Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 188, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1942 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gainesville Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cooke County Library.
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Betton so the public could see its
expected; the nerves and tissues.
for the office.
PAGE THREE
If used for des-
gether and chill.
Unmold
A
sert omit salad dressing.
I
were in action.
2
'official business.”
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298
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and at
shoes
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For Miss or Matron!
Slacks
8
213
1//7$ 7Wr
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349
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WE REDEDICATE OURSELVES, TODAY, ON OUR
40th ANNIVERSARY, TO THE SERVICE OF A
ICA
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Ful Cut For All-Over Fit!
96
3
Neat
for p
nt m: Dress-
ISE
Fl
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I19
1 De Luxe
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mm
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WORK
JOB!
a
Interest Seen in
St Jo Election
For Every Spring Occasion:
Women’s Shoes
ANNIYERSARY
5HJUEILEE!
Luncheon Given by
Dye Club Members
FOUNDERS
FEATURE
3
F
THE PENNEY WAY IS THE THRIFTY WAY-THE
THRIFTY WAY IS THE AMERICAN WAY!
Dozens for You to Select From!
Men’s Gabardine . cg
Houston planned to pass in review.
The public was invited to the
LITTLE TEACHER*
BABY SHOES
• • ,
wares. This unit, the seed of oth-
ers to follow at Camp Hood fn
4
Lustrous
Solid
Colors
9
t
• Genuine
Shark-
skin
Music Department of the
XLI club will meet Tuesday,
7:30 p. m., at the home of Mrs.
J. R. Whaley, 513 South Tay-
lor street.
Woman’s Missionary society
BUT
STATES
Keystone class of the First
Baptist church will meet Tues-
day, 3 p. m., in the home of
Mrs. J. E. Scruggs,. 528 North
Dixon street.
The most important
1912 fabric. Tan,
Blue. Pleated.
GOWNS
79c
-e
1
• 1 3
work! Of sturdy,* khaki-
colored dril—U. 8. Army
approved — Sanforized
We feel that the Penney Company is peculiarly well
equipped to make a substantial contribution toward the
Thrift and Savings of the nation—because the Penney
Co. knows from long experience what thrift is all about
THRIFT and savings are a big part of the job
The Penney Co/e practice of Thrift and Savings in
evidenced in everything we do: We buy for cash and
sell for cash; we make no deliveries; we eliminate an
costly frills and extravagances; we operate on an ex-
tremely small margin of profit per transaction; we buy
at the source in the most economical quantities; we save
at every turn! AH this means that now when Thrift and
Savings mean more than ever, it will pay you, it will save
precious dollars for you, always to shop first at Penney's.
"C&Z-Bac *
&ovr<s&acdwr
Thrift is nothing new to the Penney Company—it is our
stock in trade. When the Penney.business was founded,
in 1902, hard work, and spartan living were the general
rule. Our first little store in Kemmerer, Wyoming was
dedicated to Thrift, and all through the years, as our
business has grown, Thrift has continued to be our
guiding principle.
i
Sheer beauty.
Bright with flow-
era. Slim waist,
full skirt.
We rededicate ourselves to Thrift and Savings. We re-
dedicate our 1600 stores, which now stretch from coast
to coast, to the great jobipf helping AmericanfimWij
to continue to five well for less.
Z07
I
i
I
Sanforized Gaberdine
BOYS’ JIMMIES
• Tan and
Blues Galore:
1
9
To Arraign
(Continued from Page One)
give specific answers: that his lec-
on lettuce and sprinkle, with grated
cheese for salad.
-)
SPRING HATS
Designed for spring! Dressy, cas-
ital and sport styles .... flower
or ribbon trimmings!
community, members of the Dye pe as used by Mrs. Arreva D.
Home Demonstration club enter- French at the* Register’s Cooking
tained recently in the home of Mrs. school last week, it is printed here
J
l
Blaw,
onions.
298
A TREMENDOUS TASK LIES AHEAD OF US!
Today America is at war. Now, in wartime, because of
the tremendous job ahead of us, we must learn again to
work hard and to live simply—to put into the preserv-
ing of America what we once put into the building of
It—to return to the old ways of Thrift and Savings that
were the general rule at the beginning of this century.
Monday
Wesley Ann class of the
ST. JO, Tex., April 6.—Consid-
erable interest is being shown in
the city election to be held here '
Tuesday.
W. F. (Bill) Donley, who has |
been city marshal for the past 151
years, is opposed by Charlie Gor-.
don, night watchman. This is Gor-1
Members of DD
Club Entertained
Miss Peggy O’Neal was hostess
in her home, 520 .North Denton
street. Friday evening, to members
of the DD club. Miss Selma Lewis
was initiated as a new member.
The hostess served refreshments
of ice cream and cake to Misses
Gloria Jackson, Norma Lee Le-
fevre, Nita Jean Robinson, and
Lewis. J
---V---
Yum Yum Salad,
By Mrs. French
Zinhngs
A Bargain Now Became Youll
Need Them Soon!
5 F
|| TEARS AGO,
49c
3-
BUY
UNHID
STAID
SAVINGS
498,
%
300 RAF
(Continued From Page One)
active overnight.
DNB, German news agency, re-
ported civilian casualties and dam-
age in western Germany after Brit-
ish attacks.
# The Penney Way Is the Thrifty’ Way • • • The Thrifty Way Is the American
water.
12 to 15 marshmallows chopped
1 cup grated pineapple
1 cup. whipping cream, whipped
14cup nut meats
% cup mayonnaise
Dissolve gelatine in % cup hot
water, chill until ropey thick
Combine all ingredients, fold to-
Mayor T. E. Giles is opposed by
D. L Dowd, former mayor, and Dr. -
M. L Drabing.
Aldermen George A. Wright and
Doyle Powell are unopposed for re-
election.
In a trustee election held Satur-
day, Cecil Bellah, Field G. Hoover,
and Earnest Hayley won over T. L.
Richey, Fred Holland and Arthur
Phillips.
sg fl
! Te *
+ •
(8
/C 70 e • •
A PERSONAL MESSAGE FROM
THE FOUNDER OF THE
J. C. PENNEY COMPANY:
} Hoc .
f i • 28
5-2
A 11
of the Dixon Street Christian
church will meet Tuesda:
Social NoteA
Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
Smart Checked
Terry Towels Aj
21c JA
Great big splashy checks on ' 2
thick, quick-dry ring terry! VI- <49
brant colors to wake-up your
bathroom! 18"x38". Good 234E
news for the thrifty! R33 2
WASH CLOTH to match......6c each
FIRE, TORNADO
And All Kinds of
INSURANCE
The name of George Grice on
your Insurance Policy is like
Sterling on Silver.
GEO. M. GRICE
116% & Dixon BL Phone 73
Matching Army Ort
SHIRT & PANTS SET
Spritely spring styles in rayon
crepe, alpaca and novelty weaves.
Dressy, casual and sport sty les
in gay prints and smart spring
colors, including navy. Sizes 9 to
15, 12 to 20, 38 to 44.
ame
ereg2
ge
ci 4
a
Store Them Now
At DeLuxe
Keep your precious furs safe
from moths and heat! Store
them now, and when cool days
come again they will be re-
turned fresh, clean, ready to
wear! Minimum prices.
MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1942.
I
King’s Daughters
Class Entertained
Miss Dolores Bewley was hostess
0 members of the King’s Daugh-
{aers Sunday school class of the
rand Avenue Baptist church, Fri-
Hay afternoon at her home, 1027
Ritchey street.
After a short business session,
the girls went to the home of Miss
Doris Jean Henry on Ritchey
-street, f°r an egg hunt. They re-
74 %, -
40 V.ns
v A
\ .2
chicken, salmon loaf, snap beans,
beet pickles, whole wheat muffins,
peaches, pears, cookies and iced
tea was served.
Announcement was made of the
purchase of a table for the club
house. Mrs. Elmer Fox was intro-
duced as a new member. Others
present included 15 members and
six guests.
GET READY NOW!
Men’s Warm- Weather
SLACKS.
015
M2g1
4.
1 package lime or raspberry
it was much more diffictt
to find baby shoes built to
help healthy foot growth.
Today every American child
prepntikcstr
* class. N
Present were Misses Darlene
Long. Patsy Lee, Emma Jo Perry,
Dolores and Onetia Fay Bewley,
Doris Jean Henry, Mrs. Bewley,
and Mrs. Leach.
.7-49
, Liberty Baptist
WMS Has Meeting
Members of the WMS of the
.liberty Baptist church met Thurs-
day afternoon at the church, the
I program was based on materials
■ from the Royal Service division
I (and the Bible.
The devotional was given by
j (Mrs. Oren Witherspoon, Rev. C. W.
/Henson, pastor. Mrs. Henson, Mrs.
g George Mossman, and Mrs. J. R.
Winstead were speakers.
The regular meeting date is the
; first Thursday in each month, and
i visitors are cordially invited.
Cleaners-Hatters
phone 72
So many requests have been
Inviting other women in the made for the Yum Yum salad reci-
--T--------
Texas Joins
.(Continued From Page One)
diers rode little boys and girls on
their mounts.
Four mothers were to be honored
in Amarillo’s big parade today.
They were Mrs. Flora Gray of
Alton, Ill., who has seven sons in
the army, and three mothers who
have six sons in the service—Mrs.
John Giles.of Athens, Tenn.; Mrs.
George Baker of Friona and Mrs.
J. A. Helton of Clarendon.
Amarillo’s Parade
More than 600 assault troops
from Camp Berkeley were to
march in Amarillo’s spectacle
along with nearly all the high
school bynds and school children
in the panhandle. One thousand
cowboys were to give the celebra-
tion a'distinctly Texas flavor.
At San Antonio — army-con-
scious in peace or war—the four
army posts were to be thrown open
schools—Brooks, Kelly and Ran-
dolph fields—to see how an aviator
is trained.
More (than 3,000 soldiers planned
a parade in downtown Fort Worth
today before returning to camp.
Sunday, big anti-tank guns boomed
with a roar that seemed to shake
Fort Worth’s Farrington field sta-
dium to its foundations as the 31st
(Dixie) division from Camp Bowie
demonstrated in an impressive dis-
play.
Soldiers from Camp Wallace,
coast artillery replacement center
in Galveston county, arranged to
parade through Galveston today
and the camp itself was to be
opened for public inspection. Fort
Crockett, also in Galveston, did
not plan to participate in the day’s
observance.
Parents of Service Men Honored
Fiftv parents of men fighting at
Corregidor and on Bataan Penin-
sula and 400 more .parents of men
in the service were to participate
in Pampa’s celebration?
The gates of Camp Bowie at
Brownwood were to be thrown
open to the public and bombing
planes planned a spectacular dis-
play at Midland where bom-
bardiers are being trained. t
The world’s largest air corps
technical school—Sheppard field at
Wichita Falls — made arrange-
ments for public inspection. Fos-
ter field at Victoria planned an
aerial review and West Texans
were to view cadets at work at
Stamford’s Arledge field.
More than 3,000 soldiers were
ready for a long parade in Hous-
ton while the largest formation of
planes ever to fly over the city was
scheduled. •
Two regimental parades and pub-
lic demonstrations in the art of in-
fantry combat were arranged at
Camp Wolters near Mineral Wells.
A tank destroyer battalion—a
fast-riding, hart-hitting unit—
scheduled a trip through Temple,
gelatine dissolve In % cup of hot to the publle. The crek secondrGakesville, McGregor, Moody and quote him as saying, "Just to be don’s -fourth consecutive campaign
infantry division at Fort Sam Betton so the public could see its expected; the nerves and tissues, for the office.
Demonstrates
Table Setting
Miss Nette Shultz, county home
agent, gave a demonstration on
correct table setting and offered
suggestions for the attractiveness
of a table, at the meeting of the
Woodbine-Dye Girls' 4-H dub, Fri-
day afternoon held in the auditori-
um of the Rad Ware school.
Opening the meeting by the
singing of “America,” the mem-
? ■
g Sanforized mi
• one per cent.
“The ophthalmoscope commonly
used at the date of this writing . . .
diagnostic value when thers of Geneva believe they have
— - licl-A ♦ k A n+A--Nhl A nA +i-A pa.
CLOTHES FOR EVERY
Mra FSH. LemchtAis teacher of the | ty girls and sponsors were present.
A. L. Farr at a luncheon. ~ for the information of all women
Miss Nette Shultz demonstrated interested:
. . OF THE TIME
GENVENA, Ill.—The city fa-
training although the camp is,not
complete. The tank destroyers
are in bivouac on the site.
Sunny Tuckers®
GIRLS’ DRESSES
Nautical bolero and AOm
pessant styles in prints WWW
andsheers.s-14 "-T
| xble
Leztkerdoe
Sizes 2 to 5 fine-whit
glove lother-Buittapro
opment. Sanitized for
hygienic protection:
"Cuddle-Back"-gives a
smooth, seamless bock;
holds the ankle energy*
Sizes 5% t 8,160,
(awes.Toq .
the making of spoon corn bread. ■
A.)
ea
The Paris region was under an was of no <__-______________
air alarm for an hour and a half; used in the examination of glass licked the automobile and tire ra-
early today. Anti-aircraft batteries eyes.” ' tioning problem.
Before his appearance in court; Mayor Oliver J. Adamson,,
here Saturday. Wisotsky branded Clerk Victor G. Johnson and city
the story “a complete fabrication," council members went into a hud-
.. . .. .. e .. die out of which developed:
"It is. the prerogative of .S' A bright, red bicycle parked in
dents, he said, “to lampoon their han- used only for
instructors.” J - -
can wear
F2‘40
2 \ •8 —
G- 72
Whaley Memorial Methodist
church will meet Monday, 7:30
p. m., in the home of Mrs.
1 . Royal Timmerman, 1102 East
Broadway. /
Tuesday
Lucy Lee club will meet
Tuesday. 2 p. m.. in the home
- of Mrs. F. S. Piott, south-
east of Gainesville.
Save on Notions
Spool of thread!
Snap fasteners
Darning eotton.
4c
Fancy buttons.
Organdy frilling.
Fine bias tape, 8c :
( g®-7
NOW..:. cam
Buy
22 They Wash and Wear!
RONDO* PRINTS
Old Fashioned Values in Fine Percales
Big florals, cunning prints, so lovely
you’ll want to start sew- a nyc
ing when you see them, se" A yd.
SHEER NEW COTTONS
Crisp lawns, fine dimities and other
washable cottons! Exquis- q A,
ite new prints for every use! yd.
SORORITY RAYON PRINTS
Bold splashy prints, quaint florals . . . •
they’ll inspire you to create Aec
better frocks for less mhoney" 3 yd.
Peachbloom Rayon j
CREPE - /
for all
ture notes constituted material
taken verbatim from text books
and that he bungled an attempt to
show a class how to take blood
pressure.
Finally some students devised a
trap for Dr. Fell, they said.
The students put a man with a
glass eye in a chair and asked Dr.
Fell to examine the eye through
an ophthalmoscope, an instrument
which permits the interior of the
eye to be viewed.
“Hmm, very interesting,” they
Miss Shultz Talks
To Dexter WHD Club
| DEXTER, April 6.—At a recent
meeting of the Dexter Home Dem-
onstration club, Miss Nette Shultz,
* county home agent, was the
speaker. Mrs. T. P. Corbett was
hostess in her home fora nutri-
. tion luncheon served at noon, fol-
lowed by a business meeting, with
Mrs. A. W. Henderson, president,
in charge.
Miss Shultz discussed “Hollow
and Hidden Hunger.” During the
recreational hour, games and con-
tests were featured, with prizes
won by Mrs. Louise Williams and
Mrs. Lorraine Wilson.
Twenty members and six visi-
tors were present.
just as I expected them to be. Very
interesting case.”
Which prompted the University
Medical, the school's student pub-
lication, to print in its next issue:
“Dear Dr. Fell:
“Enclosed is a section of the
primer 'Lesson in Ophthalmos-
copy’:
“ This is an ophthalmoscope.
“ This knob turns the light on,
etc.’ ”
Then at the end the article said:
" p. m., in the home of Mrs.
Frank Dustin, 207 East Gar-
nett street.
YWCA Executive board will
meet Tuesday, 3 p. m., with
Mrs. Wm. C. Culp, 1236 Lind-
say street.
Garden Study club, will meet
Tuesday, 3 p. m., in the home
of Mrs. Paul Morgan, 620
South Clements street.
Wednesday
Wednesday Bible club No. 2,
will meet Wednesday, 3 p. m.,
in the home of Mrs. Ira H.
Clement, 1326 Lindsay street.
A menu of rice and I
vegetable salad, bo
Galesut&i
! WauSUr I
Katharine Gregg Mission
circle of th" First Presbyte-
rian church will meet Monday,
. 8 p. m., in the home of Mrs.
George Brown, Jr., 115 East
Church street.
Young Life club will meet
Monday, 7:30 p. m., in the
home of Mrs. Annie Scott,
326 South Denton street.
city's three air’ corps flying central Texas, has already started
Sdidh66v
Sleek, foot-slimming pumps, for
spectator sports and draw wear!
Of soft, smart leathers.
Women’s Print
BATISTE
Flattering Styles i J
In New Glen-Row* if
Dresses
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226' 13
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8nd8g xa2kedhdde> 38
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SPORT 98
SHIRTS ■
• Long or ■
Short Sleeve •
• E ar Stripes 1.39
Men’s super Big Mac Work nm /
SHIRTS 9XC
• BLUE CHAMBRAY WWW
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 188, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1942, newspaper, April 6, 1942; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481143/m1/3/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.