The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 255, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 22, 1917 Page: 1 of 4
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PREDICTS A DRY
r
State
THIS IS A NATIONAL BANK
ml
ami who
WHO
w
subject to Federal regulation super
PAYS
vision ami examination
I ’ields
Five times every year National Hanks
report fully to the V. S Comptroller’#
THE FIDDLER?
Department at Washington
experts of the
apeeted hi detail by
same Department
welcomes
Hank
The First National
they attest to the
such Investigation#
provide lor the
st l ength and (stability of thia Institu-
tion
assured efficient, re-
Nponeibie and courteous service
First National Bank
a
The
Bay City. Texas
on
I
i'.
a
o
on
*
■MVL'M
SAID
HAS
MAN
WISE
MOST —SOME
COUNTS
We have a Carload
lust Arrived
iw
GUARANTY FUND BANK
Jas. W. Rugeley Company
■HMI
a
SALE
MOV
OU
1
Still going on and there are yet many
'•I
Good Bargains
Come in and look them
find what
You
over.
can
you want and the price is ri ght
D. P. Moore Dry Goods Emporium
ft
WiMI
iBSnJBtffl
♦
Many an account has been started; many a Banking con-
nection has been made from a DOLLAR DEPOSIT, that
4 per cent interest paid
time certificates of deposit.
We issue letters of credit good in all parts of the United
States
311
125b
The picture
worse cases,
than
average
♦
♦
*
♦
*
♦
0, a
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1
tn,.
9K I
I 111
1032
6S5
5 in
sis
♦
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♦
■
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Order No
49
......
S4
______ 142
. 1X0
202
...... 221
..... 21
..... 59
..... 72
Dodge Bros. Cars
BAY CITY BANK & TRUST CO.
Guaranty Fund Bank
... i <
... xi
XX
... 107
... 125
... 133
... 136
... 1X5
... IXS
230
b.d,
7X1
1 110
nothing to
Bank Ac-
X/OU DO, if you fail in the
years of your productive-
ness *6 provide lor the
RAINY DAYS and LEAN
YEARS.
Editors
clo which
I 1916, and
Last of the Lol# Weber Super-Attrac-
tion# Come# to the Grund Mon-
day. Unthtee and \lglit.
“THE HA Ml THU
IHM’hS THE I 111111.1:.“ I
You will have
regret if you start
count with us now.
of natural laws,
those pertaining to
1 began this study when
*A
k'
*i
y
C3J
-
J
J
1
u
(By .Jane McLeanj
film play at the Broadway
W; W 1
TljU 11 > M
11 11 ®
’ T i Th
i J v it [
75 to 100 years prior
Then from the history
heart of oaks, from tradition handed
down from my father who began to !
farm in Texas early in the fifties, and |
from my own experience after I
old enough to farm and observe for
myself. I unhesitatingly say that, for
considerably over 100 years that every j pavilion
'ear of these that ended in tho digits Good ipusie
Note
was
seat out to the
I which wan published in the Dail'
it we miss the danger pre- '
worse off. ■
iTheatie which has excited a great deal I
I of comment during its rim I# still ut-
tracting large audiences. .Men and
women with real principle proclaim
"The Hand That Hooka the Cradle" a. I
necessity, and that if through the
sincerity of its production it has
placed before the public an honest I
statement woven about a picture that
is in itself thoroughly unexnggerated
as far as the real truth is concerned,
then indeed It has fulfilled the mission
if intended to accomplish.
\ great deal has been said on the
Those who
words
The following arti '
dated Decemlmt 29. |
out
I tecetnliei
press and
Td-
tlie
1917,
several of |
repro
Albert I
Edward
Britten
Ant horn
William l>
Layton Moore
Sitnuel Henderson
Prank Parker
The picture. with an eye to the re-
list of the nano
ally called for tin
ul been exempted
I IM HI PI ll^OXs < II I I it ivn» I lli SI HA It I O| | HI
I MTI II M il ls M»T I \l HIM I It OH Bist HlKGEiL
In busy cities or tho country road, the Ford is a
favorite over the whole motor field. There are
strong reasons why half the buyers of America de-
mand Ford cars. They have proved their worth
under the most trying conditions In all parts of the
world People buy Ford cars because they know
what they have done and will do. They have be-
come one of tho every-day necessities. Touring car
$360, Runabout $345. Coupelet $505. Town Car |595,
Sedan $645, all f.o.b. Detroit. On display and for
sale by Bay City Auto & Sales Company.
The First Dollar
A
A*
*
*
*
Hay city,
Texas, the
Every patron is
I Isserl# I hut He Bases III* Forecast
I pop it Long Series of Observations
and Would lime ill Warned.
Mis W. F. Pattison entertained
'i n r of friends, in honor of Mr. and
S. .1. Baker and family who mo-
tored down from League City, to at-
tend the blrthdav partv of the hostess,
was
Twice a year National Hanks are tn
subject of birth control.
have, merely heard the words and
have thought that because of their
newness they must of necessity he
radical and wrong have greatly hurt
the greatest, movement toward prog
resB that has ever been really started.
Birth control in tho hands of the
light people Is a necessity that will
simply and surely solve some of the i
greatest problems that the country'
21. 1 faces today.
21-23
4^
*
. 1 . , J *
has opened the way to business seccess and independence. £
We desire to serve you and aid you in habits of thrift, and *
every account will receive, accordingly, our painstaking f
attention. *
*>
FIRST STATE BANK:
cent violation of the law on the part
of women who have sought to allevi-
ate the suferings of others, does not
force anything upon its audience.
Neither does it claim an immediate
solving of the problem. It does Just
one thing. It tells a pleasing and In-
teresting story about human people
ind it sets forth some of the unattrac-
tive truths that exists in the world to-
day, simply and with real sincerity of
purpose. That horrible things do ex-
ist we there find out for ourselves in
any hook on social evils,
shows not so much the
for there must he many worse
those shown, hut it does show
cases that might happen in any home,
and it loaves entirely to the individ-
ual the manner of acceptance of the
picture itself
Lola Weber and her husband. Phil-
lips Smalley, have given us pictures
before that have hit at problems and
suffering that might be alleviated.
Their picture called "Idle Wives”
showed another phase of life and
eventful unhappiness, Just as this new
picture does. It does seem that we
ought to fake the great work that they
are trying to advance in tho spirit
that is shown .and in appreciation try
to understand that, after all, progress
in any direction is a definite gain
-------—.......—0—0 ........ ■
FOR RENT; 15 00 PER WEEK—
Nice cottage' with sleeping porch and
shower bath; furnished for camping.
At the encampment grounds entrance
W M Teal. Palacios, Texas 22d
----—o—O- -
Matagorda County needs for cottou
J farmers.
bune on January 1. 1917, and in
Weekly Tribune on January 5,
has been remembered by
our readers and is herewith
tlueed on account of its peculiar acett
racy. We take it that Mr. Halbert is I
some prognosticator and puts to flight t ■'32
many such as the government etn
’ loyes and Foster.
■
YEAR EOR TEXAS l. al Board for the Count) of Matagorda, State of Texas
hen ! . crtifie: to District Board. Southern District, Houston.
•...... --- Ifollowing list of the names and addresses of persons who have been duly
military service of the l ulled State#
<>r discharged
Moonlight dance at Matagorda
Friday night, August
(By JI. A. Halbert I
Coleman, Texas, December 25. 1916
It is human nature to unveil the fu
ture. Many imposters thrive upon
this pretended gift. I have no ax to !
grind except to serve my class. Neith-
er am I a pessimist or a calamity [ ti and 7
i howler. Yet 1 never shirk the truth,
as 1 see it, to predict things to please.
Hence this message to my brother
farmers Prepare for a very' dry year.
| The rains will be light and scant, es-
J pecially during the growing season,
land little moisture to begin with at
i nl inting time, and that, little will es-
cape rapidly as tho season advances.
Hence plant early and risk a late frost
rather than watt too long and fail to
get your crops up. Theje will bo suf-
ficient showers to make some cotton
and drouth resisting feedstuffs if once
up and the little moisture conserved.
This prediction and advice is nnt
founded on a whim, but based upon a
profound study of natural laws, and I raise late
especially those pertaining to the! drouth,
weather. I began this study when a
farm boy in old Washington County, in ■ until we reach the year ending in
Texas, over 50 years ago In felling d, , 19 u. which arc as a rule the
giant trees to split rails ami rive <• t < cop years of that decade
boards I would pry into the secret of ---------- o —o—- — •
their ages and what each year brought \ |.\H\ I’iRTJ
forth in the way of "ring growth” for
Io that date,
revealed in the ,
Mr*
Name
Dupree Newsome
William l< Roberts
I 1. Childs
George DeWitt
Hezekiah Wien
David Cotmlius Cooper
Alex Kiner.......
.lames Morris . .
Calvin Ward
John James Moll
Walter Scotl ...
Moses Farri: .... ...
Henry Law
I K. Schroeder
Green.....
Max Sparks
Lee . .
Address
Pledger. Texas
Markham, Texas
Huy City, Texas.
Palacios, Texas . .
Bay City. Texas ..
Palacios, Texas .
• Markham, Texas
Pledger, Texas
Palacios. Texas
Bay City, Texas
Van Vleck. 1’u.xas
Wadsworth, 'Texas.
Palacios, 'Texas
. Midfield. Texas ...
Bay City. Texas.
(Teniville, Texas
Wadsworth, 'Texas
Bay City, Texas
Bay City. Texas...
Buy City, 'Texas...
j,. ...... 7 were dry years in Texas. Those
(Hiding in . are the dryesi from uc-|
cumulative drouth and more general
over Hie State
I hope that I may he mistaken, oi
rather than 1917 will be an exception
to this long estublisheil rule. \t any |
rate, to be forewarned is to be fore |
armed, and
parod for we are none the
Heavy to excessive ruin - can be ex-
pected about July 19 to 21 to break
the prolonged drouth, or it may not
before the same corresponding period
in \iigiist which periods are the best
for the e months for heavy rams, if
not for tin entire year of 1917. ’These
I bite I nil will g.v< some (lance to
'' ‘>■ feedstuffs to overcome (he
Good crop years will advance
rapidly from this lowest ebb ending
k
HS3
Barbed Wire
The Daily Tribune
For Sale by
JNO. I. PRICE LBR. CO.
“THERE IS NOTHING TOO GOOD FOR OUR FRIENDS
—
ri \ IS, MI HM S|lt\
CITY
HAY
FIVE CENTS THE COPT.
kl t.l ST 22, 1917.
M MIIER 255.
A <»l.l Ml
\ II
Screen
Wire, Doors
Window Frames
JNO. I. PRICE IBR. CO.
PHONE S»«
VB9BS|aK
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Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 255, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 22, 1917, newspaper, August 22, 1917; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1332979/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.