Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 157, Ed. 1 Monday, March 1, 1954 Page: 4 of 8
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A
f
THE CHINAMAN’S CHANCE
THE WORLD TODAY
EDITORIALS
How the Unite
I
-.-2
keep two steps
This is the belief of Dr.
Emerson P.
&
hese stabiliz-
pression of the early 1930’s.
$
from becoming serious.
©
j.
Dr. Schmidt:
A
RED
axpayers the
consumption and would spare
L
nesday last week he held sessions
net member.
\I
side Washington.
#Q/R/S-
“butter” at the same time.
tend to leave more money in
the hands of
confirmation by
e to the na-
ment? That is a delicate, difficult job which to
.A
7. The volume of liquid assets held by in-
drag, is not likely to be the kind of powerful
(P)
“Gene’s
It
said.
Gene
For Better Health . .
The Word of God . .
bleeding may
Saul Pett
A
E
C A. Dean, M.D.
Have A
LAUGH
editor’s note:
ic cord is re-
9223,,
g gag
fear of preg-
nancy sufficient cause for vasectom ,. This ques-
tion should be discussed with your
priest or min-
a farmer plowing in
Bonneville Energy
Bon-
Dr. Dean will
30 Years Ago .
By Jimmy Hatlo
i
I
WW8
UNCLE
V
Mrs. Hardin Smith of Denver. Col
rado, arrived
DRILTSPECIRL
Mrs. D. J. Brooks returned last
nd daughter.
V
son. Charles
• ‘Ps
gheE=-
Stringless! look!
F
l
4—Gainesville I Texas (Daily Register
Mon., March 1, 1954
/
3
Post Office
second-class mail at the
/
1
#=
/
m3
Dulles Works Like He Tries
To Stay Ahead of a Fire
J
o
ers have already indicated what they can
do. They helped to prevent tl e dip in 1949
volume has
the war, to
This means
liquid condi-
of a down-
GRAVEY-IM
SELLING TYPE-
asked
field.
Our pledge to you: Consistently
low prices ALWAYSI TRY USI
this is printed,
there is a side
said,
and
each
remarked at a luncheon meeting
of the 78th Congress club, made
He’s had 24 of them at the with congressional leaders to ex-
state department, and others out- nlain what had happened in Ber-
r BELOW MY
QUOTA FOR
THE MONTH-
deflationary force it was in the
8. The quick reactions which
tax structure, with its heavily
LIKE YOU TO STOCK
UPI UNDERSTAND
we are having—recession or di >—will not be
transformed into any serious i lepression.
By SAUL PETT
For Hal Boyle
I
X SORRY— >
f MR.GRAVEY
ISN’T SEEING
ANY SALESMEN
UNTIL AFTER
< JULY 15™- y
much as it was in 1929. relatiy
tional income.
I NEAR MES GOT 1
A VONEM SISTER-
GUESS I'LL HAVE
7 TO MARRY HER
- TO GET AN
ORDER-
7- HEBOUSHT
SIX ROWBOATS
FROM SOMEBODY-
keep a smile on his face to cov-
er up an inner void?”
1930’s.
occur in our
reliance on
with these facilities standing by, we could
still operate on a prosperous level.
How do you move from this kind of ex-
pansion into a period of normal prosperity
without cutting back output and employ-
be done in the doctor’s office.
Most doctors do not consider the
ahead of a fire.
In his case, it’s
the Communist
fire.
He h a s been
secretary of
THE PRICE IS
GONG UP-
by her daughter, Mrs. Ruby Collins
Nellie Jane.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Fonville anc
you come to a bridge, then turn
right. No — <—------* “—chi
A
more desirable in the opinion c f many farm-
ers and most businessmen because it would
provide a sensible guide to production and
By
BOYCE HOUSE
Well, would they?? I raced to
the next issue of the magazine
hoping to find the answer. In-
stead. I found another question
“What’s happened to Jeff
Published by The Register Publishing
306 East California Street "
up of women whose husbands
first came here in 1942. It was
80
a"
: $; .
forced to borrow. The government has a
wide range of choices on how to borrow, and
can do so in a way that will help maintain
8
7/1 NEW PAPER LINE IM
<A SELLING NOW-I’D
By JAMES MARLOW ment or to explain or defend his
WASHINGTON, Mar. 1 (P — handling of foreign affairs.
John Foster Dulles. 66 last Fri- It • hasn’t been a completely
day. works like a man trying to blissful relationship. He's been
criticized in the capitol. He’s had
state just over a .E
year. In that 1V
lime he has V
traveled 83,361
miles in pursuit at
of peace and
American se- —
Tuesday, March 2nd
"Diamond" cut
Green Beans
MEM-MEM- THE ONLY X
SALESMEN HE EVER
SEES ARE RELATIVES-
AND all Mis relatives )
, ARE SALESMEN—•
4
Greta are
WRITERS NOW,P>
YKNOW-AND A%
I’M TWELVE
!
be taken lightly.
Have a pressing health problem?
try to help you in his daily column.
the club’s first meeting of the J
year, and members were invited fl
3,%
THL innt STORE
on THL SQUARL ‘
»n w iNMINAY
d States Is Currently
Baxter shows no sign of letting
cable had just up on her daring plan to be-
, was a boxed come one of Hollywood’s sexi-
Unfortunately. as est stars.”
2-Msg-egsa
—---24 /
I had missed. It hadn’t although
Screenland was certain about
At 8:15 a.m. he reaches the days, with help, he completed his
office. At 9 he has a 15-minute report for Wednesday night,
conference with his underscore- Yesterday he left for Caracas
ohman
npany, Inc..
Entered as
the senate per-
f : ■ •
A
How long can
909
Schmidt, director of economio research for
the Chamber of Commerce < f the United
States.
Our economy today hasanu mber of built-
in stabilizers which it did not 1 ave in the de-
the contro-
lin. Somewhere in those three
Tierney’s flipped over Aly
Khan, but will they wed?”
Albert, motored to Dallas today fo: a brief visit
with Hubert Fonville at SMU.
Beeman Fisher of Dallas, adverti sing manager
of Texas Power & Light company, w is here today
conferring with J. B. Piper, manage • of the local
office.
wife of the Republican congressman from Iowa,
said.
“And I became a built-in secretary,” Mrs. Clair
Engle, wife of the Democratic congressman from
California, put in. “We were on the go constantly,
touring our district. Sundays we spent answering
mail. It was interesting though, and I love meet-
ing constituents.”
Mrs. Walter H. Judd, wife of the Republican
congressman from Minnesota, who is a member
of the House Government Operations committee,
went with her husband and three teen-age daugh-
ters on a tour of the west.
“While he looked at dams, I kept a watch on the
young men who wanted to date the teen-agers.”
Mrs. Judd said. “It was a hectic summer.”
Mrs. Antonio M. Fernandez, wife of the Demo
cratic congressman from New Mexico, spent her
time redecorating her house in Santa Fe working
in her garden and welcoming a new daughter-in-
law. The wife of Chet Holifield, Democratic con-
gressman from California, was overseeing the con-,
struction of a new home at Montebello. We got
finished in time to have 27 to Christmas dinner
and a reception for 700 before returning to' the
capital,” she said.
Mrs. James Abernethy, wife of the Democratic
congressman from Mississippi, got ready to enter-
tain members of her husband’s Agriculture com-
mittee and “show’ our neighbors some real live
Republicans."
“We put our best foot forward, and I don’t be-
lieve they think we go without shoes any more
down in Mississippi,” she added. Later both Mrs.
“How do I get to
Jeff Chandler
“There's no doubt
#46
NEW YORK, Mar. 1
(ranging up to 26 weeks in soile states) for
employes temporarily laid off,
3. The numerous private and public pen-
sion programs, including the fe deral govern-
(From files of The Daily Register. Feb, 28, 1924 •
John Cooper of Dallas, former local resident, is
a visitor in the city.
Miss Gladys Bettis of Stamford is risiting Miss
Grace Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Myers and fan ily of Temple
are visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs . E. O. Myers
and family.
4
#
•i
.1
patches.
tspothapRxalishercgreorotrspunstbttgnarpzepmissjan
occur other than to correct in next issue after it Is
brought to their attention. AU advertising orders are ac-
cepted on this basis onl”.
taxes) dropped only .6 of 1%. However, in
that inventory recession we were fortunate
in still having many persons with cash on
hand waiting to spend it on housing and au-
tomobiles which had been in short supply.
One thing that perhaps distinguishes the .
present economic downturn from its prede-
cessors is that its causes have been apparent
finished with
“and reports are that he
mograph wasn't satisfied. Tell your merchant you saw his
“There is a new Gregory Peck, advertisement in The Register.
I/K,
(
growths’, tumor masses within
the womb, and irritations in gen
• eral may result in bleeding.
Glandular irregularities may so
stimulate the ovary that bleeding
from the female tract will result.
With approaching years the ad-
visability of a careful study fol-
' lowing any unusual bleeding
either between periods, during a
period, or after the change of
life, becomes more and more ad-
visable.
women at times other than the nor mal periods.
A small percentage of abnormal bleeding may
be due to cancers. Tears or ulcers at the lower
end of the womb, polyps < small mhommm
ths{n&racwe loo'forward to returning to Wash- beThnsenedesinitiowsh'n behieyeate
ington to get a rest, one wife----- . . ... -
23225 ■
pikgeig
affair with Aly,"
dividuals and businesses. The
grown from $65 billion before
an estimated $270 billion today,
that the rush to get assets in a
tion, one of the characteristics
1. The farm price support
flexible support program wo ild be much
GOT ’EM IN THE
, CELLAR IN CASE
OF FLOOD
o8?1
Npe'A
a worldly sophisticate.” it
2. The unemployment compensation sys-
a trust fund
Here are some of the stabil zers listed by employes dipped from 1948 to 1949 by only
. $.3 billion. Disposable income (income after
tem. The system is backed by
of almost $9 billion, which prov des payments
tin?” The farmer said,
down this road two miles
t, Gainesville. Te kas.
Gainesville. Text s,
Afaw.R a I ond
yesterday to visit her sister, Mrs. VS ill Ross.
light from a
-424
AF
Abernethy and Mrs. Hoeven accompanied their
husbands to conferences in Cuba. The activities
scheduled for them there, however, left them so
exhausted they were ready to go to bed at 8:30
p.m. most nights. '
NO. 303 TIN
Gainesbille Qailg RRegisker
• Founded! August 30. 1890 by JOHN T. LEONARD
(Abso rbe Gainesville Signal. February, 1939.)
~ ------ T----- ------ 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 ex- .
clusively to the use of republication of aU the local news
‘printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP news dis-
.(A) The operation is a relatively simple one in
which a short piece of the sperma
moved. It is not expensive and in many cases may
the money supply.
Most of these same stabilizers were in op-
eration during the 1949 dip. The index of
industrial production (seasonably adjusted)
slipped from a 1948 peak of 105 to a low of
94 in 1949. Unemployment rose from the
low levels of 1948 to a peak of 4.1 million, or
6.4% of the civilian labor force in the worst
month of 1949, and to a peak of 4.7 million
in February, 1950. But compensation of
to exchange reminiscences of last J
summer’s “vacation.”
“I became a built-in bady sitter -
to my grandchildren while my m
daughter and son-in-law looked I
for a place to live, and father ■
1 :
3
ABNORMAL BLEEDING I!; DUE
TO VARIOUS DISTL RBA KCES
By C. A. DEAN. MI
NEDITORIAL: There are many t isturbances in
IVI the female tract which may ca ise bleeding in
7 expanded to include persons
with whom any of us disagree
on particular issues, they be-
since early 1953. What happened was that
when the Korean war broke out the govern-
ment adopted a policy of encouraging the
expansion of our economic base so that if a
third world war came we would have surplus
capacities for turning out steel, aluminum
and other vital products.
While building up these extra capacities
we generated larger incomes on the part of
business, employes and almost everybody
else and this income was .readily spent for
houses, goods, services and all the rest. We
had “guns” and even more than the normal
ntained, 30c weekly. In Coq ke and adjoln-
iy mail. 1 month, 61.00; 6 mi nths 65.00: one
iside Cooke county 1 month 51.25; 6 months
which assures
I some struggles with Sen McCar-
I thy (R-Wis).
He takes work home with him.
I Sometimes on Saturday after
B noons — he works at the office
5 Saturday mornings—or on Sun-
| day he has a stenographer come
■ out to his he use for dictation.
I He attends perhaps two diplo-
l ma tic dinners a week, besides
I having friends in for private din- 1,
I ners. And state department peo-
■ pie and government officials
we go to press, there are storm This explanation, of course,
warnings from the Peck house- raised many more questions
hold: but because of the solid than it answered but by then I
foundation the marriage has, had run out of money. I couldn’t
we have every hope the difficul- afford any more magazines. My
ties between Greta and Greg nervous ssytem couldn't, either,
will soon be straightened out.” +
It struck me as a purely . un-
haps before
(Copyright 1954, General Featui ps Corp.)
They’ll Do It Every Time
/(cousin-mere^ THeX/^
T+ A.oc nA+. ceem m-An-LI. +. eynect _ tary, Walter Bedell Smith. At for the Inter American confer-
it does not seem reasonable to expect, _pEnAVG 9:15 he has a staff conference ence and on April 26 he is ex-
therefore, that all this expanded industrial I •I—— —/ I • with Smith and his assistant sec- pected to go to Geneva for a
base should now in peacetime be operated at-- rotaries. conference with Britain. France.
ruitacapactvonTaay wasinetnda.intnton.The Case of Justice Earl Warren he goes to the White House for Korea and Indochina.
AM-Md‛.,.1md-M"M.1:m fe .... a cabinet meeting or a meeting of Besides the places mentioned
ernment s plan was to have this expanded By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY come ridiculous. To say that have a right to their opinions the National Security council. earlier in this story, in 1953 he
industrial base standing by, ready in case of Although Chief Justice Earl Earl Warren is a Communist and to their methods. but this During the day he must receive went to Rome, The Hague, Brus
an emereenev The theorv was that even Warren has been confirmed by sunnorten Comminists ic much is true: They have arrived foreign diplomats or anyone else seis, Luxembourg, Egypt. Israel,
an emergency. i ne -neor- was mai even the senate judiciary committee, or.supported Communists is at their hatriotism only because of enough importance to need his Jordan. Syria, Lebanon, Iraq,
without reason. It is such ab- the older fighters in the cause ear. Saudi Arabia, India. Turkey,
surd positions that have re- of anti-communism have been During his first year, the state Greece, Libya, Princeton, N. J.
suited in the equally untenable silent concerning some of the department underwent its biggest < for a speech*. Japan, Boston
attitude of the radio and televi- mistaken activities of the new- shakeup in 20 years. ’speech*. St. Louis i twice for
curity the James Marlow sometimes visit him at home for
equivalent of more than three uninterrupted conferences.
times around the globe. This display of energy, accord-
He’s been all over Western ing to those around him, is not
Europe — including Paris three new. He gave an example of it 12
times, London twice. Bonn twice days ago after battling Russia’s
and to North Africa, the Middle Foreign Minister Molotov at the
East. as far west as Korea, as far Big Four conference in Berlin,
east as India, and to New York That conference broke up Feb.
five times, 18. At 8 o'clock that night Dulles
His routine is: up by 7 a.m., flew out of Berlin, stopped at
home by 7 p.m.,. and to bed by Bonn to talk with West Ger-
midnight. His retreation is "lim- many’s Chancellor Adenauer,
ited mostly to reading detective took off again at 11:30 p.m.,
stories, watching birds, and stopped at Bermuda the next day
swimming when he can. for a swim in 57-degree water.
He has a sharp sense of public and arrived in Washington that
relations, reads four or five pa- night.
pers a day, hs made national On that trip home. his aides
broadcasts several times, plus say, he dictated to a secretary
speeches before organizations. some of the report he made to
He’s had more news’ conferences the nation last Wednesday night,
than any other Eisenhower cabi- On Monday, Tuesday and Wed-
I e52==
m
-(
under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Subscription prices: By carrier where carrier-boy
4 service is maintained. 30c weekly
ing counties b;
year 68.00. Oui------------- ___
$6.00: 1 year $11.00.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
or reputation of any person, firm or
program. A
chapstakoztanicK
ness drop off, the tax liability < f individauls
and businesses also quickly are ps. Govern-
USE SOME NEW
MACHINES, •
V X GUESS- P
necessity of having to buy surplus farm
products at high levels, eve rtheless pres-
ent rigid program can also exer t a stabilizing
influence by discouraging disor derly market-
ing, price slashing and undu • competitive
pressures. ‛
we now face. Well timed fiscal and mone- yersy that I
tary policies on the part of the federal gov- feesneedsadiS
ernment can smooth the way. Meantime, ly, that the
business will accelerate research and new Communist a r -
product development and step up sales and row was shot
promotion effort. att EarnWarren, Geo soos.
Even if the current dip should continue-------• SS.h---*-ok ISkY
ister since it is one of morals and ne t one of med-
icine. Vasectomy is a relatively sin ple operation
from a surgical point of view, but is one of major
importance from a moral standpoint.
The operation produces sterility, < nd the condi-
tion cannot be corrected if so desil ed at a later
date. Therefore, it is something wh ch should not
Protected Aga nst a Real Depression
HERE ARE GOOD reasons for believing ment revenues decline and the government is
- that whatever kind of eco nomic ailment
visit to Fort Worth. She was accor panied home
i Q > “Is it possible to be sterilize d by opera-
tion without some vital reason suq h as insani-
ty or disease? I find that the fea r of another
child is causing disharmony between my wife
and me. It the operation is possil le, would it
be very expensive?"—A.H.
2222227222z2-A F
^well-tueX '
GALS COULD
8
nei
2
2n-o
Mjapan,,
Alon,
o
/,
ksi,
n*
‛ieem
■ ■ ■ ■
1,
s
‛ er
busiess for investment in new job-making en-
terprises, and in the hands of consumers for
spending.
6. The amortized nature of me ost of our pri-
vate debt. While debt has gr wn too rap-
idly for good economic health a d has helped
cause inflation, it is still only about half as
the income tax. As employment and busi-
I—r——=
Figuring who gets
THE ORDERS FROM THE
-.PURCHASING GUY-
5 «ANx ANDA TP OF TuE
0 HATXO MAT 70
$3% J OONNELL,
(3. 79 MADISON AVH,
7r- New YOR- , N
sion industries which define a comers. Besides being ultimately re- speeches), Denver (for a confer
controversial person as anyone As the cause of anti-commu- sponsible for the handling of ence with President Eisenhower*,
about whom someone has said nism is being damaged by the friends and foes everywhere, Dul- Syracuse, N. Y. (speech*, Cleve
something disagreeable concern- activities of the newcomers, par- les must deal with congress, land (speech*, Bermuda for Big
ing his political views. When ticularly when they call Chief many times personal appearances Three foreign ministers confer-
men and women are not per Justice Earl Warren a Commu- to ask for money for his depart- ence.
mitted to work because of an nist, when it is so evident that • ----
uninvestigated, unanswered ref- there, is a public revulsion r ■ . .
erence to an individual, then a against such uninhibited accusa- KAwle € ( Alnnrn . LA, A,, c
grave injustice can be done. Ev- tions. the time must come when —*YI 3 *VMIIIII • • • by HAL OUT Lt
hit or miss, by Geo. Sokolsky ery human being must have an the older and long-active anti- ----------------------------------
c0., . -n unnamed persons. The indis- opportunity to defend himself Communists will have to speak
further than is now ndicated. We will re- eliminate use of that paint- against charges of any kind in out for a more correct ap-
cover from it. And the population growth, brush often by self-serving per- the United States. praisal of the enemy and of the _______ ______ _______________
the new technology and new products backed sons iS doing the cause of anti- Walter Winchell once invented battle against him. Somebody dumped a pile of old other forever . .
by a sound but flexible monetary and fiscal eommunismseatharm:, the word, hatriot and this tour (Copyright. 1954 King Features movie fan magazines near my I quickly flipped through the
nolicv— all cjeariy indicated on the future What Communist? de force represents a type of ___ Syndicate. Inc.* desk and I looked them over. It magazines to see if the dilemma
Policy an cieany maicatea ror me future— 1. A Communist is a memberperson who does not study, t----was harrowing. had been resolved in some issue
wiU bring us to new heights of prosperity and of the Communist party of the does not analyze, does not es i . A i ~.i- . It. also wasm
human well-being. sttA, Ar in "m,r tablish a premise but emotes IriS IUD VUeST inspirational, in
------------------------ , nited States or its numerous with hatred. It is dangerous in . _ , , . a way, because
iront organizations; any fight, in any movement toleaslonicht these editors
2. One may be regarded as give the enemy a propagandistic "3" seem to have
still a Communist who once opportunity to’ hit back because The Gainesville Iris club will such big, ubiqui-
. . . joined the party or its front or- of a careless array of unchecked entertain with a guest night tea tous hearts.
We are critical of others but most charitable ganizations but who has taken data or because of uninvesti- this evening at 7:30 at the First Moreover, they , J
toward our own faults. It should be the other no overt steps to disassociate gated descriptions of persons, Christian church. Mrs. Guy must use very & *
way round. We are responsible for our own himself from the affiliation, some of whom may even be on Rogers of Wichita Falls will lec- sensitive
sins and faults and we should tend to our own Ample means exist to establish your side but utilize different ture after the refreshment pe- seismographs to
business first and foremost. bonafide disassociation; methods. The McCarthy and riod on ‘The Culture of Iris.” detect the
And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy 3. A person may be regarded Jenner committees have been She will be accompanied on slightest heart
brothers eye, but perceivest not the beam that as pro-Communist' who prefers extraordinarly careful not to be her trip here by Mrs. J. E. Gill, tremors any-
is in thine own eye?—Luke 6:41. the Marxist-Leninist concept of caught in that trap. , vice-president of Region 17, where in the saviren .
life and so proclaims; During the past three or four American Iris society, also a world. wit questions tumbling over
% A / I a ■ । . . 4 A nersin mav he regarden years, manv persons have pro- flower grower of wide renown. In March, well, would they" I raced to
\Vaehine-An I e-ep as pr-Eommunist- who has for nounced themselves as anti- The guests will be entertained 1953, Motion Picture magazine down to the nearest newsstand
VV OSninQTOri Lw l l “I • • • _ eason whatsoever acted as Communists who were not ac- with a dinner at the Turner ho- found the Gregory Pecks for the very latest fan maga-
---------------------------------------- an agent of the Soviet universal tive before in any known anti- tel prior to the meeting, abroad, where he was making zines.
By JANE EADS state in any country but nartic- Communist work.- and who by Garden club members of the a picture, and the writer was The first thing I saw was a
117 ASHINGTON- Wives of members of Congress ularly in the United States even their attitudes prove that they city have received special inrita- enchanged by their marital Hollywood columnist’s “good
VV just don’t plan on getting an honest-to-good- if he never joined the Commu- do not know the subject. These tions to the meeting. bliss. “Theirs is the story of a news” in Modern Screen. Sub-
ness vacation even when Congress adjourns and nist party band-wagon hoppers who often love that’s nourished from day title: Shelley vs. Vittorio . . .
..— — *—,---- • have personal axes to grind are T j / ne LI to day.” June Haver finds Fred MacMur-
doing great mischief, first be- I AdAV C KirthdAV The next month, a title in ray . . . Dale Robertsons split."
cause often their accusations I VUU J • Mil -IMMJ • • • Filmland magazine echoed the Well. Hollywood seemed to be
are based on nothing but a dif- enchantment: “Live Alone and batting .333 in good news, un-
ference of opinion, and secondly ROBERT LOWELL, born Like It? Never!” Sub - head: less, of course. June didn’t hap-
because they often use accusa- March 1, 1917 in Boston, a mem- “Family life and love isn't a pen to want to find Fred,
tions to hurt a personal or po- ber of the distinguished Lowell sometime thing for Gregory But again, another infernal
litical opponent. family, long fa-um--- Peck . . . He wants his brood question: “Is Anne on a merry
I do not find that serious- mous for their ELae.in around him wherever he goes.” go-round?” Sub - title: “Anne
minded anti-Communists, men iterory a h i it. . But right under this, as
and women who have been in ’ . Fa though a hot cable had just
this fight, some of them as far ties. 1 his Poet Ed02mi been flashed in. was a boxed
back as 1917. take a hatriot at- won. the 11944 "E
titude. Many of them labor day puitze Prize 1g
and night to redeem-px Commu- 1o 18 —od
nists. to make their talents "6,ar-; - a L.
available for the great struggle te.. H1s sub- t T
against the Kremlin. Many of ject matter in- ' A
them sacrifice time and money Euudes MS" aCa
A motorist who was lost and risk themselves to help a Engyand, t.585
a former party worker over the Se4 and the., a‘ — — --------
Aus- emotional threshold so that he dtions, aSsoc ROBERT LOWELL selfish hope. Still, dhe clouds PORTLAND, Ore. (UP) ___
“Go will testify to the FBI or to a A dW 1 ths, oginc -ne were gathering. \ neville Power administration sup-
till congressional committee, through 8IouL a L, run The same. month. Photoplay plied more than 57 cent of
i Often these Johnny-come-late- tnrougn his works as can be asked. Trouble Across the the total electricai energv cener-
. , . on second thought, lies by their ignorance and lack noted in Dead Rainbow Pe".and Way?" There were hints of a ated by major Pacific northwest
you d better turn around and of prudence undo this arduous Eheythec mnho"n Ends, foreign romance in Pecks life utilities during the 1952-53 fiscal
go' back till you come to a and devoted work by a public 1as.sered.as, ad SoronP et ' and Photoplay was facing up year, according to the annual re-
schoolhouse and take the left attack just at the moment when Lothe —iDrary oi congress.___. to them squarely. port submitted to Secretary of
turn. No—say, Mister, you can’t something important is being In May. Modern Screen asked. Interior Douglas McKay
go to Austin from here.” achieved. Such people, of course. Classified Ads Bring Results. “Divorce Ahead for the Pecks?” — —--—-------—
--------------------------------— But in August. Modern Screen .—e ,
___________________ i ________________________________________________________. was reassuring. “Peck’s a good Current models of cars have an
boy now,” it said. Still, two average of 20 lights.__
months later. Screenland’s seis-
toured with the Agriculture com- "•d2
mittee,” Mrs. Charles B. Hoeven, Jane Eads
ment's Social Security system These will
continue to pay monev to beneficiaries and
thus help to keep up the contir uity of sales,
regardless of economic conditions.
4. The Federal Deposit Insurance system,
which makes a bank run incon teivable.
5. The tax reduction which we nt into effect
January' 1, and others in pro: Dect. These
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 157, Ed. 1 Monday, March 1, 1954, newspaper, March 1, 1954; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579736/m1/4/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.