The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 108, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Matagorda County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.
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THE DAILY TRIRUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 12. 1934
-0u
Attention!
A
4
IT
s=
MOTORIST GETS HERE
com-
give you attention, we
pump for gas
ired article the people than anything possible to
sinig, vig- <
to truck and en
cessf ul
ll
II
Br
THE
I
the Buchanan Dam. We , in this N
about the
tion, are
Fred Fields Service Station
11
1
FRA
Corner Avenue F and Fifth
READ THE WANT ADS
A Graph Showing the Benefits of the
4
THE GALVESTON BAILY
& SUNDAY NEWS
i
_1
FOR I YEAR
I
■
N
I
$4.75
I
■
Six Months S3.00
I
I
BY MAIL ONLY
2d
TEXAS’ OLDEST NEWSPAPER
Mi TEXAS
This Offer Good Until Dec. 31st, 1934
(
4
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CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION CITIES
XT
7
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t
Street or R. F .D.
y
FATE TOOK \ FOOT
READ THE ADS
a
21
e-
r
■
rum
DI
PATRONIZE THE ADVERTISERS
T
NEW STUDY LAMP
WILSON-JONES Line of
Office Supplies
The DeLuxe Line
Loose Leaf Books
Rule Forms and Devices
/,
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k
F
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0
Columnar Pads
F HI
MILK
95
T
0*
DOWN
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY
]3
lentrul Pou ter and Light Company
Me
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8888898
MA
Science Reveals Why Eyesight Fades
As Birthdays Increase
Local
Perse
A Pretty College (Url s
Problem Started It!
Mr
To I
7 " ,
I Get Those Winter
books" thia
this, the f
pass on the
relief, the
। and ocular defects are quick to
I result. No child should be per.
mined to use his eyes for close
// work under any but the best of
/ visual conditions. Abundant, glare-
/ less light should always be provided,
and the child's eyes examined fre-
quently by a competent specialist.
Mr. D.
veston is
lin Theat
Mrs. V
Miss Gri
Edna an
/
\
of age. 82% have defective eyesight.
Such is the penalty that mu pays
for his compromise with nature.
Neglected teeth may be replaced,
but damaged eyesight at best can
be only partially restored. Good
light and properly fitted eye-
glasses are a great boon to old
"Tl
Exch
box
THE DAILY TRIDUNE
THU’S NE PRINTING COMPANY, Publishers
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
r-ammi
ememasi
We Are Dealers In This Territory For The
Well Known
i HOW PRESENTED FOR THE FIRST TIME!
i .................................. ..........| ■ ■ ■ ---------------- ------
Clothes Out Of
Storage . .
card was written tho tourists were in
Washington on their way to Atlantic
City
Bay City Tailor
Shop
r
s
...
Gus Silberisen, Prop
Phone 240
out the practics
the matter, it Set
is a general attemp
We also handle Carbon Paper, Typewriter Paper, Type-
writer Ribbons and Rubber Bands.
53
Binders of all kinds
Machine Bookkeeping
Indexes and Forms
Trays and Stands
County Deed Records and
Books
7 3
[ ga
i and have them
| Cleaned and Press-
ed for Fall and
Winter
T
o
OUR PRICES ON THIS MATERIAL IS THE
VERY LOWEST
Town __________________________________
Send in Your Subscription Right Away
22030107*-
to the People of Texas
e i
1
Machine Bookkeeping
Visible Record Equipment
Punches
The Story of the
I
A LONG ONE
Pel-Shop Dealer: "What makes you
think that dascshunds are becoming
fashionable, madam?”
Lady: "Because they are always say-
mg over the radio, ‘Get a long little
doggie’."
a River 1
ver Auth
When we say we
fhousands of young men and women in schools and colleges Nature never intended children’s eyes to be used for reading,
throughout the country are needlessly wearing out their eyes long writing and study. She intended that eyes be used for looking at
before their time by reading and studying for long hours under peer distant objects, under large amounts of natural daylight. When a
visual conditions. Surveys show that 40% of college students’ eyes child does close visual work indoors under inadequate and glaring
are defective. What a sad commentary that in fitting himself for light in defiance of Nature's laws, he pays the penalty in eye
the battle of life, the student is unnecessarily imposing a serious defects. Statistics show that one out of every five children in gram-
handicap on himself. mar school has defective visit n.
morninK
urth callec
Tentennial
V Tty
»pprovd
Study lump
— bears thy t*Jf
Wk
M
I
---CTT " w“7
$
Recommended as a General Reading Lamp
-...................... Every member of the family will enjoy bet-
P
and set the specifica.
In fact EVERYTHING in the line of FORMS that are
needed in any office.
-7—;—: 2H-l0
&
10"
N 2 . 2 09
1. . ■ .. ■'
v
6.1,
people. Since the pupils of their
eyes are only one-third as large as \
those of young people, they need at )
least three times as much light in
order to have an even break in seeing.
i
0‛*
m 59
•axxnewooon-- Mow
[ SOUtH IEXAS |
force the law against what the
seems to class public gambling.
CAREY SMITH
PAREY SMITH, Jr
2 A
°c l
| I A $ 1 U X A 1
Buchanan Dam they are overstepping Hlawkir
their authority, and territory. Tnis and M
Builds Body Health!
The one inexpensive food
t h at h a s everything
nearly perfect in the
food line. It builds the
muscles and great things
the youngsters need for
the school year of play
and work.
SANITARY
DAIRY
Phone 203
Many of the countic s throughout the la a reprene ntative of that county
state are closing out the marble ma- Simultaneously, if it pleanes, with the
shots" in the lighting
game, went to work
Something was done
about it! A committee
of the Illuminating
Engineering Society,
composed of the "big
st
DRETTY AS a picture and smart
■ hr a whip, a certain college
— girl, for no apparent reason,
was not making the proper prog-
ress with her studies. Her puzzled
parent, a prominent illuminating
engineer, visited his daughter nt
the school. He found the lighting
for study purposes abominable and
decided something must be done
about it.
The Buchanan Dam, and all
such projects regarHe I I of
V N- )
ae- N\ L
Af, 4
s‛ )g /A
\) IAJ 3a
tions for a "study”
lamp. These specifica
tions covered, among
other things, height,
type and size of shade
and minimum intens-
ity of light. The Elec-
trical Testing Laboratory was ap-
pointed to certify n manufacturer
to produce the lump under the seal
of the laboratory and the society.
The result: The college girl is
doing right will with hr studies
and the lamp is now offered to the
public. Thousands who have suf-
fered from improper illumination
for reading and tudy will now
benefit.
'J he lamp: 28 inches high, the cor
rect height for delivering proper
light on desk or table. Equipped
with a white glass diffu which
throws light upwind and down
ward. Shade lined with pure whit-'
pigment.
1
T1 .\
/e N\
The Galveston Daily News.
Galveston, Texas.
Gentlemen: Enclosed please find (check or
Money Order) for $4.75 for which please send me
the Galveston Daily and Sunday News for One
Year starting_______________________________
Name__________________________
light. AU too soon, however, he
begins to use his eyes for dose see-
ing tasks, such as looking at pic-
tures or playing with toys; often
under poor lighting. Eyestrain
t —
- Jr
F i.
(p
old ftom Washington and At- ]
ity with Mesdames Ruby I
, E H Highley, George Posey i
s Shirley Carter. When the
and you get your gas promptly, courteous-
ly. But you get more. We test your tires,
your oil and your water— and we clean
your windshield. It's the “something-ex-
tra" you’ll like. It costs you nothing more.
Try us.
to th ultimate
ion of the project
M ‘
8
E
-SMMmup"
Hn‛6g,3
mean it. Drive up to our
that dear little lady o
Of all men and women past 60 years /. A
(1
4. e
UH
gc-mmmm
y. The average child is born with .ormal
• 2)
ny)
Th legislat
See easier than you've ever seen before!
Read an hour longer than you’ve read
before! N w you can, without unneces-
sary strain or fatigue to your eyes. For
this lamp the New Study lamp—is the
first desk or table limp ever specifically
designed to safeguard eyesight.
Creation of leading limp designers
eyesight specialists, research men, physi
ci ms and scientists, the New Study 1 amp
b us the endorsement of the Illuminat-
mg Engineering Society, the Electrical
Testing Laboratories, the lighting com-
mittee of the Edison Electric Institute and
the National Better Light-Better Sight
Bureau.
The New Study Lamp gives a soft,
well diffused and glareless light for read-
ing with greatest eye comfort. It reduces
eyestrain, fatigue and nervous muscular
tension. It makes it easy to see quickly
and to read quickly. Better Light—Better
Sight; the New Study Lamp gives both!
A
where located, o fer more for the
j ogress and pernanent pro? raty of
ter reading conditions and benefit in health
and convenience by use of the New Study
Lamp. Older eyes as well as young will be
relieved by it The New Study Lamp
costs but $6.50 cash or $6.95 terms, with
$1.95 down and {11.00 a month. On display
at our store now; see it today!
sideration the conservation and the
impoundirx of water which is quite
as necessary to human progresa as,
power, or of the control of flood
watera, which is of more benefit and
value to the people in senvral then
business through grand jury uc loquacity of I
tions Lavaca County thin week join- whom territory
ed Matagorda County in stamping one cent by th
V
orable to them, but we do bel
hat when they step in to Him
oreas of such enterprises as
could not gain or b
• Colorado River pr
the lantic
88
EV
Make it an exchange.
Bring the summer and
winter clothes for clean-
ing. Store those sum-
mer clothes and get the
fall ones ready to wear.
« a
O O M I N I o N Of c A N A D A r
NAA
U N f T E D !srATEs-"
[nORTH TEX
Buchanan Dam than anything else
albeit, the other legislation found
necessary may concern uk more or
lest in the last called ses on the Col
orudo River Authority was talked to
vants to lay a sangle barrier against
ny power interests or e forts. Per-
wmnally the Tribune is more than fa-
-'live of The water impounded [
conserved will be of more last-
benefit l the nine counties in- '
ed in the Colorado River Auth-1
' bill than anything else directly
Teacher (after recess): "Percy, why
are you crying?"
Percy: "Harold kicked me in the
stomach."
Teacher: ‘ Harold, did you mean to
kick Percy in the stomach?”
Harold: “Naw. He turned around
just when I kicked.”
That Your Eyes
May SEE.
Without discussing < cl. there appared an
ms the movement in the Chicago Tribune
> Hot power or electricity of any
Owner and Editor character, or of the great irrigation i
Business Manager o sibilitii and kindred enterpris
- j or of the reclamation of millions of
ompe tition with
opponition, all inspired, of course,
harp> on power and power competi-,
tion, whercas power enters into the
Buchanan Dam very insignificantly.
P A Bond has received a card 1
his son Jack who is making a •
orously, the building of due Buch- a
anan Dam. Chicago being the head of 1
tile power interests it is no trouble v
to locate the "niExer in the woodpile. 0
the Colorado Ri'
, Nobody, that this paper knows of rehnted
Entered as Second Class matter at the postoffice of Bay City, icrei nd 1 of any other thing
Texas, under act of Congress. except rower and a very small PoSSi-
. .....-.....- —_____ -................................ bility ut that power entering into
THAT'S WHAT EVERY -
88 8 -"88es
oee-rmg
589 44885
Sg5, (%
M- 4dN
--.pf—a-y
■ a
death by a little woman from Dal- This Opp sition tever takes into con-
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Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 108, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1934, newspaper, October 12, 1934; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1554869/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: 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.