Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 296, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1939 Page: 3 of 6
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 11, 1939.
SOCIETY PAGE
Editor
PAGE THREE
-
*
greatest
have a chaw of terbacer.
•mquot: TdufT
ANCHOR MARKING
location or WRCC*
I
\)e
7
not live
n sin all his life and sud-
"-F
a
S00005--
A
FALCON ANAT
I
FROM SOVA) US
ha
«
I
/
• not short circuit his men- Will be paid by the manufacturer for any
3
to Remedy cannot remove. Also removes
a man
ness.
s
=t
Social Calendar
4 1*
e
JULY BARGAINS
was
aunts.
Attending were
Mr. Fox
Rosson.
E.
a
49c
way, where Jay Fox was
than
baby three weeks younger
study Monday morning at the
Tufted
lik provided entertainment.
I
BATH SETS
!
$100
33c
marked recently. "I wish
there
DEXTER
were more thunderstorms, for my
business seems to piek up
_ Vaughan, H. B. Shaw. H. H. Mc-
Ewel
Close Out!
I
with
Men’s
r re-
Fall Pants
afternoon.
। 57. of the same address, Philadel-
$2 - $3 - $4
Little Miss Waunema Barnett phia.
feeling
Winger and family of Gainesville, expert. The lignite, used satisfac-
250 Pounds
V
Vacation
Chenille -
ICE COLD
Women’s
Boys'
, ■ 1
1
Cooke County
JIMMIES
5
25c
79c98c
25c
Every Melon Guaranteed!
4
1
8
11
$
'I • w
I
s
At Our Station or Plant
For
GAINESVILLE ICE CO
!
$
. st
*
0,0
0®
$25.00 REWARD
hl
5
1J
e d
C .
n c o r p o
a
Miss McCollum,
' Joe Biffle Are
Wed in Marietta
The ideal boys' clothes. Overall
styled. Dressy, sanforized sum-
mer material. Ages 2 to 8.
Valley View Girl is
Bride Saturday of
Myra Young Man
Edwin Carewe, the motion
ture director of note, who is
'COASTGUARD
OORTHOlQS
Wheelis, D. C.A
Fears, F: S. Piott,
Mr. and Mrs. George Lucie and J
son of Washington. D. C., spent
Mr. Biffle is a son of Mr. and
Mrs. E. F. Biffle of Myra.. The
, now
: gro-
• Bride, ]
Lemons,
OlRtCTlOH
Of TOW
. Mission Study
For M. E. Women
Broad-
i born.
re-
your
Miles Scudder, and
Paclik.
I
Women’s and Misses’
Bemberg Sheer
Addresses Strangely the Same
WILMINGTON, Del. (UP).—A
Unbleached. Only 400 yards at
this unusually low price.
Shower Party
For Mrs. Ritcher .
n
v
Dr. Virgil Fisher
Service Club Speaker
Tuesday at Noon
Beautiful summer prints. Smart
patterns. Sizes 14 to 40.
Rev. and Mrs. A. L. Jordan on
East Broadway, in Gainesville.
(
‘The Peril of
Short Cuts’ Is
Kiwanis Topic
Bath mt and lid cover. Wsah-
able fast colors.
L P. Wherry was co-hostess with
her sister.
. The leader discussed “Steward
• in Society,” and Mrs. W. O. Edg-
ington, who assisted Mrs. McKee,
young couple is residing at Valley .
View where he is in the cafe busi-
Sheers and Pique
Regular 19c at 11c per yard
Spreads
$|OO
Lawns, dimities and voiles. Also
large group prints. Sizes: 14 to
SCHMITZ
BOWLING ALLEY
PONTOONS 2.3
as ft down.
PONTOON ! AT
.
I
ALL you can put in a hosiery
bag! '
T2m6N *
‘SlLGAMOdfACTS
ASBACKSTOP^D
TOWfOSQUALUS'
PONTOON
HOHDONN
PONTOONS 1
^FTDOWN]
LUGGAGE
98c
Streamlined styles. Big variety.
A real Penney value!
Grand
Opening
of
is ill of bronchial pneumonia.
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Atkins of
Women's and Misses’
Sheer and Print
ic
Per Pound
ednesday
nly
More and More Penney
— I— —HI
something else. We must face the
fact that anything man does is
life, and should be'done ih its full-
est development,” the speaker de-
was in the grocery
"Ie in the build-
First Methodist Missionary society
took part in a mission study di-
Women’s and Misses
Rayon
“souAM*LESWN
240 FF£T OF WATFP I
HERSTERNNNDI
Dainty summer dresses — cool
and attractive styles
•0172/
11 -24
Beau tiful prints and solid colors
— Season’s newest styles. Sizes
14 to 52. , "
Miss Louise Solomon and Drew
Ward, both of Valley View, at-
tended the couple.
The bride wore a teal blue crepe
dress with accessories in white. She
ie a daughter of Mrs. Bonnie Mc-
Collum, teacher in the Valley View
|1
L
“Man Bins when he neglects his
body ant his* heal th.* Man is using
the short cut when he fails to. pre-
serve hi 3 physical well-being. A
sick mar sees the world as a sick
world, and his moral outleok is
unhealthy,” the pastor said. , I
Dr. Fisher wafned that man can-
$198
BETH GRAHAM,
___J.1 ! ' —
MYRA. July 11.—Mrs. Walter
Ritcher of Muenster was the hon- '
oree Tuesday afternoon, July 4, at ।
a shower party when Mmes. E. F. !
Biffle, Fred Snuggs, and Samuel •
* Enderby entertained at the Myra
clubhouse.
The Fourth of July motif was
carried out in the refreshments.
. Favors were miniature flags. A
" lovely assortment of gifts was pre-
sented to the honoree, who is the
former Miss Joaline Needham of i
Myra.
I
“BOWL FOR HEALTH’S SAKE”
Wooderson, the great English
miler, defeated at Princeton, holds
the world's marks in the mile.
Closing Out!
Women’s <
Bed
Spreads
$298
t
I I
DMiECTIM OF TOW -15MIUS
•SQUALUi-dihoPF
bottom- sr fan down
PFADVTOUTCWFDTO
clared.
should
'■ ’ rected by Mrs. I. R. McKee. Mrs.
\ -
Quilt
Scraps
1OC
Fisher declared that man
Wednesday Morning
For an enjoyable and healthful sport—play ten-
pins and duck pins on the best alleys in North
Texas.
WATERMELONS
.A ___
Jay's mother, whose maiden
name was Sara Pridy, was edu-
cated in. Paris, and attende
school with two oi Mrs. Hoag's
87c
Women's and Misses’
Rayon
SLIPS
$166
Parkway
MUSLIN
Norman Couple
Marries in City
The marriage of Miss Loma Jane
Eldridge and Herbert Henderson,
both of Norman, Okla., was per-
formed- in Gainesville, Thursday
evening at 7 o’clock at the First
Methodist parsonage. Rev. E. C.
Carter, pastor. read the service.
The couple is residing in Nor-
man at 301 White street.
Bible Study for
Church Women
Mrs. Earl J. Patton led the Bible
live life to its fullest,” the speaker
urged.
Tom Godwin of McCamey and
Carl Jenkins of Amarillo were
I guests at the luncheon. Hugh
Genuine Calotabs are sold only in
checker-board (black and white) pack-
ages bearing the trade mark "dalotabs "
Avoid imitations or substitutes. Family
package only twenty-five cents; trial
The second big week of Penney’s July Bargain Days. Thousands of dollars worth of
seasonable merchandise at the lowest prices in five years. Now is the time to buy,
HOSE
4
Hamilton was program chairman.
t ■ -------r-.-s—
HATS
26c
Straws and felts. New summer
models. Summer colors—A real
value!
"SOVALUS-ANC>\
•FALCON LASHIO]
rose rut a-sub
ids FT DOWN |
2mvg
Texas has scarcely scratched the
Stamford visited Mr. and Mrs. B. surface of a 23,000,000,000 ton sup-
; L. Lewter Friday afternoon. ply of power fuel, available in its
Junior Collum was a weekind “low-rating” lignite, according to
We’re closing out one stock of
broken sizes and colors at a
great saving.
church, he gave a blackboard lec-
ture on several of the parables of
Jesus.
Mrs. J. E. Douglass presided
during the brief business session.
Twelve members attended.
I
Dr. Virgil H. Fisher, pastor of
Tyler Street Methodist church in
Dallas. Texas,, who is conducting
the revival services at the First
Methodist church here, was the
speaker at the luncheon meeting
of the Kiwanis Club Tuesday.
Dr. Fisher spoke on “The Peril
of Short Cuts.”
IyC
AZ.mEm YD.
unzsvnz DAILY REGISTER, aAnnEsvmL, TEXAS,
■ '
Cotton Colonial
Bed
H D Adrian Y Wilmington stationary fireman
ML: A" „ ‘ , and a Philadelphia woman — ‘
Dr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Adrian of identical addresses in thei
eery.
The family sold their home on
Broadway, Mrs. Hoag recalls, and
moved to the LaClede hotel, where
they resided for a short time, be-
fore returning to the Indian Terri-
tory. 1
Mrs. Hoag said that Jay Fox,
the future Edwin Carewe, was
about four years old when the
family left here. There were Iwo
other children. Frank, Jr., and
Cleo, and a sister of Mrs. Fok,
Miss Kate Pridy, made her home
with the Fox family.
Mr. and Mrs. Fox passed away
many years ago, Mrs. Hoag said.
1
Conventions send nearly 10,000,-
000 persons to hotels in the United
States each year. ■
Want ads ring the casn register
• afternoon. July 8, in a ceremony
) performed in Marietta, Okla., at
■ the home of the officiating minis-
I ter, Rev. ‘<uckett, pastor of the
/ Methodist church. <
pic-'Jay Fox, and she recalled having
ill in often nursed Jay at night, when
Hollywood following a hear: at- her mother and Mrs. Fox went to
— - - * church or to social affairs.
Size 80x105. Beautiful patterns.
An unusual value. ;
L Ostenburg
. Home
Spun
15°
4 r * t a. - c ’ l l - "
For slacks, summer sport
clothes, and draperies. Sanfor-
ized shrunk.
. w ---------------
•WANDANN TONS
BOT^' SQUALUS-
ANOCfALCON
! 1 —
This chart shows the method by which the navy men hope to lift the sunken submarine; Squalus, and
begin towing it to shore, in stages. Seven pontoons are used. At left is shown how the pontoons will be
placed. Center, three pontoons will rise to the surface. At the right is a sketch of how the towing unit will
function, with vessels assisting the salvage ship. Falcon, in keeping the towed submarine under control.
The Squalus sank May 23 with a loss of 26 lives, off Portsmouth, N.H__________________ 6_________
“You don’t smoke cigarettes, do
you, little boy?”
"No, ma’am.
K (
0<
Calotabs is what the doctors call
“a cholagogue” or bile-expelling
laxative and diuretic. It gives you
the combined effects of calomel and
salts, yet is just as pleasant and safe
as ordinary purgatives. One or two
Calotabs at bedtime with a glass of
water or sweet milk. Next morning
your system feels clean and —
freshed, your head is clear,
spirits bright and you are ...
fine with a hearty appetite for
visitor with his sister, Mrs.J..W. aUnivensityoTexaspower-tuel
tal, hi i physical or his moral life. Corn, GREAT CHRISTOPHER Cora
He said it was sin for___2
think less intelligently than he is Wart and Callouses 35c at
capable of thinking. Likewise man1 AUSTIN PHARMACY
♦ A refreshment course of ice
. cream and cake was served to
Mmes. Lester Long. Terry Henry,
John O'Brien, Johnnie Green. Fred
Mitchell, Grant. Malie, Quen Mc-
Gaugh, Worth Gregory, Louise
Butler, W. F. Johnson. M. E. Mil-
. ler, I. M. Rushing, Nolan Terry,
John Shotwell, W. O. Lester, Sid
but I can let you three-quarters mile, half mile and
terbacer." 800 meters.
E. L. Richardson,
, Mabel Gaston,
2X3
\ ’ -----
% I The marriage of Miss Mary Cade
McCollum of Valley View and Joe
Biffle of Myra took place Saturday
Booher. A series of games under. 1----• ------j ---------• — —
the direction of Mrs. Emmet Pac-] meeting of the Whaley Memorial
...... Missionary society held at the
Cotton
BATTS
sins if he does not take advantage
of every opportunity that will nelp
him to develop his mind to the
greatest extent possible.
schools, and is popular with a large
He circle of friends. She was grad-
] i uated from the Valley View High
school this spring. During the
T1 1938-1939 term.-Mrs. Biffle was
PMe football queen.
Perry, Sam
told of “Steward Acquiring.”
The rooms were decocrated with
tack sufferd a week ago.
born in the house now occupied by
’ Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Broughton of torily for two years in university
Callisburg spent the weekend with furnaces. stretches in a 200-mile-
Mr and Mrs. C. M. Deckard. [wide belt from the Rio Grande to
T. J. Harrison returned home the Arkansas-Louisiana border.
Sunday from a Sherman hospital, '
Nation-Wide
SHEETS
67c
We still have about 8 dozen of
these [high quality sheets at the
lowest price in 5 years!
* "
Chickasha or Shawnee, and pur-
chased the home on East
While it was generally known
I for a number of years that Carewe
! was a native of Gainesville, it was . Mr. pox wa n
not until Mrs. George Hoag gave i bUsiness in Gainsvill
the information to a Register re- i ing at 114 South Dixon street,
porter Tuesday,’that details of I*13! occupied by the Ralph Long
association with this city were----
made public. g
Mrs. Hoag's parents lived in the
first house west of the home of
Carewe’s parents, who were Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Fox. Carewe’s
Jim Snuggs, C. L. Maxwell, W. A.
Hoskins, John Blanton, Frank
• Needham, R. M. Townsley, Lon
Blanton. Woodrow Cain, Ray Hud-
son. LeRoy Porter, J. T. Biffle, III,
J. G. Biffle, and Misses Dorothy
J - Faye Blanton, Fredda Snuggs, all
of Myra, and Mmes. Dave Chad-
: -wel and W. J. Jones. Gainesville.
and Thad Murley, Leonard; the
honoree and the Hostesses.
4 • . • •
Amoma Class Has
Party at Park
Members of the Amoma class of
the Grand Avenue Baptist church
entertained with a delightful party
Friday afternoon at Leonard Park,
"having as special guests members
- of the B. B. W. class of the church
and their teacher, Mrs. P. T.
Wednesday
The quarterly associational
W. M. U. of Baptist churches
will meet Wednesday at 10
o’clock in an all day session
at the First Baptist church.
Thursday
Nimble Thimble club will
meet Thursday efternoon, 3
o’clock, at the home of Mrs.
R. A. Ware, 321 North Grand
avenue.
EURIPIDES
WASRIGHI
The ancient philosopher, Euripides,
is credited with the saying;—Whom
the Gods would destroy they first
make mad.” Isn't it true today? To
lose our friends, our wives, our jobs,
or our business, we need only to lose
our tempers.
Do you find yourself inclined to be
grouchy, easily irritated or offended?
Perhaps you are bilious, or as we
Southerners say, you have so-called
“Torpid Liver,” so prevabnt in hot
weather. All you may need in a little
calomel or better still, Calotabs. the
improved calomel compound tablet
that makes calomel-taking a
pleasure.
McWhirter, Joe
denly before death have all his
sins washed away. “To transplant
man suddenly from an environ-’i
ment hehas been long used to, to
one unfamiliar, and have him feel
perfectly at home, would be just
W logical,” he argued.
"Don’t take snor cuts. develop
your mind, your body, and your
character fully, that you might
Dutch Dance club will en-
tertain with a tacky party
I Thursday evening, 8 o’clock,
at the Rowanis Country club.
Mrs. Hoag’s parents, the late Mr.
and Mrs. B. T. Speair, lived next
door. —
. Mrs. Hoag was the mother of a
Mines. B. C.
Barnes. Harry
Gillette, Parker
Abner Enderby,
daughter of Whitesboro visited 77, of 2712 Palethorp Street, Wil-
Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Clegg Thursday mington, and Mary W. Harrison,
Women’s?
GOWNS
34°
Printed batiste — [hand-made.
Cool and comfortable for sum-
mer wear.
THIS IS HOW NAVY EXPE ECTS TO LIFT SQUALUS
2% and 3 pounds. Were origi-
nally 59c and 69c. Unbleached.
A real value. -
f
PONTOONS I
FT DONNY* ()
Fine quality, pure thread silk.
Sizes 3 12 to 10 in season’s popu-
lar shades. .
» <j
'
.s ]
et l
Colored backgrounds, large
90x105 size. A real value!
"We are experiencing a strange
dilemma in which everything we i
do is cone that we might realize
1—
■ <
Smart brocaded rayon slips.
Bias cut. Tearose only. Sizes 34
to 44.
Men’s Shantung
PANTS
Early Details of Life of Edwin |
Carewe in Gainesville Revealed!
Read THE Sen for ■ free
•2., ihl SAMPLE con
Wall Street Journal
for Complete Markets and all
Business — Financial — Iudus-
tnal News
The Newspaper of Successful
Business Men and Investors
44 Broad St. New York, N. Y.
and SAVE!
Women’s and Misses’
Cotton Wash
—...---—---- r.— -g imme-
I diately after a thunderstorm. But
_____ DEXTER. July 10.—Mrs. H. H. there is one thing I can’t explain.
R. A.'Collum and son, Mrs. P. B. Cun- That is, why is it that one-third
, Owens, H, F.Lee, R. L. Beckner, J ningham and children, spent Tues- of the watches brought to me for
Booher, and 1 day at Lake Murray and Turner repairs have stopped between the
Falls, Okla. . hours of .midnight and 3 a. m. ?”
959%6
DRESSES DRESSES DRESSES DRESSES
powroow
4 T 200FT00mN
panied home by their daughter,
Miss Fayrene.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh A. Wilson
were visitors in Gainesville Sun-
day afternoon. s
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Delashaw
and children of Lubbock hat e been
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. T.
•|B. Delashaw.
where he has been a patient for
the past four weeks, and ’ is re- e
ported improving.
Mrs. J; C. Wallace, Misses Leona 2
real name is Jay Fox.
According to Mrs. Hoag the
Fox family came to Gainesville in I
1884 from Indian Territory,
---------------------------T
Obliging
• Lawton, Okla., are visiting rela- MONTGOMERY
i tives here. < -s_II * — _ -
Frank Sherrill of Era was a vis- VV f A M H •
. itor here Sunday afternoon. WM/ H E. ■ V
| Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dunagan g """
man Sunday and were *esom- j 113-115 S. Commerce Telephone 383 Gainesvilie, Texas
i cs n
I Special for
I Wednesday
TORN SHEETS
Sizes 81x99
37c
Thunder Stops Watches
SASKATOON, Sask. (UP). —
Herb Buckle, local jeweler, re-
c• ii •
5 . . ' .1
98c
Shirts to match—79c. The ideal
[clothes for sweltering hot days.
Sanforized shrunk for perma-
nent fit.
summer flowers. The hostesses
served an ice course to 16 mem-
bers and two visitors. Dr. Virgil
H. Fisher and Rev. E. C. Carter.
Tell it. sen it, rent it, buy it—
classified advertising in The Reg-
ister.
■_________________________________________________1 .1
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 296, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1939, newspaper, July 11, 1939; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1459412/m1/3/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.