Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 282, Ed. 1 Monday, July 21, 1952 Page: 2 of 8
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For Better Health ..
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Foster company has taken over the old White
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year ago, when the Korean war taxes due at that time.
Produce company business.
50
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BUTTONS AN’ BEAUX
SHARON SMITH
54
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DRILY SPECIRL
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vention, because it elevates its
absurdities. For instance, televi-
sion made Tom Dewey look like
little Jack Horner, who sat in a
corner, eating his pie; he put in
House lawn.
They feel that the campaign
needs a woman’s touch. And that
The place is full
of D e m o c r ats
U
T
Have A
LAUGH
7
72
W
k
nA
ssSs
"WATCH THIS ONE!”
36
54. Female ruff
55. Rent anew
DOWN
1. Coarse woven
fabric
2. Wonder and
fear
2
9
S
T
31
3. Short sleep
4. Prayer
5. Fortification •
6. Lure
7. Limb
8. Set in earth
again
9. Think:
archaic
10. Possess
11. Pitcher
17. Decay
19. Heavy
21. To the inside
22. Midday
23. Musical air
24. Rescind
27. Spoil
28. Box
29. Seek
30. Finishes
32. Not
professional
36. Locate per-
manently
37. Except
39. Sun shade
40. Inspect
41. Shave off
42. Single time
43. Queen of
England
45. Before
47. Be the matter
with
48. I have: contr.
49. Seine
“Sports! Studies ! Cars! Aren’t you interested in
anything important—like girls?’*
ACROSS
1. Large
landed
estate
6. Legal
profession
9. Article
12. Cognizant
13. Form of
“to be”
14. Uncooked '
15. Lukewarm
16. Make better
18. Sodium
chloride
20. Depress
21. Chant
24. Rodent
25. Part of
speech
26. So be it
28. That woman
31. 2000 pounds
W
division. This section covers not
only India but Pakistan, Ceylon,
Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim and Tibet.
It has some 400,000 books. About
7,000 boks are in 14 Indian lan-
guages, such as Hindi, Sanskrit,
Bengali, Urdu ana Marathi, all of
which Mr. Nagar speaks.
counts, and the reader will have
an interpretation of the story as
he sees it unfold on television
and from the reports on the tele-
phone from some of the tempor-
arily great.
' ' -
, -Toxm-ee
32. Accommodate
33. Play on
words
34. Single unit
35. Nothing more
than
36. Particles of
broken
rock
37. Prohibit
38. Wards off
40. Declaim
pompously
43. Dismounted
44. Small water
flask
46. Dye
50. Segment of
a circle
51. Vase
52. Shade of
green
53. Born
-
of the White House address—1600
Pennsylvania Ave.”
“We ought to save Vice Presi-
dent Barkley for the 1956 Olym-
pics instead of wasting him on
the 1952 presidential race.”
"Averell Harriman is in favor -
of so many things I am worried
because he hasn’t said what he is
against. He simply can’t be in fa-
vor of everything the New Deal
)
"y
Ldm03
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By
BOYCE HOUSE
his thumb and pulled out a plum
'and said, “what a great guy am
vp
A
1 Esm '
SEESM
<3
. —L---
VOTER
NTERE$T
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Founded August 30, 18 90 by JOHN T. LEONARD
(Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939.)
Published by The Register Publishing Company,
Inc., 306 East California Street, Gainesville, Texas.
Entered as second-class mail at the Gainesville, Texas,
Post Office under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
\ ...
N -
“TheCdilanial/age
2—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register Mon., July 21, 1952 S
(3
and saw as little as the man next long existing institutions. Farm
to me. I climbedwm-- machinery, for instance, altered
the life of the American farmer
Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy
service is' maintained, 25c weekly. In Cooke and ad-
joining counties by mail, 1 month, 90c; 6 months 34.50;
one year $8.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month $1.10;
6 months $5.50; 1 year $10.00.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character,
standing or reputation of any person, firm or corpo-
contact all accounts every six
weeks; in spare time, look for
new business, must have unlim-
ited endurance and attend all
clubs.
Tuesday, July 22nd
SOS Magic
SCOURING PADS
a revolution in
---o--
FOUR CENT COTTON
A CANDIDATE FOR congress in Texas,
- seeking reelection to his "steenth" term
cites the days of four cent cotton during a
Republican regime, in asking voters to re-
turn him to office.
What the candidate did not recite was the
cheapness of commodities in those days. He
did not say how much a dollar was worth
then as comapred with 1952.
There are many people who would like to
go back to the days when a dollar was worth
just that, not fifty cents or forty cents. The
congressman’s reasoning may go- over with
some voters, but it certainly does not make
an impression on all his hearers.
Editor’s Note: Trellis Mae
Peeble, the average wife of
Wilbur Peeble, America’s most
average citizen, has been be-
trayed by her initial enthusi-
asm to come out for Gov. Adlai
Stevenson of Illinois for the
Democratic presidential nom-
ination. She tells about it in
the following letter home:
on tables
0
A
C
a, es
a TH L LITTLE STORE*
MON THE SQUARE
hhau 301 w BRoADWAY ed
THE BIBLE... Can You Quote It?
Copyright 1952, Lavina Ross Fowler
1—Beloved, now are we the sons of God: therefore the world
knoweth us not. because____________________________1 John 3:2
2—Name the one woman in the Bible whose age was
revealed ----------------------------------------Genesis 23:1
3—The discretion of a man deferreth his anger; and
it is his glory to pass over a____________________Proverbs 19:11
4—Into thine hand I commit my______________________Psalms 31:5
5—As snow in summer, and as rain in harvest, so honour
is not seemly for--------------------------------Proverbs 26:1
933
"aed
/up
f T'1 W
-2 25
<. --hc.va
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don’t know who
should lead
them.
They are like
a bunch of boys
at a camp when
the director has
gone, and the
----O--
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES
IF YOU ARE ONE OF those Cooke county
- voters who do not like the Democratic
platform this year and neither do you want
to vote for the Republican nominee, General
Eisenhower, there are several ways for you
to turn when you go to the polls next No-
vember.
There will be half a dozen presidential
candidates, whom you may support instead
of voting for the Democratic or Republican
nominee.
There were 618 Cooke county voters in
1948 who voted for neither of the two major
parties’ candidates. The great majority of
this number voted for the Dixiecrat candi-
date, Strom Thurmond, but votes were also
cast for Watson, the Prohibition party can-
didate, Henry A. Wallace, the Progressive
party standard bearer, and Norman Thomas,
the Socialist party representative.
To be sure, most of these candidates re-
ceived few votes in Cooke county: Watson
14, Wallace 5 and Thomas 3. But these par-
ties and others have candidates this year.
General Herbert C. Holdridge is the Amer-
ican Vegetarian party candidate; Fred C.
Proehl represents the Greenback party and
Vincent Halliman has succeeded Henry A.
Wallace as the Progressive party’s nominee.
The Prohibition party candidate is Stuart
Hamblen, the Socialists have replaced Nor-
man Thomas with Darlington Hoopes, and
Farrell Dobbs is the Socialists Workers’
hope.
General Holdridge is another retired gen-
eral who has entered politics and Halliman is
a San Francisco lawyer, now in jail for con-
tempt of courts, as defense attorney for
Harry Bridges.
Stuart Hamblen is a well known cowboy
singer and evangelist, while Hoopes is a
Pennsylvania lawyer. Dobbs is a one-time
labor union organizer and Proehl is a former
banker, now in the grocery business. •
After surveying the field, however, we
imagine the Democrats and the Republicans,
will get most of the votes in Cooke county
as they have in years past. Truman polled
3,227 and Dewey received 1,194 in the 1948
election.
♦J
I S
Mrs. J. G.
(A) Sciatica is an inflamation of the sciatic
nerve, the biggest nerve in the body. It may be
of so-called primary origin, due to some systemic
disorder. In other cases a protruding disc in the
back, arthritis, or defects of the spine may be at
fault. The female organs also should be carefully
examined.
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 15 cents to cover cost.
(Copyright 1952, General Features Corp.)
—
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888222 A Hi
watch a demon-
• stration, but al-
ways just at
that moment a
couple of hun-
dred six-footers
also climbed on
tables.
In the con-
A CA man
P A g Tg
EVEPS
who pelieve in A
being Demo-
crats. But they I
Washington Letter...
WA^HINGTON-Scholars in India call the U. S. TheSe Days. . . by GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY
the “land of libraries,” says Mauri Lal Na- _______________________• 4
tar ’ prhandso merintellectralyoung.man fromU a ILL SEE IT ON TELEVISION stead of dramatizing a situation,
porermd orant tn n.a ft 12 t ur Ce.a T WAS mauled, pushed, shoved, it reduces it to its proper value,
gresright g ° work at he —ibrary of Con- I stepped on and lied to at It lives without adjectives.
5 Mr' Ng,, is L,In:n to g-n;- +, g., Asia the Republican convention in The invention of a new process
r Na8ar 1S henping to oibanjze the South Asia Chicago. I sat in the press gallery often involves - ’
section of the Library’s onentalia ............ - " • 3 - -1 -5
Our pledge to you: Consistently
low prices ALWAYS! TRY US!
kids run around ,
yelling at each Hal Boyle Adlai Stevenson—for a politician
other — and no one to take over —certainly does have a lonely
responsibility. face ... so wistful.
For 20 years they have been Well, dear, all I have had so
used to playing follow-the-leader, far is fun and frolic.
and now they must pause and Your loving wife,
say: Trellis Mae
“Well, but, who is the leader P.S. Please send more money,
now?” I had to buy a new pair of shoes
Wilbur, I never felt so sorry after dancing with that dubious
for men since I first told you delegate from Texas.
so that actually he vecame a
manufacturer; the automobile
shifted population from rural to
urban areas and changed family
relationship. Television will ul-
timately kill the national con-
Mrs. Irb Bateman went to Saint Jo Wednesday
night to visit relatives and friends for several
days.
Jess Dustin, former Gainesville man. and his
, Maysville, Okla. baseball club arrived in the city
this morning and will begin a three-game series
with the Gainers this afternoon. The Gainers de-
feated Valley View yesterday 15 to 3.
The Big Indian Oil and Development company
has selected a site on the B. W. Davis farm one
mile east of Callisburg on the Callisburg’ and
Whitesboro public road on which to drill an oil Wanted—A man of vision and
dent of the Big Indian company. A 90-foot steel ambition, an after-dinner speak-
test well. C. A. Doudrick of Kansas Citv is presi- er, a man who can work all day,
derrick has been shipped here from Pittsburgh, stay up all night and appear
Pa. for use in drilling the well. Spudding in of fresh next morning.
Che well is expected not later than August 1. Must be a man’s man, lady’s
Jasper Guy Estes pitched the Gainesville Gain- man, model husband, fatherly
ersto a 10 to 4 victory over the Tishomingo team father, good provider, plutocrat,
at the city ball park here Tuesday afternoon. The Democrat, Republican, a New
victory was the fourth but of five trials for the Dealer, an old dealer, a techni-
Whitesboro hurler. cian, politician, mathematician
Constable Charles Cochran reports the recovery and mechanic.
of a stolen automobile in a thicket four miles Must be a sales promotion ex-
northeast of Muenster. The car is the property of pert, a good credit manager, at-
Mrs. Will Arnold of Leonard, Texas ,and it had tend all meetings, funerals.. visit
been stolen last week. customers in hospitals and jails,
IMPORTANCE OF PROTEINS
TO THE BODY IS GREAT
By C. A. DEAN, M.D.
NEDITORIAL: The protein needs of the body
IVI are receiving more and more attention, par-
ticularly as regards the needs of the surgical pa-
tient. It is essential that there be a sufficient
718
8288
Hsddh.
--e-as°
”g-z
B aHe
ESE3WAIT ‘
TEPEUNI
IDOLEGNU
S
e
what shirts to send out to the ............................-...........-
I just talked around among the II \ Ammameia
girls here—honey, you know I ®e• VVIINMIVI vlOI
know nothing about politics—and pn - pyo
aswr. cameup with the same neet on Decline
“The only Democrat who can WASHINGTON, July 21 (A) _
hope.to beat Gen. Eisenhower is America’s active cargo and pas-
: Adlai Stevenson. senger fleet has shrunk from
He is the only Democratic pos- 1,520 ships last Jan. 2 to 1,098 on
sibility who has ummpphh—the July 1—a drop of 28 per cent
others only have promises. the National Federation of Am-
filled that office left hardly a •1 talked.to some of the other erican Shipping reported yester-
Ied mdi Ace -1511 m m girls I met here and this is what day.
mark on history. Zachary Taylor fhev said about the other fel- “The present threat of another
may have been something, but 11/.’ .015 P.ese tuedl or anoinel »
it takes some doing to recall him “Estes Kefauver his coon worldwar, points up the acute
as nresident of the United States , .Estes Ketauver.: nis coon shortage of commercial passen-
01 Tvlei and BuchanTn and skin cap is shedding, and too ger-carrying ships,” the federa-
AYervanduehananand.yan many honest horse players who tion said. The passenger ship to-
uenieet,forathem there Were can 1 get to the track can 1 lay tal’ including the new SS United ’
torhuight.P all the an thS down an honest $2 bet because States, amounts to 51 snips of
oratoryand.a the of his moral crusade.” 15,623 capacity compared with
makes conventions. “Sen. Kerr has so much oil he 123 of 37,741 in 1939.
So, OK, I’ll do it that way, too. would want to put kerosene The sharp overall 1952 decline
Here I sit, in the detachment of lamps in the White House. Fas- in the merchant marine was
my farm, with nothing to dis- cinating looking devil, though.” brought about mainly by reduced
turb me but the static of a than- “The big advantage of Sen. foreign aid exports, which re-
derstorm, watching television, Russell is that he is a bachelor duced by 411 the number of gov-
and talking to Chicago on the and we would not have to watch ernment-owned ships operated
telephone. If it works, the bosses how his progeny took advantage by private shipping lines,
can save plenty on expense ac-......... -................
77
Must be an expert driver, liar,
hunter, fisherman, dancer, trav-
ration which may appear in The Register will be eler, bridge player, poker player,
therultnrputsdhepon beins brought to the at- golf player diplomat, financier.
Member of The Associated Press, which is entitled capitalist, philanthropist and au-
exclusively to the use of republication of all the local thority on palmistry, chemistry,
news Printtdhin this newspaper, as well as all AP psychology, dogs, cats, horses,
The publishers are not responsible for copy omis_ blondes, brunets and redheads,
sions, typographical errors or any unintentional errors' Salary commensurate with
that occur other than to correct in next issue after it ability.
is brought" to their attention. All advertising orders
are accepted on this basis' only.
-- 9
K AT ElDg
ETAPEE
METAH
aWe
Boyle's Column . . • by HAL BOYLE
You take Eisenhower. He
shrugged in 1948. Now he is
shrugging the other way. Some
of the girls I have talked to here
—of course they are Democrats—
say now that Ike actually would
like to put Mamie in the White
House.
Somehow the Democrats here
don’t feel they will ever grow
Kansas sunflowers on the White
Mr. Nagar is so enthusiastic s cg
about his mission that he works f "
far into the night, and Saturdays 1 a
and Sundays as well. “As soon
72/—
3338888
3333333322289888
A
-355528
amount of protein available in
both quantity and quality. No
prepared protein preparation can
replace the protein of animal
origin from meat, milk, cheese, g898
and eggs. fl
Protein is needed by the body g 53
to build new tissue. It is likewise " *8
essential to building up the blood
volume, especially after blood T
loss from any cause.
When a protein deficiency ex-
ists several things may follow. 0
First of all, wound healing may “
be prolonged. Wound ruvture is C. A. Dean M.D.
i MEP
REATAGA
EDSSL
8%
*
as I entered the library,” he told • vention hall, old
be, with shining eyes,. “I said -anesees friends and
‘This is the nation’s pride, a great library of a pretty women
great country.’ ” He was greatly impressed by were pleasantly Geo. Sokolskv I „
warm welcoming letters which greeted him upon distracting. The old friends al- ' Q See-me -ki in
his arrival by air in New York last October. “I ways wanted to know what’s hap- SO, I thought that I would 7 JOll ill
felt just as in my own home, and this feeling pening, and as most of them watch the Democratic convention r
grows daily,” he said, should have- had as much infor- on television. I would see what ae-e GHuy "TAe-w,
Working quietly and efficiently at his side is mation as I could have, I could the.peoplessennwpuld.exper- 005 Ily 1O0dy
""21 2 SSSSSB yan- LL, was
happy they are to be here A graduate of Agra worked out their way. qhmncu to hotasnationaluconen- son county jail in downtown Kan- Six cirrec^ 142
I niers but hYttarPradeshuher fayoritesubjiect In the hotels I fought to get on from now, the politicians will sas City early today. For wisdom, courage and peace read the BIBLE daily,
name,, sonnster ssimprictjs in Hindi He themel wvato rireThngirlsawho ran either be fed up with their ex- The escapees included an ac-
(1YL.. T1, m:.1 41 v , • -nem Weed ana snappy ana posure over television or this cused slayer — Josepn Nastasio
gsWhen-ndian 8ir.S’ marry, they change their acted as though they wanted us new instrument will have forced Jr., 25 — who police said had
firs names, huSarla’s fits her SO well, I wanted all to drop dead. Teen-agers in upon them a different, more “squealed” on many persons in
her.to eep , Mr. Nagar said, smiling fondly at search of free Coca-Cola and sane more decorous procedure, the underworld.
Sarla, whom he describes as more a friend tnan children in search of buttons History sh0vs vepi f,1, Gian r, 1 1 c .1
iust a wife ” EineG int me stennen An mV nisioiy snows veiy tew gigan- The break was made from the
• uS . pumped to me, stepped on my tic human beings. Most men who jail on the 12th floor of the
Mr. Nagar himself is a graduate of Benares uni- toes, spattered my suit. To get loom large in any period disap- courthouse Police said acetylene
versityand son of a great scholar and authority on to someone for the business my pear in the next. Daniel Webster torches were used to cut through
the Atharva Veda, last of four sacred scriptures of newspapers paid me.to,do,.I and Henry Clay are, in historic steel doors on the 10th and 11th
the Hindus. The young Nagars already have many literally had to—Wade through hindsight, enormous minds and floors. A jailer was tied up, and
close friends in Washington. When they cele- photograp eis. They squat, . sit personalities; yet, neither could the prisoners escaped down the
brated their first wedding anniversary they were crawl and do neaily anything, to be president Small men who stairs
hard put as to whom they’d ask to their party. get a photograph. *--
“We didn’t know whom to exclude, but ’ we 1 soon enough discovered that
couldn’t accomodate all our new friends in our I could transact more business on D • AA,,pI
small apartment,” Mr. Nagar explained. “At last the telephone than by running D)U31IC35 IVlilOT e • • by SAM DAWSON
we chose 14. One was an Indian the other 13 around from hotel to hotel. So I _________________________________,
were Americans—one an American Indian." said to myself, afterrmy. Dulse NEW YORK, July 21 (A) - was only a year old. This double-
Demtiha that is it iust as effiewnt. Uncle Sam is. spending twice as time into debt shows how de-
lotejenhone from mv Berkshire^ much as he is taking in these fense spending is now really hit-
to.ephonenrommEsKinik days. In the first two weeks of ting its stride.
illtop as fi om e 15 °oi of this month the treasury ran be- The treasury has tried various
. , the, Conrad Hi ltonhotel. And.I hind by two billion dollars. means of meeting this deficit.
(From the files of The Daily Register, will not have to shut the Window The financial district thinks The total of a 91-day treasury
July 20, 1922.) to keep out the noise of the sheet the treasury will soon be bor- bills has been increased by 11
Miss Maudrue Lamb left today for an extended singers whose doggerel pollutes rowing more money — pessibly billion dolars. A disappointing
visit with relatives in Dallas. Chicago s air, seeking four billion dollars from non - marketable bend issue
George Shady of McAlester, Okla, is visiting - have been to many conven- corporations as a sort of advance brought in 318 million. A popu-
4 his mother Mrs. Sallie White on North Grand tions. 1 can reconstruct their payment on next March’s income lar marketable bond issue last
avenue. atmosphere in any nightmare. I taxes. ■ month brought in 414 billion.
. G. A. Seltzer is here from Brownwood to spend am acquainted with many lead- Under the impact of defense The treasury hopes its more
a few days with his family. ing men of both parties and they and other spending the federal liberally termed savings bonds
Miss Gladys Olvey has gone to El Dorado to will tell me as much or as little debt has hit 263 billion dollars, will coax money from the pub-
visit relatives and friends lor several days. on the telephone as they choose, eight billion higher than a year lie, which was cashing in more
Miss Dorothy Bear will arrive tonight from In i fact, in two instances, I sug- age. And the government has of the old style savings bonds
Henrietta to visit Mrs. Lee Moody. " gested the bathroom as a suitable borrowed six billion dollars in than it was buying.
Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Balthrop returned Wednes- place for private conservation, “new money” since April. The treasury may next turn to
day night from a motor trip to San Antonio. with the hope that there would July is always a bad month tax anticipatcry bonds, a form it
Omar Deems, former manager of the local be no intrusion. Every move is for the treasury, of course. Tax has used before. These are sold
Harvey House, who went from here to Brown- watched because maybe “this is collections are slow, while gov- to corporations, who have to
wood, has been made manager of the Harvey it." ’ ernment agencies start to spend save money for months to meet
House at Fort Worth. ' Now, this television machine funds appropriated for the new their tax bills. By buying the
J. A. Hilliard of Hugo, Okla, has arrived in the intrigues me. It reduces greatness fiscal year. bonds, they get some interest on
city to become manager for the G. P. Foster & to its proper proportions. It de- But this July’s two billion dol- the cash they are laving aside.
Company, Inc. produce business in this city. The stroys the synthetic build-up. In- lar deficit in two weeks com- And then in March they turn the
Foster company has taken over the old White _ pares with a one billion deficit a bonds into the treasury for the
,c
7
ggge
The Word of God • . .
The birth of a babe in a manger in a stable
did more to attain that end than all other in-
fluences that have wrought in this world.
Glory to God in the highest, and on earth
peace, good will toward men.—Luke 2;14.
Bbd a
VOTING FOR PRESIDENT
VANY DEMOCRATIC voters who would
-V- like to vote for General Eisenhower in
November are undecided whether they
should or should not enter the Democratic
primary this week.
General Preston A. Weatherred, Dallas at-
torney, has gone into the legal aspects of the
matter extensively, and his conclusion after
examining court decisions on the subject it
that:
"Inprmary elections, neither a party con-
vention, a party executive committee, nor
election officers of a party primary have
any authority to require a test of party
membership other than that set out in sec-
tion 189 of the election code. Any qualified
voter who is willing to subscribe to the sta-
tutory pledge is entitled to vote in a primary
election.
“The power of election judges to refuse
the right to vote to a person who is willing
to take the pledge is limited to determining
whether the person is a qualified voter as
defined in the election code, whether he is a
resident of the voting precinct, and had not
previously voted at that election, and
whether he has complied with statutory re-
quirements pertaining to poll tax receipts
and exemption certificates. Refusal of any
election judge to deliver a ballot to a voter
meeting these requirements is illegal.”
If conservative Democrats who desire to
vote for General Eisenhower should remain
out of the primaries in great numbers, they
would endanger the candidacies of the
state’s conservative candidates for offices
on the primary ballot.
The primary ballot’s only pledge is that
the person voting says he is a Democrat and
will “support the nominees of this primary.”
Nothing is said in this pledge about the pres-
idental race and the law does not provide
that a pledge of support of presidential can-
diates can appear on a primary ballot, ac-
cording to Gen. Weatherred’s interpretation
of state election laws.
52
Ess
AP Newtfeatures
4eha
2 4/
U)s
No group of people I have met way: Adlai Stevenson must be
before has ben so disorganized, the best candidate because he
....... af simply shrugs of the presidency.
(HICAGO, July 21 (A3)—Well, stands for — Herbert Hoover
U Wilbur, I still say all the proved that.”
Democrats need is a woman’s Wilbur, the way the girls I
touch. have talked to figure it is this
another possibility. Bed sores are more likely to
result. Protein is also essential in proper qualities
and quantities in the maintenance of a healthy
liver.
(Q) “Please advise me on sciatica. I am
going through my second year of it and I am
in agony.”
No Job Too Tough for SOS!
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 282, Ed. 1 Monday, July 21, 1952, newspaper, July 21, 1952; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1559547/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.