Gainesville Weekly Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 9, 1937 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
)
GAINESVILLE WEEKLY REGISTER, UAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
PAGE TWO
¥
THLRSDAY, DEC
E
ovn
(0pics
How’s Your Heal
■
Texas, December 7
I AUSTIN
EMitorial and Business Office,>308 East California St
-
the week-end?"
the Uni-
Sixty-seven students .on
would
I came
matter.
institution.
From the countries swept bv the
\
and
Twenty-three merit
J
A MOBTON SMITH
(Continued From Page One)
aw
I
ippine Islands and Japan.
BY MAIL in Zones 6, 7. and 8
ga
$7.50
fo r e i g n
$4.00
WEEKLY REGISTER
I J
Arch Hunter, about 60 years of
Contemporary Thought
Dr. I. L. Thomas, chair- -
P
a successful 1938 g: id
I i
Oil Production
*
Leopold
Werner
gineering, and
Douglas Cracks Down
ference championship in-1936 with
£
Lindell and William
Lindell entertained Fri
4
4
Man About
business
Manhattan
Skill Revealed
For V
Texas,
Close
II.
cars in which they were riding, fifth place in meat indentification
collided at the intersection of N. and tenth place in poultry judging.
Dixon street and Broadway.
judgin
g
Sizes If t
Know Texas Better
by winning state competition.
organize or the commission must
A Small Matter?
BOYS’ FI
A
City Briefs
Foreign Wheat Market
in the grocery business in Gaines-
Sizes 6
b
V
SIMPLIFIED NOTARY
MANUAL
In Other Days
inspiring
An
Box 1392, Dallas, Texas.
MEN’S
Smile Awhile
HOUSES
i
50
t
been named manager of the
«
What does he think of clothes
making the man?
. "Strictly ,
BOYS’ IM
SHIR
3 for
4
1939,
year: W. S. Dickey. N. G., E. E.
L
N
Would Require 17 Days for Texas
Varsity Student to Reach His Home
drink bottling plant’ at Fort
Worth.
the Securities commission, is show n
at his press conference in W ashing-
ton when he declared that the New
STEWARDSHIP’ IS
MISSIONARY TOPIC
1937 Leopard foott
receive their letter
Team members were as follows:
Young county meat identifica-
Felt slippers— lea
Oxford grey. Siz
EW YORK—Among the many
savants, authors, and illustra-
--$3.50
--$6.50
jestic Theatre, a special matinee
will be given. Saturday, admission
price being one discarded toy.
council room of the city
7:30 Tuesday evening.
I
Coffee’s wheat amendment, Jones
declared that without the market-
ing provisions wheat prices would
collapse.
Coffee, however, contended the
wheat marketing quotas were un- j
questionably unconstitutional. He
Regular Meeting Of
City Council Tonight
City Manager E. J. LaCour an-
nounced Tuesday morning that a
regular monthly meeting of the
reported unimproved today.
C. B. Smith, of Ardmore, has
1937 Edition. 338 pages, 28 chap-
ters. more than 100 forms; re-
vised to’ date. Price only $4.50,
prepaid. Five days approval. De-
livery now. Order your copy to-
day. . • 1
Texas Law Book Co.
county agent. Other improvements listed in Crock- 1
ett’s program. include 24 header tanks and 990 rods
of fence. ’
Memphis has a job of rebuilding
to do. Three pitchers, two catchers
and an outfielder advanced since
the close of the 1937 season.
RADICAL CHANGES
IN MERCHANDISING
SEEM TO REVOLVE
ARCUND SERVICE
FOR THE .MOTORIST
TOYS FOR KIDDIES
pear exceptionally
present time. .
iss, Texas Press Asso-
gue and International
ion
(Texas) Postoffice
I get along fine till
stand up.”
along the entire Aragon front of
northeast Spain.
Senate
1 .
r I
1935 for the Institute’s last confer-
ence title.
Kilgore is coached by Clyde Lee,
former Centenary star. who at-
is here to study mathematics and
physics.
Austria. Filipino student, frank-
Sean Box Orator (winding up his speech)—An’
that, lidies and gentlemen, is the ’ole kettle o’ fish
in a nutshell.—London Opinion.
will be the second meeting between
the two schools.
Oklahoma:
Due month, in
advance _____-___-
"One year in advanee
Japanese
(Continued From Flage One)
100 C
MEN’S FI
23 Leopards
Receive Lett
. Coach Anne ii
But then, nervous exhaustion is a none-too-well
defined complex of symptoms.
A person in the early stages of nervous exhaus-
in the grocery business here. Mr.
and Mrs. Havs and their estimable
family have long been residents, of
Gainesville and have many friends
i here who regret their departure.
" de
th
s
W.
-------O-------
Isn’t life abundant now? Soon every home
wiH have a central heating, conditioned air,
and a bombproof cellar.—St. Louis Star-
Times. . -i
church dining room. Every mem-
ber is cordially invited and urged
to attend the “get together.”
Dr. Stanley W. Hayne of Den-
ton, presiding elder, will be pres-
the pigskin 'sport.
James O'Neal. Jam
lin, Harvey Elkins.
Wheat has been doing fairly welrin
spots, being large enough to furnish pasture
for sheep and cattle.
NOW FOR REAL PRICE-FIXING
IOR better or for worse, our government has em-
barked upon a large-scale price-fixing experi-
house “Now, my good woman, please tell the court
how the stairs run in your house.”
ceived some fine cattle from Mis-
ent. The supper arrangements will souri to add to his herd of short-
be in charge of the Circle No. 1 horns which is now becoming fa-
Local Dure
The English sportsman became friendly with the
keeper of the only store the Highland village boasted.
One day he said, "Well; Angus, I understand you’re
the postmaster, the shopkeeper, the Justice of the
Peace, and County Councilor of this district.”
"Aye, sir,” replied the native. “Ye might say I’m
the Mussolini of Glenlochty.”—Toronto Globe and
Mail.
klistry of Disasters
Four wars and two floods are the main catas-
Brown, Cooke county farmer, was (team was tenth,
driving a Ford car, and was trav- ; county's livestock
i cling north on Dixon street, when
a cheese
the closest thing to pure
protein known to chemistry.
authorities were attempting to lo-
cate relatives of the man who was
well dressed, weighed about 180
pounds, blonde hair, and his left
arm missing.
Mr. Jones sent the dispatch to
The Register and said he wrote
the chief of police at Madill, advis-
ing where Hunter’s relatives might
be located, if he was the former
local citizen.
!
natichal boundaries to attend this j ter; but'only one student. Arthur
> Robert Wooldridge from Toronto,
J Ontario, Canada, is studying here.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9. 1937. {
----------------------
reported that the structure was peen named manager of the new
not insured, but little damage was branch hardware house the J. B.
done. ' Spragins & Company are opening
----------------- i in Wynnewood this week.
Members of the Associated Pre:
cla.tion. Texas Daily Press Lei
Circulation Managers’ Associa
Entered at the Qatnesvlll*
as second-clas^i
lose (
■ MEN’
HNK
3 for:
to suffer from a variety of physical ailments, as
well as a multitude of unwise behavior practices
which dissipate his nervous energy.
It is no small task to determine to what extent
nervous exhaustion is to be charged to each of
these two causes. However, as Dr. Charles L. Hart-
sock observes in a recent paper in the Cleveland
“Shure, when I’m upstairs they run down, and when
I’m downstairs they run up’.”—Christian Science
Monitor.
psychology. The latter, Elias, is a named as follows:
tutor in psychology. ( FIcuse
Cotton marketing, petroleum en- 1 -
70 cars, left Amarillo for Galveston, where it was
exported to Antwerp, Belgium.
man; D. Blanton, Claude Cotten,
“How long would it take you to one students from Mexico, seven
from the Canal Zone, four from
Fancy patter 1
Fast to wash in;
1414.
business? but
accessory
Oh, certainly! Just a notary
manual and business form book.
But what a manual! And what
a form book! Best of its kind.
Written and published exclusive-
ly for Texas notaries. That’s
Humphreys—
which is greatly in excess of the crop last ment which cannot fail to have important re-
vear and somewhat above the 5-vear aver- sults. The Bituminous Coal Commission has decreed
year ana Somewnat aD0%5 -ne year aver, minimum selling prices for soft coal at the mines
age. J-ne estimated yield IS 191 pounds Oi throughout a territory which produces four-fifths
go home?” Seizo Huga from Aza-
but. Japan, was asked. Puerto Rico, three from Cuba, two
“Seventeen days,” he estimated, from Venezula and two from Pan- q
Eleven Members
Have Played 1
High School Ga
of the Women’s Missionary society. mous aH over the country.
------------—— Elm lodge No. 74. I.O.O.F. elect-.
Work is in progress on a
$45,000 addition to a soft
E. L. Caldwell county’s crops
DINNER PARTY
CHURCH CLASS
likely answer in the negative, for
tneylare the students who cross west. and from the east to regia-
WE ARE NOT GIVEN much to
predictions, but concrete evi-
dence leads us to remark that
the next radical changes in mer-
chandising methods seems to re-
volve about the automobile service
station.
Already in Gainesville, we have
a station which has taken on the
agency for automobile accessories.
Mitchell, W. A. Hunte
Purcell;
GUards. James Me La
ence Klenk and Hubert Rachuig,
all of Olney. Young county poul-
try judging—Harriot Kunkel. Ol-
ney; Joe Elmer Cole and G. C.
. Laney, Jr.. Jean.
j Caldwell county crops judging —
TEXAS PRODUCES - L
SOME BUMPER CROPS
ACCORDING to late forcasts. Texas has H
H produced a cotton crop of 5,050,000 bales,, f
Residence Slightly
Damaged by Fire
The home of Malissa Waller,
ed it. Fire Marshal John McCarty
the past week, officials
Dec. 7.— Texas 4-H club judging
teams won cne fifth place, two
The ferty-one students from
Mexico might “cut” a few c Usses
and spend a week-end at home; Warm breezes
and the students from Canada and > Mexico
"Swede" McMurry ann
day.
The names of these
the Gainesville men of
lows:
Ends, Eugene Rid1 an
O’Neal, Max Wilsoi. .
denhoeffer and Hari y
as the theme of her remarks the
hosen topic. A playlet in keeping
with subject was presented by
Mrs. C. H. Clark and Mrs. Bonner.
During the business session, the
circle voted to give five dollars to
the charity Christmas fund and
plans were made for the Christ-
mas party to be given on Decem-
ber 20.
A seasonal plate was served by
the hostesses to IT members and
the following guests: Mmes. Jones,
Clark, E. C. Carter, D. W. Craw-
ford, J. E. Johnson, and Miss Von-
cile Liddell.
came fifty-nine of the sixtv-seven
i students whose home addresses 3
i cannot be completed with the let-
j ters "U, S. A." Reports concern- •
ing mild Central Texas winter. as
well as proximity. may have in-
! fluenced the choice of the forty-
versity of Texas campus
KERRVILLE, Texas.- Upon his
return to Kerrville Friday night
Coach Weir announced that-the
Kilgore Junior College-Schreiner
Institute football game to decide
the championship of the Junior
college conference will be played
in Kilgore Thursday night, Decem-
ber 9, Kilgore holds the title to
the northern half of the Texas
Junior college conference by virtue
of their 7 to 0 win over Wesley
college last Thursday night.
Schreiner Institute defeated La-
mar college for the championship
of the southern half.
Schreiner’s squad is reported in
good condition, and hopes to be
The livestock situation is satisfactory and
the movement of cattle and sheep is about
normal. Weather conditions during the fall
have been favorable.
HARDLY DISCERNIELE,
sur WORTH $8,000,000
(NE THIRTY-SECOND of an inch is hard-
V ly discernible to the eye, but just that
mucn added to the average staple length of
cotton mould mean in excess of $8,000,000
more in the pockets of the growers in one
year.
,8889
235 83
su
from the south. from the
of the house
trailer camps,
legislation to
A Maori village, complete in
every respect, may be transported
from New Zealand to San Fran-
cisco for the 1939 World's Ftair.
ly admitted that climate influ-
R. S.; S. Booth, P. S., and John'
Peitzcker. Secretary.
The Gainesville cotton market
for Dec. 6, was paying 712c for
good middling.
’ Mrs. M. A. Bagby, of Clarksville,
and Mrs. W. T. Peery, of Quincy,
Okla., are visiting their sister,
Mrs. F. L. Cleaves, Denton street.
PAJAM
49
company. Mr. Long will continue
. -aa
- -3
stewards. A committee composed
of R. A. Havs. Roy P Wilson and
D. Blanton will have the necessary
and several articles
tion team Herbert Slater, Clar-
trailer has come
and agitation for j
tax this roaming
On the subject of “Stewardship,"
Mrs. Garland Shell directed the
program Monday evening when
members of the Katharine Gregg
Mission circle of the First Pres-
byterian church were entertained
in the home of Mrs. Brien Bonner,
523 South Morris street. Miss
Theo Bagwell was co-hostess for
the evening.
College Extension
The first of a series of church
night suppers will be given Wed-
nesday evening by members of the
First Methodist church in the
DAILY REGISTER
BY MAIL. OUTSIDE OF Cooke, Grayson, Denton.
Montagub, Wise counties, Texas, and Love county,
Jess B. Hays Moves
To Ardmore, Okla.
Jess B. Heys and Ralph Long
have dissolved their partnership
agreed with Insurgent General-
issimo Francisco Franco "on the
necessity of uniting all Spaniards
worthy of the name of a basis of
national and traditional principles.
A conference at which Franco
and the prince discussed the fu-
ture of Spain was held yesterday
at Salamanca, insurgent capital.
Intense cold and snow caused sus-
pension of military operations
apartment here, which is not fill- !
ed with costly curios and antiques ।
. . . “I have a morbid dread of pos-
sessions or anything that show ...
I am afraid of being tied down to
concrete objects.... For this reason '
I spend1 money only on things that
don't hang around to clutter up
the room the next day ... I was
very much pleased with myself
when I made three pictures on
two suits of clothes ... I couldn’t
stand it if my rooms were taken
up by a huge wardrobe.”
. ; >
Tackles, Joe Moi
ing houses hotels and todrist J Noredlinger from Ulm, Germany,
camps. And with the’ popularity
tenth places and one fourteenth
rank in contests at the National
। 4-H club congress at Chicago, Ill.,
I have to j
l
• zl
up from the squad m
Fodders and Cubs.
devotional was
And his leisure moments: "I had
to break a leg to get a vacation.
It was the first I’d had in seven
years, and I came out of it with a
six-inch steel plate in my leg in
which there are five screws . . .
Would you care to see the scar?
. . . See . . . Here it is . . .Nice job.
eh? . . . They told me I could have
it removed now, but why mess
around when it feels okay? . . . ।
I guess I’ll wait till it starts to
hurt, and then the pain of having
it removed will be a pleasure . . .
Incidentally, this came as a lucky
break ... I needed some photo-
graphs badly, so now I simply use
the X-ray plates for fan mail and
otherwise.”
Not adverse to lounging com-
fortably in chairs, Mr. Joslyn care-
fully lifted his feet to the table . ..
“I always feel more like talking
with my feet higher than my head
... I rehearse that way, too . . .
Alton Franke and Norman Lee
Graef, both of Maxwell; and Law-
rence Kasch, Lockhart.
Fort Bend county livestock judg-
ing—George Schmersahl, N o e 11
Yarling and Arthur Benton, all of
Rosenberg; and Wilford Hopman,
Beasley.
Close (
75 O il
Texas Power
& Light Co.
“YOUR ELECTRIC
SERVANT”
George L. Patrick, district rev- ____ —_____e ____
enue collector, was a business vis-. brought by Mrs. Floyd Jones using
For the first time in five years the Panhandle
shipped its wheat abroad this fall. A single shipment 1 ville, and Mr. Hays and family
of 1C3,0c0 bushels, comprising a train of from 60 to are moving to Ardmore, Okla.,
— - - where he will be agent for an oil
COLLEGE STATION.
for .sale of any wheat produced
above quota limitations.
DAILY REGISTER
BY MAIL. in Cooke. Grayson, Denton, Montague,
.Vise counties, Texas, and Love county, Oklahoma:
One month in ad- Six months, in
tanee ,___i________GOe advance______________
D- year. In advanee--_______________________________
Whetf substt iption is not paid in advance or renewed
w thin one week after expiration, straight price of
34 cents per month will be charged.
Texas A&M
“Going nome tor
city council would be held in the
hall at. itor today.
, Rev. Herbert A. Jones will
preach the anniversary sermon
for the Melitia Commandry
Murphy, Harvey
and activity. In a word, “spending beyond income."
Frequently, of course, both of. these conditions '
operate together so that the patient suffering from
nervous exhaustion may be found. upon examination.
able to bring a championship back
to Kerrville. Kilgore won the con-
population.
We have long since seen the
- . ---- — passing in the smaller towns, par-
tended Schreiner Institute and [ ticularly, of certain classes of
played on Schreiner's undefeated' ----
football team in 1926. The game
Knights Templar at the Baptist
church during the holidays.
colored. 615 Mill street, was Mrs. Andy Hunter and Miss Eva
threatened by fire Tuesday morn- McCormick received injuries whe n
ing, when a blaze started in the thrown from a buggy during a
roof. The fire gained Jittie head- runaway yesterday. Mrs. Hunter
way before the small pump truck was the most seriously injured and
of the, fire department extinguish- is
Ao accurate record of cotton quality was
kept in this country before 1928, reporisi the
United States Department of Agriculture.
Prom 1928 to 1934 the average increase in
staple length amounted to about one thirty-
second oi an inch. It is estimated that tuc _________
increase in staple length of one thirty-sec- । trophies which Texans have to look back over since
end-cf an inch added mote than ggoAA the beginnings of statehood. The wars, of course,
to the value of 411 1.4 r.nan-d,U,000 degin with the struggle for independence, on
cHk the 1934 cotton crop, through the Civil and Spanish American wars to the'1
—oe county cotton farmers, in kind with Werld war, when 203.000 Texans went overseas.
Ciuers all cver iexas, are being urged bv tic Grcatest natural tragedy was the Galveston hurri-
Texas A&M college, to plant a better ouahtv nane in September 1900, when from 5,000 to 7.000
cetton than is +: ,P, 1 d De<-ter quality lives were wiped out. Just a year before the Brazos
1114 ,r IS their usual wont, to tne end flood swept across the country, taking heavy toll
mat iexas cotton may re-estabiish itself in cf lives and property.
the foreign markets, thus helping.to save ---
the south from lumatio'n, as well as to Bet-
ter their own financial and economic condi-
tion Some progress in this direction 1s -----
noted and it is noped that before many more Fini ;
years have passed, Cook county will wit-
ness a revival of the spirited bidding for its
cotton that once-pr evailed aere.
to the automotive
manufactured by
Central America could visit their
parents during the Christm?.® holi-
davs or the Easter vacation; but
visits home 'are not a part of the
semester’s schedule for students
from Germany, Turkey, the Phil-
his car collided with another Ford
driven by Kenneth Wright. The
car driven by Mr. Brown was
tay all from the Philirpine Is-
lands. They would reach home five , equipment installed.
have been incorporated with allied
businesses, as well as the increase
in the variety of articles handled
by other stores, notably the drug
stores. i —
’ ’ IN
THE YOUNG MEN’S CIVIC 1%
place, and
Marshall in
Clinical Quarterly, many of the symptoms that point denartye dtaxs of 15ndntsor bushel
indefinitely to organic disease are a result, rather - -
than a cause, of the. exhausted state.
NIGHT S
49
NERVOUS EXHAUSTION—I
A S many of us are potential victims of nervous ex-
A haustion, it is good to note closely those person-
alities and behavior patterns which help to de-
velop the exhaustion state.
To begin with, what may cause nervous exhaus-
tion?, One evident condition is some organic disease
which slowly or acutely saps the patient's vitality,
and which may also interfere with his energy- re-
generation mechanism.
Another possible cause is the excessive (func-
tional) drain of energy, the unreasonable and un-
balanced expenditure of energy during everyday life
“How do the stairs run?" repeated the woman.
Tomorrow—Nervous Exhaustion—II.
Size 17x17.
quality cotton.
after checking cn the time he ama.
esEablishments, which
hearsals begin on "All the Glit- •
ters.” This is the comedy by Jack '
But there are a number of1 Baragwanath, and Kenneth Simp-
Gainesville citizens who have ex- son.which tossed afew.pellets <
pressed the desire to contribute cert inof he.elite around, in fart '
many toys which their children he privately bewails the acei-
._gg have tired of, and are in need of dent of limate that casued him to
. judging repairs before, they can be useful (ke born in Pennsylvania . . . "It |
ancFort Bend again. t was a hot summerin New York.: William C. Douglas, chai rman of
juuging team. These people are asked to put so Mother and I wenndown into - -
was fourteenth. The teams had t the toys in some kind of box or the mountains of Pennsylvania to
qualified for the national contests tag and send or .bring them to the visit some relatives. I happened
theatre Saturday morning so that । to be born while we were away. York and other exchanges must re-
the entire collection of toys may then Mother and I came back to
be made at one time.__New York. ” . widen its scope of regulation.
--------------------- But whether ne is in N. Y. or — ■ ■ ■■
O'Barr, Vice Grand; C. O. Turner, not, he always maintains his ----------------------------
gineering, and mathematics 'ire
three subjects in which the Uni-
versity has gained international
reccgnition; and it is these three
subjects which have attracted
some of these students from far-
away places to Texas. Hug came
from Japan to study cotton mar-
keting. Reshit Ahmet Kenan and
Turgut Ulug came from Turkey
for instruction in petroleum en-
4 lie year in
adEane ____
t "x months in
advance ___
Cornell won’t play a single ed the following officers at their
breather football game in 1938 or meeting this week for the ensuing
Bob Leonard, < :ptain of the
1936 Gainesville High Leopard
team, who is quarterback of the
Schreiner Institute' footban team
this season. He is a freshman at
the institute.
. 0--------- ! There is a fellow we know whose wife hasn’t per-
hlie tne propagation of soy beans inmitted him to spend a cent of his wages in thirty
Ccoke county has been largelyan cInri vears. Yet he lies awake nights worrying about
mint, or demonstration, upt tnisPn Roosrxelt establishing a dictatorship.- Troy (N.Y.
there are certain sections of Texas where I
thousands of acres are planted annually to Upani Down
the crop. Ine Chinese nave Been m--in. , ■ The examining lawyer was cross-questioning an
milk oi soy beans tor 3,000 years aS Trishwvomnincourtwith regard to the stairs in her
chemists know how to do it, and promise to
make abetter quality of milk than is made
by the brethren in the Orient. They have
made ice cream, buttermilk, and chocolate
flavored milk. They also have made
that is said to be
EIGHT REPORTED KILLED
MEXICO CITY, Dec. 7 (API —
Ambulances raced from Mexico
Citv today to Zimapan, Hidalgo
state, where eight persons were
reported killed* and 45 injured in
a collision of two passenger buses
on a fogbound highway. Zima-
pan, where the accident happened,
is 130 miles from here.
part were Misses Jessie Thomas
and Eva Metz.
Sherwood Hill, of Nocona, is vis-
iting friends here today.
General Hudson has just re-
Lamar in second
Schreiner defeated
_____I overturned and the body was bad-
ly bent. The car driven by Wright
Prairie Dog Blues was also damaged considerably.
EINDER the Soil Conservation plan progressive
‘ U Crockett county r anchmen, are ridding their -
ranges of prickly pear, cedar, mesquite and | 7
prairie dogs. In all, contracts covering 1,185,748 I!
acres of land have been prepared in the office of the L
would spend getting from Austin -- --
tome port from which he would, Church Chimes
Huga is the only Japanese stu- np D, A i»p • i -
dent on the campus and was one I 0 DC HlpIIIICG
of the last students to register;
this year. He is a transfer from ! Amplification of the chimes of
the University of Dayton, Ohio, whale v Memorial Methodist .
and is doing graduate work in cot- ■ church, so that they may be heard
tonmarketins: miloo g land and over a wide area of East Gaines-
n Seme.10,000 miles.f n and and vine, was approved Monday eve-
ocean lie between Austin and tne . . . i—
home of three University students, ning at a meeting of the board of
Ramen Santos Austria Elias Fi-
ler Bumatay, and Emilio Buma-
Two men narrowly escaped in- ( Ser vice di vision have learned,
jury Monday evening, when two Teams from Young county won
of the
Rep. Wadworth (R-N.Y.) as-j =
serted the farm bill, if enacted g i • mI
s "ittersm" ror the nited Jchrenner Plays
Dead Man Thought Kilgore College
Former Resident Team Thursday
42 YEARS AGO
(From the files of the Daily
Hesperian, Dec. 7, 1895)..
Governor Brown of the Semi-
nole nation visited friends here to-
day.
off the Gulf of
the Caribbean Sea
Henry Long, Dr. J W. Truitt;
music Roy P. Wilson, chairman;
Clyde Thomas.- R. F- Spires; evan-
gelistic X-J. R. Gilliland, chairman;
W. J. Smith, R. A. Hays, Van Hill.
J. N Whaley: ushers—John Reid,
chairman; R. E. Bandy, J. A. Gilli-
land; finance —D. E. O'Brien,
chairman; J. M. Maupin, Frank R.
Aldridge.
makers. It is certainly a depar-
ture that will be watched with in-
terest by business men.
We learn aiso that business
centers are being built in good lo-
cations by major oil companies,
which provide not only every need
in servicing an automobile, but ac-
cessory store, dining room and
other services to the motoring
public, such as barber shops, beau-
ty shops, cigar stores, newsstands.
These companies have found
that the average tourist, setting
out to reach a given destination,
is desirous of spending as little
time as possible on each stop, with
a minimum of stops. Therefore*
they are seeking to cater to the
tourist by providing him with ev-
ery service he might desire, with-
out the necessity of driving all
over the business section of a
town,___especially where parking
space is scarce.
* * *
NOT SO LONG AGO, 'the
growth in popularity of the house
trailer was amazing to most peo-
ple. Now the house trailer is gen-
erally accepted as the living quar-
ters of a large portion of the roam-
ing population of our country,
which formerly frequented board-
J . C
enced him to choose the Univer- -
sity of Texas to continue his I
American study. Climatic condi- j
tions may explain why students «
NOTICE TO the PUBLIC I to fall asleep. He notices a marked inability to con- Arch Hunter, about 60 years of (
tiny erroneous reflection upon the character, reputa-j centrate and to make decisions with his customary age, who died suddenly in Madill,
iibi-or standing of any firm, individual or corpora-; promptness. I Okla., Sunday morning, was
-oppiwils-brsEladztoorrected upon bein 1 Later, he may develop digestive disturbances, thought to be a former resident of
—------------------------------------------------- and if he is foolish enough to experiment with his Gainesville, according to Lee Jones
.The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the diet, he is likely to lose weight. I of Okmulgee, Okla., former resi-
use for republteation of all news dispatches creditedi “Peculiar feelings in his head,” and occasional dent of Gainesville.
19 it or not otnerwise credited in this paper and also 0 , .
la focal news appearing herein. crying spells may finally induce him to see his physi- A dispatch from Madill said
—,---cian.
in ease of errors or omissions occurring in local or
ocher advertisements or of omissions on scheduled
date, the publishers do not hold .themselves liable for
damages iurther than the amount received by them
for such advertisements.
lint per acre, compared with 121 pounds in of the country's fuel of this kind.' It will in due Showg A D)ecine
1936, and a 10-year average of 139 pounds. course complete its price-list for the entire indus- " ---
The greater portion of the crop nas been tin addition to exercising the price controi Vested TULSA, Okla?, Dec. 7 (AP) -
gathered and ginaed, except in the South in it by law,'the commission has established a neces- The nation’s production of crude
Plains where gins are running day and night sarily elaborate system of policing alle the selling oil decreased 35,273 barrels daily
and where picking will continue until nearly practices of mine operators and their agents. Not during the week ending Dec. 4 to
FLritm, H.,-F,+ A; .. +1 only by statute but by the practical logic of the mat- an average of 386,907 barrels per
Christmas. Heavy frost did not hit the ter the commission is required so to extend and con- day. the OU and Gas Journal re-
northern part of the state until after most of tinuqusly maintain its supervision. An additional ported today.
the crop was matured, and the freeze will “bureaucracy” of no mean proportions appears to Oklahoma declined 11 725 bar-
cause practically all bolls to open be inseparable from the government’s undertaking rels dailv to 556,100. East Texas
Late estimates show rger ordctins to cure a "s:ck industry," doubtless the sickest large dropped 848 to 416,898 and the to-
_.—a-e -maues snow arser proauctions industry in the land. tal state of Texas declined 17,599
than were indicated a motn ago for cotton, In enforcement alone the task of the commission to 1.304,344.
pecans and citrus fruits, And reductions in may turn out to be formidable. But considering the Louisiana increased 3,585 to
cora, grain Sorghums, peanuts and sweet willingness of mine owners, miners and coal hand- 246,270. California declined 2.009 ' ,
potatoes. lers alike to try a new order of things, the matter of to 700,000. and Kansas . dropped | Avang” I sadrierznor
P1 securing compliance with regulations would appear 10.525 to 168,775. " IvAallB •-—S-8
In addition to cotton, included in these to be a secondary element of doubt in the long-term Eastern states including Michi- GW il l| HA.E
estimates are 72,0-18,000 bushels of corn 41 - success of the experiment. Of primary importance gan, were down 844 barrels daily
690,000 bushels of wheat 12 200 000 hi’hejs IS the question whether the higher level of coal prices to 186.148 and the Rocky moun-
nt ,, Am25 9 Kuei / ‛ ’ which must be expected to result from this decreed tain section increased 1,215 to 76,-
0, rce, 49,664,00 busheis 01 gram sorgnum, restriction of competition will or will not reduce 310.
87,150,000 pounds of peanuts, 3,744,000 bush- coal consumption enough to offset whatever bene- ----------------
els of sweet potatoes and 2 ,360,000 pounds fits mine ownership and mine labor may gain from AA. A.4
cf pecans n price stabilization. Solid fuel, of course, meets the Udr UVcrLUrnCC
PEO.; c . competition of oi and now increasingly that of hy- T M n» • r
A heavy crop of grain sorg*m is being droelectric power. n ( oligion Here
harvested in the South Flains region where If the experiment succeeds, its success win in
many new trench silos have been constructed all probability support demands for the application
to take care rf the surnlg of governmental price control in other directions.
ThJwXn iu P \ We already know something of the persistence of
-Hwestern Part °. the State is badly in such demands from many spokesmen for the farm-
need Oi moisture. A light snow fell Novem- ers. If the experiment fails, the reason for its
ber 27. Wheat has been doing fairiv welrin failure may be expected to throw much light upon
the merits of an extensive range of price-fixing pro-
posals.- Wall Street Journal.
the bunk . . . Please understand, I
am speaking only for myself . . .
When I am in the chips my clothes j
are baggy and I don’t care how I
look ... I never crease my trous-
ers and worry about clean collars I
until I am broke—and looking fori
a job ... As a matter of fact, |
some people I know passed me this
morning and one of them said: j
“Gee, he must be making millions '
—look how sloppy Allyn is!”
At which, in a wave of sudden ;
embarrassment, accruing from my ‘
own neatly shined brogans. freshly
starched shirt and an unspotted
cravat, I reached for a chapeau,
waved’a hurried farewell, and fled
to the street.
the other is a graduate student in Standing committees were
GAINESVILLE WEEKLY REGISTER
AND MESSENGER
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY— ALL HOME PRINT
" FOUNDED IN 1878
THE REGISTER printing COMPANY (INC.)
PI BLISHERS, GAINESVILLE. COOKE co., TEXAS
SUPPER PLANNED AT The Chautauqua circle met last
METHODIST CHURCH (cunnnghaxnreamingithe-ds-
cussion on American history and
Miss Fannie Bush on Industries of
the United States. Others taking
88884 3
Championship of Junior
College Conference at
Stake in the Contest
or six days earlier than Huga. The i It is planned to use the chimes
boys transferred to the University 1 for Christmas music during - the
of Texas from the University of holidays and on other special oc-
Kansas. Austria is a pre-law stu- casions. The board also voted to
dent. One of the Bumatay broth- install a new neon sign on the «
ers is studying engineering, and church building.
League has taken over the task tors which the winter season has
of collecting discarded toys which sent to New York is Allyn Joslyn,
the city firemen have volunteered the actor. He is of prime interest
to repair and paint for the com- here because of a bulls-eye he
munity Christmas tree. scored in a comedy last year call- ,
Through the courtesy of the Ma- ed “Boy Meets Girl. Now he is
nervously biting his nails until re- j
^11
i " 2“
S..
4
Complimenting t he
school classes in the F
ist church taught by
Three months in
advance _________ $2.25
One month in
advance -_________* .75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
Texas Progress
To tel a better appreciation
of the - developments being
made in Texas, watch thin
space.
M. L. Purcell, Eugene
Max Wilson, Adolph
fer, Ware Purcell, F rit
Clyde Cribley.
With 12 letterm en
and some promising ta
Six months, la
70c advance _____
Fletcher Morris:
Centers. Irvin Br gh
Bill Culp;
Baeks. Buddy Richai
neth Purcell. Eric G lei
Collum, Robert P< ar
Yeakley, Clyde Crib ey
Purcell.
The three team man
ace McCain, Willardj
and J. B Whittaker. V
receive awards.
Eleven Not to Return
Of the 23 boys b tt
have completed their (
BY MAIL, in Gaineville or in Cooke, Grayson, Den-
ina, Montague, Wise counties, Texas, and Love coun-
ly, Oklahoma: • । tion is likely to feel markedly fatigued and to show
i ix maonthx, in , -- One year, la . ' increasing irritability, as well as a distinct change in
“Y“MAir,inaiotherunties o“Te Unite states:, disposition. Toward the end of the day, he frequently
* months, in one-year, in j feels an urgent need for a stimulant to help him keep
adyance --------------- advance--------------- up his usual pace.
Y Mail in Zones 6, 7 and 8 I Noting that he is slipping somewhat, he tends to
____________ 92X<* _______________________ himself harder. In consequence, he soon be-
---:----------:-------------------------- I comes even more irritable. He finds it difficult
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View three places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gainesville Weekly Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 9, 1937, newspaper, December 9, 1937; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1459020/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.