Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 229, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 23, 1953 Page: 2 of 8
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PARDON US IF WE SEEM PESSIMISTIC
EDITORIALS
BRUCE BARTON SAYS:
' ’ SGGee
How Lucky We Are in U.S.
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Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle
31
BARBARA WARD
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THE BIBLE... Can You Quote It?
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For wisdom, courage and peace read the Bible daily.
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They’ll Do It Every Time
56
By Jimmy Hado
Registered U. S. Patent Office
57
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AP Newsfeatures
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Monday, May 25th
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BARTLETT PEARS
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Rich luscious halves! look!
Sat., May 23, 1953.
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kindliness of the
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This last year
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do?” The other replied, “I could
object.”
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57. Affirmative
58. Soft drink
59. Repose
DOWN
1. Those
2. Engage
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wagon
55. Russian city
56. Baking
chamber
s
1
ACROSS
1. So
5. Above
9. Divine being
12. Suggestion
13. One of an
ancient
race
14. Regret
15. American
lake
16. Presently
17. Anger
18. Measured
20. Hang
loosely
22. Abscond
24. Bathes
27. Siamese
coins
29. Arrow
31. Withered
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gressman back in 1931, and she has had many a
famous gentleman for a dinner partner. In recent
years she has added cards from dinner parties
in South American and European countries that
she attended with her husband and other mem-
bers of the Senate Appropriations committee on
tours of investigation.
Among these are autographed placecards of the
worked heart.
(Q) “I have been going to the doctor’s of-
fice several times a week for a diathermy
treatment on my back. I was wondering if I
could buy a diathermy machine and apply
these treatments myself. Could this be harm-
ful?”
A
—
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but Truman volunteered to autograph it.
Like any other congressional wife, Mrs. Chavez
is constantly on the go attending luncheons, teas
and receptions, and she’s active in the Senate
Ladies club, which meets Tuesdays to sew and
roll bandages for the Red Cross. She never col-
lects cards from women, she said, but she saves
clippings of these events. A highlight of her col-
lection is the set of clippings on her daughter
Gloria’s wedding here in 1946 to Jorge Tristani,
scion of a wealthy Puerto Rican sugar planter.
It was a spectacular social event, with Margaret
Truman one of the 12 attendants. Most of the
capital society was on hand for the reception.
Now data on grandchildren is filling boxes in
the basement of the Chavez Washington home.
Gloria, living in Puerto Rico, sends clippings and
photos of her sons, Jorge, 5 and Dennis, 3. There
are items too concerning Stanley, 16, and Imelda,
14, the children of the widowed elder Chavez
daughter, Mrs. Stanley Miller, who makes her
home with the senator and his wife.
“Ever since we came here we’ve been meeting
interesting people from all over the world,” Mrs.
Chavez told me. “We’ve met ’most anybody you
can mention.”
stalling there in the hope that
the breach between the United
States and Britain over the Red
3. Joins
4. Metal
5. Wine vessel
6. Sympathetic
7. Scent
8. Pertaining to
punish-
ment
9. Mourn
10. Of us
11. English river
19. Extinct bird
21. Free ticket
23. Footway
25. Silkworm
26. Transmit
27. Insects
28. Civil injury
30. Sea bird
33. Rafter
34. Lease
37. Bearlike
39. Arm
covering
41. Mexican
coins
43. Protective
covering
45. Air: comb,
form
47. Metric land
measures
48. Hollow
49. Feminine
name
50. Remunerate
52. Wing
THOUGHT THE SPEECHES
WOULD NEVER STOP!! .
THE GUYS RESPONSIBLE >
FOR INVITING THE HEAD
TABLE OUGHT TO BE )
TOSSED OUTA THE CLUB!/
Our pledge to you: Consistently
low prices ALWAYS! TRY US!
32. Negative
answer
33. Annoys
35. Among
36. Faithful
38. Present
39. Unhappy
40. Leather
fastener
42. Record of a
single
year
44. Daub
46. Walk
49. Slender
finial
51. Bristle
53. Simple
54. Moving
wwow.
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EANTQUATED -
-VAA $TKUCTURE
ZZA—g
OH,WArTER...
MORE BLACK 4
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The forthcoming meeting may
also shed light on what’s to be %
done about the growing pressure
in Western Europe for a step-up
in trade with countries behind the
iron curtain, a movement that •
the United States has been trying
to squelch.
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You see Butte, the world’s great-
est mining camp, with its 276
miles of streets and 2700 miles ‘
of mine tunnels.
“You can stop over for a day
or two at Rainier park or the
Grand Canyon or Yellowstone
park. You can see Mount Hood
Ogi
#RK/S-s
DIURETICS VALUABLE
IN HEART CONDITIONS
By C. A. DEAN, M. D.
N/EDITORIAL: A diuretic is a medicine which
IVI promotes the secretion of urine. Most diure-
tics act by direct stimulation of the kidneys.
Diuretics include a variety of compounds such
A. L.
(A) Diathermy is the medical use of heat ap-
plied to the .body by a high-frequency electric
current. This current actually passes through the
body. These machines can generate sufficient heat
to cook food, and can kill body tissue as well. Do
not confuse this type of heat with that supplied
by a heating pad or a hot water bottle.
Irreversible damage may be done when this
treatment is not in skilled hands. The tempera-
ture of the entire body may be raised to danger-
ous levels. The answer to your question, there
fore, is obvious. It would not be wise to purchase
a machine and use it yourself at home. Your pres-
ent method of treatment is much wiser and safer.
Readers’ letters are welcomed by this noted
medical authority. He will answer as many as
possible in his daily column.
(Copyright 1953, General Features Corp.)
94L
,,2
ly unintentional errors
in next issue after it
I 4
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Founded August 30, 1890 b
(Absorbed Gainesville C
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.
Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy
service is maintained, 25c weekly. In Cooke and adjoin-
ing counties by mail, 1 month, $1.00; 6 months $5.00; one
year $9.00. Outside Cooke county 1 month $1.25; 6 months
$6.00; 1 year $11.00.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing
or reputation of any person, firm or corporation which
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as caffeine, mercurial salts, acidi-
fying salts, and ammonia com-
pounds. Many of these com-
pounds also irritate the kidneys,
and under some conditions may
do serious damage.
Diuretics are very valuable
medicines, especially in the treat-
ment of heart failure and drop-
sy. In these conditions, fluid
accumulates in the body tissues
and adds to the strain on the
heart. Diuretics stimulate the
---------- “The West at
and married her and they moved Bay” she advo-
down to the east side of New cated the forma-
York and became part of us. tion of a west-
Phelps-Stokes entered politics and ern European economic union,
ran on William Randolph She was a summa cum laude Ox-
Hearst’s ticket for the Independ- ford graduate.
A HATLP HAT TO
%/CLARENCE Nordstrom,
a BEVERLY WILTSHIRE,
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
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a THL LITTLE STORE,
ON THE SQUARL
MShs 307 W. anoaowAY
12
Business Does Not Prosper as Much
In War Years as It Does in Peacetime
For Better Health ...
King of Norway and President
Peron of the Argentine. “I was
not their dinner partner, but I
sat next to them as ranking
lady of the visiting senatorial
group,” she told me. Some of
the autographed cards carry
flattering messages—“You know
how men are.”
Several years ago, sitting next g
to President Truman, Mrs. Cha- L M
vez asked him if she might have
his card for her collection. Ac- 8088
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kidneys to secrete this unneeded
fluid and so relieve the over- C. A. Dean, M.D.
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a
ence to you folks, I think you At Sunderland, a little Massa-
ought to be ashamed of your- chusetts town in the Connecticut
selves. Here you are chattering River valley, a civic-minded citi-
about Europe, and not one of zen erected a public library He
you knows anything about your dedicated it with an inscription
own country. Some of you have which begins: “In gratitude to
never been west of Yonkers. Him who permitted my birth in
Have you any idea what you this most beautiful valley . . .”
have missed? . How many of us, as we read
Europe has some swell moun- in our morning papers the
tains, sure! But’ how many ghastly reports of wars and fam-
ranges of mountains do you ines, of purges and plagues and
think are visible from the car pogroms, have ever uttered a si-
window as you ride the Northern lent prayer of “gratitude to Him
Pacific from Minneapolis to Seat- who permitted our birth in this
tie. Twenty-eight. . most beautiful country?” How ,
As for rivers, the railroad many of .us have even seen it9 '
tracks run beside them for 1406 (Copyright, 1953, King Features
miles.__Syndicate, Inc.)
L.
“uganenea
"“eqdgeaded
*- 35
—ea--" Copyright 1953 .... Lavina Ross Fowler.
-----—— --------------------- 1—There is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to
A member of a small church law one with ............................................................ 1 Corinthians 6:7
who had only the first qualifica- 2—Who said, “I am not able to bear all this people alone,
tion of an officer—the desire to because it is too heavy for me?” ........................ Numbers 11:14
| be one — kept insisting on being 3—Men do not despise a thief, if ................................ Proverbs 6:30
38 made an elder. At last one of the 4—Unto a land flowing with milk and ............................ Exodus 3:8
H elders said, “Just what could 5—If any man among you seem to be religious, and.
2g you do? You can’t lead in pray- bridleth not his tongue, but ........................................ James 1:26
8 er; you can’t lead in singing; 6—Name the person called a “Whited Wall”, by Paul ........Acts 23:3
g you can’t make a talk and you 7—Jesus answered them, Have not I chosen you twelve,
Bl are no financier; what could you and one of you is a ........................................................ St. John 6:70
1
MOANING LoW TE
MORNING AFTER THE
ANNUAL CLUB DINNER'
THANx AND A TIP OF THE
WORST BANQUET THE
CLUB EVER HAD-I
China question may widen.
Businessmen will watch the
Bermuda parley closely for a
hint as to that.
D8
PR
by JOHN T. LEONARD
Signal, February, 1939.)
may appear in The Register will be cheerfully corrected
upon being brought to the attention of the publisher.
Member of The Associated Press, which is entitled
exclusively to the use of republication of all the local
news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP news
dispatches.
The publishers are not responsible for copy omis-
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by Tammany Hall and I, as a NEW YORK, May 22 (A) — The Kremlin is the big un-
child, watched the destruction of Business will have a stake in the known in most long-range busi
A reader telephoned to me to could the story of struggle and the ballot boxes. It was one of Big Three meeting in Bermuda, ness planning these days.
my earliest lessons in practical AU business planning and pros- For months businessmen have
There are hundreds such mar- politics. Pets are closely tiedtothe uti- tried to guess if the Kremlin will
riages among us in this country, Years later, Rose Pastor Stokes S permit a truce in Korea Manv
because social barriers are dis- became one of the first American tue, hod.P eace or_Wanor_inist Se.. L.m. .Koiea. Many
appearing, particularly in our Communists and they were di- e-uthetWl
colleges. Students of sociology vorced. But it was a beautiful 48h“onbe
cannot be too impressed by the and exciting romance while it Iwcn‘ at
term, “good families,” and stu- lasted. present.
newed sense of
the majesty,
variety and
beauty of our
country, and of
the essential up-
rightness and
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‘TVHE OFFICIAL COMMUNIST “line” often
“ undergoes dizzying shifts and variations.
But there is one Bolshevik tenet which has
been as firm as Gibralter since the days of
Marx. That is the doctrine that wars are
always encouraged, started and maintained
by capitalists and the owners and managers
of big business, for personal gain. These
malefactors, communism holds, are always
grimly eager to exchange the lives of the
masses for more dollars with which to line
their pockets.
A good many non-Communist people eith-
er believe that, or think that there is at least
considerable truth in it. Therefore, some re-
cent remarks by the chairman of one of our
very biggest businesses which is a corner-
stone of war production, seem to deserve
wide distribution.
Speaking at a stockholder’s meeting, Ben-
jamin Fairless of U. S. Steel declared cate-
gorically that this company “has never pros-
pered from America’s participation in war.”
Further, he said, it has taken “a financial
beating from the moment our country en-
tered the conflict.”
He cited figures to prove this. In 1941,
U. S. Steel had profits of $116,000,000.
Heavy drops occurred as soon as we entered
the war. In 1945, when the war effort was
at a peak, profits sunk to $58,000,000—less
than half of the ’41 figure. When peace re-
turned, a strong upward trend set in, and
$215,000,000 was earned in 1950. Then the
Korean conflict swung into high gear, as
did the rearmament program generally, and
profits fell to $184,000,000 in 1951 and to
$143,000,000 in 1952.
Why should great companies find war fi-
nancially less profitable than peace? The
Wall Street Journal provided the answer in
these words: “The reasons are clear. During
war-time, production increases enormously,
but so do payrolls, taxes and government
controls .... it is not a normal expansion
with all the economic factors that should
govern a company’s safe growth taken into
account .... Mr. Fairless spoke for more
than his company when he said that there is
no profit in war.”
An equally significant and interesting
view came from another man who can speak
from experience and authority—Keith Funs-
ton, president of the New York Stock Ex-
change. American business does not want
war, he said; “whether it’s a hot war or a
cold war or any bastard offspring of war.’
He then went into what caused the fall in
stock prices following the Kremlin’s latest
•peace offensive. The market, he noted, will
always respond to shock treatment—wheth-
er it’s the danger of war or the hope of
peace, a political upheaval or a labor crisis.
But, he continued, “the market’s sensitivity
to sudden news developments of national
or international significance does not mean
that investors all over the country applaud
destructive developments or condemn con-
structive events.” It is a matter of record
§85o
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—(528
I fly a good deal. But at least “Starting a trip to the coast
once a year I give myself the from Minneapolis, in ‘the state *
thrill of crossing the. continent of 10,000 lakes’, you pass half a
8688 dozen state universities that, if
g9a not as old as Oxford and Cam-
bridge, are a lot bigger. You go ,
through the Red River valley,
‘the bread-basket of the world’.
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sions, typographical errors or an;
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that when the Korean war broke out stock
prices slumped much more severely than
they did this year.
Business’ general attitude toward war and
peace is probably reflected in one more ob-
servation of Mr. Funston’s. After pointing
out that in the 164 years since Washington
was president we have been at war about
10 per cent of the time and at peace about
90 per cent of the time, he said: “We did not
build a great country because of those years
we were at war—but in spite of them .. . My
conviction is that the vast majority of Ameri-
cans are too intelligent and too well-informed
to permit even the most skillful propagandist
to beguile them into believing that American
business is so intent on self-destruction that
it prefers, war to peace.”
----o----
OLD STOCKS AND BONDS
WE WOULDN’T WANT TO raise anyone’s
• hopes falsely, but if you have old stocks
or bonds that grandpa said weren’t worth a
nickel, take another look at them. One
might have a fortune in the attic.
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Business Mirror . . . Ly SAM DAWSON
ence League. Hearst was robbed —................. -————
cording to procotol, the. card was
inscribed merely “the president,” Jane Eads
R. M. Smythe and company of New York
estimates there is more than a million dol-
lars worth of unclaimed paper lying in attics
and strong boxes.
The firm’s job is to track down washed-up
and washed-out securities which are referred
to as “cats and dogs.” The president of the
firm, Godfrey Bligh, says there’s many a case
on record of supposedly worthless stocks
turning out to be valuable.
For example, there’s the American-owned,
mining company that folded in Mexico in
1930. Eighteen years later, the Smythe com-
pany discovered the Mexican government
had awarded the company a large sum of THESE DAYS
However, all the records for the company ~ । m • y — • y e
had been destroyed and nobody knew who —oor DOV AHO Ke (=yp •-Ap\
the stockholders were. One holder was final- KY 4-" " 1 Y
ly located and paid $1,600. But the others By GEORGE E. SoKoLSKY. bors. to interpret, as best one
are still unknown. suggest that I do a column on high hopes.
Bligh tells another story about a woman the subject of a rich girl, Sara
who had inherited a large bloc of mining anR0se
stock. Her broker said it was worthless and of Franklin D. nna.
she promptly burned it. However, the Smythe Roosevelt, b e - .292255620100025805559592821
company traced the stock through old rec- coming engaged
ords and finally paid the woman $3,500 for AnthPOny di
the charred remains of her holdings. Bonaventura, the
Some aren’t that lucky, however. One law- son of.a harher
yer had Smythe experts look over the con- Hves"bden seri
tents of his strong box after 12 years and ous too long,
they discovered he had some irrigation bonds Yet, what can be
that had been worth $5,000 just five months more serious or
by rail. And al- 488
ways I come a
home with a re- 8
/SsksZ
// -----
30 Years Ago . . .
(From the files of The Daily Register
May 23, 1923.)
Miss Mabel Barentine who will graduate from
Gainesville high school next week has gone to
school 12 years without being absent. Her sister,
Miss Josephine Barentine, went to public schools
11 years and was graduated without missing a
day. Since then, Miss Barentine has taught schools
four years without missing a day.
Tom Murray of Valley View was a business
visitor in the city today.
Robert Swann suffered injuries in an automo-
bile-streetcar accident in Dallas last Saturday and
is confined to his room here.
Miss Inez Beeman . of Myra is visiting friends
in the city.
2—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
fehag
,h
LAUGH ..
By
BOYCE HOUSE "
5-23
m । s—%
COFK ISSS. XING FEkfllRE^^^^ICATE. Ine., WORLD, RICH RESERVED^
GNCRCUS"
5-emVgg
IjmN
is brought to their attention. All advertising orders
are accepted on this basis only.
1 - -
2d — and the majestic Columbia river,
T . , BRUCE RARTP and Portland, and Seattle, Spo-
triptodthe West coast, one by kanfhaanmarcomusiya"terllethmn
The northern and the other by throbbing Northwest whose peo-
the suthern route.Shortly after ple are just about the happiest
dinner party in New York al. an d.mostgoptimistie on the face
which it appeared that a major- "Coming home by the south-
ity of the guests, all Amencans, ern route, you marvel at San
had spent almost their entire Francisco T os Anwhi yN1 a
lives in Europe. The talk was all iiCSSOu-O Angeles, Holy-
about London and . Paris and I paused to catch breath
Rome and the. Riviera. I said and one of the gArecmiq!’
nothinguntilrfinally the hostess •How right he is. We deserve to
Putnaedestinnvwhieh g be scolded. We know nothing
cnance to mow on. about our own country.”
Then I said: “With all defer- -
A
__ 9,
7
dents of biology know that it is A greater fuss used to be made Whether busi-
the genes and the chromosomes, over such adventures in romance ness is facing up
a t and not the blood, that count in 50 years ago than today, because to a coming
g inherited qualities. the rich seemed to be richer and slump, whether
ngasg8e So they go along loving each the poor seemed to be poorer. men are to be
gg other as the opportunities offer, But we have been leveled to an laid off, wheth-
.ash_a2 because money does not count, economic common denominator er another whirl
- important than Geo. Sokolsky anyhow. Four deaths, and a great and society in this country is no of inflation is to
before but since had become worthless. love and marriage than the estate is wiped out by taxes. It longer an aristocracy either of send prices up
Maybe it would be well to investigate any yomg, in spring finding a new vanatrmrossareerpguneeiusoia “ cupi mon democrat and given S’ are hethgr Sam Dawson
Old stocks and bonds that may be in the be- / . man di Bonaventura is a barber, free rein denies the differences up or down, all of these are tan-
longings of one’s family for years back. W hich 0 These two is ricn or And what is wrong with being a that humans regard as so im- gled in the snarl of international Some businessmen think that
rHere mioht be «gol in them than naners ” Poor, 4 &0 no. Know, because barber? Somebody tried to give portant. He shoots his arrow into relations. the entire Soviet peace offensive
___8_______________PaP__• money is never the criterion with him a pedigree as coming down two young people and they re- Ask a businessman if he thinks may be aimed at laying the
youtn. .Maybe tney aie bom ricn from the Romans, which is un- spond as did Adam and Eve or next year will see us in a reces- ground work for a big trade war
TLc \A/ p,(m,, in .Ine contentments mat come doubtedly correct, as it is with Romeo and Juliet or Pelleas and sion, and he may say “yes” or in the years ahead, with the ulti-
’ n “ V V viU OT VV• • • • dothem iiom then common bonu many Italians. Maybe, I am a Melisande and the less anybody he may say “no” depending often mate goal of weakening the eco-
----;---------- 01 8reat music remaps me descendant of King David. Who does about it, the greater are the on the kind of business he is in nomics of the United States and
God’s kingdom is within us. There He has a young man is ricn in me sense oi knows? I recall that my grand- chances for happiness. but whichever his answer, he’s its allies.
seat of wisdom and power beyond our under- strength and in me stability tnaT father thought that he descended (Copyright, 1953, King Features to add: “That is assuming, of --------------------------------
standing, but the limits of God’s kingdom in- comps from an early struggle tor Irom Aaron, the brother of Syndicate, Inc.) course, there is no change in the Tell your merchant you saw his
elude the utmost star an infinity away. Our tne sun against wnat some mis- Moses, but he had no documents ------—------------------—— international situation.” advertisement in The Register.
father needs many obedient sons to carry out taxeniy can PoVertY: i ernaPs to prove it. Let us not go too far T I f ne • I I
his will. the young lady has been enriched in geneaology, lest we discover ooAv’cRKrthoAw
Our Father which art in heaven.—Mat. 6:9. by an experience with a broken that a man’s a man no matter VUUY • Dll IIVCy • • •
------------------home and with .a kindly step- who his ancestor was a thousand -------------------------
,, . . „„ father who adopted her. years ago. BARBARA MARY WARD,
\A/-cIpgAm I AAp .Who.can know about such celebrated mar bornMay23,1914,inYork,Eng-
VV asm nOTOn LCTTOT • • • things that are deep in the memo- riages rmtcnihratememar land, daughter of a solicitor. For-
• nes of children and growing 85 u± Y enuanood was that eign editor of
-- vouneneonle9 • Rose Pastor to James G. 48 eg,4,0
By JANE EADS When I was very young Phelps-Stokes. Rose Pastor had the,Br ish h
¥17ASHINGTON—Mrs. Dennis Chavez, wife of women reporters, professionally started in a cigar factory and Economist” a'
IV the Democratic senator from New Mexico, known as sob sisters, were sent then wrote a columnm a Yiddish governor of the agassnas
has been storing away reminders of her 22 years’ on such stories. They would inter- newspaper entitled “Among Our- British Broad- a &
experience in the capital in the hope of one day view an immigrant mother who Selves, Girls, in which she gave casting Co. and — 3928-8855
finding time to write a book. spoke not a word of English and ady1ce freely which is a journal- former member
These items include all the things that people who either beamed with joy or Isachahtmheparticuary ad- of the “Brain
put into memory books—invitations, programs, wept out of the anguish of losing -m m8n9 lk marriage. Trust” panel,
photographs and scads of clippings—but the most a child to some alien and fright- Along came Phelps-Stokes of she is a popular
interesting is a collection of placecards Mrs. ening environment. And maybe Yale, rich handsome, tall, to our public speaker, gas
Chavez has wheedled from her dinner partners, a small boy, like myself, would VerY comfortable slums to be a in her book 898
She has gone to a lot of dinner parties since her step out of -the crowd of neigh- sUJlement worker. He met Rose
husband was first sent to Washington as a con-
K6
excellent Four correct
LISTEN TO THE W////NEWT WAS TOASTMASTER.
CRITICS-I don’t \/ he WAS IN Here a little
THINK THE/ EVEN 1 %A WHILE AGO, AND THEM -d
REMEMBER BEING—=A\ GUYS WERE TELLING V
_THERE!—Z--•( HIM WHAT A SWELL }
\E SPEECHES PARTY IT WAS/-
. YWERENTLNGFALFREH/THEIRIEAV
=4 JUST LISTENS SLOW- OF A GOOD J
2 AND HE KEPT WANDERING ) p> TIME ISA ’
gl INTO TWO OTHER BANQUETS free DUCAT
ON THE SAME FLOOR-/, T THEFLEA
R?n
hm4_
29
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 229, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 23, 1953, newspaper, May 23, 1953; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1572188/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.