Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 160, Ed. 1 Monday, August 15, 1927 Page: 3 of 4
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(By LN. S.)
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103
A
n,r
r tto
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so. But Sylvia lapretty.’
by
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EES!
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Tarawr
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MF
Ifll
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would
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tody works to
poette result
OF THE DEADLY DOTTED LINE RANGERS
ARE SENT TO -
CHILDRESS
■ -
f
4
7"
yypwiw i
friends ray
through legls-
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to utilized im
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death with Ito No. 17—The Star
‘ No. 18
'HDRAWING the family’s savings account at the^bank ( .
. where it is safe, and losing it through speculation is a k
serious matter. It may bring great hardship, especially to the :
;T mistress of the home. It may force great
laatoaM&t
Locatei
__________________________- ' ■ •*
—te——te———!■■■ |-.!i.!.1 II!.. ———~
nwiw-Wr—nr—fc- ___
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
point in the activities of the inexperienced
“ ■ j> ----------------- ..... ■ u ■
that it would soon erect a number
of downtown garages wherebusy
business men could park their can.
As aa inducement for business men
to take out memberships, charges to
S£h win re8ult unle88 Immediate steps are
be obtained elsewhere. ~ A Board «f '
•1
,*?’ ' A".
Hotchkiss-Lindley Fnenk^
PlBn*i&
------------- 11, I. fctajlS
t QUEEN THEATRE
J TODAV
.-----r—
R. Q. WASSON E
H
CAMP DRUG CO.
PhoneS J
the dotted tine white
W'
’• V ■
■t trite eo easy to
to inevitable day
hues to; pay priori
'mTM® CM1WI Iw^IsIa
I Mato eerier the
perattvw endeavor
Ao 10 to wave the
■ration' aad an the
lor it there io any
ra tobka people co- ,
mm of pooporaMve I adopt business
ganteatlon from the 1 .u.
than trom the top
ton deoado or two
ra was organised with
st prominr:*
bom. two eminent judges. jNo
F-
out* 1
tot became seme Mpb> ,
mM teito yea thot you
or Mat poa aJtow pood
that aoa kava a lot of *
nly triton yoe are faWy
slick prefer. M-
in n certain elty aa
vitb tbft i___
J1ESTWAY
Wisconsin college
tyo: "Two things
mer hard but the)
hit buslnesOt- They I
wet of production .
. R. Q. Was|^ etSOhqa
the Madisonville school boat
assumed his new duties. We prMhll
for him plenty of amusement And M|
of good hard work, tot M te* a po-
sition to render the kiddies of MacB-
sonville a wonderful service and Wd^
are sure be will spare so polaa la
ing this.—Madisonville MeteiML?^^|
T ■ i »
Fairfield — Contracts awarded fto-
two road projects here.
Recently laboratory rate have helped
show how science can exterminate
their plague-carrying dock and alley-
kin. A bacterial culture, known as
“rtrtinln,” has been discovered that
kills rats, but doea not harm humans
or domestic animals. Placed on bait
It spreads an epidemic among the ro-
dents. j\ !
Raised In spotlessly clean surround-
ings, his hours of sleeping, eating and
exercising as carefully regulated as a
‘ baby’s, the rat that goes to college Is
an aristocrat He enters a university
in the pink of condltlon for any rest,
preparatory schools,'* such as Wis-
. tar Institute, graduate "standardized’'
WAcrt She. Wanted J tots each'<me so like the rest in body ■ - T- - .r
- and health that one testing laboratory / Party and blrthday for
can .compare its results directly with »
another’s. - - -
<’ .' ‘> «Z •
Queen af Bulb Flowera
Holland for several years past has
been noted for Its spacious tulip gar-
dens. Every variety of tulip Is culti-
vated by the Dutch gardeners, and
uew hybrids are often worth a great
deal of money. > "
The tulip has always been the queen
of bulb flowers since It was brought
from Turkey by the ambasMdor of
- *: - -*^1
red flower in Perrife it' was of old a
symbol of love and romance.
Most new blooms cultivated
Dutch gardeners an hybrids gi
from the seed of flowers fertm^g
‘pollen from others. =- ;
Horeeehoe far Luck
your art ail the various toons which
. ! school of “Epicureanism” y.-ere mostly
(By I- N. S.) | poof,- but beiiig greatly attached to
AUSTIN, Aug. Ifi.—Two Texas ran-. one another, they, in times of scarcity,
gers were ordered from Fort Worth to j
Childress Sunday night to quiet race
\1,. J was learned today. ■
Rangers were dispatched following
long distance, telephone conversation
between Governor Moodj^ and Mayor
Will .Tones of Childress. z JOnes stated,
that lovaRof/icers were \ “unable to
swiw^^i..*.'. milUli.. <
- ■ 'f < -- -
- a> "to"
- -
taken to. exterminate the rodents, Di
j Curto said, "
Del Curto’s greatest fear Is In the
outbreak of epidemics, for, be says,
” i rats are the greatest of all carriers uf\ mtotafly the same as those governing
* pestilence. Meningitis and dlptherla'
usually follow the influx of the ro-
dents, be declared.
Dr. J. C. Anderson, state health of;
beer, also warned against the, rats,
stating that bubonic plague, which is
HR contagious and very fatal, Is vqry
' prevalent among the pests. He cau-
Wooed all citizens to exercise care
|H against eating food that rats, have
gH touched, and called for a campaign of
; extermination.' ’
- r h . < -----o—----;-' V
W<.. < - . v’l'. ' . ■- 'h
/ C' I .______
"Sylvia looks very , aweet tonight,
‘ don’t, you fldjikT* asked the fair-
*'f haired girt at the dance. '
“Positively stunning I” declare^ her’
partner^ and then j realized what he
had done. “Of course,’’ he added,
“she looks prettier at times than
others.” « Pj 1 '
i The fair one melted slightly. “The
real test oft beauty,” she said, "is to
- look pretty always." - , . '
t *Tto do,” declared her partner. v,.
"Hqw perfectly sweet-of you to say
JIM are prettier." dedarto tor ae Maximilian. As a wild
gAVAgQTADAILYBXAJinrEl MONDAY, AUG. 15, 1927.
Sensuality Made No
Appeal to Epicurus
■ Epicurus .could return to earthly
life today he would be somewhat sur-
prised to hear his name as an ad-
jective applied to persons and things
sensual. Impartial history represents
the, habits of this" Athenian philoso-\
pher and his followers as exceedingly,
frugal and tempera ter
The members of his communal
I ovuvyi v*, tpuuienuiMu y.ere musuy
poor,- but being greatly attached to
contributed to each other’s support.
Epicurus himself began his philosophi-
cal career when he was thirteen years
old. At that time, upon hearing a
verse of Hesoid wherein all things are
said to come from Chaos, he asked:
“And whence ’ came Chaos?’’ . His
teachers referred him to philosphy
and to philosophy he did apply.
He sought Instruction from many
’ piasters,’ but none could give the youth
cope with situation.’^ Several fights any solid coavictldh.- He thus founded .
his own school of thinking and tried |
to teach the world by precept that
they who live simply have no fear of
poverty and are-better able to enjoy |
■ the Pleasures of life. He was the first |
r>. yet. Ironically enough, his fame Is tbs I
>C perverted one oft a sensualist—Kan- I
'____________ £ ' sas City :
a tour of the state, J. M. Del Curto, *
• • ■ - - - Scientists Use Rats 1
in Study of Heredity
; In the study of heredity rats have I
proved most valuable, writes H. Cl I
Davis, in Popular Science Monthly. J
To observe four human generations ]
would require the better part of a cen- '
tury. In two years, rate have told the I
same story, for the laws of heredity
govenflng the rat family are funda- '
- Want to seH sheep, cetfte \
Want to sell groceries, drugs
Want to seU boots and shoes
Want to sell dry goods, carpets
want to sell clothing, hats or caps
A1DVERTI»E TN THE EXAMfflHBl
Advertising will . gain customers
Advertising keeps old customers
Advertising makes success easy
Advertising begets confidence
Advertising means business *
Advertising shows energy
Advertise and succeed
Advertise - judiciously '•
Advertise oft-bust:
9 Advertise weekly y
Advertise now
x Adv.ertioe
HERE A ? >/-
dren and infants; golf and sport hate
from Italy, for grownups; novelty bas-
kets and stamped goods at What-Not-
fchop. lW-8t
FOR RENT
. !■.,■ , ■■■ ■ .■* ------------------------------
F0(R SALK—Good wood cook stove.
Phone 38.
‘ ‘'■---------------------
TOMORROW , /
“ONE INCREASING PURPOSE” -
?• From tfie latest and greatest novel by '
A. S. M. Hutchinson
with Edmund Lowe, Lila Leo, May A^on, Hunfley (ter»
don, Emily Fitzroy, George Irving’Josef Swikard
and Jane Novak
The theme of this mighty^screen entertainment an-
swers one of the most vital problems in life today.
— aho-?
“Madam Dynamite”
jldirite 25 : , ChildrroJa^U
WedaMMr: "Dune
—— ---T---
King 420 for Program and Sehadala
HBHHHHHESEBBBNHHi u toi1* 1
limiii ViiiiiLi'<gi|iS^
MM
method st naUingro a
bring good luck la hav-
ing the twr ends pointing downward.
This to dne to the fact that some per-
sons think its protective powers to
be due to it* resemblance to the nim-
bus or halo frequently seen in pic-
tures of angels or saihts. The super-
stltutlon regarding the horseshoe as
>an emblem of luck la believed to be
connected with the custom of the an-
cient RomanA They used to drive
nails Into the walls of their houses
ag an antidote against the plague.
- :
Conversation at Its Best
in- names ef prominent local citizens,
H among. Jhem two eminent
k sooner was ths organization of the
k board complete’ than the promoters,
antoftjAh the endorsement ot theso
• outstanding mea, went torth to, reap
_e a past harvest by selling momtor-
ubt, ships. They got the members—but
m- the toflding of the garages remained
ted. m idle dream. . "
miters ot the Board of
r lator tntorvtowed as
toe to consent to the
Mthgy stated that ttoy
ibtional etorvy facili-
downtown
district and they signed up without
Imagine their dwgrta when told that, -
a tMdlns ut the byMawe st the or
«■■»**■ »*»«sanAtw.A,
UOvWlWrH SRO 00 vOwOTB Out
been toed ttotory in order
to sell memberships in a take proposi-
tion!
. . Because these prominent citizens retaln t^em 10 J®*
•f were caretabs with their names and , " ‘ '
tailed to read and to Investigate the
enterprise, hnndrods et business mon
bought memberships only tn lose thefr
money. Sigitng without reading is
about the most dangerous act of
financial carelessness that can bo.
awomwiMte othSMlttad. ‘'9. '■
fM OUT | the same aa the tanner, yet businest
came through to a way that is tai.
!, ahead Of the farmer. Thia has been
I brought about through industrial
efficiency, through Improvement ol
' methods They, have increased laboi
output per unit to the,degree the cost*
of production have actually been re
duced by better methode of carrylnt
on worft. Industrial enterprises on a
large seals are spending millions on
reeoareh. In ten years automobile
output per worker has increased 172
, per cent, Urea *111 per cent, ofl U
, tT W cenft cement <1 per cent
•Compare* that with* others. The
packers have increased only 27 per
cent, sugar refining 21 per cent, boots
add shoes only • per cent There has
bora an increase in sgilsshsrs since
1M> et M per cent It is doubtful that
businoM has any such opportunity as
«Ms in agricnlture to reduce cost
of production through improved meth-
ods. Take oorn.—Iowa shows a Varia-
tion to cost of production, from fifteen
cents teoevtatpfive crate S bushel, la
Illinois tho coat of producing oorn ra
I 10 aero fields was reduced from fifty
two oonts to twenty crate a bushel
t TSe maatacturor who had R within
his power to reduce production coots
from fifty-two to thirty cents per uait
vo«M bo tickled to “ ’ *
opportunity ot ufteting competition
under these conditions.
"Tho way out for the farmer is U)
to become a business sunn. (2) to
1 methods to adabt
himself to tho same kind of conditions
i ahd bo aa efficiently mobile sa is oto
manufacturer or our business man to
r tha ordinary channels of his trade,
ve at hand » 1 (3) to rely less upon political
to utilized Un j promises and more upon individual
ifinito knowledge I initiative, (4) to work toward oo-
A-*ytef | oporotive endeavor, but in the mean-
v 11 1 11 ran for cooperative ra
r*Wrifeive ail ot these problems
so inditldM Hy he cud do somo-
M tho ptnsent time.”
In the heavens." It lives. It goes—lives
with high beauty because It will ^b.
The man who realizes himself 'in talk
with a friend—there is a p’.irity tn
him, he Is generoys, for this i%allzlng
together, havlhg Its own beauty' Is Its
own eud.< To sbe an idea In a man’s
eyes before it has shaped for bis voice,
to Intercept the unspoken, meeting It/
with what yourself would not have
spoken, this Is a creation with con-
sciousness itself.—From "The Road to
fhe Temple." by Susan Glaspell -
Famous French Engineer
' Ferdinand De Lessepa, who lived
from 1806 to 18M, was the.famous
French engineer who designed and
superintended the construction of the
Suez canal^which waa completed be-
tween the yearn 1859 and 1969. His
scheme for cutting a canal across the
, isthmus of Panama led to a financial
collapse for which Do Lesseps was
held legally . responsible In bis old
age he was condemned to a term of
Imprisonment, which, however, was
not enforced. \ . - T r
y Desert Cannibalism
> A teacher in Indiana told her prt
, ' mary class about the life of the
-——11:00a.m. desert children: their games/Clothing
nd s food, etc. One article of food they
< < had for dinner was roast kid. Th<
— 3 ’85 p.m. Qext day she ^ited class member^ to -
tell what they had learned about the
children uf the desert.\The first hand'
raised was not that qf a retl-headeo
boy on the back sent bat the bright
eyed boy with- riiven lock*r's’lttinr j-
near the - front «“i:> ;<•>• .i.rily auswere<
•They hfttl "oe,sYc (I b >y for dinner.”
' Z/ '' ; '
Howard D. Hudmn Mp.
Babies Level
---;——
■ FordlKomadiandinMiu
troubles and dfeturfaances du
Z to teething, there is u?tHn
better than a safe hshMFflto
Children’s Laxative.
— ....... •
Mas.
partner.
“Don’t be absurd,\ said the fair-
haired -girl; “but ft’s perfectly sweet
of you to say sot” :
___ ■ ■ ■ r- ' ‘ 1 Tl 1' :
A/erf and Observing
■> Knowing tberefo're that you cannot
be a good master unless you have s'
universal power oft representing by ”
nature produces—which indeed yem
will not know h»W to do unless you
— _._
mind—took to it. 0 fainter, that
yhen you ,go into the fields you give
your attention to the various objects
and look carefully In turn first at one
thing and then at another, making a
bundle of different things selected
and chosen from among those of less
value.—Leonardo Iva Vinci’s Note
Books. Translated by Edward Mc-
Curdy.
Railroad Time Table
' 5 H. A T. C. RalkKNbd >z
Northbound
No. 17—The Owl —---------1:12 a.m.
No. 19—Local Passenger —11:25 p.m
No? 15-^-The Hustler------11C3 turn.
. Southbound ~ " c
No. 20—Local Passenger 4 :88 a.m
No. 16—The Hustler —3 ;58pjn.
No. 18--The Owl 5:25 a.m.
R. 4 T. a Maria Cut-Off ' ■-
c ' Northbound < ;
No. 345—Daily------------7:50 a.m.
T;7'.’ ’>■: Z Southbound " v
Bo. Mfi-SaaMy Only J 1:40p.m.
He. 34£-Week teye 8 :10pja.
U6. N. WaMzai
Northho—d
No. 18—The Star----------12:48 ajnJ
No. 20 -__ —10:02a.m. I
v OovtbibouBd -
—.— 5:25 a.m.
—---3:45 p.m.
MadtooWville Broach
Northbound
Departs No. 120
y / Southbound
Arrive No. 119
\ Santa Fe System
. Northbound
No. 218 9:04 p.m.
|/’A Z Southbound '
No. 217 -__ --7 r32 a.m.
---- .? ,
iTSetoi 1- 1—0—.—.^.
4 notice. Phone 472. Mrs. Rather.
z \ 122-1 m
. . . . . ^>
. WANTED -W
..... .-----— ----V-----——’ ,
WANTED-Wlll pay 5c per pound for j
clean cotton rags.—Navasota Daily
Eaamlner.
ANTONE wishing to make appoint-
ment for golf lessons with Mr. Dbb-
son phone J. M. Quinn Drug Store.
158-3t
WANTED—Farmer or farmers’ son or
~ n>an to travel ^ in countifyz, Steady
work, good profits. ^IcConn and Co.,
Dept. C411, Memphis, Tenn. ' It
Strayed ot ; Stolen
SThUli» '< OR STOLEN—One Vine
Great talk is like a song, like a glory grhy horse, about 4 years old.^ No
brand. Wire cut on breast. About 15
hands high. Reward. J. T. Barry.
153-3t
Sherman — Tax rate ettft nine cents'
on 8100 in Sherman. f
... ' -----—o------
want a Oook 2
Want a. clerk
‘ > Wapt a partner
\ Want a situation ’
Want to sell a farm
Want to borrow money
Want to sell property
HOVSTON. TKHAS
<WMlte Tte^GInM Oartna MK
•M dte, to tk. tenter •>
modern convenience, eotqplsd w
a Marine desire tolMlHHR
without bath 8UJ0, with bath «
—id <250 Rooms rinata—
am
TODA?
“THE MAGIC GARDEN”
The latest novel by
GENE STRATTON PORTER
with Margaret Morris, Raymond Keane. Charles Ctary
and Hedda Hopper
A story surging with the resistless force of youth— .
youth the unconquerable.
. > Also Late News Reel
Schedule: 1:20, 3:00, 4:40, 6:20, 8:00, 9:40 P. M.
Adults 25c Children 10c -vz . ' ll
Rats Overrunning ine p^asurea or He WM the flrat
entire Otate 1 exaS to make philosophy a basis of morals,'
• (By l N: 8.) >- .
AUSTIN, Aug. 16.—Returning from.
state pathologist, declared that rats
are overrunning, the entire state .this
year.' Considerable damage to crops
where it is safe, and losing it through speculation is a
mistress of the home. It may force great
economies in household management or
amount to actual privation. It may mean
that the children will have to go to work be-
fore they complete their education. The
lose of the family’s accumulations may even
result in physical breakdown on the part of
the wife through worry over the loss of sav- *iot. it
tngs which she helped to accumulate at the
sacrifice of home comforts, but was not con-
sulted when it came to investing them. The
making of investments by men who are
heads of families 'and inexperienced in
t finance should not be undertaken without
consulting her. But even if both agree.the „
Venture should be talked oyer with the local occnrred Saturday night, Jones said,
banker or information about it obtained
from the National Better Business Bureau in I -
York, which serves without cost and |f
r. MOREHOUSE pureiy jn the public interest^ „ If this is done
ot of trouble and quite likely many regrets and heartaches '
1 be avoided. , "’ -
There is one 1 \ * J*
Mbr where be should have above
1 rod-light stop signal to caoae him
feuse gnd investigate and that to*
tofans to roaches the decision to
* «u the dotted line." Before yon
( with ywu* Bvlngs tai the bnnk by
fine a erattMt pinend before you
■terp prrawtars, etept^euMnine
lAaeatitofo! It wtt pey to ewri
eaatfaet Mverri Mm. ran trad-
< aU flto wttKn weighing
ytarn.ltvlIwtobtos(Mri
y the deadly fine print uuny
(Operated la moot eonU ecto,—so
B that it strains yrar eyes aad
to skim over c
MkrfiolaUyj Do not
Mbfr ined. ft wfll
MOBto^pkeJ
■0^^
;Ir ... By W. R. MOREHOUSE .. J >
Public Relations Commission, American Bankers Association
W-
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 160, Ed. 1 Monday, August 15, 1927, newspaper, August 15, 1927; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1337046/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.