Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 282, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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allowed each applicant and each
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Letters will be sent to an army
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Re-Elect Our
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FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1942.
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.......35c
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Men’s Hate
.......50c
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church, officiating.
I
OLAN R. VAN ZANDT
enlist in the service.
Want ads ring the cash register
6
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City Briefs
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MU‘cR€ST
BA
pmeee
Experienced State Senator
Olan R. Van Zandt
He Has Proven to
the Citizens of Cooke
County That He Is—
Efficient
Impartial
Fearless
NO. 1 NU-CREST
PEACHES
Demand Here for
V-Letter Paper
At Post Office
\ Micro-Photographic
Plan Lightens Load
Of Service Men’s Mail
NU-CREST
SPINACH
Cleaned and
Pressed ....
Sliced or Halves
In Dextrose
YOU’RE NOT PLAY-
( ING “BLIND MAN’S
BUFF” WHEN YOU
PURCHASE OUR NU-
CREST AND MOON
ROSE PRODUCTS!
NU-CRESr
apricots
NU-CREST
CORN
NU-CRESr
PEARS
f
6
NU-CRESr
BEANS
times, we need in office
more than ever, men of
experience and demon-
strated ability.
NU-CREST
PEACHES
PA C1F FOUR She will report for active duty
with the Army Nurses corps Au-
YOU WILL FIND NU-CREST AND MOON ROSE
PRODUCTS IN MOST LEADING GROCERY STORES
---
NU-CRESr
PEAS *
NU-CREST
SOAP FLAKES
address of the soldier to whom
sent.
WON’T
YOU TRY
THEM
THIS
WEEK?
Enriched With
DEXTROSE
CHUCK ROAST
First Quality Beef ... LB.
«
GRAPES
Thompson’s Seedless.....
BLACKEYED PEAS
Home Grown, WeH Filled ....
GRAPEFRUIT
Juice
TOMAl
JUIc
Cleaned and
Blocked ....
Sensible Food-Stamp Plan, Adequate and Humane Care
of Our Insane, Homestead Tax Exemption—Always Fair
to the Farmer, the Business Man and the Working Man.
BEANS
Ranch Style, 15-oz. S CANS
cial letter sheets for writing men,
in the army, navy and marines in should the film be lost in transit,
foreign service. Postmaster Cecil a second reproduction will be sent
H Tinsley stated Friday. The let- to the service man.
FAMOUS
NU-CREST
PRODUCTS
FRESH CALIFORNIA APRICOTS
(Better Can Some Now)...........................
Aooda Pa^e.
Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
p.
52, .4
Enciched With -
DEXTROSE
Louis Shanks of Tioga, John of
Dallas and Mrs. Frank I Covey of
Joplin, Mo.
HARRY W. SHORT
NU-CREST
Fresh PRUNES
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Let s Re-Elect Van Zandt to Assure
: Able Representation to This District
OLAN R. VAN ZANDT—Political Advertisement
. T
zumummmimimmmmmmmmmmmmum
gust 10.
Miss Harris, well and favorably
known in this city, received her
first nurse training in the Gaines-
ville sanitarium, graduating from
On thew* qualifications, JOHN ATCHISON is en-
titled to the vote and support of the good citizens of
- Cooke County who desire the law enforced and the
peace of the community maintained at all times.
,2
95 2
oracu5
Senator Van Zandt, as Dean of the
Texas Senate, Enjoys the Esteem and
Confidence of All Who Know Him.
At the place of reception, the.
film will be enlarged to readable
There has been some demand at letter is retained until assurance is
the Gainesville postoffice for spe-given that the film reproduction
..... - — has reached its destination, and
wMA)e
DoCc- ARIA
22
$ takeOOO
I
SPECIAL
Men’s Suite and Plain
Dresses
Washrite Granulated
SOAP
POWDER
gg
TYLER & SIMPSON CO
WHOLESALE GROCERS ,
ESTABLISHED IN GAINEsvHaE IN 1879
PINEAPPLE JUICEORA
Hunt’s Supreme, 12-0z. 2 CANSMu) W
Sze
eve OtM, a
JOHJI ATCHISON
FOR REELECTION .
• A c VAI IP
COUNTYATTORNEY
VOTE SATURDAY FOR
John Atchison
FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY
. . (Pol. adv.)
Cash and Carry
We do an kinds of altering . ..
Repairing
All Work Guaranteed—By
Expert Cleaners!
Fur Coats cleaned, glazed and
stored. •
ONE DAY SERVICE
Miller’s Cleaners
329-331 North Commerce
PHONE 151
Junkyards in this country di a
business of close to $50,000,000
h"“
, LBS 23c
-
3
■
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NUPICREsr
i"-mBsmmmtmW"-" I
They cost about $10 each and our '
| army uses thousands of them. Buy, (
War Bonds and Stamps from your I
bank, postomice and in many retail .
stores to help pay for these neo- '
essary items for ourAghting forces., .
Help your community reach its War '
Bond Quota by investing at least 1058
. percent of your income in War I
Hqnda or Stamps every pay dag. ii
" •.s.Tvpnonn
$1
2 .
ET;
JOE F. FRIES
PILOT POINT, July 24.—Joe
Francis Fries, 71, died at his home
three miles north of Pilot Point
Wednesday at 7:30 p. m., following
a paralytic stroke suffered a week
PLENTY OF NICE DRESSED FRYERS FOR SUNDAY DINNER
RALPH LONG Grocery amd Market
Six Charges in
Corporation Court
Three men, charged with illegal
. train riding Thursday night, were
! placed in the city jail and will be
held for trial in corporation court.
(Charges were filed against a man
... LB. 15c
20c
32c
each and every issue for which he 4
campaigned. During his first race,
he favored the creation of a state
land board, the improvement of va-
cancy laws, the good-faith claim-
ant's preference right, and the cor-
rection of state abstracts.
He was against vacancy rack-
eteering and title clouding, outside
influences and gambling with
school funds, and logarithmic bids
and favoritism in leasing state
lands.
Commissioner Giles now points
with pride to his unparalleled ac-
complishment of the issues be ad-
vocated and to the 100-per cent
abolition of the abuses he fought.
--
Jester Confident
Of His Election
DALLAS, July 24.—The little
men of Texas, the independent oil
operator and the consumer who
makes possible the operation of in-
dustries regulated by the Texas
Railroad commission, will elect
him to the unexpired term of Com-
missioner Jerry Sadler, Saturday,
Beauford Jester of Corsicana de-
clared here today.
Closing his tour of the state with
A.
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(
N°
AuFcResf
Uekr
Bascom Giles Was
Here Thursday
Bascom Giles, commissioner of
the General Land office, was a
visitor here for a abort time
Thursday in a final swing through
this section of the state before
bringing to a close his brief cam-
paign for re-election.
Commissioner Giles claims the
unique distinction of being the one
state official who has accomplished
i
I 5c
a ftaal BAdre— to an apdognam
teed adequate repreBentation of the
interests of Texas consumers.
Reports reaching him from
throughout the state indicate, Jes-
' ter said, that he will lead the
ticket in Saturday’s primary yot-
ing, despite the fact that he isa
newcomer to political circles. He
will close his campaign from his
Corsicana home at 8:45 p. m. in a
broadcast to be heard statewide.
size and a photographic copy pro-
vided the soldier. The original
on Hit Record of .
• Accomplishments
and His Ability
CURED HAM SHANK ENDS
8 TO 4-LB. PIECES........................
Catherine Harris
is an Army Nurse
Miss Catherine Harris, city-
county health nurse at El Paso,
and former member of the nursing
fraternity of Gainesville, has en-
listed for army service, according
to word received by friends here.
During these critical
- For every dollar spent on de-
defense in 1938-9, Britain is spend-
ing over 816 in 1942. The war al-
ready has cost Britain $34,500,-
000,000. In June, 1942, govern-
ment expenditure was 856,000,000
a day.
RIPE TOMATOES | Qa
Fancy Home Grown. No. 1 Grade.. 3 LBS. ■■ WU
iMXnMl
menus )
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V "9
T 22
gans. /“
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MP*i
WASHRITE
$an.Rden
©OeTA
.hiie
PINEAPPLE
Half Slices, No. 2%4 Can ... ..
NECTAR 5X.
Peach and Apricot .. .12-0z. CAN
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letter must bear a
stamp for transmission.
34
Burial was in Fairview cemetery Two years ago, she was em-
and bearers were Arthur Dugger, ployed by the City-County Health
Martie Dugger, Lloyd Craucker, department of El Paso, and is the
Frank Craucker, Cleve Watkins first nurse of the department to
and Nolan Wayne Griffith, enlist in the service.
27c
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h”d
ago.
Funeral services were held at 3
p. m. Thursday at St. Thomas ’
Catholic church here, conducted by j
Father John Brady of Gainesville. ,
For burial in the Catholic cemetery-
pallbearers were named as Frank
Heitzman, Ed Ledbetter, A. Ber- ’
end, L.'j. Epperson, Joe Clark and ;
Frank McCullum.
Born May 2, 1871, in LaGrange,
Fries was the son of the late Mr.,
and Mrs. Joseph Fries, and had i
lived in his present home 25 years, :
where be was prominent in the
farming community. He was mar-
ried to Miss Betty Brown in
Gainesville in 1906. He was a
member of the Catholic church.
Surviving are his wife, a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Vernon Beaty of Fort
Worth; three sons, John and
Charles of Fort Worth and Jodie
of Tioga; four grandchildren; four
brothers and sisters, Will and Mrs.
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WAR BONDS
!★ ★
A shelter tent is a “pup” tent and
* our Army and Marino Corps uses
thousands of them in field maneu-
i vers, in training, on short marches
' and for over-night bivouacs. They
1 are like an inverted V, simple and
easy to Mt tv and toko down,
quickly. 3 J
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ter sheets are a part of the micro-! ------------------- -
photographic letter plan adopted When Brigham Young and the
recently to lighten mall loads to Mormon pioneers entered the Val-
foreign points. j ley of Great Salt Lake in 1847
The sheets, which may be folded there was only one tree in the val-
and sealed, require no envelope and ley—a mountain cedar. A monu-
mav be obtained free of charge by ment to the tree, now dead and im-
relatives and friends of men in the bedded in concrete, has been
service at any window of the post erected by a pioneer memorial as-
office. Three sheets per day are sociation.
Funeral services for Harry Wal- the school of nursing. She did post
lace Short, 40, ef El Dorado, Kan- graduate work at Bradford Me-
sas, were held at 10 o'clock Friday morial hospital, Dallas, and at-
morning at Leazer-Keel Funeral tended the Graduate School of
chapel, Rev. J. P Fleming, pastor Laboratory Technic, St. Louis, Mo.,!
of Whaley Memorial Methodist and George Peabody School, Nash-
Mr. Short died at 5 a. m. Thurs-
day in Gainesville sanitarium, fol-
lowing an illness of two days. He
had been visiting friends in Gaines- J
ville.
Born October 22, 1901, in
Georgia, he was the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Short, and
was married to Miss Elizabeth
Dugger in Ardmore, Okla., in 1939.;
He was employed by Cities Service
Oil company in El Dorado and was
a member of the Methodist church
there.
Surviving are his wife and a
brother, William Short, Bartles-
ville, Okla.
•)"7A PORK CHOPS
• ■ V I Nice and Lean........ LB.
Some recent achieve-
ments of Senator Van
Zandt include:
Old Age Pensions, Teach-
i ers’ Retirement, Unem-
ployment Insurance,
Road Bond Assumption,
High School Tuition and
Bus Transportation, A
for drunkenness and against two
persons for parking in restricted
zones, Thursday.
Has Returned from
; Pastors’ School
Rev. Alexander Gray, pastor of
Southern Presbyterian church, has
returned from Kerrville. where he
spent the past two weeks attending
the Southern Presbyterian Pastors'
school. Mr. Gray will occupy his
pulpit for the Sunday service of his
church.
No Cement to
Pave North Grand
No cement is available at this
time to continue the paving proj-
ect on North Grand avenue, City
Manager Ross P. Reagan an-
nounced Friday. Effort is being
made to obtain materials for the
project immediately, and both city
workers and State Highway de-
partment employes are ready to
begin work.
- Lge-.-e
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post office, New York for example, . 33,
where they will be photographed) f -
on a strip of film which will be * a
transmitted by air or ship to the
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NEW AXIS VEHiCLE—Tnis new type of motor-cycle track vehicle was captured from the
enemy by the British to Libya. It is used to tow smalLgnns and carry a few men.
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 282, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1942, newspaper, July 24, 1942; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481253/m1/4/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.