Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 59, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 24, 1934 Page: 3 of 4
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B
KPwi
THE HEIGHT OF GOOD TASTE
Luckies are made of only the
dean center leaves — the mild-
est, best-tasting tobaccos. And
then. It’s toasted* for throat
proteaion
all-ways kind to your throat
la
I
^•A'. -- ’
—*
“It’s toasted”
- -
’•3
3
L V Lochias an
t.,., .... ...
is round, firm, fully packed—no
loose ends. That’s why Luckies
’keep in condition’—do not
dry out. Luckies are always
in tU-ways kind to your throat.^ * ■
,J
r- . f£
T
t
3CV
■—
1
Jet*-
Th*
to
LWAfff
Q--
Phone 84
for Office Supplies.
THE NEW NORGE
AS LOW AS 5119.50
His nearest opponent had
I
I [lit
■ Continued from page 1)
fl
Representatives of every group con-
It seems strange with the
a
a chance.
Wilson Furniture
word
Company
we
ffl"l
living”, he add-
Thls
5
■■ -■
I
• the
where he took
Aus-
an
I
at Tex-
seller said, “and here I
was not
official
it was
This is not the time to think of the
past, but to help plan for a
future.
Less expensive than ice. Its
safe, steady refrigeration
holds down family budget
by SAVING left-overs, oy
permitting quantity buying
at lower prices. Call and see
the New Norge features.
where
they ever existed.
, stickler about
He opened his
last Saturday
of the night
conference with
national boxing
i worked Sunday
Roes to g°
a fight
Fort Worth
Some argument for the suggestion'
that legislators should be placed on
annual salary rather than per diem is
to be found In the fact that Sen. J.
W. E.H. Beck, Decalb, chairman of the
state senate fee and investigation
committee, had been home but three
days between April 17 and the ad-
journment of the legislature on Feb.
13.
If A TOOT A DAILY*
1.. ..... "■ '.J.
Politics may be bewildering, but it ■
gives one the pieces with which to
play a very fascinating mental game.
There are the peaks, but what lies
below is obscure and the game is td
take the news as published and try to
fit the items into picture as in a jig-
saw puzzle. Maybe you can—and
maybe you can’t.
Competition between cities
them on to civic achievement.
■- ■c- Wr
Referring to college degrees
practical experience
youth With two degrees
vehdty of Texas was c
tng beer in a
Noticing
friends are counting on a 70~to 1 m*1
Jority. Zapata county is up to 90Q
from 150 votes two years ago., Jim
Hogg county Has 1100 qualified votec*
as compared to 500 and Brook* coun-
ty has raised from 500 to 1,300.
Those are the increases the Duke is
after.
Parr’s name has become tradition ■
among the Mexicans of his vast dis- j
trict. Among them he is known and |
revered as Senor Don Padre Parr. !
Through his long career he has told
» ♦.bar* th* Mt* printed. Th*y will iff
• 'ready for issuance shortly.
I _______________
• Under a magnifying glass Texas dg-
• agatte stamps wUl r*v*al a letter C,
• lock and a heart. They represent
Charley Lockhart, state treasurer, un-
der whose direction the cigarette tax
1 stamps are Issued. Sleuthing to de-
termine if the stamps are being coun-
terfeited still continues with rumors
of startling exposures to come.
The whaling industry will never re- |
gain its former glory,
ter for sincere regret.
and doing away with
that something will
Either that things might I
they might go stagnant
populated counties to
beat the mesquite for votes. His
| friends say that Duval county, which
' . 1 polled 2,000 votes last election, will
have 3,600 this year and most of them I ceived special invitations are; individ-
| will be for the Duke of Duval. Starr ual producers, representatives of pro-
spurs county with 800 votes last election is ducers, breeders, and marketing or-,
said to be 1800 strong now and Parr’s ganizations; officers of State, regional ,
--O--
Lesser Newton Speaks*
Jim Neal of Webb county, easy- I
I going rancher, gave Parr a scare four
j years ago when he received only 3,600
: votes less than the veteran politician
I There are those in the Rio Grande j
allegedly I va"fiy who say ,hat Parr's tenure will cerned with the beef cattle industry,
best brain in Europe spending yearsj end with the election this year. The to the number of several
and much money in trying to find a
formula for disarmament that there
has not as yet been a way found.
and national llvoatoek argania
and general farm orgamMUoas;
official* and repr*a*ntatlv«* of Mad*
Agricultural college*; and farm p*0M »'
editor* and publishers.
The conference was called after ttsr
passage by Congress of an amendnaMk
to the Agricultural Adjustment A*t.
which made beef cattle a basic e*M-
modity. The purpose of the coadST-
■ ence according to Administrator Clasa-
! ter C. Davis, is to permit represent*-
I tives of the industry to analyze tbstr
difficulties and to see what might b*
under the Agricultural AdjOSt-
for the benefit of be*f
I done.
men! Act
producers.
• 4 .» • •
K. MwrABF.R
MUP Staff Correspondent)
23 (UP) — Burpris-
PWbfijibreons at the state capitol
|A ■ why Saturday was San Jacinto
they reply it is the anniver
Kfclf th* battle of San Jacinto
^^^Mkurther, they say the battle
named because of the proxl
|Kaf the San Jacinto river. But
Kg asked how the river received
^■M*, they are stumped.
iKfaM* in the historical section of
Kte library ■bow that it was j
Kd for Saint Hyacinth. Spanish for
■tilth 1* Jacinto.
Jbminican friars from San Augus-
named it Pushing along the
*0* coast in 1751, they found the
Inity rivet free for their craft, but
tth*r stream whose waters enter in-
Galveston bay resisted their efforts,
by found it blocked with water hya-
They named it for another
lot missionary, Saint Hyacinth, or
Spanish, San Jacinto.
Jelebrating of the anniversary of
| battle on April 21 and its declara
hM a state holiday has caused pop-
■jmnposition that April 21 is real-
■bn Jacinto D»yv Religiously the
|
■ft* August 18.
Elevator boy* at the state capitol
spend their time between ups and
downs reading philosophy, studying
trigonometry or scanning sonnets,
^hey are University of Texas students
working part time to finance their
education.
1’
Some cities need to make plans for
better business and then go to work.
tire. He is 73. But he changed his
mind because his enemies said if he
didn’t get out they would beat him.
“All right, we ll see if you can", was
his reply, according to his son, Coun-
ty Judge G. B. Parr
| first count
six.
The eighteen counties In the expan
, sive 27th district are Zavala, Frio.
McMullen, LaSalle. Dimmit, Webb, Du-
val. Jim Hogg, Zapata. Jim Well
Kennedy, >Nueces, Kleberg, Willacy,
i ville, speaker of the house in 1905 and | Brooks, Starr, Hidalgo and Cameron
1906, is a prominent attorney and at. o ----
j one time was a political power of Tex- Beef Cattle
I as. Jim Neal of Webb county, easy- . , A I
an< ! going rancher, gave Parr a scare four Industry /Analyze
P°lnt i years ago when he received only 3,600 j Problem Apr. 26
that
Kmgwai'ijii frr .........
I Duke Duval
Draws Battle Line
Benavid**, April 24 (UP) —
Duke of Duval ha* drawn hi* battle
lines to defend his political domain
of 18 South Texas counties which he
has represented in the stat* senate for
20 years.
The Duke, officially registered on
the legislature’s roster ae Senator Ar-
chie Parr of Duval county, Is In the
race for re-election this year prlncl-j the Mexicans he would care for them
pally because of hl8 love to fight. Two His word has been as good as an oath
years ago he announced he would re- and on election days they swarm out I
of the mesquite by the thousands to
cast their ballots for Don Padre Parr,;
or anyone he endorses.
Parr always carries his home coun- 1 _
ty. In the last election his friend, 1
i Milton West, who sought a congres-
The battle will be waged over the | Hlonal seat, received 1990 votes on the
glorious [ southermost tip of Texas from the
Winter Gardens country south of San
Antonio to the ranges of the cattle
barons and the citrus growers of the
Lower Rio Grande Valley.
Competition is strong for the Duke
this year. F. W Seatury of Browns-
■ Law* passed by the second special
r,.ior of the Texas legislature are
being published, after all. An appro-
priation for their publication
made and it was feared no
copies would be available. Then
goun4 there was enough left of the
mt fund for the session to
end with the election this year. The j to the number of several hundred,
Good Government League of Hidalgo. , ^ave been invited by the Agricultural i
j yAdjustment Administration to attend j
a conference at Chicago, Ill.. April '
26. The conference will cover the J
situation that confronts the industry,
and the possibilities of formulating
some program for dealing with the I
beef cattle problem. Attendance will |
not be limited to those receiving spe- j
cial invitations. The meeting will be I
open to any person with an Interest,
In the Industry.
Included among those who have re-
stated at the beginning, this sys-
of agricultural financing has
set up to contact the farmer
borrower with a source of supply of
money at a rate of lntere*t that will
put him on parity, with other indus-
tries in the conduct of his business.
It is expected to eliminate the high
point of inflation and to raise and
build up the low points of depression
and to perform a leveling out process
that will enable the producer from
the soil to look forward through the
years with confidence in his plans
Knowing that his business will be on
an even
the constant fear
go wrong,
go wild or
and dead.
condition of justifiable confi-
dence In agricultural persuits is com-
ing and when it is established then
the Farm Credit Administration will
have done what it set out to do.
til* founding of the order.
fiKThe Ban Jacinto river continued a
^Kctath blocked stream for many
Hm^AA* late as 1907 Congress made
jEiapprOprlatlon to clear the bulbous
Enfant* from the stream as they im-
|fo*d*d navigation.
Fl R. D. (Denny) Parker, chief of the
oil and gas dlvl*lon of the state rail-
' road commission, now in charge of
|P*et*Taras oil rule enforcement, need-
ed Bpeclal dispensation to enter the
\Univerelty of Texas, where he took
hl* degree.
Pariter was 15 when he enrolled at
university and the age rule had to
be waived. Incidentally he is hiring
no one in the oil enforcement work
who has not had four years experi-
ence.
in the short time of ten days and in
______ _ time we are going to try to cut this
Saint Hyacinth or San Ja-jto five days.
I made this statement to a prospec-
[yaclnth was one of the early live borrower the other day and his
ns. He received his habit! reply was "pshaw thats nothing I
Dominic personally soon af-|have been arguing with my banker
ten weeks now and haven't got any-
where yet.’.
Here is the point I am trying to get
you as a prospective borrower to see.
If you do your part in the way of
offering adequate security, clearing
the records instead of taking it for
granted that it is clear and actually
being ready for the loan to be made
when you make the application, then
there will be nothing in the world to
prevent your loan being close satis-
factorily in a very few days.
A majority of the criticisms
have had, have come from a slightly
resentful attitude taken by a few, and
I am happy to say a very few, busi-
nesses in the commercial world who
persistently call attention to cases
where it has taken two and three and
possibly four weeks to close a loan.
And in some cases never closed at
all. Not taking the trouble of course
to add that this delay was caused by j
him or someone else having a prior
mortgage on record that had not been
cleared, even though paid in full. The
records must show clear or satisfac-
torily arranged for clearance in some
way.
As
tern
been
outside the democratic fold for six j
! six years, has dissolved—returning 7,-
I 500 members and anti-Parr voters to
Many cities are in a position to i the party.
move ahead. All they need is for a ; Ail this the Duke knows and he has
lot of citizens to give the live ones j p]anned one of the most intensive
campaigns of his long career.
That campaign will take him into
This 17a mat-ithe 8PftrSPly
L. ar» * ♦ k ■> rm,
With its pass- 1
Ing goes a race of men who did ni
know the meaning of the
"fear.”
and
recalls that a
a from the Uni-
discovered sell-
community near
tin. Noticing his fraternity pin,
ex-student made inquiries.
"Yes, I took two degrees
as”, the beer l----- -
am selling beer.”
"But I’m making a
ed.
^Charts Poe, ^tate labor and boxing
commissioner, is not a
the hours he works. 1
office at 8:30 p. na.
night to take advantage
telephone rate in a
th* president of the
association. Poe also
trying to force Barney
thru with his contract for
Vtth Tony Herrera at
April 20.
Laws passed by the
****ion of the -----
Jim Barrett, managing director of
the Oklahoma Biltmore Hotel, says
that an investigation will show that
the best sections in most American
I cities today are those that did not
have the major advantages in the be- |
ginning, but men with foresight, cour- '
age and energy have cooperated to ov-j
ercome natural disadvantages
have overcome them to the
it is all but forgotten
county for
CLASSIFIED ADS
—o--
CARD OF THANKS
for.
i American bow-
id no mors
J
lar Pain*) Feri-
»that they haw
Anti-Pain PiDs
FOR RENT — Five room cottage
next door to Sol Jone* reaidcnc*
Modern convenience*. Navasot*
, Building and Loan A*»n. tf
FOR SALE — 1 «Ktra Good Jmsy,
frosh, t—1 month* old fin* j*rs*y
male. AliXr. SMt
FOR SALE - For next 15 days w*
will sell 000 2-hosM loads kindling
at 28c par load. Se* Hambric for
delivery NawsoU Cooperage
Welle Children.
-------O-------
After 17 years a locust is no long-
er a locust but a cicada.
Mr. Newton will be back in Grimes
* • a number of meetings in
different places and will explain this
situation more fully to county farm-
ers.
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation to our many
friends who were so kind to us during
the illness and death of our dear fath-
er, G. J. Well*.
May God bless each and every one
of you.
Per. /. N. Demy soys:
hsw found nofktnfl tn th*
r* that am tahs th*
of Dr. MiUt Anti-PtOo
W art a «ure reitef for
p from Headset^
, Toothache, Backachst
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 59, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 24, 1934, newspaper, April 24, 1934; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1381516/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.