Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, September 11, 1936 Page: 4 of 8
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I
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 11, 1936
GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
FRIDAY A
THE STEER WON THIS CONTEST!
Jr
Bigg
the week in Dallas.
, has begun. The contract was given
41, (.cL T -—HA-
G. D. BELL
will I e t
C C. Humphries of Greenville, on business Wednesday.
ROSSTON
Went Side Square Phone 442
E g
*
MOTOR BUSSES
1
lieves
Martetta
all
MARIE
TIMMIS
g;
n
Ben
-
nephew of Childress
Wichita
%
101% California St.
i Falls and all points west: 10:30 a
1
Johnnie Bewley left for Gaines-1 u.; 500 p. m.
the C- li
F
F -
ds
«
9
I r
I
II
Dallas I
4
T(
L.E
I S
are nullified bv dishonest employ-
4
lemons im
with
long
tains other deposits
Pinto Beans 4
50c
Lbs
Iresh
Groceries
93c
rich.
J
A-Y
Business,
BREAD
White II
Preserves
25c
Strawberry
5c
or
19
4
"422
I
Green Beans, Del Dixi No. 2 can 10c
Whole Pee’ed
VALLEY VIEW
N1
Finr, «rispy
APRICOTS
Peas, Glyndon. .
I;
1 1 80000
I
29c
Big 24-oz. Jar . •
Granulated
30c
SUGAR
3 lbs. 25c
Navy Beans
1
18c
I
101bs. 55c
Macaroni or Spaghetti .... 1b. 15c
d ii t
h
lie
drop in the hucket Of couirse,
these vast supplies of certain
Frazier’s
25c
PU
\LL SPECIAIS ARE
CASH
.1
BA
EVERREADY
1
g5C
Cocktail
Fast f
10c
Lima Beans
/
Joli x
We Deliver
Phone
103?
tank-agriculture"
X
-----------
r
V
Chocolate, Baker’s. ... 1-2 lb. bar 19c
Lh. 5c
l
2 Doz. 25c
N, M
1 y! t
SAVES YOU MONEY!
5c
2 Lbs. 13c
r
1
i
10 Lbs. 23c
436
#
*
79
h THE FAM.
2
Rolled
Roast ... Lb. 15c i
Sliced Bacon
Lh. 25c
Scottissue......3 rolls 22c
Mixed
Sausage
(buck Roast .... Lb 121c
lb. 23c
$
lb. 17c
Lb. 10c
Lb. 22c
Catsup......14 oz. bot. 15c
ETRA
2 pkgs. 30c
-m
2 tall cans 15c '
322-122
< orner Commerce and Broadway
(
A
Phone 318
□cm
2.
I
w
Shop at
8
I
31
Big Bologna
Stew Meat ..
Crackers, Saxet.........2 lbs. 19c
Pineapple, Libby’s 2-15 oz. cans 25c
Peach Imitation
agricultural products. While “tank
farms"' are still confined to the
I NCY VEAL
Loin Steak
No. 2
Can
Sinclair
White
Lipton’s Tea . . .
Grapenut Flakes
i
।
i
national consumption of bromine.
This chemical is essential in mak-
. . 3 rolls 13c
. sml. pkg. 9c
large bar 10c
is corret
are to.|
17 600000
2 200,000
wife
spent
Canterbury Tea . . 1-4 lb. pkg. 15c
Sunshine Bings .... 1 -Ib. pkg. 20c
• Tene •ve taMtar preduch, edverHsd Im THI
NAMLY CMCL MAGAZIME. Buy hem
wHi eonfi.
RELIABLE
ABSTRACTS
o
ap
of th' <
Mo e
Miss Sue Lowe left Wednesday
for Caddo. Texas. where she will
No 2 1-2
Can ...
16-oz.
Loaf
farm ing
protect
spent the weekend with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Rose and
family.
Alagood’s
Grocery—Market
i
als
able
Be < .
to nig
additi
McCo
. and n
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Williams are
spending a few days in San An-
tonio.
Ray Hand of Fort Worth spent
nolog}
move
20-ton
Hen
l
i
lh t>
4 ake.
Maid Baking
Powder .....
| points
m.;
Zee Tissue
Super Suds
new
torv.
Toilet Paper
Coffee........
Edward's Dependable
Airway Coffee . .
Fresh Roasted
CRACKERS
2-lb. box . . .
.. Lb. 10c
.. Lb. 10c
are ■
urpy
tire surface.
On the coast of North Carolina,
a chemical plant, of an establisned
Dallas with relatives.
Miss Leia McCubbin is spending
GOOD COFFEE
Per pound .....
For
power
the si
tem a
have
Tec
polish
(
halt
18-n
in-a
Zw id
X
• /
least
An
been
Fritz
< he
thin
lark
1-4 lb. pkg. 21c
.....pkg. 10c
Stokely's Finest
Cigarettes . .
Camels
Milk .......
Max-i-Mum
513 Throckmorton
Gainesville
i
GOOD EARBECUE
Lb................
BFVIRLI
PEANUT BUTTER
\ real extra fine quality, made from the
finest peanuts grown.
~000
7,500
82,8 00
15,000
ea-water
Guaranteed Quality
At Low Cost
Day Sale "V
Friday, Sept. 11 through Tuesday,
Sept. 15. Our store is loaded with
Bargains.
4.59
ecesS
McCo
aks,
’ Flavor
1 he n
l
l
Stenographer—Notary
Legal Blanka
4 hpice
apple <i r
CATSUP
, U FOR
Savings
ar
to i
Pal
Dependable Insurance Of All
Kinda
WB
T324
2
wHL *
g gggd
1114
iiiiiim CIRCIE
• 5
•I
war)
q9UB
Ay
8
eo
I
1
Spaghetti, Phillips , 2 med. cans 15c
Tomatoes, Standard 3 No. 2 cans 25c
Golden Ripe
BANANAS
New Jonathan
APPLES..
Seedless
GRAPES..
Red
POTATOES
Peas, Eifood Blackeyed
..........2 med. cans 15c
J. W. Schad Tire & Battery Shop
APRICOTS, choice I r
quality, 1b......... LeC
55729
25c -t
from a three months’ visit with
relatives in South Carolina.
Ti
Wet k l
Itai sin
II ou-e
op •
Ur
. 3
y
M-f
A
3392
—2
**
epgs
a8mem
79090068
Miller’s Corn Flakes .... 2 pkgs. 19c
Pawnee Oats . . . .......big pkg. 18c
Blackberries........No. 2 can 10c
A Grape Punch, Walker’s......pt. 10c
Apple Sauce ........ 18 oz. can 10c
Vigo Dog Food .... 2—1 lb. cans 15c
Mackerel, 1 lb. can ........ 3 for 25c
Pink Salmon 1 lb. can......2 for 25c
pan d with the overwhelming vol- i
umes available literally but a i
A revolutionary new method
of vulcanization known as the
' .ad
Freddie and Billie of Phoenix, Ari-l
zona, spent the week with Mr. and
Mrs Bill Terry
Those who attended the League |
Union at Reed's Crossing Friday .
night were: Misses Yvonne Iopwry.
Ti can 12c
No. 2 can 10c
W > ig
stat
spent
lated
of he
psr’s
be m
moun
SAFEWA
Visit a Cenjenn ialM Romantic
dollars'
“Mining" The Ocean
BACON, sugar cured 1 K.
Bean bacon, 1b..... leC
on the home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Montgomery.
Work on the W. S. Pace home
BROOMS -I Q
Good Quality ...... LC
the week with his parents,
and Mrs. W E Hand.
Miss Mildred Rose of 1
ceg-
E c gpe
—20*—
■ 2333322
Sfi.4 0
w hid
2 \*
Baker’s Cocoa ...... 1-2 lb. can 10c
Jell-Well ............- . 2 pkgs. 9c
Lux Toilet Soap........3 bars 17c
Pork & Beans, Van Camp’s
10 oz. can . .
3o 100—Newrop
Prunes
3 lbs. 23c
3353-5-
•a
' adne
a ' i 6
Gold .....•........
Silver
Salt
Epsom Salt
Caleium Chioride
Potassium Chloride
Magnesium
Iodine
Iron
Strontium
Aluminum
Yet the q uansity of
Seiberling Vapor-Cure process
preserves the life of the cotton
and rubber in Seiberling tires,
welds them together into a
single unit and produces a tire
with no weak spots.
If you are looking for excellent
quality at low prices, see us to-
day. We make liberal trade-in
allowances on your old tires.
-6
as estimated by the
Leave Gainesville for
Oklahoma City and i
trying to find industrial uses for
A
FREE —- Cup and Saucer
with each 2-lb. can of Dairy
y-c
F
48
vaf
esii- social. Our human development :
mated value of a hundred million has not kept pace with our tech-
i little daughter. Etta Kathryn, of
Dallas, spent the week in the W
(|1 S McCubbin home
SA N
Work is
whit h would yield the above hoard
would he relatively minute com-
revolutionary < hemic d
Wanda Lou Martin, Anna Grace
Klinglesmith, Dorothy Dean Hun-
ter, Nell Highfill and Charles
Peery.
j‘ \
(
tH
1 per cent below normal
Copyright. 1936, Publishers Fi-
nancial Bureau
is pumped through the works it i fits from new developments if they :
yields 1 000 tons of bromine are nullified bv dishonest employ- i
Walker and
a. m., 11:20 a. m., 3:05 p m. 5:40
p. m , 9:10 p. m.
and! Leave Gainesville for White*
of an
ers, selfish workers, and unscru-
pulous politicians. America’s real
problems are not mechanical but
. -
- .g
une -41
0
uses tchemurev)
B-i sME2
K. 52 78
-TAGF vOU’R
IW _ ■■ ■■■■ —
BABSON PINS HIS
HOPE ON CHURCH,
LABORATORIES
w. A
about farm problems, ou
lists are quietly study
nial in Dallas Wednesday.
Mr and Mrs. Bert Martin are
visiting Mr and Mrs. Dave Martin
and family in Lubbock
Mr. and Mrs M. C. Browning
and children. Opal and Wavne vis
ited relatives in Cleburne Sunday
Mr. and Mrs Cecil Bowlby and ’
i nical advancement Only a true
i spiritual revival and mental awak-
fraud, scientists and technicians
have been striding ahead in seven-
league boots. From the informa-
FRUITS MD VEGETABLES /
prizes contained in that lumv of
sea-water from which two million
dollars worth of bromine has i I-
readv been lifted
finding
ages, while
Rev. I
Free! With each 48-Ib. sack
of Smith’s Best High Patent
Flour we will ’ give one
butcher knife free!
Politirianv Scientists
Other startling illustrations
now industrial :
for our "sur-
and turned out to be nothingibut n . ..
a water-lodged "gold-brick Ho v- 1 rat Owens and a wild Brahma steer are shown just after they parted
ever since the days of that da ' —omPan in an EllenwbnrgMashatdprsteerrding contest. The steer
tury realities.
Hence our engineers, inventors,
Ing anti knock gasoline When a and chemists are constantly lead-
block of sea-water a square mileing us toward a more prosperous
C. H. McCuistion and children.
, , Hal and Frances and Emma Jo
■ * ’ 1' " McCuistion. attended the Centen-i
10c
10c
Shortening Wilco
VP 8
Qo ca
. ,ao
roads from cotton, cosmetics from
oats. Some of these products are
now in actual production on a com-
mercial scale. Agremistry and
chemurgy may sound like tales
from the Arabian Knights but
they are actually twentieth-cen-
ever. I have no doubt that mod-
ern engineering will be able to Babsonchart. now registers 25 per
master most of the problems n-.cent above a year ago and is only
volved Here are some of the « ther
the boro. Sherman, Pana Texarkana
and all points east: 7:40 a. m.,
Ou: marine chemists have potlening in our churches and schools
yet he en able to work out pro-lean cope with the tremendous
cesse for extracting all the < ther ' problems introduced by the prog-
available sea-water deposits How- ! ress in our laboratories
worth mbre than $1,700,000 at rur-
rent quotations And, in addition,
that same lump of sea-water con-
O '
..
■
m.
Leave Gainesville ior Denton
cation. - Gainesville this week.. She spent
Mrs. R. L MCAteer and Bill last week at Dallas having her ___
spent Sunday in Slidell. eves treated. Dallas Fort Worth and all pointe
Mr. and Mrs S. R Nall of Cal-: H N McPherson of Wynne- lsouth:’ 1:10 a. m„ 4:35 a.m.,7
ood, Okla., spent the weekend _ 11:20 a. m 3:05 p m. 5:40
and Joan, spent Sunday in ville Saturday to attend school; LOCKING BARN APTER . .
this term. ’ I OPELIKA, Ala (AP).- Just to
Mrs - Berry spent thelne safe M E Gilmore. Opelika
weekend at home but returned to i De
---in —aua- , where she is undergoing I business man, out to purchase a
the Cash Lumber Company. Misses Mamie and Della Walker ( medical treatment. : safe When he returned he found
Rev. and Mrs. Roy Montgomery’ visited relatives in Fort Worth • Nat Bewley of Abilene arrived his cash drawer had been rifled of
and daughters of Union Grove Sunday. ] Monday for a visit with his $200.
spent the weekend with his par- Mrs. N. Edge and Bobby are mother who is very ill. ‘ ----
ents. Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Mont- spending the week in Fort Worth. ! Mrs. Sherman Bewley spent sev-
gomery and family. Mrs. Ed Knight was in Dallas eral days the last of the week with
- - — - ... ---- - I ber father in Oklahoma.
t not her chemical group
verge of some extraordinary de-
velopments in the chemical treat-
ment of sea-water. To view these ■ have had several of their brain
new possibilities in the right per- ' children adopted by industrialists,
spe five remember that the Ale ohoteis being made from arti-
oceans cover more than two-thirds chokes, astics from short cotton
for 71 percent) of the globesen- fibres, pht from soy beans and!
tung oil, paper from corn husks,
gce
Sauer Kraut Brand
against future short-
in r ise Mr Wallace
J • 3
VALLEY VIEW, Sept. 9. Mrs
duced nearly half of our entire
studying s
plodinig t
m 1
*FEATURED DURING
"FAMILY CIRCLE WEEK"
and chemicals became a
and other vegetables beggar the
imagination.
Churches Must Do Their Part
Meanwhile the chemurgists are
counterbalancing the tank farm-
ers. Led bv Henry Ford. they are
will come 1
the Carr g
family spent the weekend in Sul-
phur, Okla.
Miss Estelle rdelt spent the lshurgiweerrgusshday MF andjuere with relatives,
weekend in Vici..Okla., with Mr Homer RoX was in Ft. worth
and Mrs. Ralph Kelley, on business Wednesday I
• Misses Sue. Earlyne and Mary Mr. and Mrs. Jack McCubbin of, weekend here.
Alice Lowe spent Saturday in Dal- Paris spent the weekend with Mr.; Miss Ima Bewley left Friday f.r 11:30 a. m., 6:00 p. m
las with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bery- and Mrs. W. S. McCubbin and her school near Decatur which Leave Gainesville for
hil. family. . was to begin Monday
Improvements are being made; Mr. and Mrs. Dan Flint, Dan, I
Wiisor V
ing buit
vent t nen
with < Km
(tank-agriculture) to
i i —-g—0KT
. a
• *2eea %
Miss Pauline Cunningham has!
„ . , . ,,, returned to Burkburnett where.]
simultaneuslv demand would be . . .... t
. „ , » , s . she will teach school this year. t
increases because of the chemical , _ ,, .c , ,
. . , , , I Mr and Mrs. Boe Martin of Ft
Indu kvs ingenuitv in develon-
. , . , . Worth spent Monday with Mr and
ing new uses and markets for ts . , .
I..., , t, . i , । Mrs T P Willis and family .
procuets That is why I pin my r...... 1.e IVA.cv!
8 Caron
e
ow
'I c"
A 9
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Malkicote
and Norma Jean,’ spent Sunday
and Monday in Fort Worth and '
. - - Dallas.
I period. But we can derive no bene-j Mrs. Bill Bounds and sons.1
, --om)
o”
laboratory stage. chemurgists
6269 e fe2 Royal Gem Brand No. 2
“5 surnsawsnasmensnud Can
chemistry of farmir g The De- .
part ment of Agriculturre wai: 4 us
that, although, the drought has
temporarily eliminated farm rur-
phuses our basic problem of ove: -
production is still with us At the
♦anu* time, the folks in the De-
partment of Conservation predict
grave dis stets and f od short-
ages if soil erosion is not halted -
Meanwhile, practical chemists are
developing methods of intensive
I ba?-
W-
day with Norman Mills. " ROSSTON. Sept. 9.—Rev. W. A.
Mrs. Freda Polk and children, .aine and wife left Monday for
were in Dallas Wednesday. They ineir home at O’Brien after being
were accompanied home by Miss here in a meeting for two weeks. —. „ - 10-5 A
Mert McCollum who is on her va- Mrs. J. B. Dill is visiting at pm . 5:10 m 9:00 p m.;
plus’’ farm proiucts
“Tank farming” is carried or) in
shallow basins filled with a fer-
tilizor solution maintained at a
standard temperature. Seeds are
spronted in peat-moss placed on
wire st reens just ahore the liquid,
their roots extending downward 1
fnte the culture Crop yieldsob-
tained in experiments have been i
trulv amazing Tomato plants
grow so high that the fruit must
be picked from a stepladder The i
tomato yield is at the rate of 200
tors per acre of tank surface
compared with a normal outdoor
crop of above five tons per acre |
Polatoes produce 2,400 bushels per
acre from the tanks cempared t
with an outdoor average of 115
bushels Productivity of straw-
berries, turnips, carrots, celery.
hopes- for America’s future en
busine sslike scientists Thev ure , .
always striving .......... prices teach .first grade work in "he
and bizzor volume Only aspricesm Mrs Lovelady is visiting’
are.owered and more, goods are , ... r. . „ . ... s 1
. . . ’ . . her brother. Ed Roane in South i
produced can our standard of liv- —
ing rise
Mr. and Mrs H. B Lowe were
in Fort Worth on business Satur-
day.
Miss " Vannie McCroskey left
Saturday for Grand Prairie where
she will make her home with Mrs.
N. B. Boswell.
Mrs. Alva Gamble and daughter
Seattle. Wash., are visiting her
brother, Norman Mills in the Lois
McCuistion home.
Mrs. R. E. Godwin and children
have returned from a trip to San
Antonio where they visited rela-
tives.
Mr and Mrs T P Willis and
Frances were in Fort Wo: th Fri-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Knight and
tion that I get, we are on the
$ 36 000
25,000 |
24,500,000
prices would be reduced Fut
Texas i
Mr and Mrs Chancey Morgan .
, of St Jo visited relatives here
"‘Sunday. 1
P,0CS08 Mr and Mrs Holly McCollum
and < hem- I ’
South Carolina, is visiting his
brother, S. E. Humphries. r
Mr and Mrs. George McCraw
and children, Georgamaye. and l
Delmon, of Fort Worth spent Sun-
In surface and a huncred feet deen
1 Hit the bull’s eye with a Regis-
, ter Classified Ad
and family of Paris spent the
weekend in the T. M. McCollum
home.
S. E. Humphries has returned
- 10c
company has already proved the
practicability of extracting wealti
from these vast ocean "wastes."
Last year this “mining” plant pro-
While politicians howl I ■
Hat 10c
on-
tiie i
AMERICA APPROACHING BIG
BISINFSS BOOM, SAYS FA-
MOIS ECONOMIST
I ______________
Bv ROGER W BABSON
BABSON PARK, Mass. Sept
11. —America is approaching an-
other business boom—perhaps the
biggest in our history Cheap
money and deferred demand for
goods are two basic reasons un-
derlying this forecast. A third fac-
tor is the coming market for new
products and the amazing discov-
eries of new chemical processes, j
Several months ago I discussed ’
some of the modern products; to- ‘
day I will mention some of the
revolutionary processes.
Wealth From the Sea
Years ago my New England
neighbors got greatly excited
about a scheme for extracting
gold, from sea-water. It was just
another stock-jobbing promotion
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, September 11, 1936, newspaper, September 11, 1936; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1437831/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.