The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 127, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 18, 1925 Page: 1 of 4
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The Daily Tribune;
BUICK
BUICK
Y
"THERE IS NOTHING TOO GOOD FOR OUR FRIENDS"
VOLUME XX— NUMBER 127.
BAT CITY, TEXAS,
FIVE CENTS THE COfY
Statement of Condition of
Statement of Condition of
LICENSE, VISITOR SAYS
Bay City Bank & Trust Company
First National Bank
J
Zachary Taylor and hence related by '
Bay City, Texas
Bay City, Texas
At close of business on June 30, 1925.
her daughter, Mrs Joseph J
RESOURCES
At the elose of business June 30, 1925
$466,484.40
Roasting
, tomatoes, beans and
Real Estate
- 71,791.50
Bonds and Stocks
Furniture and Fixtures
25,000.00
U. S. Bonds
4
6,086.20
Furniture and Fixtures
14,522.62
142,033.66
Banking House
Jupiter
11,390.00
Other Real Estate
$533,007.83
$ 87,177.15
Bills of Exchange
CASH
LIABILITIES
He
talned it. but left it in his
$970,075.21
$100,000.09
Capital Stock
$533,007.83
28,242.68
Surplus and Profits
25,000.00
Circulat ion
816,832.53
DEPOSITS
Condensed Statement of
1
$970,075.21
Citizens State Bank
of Bay City, Texas
Taylor homestead
Louisville,
erial
of
NEW ORIEANS RICE
fever
___ $464,831.76
Total _ _
LIABILITIES
Because of the various methods by
$464,831.76
Total
TAKING A VACATION
Compare These Values with the Peddler’s Oferingsi
EVERY DAY
lit thread silk sock mad#
knitting ma-
atest
iminates unai
chine that
lv floating threads on Inuit
t
ALL SUMMER
FOR DISPENSING STANDARD GOODS, MERCHAN-
ONABLE ARTICLES IN OUR VARIOUS LINES AND
It’s easy to buy, easy to own, and easy to drive
Let us show you.
THEY MAY BE IN THEIR FANCIES, BE THEY MEN,
WOMEN OR LITTLE CHILDREN.
OUR PRICES ARE AS LOW OR LOWER THAN CAN
Dodge Brothers
BE FOUND ELSEWHERE ON LIKE QUALITIES, AND
THE PREMIUMS WE ARE GIVING DO NOT COST
MOTOR CAR
AND YOU NEED OUR SERVICE.
feed
HARDY-ANDERSON WTO CO.
D. P. Moore Dry Goods Company
Phone 154
17-18
now.
A
EXIDE BATTERIES
GOODYEAR TIRES
J
C
Loans and Discounts
Bonds and Stocks
A homing pigeon won a race be-
tween Paris and Brussels against an
airplane
Interest on Guaranty Fund
Assessment on Guaranty Fund
CASH and Sight Exchange
10,946.45
38,330.04
36,653.13
$236,772.16
47,500.00
37,667.06
56,962,92
near
aut hor
Capital Stock
Undividen Profits
Deposits - _ . _ _
Bills Payable _________
Liberty Bonds Deposited
Capital Stock
Undivided Profits .
DEPOSITS _______
WHY BE
PESTERED?
’ had ob-
rooma.
be so produced until thin
you r.
less
must
next
JEFF DAV IV M I Kill IGF
DELAY ED in FORGE T ING
$ 50,000.00
1,086.17
344,695.59
__ 32,900.00
36,150.00
..$303,599.13
. 56,475.00
13,449.66
4,506.50
12,943.88
NONE.
We Stand on Our
Record
_____$ 65,000.00
_____ 7,126.10
______ 460,881.73
For Men
Rollins Style 1045
A black, pure dyed, medium
STATE BOARD OF HEALTH
SAYS TYPHOID RATE is
As rendered to the Commissioner of Banking
of the State of Texas, at the close of
business, June 30, 1925
The above Statement is correct,
A. HARRIS, Cashier.
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts ----------------------
Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures.
Other Real Estate ----------------
Bonds and Stocks ______________________
Interest in and Assessment for
Guaranty Fund _____________________
Other Resources ................ --
CASH ______________________________
ilght-
de ot
HIGH IN TUI Sovra
Frlends tell us that agents, canvassers, and doorbell ringere
are getting ho thick that some days they keep one runnin, to
the door every few minutes—and usually they come the thlck-
eat when one is the buslest.
through water. milk,
riers" and other ways.
• STRIVE e-fLEASE ALL HOWEVER PARTICULAR
wells and springs may
1
t
the subject of gener il rejoicing
Not the least of the troubles of the
large land owner is the barge num-
bers of farm laborers or tenants that
must be fed and held over to next
year.
Now and then a good stalk of corn
or cotton is placed on exhibfion In
go while the
appearing in a Memphis
The water In
be contami-
but well in line. which
a moderate business.
■ REHIGIOUS LIFE OF THE
NEGRO IX AMERICA
Loans and Discounts
produced on
newspaper and has written a number
of novels based on Southern and Co.
lonial American history.
weig
on 11
ducing next
a Dodge Brothers car.
Jefferson Davis
crop can he made or any rart of a
crop that will lessen the expenses
upon the straighten • d farmer m pro-
DISE OF MERIT, AND AT ALL TIMES KEEPING
ABREAST OF THE TIMES IN FEATURING FASH-
Why Encourage This Type of Selling?
Every time you admit a peddler to your homo or make •
purcha • from one you are encouraginir him and more ilka
nun to come again.
eock A better hock than the
peddler’s $1.00 number.
-----0—0—
Advertise It will pay you
marriage to
dent of the
America, is I
> Confederate
a guest at the
for which he had to
wedding party waited.
(All LOAD OF PEACHES HERE
A car load of Elberta peaches has
arrived and are on sale at all the
grocery stores. The crop this year
is short and if you expect to pre-
serve any you would better get them
by flies, “car-
crop It w11 be
*5 v
imported feed and
Pluvius relents
is the
market today. Inquiries
every known garden vegetable usual-
ly ho abundant that more rots on the
ground than is eaten. Is this year nb
sent except in the small Irrigated
patches.
XII the milk supply of the town is
Ky. She
story now
is contracted by some one
Mil RDAY, JI LA IM. 1923.
States of
home of
I Lowery,
But however gloomy prospects may
look In Caldwell County, they are
said to be vastly more favorable I
than in some counties surrounding.
---o—o-.............
LIST UNION SERVICE
I which typhoid fever may be contrac-
ed, everyone should get Immunity
from this disease by vaccination. Our
experience during the war. when out
of an army of 1,000,000 men only a
few hundred fatalities resulted, shows
the value of vaccination as an Im
munity against this disease.
Three relatively painless hypoder
mic injections, given at intervals of
from five to seven days will give you
this immunity. It would be the wise
thing to have your family physician
give you this Immunization at once.
the local
were small
The Texas state Board of Health
in a recent bulletin says
The typhoid fever rate is still high
in the Southern States, this being
due to the large rural population and
the difficulty of sanitary control in
such sections. Forty years ago twen-
ty four American cities had typhoid
death rates ranging from forty to
sixty deaths per 100,000; but. (..rough
the protection of water supplies, in-
stallation of sanitary sewer systems,
supervision of food establishments,
pasteurization of milk and use of an-
tityphoid inoculation. the death rate
from typhoid in these cities has aver
aged in recent years three per 100,-
000. In the Southern State- the
death rate from typhoid in recent
years has ranged from ten to twenty
one per 100,000.
Tphoid Fever a Filth Disease.
Typhoid fever is a fiith-borne dis
ease, and is communicated from one
person to another by germs from the
bowels of an infected person reach-
ing the mouth of a well person Ty-
phoid fever germs may be transmitted
resulted in
to sell their products, or berating cits
officials for regulations against the
scattering of rinds is absent this j
year.
Big water melon eaters have this
year laid off. One of them recently 1
-aid ■ There are not enought water
melons in the county to appease my I
appetite, so I have not tasted the del i
New Orleans, La., July 16, Spot
prices were firm ami unchanged in
For Women
Rollins Style 2530
A medium weight pure silk
stocking with long wearing
lisie tops, toes and soles Look
at the price of this style. ‘Then
(mpare it with the stockins
you ught from the peddier
for which you paid a 'bird
uoro Season’a newest oolora.
II Watson of Memphis, !
grandniece or President i
The sight of long lines of wagons
of watermelons and mushmelons,
quarreling with ench other for space
YOU ONE CENT. WE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE
while on a camping trip, or while on
a hike in the country. Any one an-
ticipating a trip of this kind should
take typhoid vaccination, and where
this is not done, extreme care should
I be taken against infection Where
; water for drinking purposes is ob
tained from wells or springs of un-
known quality, it should be boiled
before use, and it also is a wise
| precaution to scald milk before it
1 is used, as heat kills typhoid germs.
Summer is just one long vacation to the family
with a car. The long evenings, the week-ends,
the holidays, all afford an opportunity to the
motorist to go somewhere and rest, refresh, and
recreate body and mind.
284,623.34 371,800.49
I Lockhart but such stalks are from 1
[the sandy land and from small areas,
where some of the scattered showers'
■ have overlapped.
nated by soil seepage, or by the en-
trance of surface water through un
protected tops.
In communities where open-back,
insanitary closets are commonly used,
. Ilies are a constant menace, as they
crawl over this infected tilth and
carry the germs on their hairy legs
direct to adjacent homes It is es-
timated that probably 20 per cent of
all typhoid case are milk-borne.
Health certificates for dairy employ-
es, to eliminate the possibility of ty-
phoid ’carriers” handling milk, and
i milk pasteurization. have proven very
effective in prevention of milk-borne
epidemics.
Prevention oi Typhoid.
In rural communities and towns
without sewer systems, the building
of pit privies instead of open-back
closets is a very splendid insurance
against typhoid. This type of privy
। j can be built at a cost of $12 or less,
and plans for building can be had
i free of cost by writing the State
Board of Health at Austin.
It is often the case that typhoid
(Lockhart Post Register.)
Scattered showers fall almost ev-
ery day in portions of the Lockhart
trade territory, but thus fir not near
enough rain has fallen on any area
to be of the least benefit to crops
The showers are generally about
a mile wide and in length three or
four miles, but when the cloud passes
the hot sun scalds the vegetation and
cancels the effect of the downpour.
Some sections report as much as two
inches of rain from a passing shower
Tiie latter part of last we k show-
ers sufficient to lay the dust fell In
Lockhart and these showers were fol-
lowed by a few hours of cloudiness
but they were of no benefit to vege-
tation.
Dry as the ground is only a beriesi
of rains extending over a we K’s time I
would put moisture enough ‘n the
ground to start the grass.
Colton. where It is plowed to make
a dust mulch on the ground is hold-
ing Its own remarkably well, but in
order to be worth picking, the ground
in which it grows must be thoroly
saturated
it is now considered too into to
plant In cotton the large acreage of
black land in which cot* has never
been planted or in which there was
not moisture to bring up the pianting.
The only hope of anv advantage
there idle acres can do the farmer is
by planting food on it Dut not many
days hence the time for planting food
will be past.
Hope of A cotton crop that will
Take Silk Hosiery for Example
You always pay more to the peddler for a mefum or fair
quality hose than we charge for one of good quality. Wb are
prepared to prove this if you will come in and ask us to do so.
When you buy hosiery from us
You nee il before you jmy for it.
You don’t have to buy more than one pair at a time, in ordof
tu yet a fuir prire.
if yon re not xotiefied we're here to make th in ye ri^t.
We rorry n lor yer minor f meat of etylee, tint and colore than
any peddler.
We'll prove that we ran sive you better hosiery for less money.
And wo don't pester around your door.
Mrs, I
Teun . a
Fancy Blue Rose was quoted at 7%
a 7"c. fancy Honduras at 7% <ii
7%c and fancy screenings at 3%c.
Eunice. La . reported the first new
rice sale of the season when eighteen
sacks of Early Prolific sold at $5 a
sack. This was reputed to be the
earliest sale of new rice in the his-
tory of the Southwestern rice indus-
try. Ravin’. La., wired that, rice
farmers in that section were tuning
up their binders and pre paring to cut
as soon as the heavy rains cease,
-------o—0---
DROI TH CONTINUES
Later, after I was grown up and
married. I met and came to know
quite well the second Mrs Davis, who
was a Miss Harrell and a great friend
of the Taylor family. While there
have been many stories is to the
objection of President Taylor to the
marriage of his daughter, my moth-
er's first cousin, to Jefferson Davis,
the fact was that his only objection
was to the fact that Davis was a sol-
dier and he had by personal experi-
ence learned to know the vici situdes
and uncertainty of the soldier's life
It was i love match and Jefferson
Davis probably never completely re
covered from the grief occasioned by
the death of his first wife, a victim
of fever.''
Mrs. Watson was born in the old
Time: 7:00 p. m
Place: Presbyterian church.
Leader: Bernice .Milner.
Song: "I Love Him”
Remarks By leader.
Scripture Reading
Recitation: "Poor Li'T Brack
Sheep." Leslie Calloway.
Song: “Have Thine Own Way
Lord "
Reading: “Uncle Charles Jaggers”
—Pauline Huebner.
Violin Solo: "Humoresque," Mrs
AV. B. Brooks.
Recitation: “The Lord Had a Job
For Me,”—Ethel Gusman.
Things worth thinking about:
Negro Christian Endeavorers
Negro Progressing In Education
Negro Wage Earners.
Negroes moving North
The Negro and his Church
Prayer.
Benediction.
All young folks of the Methodist
and Presbyterian Churches are urged
to be there.
The last of the three union sun
day night services of the Methodist.
Presbyterian and Christian Churches
will be held tomorrow night at the
Presbyterian Church These services
have been ho Interesting and satis-
factory that they would probably have ‘
been continued If it had not been for
the fact that some of the ministers 1
participating will be absent from the
■ it > taking their vacations.
at 1934 North Carroll Avenue, Dal-
las, Texas.
“I re . with interest an article In
Sunday's Dallas News on the court
ship and marriage of Sarah Knox
Taylor and the late President of the
Confederacy," said Mrs Watson, and
from my personal knowledge know
most of the statements made by the
writer to have been correct My
mother, a daughter of Hancock Tav
lor. Zachary Taylor's brother, was
present at the wedding of Sarah Knox
Taylor and Jefferson Davis, and of
ten told me of the ceremony, an item
of which was the forgetting hv the
bridegroom of the marriage license.
un-
soon
Him
pay expenses has gone. IP
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Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 127, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 18, 1925, newspaper, July 18, 1925; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1509439/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.