
r by the way, has written some 48%
1 of the most vig rously anti- pgA* S’
I Roosevelt stories and whose pa- 641 a.E23
I per is much against the new deal.
Papa, whose face was very red, was a hundred
I yards away in the press section: and could do
I nothing about it. But daughter scored immensely.
A Kentucky Democrat standing behind her
I leaned over and said: “Honey, anyone as loyal
I as you are deserves a better seat.” He picked her
I up and put her on his shoulder where she re-
I mained throughout the ceremony continuing to
I shout at the top of her childish tremolo: “Hurra-
I a-ay for President Roosevelt”
I A secret service man who knew her father
I and his attitude toward the new deal told me
I later: "If I had known whose child she was, I
2 would have gone over and tapped her on the
^shoulder and said: TWhat are you doing .Honey
... heckling?’” I
if you had.” •
Lovely laughed. It was a beau-
deals rather
business known by is “57 varie-
ties.”
al areas and
ped at an as-*
a 23.5 per
1937 and
TOO DANGEROUS FOR WAR
IN ITS blind destructiveness a tornado
1 is appalling. So is the hate-controlled
bomb dropped from a great height on a
crowded city. Equally powerful is a heavy
charge of dynamite but the word carries
no suggestion of horror. Great power un-
der control is an admirable thing.
Dynamite is actually too dangerous to
use in war, says Paul Kearney, in Nation’s
Business. It couldn’t be used for propelling
a projectile, but in the hands of men who
know their stuff it can perform as delicate
a job as roughing out the 80-foot letters in
Gutzon Borglum's 500-word history that
is part of his epic mountain-side sculpture
in the Black Hills.
advanee-------
One year, fa
her heart sinking, wasn't he rich
after all?”
Charging that .the school system of the
I country is not adequately preparing youth
for the national emergency, Doc'. •-
l dard announced that the Commission is
He’d never marry
kind—not a boy who drives a
like that as if it was—well,
I 14
i l 17
believed to
Five doctors had performed a
autopsy and had already em
balmed Byron.
have it with me so I could buy
and buy! Anything I wanted:
Wem lka _ 1il gii 1 at a candy
Roger paused on
the thought of what fun it would
little girl to the
apparently innocent little fig-
i re appearing in s; ’*
The Register Saturday,
tionate amount for €
preciation of the boo
ducted. Depreciatioi
ting down some of them. six
For instance, maybe some of/
you heard, over the radio, thatg
tiny, far-away voice which in-BL
ter m i11 en t ly kept cryingga
throughout the ceremony- not E d
only during the oath-taking butlO
also during the* president's ad-AV
dress—"Hurra-a-ay for Presi-Bp
dent Roosevelt!” E
It was the 5-year-old daugh-
ter of a newspaperman who. A
—------- andequlp-
liant smile, the wide, luring brown ment. ’ Insurance prmiums on of-
eyes, the smooth tanned skin of fice or other professic nal equip-
lawny did his best to get there i
time, but he was tool late . .
walked out. But I still don’t
why I should have bothered
Printing Company. (nsgsPubtshezos" atnsesvthiseCnrk ssCounty. Texas. Editorial and Busi-
“STRICTLY PRIVATE
Frademark Apolica For
Six monthm *■
vance —t-----36.50
a propor-
1 year’s de-
1
E!
AEW YORK When we remember that Sinclair Lewis once entered .
lx pulpit and dared God to strike him dead, and that Ferde Grofe, i:
with all this. It isn’t quite grati-
tude after such heavenly bacon JUDGE HENRY ST
and eggs. Excuse it please!”' '
very nicest candy shops in the
world.
To be continued.
4
- iso rance may
be deducted. A preriiun paid for
-___ ,_-____ -_____ - automobile liability insurance
lips in a torrent, hot passionate should be apportion d and that
--.ds. It was a sweeping sort of part of the premiui i i ttributable
Ralph Eugene Whited. 18. Span-
ish
Mister! I really came, on impulse.”.
“Thanks for impulses, then,’’
said.
iuve, the theater, and now wil
write another book . L . “A novelis
ing of its vision.
Should be granted a copyright for its pious
hypocricy.
It not only marking Time, but is challenging
Eternity.
God has said of such a church: “I will spue
thee out of my mouth.’’
there
They
TONIGHT AT A CAWP DANCE THERE
WAS A GUY RINNING AZOUND TE
PLOOR UIT A MSROPHDNE.....WE
Au LAUGHED AND DID A Lor OF
KDDDING...I UEIEP KIEW nu UAIER
THAT IT WAS A REAL EROADCAST
FROM COAST TO COAST....
her throat for a second and then
rippled like a song to her curving
lips.
“Thanks for them kind words.
across the table was a trace timid.
“It’s hard to tell family things
But I do want you to know I I
didn’t just come up here trying
to hang myself on you."
“I’m su r e you didn’t, but
wouldn’t have minded in the least
___ ___ e p wrote many novel 3 u ider the pen
throwing a monkey wrench into name of Elizabeth Ei- -- t.i.
SoIjust the widow of noble me: 1, Baron Van
not a deductible item , being a cap-
ital expenditure, bit
But this was a mad thing, an un- journals for the taxp
reasoning impulse. ’Perhaps the
The bacon and eggs were per-
fect. The toast with its butter
Late Deaths
By The Associated Press
REED SMOOT
and frightened. - I : [ ’ -I---
"Well," she was trying to finish Russell.
on a gay note, “I can’t k e
natural upflare of a man about tc
marry, about to promise one girl
unswerving faithfulness for the
rest of his life. Emily. He tried to
“I'm glad you have. Lovely,”1 +i
voice very earnest and a traci
ture so in question.
Lovely caught something of h s
thought in his eyes and her heart
quickened its beat. He was look-
ing at her as if he really liked
her. Not just an exterior thing
that had to do with her good
looks and young curves. But some-
JiG gun.g up aww N-j-- get
under my skin. Gert said a wed-
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1941.
ji |— .—( . . —
SCHOOL SYSTEM CRITICIZED
HR A. J. STODDARD of Philadelphia,
V chairman of the Educational Policies
Commission of the National Education
Association, addressed a conference of su-
perintendents of schools I that met in
Washington, D. C., the week of January
20th, under the auspices of the education
section of the WPA. I '
use is also a deductible item..
The cost of teehmica
veiled if war shifts major ac-
tivity to the area near Turkey
and Asia Minor.
____■ a
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.—Reed
Eyasi. - - toe
o-g"STigEqmnzynes*e,ranas:
Dne month, in ad- -5,
vanee --------
8 mante", 00
i
- . A
3**88 > $
of the moment: “But why borrow
worry? We re here togethe r.
We've just had a swell breakfas t.
And it looks like Paradise o it
there, the river, the trees and
all!”
That stopped Roger Cosgrav re
for a full minute. A girl with the
sort of high reckless courage that
could live in the beauty of the
present with her immediate fu-
Production of
, — severely with
those who fail to return question-
employee. I he1p
naires properly. And they
- to observe the
P,
k y for
possessjon of untax paid whisky.
Desiring to be guided strictly by
th* law, the men who read this
newspaper and whose numbers
we re 'involved in the error, began
be sieging members of the draft
bo ard with telephone calls and per-
So: al visits to learn if their ques-
tionnaireshad miscarried.
■ * ♦ ♦ *
THE DRAFT BOARD members
therefore, spent a hectic weekend
“But you’ll need 1 * 2.
for this breakfast, or," smiling
brightly, “am I —
Heinz Company . _ -_______o„,
multi-million dolla r p reserved food
place. It was his quaint idea when
I got out of college * - ~ - -
tender. “And where do you
from here?" He was smiling
ing over her, and ran away. And Lovely gave
because she had no other plac e to but still she hdn’t taken the
go, she spent most of her m oney money' he held
I seeking for practical steps for the school
■ system to follow in making itself as effi-
I cient as modern American industry. These
■ steps will be based on surveys of ninety
I outstanding high schools. Work to build a
I new program has been started at the head-
I quarters of the NEA by nine young men
I from school systems and colleges through-
I out the country.
I The new program, the speaker declared,
I is the response of education to the chai-,
I lenge hurled by the president in his inau-
I guration address to the present education
■ system and to Americans unborn. The
h president’s challenge was “to step up the
L preparation of American youth to meet
■ the threat of totalitarianism against the
democracies.” - 1 .
While many good things could be said
about our American school system, he in-
dicated it would be well to follow what
William S. Knudsen of the OPM was doing
about industrial production. Mr. Knudsen
is keeping a critical eye on industry with a
view to increased production in the emer-
gency that confronts the country.
Later in the week, Belmont Farley, as-
sistant secretary of the Educational Pol-
icies Commission, declared that the prin-
ciples of our free democratic institutions
should be instilled in the nation’s youth
■ as a defense against the totalitarian doc-
■ trines taught European youth by nazi-fas-
. cist organizations. Farley charged that
heretofore the schools had failed to clarify
the various characteristics of our demo-
cratic institutions. A study of the various
concepts of our democratic way of living
might well be introduced in the various
school levels, say, from junior high school
on up through senior high school years,
even if certain other courses had to be
abandoned, in the opinion of some observ-
ers.
«county men who registered under
tile draft act, who have, either
through negligende .......—j,
failed to return th questionnaires
properly filled out.
E Let’s take Verdi, whose opera
5 are immortal ... As a child h
2 ws an acolyte in a Catholi
E church and it is said that once a
E annoyed priest knocked him un
E conscious . . . The legend is tha
E later the priest was struck dea
5 by lightning.
5 Wagner, generally believed th
5 greatest of all composiers of op
lose eraS- was in real life a prim
of us who like to read, and sift, chisler, a notorious anti-Semit
and analyze the remembered leg- and a revolutionist . .. He wa
ends and episodes and anecdotes of also dishonest in money matters
people whose novels we have en- Brahms for awhile earned 5
rec >'rdl for Thomas Ross Noble joyed and those operas and sym- cents a night playing waltzes 11
rc 1., Thomas. FoSi ‘7. J phonies have lived long years after a Hamburg dive for saliors an<
John Gleaves Young Nellie Viena they themselves are dust. their waterfront sweethearts . .
Coqk, Alfred Bentley, Ivan Ellis Tschaikowsky studied law an
Eeaty,.Mary Meade .Finnie, and It fascinates me, for instance, lived as a clerk. He; was pas
John Frankiin ozment. to know that Mozart wrote his own twenty-five before music attract
RY MAnaer t««:
--‛menth. !• nd- Six month
her. She was glad he didn't sym-
pathize. f
Courage
thing deep that might be lasting.
She was aware of a thrill < f
surprise. Perhaps and she tren -
bled inwardly with eagerness at
the thought—-luxury was not after
all so far beyond the reach of her
hands. Hands, she glanced dow i
at them, so suited to it and that
- . V
Then suddenly Lovely was till-
ing him the whole thing. About
the Home and on through the
years to the moment she stood
outside dthat closed door and lis-
tened to Ring’s and Gert’s‘quar-el.
Lovely looked up at him as she
time it is used fc r professional
purposes.
gained national prominence as co-
author of the Sm not -Hawley tar- j
iff act. He was on, • ol the 12 apos-
tles of the Mormon c lurch.
“Shall we toss a coin?” washer
gay suggestion. There was some-
thing he liked about the galls nt
young courage of her. Something
like hands taking hold of his
heart.
“Won’t they worry about you
in the city? Your sister, I mean ?”
“Would you worry about ji st
one more mouth to feed?” was
her answering question.
“If it was yours, I would. But
that doesn’t settle anything. Hare
you no place at all to go?” ,
“Only back to my sisters.” And
One year, in
advanee-------$2.00
and Cleveland new. spa Der man.
JOSEPH E. < LIFFORD
then the brilliance of her smi
breaking through the seriousness
thing he felt helpless against. It
was a miracle to him that he
could force his voice to speak
calmly and sanely.
“But this sister of yours,” he
said. "She m u s t be pretty fond
of you? You’d probably be wel-
come back there if you had a
little money? Sometimes things
like that make a difference.”
had always wanted it so. The fee 1 deduct a portion of 1 he wages paid
of fine fabrics, of costly furs, of domestic servants whose time is
elegance and luxury and ease, partly occupied in ci rir
a rooms. Membership d:
Her fill fessional societies i re I deductible,
eliohtio I physicians and dentists who keep
Registered men
Your SON
Givd Gdu Clunku. ,
pense. The cost o
| "■ ‘I
J
lingered and lingered. And talked.
Mostly of unimportant things.
Finally Lovely said it:
“I presume you’re wondering
how I happen to be up here again
this morning?” She had a feeling
she owed him some explanation.
Roger smiled.
“I’m glad you’ve brought that
up. I was wondering."
“Well,” Lovely hesitated. She
toyed with an extra spoon, for
the first time the smile she flashed
day?”
■I ■
IN THE NEWS STORY
lished in The Register, it
st ated that persons
rnge from 1 to 1.999 had been
Roger shook his
“My credit is
charge it.”
Clifford. 78. Minneapolis milling
company executive and I philanthro-
pist. 1 .
business taking a jc b some other
fellow might need when he could
keep me busy heping him man-
war-very great. case against the A. H. Belo Cor- tended illness.
' British people,” he re- poration. publisher of the Dallas Funeral services werth eld,4
“are united as I did not (Tex.) News and owner of two ra- the C. M. E church Monday AI
it was possible for a whole dio stations, would be appealed im- ernoon, with burial in Fairvie
to be united ill a common mediately to the Fifth Circuit cemetery. His wife, a brother am
purpose to survive. Court of Appeals at New Oilcans, two sisters survive.
"The free people of the; United .Judge Atwell dismissed a wage-
States should be prayerfully hour complaint against the cor- Rritigh Horceg
thankful that they do not have to poration last week and granted it •I 111314 < •-1
as | the free people of Britain a declaratory judgment, holding (Continued From Page One)
compelled to live, with sleep- that its method of computing
nights of apprehension and overtime pay for employes satis- a few officers an 1 men
of fear as to what may hap- fied the requirements of the law the Bulgarian army in the use
in the morrow," j ______ so long as it exceeded the pre- equipment sold by the reich.
- - ' e ------- scribed minimum. . ___ _ !-----►
wealthy young man named Roger leather wallet.
Cosgrave because she and some of “Fifteen dol
own Topics
A. MORTON SMITH
ERE’S AN OLD SAYING
that “figures don’t lie" but an
(ILL SAY!,
)Z4. -( TS .
(aah
her friends from the tenement "That’s all I’ve got with me.
district of New York were ires- Lucky.
passing on the Cosgrave estate, carry that much, 'take it and go
Roger Cosgrave knew a surging
it magazines and newspapers for the
He wanted desper 4 * ” - .
her hands as fhey duct this item as 3
Tlie news item referred to gave
t otals of men pla ced in the
rious clssifications under the a-
luctiye service act in Cooke coun-
ty. ■ .
And good times! She leaned)
JI STICE OF PEACE
Felony Locket 1
sat of Texas vs. Robert A.
S 610 man, driving while intoxi-
cated.
Wilkie
of rich people ci rri d much more
Along Came Cinderella
include the cost of supplies used in < - , ,
- - rent cost cf a British collapse would make the
ilar products showei
cent decline betwe n
Among other figures wap the to-
' number of persons who had
failed to answer questionnaires
to them'. This (figure was five.
That means there
Entered at the Gainesville Texas, (postoffice
e as Second-class Matter.
Members of the Associated Press, United Press,
rMen Press Association, and International Circu-
Inn Managers’ Association.
’ DAILY REGISTER
1 months. in advanee —
Sie oi"50 .-"nt. per month will cUrt.J.
she is having breakfast with,
all people, Roger.
NEW HAVEN, Comn.
hi Henry Stoddard, 97.
Cf have'been the oldest practicing
Kt lawyer in the United states.
“NPros S. VAN DZER
"CLEVELAND
i S
$8
..
“You have second sight.’
ly said brightly. "And
We missed “One-Eyed” Connally at the In-
augural but we did have our ace gate-crasher.
Stanley Richardson, major dome for Joseph
E. Davies, chairman for the Inaugural committee,
had charge of the sale (and distribution to the
press, etc.) of the thousands of tickets for seats
that lined the mile-long parade route, i
At 2:30, just as the parade was starting, he
got his last chore done, dashed to the stands in
front of the White House, and marched up to the
guard. It was only then that the man whose
hands had been stained for days with ticket ink
realized" that he didn’t have a ticket!
Being a one-time newspaper man—and a
good one, too Richardson figured what he would
do if he still were a newspaperman . . . and did it.
He crashed the gate, squeezing in between a
couple of friends from the state department and
slithering past the guard so rapidly, that the fel-
low never had time to rasie his eyebrows. Which
is why the boys now refer to Mr. Davies’ right-
hand man as Stanley “One-Eyed" Richardson.
Mariage Kidenses composed “Dream Through the sky with his law books fend Grof
chester Melvin Reeves, 20 city, Twilight" while waiting for his With his dog . . .
Emma Marie Wright. 23. Rt. wife to put on her hat. Lewis has given up
1. dainesville. [I (... . , love, the theater, '
ggEdrt,TguaandAlice.Grace ’m^bid’dread PbeingFembame no"
Meers 24, Spanish Eort Texas. and once made his friend Tre- As for Grofe, the last word
lawny promise “not to let those had from him, a note, said he ex
doctors push me around..’’ if lie. pected to leave for ( alifornia
Byron, died first . . . Later, when Probably he is already there.
foomhs current
Don’t you see that’s just why I
can’t go on pushing her life
around?”
"Yes," thoughtfully “I do.”
“Without me maybe she and
Ring---” but she toppd speak-
ing.
Roger’s hand had gone to his
•
backing his car out of the drive one night, unfortunately ran over hi
little pet dog, a fox hound, and killed it, We may wonder briefly wha
urged Lewis to do such a thing or pause for the moment to sympathiz
with Grcfe’s grief over th less of his friend. But we attach no specia
significance to these incidents. We accept them for what they are, hu
manizing little incidents in the lives of two well known men.
And yet a hundred years from __________________I________
anwering the questions of these now, leafing through faded news-
hu ndreds of men who feared they paper files, students doubtless will Byron was dead in Greece, Tre
had failed to receive question- come upon these
res mailed them, when, as a incidents and re-
matter of fact, their question- port them, ana
res had never been mailed. some even will
Thus it may be seen, what anx- try to. read some
it y and woes an apparently in- special sign f -
nod ent little figure can cause. cance into them
The Register regrets this error, and wonder 11
rateful to the draft board for they offer a key
indulgence, and it is our sin- t -e"1s Per-
cere hope that such a mistake does s 0 na 11 t! or
not again appear in news of the whether the dog
draft board’s activities. incident had any
I -________. effect on Grofe s
career.
g a M 1 I mention this __
00 AI K,060 TOS because that is the way of
CO I NTY COURT
Pre bate Docket <
j A pplications to establish birth
Jimmy Roosevelt, tycoon of the juke-box
movies, probably caused more jconsternation
■ among the uninitiated than any other person.
The question, almost invariably was: “Who
Ils that foreign diplomat on whose arm the presi-
gdent is leaning?”
I The answer was: “That’s no foreign diplomat,
that’s Captain James Roosevelt of the United
st nt questionnaires. The latter fig-
ure should have been “1,100” in-
stead of “1,999." an error which
o< cur red in this newspaper office.
Wnen registered men whose
numbers range from 1.101 to 1.999
inclusively, saw the figure, they
haturally enough supposed that
questionnaires had been sent them
and since they did not recall re-
ce ving them and filling them out,
they feared that they were among
th • five whose questionnaires had
not been returned.
"(Continued Irom Page One)
see Arim, a German, and the second
dences both as the ir offices and
their homes. ‘In such instance the
physician may deduct as a busi-
ness expense the rental value of
the rooms occupied fori office pur-
poses if he actually pays rent, and
also the cost of light and heat fur-
.-31
Hh“Ebna..l
Six months, in One rear la
advanee------75c advance___
WASHINGTON, Feb. 10 (AP). Joe Dorsey, 70. negro citizen 0
pojnt, bther than to observe that The wage-hour division announced Gainesville for 30 years, died at hi
- i ” -’ . ’ . • ; today that the ruling of Federal home. 409 Schopmeyer street a
of American involvement in Judge William H. Atwell in the 1 a. m. Sunday following an ex
funeral march . . . That Bach had ed him seriously,
two wives and twenty children ...
That Schubert wrote “Hark. Hark Well, that’s the way it goes . .
the Lark” on the back of a cafe Lewis in the pulpit and Brahm
menu, and that Richard Strauss on the waterfront . 1 . Tschaikow
1
IS
come clear. Superimposed on her ducted. Depreciation n
foot urea were fhe dazzlinolv hril- taken on office furniture
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, February 10, 1941, newspaper, February 10, 1941; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469947/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.