Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. [35], No. 197, Ed. 1 Friday, September 29, 1933 Page: 4 of 4
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TODAY
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Adultf 25c
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Goes With Oyrd
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Friday Afternoon & Saturday Speciale
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17c
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ICOHOMYMil
14c
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16c
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. Wi OO OUR r
43c
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7
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Rajah Salad
pint jar
13c
25c ’
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Brin Felts
/. .
in
Ladies' Hats
I■'
Children's Shoes
$1.14
79c
I
HUCK FINN. Guaranteed fast colors. Price
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School Days Are
Here Again—
Boys' Pants—in Longies, Knickers and Shorts.
Boys’ Caps, Ties, Belts, 2 Piece Underwear
Our complete stock of Boys’ furnishings
will make it easy for you to make selections.
Full Pack
No Slack Filling
Judge R. M. West of Austin spent
Thursday afternoon tn ths, city.
■s-sH
I **!
Mr and Mrs. Sam Carson spent Wed-
nesday in Houston attending to bush
ness.
t
I
Saturday Mid Night
"MADE ON BROADWAY"
--o------
A mature rubber tree produces a-
bout half a pound of rubber a year.
Verigood
12 Ik Sk
FLOUR
YELLOW ONIONS, 2 pounds „l____5c
IDAHO feUSSET POTATOES, 10 pounds_______23o
ORANGES, 2 dozen _________________________25c
JONATHAN APPLES, doxen_________________12c
FRESH ITALIAN PRUNES, dozen____________7c
CABBAGE, 3 pounds_____________-____,______10c
' LETTUCE, each ______________________________5c
’X’
LINDLEY
Funeral Home
AmbtUanee Service
PflONE 48
Navasota. Texas
fe -MJ
......j
.8 O’CLOCK
Mild and Mellow * pound
COFFEE
Choice Dried
PINTO BEANS
A Complete Stock Of Pat-
ent Straps and Buckles,
Roman Sandals, High Tops
And>e
fig! \
• •
I
d
I
■I
ii
£
White House! Evaporated
3 Tall or 6 Bahv cans
MILK
DVNAVANT’S
MORTUARY
Ambulance Day and Night
Courteous Comforting Service
> Phone 93
iff
S’
“MORNING GLORY”
Fran the Play by Zoe Akina
With Katharine Hepburn, Douglas
Fairbanks Jr., Adolphe Menjou.
Mary Duncan and many others. I
The screen a most arresting person.
aUty ‘ She triumphs again in a drama
that touches the heart of the worldl
Adults 35c Children 10c
Fast Color Broadcloth qq
TOM SAWYER SHIRTS, size 6 to 14, price ......... “OC
Kelly To Be Moved
, To Oklahoma Saturday
Mrs. JeSibie Floyd and Mrs. Ewing
Thomas of Roans Prairie were in the
the city Thursday afternoon shopping.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Smith of Hunts-
ville were In the city Thursday after-
noon. ' ' ,
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. McDonald of
Dallas are visiting in the home of Mr.
I and Mrs. J. H. McDonaJd at Allen
Farm. .
MRS. H. H. KNOX
Teacher, Plano and Voice
Classes in Primary and
Intermediate Child Singing.
S*udlo Opens Sept. 11, 1933.
PHONE 32. ' 173-Uno.
“------ ------------;—<—-4
Again came orders to /-
' ‘ ‘ I
_i--o— --
Engineer Found
Dead In Bed
F '-V
WHO WANTS A BEAUTIFUL
PIANO AT A BARGAIN?
”W'e have a splendid upright, ai-
-n a lovely Baby Grand piano in
two-tonc mahogany that we have
t<> take back. Rather than re.
ship will sell fbr less than bal-
ance due on easy terms. Will ac-
cept/-cotton as part payment. If
interested, write or wire us at
once before we send our truck
'for them.
BROOK MAYS 4 COMPANY
715 Fannin Street
HOUSTON. TEXAS
Phone FAIRFAX 4308
£
Dei Monte Sliced or Halves
No. 2H Can
PEACHES
Tampico. Sept 2* (UP) An Amer,
lean named Dickinson and his wife,
Owners of the Hacienda Aguadulce,
were drowned in floods resulting from
Sunday’s hurricane, a government dis-
patch from Tamiahua said today
Work of cleaning up Tampico con-
tinued. with Military and civil auth-
orities, local volunteers and employes
of American oil firms cooperating.
The steamship Coahuila was td
leave Vara Crus today with grain, su-
gar, rick, beans, medical supplies and
Red Cross workers for stricken Tam.
pico.
At Mexico City American Ambassa-
dor Josephus Daniels gave Jose Man-
uel Puig Caaauranc, foreign secretary
a check for $25,000 from the Ameri-
can Red Cross.
I. Rev. W. N. Purcell returned home
Thursday night from Cuero where he
has been holding a meeting for. the
past two weeks.
r„‘.i
L J
481b8t$1.53
SAME PRICE 64,
AS 42 YEARS AGO
25 ounces for 254
I MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED
av OUR GOVERNMENT
ITS ”
YOUR CHKAPRSU ’
fERVANT
A Special Assortment
of Ji
1
!- Jo. Mil!, J... s;.i U U-.
J. A. Hill, president of West Texas
State Teachers college, Canyon.
Joe has been selected as a member
of Admiral Richard Byrd’s expedi-
tion to the Antartic regions. He
had charge of nearly 100 dogs
when the expedition sailed from;
Boston September 25.
I
pounds
DRESSING
Quaker Maid
PORK & BEANS
Cleanser Chases Dirt
OLD DUTCH
22c
8 oz. Jar 8c
quart jar 23c
i
MW
28St. m
Mrs. Phillip Arhos returned last
night after a trip to Chicago to the
fair and to visit in St. Louis with
friends.
16-oz. cans
New Guinea Tribe
Bears Only Twins
Brisbane, Australia.—Doctor
Fortune, of Columbia university,
arriving here from New Guinea,
tells of an amazing discovery.
The Monduguma tribe develops
the trait of twin-bearing almost
to the exclusion of single births.
The doctor maintains it is due
to a system of Intermarriage be
tween cousins.
The women of the tribe do nil I
the work.
3CSM 19c
Jack Holt
and Liilian Bond in !
“WHEN STRANGERS
MARRY”
AIM Comedies and Buck Joneg
and Madge Bellamy in Peter B.
Ryae’s
"GOHDdN OF GOST CITY”
Saturday
Children 10c
All the above have been advanced very
little.
Mr. and' Mrs. L. A. Millican have
returned home from Chicago, where
they attended the fair.
24 lb Sk
—
C. S. Cone attended the circus in
Houston this week.
i 3
Showing The Most Intrinsically
Novel and Sparklingly Attract-1
ive Styles Ever. i
■
HEADQUARTERS FOR SCHOQL
WEARING APPAREL
Richards News
IMVm. !> _ • •
Richards, Texas, Sept. 28 — Mrs. O.
A. Hamilton and son, Oscar Jr. and
Mrs. Eleanor Cecil motored to George,
town Friday, where Oscar Jr. entered
school.
Mrs. Henry Griffin and children
have returned to their home at San
Antonio, after several days visit with
her njqther Mrs. M. F. Aubry and sis-
ters, Mrs. Scott McCune and Mrs.
Frank Foster.
Mrs. G. C. Sanders and daughter,
Miss Cecil spent several days in Hous-'
ton the past week. '
Mr. and Mrs. Gates Kelley of Goose
| Creek are visiting Mr. Kelley's par-
injured in an auto wreck Tuesday 1 ents. Mr. and Mrs. Ike Kelley.
Miss Sallye McCune surprised a
number of her friends when she and
Colquitt Wingard of Shiro were mar.
We wish this
j young couple every happiness on their
, voyage of matrimony.
Quite a number from here went to I
Houston Tuesday some to see the cir- ■
cus and others to do some shopping.
Mr; and Mrs. Holiday and little
daughter spent Wednesday at Hous-
ton.
News is scarce in our little town.
Maybe We can do better next week.
------O--
Cowboy* Fail to Find
Hitching Post* in Town
Laurel, Mont.—The automobile
may not have supplanted the horse
entirely, but parking spaces certain-
ly have done away with hitching
racks, two cowboys discovered In
Laurel.
The cowhands rode into town;
tired an,d dusty from a long trip.
Officers Invited them to move on
J when they., attempted to hitch their
, horses In the business section. They
i tied their horses to some small trees
j Jn a pnrk. ‘ '
< move on.
‘‘This town lias gone plumb to'
h—1,” commented the range, riders
with disgust.
I Rotert Miller *of Ferris, Texas, is
I here for a few days visiting his moth- i
| er and sisters. His visit at this time
I was occasioned by the misfortune
I which befell Miss Bettie Miller who
was
•night. Mr. Miller formerly lived in
Navasota and has many friends here
who ate always glad to have him re-
turn. pled Saturday night.
Sherman, Sept. 29 (UP) — The body
I pf Frank Thornton, 67 year old Frisco
railroad engineer, rode to Tulsa. Okla.,
today in a baggage car behind the lo-
comotive he had expected to pilot.
He was found dead In bed here last
night a few hours before he was sched
Uled to take the train out.
-------O-4---
Ybdeling contests are being organ-
I ized in England.
' ‘ I
St. BUrttn-De-Ra. France. Sept *»
(UP)—La Martlniare, Franoa’e ferry-
boat between th« homeland and the
dreaded- Devil’s Island penal eettle-
ment, sailed today with *73 deoperate
convicts. ,
The thud of new wooden sabota mix-
ed with the convicts’ curses as 80 wai-
dem and 40 Senegalese infantrymen'
herded them below decks.
The sabots were a last minute is-
sue. Guards had heard reports that
the doomed men while at the "school’’
prison here, where they were trained
for their new existence bad worked
thin knives into the soles of their
shoes. At the last moment all shoes
were confiscated.
There was a bumper crop for the
penal settlement this year — *40 men
altogether, the moot desperate of
France’s convicts. The prison ship
holds only 67*. The overflow will be
taken to DrvII’s Island in mid Decem-
ber.
Memphis. Tenn., Sept. 29 (UP)
Geqrge (Machine Gun) Kelly will be
removed to Oklahoma City before
noon tomorrow, federal authorities in-
dicated today.
t Departure of the Kelly plane and
an escort squadron depended on the
mass trial of defendants in the Char-
lei F. Urschel kidnaping case in j
which Kelly and his wife, Katherine |
Kelly, will be tried Oct. 9.
Sixteen planes were expected to
leave here with the desperado a few
hours after the Urschel’ case goes to
to the jury. 1
If arguments are concluded by noon
today, federal agents indicated the
planes would take off during the af- 11
ternpon, arriving in Oklahoma City
before sunset.
Authorities who previously reported
an oral confession in the Oklahoma
j abduction revised their statements
[ late yesterday and anonunced that “no
I satisfactory statement has teen ob-
tained” from Kelly or Mrs. Kelly.
John M. Keither, special agents of
thebureau of investigation, said Kelly
had not admitted complicity In the
kidnapings.
Special school lunches prepared for
students at 25c, Colonial Cafe. 196-6t—
l.t-w. >
dL:
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JOSEPHINE GREENWOOD
KINDERGARTEN
and
DANCING
Phone 361
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. [35], No. 197, Ed. 1 Friday, September 29, 1933, newspaper, September 29, 1933; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373428/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.