Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 154, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 21, 1937 Page: 2 of 4
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LIFE'S BYWAYS
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Untie Yeoi-iuS Sfz. ~ Y'Know BY cowf % AVE. TiNK
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A BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY
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support of the bill, but that would
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By Charles McManus
DOROTHY DARNTT
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On* Year ____
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AMERICA'S
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SCHOOL DAYS
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Thursday, thereby leaving the meas-
ure stranded in the House Rules Com-
mitted, was caused by uncertainty
in the Southern minds as to what the
actual effect of the measure would be
if enacted into law. Potentially, the
Entered a* Beoond-Claas matte*
Feb. 22, 1816, at Navasota, Texas, unX
der Act of Congress, March B, 1878.
p values. Perhaps he la not only goad-
60 by his own desire but by counter-
crlticlsma burled at him by creators
Furnish material at a
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Obituaries and resolutions of re-
spect published at one (1) cent per
■ vord
Ruggles, U a Kansas City now
man who ig considered one of the na-
tion's outstanding motion picture
critics. He Is now a Hollywood screen
writer who has worked On some of
the outstanding film successes of this
and last year. "Exclusive", which la
based more or less on his own news-
paper experience comes to the MU-
ler’s Sunday. It Is his first major
picture. In the article below he tells
why and hovr he wrote It). ,
Lurking In the cosmos of every
critic who Is worth his price and bls
opinion is the desire to see whether
he himself can create that whiah he ripeyters, as wall as from observa-
tion. J still firmly believe that one
should begin writing of one's own ex-
periences, using familiar backgrounds
I
By John C. Moffitt
(Editor’s Note: John C. Moffitt, the
author of “Exclusive", the dramatic
story of a war between two rival
newspapers co-starring Fred MacMur-
r >
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ppdB*K F
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Any erroneous reflections upon the
Character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
may occur in the columns of THE,
EXAMINER will ba gladly corrected
npon being brought the attention
of the firm
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\<ive MB I )lMPOS»l
/ OELISF from I (fl-| fA LUNA
(ygeMM4*r
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if
ing creatively.
f. I have made two starts In Holly-
wood. the first non-productive, tn an
empirical sort of way. Out of these
two starts, however, has come the cur-
rent screenplay, “Exclusive", produced
by Paramount, based on my original
Girl". It is not odd
Ctlon featuring Fred
MacMurray, Frances Farmer and
Charlie Ruggles, should have a news-
paper background.
In writing "Exclusive”, I drew from
my own experience as a newspaper-
man, and from the experience of oth-
•itSrl' a . A, . zok CAR'ST
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A. E. Gruetzner
Navasota, Texas
WILL GO AN YWHMBE
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WORLDLY WISDOM: Where is
the wise? where is the scribe? where
la the disputed of this world? hath
not God made foolish the wisdom of
this world? 1 Corinthians 1:20.
----—— o—---
SOUTH AND WAGE BILL
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ARE YOU ONLY A
THREE-QUARTER WIFE?
ltdEN. because they are men.can
1’1 never understand a three-
quarter wife—a wife who is all love
and kindness three weeks in a
month and a hell cat the rest of
the time.
No matter how your back aches
—how your nerves scream—don’t
take it out on your busband.
For three generations one woman
has told another how to go "smlL
ing through’’ with Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound. It
helps Nature tone up the system,
thus lessening the dijoomforts from
the functional disorders which
women must endure In the three
ordeals of life: 1. Turning from
girlhood to womanhood 2. Pre-
paring for motherhood. 3. Ap-
proaching “middle age."
Don’t be a three-quarter wife,
take LYDIA E PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND and
Go "Smiling Through."
NOj'l_U NJE-V^ca.
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TUlS N/AJ=y •
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I ISTEKI, SO—> Ot-O BUZZAQq
VOU <N.r->j= -TQ.VINJG TO MAKE
LJS TUIISJK. sOu),a& O-iCL .
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T’N^IE \OU ZXX2.E- Xx- CO- K
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woiild get the Southern viewpoint.
There is another viewpoint of the
wages-and-hours bill that interests
Southern Senators and Repreaenta-
I.fives. Cotton today, even in a 59c dol-
ftttYvirieftej a»qvT?J
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KsiMP!
Hour
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get -n-usr r^iCT—
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lanteto laily Euarinr
PaMteM Braqr MtemMma Baawk
| Ba**, W
J. G. WHITTBM
Owner and Publidur
Ck Willard Brook*_______Manager
Navaaota, Texas
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CONTRACTO)
" dPaintinf—Paper Hang
Work don* neatly, exswtiy, d
olutionary, and. pa'rt of thia revolu-' thC P'6P°^d measure that Promises
tionarj- effect will have its. bearing
on regional industrial development. If
the South could be certain of influ-
ence- on the board, a just different-
ial between Southern ’ . _ ___________,
wages based on a scientific defermina- (
tlon of differential in living ■ costs
might be assured. Due to cheaper con-
Atruction. fuel and clqthln'g -costs, the
South ought to have the benefit of a
differential. It js doubtful if a board
dominated by Northern
$TOP
HIM,
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WAMT
tmat
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have been trading a temporary South-
ern for a permanent Northern advant-
age. i
The -cotton farmer has a very vital I
interest in the so-called turnip revo-'
lution of the" new deal ’program. His I
representatives in Congress must do ]
some careful trading. They were do-
ing so when they remained mum,dur-I
ing the vote on the hours-and-wages j
bill.—Dallas News.
-----O----
FILM CRITIC TELLS WHY j
HE WROTE “EXCLUSIVE’’
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The Fabian retreat which a bloc of j ■ ■ _ .. . . — . .
Southern Congressmen beat before the | )ar- 10c pounj; approxlmately the
drive of advocates «f the wage bill 1 prewar normah Indu8trlal wages and
other costs have gone up, and now
stand about 50 per cent above prewar
normal. The wages-and-hours bill
i will, if enacted, boost the price of the
| things the cotton farmer must buy
. . , .,,, . ■ , I stilt higher, and there is nothing in
hoiirs-and-wages bill is extremely rev- :
. . . I . 'I the nronosod measure that nromises
any relief to- the cotton grower. It was
reported a few days ago that Roose-
velt was wjlllng to recommend a Gov-
ernment subsidy to boost the cotton
J.7d Nm-themi prlC0 12c ,n rotul'n ^ Southern
DO YOU KNOW WHY- - - Thii I: Tin Age Of Specialiits?
^EEKl! OM-OW- A
if i pon'r tier this
dMLBUNCLE LANCED
I’Ll. BE IN THE”
---1 OBIT»AON dOLUMN
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IT WAS t—
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WHAT ftEMCDY
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Got MY
PAPA
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ALL mPHT
Doctor GCESS.-4—)
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 154, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 21, 1937, newspaper, August 21, 1937; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1381618/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.