Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 307, Ed. 1 Monday, February 26, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
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Fair to Be Larger
Examiner
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HEALTH NOTES
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‘f’richiiesis is caused hy ll
which encysts in the musely tissue of
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QUICK RELIEF FOR FEET
are these shamans in this respect,
a week. Migtationof enbryoit
GENERAL ELECTIONS
out
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JOB PRINTING
At Reasonable Prices
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do, that the
Phone 84 and we will call
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There is evidence that on many farms,
hog- aquire the pirasite front, rats.
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Three Montha
Accident
Burglary
Public Liability
Automobile
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ing of union or
way between
pursday night
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an erroneons reflectlona upon the
ocaraoter, etanding or reputation ef
any person. Arm or oorporation whiob
mny occur in the columna of THE
EXAMINER wil be gladly correct-d
epon belng brought to the atientien
of the Ora
ed,
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Obtuariee and remoluattone at ro-
opeut puMiabad at one (1 cent per
wama.
Envelopes, Sale Bills, Circulars, Folders,
Programs, File Statements,
Letterheads, Invoices -,oh
Fire
Group
HENRY C. BAKER, Agent
NAVASOTA, TEXAS
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Volume of Life Insurance in Force______________
Assets -_______________________________
Reserves’ and All Other Liabilities
Capital and Surplus__________________________
OTHER LINES WRITTEN
— ■ ' . I I ............
THE TRAVELERS INSURANCE co.
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
they were glad to accept a few
seeds. I
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a Wa •
extensive study of the few remain-
ing tribes of the Paiute Indians in
Nevada and southern California.
The bulk of her information was
gathered from the tribes that still
exist in the vicinity of Las Vegas,
Nev.
The shaman practitioners who
have become modernized to the ex-
tent of $5 fees for treatment were
those of the Kaibab group in the
high plateaus and the Grand canyon
region of Utah.
Pubilahed Avory Afternoo
Dxcept sunday
Navasota. Tasas
----$4,986,971,181.
— -$1,089,202,843.
- - $ 978,083,558.
— -6 61,110,085,
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To those who like fine, neat printing and prompt service
we offer a complete service—clean printing, good paper. Let
us figure on your next job—no matter how small or big!
PADUCAH, Meb.j
Butler and Miss Grk
organizers for the
Clothing Workers of 1
said Friday they had w
Johnson reporting an e
pammnarsmnc
Tia "f
M.La a l A’ A
•Don’t suffer fromburn-
ing, smarting eyes;
Murine brings you
quick. a mat inf raliaf.
Murine's six extra in-
gredients completel
wash away eye irrita-
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Lt was recently pointed
that this is one of the extremely
crate in public office Working
oat the assumption, which many
President does not
gain, and is keeping
o<
A BIBLE THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
A JUSTIFIED KAI TH:
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-
They said tn the memnare the 19
ported attack ‘‘forces us to requee
immediate and thorough state tuves
tigation," nud added that "mob mto
lence has been threatened agalpsi
union members if they attempt to ne
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any considerable public following.
Frank Murpl,who used to be
.talked about also, is on the Su-
citpisruuss”.
relieve shest sold-
he and pains due
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and went forth into the wilder-
ness of Tekoa': and as they went
forth, Jehoshaphat stood and
said, Hear me, O Judah, and ye
inhabitants of Jerusalem; Believe
in the Lord your God, so shall ye
be established ; believe his
prophets, so shall ye prosper.— 2
Chronicles 20:20.
Our Platform For A
Greater Community
A united Grimes County
with all communities work-
ing in harmony.
Intense agricultural and
livestock development with
emphasis placed on soil con-
servation.
A well-equipped municipal
auditorium for Navasota.
A modern hotel for Nava-
sota.
A Chamber of Commerce
home.
Modern store buildings and
offices in Navasota.
Make Navasota and Grim
es County known over the
state for their historical
places of interest, as a blue-
bonnet center, and for their
natural advantages.
hn
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through the blood elid becrome encyst that their fee is $5, where formerly
ed in muscle and other tissues. 1
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is greater in home butehering, unless
safeguards are exercised. Prolonged
refrigeration of meat at low tempera-
titres destross trirhini larvae. Thor-
ouzli cooking aud use of meat that
has been refrigerated and bears the
stamp or approved inspection are the
surest a feguards against tricliinosis.
Ruth Ellen Turner
Of Richards is on
College Honor Roll
SAN MARCOS, Feb. 26. — Among
flie 217 students of Southwest Texas
State Teachers College who made the
honor- roll for the fall semester just
completed is Miss Huth Ellen Turner
of Richards.
According to Dr. A. H. Nolle, dean
of the college, tile total, number of
students on the honor roll represents
approximately 15 per cent of the total
number of stndents enrolled in the
college for the semester..
All students making at least a
“B” average with no "F’s" were in-
cluded. Eight students with five or
more subjects had a straight “A” rec-
ord.
preme Court and out of tetive
I polities. Secretary Hull would
probably have the best chance
of cementing together the war-
ring wings of the party, but, due
to his job, he has had nothing to
do with domestic ' questions, for
eight, years, and his" stand on
many big issues of the day is not
known. At the monent, however,
Hull and Garner seem to have the
inside track.
On the Republican side, Tom
Dewey has started his campaign
in earnest. He is making a series
of major speeches covering prin-
cipal problems. Strongly in his
favor is his voice and personality.
Against him is the fact that men
high in Republican councils
Would prefer some one older, and
with a longer and more varied
record in public office. So far,
the political experts say he, has
been no whirlwind in whipping
up general enthusiasm for the
cause of the GOP, but he has done
better than anyone else.
Vandenberg is out for the nom-
ination— and he has advantage
through contaminated meat, the trich-
inar worm deposits eubryos in the
human bods, and these circulate
t he S
eted f l
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Republican convention and lead
to the nomination of some ex-
tremely dark horse.
The recent polls indicate that
the Democrats still have the edge
in popular fancy .They also indi-
cate that the President is still
the most popular candidate. But
they do not give him any over-
whelming majority—if he did
win, the polls say, it would be by
a comparatively tight squeeze.
Rarely has it been so difficult to
forecast whether the next admin-
istration will be Republican or
Democratic.
Health Department reminds Texans
of the. hazard of anjniring trichinia-
sis efrichinosis) by eatiu pork thut
is improperly cooked.
’The warning is directed primarily
Io Texas farms where rats ure known
to be numerous. The rat is perlnps
the most common carrier of the trich-
ina worm which causes t richinosix.
round Wurm Trichiuella
form. Fresh pork should be nonked
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"uen - 4 ’ - 0a eh- ‘ Hjiwmbeeeun, 2Fe • ■ 2 5 1 . c3
JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS
Quality Work At Reasonable Prices!
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"Eestrainduetodust,drivingiulare,closewosk,
movies,reedine.lntehoura Murine yillnecoe-
root eyedeficiencies. For treatmentgki oqgeniccye
dinorders, see a competent professlonafatonce
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Metered aa Secord-Clan mattar
Seb. 22, UM, at Navasotr, Tana,
ender Act of dongresa, Marah 2, un.
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the other prospeets far behind in
the race. ‛ut, as in the ease of
blood stream eauses fever and severe
muscle storeness, especially in the din-
phragm mid the muscles of arms and
legs. The third stage, during which
cysts surround the larvae in themus-
elew, is the critical stage. If infection
is severe, there may be edema or
swelling of eyelids nnd elsewhere,
marked loss of weight, weakness, ami
delirium. The disease usually, lasts a
number of weeks, frequently resemb-
ling typhoid fever. Tin* mortality rate
rate is usually low.
Prevention of trichinosis depends
primarily upon thorough cooking of al
pork. Most cases follow ingestion of
Wieners, sausage, or other pork prod-
ucts, eaten in raw or partly cooked
i medicine men of California, or sha-
Nmall mans, as they are called in their
spiralis, native language, have now become
at-- -e 1 so modernized that they charge reg-
ular doctor’s fees for casting out
evil spirits and other native medi-
of a long and capable record in i
the Senate, plus an established until it turns white and is no longer
machine. At Hie moment, these . red in color. The hnzard of the disease
three men are in the lead, with _______ L.
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Eam4
cal treatment.
I Furthermore, so strictly modern
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Pemnpitne 36
LONGVIEW, Feb. 30. — Plans for’
a larger and more comprehensive ex-
hibit at the 1940 State Fair demon-
strating tiie accomplishments and fu-
ture possibilities of chemurgy in Tex-
' ns will lie mad in Dallas, Monday,
' February 20, at a joint couference of
officials of the State Fair of Texas
and the East Texas Chamber of
। Commerce. The chemurgie exhibit at
the big Dallas fair last year was as-
sembled and directed by Elmore R.
I Tom, agricultural director of the Etex
i Chamber of Commerce, and both the
State Fair and the South Texas Fair
at Beaumont, have akked the East
Texas Chamber again to sponsor their
1940 chemurgic features. a
Those attending will include Harry
L Seay, president, and Roy Rupard,
। secretary, of the State Fair; Victor
1 Selloffelmayer, chairman of the East
Texas Chamber’s chemurgic commit-
teet President F. Dudley Perkins of
McKinney end General Manager Hu-
bert M. Harrison of the East Texas,
and Tom. ■ .
"Ehemurgic resenrch, which is con-
stuntly finding new industrial uses for
. the products of the farm and the for-
l est, offers the brightest hope for so-
। hition of our depressed Texas ngri-
I eifure", salu President Perkins. "The
' East Texns (hamber has pioneered
. several such research projects mid
I cooperated with other ageneies in tle
veloping others. Tie great fairs offer
an opport unity for the public gener
ally to keep informed on the magic
by which the chemist trunsferm the
products of field and forest to entirely
new uses, and open up new and profit
able markets to the farmer to sell old
und new crops profitably. The mir:
aelesthat are being porformied in the
laboratories have only sera billed the
sm face, us eompared with future pis-,
• sitsklinies, and Tex, is. the greatest pro-
dluer of raw materials in the nation,
seeks to keep abreast of this develop-
merit which promse- in reyolutiouize
urcemnomieaud indust ral life.
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hogs. Wiien trmismitted to num
bout the
Robert of
G. Willard Brooks-----Manager
Vucile Nemir -------Editor
And I
they rese early in the morning, I
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i25
12
1
ds
every political observer in the
country has been fooled. Both
parjes are divided within themn-
selvs. And the ranks of both
are alive with self-starters, fav-
orite sons and others who are
anxious to take the oath of office
from Chief Justiee Hughes next
year.
Starting out with the party in
power, everything hinges on what
the President will do. If he wants
the nomination, it is hard to see
how he can be kept from getting
it, despite the growing disaffec-
tion of many prominent Demo-
/. EYE s
AT ALL DRUG STORES
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few general election years since
the Civil War in which the pub-
lie hasn’t had a pretty sound idea
of who the presidential candi-
dates would be. Generally the
country has known long in ad-
vance who was going to be bat-
tling for the White House—the
w nominations of Hoover, Wilson,
Hughes, Franklin Roosevelt, Al
Smith, eta., were practically cer-
tainties many months before the
conventions were called to order.
Single recent exception to this
rule was when dark horses Cox
and Harding opposed each other.
The rumor always goes around
about this time that some vague
and immensely powerful political
" NERVOUS TENSION
Shows In both faea and —nun
You.are not 81 compeny for
yourself at anyone elme whan you
are Tanae, Nervoua, “eyed-up*.
UM nerves make Ma
WaaTtNiMMa. tr-we
The early symptoms of trichinosis ----— r ।
include abdominal pains, nausea, _ This fact was established by Dr. t
•- diarrh.....iatine wsoueEsabaepartmehtoftheontorrpalsn
the California, who has completed an
sume work in the Merit Clothins Oom-
pany factory" at Mlayfield.
The Natlonal Labor Belatious
Board recently held a hearing at
Mayfield on chargee of unfair labor
practices, filed with the boatig by the
bosses have the key to the puzzle.
and will pult their candidale over the Democrats, inyihing can lap-
with ease ahdudispateh when t1e pen. There is an off chance that
a deadlock might I result in 1hb
time comes. But if that is so.
— ------
ivasota Daily Chemurgy for
. The McNutt
to have blown
mki carry the
would get con-
vative support.
NEVnegL
•mamum,
mkilled ehemistn i
Xn laliort- I
ies.-91* ab
dom mi-
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2 thm vj, v’ i x-0 t
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h ewkehN a30,i9a
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A CW A against the Merit company.
No finding has been reported. s
Butler told newspapermeuta car in
which he, Miss Kuhimn and John
Sullenger, Puducah, were riding was
fired on at West Viola in Graves
County. He said the car was hit five
times.
5227
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Indian Medicine Men
Charge Doctor’s Fee
' Western America’s Paiute Indian
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AUSTIN, Feb. 26. - The Stair
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HOW 10 CLEANSE AND S00 ‘ IE
TIRED
STRAINED EYES
CUTS-BURNS-SCALDS
should be quickly treated to prevent bad after-
rtf eels as well as relieve pain. UeeQILof-SALT.
Wonderful too far sore, tired feet At your
druggist’s—money back if not satinfied. For
free sample w ite Momo Laboratories 215South
Leavitt Street, Chicago. ____•
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Nemir, Lucile. Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 307, Ed. 1 Monday, February 26, 1940, newspaper, February 26, 1940; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1382392/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.