The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 12, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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Real Estate and Fire Insurance.
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SAFE INVESTMENT
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INSURANCE
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A few Dollars saves lots of worry
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Fire Insurance*
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Stock Judging Contest.
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NO ALUM—NO LIME PHOSPHATES.
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The Examiner-Review
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Ed F. Blackshear
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.....84
TELEPHONE
MAILROAD TIME TABLE.
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11:42 p. m.
Valuable Timber Becoming Extinct.
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m it tee is for. If the charges A-e
naval untrue, they will be easily dis-
m&nder Sims sound on the face
of them like unreasonable crith
cism, but the Naval Committee
This sort of weather puts fish-
ing notions in a fellows head.
Entered at the Navasota Postoffice
as second-class mall matter.
A :
The classified column will sell
your chickens, eggs and other
truck. Try it.
either. If there is anything in
the charges against the navy, it
ought to be brought out. That
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by shutting up the witness and
not allowing Him to talk. The
has been thrown into contact Subject needs to be threshed out
with^many naval officers, each of and the more publicly the better.
A Georgia journal says: “Col.
John Temple Graves has beat it
to the land of milk and honey.”
Which properly translated per-
haps means," the land of mint
and money.
Makes the most nutri-
tious food and the most
dainty and delicious.
ROYAL
BAKING
POWDER
The only Baking Powder made
from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar
No fussing or fretting over
the biscuit making. Royal
is the aid to many a
cook’s success.
whom has some particular hobby
as is only natural with men of
any profession who are interest-
ed in their work. Some of these
officers, in perfectly good faith
. probably, declared that the
American warships carried their
armor belt too low. Others
Reports from several of our
farmers is received to the effect
that a very fine stand of corn is
noticeable every where, and
especially in the bottom, The
ground was in splendid condition
and the weather has been extra
goocPfor the constant growth of
young vegetation. If no backset
occurs and a corn crop is
assured, it will mean thousands
of dollars to the country.
found in this country that will
take the place of hickory. Manu-
facturers say that no steel or
wire ? spoke has yet been found
that will withstand the wear and
tear of the hickory spoke and for
this reason the welfare of the ve-
hicle industry seems dependent
upon the conservation of. the
hickory supply.
Automobile and carriage manu
facturdrs, along with the m6nof
the allied vehicle industries, are
giving very serious consideration
to the question of the future
wppiy ^hickory timber. This
wood, Which is one of the most
important of all wqods, since no
satisfactory substitute for it has
been found, plays a more im-
portant part among the commer-
cial timbers than many people
realize.
For automobile and carriage
wheels, where strength, tough-
ness, and resilency are essential
The Fort Worth Stock Show
has again offered liberal induce-
ments to students to enter a live
stock judging contest to be held
at Ft. Worth on March 13-14.
Classes of cattle, horses, sheep,
and swine are to be judged and
reasons given for the various
placing. The four students
whose judgments are nearest
correct and their reasons best
willreceive the following cash
prizes: first $50; second, $25;
third, $15; fourth, $10. Students
of the animal husbandry depart-
ment look forward to this event
with great interest and more
than one club for special study
has been organized. The fresh-
man class' in agriculture has
held a meeting and voted to pay
the trip expenses for two of the
most popular judges in their
class. The men selected for the
free trip were 8. H. Ray of Fal-
furrias, Texas, and H. P. Brown
df Cuero, Texas.
It is from the records made in
these state shows and contests
that a te^m of five seniors is
selected every year to represent
Texas in an international contest
at the Chicago show.—The?
Battalion.
great big gains in politics. In
the very nature of tilings those
who kick against the wishes of
the majority fall down good and
hard after a season.
Kentucky has set the country
an example in politics that the
Democrats party ought t<> b°
ashamed of and which, at
the same time, should appeal to
the better sense of dissenters
down here in Texas. Kept up,
the present quarrel in the party
is going to hatch out a peck of
trouble that time only will elimi-
nate. ' :
North Botina
No. 218, through train.....!
No. 206, mixed train.. .... OJSB a. na.
South Bound.
No.,217, through train..... .6.28 a. m
No- 205 mixed train <i:50p. m-
No's. 206 and 205 rtm between Som-
erville and Cleveland.. -
Arrival and departure ot k 4 T.
ae< G. C. G 8. F. train* from the
Satai■ 4epot; me i. & G. N. trains from
-Gait lopot one block north.
H. A T. C.
North Bound.
No.3day...
xot 5 night .
^»o. 31 Day...,
/South Bound.
: ■: ■ ..
-: No. 2 day...-. ri. .
No. 6 night...... ...
No. 32 Day....-----
A. C. A S. F.
thought that the ships did not
have enough freeboard, others
thought that the ammunition
hoists could be improved and
: others that the turrets were not
1 properly protected. All these
points are technical matters that
furnish subjects of discussion
* for the naval boards of all great
powers, and all of them have
figured (Ait in the light of the
best naval construction with each
successive warship that the
'-American navy has built. But
Mr. Reuterdahl bunched All of
the criticisms and made it ap
pear that the whole of the Ameri-
can Navy was fit for little but
li.Ti P. iu. pile. Therefore the
LA.fA. p. Uit
. .7 a. m. Senate Committee on naval af- ,
fairs has had numerous witness
......4:36 p.m. es before it, Admiral Converse.
.3:42 a. m. Admiral Capps and a number ol
..3:30 p.m others, all of whom have agreed
that the charges of bad con
struction were unfounded. It
•was not till the committee got
11:24 p. m before it Commander Sims this
week that they found anyone to
agree with Mr. ReutcidahJ.
Commander Sims said that all of
the charges brought against the
navy were true beside many
others that had not been brought.
He said that American sailors J
did not know how to shoot, in
spite of the fact that they now
hold the most of the gun records
of the world. And he said ot her
things of the same sort. But as
soon as he started to saying dis-
agreeable. things the committee
shut him up as though they were
afraid of finding out something.
This did not seem very good qualities, no other wood has been
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Soreheads never make any
I. A O. rt. '
14 Northbound arrive .11:25 a. m
15 Southbound arrive; ;.. . 5:40 p m
Madisonville Branch, y-
Leave Navasota.. .........llt30 a m
Arrive Navasota.. ........ 5:30 pm
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• The Nary Investigation.
There is nothing particularly
edifying in the investigation that
has been going on this week be-
fore the Senate Committee on
Naval Affairs. The thing all
oame up through the magazine is what the investigating com-
article written some months ago
by Henry Reuterdahl, a
artist, who made the discovery proved. The comments of Com-
that everything was all wrong
with the Navy. Mr. Reuterdahl
is not a navy expert, not a war
ship constructor nor anything in is never going to getat the truth
that line. He is merely an artist
who in the course of his work
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Blackshear, Ed F. The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 12, 1908, newspaper, March 12, 1908; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327544/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.