Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 31, 1951 Page: 5 of 8
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5—Gainesville (Tex.)' Daily Register
Ross Point HD Group Recommends Spaghetti Dish
Fri., Aug. 31, 1951
1
Classified Ads Bring Results.
WALTER JENKINS
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As Seen by His Home Folks
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he Wichika Falls Chamber of Commerce
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‘Walter Jenkins
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SAYS
We are proud of him, and extend the best wishes of his home town eitizena
ith
STATE SENATOR
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For— ffHe has no ambitions other than
Today’s Birthday...
Candidate for
Pol. adv. paid for by Elmer H. Parish and other Wichita Falls friends el Walfer Jenk?n.
Congress
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GET ONE FREE WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
NEW FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR
Your Key to Grealer Value
lllahon
Simmons Buick Company
Dixon at Broadway
Phone 1413
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WESTERN PETE
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WALTER JENKINS
-
* APPLIANCES ,
ELECTRIC
Gainesville Community Circus
Concludes Most Extensive Season
You never tried a fine car
like This One
KDNT (Denton)___7:15-7:30 pm
KSWA (Graham) _ 6:15-6:30 pm
KGAF (Gainesville) 6:00-6:15 pm
KVWC (Vernon) ‘-8:00-8:15 pm
KSEY (Seymour) 9:15-9:30 pm
KELT (Electra) 7:00-7:15 pm
KOLJ (Quanah) _.7:15-7:30 pm
'You’ll find that the Roadmaster has a high-
compression, valve-in-head power plant that
is also Buick’s own-a mighty Fireball
Wester
Auto
I
ick
xas
.15
. 9
. 9
71
68
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and
the
He has served his state and nation for more than ten years without any thought of per.
sonal reward. He has worked long and cheerfully, ever attentive to the needs and de.
sires of the people of Texas. He has no ambitions—other than to render a good publie
service.
As an expression of appreciation from his home town folk for his unselfish service as
assistant to Senator Lyndon B. Johnson.
’ct.
144
107
104
296
294
279
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOCIATE STORE
You’ll find the extra comfort of double-depth
Foamtex cushions in Roadmaster only.
KFDX (990 on dial) 6:15-6:30 pm
KWFT (620 on dial) 6:15-6:30 p.m.
KTRN (1290 on
1
/
Door prizes were furnished by
local merchants.
Engine endowed with more performance
than most owners will ever need.
~Henry S. Grace,
PRESIDENT
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83333333 38
. 3: • 3
By direction of die Board of Directors,
January 17, 1950
tary schools so they may receive
special attention and help at Mc-
Murray.
speak over the following radio
stations Saturday, Sept. 1:
CLIFF
7.
of
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b-
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ith
60
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at
ext
ni-
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At-
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la-
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us-
Good Congressman
hit
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lay
SHALL WE LIMIT
FEDERAL TAXING AND
SPENDING?
HEAR
Ace Garage
110 North Denison
PHONE 1779
%7 ou’ve a right to set your sights higher
I when you buy a fine car.
You can rightly expect more room — more
comfort—more performance —and a lordly
smoothness in the way it carries you.
So we present these facts:
You’ll find, in a Roadmaster, more usable
room than you’ll find in any other six-
passenger car in America,
Classified Ads Bring Results.
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(GM
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WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WI LI BUILD THEM
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to render a good public serviced9
1
NO WONDER PEOPLE ALL OVER THE 13TH DISTRICT
ARE SAYING—
Will Make Us a
____6:15-6:30 pm
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SPAGHETTI DISH A MEAL—After business come pleasure, and what could he more
pleasant than sitting down to one of Mrs. Luc y Turner’s spaghetti dinners? Members of the
Ross Point Home Demonstration club watch as Mrs. Turner serves the plates.
1
WANTED
Men to Train
For Real Estate Appraisers
Age 21 to 60. Must be resident of this county two or more
years. Competent appraisers receive $175 to $325 per month.
Farm experience valuable.
Write Box 523, Gainesville, Texas
Early Morning Collision
Damages Two Automobiles
Two automobiles were dam-
aged, but no injuries sustained
by the occupants, in a two-car
collision at 8:55 a.m. today at
For those who like one main
dish at a meal and for those who
like something more solid than
dainty sandwiches at club meet-
ings Mrs. Lucy Turner, Rosston,
has a very pleasing answer. Her
spaghetti dish which serves up
to 15 people receives a vote of
confidence by members of the
Ross Point Home Demostration
club.
Mrs. Turner said she serves
crackers, potato chips, and pic-
kles with the spaghetti dish.
“Anything which isn’t too rich
goes with it,” she said.
Spaghetti Dish
1 cup spaghetti (uncooked)
2 large green peppers
2 large onions
1 pound or more hamburger
meat.
Cut up the peppers and onions
and fry in fat until done; add
the meat and fry until done. Add
soup and tomatoes to mixture to
taste. Boil spaghetti until done
and rinse with cold water. Add
the spaghetti to mixture and sim-
mer until ingredients are well
mixed.
Mrs. Turner said she had been
serving the dish for meals and
special occasions for about a
year. “I haven’t heard any com-
plaints about it yet,” she said
with a twinkle in her eye.
responds to your slightest wish — the quick
answer you get when you nudge the throttle
—the extra security you feel in the velvet grip
of the brakes—the complete freedom from
tension you find in Dynaflow Drive — the
sense of mastery that makes every mile a joy.
And, confidentially, there’s one more impor-
tant way in which Roadmaster stands
alone, and that is in the modest cost of its
pounds and performance.
Better come in soon and check for yourself
what a great car and a great buy this one
really is.
Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject to change without notice.
Euea
888
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ENGINE =
GEN. CLIFTON B. CATES,
born Aug. 31, 1893, in Tipton-
ville, Tenn., is commandant of
the intersection of Scott and
North Dixon streets.
Involved in the accident were
Mrs. Anna Flusche Loerwald,
65, of Lindsay and Wm. Wesley
Rudd, 85, of 521 Cunningham
street. Police report that Rudd
was driving east of Scott street
and Mrs. Loerwald south on
Dixon when the cars collided.
Damage to Mrs. Loerwald’s
1950 Chevrolet was estimated at
$30 and damage to Rudd’s 1939
Plymouth was placed at $15.
t
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ttaM
A.V
City’s Exceptional
Children To Go to
McMurray School
A special classroom in McMur-
ray school has been designated
for use in teaching exceptional
children. Children from Frank-
lin, Lee and Lindsay schools who
might need extra help because
of vision or hearing defects, a
physical handicap or slowness in
learning should transfer to Mc-
Murray school where facilities
for giving them extra help are
being set up.
School for these children will
start some 10 days after Septem-
ber. Mrs. Julia Kinard, who
will teach the class, is recover-
ing from an automobile accident,
therefore school will not convene
for these children as soon as for
others.
Children who do not need to
remain in /his room all the
time, but only need extra help,
will receive this help as often as
necessary, depending on the rat-
ing given by the health nurse.
Mrs. Kinard will work closely
with the health nurse and home
room teachers.
Parents of these children are
asked by Supt. Roy P. Wilson to
request a transfer from the prin-
cipals of the other three elemen-
Sr
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hg 2I
W. E. Chalmers to Receive
Master’s From SMU Today
W. E. Chalmers, dean and reg-
istrar of junior college, will re-
ceive his master’s degree from
Southern Methodist university at
6 p. m. today in Dallas.
Five local teachers have also
received master’s degrees this
summer. They are Mmes. Dor-
othy King, high school teacher,
Kate Pearson, junior high, Myr-
tle Stout, junior high, and Lena
M. Corbin, McMurray school,
and Miss Eunice Brown, Benja-
min Franklin school. They' re-
ceived their degrees from North
Texas State college at Denton.
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paid off the balance of $2,500 due
on Gerry, the baby elephant,
with a bank balance at the end
of a year’s tour.
In addition to the shows, the
circus has had a number of
profitable seat rentals during
the season.
There were no serious acci-
dents during the season, for
which the board of directors and
members were thankful.
I'm
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1nn1948. Kenwon.
high honors for —
d i stinguished ,
combat records o
in both world as 1a 4/ a,
wars. He served
HOME OWNED and OPERATED by
808 088
s12 E. CALIFORNIA PHONE 27
Fall Fashions Reviewed
By B&PW Club Thursday
Fall leaves and flowers deco-
rating the stage set the atmos-
phere for the style show given
Thursday evening at the Junior
high school auditorium by the
Business and Professional Wom-
en’s club in Gainesville and the
Hollywood shop.
Back-to-school fashions in
sports and dress gave the teen-
age miss a chance to view com-
ing fashion trends. Fall and
winter coats both trimmed and
untrimmed were shown in the
second part of the show.
Jimmy Harpole sang several
selections and a group of chil-
dren from the Era community
entertained. Master of ceremo-
nies was Jerry Tally. Miss Joan
Beckner, Mrs. J. H. Newby and
Mrs. H. A. Baker played the
piano.
Models were Mmes. Don How-
ath, Stella Rowe, H. F. Couch,
R. L. Beckner, Glenn Wilson,
and J. H. Newby and Misses
Bette Aughtry, Virginia Green-
1
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a
ea
Gainesville Community circus
Thursday night concluded its
22nd and most extensive season
at Fort Worth under auspices of
Leonard Bros. stores, which en-
tertained their customers with
the show.
Three performances were
given in Will Rogers coliseum
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs-
day nights, with 12,000 versons
in attendance each night. Tick-
ets were given away at Leon-
ard’s stores but were insufficient
to meet the demand in spite of
exceptionally warm weather.
The circus played nine en-
gagements this season and trav-
eled greater distances than ever
before and attendance of 120,000
was the greatest for any season.
Particularly outstanding was the
attendance of 18,000 at Odessa in
two nights at regular prices.
The engagements played, in
order, were: Gainesville, Gar-
land and Abilene in April and
May; Amarillo, Dallas, Childress
and Carlsbad, New Mexico, in
June: Odessa in July and Fort
Worth in August. Five of the
trips were 200 miles or further.
The Carlsbad engagement was
the first the show has ever
played outside of Texas and Ok-
lahoma.
The season was also exception-
al from a financial standpoint.
The show was able to meet the
heavy expenses attendant upon
preparing for the season, and
NOW The Famous
he Executive Committee ,
Q2. ep.naK
42722, kk^^
.E. --S. .r,
C. P. McGAHA PAT H. SIMMONS 7
wood, Jane Gayle Crowford,
Dorothy McCain, Ellen Lynn
Preston Barbara McCoy and
Mary Jo Walter.
. 28
* 3338585
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And you’ll find that a Roadmaster rolls
with unsurpassed levelness and poise, thanks
to coil springs on all four wheels—which is
still another feature found on no other car in
the fine-car field.
But the thrill that is yours, when you get this
willing beauty out on the open road, is
something that can’t be summed up in
any listing of features, one by one.
It’s a “feel” which, we honestly (
believe, no other car can approach.
It’s the sure way this dazzling per-
former holds the road —the way it
- eaA/2g
7 1
88 V
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ga,
in major cam- clifton b. cates
paigns in France in World War
I and in battles for the islands of
the Pacific in World War II. His
favorite sports are hunting and
fishing.
M
Spend some time at the Western
Auto Associate Store and cash
in on the many bargains they
have to offer. Their widely
assorted stock permits you a
wide selection in home and auto,
needs. Ask about their budget
plan.
Med i ‘0
OASIS
DECANTER
This attractive 2-quart
emerald green, Duraglass
Container features the
patented TOUR - THRU
Aluminum rust-proof Cap
that allows you to pour
W i t h o u t removing the
top, then automatically
closes to seal out odors.
The perfect refrigerator
bottle or a distinctive
table-piece.
ONLY 7 9
di 4 ia m
stew
S22*ei
guIMIIMIMa,
€2 \
i 262
d Egmlb
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I HILILLLLIIDL--" J
■ CAN YOU !
iSTOP1
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WMaa
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goh,
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in 1917
Gen. Cates en- aMMha
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Negro Charged
With Theft of
Money at Dance
One Negro was arrested by
county officers this morning and
charged with theft, and another
colored man is being held in city
jail charged with discharging a
gun within the city limits.
J. C. Howard is in Cooke coun-
ty jail charged with theft of a
billfold containing $28. The com-
plaint was filed by T. C. Flow-
ers, colored, who asserts that
Howard grabbed the billfold
from his pocket about 12:15
o’clock this morning at a dance.
Bond for Howard was set at $500
this morning by Justice of the
Peace Clyde J. Matherly, How-
ard was arrested by Deputy
Sheriff Archie Nichols and Con-
stable W. A. Fletcher.
Another young colored man
was arrested early today by city
police and charged with dis-
charging a gun within the city
limits in violation of an ordi-
nance. The accused stated that
he fired the .38 caliber pistol
into the ground in an effort to
scare a colored motorist who al-
most struck him with a car. The
incident occurred about 1 a. m.
today in the 500 block of North
Throckmorton street.
—/ Tyg -pe
# 3
4*
THE WAY TO GET A
CUSTOMER TO SPEND
SOME MONEY WITH
YOU IS TO SPEND
SOME TIME
WITH HIM. P
l we ADJUST t
g AND RELINE a
i BRAKES /
‘ea
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 31, 1951, newspaper, August 31, 1951; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538458/m1/5/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.