Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 90, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 13, 1939 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Navasota Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Navasota Public Library.
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I
1
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lord.
House Resolution
Calendar Cleared
a guest of his grandparents, Mr and Mexican stood there like the boy on j
to New York.
I
Willie Pitts, fharles Hlarris, and 0
•MP9
home Friday.
Narle Anireus of Houston is
1
I
f
to Dinhy Nell l’earson.
A deep silence, descended except for
LISTERINE GEIS RID;
Mrs. J. K. Pearson and families.
Father’s
Day
I GIVE YOU
66
SUNDAY
for
^June 18th
Forget
P
--2
>
Our Stock Is Full Of
• •4V2
Nice Useful And
28
y
Appropriate Gifts
FOR
3
FATHER
r
1
Fit Perfectly.
Wear Longer!
i
Newest Colors
79c-$1-$1.25
J
Call in to see
4AuCa
NAVASOTAS/BEST DRY GOODS STORE
I-
E.M
tL
V
N
J. B. Gibson, traffic representative
of the Missouri Pacific Lines, Hous
tieday for Bit
she will be a’ .
*.*a a
flaksa
appointment only in the army
which he expressed a preference.
and Hyer was in the midst of a mon-
ologue when a native silently display-
ed a serape
the
um
1-
in Fort
member
Dallas Blankenship said the Legis-
lature did not have enough time prop-
erly to study the various appropria-
tion bills and protested running the
state “at a cost of $175,000,000 in a
haphazard way.”
We Will Wrap In Nice
Gifty Packages.
A
‘Humming Bird’
Stockings
.No
rec-
I
If you Wereon of . several hundred ■
rhousand who intended (asa Mauana J
All Full Fashioned,
Reinforced.
THE AWFUL PRICE YOU HI FOR BEING
NERVOUS
c 2
gpi
S8e
ton, was a business visito here today. I fall, ironically enough, at the hands
_ of a street vendor.
Gams mid children of Fort Worth re-!
old and
I to lira
2
TEXAS”
Check Below And See If You Have
* AnyOfTheSigus J
Wshaped gery
h causes dandru
4′4 f
r.
mmmsmmm
tr-e
ga3,*2
DANDRUFF
FOR KttKl
gs
Mrs. W. H. Hendrix and children
N
9
3
THOSE -
CHILLS AND
FEVER!
Taka Thia Grand Medicine
for Malaria
Don’t suffer like a dogl
The minute you feel a Malarial
chill or fever coming on, start tail-
ing Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic.
. ■ e '
j5
with
weld
that he wrote a sosteard to the folks
back home, "They sure are behind in |
their hairling here."
New York City.
' This good, old medicine will soon
bring relief.
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic con-
tains tasteless qainidine and iron. It
reMeves chills and fever due to Ma-
laria. and also tends to build you up.
That’s the double effect you want
The next time you suffer an attack
of Malaria, try Grove’s Tasteless
Chill Tonic. This 1* no new-fangled
"‘14 -- n‘"Y XVM wan H
eg
“Don’t
sass
Lambert Phariaoi Co., St. iouit, Mo
LISTERIN
TE PROVED TREATMENT FOR
DANDRURF-
e
Dad”
said. "No qulero comprar nada," And
then the scrape-vender moved serenely
Mrs. Floyd, on.
One by R. A. Fuchs and others to
criticize the President for purchasing
Argentine canned beef for the Navy
was postponed indefinitely at the in-
i stance of ITlee Daniel. The House
■ approved another by Fuchs which pe-
titioned-post office officials to pur-
chase cotton twine instead of jute.
year, frir a
father I
turned home today after visiting Mr. wind rippling through the trees and-
and Mrs. (L P. Pearson and Mr. and will you believe it? the sound the
Opponents objected that the cost
would be too great and that it would
accomplish little if anything toward
solving the problem.
The House ordered an investigation
into rumors reflecting on the commit-
tee on public lands and its chairman, ;
Harold Hankamer. There was no dis- i
closure in debate of the source of the
rumors, which Hankamer said for the
first time in his service in the Legis-
lature challenged his conduct and im-
;p
wind made was very much like a
1 chuckle.
As a reminder for safe driving, Jo-
seph White sought in another to in-
struct the Public Safety Department
to erect white crosses at every scene
of a fatal accident, but it was shunt-
ed to a committee.
inquired, "Have you lived
few minute*, get th* I
NRIT. D*n«ndabte-«o
cotics. Do** the work quiel
Raachat and Hill Pityroaporum
ovale, tha •tubborn dandruff farm
Don’t go around with a osae at dandrut
Lstshmeinenpudaarazigsuigen
ListerineAntigeptic, famous for 25 years
as a mouth wr- — -------E
hair, and hair
which rat
queer bq
ovate) wl
Start ti
other rot
ordshow
Hundreds of appropriate gifts suggestions throughout
houce. 4 ”
RHEUMAFISM
ckofve. FAW li MW M44MUTEC
To Felieve th* tortring pain at heuma-
tism: Neuritis,"Nedfalela 6‘Lugbhko, in a
- • - " “--pformulm
k no nar-
ust relieve
worst pain, to yoor stlsfgetiom in a few
mtnutes or money back at Druggists. Don’t
Buffer. Use NURITO on thia guarantee today.
home after a visit in New Orleans
with relatives. v
Sterling Hudspeth of Huntsville is
here nil
Hah./ The newspaper co-operates with
civic organizations, more espeelally
those of course in Texas cities having
a large number ot Amerleans of Ital-
ian descent.
< resume his discourse but the street
! salesman held his ground. “No, no,
<1 seller," Hyer exchimed but still thel
F "“g
m d
ada
02
EfR8 s J "
g
PERR
T Slmnons, before going Msr. Roy Smitheal, this week.
Also referred to a committee was
one by Fuchs petitioning Congress
either to provide a subsidy to agri-
culture to offset the protective tariff
for industry on goods purchased by
Southern cotton growers or to lower
the tariff in order to put cotton grow-
ers on an equal footing with those
in South America.
Worth in 1:5), you still re
, . "n"
- '
mwam-
f w days visit with her
176
: : g., 1 -003 sg
hi ‘,12
■ 1625
-m-
Austin, June 13. — The House spent
Monday morning clearing its docket
of resolutions, many of which had ac-
cumulated during the week end ad-
journment. /-
Night Is Yonnu and ) oii-f So leau-
Mrs. W. B. Dedmon,
All Eyes Are On Father
He sits with chin in hand. He is not reading his paper. He ’
has a faraway look in his eyes. He is remembering the past I
and dreaming of the future. , I
Father has a right to dream. His dreams have built the d
present. His dreams will shape the future. Tomorrow has -al- I
ways held its secrets “but father unfailingly probes ahead tor I
’ the answer to your happiness. 28
We have made preparations for “Father’s Day”—all |
packages neatly wrapped with a special cellophane band read- Eg
ing “Gift for Father.”
us for your
“Father’s
vo.ir lifev" He replied. "Not yet." articles onopportnnitie offered in
And of course you remember the I Texas have been frenuently reprodue-
one about the farmer visiting a biged in Italy. At first, ,n Tribuna Ital-
cirs for the-first time. He was so im iana was entirely in Itulian but now
pressed by the trucks and automo ( four Tifthi of the content- are in Eng punged his motives.
Idles, whizzing through the streets }
LOCALS
“MsgAnn SimmonsleavesInthe
morning for New York City, ’ where
■be will begin her work as u staff
member of the Institute for Propagan-
da Analysis. She came here from Co
lumhia, Missouri, where she attended
the Universits of .Missouri the past
Ilie thrill at hearing "IInli
Passing by a Dallas garage recently,
this observer saw a car, or what had
once been a car. The front wheels had
been ripped off, the hood had been
crumbled into a shapeless mass and
the top had been crushed in. The
thought of being Inside such a bullet
when it crashed at 90 miles an hour
made one break out in a eold sweat.
A young immigrant from Italy de-
cided that citizens of Italian birth
and descent in the Southwest ought
I to have a constructive newspaper of
their own. So Charles S. Papa, who
arrived in Dallas in 1908 to estab-
Mr- d, C HirrH-, Si . leaves Wed L. Steele, Jr., are in Harlingen al
Ties, Socks, Shirts, Light
By BOICE HOUSE
it is runored around Austin that
Senator Joe Hill may run for the
United States Sente next year. He
is a ready debater, a natural-born
fighter, dynamic campaigner and he
would have to be reckoned with.
We’re a little behind in the “oldest
joke" contest, so here are several en-
tries :
An Irish immigrant was asked as I
lie stepped off a boat in New York,
1 tin recently, called to mind an old-
time political campaign In which one
candidate accused his opponent of
inconsistency, quoting a jingle about
the big snake that went through
the country”:
“He wobbled in and he wobbled out;
He kept the people all in doubt
As to whether the snake that made
the track
Was coming in or going back.”
Help Kidneys
Your maoy twnUla » Million tiny MM
pzMstwiez.ezsnaangeneby.neg: i
g ggtrtBy'dtewd^tf ayfe Hn^* 01
elagderimake you suter from dettinu Up
a
such trouble* with the doctos Precp-
tion Oystex. Oystex starta workng in 3
hours and must prove entirely satiaaotory
in 1 week, and be exactly the medicinetyou
nged or money back ts «uaranteed. Tele-
phone your duggist for Qystex (Siss-tex)
today. The guarantee protects you. -Copr.
1937 The Knox Oo.
Mrs. C. 8. Smith and son, Charles,
and daughter, Bettie Lou, of San An-
gelo, and Mrs. Leon Smith of Brown-
wood are guests of their mother, Mrs.
T. G. Hatchett, and brother, W 8.
Hatchett.
___ Nadu', meaning ’I do not wish to buy
Mi>- Billie Bob cloakes of Fort anything’" And he stood there smiling
wonn i- si-iting Missex liise and until Hyer, carrying out the ritual.
ine her granemother, Mrs.. X. Rice.
the binning deck or the unwelcome
raveu perched above Poe's ehamber
door.
I Lev de you say ‘Seram’ in Span |
ish?" Byer appenled to his fellow
travelers.
Up to this point, the native hnd said
Miss Lucille Lord of Houston spent A group of the Americans were sit-
Monday afternoon here with her par-tin} in Pueblo's dreamy central park
The House declined to create an in-
terim committee of five members from
each body to investigate departments
and institutions to determine the
least amount with which they could
function properly. It also would have
been directed to examine taxable prop-
erties in order to recommend a pro-
gram to meet needs of the state in
raising operating revenue and for
wiping out the deficit.
arid Mr*. J. F. Marshall have returned “No." said Hyer, and attempted to
Pueblo, Mexico, was the scene of
the victory of 2,000 Mexicans over i
6,000 Frenchmen on Cinco de Mayo l
and it also recently was the Water-
loo of Julien C. Hyer of Fort Worth,
past International Lions' president
who led a pilgrimage of Lions into
Mexico. Famus as an orator and ■
conversattionalist, Myer met his down-
Weight Summer Pajamas,
Summer Robes to match Pa-
New Regulations
Fort Ram Houston. June 13. — New
regulations have been received at
Headquarters Eighth Corps Area cov-
ering the examination of -candidates
for appointment as Second Ldeutenants
in the Infantry, Cavalry, Field Artil-
lery, Coast Artillery. Corps and Signal
Corps. - ( . *-
The preliminary examination will be
completed not later than July 15, 1939.
The final examination will be com
I pleted September 2, 1939:
Selected candidates will be commis-
sioned about November 1. 19119.
In order to be eligible for appoluit-
ment, candidates must be male citi
sens of the United $tntes between the
ages of 21 and 30 years: a warrant
officer or enlisted man of the Rezular
Army who has had at least two years' ।
service; a reserve officer or an offi-
cer, warrant officer or enlisted man
of the National Guard: member of the
Enlisted Reserve Corps or a graduate
of a technical institution approved by
the Secretary of War. In addition to
these requirements, candidates must
be single and not previously married.
Candidates who have taken two writ-
ten examinations for appointment in
the Reuglar Army are Ineligible to
compete in subsequent examinations.
Applications from candidates must
be received at Headquarters Eighth
Corps Area, Fort Sam Houston, Tex-
as, not later than June 28, 193ft. and
should be accompanied by a recent
photograph approximately 3x5 inches
in size. Each candidate will be requir-
ed to confine his preference to one of
the arms in which appointments are
to be made, and will be examined for
Black, and Mrs. 6. W. Floye
Roan- Prairie were vikitors here
dary.
Day” Present
r ♦
COMFORTABL COOL
Matinee 1:4* to 6:00, 10-15
Sat. Mat. 1245 to 7180, 10-le
Ngtis and idolidays, 10-25
TQDAY-WEDNESDAY .
Mr-. Gavin Black. Mias Aunie Mac
tiful" u song written "peclally for ,
the "magnificent -how Well, there will
In- another beautiful ballad in this I
year's Casa Manana ami it will be j
written by a Texas songwriter. Lou
Wolfson, executive director, has an 1
nounced a contest for the best song ’
written by a Texan and the melody
will be sung by golden-voiced Kenny
Baker to the lucky girl who is chosen
as Texas Sweetheart No. 1.
4
4%
A-s
Eh.l
C. C. Short, Jr., is in Madisonville ■ ____
spending the week with James Elmer !
Reed : United States Marshal' Guy MeNa-
____ mara of Waco, in conversation in Aus-
4E<q
“Are you a Democrat or a Republi-
can?" He answered. "I dun but I'm
agin the goveriment."
A 90-year old mountaineer, with
long whiskers, was sitting in the
' doorway of his cabin when a stranger
ixville, N. Y., where feruling the State Firemen's enuven
ne-t of her daughter, • Hon uniterway there. They return
! lish a fruit and produce business,
started La Tribuna Itnliana, it few
years later and will commemorate the
, twenty fifth anniversary on June 20
, with a special eilition: The newspaper
। has subscribers lit It! -tale- and its
nofhing. Now he said in excellent
Il Lagilsh,Ir you wish me to leave,
yon shmuild say, ‘No qulero comprar
THE NAVASOTA DAILY EXAMINER TOESDAY, JUNE IS, 1939
mm --
Army Exams Hol
peemcrrnT
p,ge
B A • w*1
h4/k I
: j
jamas, Underwear, Lastex
Bathing Suits, Hats, Fancy
Suspenders.
Mrs. Lay IavdlandMr. Dowell for
the snmme he will also visit in
Boste , ueu . ttund the World’s Fair in
6 vi
J A.q .
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Nemir, Lucile. Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 90, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 13, 1939, newspaper, June 13, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1382175/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.