The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 241, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 29, 1929 Page: 1 of 4
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HOME-MADE
SANDWICHES
all
The Daily Tribune
CANDIES
Our
orda
Always Fresh
Specialties
ALCOVE
ALCOVE
“There Is Nothing Too Good For Our Friends
nd
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FIVE CEN’TS THE CoPY
Small export shipments to se
Quotations
unchanged, as oftcially posted by the
is 1 cents, fancy 3’ic and choice 3*4
Edith extra fancy is 5 to 5%c, fancy
Set
and heads are 3e to 3%, 2%c to 3c
By II ARRY AUSTIN ( LAPP
de-
been made recently.
CONDENSED STATEMENT
of
the mother preferred.
At Close of Business December 31, 1928
ens and value your own dairy heifers.
22 31d p
R. 1. Koons.
RESOURCFS
23tf
1,006,406.55
true
$1,667,223.67
LI ABILITIES
$
4
1,465,981.12
e-$
*1,667,223.07
N
J
IMS
<
LADIES!
(
STATEMENT OF CONDIIION OF
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS, DECEMBER 31, 1928.
RESOURCES
NOTIC
the right to reject any or all
■
*1,266,638.18
LIABILITIES
BEGINNING SATURDAY, JAN.
*1.266,088.18
26, 1929, WE WILL HAVE A
SPECIAL SALE ON ALL
OFFICERS
OF OUR HATS
DIRECTORS
■M
i
other for $1.00—2 Hats for $6.00.
Your watch deserves M
Another lot of Hats on sale for 98c
COME EARLY WHILE THERE
IS A CHOICE SELECTION
highest virtues. It begins
—Abraham Lincoln
D. P. MOORE DRY GOODS CO.
-9)
W. F. TETTS
Jeweler and Optometrist
CITIZENS STATE BANK
"4
E.
100,600.00
26,000.00
61,842.66
24,400.00
$530,220.92
26,000.00
86,860.34
12,000.00
2,000.00
6,746.88
from any cow but the mother for at
least a week after which time milk
from other cows may be used if neces-
*350,000.00
10,760.00
70,600.00
112,678.21
403.478.34
in the world-wide dealer organiza-
tion of Dodge Brothers, the sale of a
new car marks the introduction into
the "family circle," and the beginning
of a spirit of friendly co-operation that
and 2% to 2%c and screenings 2%c,
2%e and 2%c per pound.
Reports from Southwest Louisiana
Capital Stock
Surplus ..................
Undivided Profits .
Circulation
DEPOSITS
Loans and Discounts ___________________________________
U. S. Bonds —
Municipal Bonds____________________________
Real Estate ..............................
Furniture and Fixtures .....-.................
U. H. Certificates of Indebtedness____
Cash and Sight Exchange ...........................
eral
are
* 494,876.27
24,000.00
"1,614.26
9,728.77
6,000.00
25,000.00
623,818.89
duced the new
line.
serves
bids.
29-9
Capital Stock
Undivided Profits
DEPOSITS ............
Uy Rugeley, President; P. R. Hamill, Vice President and Cashier;
L. B. Luder, Assistant Cashier; J. Erwin, Assistant Cashier.
Loans ....... .........................
Bonds to Secure Circulation
Other Stocks and Bonds ....................... ..................
Banking House
Furniture and Fixtures .........
Other Real Estate ............
Cull Loans
U. S. Bonds ......................................
Commercial Paper and Municipal Securities
Bills of Exchange
CASH
The Cement Idea
Supported
!
■ board of control to the state legisla-
ture that three state-owned cement
plants, to be operated by convict labor.
RAISING THE DAIRY
COW
I
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I
The above statement is correct.
P. R. HAMILL, Vice President and Cashier.
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3-' V
futtB—_
There is only one right way to clean a watch
—bathe, dry, polish and oil each part sepa-
rately. This involves taking the movement
completely apart, reassembling it and regu-
lating it accurately over a ’ ’ ' '
It takes an expert to do it.
A. HARRIS,
County Judge, Matagorda
County, Texas.
--o—o-------
Butter fat 1b worth at the present 1 good treatment to
time about $760.00 per ton. No man Vox 162.
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•na
: - A
((
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
BAY CITY, TEXAS
ANNOUNCES A
Free Lecture on Christian Science
BY
Dr. Hendrik Jan de Lange, C. S.
OF HIE II AGUE, HOLLAND
Member of The Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Chureh
of Christ, Scientist. in Boston, Massachusetts
In the Grand Opera House
Tuesday, January 29th, 1929, at 8 o’clock, p. m.
THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Bay City, Texas
great success milking rejected cows.
BAY CITY BANK & TRUST CO.
BAY CIrY, TEXAS
■ u
—))
with saving money.”
a period of days.
. It takes time; it
costs a little more; but it is less expensive in
the long run it saves your watch. •
Place your watch only in hands that you
can trust. Our membership in the Gruen
Watch Guild fissures you of competent
watch service at our store.
this EXPECT care
Every Hat in the house on sale —
open । indicate somc Improvement in
I mand and a fair movement.
The recommendation of the state
—o—o
sary. Feed milk from the same cow,
is one of the first and
A good Ford truck for sale; almost
new. See El Maton Garage. 24d 25tfw
FOR RENT—Three nice bed rooms.
ports are reported.
BAY CITY, TEXAS, T ESDAY, JAM ARY 29, 1929.
Hy Rugeley, R. Lee Anderson, O. A. Moore, P. R. Hamill,
Edw. Ryan, T. J. Walker, W. R. Horn, Jr.
VOLUME XXIII NUMBER 211.
One Hat for $5.00, and buy an-
M E /Lt » O
TTTIITTTTTMER..G RU EN^VVATCH :.GMMTT
-------------------
vestigation, and must be assumed
sound.
It should give the legislature some-
thing certain on which to work. It
may very well furnish the central idea
on which the entire prison system can
be rebuilt.—Houston Chroincle.
Ford Truck
Ay-
\‛dye
that had the facilities of investigating The wise way, the profitable way to
their feasibility. The report given the dairy is to sell butter fat, keep the1
legislature was requested by the prev-; skim milk at home, feed pigs, chick-
ions legislature, and so is entirely in .....
order. It was based on extensive in-
South exposure. Phone 322.
-------o—0-------
Your job printing reveals the
character of your establishment.
I
!
continues indefinitely. The combing- quires little skilled labor, since it is
tion of factory trained mechanics and the one product of which the state
the well-equipped shop keeps the car buys vast quantities, that the manu-
“Teach economy. That
board of trade. Blue Rose extra fancy
। FLOORS RHFINISHED—I am pre-
pared to make your old floor new. I
, Can sand and finish any floor or give I
lit । -AAA 4 root ment 8 A new ones. P. O.
adequate to take care of home articles
that will be needed to get these people
back to where they can half way live.
A greater portion of the money given,
an account of which will be given
later, has gone for medical aid, funeral
expenses and hospital services. The
committee could use a little more cash,
but I bat, though, is not what we wish
to call your attention to now.
We have some colored families as
well as white families that are not
able to purchase new furniture, neith-
er will the committee be able to fur-
nish all that will be needed for these
people. We have discussed the mat-
ter and the committee decided to make
a call through the paper for any ar-
ticle that you would not have any use
for in the way of an extra bedstead,
set of springs, cook stove, heater,
chairs, extra mattress, quilts, etc. Also
kitchen utensils and dishes, as these
people do not have anything and many
of us have different things around our
homes stored away in the attic that
can be painted up and made to look
like new. The committee has arranged
with G. A. Moore, treasurer of the
committee, to take charge of all these
things that will be given, same to be
sent to the Union Warehouse and if
you have no way to deliver the article
yourself, we will see that these things
are sent to the warehouse at once so
they may be given out to those in need.
We could use some more children's
clothes, ages four years to seventeen,
for boys and girls.
This appeal w ill not hurt anyone and
the committee will thank you for any
article that can be used in the home
and they will be put out to the best
advantage of the storm sufferers of
our recent calamity. Call the Cham-
her of Commerce—Phone 70—for in-
formation. Also our committee could
use a little more cash subscriptions.
STORM RELIEF COMMITTEE.
—------0—0
Notice
ROOM AND BOARD—Am prepared
to accomodate, splendidly, a few
boarders. Phone 323. 31tf
• can afford to feed a ration to a calt Rice M arket
any portion of which is worth such a M1ce arKet
price. If this article suggested the New Orleans, Jan. 29, Further re-
use of a calf feed that cost *766 06 per ( ceipts of rough rice reported here
l ton it would not be worthy of printing Monday by mills. but the total was
i Experiments ut our many expert- only 792 sacks Mills are short of । per pound,
ment stations have established as a suplies and it is expected buying will —
'fact that calves raised on skim milk in reuse now, as demand has improved (% to 5e and choice 41 to 4%c.
are just as good as those nursed by a for clean rhe, both in the domestic
cow. in the South this statement is and foreign markets Receipts of
doubted in many places, but its truth clean from country milla for export
"" may easily be demonstrated by any amounted only to 1984 pockets and no
committee for the purpose of storm I IL Bamford, director of service for ting the convicts off the farm and into Raising Calves By Hand dpirxsarme rnSkinamiiplvasraisod and n" 'sales' P tpouth In “buyer ‘
relief sufferers, the fund will not be Dodge Brothers, who have just intro-central plants where disciplinary and b - J? modorn me mod , pi t y i
..... Dodge Brothers six penological methods could be improv- The reasons for raising dairy calves for.deveop.8!ood.bnedawellgrown
ed—have urged the cement plant pro- by hand are too numerous to mention. “ a’onle apetetHsuit
posal because it seemed to offer the Among them are, better calves can be j The 24
convicts raised, costs less, they develop better hoursvsrteverythingisnormmimothn
"itssteemsethatosinedtcement is casily bonansandedixesttancybility, les.....Mik the cow...... teed tii
made, since the manufacture of it re- Profitable da rX on mis- ‘whole mi fresh and warm, at the
ouires HHU auinen 10100 Wine. , . nmiap gaty AMI on mis rate of about six pounds per day in
quires little skilled, labor, since it is ing and developing calves rather than three feeds of two pounds each. It is
‛ on the purchase of cows to replace very important that regular feeding
---- ---------- ----- .... ......._- those which have declined in produc- 1 nourg he hserved D not feed milk
facture of it meets the needs of the tion. Good dairymen do not sell their
Texas prison system exactly. best cows, hence the man who buys
Now these ideas, heretofore unoffi- for replacement is obliged to take re-
daily advanced, have been given sub- jections. No man cun hope to attain
stance by the official report of a body
At the regular meeting of the Com-
missioners’ Court of Matagorda Coun-
ty, Texas, to be held in the office of
the County Judge in the city of Bay
City in said county on the 11th day of
February, A. D., 1929, bids will be re-
ceived from any banking corporation,
association or individual banker in
Matagorda county that may desire to
be selected as the depository of the
funds of said county. Said bids must
state the rate of interest to be paid
and be accompanied by a certified
heck or exchange for *1006.60 as a
guarantee of good faith upon the part
of Ute bidder, that if said bld be ac-
cepted, he will within five days after
notice of acceptance execute a bond or
bonds as is required by law. (See Art.
2517 of Revised Civil Statutes of 1925
as amended).
The said Commissioners’ Court re-
looked upon as necessary evils by the
average car owner. If the driver
would only obey the few simple rules
of the manufacturer, laid down after
exhaustive tests and years of research
in the automobile industry, his troub-
les soon would approach the vanish-
ing point.
through red lights into a smash-up
and the new automobile owner who
forgets to remember that an ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure
have much in common . Both are on
the road that leads to the service sta-
tions and repair bills. It is difficult to
educate the driver of a new automo-
bile in the care of his machine. A ma-
jority appear to pursue a “let well
enough alone” policy. Because the
motor hums along smoothly and quiet-
ly, periodical Inspections and import-
ant lubrication operations are over-
looked, trouble develops and vital
parts wear prematurely.
Proper Lubrication important.
Proper lubrication is of paramount
importance always. The wise driver
insures himself against inferior grades
of oil by dealing with reliable con-
cerns. Factory tests show that crank-
case oil should be changed at the end
of the first 256 miles of operation and
again at 756 miles. After that new
oil should be substituted for the old at
every 1,066 to 1,500 miles. The levels
o f transmission and differential
greases should be checked frequently
ami the grease examined from time to
time. A general lubrication of the
chassis is also required now and then;
air pressure of the tires kept at the
point recommended and the battery
solution at the required level.
Motors must be broken in gradually
and the driver who takes the road to
smash all existing speed records while
the first few hundred miles are being
registered on his speedometer must
expect to pay in grief and repair bills
when the thousands are reached.
Service departments too often are
mp-
14-31
performing at the highest point in ef-
ficiency.
After the new car has been operated
around 1,066 miles, it should be given
a thorough inspection. The align-
ment of the front wheels and axles
must be checked, bolts retightened,
spark plug and distributor point gaps
examined and carburetor adjusted.
Tappet clearances, ignition and valve
timing also require the attention of
expert mechanics at this particular
period in the life of a motor.
Mechanies Trained in Factory.
The importance of skilled mechanics
trained in the factories and schools
of the manufacturer cannot be over-
estimated . In the Dodge organization
they are urged to avail themselves of
every opportunity to take our courses
and visit the factory at least once a
year. In that way they reap the bene-
fits of all new ideas in assembly and
manufacture at the Dodge plants, ex-
perience invaluable to them when they
return to their own branches, Increas-
ing the standards of workmanship and
efficiency. Mechanics and students
come to enroll in our plant courses
from many foreign countries.
The color blind driver speeding
* 66,606.00
10,618.18
1,179,520.64
8 $
M
STORM SUFFERERS SERVICE A BIG
IN NEED OF HOUSE- FACTOR IN SALE
HOLD ARTICLES
I The idea that the responsibility and
- I interest of the manufacturer cease i be established, puts that proposal on
.when the new car is delivered by the a very solid foundation.
While everyone has been more than dealer is as antiquated us the one- Heretofore persons interested in re- •
liberal in the giving of money to the ' cylinder automobile, according to W. 'habilitating the prison system in get-
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Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 241, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 29, 1929, newspaper, January 29, 1929; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1553880/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.