Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. [283], Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 24, 1951 Page: 2 of 8
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Business Mirror... By sam DAWSON
THE FATHER OF THE BRIDE
'ANP
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For Better Health ..
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volume running about seven per
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GEORGE BUCHER
crease in consumer buying power started his busi-
These Days ... by George E. Sokolsky
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in
Gkss
Boyle’s Column . by Hal Bayle
325
bunkroom. The clatter of the tele-
(A) — Give
CHICAGO
me
Japan lost World War II long be-
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Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle
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30 Years Ago ..
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Merry Menagerie-ByWalt Disney
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DRILY SPECIRL
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Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
the Russians will find that their
conquests in Asia have been se-
verely and perhaps even perma-
aluminum in building, is one of the features of first postwar Ger-
man construction fair, “Constructa,” which opened in Hannover.
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Copr. 1951, Walt Disney Productions
World Rights Reserved
By PAUL C. DITZEL
(For Hal Boyle)
OD
D E
E
N
D
51. Command to
a cat
DOWN
1. Cut into small
cubes
A
V
E
The Word of God . . .
It may be a dark and evil world, but we can
contribute one light to the darkness. Among whom
ye shine as lights in the world.—Philemon 2:15.
E
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43
city Sunday.
Frank Dustin of Marietta spent the weekend
in the city with relatives. •
Miss Dena Belle Newton has returned, from
New Zealand, the Philippines and high school official here says the
Japan. Together, these countries belief that southern square dances
represent a telling supply of cru- are square is nonsense. Mrs.
cial raw materials. If these coun- Doris Reynolds, who is starting a
tries establish a two-way coop- square dancing class, says south-
eration, such as thus far has not erners go ’round while western-
quite become possible in Europe, ers do the real square dancing.
20
Our pledge to you: Consist-
ently low prices ALWAYS!
TRY US!
"roR.
RENT
—
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58838 5233332 ■
See
cent above last year, largely re-
flecting post-Korean price rises.
Wholesale grocers, however,
are having their inventory prob-
lems, similar to those in other in-
dustries, but not nearly so arte
l
JR
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533085526...
3523"
365#: 2
five years. It has not become too dark. Do
you suppose there is some hope that it will
not become darker? Is there any way of
brightening it up, such as bleaching?”
Mrs. L. A. W.
(A) There is always the hope that it will not
get darker, depending on whether the nerve is
partially — or completely — decitalized. A
partially devitalized tooth can recover. A com-
pletely devitalized tooth cannot. Bleaching for
this condition is not successful.
The important thing is to have semi-annual
x-ray check-ups to be sure no abscess is forming.
If you desire a copy of Dr. Dean’s new 56 page
“For Better Health” book, write him care of this
newspaper, sending a self-addressed, stamped en-
velope and fifteen cents to cover cost.
(Copyright- 1951, General Features Corp.)
//lO
9
8
7
ouro
-kp<R
h
Chinese history
when a general SkoRGI E sokolsky
grew his own
food on the march to care for a
moving army: It was an innova-
tion. Most often, armies lived on
Washington Letter...
(First of Six Articles on How to
Guard Against Vacation Perils)
By JANE EADS
WJASHINGTON — Take the summer sun in easy
’Moses. Over-exposure may result in severe sun-
burn or sunstroke. And be careful even on hot
(From the files of The Daily Register,
July 25, 1921.)
Joseph E. Johnston Camp, United Confederate
Veterans, elected officers at a meeting Sunday
afternoon as follows: R. H. Alwood, commander;
R. A. McElreath, adjutant; R. J. Brown, first
lieutenant; A. G. M. Lay, second lieutenant; J. E.
ib
When I visited Europe last
summer I took in fires in Lon-
t • $.
a $
Pa##
2—Gainesville (Tex.) Daily Register Tues., July 24, 1951 •
ill
Ei
a THE LITTLL STORE.
•ON THE SQUARE •
29-301 W. BROADWAY
an incident
ACROSS
1. Let fall in
drops: obs.
5. It is: contr.
S. Short for a
baby
carriage
12. Daughter of
Eurytus
13. Insect
14. Biblical word
15. Go to pieces
suddenly
17. The dill
18. Musical
studies
19. Whole
21. Spoil
22. City in
Pennsyl-
vania
23. Neat
25. Defamations
board of its for- i :
eign selling sub- g
DRUG ALLERGY MAY RESULT
IN TEMPORARY ARTHRITIS
By C. A. DEAN, M. D.
MEDITORIAL: A type of arthritis, usually of
-V.I short duration is' occasionally encountered
in practice. The arthritis of rheumatic fever is
the most common of this group, but almost any
type of organism may be responsible, from an
allergic point of view. Drugs likewise may be a
causative factor, notably such drugs as aspirin,
phenobarbital, sulfa, penicillin, and others.
It is believed that the repeated exposure of joints
to either the bacteria involved, or to their end
I NEW TACTIC?
I HE Russians, who overthrew the Czecho-
I Slovakia democratic government by a
I political coup coupled with Czech troops,
I who tried to coerce Greece by kidnaping lit-
I tie children and by guerilla warfare, and
I who tried to turn the Americans out of Ber-
I lin by cutting off land transportation, are
I gaining ground in the Middle East with a
I new tactic which may be indirectly traced
I to them. ,
I In the tradition of the East, their enemies
I are being removed by assassination.
I The premier of Iran, friendly to the
I United States, was killed by a religious fa-
I natic. There was no direct evidence of Rus-
I sian influence—but the communist party
I was declared illegal following the premier’s
I death.
I Result of the murder was the accession
I to power of the extreme nationalists and po-
I tential halt of Iranian oil to Western powers.
I Now in Jordan, King Abdullah, one of the
I Middle East’s most powerful leaders and a
I staunch friend to the west, has been killed.
I His younger son, Prince Naif, has been
I named regent and apparent successor to the
I throne. He, too, is friendly to British and
I Americans. His older brother, Prince Tar-
I ral, heir apparent until a reported attempt
I to assassinate his fathe and other acts of
I violence caused his removal to Europe, is
I expected, however, to fight for the throne.
I Another Middle East country rich in oil
I has been thrown into turmoil with possible
I fatal consequences to Western Powers.
I Russia’s hand in the two assassinations
I has not been discernible. It can hardly be
I coincidence, however, when two of the most
I powerful friends of the western countries
I are cut down. v
I Whether or not the assassins call them-
I selves communists, they have been influ-
I enced by Russian propaganda in the Middle
I East.
I Perhaps these fanatics do not realize it
I either, but as surely as they cut down the
I friends of the west under the name of pa-
l triotic nationalism, they are aiding their
I powerful neighbor to the north to step in
I and take over the vast stores of oil located.
I in the Middle East.
| ----O---
I FEWER TRAFFIC DEATHS
I HAT the traffic safety campaign being
I conducted by the Rotary club is getting
I results so far as traffic fatalities are con-
I cerned is quite evident.
I But there have been more traffic injuries
I in Gainesville and Cooke county than at the
I same time a year ago.
| There had been but one traffic death
I through July 22 of this year as compared to
I eight during the same period a year ago.
I This is an exceptional record of which every
I citizen of Cooke county should be proud.
I But there have been 52 traffic injuries in
I the county this year, as compared with 48
Ito the same date in 1950.
| Thus it may be said that the severity of
I the automotive accidents this year as com-
I pared with last year has been reduced, if the
I number has not been lessened to any extent.
I This situation is well worth working for,
I but it is desirable that every effort be con-
I tinned in an effort to reduce the injury lists
las well as the fatality totals.
i -----0--
I LOCAL MILLIONAIRES
I A BUSINESS man made a remark recently
I that there were 11 millionaires in Cooke
I county and proceeded to name some of them.
I It is quite possible that some of these peo-
I pie, known to be well to do, would deny
vigorously that their affluence approached
I the million mark.
3 We are glad to know, however, that there
I are as many as 11 persons whose friends
Irate them in the millionaire class whether
they attain the full stature of millionaires
lor not.
| Some of these people have become well-
to-do because of oil holdings, others have
attained their present status through indus-
try and personal effort.
Texas is supposed to be the home of many
millionaires and Cooke county should have
her share of them.
a ~
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29. Harmless
tumor
30. Eulogy-
Si. American
general
32. Reverse a
previous
decision
34. Toward the
sheltered
side
35. Rim
36. Prevent
37. Bag for rags
40. Scent
41. Australian
bird: var.
42. Entice
46. Military
weapon
47. Perceive.
48. Ceases to live
49. Existence
50. Chicken
/3e,
/ 5
the lands they invaded.
ggga In our complicated age, food is
M not only essential raw material
of war or of defense, although
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5 1
Wednesday, July 25
“COUNTRY COUSIN”
BREAD
SAVE at Mitchell’s! LOOK!
212-Lb.AEc
Loaves 4 e8
STALINA DAUGHTER. 1$
WED AMID GLITTER OF A
TWO-WEEK CELEBRATION
REPORTED COSTING
#900,000 A$ VODKA
ANO CHAMPAGNE ,
FLOWED DA AND NIGHT/
sidiary — West-
inghouse Elec-
tric Internation-
al Co. Bucher
graph key and ding-a-ling of the
_________ , ____ ____ a register sounding alarms in other
smoky basement fire to tangle parts of the city lulls you into
with and you can keep your base- semi-sleep.
ball games and television. Then it hits.
Ill never hope for a fire, but The bunkroom lights snap on.
when the engines dash by you can The waker alarm bell orders you
bet your boots I llgrab mine and out of bed and into your boots,
take oif for the blaze, pulling on E , , 117 1 . 1:1.
my firecoat and hat. , Grab for the po e ads
I’m a fire buff. I like to go to down. Squirm.into your coat and
fires and grab a hoseline and reach for the back rail of the g.
follow firemen into a “ripe” Swing aboard as the 1,000-gal-
working fire. Ion pumper eases itself out of
Any buff worth his boots will the station. You’re on your way
bolt from bed on a wintry morn- to another blaze.
ing to take in an extra alarm I‘ve gone to at least 200 fires
blaze. since I became a buff. Some were
Buffs got their name from the minor, others were tragic.
horse-drawn steamer days when I‘ve choked on smoke at tene-
fire engine chasers huddled in ment house fires and waded
buffalo robes at fires in sub-zero through water at a four-alarm in
known Chicago’s stockyards. I’ve seen
fires in New York, Buffalo, Wash-
ington, D. C., and Toronto, Ont.
E6° ARE
NTMERR
1
386 288888588
emphasizes that any extreme ness career with the Westing-
pressure on food prices may be house Co. He lives in Pittsburgh,
due to merchandising blunders.” -------——---
Grocers are selling to so many Maggie and Nellie are names
more families with annual in- of towns in North Carolina near
comes over $3,000 that there has the Cherokee Indian Reservation
been an unexpected increase in at the eastern gate to the Great
demands for better quality foods Smoky Mountains National Park.
I
63
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C. A. Dean, M.D.
and peoples to
take over with-
out regard to J
supply. Many 60
----- __ ------------ conquerors®
days when it’s cloudy or when you re indoors, moved fromxs.
Exposure to intense heat may result in heat- hunger areas in-
stroke or heat prostration. to lands of plen- M, "g"
Any of these conditions could be fatal. All are ty; from deserts "e •
serious. All can be prevented, according to U. S. into valleys of
fertility. I recall
wug J
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sSdt ' eq' '
, ■■ J
§333336 38
T4E FOR
don, Paris, Stockholm, and Co-
penhagen with foreign fire chiefs.
-----0--
COST OF LIVING
AN unusual situation exists in Gainesville
r as regards a Negro family. While the
head of the house has a job and a regular
income, the family is in need of contribu-
tions of clothing, bed clothing and other
household equipment to resume housekeep-
ing after a fire destroyed their home.
The wife and mother of the family made
it known to white friends who sought to
help them, that their grocery bill, covering
no luxuries, runs $75 every two weeks or
[more than $150 a month. Undoubtedly that
is a big bite out of the family income.
There are 11 in the family including the
parents and nine children ranging down
from 14 to four months.
I When the cost of groceries becomes so
great that a family has no money for other
NEW YORK, July 24 (A) — in wider variety, the institute
Bumper harvests are in prospect holds
in many parts of the country. But dem, t-ict;c, would Am
food processors are counting on Eederan statistics would seem
the rising total of personal in- to bear this out, both as to how
comes to keep sales volume high incomes have grown and widened
in the nation’s grocery stores this out through the economy, and as
winter. ' to how Americans spend their
Americans like to eat well. The money in the grocery.
better their incomes the more r Ten years ago 5.8 million fami-
they spend, as a rule, at the lies had.annual incomes-of more
grocery. Housewives swing up than $3,000, but today 27 million
and down the food economy families have.Even taking into
scale as their husbands’ take- account , the higher prices, this
home pay rises or falls. still leaves a large total income to
n.1 . be spent at the grocery, And, al
Full employment and higher so, there are 14 million more
wage scales, the food processors families now than in 1941 in the
say, should take care of the new nation. That accounts for much
big crops although a tew see of the growth in retail food store
hopes that abundance may mean sales from $12.5 billion in 1941 to
that prices, can drop nearer to nearly $35 billion today.
the pre-Korean level. _________________________________
Retail grocery sales are now r 1 9 . 1 T
reported running at an annual | AAAty c KrthHAVT
rate of around $35 billion. Even -•uCY • •••
price resistance to some more ex- -------- - 1 ~ ........
pensive items hasn’t cut total GEORGE HEISLER BUCHER,
purchases of consumers back born July 24, 1888, in Sunbury,
much this summer, spokesmen Pa. Bucher was president of the
A
ter
Rev. T. M. Cunningham, pastor of the South- _______ ...a anu
- ern Presbyterian church here, is leaving today China, raising the world
for West Texas for a few weeks’ vacation. f
——
A ' " " ' "h* 892
i- asmps
d="2 2109
Public Health and Red Cross of-
ficials. ~
For most folks 15 minutes is
long enough for the first sun-
bath. Each day after that you can
add another 15 minutes until you
get as brown as you want. But
don’t forget you can get severe
sunburn even if you are well-
tanned. ’ -
The Health Service warns
particularly against noon-day sun i gdea
because its rays are short, direct ----------- --g------- .. _
and burning. Sunbathing is safer y,. E,, fore the A-bomb was hurled at
in the late afternoon. But take it ' " Hiroshima because the American
easy! And don’t forget you can get a bad burn on navy had cut off her food supply,
cloudy days and an even worse burn from re- the fact is that her rubber and
flection of sun on sand and water, oil supply were also cut off by
Use suntan lotion, oil or cream, but remember our navy. They could not proceed
they only give partial protection. Burns, accord- without these raw materials. .
ing to the Red Cross, come in three degrees: first, Whereas with long planning
when the skin gets red; second, blistered; third, and development, the North and
when deeper destruction of tissues occur. Shock South American, continents cou d
and infection are chief dangers. be made self sufficient, at present
Call a doctor if burn is severe. Keep victims the. United States must import
lying down and warm. If mild, use calamine lo- ertain essential raw.materialsif
tion.(Keep this on hand; it's good for other sum- itsistoeshe, ablesto dsfend itsel
mer perils, too.) Or use dusting powder. In emer- simPttenty Agns raw rubbet-
gencies, rip clean, fresh-laundered cloth into wide SLromit Sin manganese cobalt’
strips and dip into a quart of warm water mixed bauxite "‘(for’ aluminum), tung’
with three tablespoons baking soda or ps sten, lead, copper and zinc. It is
salts. Apply to burns. Keep wet. -4 Aresen+ -1s. imnor+ing —on
Sunstroke is caused by too long exposure to dttPnden stress can °rrgc, its temperatures. We also are
sun, heatstroke by prolonged oppressive heat, Owntsupsrystes can produce its as "fire fans," “sparks,” and “red
even indoors. Both these start with terrific head- Without these products in ade_ hotso" „
aches. Everything looks red. Suddenly you lose quate amounts, the United States b Many of us frustrated firemen
consciousness. Your temperature rises dangerous- cannot fight and Win a war, as a have tire alarm registers or ra-
ly. Sometimes victims collapse suddenly, die with- matter of fact, in a war against dios next to our beds. We keep
in a few minutes. Russia, our only advantage is our bootsand coats nearby. - One- Christmas I “helped carrv
Prolonged heat, combined with humidity, will superior industrial capacity de- .I ke any buff whose eyes glis- tL, body of a priest from a blaz-
cause heat prostration. This is equally serious, pending upon a steady and rhyth- ten.as the sirens set up a. crez ing rectory at a two alarm fire
Health Service officials say all you need is com- mic supply of raw materials. It is sound °ArSmw sis.k. taka Plentinf inBuffalr.Last winter I watched
moil sense to prevent these things, to Russia’s interest to hamper and frends ° 5 and heckling helplessly with my fireman pals
Keep out of the heat when you don t have t even destroy American accesses Why'do I chase fire engines9 I while eight persons dropped into
be m it they say . . .wear a hat when you go to raw materials outside our don’t {now Can you exlin why the flames during a five-alarmer
out in the sun . . . avoid heavy or tight clothing boundaries memorize batting averages9 in a Chicago hotel.
. . . don’t exercise too much in the sun . . don t Some of these items must at 5 Best Answer a fire buff givls Buffs in many cities have
exercise anywhere just before or after meals . this time come altogether or in to the raised eyebrow is “Show formed clubs complete with fire
don’t overeat . . don t overindulge in alcoholic part from the east of Asia: me a who doesn’t like to museums and stations where they
drinks! ,, . . Raw rubber fr°m Maiaya In- Watch FLe oAhe drama of a keep siren and bell-equipped
if you are very old, or very young, or if you donesia and Siam, tin from Ma- 100-fd.t aerial ladder truck trucks ready to roll on all second
are an alcoholic or have heart trouble, the sun aya and Indonesia; manganese threading through traffic and alarms to serve coffee to tired
and heat will affect you more easily than others, from India; tungsten from Siam yj show vou a bore ” firemen.
If you are middle-aged, a non-alcholic and have and China; chromite from the on • days ff I often head Next time the fire equipment
a goodticker, you’d better watch out, anyway. Philippineg. for a busy’fire station where elangs by, look closely. The fellow
(NEXT: Poison Ivy and Oak). S e of these products may friendly firemen always welcome clinging to the hook and ladder
tries butobtained.inother.coun- another hand. may be your local banker, a
tresrihu), Far rubber.a nd.tin are Comes bedtime and you ar- prominent lawyer or the corner
There was a Enstern.rodscth range your boots and trousers grocer-all good buffs and good
products as chrome and manga- near your bed in the upstairs firemen, too.
nese could be imported from Rus-
sia, but it does not make sense
to expect that country to be a
source of military supplies for a
long time to come, if ever again.
Tungsten, one of the scarcest
of metals, used to flow freely
. t a 1: from China where it abounds in
Bridges, treasurer; ana H. L. Edwards, chaplain. Hunan province That source is
Milton Clark of Ardmore was a visitor in the now completely cut off by Soviet
China. One of the reasons why
the British were so anxious to
have Soviet China recognized by
----- ------ _ the/United States was that their
Dallas, accompanied by Mrs. Egbert Betts of that grat trading firms, such as Jar-
city, formerly Miss Sarah Lee of Gainesville. dine, Matheson, could export
Mr. and Mrs. Wirson Gilbert left Sunday morn- products like tungsten to the
ing for an automobile trip to Oklahoma, United States, making a great
James Craig has returned to Fort Worth after profit out of a scarce commodity
a visit with Mrs. D. U. Hancock. / They did well exporting raw rub-
ber to Soviet Russia and Soviet
l h 1 • A J l -
Esg
A.M P g
as in some. “The only burden-
some inventories threatened in
foods,” says the American Insti-
tute of Food Distribution, “are
among some canners and freezers.
But analysis of the startling in-
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THE NATIONAL SUPPLY long as it withholds from the nently arrested.
00 H0H
En-gEGEELE
327 28, " <
Stoll.
I
i N G — Structure, publicizing the use of
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2225
1
„ - —,-----o -- w JI id price
tor that commodity unnecessarily
and thereby indirectly placing a
necessities, the cost of living in this coun- ta upon this country.
, 1: i .. 1 • r .I the Pacific union, on which
try is critical, as it has been for some John Foster Dulles has been
working, is to be vital in our af-
- lairs, one of its major tasks must
I a, , A , aom ax Al. A be the distribution of Far Eastern
Gainesville Nailu Regisker
Founded August 30, 18 90 by JOHN T. Leonard / can be contributed most advan-
| (Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939.) / tageously to the defense of the
| Published by The Register Publishing Company, ration which may appear in The RegisterMwill be area.
Inc., 306 East California Street, Gainesville, Texas.- cheerfully corrected upon being brought Jo the at- For instane, ;+ 11 1
[Entered as second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas, . tentio.n of the publisher. / L.. 1 H Wouid nave
post Office under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. Member of the Associated Press, which is entitled peen advantageous to India if she
... . „ . . . , exclusively to the use for republication of/all the local bartered manganese and mona
I Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP yite s'nqs o A, ona.
[service is maintained, 25c weekly. In Co.oke and ad- news dispatches'. Aile samas XOr American wheat,
[joining counties by mail, 1 month, 90c; 6 months $4.50; The publishers are not responsible for copy omis- Actually, the so-called Russian
one year 88.00. ° utsidesooke county 1 month $1.10; sions, typographical errors or any unintentional errors contribution of wheat was largely
lb months 70:00i 1 year *.VV: that occur other than to correct in next issue after it a bluff and India CannAt ha ra
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, is' brought to their attention. All advertising orders “ W duu xnuia cannot De re-
[standing or reputation of any person, firm or eorpo- are accepted on this basis only, “ garded as a friendly country aS
T 2
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Lddnc-*- —*
2. Underground
part of a
plant
j 3. Light up
4. Grandmother
5. Raps
6. Those occupy-
ing a public
office
7. Guidance
8. Chattered
9. Hindu princess
10. Genus of
maples
11. One of a pair
16. Air: comb, form
20. Baseball team
22. School: French
23. First even
number
24. Book of the
Bible: abbr.
25. Slothful
26. Susceptible
27. Shakespearean
king
28. Place to sit
30. Earth goddess
33. Reprove
34. Eludes
36. American
humorist
37. Plexus
38. Wine vessels
39. Clan
40. Heating cham-
ber
43. Birth
44. Meadow
45. Superlative
ending
products, in an individual allerg-
ic to these agents, produces a lo-
cal sensitization of the area, fol-
lowed by a fleeting or destruc-
tive reaction.
Sometimes the only response
in an area is the release of a
chemical called histamine, which
causes redness, swelling, and
pain of the involved location. A
special name, called palindromic
rheumatism, has been given to
this last phenomenon.
(Q) “I have had a devital-
ized front tooth for the past
C—S
for the grocery trade say. The Westinghouse Electric corpora-
large retail units report dollar tion from 1934 to 555008
volnme pinnine ohenf cetten non 1946 and lts vice g 9
chairman from , I
1946 until early .om. J
1951. He is now 8
a director of the ;
company and
chairman of the
There may have been a time in United States materials essential In a word, if the Pacific union
human history when a world con- to our very existence. We do not is put on a sound economic as
cleror set out in search of lands know what barter arrangements well as political base, it will be
que o set.out in seareh of lands India has made with Soviet Rus- a tremendously important agency
sia. for the containment and perhaps
if the Pacific union is intended in time for the defeat of Russia,
to include all the anti-communist (Copyrisht, 1951, King Features
countries of the east of Asia, __________Syndicate, Inc.)__________
surely Malaya, Siam, Burma, For-
mosa, Indonesia and French Indo- Different Down South
China must be added to Australia, OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (U.R)— A
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. [283], Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 24, 1951, newspaper, July 24, 1951; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538419/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.