Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 124, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 23, 1939 Page: 11 of 12
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STURDAY AFTERNOON, DEC
23, 1939.
GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
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Morris & Ruth Beauty Shoppe
Phone 136
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107 West Elm
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the barometer should serve as a
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MUENSTER
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835 E. California St.
Phene 31
South Rice Avenue
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Twenty-four members of the lo-
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WE APPRECIATE
YOU!
MERRY
CHRISTMAS
And A
Want ads ring une cash register.
GEO. J. CARROLL & SON
HAPPY NEW
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FUNERAL HOME
YEAR
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Last California Street
Phone 150
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J. A. Thomas Food Store
And Employes
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your good health,
peace and contentment
during the New Year.
We, at
Stephenson's
Wish for You
May the Joy of Christmas be yours
and may you have a New Year of
Happiness. We appreciate your
business and hope we may have
the pleasure of serving you in a
more efficient way during 1940.
We want this message
to convey to you our
heart felt desire for
Woman Scolds Mayor,
Can’t Find Handbook
Lyle K. Evans
MAGNOLIA SERVICE STATION
week in Dallas with Mr. and Mrs,
A. H. Rebentish. Mrs. Stimson and
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STEPHENSON
TIRE & BATTERY COMPANY
Feeling Grand?
Secret Likely
In Barometer
We would like to take this means
to express to cur customers that
we appreciate their business and
that we look forward to serving
them.
Then forgetting the commercial
side we want to sincerely wish for
one and all a— •l
JOYOUS YULETIDE AND A
NEW YEAR OF HAPPINESS
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It Has Been a Pleasure
To Serve You. That We
May Continue Doing So
Is Our Wish
ELLIS
Phones 700 and 701
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MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A
HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO EVERYONE
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days are few and full of trouble."
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Considerable blackout area is
cast by the shadow of Leonard
Crum who's known at a British
training depot as "Two - Ton
Tony," presumably after Galen-
to. the American fighter and
boastful barkeep.
3
the real meaning of Christmas. We must
remember we are commemorating the
birth of the Christ Child and make this
a season of unselfish giving and of serv-
ice to others.
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RI.CHRISTMAS
CLYDE
136 E. California St.
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May the New Year bring us together
often that we may serve you.
We feel that a wish for true happiness for those
you hold dear would be the kindest thing we could
do to make your Christmas and New Year happy.
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We appreciate your many kindnesses of the past
and look forward to seeing you many times
during 1940.
SCHAD & PULTE
HARDWARE
22
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I HAVE BEEN working recent-
ly out at my old home and the
man that owns our home place if
tearing down the house in which :
was born. There is a pang of sad
ness as I think about it. becausc
the old house always brings bad
some fond remembrances of my
boyhood days. Not many of the
old landmarks remain and before
many years all traces of the old
days will be gone. The old house
that were built fifty years ago
have served their purpose and have
been replaced bv new and modern
structures, people that lived theft
have passed to their reward or
moved to other parts, and others
have come to take their places.
Such is life and we are reminded
of the scipture that says; “Mans
S- .LAin . t. As WBCIKMC iWO—fAGB SEVEN
REGISTER WANT ADS GET RESULTS
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MODE—When winter comes.
Mi' asm Jean Strickland of
Mount Kisco, N. Y. is at a
southern resort she’ll have this
harem suit of red rayon crepe
for one occasion.
LuhlL- L. ..
ENCLISH
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Hearty Greetings
M‘I TV"
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To you who have been so kind and consid-
erate throughout the year 1939, we give
our very best regards. We feel that you
are more than customers, you are our per-
sonal friends. May our friendship continue
and may you have happiness and prosperity
through Christmas and the New Year.
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California Market
Must Not Forget...
epsmem orperemrre meyemeem
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■ Tttle better tha:
they were this
time lat year.
The o p e r
weather has per
mitted the farm
era to get the!
land in fine con
dition for t h e..i
spring crop. The listers are run-
ning and the fields are going to be
in tip-top shape for the planting of
corn.
Dr. Petersen said the changes in tigued.
For the same reason, he added.
initiation ceremonies held by the >
Wichita Falls council. ;
Mrs. Lula Nieses and daughter.
Rita, of Temple, who were here for
the funeral of Frank Seyler, have
returned home. Other relatives
here for the funeral were Jake
Gieb and son. Edward, of Fort
Worth, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Seyler
and family of Justin.
end with his mother. Mrs. Annie Tell your merchant you saw his
Trachta and family. Mr. and Mrs Advertisement in the Register.
Trachta are on a holiday trip to J
Texas and will spend Christmas in : ■»
San Antonio.
A son was born Sunday in the
Muenster- clinic to Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Otto.
and temperature tire it out and
by the time the first balmy rays Memphis, Tenn., spent the week- Mrs. Rebentish are former school-
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bodies to outside influences like a :
thermostat. of spring come around we are fa-
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ycur mirth and good
cheer during this
Christmas time, for
to withstand the shifts in pressure Monday here.
Mr and Mrs. Thomas Trachta of
ate is in direct proportion to the with the first signs of autumn we
ips and downs of the atmospheric I once again feel full of pep and
ressure. Sudden increases or de- | fit for the onslaught of another
creases in the pressure. he de- winter.
- clared, often will show an adverse In conjunction with air condi-
effect on patients who appeared tioning. Dr. Petersen expressed the
to be on the road to recovery and opinion that some apparatus for
sometimes the shock is so great controlling the air pressure in a
it,causes death. sick room would be a great boon
• A study of Chicago weather ta- to medicine
bles from 1915 to 1932. according
to Dr Petersen, showed that 1 ■
But If Pressure Rises
Odds for a Grouch Are
Quite Favorable
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■ e2AN# MMMMMMlMMMNliMMIMM B1 cal council. Knights of Columbus,1
went to Wichita Falls Sunday for*
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B ELC I U M K E:EP S W ATC H , IN FIL M— Though this view of Belgian pilots appeared
in defense movie. Those Who Watch.” invasion of country might turn men from “reel" to "real” roles.
Johnny Mason, coach of the
victorious Colorado School of
Mines football team, formerly was
a swimming coach at the Univer-
sity of Colorado.
AS CHAIRMAN OF the Half-
Gentry Club, I hope to prepare a
program for our meeting next sum- ;
mer that will pay a tribute to
those who for so manyyears have
added to the development of our
civilization. Things are so differ-
nt now to what they were in their
day that we can hardly realize the
hardships that they encountered. ,
While working at Freemoind
the past week we called on Mr.
and Mrs. Huse Martin, who live in
the neck of the woods known as
“Thief Neck,” and they have been ?
busy gathering their pecan crop.:
Mrs. Martin told me that they'
gathered over seven hundred,
pounds of nuts from one tree. I
think that is the best I have heard i
about. At the prevailing prices ’
that means about sixty dollars. A !
few trees like that would be better
than a cotton crop and not nearly
so much work.
We are not . expecting much
Christmas this time as not many
of our children that are away will
be able to come home. We had
them all with us last year and
this may never happen again be-
cause some of them are so far
away. With one in Japan. one in
Washington and some others in
another state it will be hard to get
them together. I guess I will get
the ties and socks as usual and will
enjoy the- fellow- hip of many
friends and relatives and be happy
just the same. _
NIFTY ‘90‛S—Time turns
backward t® 1890 in this bustle-
back woolen Turner model '
shown in New York. Lace forms
an inset at back as well as the 4
. --—cowihood.—----d
warning to physicians to be es- March is a bad month for colds
pecially watchful over their pa- and pneumonia.
tients. Blood pressure declines and tem-
On the basis of a survey, th peratures remain more constant
iloctor cencluded that the death during the summer months and so
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B. E. Yelton. patient in the
Muenster clinic, has been removed
to his home. He is recovering slow-
ly from injuries received three
weeks ago in an oil field accident, t
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Beasley
have moved to Wichita Falls to re-, |
side. The Marion Supply Co., of
which Mr. Beasley was local man-
ager. has moved its supply house
to Wichita Falls and he will have
the same position there.
Joseph Dangelmayr.Sr., is in St.
Raul's hospital. Dallas, for a se-(
ries of treatments. He will return j
home this week,
Mr. and Mrs. John Henscheid and
children, former M uenster ites, have
returned to Muenster to live. They:
are cccupying the old Richter place
east of town.
The new rock home of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Felderhoff, northwest
of Muenster, is nearing comple-
tion. i
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kaiser and
Mrs. Tessie Stimson visited last
tian as the ear- M
, lier crops. Wei
I relieve that the L
। prospects are t 2
MILWAUKEE. Wis., Dec. 23
(UP). Your general well-being as I
vell as the weather may be sig- '
nalized by the harometer, accord- 1
ing to Dr. William F. Petersen
pathologist and bacteriologist at
ihe University of Illinois.
The next time you feel a grouch
coming on consult the barometer.
It is ten to one, said Dr. Peter- i
sen, that the barometer pressure
will be going up.
The doctor asserted that air
' -pressure plays an important role
in health Sudden death and even I
spring fever are some of its ef-
feels, he contended.
‘Pain in an abscessed tooth may
| be due in some degree to high at-
| mospheric pressure; the .ability of
I an athlete to perspire and the tone
I of his muscles vary with the air
I pressure; the nervous, mental and
I even digestive systems react to
I the stimulus of air pressure.
In normal persons, Dr. Petersen
I said, high barometric pressure in-'
creases the blpod pressure and I
I with cold temperatures when the
blood runs fast, you feel full of
pep. However, when the pressure
makes the blood sluggish the ef- i
feet is to put you in the dumps.
Changes in atmospheric pres-
sure work the hardest suffering on
the young, old and sick. Ordi-
i arily healthy persons, the dector
explained, can readily adjust their j
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deaths increased as the barometer
Went up and decreased as the at-
mospheric pressure declined.
He described the area in the vi- MINgER N,. 20 — Mrs
cnity of Chicago and Milwaukee I MUEPSTEm D 2+) is
as < e of the world's worst cl-Gusta Rlchter of Washington -
matic regions because it lies in the visitin'; hei brother, and. sister-in
path of storms from both the Arc-|law, Mr. and Mis. Ed Schmitt and
tic and Southwest and conse- i other relatives. Her niece Mra.
quentlv suffers great tarometric! John Fisher, entertained with a
changes dinner for her Thursday. She will
.Spring fever. Dr. Petersen said, return home next week. Another
is the result of continually chang- j sister of Mrs. Richter and. Mr;
ing air pressures and temperatures 1 Schmitt. Mrs. Martin Strock, of
throughout the winter. The con- Kingfisher. Okla., and her husband
stant need of adjusting the body and two children spent Sunday and
A FEW DAYS AGO I met E. R.
Ballard of Gainesville, on the street
and he told me he would have a
birthday next Sunday and would
be 80 years old. He is one of the
oldest citizens of the county, hav-
ing been here since .1870, and has
een a citizen of Texas almost all
his life. Next Saturday will be his
59th wedding anniversary.
He and his faithful wife lived!
for many years on their farm a few j
miles east of Gainesville but a few
years ago moved to Gainesville. I;
take off -my hat to the pioneers of
he county who helped so much to
bring about the good environment
in which we live.
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HAMILTON, Ont. (UP). An
irate woman demanded to see
Mayor William Morrison, 'and on*
gaining his coffice. said she would
never vote for him again.
“A fine mayor you are,’ she
shouted “You have every book-
makers place in the city closed up
so tight a person can’t even get a
$2 bet down."
KADEN FLORIsr
Observations
By GREGG HOWARD
I rHERE HAS BEEN VERY little
I growth in the Cooke count) r e
grain crop in the last week
'tut it-looks to be doing very w
• in that it has a good color. The
•later sowing has come to a go
‘ stand and wil _
likely be about [ gp,een
as early produc- 1,Hgg,a,
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 124, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 23, 1939, newspaper, December 23, 1939; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469721/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.