The Examiner-Review (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 154, Ed. 1 Monday, July 29, 1918 Page: 2 of 4
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EVERYTHING
THE EXAMINER-REVIEW
■D r. BLACKSHEAR
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ANNOUNCEMENTS.
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IS TO
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Make Known
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people of Texas.
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FEDERAL AID FOR
TEXAS ASKED IN
LABOR SHORTAGE
promised
persuade
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F
Also, it may be suMested that lien-
after wiien the women voters make in
guiry as to how the male candidates
stand upon thia or that proposition.*
tie said male runners bad tettey comb
across with the proper dope
many
they
jj. it
*
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>
of the United States. department of
agriculture, and Dr. W. P. Hunter of
the Federal Horticultural board.
-- -••-e
Member of the Associated Press.
TJie Associated Press is exclusively
i -satitled to the use for republication of
■I news dispatches credited to It or
Government Is Asked to Raise Immi-
gration Ban on Mexican Labor; Mex-
ican Editors Entertained.
' K.-
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AH of the advertising of the past has
served according to its adequacy—and its
fruitage is seen in the goqd-will enjoyed by
your store now. . But past advertising does
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Electrify the Heme
-7-----------------—
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PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Publisher
mimi ■
.Station. ■ 'lex... July' 20 -I
re-stocking the droUlli.-|
AMERICAN AND ITALY
HAVE COMMON INTERESTS.
f
1
I
Y aS
TOMORROW
• “ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS”
with
Vitagraph’s Favorites
EDWARD EARLE and AGNES AYRES
The Q
-----TODAY—
•‘THE FLY GOD”
The conduct of the women of the
State on last Saturday has done more
for equal suffrage in thia State than
anything clue ti|at( has happened in a
cantury
was the cohnting.- According -to last
eotint at 2 :00 this afternoon. Congress-
man Eagle was about 2(100 dr la-ttcr
in ’Harris county in the lead of Mr.
Garrett, ail of which makes , us
wonder what in the world hecamii of
the twelve or fourteen thousand Mr.
Garrett assured us was in pickle.
<1
The Honorable Annie Webb Blanton
in the Atalanta of Texas politics.
We presume that those straddlera
who were wout to say they were to-
favor of suffrage If the women wanted
to vote are now satisfied.
not MAKE KNOWN the offerings NOW
' • . • ‘ • • ' . * ■ •. I * -
READY for your customers.
■ collectively, ale neither
•j amateurs in lids line. .
< ..'.iso. great assistauet' was
Air I i" Bednar who had chargei
tiie "flash, light" purtiym ‘Of tlie
I serCn e , ■ i -
i v • • f* tv’ ' .
Tim Examiner-lb view. ’ is always
Service ]. ;
I especial I.vain \v<‘. feel un>i-.y'
"■'■■•■ii.
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STATEWIDE CONFERENCE AT SAN
ANTONIO RESULTS IN SENDING
MESSAGE TO SECRETARY QF
'LABOR AT WASHINGTON.
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To Advertise
’ ■ Gram 'i ..
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bottl
OjbiERS ■
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*?*>*A*M***X*a*a*S****w*w****«*A^i*A**'
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PUBLIC APPRECIATED
REVOKE LICENSE OF
’ WL',7. It , DEALER, jj.
’’ ■
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The honor of the State has been
▼todieated.
ueen
, ’ E May Retain Twelve Pounds .a Month i
S for Each Pe; con in Family.
What you tell about your store in" to-
day’s advertising is what the readers of this
I®
Intermountiin Railway,
Light & Power Conyaay
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. I... .j--■-«!■ ■ -1
W. S. S.-,W. S. 8.—W. 8. S.
^4 .
According to the precedent set by
fete resignation thia ik the day for
Ferguson to retire from the governor’s
' rare.
• . -
save feed;
that have been ruined l>y three
- j.«“ars of drouth.’ increasing
the yield, of s/aple food cropfi in Hie
as a means of’helping to win tlie
eiftnbatting the pink boil worm
Pt
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featuring
Roy Stewart
and
Claire Anderson
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**
Candidates for office certainly
make some wonderful pre-election
eiiUiM We are reminded that when
Mr. Garrett apoke here lie assured
Wta bearers that he bad the votes of
twelve or fo irteen thousand g-ssl ’some, remedy, contains
women, of Houston.-wrapped up and
put away, and all that was ntfre^wtrv
adeiilS nor |
rendered
mhiiibhii. ho|H*s •>(.
'ihr. W.<fl hl < i ’ » ) ■
l' J ■ ' V
Hoti t in■ 7 '■;! ‘ e»tn J "X
wr.iygluilv i I ■ -d to ’’ t cars > .
io( oats d^to ir.m I,., i Omjeut;..
' 3.„...' ompaiiy of v.,« o; .
The hearing was < omlin'< 4 bv ape d '
eial ex.im;ii»r a,'-;., i. :• i by. E. A
Peden, Federal Food t.lii.hilstrutor for '.
Teias, and. thb OrtTofi.einent division ')
announces that fne,r> vocation wilbcon- ;'
tinmgin «.freef until fin tfu r notice. And i
no application for re issuance Of 11-j J
♦ cense will tie e'uteftalh' J by the Food I
A-b-!’ '■ :i'hcy. ,;
the war. Tlie Germans will know, if
tiu-y do not .obtain a decisive victory
this year, that they will themselves
i infallibly -lie^lefeated w|ieu America’
has had time to put her full strength
into tlie task. Therefore the Germans
are throwing all their available men
against the various points of opr de-
fensive line, hoping to break through
somewhere and bring about au im-
mediate decision.
."Tlie position at present may be
compared with the jfigantic Battle of
Waterloo, the armies of Prance and
Italy^ representing the English in the
famoiis battle, holding out for all
they are -worth against- the enemy's
frenzied attacks in order to afford
time for Americans to enter the fight
ami make victory cerfaitt, thus chang-
ing, our iron determination, fbat'^lhe
enemy shall got pass,'into tlie rertaiic
ty that we shall drive him is-fure US. ;
auitry.
Rome I
oehihsti.
It 1* thgf firne of year now for the ••America and Italy have
. begin joking the ^nts in common: Aliove all,
i feel that both fon^lit and won their
K independence. Both havg always
stiitai for liberty, for ■ i lie freedom oft
nationalities.
"We have now readied the crisis in Mexican editors who
People do not feel fully informed about
the events of the war unless they have
read the LATEST NEWS oj the war. They
may know what has happened—but they
want to know WHAT IS HAPPENING NOW.
In^tvery home where there Is
baby .there sboiyl'd also • bv a tot
of’ McGEE'S BABY ELIXIR It may
be needed at any time to correct
sour stomach. 'Wind colic, diarrhoea
or summer*<-omplalnt It is. a whole-
2_. no opium,
or morphine or Injurious drug of any
kind I’rire :i'.c and p< botie1
Sold by Jm). Quinn- -
The same principle applies to store
advertising
Ferguson-will not even get to plant
his foot in that war garden he told
Bs of.
into the heart of Iuh own
ITince Culuiuuv, Mayor of
wrote tlie following for the A
* ITi 'S :
The Examiner-Hevtew is moved.to. ‘Whi,
suggest that Mr. Ferguson probably p >•:*•*•* h'*
has departed for ills swihe ;iml sli, >f,p' ■' > ■ im-
ruucli ami la holding close <.ommuniou I,,f b Gi .iii u,
with the, former, as ja r Ids iu-pmis<- >'•’• I'fcl i
Mtoofld he 1* defeated. Every hiau to
‘ Mr taste, to say nothing of those ■ imt what ,nb\g m.-<k<-
birds wlrich are said to "flock fo-
^ther."
1*1
«««««««
paragraphers to
v“Atao rans.”
> ’W
J-lti'Oiav sfM-eihli .Avir,-’;'
cii'arejjiiy voii much iipprediat- Garrett anil l-bmie. if is pra<-ti<-aUy
. , ....lie.-1’ ; j • 1 - ‘ .
i-iiizi-jis pliion^ ri'iiuilv
•ere not
eb aijxBiusvy aw,ailing hi- ..
■ li(>ped_ would be
• candidate.,
Owing to tlie i unprecedented vote
oi'er the siiitix jt was early kno^ii
that anything lilte ;i full* return i
iiiipossibie on Saturday -night Ur
oil. Sumiuy. ' '■
- Uet urn’s on yoiiiity boxes was
very much' bailed up inasmuch
.miinlrer of pre|iipts
the tabulation ypf the. yotrf and even ( Tin* Exaniiner-Retiew wishes to ..
:rt this writing, Monday morning,' it perially thank Messrs. L. M. Ilewit.'
IjiisZ hot been jeoncliided at three or ollie McGee, Mathia^ Menger, H. Nl
toiii' places, v
Ily 12 :00 o'efock s>i
’it ,
State had gone for ^Governor Hobby
by an overwhelming vote. The same
thing was known in the race for State
Superintendent of Public Instruction, Examiner-Review force,
— - e ■’ ■ - . ' =
i>ww* v* w* ★ w* v* w* w* v* v* v*w*w*w*w*w* <★*★<
Vte Congress Eighth District—
JOE H. EAGLE (Re-election).
, DANIEL E. GARRETT.
Bar Representative 21st District—*
There are tw^ distinct classes of
■ 'wheat product rs^yn !’• xas- those-in ■
8 I the. northern part of thy Stale, who-]
a I have been in the ligliit of raising ’wheat j
scattered 'sections of the State who,
4
Now is thje time to make good on
that - resolution and Insure a
pleasant, comfort summer
WE ; SELL
ELEQTRICAL FOR THE HOME—
‘ ' I ..
May we have an opportunity to
»[ ■ ''1 -111 ’ 11
make your home comfortable.
All right* of republication of special intendeuts resided. Their "politieal” j
therefore used, IT it |
Miss Blanton came I
____ . I the votes I
she received is evidence that it is no 1
? longer good policy to “shy” around a
proposition .of so muefa moment as'
the late race for governor. Th tlie
meantime, it might be well for those
of his endorsers who Endeavored to
use their "political” influence, to be-
gin to cover their tracks so that tlie
thousands of women voters ^vill -not
HOWARD BENNETTE. . remember the incident later'when it
Bar Representative 22nd District— becomes necessary to elect school
DR. OSCAR DAVI8. trustees in the various! Texas towns
■ktr District Attorney— “ntl 'images. They might decide to
J. B. LEIGH. disarrange the personnel of some ot
M. L. BENNETT of Leon county, fix* Imards, all of which might also
Bor District JuQge 12th Judicial disarrange the plans of some ot Mr.
district— ’ jDoughty’s "political” superintendent
J. G. MCDONALD, Grimes County, friends. One never can tell.
E. A, BERRY (Present District
Judge) of Madison County.
County School Superintendent—
MISS UZZIE FAYE GRISSETT.
M A. MCDONALD (Re-election).
SUBSCRIPTION RATES L
Gm year ......................MOO
Three months 1.00
Per month ........... .^... i.... .40
■fugle copies ...... .06
and evil. ■'•-
Ihitl lbc;i-ut.,
-Hlld ji’.srii-- xi.’ibl tint: <a.i i
klijs n-uli i»* nidi i d-ue - >ta
thorough partii i[aition I v \
the-war
SERVICE RENDERED :
Food Administrator Peden has re-
turned from San Antonio, where ha
was present at a oonterence on the
labor situation, the result of which
was a message to William B. Wilson,
secretary of labor, uring that for a
period of 90 days the immigration lays
as to Mexican labor be Immediately
suspended and • the bars be let down
except aa to the health requirements.
The conference brought out the fact ;
that a small group of Texans in South-
ern Texas alone required,-40S000 Mexi- ;
can laborers In addition to those they
already have, and that the need is
manifold over the entire State.
As an interesting climax to the re-
quest that the present restrictions on
Mexican labor be ^removed, Mr. Peden
bad an opportunity to address the
> were recently
received in Washington., by President
Wilson. These editors were in San
Antonio on their way back to Mexico
after a tour .of the United Str.tes. In
hie address following a luncheon dt
the Gunter Hotel Mr. Peden read the
message from the provost ‘ marshal
general of the army to the Food Ad-'
ministration with reference to Mexi
canB'pf military age engaged in labor
in the United States and the generous
rulings provided for their military
exemptions; . . !—■
Administrator peden alejd wired Her-
bert Hoover, United States Food Ad-
ministrator, requesting that Mr Hoov-
er take the. matter up as a military
necessity with the Department of
Labor the need of additional labor at
once in order that the farnrer, who
was urged to plant larger crops,- may
not be discouraged to do likewise In
1919 • , .
iwuulle, ,I>. L. Ilufft* Geo. Hoeneke,. wl‘|o wU’i addres8
on Saturday night, j telegraph oiierators, for, their kind-
was practibally known tliat the ness.' in titkiug down tlie returns.
Without their loyal assistance the
small service rendered would have
been practically impossible since the
singly and
For once we voted, in nearly every
instance, in accordance with the ma-
jority over the State. . •
Rome. July 26.—"The fifth year of
war dawns full of hope for the
Entente,” Senator Guglielmo Marconi
said to the Associated Press. "We
have passed successfully through
many severe trials. Other trails may
be ahead of us, but in the light of the
dogged determination and the un-
datinted courage shown by all the
He is now truly the Hobby of the anted troops in the past we may look
into the future with all confidence and
’ trusf.
“America and
points in -common.*
newspaper KNOW about your store as it is
NOW. What you made known a week or a
month ago was the store’s story of a week
or a month ago-now history.
■T ^'f <
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Mr. Doughty said he refused to
bring the office Of Public Instruction
into politics, yet he later published a
lengthy tlocument carrying the names
of several hundred superintendents
and other school men, his friends’, :for
Mt otherwise credited in this paper the express purpose of creating sentii
MB also the local news published ment in his behalf in the various
barton. , ’ I towns over who* > schools the super-
A M> _•—*-*_ -_m —— —1.11 .-Al
■rm v* ivyuMuvoxivu VI
■topatchea herein are also reserved influence was
much or little. ---------
I out squarely for Hobby and
' Rntered at the Navasota postofflce i
M second class mail matter, as .re
■tore* by law.
Make It An
Electrical Summer
==
-fc ’ 1 ‘
Remcmbfer how you boiled and,
sheltered last summer over that
old cook stoved
Remember how you
yourself - you’ would
Friend Husband to—
Operators and Others
Valuable Assistance,
rhl
! ' - ■ “• ■’ ;
| for conuuerciai purposes, aud-thbse in Th,.. ,-i, , ;<tiKi< v n-mli iimI
scattered 'sections of the State who, saiunlar uicld* |L '
beginning last year, planted sufficient
wheat to feed themselves and tiu»ae«de- l’1.”’' ')« ' i ilj s
pendent upon them.. 'This latter class, j
the Food;’ Administration announces,
should first arrange* for sufficient
wheat out of their crops to feed their
families for the coining year on a basis
of 12 pounds per month per person,
.also enough for seeding purposes, if
they have more wheat than covers that
of providing for their. families and
seeding, the farmers should sell their
surplus to their neighbors for 'seeding
purposes exclusively, thereby putting ,
more farmers in a position to produce
their own bread for the coming year.
- “It Is the policy ot the Food Admin-
istration,” states Administrator Peden,
"to have all farmers, wherever possi-
ble, plant sufficient wheat for their
own consumption-and those dependent
upon them. If there is any ether im-
pression it should be corrected at
once.
"The public may rest assured that
the United States Food Administration
iwill do everything it possibly can for
Jibe farmer producing wheat for home
consumption, and the only reason they
(Were restricted in the use of wheat list
gr*ar was that the crop was so short
tfet it was absolutely necessary to get
«*ery grain of wheat to the mills in
order that this government could take
care of the obligations in the army,
navy and allied countries-
"Because of the fact thkt there would
■be a considerable waste and spoilage
the quantity retained on farms were
ground at once, the Food Administra-
tion requires that out of the 1914
{wheat erop only sufficient wheat of
jtbo 12-pound per person per month al-
lotment be ground to last until Ooto-
*er 1. When that period has passed
additional grinding is in order.
. "Both the commercial wheat pro-
daeer and the small producer for fam-
117 *nd seeding operate on the
(Mme plan so far as the 12 pounds per
iperson a month goes. The exception
to only in that the small producer atay
distribute his surplus among his neigb-
ibors for seed.”
''' w
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ilie fifth
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< i i I -s__________ ' 'i’lu Examinvr-lli *.iew‘ is ;ilw;ij»>
n . , . : , • ' j «l<-<-pi.'. ;:pi>i <-<-ial i) v lur. i(hy
Examiner-Review Under Obligation To Local n .‘ii I
p _ . 'uldiualioii l<» fljbso \V^o Cirnic- h| 1
;issistajH:<! ktst- Saiunu/y iiigiit.
.* . .>-■■■— --------4 '/
PLANS TO KKII \BILH Af;i
WESTERN STOC K RANGE.
on. .\li.-s lililnton . simply ''ruiiii'iitg mwav" I’’ ... " ! ’’ .■ ,
*■ ,'- * i By. tssofhiied Press.)
El.ainincr iv.ith iig- iliing: ... ■ 1 , Ftvlkgf : ’ ’
i-muiCvl ion. ' In llh*. i;opgtcssionul rajV between I’IJns fol' n—stocking the
si in-ken Aeelions of Texas wifi, nieat-j
, . ... , ’ proJ'.K’l.ing animals, inducing furmere
surer! • Dial l-.au'le will uni out l>V ;a , . —
. • ‘ J. ; to build silos in order to
eoi'- tb»>n.'-:nnl or more in ’th<‘ rlistrict, I
, . .' •< • ' | crops t uai
■tr-rl 111 tbe l}alris comity |H.illing Mr. Eagle out ' Simessive
>1’ a rather dangerous pocket.
In the race For county school s*iper?
'intenileiit Miss GriSsctt is rmmhig a'1''’11'
race lik- mi ohi-titnet* ami the in-' a,hi »' ?<’”“• ilie ^ine f
'••'complete' returns’ only show Mr Me- Uli?°r ,,e «ivwl e,’“-
*’ ,. ri , , ... , . i, . sTderatioJi during the tw’enty-first an-
eveir ai'<‘iit 4!» votes, in the lead. ■
. .. * • . irtial session of the Texas Farmers
>,lhis may be overeoine-tn the, returns'
, • it’ongress which convenes here at A.
also' ■v‘‘t ,o arrive..
laud M. College today. <
as a Further tabulation will b.* attempt- practIcaUy a„ of the organized
did not conclude**.! al 3:00 o’clock this tH'ter.mon. * Hve sto(.k producers of
‘■s- i the state will l»e represented at the]
meeting.
• Among the' distinguished speakers-
_____ _____ _______> the meeting are
Clarence Ousley, assistant secretary
of agriculture,.Dr. George M. Rommel,
chief Of the animal husbandry division
J4
<‘rl b\ I he .pitbiic.-' ; j
Many r-itizejy; jt'lib
tuxrs of ’till- cojjn^y Jw
iiihlh-me. ea...
formal ion whijh i hi'
i;jv<rraid<> to his liajrlicular
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Blackshear, Ed F. The Examiner-Review (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 154, Ed. 1 Monday, July 29, 1918, newspaper, July 29, 1918; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1327677/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.