Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 248, Ed. 1 Friday, June 14, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gainesville Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cooke County Library.
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including
terrace outlets
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offers
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financial
and practical.
pay and artistic
designs.
sprinkled on the
cloths.
vation district.
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to co-
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Iburn Motor Co
Phone 966
Red, Ripe Melees
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Highway 82 and 77.
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Beef Liver
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LONS
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SAFEWAY
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an early a
moved to
Nice
Slicers
Ocean Whiting.
Haddock Fillets
• 214
454
336
22*
184
404
344
304
SAVE YOU
MONEY!
1
13c
64
124
154
334
334
344
164
12c
and sodded channels.
Written prior approvals should
be obtained from the county ACA
194
74
Fresh Corn__
White Onions _
A ,4,-
•ranges ies,3ly..
Sunkist Lemons.
#7
2 #1
Offered Those Desiring
To Engage in F arming
The Farm Security administra-
tion, an agency of the U. S. De-
129c
194
194
s
4
Me. 1
Can
cie’
CANDIDATE—Pat M. Neff, Jr.,
Houston attorney, who has an-
nounced his candidacy for attor-
ney general of Texas. He has
served as an assistant attorney
general for eight years under
three administrations.
Hot Summer Weather is
Bad for Your Car
7297
522
FROM
It's Always
Time for Tea
CANTERBURY
TEA
V-Lb. Pkg.
224
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T-Ib. Jar
274
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Ne. 2
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Ne. Va
- Cm
12-0.
.. Cm
72-02.
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24-0.
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> purchase of additional land to
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
Admi^Ati on
__________ity
administration in* farming opera-
tions.
Clover Crop Aids
Oats Production
The oat crop on the Frank Bay-
er farm near Muenster is expected
to yield 35 to 40 per cent more
oats per acre on land where bi-
ennial white sweet clover was
used as a soil improving crop,
than the same grain planted on
acreage not similarly improved,
Mr. Bayer believes.
Last fall, he turned under 10
acres of clover and planted oats
on the tract.
CAR CARB
Mud
“Enough of my clover went to
seed last year that I have a good
stand this year,” he said. “This
I
Farm purchase loans may be
made to finance the purchase of
a family-type farm, to finance the
ige with his
Cleburne.
CASH
For Good Used
FURNITURE
THE BOMB FURNITURE
Phone 520
Authorized Ford Dealer
Dixon at Broadway *
2
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g
V
y»UeL
A
>eY
.u. 2/7C
■
-
White Magic
partment of Agriculture,
technical guidance and fi
—Boyd * Breeing Photo
Europe. He spent 13 months over-
seas. He received his discharge
at Fort Sam Houston Dec. 2, 1945,
just 20 days short of completing
seven years in service.
While Bill was stationed here,
he met Willie Garvin and after
a while they married. Young Wil-
liam Garvin Claunch, aged 26
months, was born just two weeks
after Bill went overseas. Natural-
ly, when he was discharged he
returned here immediately and
went to work for Mr. Garvin.
The couple and their youngster
live at 411 S. Grand at present.
Bill is a member of the Vet-
erans of Foreign Wars and the
Rowanis Country club. Golf is his
main outside activity now, and it
is something else he can attribute
to the Army. He picked it up at
Fort Sam when he first enlisted
and it has been almost a mania
with him ever since. He claims
he can’t play a good game, but
really enjoys a round or two.
Hunting and fishing are a little
too tame for him, though he does
enjoy both.
W
N
% •
11
#,7
, #3
FSA Assistance
For Farmer Vets
Made Available
Two Types of Help Is
L,
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E agg
F
South Texas
, BLACK DIAMOND
pcki,u
5
L 7
P"
/
••TTT"• T ■
Cucumbers
Braunschweigersst
Sliced Bologna tntyt Lb.
be made for the purchase of farm
and home equipment and live-
stock.
Operating loans are based upon
an improved farm and home
management plan, worked out
jointly by the veteran and his
‘family and the FSA county farm
and home supervisors. This man-
agement plan calls for (l) home
production of feed and of the
family living, as nearly as possi-
ble, (2) several sources of cash in-
come and, (3) improved soil con-
serving practices and proper use
of land. Careful hours of guidance
in these improved farming and
homemaking practices accompany
the loans.
Maximum Loan Available
The most that can be loaned to
and individual in any one fiscal
year is $2,500, and total indebted-
ness of a borrower to FSA cannot
exceed $5,000. Interest on loans
is 5 percent. Payment terms are:
one year on funds used to buy
> consumable goods and up to five
years on funds used to buy re-
coverable goods such as livestock
and equipment.
Farm purchase loans are made
to veterans who (1) have an
,)
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f>r finer
3
A;;;3*
il
| Newcomer to Gainesville
Eisenhower’s Army Typist
Now Sells Groceries Here
•
Quietly tending to the Wants and needs of customers in a gro-
cery store in Gainesville is a young man who for mny months wrote
all of General Eisenhower’s letters.
make a‘family-type farm, or for
the construction of new farm and
home improvements as a supple-
ment to land purchase.
Applicants for farm purchase
loans are passed upon, in each
county by a committee of local
farmers, who pass on the appli-
cant’s eligibility to receive a loan.
The farm to be bought also is
passed upon by this committee of
farmers.
Careful Appraisal
Each farm under consideration
must undergo a careful appraisal
to determine whether or not its
long-time earning capacity will
enable the borrower to repay the
loan, and, at the same time, to
2235
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d0 ‘4
TRAVEL BY BUS
DIXIE
MOTOR COACHES
Phope 22
Corner Rusk and Elm Streets
------
g.;,003
td-c‘
NdaEe K g*
SE ■ 3
$7, did
$2 2
assistance to veterans of world
war II with a farming back-
ground who wish to buy farms.
The two types of help available
through FSA are described below.
Standard operating loans are
made to veterans who (1) have
an agricultural background, (2)
are in need of supervision in good
farm and home management
* practices, and, 3) cannot obtain
credit elsewhere at reasonable
rates and terms.
These loans may be made to
mat young man is William A. •
Claunch, Jr., recently of the
United States Army, and one of I
the newer residents of the city I
who has gone into business. Bill, I
af his friends call him, can be i I
found at Garvin’s Grocery, on; I
North Commerce, where he works a
with his father-in-law, A. B. Gar-I I
vin.
The story of how Bill happened |
to come to Gainesville is simple 1
> 5328638 ' ■ Ns8sded
i
3
Delicious for the
Week-End Picnic
X
enough. He was stationed here
during the war, fell in love with
a local girl and married her.
Maypearl is Home Town
Originally Bill came from May-
pearl, Texas, but he left there at
"is parents and 1
!. He got some
agricultural background, (2) are
physically able to operate the
farm and, (3) are willin
Y..
committee before beginning any
of these practices if AAA assis-
tance is expected, Mr. Newberry stand this year,'
warned. : '
Crackers rks.
I. Sno White
□ait Plein or _____________
Slasher Mops.
PlumiteSamsdn..
Camay Soap____
Sweetheart U*.
r"
3 t /' i
where they are able to get the
most soil conservation.
Grain harvest is now under way
and Mr. Newberry anticipates
several farmers would like to
carry out a terracing program
after the harvest.
Producers may check with the
county agent, soil conservation
office, vocational agriculture
teachers or the AAA office to
work out water disposal systems
BAKERIES ar Sunshine Biscuits, me.
u. 104
."5
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560a
3 1
8 I
In
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140'312.2
U. 104
■ Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
Juice Erptiu
SweetPeas "r
Tomato Sauce ub”a
Sliced Beets eroandal.
Deviled Ham naya.
Swift's Prem____
Wilson Mor____
Pickles __________
V;-A, Million Smilas
V inesar MI* ider......__
2285
THE THOUSAND WINDOW
• 2
Raisins Seedless____________ pkg.
for their terraces,
drainage ditches, U.
1-Ib. •24
... Pkg. A
adi
K
eA
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, "4
888 98883
888388333383
-
be
A {
Delicious, bracing, refreshing--iced Admiration is
a summer delight! Brew the pot a little stronger
than usual. Then pour slowly over the ice cubes.
You'll get a grand, cool drink and a Savor—my,
h, my}—like no other Savor in all the world.
’I*., . j i I IF r r ‘.
Crackers.. .They’re so easy to
serve, too l jjf
Keep Sunshine Hi Ho crk-
ers on hand .. . They’re ideal
for refreshments anytime!
e AL TE) TO Hito
/ T" The TASTIEST spreads, the qadmgea
• simplest beverages taste better E9"a3s3s
with crisp, golden-brown Hi Ho AdM4 89839
Airway Coffee — 21 414
experience has shown me that a
soil improving crop turned under
New table cloths made of cot- makes me money and I plan to
ton and rayon fabric are durable have several acres in clover next
end •—*;—i The designs are [year.”
with roses, fruit Mr. • Bayer is a cooperator of
carnations and tulips I the Upper Elm-Red Soil Conser-
f P
n
F
MOTOR OVERHAUL
MOTOR TUNE-UP
U. 534
.6 Ears 254
Gainesville (Tex.) Daily Register r""
Friday, June 14, 1946
—i----------------- t -A
| finance farming operations, home . 8
operations and minor improve- • f
ments and repairs. They also may
Soil Building
Practices Bring
Farmers $37,948
Balance of $28,661
May Be Earned Prior
To December 31,1946
Farmers of Cooke county have
been issued prior approvals for
carrying out various soil build-
ing practices on their farms in the
amount of $37,948.45, H. B. New-
berry, AAA administrative offi-
cer, announced Thursday.
There remains a balance of
$28,661.29 that may be earned by
producers before December 31,
1946, Mr. Newberry said, in re-
minding farmers to take advan-
tage of this money and use it
Liver Cheese sied_—u.
Cooked Salami________u.
Cervelat _______ ........Lb.
Sea Foods
ga . -
of his schooling there, more at !
Fort Worth and finally was grad-
uated from Sherman High school
in 1938.
As a youngster he was a little
more interested in sports than1
many boys and spent as much
time as he could playing foptball
and baseball. He later lettered in '
both sports in high school, play-
ing guard on the football line
and second base on the diamond.
He didn’t get a chance to play in
any conference games, though,
something he’d always wanted.
After school the wanderlust hit
him. He wanted to go places and
see things. There was one way
he could do it--in the army. So
after working a little ar a soda
jerker and a few other odd jobs,
he enlisted on sc three-year hrtch.
He hadn’t been in service long
when he was assigned to Head-
quarters, Second Infantry, Sec-
ond Division. He was given a job
as typist and general clerk and
assigned to work for a man he’d
never heard of before, a Col.
Eisenhower. It wasn’t very long
before he found out why the
other GIs swore by “the Old
Man.” , „
“That was a man to work for.
Bill will say. “He was just about
the best boss anyone could ask
for. He never got angry, but he
wanted things just perfect. And
the boys naturaly did things that
way because they liked him.”
With Ike 16 Months
Bill was assigned to work for
Eisenhower when he was chief
of staff of the Second Division.
He stayed with him for 16
months, and calls it the best part
of his army career. The remain-
der of his first enlistment was
uneventful, though the men
seemed to realize that war was
in the air when he got out in the
middle of 1941.
As soon as he was discharged
he went to work in Dallas at the I
Mercantile National bank as an
understudy to both a teller and
a bookkeeper, and if the war
hadn’t intervened, he’d probably
be there now.
But the war did intervene, and
he reenlisted in December of 1961
at his old rank of staff sergeatt.
Because of his previous service,
he was one of the men chosen to
open Camp Howze, and is one
of the original 17 men sent here.
For six months he was in charge
of the post theaters, seven of
them. He was an MP quite a
while, until the army decided to
clean out all regular service men
and ship them into the fighting
zones. -.
He was transferred from here
to the 185th General Hospital at
Walla Walla, Washington, where
he trained as a medical suply
sergeant before being shipped to
Camp White, Oregon. In March
in 1944 he boarded ship for Eng-
land.
In France At War’s End
He was still with the 185th
when he got to England and
stayed with them quite a while.
In a short while he was made
master sergeant. Eventually he
was transferred to the 75th Di-
vision at Rheims and stayed in
France until the war ended in
NOTICE TOCUSTOMERS AND
FRIENDS -e,
• We will be open for business
Friday, June 14. We have been
closed for vacation. Come to see
us. Two-Way Cafe, intersection
Fat, Young
HENS
Dressed and Drawn
494
137c
-------
' onAAAAeeAeAA ‘
Froth, Firm, Pink :
TOMATOES
12c
Lb. :
Lb. 5C
■ make a living for himself and
■ his family.
m As a general rule, farm pur-
m chase loans are not made for more
j than $12,000.
■ Interest on farm purchase loans
■ is 3 percent, and up to 40 years
■ may be allowed for payment of
■ the loan. Most farm purchase bor-
■ rowers, however, repay their
B loans on the “variable payment”
B plan, under which they are billed
B for larger amounts in good years
• and smaller amounts in bad years.
■ This plan substantially cuts the
B repayment time needed. It also
■ [protects borrowers by permitting
■! them to get ahead of their repay-
■: ment schedule during period of
■! high farm income, providing a
■ marein of safety against the pos-
■ sibility of poor yields or low
■ prices.
• Loans are accompanied by an
• improved farm and home man-
• agement plan and borrowers are
" guided in improved farm and
m l home practices by FSA county
m . farm and home supervisors.
m Detailed information on the as-
m1 sistance available to World War
m: 11 veterans through the Farm Se-
m curity, administration programs
m may be obtained by contacting
ma, Glenn H. Mitchell, FSA supervis-
■ or for Cooke county, whose office
■ is located on the third floor of
■ the courthouse.
raTER the WM
25 BENDIX de luxe Home Laundries g4
25 BULOVA 17-Jewel Wrist Watches gSg
$2500.00 in CASH PRIZES (Sgt/
FREE ENTRY BLANKS AT SAFEWAYI "
FIRE. TORNADO
And All Kinds of *
INSURANCE
The nsme of George Grice
on Your Insurance Policy
is like Sterling on Silver.
GEO. M. GRICE
366 East California Ph. 73
Potatoes .................
Large Plums
Dried Appless . W
Sweet Potatoes^ a”4
-$3344,55
i“„JgwT, 3aeddb.
8*fjedet
14b.
—ig
J*-O».
Pkg.
Ne. 14
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14-0.
Cm
3 Sit
.3 Sara
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M-gnid
s
Not a Scratch—
With
Our Handling
Our moving experts ar
specialists in handling fine
furnishings.
CALL 682
DAY OR NIGHT
LLOYD ROANE 3
Transfer and Storage
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 248, Ed. 1 Friday, June 14, 1946, newspaper, June 14, 1946; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1470731/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.