Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 117, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 28, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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THE SONG OF THE SHIRT
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Six Months-----
Three Months___
By GORDON K SHEARER
Austin, June 28 (UP) — Capitol cir-
cles take with a grain of salt the re-
Any erroneous reflections upon the
character, standing or reputation at
•y person firm or corporation which
may occur in the columns of THE
EXAMINER will be gladly corrected I
anon being brought to the attention
-----•8JOO
---UM
---9U0
, fllb ICUICUiVUl nvuiu aa.vM.. —w r~
litical passing of a man who for more
■than a quarter of a <
legislature ended. Senator Parr had
! apparently recovered <
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22. ins. at Navaeota. Texas, under
Act of Congress, March J, 1872.
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Sider the Heme : f
at Austin
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Mexican War K
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d up th
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anon being brought to the
c' the firm.
' retire.
1 His retirement would mean the po- |
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hV.jta:
, Institute.
for '
mad>> lately '<
ohserva t ion
from
was tha7 the*
Washington in<li-
bet wf eh
nation: J
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“Work works work
Till the brain begins to swim!
Work work work
Till the eyes are heavy and dim!
Seam, and gusset, and band,—
Hand, and gusset, and seam,—
Till over the buttons I fall asleep
And sew them on in a dream!
/ ,
of the l ape ?
o
With fingers weary and worn.
With eyelids heavy and red,
A woman sat. in unwomanly rags,
Plying her needle and thread,
Stitch’ tititch! Stitch!
In poverty, hunger, and dirt;
And still with a voice qf dolBrous pitch
She sang the "Song of the Shirt"!
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Looks like Ibusipe^s
with thp railfQad'
jf iWt^^'
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y
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it-
Obrituarles and resolution* of r«- H
*p«ot published at on< (1) cent per I the
word.
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IT A MILT
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taMfakp; W‘ ■’>’ *•** J-.e
8FEAB8 A WHITTEN
Ommve and PaMtahm* * ••w
Navaeota. Texas
o>'i
New York Tim
nariiy look
WO! (I 4 of t
most
Thr
- ■
is picking up
• sphere the Pen-
nsylvania has recalled 2.01'0 men and
the Baltimore and Ohio' radroad is to
hire 500 more men That sure looks
gOod for ‘the unemployment situation.
race was sc |
contest. Pan
1^5 talking about
Chesterfield — says it
has a good reputation
—What about it?
/
a six
politics
1 -^Sl
v ’'ji
is vitt.l <r_. -.go a ecmi-gridiror.
dinner was given at Austin by ;hf
r.twspapi correspondents and mem
bers of the legislature who have bee:'.
. :.;.n When Parr arrived as
::ght
•able from him. hir own
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wti; S i mar. Evans, n.itv
r-.-r - ——-------
;ant jrostmaster-general.
— j
: Ohr does ndt ordi
to $»\nator Couzens
wi.'dom, but h<
\th<* most p«»nvt iatinij
which < !*!■• in ♦ he > th'patche
’ l.ondon. '1 h» gist 6f"it
L attitude, at
confl’.ct hvt.wfp^- intc’,-
aivl l(/ir naUoird /•< or'
In the ♦►binion i ‘ b*
.• can not carry
or later we -
z? ’"zjfc
I I •
iports that Senator Archer Parr, Be-
Catered as Second-Oaaa^matter | navidea, is to retire politically.
That may L_.
his intention now regiment in which --,—, ,
it Is admitted, tut fi. Par< of’vlrginia, had eBrved. Geo, >
it is predicted j Parr became so struck with the Texas
when he hears I country while serving in the regiment
the sound of bat that after the war he returned to the
tie in the 1®3-1 »t«t« •«<* eettled.
campaign, he will i As Archer grew up the family mqy-
prick up his ears i ed (o ftockport. He attended schtxrt.
like ah old war- there ahd taught there. He next he
horse and he in ‘ came a cowboy in employ of the Cole
man-Fulton Pastures company, drove
By the time the recent session of the heard from Bouthwest Texas to Kan-
legislature ended, Senator Parr had saa and later became foreman of the
i apparently recovered entirely ■ from Sweden Ranch in tluval. couhty. Latftr
the illness that led to reports he would j he purchased this ranc6 Whl£h is his
'_______ . , . ■ | home.
His 27th senatorial district is an em-
pire in itself. It covers 14,510,000 acres,
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Chesterfield j
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wh" ' •'
He seidop
In 1919. W. D. Glasscock .-..eUh- and pa;., Utt'.- attention to pa.
Iiamentary squabbles—unless they en
danger a till he ._yors.
In the heydey o; his reign many pc
litical actions now tabco, were not ;
six inch lawyer-ranchman from only permitted but were general. When ;
teles are told of political tricks he pu
over, Parr enjoys the laughter.
He cv r. stretches them a little for
its early ranching days lias gradually effect,
weakened the hold of the old leaders
j like Jim Wells.. Parr, and the late A.
Y Baker. A good government leagut
carried Hidalgo county in 1932.
Parr is not only the dean of the
Texas senate in point of age and in special gu&st he "found seated
1 point of length of service, but he is\ ■'
1 more than twice as old as severa! of replica,
the senators.
A recognized power in
■bi
'than a quarter of a century has held includes the largest ranch in the Unit- ‘
a tenth of the entire state in almost ed States two of the large Mexican
feudal control. ; border cities, one of the large Texas
He approached more nearly to the , gulf ports, the state's citrus and win
■ jefe politico" of Mexico than any ter garden district, one of its large sui-
other person in the state’s political phur deposits and one of its oil field:
history with the possible exception of | it comprises 18 counties.
the late Bryan Callaghan. Callaghan.’ A visitor to the Texas senate migh
for years ruled San Antonio and Bex I not pick out Parr for its olde-'. mem
'ar county with iron hand. * ] ber nor would he think the smiUni
Only twice in hik long senatorial , senator in the back row is one
service has Parr's’rule been seriously 1 ruled with iron hand,
threatened. 1..
ran against Parr. Th?
close that there was a
was declared winner.
In the last election Jihi Neal,
foot
, Webb county, made the campaign
; gainst Parr.
Development of the country from
reputation of some other things . . . and, a a
come to think about it, I should say that
CHESTERFIELD has an A-l reputation. 1 .
You know, it seems to have real merit.
To me, for a cigarette ’To Satisfy,”it cer-
tainly has to be made right; and then it has
to ta«e right. I just don’t like them strong w ‘
• • • “^ey iust have to be mild.
CHESTERFIELD has what it takes to satisfy, I
That’s what people say about it.* y J
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They have
what itTJces f
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id. ai.h’/
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"O Men. with sisters dear!
O Men. with mothers apd wives!
Jt is not linen you're wearing out,
But human creatures' lives.
Stitch-' Stytch—Stitch
In poverty, hunger. <and dirt.
Sewing qt once, with a double thread.
A shroud as well as a Shirt!
“But why 'do I talk of Death
That phantom of grisly bone!
I hardly fear his terrible shape.
It. seerrt.s so like my own
It seemk ko like my own
Because of the fasts I keep:
O God"’ that tread should be so dear.
And flesh’and blood so cheap!
Thomas Hood.
offle
cate."
riaf ion. 1,1 m
. cUirp' p'rve 1.7m■
JsficihUsaij Sf\i:it^>fk “we can not carry
thfoiigji birth Srioher or later We shit!! '■
..Hiiv • decide which we are to fol-.
t/16w“. Thus far, it'must te admitted
the admiplstratioA jit Washington hd-
refu-eit ia hesitated to mnkf the ne-
cfessary choice. Its genial suggestion
to th- country appekrs to have been
th it w<. ar, not shut up to. a choice
between contradictory policies, bu-
may chee(fii!ly undertake to adop
both yf th, m
At present. Washington is visibly
’ putting its money on the nationalistic
horse. This is made pretty clear, not
ionly by the significant utterance . an,
etill more significant silences of Pro.
fe$sor Moley and other spokesmen for
the administration, but by the zeal
and energy with which the great
scheme of industrial recovery is be-
ing pushed. If that succeeds, our rela
ticns \/!th the rest of the world will
be officially allowed to recede more i
and more Into the background. But I
if it is only partially successful, or
falls outright, there will be a differ.!
ent story to teU. Should the United
States become choked again with its
own internal trade and mass produc- ,
tion the ears of the Roosevelt admin-
istration would be open to discussion of
tariffs and ships and freights and for
sign markets. Till the actual results
are knowif, there is little the country
can do except "watchful waiting,"
Pioneer Woman. 72. Died
Jjtcxte. TESTI. (UP» — Mrs C. W.
72. a ptpneer of the county
first woman to be married
rasih) af flaxie, died recently
M a settlement of a few
she wm
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Masks
- WAwr «tufied under his coat, laugh wh
Throughout the dinner Sijtmth, ate, |
riaised his cup and gesticulated ini Ua
unison with the Duval senator. Parr ' If Mayor Paul Wakefield, fc
enjoyed th a parody and joined in the former secretary to Gov. Roes B.
Haying Horsie A
BUTWEIX TWO
Word th.’it Mhe Methodist church is J
sponsoring a -Chautjiluqua t<^ be held
in> October should be- received wjth I.
opi?n arms by, thewCltjizenship of Nav- [
asota and ?u(;QoundiAg territory The |
program- tq be given wilpbe entertain- J
Ing and educational. z\ goo,’ chau,tau I
q.ua is something that all ^an enjoy
and each conirnunity should h:\ye each4
year, i > J, ■
(0/ -
Th-,'innudl Bed Cross Swimming In ] ’ >
stitute will lie conducted next week
and all ’.hi,I desire to take part should 1
rt;g(stei NOW The institute has been
Very, successful in the , past an.d 'iTli-
expected to te even bi'tt<T this yeai
The Red Cross is doing a,"wAnderfu! '/
piece of wtk , eiir-^iV.yea: by hblfijny
thw i^wimm
di
$•’ 1
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*T1ALKING ABOUT the reputation of a ; |
JL cigarette—that’s something new.
I know about reputation of people . . ,
S Southwest Texas fee mare tha* 80 wi^h a pUJox*
'■ years and political boss of a large part — wev’**. -
vf the border country for a quarter of
a century, he has held but two politl-
I cal offices himself. His first office was
county commissioner. The rest of his
office holding has been in the Texas
senate ofwhteh he tvcamo a member
in 1BU. Parr then was 54 yours old, the J
legislative Manual of that time shews J
The short, rotund; jolly-faced, far- ‘
merstockman, is. generally known a»
"Archie". The cored name is Archer.!
When be was born on Christmas day {
of 1861 at Indianola he was named [
be for the Colonel. of the
"'1 bls ftdher. George
a
BmW'
F" ■■■
I
and later became foreman of the
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 117, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 28, 1933, newspaper, June 28, 1933; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373349/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.