Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 75, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 25, 1942 Page: 1 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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1
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 25, 1942
VOL. 53
I
4
‘Last Stand’ Japs Near Buna
f-
2
1
2 i
48
blast shipping and
Tunisia.
to
I
The aerial action was particular-
Determi
to
tween Gona and Sanananda. No
Anticipate Quiet
festive table some-
celebrate at a
been jammed this
country have
week as consumers rushed to buy
{
cial music has been arranged by
I
-WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 (AP).
consider its blessings.
$
his
country.
sugar blank. The word “cof-
' will simply replace the printed
cut to American history. Except
fered from the “casualties and cal-
GALVESTON, Texas, Nov. 25
of sedition and civil war,
i
hem. In other cases.
able to get
V
and implored the aid of the
the abnormal de-
continental and
a strike of city health and street
tor.
the ene-
yeara.
3.
Pe
-a.
-
3
No Single
Chief for
May Drain
Air Force
i, cranberries, veg-
and all the other
turkeys, chick
etables, pastri
fers. Secretary Harold L. Ickes,
Defense Transportation Director
Joseph R Eastman and Price Ad-
ministrator Leon Henderson had
represented
teire by
!
The custom of Thanksgiving was
re-established by President Lin-
coln, amidst the agonies at the
one of the
sections of
be without
of which th
The Pin)
during its "teen"
Madison's procla-
tors are doodle drawing.
Showdown Predicted
any
new
To Be Held at First
Presbyterian Thursday
A service of praise and thanks-
the i
fee”
for it.
ANCIENT GIFTS
Associated Press
United Press
AP Telemats
vaders.)
Added Axis Troubles
for the fu-
fearful of short-
seas."
Apparenty the nation was so
itest beef producing
country, may soon
at, except for pork,
is a limited supply.
see trace the whol
revolutionary war.
Determined
Feast Thursday
SABOTEUR’S FATHER
SENTENCED TO DEATH—
Hans Haupt, father of Her-
bert Hans Haupt, executed
nazi saboteur, leaves federal
court at Chicago after having
been sentenced to death. He
was one of six convicted "of
treason. Two other men also
were given death sentences.
7
in Russia
Battle at Extremely
Critical Stage. Eden
Tells Commoze
Cowboy Henry is
Held at Beaumont
. BEAUMONT, Nov. 25 (AP).—
Claude (Cowboy) Henry was cap-
tured without resistance here to-
however, had no confirmation.
The Germans' heavy use of air
transport was underscored by a
Reuters report from Cairo that a
Japanese planes appeared to con-
test the air with the allied fliers,
it was reported.
“sugar” on the form.
Coffee sales to consumers were
“frozen” at midnight Saturday to
allow dealers to make an inven-
tory and replenish their stocks.
Consumers will not be required to
register as their present sugar
books will be used to obtain one-
pound allotments until War Ration
Book No.2 is issued in January.
War Work
FDR Still* Argument
In Capital Over Who
I* Production Bo** * -
-
, 1.
ident told a press conference yes-
terday, must work together to
solve the problems of production,
allocation of materials and schedul-
ing of production.
Further, he declared, all the of-
ficials concerned with these prob-
lems are supposed to agree. And if
they don’t, Mr. Roosevelt added, he
will put them in. a room and tell
them to do so.
Commenting on current conflict-
ing reports over who has the final
word on production and allocations,
thej president observed that those
who say there will be a single maa
control over all war production fac-
He said he hoped to develop
through the four officials “such a
been directed to appear Friday to
establish the need for rationing.
*Tve had more than 2,000 com-’
plaints, largely from the midwest,” I
Truman told reporters.
our fellow citizens while engaged
in their lawful business on. the
CAPTURED — Claude E.
(Cowboy) Henry, above, who
escaped a Texas prison farm,
and made an effort to reach
Lake Charles, La., to contact
his wife, Anne Beatrice (Toni
Jo) Henry, was captured in a
hotel room at Beaumont, Tex-
as, early today. His wife is
scheduled to die Saturday for
the slaying of a Houston,
Tex., salesman.
more beef until Jan.1,
(Contqued on Page Si) •
American units were reported at-
tacking an air field in the fare of
stiff enemy artillery and machine
gun fire.
The allied airmen made more
than 100 sorties over the battle
art a yesterday, dropping hundreds
of bombs and spraying many thou-
sands of rounds of machine gun
bullets on positions of the trapped
Japanese.
the city tax rate of 23 cents on
the 5100 assessed valuation was
defeated yesterday by property
owners by a two-to-one margin.
The city commission agreed to
submit the proposal on recommen-
dation of a special citizens’ com-
mittee as part of the settlement of
ages later.
i Not all of the demands are being
met In some localities the supplies
were limited and grocers set up
their own rationing schemes. In the
case of some foods the overall sup-
ply was insufficient. Not all who
wanted turkeys, for instance, were
People
Their Idiosyncrasies,
Their Joys and Sorrows
going strong. He believes the tires
are good for the duration.
His first in 1789, offered grati-
, tude for “the peaceable and ration-
Thankagiving represents • shotenamaanetoisthishn"oshaveuhonn
victory over their troops.'
Later, we give *
terpreted Wilson’s new role as
chiefly that of plane production
coordinator charged with synchro-
nizing production of parts with
that of the skeleton, will see
whether certain navigation instru-
ments are ready for installation
and if some plant is not up to
schedule it will be Wilson’s job to
correct that condition.
Mr. Roosevelt added that the
newest planes are much heavier,
have a greater wingspread and
more horsepower than their corre-
sponding types that came off the'
assembly lines a year ago, and each
requires more man hours to make.
As a result, he said, the gov-
ernment is going to spend more
time on the workmanship phase
in 1943 than it did a year ago in
an effort to get more out of each
plane.
Turn Down City
Employe Pay Hikes
Thanksgiving Day
Union Worship Service
Many Forego Holiday
But Not Traditional
Thanksgiving Dinner
BY OVID A. MARTIN
WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 (AP).
Americans may be willing to fore-
go the holiday part of Thanksgiv-
ing tomorrow in order to keep war
production wheels humming but
they apparently are determined to
county. Sale of light wine and beer
in most precincts at pres-
, . a__:___if________
lieved to still be those holding de-
tensive arcs some 30 miles outside
Tunis and Bizerte and in flight be-
fore Britain’s 8th army in Libya,
although Vichy radio yesterday
reported strong enemy formations
landed at Gabes and Ssax in south-
ern Tunisia.
Allies Roam Tunisia
American, British and French
forces were reported roaming the
length and breadth of Tunisia,
clashing occasionally with enemy
patrols in short but violent en-
gagements, and preparing for the
final showdown with the axis in
Africa.
E.. 4
a
2*,8
Almighty “to heal the wounds of
the nation, and to restore it to the
full enjoyment of peace, harmony,
tranquility, and union.”
The next two decades record the
restoration of harmony and the
building up of the west. The pro-
clamations offer Thanksgiving for
abundant crops, successful com-
merce and manufacturing, a flood
complete picture of the necessity"'
for general rationing that opposi-
tion would subside. giving for the blessings enjoyed in
“Once the American people are j America has been planned for citi-
convinced that this drastic step is' zens of Gainesville, to be held
The Daily Register will go to
press before noon Thursday, and
persons desiring to place news for
publication on that day are asked
to telephone the office not later
than 9 o'clock Thursday morning.
Featured on the afternoon en-
tertainment prograin will be the
Denton-Gainesville football Pame
at p.m at Leeper stadim. ‛
zvg7
to
job.: B
One example:
Paseo high school has 361
pupils interested is working,
but 151 are under 16 and 201
|
4
• uQ00E ELECTION CALLED
MINERAL WELLS, Texas, Nov.
25 (AP).— Commiasioners court
has ordered an election Dee. 8 to
W,
A ;
The Weather
1 . 1 > 11
trimmings.
“Never before, report agriculture
department officials, has there
been so great a demand tor food.
Possessing a record volume of pur-
chasing power and limited outlets
for its expenditure, civilians de-
manded an unprecedented quantity
of good things to eat Families
that never before thought of buy-
ing turkeys are in the market now
for the festive bird.
Buying For Future ’
Some of the heavy buying, gov-
ernment officials said, undoubtedly
ited that the tem-
iges were greatest in
meat poultry, milk
eggs, some
vegetables, and some
This wartime Thanksgiving is a
solemn occasion to Junior’s par-
ents, but to Junior, studying the
development of * *
' -,jir0e
8,
ycg
Sgce a ,5
B > 4 88%. 2
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necessary, they will be patriotic Thursday morning at 10 o’clock in
and co-operate as they always do,” ' First Presbyterian church in ob-
Truman said. servance of Thanksgiving day.
Conceding that there was no —. ... T.ncIa +n.
the house committee that “ a car a Thanksgiving sermon by ReV-
Alexander Gray, pastor of South-
December 1 remains the effec- choke off supplies and reinforce-
tive date. - -
ance.
“You fellows seem mighty ner-
vous,” he chided the officers, who
had covered him with their wea-
pons, "I'm not going to cause you
any trouble.”
Henry was captured only 60
miles, from Lake Charles, La.,
where his wife faces execution. He
told officers he was sorry he had
not been able to “get over there"
to see her.
Struggle
is Nearing
done to avert the move. They re-' nazi seaplane capable of flying 80
ferred to Jeffer’s declaration that > fully equipped soldiers, had been
rationing was not necessary to con-| shot down into the Mediterranean
serve gasoline outside the east but | by RAF fighters off the eastern
was essential for the conservation coast of Tunisia. The plane was
of rubber, stocks of which, he said, j f i y i n g northward, presumably
might reach a dangerous low next after having disembarked enemy
year. _ __ reinforcements.
Truman Calls Witnesses ------------------
Chairman Truman (D-Mo) of the , A • •!! •A
special senate defense investigat- lanegvIeITAG
ing committee announced that Jef- UCIIIVV IIIVIVV
Allies In Bitter Battle With
time during the day.
Millions will work as usual to
keep the planes, tanks and ammu-
nition rolling but when they sit
down to dinner it will be to one of
the moSt bountiful Thanksgiving
feasts in the nation’s history.
Grocery stores throughout the
Are on the
Defensive
30 Miles Separate
Reds Pressing in on •
* Two Sides of Invaders
By EDDY GILMORE
MOSCOW, Nov. 25 (AP).
Axis armies balked and bled
at Stalingrad for ’ an even
three months, fought on the
less they received instructions .to
the contrary by Western Union
telegram before 9 p. m. August 21,
1939, the opinion recited.
Mrs Bates was assured that her
telegram “Boy may stay” would be
delivered before 9 p. m. It was not
delivered until the next morning,
the opinion continued, and as a re-
sult the child was placed on the
train and was not met at the Fort
Worth station. Mrs. Homer claim-
ed damages for the mental anguish
suffered the next dav between time
of delivery of the telegram and re-
ceipt of another message from her
daughter, assuring her the child
was safe. She was awarded 5400
by the trial court and the award
was upheld by the court of civil
appeals.
Program December 1
WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 (AP).| The air war preliminary to the
Protests against nationwide gaso-! decisive ground battle continued
line rationing drenched the capital! hotly. The enemy air objectives
today but Rubber Administrator ; apparently were threefold — to
William M. Jeffers declared the i rake advancing allied columns in
prog i Am stands. Tunisia, to --• -hi--i-~ --A
IaKagamuoms
’ g
67
X
33
Great Air Power Backs Hitler’s African Army
Nazi Escape Corridor at Stalingrad Narrowed
Germans
“ a car
win burn up as much rubber in . . , -
Oklahoma, for example, as it will ern Presbyterian church, and Spe-
in Maine." cial music has been arrang'd by
ficiently to
mand.
Reports
porary sho
the cases
and dairy
types of '
luxury items.
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egister
VAN NUYS, Calif.—A 400-year-
old Chinese brass flower vase, a
heavy brass incense burner, a pair
of dynasty bowls and an ancient
Chinese gong were among gifts
to the metal drive.
Mrs. Grace Gates Mitchell. whose
son died while flying for the RAF,
gave her collection that included
brass nails from the American
Revolutionary period, old andirons
and century-old candlesticks from
a Russian cathedral.
Fanciest gift: a full dress hel-
ment of the Prussian guard.
RATION PROOF J
SAN FERNANDO, Calif.—CL W.
Robinson didn’t dash after a gaso-
line ration book. He didn’t need
one.
His 1912 electric automobile is
that nationwide rationing is com'
pletely unnecessary.
After hearing Jeffers yesterday,
however, members of a bouse in-
ly intense on a six-mile stretch be- terstate subcommittee said private-
Tin-__"___I.. -- ly it appeared that little could be
4,
9 -A
F •' * 2
r •dffv
.d.x
ddahd
=—,—* . | a a traditional American hone with
The proclamations of the old thanks for our exemption from the
' — -ntional congres- war swirling about the nations in
• history of the Europe.
to the erty darkperlod.we itTh’aprouathmtulsprogiarptatn
iSl’ZS’SJ*"euppse 402 oGe ammhtgdecemizs." #08
-------------armies, and “to our cause by shadowed the war of 1812 in his
department employes last Septem- defeating the councils and evil de- concern over "the unfriendly dis-
---- signs of our enemies, and giving us position, conduct and demands of
virt ee” thei” mum. a foreign power, by depredations
that “there have been so many in-
stances of prowess and success in
our armies, they have recovered
unfold the1 a-q- ---- ofunegualed magnitude and sever-
.^3 "for toe civil and religious liberty ity." Yet, in the middle of war, he
s rise from with which hleesed ” Si- preferred to look to the peace be-
By The Associated Press
—PERPLEXING—
NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.—Post-
al authorities are stumped by this
one: more than 100 unstamped, un-
addressed envelopes containing
coins have been deposited in a
mailbox on Falls street.
Acting Postmaster Thomas F.
Gray hazarded a guess someone
might be donating to some federal
agency but “ all we can do,” he
added, “is hold the envelopes and
consign them to the dead letter
office.”
NOSEBLEED CURE
LOS ANGELES—Dr. A. D. Trot-
ter, police-surgeon, made this re-
port:
Charley Williams, 1 46-year-old
boxing instructor had a nosebleed.
Several friends swiftly twisted a
tourniquet around his neck and
rushed him to a hospital.
• Doctor Trotter said he unwound
the tourniquet from the gasping
Williams just in time.
Anyway, his nose quit bleeding.
WORKERS WANTED
KANSAS CITY—Christmas
workers, 1,130 of them, are
wanted by downtown stores.
Usually the high schools pro-
vide them.
But not this year, says Dr.
Harold C. Hunt, superinten-
dent. Almost every pupil who
is old enough already has a
Cloves once were sold at more
than their weight in gold.
determine whether alcoholic liq- ________
uors are to be sold in Palo Pinto the whole
_ ments, and to fly in men and
Representative Johnson, (D- weapons across the Mediterranean
nghttra 90- stayanankeprs from Sardinia and Sicily.
he and a group of tDeph-statd . , Axis communiques stressed
congressmen would try to show I blows particularly, against allied
-- - J _ I shipping and allied-held ports in
Algeria. These enemy planes.
,e
2 mddid
Gas Rationing
Protests Pour
Into Capital
Rubber Chief Jeffers .
Stands Pat on Starting
21
LONDON, Nov. 25 (AP).—
The scale of axis air attacks
in North Africa was reported
today to show that Hitler was
backing up the enemy’s land
•forces with great air power
for a bitter-end stand on the
Mediterranean shore — prob-
ably even to the extent of
draining planes from his im-
periled Russian front.
This warning of the degree to
which the axis is girding to save
its last footholds in North Africa,
came soon after Foreign Secretary
Eden told the house of commons
that the contest for North Africa
had reached “an extremely criti-
cal stage."
However, the strongest enemy
ground concentrations were be-
labor and transportation shortages
interfered with distribution, or else
retailers had failed to stock up suf-
. Packing company
and the Doty Packing company to-
day notified whiolesalrs they
would be unable to. "
wife before her scheduled execu-
tion in Louisiana Saturday.
Police Capt. George White and
two other Beaumont officers, rous-
ed the convicted slayer from a ho-
tel bed this morning and he sur-
rendered without show of resist-
pay for city employes making 5150 Pgeant o the nation rise from with which we are blessed." Six prere
monthly or less and an increase in colonies to a great yeyg later, Washington expressed yond.
Rev. Robert G. Rayburn, pastor of
the,host church. Rev. J. P. Flem-
ing, Whaley Memorial Methodist
pastor, will read the scripture for
the day.
Mrs. J. E. O’Brien, church organ-
ist, will play “Agnus Dei," and
j Murray Smoot and Mr. Rayburn
' will sing “The Lord Is My Light."
Special selections will be offered by
the church choir, and Rev. T. H. I
Epton, pastor of First Baptist
church. will lead the Thanksgiving
prayer. Rev. O. J. Robinson, pastor
of Grand Avenue Baptist, will say
the benediction.
Presiding during the service will
be Rev. Gerald P. MeCollom, pas-
tor of First Methodist church, an',
president of the pastors' associa-
tion. The public is cordialy invited
to join in this service. !
Business to Close
City, county and state offices in
Gainesville will be closed for the
holiday, as well as menbers of the
local Retail Merchants association.
A skeleton force will remain on
duty in fri—1 offices all day,
however, according to a govern-
---------------- i ■ \
Americans Are
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON, Nov. 25
Arguments among some gov-
ernment officials over who
bosses the nation’s war pro-
duction were stilled at least
temporarily today by Presi- .
dent Roosevelt’s assertion
there is no individual high
command.
Present administrators, the pres- '
Its Climax
Every Plane Allies
Can Muster I* Sent
To Blast the Enemy
GEN. MACARTHUR’S
HEADQUARTERS, Aus-
tralia, Nov. 25 (AP).—Amer-
ican and Australian troops
were gripped in a bitter close-
quarters battle with a “last-
stand” force of Japanese on
the beaches of northeastern
New Guinea today as the
bloody struggle in the Buna-
Gona area approached its cli-
max.
Every plane the allied forces
could muster was sent skimming
over Japanese positions with ma-
chine guns and cannons blazing.
Bombers added high explosives to
the confusion and death below. On
the ground, allied troops who have
surrounded the Japanese on three
sides, closed in slowly.
The heaviest fighting was tak-
ing place on a coastal strip 12
miles long between Buna and Gona.
At Buna, both Australian and
7
Adding to the troubles being
built, up behind the axis siege ar-
mies, the Russians reported yes-
terday that they had shoved a
column down the Volga from the
north to effect a Junction with
Stalingrad’s tough garrison in the
northern part of the city and clear
out a wedge that the invaders had
driven between this sector and the
main part of the town.
Built Coffee Users
Register for Ration
Registration of institutional
users of coffee for. rationed allot-
ments after November 28. began
this week at the local rationing
board, located in the basement of
the courthouse. Ten commercial
users had signed for their allot-
ments Wednesday, the local board
reported. Registration will con-
tinue indefinitely but all institu-
tional users were urged to make
application prior to the coffee ra-
tion date.
Restaurants, hotels, hospitals
and other institutions will be al-
lowed, for the initial two-month
period of rationing, as much coffee
as they used during September
and October.
Institutional users must regis-
ter at the same place where their
registration for sugar allotments
are on file, local officials said,
and the form used is identical to
Government sources have pre-
dicted that War Production Chief
Donald M. Nelson’s appointment of
his vice chairman, Charles E. Wil-
son, as top man over aircraft pro-
duction might lead to a showdown
conflict between WPB and military
services over control of munitions
production.
As matters were going, they
said, the clash might be expected
to determine whether Nelson or
military authorities would have
the final word on war economy.
In appointing Wilson, former
president of General Electric com-
pany, to the post. Nelson stepped
into a field of scheduling and expe-
diting warplane output over which
the army and navy had sole author-
ity.
The WPB chief also named the
army and navy men to sit under
Wilson on a new aircraft board
charged with doubling warplane
production within a year. In addi-
tion, some sources expected that
Wilson would get equal authority
over other key branches of mili-
tary production.
FDR Interprets Bole
The president, however, in-
Thanksgiving Proclamations
Reveal Progress of the Nation
wYMAMMEN A.3°%FRn omlzetwa pnocsmationsnendnch take ume out to enjoy turkey and
of American sentiment
Amarino without Beef
AMARILLO. Texas, Nov. 25.
(AP).—Amarillo, to > the heart of
civil war. “Father Abraham” suf-
already have jobs. That leaves
nine available.
BOTTLE NECK 1,
TWIN FALLS, Idaho—Alton
Young, proprietor of the last dairy
to maintain home'delivery in this
agricultural community, says his
wagons will stop running Dec. 1.
Reason: no tires, no help.
Housewives can still get milk,
but they must go to the market
Temperature: High yesterday,
76; low last night, 48; noon today,
73; high for year, 101; low for
year, 5.
East Texas: Warmer in east and
south portions this afternoon and
near the coast tonight; colder to-
night in west and north portions;
temperature- Mar freezing ex-
treme northwest portion.-
defensive today while re-
surgent Russian arms
squeezed the besiegers’ west-
ern escape corridor down to a
meager 30 miles arid contin-
ued pressing in from two
sides.
Meanwhile latest dispatches
pushed to 80,000 the estimated
German losses in the still mount-
• ing offensive.
Soviet cormuniques reported
both rail and supply lines to the
siege forces cut early in the offen-
sive which started seven days ago
and today’s front line dispatches
indicated that only a narrow strip
running through the Don river el-
bow north of Kalach and south of
Trekhostrovskaya remained open
to an estimated 300,000 Germans
and their allies for moving sup-
plies. or escaping.
.More Towns Captured
The fall of Kalach, on the Stal-
ingrad-Kamensk railroad, was re-
ported Sunday and Trekhostrov-
skaya fell yesterday to forces
pushing down from the southwest.
* (The official communiques have
not made clear the paths being
followed by the several Russian
offensive columns but the location
of the Germans’ escape avenue
north of Kalach would indicate
that the same Red army which cut
the Stalingrad-Novorossisk rail-
road southwest, of Stalingrad
swung part of its forces north-
westward and captured Kalach,
' which lies about 50 miles due west
of Stalingrad, and then swerved
west to take Surovikhino, another
35-40 miles west. | -
(Earlier Russian communiques
reported penetration to Cherny-
shevskaya, about 75 miles west of
Trekhostrovskaya, and this gives
» the picture of a German-held cor-
ridor stretching some 120 miles
west from Stalingrad within nar-
row confines before it spreads out
, into relative security for the in-
CONGRESSIONAL MED-
AL GIVEN HERO’S MOTH-
ER—President Roosevelt be-
stowed the nation’s highest
decoration posthumously
upon Capt. Richard E. Flem-
ing, below, marine pilot cited
for heroic action in the battle
of Midway, when he handed
the congressional medal of
honor to the flier’s mother,
Mrs. Michael E. Fleming of
St. Paul, above. Between
them is Lieut. Gen. Thomas
Holcomb, commandant of the
marine corps.
n
- -—-s,
h n"
local Woman Is
Awarded Damages
For Delayed Wire
Mrs. W. L. Homer’s
Plea Is Upheld by
Texas Supreme Court
AUSTIN, Nov. 25 (AP).—The
supreme court held today that low-
er courts correctly awarded judg-
ment in favor of a grandmother
who had alleged that failure to de-
liver of a telegram on time, caused
her to suffer mental anguish over
the whereabouts of her five-year-
old grandson.
Mrs. Doris Bates of Fort Worth,
daughter of Mrs. W. L. Homer of
Gainesville, left her young son day three days after his egcAn,
with thegandparents withthe wi- from . Tekas prison.rarm, WLiP
demstandingathatorheyrwwid.plane 5S.1'" with intent, of seeing his
(SIX PAGES) NUMBER 75
adowi.
%e -a
e"'
L j
int&nllt Dailm RR
ely
(Sa
of immigration, peace and pros-
Storing this period President
Johnson noted the extension of the
railroad “far into the interior re-
cesses of the country.” and in 1882
President Arthur referred to the
development of the telephone.
■toafca As Worid Power
i America’s emergence as a world
power, during the Spanish-Ameri-
(Contined on Page Six)
y
ezufiwta..,, 3en.c.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 75, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 25, 1942, newspaper, November 25, 1942; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481376/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.