Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 182, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1952 Page: 7 of 12
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Money Talks!
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when you use Cook's. The balanced Cook
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$298 $489
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THE
STORE
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209 N. Commerce
O. L. BLAKE, Prop.
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COOK S HOUSE PAINT WEARS SLOWLY.
COOK’S HOUSE PAINT IS SELF-CLEANING!
TO LAST LONGER
IT’S A WHITER WHITE
. . . $2.50
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YOU CAN’T FOOL
A DOG’S NOSE
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IF EVERYONE WOULD ONLY SAVE,
SO GREAT WOULD BE THE WORTH,
YEAR AFTER YEAR
BOTH WANT AND FEAR
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Body Builder 25’s.....................
Fifties 25's.........$2.25 Breeding 25's . . .
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Average depth of the ocean
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Fryers
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Whole
GREEN BEANS
DALLAS NEWS
Daily and Sunday Delivery
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$5.50
Per Gal.
in Fives
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235
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It's a Well Known Fact that Helpy-Selfy is one of the
Better Places to Trade — Consistently Low Prices
Everyday—SUGAR—SHORTENING—COFFEE at low-
est advertised price of any competitor.
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A SWORDSMAN
Grayson Oleo
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QTALITYFOd
V Rich in taste appeal L, „
Try this "nose test”. Set a dish of Vitality in k
front of your dog. Watch him perk up as soon as
he sniffs the tempting "meaty” aroma. Then watch
him clean the dish. Every ounce of Vitality is ALL
food with ALL the good, appetizing, digestible
body building nutrients to keep dogs in the pink
of condition.
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ELPY-SELF
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THETIRST STATE BANK
senrvmggomga,,6AINESVILLETEXNAeE-aagsagsgsgay
,, .... ; ____ , . ......at your Cook's paint job. You'll;
be proud of it. And throughout the life of the paint, it will I
retain its smooth, uniform surface. No cracking, chipping,;
peeling or "alligatoring" because Cook's House Paint is
balanced for beauty!’
Tomatoes
""-SS-E-Se-T-M42-S22IN-2ENESTaEEa22S
R. D. Logan, Waco; Mrs. O. B.
Tyler, Dallas; and Mrs. J. E.
Stiewig, Holdenville, Okla.; three
sons, Monte M. Coon, Dallas,
Delbert W. Coon, Farmington,
N. M.; and' Elva Coon, Durant;
17 grandchildren and five great
grandchildren.
Mrs. Lane was born Nov.- 18,
1876 in Cooke county, a daugh-
ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Freeman. She was married ' to
H; M. Coon in Gainesville in 1895.
and they moved to Durant in
1906.
STILL LIFE—The rabble that followed Christ to Calvary
is portrayed by the costumed people. In the course of the
play they stop occasionally to "freeze1' the action. This
scene looks like violent action, but the actors are not mov-
ing. They will hold positions like this a full minute.
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gradients in the balanced Cook formula is titanium. As Cook's
House Paint wears, this titanium releases a white power on ,
which dirt and grime settle. With every rain, this white pow-'
der washes away, carrying dirt with it, leaving your house
with that brilliant "just painted" look.
PASTELS
FOR EASTER
In sizes 7 to 14
Soft Pastel Colors
New Spring Styles
3
Packages
25c
In October 1951 there were
265 religious bodies in the U. S.
1.49'
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LAURENCE ROBERTSON
Funeral services for Laurence
Robertson, 52, brother of Mrs.
Raymond Bosley, 919 East Scott
street will be held at 1 p. m.
Friday afternoon at Whittier,
Calif., with interment in Rose-
field cemetery there.
Mr. Robertson, a former resi-
dent of Gainesville, passed away
Tuesday afternoon in a hospital
at Alhambra, Calif. He made
his home with his mother, Mrs.
W. F. Robertson, at Alhambra.
Born at Tioga November 6,
1899, Mr. Robertson had lived
in California for the past eight
years. He was engaging in the
contracting business, retiring on
account of ill health.
In addition to his mother, he
is survived by three brothers
and three sisters.
WILLIAM HENRY HUNT
Funeral services for William
Henry Hunt, 70, of 615 Potter
street, were- to be held at 4 p. m.
today at the Pentecostal Holiness
church with the pastor, the Rev.
L. D. Stallings, and the Rev.
C. M. Thomas, pastor of the First
Baptist chapel, officiating. Burial
was to be in Fairview cemetery
with Geo. J. Carroll and Son Fu-
neral home in charge of arrange-
ments.
Bearers were to be, Lige Bry-
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stubble mulch on the surface of
lands in cultivation can' bring
any permanent relief from sand
and dust in these areas, Merrill
said. The emergency tillage
used this season by many farm-
ers already has broken down
and is blowing with other now
unprotected lands. Tillage can
be relied on only for a short
time to retard soil blowing, he
added.
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F you're ready to repaint, this even wear means that you save '
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Pork
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In sizes I io 6x
of Rayon Taffeta.
Choice of other Fabrics.
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county and in western Hockley
county. An . additional 95,000
acres in the area are still in the
moderately damaged classifica-
tion. Taff added that cropland
which had been given tempo-
rary protection with emergency
tillage has now begun to blow.
Regional Director Louis P.
Merrill, Fort Worth, said the
next. 30 to 45 days may be the
most critical of the current blow
season. Only rains in sufficient
quantity to prompt the growth
of grain, grasses and other plant
cover can materially change the
now bleak picture. A single rain
or showers at this stage likely
would put the soil in a crusted,
more vulnerable condition, he
said.
Only a long - range program
aimed at getting light and shal-
up?
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i Soil’ conservation districts re-
port that well - managed grain
sorghum stubble has proven
very effective in holding soil
and point out that large sorghum
acreage obtained. through the
efforts of districts last year is
now preventing much more ex-
tensive losses.
Areas in the vicinity of Big
Spring, Lamesa and to the
southwest and west of Lubbock
again were the hardest hit by
the . new blowing. Acreages of
moderate to severe erosion re-
ported by District Conservation-
ist ■ J. A. Perrin at Amherst
changed from 165,000 acres in
mid-February to 270,000 acres.
SCS District Conservationist
Goodlett at Big Spring did not
increase his estimate of acreage
in the moderate-to-severe cate-
gory, but he pointed out that re-
cent winds had added greatly to
the acreages which had blown
down to plow depth.
Soil drifting across highways
in the Big Spring-Lamesa area
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Dust storms, described by 1 Texas for the first time in sev-
long-time residents as the most [ eral years.
8
ant, O. L. Miller, Bill Voyles,
J. D. Hazlerig, Con Hendricks
and Billy J. Weatherall.
Mr. Hunt died at 10 a. m. Wed-
nesday at his residence follow-
ing a heart attack.
Survivors are his wife, four
sons, Bill Hunt, Gainesville;
Carl, William, Jr., and Jack
Hunt, all of Fort Worth; three
daughters, Mrs. Lige Bryant,
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also is making a serious prob-
lem for highway crews.
Edwin Merrill of Shallowater,
Texas, a Supervisor of the Lub-
bock County Soil Conservation
district, said wind erosion con-
ditions in the South Plains are
the worst he has seen in his
lifetime.
District Conservationist Homer
Taff at Lubbock, after a survey
at the height of Friday’s blow-
ing, estimated that 75,000 acres
in his reporting area have ad-
vanced in the last three dust
storms from the moderately
damaged to the severely dam-
aged category. These lands are
in southern and southwestern
‛ Lynn county, southern Lubbock
Fl
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Calavos & .
Gainesville; and Mrs. Bill
Voyles and Mrs. Lacey J. Con-
stance, both of Fort Worth; one
brother, Tom Hunt, Holtville,
Calif.; and 14 grandchildren.
A resident of Gainesville since
1935, Mr. Hunt operated a small
barber shop in his home. He was
born June 15, 1881 in Limestone
county, and was married to Miss
Eddie Boyd on March 7, 1909.
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formula insures smooth, even application. Fewer brush marks.
It spreads easily and hides old paint completely. You, your-
self, can do a good painting job with Cook's Balanced
House Paint.
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He was a member of the Baptist
church.
MRS. MINNIE COON LANE
Funeral services for Mrs. Min-
nie Ursula Coon Lane, 75, a for-
mer Gainesville resident, were
held at 2 p. m. today at the
Church of the Nazarene in Du-
rant, Okla., with the Revs. W. H.
Wooten, W. A. Carter and Thur-
man White officiating. Burial
was in Durant with Geo. J. Car-
roll and Son Funeral home in
charge of arrangements.
Mrs. Lane died at 8 a. m. Tues-
day in a local hospital. She has
lived in Durant since 1906, but
had been visiting here in the
home of a daughter, Mrs. David
Smith.
Surviving are five daughters,
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Eugene
French, both of Gainesville; Mrs.
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severe in their memory, have
swept 220,000 more acres into
the class of farm and ranch
lands undergoing moderate to
severe wind erosion damage in
western Texas and Oklahoma,
the Soil Conservation service
reports.
me new total in lands which
have suffered the loss of one to
six inches of topsoil is 1,388,300
acres, according to reports from
Soil Conservation Service field
offices to Regional Director
Louis P. Merrill in Fort Worth.
Most of the newly damaged
areas are in Texas, which now
has a total of 1,181,800 acres in
the moderate - to - severe wind
damage class. Oklahoma lands
which have suffered moderate
damage now total 206,000 acres.
None of the Oklahoma land is
reported in the severely dam-
aged category.
Merrill said recent high winds
have damaged depleted range
lands in some areas of western
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COOK S HOUSE FAINT Cek
Mi-lex, ;
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€0225——-2.2
7—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register Thurs., Mar. 27, 1952
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। EASTER WEEK this year,, tourists in Italy will have a
chance to see a 900-year-old passion play at Sezze, near
Rome. A bowl in the hills is being, fitted as a theatre with
seats for 100,000 people. More than 4,000 villagers take
part in the 900-year-old show that tells the Easter story, but
includes characters and scenes from the whole Bible. More
performances are planned next summer.
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REALISM is provided by simple people accustomed
for generations to portray the roles of the play. Chirst is
played by a clerk. Sometimes the roles are handed down
from father to son and mother to daughter. Below are
some of the characters who have parts in the play.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 182, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1952, newspaper, March 27, 1952; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1550776/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.