Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 184, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 14, 1932 Page: 2 of 4
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Navasota. Texas
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Swan Tragedy
A BIBLE THOUGHT FOB TODAY
ator and political ruler whom
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romance
swan.
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ON WEDNESDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS..
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a loving
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drink freely in town and
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the pity
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con-
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black
minus
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en
—----O —--
MARK HANNAS FAMOUS
OH! M»u MBAH THC
CHIPS I HAT> u)hbN
u>« quit placing ?
Ybsj had swr-
why, i THQBvr those
INTO THAT Box
WITH CHIPS IN IT.
WAS “THAT AU RIGHT.
1 MR«SHOD60ASS’
ALLRIGHT
WITH ME>
i>i tub banker
Too Should HAMK
CASHtfc'tM IN,*
YboQ Hubby
PAD Good
Money foq'bM’
Good \
GRACIOUS. '
EwBOfUME
I TURN MY
BAcWThat
WOMAN TX>ES
Somethin’
dumb
LOVE MASTERS FEAR
is no fear In love; but perfect
casteth out fear.—1 John 1 18.
---o
WHAT’S RIGHT WITH
EDUCATION?
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route from Hempstead to M<
villa. ■ '■ ‘ -- T-V , -toh
Mr». G P. Pearson and little daugh-
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Ilf
118
'Ll MWie
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Music in the air . . . bewitching
music. "Blues” or ballads . . . sad
songs, glad songs . . . old favorites or
latest hits . . . Chesterfield’s Girl of
Song sings them all. Hear
■
| MMM
There1
love
■ 7'3
• >*. * < .■ *.»
PlanterevUle were
route to Madiaonv
d«y ..i,<
Churchill and Henry Kolker.
----'----o-----------
Anderson News
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HIT*9 IllLT
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worrian How he comes to ills senses, j
worsts the political gang and triumphs
with hie party, form the background
of a spectacular drama. Karen Mor-
ley, who appeared with Barrymore in
’ . ’ ’ ; i the political |
nervous over my condition—this was
unusual for ‘
ful whan I i
SUSSS* MyTunt tokfma f ought
had token three er four bottles Bty
aide quit hurting and I was soon
feeling Strong and well.*’
Cardui is sold at drug stores bore.
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•-Lail
I
L;,' Obrttuarles and resolutions of rs-
h spsct published at on. <1> cent per
r word.
r, . ■■■■ ............. - . —, W I HI --
erroneous reflections upon the
r character, standing or reputation of
P - ’ ray person firm or corporation which
I may occur in the columns of THE
»>? EXAMINER will be gladly corrected
i upon being brought to the attention '
of the firm.
1
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T to*Naw
Measra. RuNi and Irvin Wood and
MlM Harsee Backer motored to N«r.
vasoto Thursday morning.
Mr. and Mra U«e Spell and chil-
dren of Bryan, Mrs. H. C. Arrington
and daughters, Mieses Adell and Lil-
lian, spent Thursday afternoon at
HuntovUle.
Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Boggess, Misses
Eugenia and Josephine Boggess spent
R One Tear -----------
Et Bz Months ..........
K Ikroe Months--------
Entered as Second-Class matter Feb.
S tt. 1PH. at Navasota. Texan under
p Act of Congress. March 1. Id7b
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6
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MIMred O’Brien of Erwin and Miss
AHne Moody of Piedmont who spent
several days here. ,•>
Mr,, and Mrs. Clarence Cuihrell
spent several days last Week at Hous-
lo«b . /■ .
Mr. and Mrs. Llge Spell and chll- ,___w______________
dren of Bryan spent several day* last Friday morning at Navanota.
week with Mr. and Mra. H. C. Ar- „e w-i-nn,
i ingtoq and family. ,
Mrs. J. H. Allen and 'eon, J. T. spent
several days last week at Houston. Mr-
Allen motored to Houston Sunday.
Mitrseu Grace Bradley ,Zoia Mae and
Adelle Arringtoh and Lawrence Spell
motored to Navasota Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Howell of Bry
an spent the week end here.
V. H. Borski spent Friday morn-
ing at Navasota on business.
Mrs. L. T. Boggess, Misses
Mrl<1
\Thomas!
,\ That*
bkou&H •
-vH HAR-HAR
A (NT THAT
aus' LIKE
a tNoMAN.-
HAR-H'
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When in my grave and sleeping warm
Politics may still be vile and rotton
And a raging wild Bermuda storm
Brings destruction tb the fields of cot
ton.
I' A
JF
which win open
Theatre.
The breakfast decides the start Of
a political campaign io the picture. It ter. to Nava>oU wadnesdiy
1. an echo of the famous “corned beef They w.re accompanied home by Miss
breakfaata” that Mark Hann* uaod to ----- ”
stage in Washington. Whenever the
famous political organiser and Ckar
wanted to decide on anything, he sum-
moned his “cabinet” of men high in
the political machine for a breakfsnt
at which his colored cook served her
famous coined beef hash. There any-
thing from a new preaident to a-nat-
ional tax was settled on. It got to
be a byword In Washington.
Samuel G. Blythe, famous political
writer, who collaborated with John
Meehan in the present story, attended
one of them, of which a full account
is given in his book, “The King Mak
ers." Many other vivid details of the
“insldf” of politics at Washington
and expedients of lobbyists, such as
the employment of women In attempts
to snare lawmakers when other means
fall, are seen In the new production
which is based on Henry Bernstein s
play. “The Claw ", with authentic ma
terial added by the adaptors.
Barrymore heads the cast as a sen-
the |
vested interests seek to render pow [
erless through the manipulations of a |
"Arsene Lupin”, plays the political j
charmer, and the cast also Includes |
the new screen “find", Diane Sinclair,
Nils Asther, Reginald Barlow, Wil-
liam Collier. Sr., William Morris, Ra-
faela Ottiano, C. Henry Gordon, Bur-
Then, quite suddenly, the flock of
■ I
I
Mrs,
Sun-
I
ryy •■•■•.z 'Li
T-
[running for office they waem to ba
more fund of talking of the other can-
didates’ characters than mending
their own and the harm they do to
others is often less than that they do
| to themaejyea. If an editor waa aa
I indiscraat be would have a libel suit
I on bls hands ■■
Mr. Wisdom — You know Father
Time, a man always keep* true to his
i first belief, until he gets a second ”
i Lady Ignorance < reading an old
I play)-
“No stock exchange disturbed the
With overwhelming shock*—
Bill ploughed with all the shares
had
Jane planted all her stocks.”
Lady Ignorance thought Bill must
have been a farmer, and Jane, fond
of flowers and they were not afraid
'of retribution.
--T-- ---O-T--
Blonde Caused
« „t„'.-t “y aff^urs;, its vitality I
— and indeed it has tremendous vital-|
ity comes not merely through:
the generous outdoor policy, but also j decided on ana national crises seiueu
through subsidiary measures t h a tl have an echo on the talking screen in
‘ ■ Barrymore's morning meal
in "The Wash
MetrbXjoldwyri-
Mayer's dYamatic romance of public
life and the machinations of lobbyists.
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The prohibition law may be repeal-
ed,
And men
city
But in my grave I'll be concealed
And cannot join them: and mores
Ifei'ta! Tea, dear friend, I will be relieved
t.V. And I, no reason have to doubt it.
1 No more I’ll fret or be sad or grieved,
Lr’- But I won’t know a thing about IL
—Pat Keelan.
1
--
FATHER TIME R RHOP
'»|itoi v* . • 1 • 1
By KATHERINE B MORGAN
E Operators in the Shop: Sir' Oracle
^Madam Worry, Mia* Education. Mr.
Jf/'Wlettom and Lady Ignorance.
/ , Stock Holders: Meseers Hour, Day
. a N1«ht '
BMta Education — “What the last
»■ war taught us is: that a nation re
Earuits men more easily than it can
Bitotrimre ita just war debt*”
‘ Mrs Worry — Tee, all day long I
h«a*wer th* door bell to peddlers, and
night my hueband lets them all in
radto, and they
• tMLUeMnrthMramlteammGa. 1
* W
.7:W
'Herngnl^ ___
passed through here 'Buhif
wxm. ?"
Melvin MeKiUMyM «P«n<!
eral day* at Plantermrtlle.
Mr and Mrs Roy McKinney of.
Side Quit Hurting,
Got Stronger, Wefl,
CARDUI Helped Her
2jrs.,1suss£Tg: ■-J
me *m*r eWxeaAIHmt thia
quit hurting and I was soon *Zt
ng strong and Well.”
Messrs. W. S. Brown, W. E. Ful- I
gham, M. L. McKinney and J. Y. Gat
i es, left Saturday for Lubbock to at-
| tend the .state democratic convention.
Mrs. Lillian Stoneham of Stoneham
and Miss Ida Mae Hill of Abilene
spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. C. I
„. Cuthrell. '
M r1 e 1 C? X fr-r, ..
Anderson, Texas, Sept. 14 —
R. A. Hoke of Huntsville spent
day here with Mrs. W. E. Bay.
Mrs. Blumberg of Waller county fa
here visiting her brother, Rev. J. E.
Bouiet and family,.
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Moran and son, |
Pat, motored to Hamilton Thursday. I
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Goff of Dallas I
spent last week here with their aunts, |
Misses Mollie, Augusta and Clara
j Lange and Mrs. Clarence Cuthrell, |
I
“THAT LITTLE B. Link
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I'm told that death will bring relief
From all the worries and ills of life
from throbbing pains, remose and
grief
And the nagging ways of
wife.
RUTH ETTING
• ■ ■ , . ■ » ■
in Chesterfield’s Radio Program,
"Music that Satisfies,” every Wednes-
day and Saturday night—Columbia
coast-to-coast Network.
1
| * * *
( Chesterfield Radio Program—Every night
Except Sunday, Columbia coast-to-coast
Network. k; :/T.'.
f 1
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*
THE CIGAEETTE TRAPS
rifHS CIQARETfiWliAT 7adiedjSe2i
i1 ■7*,;7M|Mr
/a
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P,teakfasts at which presidents are
iecided on and national crises settled
I'A.
Mrs. J. S. Chaney, Mrs. Kit Cha-
ney and Wyatt Chaney of Navasota
Mrs. Richard Chaney and baby
Madisonville were here Sunday
white swans developed an immense
resentment. They’ declared war on
the black couple and on April 7 killed
I ho female black swan.
For a few days the male
wan flew about restlessly,
blonde, minus brunette. Finally he dis
: ppeared and’was later found to have
flown to Battersea Park.
There he found peace, but neither
npr blonde mate, there being
female in the park and she
quite taken up with three white mal-
es,
London, <UP) — The black swan,
who preferred a blonde, barely escap
ed with his life and minus his bru-
nette wife.
It happened, not long ago, in Hyde
( Park, here in the center of London.
I The pair of black swans, obviously
married, were from the start
hatted by the more numerous white
swans.
But romance came in the spring-
time. The male black swan became
much attached to a female white
For a week or two they were
constantly together, happy regardless
of theirm moral nature of their rela-
tionship.
5®'-’ ■
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'W ?l
f fl
f,
»if“
' ■ ' < 7)
? IS
Bata* Pearaon of Piedmont
her* on buainess Friday.
Feltx Fabian ot Houston spent last
weak h«r* with hla rister, Mrs. Felix
Moraa and family. *
Mr. and Mr*. Ike Roan and little
daughter, Lillian Adelle of Houston
spent Bunday with Mr. and Mrs. I. P.
Bradley and family.
< Misses Martha Ann Stanford and
Jsssle McIntyre and John Paul Stan-
ford of Houston are visiting their
Mary grandparents, itr. and Mrs. W. S. Me-
Kmlecik, Eugenia and Josephine Bog- Intyre Sr.
that
make free school privileges practic 1 Lionel
able, popular, and efficient. What good [with political poweis
does it do to open a door if wepngton Masquerade ",
promptly make entrance difficult and
undesirable? Since parents who are
(financially unable to buy textbooks
would probably save personal humili-
ation by declining to enroll their
children in the public schools, the state
protects children against such
tingencies through constitutional
date under which free textbooks are
the professionally
is prerequisite
supplied. Since
qualified teacher is prerequisite to
efficient school preparation for citi-
zenship, the state designates teacher-
training institutions, such as the
State Teachers Colleges, for the pre.
paration Oi teachers.
Since the indifference of parents
and the exploitation of capital would
keep Children in the fields, shops, and
industries with no chance for school-
ing, the state enacts compulsory edu-
cation laws. Since antagonistic
boards of trustees would cut school
tenks to save taxes, we have manda-
tory tax levies by vote of the people.
Since a narrow, static course of study
lacks appeal to large numbers of chil
dren who would drop out of schools
not motivated, we have multiplied the
range of subjects offered to keep step
with the range of interests manifest
ed. — C. E Evans, Southwest Texas
State Teachers College.
---------O—-------
DEATH
Any discussion of “What's Right
With Education'' is sadly incomplete
if it fails to include the ideal of uni-
versal education. The public schools
offer free educational opportunity for
everybody of school age, with no dis-
franchisement of class or creed or
race. The democratic way in a dem-
ocracy to assure good government is
to educate the whole people so that
they will know good government when
they see it, and know how to keep
and improve good government after
they get it. The public school is,
therefore, the state's guaranty of good
government through enlightened citi
zenship. The illiterate person, neither
appreciating the beneficent function of
government, nor enjoying the capacity j
j only one
FLORENZ ZIEGFELD
said... ''Iconsider Ruth Elting
the greatest singer of songs that
I have managed in my forty
years in the theater." /
....
■ .«<■ ■
■ ■ ■ ■ >*< . '
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to render skillful service, may at any |
tifne be a liability to the state. "The |
educated mind is the guardian genius )
of democracy; it is the only dictator I.
freemen acknowledge and the only
security freemen desire.” ; ()KXj.;|( BEEF BREAKFASTS”
F?ee educational opportunity is not' ECHOED LN “WASHINGTON
a dormant statutory offers;, its vitality I MASQUERADE"
Y
ph
merely
sifi
St
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 184, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 14, 1932, newspaper, September 14, 1932; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373106/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.