Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 19, 1957 Page: 4 of 10
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TV-Radio News
#Of‘
By BOYCE HOUSE
Parton of Gainesville, and DeWitt
TERMS-
Rev. W. E.
Word of God
The couple will reside in Grand
4—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
Tues., March 19. 1957
1
Put
upon
ing
or
A
I KNOW LOTS OF OUTFITS THAT
WOULD JUMP THRU HOOPS TO
C HAVE ME SIGN UP.- A
/ BUT, LOOK,
I MR. BLOOD- .____-___________-
STONE-WEVE P HERE TO SCARE DELIVERY TRUCK THROWN IN-
ALWAYS BEEN ‘ ! “
ABLE TO
j on business.
Mrs. Foster Lyman and Miss An-
the men in a man’s world, writing
. international affairs, labor.”
and her distinguished husband.
PAINTED AND PAY FOR
A NEW NEON SIGN IF HE . ----- 2 M 2
WANTS TO KEEP MY BUSINESS/ LCOME TO A HIS BUSINESS-
/ AND FURTHERMORE ,
/ GOOSEGREASE-YOU CAN
TELL YOUR BOSS THAT HE’S
GOTTA HAVE MY STORE
Whaley Memorial Methodist church,
Rev. J. C. Marshall officiating.
YOU ONysL
HIM-I GOT TO K
WORK FOR HIM HIED
LIKE ME TO BE /
NIGHT-WATCHMAN
HERE, TOO
OL‘ BLOODSTONES I COULDA HAD THE CL BANDIT’S
A WISE APPLE- 1 SODA-WATER ACCOUNT BUT
GETS US OVER ALL HE WANTED WAS A NEW
tern
Ine.:
mote obesity which in turn creates a ten-
dency toward diabetes. It has been shown
that 20 fat persons develop the disease for
every thin one who does. The obvious
* moral is do not overeat, do not remain
overweight, and get plenty of muscular
exercise.
You can judge your own tendency to-
ward diabetes in the light of what has
been said: Are you overweight? Do you
over eat? Is there diabetes in your fam-
ily? Also, do you have any of the symp-
toms: great hunger, loss of strength, loss
of weight, persistent thirst, or excessive - __________, _____, ________________
urination? If so, you’re a likely candidate dream of wearing anything else. It's becoming
for a urinalysis or blood sugar test by- *
your family physician.
FOR GOOSEGREASE!
I WOULDN’T WANT P
WASHINGTON - Promilla Kalhan, top
woman journalist of the Hindustani Times,
a large daily of New Delhi, is typical of the
modern young woman making herself heard
in India today.
She worked hard to achieve her present-day
status, but she admits she's somewhat sur-
prised.
“I was born in a little princeling state in
Pakistan where women are still in veils,” she
told me, “and now look. I am working right
along with
about politics,
Promilla C____.__________
Dwarka Kalhan, assistant editor of the New
Delhi paper under Devadas Mahatma Gandhi,
the great Indian leader’s son, are in this coun-
try on a State department leadership exchange
grant
On their visits to various sections of the
country—New York, Detroit’s industries, a
short work-stay on a Wisconsin farm, Chicago,
Los Angeles, Boston—they will be gathering
material for articles for their paper.
Mrs. Kalhan acts and talks like any of my
newspaper women colleagues here, but she still
clings to the graceful sari, the scarf-draped
costume of her native land.
In New Delhi, she says, “women wouldn’t
Wednesday, March 20, 1957
swin’s "Besksiee"
CHEESE
Mells in e si,1 Moes tool
179
to all women and it's more comfortable than
dresses worn by western women. And it never
goes out of fashion.”
“Indian women never wear artificial jewel-
ry,” she said. "They wear pure gold, or dia.
monds. In the south, more diamonds, in the
north more gold. When I go home with my
costume jewelry, they’ll say I found a gold
mine or oil well!” 1
Dr. Homer L. Hitt, head of
the Institute of Population Re-
__search, predicts a U. S. popula-
Women appreciate the simple tion of 19 million persons 65
things of life—men. years of age and over by 1970.
Therefore I have lent him to the Lord. As
long as he liveth he shall be lent to the Lord.
—I Sam. 1:28. sented two ,—,_____----------—
Infant baptism is a rite that is supposed fourth grade, gave a reading. Miss Margaret
to amount to the same thing. Taylor had charge of the program assisted by
The Lord pays wonderful dividends on Mmes. Harry Spence and W. D. Garnett and
such loans. Rev. J. F. Murrell.
eral days. t
Dwight Starr returned to Denton Sunday
after spending the weekend here with rela-
tives and friends.
Mrs. Leo M. Kuehn has returned from. New
York where she spent several weeks with rela-
tives.
Miss Mollie E. Ross has returned from an ex-
tended visit in Jacksonville, Tenn.
Mrs. P. M. Smith of Childress is the guest of
Mrs. R. F. Spires for several days.
Miss Helen Boyd, CIA student at Denton,
was here over the weekend, the guest of her
mother, Mrs. Leta M. Boyd.
Miss Irene Mason has returned to Denton to
enroll for the spring term at the College of In-
dustrial Arts. L
G. R. McKinley and William Webster and
son have returned from a trip to Oklahoma,
West Texas and New Mexico, where they spent
several days on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Lyman and Miss An-
nette Newton motored to Ardmore Sunday
where they witnessed “The Big Parade."
Postmaster J. Hickson, who has been ill
for several days, was able to be back at his
desk today.
Miss Audie Killgore of Gracemount, Okla, is
visiting her aunt, Mrs. W. R. Bridges on Red
River street, and her uncle, Walter Killgore of
Muenster, for several days.
Rev. and Mrs. Everett B. King of Sherman
visited relatives and friends here Saturday.
K. W. Rice, injured in an accident at the
brick yard, who has been a patient at Gaines-
ville sanitarium, has returned to his home just
east of the city.
Committees in charge of the city-wide clean-
up campaign are as follows: Mrs. W. O. Davis,
first ward; Mrs. Harry Spence, second ward;
Mrs. Lee Lewis, third ward; Mrs. E. N. Black-
burn, fourth ward; and Mrs. T. J. Midkiff,
fifth ward.
Miss Louise Parton, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. C. A. Parton of Gainesville, and DeWitt
Miller of Fort Worth were united in marriage
Sunday morning. Rev. W. E. Hand, pastor of
Grand Avenue Baptist church, officiating.
Miss Jimmie Frances Mangrum and Chester
M. Hall were united in marriage at the par-
sonage of Whaley Memorial Methodist church,
the pastor Rev. J. C. Marshall officiating.
Miss Evelyn Bryan became the bride of
Dewey Robbins Sunday afternoon. Rev. W. E.
Hand, pastor of Grand Avenue Baptist church,
officiating. The couple will reside in Grand
Prairie.
Mrs. Roy Potter presided at the meeting
Wednesday of the South School Parent-Teach-
er association. Students of the fifth grade pre-
plays and Betty Bob Mason of the
------0----—
THE TEEN-AGE MARKET
COME NOVEL ADVICE to retailers was
P given by speakers at a recent conven-
tion of the National Retail Dry Goods as-
sociation.
It was urged that retailers give special
attention to teen-agers and the teen-age
market. This was buttressed with some
surprising figures. There are 16 million
teen-agers in the country today and their
income—from earnings and allowances—
comes to a whopping $9 billion a year. By
1965, it is estimated, there will be 24 mil-
lion teenagers commanding $14 billion in
purchasing power. In addition to all this,
teen-agers exert a major influence on the
shopping habits of adult members of the
family.
Specific suggestions-which can be fol-
lowed by small stores and large—were
given as to how to effectively reach this
market. They included these: “You can
plan a series of ads especially designed to
sell your store to the teens. You can make
sure that first of all you carefully select
the merchandise that’s to be featured in
these ads. You can reach out to this
group in your ads. with headlines that
select teen-agers from the passing parade
of reader traffic moving through the
pages of the newspaper.”
Retailing and the markets it serves are
forever changing in this country—as the
economic rise of the teen-agers graphical-
ly demonstrates.
-----------0 ---
“There’s much ado being made about
whether kings, dictators, commissars and
the like from across the seas should be
invited to our country and how they
should be treated if they do come on in-
vitation or otherwise. . . . And how can
we sell if we don’t show people the prod-
uct. The more people that see with their
own eyes the incredible and unsurpassed
achievements of a free people working
under a free competitive system, the bet-
ter it will be for us.”
—Hartland, Wis., Reporter
. --------------0--------------
“We owe a great deal to our govern-
ment. The question is, how are we ever
going to get the money to pay it?”
—Cornell, III., Journal
Editorials
Unfound Diabetes
VARIOUS EDUCATED GUESSES as to
’ the number of “undiscovered” dia-
betics in the United States place the fig-
ure somewhere between one and two mil-
lion. Undoubtedly a fair proportion of
them are Texans. )
Diabetes is a general systemic disease
in which the body loses its ability to burn
and store sugar normally. All starches in
foods are converted in the stomach and
intestines into sugar. As sugar they are
absorbed into the blood and pass through
the liver and into general circulation to
all parts of the body.
Normally the gland called the pancreas
produces a secretion called insulin which
is also powred into the blood. In the pres-
ence of insulin, the sugar of the blood is
burned, especially by muscular activity.
Any excess of sugar in the presence of a
normal amount of insulin is temporarily
stored, mostly in the liver, and released
as needed into the blood.
This is the normal pattern. But in a
person suffering with diabetes the pan-
creas fails to produce sufficient insulin.
‘And when starches are eaten and ab-
sorbed as sugar, the body is unable to
control the sugar normally by storing it
in the liver or to burn it efficiently in
muscle exercise. Result: the sugar con-
tent of the blood increases to abnormal
- levels.
Because the diabetic is unable to burn
the sugar efficiently for energy, he be-
comes weak and tired. His body needs
nourishment and he therefore develops
great hunger. But because he cannot util-
ise the starches, he uses up his own tis-
sues and continues to lose weight.
When the blood sugar gets too high, the
kidneys, in an effort to lower it, removes
some of the sugar by excreting it in urine.
This, in turn, makes the body dry and
creates a thirst. .
Proof of the hereditary nature of dia-
betes is the fact that surveys of diabetic
children show that 80 per cent of fam-
ilies in which there is or has been dia-
betes.
Overeating and lack of muscular ex-
ercise are conditions which tend to pro-
Washington
Indian Woman
By JANE EADS
Bob Sassing was assistant story nearly lost me a couple of times, al opulation within 3 one-
editor at Columbia Pictures. Finally the doctor told me blunt- sompreimile area investigation e
“We both wanted to write,” ly and with no bedside manner heesults of the investigation picket up a meat-oaueu pox-car .. v----.-----,—
she remarked, “but we realized that I would have to leave or I show that both systems have PA P SARA made fibers have been gaining
E. weans a. toms X^ here .ma Bob MAMRS E == shmepe-eag-ininen "DO arumsoe or
thing to do was to get away, clicked at once with a TV script, functions, Benson said, "pro- of Vesel’s diner. lon acrylic fiber, says its entry
and we thought we could live On the day she was about to vided that relatively quiet condi- The 58. year: old proprietor, accounted for 25 per cent of to-
most cheaply in Mexico. - take a job as story editor at tions prevail__________________who ha(j just spent $2000 on the tal fiber usage in men’s sweat-
“So we sold all our belong- Screen Gems, Columbia’s TV diner to repair damage from a ers in 1954, and 47 per cent last
ings and left. All our friends subsidiary. Random House ac- There isn’t a single wooden fire, had reason to believe the year. Du Pont claims 70 per
said we were crazy, and maybe cepted her book. Several com- structure in the capital city of eatery was jinxed cent of the market for women’s
we were. But we had to try it” panies sought it for filming, but Hamilton, Bermuda. All houses -------------1----------------sweaters.
They settled in the village of Warners came up with the most must be built of stone as a fire . . , ,
Ajijic, an idyllic community money._____________________safety measure._____________Have a Laugh
They’ll Do It Every Time • ------- - By Jimmy Hatlo
LISTENING TO THE •
LOCAL DEALER PUT
THE SQUEEZE ON
THE SUPPLIER-
7MFREDCGOS-
362. KIMBLE Raco,
ELTIMOPE/, MD
The World Today
Israelis Express Surprise
At What Nasser Is Doing
Hollywood
Writer and Husband Give
Up and Live in Mexican Town
30 Years Ago
(From files The Daily Register March 21,1927.)
Mrs. J. C. Casey of Wichita, Kansas, who
has been visiting in Galveston, has arrived to
be a guest in the J. T. Leonard home for sev.
LEONARD
Fer Eneeru
or The Associated Press, which is entitled
o the use of republication of all the local
in this newspaper, as well as all AP news
lishers are not responsible for copy emis-
aphical errors of any unintentional errors
FEUYE
The Woolknit Associates, Inc.
base much of their hopes on the
development of cold water soap
which hits at one obstacle in the
er," three 100-watt amplifiers, ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UP)— past to expanding woolknit gar.
Meanwhile, the Bassi ES three 100-watt horn loudspeak- George Vesel bent over to tie a ment sales.
wvar- Wpoteine found success in ers and a gasoline-driven motor shoelace in the living quarters For women s wear the mak-
paid short stories a nd she W orked on generator, of the diner he operates-and ers in the fashion field stress
$100,000 for it.font a X E woman’s The other system tested was the next thing he knew he had the old standbys, lamb’s wool
It’s quite a switch for the mental breakdown 11Ie after a a fixed installation atop a build- a box car for company, sweaters and cashmeres, and
Bassings, who at times were 0 ing. It consisted of 32 100-watt Looking up to see fixtures are touting mohair,. “knitted
virtually penniless in Mexico. After three years in Mexico, loudspeakers installed on the come crashing down, Vesel said like spun sugar,” and a 50-50
Eileen is an attractive Bos- the passings had to return. roof the 10-storv Hotel Gary he “thought it was an earth- mohair and wool honeycomb
phutn EtAs ====== ee Fes
tended in nearby yards with its. digans
engine running had started up,
picked up a meat-loaded box-car - lower priced levels man-
oh the rails a short *
Health
Corneal Transplant
By C. A DEAN, M. D.
MEDITORIAL — Progress in surgery has
made possible the operation of corneal
transplantation. When indicated, this operation
produces rewarding results, to say the least
It is ideal in certain conditions, namely
scar formation and keratoconus. The latter is
a degeneration of the cornea, in which it be-
comes cone shaped. Scars can result from
chemical burns and certain infections. The
scars involving the central part of the cornea,
provided the rest of the eye is healthy, are
especially suited for transplantation.
After operation is decided upon, it is neces-
sary to secure a cornea for the procedure. This
is usually done through patients’ willing their
eyes for such a cause. The donor corneas
should be as fresh as possible, although it is
possible to store them in eye banks. Such
banks have been established in several hos-
pitals throughout the country.
(Q)—‘I have had a noise in my ear for
the last nine months. I only notice it when
I am quiet. I have gotten no relief from
this. Could a bad tooth have an effect?
Could a gland disturbance cause it?”
a : —G. H. C.
(A)—A bad tooth, if infected, may be the
source of some ear infection which could cause
the noise to your ear. Gland disturbances don’t
usually cause this symptom. Very often, no
cause is found for it. However, such things as
hardening of the eardrum, middle ear infec-
tion and certain drugs may produce it. Also,
there is evidence to suggest that we all have
noise production in our ears, and hear it only
when we are unusually quiet
Write for Dr. Dean’s new 56-page medical
book. Write care of this newspaper, sending a
self-addressed and stamped envelope and 25
cents in coin (no stamps) to cover cost.
(Copyright 1957, General Features Corp.)
The Last Tycoon' Is One of
Highlights of Winter Season
By CHARLES MERCER head of a motion picture studio,
NEW YORK () — The pres: gave a superb interpretation of
entation of “The Last Tycoon a complex man confronting
by Playhouse 90 (CBS-TV) was complex problems in “The Last
a highlight of the winter TV Tycoon.” Viveca Lindfors, Kee-
dramatic season. It reinforced Han Wynn and Lee Remick also
opinions one forms after watch- were excellent. John Franken-
ing that 90-minute Thursday heimer’s direction cannot be
evening program over a long praised too highly.
period of time. D Manito goes
When scripts of high dramat- set ...
1c value are chosen, 90 minutes credit, for NACRE :
are preferable to 60 minutes in =-: Sot pits.
TV drama. The films made by sdapdton, “Tre shoff or com.
an outside packaging producer st, M RLO A ded.
which Playhouse 90 shows once PemPE eie, ch arwhat
a month are so vastly interior neownted to say were implicit
to its usual live productions -none —orumetenTe is
that, using only that compara- - ctorabout Holy.
, tive basis, one would say live . * and.amion sc
drama is indeed preferable to ing death, an artist under the
* - pressure of commercialism, a
ducea-prosram bend" the eon. lonely man in a crowd.
tention of many New York pro- . As far as can be recalled
ducers that the west coast can- here, it is the only excellent
not turn out live TV drama of interpretation of Fitzgeralds
distinction. work yet performed on tele
Jack Palance, playing the vision.______________________
Hal Boyle
American Tourist Industry
Is the Greatest on Earth
By HAL BOYLE That the phrase “passing the
NEW YORK (A)—Things a buck," meaning to shift respon-
columnist might never know if sibilty, originated in cardrooms
he didn’t open his mail: from the custom of placing a
That the American tourist in- counter or marker, called a
dustry is the greatest on earth, “buck,”, before a player to re-
Yet a recent survey showed 75 mind him its his turn to deal,
per cent of U. S. adults never . That if you like living in
have made a journey by air, 50 towns with old names you
per cent haven’t made a trip of might consider moving to Bum-
ing over control of Gaza while more than 100 miles by bus, ble.ee, Hygiene, Cole-
the U. N. troops are moving to and 30 per cent have never
the armistice line. Note: All the traveled by train. ErostprOOL, Fla SocialCircle,
===== 20=
ted to take control the whole That the White House ap- available are asparagus, tomato
t true th. . of Gaza, except the line, pears on only one U. S. bill— sherbet and spinach. 2
* By JAMES GARLOW . Egypt last October they seized And now Saudi Arabia is tak- the double sawbuck. That the 75,000 miniature raff..
Ass.ociated. Press. News Analyst Gaza and drove the Egyptians ing over the Tiran islands at That here is what happens to road fans in America spend 15
WASHINGTON () - Israelis out of the Agaba area. There the mouth of the gulf, with a you when vou kiss a pretty million dollars a year on their
===== LAE -- -.- == e-i.
Not much unless they can pro- Israel got from President El- Probably blockaded again in the pressure rises, some white blood three kids, spends 6.8 hours a
ducesecret PledE Unit^ the senhower, Dulles, Henry Cabot gulf. So long as U- N- troops cells break down, the pulse week and $2.88 maintaining his
United States or the United Na- Lodge, American delegate to remain on the armistice line, quickens, you breathe faster, toy trains.
tons, , . toe U. N., and U. N. Secretary Egypt is unlikely to resume its the circulation increases and That it was William Bolitho
They ve produced none yet. General Dag Hammarskjold ex- raids on Egypt, your heart action speeds up. If who said, “Freeing oppressed
Secretary of State Dulles re- pressions of hope that once Is- But—Israel hasn’t let theU N there is no pretty girl handy, nationalities is perhaps the most
portedly told senators yester- rael withdrew solutions might troops take nositions on the you can get the same results by dangerous of all philanthropic
day there were none. All they be found, RA side of the armistice line, running around the block. enterprises.”
got, it seems, were pious hopes Eisenhower also said: emSiaer on * paotia -----------------------------------------------------•
that things would work out all 1. If Egypt violated the arm- * ve an D .
right.: istice line, by raids on Israel, excuse to demand the withdraw- Business Mirror
Take it step by step. . . this should be dealt with firm; al of U. N. troops altogether. -------------------------
When Israels war with her ly by the society of nations. ____________________- o II
Arab neighbors ended in 1949 He didn’t say how. SwAwAPRueE ( Amae I In -
there was an armistice agree- 2. The United States was “pre- E.gaug. Cudap owcqTeF Du-11e0a IC9 S
ment which gave Egypt control pared” to join with others to CTOCHOY TGC, . "
of the Gaza strip. Egyptians “secure general recognition" of EL.YTA Inwapaerinc Sa-Sc
later used Gaza for guerrilla all nations —which would in- For Sky Tested VV ITA InTCrCSTine oTdTi-Tics
raids on Israel. elude Israel—to free passage in
Further, Egypt took over in the Gulf of Aqaba. Eisenhower
1951 the Tiran islands at the didn’t say how this would be
mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba, done either. 0
fortified them, and blockaded So Israel withdrew from
Israeli shipping although the Egypt, U. N. troops moved into
islands belong to Saudi Arabia, Gaza and into the gulf area.
When the Israelis invaded
Our pledge to your Consistently
low prices ALWAYS! TRY USI
THE LITTLE STORE,
ON THE SQUARE "
300 * DReAD WAY h
My COMPANY PUT
THIS GUY BLOOD-
STONE OFF LIMITS i
TWO YEARS AGO.
CHICAGO (UP) — A voice By SAM DAWSON the acrylic, or “warmth fibers”
from the sky may direct the NEW YORK (A)—The sweat- will see a scramble for markets
public in emergencies in the fu- er business which always comes between at least seven varieties
ture. up with some interesting fig- a couple of them newcomers to
The Armour Research foun- ures of one sort or another has the fray. -
dation said that two experimen- some new statistics today on Revival of interest in men’s
Now the Egyptians are tak- tal sound systems—one of them production and sales in this sweaters — there has never
airborne—have been developed year's intensifying battle of the been any drop in interest to
for the Federal Civil Defense fibers, women’s sweaters — started to
administration. Leaders report a growing 1954.
The DuKane corporation, St. market for men’s sweaters — in 1950 production came to
Charles, Ill., designed the sys- and an increasingly competitive 1,620,000 dozens. By 1953 this
terns and scientists at the re- fight for it as well as for the had dropped to 1,270,000 dozens,
search, foundation studied them industry’s old standby, filling But in 1954. sales started up
for intelligibility under various women’s needs to sweaters. again, and last year output
operation conditions. The wool industry predicts neared - the two million dozen
- .The airborne system is de-its knitwear sales this year will mark. This year, the sweater
By BOB THOMAS . that had previously attracted signed to provide voice com- top those of any year in more makers expect to go over that
HOLLYWOOD (PP)—Ever feel writers D. H. Lawrence, John munication from air to ground than a decade, figure. For one thing they are
like chucking the whole works Dos Passos and Tennessee Wil- in order to control outdoor traf- In the man made fiber field coming up with some new types
and going to live in a Mexican liams. After a year, the Bas- fic and pedestrians during air -------------------------------of yarn they think will do the
village? sings found themselves broke. Aert anrat - trick. -
Eileen Bassing and her hus- But they weren't ready to ad* ing to Dr. Robert W. Benson of Boxear Pays
ba nd. Bob, did. They left, be: mit defeat. They sent for their the foundation.
Ma Mop/:" AN S^S bod broke * •STiASsnS The system uses a Cessna 170 Visit to Diner
der. And the investment paid English residents and tourists airplane, magnetic, tape record-
off. Out of it came her novel, 5ar three 1AA A#* Amnlifiame
“Home Before Dark,” which
they are now adapting for War-
ner Brothers. The studio
He found success in
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 19, 1957, newspaper, March 19, 1957; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1613745/m1/4/: accessed May 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.