The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 210, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1916 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Daily Tribune
Publlamd Every bay Ki«ept Sunday
Editor and Hua Mgr
SISK GUO. S HOW. COMPANY
i
an
-er
V.
««
*
■
■
Vf
u.
ARGIMNS IN OPPOSIIIDN
*?«•
0
=3
SI
Oh* Tear
W IT
s
I u
10 SUFFRAGE FDR WOMEN
ir<
r
ro
K
fTop
I
0
H ohtiiHi' d from Pago I.)
4
I
1
the
I
■
Hll
pOMHet'H
■a -
1111»i; t
!
Hie
|>llt
f
planted
♦
fen
f *
Administration Buil.iiug \
and M
, College
T
se will I
July 24-29. 1916.
held
th.
hi w
of
x|||. Itt | F’s Sill.
a
thk
Wawhitigi oh
< t fut |]h* <mitht‘ast cornel’
a
nn
a
equ 11
many
a
There are few
xa H
the
an
} m
a
Mn'c<
to
/
1‘HHOn
In
In
o
o
cent
re-
t
A-
Thero Is no
F
If,
What’s There
;r
sr.
J®
a
9
r
i
Nothing is lacking.
1
r
>
And it is a perfect beauty -snappy, stylish, speedy.
■
STAJE FARMERS' INSW
Don’t delay—ere us at once and talk it over.
of
Wl
V
n
■n
•i
<**»•*• J
1
f ■
I
If' .’1 I
Cr.rfi
the drawn features of the nervous
under-nourished man
Grape-Nuts
FOOD
A Complete Car in Every Particular
And It’s a Car You Will Be Proud to Own
prom
of
till!
*4 <W
2 on
Itlf’S
tlona
wound,
id*
S< lllltol
sermon .
woman
No wonder there’s a rush to possess the car the world
has been waiting for.
It’s the first complete car at anywhere near so low a
price.
i
1a»h Ang'-b-
of linvltm
One Year.,
six Montiit
Black
hand I < d
Springs
Ht'HNon,
ill! TRIBUNE I'lHNllM. COMPANY
Pahllaher*
CARRY SMITH
of grap<<
The Tokay will be
HI IISI Illi*I ION RATES:
The halb Tribune
the
Fort
Are
Do
show
du
to
l-*|lllll
I bn l
/*
r
It stands out alone boldly—unapproached—a power-
ful five-passenger touring car complete for only $615.
Coy
Nos
county
and is
I a< follows:
W
S8»
should haVi
By making u close study of
otic > Inmld
* room .it th,, fop.
place
you I
and
supercede
Its
f
Wednesday’s Special |
Bananas 15 cents per dozen j
w
■ K
19.
de-
Z
I
Th
*
In every way it’s a car you will be proud to own and
rideitr.
I* -
Baker.
. M.
Stevenson, hold
inferior to that
y‘
iu‘< UIISl
tieitiidi
dren
pnfsrrry
tiout thi
Tin
d • • f• at i d
west cormr
division: thence N. ;
alona th<- southeast
■V
■~~~ JT .. , .... ... _■»— * 2
Mi?
El '*1
K„
"ODtL 73
*615
Roadjftrr *393
jfaA 7ol»d»
---------------<>..... o- ■■ —
FALL FUESIIEMNU.
in-1"
1
11 tip
f tin
annual meeting of the State
■ laeUtute will be held In
W*M..33
fV^CAPUD®
par Mrap
half atrnpfi
that the exchnnge
cure.
The Mh(ar<'r<lii fount, I rlhunr
(Weekly 1
mall
of many
uffrago
reudilj.
man
is
Kobert T
leglalature
disriissiim
with the wonderful energy values of whole wheat and barley, including their vital
mineral elements, is an ideal ration (served with cream or good milk) for building
well-balanced bodies and brains.
hub City
f'arrizo
th Im
h HiHtam
it up will find
■'olvi' thi' prob
Ml fi-rtllltv
iomii
from
Sunday
for
of Uh
eongreM.--
i|uost ion
frage.
ad
D., 1916.
BERT CARR.
Sheriff. Matagorda county Texan.
will
rldng 1
that
dPs' '' W
M
wit
.... (>.^..
u blllty
Riirct MH
Jl
Ji.
ot
4 m-
child
Icnii'
■
oversight
in tile
ra do.
SuflragiKi,-
4
!fgfe
// 7/k. zj//a
reviva I
to lmv«
uialntnlnlng .hl fertility It
continue tlic plantinr.
crop <m n tract of land
ar I.e^iimoH honld be
cropH Cover
ahonld be
tuple
llvin>
mt
The farmer wlm will pluti
<.f rotation and fallow
thill he IlIlH I’ogiiu fn
lent of
la Hiilelilal to
of the snme
(.'eur aflxj year I . nnu
ouo of the rotation
cropa for green manuring
another
Smith Texas Th«y de
of information about
find cultural rnethodr
b> rrli'M, fruits,
i IOpH f if cour o
t-ncyrlopcdlit of
'h |,rook all kind*4
and give I he very
Ttiat'M
Lincoln, Nebraska,
log rtwclved the first
atra wberr i
overthrown
I can
win
Wavering
stid'-menta
fk
WWW'
JNO. A CRAWFORD, Dealer
Phone 6(h j ; Bay Ci
.. —
That means Electric Starter, Electric Lights, Electric
Hom, Magnetic Speedometer—in fact, every necessary item.
Nothing is lacking. Then are no extras to buy.
to
It i-
limit
to 51
mail' suffrage
limit from ">5 to »U» hours
k
The tlulf t’oiiHt (’Itrir Exchange of
Mobile, \lubnniii, marketed eighteen
car« of Rnt«iiinii ornngea tawt neanon
for the orange gtowera of Baldwin
and Mobile f'onntlen The orang••
were packed In the half atrnp pack*
age and brought from $1 66 to f? :,5
Each car contained 600
Thia year It la cfttlmntod
Will handle 100
great Importance u
a market for the
farm. The natural
roll, our mild climate
fall all enntd
a Im iida n t
and Pranmn of Kun
the ftrit cur of
t'l'cxaai gf ra'A'Iierrlei
on was
law
■ r
their I
over vour atipply and see if there la
not aiune Item short, then phono tn us
and wo will wend a man rlcht now to
aee what the trnuhlc Im Wo
iinten to pleane you. and you are to
he the Judge.
mves
In
■ Women in
ever changed a
Recent tuHtance
Vntonio mid are
were not
I’hey
then i
avail gcliatsi
ending
of a Ickcdnes-
Or the bright, calm look of health
and conscious power to do things,
that ludoiigs to the num who is uell-
nourished
Note that word “complete.”
flavor, the ea-mi for tin- mango
Imlng cumparatlvfdy abort, and the
delicate nature of the fruit prevent-
ing Uh retention for tiny length of
time, or Uh export from the Inlands
The pre’HTved fruit Ih to be known nn
mango honey.
Entered aw necoud cl .■« matter at
Uta poHlofflc.e In Bay f'.ty under act
of t ongrean
A company luei be. n formed to
out .'<50 acres of grapes nt Fort Htoek
ton. The Toknv will be planted a)
mont oxi'lualvciy
way
bl II difference between
production and the value of the fin
lulled product
we
Holomon could do.
sah
Matagorda
ment
meet-1 2V<U da,
"f
studying
against
aid that site had sign
.> get rid of constant I _____
all anti.
Iiefore !
ipie act on |
meetingH. This year’s nes
institute promises to be the
Hum and Ramsey luive do ei| (heir
at Sun Antonio mid arc aid
admiled they were not atH '
tied with the results The.' go from ■
there to Fort Worth then come to j ,.n
Austin \t’e (he < .
those titles In a de
to thidr deurei
tin I’exaH
No. I.old’ Un ' are faking the ho
evils first atid are only fedfttg
win to the ti ul thing
tin- health autlioiitie
women 'Ultragi states
Idaho and Wyoming
had it all their own way hn point of attendance than any
in I • xa Now tiie otli- viously held A most excellent
definitely postponed the uniform child
tciiool
when |lo(| ,.,. social .enter rhe while slave
easily ( a, i wa denied place on tin- < alendar
which ,,f (p,. |1(ni8(..
kind of;
Wil
men are
ot’ fad One
rage petition
that I .tantial way.
date for I lie
after
for half an hour
ited took out his
his i
bold'
ot tins tract, thence ri. IS 1-4 degree*
!■: I.Jim.J lei to |lle division line be-
tween lots No.-. 2 and 7 of the O'Con-
nell -ii..division, a dak,e sit fur the
division Um between lots Nos. 2 and
7 of the O'Connell subdivision, a state
of tilts
. I I . • S. 71 3-1 dea. W. at Iliti
pass the division corner between lots
and . of said subdivision, the same
ben..: In thi E. iitie of lol No. 1, llsu
feet to tin east edge of the Bay City-
Van Vleck road, a stake set for lite
southwest < ornei of tills tract; thence
N. t deg \\ along said edge of the
Hii ( ity-Van Vleck road 1,100.8 feet
to the plac< <>1 beginning, containing
Aitliin aid de-.ribed boundaries 27.02
aeri of land, amt being out of the
original surveys as follows; 26.42
r< , i:t. ■ ' . ' block ;i. I. <V (1. N
It. Co.. 1.2 acres survey 4, block 3.
By far more cows tresheu
spring than in the tali,
is no good reason. There are plenty
of good reasons why cows should
freshen in the fall. The fall-fresbeu
ed cow yields her greatest flow in
winter, it is then that milk and but
terfat sell higher. There is less work
on the farm in the winter than in the
summer. This affords time to give
the cow the best of care; time to
study the cow; time to prepare effi
cient, economical rations; time to
weigh and test the milk she yields:
time to really learn how best to se-
cure large, ecouomical production
and make money from cows.
More time Is avilable for feeding and
caring for calves and rasing them
well. Then when spring conies they
aro ready to go on pasture and grow
with uo extra work except giving
them a little grain twice a day.
Cows certainly will give much more
milk during the winter without requir-
ing much more feed than though they
' freshened In the spring. Then when
i spring comes with its warm rays ot
sunshine, refreshing showers, green
grass and balmy air, the cows go on
i pasture in good condition and, though
I Rale in milk, their flow Is rejuveu-
ned nearly as though they had fresh-
ened again, and they yield well until
midsummer. They can then go dry
without occasioning much loss, for
harvest is on, we need our time, niilk
I is cheap, pastures are bare, beat in
! tense, flies pesky and cows do tu>
| give much milk under tiici-e condition
' Anyway ,R Is hard to milk cow* be-
fore and after a hard day’s work in
tfrw harvest field, and. besides, cows
ueed a rest
When the busy summer Is over they
fall pns-
bay.
food
Note that it is not a small car. The wheelbase is 104
inches. The tires are four-inch size—many cars costing
more have smaller tires.
O'Connell
in- nort.ii-
of lot No. 1 of said sub-
’ I - i degti e 1st
tlio southi'iist edge of the Bay
city-Van Vleck public road ss7.n for
to a stake set for the northeast yorner
ehil-
eolil- j
bi'eters
mb rli re I
in 191 I I
a child ’
■ lor 15
i freshen again just as the
I Hire* become good, when the
I grain aud silnge are ready to
and when the price of milk and but
terfat starts upward,
Many great economic gain* are
! made. The cows gives more pound#
of milk and butterfat in a year.
i sells for nore per pound.
' more evenly distributed
■ the year. Clives are
’ am! cheapaj
ery bccopfei
I We beco’iie better dairy men.
pencil and wrote
anti siiffruge record ,
for the login-
Minty. 1 am told, i
A Candida to for |
the
Slit
A Hlmilar
I'hviol v
have proven Hie
vi'i''A failh ba-i d oh falsi
si's I* eailj overthrown Truth
stronger than fiction
j tmiiieis of many women
from nt'trage in a <lay.
won by
who signed a suf
lielping UN ill
Small, cundi
from Harris
the Hiibj
as large ;
acai ml th
u quick stroke of a
leafv top Is s< voted
,.-...A ..TT
'~r.
J.L . ■ XS!
t lie)
I wiiiiii ii's volt
j dilIon ' of wi>
i do inn vey
ilook into
eeplini'. ini-rt
By is foronce
laid*
stales
I'll!' described in deed from .1. Id
Stevenson et al. to Samuel J. Baker,
dated January I, 1911. and on the 1st
day o! August \ 11.. 1916, being the
first Tii'-sdiiy of said month between
the hours of in o'clock a. m. and 4
o'clock p. m , on said day, at the Court.
House door of -aid county 1 will offer
foi ale i.nd sell at public auction, for
cash, all tiie right, title and Interest
of tiie said Samuel J. Baker, (1. M.
. i J W Magill and J. E. Stev-
in and to said property.
Bated at Bay City, Texas, this tiie
11 til day of .July A
Many orehitrds are not fruitful for
the ii'uson that then- ar<- not Hiiffl
(lent nutritive proj»erfb‘H In the oil
to supply tin requisite amoiinf of
noiiilahment to enable the trees to
mole than malaln life, let alone
forming budii and b]o.- onn«
I tiring fruit
short. Cou
a
following not
chalk line In
he follow s n
through tin- fori' t leaving It
to do ho will take him more
toward hi* goal without this
I- Hie highest iind hardest
labor known to man, no man
travel fur the road of wucccsh.
in
t Illicit h'd
Ontlmrn . entl< ni<-n
.aw pickaninnies in Ho- coi
z\ woman Is uperintiiol
4-llOOis, I'llO*' n
in the
Why? There
< iiliforitbi, is hoasflnit
r<'i<lv<'d an order for rji.ono
sucks of I,bun Ih',111,
der is lookml to follow
often
In id
w It h
the leafy trip I
a ml sirolo- mny cause
erlmiH wound. Cotloii pick-
beet Im I (i-st in?
Itoliin.-.on
auditm iiim
of
If any. problema that
confront the furmers of T.-xa-i of -m
flint of flndlni’’
products of the
fertility of tlm
abundant ruin
thi* farmer to produce
cropH, lint how to dls|io:<H
of them to tlm III ■ f Iidvantage Is the
pridili-in wlileli 4-010-4 t n1 him most
We an- visited almort daily by per
son* who eoiitemplati- tile purchase
of home in South Texas They
sire all sorts of information
soils, crop
tiuiri-il In j/row In
l-tliill’-H ami
we are not
Information
Of HUHpil-loll
infornmt Ion
a
I'HIISII
I Mlltfi a;.-.e
working wnmn
Thirteeii
(lie
Mitnngorial ability i« the larreHt
factor In 1 m-<-< us Hard work In <-v e.-|i'n- coniinb Imi
cry llm- of hut inn effort Is nw-sary
but without a wi-ll thought out (dan
following, net ar a man follows a
awing :i hoard, tint a- 1
stream that guide* him- |jl)t(ir t)m ;|1II| n,,. |,m nmkim.-,
i hoii
wai>
promi : t-firn.
2T -■ ■
turned j usefulness of old farmers'
The State Farmers* Institute
j reality a farmers’ meeting, where
ami every delegates i- on an >
s,‘h | basis. No favoritism Is shown arid u ,
l schemes are unfolded to promot<' I: t
dividualtsm. It is growing in Inti
' eat and value and will dotlbtle-o. a
(juietly and unsoiii-■> |t should, supercede all State meet- :
ings of farmers. Its mission Is to
promote agriculture in this State that
Individual farmer may become
s-kllli'd and consequently inort
“Upward and onward"*
Who is there who will
' challenge It* destiny or doubt its use-
' fulness'
: more
| prosperous.
I is its motto
(jrape-Nuts is a delicious food, combining the native sweetness of wheat with the
Udkate flavor of malted barley and brought by scientific baking to a marvelous de-
^gestion. A daily ration of Grape-Nuts has put the joyion'
<>n many a Countenance.
kt eat tP'i-t
liml\
W tn*l 4-
tp knife
from the rmit
A new imliiHtry thn preservation of (1
nmng4iei», Inin rifintly bm-u started pij,
tn Manila 'I'lie I'tillipplnes Ih the y. i \|r
hotm of the imingo, ami for years ||,M| i4)ii
efforts have bm-n made (4* prolong <hlvrilry
the u»c of the fruit and Its axcellent c,-tii»i • Im
mu on for the mango ton h.-|.i ■
4-omparatlvi-ly short, and the m oft'olorado publie
■ of Io r nppm-i d pi-i uliai •
(lie wi*l fa re (if tht
state. There Is
blit llieSe 51)00
dud rm one
logiMliitilfe of Colorado
IdJI to 4-sialdl*h
tlm
tlmrebv to tiii
Without inve"
HlltlH'
i tlm i <m
Suffragists | eminty
Mon generally
Imsim- bi-t'oi'e
i a-set t Ions.
I lilted
too, these meetings are
J turbed by political schemers
go '
eoim
i taking
scale uh .
Aus- ’
A" to tlm vnrl -lv of v<*getalih<n to
grow, flguio out vour market first
and 4I)« (I crow leeordlngly Rond lit
eraluro on vegetnhle growing Rvory
feriiici Hliould havi a library for hl«
needs By makliii-. a elo-io
lhe limdn<'si' one * Imuld
There Ih nlw
The fiinri offi i - splendid opportiin
to the virile young man
of rural life have
i liiii)g4‘H during tin-
Tlm loni’llimss of
of farm
telepliom-
nanie on mi
Every eiindidati
lature from Harris co
is an aiitl-suffrimist.
s wrote after
i ho should act
A lady
petition to get nd ot
nagging, but that he is now
We aii- gettiiig information
the people and Informed |
principle*.
I'lm legbUatiiri- of
hOftslH of )n,,
'■nr of the 19|fl
In order to derive the best
<>n the farm, or In ini' other line
work It In riceeHHari to handle
work in mil h a wnv that there Shall
a difference l.etwiin the emit of
SSlf'
O W'. g -fetF
hours
and under
fni-H mak‘-
Two
women Miffra-m -tales limit the hours
■ I or ntidei Oregon. Colorado, Ari
and Wa llington limit the limit’s
. . to i;i) inn do not prohibit
work.
Hill an light hour law for worn-
defeated in < ’a I Horn in. ami a
providing one day of rest in sev
was ri,l<-eled Kansas has no law
! limiting the hours of labor In Cali-
fornia Ore on and Washington the-
e.uinlm- industries which employ 25
) pm ci'nt of all working women are
: exempt from tlm law - restricting the
hours of labor.
In Kansas pet cent of Hie worn
<-n receive less than $5 per week
M msaehtmsets only s per
How about that Job printing? Look , . ive let s than f5 per week
Tlm Vnmrlcan Medical association
report- that Minue<ota. New York
Mil- nrhui sets. North I'arolina. Miiry-
guar- laud ind 1‘ennsy Ji anlii all male suf-
frage b-ad in regard to lhe super-
vision of health official
Condi
und> rvoiie
past few
former
period of farm lif<’ tie more <-xf«ts
Tlm telepliom- and rural mall havi'
brought about a m-w era In firm llv
ini- Tlrnii too. tin- automobile hir*
emitrlbiiti d verv I'li-ativ toward nuik
Ing farm life tndnrahle to tlm nmit
exnctlnir All these iir.om-b have
eonihllied tn nlllke lie- farm tin* ldo.il
r ,,f abode. Htild'1 the prm-n'ss
have mmlo In t our farm priii'tlce .
.e whether it im.ws with tlm
teaching* of those with wider t-xpcr
Irliee I’efbap 'our ■ ueec si’«i h-IV<-
hr-eii fiiiliirc*
n-rtas. by virtue of an order of
1 iied out of tin- District Court of
comity. Texas, a judg-
i'('ndered in said court rm the
ot June A. D.. 1.9lt>. in favor
Alamo Lumber Comintny and
liti-t Samuel J Baker G. M. Magill,
\\ . Magill and J I-.' Stevenson. No.
I. itt.i. on tin- docket of said court, I
11 th day of July A I >. 1916.
in., levy upon the fol-
wing described tracts and parcels of
ml -ituali'd :ii th" Count- of Mata-
u'da. state ot Texas, and belonging
I to the said Samuel J. Baker, and I
i aiic-t ■ which tin- said (I. M. Magill, I
J. W. Magill and J. E. Stevenson, hold
. , .u nm-H-dm;;!,. and infm or m that '• x ■ R- R- which said land
I of the plaintiff to-wit:
27.412 t-ieres of land in Surveys Nos.
I and 3. block li of the I A- (}. N. R, R.
nrvi-y . and being portion of lots
I and 2 of the M. O'CantM.-ll sub—
vi-mn. a piat of which subdivision is
■ of reeord in the deed r<cords of Mata-
eorda count' State of Texas. Vol.
I7n. and is more particularly
ib>4<! as follows: Beginning at th
northwest, corner of the M
rii-divi -imt, Hie s.nm- bcili-.-. 1
not
In tlm
amount
the tree*
let
ami nm
there ’’free’ ’white” states
a latter legislative record tliau
T, x.i v In re womi-n are ‘ slaves”
i 11 r iiiiiicaI public custom
le tters eome from nu n saying they
I mu equal uffragi- lm< ause of
. bi in-fit Dm' " di iici-rue
' war-e earning womi-n.
J lli.-atirm they n iturall.y
I improvi
u omen
Idea.
niatt'-i’s of
unpriv on
Hie I'nited States
found that Id male
Ho- hours of
It
tgibor i*
throughout
raltyed better
That which was drurfu
a pleasure We learn
We proa-
^nrrner.
ment* perfected to care
, attend.
The State Farmers’ institute is tin i
I creature of law and its annul i.. ..
preconceived opinion ing.s are by far the largest attended j
' of any farm meetings of the State ' (
ti nd I-■
whose |
, activities have almost dertroyed th- | (f1(| un
congresr ; tt t) qh-juek a
is in |O
llcnl I state.
S'I'A J E OF TEX AS
Cmftt.t.y of Matagorda.
vited to attend and take part
This year's aession
largest
pre-
jt x;i- Now tiie otli vioiisly held A most excellent pro
side of the shield is being i xhibit ' gram has been arranged ami arran..;--
I’eopb- an beginning to think, to | mente perfected to care for all who
e.stigal4-
Im <>l>s said in his
polities,'’ that no
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 210, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1916, newspaper, July 11, 1916; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1362187/m1/2/: 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.