The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, March 28, 1924 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Matagorda County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.
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■■■■■MB
T
Coffee That Satisfies
and
parent*.
and
regard*. yrmrs.
W O Sicphcn*
I'oiile
<*xtend<-d
"n-i................< ii Q .......■—............
MR. mTH’BIXV moi||||( I'isMI'
in iv
han returned
vtait In
———n—o-------
GOOSMth DI MUNS M Ts
IN -IMIH »»*' W >«.» IM I"
Th* following letter received thia
noon la self-explanatory
Au.fln. Tr««e. March 27, 1*34
Hear ('irrf
•My mother panted nwa> yesterday
morning and I am going to have to
remain over a day or ao to straighten
up some affairs.
We expect to reach home Saturday
night and I shall appreciate It If you
will Insert the enclosed notice tn Mat
urday’a paper
With kindest
.March came in like
seems to be going out
three Ilona
a lion
like tw
Mr IV II Vaughan, who has been
In IxM-khart for the past several days
Inspecting Caldwell County land for
the iVderal Farm Loan Bank. arrived
home last night
Mr. .1 M. Fltsmauriee, of Houston,
is in the city for a few days on bus-
iness.
Miss Thelma Moore, of Gulf, la In
the city for the Interscholastlc Meet
and visiting her parents. Mr.
Mrs. ft P Moore
.Mias Louise
home after an
I 'nilas
THE IMPROVED
LOCALS AND I’LKSONALS
Blue Chimney
to Hay City
New Perfection
Fi
j
irNtS
;2!
a
I N
GUI.' ITEST
( HIM-
III*.
Henionstratlons Glad) Given
TAYLOR BROTHERS
hiMt
Clark’s Special Coffee
u
pleasant
THI.SE
NEY
1*1. I Y
HI-JI
IRE
THE
V III E
MODERATE I’RK ES.
STOVE
AT
The I
now
i Mr. Harold
w as
today.
11123
car.
1B23
I ear
A lineman's climbing spur.
Return to telephone office
21-21
1 la'^
Harber, of Markham
a business visitor
model
Will
BAY CITY
25-31
Messrs. Peryman Moore and Hugh
Gill are in Port taivaca today
model
Will
BAY CITY
25-31
The weather continues fine and the
farmers keep busy.
With the primaries only two weeks
off.t he candidates ate busy with the
voters and are putting in every mo-
ment of time
| LOST
i Reward.
Mr. W. D. Wilson and Mr. Geo. It.
Culver of Matagorda wore business
visitors to Angleton Wednesday.
Mrs Albert Wadsworth entertain'd
the wekly bridge club,
afternoon. A delicious
luncheon was served. !
Hamill won high score.
| in June.
i quota of
| were present
i thuslastlc.
I EASTER ■ < (HIKING, BETTER-
LIHIkING Bl.I E CHIMNEY NEW
I’lRlIITIOk WITH CONVEN-
IENCES TH IT M IhE YOl It hlTCH-
WORh MORE PI.EASAkT.
FOB SALE CHEAP
Ford, 5 passenger touring
trade for city propertv.
LI MBER CO
OIL
M I II 11 I 11 I It II lit
and can be made today
company and come on.
we do not mean it.
FOR SALE CHEAP
l-’ord. 5-passenger touring
trade for city property.
LI MBER CO.
Mr Cecil Bess, driller of Corsicana,
is in the city for a tew days with Ills
family.
Judge (1 Sholars of Orange has re-
turned home after a pleasant visit
here, the guest of Dr. and .Mrs. 8. It.
Sholars.
As we said, yesterday, you can be
friendly with thia paper if you want
to. We repeat that and will go an-
other one today. If you will not be
friendly and want the paper for your-
self or yourselves, Just keep it in
mind that you can buy it and run it
for your own satisfaction and profit.
This same deal could have been made,
live, four, three, two, one years ago
Get up your
If you think
Mr. and Mrs. W H Robinson left
this morning to spend the week-end
in Wharton They will have as their
guest Jack Wesley Young Jr.
I pusywillows In tall
~ After a delicious three-course menu
the discussion of ‘Africa" and liusi-1
Hess of the league was begun
| interest of the entire, league
centers on Camp Allen which begins
Il'e hope to send out a full
delegates. All members
and seem'd very en-
, Wednesday
i two-course
Mrs |- R.
A Ell 13-21 Bl.l E I
MOBELM ARE N0I1 ON
AT IHIS STORE.
The V. P. 8 L. entertained
evening with another one of their
Lent' n suppers The table was beau-
tifully decorated in carnations and
I sliver baskets.
Mr. A J Harty lias return'd from
business trip to Houston.
Mr O. A Cllaud, of Markham, was
a business visitor to Bay City yes
terday.
U V-
JW"- -
FIRMER
WHY
TELLS
GRAND
TODAY
with
BE
II
And Others
of clothes, 20
for
suit
Ills"
at
IHE JUNGLE
GODDESS
cloths.
io
of
for
suit
PRICES - - - 10, 15. Sftt-
TO MORROH
Rl< II ARD
TU.M UH.I
In
■•UH INhMHIN"
New
Business
while
PHONE 1—4—ft
MARGARET HORD MclONNELI.
Ml Sit STI DIOS
Hay I IO.
Phone 182
from
No job too small to
lx* considered
, a. I bushels
bushel requires
taxes
some
reasonably
Indiana,
h urc fees
Mrs L
balcony, E
m.
M l III. I ERITE
MOTTE
JOHN BOMERS
EMI ELI TIYI.OR
l> 11 IB III TI ER
II II II R I ONG
1.1 i ll I I HI I’TON
R II I'll I I II IS
< III Ml H ( Ok K 1 Ik
of the farm; money is simply
in the transaction.
transactions a
present the matter can
a nutshell, using my
an example.
heart, or
Don't
IINDIIk A
The Hay City Repair &
Refinishing C <> in p a n y
has opened for business
in the building adjoin
ing the Bay City Bank &
Trust Co., ami will ap-
preciate all orders for
refinishing and repair-
ing all classes of furni-
ture.
Don’t
Don't yell
Don't learn your
read It from a
refer to your
Don’t knock the other
“DESIRE”
We had all these
were less than
It la rumored that a
millionaire has sailed a
yacht In search of
believed to have been
Cocoa Island by Captain W
gan. the British
rumored
and
York
In hl"
buried treasure I
burled on I
L Mor
the British buccaneer. The
treasure Is rumored to constat of
solid gold and gem incriisted orna-
ments. the ravish'd riches of the Inca
lixited from Peruvian
vonieuce in tl.e
It'ins showLig
year* ago at
Im given in
own farm as
Wheat at 75 cents a bushel required
formerly
Taxes on farm. I no bushels
To pay for binder, 153 bushels
I To pay for wagon. i>7 bilahi Is
I To pay for harness (team),
| bushels
To pay
bushels.
To pay for shoes
Wheat at $1 a I...
present:
Taxes on farm, 200 bushels.
To pay for binder, 250 bushels.
To pay for wagon. 125 bushels
To pay for harness (Tteaml.
bushels
To pay
bushels.
To pay for shoes, 8 bushels.
• Tli" farmer is handing over pr<u-
I tic-ally twice as much of his farm
I products for the things he buys as
I formerly when the prices were lower
II and tile excess eats up his profits, In
[ ninny eases leaving a deficit This
I condition can not lung continue with
I out farmers going bankrupt. The
I remedy, of course, is to equalize
| prices, either by doubling th" price
I of farm products or by cutting taxes
I and the prices of goods he has to buy
I in two.
l-’urmers who give the matter study
! know that prices of farm products
I artificially enhanced prove a boom-
I erang in the long run and will not
' solve I he piolilelll III.' .111 e I mi 11 ve
U then is to cut the prices of those
II things he must purchase.
: By reason of an outrageously high
[tariff that practically excludes for-
eign goals and gives our home man
ufacturers a monopoly, they have
formed combinations and are charg-
ing the home people all the traffic
will hear while selling to foreign
|M-oples goods nl competitive prices
I Xow as to taxes There has been
I much said shout the tsxpsyers being
I responsible for high taxes It Is
[ true that we demand some things
such as schools, reasonably gmsl
I roads, the proper care of uiifortun
litis and the like. *" “
things when taxes
what they are at present
The general body of taxpayers has
not demanded kited salaries, useless
high priced commissions, all the hard
I surfaced roads built Inside of a year
or two. palatial prisons, root cellars
with all that this expression Implies
and so on. These things have been
foisted upon us over our protest —
I Thomas Trueman. Rockeville, Did. in
I Indlanam'lls News
, ®—o—
Ten ’'Don'ts” for women political
orators, given by the woman vice-
I chairman of the republican national
I committee, are as follows “Don’t
show oft your best clothes, don't
li'itk like a bareback rider or 11 tinsel
ciri us dancer Don't war pearls or
dangly things around the neck Don’t
wear a hat. especially one with feath-
ers nr flopping things on II
show your feet or ankles
at your audience
speech b.v
written copy
lack of lime
party
Much has been said about the finan-
cial plight of the farmer and the pic-
ture Is not overdrawn. Such rem-
edies as have been suggested have
been of a nature ultimately to aggra-
| vote his condition Lending him
I money relief does not meet the situ-
i ation. Low prices for farm products
are given by all who discuss the sub-
I Ject. even by most farmers them-
I selves Farmers have been fairly
i prosperous with wheat selling at 75
cents to 811 cents, corn al 25 cents to
I b> cents, hogs cents and othti farm
i p < duets in proportion What then Is
the trouble since prices at present
I are quoted much higher" l-’nriners
I pay for what they buy with pi Huels'
i con
With
few
Clark County. Ohio, In the future
will use all rsipper found in liquor
stills In repairing rmifing and spout-
ing on niunty buildings
------O-.-O—- —.............
Castleberry, modlate, In
Bti'louh "tore. I’bon"
37-3 e
M
M
and
Francisco.
Ib»ran
I |r-
Itall
Ma rno,
Lucy
Mary
Howard
little
Stephen Goossoa. graduate of
■cole dee Beaux Arts of I'arta
I nail *la«
th*
de
' signed the grrat sets which are seen
In the Joseph M Hrhenrk production.
[ 'Ashes of A’cngeanre.”* a First Na-
tion picture starring Norma Tai
made, showing Monday and Tuesday
at the Grand Theater
Mr CsMsaaon. who has made a spe
< lai stud y«if French architecture of
all pirl'als. const ructesl a den plicate
nt the txmvre ballroom a* It was in
i I.’>72. three chateaux of the Renaia-
same period, and an entire quarter
l of the I’arta of Charles IX More
, than I'"' architects of the American
Institute of Architects visit'd the
, sets at the t'nited studios during the
I filming of lhe photoplay
"Ashes «»f Vengeance" was directed
I by Frank Moyd In the cast, besides
| Norma Talmadge, are Conway Tearle.
Wallace Beery, Courtenay
I Josephine Crowell. Hetty
J Claire McDowell, Andre
Murdock Ita'Quarrta
i ger. Murdock MacQuarrie. Boyd
win. Carmen Phillips. Winter I
William Clifford, Hector V.
i Earl S' hcn» k, Jimmy Cooley,
J Beaumont, Forrest Hoblnaon.
McAHtater. Kenn'th Glb*<>n
Truesdell. Frank Leigh and
j J« anne Carpenter
Ashes of Vengeance'- is a romance
i of France In the days of the weak-
willed Chart's IX and his ruthless
mother, Catherine de Medici He
sides the notable cast named above
four thousand extras are employed
m its spectacular and thrilling]
, scenes.
WHITE LECKCEN EGGS
Otis Montgomery
Johnson Strain, From 200 • • Egg Hens
Per Setting 15 Eggs $1.50
Mail Orders Promptly Handled
Phone 281
Bay City
“Amemican Maid’’ distributed locally by Cabtek Gbain Co.
I
some
If you want more business use :
“printers ink” for results.
It Is estimated there are HW
and 100 woodland caribou on •
he island Also the only sharp-'
railed grouse found In Michigan are [
‘ located in this area It has 21 inland I
. taken and several swift-flowing trout ,
.streams in the interior j
Isle Royals, located In th* heart of
|j Lake Superior, and containing 132.Wii
I: acres may become a national monu-
ment. according to a statement from
I Secretary of the Interior Work Evi j
II dence of prehistoric mining has been I
I uncovered in three sections of the]
I island Harbors and bays range In I
-........ ‘ depth from two to seventy-four fath j
.......... onu It Is estimated there are ISO"]
—-
Fresh Alarm Clocks
0
.1b£-
J
A Kind of Insurance
No Policy Covers
Yoh get it
Y'Mi got it hen*
Oodbe Brothers
MOTOR CAR
HARDY-ANDERSON 'AUTO-CO.
Phone 154
EX IDE BATTERIES
GOODYEAR TIRES
Read The Tribune’s Want Ads.
Yet auch Insurance fo obtainable.
when you buy any car from the dealer who
al-will of the car owner m«»n»
P. G. SECREST
JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST
values the g<a
than th* order he get* from the car buyer.
Walker Furniture Co.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS
.....— —■ ............—- ......■ ■ !
By FRESH alarm clocks, we mean clocks fresh from the
factory, freshly oiled ami fresh in our stock, ready to
RUN and spread the “alarm.” We have just received a
supply of this kind of clocks ranging in price from $1.50
to $1.75 each.
FRESH CLOCKS give the owner much better service than
clocks that have been in stock for a long time. OURS
ARE FRESH. J
When in need of a reliable clock, we’ll be pleased
to serve you
Vi
L nl v
&
W6iy
Safeguard your car as you will, no inauranca
company can issue » policy insuring your
entire contentment with any car you own.
'T'HE beat insurance of
X pure, fresh, clean,
wholeaorne f'xxi is to place
It In the clean.
p*rsi RMTW
■■rak
Glacier
Refrigerator
The highest-grade house-
hold refrigerator built —
selling at a popular price.
Exclusive, patented fea-
tures— not found in any '
other refrigerator.
RKFRICh'RATOR TIMh' IS ALMOST HERE HE’ HAVE
ON OISPLA F t l.lNE OF OLACIER REERIC,ERATORS
AND WOULD LIKE FOR YOU TO LOOK THEM OVER
RE EORE BUYING.
5HETLJ' '.’’i i . ... ------
4
i
>
y«m<
h Taker But One Trial
Better than
any flour she
had ever used”
Remember—
The Better the Flour
The Better the Baking
AMERICAN MAID FLOUR MILLS
HOUSTON. TEXAS
"I tuc American
Maid flour all the
time—have for
a long time, I
like it better /
than any flour
1 ever used.”
The (ihuve is f>an of a lefter written
ar by a lady of Rotenberg. Texas
I
2$
to Convince
“American
Maid”
flour
AN EXTRA PAIR OF TROUSERS—FREE I
maar* fr-
VERSER BROTHERS
EXCLUSIVE MEK 8 STORE
|5O.0b, aB with
Ni-w Spring and
can be madf up
(hare la nothing
and fabric*
We are offering an
ch a .rd from u« ir«m
elahl da».« range* of
as low a« S.5"0 and
pair of trou«er« free with each ault pur-
pring and Summer line of 1*23. Thera aro
« fiotn this Bn. beginning
‘rec tronaara. That* auita
Summer 1*21 modela and
from the current xeaaon’a style*
HSRSBER
MSWESBKM
B S3*
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, March 28, 1924, newspaper, March 28, 1924; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1365930/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.