Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 185, Ed. 1 Monday, September 13, 1926 Page: 2 of 4
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MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 19M.
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GLASSIFIED ADS
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Retail Credit Men’f
Association r
world ho would teava behind the ua*
blemished name of an honorable man.
put
these
territory
as com-
Savings
gen-
was
Y. W. A. MEETS
TUESDAY EVENING
No. 17, The Mar
No. W_____
W>.‘
of re-
per
rate
Apts.
and inteednal
turbanceodue
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8.4.
NAVASOTA DAlLYBXAMDrEB
Dr. G. C. Butte
Goes to Porto Rico
j?5UW’£.v*< • S'
EH. Terrell &Company;
“The Progressive Store”
We Go The Limit To Please
bftn Paper
ao<p ,
Ataoaaota Daily Examiner
Pabhahed Every Aft erne an KxoarC
Sunday, by
Goo, T. Spears J. G. Whitten
$
f.- : w-.v
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There will be a meeting of the Y.
W. A. with Miss Ethel Aired tomor-
row (Tuesday) evening at ’6 o’clock.
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8 TENNESSEE
CONVICTS OUT
Clothes Your Friends
Will Admire-
crfItLJDB CLOTHES give
♦
i
No. 18, The Star —
No. 20 —
*
have their
CUftLEE CLOTHES give an impression of taste and quality
even to the most casual observer.
They are made of the best materials, fashioned to meet the?
demand of a gentlemen of today, and tailored wettlby mas-
ters of good clothcp making*
LL 111- I"---
I™
Masso Kapita, a Japanese resident
of the island of Maul, took his * life
long friend Mata usd Tant and Tanl’s
twb Httle girls for an automobile
ride. ! Crowded to close to the edge of
a narrow mountain read, Kajita’s car
overturned and Tanl and his chil-
dren were killed. Finding that Kaji-
] ta had no driver’s license, the dis-
k trict judge sentenced him to serve IS
days in jail and fined him $100. Ka-
jita took the sentence and fine cheer-
fully, but decided that they did not
meet th? ends of justice. So after
serving his jail sentence, he drowned
himself in the waters of Kahului
Friends of the dead man say
he felt that, however, unwittingly, be
was responsible for the death of
three; that for the remainder of hie
days, he wauM be a marked man1
;• ? u t •
Passengers arriving here on the
Tatoo Maru said that Tenko Nishlda,
founder of the “Tttoen” sect, although
he traveled on a first class ticket,
spent his time'helping the crew wash
decks and scrub brass fittings. He
also ate with the crew in the steerage
quarters. Nishlda has come here to
spend several months preaching the
gospel of his sect, the basic principal
of which is “labor is prayer.” * From
here he will continue on to the main-
land. He is about 60 years' of age
and is known as the “Socrates of Ja-
pan.” '
K
WANTED—Farmer, farmer’s son or
man at once or soon as harvest is
over to travel In country. Steady
work. Good profits. McConnon A
Company, Dept. 411, Winona, Minn. -
184-fct
NICE J%^»UE
Chicken, next door to Magnolia
Filling Station in Freedman Town on
K. T. highway —P. R. Franklin <co£)
V \ \lM-6t
> We have the compietest ~line of.
Mattresses ever carried here. New
Fibre Chairs, Imitation
Levy.
i that there
further delay and thiit ac-
t new hotel witf start
early next month.—Brenham Banner
IRt '
“{press.
X —----— . ■
Big Spring — Marland OU Com-
pany making preparations .to . gtart
number of new tests on holdings In
Chalk oil field.
BaMMLoTblt
feraftft'Ui
twublaoansL
Jo
i * .The JUwanls Club will hold Its
weekly luncheon meeting in the C. of
C. ball tomorrow (Tuesday) at 12:15
p. m.
/ f« •______
ent of:
BINDERS INDEXES FILLERS
< Other items in the Loose Leaf Une
Will be addedxas demand for such is
shown. JgP
- also - A
Typewriter Ribbons ■"
____LOST
I LOST—A ixist office money order for
10.00 in Panette Smith’s name.
| Finder please notify 419. ,t It
We are showing some aftikuig Fall models and patterns. We
know that if you will come in and try oa one of these suits *
and learn the reasonable price at which you may <rwu WNA
henceforth you will be a genuine booster of OUR&Vtf
CLOTHES.
it-’*
4s;
f./
., erecting a modern hotel on the site of
V —J—r-.<£ ■—
Mrs. John McGinty, phone 48.
, 181-6t
upon being brought to the j attention
of the firm.
I hospital. |
The prisoners were well armed. 4
The guards were found gagged and
locked in a cell. ,
--.
Card of Thanks
Sr
ta., -
men to watch a serjet of experiments
in Palama Basin to prove that refuse
from certain :pineapple canneries was
jwdsonoua to marine life. Irt place
of a paU of -acaiqa and a blindfold.
Judge Mgssee oaH-ied a wire fish
Sgsket and immersed in the water at
the point where the pineapple refuse
enters it. In the course of two hours
seven infant mullet succumbed. Law-
yers tsat in the rowboats, watches in
hand, counting the minutes before
each doomed fish breathed its last.
1
Obituaries and resolutions
■poet published at one (1) cent
word.
king, there la nothing
kan a aafe Infanta’ and
tn’g laxative.
Mas. Winslow s
Strut
NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 13.—
Holding up two guards eight Tennes-
court | see convicts escaped from the prison
city was
E. K.
We have stocked a supply of the Irv-
ing-Pitt Loose Leaf Memo and Sales
Books which may be had for a reason-
able charge.
Assort
Navasota Daily
Exumner
HAULING—Anywhece, Anytime, Any
Kind, see W. L, Mathews m* phone
296. KAlm
-r-------.>
home. F" “ *
It represents
in
fora
FOR BAUE-Fresb. buHt seed turnips,
mustard, rape, collates, mix bekns.
Tom M. Owen. ' * 18(Mtt
FOB 11^iB tFwy- choice Warhorse
Game Cockerels. See E. L. Blair,
phone 248. 181-6t
' ' J
will meet ‘
Tuesday, September 1
8:00 P. M.
in Chamber of Commerce Hall
1______ L._____ __'
am aftar every atgal)
of thia important M
in ad"|
by hdping’the dige
1 jaaa ;fer mart mN ami
Raih o«d 1 miel able
IL A T. <L RafWssc
. Narth-Bound f 1
No. 19—Local Passenger ..11^2
No. 17—The Ow» l>t«t a,
No. 15—The Hnstlar U
| South-Bound
> No. 20—Local Passenger —A 40 a
No. 18—TS»e Hustler ^446 »
No.. 18—The Owl a
H. I T. C Mexia INK Oil
Nortb-Bound
NO. 845—Dally —X._?_740a
J
Jj Na 348—Week Deys___
“ No. M8-8unday Only >
L V«. N.MM
North-Bound'
a
BbaUi-BtfunJ ’
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IMamwMs NMi
Nor^h-BooaA
Departs No 12l» ll:0l|
Bouth-Bmmd
Arrive No. 119 _ J
&m*a Fa Byttam.
NoMh-lSMa*
No. 218
Any erroneoua reflections upon the
character, sending or reputation of
any petttn, firm or corporation whiah
may ooear in the columns of ill
DBMOCBATIC NOMWBES
For Repreeentative, 26th legislative
W. 8. ’BARRON.
Fag JgBttt Attorney, J2th Judicial
A. T. McKinney, Jr.
fa
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, ______... ;r f___
Typewriter Papsss
Carbon Paper
‘ wVtsnta's an’!/ '
-
EVERYTHING IN PRINTING
Daily
News
Letter
Gaaatt «< Steff Cinianaiiati
Mm V.^Pnw^^»W O1
the present Anthony Hotel. Mrs.
A. Hacker is president of the com-
pany, Mrs. Mary D. Ross vice-presi-
dent, and A. H. Hacker secretary aid
treasurer.
This company was formed solely
for building purposes, and Mrs. Hack-
er, who will invest a large amount in
furniture and equipment, will endeav-
or to operate a hotel of which the
citizenship may be proud asid that
will give Brenham a splendid hotel
Boef, Mutton, reputation among the traveling pub
* to Magnolia ***• plaus for a handsome and com-
modious building are completed, and
work will start on the npw hotel in
th# very nepr future.
■_ Right now it appears
will be no 1 _
tual work on the
•coming together.” It represents a This purpose, the Japanese say, Ki
pooling of interests in a common, jita accomplished.
purse to put some project through. In
the old days, the Hawaiians joined
together for planting or fishing and
each separate organization was
known as a “hui.”
The advantage of the hui is that it
enables the small fellow to get in on
a chance for profit. Clerks, steve-
dores, yardmen and housemaids find
in tbe organization a place to
their meager earnings and by
combined resources carrying out Busi-
ness deals of no mean value..
The Hawaiians and Chinese have
an especial • liking for “hui” organlza-
will be gladly: corrected lions and more than one, putting his
small holdings into a common fund
for the purchase of real estate has
seen handsome profits as a result of
the present active* Interet in ' island
lands. These organizations seldom in-
corporate, preferring to , operate
through one individual in whom they
trust and who is counted on to watch
out for the best opportunities of in-
vesting the funds.
• Spears A Whitten
Owners and Pubitehers
Navassta, Texas
one Tear---------------------
‘ Six Months ---------------------«-<»
. Three Months -----------------L5C
By JOHN F. STONE
(International News Service Staff
» Cerrwopndent)
HONOLULU —' Various localities
• own methods of conducting
tbe real estate business, but one of
the meet important in Hawaii, out-|h,rtM”
side of the offices operating for real
estate business alone, are the so-call-
ed MhttN orfaalaattow. which have
‘ eg into primlaence with the pres-
WMktti hesch and anMMI< aaoociateo if he continued
inward Oahu. llre thaw »pt it he volun-
’ fmmMNmced hem tartly followed Tanl into the spirit
py) to Hawaiian and la defined in
< tkat lunace M »
-
Assessed valuation of real property |
of the city and county of Honolulu in I
a period of four years has soared to
the total of $159,230,507 or an in-
crease of $60,000,000. Commercial de-
posits in the banks of the
during 1926 were $44,861,818
pared $39,101,344, in 1925.
deposits were placed at $22,989,564 in
1926 as against $21,708,371 in 1925.
One of the most interesting
sessions ever held in this
that presided over by Judge
Massee of the circuit court when he
in company with court attaches and
a small detachment of lawyers em-
barked in a fleet rrf three small row-
boats navigated by JappiKwe fisher-1 ,
We wish to thank each and-, every
petsdn for the expressiojis of sympa-
thy and flowers presented Sunday at
the funeral of our dead mother and
grandmother, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth
Glass. It Is impossible to thank each
person individually, but. we wish >11
to know t^at your thoughtfulness
<
was not lost sight of and was com-
Jprting {q us. ? ■ ■ .J -
S. W. Glass and Family*Drastic Method to
Check Mail Robbery
WASHINGTON, Sept. 13.—A com-
mand to “shoot to kill” was sent* out
today by the post office .department
to its army of 22,500 railway iqail
clerks to protect from bandits, even
flj the cost of their own lives, the
millions of dollars worth of treasure
handled daily in the United States
mails. The command, which applies
to the thousands of other postal em-
ployees, also constitutes a warning to
the underworid that the postal serv-
ice means war and anyone found at-
tempting to rob the malls may expect
a cold lead reception and no mercy.
Houston — $2,800,000 warehouse to
be built on upper ship channel, Be-
tween Main street viaduct and San
Jacinto street bridge.
FOR RENT
- ueui-
FOR RENT — Seven room cettage
with bath, large haiL four eloeeta,
two kitchens, three laundry tuba in
kitehen, tiled hearths, three ., grates,
one fireplace, china closet built in,
garage. Can be used for two fami-,
lies. Close in. Possesktou Sept. J.5..
Apply, Mrs. E. A. Scott . f
One small furnished Apt. with pri-
batb and kitchenette. Scott
Phone 171. 182-tf
(Ry I. N. S.)
NASHVILLE. Tenn., Sept. IL—
Three of the escaped convicts were
recaptured, it was announced at noon
today.
(By I. N. S.)
WAXAHACHIE, Texas, Sept. 13.—
Dr. George C. Rutte, former dean of
hiw at the University of Texas and
Republican candidate for governor of
Texas in 1924, learned of his appoint-
ment as acting governor general of
Porto Rico while visiting friends
here. x
While here en route back to Wash- .
ington before going to tbe Island pos-
session. Dr. Butte was a guest of
Prof, and Mrs. Howell T. Livingston,
here, old friends of the former Uni-
versity dean.
Dr. Butte told the Livingstons that
he would assume the duties of gov-
ernor general of Porto Rico because
of the ill health of the iifeumhent..
causing tbe latter to return to the
United States, hoping to regain his
strength. Headquarters of the gov-
ernor general on the island it at San
Juan.
Dr. Butte had been attorney
eral. stationed at San Juan, and
very popular with the natives, as he
was the first to hold that position
who could speak Spanish fluently.
———-o---—
Brenham To Build
BfeNtw Hotel
A charter has been granted to the
Anthony Hotel Company, an organi-
zation formed for the purpose of
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 185, Ed. 1 Monday, September 13, 1926, newspaper, September 13, 1926; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1381250/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.