Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 199, Ed. 1 Monday, April 19, 1954 Page: 4 of 8
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4
s
THE DUST-COVEREDBOOK
THE WORLD TODAY
EDITORIALS
J
1954 Baseball Season for Owls Opens
3
-
r
□
X
)
In that one Dulles talked of
if the Communists attacked
ly'
+ --
-f.“
-
tion runs to nearly 125.000,000 barrels
/
a
reati n
and highly entertaining form of
-
a
■’4
be
f
ie
summer season may be long and unpleasa it
7PAA/E
without the excitement created by having
a
THESE DAYS
By GEORGE E. SOKOISKY
And progress has certainly not been
time.
universal for additional
china
of
and Formosa.
such as wheat or rye or
su
white
000,000. The American people are hardly
ts
e-
le. which is one Geo. Sokolsky
disturbances in that coun
ma
For Better Health . .
I
b
favors and preferential treatment.
che
in
is r e a 11 y won-
(go-
derful. It works
Syndicate. Ine. )
■n.
< X-
I
r ot
The Word of God . .
surplus countries. Burma.
M.D.
is
Today's Birthday...
and
vill
for breaking
our
fool!
I hev’ll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
GETITALLTDIED UP-
Jane
YOU’LL FEEL LOTS
the
BTTER,WONT you?
just
«4
al.
H
DRILY SPECIRL
3
the
54
Tuesday, April 20th
this
I
C
wife
homa City for a visit with relatives and fri
nds.
Tender and meaty! look!
1954
Ille
$
306
news
news dls-
e
Hl
diA
are W
A3
2
k
6
.unfE
GETULIO VARGAS, born April
19. 1883. in Sao Borja, Brazil, son
l ok
id
WHERE YOU WANT 'EM
WHEN you WANT 'EM-
including Mrs Homer Ferguson, wife of the
publican senator from Michigan: Mrs Mike
TSK
JU$1
can make China
self sufficient in
HYPNOSIS IS DANGEROUS
FORM OF “ENTERTAINMENT
part of Asia. In
modern times.
adds zest. pep
and variety t o
price supports, which has led to ever-mount-
ing surpluses, is certainly unsound and needs
ere
the
Big Addition to
Local Post Office
produce an ade-
quate supply of
rice for her peo-
Re-
Mon-
who
i un-
is
ill
without it the Chinese is a
hungry man
Til UTTU
M 1M SgVARL 1
the
en-
for
-
not remind him of old Cicero and
say:
fall,
co tin-
such as mining and farming, had
a far lower death rate from this
ailment than those who did light
tasks, such as desk workers, hair-
dressers, or employes in factory
jobs requiring little physical ef-
fort.
The next time you feel vaguely
maintained here.
Gainesville citizens have learned that t
James C. Hagerty, in an unusual
preview. has ex-
LAUGH
Have A
baseball merely to keep a team in operatic
locally.
s,t -
5 it: ;
af
-..3
■ '•
1
Secretary' Eisenhower.
The state department issued a
statement. Without naming Nix-
tired and cross and go to your
doctor, and find him looking a
bit pale around the gills, too, why
S’ l
r ■
so much as the word
” to retaliate instantly.
So NURSIE STRAIGHTENS
THINGS UP- A TEN-FOOT
OCTOPUS YOU'D HAVE TO
BE TO REACH ANYTHING /
n
a
3.: -23
,22-
L-e2
peeled that China will ever
able to supply itself.
wheat is grown and eaten,
varieties of noodle dishes
Some of the statements even ap-
peared contradictory. i
Nixon, in a nationwide TV and
radio broadcast March 13. talked
strength even in eld age."
A panel of 21 medical scientists
rice. What wheat
is to the people
of Europe, rice
MAYBE IT’S NOT NEAT, BUT
AT LEAST YOU GOT THINGS
Eisenhower's Speech of
Next Thursday Explained
By JAMES MARLOW china. Others wanted to know if
WASHINGTON, April 19 (A)— Nixon was really speaking for
your life, 4
Properly used.
stantly"
“capacity'
——
Our pledge to you: Consistently
low pricei ALWAYSI TRY US I
69
NEW YORK, April 19 (P)— The versit y of Minnesota told the
medical profession has come up panel of the “protective effect"
with another tremendous wonder of exercise against coronary
drug. heart disease.-He said a study of
Don’t yawn. This wonder drug 2.500.000 British workers showed
is really won- mmmeemmemeeemm that those who did heavy work.
Mon., April 19.
--—----
The greatest 1
to the Soviet
■ F
$ 3
this country’s “capacity" to re-
talinta “inean +lu" end "massive-
4
family had (A compared notes last Jan. 12. _ _
before they talked on the admin- I- --- C—----.
istration’s foreign policy and (B) 1 „ .
talked in language clear enough taliate “instantly” and
to be unmistakable. ly” if the Cemmunist
Eisenhower himself, Dulles and anywhere. That speech caused
Vice President Nixon in the past confusion here and abroad.
few’ months have made state- On March 19, six days after
2-LB. BOX 45
ments which caused confusion Nixon’s speech, Dulles was ques-
and required later clarification. tioned three hours by the sen-
ate’s Foreign Relations commit-
tee. Did this “instant" and “mas-
3
‘?
g3
F i
or. j
-- .
c::
3 2
7:
*6, '•
into serve something of
powerful, and ever-more-cost ly governme nt
would have us believe.
to touch him. And that blindly selfish a
Mr. and Mrs D. J. Neill of Amarillo are
guests of the latter’s aunt, Mrs. E. D. White.
Mrs. Clarence Wear and son. Jack, left
confined to large companies. Thousands
L LlHGya
l lino?.
Ne
hcera
Some members of congress im- time by saying that if this coun-
mediately said this clou n try try was attacked he wouldn't
shouldn’t. send troops into Indo- have to wait for congress.
By
BOYCE HOUSE
TUESDAY is a red letter day in Gaines -
- ville. Sports enthusiasts have had the
date ringed on their calenders for many
weeks and time passed slowly during the it -
tervening days.
month later
C. A. Dean,
Fresh frozen
CHICKEN BACKS
probably the two diseases the is the father of _ "
average man fears. two sons and GETULIO VARGAS
Dr. Ernst Simonson of the Uni-two daughters.
failed to
White House Press
Take coronary heart disease,
for example. It and canqer are
Therefore it becomes critically
---------- - - .... —------.1 of
000,000 acres of
who
of Gen. Manoel Vargas,
helped establish ■
the Brazilian re- A
embourg and her recent sojourn in Russia.
Learning to speak the "language of diplomacy'
is currently the interest of additional groups 1
gather to chat in French over their tea cups _____
der the expert .direction of Mrs. Beverly Robinson,
wife of a retired State department official. Spark-
ing this movement was Mrs. Roy St. Louis,] wi..
of the assistant attorney general' under President
Hoover.
Boyle's Column . . . by HAL BOYLE
,2.
merce street. Rev. R. E. Joiner. pastor of
A town the size of Gainesville and a tow n
the size to which Gainesville should grow
within the next few years requires a wide
variety of recreational activities and faci i-
ties to keep its citizens interested in livir g
here.
And professional baseball provided a cle: n
morning for Fort Worth to spend the wee .end
with Mr. Wear.
Mrs. E. A. Wesson left Friday afternoon for a
visit with her son, J. E. Wesson in Norman. < kla.
Mrs. Frank Springer leaves Saturday for i kla-
united in marriage Friday at the home of
hride's mother. Mrs. C. A. Gilbert, on North ( om-
On March 29.
Block of this city and is engaged in the hard' vare
business here.
but the principal dish from the
Yellow river south is rice ;
Owen Davis, employe ot The Register con pos-
ing room is ill at his home on Lindsay street
Miss Mary Gilbert and William R.' Block
Ickes, widow of Harold Ickes, former secretary of
interior, and many diplomatic wives, i -
Two of Washington’s top hostesses have
vegetables as
With all of these facts in mind, it behooves
every citizen who is interested in sports in
even the most casual way to be on hand i n
Locke field grandstand Tuesday night when
the baseball season formally gets under way.
That is your way of saying to the board
of directors that you like baseball, you w ant
Gainesville to maintain a team this year and
you are desirous of keeping your home town -
in professional baseball.
--------o--
75 YEARS OF FREE ENTERPRISE
(N SEPTEMBER 99th of this year, a far-
• western oil company will celebrate its
75th anniversary. The company’s lineage
goes back to 1876—only 30 years after the
California gold rush that started the great
western migration.
Its beginnings were modest indeed—the
first well produced only 30 barrels each day.
There were many problems to deal with,
many setbacks. As with anything new. skep-
sive” retaliation mean atom-
bombing China or Russia for a
Communist attack anywhere?
Not necessarily, Dulles said. He
said he wanted to emphasize in
his Jan. 12 talk not the word "in-
came to Gainesville from Plainview three j rars
ago and is a graduate of Stephens college in Mis-
ouri. Mr. Block is a son of Mr. and Mrs. .
Scores of women have taken up the art of
speechmaking in Hester Beall Provensen ‘s lass.
see--
-6-
.3-
DIFFERENT STORY
WE VE all heard the argument that only
‘‘ government can provide so-called finan-
cial "security" for the people—that they are
. incapable of doing it 1c themselves.
The facts tell a different : tory. In 19! 2,
according to Insurance Economics sum y.
some $27,000,000,000 of the national incor e
went into] four basic mediums ot family and
individual protection. These are: Life insi r-
ance and annuities: pension and retirement
funds; long-range savings in banks, sving
and loan associations, and in U. S. bonds;
and resulting from illness and accident..
it is estimated that the 1953 invest me nt
for these purposes was more than 830.00
fA‘ The temperature would indicate what
knownas a low-grade fever if the child’s
nesses stake the form of colds or bronchitis
chest golds, T B should be the first disease to
for 1 ther infections such as undulant fever.
lacking in thrift, foresight and responsibil ty
as the advocates of ever-bigger., ever-mo
say that until these countries de-
veloped large enough farms to
permit the use of agricultural
mechanization, little could be
done to improve production. That
is particularly true with regard
to rice growing.
(Copyright, 1954, King Features
china and Thailand, into such an 1
economic union to assure al rice provide $430,000 for the project,
supply for all of them. 1 The hill "hich n—ite "e
in another
on, it said he was only “stating a
course of possible action which
he was personally prepared to
support under a highly unlikely
hypothesis.”
This was state department lan-
guage for saying Nixon ex-
pressed a view only on what
could be done in Indochina if the
French quit although it’s unlike-
ly they will quit. As of now it
isn’t clear whether Nixon was
floating a trial balloon to sound
out sentiment or was expressing
thinking of the administration.
But what then did Nixon mean
in his March 13 talk when he
mentioned this country’s "mas-
sive, mobile, retaliatory power
which we could use at our own
discretion against the major
sources of aggression?”
The very words he used—“mas-
sive” and “retaliatory” — were
right out of a speech Dulles made
correcting. But, he continued in effect. _________
groups which are critical of it — including of the i principal reasons for the
business and labor organizations—would be
year from 7,000 wells. Another 100,000.000
barrels are produced abroad. It has been
rice land
plained what
President Eisen-
hower will say
in a New York
speech T h u r s-
day night to the
American News-
pa p e r Publish-
ers association.
Hagerty told
newsmen: “The
president will
say that miscon-
ceptions of the James Marlow
aims and aspirations of America
as well as those of other free na-
tions, reported and circulated
here and abroad, often cause
needless misunderstandings and
frictions between the govern-
ments and the peoples of the
free world.”
Some recent misunderstand-
ings might have been avoided if
members of Eisenhower’s official
tude could ruin this or any country—mor iBy
as well as financially.
_ . miracles.
It gels rid of
“that tired feel-
ing” millions of
sluggish Ameri-
ca n s complain ■
of. It makes you
feel better. It
gone out on their own to capture the spotlight
on the speaker’s rostrum Mrs. Morris q'a fritz,
in behalf of District of Columbia civic and benefit
interests and Mrs Perle Mesta, to talk over the
country about her career as U. S. minister to Lux-
ney infections, ete. may produce a chronic elva-
tion intemperature
I think you should consider the child sick,
keep her home from school until a definite d iag-
nosis has been made The child should hav e a
Complete examination, including x-ray of chest.
the National Citizens for Eisenhower Con ires
sional committee are already well known
their talents in this field.
roney. wife of the Democratic senator from Okla-
homa; Mrs Oscar A. Ahlgren, president of the
General Federation of Women’s clubs; Mrs
In Gainesville Tuesday Evening
baseball club mour midst, engaged in league
competition against teams representing oth-
er cities in close proximity to this city.
words, is that almost everybody, not just
the farmer, has been looking for profits
The Alligators are found only in here last week concluded that
then the southern United States'and perhaps the value of exercise is
be Chinese- The Manchus plan led southern China, the preventionof some diseases
■ ■ -------1----------- ------------;—— and the treatment of others.
which do not fit well into .
Chinese cuisine. In North China wedded to that grain and how
and Manchuria, considerable difficult it is to change the eat
Thailand was able to maintain in 1949, Clifford Greer was sen- physicians are seeing the wisdom
’’ war fenced to four years in jail for of a health hint written more
blood Count, and urinalysis.
4 Have a pressing health problem" Dr. Dean
try tohelp you in his da ly column. •
tCopyright 1954. General Features Corp.)
----
But Tuesday is coming around shortly an d
the 1954 professional baseball season i 1
Gainesville will get under way at Locke fiele ,
where the Owls will clash with Lawton i 1
the lid-lifting diamond melee.
Baseball means more than mere recreatid i
for the citizens of Gainesville and surrounc -
ing territory. Baseball is a civic venture i n
Gainesville and deserves much more ths n
. casual support of athletic fans hereabout s.
Whereas baseball in many cities and towr $
is under the supervision of corporations < r
individuals who engage in the conduct < f
30 Years Ago . . .
From rires or The Daily Register. April IS. 1 211
Rev E. H Dunsworth has returned from N ari-
of disobedience.
Go wash in the Jordan seven times.—II Kings
5:10.
of the administration's “new
look” in meeting Communist ag-
gression abroad and said:
“We decided we would not fall
into . . . traps. And so we adopted
a new plan . . . rather than let
the Communists nibble us to
on much stronger ground it they showed tor hacentury Rntnrpts
some willingness to make a Lew financial sad- were not unusual in China dur-
rificeson their own hook. His point, in other ing the years that I lived there.
X : *
49
, - . state .............
concerns of all types and sizes are an in- area of Thailand
Ginesbille Qailu Deaister
Founded August 3 ). 1800 by JOHN T LEONARD
teams for financial gain, in Gainesville tl e
baseball corporation is made up of many
stockholders, none of whom expect any fi-
, nancial returns and who are interested
BLIND SELFISHNESS
A COUNTRY EDITOR recently observed
that our present system of agricultural China
children are potential neurotics,
and may be acutely'upset by
hypnois
’ Neurotic symptoms may be
created by suggestion. Children
are more suggestible than
adults, and the potential harm
from hypnosis is greater for
them than adults, h . .
When properly used, hypnosis
has | no • harmful effects. How-
e'er. it should not be ued out-
side the medical profession.
(Q‘"I do not know whether to allow m •
little girl to go to school For the past lot r
months she has been running a tempera tun*
from 99.2 to 99.6 degrees. It is usually highe r
in the afternoons. Does this mean she has t
fever? She appears healthy and is only o
casiqnally sick ” Mn. M. W.
lam
7/-.... DISORDER-’ \—
TSK! TSK! WELL .WE’LL —
leader in the manufacture of petrochemicals
as well as in the development of new and
better automotive fuels and lubricants. its
net worth is more than $1,400,000,000- and
112,000 separate stockholders have their
savings in it.
What gives this general importance is that
it is typical of how the Great American oil
industry, with its world-wide affiliations and
operations, has grown and succeeded until it
has been accurately termed "one of the most
amazing industrial developments of all
First Presbyterian church. officiated. Mrs. E lock
by JOHN T. LEONAR +
Signal. February, 1939 )
may appear la The Register will be cheerfully corrected
upon being brought to the attention of the publish er.
Member of The soclated Press, which is entii led ex-
clusively to the use of republication of all the ocAi
printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP r
patenes.
The publishers are not responsible for copy <
typographical errors or any unintentional er
to correct in next issue al
advertiatng
the matter of
for our citizens. Therefore it is very des -
able that a professional baseball club
office he had V
left in 1945. aft- "
er a 15-year ten- 2
ure as a virtual /
dictator. This 5 S
foot 2 politician $
and strong man.
By C A DEAN M. D
NEDITORIALi Hypnosis as entertainment
-vI be dangerous. However it appears to be n
joying an increased popularity as part of ‘ <
riety" shows and in show before school child]
Many children have a sense of insecurity ; nd
are inclihed to mistrust people
and doubt their motives Such
and ing habits of a people. Further-
: re more, in Asia, farm holdings are
popular throughout the country, usually small. I hose who, to
- n-- "i. cover Communist activities,
and spoke of the Communists as
ery "agrarian reformers" failed to
“I knew it ... I know it,” says
ernment. , ... ... . the average man, settling back
1 he h»eal post^o f flee building is grumpily into his esy - ■
workers over crowded in some depart- “Just a trick. Exercise is for chi-
ist ments and has a lackof.space for dren. Maybe it’s for women now,
pos- some, put poses, including addi- too, since they don’t have enough
rice tional lack of boxes in quantity, to do around the house. But 1
of don’t need it. Even the thought of
or Bad Habit exercise bores me.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UP) But it isn’t a trick. Modern
I
rice company. After four years, he the Roman sage, who wrote, “ex- public. Elected
was released and re-arrested a ercise and temperance can pre- president of
early Brazil i n 1950,
he reentered the
Washington Letter...
gdpghee5#62-2-g22 3
3522*5225222**- . ..
0eegec33r ■:■. ■ -1 -M C 8
ZA/ M'
L,a,3e . hi-. ■ 2-.---
-302ddh into the jungle. Paddy fields
j___________* . ' . quire constant working and
-JL -.j . e ......1 e labor is frightfully hard and uan-
.Ed Clark., former secretary of palatable. As in all of these on-
state, says that after he,hadex, tries human excrement
t, . . . -miy principal and in most
inhisiboyho ddays:, his wise the sole fertilizer, and is even
grandfather ' ould le 11 a story: dangerous work from the s la id-
Even thpugh young Ed would point of health. The
ihe bs inetrikmmuekworenncto;
idling "il' "gain* AHarentiy h"
no"aanihenchefhrmnmndene: Y" >»> - wt
“I used to have (the grandfa- im iter.
is to a l a r g e
death all over the world in little spesch, Dulles called for ’’united
wars, we would reply' in the fu- action” against communism in
m, । e — । e A . ture primarily on our massive. Southeast Asia. Then he dashed
•-Ieh- FAr (2 An-rAI A- Aeian VIee mobile, retaliatory power which off last week to London and
I I V IIP I • l *? • 1111 • I • I / \ □lull INI * F s we could use at our own discre- Paris to get promises of united
■-......- - they - not
that this and the adjacent Japan puiem haan or # iAtn ghe ’VZ" tofaMs AnWzni asnetonrsgoks.spathe ePlawhi IseinsMarsherEheehams
"hatand --- in Burma. "
‘the the. o’Asia No ASigrownum might have to send troops into Dulles, in a news conference
l .i tv eait0 risk ’ MoAsat ioUn Indochina if the French quit and a magazine article, said un-
Rice requirements, the alterr a- t oudcrik epenmni from fighting the Communist led Viet- der some circumstances, such as
lives to imports being the reduc- an-iiuPP, ' 8 minh there, an attack on American allies in
tion of the population or training ', • •.11 . . . This seemed to be saying the Europe. Eisenhower could order
the people to eat other grains I hose in the west who advp- United States might get involved a counterattack without waiting
y. such Cate a substitution of American in the very kind of little war for congress.
potatoes, surplus wheat, for rice do • not which might “nibble us to death” At another news conference
the realize, how the rice-eaters are against which Nixon cautioned a. March 17 Eisenhower tried to ex-
month before. plain what he meant the first
tics saw little future for oil. There were
great risks to be taken. But the pioneers
. took them, and never gave up.
Today this particular company operates
on an international scale. Its U. S. produc-
3
38-*
Henn: 3
-sc 2r • "‛:c
iM&j
Fa
■ II^254-9 cSu
«<»»•> i-m mm; hatvkkm Ine won: p RiGo rKRWSFRvEN
HeeN
ySesssn
Mss
By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON Despite all their partying.
VV Washington hostesses manage to give,a great'
deal of time to civic and social welfare activities
and are real eager beavers for improving them
selves culturally.
22
=3=22,2 73
E8 ther would ay) an Indian ten-
E ant or one of mv farms. One its rice fields during world . .. , - . - -------- ------ ---------
day when I was visiting his II and since and therefore is skill breaking into the Sunshine Loan than 2,000 years ago by Cicero.
E place, an owl hooted and the In a target for Red Chinese emnn- f*e" *—*• vn" he "he ” ---- hn - —
dian said. ‘I’m will rain’ A avarice. Should Indochina
week later, when I returned, Thailand must be the next T... ..
for- there had been no break in the try' to be included in an Asiatic the Sunshine Loan company'.
mer secretary of state, and Mrs. James LoMur extremely dry weather and I economic union dominated
phy, attractive blonde wife of the chairman of reminded the Indian of his pre- Peking by military force.
“ diction. He replied: rice bowi of the world would I
for ” Um young owl: d
Many prominent wives have taken up pain' ing, pressed some view very
These include Mrs Sherman m
Adams, wife of the assistant to
the president, and Mrs Sinclair FA
Weeks: wife of the secretary of FE
commerce. ; E
Mrs Harold Stassen, wife of [ j
the director of the Foreign Op- 1422
erations administration; Penny
Ridgway, beauteous young wife
of Gen Matthew Ridgway, army
chief of staff: Mrs. Yang, wife
of the Korean ambassador, Mrs.
Barrington, wife of the Burmese
ambassador, and Mrs. de Castro.
of the Salvadorean envoy, are Jane Eads
others. . .
Some, like Mrs Dean Atcheson, wife of the I
, , । Is a Possibility
The Communists would there-
fore say that historic necessity A big addition and a remodel- ---r. ----,
impels them to force the rice ing project for the Gainesville this miracle Hal Royle “Cut out the capsules. Doc.
’ • ~ ndo post office is in prospect if con- cure for what ails you can also Let's you and me just do 25 deep
h m gress passes a bill which would benefit people of nearly all ages, knee bends together and a few
ih e*e femthe --ejeet. sizes.sexesandvveights.lt leaves pushups from the floor. Then
The bill which permits rent no bilious after taste. It can be let's the both of us walk all the
It was estimated that at the payments on buildings construct- taken at home or away from way home.”
end of'world wir it marIU 19. ed to government specifications home. And if doesn't cost a: mint You’ll both sleep like children
..........>• - ’ in to count as purchase payments of money. Itabsolutely free. that night, and the Doc maybe
Southeast Asia were moving back has. passed the house and is ex- What do they call this vital wgn’t even chargeyoufor an
- - - -- re. pected to receive Senate approval miracle medicine? Well, frankly, office visit. I said maybe.
the next week. maybe that’s ,what's wrong with .Remember what happened to
The Gainesville project is one- it. The name has a bad sound. It the old Romans after they start-
of a large num ber ver the coun- is called let’s face it — fexer. ed sneering at Cicero and be-
the try listed by the General Service cise!" came so lazy that the oly exer-
places, administration of the federal gov- «q knew it I knew it ” savs cise they got was ordering slaves
r -------- ° 1 mue" n ... i Knew n. says to peel them grapes? They lost
, . an empire.
chair.__S.____.
, d2g-,- .
-.;4 '.. -3 Ace» *
-2 s, "
tegral part of the industry today- and many
an enterprise which is small now will be big
tomorrow. In a competitive system, there is
opportunity for all.
----- o------
ee • -
by
L.. - (Absorbe Gali evil
Published by The Register Publishing Company Inc
East California Street, Gai neavilie, Texas. Ente ed i
— gnd-class mall at the Gainesville, Texas, Post Offk
under the Act of Congress March 1 1879
bscription prices: By carrier where earri er-boy
aervicr is maintained, 30c weekly. In Cooke and I djol-
Any erroneous renectloD upon the character, stnng
« reputation ot any perso. rm or corporatio whieK
etta where he accepted a call as pastor of
First Baptist church in that city. He has beer
gaged in ’ missionary work in Cooke county
several years.
V
AH low standard of living important tor the economy
e countries prefer the stomach fill R , CAima lht ric, Le Avlable
ing. energy-giving grams to the Eedfhmnasthntrreevhsdxpsae
expensive muscle meats which Ariin.t neSaP da:!5n ir
tti- the major foodgravies, vegeta menscrmmunnst china nasotu
sionaimehtspardrimtimhingrniy
the soy bean competes with rice caPitasteaprosss not wi?k
in areas where the bean used, among S uKiess
l he surplus producers of rice they are all joined in some ki id
in Asia have been Burma, Indo- of economic union. * . 1i
a china and Thailand. China, be-
You cannot buy immunity from the penalty
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 199, Ed. 1 Monday, April 19, 1954, newspaper, April 19, 1954; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579778/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.