Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 166, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1919 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 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:
— x"F p
J*;
*
I
OAJMBSVILLB WILT BXGISTKB, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1910.
I
oomFaitt
A
THE
Wichita Falls, Jan. 30.—Reports re-
ra-
979
t
THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1^19.
I
HOC* LX.
I
Sophistication in Simple Lines
the
fl
’if
111
(governor Hobby has undoubted-
ly
(F4)
1
HI
If
•»l
I"
MIR" •'
Mfe
£
I
E1
lF
•i
I
f ,
K.:. .“
»
i!
i, .
►
3
?!
%
. I
pi-
th*
©McCai*
*
*PF
1>
&
I*-.
I
hS & .
■
S<l
ill'*'':.1!/
■
IS
ill
organs weakened by
* \orJS^
r niter
hey do
£
.M
J
*.«
I AS
jgaijgg!
JUST AS SURE AS THIf SUN RISES YOU CAN PUT 50c,
$1.00 OR $2.00 A WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS OF EACH YEAR
AND IN 5 YEARS HAVE PILED UP $125.00, $250.00 OR $500.
DON’T ONE OF THESE SUMS LOOK GOOD TO YOU?
Pay that poll tax. Tomorrow is
the last day.
■NUN WANTS A
LAW AGAINST WIRES
THOSE SHOE BILLS!
-EP THEM DOWN
LYOAY IN FAVOR Of
REDUCING ACREAGE
A good way to get the country trade
is to advertise In the Weekly Register, t
published everv Thursday.
WE ALSO HAVE PLANS WHEREBY YOU CAN PUT IN
$5.00, $10.00, $20.00 OR MORE EACH WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS
OF EACH YEAR FOR 5 YEARS AND HAVE $1,250, $2,500 OR
$5,000 OR MORE—ENOUGH TO BUY A NEW HOME OR A
GOOD BUSINESS. NO COST TO JOIN THE CLUB.
COME IN AND LET US EXPLAIN IT. COME IN NOW.
■ ' :-a?
- 7;
;L. ' >4 I
■
M
•I
«l
11
»
H
f j
ss^sSiSSiSagaiHSiia
III
i'l
“I
E?i
l.’l/Jill
i
1
I |
*
r
r
WEEKLY FASHION LETTER
■ • .
J
rw
-*
F^irst State Bank
J. W. DOWN ARD, President F. MORRIS, Jr., Cashier
T ( f j
Hw
W f
HH
I
H. Boedker and others of Bowie, Tex-
as.
For an undivided half interest in two
and a half acres of the Hardin tract out
of the DuLose survey, the rate of $100,-
000 an acre has been paid to T. P.
Adams and otheres by J. W. Penland,
trustee.
Sffl®
SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY
BRINGS SURE RELIEF
American Army of Occupation, Jan. 30.
The task of supplying the eight divi- „
j ^ions of the Third American Army with
Browning machine guns and automatic
rifles was begun ■. recently. The Brown-
ings are to replace the machine guns and
automatic rifles with which all troops
of the American Expeditionary Forces
have been armed.
3
■j
9r 1
Reception Cards, Engraved Visiting
Cards and Engraved Birth Announce-
ments at office of Register Printing
Co. (tfhT
& ’is
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 30.—Men ad-
dicted to the use of tobacco in any form
would be prohibited from holding public
office if State Senator Oliver Kline
from Huntington, Ind., were able to car-
ry out a req nest of a constituent. Sen-
ator Kline received ,a long letter from
a resident of the county, requesting a
law to prohibit any user of tobacco from
being a public official. The communi-
cation was read into the records of the
senate and then referred to the com-
mittees on Swamplands and drains and
rivers and waters for joint action.
A full new line of Engraved Visiting
Cards, Birth Announcements, Personal
Stationery, Reception Cards, just received
at office of Register Printing Co. Call
and see samples. (tf)
p
E
si?
WY OVERSEAS MEN
TO RETURN TO FARM
,rt1l
WRITTEN ESPECIALLY FOB THE REGISTER BY SOME OF
LEADING FASHION ARTISTS OF NEW YORK CITY
Colda Cau«e Grip and Influence
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets
remove the cause. There is only one
“Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE’S sig-
nature on the box. 30.
Mr. John Held, merchant, of Salt
Lake City, keeps an exact record of the
shoes he wears. He writes, “Two
pairs of Nedlin Soles have worn for
me 19 months and I am on my feet
ninety per cent of the time.”
This is not an extraordinary exam-
ple of the money-saving service that
people get from Neolin Soles. It is
typical of the experience millions are
having. These soles do wear a very
long time and so help you keep shoe
bills down. They are scientifically
made so they must wear. • .
. Get Neolin-soled shoes at almost
any good shoe store. Get them for
your whole family in the styles you
prefer. And have these cost-saving
soles put on your worn shoes. They
are very comfortable and waterproof
as well as durable. They are made by
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Com-
pany, Akron, Ohio, who also make
Wingfoot Heelv guaranteed to out-
wear any other heeh
Heolin gdeg
%B$|t
By Associated Press;
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 30.—Governor
Goodrich has been asked to urge the
legislature to pass an anti-witchcraft
law. The request* came in a letter
from someplace on a rural route out of
Huntington and was from“a good old
Republican. “The writer" declared that
witchcraft is the sause of all sorts of
troubles which might t>e instant death |
or merely an automobile accident, andl
that under the present laws of the state
the county prosecutor does not know I
how to deal with the situation.
Control of the business of practicing
black art license and life imprisonment
for violators of the law are suggested,
such ealBFeb.’ta tharo taro arodi aroi
The governor has not asked for such
a statute.
of the river, across from Burkburnett,
in which territory there is still much
interest, are to the effect that the
Burk-Bridge well Is drilling through
hard rock around 1,450 feet, and it will
likely be several days before the depth
of the Fowler sand is reached. Increas-
ing activity is shown near this test in
preparations for drilling. Already fifty-
four locations are reported and some-
thing like a dozen derricks have been
erected. The Red Wich Oil Company
is among those rigging up to begin op-
erations. This activity, it is understood,
is extending some distance in the direc-
tion of Randlett, Okla., near which town
land is leasing at better than $200 an
acre.
In the Burkburnett field the Harves-
ter Oil Company is preparing to drill in
its well, which is located on the Van-
cleave ranch not far from the Helen
Elizabeth. The sanG was reached in
this well several days ago. The S. A. M.
Oil company well on the Tardin tract
to the southeast of the Burkburnett
school house will be grilled in within the
next few days, the sand having been
reached about ten days ago when some
delay was experienced. Both wells are
expected to show up to the average of
the field.
Some fancy prices are being paid for
leases in the Burkburnett territory, ac-
cording to figures available, in one in-
stance the amount reaching the basis
of $195,000 an acre. This rate was paid
for half a lot in the Musgrave addition
to Burkburnett by E. H. Staley for out-
Fort Worth, Jan. 30.—About 80 per J
cent of the men who are being discharg-
ed from Camp Bowie have jobs await-
ing them, E. A. Turner, head of the U. •
S. ’ Employment Bureau at the camp, |
said Wednesday.
-When he first began registering the I
soldiers, about 95 per ,-ent said they
had jobs waiting for them. Th'.*n after
several weeks, the percentage dropped
until only 90 per cent had jobs.
In the last few weeks, the percentage
has fallen to 80.
Turner is expecting the scale to go
upward again in a short while, espe-
cially among the overseas and wounded
men.
More than half of the men from over-
seas want to go on the farm, says Tur-
ner.
These men who have seen action visit-
ed Paris and London and viewed the
gaities at close range in those places,
and all seem perfectly satisfied to re-
turn to the farms, ;
Nearly 60 per cent of the overseas
men are going on farms.
King Komus Syrup
is fine for waffles, cakes,
pan cakes, for making
candy,“stage planks” as
Made of choicest
grains and
ready-to-eat
Grapeliuts
Food of
wonderful
L flavor
ii”
t
digging up the dinero to meet the
bills, and therefore continue to be
the goat of the big official annual
show and graft hunters.
----X----
Mr- McAdoo declares that he is
"fading out officially.” There are
several politicians who wo^ld like
to kjjow if his assertion is a threat
to the Democrats or praise to the
Republicans. Even our old friend,
Chainp Clark, is in this class, but
judging from the "McAdoo For
President” clubs that are being
formed over the country in rail-
road circles, Mc’s “fading out” will
sooa be replaced on the canvas in
life size portraits, which will re-
miad the country most forcibly
that he is the son-in-law of his
father-in-law, and then Champ,
whom it is said is backed by Billy
Bryan this time, will have to get
busy if he expects to keep the ex-
director general from receiving the
nomination, which it is hoped will
be equivalent to keeping the pres-
idency in the family for some years
to come. Looks like our friend
Clark, from grand old Missouri,
“alj the way from Pike,” is going
to have the fight of his life next
year, even with the backing of the
man who made Woodrow Wilson
president
f
Stops The Tickle
Heals the Throat and (lures the Congh.
HAYS’ HEALING HONEY. Price 35c.
tem Oil hM enabled raferina _ .—
tty to withstand attacks of kidney,
, bladder and stomach troubles
___all ■ disc sass connected with the
urinary organs, and to build up .and
reetsre to health CZ___1 *
i sea-e. These most important
watched, because the;
'y the blood: unless t
k you are doomed.
If
ft *
fl
in." •• 53
I fl
=™1
IB
I
J
8® I
■
J ViiiS
!■
F* -
E W
g f
By Associated Press: 4,
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. f
stepped from the Union Station here
carrying a market basket and a suit-
■ case,
about
l‘m
from Dayton, Ohio,'
tested it was against his principles to
have intoxicating liquor. Just to
prve his assertions he raised the cover-
ing of the basket and displayed a much-
worn bible, saying he prized it “more
than al the whiskey in the country.”
The officers were not satisfied. They
demanded that the suitcase, be opened.
1 It was found to contain two one-ahlf
pint bottles of gm and thirty-one half
pint bottles of whiskey. “And it was
squirrel whiskey, too. One drink of it
would make your hair curl,” sighed a
policeman. The man was charged with
“operating g blind tiger.”
KINKV
I
riorf
executed the same.
Given under my hand and the seal of
said court, at office in Gainesville, Tex-
1 as this the 23rd day of January, A. D.
19111.
JNO. F. COBBLE, Clerk County Court,
Cooke County, Texas.
By N. C. SNIDER, Deputy.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the .t.
Signature of
----X----
Some persons wonder why the
French get on a little better with
other peoples than the British do.
When Mrs. Wilson was in England _
the papers said she looked mothers, gjje partiea> the transfer being from C.
ly, but the French press portrayed
her as a lovely and gracious wo-
man.
What would it be worth to be
able to get in a vehicle now and
go with speed and comfort to any
part of the county? It can’t be
estimated in dollars and cents, and
yet a few dollars extra tax would
give you that boon. On with the
bond issue for better roads.
-------x------- r.
The report that the bolsheviki
spent vast sums in efforts to estab-
lish theif cult in the United States
lacks probability. In the first
place they never had vast sums,
and if they had had the money
would have been spent for booze
and other forms of dissipation.
-----x-----
A lot of wild bills are introduced
at every session of a state legisla-
ture by would-be reformers. A
number of such measures are al-
ready fisaking their appearance at
Austin. It is the duty of sane and
sensibly members to throttle all
bills of-this kind and prevent their
passage. The extent to which they
succeed in this good work will
mark (he legislature’s value to the
state.
The police began tb question him
a mysterious “bulge in each,
a hard working, religious man
he said. He pro-
butter. Put up in a
model factory, up-to-
date in every respect
and comes to you in
sanitary cans right from
the kettle, i
’ Ask Your Grocer
Dunbar Molasses
and Syrup Co.
Nev OrieaBs-MeapIm-New York
Fort Worth, Jan. 30.—D. E. Lyday,
president of the Farmers Union of Tex-
as, will write a letter to Judge W. F.
Ramsey of Dallas, president of the Fed-
eral Reserve Bank for this district, and
suggest that issue a call fdr members
of associations of all interests to meet !
and devise plans for cutting down the
cotton acreage in Texas and the South.
Should the South make a bumper cotton
crop another year, Lyday said, the ef-
fect would be disastrous.
. Five-cent cotton in the fall of 1919
is possible and very probable, Lyday
said, in event the present contemplated
acreage is planted and a good crop is
made. Last year the Union made a
special effort to cut the acreage and
managed to hold the increase down to 1
per cent against the cry of big war
prices, v
Lyday favors a meeting of merchants,
bankers and Union officials at an early
date. He declares that a united effort
of all these interests will bring the
average down, insuring the farmer re-
turns for the cotton he does raise.
riub pays
3? club
C o /: h p^S ^^00
Wh«n y°u need anything printed,
call 98. Register Job Department.
w •
Aa Uansual Cellar
One of the most dutable styles that
The Daily Register
■3TaB LI8eSdWpT?8 >4
PKWggG^COltfANY
GAINESVILLE, TEXAS
J. ---WsssfaB Mter
d H.
■D~MBAT<-------—CTrwaMtT
Editorial and Business Office 310 East
Calttornla^rtreet. Telephone No. 98
Motored at the Gainesville Postoffioe
ao gecond-cla— matter_______
RELIGIOUS MAN HAS
SQUIRREL WHISKEY
er la mode censors them or not. Loud,
extreme colors should be avoided, and
if one wants a spot of light 'color next
the skirt, there are many subdued shades
of spats that one may get at reasonable
price.
that the average woman is just begin-
ning to solve. The Parisian, by a nat-
ural instinct, chooses her clothes cor-
rectly and wisely, and always looks* chic.
But the American woman in the past
has been included to lavish upon her-
self finery that was neither weH|chosen
nor becoming. To attain that height of
charm that the.Parisian possessed was
not a matter for a few moments’
thought and then dismissal. It required
a study of one’s own personality, attrac
FIICY PRICES FOR.
LEASES II BURK FIELD
Thanks to the sensible buyers and, I
must say, sensible women, the demand
for novelty shoes has decreased and
they are now passee. So few have feet
that can wear these oddly cut boots and
shoes; and still just those who can not
will attempt it if it has been approved
as the prevailing mode in footwear. If
one has those dainty little feet that look
well only in short vamp shoes, one
30.—A man should stick to short vamp shoes wheth-
well as for plain old-
fashioned bread and
/
7
Hb i
Nappy Hair,
, Grows long,
Straight, Soft
j and Silky by
I using
EXSLENTO
QIKXINE POMAEE
A Cu'GriTCT. Removesdar.-
<lruT. Feed.;:ho root* of thchpir. Cleaa-3
theecalp. Stops falling hair at once.
Price 25c 17 mail on recciptef st^>s
or coin. AGENTS WANTS©
WrtSa tor p®rtlou«ar»
FXH INTO MEDICINE CO.. ATLANTA. G.L
•Sr—™-:;:-:
WWWWWFOiilliKBsS
i Fill the Pitcher with
■ x J';-' ‘
a syrup of flavor. Use Dunbar’s King
Komus Syrup. It is made in. Louisiana
where the sugar cane grows, and the
flavor of the cane is retained in the syrup
Dunbar^
&
-1a
Im.
I
ceived today from the Oklahoma side
To look really smart is a huge problem I fashion and will outwear patent leather,
“*‘ L’— brown
fords with the military heel, are very
smart. Evening pumps are dependent
upon the color of the gown. But if
there is doubt as to what color best
harmonize with the fro<k?nTSsutfways
safe to wear silver cloth. yi
Little Change in Silhouette
Spring brings us no change in the
silhouette of the costume. The long
slim lines have proved so desirable that
they>will not slip away after just one
season. Many little cnanges are seen,
such as novelty sleeves and collars. This
attractive frock of serge and satin for
Misses has a very unusual collar, hav-
ing one end extend down to about the
knee. The other has a rather odd-
shaped tunic which gracefully rounds at
the center-front seam.
lining of the kidneys and drives out
the poisons. New life and health will
surely follow. When your normal vigor
has been restored continue treatment
for a while to keep yourself in condi- •
tion and prevent a return of the dis-
ease.
_ ontfl yoa ere incapable of
druggist.will cheerfully refund your ”
____,______ money if you are not satisfied with
A
Dolly, one ^ionth In advance-----8 M
Dally, six months in advance----->8.40
Daily, one /ear. In advance------$d.M
Snhecriptie^ Batea By Mail ta Texas and
Oklahema
Per month, in edvanoe__---------dOc
Six months, tn advaaee-------|3JX)
One year, is advaaee------------93JO
All papers $0 France, per month----60c
▲l»o Owners and Publishers of the
VUKLT KBGISTHR » MBS8RNGHR
fUt^yer year, in advance.
NOTIC® TO TH® PUBLIC:
Any erreneoue reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
may appear in the coitnni of The
Register A Messenger will be gladlj
aad promptly corrected upon being
brought to the notice of the pu blishers
TO ADVERTISERS: A
In case of errors or omissions in
legal or otper advertisements, the pub-
lishers do not hold themselves liable
•or damage further than the amount
received by them for such advertising
"Hix.
11
r
i’ I
I
CITATION
The State of Texas:—To the Sheriff
or any Constable of Cooke County,
Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to cause
to be published, once each week for 10
days, exclusive of the day of first pub-
lication, in the Gainesville Register, a
newspaper of general circulation, which
has been continously and regularly pub
lished, in Cooke County, Texas, for a
period of not less than one year, the
following notice:
THE STATE GF TEXAS.
To all persons interested in the estate
of Alsey Barrett, deceased. Be it
known that on this the 23rd day of Jan-
uary 1919, C. F. Duston has filed in the
County Court of Cooke County, Texas,
an application for Letter of Administra
tion upon the Estate of said Alsey Bar
rett, alleging in said application that
the said Alsey Barrett, departed this life
on the 12th day of February A. D., 1918
possessed of an estate consisting of 51
acres of land just east of Gainesville
Texas, of the probable value of $3,000.00
and a house and lot in Gainesville, Tex
as.
j That the said Alsey Barrett owes
I some debts and that administration up-
1 on the said estate is necessary, and that
, y .< . . - , nr v your applicant is not disqualified from
ly taken a pointer from Washing- accepting letters of administration
ton when it comes to recommend- which will be heard at the next term of
ing legislative appropriations and said Court, commencing on the First
thinks and talks millions, nothing' holiday in February A DE 1919, the
& | same being the 3rd day of February A
less, jUSt as though the Texas tax-| P 1919 at the Court Hoose thereof, in
1 1: 1 ~ t Gainesville, at which time all persons
interested in sand estate may appear
and contest said application, should they
deside to do so.
J Herein fail not, but have you before
said court on the said first day of the
next term thereof this writ, with yotu
light except that o£ the taxpayers, rel,n' ,,’owing how
and they, poor fellows, get it in I
the seek by being kept on the job
tions, and detractions, and then
search for the exact lines in dress that
accentuated the attractions and artfully
hid the defects-
Having found the suitable lines, the
harmony of the costume must be consid-
ered—harmony for instance, between hat
and suit, and shoes and suit: and then,
of course, harmony in the color scheme.
Some women carelessly wear the hat
that they wear at the matinee, when
they go for a walk in the morning. The
time and place must be given considera-
tion. for how absurd to wear a dressy
hat with a mannish walking costume.
If the hat is dressy the suit or coat
must be dressy and the shoes must be
of a rather dainty last. If one does not
properly complement the other, the en-
tire costume is a failure, even though
each part in itself is pleasing. The dis-
cordant combination has a distasteful
effect.
Quantity Small, But Quality Excellent
Perhaps the biggest lactor in the de-
velopment of a perfect costume is the
material. The material must be good,
for though the lines be perfect and the
fit above the slightest criticism, if the
material is of inferior quality the time
and labor have been spent in vain. An
expensive material will outlast the
cheaper material and always is a mark
of good taste. The present modes re-
quire vVy little material and for that
very reason everyone ought to exert ex-
tensive efforts to buy the best mater-
iaL
Affairs are gradually becoming normal
and very soon the market will lower the
prices of woolen goods—not as low as
the pre-war prices, however, for market
conditions are never the same after a
war as before. And with the material
cheaper, no one will have the slightest
excuse for not being a smart and well-
dressed person.
The Consideration of Shoes
' '
' i ,
ton when it comes to recommend-
ing legislative appropriations and
11UUA3 auu Laiivo uuuiuua, i
payers have unlimited amounts of
coin of the realm and are just spoil-
ing to lavish it unrestrained on
the tax-eating bunch always hun-
gry and avaricious. In legislative
times all interests get in the lime-
(MR
druxxist will
results But
restsre to
SFpJS
their wo
* Wesrinesa, rieoplresnisR nervous-
■SfK despoudcnor> beckaehe, atomach
tro^ie, paisa in the loins and lower
sbAsssen, gravel, rheutuatiasi^ sciatica
aae IssNsaco all warn
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.
Leonard, J. T. Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 166, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1919, newspaper, January 30, 1919; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307962/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.