Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 128, Ed. 1 Friday, May 11, 1923 Page: 2 of 6
six 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:
-
—
<
L
<
■ad Bible jUmct
<
w
I
V
I
>bo
which trip
Classified Ads pay. Try one!
long
nix<
'Others are idlers, soiled and poorly
life's
ABE MARTIN
Our Contemporaries
^•QCSnSQWWKaoaoaoaoaoaoaoaoac
lllGP^
The
in warm weather.
FRIDAY, MAY 11. 1923
TOE HOMAS GREATEST BAKWC JPOWfR.
Try a Want Ad for Quick Results
‘Quality’ Summer Suits
♦
Saturday & Monday Bargain Day
I
a
■
I
'I
tT«;
f
r
»
T
v « C • • s
*, * ! *
f
-4
«
• A
i
f
V:
$12.98
t
/
H
7
$25.00
V
I
B
4,
SHOES
SHOES
I
■
1
ft
ii
■L
KI
Mohairs
Palm Beach
i
1
Worsteds
<
MEN’S SHOES AND OXFORDS
MEN’S STRAW HATS
Store Will Remain Open Until 9.30 o’clock Saturday Night
1
%
T-’-
aimed ade-
-
4 «w’?
L- , .ri
if
52
r-'i
■- T ■ -
MEN, YOUNG MEN AND
BOYS’ SUIT SALE
I
I
-
Read the news in the
ads of this paper.
Men’s Summer
Unions for
Headlight
Overalls for
Come to our store and give us a
once-over before you purchase.
Men’s Dress
Shirts
Pin Check Pants
only-----------
We Sell For Less--Why Pay More?
$2.65, $3.45, $3.95, $4.85
BIBLE THOUGHT
—FOR TODAY—
All Ready-to-Wear and Millinery Priced Extra
Special for Saturday!
Just received pretty new Linen Summer Dresses, Pretty Voiles, Linens, Dotted Swiss
and other wanted materials in this new line of dresses.
$1.00
$1.48
$5.85
. 50c
$1.50
I
<
it pet-
it* and
idhering
consist-
JUST FOLKS
By EDGAR A. GUEST
.. 95c
$1.00
It
is
!
& *
Blue Work Shirts
for only
Men’s $1.50
Overalls £or__w__
YOURS ANXIOUS TO PLEASE,
f
Tropical
Gaberdines
I
3
4
*
'I
1
a,
4.
A
■j
DAN SIDDALL
“Quality Drugs”
| ' 4
0
i
J .IW
3.10
:<_50
N 11/
50 c
95c
The Latest Styles
1.65, 2.45, 2.85, 3.45
*10
--T-------T4T- T 'j|
— *19—
85$-|g
85*12
The Season’s Newest Showing in Beautifully
Tailored Summers Suits in Patterns that Please
Valuable Addition
To Your Library
Here is where you can save on your shoe bill. Every pair of
shoes in stock are priced at a GREAT SAVING!
Extra Special Children’s Slippers;
to close out
Other good styles x '
for only
Ladies’ Slippers at a great saving;
priced only $2.85, $3.85, $4.85 and ...
PRETTY NEW WHITE SHOES
JUST RECEIVED. SEE THESE!
Qneations.
Where is Daniel supposed tn
If you wish a new Spring Suit, at rock- ; f
bottom prices, here is your charice! All '
Suits with new low prices!
'4 /
1 lot of Summer Suits, in Kool Cloth, A A
close out at «P3»VV
1 lot Palm Beach and Kool Cloth, and medium weight. ,
fancy weaves; close Cl A A A
out price' only 1 1 v.vv
Boys’ Best Gaberdine Suits; values to
$19.50; special Saturday at
See our Special Values,
priced $19.50 and _
CAWMEJ
4 J
. SAYING GOODBYE:—Finally,
• brethien, farewell. Be perfect,
- be of good comfort, be of °ne
Z mind, live in peace: and the
J God of love and peace shall be
; with you.—2 Cor. 13:13.
■A’'
jw"
IM*
9 9
School Teacher is
Fined for Whipping
Eight-Year-Old Boy
Waco, May 11.—(By Associated
Press.)—A jury in the county court
late today imposed a fine of $200
against O. W. Stewart, superintend-
ent of the West schools, tried on a
charge of assault an battery in con-
nection with the whipping of Wil-
lie Devers, 8 year old, school boy.
Motion for a new trial was filed im-
mediately.
—Tit • w. ■rr
Very Appropriate
—FOR—
Graduation Gifts
Hudnuts’ Three Flowers Per-
, fume, Toilet Water, and
Twin* Compacts.
-it:
BL
h -
You can buv a Corojig Typewriter
for a limited lime only, at 44.00
down and $5.00 per month. See the
late models at The Register Offke.
Chicago Store
WE SELL FOR LESS
Don’t think because
s6me baking powders
cQme in big cans at
a low price that ypu
are getting a bargain.
It is the leavening
strength that tells the
story—the results you
have on bake-day.
..'L
Flacohettes Of
> Caron’s Black Narcissus,
Houbigant’s Odours,
Coty's Odours,
Djer Kiss Vanettes.
At $1 Each
✓*
It is first in quality, re-
ceived highest awards at
the World’s Food Expo-
sition, Chicago, Ill. Paris
Exposition, Paris, France;
first in results—never
fails, produces evenly
raised, light, tasty, whole-
some foods; first in econ-
omy—moderate in price
— you save when you buy
it—you save when you use it.
Used in so many homes
that its sale is over 150%
. greater than that of any
BEST BY TEST other brand.
V f
/i
■
I-..-. >}
A<6 hours behind time this week.
However, the public loet confidante
in it long ago, when the Enriwii
sparrows began to build nests in. its
works. ' ■ ’ v ; ’•
—-----
The limid^onie Biblee being put out
by The Register are going fast. (Jet
one before tfig supply has beenf sold.
Bring three roupona* ruj<t $1 land
get a rejHrtar $5.00 Bible.
GAIXKSVIL.LK DAILY RKGIMTKR, FRIDAY AFTER.WOOX, MAY 11. ISM
----------
&
| qaately to serve the community or
| district in which it maintained its
office.
"The modern idea, however, is one
And to this a A1**1
I centage of the country rdtiorn
publishers of today are _adt
firmly. Greater and morf co...-.n%-
ent effort :■* made to secure and fur-
nish the news of the district served.
Editorial pages more and more are
being devotee to the discussion of
local problems, and advertising col-
umns are cleaner and more generally
used by home merchants.
"The Northern California Counties
association has the right idea in de-
claring first dnd foremost for the
i.---> newspapers. It is a policy that
will reap rich reward for the coun-
ties concerned ami will give greater
incentive to the newspapers of the
district to work- for the better inter-
ests of the immediate communities.
* Money expended in advertising
the home section is money well spent.
And .its expenditure through ^he
columns of the local newspaper not
only produces tangible, qnickly-seeu
results, but lends encouragement
and support to the one business enter-
prise that no community may get
along without and expect to progress
and prosper.**
M&rathonic.
It must be the heat that af-
fects those Houston people who
are endeavoring to break all rec-
ords for endurance in dancing
and piano playing.—Gainesville
Register,
The dancing marathons are play-
ing out. They do not draw well,
MEMBER i having used up their allotment of
„T«XM Da.Hy Preis!**^*, The front-page publicity. The dish-
q^spap'.r '' nshng marathon is the latest. A
jgociated young lady in the North won thtj
< liampion-hip in that department of
industry by going thirty-one hours
without drying her hands. The older
ladies are now talking of staging a
knit tint; marathon, apd some of the
more juvenile matrons are consider-
ing the advisability of organizing a
sewing contest. Some of them who
havent’s been married very long, and
who didn’t bring to the new home
very much in the way of trousseau,
are feeling the' need ofl new things
to wear, A harvest of gingham
bouse dresses, for example, might
follow the sewing marathon, to the
utter advantage of the participants.
But this proposition hasn't gone be-
Ingersoll pencils in many
styles and prices. Fountain Pens
at all prices.
Subscribe for The Register uow
and get a key and you will have a i
good chance- to get the Ford Sedan. I
What the general reader of the
Bible most wants to know is covered
by mkny pages of helpe—these
m’ght l<e called an appendix—which
are within the covers—limp bound,
by tjie way—of the new Big Print
Red letter Edition of the Bible now
being distributed to readers of The
Register. This volume and appen-
dix are a« essential in a library as
an encyclopedia. On the average
bc->L shelf, where the number of
books do not warrant the term li-
brary, such a Bible is even moie
nTessary. The smaller the •ollevtion,
the more important it is to have it
compromise the bnst and most con-
cise of reference works.
This is ihc best edition that lias
ever h.'cn offered to the public for
much more, thah the present nominal
co-t and the three i*oupon-> The r?*l
letter feature of (lirist's words alon"
mark a special desirability. Then
there are the comnrehensive annota-
tions and the half tones, which add
immeasurably to its value. Even
w ith other Bibles in th? home, this
particular edition should J>o ther?
ako for its convenience, and for the
excellence of its additional inform?-
ti«.n other than the regular text. The
coupon offer is explained in another
part of this issue.
-lesul
SaINESVILLE TEXAS.
FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN
The Economy BAKING POWDER:
I -1
SSSSSSS8SBSSSSK
g ' gg
» JUST FOLKS “
« By EDGAR A. GUEST 8
B 8
888888888888888
WORDS.
Words are like people, passing every
day,
Strhnge, scornful, cheerful, brave
and good and bad;
Some clean and fresh as youth and
just as glad,
And otlwrs old and worn and pale
and gray.
Some words there are
■ along the way.
Some dwdl with sorrow and are
always sad.
clad,
And thus our choice is told in all
we say.
Sonce from the passing throng 1
would not call
’ Base men and vile to walk
path with me.
But want the brave and wise, and.
first of all,
The deem and true to share my
company,
Shall I make friends with ugly wools
and base.
Scorning the good to choose the com-
monplace ?
CALUMET
- The Gainesville Boys Band made
another hit today by playing a con-
cert for the NulphUr boosters on the
Turner Hotel lawn. “Never dreamed
fitere was such an organization of the,
fize and character in Texas,” was
file cohcensus of opinion expressed
>y the visitors.
# * ♦
2 Many jiew friendships resulted
from the invasion of Gainesville by ■
two wolf «t Sulphur, (Jkia,, citizen*
B>day. , /lbe mission of this excur-
sion was to advertise Platt National
Park and the renowned health-build-
&>g <Uial<ties of the* sulphur water at
that popular resort. Sulphur should
be exceedingly proud of those ener-
getic ritlzeiis willing to spend their
time and money in advertising to
this section of the country the claims
•f Sulphur as a place for rest and
J ’hful recreation. ;i
w * <
5 California is believed to have set j
the pace for the rest of the world in
fecoghizing the value of its com-
munity newspajier*. according to re-
cent action taken by the Northern
California Counties Association. That
$o<iy did not limit itself to formal
fesolutkms praising the work of its
•ountry editors, but arranged for
Said advertising to apjiear in the i
5 fliey admitte«l were doing a
powerful work for the good of their
various communities,
TIjc editor of the Plumas (Cal.)
JTationat Bulletin, published at
£uincy, tells it »u much better than ■
• e can that we take pleasure in run-1
Jing an article that appeared recent-j
Br in his columns. It was as fol- ,
• “Conclusive evidence that the rural
bn-ss of the country is alauit to I
|<>nie into its own is evidenced in the
action of the Northern California
Association in declakuig that the'
borne newapapeni are the most ef-i.
fective advertising medium for any j
•ommunity.”
t Following this expression of opin-1
jon, which was unanimous with the |
membership of the association, in-.
struct ions wer<> issued to the secre-
tary to arrange for the purchase of
J column in each countby newspaper '
•ubli.-hed in the five counties repre- I
tented in the association. Further-,
jnore. the secretary wa* instructed toj
Contract for thie space for a period
of one year and to use it for the re-
citing of the advantages and resources
• f the particular section served by
•aeh newspaper.
7 ’’Recognition of this character for'
the country newspajier is the first of
jts kind ever made; at least no rec-1
•rds of past similar action are avail-
able ny Jar as is known. It marks ,
a step in the advan<*ement of the'
•onununity publication^ and. though
home w hat tardy in its promulga- *
turn, may rightly be considered an
igv^nt of notice.
e •‘It long has been held by thosefi
fcho are in a position to know- that !
Jin re i« po one thing so valuable to a
wuraflrdiatrxt a* a well-edited and
iiell^U’dcxl community newspaper.
It isTUW* champion of the rights and
the eorrector of the wrongs, the dis-
seminator of the worth while news,!
She consistent and persistent ‘booster’
Jor advancement ^progress anil pros-
perity, And yet. in many eases, it
Am the least recognized of any enter-
Jtrise conducted in the rural sec-
tion*.
- “This condition, however, is not so
. Inuch the fault of the business men
and anbscrihers as it is of the edi-
i Tors and publisher*. For many
^ears a majority of country pnhli-
rations Were conducted along thej |
Jine* •/a charidy enterprise—in other
•wofd*. the view was held. And is still
I Jield fey gome editors and publishers.
•Hut the newspaper should receive ; |
I wuppurt whether or not it
WE SELL THEM FOR LESS”
» . 1a * . » * * t b ’ " ‘ ! • ’ *
The- Daijy.s Register
AMD M3CMBM0BB
’ ESTABLISHED IN 1134
REGISTER PRINTING COMPANY I of aerviee.
(Inc.) PubliaMre
• «A INES VILLE. TEXAS
X T. LEONARD „ Manacla* M1t«r firmly.
X M. LEONARD---------
M H. LEONARD Baaiaem Mwr.
ED HEATH CliTVtater
Editorial and Business Office 310 E.
Sdifornia Street. Rttstneaa Office
^telephone No. IS; Editorial and
£bws Room Phone No. 69.
{atered at the Gafnertfle Poateffice
aa second-claae matter
ItaMMrtgttea Batea ^GaJaawvUle ------
BnilyreRe morrtha tn advance..| .70 |,onl(.
OallyTAIx rnontba In advance--»4.00
pally, one year in advance----37A0
Rates by Mall In ’
Texaa aad Oklahoma
fcr month. In advance-----1 .70
4x months, in advance -a----3
year in advaned----»’
Also Owners and Publishers of the
•* WEEKLY REGISTER A
“ MESSENGER
r |I/K) per year; fl months, 50c;
« 3 months 25c; in advance
J flOYlCK TO THE PUBLIC
“Any erroneous reflection upon the
Character, standing or reputation ot
&y person, firm or corporation
which may appear in the columns1
« The Register & Messenger will t K r r r .. K „
« gladly and promptly corrected 888888898888 8 8
aon being brought to the notice of ,
Xa publishers.
TO ADVERTISERS
*Tn case of errors or omissions In ‘8S8SSBSSSB8 88 8 8 8
•cal or other advertisements, the
yubliehers do not hold themselves
Jable for damage further than the
unount received by them for such
advertisement
?The Associated Press Is exclusive-
ly entitled to the use *or republica-
tfen of all news dispatches credited
to it or not otherwise credited In
tais paper, and aleo the local news
appearing herein.
MEMBER
Southern Newspaper Pub' rtrars’ As-
sociation, American -
Publishers' Association,
Press and United Press.
Beaded Vanities;
r new; priced
from $125 to $3.00
-
yond the talking stag* as yet
may never get beyond where it
now. Any young woman who can’t
prove tb herself that it is cheaper to
buy ready-made things than make
them herself isn’t aa good a rhetori-
cian as our modern school system
turns out, on the average. By the
way, we haven't heard of any mascu-
line project for the institution of a
lawn-mowing marathon. It is just
as easy for a man to persuade him-
self that it is cheaper Ao hire his
lawn mowed as for bis wife to prove
that it is chedpef twbny her clothes
ready to wear. We are a practical
race, determined to be thrifty and
save money by hiring things done for
ns instead of wasting our own time
and strength in doing them for our-
selves, Come to Texas.—State
Press in Dallas News.
88888888888888
s Dog Hill Paragraft*
8 8
8 By GEORGE BINGHAM 8
8 8
8 8 8 8 ---- 3 8 8 8
Ellk-k Helwanger is spendins the
week at Thunderation. He didn't Lavallier
have anything to do around here. something entirely
and went over there looking for a , 9(- f
job. but he is mighty hard to please -
‘ I
i • J *
o."*' ■* <
' di al' ’
t !
Cv'■
' 1 T I
SHOES
Her many friends will he pleased to
note that Mrs. Jefferaon Potloeks.
who has been trying to save up
enough 1.utter and egg money for the
pe-st several months to buy herself a
new dress, announced today that she
had gone over the top.
• • •
The town clock at Tickville was
.’I .J
have died?
What are angel*?
In what land did Job lire?
What is the first sentence of
the second Commandment ?
z 5. W ho foretoid the birth of Johu
the Baptist.
<>. Did Naomi's «ons —lire
after their marriage T
Anrwera to Yesterday’s Questions
1. Samuel anointed David.
2. Naomi's two sons married Ruth
Orpah
3. The name Moses means, “from
the water.” ,
4. Sanl was very remarkable for
his activity. "7
5. Saul was compared to the ga-
zclllc; and railed the “gazelle ot
Israel.” ’ *
fl. The Mount of Olives was on
the east of Jerusalem.
8 8 8 8*3 838888388
8 S
s ABE MARTIN «
3 8
BBSS -- BBSS'
Pinky Kerr who wuzn' worth his
keep before th' war now nulls down ,
$5 per day. (
These girls that are dancin’ two ;
or three days without stoppin' igid (
better eave ther steps till thev set- (
tie down an' try t' make a mince
pie without a kitchen cabinet.
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. & Leonard, Joe M. Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 128, Ed. 1 Friday, May 11, 1923, newspaper, May 11, 1923; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1311589/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.