Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 17, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1921 Page: 2 of 4
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WEEKLY FINANCIAL REVIEW.
OUR NEW LOCATION
Just Folks
1
By Edgar A Guest
APEX
the
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THE FRATERNAL AID UNION
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FINANCIAX STATEMENT JANUARY 1, 1921
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ASSETS
LIABILITIES
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Total Admitted Assets
■ ELECTRIC SUCTION CLEANER fl
$5,078 916 !M»
_____A3,078,916.99
rot;-’ Liabilities
<aiue mere to prey.
A ucw
Total Benefits Paid in 1920
$2,190,566.41
DON’T NEGLECT THAT OLD TIRE
.s
ia
We repair rim cuts, blow-outs and Tubes. All work is guaranteed!
i
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Put this
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LEST YOU FORGET
DR. W. 1. MMX
>
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D
r
/
d
1
/
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A
9
r-3.'
I
MRS
I
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tu amuse him-
chair ur walk-
FAMILY OF TEi
- WEIGHS 2218 LBS.
Total Paid to Beneficiaries during 1920
Total Returned to Living Certificate Holders during 1920
Ratio of 1920 Benefits Paid to Receipts from Members
Gain in Full Legal Reserves during 1920
G^in in Total Admitted Assets during 1920
Total Paid to Living Certificate Holl
Total Paid to Beneficiaries si nep
Total Insurance in Force Deceml
MRS. LIZZIE V. HAYES, District Organizer. Phone 915
Gainesville, Texas
For Further Information See
206 South Morris Street.
down in
black
and
white!
$1,982,897.75
207,668.66
since organization
organization
*r 31, 1920 ‘
GAINESVILLE ELECTRIC CO.
PHONE 325 E. CALIFORNIA ST.
O. T. C A R R
PHONE 174
!
378.806 98
30984.82
50,000.00
184 32
116,118 97
868.441.70
56.3
_ 536,641.50
„ 655.984.49
1,671.943.84
87,504,195.09
90,796,320.00
CilyBrids
hesterfield
CIGARETTES
tons as comjMred with I .*813,406 tons in
•June, with 2,802,818 tons produced in
July, 1920, and with 3,299,049 tons pro-
<luced in Mar.-h, 1920, when the peak of
41 ■■■■■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■■X
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! Painless Extractions
Si
I ' can't be copied
discovered,
oue whose
t slcoLoUc
WORKING ON FARMS
CORES SHELL-SHOCK
the result that of ths ta
the lowest level
— 1,005,705.65
182,382.66
233,221.38
28,645.05
339.728.47
Quality Electric Co. i
Phone 141 Dickerman Bldg. J
dims. -vi. jkl. wains oi nramore whu
Las been visiting relatives in the city gflflfl■■■■■41 ■■■■■■■■■*
ELROD TIRE & VULCANIZING CO.
PHONE 174 WEST SIDE SQUARE
will be mean souls to
the aeceie* alor so
— i ail the other
And such disagreeable
. luutorisl will nut be able
Lie wuuiunt have motor foot
ru the mt bit of using his
Take that casing or tube injury to the ELROD TIRE & VUL-
CANIZING CO. Many people seem to think a cord casing can
not be repaired, but it can if you take it where they have the
proper material and machinery. Let us know your tire troubles.
We can fix you uP.
EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR SAVAGE TIRES
1 suction
■ Cleaner.
KEEP THE DRIVING
GEAR RIGHT
and your car will run smoothly and
without trouble. Employ us to see
that it dots run right, and take no
chances on a breakdown. Our auto
mechanics are expert on gears,
shafts axles and all parts of any
chassis.
BOB HENTHORNE
GARAGE
unfit it is too late to have it repaired. Remember, the fabric caress
75 percent of your Tire. It pays to save it. See us about building a
NON-SKID TREAD.
IB
3'
.74
,k44
iT.M
Sak»e.-t>ti«a Rate. By Mall ta Tana
aa4 Ohlahama
Par month, in aq^pne*---------.4 .70
Six months, in atfVknea------—M. to
Ope year, ln advance------------
Also Owners and Publishers of the
WKKKLY BEG1STKB A MBSSMMGMB
41.40 per year, in advance
NOTICE TO THB PL'BUIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, etanding or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
may appear in the columns of The Reg-
ister A Maasenger will be gladly and
promptly corrected upon being brought
to the notice of tbe publishers. ____
TO ADVEBTISKBS
In ease of errors or otntaaione in
legal or other advertisement*, the pub-
lishers do not hold them selves liable
for damage further tban the amount
received by ta.m for such advertising.
Tbe Associated Proas is exclusively
entitled to tbe use for republication of
all news dispatches credited to It or not
otherwise credited in this paper, and
also tne local nows appearing heroin.
MEMBBB
a N. P. A. A_ N. P. A.
Associated Prose United Proas
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 24, 1921
The -Daily Register
AND MBMMJSMai
______ESTABLISH BP IN,1444______
fUDOISTKR PRINTING • COMPANY
(Inc.) Publishers
GsriheevtUe, Togas
3. T. LEONARD------NaaagtaB BdMae
C. H. LEO WARD-----Basta see MaMMOr
BD HEATH____________-CtrewtBdna
Editorial and Business Office lid East
California Street. Telephone No. St
Entered at the Gainesville Postoffloe
as second-class matter
SnteeeHytlea Rates tn Galneevllle
Dally, one month in advance-----
Dally, six months in advance—.
Daily, one year in advance----
ITS A FA CT— listen:
A You know what you’ve
always wanted a cigarette to do.
Chesterfields do it.
They not only please your
taste but they do another thing—
They satisfy.
They give to your smoking a
“completeness” that is altogether
new and different.
Those fin j tobaccos—Turkish,
Burley and otl’^r choice Domestic
varieties—are blended right.
Just right!
That’s why you get “satisfy”
in Chesterfields.
And the blend can’t be copied.
There’s no use looking for
“satisfy” anywhere else.
Don’t try it—try Chesterfields.
>1
I
Ask for Demonstration!
Prove the superiority of the APEX g
in your own h&me, free.
IS WEST SIDE OF SQUARE, NEXT TO WATTS BROS.
COMPLETE LINE OF BATHTUBS, COMODES, SINKS AND
LAVATORIES. AUTOMATIC WATER HEATERS.
An’ all the times the fur would fly,
Somehow we’ve still kept lovin’ on:-
An’ whether she or I was wrong.
We never kept our grouches long.
! The percentage of shell-shocked sol-
We’ve watched the youngsters quarrel,; 4|era aetlted onjhe land,jrho have com-
An' wrangle as they played their games.
They’ve scrapped, as children often *do,
An’ called each other dreadful names;
Yet when each little spa-. was o’er,
They were as lovin’ as before.
Prepared for The Register by the First
National Bank io St. Lo”’s. _
Statistics of iron and steel output for July, 1920“, and with 3486,941 tons |<ro-
was___
steel at
and”M5 for~steei was reaslmd.
The statement that the iron and steel
industry is both “prince and pauper" >
well borne out. j
Good! from
the first drop
to the last
RHEUMATISM
SHOULD BE TREATED THRU THE BLOOD
Medical authorities now agree
that rheumatism, with its aches
and pains, is caused by germs that
pour poison into your blood
I stream Rubbing will not give per-
manent relief. Thousands of rheu-
matic sufferers have stopped their
agony with S. S. S.
For Special Booklet or for indi-
v id ual adv ice, without charge,
write Chief Medical Advisor,
S.S.S. Co . Dep'1441, Atlanta, Ga.
Get S. S. S. at your druggist.
S.S.S.
Standard For Over Fifty Years
I f you could
along” without publici-
ty, then advertising
adds the bonus to a liv-
ing wage.
I
Real Estate (Market Value) $ 89,874.32
Mortgage Loans, First Liens 1.199,359.46
Ignited States, County and Municipal
Bonds I
Certificate Loans and Liens
Cash in Banks and Trust Companies
Interest Due and Accrued —
Receipts from Members in Transit
“get
A wiki hawk vias
spue oi
lurk lhe oiuei uay.
p^vuiis iu cue
poseU Uv
Bellegonte, Pa., Aug. 04.—Center coun-
| ty may have that famous straw that
progressiveness and the inventive- hi8 nine chiidren are claiming the heavy-
aHke flpneTits of patriotic press weight championship of the state. The
ten of them weigh 2,218 pounds. The big-
.. gest Straw scales at 290. The bantam of
- the family busts ths beam at 190.
Si
s
s
s
88 S SSS.
■ Dust and Dirt Are
Vanquished
by the exclusive inclined double- J
!■ suction nozzle of
We’ve lived our vears a? man an wife
About the way most people do;
.Some days have brought us bitter s+riTc,
Yet always we have smiled it through;
An’ though some angry words have
passed,
vVe've never let the quarrel last.
pletely recovered, was far greater than H
that among those Who stayed in- cities. < g
The Canadian government has put 25,-1 g
500 soldiers on the land and assisted g
them to equip their farms with stock, ■
buildings and farm machinery. ■
Though many of these soldiers were ■
suffering from wounds and other effects ■
of the war, the average soldier-farmer ■
today is in ruddy health as well as sound ■
finance. ■
asross the English channel In fact, we
have yet to develop oar first regular
0* route for throe <m bnsimee bound
Who hope to reach their duettnalioM
utfefy as well as quickly.
There must be some reason for this
strange inertia on the part of a people
which has always boasted of its inven-
tiveness and of the progressive spirit
which actuates its business activities
What is the reason, anyhow ? Or are broke the camels beck. Philip Straw and
nets all
agents* imagination?
88888888 88 88 88 88 88 88 88 88 88 88 88
88 88:
88
the decline in produc
try, whfck haa besR in
.iwwnw, WMfcuiMcd W1
production has readh<
since December,
In January pf this year the output of
pig iron was 2,401,346 tons as compared
with 3J0MJ81 tons la January, 1980.
The July output of iron was only W4,-
665 groes tons as compared with IjMe,*
833 tons in June, With 3,069.603 tons in
duced in October, 1913, the mouth of
maximum production.
The relative decrease shown by the
figures for^he production of crude steel
in July corresponds fully with those for
tbe month’s output of pig iron In July,
1921, there wne produced 803,376 gross
PHONE 69~
WHEN YOU HAVE NEWS
ITEMS FOR THIS PAPER.
ctAumyuu daux Moms*. W WW-
has returned to her home accompanied July aa made publie this week show that
by her niece, Miss Thelma Alley. the decline in prof'
Mr. and Mrs. Goo. Book accompanied try, whfck has beet
by Oheir eon, Jerry, have gone to El months, continued
Paso for a visit. —-—>«— «-----
Mrs. C. A Howard has as her guest
Mita Lewig of Fort Worth.
crude steel productioa in the IMM
States was attained.
As ompared with the known capacity
. sroduch* otnoums, the July ton-
nage of both pig Iron and Keel fell nm-h
<M*kw 25 percent .
The price, situation in ths iron and
steel industry has also witnessed a.phe-
LI •
Full Legal Reserves 31,132,012 31
Reserved for Contingencies - 502 369 89
Claims in Process of Adjustment (All
completed-proof Claims since paid)
Disability Claims, Installments
Reserved for 1921 Refund
faxes Due or Accrued
Payments Made by Mejpbers in Advance
(’nassigned Funds
■ Office over Cunningham Bros. ■
J Drug Store, next door to P. 0. ■
fl PHONE 616 Gainesville, Tex. j
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MOTOR FOOT,
disease Uas bev-u <
Straiigei} euuugli it is not <
voir uc|/cuus Ujiuu the Use oi
be»elafc^s. it IS motor lout , aud con-
sists oi a Uispiuceuieiit oi the uietutar.-^il
Liuuvs oi tue iigut lout due to coutmued
pleasure upon tue accelerator oi a nivlor
cal. 11 is saiU to be teiy paiuiui, »ul
no many c-scs _.a>e been reported among
v,csteru tourists that the Callioitvu
Jl < d.e Oovietj proposes to take the sub-
ject up io, oiuu) al its couveut.on next
Ll'OUUl.
rue uord thiiig about this stylish
tivubie is that it makes walking unit. I
auu iKieneies e « u more wi«.h goit, ten-1
ms and other actise \acatiun sports,^
leaving tue pour victim uei.cately poised
on n.e good tool between tyre uevil and
tue uecp sea, with no way
sell except oy silting in a
mg on ins minus.
U1 coulee lucre
ask, Aviiy step on
uiten! Uhy uy to pass
cars on Uie road . /
Ljtatal.UUd LUt*
tu dAi&Mur.
H be wtie
bead.
noticed on the
a tilth Ave. church m hew
Owing to
church beiiry, it is sup- i
There’s no dixorce court needed here,
There’s r.otning now can go amiss:
Cur tempers art not so severe
But they n il’ t often with a kiss.
Like childten, w1 on the spat is o’er,
tiiepVe’re just as lovin’ as before.
■ %<»,
Ben Brooks of Chickasha, Okla., who ■
spent several days in the city, the guest ■
of his sister, Mrs. Kay Halsoll. left i ■
last night for Los Angeles, Calif., to
make his future home.
Mrs. W. H. Bumpass and daughter
Mattie Fern have returned from a
pleasant visit with friends in Ardmore.
Mrs. M. M. Wallis of Ardmore who
-----X-----
SENSIBLE TRAFFIC ARRESTS
beverai progressive American cities
have auopicd a scheme ior saving the
time oi police oilicers and traiiic oi-
leudels. Aden the policeman halts a
traiiic violator, instead of hauling him
oil io the police station on the instant
he gi'es him a cnance to appear in
court on a certain date of his own free
will. 11 the ul.ender promises, he is al-
lowed to proceed on his way. if he re-
tuse*, he is taken to the station at
once and put under bond to appear-
There are of course some serious vioia-
tion3 which permit no such leniency.
L nd^r the new system the officer is
saved many unnecessary trips to the sta-
tion, and can assemble for a single day
nil the cases in which he must prefer
charges. The driver of the car in his
turn is saved a tiresome and often seri-
ous delay.
Many offenders deserve immediate ar
lest, but more do not. Most traffic
offenses are unintentional and trifling,
working no real harm, while the errand
upon which the offender is bound may
be exceedingly important. In such
cases the method which saves time for
the officer and the driver, yet assures
that the offense will receive due at-
• tention, is best for everybody.
-----X--
AT THE FAIR
The county fair has grown to be
something more than a miscellaneous
display of big apples, potatoes and pigs
delicately interspersed with patchwork
quilts and cheap sideshows. The fair
today i> a dignified demonstration of,
evesy phase of the life of a community
Home and school are as vital as farm
and garilen- One big fair soon to be
held in the Middle West is to feature
displays dealing specifically with these
two great factors
Two homes will be shown, one poorly
arranged for comfort and efficiency, the
other well arranged and with modern
equipment to make work easy. Two
schools will be dispayed, one badly
lighted, seated, ventilated and equipped,
the other arranged to the best possible
advantage <>f teacher and pupil. The
wrong kind of school is painfully prev-
alent everywhere, and much is hcq>ed
from this vivid demonstration.
Well balanced meals and good cook-
ery will be a feature of the home ex-
h-bit. I*roper school lunches to be a
l»art of the school display. Both ex-
hibits are to be in charge of persons
especially fitted to answer questions
ana make helpful suggestions.
A fair run on such lines becomes more
than an annual merrymaking. It helps
to make everyday life easier and more
effective, and it gains in importance
proportionately.
--X-----
AERIAL FREIGHT
Men have dreamed of aerial freight
ever since the Wright brothers proved
that men might fly. Long before the
gnat war, Kipling’s. "With The Night
Mail’’ was no less truly prophetic than
truly imaginative.
Tne burden of high explosive bombs
borne by German Zeppelins and allied
aircrafts on many fronts was proof
enough of the possibilities which the
future held Now the British govern
ment makes public the actual value of
aerial imports and exports passing thru
the customs of the United Kingdom in
1920.
Last year anch imports, mostly of
cloth and fur, totalled 33386J25 in
value, and exports 81,695,540. There is
promise in these figures, as well as
-romance.
In this country commercial aviation
has, as yet, been limited to the mails
and to ocrariousl freighting tripe in
Which advertising, rather than business
ends wore served Paoseafsr taaffia has
■
88
88
88 88 88 88 88
AFTER THE SPATS.
We’ve had our troubles, Ma and I,
But countin' all that’s come and gone ! .
. .... ... .. >----,, ] Winnipeg, Man.. Aug. 24.—Figures'
from a survey gathered here indicated
that country life was the surest cure for
shell-shock.
The percentage of shell-shocked
WJh
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Leonard, J. T. Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 17, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1921, newspaper, August 24, 1921; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1308056/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.