Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 216, Ed. 1 Monday, October 19, 1925 Page: 3 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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GRIMES COUNTY
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ABSTRACTS AND LOANS
Milton Piekeit, Prop.
Phone 2-8-1
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DR. H. H. ZINBERG
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Dentist
SnccessorUo Dr. L. J. Goree
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Phones 302 and 107
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Cards
back if not satisfied.
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Phone 60
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FIRE AND
LIFE INSURANCE
Office over Peerlees Market
Phone 288
ft E. 0AIXAHAM
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Funeral Direetom and Emblaman
Phone No. 93
IMy and Night Service
Notice is hereby given that bids for
Inde-
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TODAY AND TOMORROW
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THE RIDERS OF THE
PURPLE SAGE”
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custody of funds of Navasota
pendent School District will bo
eeived np to noon Oct. 20th,
By order of School Board,
C. E. HENRY,
President.
G. YOUDNS,
Sect’y.
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FTON-GRAIN-STOCKS
HANBERRY AND COMPANY
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GOLD STAR BRAND
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A PORTION OF YOFR BUS
INB88: WILL BE AP-
PRECIATED
‘magnolia filling sta-
tion,
Station No. 1
J. F. THOMAS, JR., Mgr.
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G. BL JftMMlNCKE, Mwwyer
NAVASOTA, TEXAS
MEMBER
NEW ORLEANS
COTTON
EXCHANGE
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Daily Examiner
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TELEPHONE NO. 84
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Setter buy a dozen cfins.^ ^Ioney
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-z Attorney-at-Law ;
Navasota,' Texas \
Typewrite^ Ribbons, any make machine
Typewriter Paper, any size desired.
Carbon Paper, large and small sheets.
Adding Machine Paper.
Large Envelopes
Visiting Cards, Paper Clips, Etc. <
Orders Taken For Rubber Stamp»|
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GARAGE
Authorized Hudson and Essex
Service
PICKETTS FILLING STATION
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Office In
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Dressing the Part
There’s a story that has to ddi with
a stage manager who was rehearsing
a mob scene for a Hew play. After be
had directed the men who had been
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Geunine Sugar Corn
Tender and Delicious <?
- No, 2 Big Can 15c
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Wednesday:
order. Prompt deliver
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GEORGE°E. LETLOW
|Opor Every Bunday For Your
fl*-; . Convenience
Located on K. T. Highway
f • in south P*rt of dty
MAGNOLIA FILLING
STATION NO. 2
Phone 235
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East Texas Honey
—in—
OneandTwoPo
“Where Quality Iteiffnt and Prices Are Low”
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A Real Bargain In Canned Corn
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TOM MIX
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Kreeo Dip and Disinfectants of all
iPhoneS us I your • i \ 1 \ 7*
service. . '
CAMP DRUG COMPANY
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DIRECT WIR* SERVICE
Freezing Fires to Death
Fire extinguishers thtft will literally
Creese a fire to death, while covering
the burping area with a dense gas,
which bars all air 3and oxygen on
which the flames might feed, Irnve ■
been devised for fighting switchboard?.!
fires, and also for oil tankers and other A
ships where Ores In the cargo hold I
present a serious problem. The ex- |
tlngulahers. which are merely tanks I
loaded with the carbon-dloxlde gas I
(such as Is used at soda fountains to. I
carbopate the water) eliminate the wjt- I
1 ter damage which forms one of the'I
greatest losses In ordinary fire fighting. I
Light Received Eye I
The naval observatory says It rite 1
atmosphere Is left out of ^rtnsMeUa.-'.vl
| tfc>n, the quantity of light received by 1
' the eye from a luminous
directly pt'nportienart to
light emitted by the object and In-^ I
versely proportional to the square ofV I
I the distance. W one light Is twice af t
fhr> away as another, It has to he 1
! really four times as bright as the 1
i other In order to appear equally bright. |
i The enormous size and brilliancy of 1
the stars, however, eniblea Xherh to
overcome the disadvantage of distance.
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More Than Fair Average
The orator finsjly reached home
tired and dusty. I Ha wife greeted him
with ’’And hou did your speech ft, 1
dear?” The <»••«•»or forgot his weari-
ness an1' h -4 d His cheat ex-
panded h >><1 went late M4 j
coet fr< ’>r<nrod pneltiaa. i
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■’ 1 ' ' ' 1 r selected for the scene he told them to
\ ■*'*-. . ____ • report at the theater that evening,
INTING
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*We are prepared to turn out any kind of commer-
cial printing promptly. Have your Stationery, Cata-
logues, Dodgers, Etc., printed at home. We promise
Toed service and reasonable prices.
We also take Orders for
QUEEN THEATRE
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DAH Y EXAMINER MONDAY, OCT. 19, 1925.
WAR
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on Mosquitos, Flies
Insects, Etc.
By selecting from our complete stock of
“This scene we’ve rehearsed takes
place in Russia, and I want all you
guys in fur overcoats.” Z'
“But I haven’t got a fur overcoat/*
I protested one of the poor actors.
“That’s none of my business,” re-
plied the stage manager. “If you’re
not dressed for Russia I won’t let you
i go on.”
The extra arrived at the theater
that night—but without a fur coat
“Didn’t I tell you I wouldn't let you
I go on unless you were dressed for
Russia?” said the manager.
“But I’ve got on two suits of under-
wear,” protested the poor actor.
Arrows Used by Aztecs
The Smithsonian institution says
that the South American curare (and
other native nam.es) poison for arrows
concocted from stryshnos nux-vomlca
did not extend to Mexico. There is
little reliable information ou what poi-
son, if any, was used by the Aatecs
and other Mexicans on arrows. One
reference says that arrows were
dipped In the acrid juice Of leaf of an
agave, but the species is not given. '
The Asjecs were adepts In the proper^
ties of plants, and aside from, the
wound, could have made an arrow
very disagreeable.
Early Settlers9 Hard
Time With Toothache
An Interesting and instructive his-
tory could be written on the care of
the teeth. We have plenty of tomes
which^deal with battles, treaties, kings
and presidents. But the history of 1
dentistry is not so Bell known. There
is no denying that the record of Lewis
4)ut we should like to know some day
how Daniel Boone, or, to eome closer I
home, how pioneers In the Chemung '
valley wrestled with wicked mofurs. !
The early settler, oV for that /mat- 'j
ter, our forefathers who ^-mriy have !|
lived In settled European communities, d
were indeed unfortutua«jjf their teeth 1
bothered them. The Rclenc<‘ of den- |
tlstry is new. Great-g^eat-grandfa- >
ther, who suffered from diseased 'mo-
lars, kept alive If hfs resistance was I
strong, otherwise, he died from one I
of a score of diseases now attributed I
to local infections. Faith irP“the good j
old days” ha* no foundation in fact.
The average age of Americans approx- I
Imates fifty-five -years. In the days"of
King John, it was less than twenty I
years. The difference represents the I
advancement of science.—Elmira Ad- |
vertlser. ■ < '
Announcements, Invitations, Etc.
On this character of business we offer you prompt
service and we always in taking orders for engraved
cards give the engraver’s copper plate to the customer.
In that manner you can save the price of the plate when
5? flEing your next order.
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Full Une Suppli
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SOFHOMDItt CLASS MEETING
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The Sophomore class of ’25 met in
the History room with Miss Scott
i for the purpose of electing new of-
ficers for the year.
Whilhvlniina CuthreU, oiir Fre4j-
man president took charge of the
] meeting afid the following now offi- and Clark miikes entertaining reading, ‘
<-ers were elected:
Sani Wood, 1’residmit . ,
Wine Burrows, Vice^prefAleut.
Fern Whitten, Secretary-Treasure.
Moselh* l5urcell. R<«porter.
The Sophomore Class intends to
bo the most prominent class Navas-
ota Public has had.—Navasota School
News. ’
Courtesy
DUNAVANT
UNDERTAKING
COMPANY
Machine Sets Forth
Cold Facts of Life
£ machine for showing the relation
of one set of facts to another set of
facts has been invented by a Prince-
ton university student Although the
machine has fewer parts than the
simplest typewriter, its capabilities
are tremendous. To illustrate, It will
tell a man how long he may expect
to live. The factors used lb this de-
termination, according to report, are
the quantity of tobacco smoked dally,
the average duration of sickness a
year, and the average blood pressure.
Measuring mortality is an Important
part of the insurance business, and
the new machine might serve as r use-
ful check on the expectancy tables
set up by erudite actuaries. But
probably the machine won’t displace
the logarithmic gentlemen who quote
the odds on the so-called human race.
Handbooks still flourish by the side
(approximately) of new-fangled bet-
ting machines and it does seem a lit-
tle more neighborly to get a run for
your money from va man than from
a mechanism.—Nation’s Business Mag-
azine.
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 216, Ed. 1 Monday, October 19, 1925, newspaper, October 19, 1925; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1336704/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.