Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 15, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952 Page: 2 of 8
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Blowing Away His Halos
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(Copyrizht, 1952. Kins Features Syndicate, Inc.)
Todays Birthday...
Carthy
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THE BIBLE... Can You Quote It?
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Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle
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38
40
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SHARON SMITH
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AP Newsfeatures
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Wednesday, September 1 7th
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George J. Carroll will leave this afternoon for
Denver, Colorado, to attend the National Funeral
Directors association convention.
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BLOOD PRESSURE VALUES
ARE BEING REPLOTTED
By C. A. DEAN, M.D.
D
b
7
L
There have been some heavy rains since,
but the water has run off parched soil with-
out giving crops the moisture they should
have had.
And when the rainfall will return to nor-
mal in this area remains nothing more than
an idle guess.
r}
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arming
alive.
Never
k(
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Mrs.
a n
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These Days . .
HOW TO BE A CANDIDATE
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Jack, of Nocona are visiting Mrs. J. P. Wear and
family.
R
Micheke.
DRILY SPECIRL
59
L
I
41. Poorly
42. Bad
44. Rent again
46. Flower
49. Principal
51. Youthful
53. Go
57. Source of
metal
58. Halt
60. Ireland
61. Tiny
62. Passage out
63. Tear
DOWN
1. Court
2. Beverage
3. Born
4. Postpone
5. Remove the
skin
6. About
58
------o ------ - means
but doesn’t say.
Women have exactly the right
bi
[
Q
fe
as
10. S-shaped
molding
11. Healthy
16. Turn inside
out
18. Husks of
grain
20. And not
22. Crystallized
rain
23. Water con-
veyance
24. Dismounted
26. Waistcoat
29. Air: comb,
form
31. Bar of metal
32. Make eyes
33. Part of a
shoe
35. Tree with
quivering
■ leaves
37. Uncanny
40. Upper limb
43. Papal scarf
45. Go in
46. Acknowledge
47. Dry
48. Woody
plant
50. Instigate
52. Not strict
54. Land
measure
55. Relatives:
56. Purpose
59. 1001
Miss Irvine Scott left this morning for a brief
visit in Dallas before going to Austin to attend
the University of Texas.
Miss Ruth St. John, who will teach mathmetics
in the local high school, has arrived from her
home in Waco.
Mrs. Phil Cushing and children have returned
from a visit with her son, Ed Cushing, in Oak-
land, Calif.
ptee
7. Source of
maple
syrup
8. Rub out
9. Lessen by re-
trenching
J. B. Roberts, who has been bookkeeper for
Lyon & Gray Lumber company for the past year,
has been transferred to the Dallas office of the
company. His place is being taken here by Walter
Clements.
a 3
E______________■_______ 9
43
AEW YORK, Sept. 16 (A) —
-N Curbstone observations on
women by a Pavement Plato:
• Nww
33
6'
1
3
ACROSS
1. Company
5. Altitude
9. Form of
greeting
12. Toward
shelter
' 13. Distant
14. Epoch
15. Close-fitting
jacket
17. Crayon
19. Smooth
21. Hard metal
22. Do without
25. Above
27. Nothing
28. Underdone
30. In a line
34. Drug
36. Drainage
38. Moistens
39. Proportion
Lamesa Observes
First Fiesta Day
LAMESA, Sept. 16 (AP) — La-
mesa held its first annual Fiesta
Day yesterday commemorating
Mexico’s independence from
Spain.
Several thousand visitors,
many of them of Latin-American
descent, thronged into Lamesa’s
downtown section for a colorful
afternoon parade.
The event was climaxed by a
street dance last night on the
city square.
3
24
70
uay
A man who marries a girl with
long fingernails should expect
he’ll have to do the dishes all his
JEROME IRVING (JERRY) life.
gn
, — ’I
.ture of her po-
litical system.
“A
----o---
DROUGHT ANNIVERSARY
ANNIVERSARY OF THE beginning of the
- worst drought this area has known in
modern times, will be observed next Friday,
September 19.
For it was on that date in 1950, that the
last rain of any consequence in 1950 fell, and
for the two years that have followed, rain-
fall in Texas and in the northern section of
the state particularly, has been far below
normal.
After the September 19 rainfall of .45 of
an inch in 1950, there was .08 of an inch in
October, and nothing but traces of rain in
November and December. January brought
slight moisture and it was not until Febru-
ary 14 of last year that there was a real rain,
the precipitation on that date amounting to
1.01 inches.
The Word of God ...
If men did that we would need no ther laws,
no enforcement officers, no armies, and Christ’s
Kingdom would prevail on earth as in heaven.
And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy mind, and with all thy strength,—Mark
12:30.
to twenty points even momen-
tarily, depending on the state of
excitement, fear, exercise, rest,
eating, fasting, sleep, shock, and
a host of other factors.
a“8,
aA
—6)
Published by The Register Publish!:
306 East California Street. Gainesville, "
57heCdilonialPage
2—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register Tues., Sept. 16, 1952
oa
She will never
■ -4
EBRAKE
GAPEQ
U T I ONS
3
(Q) “About 1%2 years ago my small son
quickly grabbed me under my armpit and
twisted. People have said that this could
start cancer and I can’t get this from my
mind. Please tell me if my fear is justified.”
A. R.
(A) It is very unlikely that cancer could ever
result from such circumstances. The trauma that
may predispose to cancer is repeated trauma over
the same area. . Examples are in pipe smokers
where the pipe constantly rubs the lips and tongue
along with the irritation from smoke, and where
a mole along a belt line is constantly rubbed by a
belt.
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.)
ton in Wisconsin and see how
tell a
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 adjoin-
ing counties-by mail, 1 month, 90c; 6 months $4.50; 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 corporation which
Campbell's
Tomato Soap
it tastes FRESH COOKED! look!
fete"
amt
Our pledge to you: Consistently |
low prices ALWAYS! TRY US! |
Washington Letter...
WKIASHINGTON— Busy as she is as a research
phychologist for the Army, a young Negro
woman, Mary A. Morton, still finds time to in-
vestigate problems of her own and other minority
groups and to pursue her love for the piano.
In her work for the army Miss pesg-sgpgsegmsgeg
Morton develops tests for use in | il M IMBi
63
Have A
LAUGH
By
BOYCE HOUSE
JERRY WALD
art Of
the selection of military person-
nel for various jobs.
Handsome and beautifully
dressed, she was born in Wash-
ington. Her father was a chem-
istry teacher in the District of
Columbia public schools and her
1
# ' 8,9
%
. » -I
t i 1
AA
0rS40
_c8/
Ing Company, Inc.,
Texas, ntered as
» ---— — -ij wvicl There is no plant life in the
h they have finished eating — but deep portions of the sea.
in the
_ The defeat of Mrs. Clare Boothe much space is devoted to local
n& in the Republican primary neys 1 often hear New Yorkers Brooklyn, Sot of t „
the United States, they feel that hadof Wald-
the newspapers publish nothing Krasna Preduc-
of importance. What they really tions, an inde- g
mean is that they do not under- ]—- — • --it at :
We VEJP
MS ET S
Gainesbille Hailu Regisket
ant, “Guilty ass m.arqd
Founded August 30, 1890 by JOHN T. Leonard prisoner said, “Ain’t that what
(Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939.) we’ve got the jury to decide7”
may appear in The Register will be cheerfully corrected '
upon being brought tc the attention of the publisher. m,
Member of The Associated Press, which is entitled ex- he man was accused of horse
c’usively to the use of republication of , all the local news stealing. His lawyer made an
Shi in this newspaper, as wel as all AP news dis- eloquent speech and the jury
The publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, freed him. As they were leaving
typographical errors or any unintentional errors that the courtroom the client asked
occur other than to correct in next issue after it is 1C4L4 l,, t C4n. asKed,
brought to their attention. All advertising orders are ac- —oes that mean I get to keep
cepted on this basis only, the horse?”
858884
1 23
42853232
WALD, born Sept. 16, 1911, in Women regard with mortal
a dry goods hatred any man who insists on
luc- taking them at their own word.
I If they meant what they said__
% j they wouldn’t say it. The art of
8 oettino lone rith a woman con-
politician. She is S
not particularly O
"""—inten with 189
=
wateert *
giaq
TAKES RAYBURN TO TASK
WHILE MOST OF the newspapers in the
" Fourth congressional district of Texas,
which includes Grayson, Fannin, Collin, Hunt,
Rockwall, Rains and Kaufman counties, con-
cur in any statement made by Speaker Sam
Rayburn, and go along with him on politics,
regardless of his new deal, fair deal and
queer deal alignments, there are some which
do not swallow all of Sam’s sugar-coated pills
without protest.
One is T. Glenn Doss, editor and publisher
of the Whitewright Sun, in Grayson county.
He takes exception to the daily press’ quota-
tion from a statement by Speaker Rayburn
that “the present economic status of Texas
is the result of the Democratic administra-
tion.’’
It seems that Doss has been voting the
Democratic ticket for a great number of
years, but he is a stickler for the truth
whether spoken by Democrats, Republicans
or what-have-you.
And when Rayburn made the statement
quoted here, Doss had this to say in his edi-
torial column:
“In the 1930 November elections, the Re-
publicans in power for 10 years, lost control
of congress, although retaining Herbert Hoo-
ver as president. The Democrats organized
the house in March, 1931, and elected John
Nance Garner of Texas as speaker, in which
capacity he served until he became vice-pres-
ident in 1933. So, you see, it wasn’t a Re-
publican administration in 1931 and 1932,
even with a Republican serving as president.
“Mr. Rayburn has had much to say over
the last 20 years about 5c cotton under the
Hoover administration. Let’s see what the
record says.
“In 1930, the last year this country had a
Republican house and senate and president,
cotton sold in Whitewright the first week in
September at 10%c per pound, and cotton-
seed at $27 per ton, according to the record
as published in The Sun.
“In September, 1931, six months after the
Republicans lost control of congress, cotton
sold in Whitewright at 6.20c a pound, and
cottonseed at $10 per ton.
“In September, 1932, still under the Demo-
crat-controlled congress, cotton sold in
Whitewright at 7c per pound, and cotton-
seed at $10.50 per ton.
“In 1933 the Democrats also took over the
presidency.
“On Sept. 7, 1939, six'years after Roose-
velt became president and gave the nation
the ‘New Deal,’ Whitewright had ginned
2,085 bales of cotton, and buyers were pay-
ing 81c per pound for cotton and $16 per
ton for seed. The Sun of that date quoted
other farm products prices in Whitewright
as follows: Corn, 50c per bushel, and oats,
35c per bushel.
“So, eight years after the Republicans lost
control of congress and six years after a
Democrat became president, cotton and cot-
tonseed prices in Whitewright were less than
they were the last year under a full Repub-
lican administration, 1930.
“All of which leads up to the fact that in
spite of all the New Deal could do after six
years, it took World War II to restore pros-
perity to the United States, even though it
was a false prosperity, and it took the Ko-
rean war and preparations for World War
III to maintain it.
“If Mr. Rayburn or anybody else tells you
otherwise, he is only trying to fool you. If
this war and preparations for war goes on
indefinitely, this false prosperity will also go
on indefinitely.
“And that is the real present economic
status of Texas and the rest of the nation:
a false prosperity paid for with the blood
and sacrifices of our fighting men and a
mortgage on the earnings of this and future
generations.”
believably vast number of meet-
ings, conventions and lectures
that occur every hour in their
city.
But go to Sheboygan or Apple-
Trout Fishing
To Aid College
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. Sept.
16.(4)—Trout are going to help
build a college here.
Gerald Oleson announced he
would throw onen his trout farms
here open to fishermen from
Thursday until the end of the
month. Fishermen will pay 10
cents an inch for any they catch
and payments will go into the
building fund of Northwestern
Michigan college.
The community college opened
a year ago in temporary quar-
ters with approximately 150 stu-
dents.
aTNL LITTLE
ON TAL $gVARL •
w omonewar
The best way
to get along
with women is
always to tell
them the full
truth. They will
regard you as
the most dis-
r < • f
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Boyle's Column . . . by HAL BOYLE
SMMA 1 15. wuaI say
g getting along with
3 ill sists altogether i.. ....
pendent unit at" . - understanding., what she
R K O — Radio IM
Ai
Wisconsin pri-G
mary are indi-
cative, by con-
no man can convince them of it.
A man tips a bellhop more
than a woman, but she is more
thoughtful about remembering to
leave something for hotel cham-
-bermaids.
Tip From Liontamer
It may not mean a thing if a
man blows up in public, but a
woman who creates scenes us-
ually has a miserable home life.
A wife whose husband invari-
ably remembers all her birth-
days and anniversaries had bet-
ter start worrying about him.
It is also true that a wife who
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IDETABU
C EMO N U S
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• by GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY
If
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W hat can a girl do to make a boy notice her anyway?”
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Copyright 1952, Lavina Ross Fowler
He that soweth iniquity shall reap________________Proverbs 22’8
“Johnny Be- 2—Let not the wife depart from her____________I Corinthains 7:10
3—When thou sittest to eat with a ruler, consider
— a diligently what is--------------------------------Proverbs 23:1
who 4-Not he that commendeth himself is approved, but
whom the Lord----------------------------I Corinthians 10:18
0—Let us not love in word, neither in tongue; but in
e deedand in---------------------------------------1 John 3:18
hHe that hath an ear, let him ________________.____Revelation 3:13
/—Ihe Lora is gracious, and full of compassion;
slow to anger, and of great------------------------Psalms 145:8
Six coueci--------excellent. Four correct________good
___For wisdom, courage and peace read the BIBLE daily.
stand the intensely local interest _____ - ________
tclmnertaensandheventthepartac - f amount of lipstick on only when
ular part of the state where they berg Memorial . - thev have finished eatina hnt
live. The deep sense of locality award in 1948, 8 X s
is normal to American life. the film indus- 5
Therefore, the successful can- Dy’s highest as
di date for public office, for the honor. His pro-
senate or for the house of repre- ductions have
sentatives, is usually a man who included
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For Better Health ...
vol
w 1 They may get an assist in this
> 3 from Truman and Taft, with Taft
; shoveling coals on the fire under
p pl Stevenson, Truman doing the
" , same for Eisenhower, and Tru-
. IJ man and Taft doing likewise for
h each other. * «i
-me —A In this way the quartet should
i- F agga have a nice blaze going by elec-
the godagg 4 ' tion day with help from the vice
the gddsggaad presidential candidates, Sen.
c9in Sparkman and Sen. Nixon.
• a — 5 C m. —-was
will be as re- LAMES MARLOW Truman and Taft are more
taxing as last year’s hat. They than just famous politicians
follow standard political practice: whose names are a household
Make it slam-bang and personal, word. They have become sym-
Not so with Eisenhower and hols of their parties.
mother had been an English
teacher. After graduating from
Howard university here, Miss
Morton worked toward a doctor’s
degree at the University of
Chicago. She’s done research in Jane Eads 1.0. pull,
the public schools, was head of a department of associated
child development at Dillard university, New the state of Cen-
Orleans, and taught psychology at Howard before necticut except ----w - ------ -----— -.p- . (
joining the labor department as a psychologist. by what is often Geo Sokolsky sentatives, is usually a man who Encuded -he
Her avocation is music, and she has given small called bedroom 1S attuned to the locality which asS,, Menagerie,
piano recitals in New York and her spacious nine- residence. Her realm is the world 1S to select him. He is part of it. -nda and others,
room home in Washington, in which she has just She accepted election to the He 1 regarded not as a “great ---,--——----
installed a new grand piano. “My whole family house of representatives once,, man but as a neighbor. numbei of New Yorkers
was brought up on Beethoven and all of us played hut discontinued that career in So many, parts of Connecticut S-eeP ln ‘-hat state,
the piano,” she says. “My favorite composers, boredom. are of the bedroom suburbs of. As long as this sense of local-
however, are Bach and Chopin.” While Mrs. I uce has no awn- New York that in those places ity prevails in this country, our
One result of'Miss Morton’s research on minor- ciations with her husband’s nub- the New York atmosphere pre- congress will remain a cross-sec-
ity problems was a study on comparative educa- locations she not unnatiFjy vails to a degree. But what is' tion of the whole American peo-
tional oportunities for Negroes and whites in benefits’ from their oonularitv true there in Greenwich or Stam- pe. would be destructive of
Washington, copies of which were requested by and suffers from heir nnn ford is not true in Waterbury or our way of life if congress were
the library of congress. 4 - arity Among the older Hh‘ Torrington or Winsted. In a state recreated in the image of, let us
With the personnel research section of the ad- licans Henry Luce is renem like Wisconsin, the New Yorker say, the characters who, in New
jutant general’s office since 1947, Miss Morton bered’as one of the man who out who interferes is as much of an York, call themselves cafe So-
has been working on tests designed to predict a Wendell Willkie over on them alien as a Russian or an English- clety
person’s aptitude for military training and classi- Those who fear Henry Luce’s man. When, for instance, “The - ' 7--------—--
fication tests to determine the specific aptitudes influence, rejected Mrs Luce’s New York Times” cr “Life” in- There is a distinction between
of trainees. candidacy On the whole among structs Wisconsin how to vote, mentally deficient persons whose
“Currently, we are studying ways of selecting Republicans, she is regarded as you can always be sure that the minds are not sufficiently de-
illiterates, or foreign-speaking .men, who with the an outsider ° vote will go the other way. Even veloped and the insane whose
proper training will be able to take their place Top MVeCemLT l y;, , in Connecticut there is a grow- minds are abnormal.
along with the others so that we’ll be prepared in part politician He E iwt? mg resentment to New York in- ’ —----•
ease of any necessity for full-mobilization,” Miss been7 a Republican and his career terference’ 111 sPlte of the lar§e Classified Ads Bring Results.
Morton told me. displays neighborly regularity
Some of the tests being worked out have no The liberals and let? winsermn T1! % A y I I "T I
pantomine. The direction/are usually given in The World Today . by JAMES MARLOW
.For instance, there might be a problem like but most Americans expect that "7 " r -
this: The first picture in a row could be that of a if a man chooses to be Sa team WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (P)— tration and the governor is get-
cat. Following this there might be pictures of a he will engage in team activity’ President Truman and Sen. Taft ting a little more caustic about
dog, a horse and a kitten. The problem is to mark Psychologically Americans re- Will make it more comfortable the Republicans. But both still
the one most like a cat. The examiner points sent mugwumps in either party for anyone whopmmegm- seem to be trying to work up a
first to the cat then to every other picture, finally Men like Joe McCarthy are not Ca n t , 8 e tee full head of steam,
making a mark under the kitten. The men woulld occasional politicians They do, adjusted to the,
mark other pictures in the same manner to show not come in and go out of party campaigning of |
they could see the similarity in objects that stand activities as their desire or lack Hen. Eisenhow-
for words. of desire for public office asserts er and G 0 V. 9
itself. They do party work all Steyenson. o L
the time and they work in their 1 Since every-
own states among their own pea- body has been
pie. They go back and forth be- istening tot hem
tween Washington and home all for years, hear-
(From the files of The Daily Register, the time, not only to mend fences, 8 the presl
September 16, 1922.) but to be among their neighbors. dcn1, and
Shortage of coal with which to fire the boilers They belong to the states which -10,
at the Era gin may force a suspension of opera- they represent. wiPm, . ‘
tions there, according to City Tax Collector Rafe One of the most characteristic 1 "5 as
Piper, who was a visitor there Friday. This is the senators is Herman Welker of
first instance of the coal strike affecting oper- Idaho. He is strictly Idaho and
ations in Cooke county. that part of the world. Nobody
School Superintendent C. A. Puckett reports the would expect him to engage in s, g-------- -- , m ’ —
city school system, will employ 76 persons during global-baloney hi-jinx, even if it Stvenson.Beins newcomers to Although Truman and Taft are
the term opening Monday. Ten years ago only is amusing. Joe McCarthy is that national Po! it CS’ they have had not now candidates for anything,
44 persons were employed by the schools. sort of person as relates to Wis- to n ch. heir, way along to get hy re both such aggressive men,
Mr. and Mrs. William Culp and little son have consin. His own people know he. the feel of th ingsThey started Wi thstrong,opinio ns and a yen.
gone to Winnsboro to visit Mrs. Culp’s parents belongs to them. . 3 mild as a couple of ccus- to express them before this cam-
for several days. New Yorkers are cosmopolitan S . ... Pa 8n 1S,oVer they may over-
Arthur Lee Joyner, Bert Pfaff and Kyle Owen in attitude/ Some of. them are NoW. the.generalis,8 etting shadew the two men running for
will leave Sunday for College Station to resume closer to London, Paris, Warsaw ougherontheTrumanadminis-.office.
their studies at Texas A&M college. and Naples than they are to .
Mrs. J. A. Cunningham went to Marietta this Boise or Madison. It is the' na- BUlLONS AN’ BEAUX
morning to visit relatives for several days. ture of a city of some 50 national
A. A. House and Walter Cunningham of Era origins that it lacks emotional
were visitors in the city today. homogeneity. News from Ger-
Mrs. J. C. Wear and children, Margaret and many looms larger than news.
7 1 C" ‘ "" —3 - about New York itself. The prob-
ability is that few of the 8,000,-
000, who live in New York, are
really concerned about the un-
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:Wevna.-- "“8
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gh-7
-g never has any reason to “kiss
trust you again. hel-boye and make up” feels frustrated.
Women always sound louder A windless calm on her sea of
munching toast than men do, matrimony makes her dread the
The surest way to annoy a coming of a storm greater than
dominant woman is to tell her, she wants.
“don’t be so masculine.” Women The greatest tribute a woman
today yearn to be feminine, but can pay a man is to tell him, “I
they have forgotten how. want our son to be just like
The most pitiful figure in the you." But few realize this.
modern world is a woman base- A wise woman, no matter how-
ball fan. She seems as out of her shrewdly she bosses her home,
element as a fish trying to skip always remembers to have to-
rope. ward her husband the secret un-
The last thing a woman wants shown fear that a liontamer has
from a man is friendship. If a of his lions.
man tells her he is her friend,
she thinks something is wrong
with either him or her.
Won’t Believe Mirror
Any woman will believe a
swindler before she will her mir-
ror.
Nothing is as unhappy and un-
certain and insecure as a woman
who always has her own way.
Widows appreciate a good man
more than a single girl—but only
until they marry again.
No husband will ever lose his
wife if he always hands her his
unopened paycheck in a bouquet
of flowers.
Give a woman enough rope to
hang herself and she will end by
tying you in knots.
A woman has more fun out of
her sense of rumor than her
sense of humor.
Contract Vs. Contact.
The difference between court-
ship and matrimony is the femi-
nine preference for a contract
rather than a contact.
AILpR
LEEE2PASTR/Y
ESMGEMELEO
SHBEDEB
jPE TELI
GAV
ENTERED
VEDITORIAL: Normal blood pressure values
1*1 are undergoing revision at the present time.
It was generally felt that a blood pressure reading
over 144 systolic in older people was abnormal.
Several New York investigators, however, con-
sider readings of 160 to 180 normal in the elderly.
The range for females is some- pe een
what lower than for males. i gam ’
Many patients ask the doctor i /
what their blood pressure read- [ W ’
ings are. After being told they F ga
will point out that “that is four, | g
six or ten points higher than e W
last month.” It should be appre- f • "8
ciated that the systolic blood, J
pressure readings will vary ten
e2a2eja
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 15, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952, newspaper, September 16, 1952; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1559594/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.