Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 31, 1955 Page: 7 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Robison at Graham.
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LIBBY’S PRODUCTS
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Sorghum Syrup
WHY JOHNNY CAN'T READ
Hydrog
Hilex
By Rudolf Flesch
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annual rate of
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ster.
A-LINE—Here is the last word in school
styles for the kindergarten set. It’s a
Oleo
Hour
le
Ml
PINEAPPLE
W,
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and it Smells
good,too
Round of Money Tightening
Under Way to Reduce Debts
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styles pictured are designed
Lee.
3.77
Sun Spun
Deluxe Cleaners
313 E. California
Dial HO5>952I ,
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By SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK, Aug. 31 (A) —
Another round of money tighten-
3647
Rev. and Mrs. Nathan Harding
and Micky Deeding o f Fort
Worth were guests of Mr. and
Tell your merchant
his advertisement in the
CAMPTON N. H — (UP)--Six-
ty-five town voters decided this
year to replace
wooden water
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LbyPEAS
No. 303
3.59
It# CORN
303 Can
The public can help
mail service by cooper
the Post Office de
Gainesville and Mr. and Mrs. Q.c;.e, kA:,,
Curtis Lyons and daughters, Wil- DuSines5 IVIITFOr
Lb.
y. The goal: to
increase in the
Jimmy Don are spending a
days with Mr. and Mrs. Dou
discourage the continuance of
the rapid
COSTUME LOOK—These two fashion-
wise schoolgirls wear similar outfits
which have checked or plaid cotton
either red or luggage brown i Acrilan
jumpers with box-leated skirts, and
jersey jackets with checked or plaid col-
lar and sleeves. Here the small wall-
walker is in checks and red jacket, the
watcher in plaid.
....
Billy Whitt, Freddie King,
Deanna Richey and Virginia and
Jimmy Kirk attended a youth ral-
ly at Calvary Baptist church in
Gainesville Saturday evening.
inach 303ca:..
4 Vienna Sausage
and other bugs
Faster, Easier
than any other'
type bug killer
-
e 3 ■
• )
a 50-year-old
• pipe with some-
lodem. It will cost
Qt Dog Relish 11-Ox. Jar
1.33
LIBBY"S NEW
12-0z Can
Luncheon Meat 39
Latest Addition to Libby’s
r
L . '.
VEGETABLES
u.i5s
... u. 5‘
ma and Pat of Dallas spent Wed-
nesday night with Mr. and Mrs.
B. G. Lyons.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Harrell of
Sherman spent several days the
past week with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Moon.
Mrs. Lon Smith of Phoenix,
Ariz., Mrs. W. H. Tuggle of
Gainesville; Mr. and Mrs. Kin
Henley and daughter and Mr. and
Mrs. R. A. Sparkman and family
of Valley View were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Richey
Sunday.
r.EA
Latest moves are:
Three Federal Reserve Banks
-Cleveland, Atlanta and St.
Louis — now charge member
banks 2% per cent on money
they lend the commercial banks
for use in making loans to busi-
ness or consumers. The other
nine reserve banks still charge 2
per cent, but their directors will
be meeting this week and next.
The U. S. Treasury is paying
more than 2 per cent on its short-
term borrowing — for the first
time since August 1953, the pre-
vious period of tight money that
preceded the recession.
Banks financing Commodity
Credit Corp. price support loans
are to receive 2% per cent per
year, which is one half of one
per cent more than they got last
year. The rate charged farmers
remains at 3% per cent.
Three of the leading national
finance companies are increasing
by one fourth of one per cent
the rate they will pay on short-
term commercial notes in the
open market.
All of these pressures for high-
er rates are building up behind
the interest that banks charge
businessmen when they borrow.
And the really big season of
demand for business loans is just
ahed. Loans are sought to move
fig
‘hm
1% Com 35
Rudolf Retch says
you why he thinks to
49100
MARYSVILLE, Aug. 31 — Mr.
and Mrs T. C. Wyatt and son.
Richard of Winnsboro spent a
.few days the past week with his
mother, Mrs. Rilla Wyatt and rel-
atives at Sivells Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Clements of
Oklahoma City, Okla., were
guests of her father, Sam Rrhey
Saturday and also visited Mr. and
Mrs. John Richey and Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Richey. Sam Rich-
ey - accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Clements to Dallas Saturday eve-
ning where they visited Mr. and
Mrs. O. H. Dennis.
Mrs. Earl Robison and son.
sleeves and collar. A permanently pleat-
ed skirt completes the outfit Pleats
stay in through many washings. All
ing is under wa;
slow down the
total of debt of
all kinds which
proceeded at a
rapid rate in the
first eight
dollars. The
federal debt
h a s n’t swelled Sam Dawson
much this year. But state and
local government debt, corporate
debt, mortgage and consumer
debt have been making notable
gains.
The money managers have
been letting the supply of mony
tighten and interest rates rise to
4.02 Cor ...2 for 355.
ILL. 795
red cotton outfit with hip-length over- 4
..... d band,
"Kan-Kil
Mils,
W DM Pickles Full Quart Jar
thing more m
$20.000 to change over.
- . — — —i .
months of this
- g — i year.
MWender“kiCneeanandan Ray'lThedebtgtota!
Moon left Tuesday for Ranger ing in 1955 at an
where they will enroll at Ranger
Junior college.
MEATS
Chuck Roast ........
Franks Hormers AIl-Meat-----
Round Steak ........
_ Swift's Premium
DQCOII or Bird Brand........
Pork Roast ........
Pork Chops
Bulk Wieners
Raymon 0. Wagner
Killed In Wreck
A Relatives here have received
word of the death of Raymon O.
Wagner of Oklahoma City in a
car accident about noon Sunday
near Ponca City, Okla. Mrs. Wag-
ner escaped with cuts and bruis-
es and was dismissed from a hos-
pital after treatment.
Riding with friends, the Wag-
ners were enroute to Winfield,
Kansas.
Mrs. Wagner is a niece of Mrs.
Bomar DeBerry Mrs. Charles A.
Howard and Harry P. Garvey,
Sr., all of this city. She is the
former Miss Betty LeSueur,
daughter of W. N. LeSueur, for-
mer Gainesville resident who was
chief engineer of the Texas Pow-
er and Light plant on Lindsay
street for some time.
Mr. Wagner in his early thir-
ties, is survived by his wife and
son, Stephen Arthur, 3%, and his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Wagner. Agra, Okla.
Mrs. DeBerry left Tuesday af-
ternoon to be with the family in
Oklahoma City and attend ser-
vices for Mr. Wagner today in
Cushing, Okla.
442 Hamburger Relish . 11-Ox. Jar
2663 ..____________ 1
AM
353538 3888688
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3888833383882.3833
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SPEARS
303 Can
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4 Tomato Juices 3-81
2x Pineapple Juice • 3 - 89 (
_) sju02ibl-‘5 ' - o
)5g i.g
Mr. and Mrs. Belle Daugherty
and family of Callisburg visited
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Whitt Sun-
day. James and Linda Whitt re-
turned home with them for a
visit.
Mrs. Darrell Hallmark and
family spent Sunday with Ron-
nie Hallmark at Arlington.
Mr. and Mrs. John Richey vis-
ited Mr. and Mrs. Coye Fite and
family at Ringgold Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Lyons of
" Potted Meat 3Va-0l. Cam
Stuffed Olives ~
IM# FRUIT
COCKTAIL
303 Can
We like to help peo-
plo "or the go" look
their smartest and ।
host. Sand us your
party or vacatior
clothes, for thorough
cleaning, « • r o f «I
pressing:
MEEPSROOMSIEOFHYIOIISECTS
toMGEKan-Ki Bug Killer is easy
to use-no spray gun necessary, no
fuss, ro mess! Just press the but-
too. Kan-Kil Bug Killer is safe-
non-inflammable-contains noDDT
too. Leaves
no typical insecticide odor. Proved
fast, safe, effective. At all stores.
Another Dependable Coigate Praduct
4, 9
02 ,-t
n t4,, 4
atu . .inol.
and process the crops, and to
stock the stores for the big Fall
and Christmas trade.
.The money managers hasten to
eSmure the nation that there is no
intention of making money so
tight that it will hamper busi-
nessmen. If the shortage really
begins to hurt, the Federal Re-
serve system has ways of easing
the supply quickly. <
The tightening so far has been
aimed at discouraging the more
speculative forms of borrowing,
which many bankers as well as
the money managers feel have
been increasing too fast. They
fear that this increase in total
debt has been playing too large a
role in business bpom in recent
months. >
Conoco Station
Left Off List
One of the eight Conoco sta-
tions in the Gainesville area and
Cooke county was left off the list
appearing in a Continental Oil
company advertisement in The
Register Tuesday.
It is the Campbell Grocery and
station on highway 82 east. The
Register regrets the error and is
glad to make this correction.
e ’ :
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3 or435
.hncli e
AV
c e ■
■ . -
aA-
WE GO FOR {
PEOPLE S
ON THE GO y
3 4,
A Startling Series
of 12 Articles a
of Vital Interest (
■ - i a
" . .37
^4... — .*51• s8MHhlgRiv,V
to each our children to reed?
Lb. 39
.59
Pme
46 Spaghetti 28--
y Spaghetti & *2-4
4 Peaches si-
“Three-Point Program,” Post-
master Cecil Tinsley said today.
The “Three-Point Program” in-
volves:
1. The sorting of mail into local
and out-of-town bundles, and with
regular three-cent mail separated
from air mail. Post offices will
furnish without charge labels
reading “all for out-of-town” and
“all tor local” delivery.
2. The tying and bundling of
mail by those who mail in quan
tity. The postmaster said, ‘This
sorting procedure is normally
relatively convenient for business
firms but it becomes extremely
time-consuming when it must be
' done in the post office.”
3. The earlier mailing of letters I
and parcels. Tinsley said, “U
more mail would be deposited
earlier in the day. peak loads
would be reduced and a larger
proportion of mail could be dis-
patched by earlier trains, planes
and motor vehicles, thus assur-
ing earlier delivery.”
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 31, 1955, newspaper, August 31, 1955; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1580378/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.