Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 29, 1950 Page: 2 of 8
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LOVELY PET-BUT THE NEIGHBORS OBJECTED
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MODEST MAIDENS
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Trademark Registered U. S. Patent Office
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months $4.50; 1 year $8.50.
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for her reaction. I have jus
ceived the following reply.
“Nothing could have had
11:16 a.
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Leave
8:00 a.
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These Days. . . by George E. Sokolsky
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“The day before the London opening I caught
a severe cold. Now the cold is disappearing. But
I still have to perform with my foot in a cast.
Miss Landis said that she has had much fan
mail including a letter of congratulations from the
Sheriff of London. Also, being a female, she said
she would have never had time to answer my
query except for the fact that she was trapped
at the moment of writing her letter under a hair
dryer in a beauty parlor. I’ve always wondered
what good beauty parlors did in the world.
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before I had even found out the difference be-
tween a shilling and a pound. Ten days before
the opening I got the ‘flu’ . . . 104 temperature and
out for three days.
“Going back to rehearsals I slippea in stepping
out of the taxi at the Savoy hotel, sprained my
ankles and tore some ligaments. I was rushed to
the London clinic to be told by physicians that I
could not open in the play the following Monday.
I refused, remained in the hospital for treatment
and there in the hospital bed I had my fittings
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archaic
59. Location
DOWN
1. Tibetan monk.
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46. American
soprano
49. Influence de-
rived from
past success
53. Meadow
mouse
54. Lubricant
55. River in
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32. Warbles
34. Forced
36. Musical
sound
37. Set of three
39. Historical
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There she was acclaimed by
all the London critics, much more
than she had ever been praised
by her native Broadway critics.
Which is astounding for, normal-
ly, the London critics are very
reticent about paying homage to
American stars. Knowing this, I
cabled Miss Landis and asked
1. Eating three meals a day but refusing to
be tempted by between-meal snacks. 2. Avoid-
simply than Uncle Sam’s. If you are going to
“cut calories, yet have other food essentials for
good health,” you might try:
small scenes in the hospital room.
“We opened the play in Brighton and I wore
bed room slippers as I couldn’t get any shoe over
the cast and strappings. I had around my ankles.
Following the opening night in Cardiff my foot
gave away and they gave me some of this British
coffee with chicory in it. I became ill and had
to be carried to my dressing room—three flights
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The Word of God . . .
The most magnificent friendship ever recorded
among men is worthy of emulation. It takes
fine people to be real friends. The soul of Jona-
than was knit with the soul of David, and Jona-
than loved him as his own soul.—1 S 18:1.
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Our pledge to you: Consist-
ently low prices ALWAYS!
TRY US!
I HAVE AN APPOINTMENT BUT NOT WITH YOL, IK WITH My Roy
FRIEND-HE MEEK ME HERE WHEN HE CANT AFFORD THE MOVIE,
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WASHINGTON, March 29 (A) — Many Ameri- sians takepre-
VV can grown-ups eat too much, say nutrition cisely that posi-
experts in the U. S. Department of Agriculture, tion and it has
e
Founded August 30, 1o »v, oy .
(Absorbed Gainesville Signal,
Published by The Register Printing Company, 308
last California Street, Gainesville, Texas. Entered
Aein S - J.
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ing high-calorie foods like the fat on meat,
cooking fat, salad oil, fried foods, gravies,
rich sauces, nuts, pastries, cakes, cookies,
rich desserts, candies, jellies and jams. And
eating sparingly of bread or cereals. 3. Being
generous about fruits and vegetables, but tak-
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Boyle’s Column .. by Hai Boyle
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Wa P E D
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry In the radio broadcasting trade
Hopkins and Averell Harriman any daytime dramatic story in
formed the basic team. Two of serial form is labeled a “soap
them are dead and Harriman has opera” largely because the orig-
not written his memoirs. Of those inal sponsors were soap compan-
who achieved our failure, Averell ies and some still are.
"TheCdilonialPage
2— Gainesville (Tex.) Daily Register Wed., Mar. 29, 1950 •
ACROSS
L Ingredient ot
mortar
5. Branches of
learning
9. Corpulent
12. Tops
13. Ooze
14. Literary
fragments
15. Animal food
16. Cut of pork
18. Item of
property
20. Seed covering
21. Employers
23. Tight
27. Atmosphere
29. Mother of
Apollo and
Artemis
31. Convene
ISSUES AND PERSONALITIES , *
PAINESVILLE VOTERS should not permit ) Yeays Aon
the issues of a power franchise to over- ________________* *
was sure your sugar is Domino-pure.’ ”
TECHNICALITIES OF THE LAW
HE TECHNICALITIES of Texas laws
have done rank injustice to a German-
American citizen of the little town of Lock-
hart.
This has been brought out in a series of six
articles which have appeared daily the past
week in The Dallas News.
The aged farmer involved was sued for
damages because a mule was the cause of an
accident involving an Austin family. He did
not own the mule, but the fact thathe did
not appear in court to bring proof of that
statement, caused the supreme court of Tex-
as to overrule the district court and the court
of civil appeals, to render judgment that the
farmer must pay $3,000, wiping out his life’s
savings, and causing him to be forced to sell
land to live on while the case has been in
litigation.
Not only did the district court judge who
first tried the case decide the man was
blameless, but the third court of civil ap-
peals at Austin, and two members of the
supreme court felt the same way about it.
The majority of the supreme court ren-
dered a decision based on many rules and
opinions based principally on technical points
of law.
The decision said in effect that the defend-
ant should not have relied upon the district
clerk to inform him as to date of the trial.
We doubt seriously if any of the six mem-
bers of the supreme court who rendered the
majority decision, feel that justice has been
done by the farmer who was defendant in the
suit.
But the supreme court justices are victims
of the mountainous legal technicalities that
have been built up through the years to ren-
der justice practically impossible in other
than routine types of cases.
It has often been said that our whole legal
procedure and system need radical revision.
It should be repeated again and again and
again, until something concrete is done about
it.
282888888 8
JOE COOK
lis second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas Post
Office under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy
service is maintained 25c weekly. In Cooke and ad-
joining counties by mail, 1 month, 75c; 6 months $4.00;
one year $7.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month 80c; 6
^11
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2. Frosts
3. Taking dimen-
sions
4. Park in the
Rockies
5. Beast of
burden
6. Meal
7. Lachrymose
drop
8. Sail support
9. Distant
10. Tropical bird
11. Tally
17. Gum resin
19. Swiss hero
22. Repose
24. At no time
hereafter
25. Prophet
26. Volcano
27. The sweetsop
28. Metal
30. Norse god
33. English manu-
facturing
city
35. Repetition
38. Circled
41. Tardier
43. Edges of a
roof
45. Far across
47. Lamb’s pen
name
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Broadway .. . by Mark Barron
NEW YORK, March 29 (A) — Recently, in Lon-
-N don, W. Somerset Maugham’s novel “Thea-
tre” was made into a play by Guy Bolton called
“Larger Than Life.” And Jessie Royce Landis, the
Broadway actress, was summoned to London to
play the leading role.
,55
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Germany
56. Emerald Isle
57. Hold back
48. Dispatched
49. Fill out
50. Long narrow
inlet
51. Tree
52. Before
Texas Today.. . by William C. Barnard
THE LITTLE STOREa
ON THE SQUARE <
SMMBhaa 307 w D&OABWAY ek
worse beginning,” she began
cheerfully. “Opening of the play
was pushed forward one week,
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Associated Press Staff other lever that swings the goom
The scoop shovel operator does from side to side.”
not mind the public looking over A foreman came up just then
his, sh oulder. He s too busy. and said: “this conversation is
.We .learned this from Elmo costing the city about a dollar a
Stahl in San Antonio. Elmo was minute, with all those trucks
busy digging out the San Antonio waiting to be loaded,” he went
river. He. had driven his big gaso- away.
line-powered machine right up m0, — . . cc
on a downtown bridge. Fact is, .Then, Elmo went on. Some-
the caterpillar treads were on times I’mpperating tWo or three
the sidewalk of the bridge, up controls at one time.
against the railing. “How long does it take to learn
The boom of the scoop shovel to operate that outfit?”
extended far out over the river, “You don’t begin learning right
as though it were fishing for off. You put in- a couple of years
something, and the shovel itself as a grease monkey and helper
would drp about 30 feet down and the operator never lets you
ing them straight—vegetables without cream
sauce or fat, fruits without sugar or cream.
“Don’t skimp on fruits and vegetables. Eat a
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for clothes, hats and wigs. We also rehearsed
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mn at the First UNRRA, the Bretton cutout cookies, with a Domino
k - Woods and the Second UNRRA package illustration and this sell-
conferences. Alger Hiss came into ing messoge: “Here’s What Domi-
|g| the picture late. He attended only no-pure Means to You: 1. Energy.
32959 three of these conferences, Dum- 2. Sweetness. 3. More Food Fla-
", barton Oaks, Yalta, and San Fran- Vor. 4- Cleanliness. 5. Full Value
/ cisco. At each of these, he was 100 per pure cane sugar. ‘So la-
very important; at Dumbarton die,’ says little Miss Domino, ‘be
" Oaks and San Francisco, he
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I REAL’ COMIC STRIP CHARACTERS
I THE GRIP the “funny” page has on the
I " imaginations of persons in the United
I States is brought into sharp focus by the
I large number of comic strip characters who
I have come to life in the movies or who have
I been used in different promotional activities.
| The comics are the latest fictional device
I to become real enough to their readers to be
I “brought to life.” As far back as the middle
I ages, morality plays characterized ideals.
I Miracle plays, while dealing with the lives of
I persons who once lived, Old Testament fig-
I ures, came into being through the desire of
I the people to see personalities they studied
I in the Bible come to life on the stage.
I Great novels and classics have always been
I a popular subject for movies and plays.
I The subject that has the firmest hold on
I popular imagination at present, however, is
I the comics. One of the oldest to be used ‘on
I the screen is “Blondie.” Dick Tracy and Joe
I Palooka are two other popular comic figures.
I How real comic characters are to their
I followers is ..proved time and again by the
amount of mail received when a crisis oc-
curs in the life of the hero or heroine. Money
and gifts are sent in on such occasions as the
birth of a child, an illness or a death in a
comic strip family.
Towns, roads, different items have been
named after popular “funny” heroes. Numer-
ous toys and articles of clothing have been
sold because the cowboy hero or some other
character has endorsed them, and many a
breakfast food or other dish has been eaten
because of a recommendation by some lead-
ing comic character.
The comics not only provide an escape,
from daily problems, on the whole they try
to solve the question of the moment before
the people or to reflect their major interest.
That is the secret of their popularity.
----o---
1
"A
period
40. Celestial being
42. Bury
44. Daybreak
you keep young longer, postpon-
ing old age. An individual well- Eg
fed from babyhood has a more 12
likely chance to enjoy a long
prime of life. But at any age you g
are better off when you are bet- 8-3826
ter fed.”
When families in this country
are poorly fed, the specialists say
the foods they neglect are most
often milk and milk products
and vegetables and fruits—es-
pecially the leafy, green and yel-
59
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low vegetables and citrus fruits, ane. 4 |
“Up to 35, it’s safer to be plump
than skinny,’’they say. “Beyond Jane Eads
Thursday, March 30
CHOCOLATE COVERED
Cherries
Your favorite candy! Look!
Pound ec
Box p
,,,58
V
ATTLEE
■ '
Stahl, a handsome, very husky year or so, he lets you practice a
190-pounder with cool green little bit. Takes about a year of
eyes, operated the machine with practice before you’re ready to
calm proficiency while about 100 do a job. And some guys never
“sidewalk superintendents” learn.”
watched, fascinated. • “Does it bother you the way
After a time, he climbed down the public watches you all the
from his perch and we said: time?” we asked.
“You have to do a lot of things “I don’t pay ’em any attention,
at one time, don’t you?” I’m too busy.”
“Have five controls to look “You mean you don’t get a
after,” said Elmo. “One lever kick out of having an audience?”
brings the shovel right up. Then “Only time I get a kick,” Elmo
another lever brings the shovel chuckled, “is when I drop that
toward the machine. There are shovel clear from the top and
foot brakes that go with both splash a lot of mud. I like to
those levers. Then there’s an- watch ’em run.”
They say that overweight is the most frequent given them a i
malnutrition problem among adults in this coun- moral strength #
try. Some down-to-earth diet tips are given in among the weak- Nkan,,
the department’s newest cookbook, “Family er nations of the \7 'j
Fare,” put out by the Bureau of Human Nutrition world. l V \
and Home Economics. The nutritionists point out: From the time v . „‛m 9)
“Modern knowledge of food at work brings a w 0 r l d w a r ll
new kind of mastery over life. It can even help - • — N"
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shadow their exercise of judgment in the se- From the files of the Daily Register, HE LIVED your drfam
lection of new city councilmen. March 29, 1920.) "pnF- -E DREAM
I This city reverts to the city manager form Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. red-blooded Sgshecamedhero.to
of government after the election, and five al- A. EKoon, on Davis street, their daughter, Miss What every -boy, abt son eari
dermen, one from each ward are to be chosen Debbieziugag uitedein mprriase.torMr Robert stage dreams of doing. In the
Tuesday from a large field of candidates. church officiated. J. T. Bain and Miss usttn wnld’siewidestanun hipped lions
The voters should be careful in selecting Koon, sister of the bride, were the only attend- and Tigers and Leonards He
men in whom they have confidence to begin ants. M usic was furnished by Miss Cecil Cohen. could drop a Texas cowpuncher’s
the task of bringing the city government out Bhsgbranaranmmpioyeoorohesannadrersaifoadlopooventhetheadco"gc?8h0o
of the chaos of a treasury deficit variously here. , nearest 4n snu °Pe tothe
estimated upwards of $75,000. Mrs. George Richter and son, Paul of Dallas could outsmart the fiercest beast!
A business administration with strict econ- were guests Sunday of Mrs. Will Scott. . In movies and books he drama-
Lmy and the best possible service to the eiti- tordt pentniggentsrand AoPartpresentienda inzednsradven tures for an admir-
henry possible under the circumstances, is cial service at the Baptist church. Born in q-inceij, :
needed at this time. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Leverett entertained Sun- most Of his growing 1 in K,dg
___O____ day with a dinner in observance of the 70th birth- in this city’s premtrpomtan
Prison inmates should be given the latest Re. Et Joi mer and Mroanasserst X°E daxsicHiseanimallcatchinaaleng
bews of the day says a warden. So they’ll McClure a boyhood hobby ™^ed to a life
be satisfied to stay where they are?—Den- L- c- Luce, representing a hardware manufac- work that was colorful and often
ton Record Chronicle, tuning concern in Chicago, was in Gainesville to- fantastic and dangerous. While he
____O__ ' an. absence of 10 years. Mr: Luce stated bought from local trappers most
c.. in the Chamber of Commerce that this was one of of the animals he LrL+ Hle
Students in a western college use text the nearest cities he had visited in his Texas ter- he caught enough himself to make
books of case histories in a “Family Trou- ritory, and that its steady growth was very notice- a vast .assortment of thrilling ad-
bles" course. Characters, naturally are en- a Slias Boozer, who is attending A&M college, is V entureste a man shou]d 0 4
tirely frictional.-Denton Record-Chronicle, at home for a few days.__ be sixty-sixanddie in bed is to t
self unusual, in view of his many
Gainesville Qailu Regisker
hazards of the jungle than to those
of fhe modern citv The ailments
18 90, by JOHN T. LEONARD that UH tn He 1,-4, ailments
' . February, 1939). ,4 .a to his death began with
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, a taxicab wreck in New York
standing or reputation of any person, firm or corpo- three years ago There have hepn
ration which may appear in The Register will be manv success, nini 114 1kkl
cheerfully corrected upon being brought to the at- 11 Y J CeSsu animal catchers,
tention of the publisher. Dut onlv r rank Buck brought
Member of the Associated Press, which is entitled back to most moviegoing Ampri
exclusively to the use for republication of all the lo- cans the hot hreatL £ 46, •, 1
cal news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP , 46 not Dreath of the jungle
news dispatches, and the drama of survival there.
A E W YORK, March 29 (A3)—■ my period of enforced bachelor-
11 How do you turn off a milk- hood has convinced me that a man
man? can’t really run a home by him-
There must be a way, but in 13 self. He can only run it down,
days, two hours and 12 minutes I AS soon as a wife leaves, the
haven’t figured out how to do it. place starts falling apart at the
It has been exactly that long since seams. Pants get out of press,
my wife left me on a three-week shirts won t 80 out to the laundry
visit to relatives in regas light bulbs go out while you re
“It’s the first time you’ve had reading the evening newspaper
the apartment all to yourself in rain comes in the window and
ten years,” said Frances. “Have runs onto the rug, you run out of
fun, you poor thing.” razor blades, your shoestrings
The last thing I remember her break and your suspender but- .
saying was, “You don’t have to ons Pop off likmad.
Harriman is the only civilian still worry about the milkman. Just , And of 14,000,000 men in the
serving our country. His name tell him to stop delivery.” ast war 1 suppose I was the only
, 8 I- . . , I have__about twelve times in- one who never learned to sew on
, „ ... . often appears as Dean Acheson's cludinye onceowhnejT took some a button. 1 always thought that
PEACE ACTIVITY only the enemies have changed, probable successor. Checkers and spelled out"in the was for first lieutenants.
T IS SAID FANCIFULLY that For Hitler was substituted Stalm; It is suggested that what was doorway: “No Milk.” It hasn’t the most shattering blow to my
we won the war and lost the for Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, done had to be done and that worked. Nothing’s worked. I even pride.has been my experience in
peace. That is nonsense. Whoever The 13 conferences which those who did the job could not started delivering it back to him the kitchen. It there was one thing
lost the peace, lost the war. Who- sought to establish the peace__and but have accepted Stalin’s terms, each night, but each morning j coud do as a Boy Scout it was
ever won the peace, won the war. failed__are: Casablanca (January They say that hindsight is easier there were just two bottles in- towhip up a batch of bacon and
Thus far, the evidence is that 14-24 1943) • first Quebec (August than foresight. All of which is stead of one. e 885.. , , ,
Soviet Russia won the peace, 17-24’ 1943) ’ Moscow (October 19- nonsense, because it evades re- I suppose he finds it impossible But.what has happened to eggs
therefore, Soviet Russia won the 30, 1943); first UNRRA (Novem- sponsibility. to turn off his cows and is just overthexears? Everyone I put
war. The Rus- ber 10-December 1 1943) - first In our system of government, passing his problem on to me. I’ve - pan ended UPoOKing nxe
Cairo (November 22-26, 1943); responsibility is fixed. It is the been relaying it to the refrigera- an oyster qn.tor.and a mess of
Teheran (November 28-December business of a president and a sec- tor, but it’s full now. So am I— A-room ,,
1, 1943); second Cairo (December retary of state to be adequately Grade A and Pasteurized up to Le Eourse,-,,couldhardboil
4-6, 1943); Bretton Woods (July 1- informed to have foresight, tomyears. a’nd 7 don’iawater shortage
22, 1944); Dumbarton Oaks (Aug- understand situations as they de- its a funny thing about milk, gina nduudontswant.n eighbors
ust 21-October 7, 1944); second velop. Otherwise, why do we You can t give it away. If you go S 8 “d whispering I m un-
Quebec (September 11-16, 1944); choose them instead of the eleva- up to a strange mother with two p Wiye, h_hit : . .
second UNRRA (September 15-17, tor boy in our building, or a Mon- bottles in. your hands and say, +Lel,,5n"4D,1.ni n81 put
From the time V. AA3/ 1944); Yalta (February 3-11, tana sheep herder? We select men Please, lady, take this milk,” she Jheresnotetterhabit,fora fel-
world war II \, - 3/ 1945); San Francisco (April- 25- because we assume that they have starts backing off. She thinks you IWWihstenthumbsnibeglad
started in Eu- NggJune 26 1945) the knowledge and know what have a delusion you’re Napolean mme 8519 Dam
rope, this coun- memee==e (I exclude Potsdam because it they are doing. We hold them for playing supermarket.
try became in- GEORGE E. sokolsky Iy Icren -n affirmation of their conduct, for every one of The worst thing about my ever- Classified ads bring results!
volved in an as- their acts. flowing milkman is that when -----——---—--------------
tonishingly large number of in- D Roosevelt died and HarrI Tru- When they succeed, they have Frances comes home and looks in Airline Timetable I
ternational conferences. Out of man h5 to acunint himself with the public confidence. When they the refrigerator, she’ll say, “Well, ‘ -----------J
that large number, I have selected the situation and the personalities fail, they should be driven from Hover, couldn’t you at least tell CENTRAL AIRLINES
13 as the basic efforts towards involved) public life. the man to stop delivering milk? Northbound
the establishment of peace. ; It is interesting that Cordell (Copyright, 1950, King Features Andsshelte1 him once to stop,.. , Arrive
N. neace conferenee has ever tj1?! 1& iner esung cnai .onde Svndicate Ine ) and he 11 stop. He 11 probably even Flight No. 1 7-55 a
no peace .con-erence nas ever Hull, secretary of state, attended 9-nacate, me.) settle bv taking four bottles L-cL Hi;L. N. q----- 1:37d
been called in the connection. The onIy tW. .f those conferenes the --------—-------------------— g 41 ng rour DOtteS oacK. Flight No. 3-----4.17 p.
Napoleonic wars were terminated piry Quebec and the Moscow p.- e, c H ch ? the.authority of wives, . Southbound
by the Congress of Vienna, which £v Simson secre arv of X’ —omino Cane Sugar and.thefutility.of husbands. As Flight No. 2-----11:11 a.
laid down a political basis for attended only ’ one, the Second Widely Advertised ___1 of fact everything about Flight No. 4-----5:23 p.
Europe that held for nearly a Quebec, which established the The American Sugar Refining
century from 1815 to 1914. Wars basis for Yalta, was attended by company has launched an exten-
35 excess fat becomes a greater health liability occurred during that period, but Henry Morgenthau and Harry sive advertising campaign on be-
than extreme thinness.” - they were localized. World war I Dexter White, but not by the half of Domino pure cne sugars
As for reducing . . . those under 20 should onlv ended with the Versailles confer- secretary of state, in Texas and Oklahoma, begin-
do so under a physicians guidance. “This is a ence, which established the Led- Franklin D. Roosevelt, General ning this month.
safe rule also for young mothers, or those with gue of Nations that did not last George Marshall, and Admiral The campaign, which will be
any heart or organic troubles,” the cookbook sug- g‘ King attended seven of the 13 on a sustained basis, will appear
gests. If you need to reduce and are over 35 World war II has not yet pro- conference. Harry Hopkins, Aver- 1n major daily newspapers in over
you are warned to lose poundage slowlv no duced a treaty of peace. There ell Harriman, General Arnold, 20 Texas and Oklahoma cities,
more than a pound or two a week All the diet have been many conference but General Somervell and Admiral The ads will feature photographs
experts in the world couldn’t explain the job more not a Peace conference. The rea- Leahy attended six of them. These and testimonials of housewives
nc-- - son is that the war never ended; eight men made what they per- from different sections of the two
- haps thought might be the peace, states.
ry 1 9 D ‘ 1 1 They had many assistants and A typical banner headline
I ((Av S KiyrndAv associates, but these men served reads: “Texas Women Tell Cookie
••• continuously in the formulation Secrets! ... for rich, crisp and
of the peace and they failed. tasty cookiesp remember—only
JOE COOK, born March 23, Dean Acheson played a small one sugar is Domino-pure!” Also
1890, at Evansville, Ind., as Joseph part in this effort. He was present Prominently featured is a plate of
Lopez. One of
the stage’s mer- J
riest comedians Egemlg
for 35 years, he “e—
_______ is now retired. | W W O b:
variety—yes, potatoes, too. A medium-sized pota- Orphaned in in-,e C
to has no more calories than a big orange, or a big fancy, he took s— ®
apple. i ‛
Being generous about protein-rich foods for nu- h1s , foster par-
trition requires plenty of lean meat, milk, eggs ents name. Joe e
and lean fish and “if you are underweight you got his start in
need to turn the tables to put some fat on your vaudeville in
bones,” says the nutritionists. wn!
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 29, 1950, newspaper, March 29, 1950; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510566/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.