Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 20, 1954 Page: 2 of 8
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1
The New Nurse
r
sin
I
of Challenge for
ess
E?
i-
in The
6
be some
):
fl
Some
storekeepers must learn to be merchants
$
been used to
their laps will hve to go back to
2
AA
political
\
-
t
contin-
24
5
8
4
bent on
hone.
the
agazine
from a nearby table and read a vei y pessi-
barmaid
e
(Copyright. 1954, King Features Syndicate. Inc. I
speech, the edi-
nation’s capital "
the
either through development defects or
because
haven’t been
knock
the Democrats i
parts.
#
3
tries as Panama, Holland and Sweden are ex-
A
VALLEY VIEW
C. A. D ean, M.D.
of her.
because the other children make fun
(A) I think you should take
I
•hiatrist of psychologist
I.Q. I do not believe that you sho ild get a
younger companion for her, at least ui til after
psychia-
The Word of God . .
medical
Dr. Dean selects the most important
9
Have A
LAUGH
b
h Program Given
the seal, which
tist
try club
handicaping H. C. Watkins. O. E. Powe rs, Otto
an bald
Vaeth, Jr.; house. Lee M
. Carl Moi re. Mrs.
loody
Grif
William Tyler, Mrs. J. L.
ffin; enter! ninment.
g. Jones of Era and Mrs. Richard
id, Lawson and Mrs. George Wilson
i, William Milne. William Simpson
Charles
iome on
a recent
Q
DRILY SPEEIRL
9
C
9,
--
Qs
1
Thursday, January 21st
4
D
M
I
children
H8=
2
/ 3
A
30. 1800
(
as
-e
f
di
are
2r:
1
Q
COCK IC.,
on
e8»
retarda-
special
the
wit-
day when the Woman's Mission
ary Union met at the First Bap-
if
suffer from defective vision or hearing.
If your child should have some mental
tion, she may have to be placed in <
WITH SLOW
MUSIC ALSO
A LONGER
MASSAGE .
amb-
it
on radio are re-
quired by our
trades to set
forth immediate
reactions. It is
one of the tra-
vails of a free
society.
/ I GOT NY
LAST HAIRCUT
TO THE STRAINS
> OFSAMSQN,
Land DELILAH--
i
O
)
Happy shaves with
ME BARBER WHO LOVES
S GOOD MUSIC---
MgmADATAI
I
I I
- ‘ E
President Eisenhower,- asking him to call for
congressional action to build up the Ameri-
can merchant marine.
In a letter to the chief executive, Mr.
Meany said that the merchant marine “faces
When President Eisenhower to antagonize lei
, hopped out of bed this morning help he might otl
and looked in mammammc 1
»n this morn
• Bundschuh
AND THE RAZOR
IS A BATON—I
HOPE THERE ANT
s NO DUELING
\ SCENE IN THIS )
V OPERA ” /
Mrs. Chumbley presided for
business and heard reports from
ceeding us in shipbuilding, and Britain builds
ten times as much tonnage. I ”
< / THOUGHT \
YO• 70D •
ME 74/5
Nese WOULDN'T
, 74k=4000 .
V CAREOF,
P A£/ J A
‛ BRUNO THINKS
HE’S TOSCANINI
I
NE
The Repl
politically in the
President "Eisenhower approved
was. dreamed up by the Heraldic
branch of the Office of the Quar-
termaster General. For those who
know their heraldry, it is de-
By
BOYCE HOUSE
5-,/
p
PRESIDENT GEORGE MEANY of
- AF of L has issued an urgent arveal to
responsible for
---or any uninter
to correct in next
ttentloa.AU ----
Our pledge 40 yeu; Consistently
low price» ALWAYS! TtY USI
and Mrs. Victor Morrison Mon- standing committees. Mrs. W. R.
day Younger was appointed benevo-
Mrs. H. L. Martin had as lence chairman and the group
guests Friday Mr. and Mrs. Ar- plans to pack a box for Buckner
dell Martin and daughter of Den- Orphan's home and to send a
ton. Her son, Lester Martin of CARE package to Korea.
Fort Worth, visited her Satur- Fifteen members were pres
day. ent___________________ --
ily of 12 chil-
dren. The noted 1
8
lb
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (P)— neutral in her politics, told me:
Leaves from a Capital visitor’s “This should be one of the
diary: most active seasons socially
The Republicans took power since before the war. The big-
gest difference I have noticed
1954 Seen as Yel
Hardworking Bus
563
7 p
L.‛(s
e MW
f LADQNNA46
5 MO-5cn-2
THE WORLD TODAY
Eisenhower is Jaunty as
He Starts New Year on Job
By JAMES MARLOW get his program ready for 1954,
WASHINGTON, Jan 20 QPI— so there was no reason in 1953
avL in nt STORL,
2 9N lit HHKNt “4
Ehh w eneawav d
Worid at Our Doorstep” Mon-
grinding year.
- The face which
your part in the parade of progress.”
--------o--------
TIME WE LEARNED
‛b4,
deG,
((6
■N
L) ;
a psyd
of her
a year ago, but |
socially they]
E
I
virtual extinction.” Even such small coun-
church. Others
He was wiser, no doubt, than Will he fight for his program?
he had been that day a year ago Everybody’s waiting to see. If he
when he stood for hours watch- does. it may not be audible. In-
ing the Inaugural parade. In his stead of public denunciations and
first year, he frankly ’concedes, urgings, he may work out of
he was a political novice. He sight: over the tele
one around can take Taft’s place
in a hurry.
Toward the end of his first
year. Eisenhower gave signs of a
toughening attitude, which may
be an indication of the mood he’ll
use in 1954.
Washington Letter...
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON—Now you can tell which official
VV government limousine is carry ing Mrs. Oveta
Culp Bobby, secretary of health, education and
welfare. It has its own specially-designed seal
like the cars of other cabinet members.
doesn’t claim political mastery through envoys, or by calling
now. legislative to the White House
His handling of congress this for a private lecture.
who had
able to
IN SPITE of the peddlers of gloom, who
* , would probably like to see th e Demo-
crats back in power in Washington, E ractical-
y all well informed and impartial authorities
predict that 1954 will be a very good year for
hard workers
Should I take my daughter to a doc or, or
should I get a younger girl as a com panion
for her?”
Nication of all the local
as well as ail AP news
pius paleways within an annulet
of chain, all proper,” with a
crest “on a wreath argent and
sanguine with an Americi
eagle displayed and wings par-
tially inverted proper.”
Those who do know say the cuuge. avay u-. ua a.- . —-• ——— —- —-— .— -g,. . .
staff of Aesculapius, the accept- Jane Eads tested leaving me with three lit- ners,” unmarked and confusing. Jones of Era and Mrs. Richard
ed insignia for medicine, serves as the symbol for tie infidels and I would like to A wrong turning is so easy, and, Lawson and Mrs. George Wilson
the Public Health service, one of the agencies of be appointed their executioner.” on this road, often attractive, ofi Gainesville were guests of Mr.
the department. The open book stands for educa-
tion, the chain for welfare.
school or obtain her education at home. ’ he child
is at a very’ impressionable age and may develop
some personality abnormality if the present sit-
ution continues.
torial response
must be immedi-
ate. We in the
newspapers and
the hurried men
scribed as “argent an open book
with sanguine binding, charged I
overall with a staff of Aescula- i
Boyle's Column • • • by HAL BOYLE
T. J. Midkiff, Jr. is ill at the family
North Taylor street.
Mrs. W. W. Jones is recovering from
illness.
8A
d"
while intoxicated; 21 violations of liquor laws.
J. A. King left Friday for Cleveland. O nio to at-
tend a convention of dealers and distrib utors of
in each case. In all the modern wars in
A
a
tors whose
_____ ______ise get for
his program this year.
Last year he had Sen. Robert
A. Taft of Ohio doing much of
the in-fighting for him at the
Capitol. Taft’s dead now. and no
That was when Sen. McCarthy
(R-Wis> made his unexpected
gazed back at inuesuntON criticism of Eisenhower’s con
• him in the mirror looked a little tinned aid to allies who trade
_ ----- -------- The Demo-
Thus, from 1929 to 1939. the his search for the facts and his crats refused to
United States faced the devilish avoidance of pressures may help don sackcloth
spectre of 10,000,000 unemployed, him to meet the challenge of and ashes after
to be solved only by war. What- his moment in the affairs of their defeat.
- ever the politics or the morality man. But the decision is not This has led to ___ n a
ro ponder, to Geo. Sokolsky of war, it absorbed the unem- really his; it rests in whatever some grumbling
Mmsta --,= -*2
35 vears and for which we have paid dearlv lines. Indeed,, often the lines er but got him more pay and |
2” years ana -° wnicn we nave paia aeany are really dead, because history better conditions. It also pro- •
... , . plays havoc with small episodes, duced more taxes, debased the VALLEY VIEW Jan 19—Er-
which we have been belligerents, we were leaving not even a toe print on dollar, loaded the country with nest Herin has returned to Veter-
forced to build a shipbuilding industry and a the sands of time. debt, created a class-conscious ans hospital, McKinney, where
merchant marine virtually from scratch, at This is to be a critical ses- urban proletariat where none he will undergo surgery this
an enormous cost in both time and money. sion ofiscongressrAsa result tf exi ted.before. .. . week.
41nanyevent, there can be nodoubt hat oca suJcEa.Ppxtantwhothaskasnea
the United States needs a merchant marine nation, we shall either restore as it developed since 1609. to a ville sanitarium expects to re-
second to none. Mr. Meany’s appeal is per- conomy’underasmixedkepUb society as it has been altering turn to his home this week. He
fectly justified. . lican - Conservative - Democratic Snce
management, or we shall have a
depression and the socialists will
Misses Fay Corbett of CIA. Denton. a id Clota
Bokin of Fort Worth. are guests of the former’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Corbett on East Cali-
fornia street.
Max Gardner and Frank Dustin of Mar ietta vis-
"Diamond" fancy
MUSTARD GREENS
Mrs.H. B. Smith; boats and fishing. Franl ; Morris,
Morrow;
you have discussed the situation with a 1 _
trist. Some children who are backward n school
There’s a rumor going party rounds that two
embassies are dickering to outbid Perle Mesta on
a mansion for which the recently returned “Host-
ess with the Mostest" is said to have offered
$200,000.
Adding spice to the story is the tidbit that an
agent meanwhile is trying to sell the house to
realtor Morris Cafritz, husband of the fabulous
“Gwen.” Mrs. Cafritz is still fighting for the title
of the town’s No. 1 hostess which she started
going after even before Mrs. Mesta left to serve
as ambassador to Luxembourg.
Anyway, the agent is supposed to be telling
the canny Mr. Cafritz, who already holds a big
hunk of DC property, that he can always rent
the mansion to either embassy—-or to Mrs. Mesta.
A woman, properly, administered the oath of
office to Mrs. Alice K. Leopold, former Connecti-
cut Secretary of State, when she was sworn in
recently as director of the Women’s Bureau of
the Department of Labor. She was Washington’s
Municipal Court Judge Mildred Reeves.
Wed., Jan. 20, 1954
hose long range predictions
tionally accurate for a great
and ordered
a bottle of expensive champagne from a
beaming barmaid. While the girl was gone
for the wine, the sailor picked up a ni---8—
the ram-
under the present administra-
tion is that the parties are
smaller and more formal.”
But nobody in a responsible
post foresees an early doom to
that famous institution — the
Washington cocktail party.
The recipe for one of these is:
Take 50 assorted politicians, -
military leaders, diplomats and
their wives; garnish well with
bourbon, scotch, gin and sherry;
season with assorted canapes.
Let stand on one foot for two
hours in crowded, smoke-filled *
mistic editorial predicting a depression. The
sailor was downcast and when the
older. Not much. Just a little. with Red China. Secretary of
But if he wondered why he had State Dulles replied, defending
been willing to carry on his back his policy, and Eisenhower
that mountain called the presi- backed Dulles.
. dency, it was probably a thought If that wasn’t Eisenhower’s no-
that lasted only an instant, tification to congress his novice
He was still as jaunty as ever, days were over. maybe this was:
working harder and longer his statement that the Republi-
hours, perhaps, than any he had cans don’t deserve to keep con-
endured since those days on the trol of congress in Novembers
eve of the invasion of1 Normandy, elections unless they pass a pro-
nearly 10 years ago. gressive program.
He seemed, judging from the It was advice which seemed
quick grin he could produce, to like water off the backs of some
be enjoying his job. He was still of his Republicans whose re-
enormously popular. And he was sponse to parts of his program,
still amazingly free from per- particularly his farm program,
sonal abuse. was not enthusiastic.
Jordan, automobiles. Mr. King has the 1 pcal Jor-
dan agency.
Standing committees for Rowanis Coui f.
named by Arthur Teague, president, are: Finance,
G. W. Bradley. W. W. Leverett. J. W. I ownard;
AM.
your dat ghter to
for an evaluation
Idren returned
here with her
sources of energy will double the power , ca-
pacity. Our population probably will reach
200 million. Agricultural and industrial pro-
duction will increase enormorusly as well as
consumption. All forms of transportation
will show fabulous increases. Heat from the
sun will be harnessed to warm houses and
factories. Sea water may be purified at an
economic cost for human consumption. Great
lakes and canals will conserve and distribute THESE DAYS
W at er. ""T--K
“‘Don’t sell America short,’ as a great erg - • e f F" m i
New Yorker said many years ago. And don’t | he | raVall OT rree overnment
sell Texas short. There is no room in East By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY thing. They are the outbursts of And one wrong turn can lead
—exas for peddiers of gloom. We are going When any president of the a proletariat which wearies of miles away from where one
places. Don’t miss the chance for playing United States delivers a message paying the price of errors. The wants to go. And maybe, in the
to congress or delivers a major burden in the past has normally end, it does not pay to go back,
fallen on the peasants; in our The sun has set. It is too late.
again and many more order takers who have
been used to having business dunped in
their laps will hive to go back to wo rk.
to Dallas this morning after a visit________
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Merzbach er.
“Unless the pessimists and the
propagandists succeed in talking us into a de-
pression, there seems to be no cause for
alarm. Of course, it is possible by
nous dinning the “depression blues” nto peo-
ple’s ears, to scare some into heading for the
storm cellar while the sun is still shining.
year will illustrate his political In his State of the Union mes-
development, or lack of it. Last sage Eisenhower sounded pretty
year he was mild and gentle with confident this country had seized
the lawmakers. Some of his the initiative from the Russians,
critics said he was more anxious a view which may turn out to be
to be liked than to lead. more assumption than fact. In
His friends gave another ex- this kind of war, it’s the final
planation: he was using 1953 to results that count.
the mirror he
may have
thought: “How
did I ever come
to let myself in
for this?”
He had moved
into the White
House one year
ago. And it had
been a tough.
conditions.
In many cases, where an indi-
vidual tends to abuse his physi-
cal condition, pain warns that he
is overdoing. Pain, therefore,
may protect the patient against
himself.
(Q) “My 12-year-old daugh-
ter has been in the third
grade for three years. The
children in her class are
much younger than she. My
daughter cries a great deal
PAIN, MAN’S FRIEND,
IS DANGER SIGNAL
By C. A. DEAN, M.D.
NEDITORIAL: Pain is not one of the great
1VA enemies of man. It is of definite vi lue. con-
trary to most popular belief.
Individuals who arc unable to perceive pain,
parts and appeared on the pro-
------- Mmes. Harry Scheid.
“The story is told of a French sa lor who
landed in port in France, a century or so ago,
with his pockets full of money and
having a large evening celebrating his shore
leave. He went into a small cafe
| They’ll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo
"TUI9 IS NOTHIN’— WHEN
‛ 4 M You OUGMTA BE IN V SONKS IS 1
Forty-one indictments were returned by
Cooke county grand jury which examined 106
nesses in Investigation of 59 cases. Included in
the indictments were 2 forgery; 3 ini reducing
stolen property; 7 burglary; 1 assault wi h intent
to commit murder; 6 theft over $50; 1 driving
Joe Turner went to Ardmore on business this
morning.
Robert Swann of Fort Worth is here visiting
relatives and friends.
Sam and William Pitman went to Mari etta on a
YOU GET/
A thrifty buy! loek!
2 NO. 303 TINS 1 5
Men of Country
on good authority that France was going to
have a depression and widespread unemploy-
ment. So he had decided to save his money.
“The proprietor wanted to know why the
order had been cancelled and the barmaid
told him that the sailor had heard that there
was going to be a depression. The boss was
sad and told the maid that she could not have
the salary raise he had promised her because
business evidently was going to be bad. The
barmaid burst into tears and went home and
told her landlady that she .would have to give
up her apartment and take a cheaper room
because she had heard that there was going
to be a depression and she would probably
lose her job. The landlady was sad and went
to the-milliner and cancelled an order for a
pretty new hat and repeated the gloomy pre-
diction. The milliner cancelled her lease on
her store and the landlord went to the bank-
er and told him he would not be able to pay
his note. The banker give out a statement.
And so it spread.
.While he was brooding over his ale the
sailor looked at the magazine more closely
and found that it was five years old. The de-
pression the editor had predicted had never
happened, but the depression the sailor had
started spread all over the little town before
common sense prevailed.
“Predictions of things to come in the
America of 25 years from now, by eminent
scientists and leading industrialists, stagger
the imagination. The atom age is here. New
The exodus of Democrats and
the reduction in the numnber of
federal employes here is solving
.. the Washington housing short-
‘Let the Democrats dominate age 5 6
the scene; that's one of the rea- 6 ‘ .
sons they were relieved o pew- a Yandiora lange baF. tkntadn
It is stated in political terms Gainesville hospital last week. AntLer 1ady nerhans more order to get a key to an apart-
and therefore will receive a po- Mr. and Mrs. Hub Jones of Anomer laoy. pernaps more ment.
road” sav litical response. In moral terms, Lubbock were recent guests of , m. . . One lady told me there were
Samyy 3 ? “ Todays Birthday...
are looking for a Moses to take of the members of the Valley GEORGE BURNS born Jan. newcomer here was given a
them back over the Jordan out View Baptist church were in Fort 20 1896 in New York City as new tease by his landlord cut
of the confusions of Egypt. No Worth last Tuesday, night where Nathan Birnbaum, one of a fam- ting his rent $13 a month.
one who seeks it can, however, they heard Evangelist Billy Gra-
miss the moral note in the Ei- ham speak,
senhower message and what to Jimbo Bond has been in charge comedian has
the hurried seemed like compro- of music at a revival in progress Lepomg famous I
mises are the halts in a steady at Grand Avenue church in as LA “ctraipht” 91
march toward a restoration of Gainesville.. ’ mn of thp non- J
the leadership of an idea in Guests of Mrs. Annie Miller I, _ AIEnAnG.
American life — the idea of in- last Tuesday were her brother-in- wir. tram '
dividual dignity and self-reliance, law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Burns and Al
Those who believe that this is Young of Whitesboro He started ,
A woman whose hussand had a smooth road to drive over in .Sundayguests of Mr. and Mrs. as an entertainer d
died intestate (without leaving one of those low - hung fancy Wylie McCollum and family were in vaudeville and fl
a will* had three children (in- modern cars do not see the Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Huey and joined with E
fants in the eyes of the law rocks to break axles, the ruts daughters of Pilot Point. Gracie Allen in I__ ___
since they were under 21) and into which it is possible to skid, Mr. and Mre. Jimmie Potts and the early 20‛s. rn gram were:
it was necessary to have an ex- the thank-you-ma’ams made by son visited his cousin. Mrs. Goy They were mar- " J. A. Hayes, Gladys Chumbley,
ecutor appointed. She wrote to wind and weather, the erosions Smith, and family in Pilot Point riedin 1926 Together they have F. R. Rogers Claude Williams
the judge of the probate court: that .unthinking,, man produees Sundaytng A . -t,.- appeared in many films and and Charlie Bryan. Mrs. L. L.
“Judge Jim Smith, Reprobate to his undoing. It is a road that Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bartlett and have been featured on radio Judd gave the devotional.
Judge: My husband died de- leads to all sorts of "four-cor- daughter and Mr and Mrs. Cecil and television.
1__5 1__2:____.1 -l 11 -e ” unmarker and —2— T--~ ~€ E- —i AK-e Diche-a
Among them is Roger Babson, whose six
months’ forecast recently appeared
Register, and wT,
have been exceptionally accurate foi
many years.
While it is conceded there will
leveling off from 1953‛s peak, the New Year
will be fine for salesmen and hustle
•egd
gceba2vud
E-.-.
‛gd raeeas.
Jr.. George Carroll, Sandy Parsons, J. T.
membershin C. J. Wise. C. J. O’Neal. Joe Boozer;
society it falls most heavily on President Eisenhower needs
the industrial workers who too not only courage but philosophy,
often own nothing but their a sense not of his place in his-
regal rights. They possess no tory but of his country’s role in
homes, no farms to produce civilization. His , unhurried ap-
food, no tools. In our society, proach to problems, his refusal off
they usually possess no skills to act unti he has, as he calls
and have only their time to sell, it, been briefed on the subject,
Sarles; tennis. J. N. McArdle, J. T. Wood s, W. D.
Garnett.
C. A. Seltzer of Brownwood was in the city on
business Saturday.
Mrs. C. Beall Wood of San Marcos is t he guest
of her sister, Mrs. L. A. House on Sout h Grand
avenue.
30 Years Ago . . .
(From the files of The Daily Register
January 19, 1924)
2—“ainetvileTexas) Daily Register
Gainesville Qailu Regisker
Me EKe Saw** will be cheerfully corrected
s upon being brought to the attention of the publisher.
• Member of The Associated Press, whicn h entitled
to the use of, “ — -
' in this news
Hubert Harrison, writing in “East; Texas,”
Organ of the East Texas Chamber of Com-
merce, has the following to say about 1954
prospects:
I- 0
tom
questions sent in by readers, answering one a
day in this column.
(Copyright 1954, General Features C orp.)
7$)
a <
FLHdi I!
7LA-DA-
\DA-DA-)
Te,
returned he cancelled the order for tl e cham-
pagne and ordered some cheap ale. He told
iue surprised barmaid that he had ju^t heard
For Better Health ...
of operations, are handicapped. Pain is
a perceptive mechanism, since it
frequently warns of abnormal
living room while airing politi-
cal views and exchanging inside
- cgc, u ;c information on government; host
1 the.social gcene.Certainlyit S then opens front door, pours
J true that few have retired to the whole group into the night,
hermitages. takes aspirin and goes to bed.
One disgruntled lady, who ob- If all has gone well, the host
v lously regards Democrats as ir- later should receive at least five
responsible grasshoppers and Re- invitations to attend similar par-
publicans as earnest ants, wrote ties. The main thing is not1to
to a local newspaper. vary the recipe by introducing
“Why aren’t they (the- Repub- ribald old party games such as
licans) throwing more and bet- postoffice or pin-the-tail-on-the-
ter shindigs with gin. orchids, donkev.
turn to his home this week..He mink ana caviar? . . . They
was visited by his daughters, have taken over the serious side
This is the problem of Presi- Mrs. Corinne Godwin and. Miss of running our government and
dent Eisenhower, and his course Ora Dayion and Mrs Godwin’s are not so concerned over enter-
come to power in 1954 under willnot.be an eay one. The daughter, Miss Janelle Godwin tainment and the social whirl,
he puisMf he left.Wing Dom “State of the Union message is of Dallas, last weekend. -- ...
, , oernts and thp A D A This al a challenging document because Miss Jane Mallicote returned
We have known modern men who imagined CTatsandethA.A-tihia it sets a program for arresting to her home here Monday after
material possessions were treasures. But at the serntate. Sacer tea -n ted the disintegration of a society, receiving medical treatment in a
end declared it all to be ashes. The very body States, no matter what the hap It is stated in political terms Gainesville hospital last week,
of materialists turns to ashes P¥ " ."tQy.0E..4 and therefore will receive a po- Mr. and Mrs. Hub Jones of
I am become like dust and ashes.—Job 30:19. phrase such as middie-ol-the-
S WHITESBORO, Jan. 20 Mrs.
H R. R. Mikeska was in charge of
-1 the Royal service program 'The
' Royal Service
I THE CHAIR WHEN V FLAYING, HE’S
2 THE DODGERS CRYING IN 1
•ARE LOING!e4 THE LATHER-
222-
Mdaegt
g® *$g
n , #2
dhi
I
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 20, 1954, newspaper, January 20, 1954; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579702/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.