Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 21, 1940 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1-
1 ;
PAGE TWO
MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER JI, IMO.
22%
{
N
4 "
gy shrugged.
vent to the writing desk,
free,
ranee _____
1.25
and the friends of the family, and
I
eaZli
M. S. Ajax, is
I
signifi-
E
I
w
& VV
TURKEY SMOKER
are
Price is re-
H
Valley View.
I of the presence of another Ameri-,
Temu went on speaking to Peg-
wher
report which goes into The
lunch that day in an inn that was Register.
format,
well
Allmann, Rt.
says:
an
Temu apologized. “You must
Brown;
eral
i
and consternation.
j ,
field
touchdown.'
IF
Vote in haste and resent at leisure.
The man who
traffic
Bryant. Rt. 1,
She spoke with a heated sincerity nity
r escaped and swam back down .the
am Bilbrey, Rt.
B. Ross vs. Thelma Ross, di-
Prince of, I
A
O—.
movies
the
timself, the
The plane
lace
of
S. Lindsay.
anc
Second street.
132—William Harry Lewie, .118 ■
Late Deaths
Throckmorton street.
Rt. 1,
ins
Rt. 6.
Culberson street.
city,
135—Edward Lawrence Heit?
EL PASO, Tex.—Hubert S. Hun-
1941
since 1928 and veteran Southwest
1941
Box 87.
morton.
past
1
s-of
e
41
you.
Boston
University, in the
.0..
t
»T
Hi
newspaperman.
ROY ASA HAYNES
> comes over the wire no more,
can imagine - our regret and
here* that she swallowed the ab-
surd statement i without question.
HEN A CHEERY VOICE at
the other end of a long dis-
He is the Prince’s friend, not
mine, you can depend on that.”
*
*
There is one scene in this play
that deals with the awful meta-
morphosis that takes place in His
mind when He, realizes that His
into the bag that had been
brought from Watch Tower Wells.
"Where did those clothes come
THE SIDE CAR
By HERBERT ELDRIDGE
With impetuous Latin generosity, Mussolini
offers to give us Canada and other near-by Brit-
ish possessions if we will join the axis. However.
Benitc shouldn’t count his countries before Adolf
steals them for him.
excuse my brevity. I’m an army
man. Be ready in ten minutes."
He went out.
I
,those people who were His friends
7 until they turned against Him.
Three doctors in a small tow in New Mexico
refuse to deliver babies without getting paid in
advance. It may be mere coincidence that they
are reported studying for a C. O. D. degree at a
night school.
r b 37-:
1941 C
___ $3.50
__________
Dexter.
46—Cleo Travis
Valley View.
Li
100—Lonnie Reece
Valley View.
130—Louis Brooks Hall. 803 N.
Commerce street-
" 131—Cecil Orville Morrison, 415
1
river.”
“Well!”
-
M
d
F E White,
RiSOn, city,
northeast rim of the world.
To be continued.
By The Associated Press
HUBERT S. HUNTER
- 1
4
--ri
’ ' 7 3
girl behind him came forward. At
the sight of Lynn she screamed.
came a bloodless and salutary revolution,
kets were created with dizzy
tracks, so that cars could travel anywhere
and everywhere in the land. Those who
esting safety articles, aptly illustrated,
and a guest editorial by Charles K. Devall
of Kilgore, president of the Texas Press
Association.
Qne year, fa __________________________«,________
When subscription is not paid in advance or re-
newed within one Week after expiration, straight
price of 50 cents per month will be charged.
* enL
. -
133—Paul Dobson Fields, 903 N.'
Weaver.
134—James Thomas Owen. 407
roared out on the smooth, deep-
flowing expanse of water and
soared into the blue followed by
a few surprised and futile cannon
balls from the nearest fort.
When they had lifted to a level
i
Dexter. I
29—William Hugh
1, Valley View.
30—Percy Andre
Box 586, Gainesville.
all night."
“Why not go straight to De
"g F
-"8
• ■ E.ca
‘ 717V
omjbosuesnehdmrrem5 A $
+v-
. and
1
3
66—LeRoy Dishman, Rt. 1, Val-
ley View. <
67—Weldon Hobbs. Rt. 1, Valley r
View. 1 : | I
68—J. B. Masten, Jr., Star Rt,
1. Era. H ‘
b
__
In the Ossining hills in New- York there op-
erates today a small but successful business
which came about because a retired American
business man, feasting for the first time on a
certain kind of smoked turkey in a Manhattan
restaurant, learned that this was a delicate and
scarce article, obtainable only from a man living
in the country not far from his own estate.
Investigation resulted in the setting up of the
turkey smoker in a new smokehouse on the busi-
ness man’s estate. The turkey smoker himself. it
turned out, was the third in his family line that
had smoked turkeys for European crowned heads.
His grandfather had smoked the fowls for Franz
Joseph, and his father for two kaisers in Ger-
many. These monarchs were in the habit of dis-
patching the smoked turkeys as Christmas gifts
to their cousins, the Kings of other European
nations, notably the Czar of Russia.
But kings, kaisers, emperors and czars fell
out cf fashion. The son of the turkey smokers
continued his trade in America, in a smallish
way, until the American business man recognized
the sales possibilities of the product.
'It is a long way from old Vienna to the Ossin-
ing hills: a longer distance than can be measured
in years or miles from the days when a Czar in
St. Petersburg smiled over a morsel of smoked
turkey from his cousin in Berlin. But what was
good enough for an Emperor’s table is good
enough for the average man’s,. That is the theory
of American business. So a turkey smoker still
finds his art a useful one. — Christian Science
Monitor.
Contemporary
TODAY’S DARKEST AGE
WJINCENT SHEEAN and H. R. Knickerbocker
V arrived in New York the other day on the
Atlantic Clipper and had what must be a de-
light to foreign correspondents these days: the
opportunity to tell what they know without the
shadow of the censor hanging over them.
Discussing the bombing of London, Sheean
described the damage already done as "terrific.”
He estimated that within a year or two London
would be in complete ruins. His colleague, Knick-
erbocker, lessened the time needed for destruc-
tion. If, he said, the bombing were undertaken
methodically, there would be nothing left of Lon-
don by spring.
• Ancient history is full of the stories of the
destruction of great cities—Troy, Babylon, Car-
thage, Ninevah, Tyre, Sidon, Athens, Rome. But
not for some 1,600 years has the world seen
physical destruction comparable to that which
is now taking place and which has been made
possible through the invention of the airplane
and its refinement, the bomber.
Day by day the landmarks of London which
have withstood the ravages of centuries become,
within a few minutes, a mass of rubble. And, as
yet, no defense has been discovered adequate to
end the destruction. Unless some defense is
found, within th next six months, or two years
at the most, the English-speaking world may see
the obliteration of buildings inextricably inter-
twined with its history and its civilization, such
as St. Paul’s cathedral, Westminster Abbey, the
House of Parliament, the British Museum, the
Tower of London, the Temple.
What is happening to London today could
conceivably happen, to New York, Boston, Phila-
delphia. Baltimore or Washington tomorrow. Al-
ready there is in the making a bomber which
is a vast military fortress capable of crossing
and recrossing the Atlantic and taking its load
’ of bombs along. Yet the airplane is not much
more than a quarter of a century old. Think
what the inventive genius of man may devise in
the next quarter of a century to imperil the
ivered. "Ohhqw terf
n she regarded Lynn. OSCAR
id hap
smothers his boss with praise may beat some
others to the raises. But chances are mighty thin
for him the others won’t have it in for him.
Here ii
50 yea
Peggy
rible!”
DAILY REGISTER
BY MAIL. OUTSIDE OF Cooke, Grayson, Denton,
Montague, Wise counties, Texas, and Love county,
Oklahoma:
One month, in ad- Six months, la ad-
----------------
3 months, ia advanee__
One year, in advanee
78
the
the
I gy. "Did you bring any clothing
j except that you have on?”
equipped to make a liying while he lives the
more abundant life; and en rapport with
the ultimate spiritual forces that lie be-
hind the visible phenomena of th universe.
—Daniel L.Marsh, president of P ‘
Gainesville.
63—Alois John Reiter, Rt. 1,
Era.
64—Clarence B. Wilson, Leo.
65 -James Nuckles Martin, 700
1 I ! " 1 v.
GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
19—George William Welch, 327
Rusk street.
20—Hester Earl West, Rt. 2,
Valley View.
• : NOTICE to The PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, repu-
tation or Standing of any firm, individual or cor-
poration, will be gladly corrected upon being called
to the publisher’s attention.
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 to local news appearing herein.
’ to
ex-
New m
speed. < . -
quick reach of producers; new trails were •
Hazed into the wilderness of the West, and
have read accounts of present-day Europe, i
where differences in track widths slowed
transportation to a standstill in some
places, will realize how vital that agree-
ment was.
The railroads’ story is more than the
story of our basic medium of transport. It
is also th story of private enterprise—of
the achievements of free men. It is the
story of a philosophy of life and govern-
ment.
OPPORTUNITY STILL HERE
FOR THOSE who have the old-fashioned
I passion for learning and service, there
seems to be plenteous opportunity to suc-
ceed. Take the case of an unassuming girl
employed as a stenographer in the Port-
land, Ore., city ticket office of the Union
Pacific railroad. Some time ago the Phi
Delta Delta, woman’s law fraternity, .an
international organization whose member-
ship embraces some of the world’s most
brilliant professional women, elected this
girl to its highest office.
Such an instance lends contradiction to
the too-often repeated claim that young
people today lack the opportunities of the
past. With better schools and colleges and
more advantages for equipping themselves
mentally and physically, those ambitious
to succeed will not fail to find such op-
portunities.
rs were brought within
More Truth Than Poe
21—Harold Clifton Boggs, Rt.
1, Dexter.
22 -Charles Oscar Stricklin. 820
S. Wine street.
23—James Howard Perkins. 301
S. Dixon street.
----O— —
EDUCATION, THE INTEGRATOR
EERY educator in time works out his
own definition of education. I have
worked out mine. It is this: Education is
the leading out of the individual into an
efficient and rightly integrated personal-
ity, comfortably at home with himself and
with his fellows; serviceable to society;
are in
Gainesville Daily Register
AND MESSENGMR .F
Absorbed Gainesville Signal, February, 1939.)
FOUADED AUGUST, 1890, BY JOHN T. LEONARD
Published Each Afternoon, Except Sunday
„THEREGISTER PRINTING COMPANY, (INC.)
PUBLI3HRHS, GAINESVILLE, COOKE CO- TEXAS
Editorial and Bu*lnqsa Office, 308 E. California St.
Entered at the Gainesville, Texas, Postoffice
as Second-class Matter.
Members of the Associated Press, United Press.
Texas Press Association, and International Creu-
Nation Managers’ Association.
_ J DAILY REGISTER
Bl MAIL, in Cookie,, Grayson, Denton, Montague,
Wiae counties, Texas, and Love county, Oklahoma:
Ome mpnth. In ad- Six months, la ad-
Brown ce, 251 5
"Perhaps the gentlemah 1
them around for his lady/friends,”
Lynn suggested flippantly.
“That dress fitsyyou awfully
the emergence of the road to safety, a
road neither blind nor unmarked. It has
seen Texas and its cities reduce the motor
death toll in the face of an increased na-
tiopal average. It has seen local and state
departments of government cooperate with
public spirited citizens in erecting sturdy
sign-posts of safety. These have given
proof to a formula.!
“With confidence in the soundness of its
purpose, the Association through Texas’
Traffic again pledges all its energies to
' making Texas streets andhighways safe
for public use.”
24—Guy Olen ewter, Rt. 1,
Dexter
25—Hollis Edward Snider, Rt. 2,
Valley View.
26—Harris Austin Latham, 526
N. Chesnut street.
27—Raymond Ross Elliott, Dex-
ter.
28—Lester Lee Burleson, Rt. 1,
did this happen?”
next week.
Frpm state headquarters at Aus-
tin qame a telephone call Saturday
tc le arn the total amount of money
Th e article tells how substitutes -
• __ 1:"- mo-ano +A win
nave
COMETIMES it takes an American business
3 man to make the best use of an European
idea.
Temu’s,” thought Lynn. “And she
must be extremely familiar with
the place to be coming alone like
this.” She remembered Temu had
just told her that all respectable
'white women were Hleaving Lan-
fou on the air transport.
For a moment Lynn clung to
the wall in unexpected weakness.
She had thought of Temu as one
above ordinary men and as her
own particular discovery.
the girls, almost lost his balance
> with surprise and consternation.
Joy bubbled up within Lynn.
He jumped to the wharf and
HERO AGAIN—Capt. E. D.
above. com-
91—Joe Clyde Spears, Rt.,
ter.
92—Eugene Walter Mitchell. "Rt.
1. Marysville. J 4
92—Arion Luther Murphree.
Star Rt.. Gainesville. . -4
94 -Rexford Gerald Alexander. ,
^aL
95 -Eugene Corum Wilkerson..
Rt.. Valley View.
96—Roy Hansford Lewis. Rt 1.
Gainesville.
97—John Henry Richey, Rt.- 2,
Mrysville.
98—Elmer Otis Burke, 207 Red
River.
99 -Johnnie Lee Masten. Star
Rt, Era.
members in a family quarrel.
“We’ll have to make plans for
getting out of here,” he said, and
ushered the girls into the shed.
New York |
By GEORGE TUCKER , V
NTEW YORK—Two years ago a play called "Family Portrait" qame to
I Broadway. Financially, it wasn't very successful. This was a great
pity. In many ways it was the most distinguished drama we have
had in a long time.
The idea back of "Family Por- ;
trait” was to present Jesus as He
appeared through the eyes of His similar. "Journey to Jerusalem"
own family. You never saw Jesus is the story of a journey Jesus
himself. You saw only His mother made to Jerusalem, with His fam-
Mary, and His brothers. James, ily when He was' only 12 years
Joseph. Simon, Judah, and their old. The idea of the journey was
wives. You saw His little nephew to celebrate the Passover. It was
who sometimes wonderingly in- on this journey that this 12-year-
q u i r e d "What has Uncle Jesus old boy came into the realization
done now?” You saw the family, that he was to be the Messiah.
69—Dan Bennie Hillis.
Valley View.
70—Leo Robert Mages.
Myra.
VA3 LX J 4-46 -V MIL -V Yr44 TT------- mI a _
tinue the journey to Shani Lun. raised locally. The total is:
E very Democrat has an opportu-
and is expected to make a
contribution to the fund, which
be left at The Register of-
and will be forwarded to the
full of fleas."
"You can be thankful it wasn't
w o r® e,” Temu observed with
amusement. He looked her over.
"Change into your heaviest dress.
You'd better give the Russian fur
coat to Mrs. Telford. There's a
Mongol coat of mine that you may
wear.”
from?” she demanded.
jibed Lynn.
Peggy was
simply a background for a horse opera or
a girl-meets-boy romance. The new rail-
road film has been produced by the Asso-
ciation of American Railroads, as the sixth
of a series to acquaint the public with the
railroad industry and the part it plays in
our economic life. " .
The present film, which is called “Be-
hind the Scenes,” goes back a hundred
years, to those days when railroads didn’t
exist and people paid as much as four
times the value of goods in freight costs
alone. Then came the railroads. With shem
.____________ greatest and stoutest edifices of concrete and
in ease of! errors oijj omissions occurring in local or * steel!—Baltimore Evening Sun.
other advertisements or of omissions on scheduled
date, the publishers do not hold themselves liable
for damages further than the amount received by
them for such advertisements.
to traffic engineers, police departments,
public officials, educators and safety or-
ganizations, all the constructive assistance
within its powers.
“As co-ordinator of civilian and official
safety activity, the Texas Safety
Association in the past two years has Seen
Peggy stared. "He talks to you
like a father.”
“Or a jailer;” Lynn suggested
Referring to the improvement of the
publication, George Clarke, its editor,
ts development from the swad-
dling pages of the mimeograph to printer’s
ink parallels the growth of the public at-
tention and concern with the traffic acci-
We were impressed with Mr.
Price’s pleasantries, his knowledge
of n ews values, and the spirit of
helpfulness which .always char-
acterized his work. We wish him
- in the years to come.
» * *
Spee to self-destruction
in South American waters 10
a nation was united with steel bands.
if a pi oneer of the pre-railroad era had
been told that one day it would be impos-
sible to ship a ton of freight a mile for a
single penny, ihe’d have regarded his in-
former as insane. Yet that is the average
freight cost paid today. It didn’t come
about by happenstance. It did come about
because, decade after decade, railroad men
have been studying and planning and pool-
ing their knowledge to give America cheap,
* dependable, standardized transportation,
mne illustration of that: More than
ago the railroad builders got to-
ld agreed on a standard gauge for
We came' to know Mr. Price
„h..n he made frequent visits to
Gainesville for the AP in the early
Then when he became at-
he
___ so busy planning a
foundation for her own position
22 yards for the longest run
lone touchdown.”
explaining to Peggy that
warehouse, a property of
___,___......—1941 Buick sedan.
tor. 54. editor of the El Paso Times b 37-203—J. O. Carr, city,
Chevrolet coupe.
N 37-189 -W. J. Clark, city,
- Pontiac sedan:
N 37-197-William Lewis, city,
tance telephone line from Dal-
___ Gainesville, says “Hello. Mr.
Smith," every day in the week, 52
tiring from the service of the As-
sociated Press bureau in Dallas
after 45 years with the news gath-
ering organization, still a most
usefi 1 and active man at 65.
. 1
man. 600 Star street
136—Leonard Verne Henn
1810 N. Weaver street.
137—Rex Bunch DeVauit
Carnes street.
31—Bernice Glenn Felker Rt. 6,
Gainesville.
32—M i n u s Calup Bacon, Box
100, Gainesville.
33—Everett Leo Hall, Dexter.
34—Cecil Alex Bennett, Era.
35—Polee Ogletre, Rt. }, Dex-
ter. . ‘ ।
___gone into big games to win
for their clubs, and describes sev-
My srs Riggins, Pearl Chloe Wil-
son George Julian Johnston, and
Mana Frances Yalth.
-4 ---f--------O--------
IRON HORSE IN MOVIES
quarters and I hear an army of
revolutionists is approaching from
the south. But you, Lynn! How
did you escape from the pirates?
I thought , they had taken you up
the river.”
“I broke away and swam back,"
1 ' 1 ■
The Word of God
This Is What the World Needs: A new com-
mandment I give unto you, That ye love one an-
other; as I have loved you, that ye also love one
another.—John 13 34.
W Reynolds,
in the life of Jesuh think, a magnificent excurison - I
In no wav are these dramas into the realm of sober reflection.
„ l- — • - |I , j~4ji tt, II
Complete Drawing 32- William Wilson Price. ,
(Continued From Page One) 5 "g3dbinack King cox, colinsuine." )
18—Troy Thornt Bryant, Rt. 1, / 84—Bert Allen Martin, RL 1, d
Gainesville.
IE T
reel
One of his play? finest sceies, kg to be no triumphal procession,
toot place in a distant M, I shining armor, no' crown of
where Mary had gone because gems. The picture is Lae of_a ior-
she kneit Jesus had taken a room men ted little boy whose childish ,
there. She. hadn’t seen Him in a fancies have been crushed and 1
long time. Jesus was always gong who realizes that He is to be sac- 44
off on His preaching expeditions. rificed, that He is to be misunder-
and His brothers were furious, stood and reviled, and that in-
Uusually He left them withqall stead of the glorious death His is
the work to do. & to be an ignoble one. •
At this inn she met up with a . 1
strange young man who said, yes. it seems to me that this is one
he spoke of Jesus a sort of fire of the really superiour moments "
came into his eyes “For me," he of the theater: Such moments j
said. “He is the beginning and alone may justify a production. I
the end I would die for Him.” do not know how successful, or 4
Just then three of Jesus' broth- vice versa, this play by Maxwell
ers come in. Mary is anxious to Anderson will be. Unfortunately,
dent problem. With this issue the Texas
Safety Association reaffirms and empha-
sizes the purpose for which it was
launchet I—the saving of lives, the preven-
tion of crippling injuries and the conserva-
tion of property.
“To that end, Texas’ Traffic will con-
tinue—only on a bigger scale—to record
and emphasize the many constructive
steps being taken on every line of the traf-
fic and industrial front.
STEPPING FORWARD
IRAFFIC SAFETY in Texas, ever an im-
I portant subjects, promises to receive
greater and perhaps more effective atten-
tion in the future than it has in the past,
They turned, at the sound of a
powerful motor boat as it shot up cgcagu
the river and headed in towards "mren 1 an
the wharf where they stood..
Ul
introduce them to ihis young man many people shy away from a ;
Peggy looked around. “How
cunning and mysterious!” she said.
They went into the living- room
and Temu asked her to sit down.
He spoke bluntly.
“Your husband belleyed you in-
tended to miss the plane. He said
you had quarreled with him.”
Peggy Waved a hand airily.
“What of it? He deserved to be
quarreled with and left. I thought
Pd stay in Lanfou and watch the
83—Fred Monroe Hollingsworth. a J
Rt, 1, Valley View.
$6— Troy Milburn Flowers, Rt 1,
Gainesville.
87—Felix Hugon. 1114 E. Scott
street. T . i
88 -Linden Murrell Foster, Rt. '.
i, Dexter.
89—Edgar Lee Mozingo, Rt 1. J
90—William Stanley Glenn, 140.
Culberson.
BOB LEONARD. Gainesville’s
repre tentative qn the Navy football
squai is mentioned prominently in
— article entitled “Beware of
Substitutes," by RICHARD Me-
CANN, appearing in This Week
Mag azine section of The Dallas
New >. Sunday.
Lynn recognized its pilot as
Bula, the pock-marked Mongol,
who seemed to be equally skillful
with a gasoline engine or a camel.
Surprise for Temu
Temu stood up before the boat
came to a Stop, and at sight of
week i in the year,’ for some seven
eight years' and then that
Marriage Licenses
I oward Morgan Smith, 85. city,
____Pauline Marie Smith, 27, city,
arl C. McDaniel, 21. city, and
Barbara Clark, 19, city.
Paul Jones, 32, Okla., and
Irene Bourassa. 29. Asher, Okla.
Aute Registrations
Passenger Cars
N 37-201—J. $. Spangles,
50 Clastcn Will
1. Marysville.
“As reporter and commentator upon
traffic safety trends in Texas, it will bring
IHE RAILROADS
1 again. And in this case, they aren’t
came forward. “How did you get "T
out here ?” he asked, and before well,” said Peggy Howly, "You
receiving a reply, ’ demanded of may be his lady friend I thought
Peggy. "What became of you? We you went into his arms last night
searched everywhere and had to as if you’d been there before,
send the planes on without you.” And the way he looked at you—’’
“I went for a walk and got Lynn thought fast. "Don't let
lost" said Peggy. “Did Sam go your imagination run away with
on without me?" you,” she advised crisply. "These
Temu gave her a sharp glance, are my clothes. Ill admit. You
“Your husband did not believe you heard last night that Temu Darin
were lost” And without waiting was trying to persuade me to con-
for her comment. he turned to
Lynn. "How_____—_______ .
Peggy answered for her: “Lynn
make arrangements to take them
away from Lanfou.
He observed the screen cut from warehouse until they came to a
the ventilator and the unlocked covered waterway in which float-
dCor - ed the silver and red low-wing
Chan had reappeared and fol- cabin plane.
lowed them in. his usually inex- .He took the control hi
pressive face alive with consterna- Mongo 1 at his side,
tion. He had undoubtedly thought
Temu'S battle with the girl was
won and it would be safe to leave
the keys in their accustomed place.
Yesterday: Lynn Britton's base your activity on Lynn’s,
forced journey to Shani Lun to Your destiny is different."
marry the Prince of that Mon- 1 Peggy sat forward in her
golian land has been a succes- chair. “Tell me more about my
sion of captures and escapes, each destiny.”
more dangerous than the last. “Right now. I’ll try to get a
Now she has once more escaped message through to your hus-
Temu Darin. the Prince’s incor- band that you’re safe.”
ruptible friend, and finds herself Pe88Y shrugged.
but in a revolution-ridden Hetwent to the writing desk,
by reason of the enlargement of “Texas’
Traffic,’! official monthly publication of
the Texas Safety Association.
October issues of Texas’ Traffic, just
out, appears in a new dress, a magazine
with a well chosen array of inter-
71—Willie Brad Gibson, Rt. 1.
Gainesville.
72—Leo Lawrence Woody (c),
514 Hannah street.
73—Captain Claude Germany,
308 Morris street.
74—Thomas Alfred Wright, Rt.
1 Dexter. '
75—Henry Hal e), 430 Throck-
too?” Peggy inquired. . But, on the other hand, we
"He soon will be married.” happy to know that the voice.
J Lynn didn’t like the way Temu whichh belongs to CHARLES AN-
said it. She knew he was getting DRE w PRICE, is still quite active
... - « u, - ■ back at her for making the sug- and strong .for Mr. ~ "
Lynn Button. gestion, but a chill of foreboding . 8
“Well, Peggy! said Lynn on a gripped her heart. He did not ,
full breath, “I didn’t recognize you > want her to have the protection
in this getjup." ! Ji iile . .. -
“I became lost and the planes J can giri.
went off without me.” Peggy said I Temu ‘ ’ •m-
plaintively; "So I raised a red gy "Did
parasol to protect me from the
communists and came looking for ; “Not a thing. I saw how mirac-
Mr. Temu Darin. The planes got [ ulously Lynn was fitted out from 30’s. ...
away just in time. Fighting has scratch.” tached to the Dallas bureau,
broken out in the Mohammedan : ^“Scratch is right,” Lynn shud- talked to us daily, reading
-----. . - .----—--- -f dered. “Mr. Wallace a n d I ate news i
Peggy followed Lynn into the
'"bedroom and watched her dig
47—Dewitt Emery Bump. Rt. 1,.
Marysville.
48 Sam Houston Copeland, Rt.
1. Gainesville.
49 - Finis Loyd Wylie. Rt. 1. Era.
and turned as a rap sounded at
he murmured. He gazed Temu Darin’s eyes held hers for may anu mu .0
at Hynn, at her high color and a moment with that elusive spark state headquarters,
mischievous blue eyes. He saw in of amusement and understanding ----- ----
her acquiescence that there was and something else that had a 1
a secret between them, a loyalty; power to' flutter her pulses,
like the understanding, between — •
city about which she knows noth- wrote a chit, and gave it to Chan
ing. 1 : to d e l i v e r. Then he turned to
Peggy. “Do you happen to be
51 Roy Hilton West, Rt. 1. Val-
ley View.
52 -Johnnie Raymon Barnett,
Rt. 1, Dexter.
53 Oscar L. Townsend. 623 S.
Taylor street.
54— James Marshall McDaniel,
Rt. 1, Dexter.
55—T. J. Tramell, Rt. 1, Dexter.
One month, in ad-
vanee —-________75c
•lx months, in
advanee_______ $4.00
integrity. “Dick seems to know yore.
T.1... .i.shani Lun. contained an how to take care of himself,” she ouNTY COURT
apartment in which the girls would said coldly. prol ate Docket
be safe, he hoped, until he could “If you’ll come now," Temu A pplicatidns for the establish-
" ‘ turned and they made their way mert of birth records for Thomas
through several divisions of the : Mar ion Wright, Jack Carr Beall.
with the northern hills they felt _L .
a jolt of the plane as it struck Criminal Docket
rough air and saw wild, black Alf Schumaker. Possession
storm clouds boiling up on the beer for purpose of sale.
who speaks so fervently and elo- play that has a biblical .
quently of Jesus. She attempts to cance. It seems to me tha: in do-
make this introduction, but pauses ing so these people unconsciously
helplessly, realizing she doesn’t confess to limited imaginations,
know his name. Taking his cue This plays has no "dot 8 thous 2”
i the young man gts to his feet and thees" ... It is colloquial. It 5
and bows. “Judas. I am Judas- draws perhaps a fine parallel be- 3
Iscariot," he says. tween the intolerance of 2,000 1
Here was a situation that years ago and the same sort or in- ( .
dripped with dramatic interest. I tolerance and its implications of if
was thinking; of that scene last today. I ! i
night as I watched a scene in an- “Journey to Jerusalem” is.no j
other play, based on an incident “Hi Ho. Silver" for action, t is, I
Between them, they had Peggy T A0a 1 Paqorcg
completely bewildered. "But what W& “I-UV--
really has become ofyour. ’.
brother?" she asked Lynn. • 16TH DISTRICT COURT
Lynn surmised that Sam had ivi Docket _
Three months. In
advanee________$2.25
One year, in
advance_______$7.50
such'games last season, 36—Raymond Lwis
H< says of the Army-Navy star Rt., Valley Vie w.
gams: / 37 Claud McCoy Campbell, Rt.
“Iwo subs beat Anny. 10-0. Bob 2, Gainesville.
keep Leonard kicked a 35-yard Navy 38—Clarance Emmitt Usrey, Rt
° goal and Dick Shafer dashed 2. Gainesville.
- - ------• —i and 39 Adam Mercel West. Rt. 11
Valley View.
40- George Rankin Hardy, East
GAINESVILLE and Cooke California street.
county are to have any showing 41—Denton Henry Williams. Rt
in tie national Democratic cam- l. Dexter. .
paign this year, they must loosen 42—Earl Ritcherson. Rt. 3,
up their purse strings within the Gainesville.
P H..E 43— Willie Arthur Paschal. Rt. 1.
‘ Gainesville.
44—Roy Ivin Davis, Rt. 1,
Whitesboro.
45—Wilburn Robert Bullard.
(c), Rt. 1,
told Peggy his doubts of Dick's J
The Road to Shani Lun
By RITA MOHLER HANSON
1 :
1-
fun. I've never been in a revolution
before.”
“How did you think you’d be
taken care of?"
She took off her wide-brimmed
hat. “Youre here, a representative
of the powerful Prince of Shani
Lun. You wouldn’t let the revolu-
tionists stand me up against a
wall and shoot me, would you?" 1 rgg- ' . 194h Dcd
‘They wouldn’t waste ammuni- -.Roy Asa 3719
tion that way,” interrupted Lynn. Haynes, 58, federal prohibition com- , 194
“They burn you olive At least missioner from 1921 to 1927 and - 2
that’s been the custom in the editor of the old Hillsboro Dispatch
past. ' ' ' from 1900 to 1921.
Chapter 22 — qualified to pilot an airplane?”
Strange "I t h i n k I am.” interrupted I
rHE sentry hastened down to Lynn.
I join the keeper at the wrought f "Not I,” said Peggy. “Why?”
iron gate fencing off the dock She was sauntering around the ‘I
from a wide stone-stepped street room looking at the pictures on S
that led down to the river, swarm- the walls. la
ing with water carriers. "Thoughteltmight get you start- 1
Lynn saw a woman dressed in ed off at once for Nanking. I have ca
European clothes and carrying a a plane here. - b, J c-aF
frilly red umbrella emerge from "I wouldn’t think of leaving mander of — . _
the mob of watermen. She spoke with Lynn as pilot,” Peggy added, the new man in the limelight
to the gate-keeper and pointed to "Why—” • in Britain’* naval achieve-
"2 XS 2 ner"wouhdryu‛hsintpudt,serding menl Hs erew which drove
admitted her, and the sentry retorted. the C lerman pocket battlesh Jb
turned to conduct her to the quay. Chan, came in with a message. Graf c
"She must be a friend of . Revolutionists had captured three
of the forts above the city as well — —।—- -tT , , f
as the airport. Uprisings and mas- months ago, was declared Oi-
sacres were continuing in villages ficially to have sunk three
to the north. River traffic had „ lctver in +he Medi-
been held up farther downstream. Italian destroyers in tne Mem
Temu made his decision. “I had terra nean.
56—Alton Berdine McKinzie, Rt.
1, Dexter. ‛
57—J. C. McDaniel, Rt. 1, Dex-
----— — ter.
Robert Lee Sparkman, George 58—3. w. Owenby, Rt. 1, Dex-
Washington Bacon. Annie Lucille ter.
Mcingil, Ruel Lee Kirkpatrick, 59—Arba Melvin Harrison, Rt. 1,
Felix Hugon, Fred Ruell Quaid. Dexter.
Billie Pendleton Farr, Lee William 69 Charles Finis Bryant (c).
Truitt, Dorsey Carl Truitt, Wayne 419 Preston.
Edv zin Truitt, Harvey Alvin Theo- 61—Paul William Hellman, 517
dor; Harrison, Terrell Anzie, Wal- I.. Denton, street.
no papers to fly in here and I have ==== rr~. i.--- -- ; 1 — ~
none to fly out. The quicker we . • ym i e
leave the better. If we can not E’Awrn I nnlAg
make Watch Tower Wells before JL WVV AI A •HAV3
weisstanatvtotlansdathineveningr By a MORTON SMITH
He might flirt across a dinner _
table with an art student in Paris, lun?" asked Lynn in a dancing
or with a college girl in America, tone. “I’m sure Peggy would love
but Lynn had never dreamed that to meet the Prince.” _ aste
a fluff with a frilly, red parasol New Flight
would come tripping down the Temu.shook his head. "Im sure
quay looking for him in Lanfou. Mrs. Telford would be bored. Some or
As their footsteps approached, other time, perhaps, when the voice
Lynn stiffened and moved out Princezis noton his honeymoon." you, g sadness
into the open. The sentry stopped Is the Prince recently married, feeling of sadness,
and stareq open-mouthed as if he
were seeing an apparation. The
101—Raymond Wesley- Vine- 1E
yard. 612 N. Weaver street. I
102—James Wesley Atcuson, Rt. ' I
2, Gainesville. ■
103—Dorman Elmer Gilpin, Siv- fl
ells Bend «.
104—Holman Holmes Gibson, fl
Sivells Bend. I
105—Clarence Galloway. S t a 1 -
Rt., Gainesville. [ 1
106—Aubrey Andrew Estes, ‘ 1
Gen. Del., Sivells Bend.
197—Roy Theodore Embry, Rt.
2, Marysville. !
198—Wayne Womack Dillard.
Sivells Bend.
109—Joe Dan Dillard. Jr., Sivells
Bend.
110—Arthur Randall Cunning-
ham, Rt. 2. Marysville. ; .
ill—Ralphus Clifton Craddock,
Gen. Del., Sivells Bend.
112—Ogan Comer, Jr. Rt. 2,
Marysville. i
113- Harvey James Comer, Rt.
2. Marysville.
114 Harmel Joe Corner, RU 2. -
Marysville. 1 ■ •
115- Eugene Clark. Sivells Bend.
US Robert Edward Chapman.
Sivells Bend. I •
-117— E. J. Jones. Rt. I, Valley
View.
118 James Wayne Pierson, Rt. /
2. Pilot Point. r
119—Clarence Earl Treece, 1012
N. Clements street.
120—Ernest Henry Arendt, RL
6, Gainesville.
121—Guy Ruben Shwadlenak, •
Rt. 3. Whitesboro.
122—William Allen Pearson, 604
Star street.
123—Woodrow Bryant (c), 819
Culberson street.
124—Benjamin Harvey Watson.
Rt. 1. Gainesville. '
125—Mack Roy Dooley, 302% -
N. Dixon street.
126—Christopher Columbus."
Meek, 724 Buck street.
127—Lee Roy Galloway. Mc-
Crary street. >
’ 128-Otis Alva Offill, 814 North
Commerce street. .
129 -Wesley Lawrence Freeman, 4 .
1208 N. Weaver street j
_______|_________- 70c vanee____
One year. in advanee ----------------
By MAIL, in Zone* 6, 7 and 8:
TON. Pa.—Qscar Klee- pnder
AyAean+ AP 4L, A —eM: *
PesieorprathenAwSi veh
uisunutnatura.housespop
. 01 a
Hiram McDaniel. Russell 62—Ira John Paschall, Rt. 1,
WEEKLY REGISTER . ,
BY MAIL, in Gainesville or in Cooke, Grayson,
Denton, Montague, Wise counties, Texas, and Love
County, Oklahoma:
•lx Month*. In One year in
a<vaaey______j 75c advance --------->1.50
WEEKLY REGISTER
BY MAIL, in all other counties of the United
States:
Six Month*, in One year. In
■Svakee L____________ advance---------$2.00
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 21, 1940, newspaper, October 21, 1940; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469837/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.