Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 24, 1953 Page: 5 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 23 x 19 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:
Tues., Nov. 24, 1953
5—Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
r
THERE IS A "SANTA CLAUS". . . A DAILY REGISTER WANT AD WILL PROVE IT 365 DAYS A YEAR . . PHONE 96
F
By Ken Reynolds
QUICKIES
s3889
8388883%8
23
(
%
F’v
8
I
!
- "s
E
' *
reeN
.....
S
A
//-24
ducers Guild.
(AP Wirephoto)
(dl)
merce. Phone 105.
9529.
(25)
4—LOST AND FOUND
LOST
ham.
(d4)
(d5)
merce.
(27)
E. Main.
(dl8)
Yesterday Year Ago
(dl9)
details.
(25)
(30)
Phone 197.
(d8)
(dll)
bum.
(dl8)
Phone Cedar-72941.
(d24)
Texas, collect.
(30)
chell, 1072.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
(dl7)
721 or 2604.
Joe Sicking.
(25)
(25)
i
8
276, Thackerville. Okla.
(25)
8
(dl)
Phone 3140-J-l.
(d4)
California, phone 751.
gg
8a8
(25)
1794-W.
for appointment.
(27)
8
3
888853333333332*33333333233338
32333**
9
(28)
ton. Phone 1081.
FOR SALE—Bedroom suite, baby
.; 8 .
88
(25)
bed. 1703 Buck.
Phone 1825-J.
(dl)
(dl6)
1673.
888
20828
17-W-4.
(dl5)
(dl4)
Commerce.
(AP Wirephoto)
two institutions meet in Philadelphia.
Total, this year
Total, last year
55
45
FOR SALE — Lovely Thanksgiv-
ing turkeys; corn fed. Phone
68
42
High
Low
536-W.
19—DOGS
36—FLOWERS AND SHRUBS
PLANTS and shrubs. Paul Ors-
burn, east Highway 82. Phone
PRETTY two-bedroom modern
rock home on six acres, fenced,
new modern septic tank, good
well. electric pump, wired for elec-
tric cook stove, plumbed for auto-
matic washer, garage, storm cel-
lar, barn. Ten miles from Gaines-
ville, Texas north, ten miles from
Marietta, Oklahoma, south. Lo-
cated 2 blocks west just off US
highway 77 on gravel road in
Thackerville, Oklahoma, price $8,-
500. Owner lives on property. Box
"Phone 1679-W-2.
SMALEHELPWANTED
C.C.
2—PERSONAL
Commerce, phone 2713.
17LIVESTOCK
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
27—BUSINESS Opportunities
FOR LEASE—New service sta-
tion. Ideally located on highway
77. Phone 2499 after 5 p.m., for
High for year, 109; low for
year, 16.
Ten-year average annual rain-
fall, 32.82.
Precipitation for the 24-hour
period ending at 5 p.m. yester-
day, .00.
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
Cigarette output in the Nether-
lands last year reached an all-
time high of 9,340,000,000.
18—Poultry, Eggs, Pet Stock__
FAT geese for sale. Phone 219-J-3.
35—WANTED TO RENT
WANTED TO RENT or buy —
Equity in 3-bedroom house.
16—WANTED TO BUY_________
HIGHEST prices paid for used
furniture. Trading Post, 313 N.
103—SEWING MACHINES
SEWING machines. Necchi-Elna
Representative. Phone 384. 114
Scientific baths and massages.
1109 Throckmorton, ph. 1074-J.
(d20)
PANSY plants, shrubbery. Arm-
strong’s, 1510 E. 82, ph. 1729.
___/____(dl5)
Tyler rose bushes, pansy plants,
Armstrong’s, 1510 E. 82, ph. 1729.
(dl5)
1 E,
X, • •: ■
§ g
3
FOR SALE or lease—Suburban
grocery doing good business,
home next door, owner leaving
town: Cunningham Grocery, 1315
E. Garnett, ph one 187._______(27)
FOR SALE—Grocery store and
fixtures; building for rent.
FOR SALE—Junk lumber. Paul
Buck Lumber Co. Phone 2604.
_____________________________(dl7)
NEW and factory reconditioned
motors. Factory guarantee.
Easy payment plan. Hilburn Mo-
tor Co., Gainesville, Texas. (n25)
FOR SALE—Hay. Will deliver.
Phone 1270-W. Tom Cunning-
41—RADIO
SHOTWELL’S radio and televis-
ion repair shop. Call or come
by, 818 N. Morris, ph. 1014. (nl5)
LEACH BROS. Radio and tele-
vision repair. 217 North Com-
Mailman Quits,
Gets Some Sleep
TOLEDO, O. (UP)—Charles W.
James is sleeping late these morn-
ings, for he has just retired as a
letter carrier for the post office
here after 37 years on the job
without being late.
“I used to get there a half hour
early,” James said, “just to make
sure, and, believe me, it was plen-
ty tough sometimes.”
He started carrying mail when
he was 18 years old and got to
that job at 5:20 every morning.
James has another job now, but
this time he starts at eight a.m.
mer Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illi-
nois, titular head of the Demo-
cratic party, today blasted the
“Republican program” of “indict-
ment by suspicion, or conviction
by accusation.”
“Gen. Eisenhower promised the
people a new morality, but his
lieutenants have chosen their
weapons without regard for their
effect,” Stevenson declared. “They
NEWSOM RETIRES
ORLANDO, Fla., Nov. 24 (AP)—
Bobo Newsom, patriarch of the
pitcher’s mound, has retired from
baseball after 26 years. Newsom,
46, said yesterday that he had
asked for and received his retire-
ment from the Philadelphia Ath-
letics. During his long stay in the
majors, he pitched for six Ameri-
can and three National league
clubs.
8822228
22f—FLOOR SANDING______
FLOOR sanding and finishing.
Henry E. Nelson, phone 1327,
815 Moran. (dll)
52—AUTO LOANS___
QUICK LOANS on autos, trucks,
tractors. Sales financed or
present note refinanced. Consoli-
date your debt into one easy pay-
ment. Pace Brothers, ph. 7. (dl7)
56a—WATCHREPAIRING
PEARSON’S Watch repair serv-
ice, 205 N. Commerce, 2nd door
north of Noel Harris Pharmacy.
(dl7)
STANLEY’S Jewelry. Watch and
Ronson lighter repairing. All
work guaranteed. 317 N. Com-
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
• ADDING MACHINES, TYPEWRITERS
Gainesville Typewriter Exchange, phone 384 or 3242-W.
o APPLIANCES
H and H Sales. General Electric appliances, 212 E. California.
• AUTOMOBILE DEALERS
F. E. Schmitz Motor Co. Phone 2400.
• ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
Parker Electric, 110 South Rusk. Phone 1570.
• FEED, SEED AND FERTILIZER
Smith-McDaniel Feed & Seed Store, 301 S. Chestnut, phone 626.
• FLOOR SANDING AND FINISHING
Floor Sanding, finishing. Since 1925 in Gainesville. J. R. (Bob)
Nelson. Phone 1459. 116 North Grand.
• LAND SURVEY
State License. Call C. M. Greek, phone 37.
• LUMBER
Joe B. Walter Lumber Co., 705 Summit Ave. Phone 2020.
Waples-Painter company, 301 W. California. Phone 1248.
• RADIATOR REPAIR
Gainesville Radiator Shop. J. F. Brown, 527 N. Com., Phone 372.
• ROOFING
Bell Roofing and Sheet Metal Co., Denton. Serving Since 1920.
Jack Lyle, sales. Phone 561-W. 1504 Truelove.
• ROOMS FOR RENT
Rooms for rent, special rates by the week. Reasonable rates.
Lone Star Tourist Courts, 627 N. Grand, phone 9544.
• TAXICABS
Safeway Cab Co., 201% E. Elm, phones 1595, 1238.
• TIRES
Goodyear Tires, Stephenson Tire and Battery, 200 N. Commerce.
• WHOLESALE PLUMBING
Waples-Painter Co., wholesale plumbing and supplies, 505 E.
Broadway. Phone 1848.
DAIRY CATTLE
Holsteins, first and second calf
heifers. Fresh and heavy spring-
ers; large number to choose from.
Every cow sold under guarantee.
Bill Hogan, Fort Worth, Tex.
05
8ga
1
Knights of Pythias,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. J. B.
Clark, Sec., A. D. Helm,
(4)
2
. . I wish you'd stop tasting that rum cake I got in the
Register Want Ads!"
, - _5e=sa—-_
// z —*X*e.D—=e
IN PUBLIC EYE AGAIN—Actress June Haver, who gave up
screen career to enter a Kansas convent and then had to
give up the religious life there because of ill health, makes
her first public appearance in Hollywood, Calif., since her
return. Here she listens to Joe Campbell, who escorted her
with her agent, at annual milestone dinner of Screen Pro-
•5
■
15—FOR SALE, Miscellaneous
ELECTRIC motors, $2.95 up. B &
D Sales, 712 E. California. (d5)
MEAT case, dairy box, scales,
slicer. See at 1427 Throckmor-
DIAPER Service, $1.20 weekly
minimum charge. Ti-De-Di-Dee
Diaper Service, phone 138. (d22)
FLOORSWEEP — We are now
distributors for 4rd Brand
floor sweep. Oil or wax base.
Phone 272 for free delivery. Ste-
vens Home Improvement Shop.
__________________(dl6)
STOVES, cleaned and repaired.
Hobbs Furniture, phone 1847.
___________(dl5)
CALL us when you have used
furniture to sell. Trading Post,
313 N. Commerce, ph. 2713. (dl5)
READY Mix concrete; sand grav-
el and dirt; dragline work, trac-
tor work. Post holes and pier
holes dug. Frank Phillips, phone
BAKE sale, Wednesday, Novem-
ber 25, Watts Brothers Phar-
macy. Sponsored by the Loving
Home Demonstration Club. (ID
OPEN every evening until 8:301
Come in. Trading Post, 313 N.
8
22—SPECIAL NOTICES
INSULATION at its best! In old
as well as new homes. Get
our prices first. Easy payment
plan. Stevens Home Improve-
ment shop, phone 272. (d22)
d—SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
SEPTIC Tanks cleaned. Day ph.
9518, night 2107, Ray Amoroso.
(dl4)
22r—RUG CLEANING_______
FOR RUG cleaning estimates,
and pickup and delivery,
phone 138, Driv-In Cleaners and
Laundry, affiliated with a Dallas
Oriental rug cleaning and carpet
company. (dl7)
25—PAINTING, Paper Hanging
PAINTER, paperhanging. Phone
1805-W. B. C. Jackson. (dl8)
26—MATTRESS Renovating
WOOD Mattress & Upholstery
Shop, 1421 E. Pecan, pho. 1391.
(dl)
r
Pencil People
Have New Ideas
NEW YORK (UP)—Makers of
the ordinary wooden lead pencil
have come up with some new
tricks that are helpful to house-
wives.
Women who sew at home now
have available pencils that will
make a clear mark on cloth. The
marks wash out without leaving
a trace after cutting and sewing
chores have been finished.
In gardening, a new moisture-
resistant marking pencil has been
created to replace the old method
of identifying flowers and vege-
tables with the seed packet. A
tag marked with this new pencil
will retain visibility even after
long exposure to rain or wind.
There are new pencils for writ-
ing on glazed surfaces such as
glass or cellophane. These make
it unnecessary to spend time
pasting identifying labels on
home-canned products, for exam-
ple.
The housewife who has a bit of
leisure to indulge a hobby now
has available 70-odd colors in
pencils that can be used for
painting. The leads of many col-
oring pencils are soluble and
thus provide greater control and
detail than conventional water-
color brush methods.
5
8288
y .•
■J
15—FOR SALE, Miscellaneous
1942 FORD sedan; 42-inch Thor
mangel; six heating stoves; %
size bed, mattress, springs; full
size bed. 836 E. California. (28)
$15.95 COWBOY boots, size 4c,
price $10. 815 N. Grand, phone
tyJeailt&L
Temperature: Today noon 58;
barometric pressure, 29.96 ris-
ing.
32—Farms ,Aanches For Sale__
FOR SALE—90 acres land, good
4-room house, small barn, plen-
ty water, water piped in house.
6 miles east, 2 miles south of
Gainesville, no minerals, price
$5000. Miller & Lynch, phone 37.
(27)
City Feller Shows
He Can Be Farmer
LANCASTER, N. Y. (UP) —
That old adage that a “city feller
can’t become a farmer” has been
defied by a man whose philosophy
of farming has been based largely
on “labor-saving devices.”
Cedric F. Smallidge, of Lancas-
ter, was once owner of the Metal-
izing Service Co. of Buffalo. He-
read a few farm journals and de-
cided to take the plunge.
Today, Smallidge owns 200
•acres of farmland, has 22 regis-
tered Holstein cows and two bulls.
The farm is self-sustaining, has
40 acres of pasture and 160 acres
cropped with oats, wheat and hay
And Smallidge operates the
whole business alone.
One innovation was the use of
surplus rubber conveyor belting
for the floors of the stalls. He
said straw bedding was pushed
aside by the cows and they ended
up sleeping on a concrete floor.
“I save time, money, labor and
straw by bedding my cows on
rubber,” he said.
Rubber flooring also covers
other parts of the floor and
makes for easier cleaning, he
said.
He also plans to use an endless
chain of steel paddles to carry
waste to a spreader. Operated by
a two-horsepower electric motor,
the chain will save time and ener-
gy.
“We’ve thrown away our pitch-
forks and cut labor to a mini-
mum,” the modern farmer said.
§
I
EXPERIENCED engineering ac-
countant for construction proj-
ect. Write or phone E. P. Gray,
226 E. Garnett St., Gainesville.
Phone 2954. (dl)
5a—SALESMEN___________
WANTED — Salesman, man or
woman, full time to sell old line
legal reserve life insurance in
• vicinity Gainesville. Pay top first
year commissions and life time
renewals. Security National Life
Insurance Ca, Contact Mark
Lockhart, 106 S. Locust, Denton,
la—LODGE NOTICES_______
REGULAR meeting
Business Mirror . . • by SAM DAWSON
,o Ten
Physician Going
Strong at Age 86
LAFARGEVILLE, N. Y. (UP)
—This northern New York vil-
lage boasts one of the nation’s
oldest practicing physicians.
Dr. John Thomas Fowkes, 86,
has been a practicing physician
for 62 years, a druggist for 56
years, town of Orleans health
officer 50 years, practicer of op-
tometry for 42 years, and a mar-
ried man for 64 years.
Dr. Fowkes isn’t taking on any
new duties, but when asked
about his old patients, he grinned
and replied, “Can’t get rid of
’em.”
COUNTRY home, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 70 acres. 5 minutes from
town. John McIntosh, phone 1348.
________________________________(30)
FOR SALE—House, 3% rooms,
breezeway, garage, concrete cel-
lar, fruit trees, garden space.
1816 Throckmorton.__(30)
EQUITY for sale in nice new
house, a bargain. Phone 1377
K€
e
Adlai Stevenson Blasts
GOP 'Program of Indictment"
ATLANTA, Nov. 24 (A)—For-1 have taken McCarthyism away
Ladies’ ball watch.
40—INSURANCE__________________
AUTOMOBILE, Fire, Casualty.
John McIntosh, phone 1348.
(d3)
Walter Alston
Named Brooklyn
Dodger Slipper
NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (AP) -
Walter (Wally) Alston, manager
of the Montreal Royals of the
International league, was ap-
pointed manager of the Brook-
lyn Dodgers today.
Alston, 42, succeeds Chuck
Dressen, who surprised the base-
ball world Oct. 14 by resigning
shortly after he had piloted the
Dodgers to a second National
league pennant in a row. Dres-
sen, who quit after the Brook-
lyn club rejected his demand
for a two or three year contract,
now is manager and part owner
of the Oakland Pacific Coast
league club.
The new Dodger manager, a
native of Hamilton, Ohio, played
only one major league game
during his career. That was at
first base for the St. Louis Car-
dinals in 1936.
His 1953 Montreal team fin-
ished second to Rochester, but
the Royals won the playoffs,
then defeated the Kansas City
Blues, four games to one, in the
Little World Series
The new contract was for one
year, a Dodger policy.
Walter Emmons Alston, who
won a pennant as manager of
St. Paul in the American asso-
ciation.- went to Montreal in
1950. He has been in the Brook-
lyn farm system for eight and
a half years.
TB Bond Drive
Brings in $1,201.50
The Cooke County Bond Drive
for the Tuberculosis association
totaled $1,201.50, according to an
announcement by Mrs. Irene
Frost, executive secretary. This
drive was conducted through per-
sonal solicitation by 210 persons
in this city and by the Lions club
in Muenster. Gainesville raised
$913.50 and Muenster raised $288.
C. E. Edwards was chairman
of the drive in Gainesville and
the following were captains of
teams assisting: A. L. Fletcher,
Douglas Pendleton. Frank Blagg
and Mrs. Ben R. Fisch.
Dr. T. S. Myrick headed the
campaign in Muenster.
By ED MORSE
NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (AP) . —
Are your prospects for buying
the house you want getting bet-
ter? Worse? Or staying about
the same?
The answer: For new houses,
about the same; for used
houses, much better. But fi-
nancing terms and availability
of mortgage money differ re-
gionally.
Although there’s been a slight
drop in home building, most
forecasts are that we’ll keep on
building houses near the whop-
ping rate of about a million a
year. Recession talk is fading.
3*33
Buckeye State
Has Few Trees
KENT, O. (UP)—There are
few buckeye trees left in Ohio,
which is known as “the Buckeye
State.”
The tree got its popular name
from its round, poisonous seed
which, when polished, takes on a
lustrous gloss. Each brown seed
has a pale scar. Indians com-
pared the seed to the eye of a
deer and named it “hetuck,” or
buckeye.
Early settlers used the buck-
eye’s wood widely for making
furniture, boxes and other house-
hold articles, according to Martin
L. Davey, Jr., tree expert who
reports the present scarcity of
the species.
Whaling Whale
Secretive Job
SCHENECTADY, N. Y. (UP)—
Even whalers don’t like to spread
the word around of their favorite
fishing spot.
The General Electric company
recently received a request for
technical advice from a radio
operator on a Dutch whaler
working out of South Africa.
He needed a two-way radio set-
up strong enough to maintain
contact over water between the
factory ship and the smaller
catcher ships. The only hitch was
that the broadcast couldn’t be
too strong or other whalers could
tune in and find out where the
whales were.
oSw,
1(9—2
' ))
d Texas. Phone C-6214.
” —a _
• 3333323332322332223222232*222*22232333368862898:2 :2222350%58328885213 -..siff-'.-yjBt,'--'
. . • • 23
,8988888838 *-8
—F
qsgs, s - ug
, (.
f T
g < n
0a
ps
l
q
I A"
i dgcnmeecsog
b IIH
M
UNFURNISHED 3-room house.
Phone 1812-W.___(25)
HOUSE for rent, 2 bedrooms.
1817 Mill St. Phone 2090. (27)
FOR SALE — Registered White-
face bull calves. Best blood
line, $150. Phone 191, S. H. Hil-
The U. S. Bureau of Mines
says enough water is pumped
out of Pennsylvania hard coal
mines each year to fill Lake
Tahoe in California.
For For
Month Year
..3.30 29.73
.1.16 18.90
from McCarthy. What an end to
the great crusade.”
The Democratic presidential
nominee of 1952, in a speech pre-
pared for delivery before the
Georgia legislature, advocated dis-
closing the mistakes and failures
of the past and rooting out agents
of communism.
“But for the love of heaven,” he
pleaded, “let us do it with dignity,
objectivity and justice, and with
some better motive than partisan
strife that can only, seriously
weaken the United States ...
“No one wins this way. Suspi-
cion of past Democratic mistakes
is balanced by suspicion of pres-
ent Republican motives. The peo-
ple are confused, confidence in
both parties undermined, the na-
tion injured.
“The issue isn’t which party
detests communism most, but
how to deal with the serious prob-
lem of espionage in our govern-
ment. And it won’t be resolved to
the nation’s advantage by shout-
ing matches and degrading cir-
cuses of political profit.”
Stevenson referred to former
President Truman as the individ-
ual “who has done more than any
living man to check the forward
thrust of communism,” and he
rapped those whose “words im-
ply disloyalty.”
Applauding the “enormously
improved” position of minority
groups, particularly the Negro, he
called progress in the South “even
more conspicuous than that in
the North.”
“I believe, and I think in com-
mon with the great majority of
thoughtful white people of the
South,” he continued, “that this
improvement must and will con-
tinue.”
He said that to keep the prom-
ises made by the Republican par-
ty in 1952 “would have been about
as easy as for one Siamese twin
to jump off the Brooklyn Bridge
while the other kept the skillet
hot for the fish fry.”
And he claimed that on two
thirds of the key issues in the
last session, Democrats saved the
Republican administration from
the Republican congress.
“The attitude of many Repub-
lican leaders seems to be ‘ I Like
Ike, but I don’t like what Ike
likes,’ ” he remarked.
Stevenson asserted that his par-
ty “looks more united than it has
for a long time.”
“Until lately the dopesters were
freely predicting that the North-
South cleavage would pull the
Democratic party apart at the
scams,” he said. “We lost an elec-
tion in 1952, but we did not
lose our vitality or sense of mis-
sion. And the sheep that strayed
are daily coming back into the
fold.”
. -
889882882680886%00
ARMY GETS NAVY'S GOAT—Led by a booming bass drum,
an impromptu parade of West Point cadets and Gls sta-
tioned at West Point military academy escorts the naval
academy's mascot, Billy XII, through Washington Hall at
evening mess. The goat was kidnaped at Annapolis and
brought to the Point. Officials at Annapolis awaited a ran-
som note or the unthinkable prospect of seeing their mascot
in enemy hands Saturday when the football teams of the
Letter Carriers
To Collect Funds
To Fight Disease
Local letter carriers will join
one hundred thousand carriers
across the country Friday, ring-
ing doorbells to collect contribu-
tions to help victims of Ameri-
ca’s “most mysterious disease”
—muscular dystrophy, accord-
ing to Henry Cotten, local chair-
man.
Monday local carriers deliv-
ered circulars which contained
an envelope in which the pat-
trons could seal their contribu-
tions and either mail or keep to
be collected by their carrier.
Friday carriers will re - walk
their route and pick up con-
tributions in envelopes. If pa-
trons mail donations, they must
affix postage.
Theirs is an errand of mercy,
for the funds they will collect
across the land will go toward
therapy and research into a dis-
ease afflicting hundreds of thou-
sands of persons, most of them
children, who are condemned to
death unless a cure is found.
The drive is being conducted
under the auspices of the Mus-
cular Dystrophy Associations of
America, Inc.
This is the first time Ameri-
ca’s letter carriers have partici-
pated in a nationwide fund
drive. Honorary National Chair-
man of the “Letter Carriers”
March” is Postmaster General
Arthur E. Summerfield, who, in
this campaign, has the active
support of William C. Doherty,
president of the National Asso-
ciation of Letter Carriers.
A coast-to-coast television and
radio show over the ABC-TV
and radio network on the eve
of Thanksgiving will honor the
letter carriers. Comedians Dean
Martin and Jerry Lewis will
present a “Salute to the Letter
Carriers” and the program will
feature other top stars of Holly-
wood and Broadway.
So the supply continues good,
but what about price?
While pressure for price’
boosts is being generated by ris-
ing costs of labor and land im-
provement, says the National
Assn, of Home Builders, this is
countered by growing competi-
tion among builders. So new
home prices are mainly steady
and the competition makes for
better quality.
It’s a stand-off, then, in that
phase of the market.
While new home prices are
firm, the prices of pre-war
homes have dropped 5 to 10 per
cent, according to a report on
12 cities throughout the nation
by the Society of Real Estate
Appraisers.
Many owners of newer-than-
pre-war houses have slashed
their imaginative asking prices,
sometimes by 20 per cent.
“Used house bargains will be
plentiful,” says George F. War-
necke, head of the national mort-
gage firm bearing his name.
Fitting in this picture is a
trend to build larger and costli-
er houses for one section of the
buying public. That’s partially
a back-lash from the terrific
postwar buying of small homes
by GIs and others who now
have bigger families and bigger
incomes.
Among the dwellings out-
grown by these owners, house-
hungry newlyweds may find
buys aplenty.
So prospects are better if
you’re shopping for a lived-in
house.
Buying any house, new or
used, will be a bit easier come
Jan. 1, because of the income
tax cut. Mr. Whiskers is easing
up on that pay-check withhold-
ing by 10 per cent for the bulk
eof 58 million individual taxpay-
ers. That will give everyone’s
home-buying potential a slight
boost.
WE BUILD cabinets, all kinds
built-ins; mill work. Paul Buck
Lumber Co. Phone 2604. (d23)
SMassgaga8s988-998
——n
/ ' —
,. TnI
"1m,
ps 8885
gg "885
. “0
Classified Ads Bring Results.
Classified Rates
1 time .............. per word 6c
3 times ............ per word 8c
6 times ............ per word 11c
Classified ads payable in ad-
- vance.
ERRORS —The Register re-
serves the right to edit, reject
and classify all classified ads.
Advertisers are requested to no-
• tify us immediately of any er-
rors in their ads; we are respon-
sible for only one incorrect in-
sertion.
NICE apartment, couple only.
Phone 1637. (27)
13—HOUSES FOR RENT
FURNISHED 2-room house. utili-
ties paid. 914 N. Morris. Phone
KENTON Kennels boarding, 1901
Refinery Rd., ph. 536-W. (dl)
22—SPECIALNOTICES
COURTESY CAB CO.
PHONE 2200
Joe Hubbard, Owner
_______(n26)
ELECTROLUX—The cleaner you
never have to empty. See it to
believe it. T. O. Griffin, 519 W.
asa, 8
88288 8888
88 -ss
FOR RENT—Garage apartment,
unfurnished. Phone 547. (26)
CLEAN furnished apartment, $35
month, bills paid. Couple only.
See Mrs. Speake, 529 N. Denton.
___________________(d23)
2-ROOM furnished apartment,
electric refrigerator, bills paid.
523 Moran.____________(dl)
MODERN 3-room cottage, com-
pletely furnished, children wel-
come. Allred Courts, north Grand.
______•_____(27)
FURNISHED 2-room apartment,
close in; couple. Phone 707.
_ __________(d24)
FURNISHED 2-room apartment.
38 8
FOR SALE—Nice small suburban
grocery, stock, fixtures, lot and
building, $4000. Miller & Lynch,
phone 37.__________(27)
Tell your merchant you saw his
advertisement in The Register.
28a—USEDCARS
1951 MERCURY2-door, $995.00;
1950 Chevrolet club coupe,
$595.00; 1949 Lincoln tudor,
$395.00; 1948 Studebaker conver-
tible, $275.00; 1948 Studebaker 4-
door, $245.00; 1947 Oldsmobile
convertible, $295.00; 1946 Nash 4-
door, $235.00; 1942 Ford 4-door,
clean, $195.00. Bruce and Son
Used Cars, 330 Chestnut. (25)
FOR SALE to highest bidder —
Two 1947 Dodge 48-passenger
school buses. Sealed bids will be
received by Randolph O’Brien,
Valley View, until Dec. 5. Valley
View school board reserves right
to reject any and all bids. (26)
31—HOUSES FOR SALE .
3-BEDROOM house. 1205 Hill-
crest. Phone 2994.________(dl6)
FOR SALE—4-room house. Phone
North Central Texas including
Gainesville: Clear to partly
cloudy and slightly colder
through tonight. Lowest in low-
er 30s in northwest tonight.
Wednesday, fair and cool.
West Texas: Fair and a little
colder through tonight. Lowest
28-35 in Panhandle and South
Plains and from upper Pecos
valley eastward tonight. Fair
and cool Wednesday.
East and South Central Texas:
Clear to partly cloudy and cool-
er through tonight. Continuing
cool Wednesday. Fresh shifting
winds on the coast, becoming
fresh to locally strong norther-
ly this afternoon and diminish-
ing Wednesday.
Oklahoma: Generally fair
through Wednesday. Not much
change.
Lake T e x o m a : Lake level,
612.16 feet; temperature of wa-
ter 60 degrees; barometric pres-
sure 29.85 rising; wind, north-
northwest, 20 mph today; dimin-
ishing to northwest 10-15 to-
night; Wednesday, 15-20 west;
clear weather; high tempera-
ture today 62; low tonight 35;
high Wednesday 62.
Five-Day Outlook
DALLAS, Nov. 24 (AP) — The
weather bureau issued today this
outlook for Nov. 24-28:
East and Central Texas—Tem-
peratures near normal, minimum
38-50 in the interior and 50-57
along coast, maximum 59-75. Cool-
er Tuesday night, warmer Thurs-
day, cooler Friday. Little or no
rain indicated.
West Texas—Temperatures 2
to 5 degrees above normal. mini-
mum 36-38 in north and 38-48 in
south, maximum 53-70. No im-
portant temperature changes. Lit-
tle or no rain indicated.
7—WORK WANTED, MALE__
MIDDLEAGED couple wants
work on ranch, some farming.
Salary or share. Non-resident
owner preferred. Herman Love,
Orr, Okla. (27)
8—WORK WANTED, FEMALE
WILL keep children while mother
works. Phone 2173-J. (30)
io^Sedrooms
CLEAN bearoom, private bath
and entrance. 402 N. Morris,
phone 240, after 6, 2336. (dl9)
BEDROOM, close in, gentleman
preferred. 417 W. California.
(26)
12—APARTMENTS FOR RENT
T W O unfurnished apartments,
bills paid, $40. Phone 1146 or
612-J._____________________ (27)
• UNFURNISHED 3-room duplex
apartment. Bills paid. 808 E.
Broadway. Phone* 277-M. (27)
LARGE 3-room apartment, two
bedrooms, utilities paid. 1023 E.
' Broadway, phone 2025-W. (28)
3-ROOM furnished apartment,
bills paid. 123 Harvey, phone
2226-W.____(25)_
FURNISHED 3-room apartment.
1208 N. Weaver. Ewing Mit-
WASHING machines, $9.95 up.
B&D Sales, 712 E. California.
.___(d5)
FOR SALE — Fireplace wood.
Phone B. C. Rosson at Myra.
___(26)
FOR SALE—Three metaL awn-
ings, just like new. Phone 96.
_________________________________(26)
FOR SALE — Trans-Oceanic Ze-
nith portable radio. Phone 669.
_____(25)
LIVING room suite; 4-deck elec-
tric brooder. 411 Second St.
_____(d24)
FOR SALE—Penzel-Mueller clari-
net, like new. Phone 317. (28)
15b—PIANOS
PIANOS bought, any condition.
Write Box 423, Denison, Tex.
(d4)
15f—TRAILER HOUSES___
28-FT. MAJESTIC, hot water
heater, folding chairs, 2 full
beds, washing machine, refrigera-
tor, plenty closets, electric brakes,
butane gas.' $995.00. 712 E. Califor-
nia. (30)
Phone 3040 or 2557. Reward.
________(25)_
FOUND — Little black cocker
wearing new red harness and
leash. Phone 1080-J or 33. (26)
a—STRAYEDOR STOLEN
STRAYED’’— White-faced calf
from farm south highway 77.
FOR SALE — Grade Hereford
yearling bull; a few Hereford
heifer calves. Also baled oats,
baled oat straw, hegari hay. Alon-
zo Jamison, route 1, Sanger, four
miles south of Era.____(28)
CENTRAL HIDE & Rendering
Company removes dead or
crippled stock. For immediate
service phone No. 6 Gainesville,
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. 64, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 24, 1953, newspaper, November 24, 1953; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579548/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.