Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 259, Ed. 1 Monday, December 10, 1928 Page: 2 of 4
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NAVASOTA DAILY EXAMINEE
MONDAY, DEC. 10, 1928
Pavement Pickups
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Crittenden’s
CRITTENDEN’S
and
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Phone 423
’TINGS
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But if you don’t KNOW the laxa-
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THOUGHT FOR TODAY
ES
was
and
THE START OF AN ORIENTAL ROMANCE
It Is
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Headlight Testing
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THOROIGHBRED
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Cascaretsi
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Hot Chocolate, Sandwiches, Coffee
Special Christmas Orders a Specialty
rash
time
The equalization fee means in short
that farmers must pay for whatever
help they are offered in a Farm Re-
lief measure.
No Taste
But the Mint
Hens over thia section are incMned
I to go on a strike and housewives are
Don’t Wait, Come Before the
Biff Rusk Starts
Spears A Whitten
Owners and Publishers
Navasota. Texas
■...... --o..........
Texas Woods
Are Numerous
ABSTRACTS AND U
bor<
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It purities and heal*. U4V1
Camp Drag Co. 2 Stoi
vour Conveakam
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Pickett’s <
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hi
A slow gentle rain has been falling
for some hours, the temperature is
■ slightly higher and weather forecas-
i ters tire "iat sea", not being able to
see far enough to say what the wea-
ther will be tomorrow.
raw
Mexico is not the only country where
there are sleepy old towns and the
people are saying, ‘‘tomorrow” we will
do this or that, or the other thing
that needs to be done.
Citizens are meeting in Austin to-
day to discuss a highway policy for
Texas. Too much talk is going, to get
this question in a turmoil even before
the Legislature takes up the subject.
I
and labor expended in the effort to
crowd in a second crop.
a nice flocks of chickens and a few
pigs to butcher next fall, is not worry-
ing over the high rate of interest and
unemployment in the factories. He is
sitting on top of the world in a pretty
position.
holders of The First National Bank,
Navasota, Texas, will be held at its
banking house in Navasota, Texas, on
the second Tuesday in January, (Jan-
uary 8, 1929) between the hours of
10:00 o’clock a. m. and 4:00 o’clock
for the purpose of electing directors
for the ensuing year.
CHAS. E. HENRY, Cashier.
Adv. Dec. 8, 24t. x
by
They tear
In a
child can destroy a
piece of work that required days and
weeks of the time and inqenuity of a
skilled workman to make.
Brenham and Hempstead are listed
to receive natural gas in a few months
Fuel of this kind is a great attraction
was
all
As
Autoists today found roads slippery
and hard to climb, where there
anything like even a short hill.
Lothringer. tried for killing the man
Young while the latter lay sick on a
cot in a hospital at Corpus Christi,
■ drew a 11-year penalty. Must have
been that the unwritten law did not
fully cover his case.
■mer who nas plenty of corn
rib, meat in the smoke-house,
showing paneling, railing, i
urns and grill work — A‘
show the finished
Texas woods.
of re-
published at one (1) cent per
to industries that ato looking for ation* There
cheap fuel. ’>■ . ished pieces df inter!
Tfee Star complains about the bad
condition of Main street in Norman-
gee, intimating that is the worst piece
<>f road in Leon county. Time to do
some real street work in that hustling
town.
A Mexican on trial at El Paso re- i
fu<ed to plead guilty and received a ■
25-year sentence ami was tried before |
a jury. The jury gave,him the death
penalty. That was a gamble in which ‘
the convicted man lost.
-o- i
What do YOU do when the bowels
need a little assistance? If you dear-
up the condition with some laxative
made with CASCARA, there is nothing
I
——t
a
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The Navasota Cooperage Company
does a business here that is a model
industry and worthy of emulation in
other lines. This plant runs every
day in the year and finds a ready de-
mand for its products.
hhy mouth, and let
be few.—Dec. 5: 2.
i.;
■“»* to Riwktent OooUdge It
Nft burden on a man to fill the
but you never hear of a man
R away from the office on that
£
K_____
* --—
' ^aoaaota E^aily Examiner ” ___
Published Every Afternoon Ex- Feen-ainiiit
sfe cept Sunday, by _
I (Ho. T. Spears J. Q. Whitten j The Laxative
Ton Chew
Uke Cum
i
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BAI
CASINGS AND TUBES
Ike best to bo had for the oar—
Tby thm and bo oonvisood.
Bros
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photograph Indicate* It
Austin, Dec. 8. — Embracing 125
“tandard” specimens of native trees
of Texas, the forestry exhibit of Tetx-
aI. which was awarded the grand
prize as a collective State exhibit at
the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Is
now displayed In the Biology Labora-1
tory at the University of Texas. It
liwane the property of the Univer-
sity after the Exposition through the
courtesy of the Texas World’s Fair
j Ounmission.
In addition to the specimens of na-
tive trees, the collection includes a
case of turned woods, veneered panels
of a score of woods and enlarged pho-
tographs and transparent plates show-
ing forest scenes and lumbering opeg-
H
Eat Your Lunch While Shoppinff
Wu ■ 1
With the break of the cotton mar-
ket on Saturday, there were doubtless
other breaks among the gamblers of
Wall street.
* *
A numl»er of turkeys were u<Aiced
Saturday in the hands of purchasers,
foreshadowing another i>eriod of fa-
tality among these noble birds about
('hristmas.
SB
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Childhood 1* the Mtrw ttic worhl <»»»•? a.- t .
ma taken to the “Gulden Hute OrplMumgr" <>t Au- Sear EaM KcHef at
the Island of Syra. Gretsn*. 11 Is to <oiup.« tv it* work among these
ildlilrrn that the relief organisation i» !nu lor th* observance of
* latoHMUional Golden Rule Sunday on Demuucr X
pWh
SV
El
Model 29B, Con-
•ole with sliding
doors, beautiful
craftsmanship and
•elected woods
with Super-
2d*£iad’hjE
power speaker
supply and the
Boscn Radio
Model 28 Receiver
(or >2^5.00 less
weaken. A violent laxative forma the
laxative HABIT. You always need
more on the morrow. With casoara.
you don’t Its gentle influence carries
on sometimes for days. With less and
less need of any aid, as time goes on.
So, the very neert time you feel
The last two frosts put the finish-
ing blight on growing fall vegetables
in this section. Particularly is his
biting e$ect noted on Irish potato
tops and other tender vegetables. Jack
could as well have delayed his visit
until a fall crop could have been real-
ised as a remuneration for the seed
Pl
Signs about the city and decorated
show windows give notice fo the early
coming of Old Santa Claus, friend of
the children and bugbear to parents.
• * ■
Christmas rates will likely be in ef
feet on Texas railroads in a couple of
weeks or less, but travel to the Sorrth-
jeast and North is not what it used to
be in Texas.
„„,S^Sggha^!iSi
also 1929 license plates and can ]
them on now.
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14 Days Till Christmas
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toMmv. and Industry are the two
d to achieve success on the
til as in business, tt ■
fool can mak< mtwy, but
lae man to save !
is own kitchen is not very
—aerned over the price of
t and other products of the farm.
» the game of life “copperede.”
ftfte watched the outgo as they
gl Income, many of them could
readily accumulate a plentiful
t of this world’s goods. ‘It is
i to expend than it is to accu-
RSi/-
. ..
wtaawdy for expelling worm*
ititochdato hMdu •
3Scp^rbottU. Sold*v_
Drug Co. 2 Stores for
ir Convenience. ___
There is room an ^opportunity in
Grimes county for many more dirt
farmers to acquire good farms
make a success in agricultural pur-
suits. It seems they would come, too,
if given a hearty invitation and rea-
sonable consideration.
■Congress appears to be only marking
time until after the holidays, when
the fireworks will be opened up in the
style that is so familiar, to citizens of
this land of the free and home of the
brave. Members must do some loud
talking to let the country know they
are on the job at Washington.
The political situation is reasonably
quiet in the United States at the pres-
ent taune. Hoover is out of the country
and Governor Smith has lapsed into a
silence that one can almost feel,
is well that calm has followed the ter- ’
rible storm of the late summer
early fall.
The crowd in town Saturday
another large one and trade in
Mines appeared to be booming.
Christmas approaches, trade will be-
come livelier and larger.
There was a sprinkle of rain last
night ami the weather is raw
chilly today, with the wind from the
southe-ast.
— .........——
What Doctors Say
About the
Laxative Habit
OSCH
RADIO
® ' II
THIS DATE IN HISTORY
December 10th.
Following the little brush with
Spain in 1X98. delegates from the two
countries met in Paris later in the
same year and entered into a Treaty
of Peace. According to the history of
the occurrence the draft was signed
by representatives of the two powers
on December 10th, 1898, and are still
in force. According to terms of the '
treaty Uncle Sem took over the Philip-
pines at a cost, of $20,000,000 and ex-
acted forfeiture of Porto Rico- and
Isle of Pines from Spain. The Isle of
Pines was later handed back to Cuba,
on the claim of citizens of the island
that the territory was a part of Cuba.
After buying the Philippines, Uncle
Sam had to go to war to subjugate
AgudnaMo and Ids band, and even now
for
apt to have to pay high for eggs for
! their Christmas cooking. Roosters
! erww as long and loud, however.
Today’s report indicated a similar
condition of weather for probably an-
other tiwehty-four hours. There is,
however, strong probability of a cool-,
er spell.
E Geo. T. Spears
BftEt. ----
B- • “
WT
OM Year
ttx Months _.
, Three Months
—----
Any erroneous reflections upon the
character, standing or reputation of
EU. person, firm or corporation which
i may occur lb the columns of THE
y EXAMINER will be gladly corrected
apon being brought to the attention
of the> firm.
EcU -------
■ntered as Second-Class Matter, Feb.
at Navasota, Texas, under
f , Act of Congress, March 8. 1879.
r. Obituaries and resolutions
5|
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sluggish, take only a eaft|r
{Delightful to the taste, sw«
ceptable to any stomadi, ax
efficient as tbs powerful pi
fairly paralyse the pertotaltt
one’s intestines. The only hl
get from Cascarets is the om
weeks and months without .
of tiie kind. And when, J4*
their aid again, the samt s
suffice* Any doctor can
about eascara; and any dn
the candy Oascueto.
$5.00
3.00
L50
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Time Has Arrived
Official County Haadllfht 1
AfthorM to Xmm
—ire
Quail shooting is reported good in I for the system—for the blood,
this section, but no duties have been; r ‘ 7— ’ ““ ---
' reiwirted on anv of the waters of this 1 tive you have learned to depend on is
sections ■ of harmless cascara, here’s some truly
e e valuable advice: 7’-'
The bark of a tree called cascara is
Hunters of this section must be tjje mogf; marvelous conditioner man-
afraid of the Big Ticket, as no report kind has yet found. It stimulates the
is ever heard of any of them going; bowel’s muscular action, but does NOT
there in search of gama
natives over there are anxious
freedom In their own right and
of a self-governing body.
■ n - ■ -
STOCKHOLDERS NOTICE
The annual meeting of the stock-
Green wood was quoted lower this
s week than in tlty summer. This re-
%ukte<l from the fact that many are
released from work on the farm and
can devote their time to cutting and
hauling wood.
One can scarcely get away from the
thought that is not a single new law
twas passed in Texas for ten years
things would move along as smoothly
and nicely as could be wished. And
the state would not suffer Id any
quarter or particular.
■ 1 Herbert Hopver and party reached
Chile today and will make the longest
in that country of the entire trip. They
leave the Maryanl on arrival In Chile
and may return by rail and water
with out again boarding the battleship.
Too many men are iconoclastic
nature, just like a child,
down instead of building up.
few jninntes a
«D PRESENT — Be not
1 thy mouth, and let not
tt be hasty to utter any thing be-
» God: for God is in heaven, and
not thine
® € Rf 1 j
Sunday was rather gloomy and un-
inviting on the outside, the inclem-
ency being such as to keep a good
many away from Sunday school and
‘church.
A bloc of Congressmen are reported '
to have detenmined to fight for an
equaliziition in any Farm Relief bill
thiit is offered. And again the bill
will feel the deadening effect of the
presidential veto.
J. B. LOOK
Office la
First National Bank JBMg.
W»|i i>U
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 259, Ed. 1 Monday, December 10, 1928, newspaper, December 10, 1928; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1337344/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.