Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 139, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 8, 1936 Page: 3 of 6
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■
UNDAY AFKERNOON, FEBRUARY 8, 1936
eAnESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILILE, TEXAS.
-E r
PAGE THESE
Miss Muenster Leads
SNOW MAROONS 89 TRAIN PASSENGERS FOR A DAY
i
NAMES OF MANY
committee- is
close
K
n
।
tion. . . . Which fails
to alarm the
4
3
I
district
attorneys.
34
After his grandmother Poppin had
/190
finger
do it now."
ding
really expect to get anywhere with
Used
is '
hett
Cars
The boy rode away never
quit t.
Rita
be prosecuted.”
f
ti
Indians
Social Calendar
f
along
school. The boy’s love of
him to
6
his life.
While he was a senator
minister. A study of the problems
close it to be impractical at this
ndulge in his favorite rec-
2:30 o’clock with Mrs. W. E.
i ollow
he was
aDUCKS
i
AiLABLE
A
performed
Curtis slipped
the lines of the attacking
I
This PIPER
Pays His
E a
l persevered. He was one
age an.
Own BILL!
Misses
vice president;
And mice and other unwantables
Dozier, Loretta
Special on Crequignole
Latham,
"«(
a
»
• 934
(
V
appy faculty of retaining
i
•stress
in both {branches.
FOR SALE
Li
J
)
1
£
2 ' ]
Terry.
Roy Mont-
■ .
A
1
as -s
SOM
r
--
PILINDSAY HONOR
19 ROLL INCLUDES
$2.50 La Parer Oil Wave. $2.00
$4.00 French Oil Wave .. 3.50
You remember the old story
Of the Pied Piper of Hamelin ...
How he rid the good people
Of that town of their rats *
After every other means had failed.
You remember, too, how he
Presented his bil and the
time, but some of his closest ad-
visers are urging it for the 1937
fiscal year that begins July 1.
the race track and its performers
persisted nevertheless, throughout
SPLITS—New York sharps are
keeping a careful eye on political
things closely find plenty of evi-
dence that British agents are do-
ing their bit behind the scenes to
flashing genius, Mr. Curtis was
noted chiefly as one who had cour-
-
school term were
Elizabeth Irwin,
national
friend of
Nettie
Virginia
Business Bureaus and newspapers
should warn the people of their
respective sections to be on the
lookout for such characters, and
not only refuse to deal with them,
but to notify their local officers of
their presence, as they are wanted
in many places. We have photo-
Dreadful toll he exacted when
He found they couldn't pay i..
In some respects a Daily Register
Want Ad is like the Pied Piper . ..
It will rid your home of
The old radio, old sofa, old beds
And other unwantables when every other
Means would fail . . .
But there’s one exception—THIS
Piper pays his own bill!
For the trifling cost of a
Daily Register Want Ad is made up.
Many, many times over by the
Dollars and cents RESULTS you’ll get
By calling 97 and
Asking for an Ad-Taker.
per pupil.
“Sheriffs,
Chambers of
the Supreme
its TV A de-
A Car For
Every Purse!
A Car For
Every Purpose!
tribe ard with a slab of dried buf-
falo meat in his pocket for food,
walked 57 miles to Topeka to sum-
C.
D.
Mary L. Bezner,
Roylee Zwinggi,
from the track, broke through a
fence and hurled his rider over the
embankment. -
The Raws always remembered
the
Mary
Patterns
For Every
Room
Finger Waves
Set dry......
!6
.f
Phone us
for Sam-
ple Pattern
Book.
to return as a member of the In-
dian camp.
For several years thereafter Mr.
Curtis put to use the skill of the
nd l
tying
the
f rom
pint..
Charles Curtis Dies
(Continued rrom rage one)
5 -
223988558
This air view shows two engines of the Chicago. North Western railroad Imes pounding through a
snow barricade on the right-of-way near Jackson, Wis., with only one coach of the train in which 89 passen-
gers were marooned for 24 hours. (Associated Press Photo)
tration of all kinds of troubles. '
State officials would have to as-
sume responsibility now borne by
FDR and his aides. It would tend 1
to take the sting out of the cha.ge :
J
WE MAKE AUTO
LOANS
6 k
4 ‘,2
Josephine Wilde, lovely young
lady seleted by the Muenster Su-
macs as their candidate for queen
of the Qooke County Basketball
tournament now in progress here,
was holding a comfortable lead in
the balloting Friday night. Votes
are given with each admission tic-
ket to the games.
gomery. Union Grove: Al Kuntz.
"Wolf Ridge; J. R. Nelson, Wood-
bine; Ray Warden, Fairview; C. J.
Robb, Lucy Lee, and Mrs. T. B.
Davis of Lucy Lee.
The next meeting of the report,
ars‘ association will be announced
liter.
... 10c
... 25c
western race tracks, worked as a
park driver, embarked on, his life
profession of law, was a, crusader
against vice as a county prosec at-
Ing attorney. and then was elected
to the House of Representatives
and later to the United State Sen-
ate.
BROTHERS
108 N. Chestnut Street
Phone No. 1
Tuesday
Business and Professional
Women’s club will meet Tues-
day evening at 6:30 o'clock for
their usual supper night.
AUDRA’S BEAUTY SHOP
Phone 337
112 N. Commerce St.
! Yorkers will have no fingernails
| left. . . They have ch ewed on them
i regularly -every recent Monday. . .
•it's reported that Herbert Hoover
will fight Vandenberg’s nomina-
Chas. J. Gandillon
‘With
STATE RESERVE LIFE
Wer
Co.
71'KlO
■
Jonesboro is the oldest town in
Tennessee and was the first capi-,
tal of the state.
* 4
- a
on horseback, riding with
vjegh
st her
Popp, Theresa M Spaeth, Edgar
Bengfort, William J Metzler, Paul
R Neu, Alfons Koesler.
First grade Lucille Fuhrmann,
Weldon Bezner, Eugene Mosser,
Matthew Lee Neu, Robert L. Bez-
tier, Dorothy Bezner, Adeline Die-
ter, Gertrude Bengfort, Patricia
lusche, Lu Ella Arendt, Georgia
Spaeth, Victor Bierschenk.
Connie Mack paid cash and two
players to Albany for Russ Peters,
infielder. Cy Benton, pitcher, and
Snyder, an infielder, are the play-
ers leaving the A's
1936
Buick
Demonstrator
At
A
Big
Discount
Texas Medical Examiners Give Warning
Against Gang of ‘Eyesight Swindlers’
1 ! • ‛ k
Season’s Newest
WALLPAPER
Iu
A1
m
g
A<Aa
these swindlers have returned to
Texas, having pulled a job recently
at La Grange, another at Fort
Worth. They pose as noted special-
ists who remove the cataract with
‛%
TOM LYNCH
MOTOR CO.
■ Buiek and Pontiac Dealers
East California Street
■' Phone 410
■ I
■
■
graphs, descriptions and
prints of many of the ‘eye men,’
has under consideration a plan for
decentralizing the federal relief
agency by turning funds over to'
the states for local officials to ad-
Miss Shultz leading the argument.
Among those attending the
meeting were Mmes. Earl Faulk-
ner of Dye club: W’. C. Stiles,
g
)N*
* * *
NEw YORK
By James McMullin
DODGE AND PLYMOUTH
SALES AND
SERVICE
PACE
be run from each state capita) in- flation via expansion
pro- , debt?
had ah..,
friendships in groups and factions
reation.
To his last days Mr. Curtis car-
ried scars from injuries received in
a fall over a 40-foot embankment
Daily Register
Want Ads
bai
Michigan senator's supporters. .
Our new treaty with Panama al-
lows that country compensation
for dollar devaluation.
. ,u al cd
is been
! i on the
xpensive
structure
ay basket
bleachers,
ami two
actice and
d,•
is far more cry than there will be
wool. Here's how they rate the
prospects for various possible de-
velopments loosely grouped under
the general heading of inflation.
mon aid.
Never regarded
Printing press currency? Not a
chance. The president is strongly help
opposed and would be sustained ny cause. Recent large British invest-
the senate in a pinch even if the ments in American corporations
house got out of control. Further ^enable them to exercise subtle in-
deValuation of the dollar? Unlike- fluence in a variety of ways. The
Call Us When You Need a
Carpenter, Painter or
Paperhanger.
WAPLES-PAINTER
CO.
Phone 48
Helen Krebs,- Anna Mae Kuntz.
Fifth grade Hubert Bezner,
Leeper, Mary Brown, _
Walker, and May Belle Browne.
MISS LORNA CULP IS
GIRL RESERVE CHIEF
come to it sooner or later. Turn warmly backed by Father Coughlin
the money over to the states and —as nine-tenths political sound
• and fury’ for the benefit of rural
voters. They get word privately
I that most ol its promoters don’t
Wednesday
The Progressive Circle, of
the Dixon Street Christian
Church, will meet with Mrs. L.
I Alderson, 921 N. Commerce
street, Wednesday afternoon at
3 o'clock.
ficient. The existing set-up would passes it, it will be killed in the factor in the November decision,
be preserved, but the show would senate or in conference. Credit in- • G. O. P. supporters are cheered
■ - - - in :----in of feripr.il by the Democratic schism which
stead of Washington. The pro-debt? Already well under way. has sidetracked Governor Henry
posers point out that politically the But effects will be gradual, with i Horner for Herman N. Bundesen.
change would relieve the adminis- i •---------------------------------------------„■
ierer, Mary Hermes, Annie
(Ort, Anna Mae Dieter, Alma
the Kansas governor.
e »:i
IIe
__________________. ly, although such a move might be , services of several American pub-
involved in such a shift may dis- made if the pressure from farm .licity experts have been enlisted.
--— :* *_ •e i---etinel nt his groups gets strong enough. In any i
case not for several months. The ;
Frazier-Lemke bill? Administra-
their legislative proposals. What
week.
Other officers chosen for
“We are advised that some of wonderful secret, system or for-
mula for from $25.00 to $150.00
Commerce, Better
tion leaders in congress will make ; complications developing in Illi-
The argument submitted to Mr. every effort to keep this from nois. Both Republicans and Demo-
Roosevelt was that the system ' reaching the White House and will crats figure that the Prairie State's
would be more economic and er- 1 probably succeed. If the house electoral vote will be an important
That means he has had an excep-
tional opportunity to sell Chair-'
। man Henry Fletcher on Landon s
merits. He has also played the
I missionary’ in New York financial ►
circles with no little success
pr • elatfen
being
nteh thia
which may be had temporarily for
identification
’The people of this state should
know that this board issues on
January first each year a ‘permit’
to practice in Texas during the
current year, which permit hears
its number and the number of the
practitioner’s license; that any
person who is without such per-
mit is practicing in violation of
the law, and he or she should be
the anti-Roosevelt
Virgil Mosser,
Arnold Fuhr-
the way,” said Mr. Roosevelt’s ad- scant danger of serious repercus-
viser somewhat daringly. “You’ve sions in the predictable future.
got to turn to forty-eight AAA’s i Financial men in close touch
eventually. You operate this way with Washington appraise the new
with road-building. You’ve got to'currency agitation in congress—
Lenora Hulme, secretary; Mary
Brown, treasurer, and Kathleen
Stevens, reporter.
Last week members of the club
were entertained with a scaven-
ger hunt. Approximately 45 girls
attended the outing. A prize of a
box of candy was won by the
group composed of Misses Doris
7--- ----" i e " num 1— I vuv ivn “
prosecuted, as any other type of how soon Yet
violator should and probably would
MRS. EARL FAULKNER
TO HEAD REPORTERS
[ Mrs. Earl Faulkner was elected
president of the Cooke County
Home Demonstration Club Re-
porters' Association at a confer-
ence held in the chamber of com-
merce assembly room, Friday aft-
ernoon.
■Other officers chosen were Mrs.
Chester Robb, secretary and Mrs.
T. F. Sparkman as fun leader. The ,
association was organized to as- i
sist members of the various clubs |
in writing their, reports for the 10-
(41 newspapers and to assist with •
the club publicity.
Miss Nette Shultz told the
group of the "don’ts" in news-
writing, and also showed illustra-
tions of the scrapbooks being kept
by the club reporters. Miss Shultz
introduced Miss Mary Graham of
he Register staff, who spoke on '
“What the Newspaper Wants." I
{ “Accuracy is the foundation of
all reporter's work," Miss Graham
told the club women. A round
table discussion was held with
Court doesn't render
' cision pretty soon a lot of New
Governor Horner’s friends are
plenty burned up about that.
But the Illinois Republicans are
also split six ways for Sunday. Ex- 1
Governor Len Small, ex-Senators
Otis Glenn ana Charles Deneen,
and Fred Lundin—Big Bill Thomp-
son's former right bower— are'
each building a personal organiza-
tion. None of them is spilling his
plans in public—but it's a cinch
that they aren't cooperating. It
looks as if the winner this fall
will be the party that can cover its
•BEDDING' IS STUDY
SUBJECT FOR CLUB
“The Variety and Needs of Pro-
tective tedding and Lightweight
Comforts," was the study led Miss
Nette Shultz, county home demon-
stration agent, at a meeting of the
Callisburg Home Demonstration
club. Wednesday afternoon Mrs.
W. C. Lyons was hostess for the
afternoon.
During the brief business ses-
sion, Miss Anne Butler was elected
as assistant reporter for the year.
Among those present were
Mmes. C. W. Rudd, Val Powers.
Weldon Boley, J. L. McComb.
Sarah Blankenship, Henry’ Thrash-
er, John Case. Misses Anne Butler.
Nette Shultz, and the hostess.
The <jlub will meet February 19.
with Mrs. J. L. McComb.
The best ground-gaining of tne
1935 football season was Sneed
Schmidt’s performance in the
Navy-Cpolumbia game. The Navy
half-carried the ball 15 times and
covered 250 yards.
and vic-president he frequently
visited he tracks nearby Washing-
ton to ndulge in his favorite rec-
AGITATION -Wall Street .... - - .
badly bitten by the inflation bug. • they are after is a psychological
The livest current question in is- response that will leave them sit-
nancial circles are how much and iting pretty w*^ their constituents.
............. -.t the wisest New ' 1"7
York sources are convinced there ADEPT Our British cousins
Dr. W. Herbert Locke
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
Offices:
Now Located Over
Cunningham Bros. Drug Store
Next to Post Office Phone 66
Immediately upon his elevation
to the vice presidency he served ______ _____ ___ __________
notice that he would not pursue when he was eight years old. In
the course of - his predecessor, June, 1§68, his tribe was attacked
Charles G. Dawes, in his efforts to by the Cheyennes,
revise the rub’s of the senate per-! through t-i *■- -
mitting unlimited debate. He threw
down the gauntlet to his predeces-
sor in. his speech of inauguration.
.E t.
mmeE
a wonderful radium preparation of
their own discovery. The operation
consists of instilling a few drops
of murine in the eye, pinching off
a tiny piece of rubber tissue or
‘fish skin’ — (the ’cataract’) —
which is secretly dropped on a
pad; the pad is bandaged over, the
eye, with instructions that it must
not be removed under four days.
On the fifth day, when the pad is
removed, the ‘cataract’ (the rub-
ber tissue) will be found in the
pan. »
“These men also have a worth-
less ‘electric belt,’ which < they al-
lege cures every disease, even cat-
aract, and which is so valuable
• only four in the world—we have
three of them)—they will not sell,
but which they lease for a period,
provided a deposit of $2,500.00 is
put up for its safe return, at so
much per month for its use. But
. ________________ . -
i mann, Francis Bengfort,
Y. W. A. of First Baptist
church will meet Monday eve-
ning at 7:30 with Miss Mary
Cod
L-S:
“4
2 ,
HA
Marysville: Nolan
Downa rd-Fairplains:
Luisa Hermes, srnpakirp.o biaswhiteereltivsstat
#e“b Tee
Miss Lorna Jane Culp was elect-
ed president of the Junior High
sehool Girl Reserve club at a [
meeting held at the school this •
♦ • "
SICELIGHTS If
I,
"w I 1
. ",.2286
“ dao8g
W* ,-•"e
aft, .m.
The following warning to the
people of Texas, signed by,T. J.
Crowe, secretary of the Texas
State Board of Medical Examin-
ers, advises them to be on the
ookout for a gang of “eyesight
swindlers," salesmen of worthless
“electric belts," and certain “free
lecturers.” The warning comes
from the office of the board at
Dallas:
“Several years ago this board
drove out of Texas a gang of 'eye-
sight swindlers,' who had collected
large fees—$7,400.00 in one case-
for the pretended removal of cata-
racts from the eyes. We captured
four of them, who were turned
over to sheriffs on requisition—for
prosecution in other states—Ark-
ansas, California, Minnesota, and
others. They are wanted in many
states for perpetration of such
swindles.
they never return for the belt;
never intended to do so.
“When we captured one of these
gangs, we found among other
things blank certified check forms,
needing only the insertion of the
amount to be paid and the signa-
ture of the cashier: made on bank
paper, numbered, etc., on the
First National Bank of Buffalo, N.
Y., First National Bank of St.
Louis, First National Bank of Chi-
cago, and the Manhattan Bank &
Trust Company, of New York
City. Adding the amount to be
paid and the signature of the cash-
ier is a short, easy job for a swind-
ler.
“Another type of offender—
equally culpable—is the ‘free lec-
turer,’ who poses as an expert die-
titian or food specialist, or who
has the secret of longevity, rejuve-
nation or some other attractive
lure and who. after his’ lectures,
teaches privately to his dupes the
Curtis for a feat he
are taking much more than an
academic interest in our election.
New Yorkers who follow such
OLD SHOES MADE NEW
Don't take a chance on cold
wet feet. We can put your
shoes in first-class condition
very reasonably.
SAM’S SHOE SHOP
North Dixon
free life of his Indian kinsmen.
of the hardest workers in public
life in Washington, getting results
by his eternal diligence and never
lasing His temper. Curing his cam-
paign for the vice-presidency he
became visibly irritated only once,
when he declared a man in a west-
ern audience who was heckling
him was “too damn dumb to un-
derstand." When his running
mate in the 1928 campaign, Her-
bert Hoover, made only a few
speeches, Mr. Curtis covered every
section of the country and spoke
virtually every day.
Although not considered among
the front rank of senatorial ora-
tors, Mr. Curtis won his start in
the legal profession by an oration
his commencement address when
he was graduated from the Topeka
High School. His speech made such
an impression upon Mrs. A. H.
Case. wife of one of the leading
lawyers of Kansas at the time,
that she persuaded her husband to
let Curtis study law’ in his office.
In 1879; Curtis was admitted as a
member of Mr. Case's firm.
While a member of the House of
Representatives, Mr. Curtis pr-
sided oyer that body upon the oc-
casion of the visit of the late
Prince Henry of Prussia. He also
was a member of the House com-
mittee that drafted the gold stand-
ard act;in 1900.
Mr. Curtis rarely made a speech
in either house of Congress. He
in Kansas City. There in a race
riding Headlight, a noto- Miller, 724 Ritchey street,
rious renegade horse, who bolted . __. ,__
Monday
Lucy Lee Home Demonstra-
tion club will meet with Mrs.
Bun Burch at her home east
of Gainesville, Monday after-
noon.
Circle No. 1 of the Women’s
Missionary Society, of Grand
Avenue Baptist church will
[meet Monday afternoon at
fk COMPLETION OF THE MID-
ifT TERM EXAMINATIONS RE-
hte VEALS WIDE INTEREST
J. LINDSAY, Feb 8 (Special).—
’ With completion of the mid-term
4 f examinations at the school here,
Were is a marked increase in the
irdumber of honor students, which
ajso reflects wide interests in
school work. Honor students in the
tarious grades are as ollows:
considerable success as a jockey
on various western tracks. That
experience came to an end when
his grandmother Curtis started
. . 1
5 7 8
3 4 15
LO 21 22
27 28 29
- Herman Zimmerer, Alfonse Beng-
itort, Miriam Koesler, Isabel
Schmitz.
’ JI Fourth grade Andrew Roewe,
+ Evelyn Bezner, Agnes Fuhrmann,
Frieda Hermes
‛ Third grade Leonard Bengfort,
Dolores Flusche, Anna D Geray,
Catherine Roewe, Mary E Schmitt,
- 1 Marcella Schmitz .
Second grade Lucille Bezner,
Beatrice Black, Dorothy R Dieter,
National Whirligig
(Continued rrom Page one)
Kaw reservation, having tired cf
the restrictions of the city in To-
peka. That was his last extended
visit to the Kaws. One night
] around the camp fire of the Indian
, settlement Julie Poppin crawled
over to him and in whispered
tones ordered him to return to his
white relatives and become one of
them because the Indians could not
offer him the opportunities for
success jin life. She led him to his
pony, placed him in the saddle
and hit the animal a blow with a
as a man of
e water,
forts of
vho has
- 18
oohi,
Edadedb . mmimehm
" . ' “00 3
- Sandmann, Anna Schmitt.
Sixth grade—William Fuhr-
1 mann, Mildred Zimmerer, Marjorie
Mosser, Lena Mae Schmitz, Annie
■-Arendt Mildred Becker. Elsie
a High school—Norbert Koesler,
Carl Beyer, Loretta Zwinggi, Stella
chmitz, Anna Graff, Louise Gieb,
Anastasia Fuhrmann, Zita Flusche,
■ ? Oscar Zwinggi, Paul Fuhrmann,
* -ahosali Schmitz, Elizabeth Neu,
■ Florence Arendt, Robert Kupper,
Henry Spaeth. Eugene Schmitz,1
» Genevieve Bengfort, Dorothy Bez-
nher, Frieda Kuntz, Regina Fuhr-
t mann, Elitha Neu, Frieda Zwinggi,
ecillaGieb.
' Seventh grade—Catherne Beng-
tort, Clara Hundt, Marie Sophia
splits most effectively. There's no
real harmony in either house.
• * •
MISSIONARY—In appraising
Landon's chances for the Republi-
can nomination, don't overlook the
। fact that John Hamilton—counsel
to and coming head of the G. O. P.
declaring “The Senate is the mas-
. ter of its own rules"
:t However, as vice president, Mr.
Curtis ruled the Senate with a firm
band and brooked no overstepping
of parliamentary regulations. With
his background of a score of years
of service and his thorough famil-
iarity with the rules, he stood out
as an able presiding officer. . ,
Guined National Notice
Almost at the outset of his in-
cumbency as vice president he
. gained nation-wide notice when De
protested to the state department
J against the place accorded his sis-/
ter and official hostess, Mrs. Ed-
ward E. Gann, at official social
’ functions behind the members of
the diplomatic corps. Secretary if
<• State Stimson was called upon to
revise the ruling of his predeces-
: aor Frank B Kellogg, who had as-
gigned Mrs. Gann. Secretary Stim-
son asked the diplomats to extend
the courtesy of precedence to her
and they agreed The vice presi-
' [ dent's sister then took rank second
only to that of Mrs Hoover, the
president’s wife.
a Born January'25, 1860, at North
Topeka, Shawnee county, Kansas.
Mr. Curtis had in his veins the
blood of an Indian' chief and of
, French and Canadian’ traders on
his maternal side. His father, Wil-
liam Curtis, traced his American
ancestry back to 1621. His mother
died when he was a baby and he
was taken in charge by his wrin-
kled old Indian grandmother, Julie
Poppin, the daughter of White
‘ Plume, a chief of the Kaws. His
grandmother persauded him as a
youth to go to his white relatives
and become one of them. ,
- $ His.grandmother Curtis got him
started to school and when he
graduated from the Topeka High
School he delivered the commence-
jar nt oration Then he began
1 studying law, drivmg the hack at
pight and selling font at the rail- I
road station to. help pay his ex-
penses He was admitted,to the bar
in 1881 and when he was 24 was
elected prosecuting attorney of
J Shawnee county, proceeding dur-
ing his term to close all the sa-
; -loons in the county.
t After one unsuccessful attempt,
de was elected to the House of
14 Bepresentatives in 1892 and served
.■Continuously until 1907. Then he
was appointed to take the place of
Senator Joseph E. Burton, who
‘S*d resigned, and with th excep-
ton of an interlude from 1912 to
:12914, continued in the Senate un-
tti his election as vice-president.
Upon he death of Senator Lodge
of Massachusetts he was elevated
- to the post of Republican leader.
1 30 On November 27, 1884. Mr. Cur-
si 48 married Annie E. Baird of To-
aPka. They had three children.
-‘Mrs. Curtis died in June, 1924,
Loved Free Life I
As a boy, Mr. Curtis loved the <
We never know today what the
morrow may bring. Play safe.
Get a STATE RESERVE
REGISTERED POLICY from
See Me Before You Die
44499 Permanent
‛4 Waves
a) « Every day except
• Friday and Satur-
—/42 day.
$1.00 Permanents ........ 75c
$1.50 OU Wave......... $1.25
"VAA
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 139, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 8, 1936, newspaper, February 8, 1936; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1437618/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.