Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 83, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 8, 1921 Page: 4 of 6
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I
I
The
LOW PRICES, TINIES
i>
com-
l
READ REGISTER WANT ADS
/
I
S
wanted
or
if you buy your groceries from us.
membership in the
Get Our Prices Before
You Buy!
been
Oj
v
the sentence
t
Uie way
READ REGISTER WANT ADS
St
NOW
Christmas Gift Portraits
3
“There’s a Reason” for GRAPE-NUTS
MOTHER GAVE IT
'.•i
5
i
>
■
Bin
BOB
I
1
IMS
i
Are you stepping on the brake
or the accelerator?
IS THE BEST TIME TO HAVE THE
NEGATIVES MADE FOR THOSE
Public Utilities' May
Be Exempt From Laws
Covering Private Plants
the interior,
regulations
States
DOCTOR SMS RADIUM
WILL NOT CURE CANCER
INDEFINITE TERM IN
PRISON FOR MURDER
Hence all of these super-
criticism—
CHARGED WITH ACTS
TO EVADE THE LAWS
s
s
> C. D. Laverty Dairy ■
■ TUBERCULINS TESTED ■
COWS
PHONE 774
(■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a
YOUR BATTERY WILL
BE READY
Due uoiiax
ited Lrvsa.
Virginia Lady Suffered With Aches
and Pains Until Mother Began
Giving Her CardoL
Do it, whatever the task may be,
For it may hold glories you cannot see.
What if you’d rather lie late in bed
Or go out fishing or play, instead!
Few of us here on earth today t
WBAT DOBS YOUR
BOOKSBOW?
If y ham ever hmn the vtetia et
Giltner & McDaniel
Phone 410 ' E. California St.
The Fifth Bed Cross Roil Call begun-
Armiotiee Day, Nov. 11 to Nov. 4.
----X----
NATIONAL PARK GOVERNMENT
Texoma Cash Grocery
FIRST DOOR NORTH WM. KILLGORE CO.
Telephone No. 197 211 North Commerce St.
G. O. BREEDING
THE PHOTOGRAPHER HI YOUR TOWS
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Confidence 1
____
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1921.
fgrSSnkq
“EXTRA PLY” MEANS “EXTRA MILES**
ZlaaH
■ ertaintly
founts
Vtonftoc
ro<*w»^
eyc«
of Texas are exchanging
’ sene, crude and fuel oili
The Chamber of Commerce has a sup
ply of catalogs and entry blanks ready
for the Cooke Bounty Live Stock and
Poultry Show, November 14, 15 and 16
and anyone desiring some can obtain
them there.
How about your breakfast or lunch—does
it give, or take?
Grape-Nuts is sweet, crisp, delightful to
the taste, and is an ideal source of power for a
busy and difficult day.
When you have news items for The
Register please can <JD
when you call for it and it will be
I properly recharged. We recharge
| all makes of batteries, call for and
deliver them. SERVICE is our
; motto or slogan and we certainly
| live up to it.
obligation that
Am^ri a» Red Cross
Lixe pioblem of our dis-
Help by joining the
MILK IS BOTH FOOD
AND DRINK
There is nothing m i efresh tog
as a glass of pure cold milk. A
glass ef milk contains more nutri-
tion than a ham sandwich. Let ■*
supply you with pure Milk and
Ci earn.
IN EVERYTHING
Calumet Baking
Powder re
First in Quality
— received highest
awards at the
World’s Pure Food
Exposition, Chica-
go, Illinois; Paris
Exposition, Paris,
France.
First in Results
—never fails to pro-
duce pure, sweet,
wholesome foods.
First in Purity
—containsonly such
ingredients as have been
officially approved by
theUnitedStatesPure
■ Food Authorities.
By lar the greatest
the nation and tue
laees today is
abied service mem
Keo Cross.
- Santiago, Chile, Nov. 7.—(United
Press.)—It begins to look as if present
financial crisis will deprive Santiago of
its annual grand opera season. The
Chilean shares with his brother Latin
an intensive love for grand opera, but*it
is apparent that this passion is not
equal to pawning the limousine or the
70
..$7.(0
Texas
_____$ .70
_____$1.50
_____IS.SO
lor a
Dublin. Va.—Mias Mary Alice
Hughett residing on Routs 3, near
here, recently told a visitor of her
Interesting experience with CarduL
Miss Hughett said: “I had been suf-
fering for some time with painful . . .
I was pale, didn’t feel like going.
Would, just drag around, and couldn’t
rest to do any good. I would suffer
once a month with my back, sides
and heed My limbs would ache and
I didn’t know what to do, but I knew
I must do something, for I didn’t get
well by letting it run on.
“My mother is a believer in Cardut
for she saw what It did for others as
well as herself, so she began giving
It to me.
. “It wasn’t long before I saw a
rhwnffe * it was just what I needed,
it regulated me. I began to eat and
sleep, and the pain stopped.
“Ciu'dul is without doubt the best
female tonic made, and I am glad I
can nwmimil it to others."
If swffsrlTur with symptoms such as
Miso TflngWt mentions, or other ail-
liar to women, why not be-
at once? Ito Merit Is well
by successful ate tor more
than 44 yean.
fcry Cardui!
A fellow must earn what his dream de-
mands, '.
Must pay for his joy with his brain and
and hands, --
Must bow to trouble and keep his grin
And conquer his whims .if he hopes to
win.
Fortune or glory will never find
The man of the “too much trouble” kind,
For this is the lesson that all must
learn—
We’ll get no more than we’re glad to
earn.
He gets the moat who has worked ths
mostk
And he who dodges the trouble here
Is dodging hie ehanee for a greater
sphere.
TOYS
New Toys coming in daily.
Dolls, Furniture, Buggies, Pi-
anos, Skates, Trunks, Dishes,
Magic Lanterns, Wind-U p
Toys. Drums, Horns, Gilbert
Toys, Games.
R; M. FIELD’S
BOOK STORE
Daily Register
AMD MESSENGER
ESTABLISHED IN 1884
REG I ST E R PRINTING COMPANY
(Inc.) Publishers
GAINESVILLE, TEXAS
j. T. LEONARD____Ealter
j. M. LEONARD_____________Eaitoe
C. H. LEON ARD----Bwaieeee Ha*a*er
ED HEATH _______________ Circulator
Editorial an 1 Business Office 210 East
California Street. Business Office Tele-
phone No. 98; Editorial and News Room
phone No. 69.
Entered at the Gainesville Postoffice
as second-class matter
Nubcerlptien Rates la Gaiaesvllle
Daily, one month in advance------$ .70
Daily, six months in advance-----$4.00
Daily, one year in advance — "
Mabscrlption Rates by Mall
Aad OUabesaa
Per month, in advance-------
Six months, in advance ----
One year, in advance---------
Also Owners and Publishers of the
WEEKLY REGISTER * MESSENGER
$1.50 per year, in advance
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of
any petson. firm or corporation whjch
may appear in the columns of The Reg-
ister & Messenger will be gladly and
promptly corrected upon being brought
to the notice of the publishers.
TO ADVERTISERS
In case of errors or omissions in
legal or other advertisements, the pub-
lishers do not hold them selves liable
for damage further than the amount
received by them for such advertising.
The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use for republication of
all news dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper, and
also the local news appearing herein.
MEMBER
Texas Daily Press League, The
Southern Newspaper Publishers' Asao
elation. American Newspaper Publish-
ers Association, Associated Press and
United Press
Bible Tbought for Today
AN END 10 WORRY:—Be
careful for nothing; but in
everything by piayer and
supplication with thankagiv-
ing let your lequests be made known
unto God. And ine peace of God, which
passeth ail understanding, shall keep
yuux hearts and minds through Christ
jeaus.—Phiiippians 4; 6, 7.
WAINEIVTLLE DAD^Y RMimR, TUESBAf, WFBMBBR «, 1»1.
’ , | W1GHIW, IS
HARD IN CHILESLOGAN OF GEMMf
The Hawkeye Tire Shop
14 North Commerce St A. M. Lideny
-rr-_____
r -.-MET- mwr W. -W- -
Built by superior workmen—of long staple 171-4 ounce cotton
fabric, crossed and over-lapped, with minute detail, under rigid
inspection, then compressed and vulcanized, producing tires of
outstanding quality.
By Edgai A Guest
i
sasxs -- issi#
* ou-el useu to bo the worlds greatest
industry. Since the wax it has
superseded by settlement work.
TO THE “TOO MUCH
TROUBLE” MEN.
If we did but the things that we
to,
It's little that mortals would ever do;
If at “too much rest when our strength
was tried,
If we never went out of our way
stayed
Close to our task while our neighbors
played,
If all that wq did was to wear a smile,
We’d never accomplish a thing worth
while.
GUNS AND BOMBS.
There has been much admiring
ment on the new American coast defense
gun which shoots a 2,500 pound shell 35
miles. It is unquestionably a wonder-
ful gun. Such a shell would probably
smash into smithereens any warship it
hiL- f is possible to
But there's the rub. Aiming at a war-
ship 35 miles away is taking a mighty
long chance.
guns are open to the same
they can't be depended on to hit any-
thing definite at their full range, or to
J" hit a moving target at half their range.
The Washington Herald figures that
_ 10 bombing planes could be built for the
cost of one of these big guns, and that
“ it would be far easier for the plane to
hit the gun with a 4,000 pound shell than
for the gun on shore to hit a -warship
at sea. One of those two-ton shells
tears a bole in the ground 75 feet wide
and 25 feet deep. How long would that
gun last, with 10 planes bombarding it!
More to the point is the fact that the
bombing plane can got out to sea hunt-
ing the warship, while the gun is fixed
on shore. And for the price of one
battleship, 800 war planes can be built.
Airplanes, rather than guns in coast
defenses or on battleships, will probably
decide that hypothetical “next war.”
Wherefore the limitation of navies as-
sumes less importance than many have
attributed to it. That is, unless air
navies are limited, too.
that France, is unhindered by England S
has caused much unemployment would dismember Germany, leaving her
land, without
Germany is
The food you eat does make a difference.
Heavy, starchy foods often do slow down
body and mind—often steal the energy that be-
longs to the day’s work. Grape-Nuts is a go-
ahead food. It contains the perfected nourishment
of Nature’s best grains. It includes all those
elements needed to nourish body and brain. It
is easy to digest. It gives energy without taking
energy.
ADDED ATTRACTION, IMPROVE-
MENTS AND CONVENIENCES
can be made in your home by having several outlets installed in
convenient locations. Attractive wall lighting fixtures always
add beauty and harmony to the home. We carry the largest stock
of Lighting Fixtures in the city, so it makes it easy for you to
make your selections here.
TROUBLE COMPLAINTS AND WIRING OUR SPECIALTY!
GAINESVILLE ELECTRIC CO.
PHONE 325 1. CALIFORNIA
First in
Economy-
moderate in
price —you aave
when you buy it
' Contains more than
theordinary leaven-
ing strength-there-
fore you use less.
First in mil-
i lions of homes
where “nothing
else” will da
Ml
---X--
liie irisii purley seems to be wander
ill uIAf uL tlioee Lx/IuluiX
--X-----
Babe KbU. io 0ULUo Lu *u vau^e
vHlc. BaLa doe-u l care »i‘ai he plays
j U.ol Su At D bulL
French anxiety and bitterness. On the ’8SSS5S8SSSSSSS®
other hand, the conviction is settling ®
even deeper in the Germanv psychology, JllSt r O1K1
‘ ' 3
a»
bloodless land, without economic
strength. _ Germany is bitter over
France’s play in Upper Sileeia. Germany
r< sents constant French, pressure in the
west, and thinks France would emascu
late the German industrial region.
These and other things make the" av-
erage German feel that France is trying
to take more than her pound of flesh.
At the same tiAe, the average man for-
gets the republic at the start, trimmed
and backed and filled, seeking outs in the
treaty until Wirth came forward with
the pronunciamento that Germany was
going to play fair and proceed to ful-
fill. Wirth has somewhat swung
around the French attitude.
But there is in Germany today a
smouldering hatred of France, which per-
haps in the next generation—not in this
— will lead to a new war.
Germany at present is not in a posi-
tion to wage war. She is disarmed. I
Twin Falls. Idaho, Nov. 7.— (Associ
ated Press.)—In the presence of the
crowded court room, Lydia Meyers
Southard, convicted poisoner of Edward
F- Myers, her fourth husband and charg
ed collaterally with the murder of
three previous husbands and a brother-
in-law, was this morning sentenced to
a term in the Idaho state penitentiary
of from ten years to life.
The defendant received
without a tremor.
Notice of appeal was filed -by her at
torneys, but a stay of execution was
not asked and it was considered likely
that a commitment* will follow in a few
daya
London, Nov. 8.— (By United Press) —
Is radium, hailed by the medical pro-
fession as a panacea for the deadly can-
cerous diseases, a failure?
It is, according to Sir Thomas Park-
inson, a noted specialist and physician
to Loiyd George, in an interview upon
his arrival in New Zealand.
It is not, according to other London
specialists, who term Sir Thomas’ state-
ment, “nonsense.”
‘'Radium is a failure,” Sir Thomas
said. “It is not only not effective as a
remedy, but it is dangerous, because its
burning effect aggravates, instead of
curing disease. Many leading stirgeons
have discarded it in favor of X-rays.”
By CARL D. GROAT,
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
New York, Nov. 7—“Nie wieder
Krieg,"—“never again war.”:
This is the slogan of an ever-increas-
ing army in Germany, the cry of men
who have come to a realisation finally
that war is a losing game for all con-,
eerned: the appeal of women who suf-
fered through the German “turnip win-
ter"; the call of children cheated of
their rightful heritage—a sound body—
through war shortages.
Germany, as a whole, doesn’t want
any more war—not this generation at
least. It is fed up on war.
This is my firm conviction after talks
w’ith men in all walks of life in Germany
the past two years and a careful obser-
vation of the trend of thought and af-
fairs in the new Germany.
France’s allegA fear ot a new Ger-
man invasion is, at the moment, a sense-
less bugaboo, according not only to
Germans, but also to English officers.
The one thing that can make that
fear an actuality, according to many au-
thorities. is a further growth of “French
chauvinism and militarism.”
Germany—undoubtedly forgetting the
ravages her arrtiies made in France—
fails perhaps to see the ground for.
Washington Nov. 7-—(Associated
Press.)—The supreme court today up
held contentions of the city of Spring -
field. Ill., that publie utilities operated
bv municipalities can be exempted from
jurisdiction of state laws regulating
privately-owned public utility corpora
I tions
ihe recent opening of the first school
lor children m Yellowstone National
Park cails attention to some facts about
such lederai possessions not commonly
known. The school has 14 pupils, all
children of government employees.
Ihe Yellowstone Park is a reservation
similar in political character to the Dis-
trict of Columbia. Wyoming, Montana
and Idaho not only can collect no taxes
of any kind within the park boundaries,
but none of the«r officers have any au-
thor. ty whatsoever over any phase of life
or government administration there. Ex-
clusive control is exercised by jt super-
intendent appointed by the secretary of
Any violation of laws or
are punished by a United
mimissioner who is appointed
by the federal district judge of Wyom-
ing. All revenues collected by park of-
ficials from the'operation of the park
ar,- deposited in the United States
Treasury.
Here, then, is another section of the
republic in which the inhabitants are
not actually self governing. The popu-
lation of the District of Columbia oc-
casionally voices a desire for a bigger
share in its own affairs. The popula-
tion of the Yellowstone National Park
will probably never be large enough to
make this question an important one.
-WHY EXPLORE?
Exploration and discovery do not sad
with the work of such courageous adves
tnren as Vilhjalmur Stefanason. If
they did, the query of the stay-at-
homes, “What is the use of it allF’
might have some alight justification.
Bat, as Stefaasaon himself points out,
time and scientific study may turn tbe
moat trifling or apparently insignifi-
cant find into a tremendous force to the
progress of civilisation.
Christopher Columbus set out to ftot
say thia oa the authority of ao leoo a
personage than the British General
Gingham, of the allied disarmament
eomnHsaion. t
Just now, German industry is too busy
trying to capture world markets and
meet reparations to think about any
more war. And the “man in the street"
is even less anxious for a war than per-
haps his capitalistic ma^er. I have
queried groups of laboring men as to
whether they wanted any more war. "ould go to work if it paid to play.
They all agreed they didn’t, On one oc-
casion I expressed doubt as to their sin-J
cerity and asked if they were willing to
sign their names to a sworn' statement.
They took the matter seriously, and
soon brought me > paper with their
names, swearing they wanted no more
war, and saying the document could be
used in any way I wished.
The new Germany has had enough of
war.
Your dealer has confidence when
he buys and sells “V. V.” products.
He knows he is giving his customers
the best. You have confidence
when you send your children to buy
household remedies or nreparatioas.
They can’t get the wrong kind when,
they get v. V.” brands. The
“V. V.” dealer is usually a reliable
dealer. Ask for the bottle with the
"V- V.” red shield.
Van Vleet-Mansfield Drug Co,
SouM’s Largest Wholesale Druggists
Mawiph i, Tenn. j
Work is the father of all that’s good—
He gets the fire who will saw the wood,
He reaches the top who will dare to
climb
With his face set upwards all the time;
This you could nail on the highest post;
’ ------x--— I
A FOOL AND HIS MONEY
Harry Phillips went to Mexico a year
ago, peuaileaa. Today he ia back in
Amenta prepared to cut a golden swath
across Uu> native laud. He struck it rich
m Mexican ininea.
One oi the ways in which he manifests
hlb AB
uumiUaUuli ad
lie Luilirxo At
pie happy—to make them
luudiy believes
scattered money
it.
He iem do ng any real harm—the
u jrld knows a fool when it sees one. He
isu t doing any assured good, either.
How dues he know who picks that money
up.
L, know/ug what it us to be broke and
jobless, Hany Phillips truiy wants to
Leip others who are that way, let him
build up industries which will provide
jobs and wages, or seek legitimate av4:
nues lor dispenaing help.
eratic season during a period of slack
business.
The jewelry and art gooda business
here has also practically stopped. The
only ones who appear to be buying dia
monds and other precious stones are
speculators or well-fixed bar^iin hunt-
ers, few in number, who are taking
advantage in the fall of prices. Many
wealthy and moder at elykedrcumstanced
Chilean families have placed their fam-
ily jewelry with jewelers for sale. It
obtain one-carat white
diamonds as low as ninety or one hun-
dred dollars in American money. Amer
ican and British travelers are the prin
cipal purchasers of the diamonds.
Well made men’s shoes on snappy
American st^le lasts sell from $4 to
$6 a pair; tailor-made suits of good
woolen cloth at from $20 to $30, with
overcoats at the same price; shirts of
good materials at $1.50 to $2, and made
to measure in the best shops for from
$3 to $4. In spite of the low prices
of clothing there is comparatively little
buying. The period of business depres
sion
and wages are low.’
» new route to the Orient in order that'
valuable gold and spieee might be more
easily procured. He found an undevel-
oped continent and took back to Europe
potatoes and maixe—disappointing re-
sults, perhaps, in that day, but of incal-
culable benefitr-to mankind since.
So, too, yean spent in the study of
seemingly unimportant ocean currents
made it possible during the world war to
calculate the drift of mines escaped
from the war sone, and to warn vessels
against them.
Stefaneeon is wise in his work as well
as brave. He makes no effort to ap-
i praise the value of his own researches. ~ x
content in the belief thnt the, nre well '•“>» »•«'• “ “ <,|>’
worth while and that time and future
• needs will prove which are of chief im-
t portance and put them to their destined
use.
Austin, Nov. 7.— (Associated Press.)
That certain large oil refining concerns
gasoline, kero
iWis stated in
the report of the attorney general’s de
partment of investigation of violations
of the anti-trust laws of Texhs. The
report named several companies.
The report states that two large oi)
companies exchanged approximately
five million gallons last year to save
transportation charges. The filling sta
tions of one company in one city w« re
supplied by the other companies and vi< e
versa, the report stated Th’s exchange
was also made in kerosene and crude
and fuel oils.
Briefly the report states that nearly
all gasoline sold in certain large cities
is supplied by one company regardless
of the filling station at which sold.
by suatu-ring bills of large de-
he walks along the streets.
tu make peo-
auula. He
that late will waft that
into baud* that need
And this is the secret of each man’s
quest— w
He gets the beet who will give his best.
II ’<■
Am
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Leonard, J. T. & Leonard, Joe M. Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 83, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 8, 1921, newspaper, November 8, 1921; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309006/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.