Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 256, Ed. 1 Monday, June 22, 1936 Page: 2 of 6
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f
PAGETWO ""B
A
i
#
MON.PALLETE
i
than that of the home.
ST
t
C
AT
ig of even a
$
peace-
our
latest
cha
Chapter Nine
e
I
/ 1
?
\
glance for glance, as good as he
A
rot.
launch ><1 a
h
wall there and looked in the safe
7
, and sw
eeps
its we arer
K tied.
with
&
» nr
6z;--m-nam
it e
attse e
m
t
(AP). —- Essentially
sports
loth
t
feet
Ch ffon
con- i that keeps him in the city so much I •
big bishop
bn in is
>1 se
now;
the county
18 days has attracted
visitors
42 Years Ago I
M ■■.........
land added free tickets to
circuses
I and boat rides.
f
in Manchester he helped start a ,
the seson’s
Bennett C Thomas, son of W S.
I
I bl
and
unpretentious
on !
Word of God
■ •
What did you do when you
Mill
O
left?"
st
NEW ZEALAND OLYMPIANS
BEGIN VOYAGE TO GAMES
publican raillery has been adopted
I
T
has started its long journey
V isitors
th
it
eive
j tered at the Indian Trading post on
of
i
the Ccoke county
in
standing member1 of
====-=
Dr. W. W. Micks
Fire,
V
Fort Worth; Mrs. Doris McDonald.
men
ton,' Mr.
"And then?”
"Then I walked all the way back1 Lufkin;
inK
its own league birth-
«
lasting through Au-
Leav > Gal
Amarillo
Little but loud the Want Ads.
r
10
poin
P
wid
geles, Calif.: Fay Reid. Ivanhoe,
!
Wil
Last
lai
Sei berli
: Coma
/
NUIPDEP TONIGHT
(
likes them all. He devotes most of
his play hours, however, to riding j
One
short
tion h r
day << ।
l wit
sleev
place in the Square."
"A good program?
swagge
bars. N
plain, i
JUST TO KEEP UP with the
proceedings we record that the
r
L
Texas Power
& Light Co.
stitt he J
puffed :
signed Hr
swagxe rm ;
skin which
• frocks
vertibl
of th
Mil d
a
p
‘6
at Cleveland.
She confides she is a bit jealous I
of her husband’s publishing'career I
yoke
frocks
satin,
of the
filmy i
those lamps. Sergeant, and well
all have a look round,”
(Copyright, 1936, Lawrence W.
euara
must
back
FASHION
TOT ER W
WEARIN
tuni
puff
orite
hath given will he pay him again
—Proverbs 19:17.
Dallas,
aonth:
• m .11
Fort
I IO
1 I 20
LIFE
CLAUEf
DAlLy.
4cripti
th” -
..
flared
length
the fan
by r
• to n
aucce
and
from
are •
retied
l s a
/fl!
“I can’t
used
• warm
Six menths, in
vance _______
“YOUR ELECTRIC
SERVANT
blanket style of rate evolved by TVA should be the
pattern for the rest.
Such was not, however, the view of the four sen-
ators.
mestic Allotment-Act which
become a law a abort while
ago.
M. L HELM
New and Used
CHEVROLETS
744—Phone—20
Leaving there, when?
Between half past seven and Wichita
“Where’s that?”
'Til show you that in a minute
(irc
(Co at inu
CONV
: WRAI
FOR;
/ •.T
f
MONDAY AFTERNOON. JUNE 22, 19s6
=----=
> ■ ।
By AURELIUS KINSEY
n
1:3n
5:10
The Idahoan still objected to a proposal in the
bill to divide 35 per cent of Bonneville’s profits be- t
tween Washington and Oregon. Idaho getting none. |
Meanwhile Senator Norris of Nebraska, who has
sheltered TVA against any ill-winds, evidently had
not been taken into the discussion, for he told re-
•rAA
Centennial
Were you here all day?”
'No. Monday’s my half day off.
tender and pure and our minds on
the higher levels.” •
But from his one-time political
enemies comes the description of
the man his friends like best: ,
"Frank Knox is a delightful per-
Pratt, t’marker will tell you the George S. Hunter, Dallas; Mr. and
same. Then I had a bit of bread Mrs. L. E. Woods, Oklahoma City;
iouse group, which led
l ing up and" down the inadequate
- - - 1 - was instantly
in the science of government. One can only
hope that other states will swing more and
from 28 states, the District of Co-
lumbia, and four foreign countries.
Which should convince the skep-
tics that the exhibit is and will be
worthwhile. I
IN
Torn
TOBACCO CAN A LIFE-SAVER
DAYTON, Tex (AP). — Steve
Owen owes his life to a tobacco
can. He was driving down Main
street when his car got out of con-
trol and lurchd into a ditch. The
steering wheel shaft stopped after
almost penetrating the can in his
shirt pocket.
my fist through the coal house
window and undid the catch and I
was inside in a couple of min-
utes.”
Inspector Kingsley Hylton was
watching his man keenly. “Go on,"
he said quietly.
"I thought I better come and
see if the old boy was all right, so
BARRAGE a
VILIEDY I
TENNIAL
if you doubled my money.”
A queer silence fell on the three
• Indige
Get
Khe Assoeiated Press in exelusive
une for repblication of all news
lo it or not otherwise credited in 1.
U> iocal news appearing herein.
and golf. 1,
In clothes his taste hi 62 is
and Dick Vineyard. Ponca City; Mrs.
C. L. and Earl Dean Thompson,
Times have changed, says the
Paris News editorially, only the
people who have no radios or auto-
mobiles for entertainment go to
hear political speakers any more
Stump speeches are a thing of the
past, declares the Lamar county
newspaper.
Mebbe so, mebbe so, but we
don't know about it over here ir
Cooke county. Our candidates are
preparing for a verbal barrage,
which they are going to begin fir-
ing tonight.
Kingsley Hylton was intrigued
"Come on,” he said, “fetch one of
sociation.
The holiday is going to give
store employes an opportunity to
spend a day at the big Dallas
show, as well as show Dallasites
and Centennial visitors from else-
where, that Gainesville is a wide-
awake community where citizens
cooperate 100 per cent to put over
such an event as Gainesville Day
at a world’s fair.
are going to close Thursday, as
voted by the Retail Merchants As-
flighted by associations with young
i people, intimates say. As publisher
at Sault Ste. Marie early in his
newspaper rise, he started a gym-
day party
gust
Centennial exhibit on
sapph e
ing skirt
Space does not allow the cataloging
fraction of all the dangers that lurk in
Beard, Jr., Ardmore, Okla.; Mrs.
Cecil Evans and Opal Evans. Fort
Worth; Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Carr
and daughter, Bobby Jo, Buffalo,
Mo.; Carl Thurman, Overton. Tex.;
Mrs. C. L. Brooks, Duncan, Okla.;
W s. Tellar, Oklahoma City; Bob
Garretson and <Jim Casper, Dal-
las; Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Hudson,
St. Louis, Mo.
Wife Proud Of career
Like his running mate Governor
silk
and
dance- n
smart* st
dige
and
HI h
inz.
If v
a quarter t’eight, I daresay,. Maurice
though I didn’t notice particular.” Mrs R.
not.
1
V
Hy a
and Hyde"
do any good because old Burdett Mrs. Polly Ann Martin. New York
had ears like a cat. Then I banged City; Mrs Amy Sawyer, Los An-
on the door a bit and nothing hap- J geles, Calif.; Fay Reid. Ivanhoe,
pened. Ten minutes I must have Tex.; Mrs. B. L. Caddell. Petrolia,
been ringing and banging. I went Tex.; Mr. and Mrs L. T. Walker,
round to the back; all shuttered Wichita Falls; Mary Louise and
the money. I went over to the
TONIGHT, THE COOKE coun-
ty candidates start their stump
speaking tour at Rosston. There
"Then I walked all the way back' Lufkin; Ruby S. Smith, Tulsa;
here like I usually do. Just after Mrs Alice M. Pearce. Carlisle,
nine it was when I got back.” England; Leslie E. Colby, Chicago;
"And you let yourself in?” I Mrs. Minnie L. Tuckr, Tecumseh.
"What with? Told man never Okla.; Mr. and Mrs, Herman L.
- Hughes and family, Whittenburg,
Tex.; Alfred Gomez, George Gomez
and family, Tahiti Islands; Mrs.
C. L Lewis, Fort Worth; Mr and
Mrs. J. A. Hayes and sons. WMites-
boro: Doris Neves. Bells; J. W.
Hayes. Whitesboro; Doug Neves,
Bells; Miss Bally Cherry, Durant,
Okla.; F. S. Luther, Greenville;
Edgar Miils, Paris; T. A. Fownier,
J. Halloran, Bill Halloran. San An-
in caze or errors or omlisjon occurring in local
or other advertisements or of omissions on scheduled
late th* publishers do not hold themselves liable for
la mages further than the amount received by them
for such advertisements.
I his life one continuous charge upl
that same hill."
That bit of 1912 Old Guard Re-E
This step follows that taken recently when
Michigan's state prison board was placed in
the civil service category. Other state com-
missions are in line for the same “reform”
insofar as existing statutes permit.
All in all, here is a distinct advancement
GAINESVILLE DAILY REGISTER, GAINESVILLE, TEXAS.
--------
•re dei igi ec
. ' end g lest 1
♦ much ugga
back about
t
SUBSISTENCE FARMS
WE cannot agree with the critics of the ad-
fl ministration’s Rural Resettlement plan
thatther is anything Communistic about it.
* A few of Tugwell’s "cooperative farms” have
been fashioned along the line of the Soviet
collective farms, with the farmers all work-
One year, in
-50e advanee __________________
By mail in all other counties of the' United States:
E est ior
-tomaci
in fix n e
teritis
headne h.
evenih ; g
Besic les
there are
ning V ray
“glorit ed
r < <m
elvet
। mel
is a fair 5,000-meter
— Li- - ----______2 4
SUMMER USHERED
IN WITH HEAT
CANDIDATES TO
philosophy of life;
"The moat uscful life is the best; I
, de
genuine, the most worthy. Let U'^
aim to be genuine, to see E '
simplicity and Is- anassuming. urMs
ostentatious, to keep our heart.T‘ /•
ay,
from Scotland Yard is helping
j "Some folks might,” he said.
Kingsley. Hylton’s tiger-like
' curiosity, which was always pac-
side and a weakness In my
—___. writes Mrs. Walter Page, of
Evansvlle, Ind "This made me so
nervous I couldn't rest Each
monthI would sufter all over and
would have to go to bed. One of
my neighbors told me how Cardui
helped her, so I took it and it
heiped me After taking eight bot-
tles,Iwas much hetter. I surely
can recommend Cardui for weakness
11:30 a m .
Leav > Gali
Falls and all
m ; 5:0 p |
"Yes. Why not?"
Lumsdal shrugged his shout-,
ders. "Well, I don’t mind, if you
don’t,” he said. fair grounds here during the past
"Why should I mind?”
Lumsdale looked doggedly away.
You interest me immensely,
1 Lumsdale," he said. "You don’t
the squad. J
“T suffered a great deal with pain
in my
back,"
(From the files of the
Hesperian, June 22. 18941.
Any erroneous reflec tion upon the character, reputa-
Hon or standing of any firm, individual or corpora-
Gun, will be gladly corrected upon being called to the
publishers" attention. AR
eiy enticed to' the
dispatches credited
this paper and also
up and made fast and locked it | Charles Henry Thomas, Lubbock;
was. just like it should be. I put Jack Thomas, Mitchell Field, New
question. Apparently, they regard that is-
sue as settled. The Democrats may also
ignore it in Philadelphia.
Yet reports arising occasionally from
-idely scattered sections indicate that there
are still voters who feel that re-establish-
Schad
&
Hx months. in . ne year, In
advanee ------------ 75e advanee _________________
Rates on papers mailed to foreign countries will be
ade known on request.
NOTICE TO THK Pt BLIC
How’s Your Health
----------------
--------0--------
Maybe that congressman who was ar-
rested in Washington for traveling seventy
miles an hour was under the impression he
was passing another billion-dollar appropria-
tion bill.—Ohio State Journal.
--------0--------
A British Laborite calls the conquest of
Ethiopia the crime of the century. But this
can hardly be, or Gaston B. Means would
have confessed.—Portland Oregonian.
--------o--------
A wreckin company tore down the wrong
building in Chicago. On such an occasion let
it remember the president’s brave words, “If
we’re wrong, we’ll try. something else.”—
Barron’s.
CHICAGO
an outdoor
1 rlx <
Swa gge ’
fair grounds
man, though his best times fail to
stamp him as a probable winner
at Berlin.
New Zealand still is counting.'
upon Lovelock to present his na-
tive ccuntry its first Olympic gold.
medal in track and field.
Sergeant White solve the
murder of Squire Burdett,
who has been found slugged
in his bare old mansion.The
curious fact is that everybody
in Hope Enderton hated Bur-
dett, a miser. not too savory
in his dealings with women,
cruel in the administration of
the power his money gave
him The two officers are ex-
amining Lumsdale, Burdett’s
only servant.
dam, should operate it upon completion, expected by
July, with the federal power commission cooperat-
ing in irate matters. 1 — ---- - _
Pope appeared contented with this plan, broad- if his money was all right,
ened as it was to give the power commission con- ' "What did von do wher
Of late Dimerous responsible organizations, in-
cluding the American Red Cross, have engaged in
sustained campaigns to make the home safe for
its inhabitants. '
By PRESTON GROVER
WXJASHINGTON—-The power measuring stick idea,
W which started with TVA, has involved Pacific
’ ’ northwest senators in a merry battle over a
bill to govern rates on the Bonneville project on the
lower Columbia river.
Moreover, during ultimate compromise talk, the
administration took a hand and attached a rider
to establish a new power policy. Under this policy
the federal power commission would take over,
wholesale rate regulation of not only Bonneville,
but of TVA, Grand Coulee, Fort Peck, Mont., Boul-
der Canyon dam. Casper-Alcova, Wyo., and the St.
Lawrence project if ever it is undertaken.
. The plan is to be put through this session if
disputes can be pacified.
Senator Pope of Idaho is pitted against the four
senators from Oregon and Washington, and each
side feels it is favored by President Roosevelt.
Pope Favored TVA idea
draw. So I brought my camera.*
Pope thought that would do nicely for Bonneville "No. Three days in the week he
and appeared to envisage cheap electricity coursing wouldn’t have anything teat from
over the Blue mountains 200 or 300 miles into the breakfast till night for fear of
Frank Knox: G. 0. pAo. 2 Alan
and cheese and some beer
started to walk home.”
Mrs. Walter Meadow, Ardmore;
Misses Maude, Pearl and Phin
Cummins, Ed Montgomery, Wich- 1
ita Falls; Mr. and Mrs Thomas
B Lark, Bonham; Mr. and Mrs.
H. H. Gilliam, Harvey Gilliam,
Houston; Murray Gibbons and
Mural Gibbons, Muskogee, Okla.;
Mr. and Mrs. John S Griffin,
Berry, Ala.: Mr and Mrs. Ted
Strickland, Greenville, Miss.; Mary
Elizabeth Meeks. Abilene; Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Brooks, Durant.
Okla.: Mrs. J. A. Parton, Galves-
ton; Miss Ada Marian Braswell.
Denison; Mrs. Frances Bradshaw.
Dallas; Miss Norma Garland,
Whitewright; Mrs. C. J. Hudgens,
Mrs. R. O. Ritchey, Quanah; Miss
Dorothy Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Listen Day, Whitesboro; Mrs. W.
porters he had not been advised of the new policy.
He was pretty frank in stating he did not want'll
upsetting TVA's affairs.
"Why didn't you . telephone
him?” ,
Lumsdale actually laughed, a
thin, sarcastic sound. "What
< htrol over the wholesale rates for all projects. He as-
Tserted it was an administration agreement that the
the fight for repeal, is not supporting the ad-
ministration.—Dallas Times Herald.
—-—---o- —.
LESS POLITICS, MORE MERIT
f
( > •
< an
Vivid cl
’ are otl
issEm
appointed, for the stores with a farewell party honoring
1 Miss Etta Campbell at her home j
on North Dixon street. About 501
D. Truitt, Dallas; Glen Jean Tay- MAttHes
lor, Alamagorda, Tex.; Mr. and
man, Frank Knox is Landon. Colonel Knox smokes a
ment of national prohibition is what the
country needs most. In short there still ex-
• ists what was referred to in previous cam-
paigns as the dry vote. :
The Republicans may not openly seek this i
dry vote, but it seems likely to fall into their
column. The irreconcilable drys hold the
Democrats responsible for repeal of the
eighteenth amendment. Whether the Demo-
crats will accept this responsibility when 1
• they meet in Philadelphia remains to be seen. )
The Raskob-Smith-Shi
should be little difficulty among
the candidates in warming up to
their campaign speeches this ,2
weather. bronco.
WELLINGTON (AP). —New!
ington and Oregon markets such as Portland was outside, when I’d finished that 1 .._______, ___ _____
the view of the senators from those states. Sale of had my bite of food in the kitchen mean to tell me that ou are
power is expected to pay part of the construction about one. Two o’clock I looked in • afraid of ghosts ?”
cost. The Washington-Oregon senators felt that any here to ask if he wanted anything 1 Andrew Lumsdale turned and
effort to give, as low rates to Boise 300 or more —" । faced him squarely.
miles away, as to Portland, 40 miles away, would 1 "What was Mr. Burdett doing' "ru tell you this much. Mister,"
push rates to Portland so high that private com-1 then?” j he answered quietly, "and you can
panies could undersell Bonneville. | "He set in that chair, same as he get all the laugh out of it you've
Senator Pope advanced a bill to create a Col- t usually did, looking at some pa-1 a mind to, but there’s rooms in
umbia Valley authority patterned after TVA with pers. He said he didn’t want any- this house I wouldn’t sleep in; not
thing, so I got off.”
. "Did you notice anything un-
whos
gown
onss
nasium and club for newsboys
Oklaho
north;
P. m .
4 m
let anyone have a key but hisself/ Moore. Vicksburg, Miss.; J. W.
And there was always only one Spears. Walters, Okla.
way to come in, and that was the Dorothy Linger, Cleveland, O.;
front, everything else was kept Isabel Schmalholz, Brooklyn, N.
as tight shut as the Bank of Eng Y.; C. E. Ellard, Houston; B. J.
land. And the front door was al- Welch. Floydada: Mrs. H. E.
ways on a chain. I couldn't let my- White and Adele Ellinger, Wichita
self in any more than you could. Falls, Kans.; Al Gilbert, Burbank.
I rang once or twice, and II Calif.; Ralph Wingert, Whitesboro;
thought it was funny that didn’t Bernice Sawyer, Indianapolis. Ind.;
Lu
let. MW
s'
I came here—this was the only
room he ever used bar his bedroom
—and there he was lying over the
table with his head bashed "in’ and
this chib thing on the floor.”
/Dead?” !
"Dead as! a door nail.”
"Was there much blood about?"
"Well, you can see most of it
. now. these stains dried up here.”
“Was it dry then?”
“No. Well, not as dry as it is
now anyway. Thick like.”
“What did you do then?”
"I was a bit put about at first
’ Then I saw the safe open—”
• One
Freddie Miller former feather-
weight champion, shortened his
name from Friederich Mueller.
ground and from his green eyes
gave «back cold, scrutinizing
Vrili IF t
coolest w r
it Im ; hi
net coven
flounec s ol
with lug c
While ii
--------°--------
The share-the-wealth forces have joined
the Townsend campaigners. They apparent-
ly want a share in the wealth of the Town-
sendladers.-"Ann Arbor News.
L , U F i
Daily -boys’ club N and enjoyed being
eight big parties this year— in*
, .. , each of the league’s cities. Each
tonio; Mary Ellen and Mrs. Jimmie l city j* hav
Mathes. Sherman; W L. and Ray
young folks enjoyed the occasion. i
Yancey Lewis has returned from !
Washington where he has been
business
A Washington Daybook
it 1 l. .. ___ - _
with? You didn’t catch old Bur-
dett paying to have telephones put
in Enderton Court.”
“What time did you get to Ser-
geant White’s?”
"Round about half past nine, or
a quarter to ten, I suppose.”
"Um. Do you know of anybody
who has any grudge against Mr.
| Burdett, Lumsdale?”
"Scores on ’em. They all hated
him in the village because he never
spent anything.”
"But you don’t know of any
quarrel with anyone actually?"
"I can’t say as I do."
"What about this safe?”
“It’s over there. Inspector," Ser-
geant White said, “let into the
wall by the fireplace. Papered to
look like the rest of the wall, see?
It was open when I got here with
Lumsdale.”
“Um. Well, we can see inside
that tomorrow, no doubt, if we
want to. I'd like to look over the
rest of the house.”
For an appreciable moment
Lumsdale was silent then • he an-
swered, “What now, Mister?"
the most
their own, by extending long-term loans and
assisting them in securing the needed equip-
, with which to start producing crops.
If they make any profit from their farms
it will be theirs, Instead of working for the
government, they will work for themselves
in other words, the government is helping
tenant farmers and share-croppers to be- . nupe mm ouer states win swing n
come land owners, and land owners are never more toward the merit system._
Communists.—Denison Herald. News.
-----—o-—-----
THE SMOLDERING LIQUOR ISSUE
IN their Cleveland platform the Republicans
I made no reference whatever to the liquor
LUMSDALE’S VERSION j
Lumsdale was a northcountry-1 if you like, sir.” Sergeant White
man. truculent by nature, sub-1 put in.
servient to none; he stood hisl “Righto. Carry on. Lumsdale. ’
“I saw the safe open, and I
thought by gum the old devil’s
copped it at last; someone's got
by Knox supporters as “a re-
markable accurate one-sentence
ful" households.' Here,' however, are some of the
principal ones: ho
Falls: Skidding rugs; highly polished floors; torn
carpets irregular stairs; badly illuminated turns;
weak stepladders; slipper bathtubs. Any of these
may be responsible for a fall, causing sprains and
bone fractures, and leading to long sickness, perma-
nent crippling and even to death.
Burns: Cooking utensils containing hot foods
carelessly placed or left within reach of "exploring"
children: combustible cleaning fluids,.used contrary
to instruction in the presence of an open flame;
matches left where children can get at them. These
cause many a dangerous and disfiguring burn.
Poison gases: These are apparently as great
a menace in peace time as in war. The principal
sources are the open gas jet; the gas flame‘burning
so low that it can be extinguished by a gust of
wind; automobiles kept running in closed garages:
dry cleaning fluids, stain removers and volatile oils
which, though not inflammable, are respiratory
poisons, especially when used in an enclosed space.
The medicine cheat housing dangerous drugs,
especially when these are intermingled with home
remedies, is a menace. In an emergency, when one’s
critical faculties and senses are dulled, it is easy
to grab blindly, with disastrous results.
What to do: Survey the home, anticipate the
risk, remove the hazard
Tomorrow—The Danger of Diseased Teeth
Mrs. Fred Denstel, Pottsville, Pa.
Mitylene Morrison and Ann
Blair, Nashville, Tenn.; B. O.
HOME ACCIDENTS
rHERE was a time when the proverbial timid soul
I could stay at home and thus spare himself the
hazards of the wide world. Today, however, he
is safer abroad than at home. For in eom parison
the accident risk of the out-of-doors is much less
GAINESVILLE. DAILY REGISTER
AND MESSENGER
FOUNDED 1886. PUBLISHED BVEBY AFTERNOON
EXCEPT SUNDAY
THE REGISTER FSIMTWG COMPANY (INC.)
PUBLISHERS, GAINESVILLE. COOKE CO. TEXAS
Editorial **4 Basin— Office, lot East California St.
Members of the associated Press, Texas Press Asso-
ciation, Tex** Daily Press Leagu and International
I irculation. Managers’ Associatlon, National Editorial
association. Southern Newspaper Publishers' Asso-
iation.L-_
Entered at the Gainesville. (Texas) Postoffice
as second-class matter.
DAILY REGISTER
BY MAIL 9UTBIDE of Cooke, Grayson, Denton, Mon-
tague or Wise counties, Texas, and Love county. Ok-
Shors:
One momth, la ad- Six months, la
vanee ---------------see ndvanee _________________
"fhree months, la One year. An
aMamee - - ---------$1.50 advaiee ---------- 5.00
when subscriptions are not paid in advance, or re-
newed within 10 days after expiration, straight prin-
of 50 cents per month is charged.
DAILY REGISTER
By mail, in Cooke, Grayson, Depton, Montague or Wise
counties, Texas, and Love cdunty, Oklahoma.
One month, la ad- Six montha. m
vanee ---------------See advanee -----------------
Gne year ia advanee ----------— g-------$4.50
Where subscriptions are not pald in advance, or re-
ewed within 10 days after expiration, straight price
, i 59 cents per month is charged.
WEEKLY REGISTER
By mail in Gainesville or in Cooke, Grayson, Denton
Montague ad Wise countlee, Texas, and Love county,
Dklahoma.
“And at Morechester ?” 1>
"Went to the pictures. I mostly
do that on a Monday too. The big
( Centennial tourists who regis-
The Tennessee Valley authority applies a Old Burdett came___
blanket wholesale rate for its power to all commune] 12, a bit later, and said he wouldn’t
ities within Rs scope, regardless of distance from 1 want any lunch.”
the power site. [ I I "Was that unusual?”
Zealand's Olympic squad of six
athletes, which will be joined on markable accurate one-sentence|
arrival in Germany by Jack Love- summary of Knox as a citizen, edi-J
lock, the country's great miler, al- tor and politician."
readv has starter] its long ionrnev
authority to fix blanket rates just as TVA had
Compromise? . ---J------------ - A .....__.... ............
A rival bill was introduced by the four senators usual about him in any way —did men for a moment and a puff of
from Washington and Oregon proposing that the he look ill or nervous ‘or any- ‘ wind from the dark house playful-
army, which is supervising building of Bonneville thing?” । ly lifted a corner of the white
“When he first came in he was sheet that covered the thing on
a bit puffed, but that was because, the table.
he had been hurrying back to see Kingsley Hylton was intrigued
Praetlee Imited ta
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Glasses Correctly Fitted
Rooms 7-8 Teague Building
Gainesville, Tex. Phone 283 I
into » ft fi
York; Mary Elizabeth Holleran
and Pauline Holleran, San An-
tonio; Mrs. W. L. Hallrock,
Omaha, Neb.; Joe Goode, Eddie C.
Elles, Ardmore. Okla ; Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. Powell, Celina; Mr.
and Mrs. James B. Mack, Pilot
Point; Mr. and Mrs. R. E Smith
and son, Dave, Dallas; Mr. and
the vigorous type whose very hob- j pipe almost incessantly They
bies promise a vigorous campaign. ‘ are scattered everywhere in his i
"The hurricane deck of a home and office.
” says this ex-Rough Rider, I In Chicago he maintains a
is his favorite vacation spot. ("bachelor apartment.’’ Too frail
As a mountain climber he has , for the city’s climate and smoke, I
driven his own pack trains over.Mrs. Knox lives in their Man- I
ranges of half a dozen western i cheater, N. H home He visits her I
states and in New England. at frequent intervals, and she has I
He can sail a boat, run a launch, accompanied him on several.of his I
ski, skate, toboggan, swim and campaign tours She was with him i
i p m . 1
x leeav " < inii
jr boro, S her mi
5 and all
How Cardui Helps
Month After Month
Where .Ithere have been severe
pains evex month, from functional
disturbnes resulting from poor
nourishment, Cardui has helped
thousands of women to obtain relief.
Their corfidence in Cardui makes
them eager to recommend it to
other women needing such * medi-
cine. . r
"Caught the 2:40 bus into More- (
Chester, the conductor’ll tell you
the same, I know him to nod to.”
"I’m quite content with what
you tell me, Mr Lumsdale, for thei
moment,” Hylton said gently. Y'
"Ay, for the moment; but I; ,
j thought you might like to know •
' whom to go to when you get fer- * <
reting about later. The 2:40 bus >
to Morechester I caught, always ,
do on a Monday.” i >
"Ah’ve seen worse.” -
"And after the pictures—what Friday, Saturday and Sunday in-
time were they over?” eluded:
“I came out about half past five J Mrs. Lee Ownby, Emma Jean
and then I went straight to the and Mary Ruth Ownby, Celina;
MICHIGAN ha driven another nail into1 “ how long ala you stay at
111 the coffin of the spoils system. The | the Crown?" Calgery, Alberta Canada; Mrs.
states emergency welfare relief commission; “I played billiards there for Lilyan Clinkenbeard, Ava, Mo.;
has established a State-wide merit Dian fori1**81 part of two hours. Jimmy Mrs. Leonard Hantly. Sherman;
employes S D-t * ‛m • "ke” "in tell "e" the George S Hunter nallas M r and
MOT
Ieave Gal
A Safe Investment: He that
hath pity upon the poor lendeth
unto the Lord; and that which he
sonality who charged up San J^imii !
, hill with Roosevelt and is perhst |
ing in making the remainder of
benetit YOU, consult • physician.
since I
f froks
1 shades
and pain." ,«
Of it Cardui does
a nd t
your job here?”
"Servant to the old man. Did
everything as you may say.”
"How long have you been
nere?"
"Six years.”
"Mr. Burdett had no other ser-
vants all that time?”
"None.”
“Did you get on with him well?”
"If he gave me the rough side
of his tongue, he got as good back,
and that’s how it was."
"Quite an amiable household,
apparently.”
"You can call it that if you've a
mind. I’ve been in better places,
and worse.”
“What were you before you
came here?”
“Stud groom to Lord Menning-
ham for twelve years.”
“Why did you leave there?”
“Because I wanted to. I am a
free man.”
"You speak your mind pretty
bluntly, Mr. Lumsdale, don’t
you?” I
"Always have done.”
"Perhaps you'll be equally out-
right about what happened on
Monday?”
"Why not?”
ORATORY UNATTRACTIVE
KILVER tongued orators who are asking
• political preferment are finding difficulty
getting audiences to listen to their appeals,
lime was when announcement that a candi-
date would address the electorate drew
larger crowds than almost any other enter-
tainment, but this is no longer the case.
Chronicling a gathering in southern Dal-
las: county at which candidates for office
from congressmen on down—or up—were
billed to speak, the Dallas News reporter
estimated that in the audience of two hun-
dred at least three-fourths were deputies
under the candidates seeking re-election, who
had come to lead the cheering when their
bosses spoke. The others were plain citizens,
probably persons who did not own an auto-
mobile or a radio or who either did not have
the .price for an admission to the centennial
Exposition or who did not care to see the
show of the century at this time.
Candidates may well begin to ask, as do
the mentors of youth in respect of crime—
Does it pay? They wear themselves down
going from place to place, burn gasoling and
wear tires, and if it were possible to discover
the reaction of each individual who hears
them, it is doubtful a vote ha sbeen changed.
No, the day of the orator, no matter how
dulcet his tones, how beautiful his word pic-
ture, how anguished his groans at the condi-
tion of the good people, how alluring his
promises of what will be done "when I am
in j that day is gone. Really big fellows
like the President can draw either in person
or over the radio, but the lesser fry are
wasting their time tola large extent.
People read newspapers nowadays and the
newspapers publish everything worthwhile
about a candidate, so folks do not need to
listen to them.—Paris News.
I i
agricultural sections of the Snake river valley and spending the money.” I cage Of his'mind,
to mine centers of North Idaho. j "Um Go on.” aroused
That it would not do so nicely for nearby Wash-! "I was doing a bit of chopping
made a confidant ot his lads On
some days, associates of the period
recall, the office was overrun wit
youngsters who wanted to talk to i
"the boss.”
Colonel Knox is a Congrega-
tionalist, Rotarian and Mason
His Philosophy Of Life
From one of his own editorials
comes this- summary of Knox's
halfway around the world to the
Games.
The team comprises a pair of
distance runners. V. P. Boot and!
C. H. Matthews; a cyclist, G. RJ
Giles; and three boxers, T. Arbuth-
not, N. Fisher and C. Gordon. I
Boot, who ran a 4:22 mile in the
tryouts/ Is considered the out-"
Enlace Peacock is officially
rated as the 1935 national, sprint
and broad jump champion. He is
a student at Temple and beat Jesse
Owens at Lincoln
Falls; Richard and
Morton, Oklahoma City;,
W Howard, Throckmor-
and Mrs. C. N. Humasen,.
INVITED
George Wright and Tommy
Bond, who played baseball in the
National league in 1876, and are
still around, will be Invited to
Texas Progress
To zain ■ better nppreclation
of the developments beinK
made la Texn" wateh thi
"What’s your name?” Hylton
asked. j —it's locked again now, the police
"Andrew Lumsdale.” are afraid IH steal it. I reckon—
“What do you koow about I just out of curiosity. There seemed
this?” - । to be a tidy bit o’ money still in
“Nothing.” I it. I let that be just as it was and
Hylton smiled sweetly. “Come, I I went and fetched Sergeant
Mr. Lumsdale,” he said, "you must! White here.”
be able to help us a bit. What was
servative. His roading interests But she’s proud of his record, too,
range over a wide field, he says,»and intensely interested in his
with economics as applied to pres-! career.
ent day problems first choice just j Although childless, Knox isde-
news reinbl
two b: ank 1, I
dav. !
V MEY NELL
ing together and pooling their resources, but
these experiments must not be confuseC
with the general plan of the Rural Resettle-
ment Administration, which is trying to pro-
vide' homes for {he landless tenants and
share-croppers of our agricultural belt.
In fact, the plan of the RRA is the very
antithesis of Communism. In Russia, sall land
was taken away from the farmers and
turned over to the government and the
farmers are all forced to work for the gov-
ernment. No one is allowed to make any
profit from the products of the land which
. he works.
Under the RRA plan, the government is
helping landless farmers to secure farms of
(UMMER WAS4 OBFICIALLY
3 ushered in Sunday,' and appro-
priate to the occasion, the mer-
cury shot up to new high records
for the season, while Monday
morning started out as if Monday j
was going to maintain the high
levels of the summer heat.
We imagine some of these Cen-
tennial visitors from the far
northern states are going to find
it tough for a few days, acclimat-
ing themselves to this Texas
weather.
On the other hand, visitors
from Colorado, Kansas. Missouri,
Arizona and other states, should
have no complaint, for the mer-
cury in those states have been
topping Texas’ temperature for
several weeks. ' .
More and more of the Centen-
nial attractions in Dallas are in-
stalling cooling devices to combat
the heat.
Personlly we have no eom-.
plaint to make. We are saving
’em for the cold weather next
winter, for which we have no love’
whatever. *
Meynell. )
Their inspection proves
fruitless, tomorrow.
of sun mer
Seme ser
train ih the
walk o it as
evenin wra
train which
MODEST MAIDENS
Tradenenek Hestetevem. v. & Patent orfiee
BORGER. — A soil erosion
program designed to be of
Considerable aid in prevent-
ing loss of top soil by heavy
winds, has been instituted .
in this county, according to
Clyde L. Carruth, county
agent. The funds for carry-
ing on this program will be
taken from the appropria-
tion for this purpose in. the
Soil Conservati on and Du-
st p v
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 256, Ed. 1 Monday, June 22, 1936, newspaper, June 22, 1936; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1437751/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.