Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1919 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gainesville Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cooke County Library.
Extracted Text
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17 ALGOHOL-3 PER G^Nt
_____i PrcparatxnwM
j similatin^theFbodtylte^*1*
! tingtheStoafidsandB^dsfl
At 6month*
35 Doses
r
fe
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMK CtRTAUA COMPANY NEW TOR* CITY
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always / \
Bears the Z/tW*
r*!-S.c F-
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
T Thereby Promoting Di^^*
[' Cheerfulness and Rest Cotrta®
JB neither Opium. Morphine
■ ‘ Mineral. Not Narcotic
*»
JI
T Constipation and DUn^1
1 Feverishness and
Loss of Sleep
.a-^i \
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jj^-icurr^ |
Mrn I
A helpful Remedy^,
panvB»«— —,
It and Feverishness and
Loss °FSleep
resulting therefroa^j1”0^
The CextavrCohp^-
NEW YORKt^
OIWF AwTaNe
K J < ' '■ *■--***■
Imams ChildkD
PERSHING'VISITS “Y” HEADQUARTERS
Watch fha Little Pimples;
■ 1
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MB MS
IJ
For Sale or Trade
leader would j
type
“I want
Wanted
For Rent
new
He has decided
Miscellaneous
your tire
Gainesville Transfer
Phone 21 or 64.5
WATER MAKES HIM FAT.
re-
the
58-YEAR-OLD MAN IS
* BEST WHEAT SHOCKER
MILL COH! WILL
MAKE ft SMALL«
Th. Wonderful Event That Will Bring
Much Gladness.
FOR RENT—Unfurnished rooms,
venient. 326 West California.
817.
. We
Gainesville Re-
(«)
con-
Phone
(29)
FOR RENT—Furnished room close in,
phone 817. (29)
1
•1
>y
M. C. A. Turns Loose More Than
$200,000 for Athletic
Equipment.
ex-
i
— I
GREAT SUM SPENT
FOR BOYS ON RHINE
NEGRO ASSAILANT OF '
WHITE GIRL LYNCHED LEAGUE WOULD NOT
SHIPPING BOARD
APPROPRIATION
IS ENLARGED
Ha« Thanksgiving
‘ Every Day
—
While hundreds of men in the army
In Camp Travis are anxious to get out '
HANDICAP THE
FREEDOM OF IRELAND
FOR SALE—160-acre good upland farm
well improved 5 miles of Edmond,
Okla.; 100 acres in cultivation. Within
half mile of interurban running be-
tween Guthrie and Olahoma City. See
owner, -418 Ritchie. Phone 847-M (d9 w4
■ WANTED—Girls for lunch room. Apply
Fred Harvey. Phone 29. (tf)
• VI
HLJII
* J
FOR RENT OR SALE—My home place
on South Denton street, 8 room house,
modern conveniences. Phone 565. (3)
WE save you 50 per cent on
bill, see us. Gainesville Rebuild Tire
Co., 14 Commerce street. (tf)
X^’w.
F \
H
Ini
1
FOR RENT—Nice cool light housekeep-
ing" rooms. 809 East Broadway. (29)
Strayed or Stolen
STRAYED OR STOLEN—Sorrel pony,
13 hands high, and about 4 years old.
Reward. Notify W. G. Ruth, Route 5,
Gainesville. (29)
G a
j; ^0
FOR SALE—Brand new No. 5 Wood-
stock. Csfl at Register office.
■ al
Of
rr
E
A full new tine of Engrave,! Viritini
Cards. Birth Announcements, Personal
Stationery, Reception Cards, just received ,.
' - - J - Cr|] I questing a
(tf) I gates at .Versailles.
1. z> o o . <1 . V. ..
Ellisville, Miss., June 26.—John
Hartfield, negro confessed assailant of
a young white woman, was lynched by
a mob here this afternoon. He was tak-
en to the railroad trestle where he com-
mitted the crime to which he confessed
a girder. His body
Walters, Okla., June 26.—The cham
; ion wheat shocker for his age this year
lives in Cotton county. He is G, H.
Cheney of near Randlett. Cheney is 58
years old and up to last week had shock-
ed over 150 acres of wheat.
I
I J?
fSx Bill
I
f -■
The Whaley Mill and Elevator com-
pany has had the old frame buildings
torn down on the plot of ground south
of its plant, and we understand that in-
stead of these old eye-sores which had
been standing since the days of saloons
in Gainesville, the company will convert
this ground iqto a park and flower gar
den. This can be made into a delight-
ful beauty spot and the company will
earn the heart-felt gratitude of all who
love the beautiful and will add mater-
ially to our civic attractiveness.
There are many other plots of ground
in the city which might easily be con-
punishment verted into narks and garde.is and in-
i crease Gainesville’s charm as a place to
— ' live. The city beautiful apn als to the
kind of folks who make good citizens
Baby Coming To
Your Home?
i
it
can cause unlimited trouble, i hi*
remedy is the greatest vegetable
blood purifier known, and contains
no minerals er chemicals to injure
the most delicate skin.
Go to your drug store, and get a
bottle of S. S. S. today, get nd of
those unsightly, disfiguring pim-
ples, and other skin irritations. It
will cleanse your blood thorough- *
ly. For special medical advice free,
address Medical Director, 41 Swift
Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
F. <
J
8 'X I
Prof. J. S. Swofford and daughter.
Miss Cleo, both of whom have been ip
the Hays school the past two years, and
MisS \ eda Swofford. who has been one
•of the county’s leading teachers the
past few years have all accepted the
Forestburg school for another year and
Mr. Swofford will move there next
month where his first work will be con-
ducting a summer normal there. Cooke
county will regret to lose Prof. Swof-
ford and his two daughters; they are
all splendid teachers and any school in
Cooke county would be glad to get
their services. Miss Veda Swofford is
now taking some advanced work in the
Denton Normal.
idetl the posses in the search i last.
I
Are you looking forward, dear prospective
toother, to the wonderful, glorious tune
when you shall bold in your arms the little
mite, which Is of your flesh and blood,
with feelings of misgiving?
Now is the time to get In condition to
jrx-t the crisis, and three generations of
■women have found in the time-honored
iveuaration, Mother's Friend, a grateful,
penetrating remedy to prepare their systems
tc vithstand the shock.
I be action of this famous remedy is to
•tiieve tension on drawn nerve*, cords, ten-
dons and ligaments, to relieve strain and
discomforts, such as nausea, nervousness,
bearing-down and stretching pains. By
regular use during the period the muscles
expand easily when baby is born; pain
and Hanger at the crisis Is naturally less
and the hours are fewer. Do not neglect
the use of Mother’s Friend. It is for ex-
ternal application only. Is absolutely safe
and wonderfully effective.
Write the Bradfield Regulator Company,
Dept N. Lamar Building, Atlanta, Georgia,
for their Motherhood Book, and obtain a
bottle of Mother** Friend from t!w drug
•tore It is Just as standard sj u^ythiug
you can think of.
BAKER PROMISES QUICK
ACTION TO FRUSTRATE •
MEXICAN BORDER RAIDS
Washington, June 26.—Assertions
that the League of Nations would handi
cap the effort for Irish freedom w’ere
denied in the Senate today by Senator
Phelan, Democrat, California.
i "Some persons interested in the Irish
I cause.” lie said, “have objected to Arti-
j cie iv uecause nicy tear iv would guar-
1 » the territorial integrity of the
This it does only with
Now,
either by
a success-
the intervention by
F(tR RENT—Brick store building, 703
Leonard block, East California street;
also rooming space for storing automo-
biles. Parties having no garage can be
at eonimodated here. For particulars ap-
ply to W J. Sherrard at Mattress Fac-
tory, next door to this store room (tf)
GIRL BECOMES EDITOR
Stillwater. Okla.,—A precedent was
.roken at the Oklahoma Agricultural
nJ Me-hanieal College here at the an-
m>! student election, when Miss Grace
n ary of Carmen, was elected ixiitor of
>e 1919-20 Orange and Black, the stu-
nt weekly paper. It is the first time
liat a girl has been elected to the posi-
tion.
FOR SALK—New and' slightly used
typewriters. Call at Register office.
FOR SALE—5 passenger Maxwell car,
first class condition. See G. A. Silvey,
5 alley View, Texas. (29)
Washington, June 26.—In reportin '
the sundry civil appropriation bill to-
day, the Senate Appropriations Com-
mittee increased the Shipping Board s
shipbuilding program from $276,000,000
t<> $491,000,000. ‘
The committee recommended that th;.
Tariff Commission be abolished. The!
house appropriation of $300,000 for sal-
aries of commission members and
j»*nses was stricken from the bill.
Deprecating any effort to make Irish |
freedom a party question, Phelan said I
the Republicans could not claim credit
for the resolution recently passed
hearing for the Irish dele-
. On the other hand.
i he said, the Republicans furnished most
I of the opposition to the resolution
adopted in 1916 expressing the hope
“that the British Government may ex
ercise clemency in the treatment oil
Irish political prisoners.”
—
AU V.X1 IHy AlU’lW w ,
of service and back Into cfvlllaa life, i
Cecil Roons of Raton. N. M., is hap-
py because he got in.
He rushed into a Y. M. C. A. build-
ing, threw his hat toward the celling
and danced around. The attention of
the “Y” secretaries was directed to-
ward him by his antics and they in-
quired the cause of his glee.
It was then that the story was told.
During the war Cecil could not
get into the army on account of his
age. He became eighteen years old
not long ago and enlisted.
After his preliminary examination
he was accepted although he was just
heavy enough to pass the mark set by
the regulations. When he was exam-
ined at Camp Travis it was found that
he was two pounds under weight.
Then he was In the midst of gloom.
“What did you do?” someone asked.
“I drank a whole lot of water just
before I was weighed again and gained
three pounds, one pound more than
was necessary,” answered the cheer-
ful CeciL
Mexican official
bring forth the
from this country.
Baker indicated that the .War De-
partment would not hesitate to pur-
sue and punish the bandits, even if the
journey took American troops much far-
ther into Mexico than the recent trip
across the border at Juarez.
Americans will be protected was em-
phasized by the Secretary, who also
made it clear that notice had been ‘
served on the various Mexican tactions
that no overt acts will be tolerated by
this government.
Baker took occasion to thank the El
Paso Congressman for his recent speech
in which he praised the War Department
for its prompt action in repelling the re-
cent Villa raid upon Juarez, which en-
dangered American lives in El Paso.
pay highest prices.
last night, and stated he had just clos- build Tire Co * 14 Commerce St.
WANTED—at once, Al blackanosh.
Phone 25 Myra, Texaa. (28)
WANTED—Position by returned eol-
dier, who has had office experience
and can handle stenographic work. Ad-
dress J. B. L. care Register office. (30)
>4 office of Register Printing Co
1 HE Gainesville Iron Foundry paj <
special attention to all kinds of gin
•ivii t< iiairing (tf)
FUR SALE—My residence on Church
street. Also 230 acres land near Mar-
ietta, Ukla., 100 acres m cultivation;
two sets improvements. Apply Geo. N.
Rice, South Denton St. (29)
FOR SALE—No. 5 Underwood
writer (all at Register office.
i'UK SALE—Bargain if sold at once my
home place un North Grand avenue-
see Mrs. Will Basinger. (28)
“Two years ago, after suffering many
years With stomach trouble, I took a
course of Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy
and haven’t been sick a day since. I
can eat anything I want and have no
pain at all . Three doctors had advised
operation, but your remedy has cured
me. Every day is thanksgiving for me.”
It is a simple, harmless preparation that
removes the catarrhal mucus from the
intestinal tract and allays the inflam-
mation which causes practically all
stomach, liver and intestinal ailments,
including appendicitis. One dose will
convince or money refunded. Siddall
Drug Co. and druggists everywhere.
—
Washington, June 26.—”1 will aay to
you that it will be very unwholesome
for Poncho Villa or Carranza to cut any
capers along that border. We are going
to protect Americans.” This statement
indicating that the War Department
hiss determined upon a policy that will
guarantee absolute safety to American!
and American interests in Mexico was1
n ade today by Secretary of War Baker
to Representatives Hudspeth and Bee.
The Texans called upon the War
Secretary to urge a strong policy in
the future relations with Mexico, while
Hudspeth advocated the establishment
of garrisons of American troops around
localities in Mexico where Americans 1
were congregated.
Secretary Baker w’as unable to prom-
ise that this would or could be done,
indicating that such action would bor-
der on intervention and any policy with 1
reference to intervention would have to
be promulgated by President Wilson. '
Baker’s attitude, however, was such that '
the Texans left his office feeling that '
any hostile act upon the part of any
or rebel
severest
They are Nature’s Warning
IhwyhHy and Diafiguring Sig-
nals of Bad
Pimples on the face and other
parts of the body are warnings
from Nature that your blood is
sluggish and impoverished. Some-
times they foretell eczema, boils,
blisters, and other skin disorders
that burn like flames of fire.
They mean that your blood needs
S. S. S. to nur-Ey *t -r j cleanse it
of urc lc-.v.::-. la.ions thy
and was hanged to
was then burned.
Hartfield, it was stated by the offi-
o the crime and confided
ies of the negroes wh" aided him.
iWId
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FOR a ALE—All kinds of typewriter
ribbons and carbon paper. Call al
Keg »ter oft ice. Phone 98
More than $200,000 worth of athletic
equipment has been ' djstribut&d
throughout the Third ygjariy in the
Rhineland by the Y. M. C. A. athletic
department in six weeks for use either
in games for recreation or training
leading up to championship competi-
tions.
The “Y” also has assigned 40 ath-|th<-
letic directors 1
Foolballs, baseball material, track and :
field equipment and a great quantity :
of suits have been supplied.
In addition to this the Y. M. C. A. j
has distributed 1,200 sets of boxing j
gloves in the Third army and is co- j
operating with the army officials in |
the A. E. F. championship contests, j continued unabated for the
Boxing bouta have become almost as | days, one white man i
popular as theatrical entertainments i other persons were injured
in the Rhine forces. About 24.000 men j -.....
attend the 6ix bouts staged weekly by
the “Y” at Coblenz and 9,000 the six
bouts staged weekly at Neuweid.
cers. confessed t
nasni
to duty with this army. i'fwo pistols and $20 were found in hisi
iXtill rnu trxr»i o 1 tr*Q /‘Lr iinfl J . .
possession when he was captured.
A subscription list has been started I de 10 because they fear it would
for the young woman assaulted by thejantee
negro. Nearly a thousand dollars was I British Empin
ra’sed within a few hours. • | respei t to "external aggression.’
During the hunt for the negro, which] Irish independence can lie won
past ten I the voluntary act of England.
i or
a result superior force from the outside.
or failing these three avenues to independence, the
members. | league only stands in the way of the
OLD TIME RESIDENT OF
MUENSTER MOVES TO NOCONA'
Frank Trachta, the hustling reaJ WANTED—old casing and tubes,
estate dealer of Muenster, was in town1 PaY highest prices. C-------
was killed and four j ful revolution
1 as
* of misunderstanding signals
; to obey corjimands of posse
; Negroes a
1 for the fugitive.
THREE POPULAR TEACHERS
TO^EAVE COOKE COUNTY
J. S.
Mr ____
Gnncral John J. Pershing. American expeditionary force commander, leav-
ing Y. M. C. A., Palais du Glace, Paris, where he congratulated every woman
worker personally.
. General Pershing's inspection of the Y. M. C. A. canteen, which was unan-
nounced. took up an entire morning and he expressed himself satisfied- with
the results. At several places he surprised the men at their luncheon. At die
Palais du Glace, where 25,000 Americans eat daily, the first intimation that the
diners had i-f his presence was when the orchestra played the “Star-Spangled
Banner.” and they looked about to find the commander in chief of A. E. F.
standing at attention.
He interrogated a number of the soldiers about the food and the prices,
and exhibited the most minute interest in everything pertaining to their
welfare. At the Hotel Rochester, a Y. M. C. A. ^hostelry on the Boulevard
Courelles. he learned with surprise that any private soldier could get two
eggs for his breakfast. This was something generals frequently had experi-
enced difficulty in doing.
To the American women workers at he Palais du Glace he said:
to tell you that I appreciate what the American women are doing over here.
It means a great deal to the army to have the right kind of American women
here doing the work you are doing. Not only is it good for the soldiers, butt
for you, too. It gives you a new per$p£tive on the work of men, and on
the war.”
SEE LASTER BROS, for Bicycles. I n
work. Noith Commerce St (tf)
ed a deal whereby N. Bowman Bold his|
farm eight miles south of Muenster to
Henry Schnidker. Mr. Bowman has been
living on this farm forty years and
having decided to rettire, he wanted a
locality in which he could relax
and spend his days among ned acquain-
tances. He has decided to move to .
Nocona.
Mr. Schnidker is one of the prosper
ous farmers of the Muenster locality,
where he has resided several years.
U. S.
i
.05
.04
.10
.06
.10
.06
.10
.10
CAN YOU BLAME “YANKS” FOR
MIXING CENTS AND CENTIMES?
In the early part of the war. the overseas Y. M. C. A. canteen price
currency, a parallel columi
ing the amounts in TJni
lists looked like this:
Bull Durham ...............1 oz. bag
Dukes Mixture ..................1 oz. bag
Lucky Strike ....................2 oz. bag
Prince Albert ....................1 oz. bag
Prince Albert ....................2 oz. bag
Tuxedo ........................,...2 oz. can
Velvet .............................2 oz. bag
Later in the war the price list# looked this
(For the convenience of those not familiar with French
in has been added show-
ilted States currency)
French ____
(Centimes) (Cents)
.30
.25
.60
.30
.60
.35
.60
.60
Bull Durham ......... ^...1 oz. bag,
Dukes Mixture ..................1 oz. bag.
Lucky Strike....1% or 3 oz. can or bag,
Prince Albert ............ .1 oz. bag,
Prince Albert ............... .2 oz. can,
Tuxedo ...........................1 oz. bag,
Tuxedo ...........................2 oz. can,
Velvet............iy4 or 2 oz. can or bag,
Many people will probably wonder what proportion of the stories
about overcharging by the Y. M. C. A. can be traced to this early
omission of United States currency on the lists. The “30 cent.” stood
for thirty centimes, or five cents in.U. S. money. It was not a hard
matter for a “Yank” to become confused.
.30 cent.
.25 cent.
.60 cent.
.30 cent
.60 cent.
.60 cent.
.60 cent,
way:
son
ken.
him
£
T
t
2
+
r-<
-
+
vm KMOAMJCV COBMAAmOlt#
■SRliHi
RUSSIAN PEOPLE IN
DEPLORABLL STATE
changes
one
GAINESVILLE FLYER LEAVES
LONDON FOR AMERICA
±
J
i
5
±
T
5
:e
WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF LAWD
TITLE#
KIN1
/shoe polishes^
Save the Leather and
Keep youx. Shoes Neat
LIQUIDS an* PASTES
BOB ■UCKeWWTE.TAN AND QN4LQ0D (DARK BIWWN) SHOES
HZS
To Prevent Belching.
Make a regular habit of eating slow-
ly, masticate yo ir food thoroughly, and
you may have no further trouble. If
you should, take <>ne of Chamberlain’s
Tablets immediately after supper.
is not the slightest [feasibility or pro-
tection. Remarkably enough the cholera
epidemic that flourished last summer
■ ceased suddenly as if by a whim of na-
, ture. But now the typhu/ and small-
, pox epidemics are developing more and
more seriously. The government has
no means to check them. The govern-
ment cannot even procure wood enough
for coffins nor transport to the cemeter-
ies. ‘ The survivors must wai£ days be-
fore they can bury the dead.
“It is obvious that people under such
conditions with such superhuman ef-
forts of energy demanded of them can-
not continue to keep their mental bal-
ance.”
TELEPHONE «7
H. E. BERTRAM
General Insurance
OLDEST AGEWCY IM GAIWE8VILLE
Eatabliaked 1N8S
><-xt Door to Majeatlc Theatre
Henry ArmstrongKof Gainesville,
if Mrs. A. C. Schappaul. writes he is
leaving Ixindon for home and is shipping
his flying machine to this city. Henry
was a college student in Kansas when
the call for flyers came and he ioined
the British Flying Corps and w-nt di-
rect to England. After finishing his
training he was made an instructor in
flying and air fighting and was soon at
the head of the profession. He has been
highly honored in London and royally
The W. W. Howeth Co.
IBS TRACTS AND FARM LOANS
Associated Press Correspondence:
London.—Physically normal persons
no longer are to be found in Petrograd
nor in all Russia, says T. Hessan, a well-
known Moscow journalist nad member
of the second Duma who has arrived in
Copenhagen after a long stay in Petro-
grad. The mental state produced by
starvation, disease and nervous strain,
he says, forces Russians to lose their
mental balance.
"Their mental condition so
their appearance that often one can-
nut recognize one’s nearest friend. I
remember the impression I had when I
met the well-known lawyer, Rajeffski.
At first 1 did not recognize him. Soon
afterward I learned that he had hanged
himself.
"Similar things happen daily. I think
w it is to be wondered that such
do not become general. In
COLORS PRESENTED
Austin. June 26.—Regimental colors °f
the One Hundred and Fortv-third Regi-
ment of the Thirty-sixth Division, dec-
orated by General Pershing after the
Meuse-Argonne action, were presented
to Adjt. Gen. James A. Harley today
by Capt. J. L. Thompson on behalf of
the regiment.
(util plete A ba tracts at all lands
and town lots In Coake eauty
GOVERNMENT RENEWS
LEASE ON CALL FIELD
i and has been urged to make his home
there but he will return to Gainesville
r and may accept Uncle Sam’s offer to
I continue the air service in America.
When the armistice was signed on the
11th of November young Armstrong had
I his plane equipped and was one of the
| leaders of the great air fleet which was
ready to go to Berlin and wipe that
| town and all munition plants off the
Wichita Falls, June 26.—That the
government has decided to renew its
lease on the Call Field realty for one
year to June 30, 1920, became know-n
here today, when the Chamber of Com-
merce was officially notified of the fact.
The uses to which the field will be put
have not been wholly defined, but it is
surmised that the aviation school of in-
struction will remain.
suicides
all the '
streets one meets still w’ell dressed peo-
ple. men and women, begging. There theY
stand some of them with their heads
down, dumb as if turned to stone; oth-
ers tonelessly repeating ‘I am dying,
give me something to eat.’
“Even if one has sufficient money to
pay the enormous prices one may make
acquaintance with starvation,” wrote
dr. Hessen to theh Copenhagen Politi-,
“One has to get hold of a seller j “ntertained arm? and statp officials
and pursuade him to sell by treating ’ ..7’ ...’
to some coffee, giving him the
place of honor and so on. Money does
not tempt him. He can always get
money. He needs it only in order to I
continue his trade, or to buy luxuries'
such as sable fur coats, gold ornaments
or ?ems. It is not the seller who looks j
for a buyer but just the contrary.
“Not rarely mothers are seen (who!
have left at home thevr underfed sick j maT’-
children) pleadin? with a milkwoman
to yield up half a bottle of milk at
quite a shameless sum and it may hap-1
pen that the milkwoman suddenly be-1
comes capricious and does not even ans-
wer the unhappy applicant.
“Add to this the terrible typhus and
smallpox epidemics, against which there
HAVE YOU BOUGHT
, 1 YOUR I
Win 5IAW Wt
SAME AND SUCCEED!
MANY RESTAURANTS TO SELL
BEER AND WINE AFTER JULY 1.
Build Yxirself Up.
A daily ration"
GrapeNuts
will help,
A Wbnderfu! Food
New York, June 26.—Many restaur-
ants and hotel keepers will continue to
•ell beer and light wines after July 1
regardless of whether Pr sident Wilson
declares demobilization completed and
terminates the operation of the war
time prohibition law, it vas learned aft-
er a meeting of the Society of Restaur-
OIL MAPS
—FOR SALE—
Made by one of the leading
firms in Texas, showing all lat-
est developments in
Burkburnett Field
• ALSO x
Archer, Clay, Young,
Tillman, Jefferson,
and Wichita
Counties
See them in Show Window at
Register Printing Co.
210 E. California Phone 98
CASTORIA
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INet Contend 15 Ftnid Dm
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SATURDAY SPEC1 ALS
GAUOSVIUB DAILY RXGIBTEB, FRIDAY, JUHX 37, 1313.
4
>
i
X;
IVORY SOAP, large bars, 2 for___________
CORN STARCH, per package___________
BEECHNUT CHILE SAUCE, 45c botUe____
WELCH’S GRAPE JUICE, quart bottle_____
_____25c
_____12c
______35c
______70c
L B. IONFS X SOI. C. 0.0. GMCfflY
WHERE YOU GET FULL WRIGHT AND MEASURE
AUTO DELIVERY PHONE IM
We have now Gooseberries, Blackberries, Okra, Plums,
Peaches, Apples, Cantaloupes, Cabbage, Corn, Squash, encum-
bers, Tomatoes, New Potatoes.
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Leonard, J. T. Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 292, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1919, newspaper, June 27, 1919; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1308827/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.