Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 180, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1932 Page: 2 of 4
four pages: ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilmView a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
Tua.
3
t
ISTI'l
for
!
■P°“
F,
<
I
-SflO-i . W*S
h
>*
t
•«
*
i ■■■rt'j <
J-
a*.'..
Butt
.
lb
i Feed Crops Bring
/^__L 1'- z>_.
Cash To Growers
a
5 lbs
i
'd
i;''
jffr
IM ’VL
•i
■
■<
IV
RESULTS:—
if-
an
never
or
in
rumors
■/
your car equipped
TvF' •
, Ki
The la
kU.
■
dtk^dk..
kfKFi
mt®
ft
M
■
LI
Ford
**>“•/*
L the patented
the strength
It takes less leather,
from the present
Women’s
A Chicago
«MM»
MOO
•ISO
w1
----— o —-
BIGGER AM) BETTER EEET
---O—--__
WATCH FOR TICKETS IN
RUETZ’S BREAD
•'•»''5 'wi«' 'vi *"'! 1
-I i :
. ■ ,Ai
18c
jq
---6-----------1 ’
Subscribe To The Examiner.
• • CI'/ > .1 joft ,«!t TT"
|G
| ft
L
ha
. :«v ■) r
Wisconsin Orewn
Cheese
,:O
IQ
X
Mil.
MfcOl
I
I
”,r.
; A J
$43
in a
H. Judson,
Li&R.
K
_ l nvrc .
Del Monte No. 2% can
Peaches
taT
nor |
accurately than she does her age.
.... . o-------—
.Mexicans Play
Big Role In
Texas Voting
Ym OlAOYoq
ToLx>Mfl*AT.
through
4: 6, 7.
.r’«
■ irf--ys
'■.■3S
'■"X3
.
...3l
» ■'Sr.i
s
. '
t Woods Special
Coffee
j ...............
■ »
so;
county. Ortlx was killed af. j,H < |
_ - And there ha sits today. Heinrich
tugs at his chain and grows thinner j
as the village cats silently atm them- 1
•elves.
.’'■j J
J2 1
and minds
Phillipians
Ud
L'-’. VJ
J
itiitti
■BM
bus, is one which automatically lights
his garage, opens the doors and clou-1
es them after he drives his automobile ;
in.
Patrick also is the inventor of
tubeless radio:
The mechanism which opens the
garage doors is operated by a radio
L ' /
‘w
.•W
., - iS
flM ■'
Ink p
hwt;t>
al »'
kv.” .
K^*’ ■
ROAD SERVICE
>y arrosMMMW reflections upon the
raetar. standing or reputation of
parnan firm or corporation which
lir in the columns of THE
f|BR will be gladly corrected
Ing brought to the attention
•f tha firm.
-
A BIBEE THOUGHT FOR TODAY
122.
-
a
1
■*
ire by* a revolutionary expedt.
led by General Rangel.
or Sterling's workers count-
h reproduction in circular
Had m SmoaBOtaM matter Feb
me, at Navarota, Texas, under
of Ccngroo*. Marek ». Itn.
»rtt«iariaa and resolutions of re
f p&llshcd at on< (1) cent per
ey. I have saved money. I
It. For the Golden Rule t
or
qexx -QOO^ VfcWLte HAVB A
FIT !P SHB KN6UU tttAT UMFBY
yjiuu TAWB Ao/AHTAeB OF
I -ft® POKBR iNFOaMAHPH
\ AMP PlkU our ONE OF j
NeiGHBOQ^j^^
cord body—and greater protection
punctures and blowouts.
nationally for reducing tire
I <
*.n
QnrdihiU Sliced
Bacon
'"'^-222.
eirhia hot
of j
man t
i
t''I'
v-X'
Sweet1
Potatoes
a atatement by the Ferguson _________
Radio Opens
Gasage
bus, Ind. (UP) .sr-
w of Ernest Pair!
L. G. WWMl
,e’*: “s. ‘ Aw1 5g
i gives a stronger bond between trea<
l 1 nrtwl hndv--find <rrAnt.p-r nrntonfinn tri
en published by former Gov.
*• a Ferguson, <tecli w
should be deported. It was
I by a Mexican running a-
a train and killing several
J
lb 19c
om Firestone r
i^ons -.and si
i new, safe Fin
of a
—■
>i' **L'
Sales :
is more Important than quantity. A
graceful six is much to be preferred j
to a wide and stumpy four. Little feet |
are all very well in China. Everyone 1
to their tastes. But a degree of pedal
expansiveness should certainly be held
no handicap in a land where fem-
inine freedom flourishes.' Besides, a |
girl does not have to telJ the size of |
her shoe much more frequently nor ,he car wi|| ,.f|y.. a|ong ltg elevated
track after attaining the necessary
speed and will thus loose all friction
I with the sides of the "trough”.
Powered by a 660 horse power steam
engine, the car also uses the engine
in braking by means of steam brakes
which make contact with the sides of
the trough: '
Present plans call for the construe-
tion of two types of equipment.
Estimated cost for carrying 44 pas-
sengers one mile is 42 cents. Fuel
economy is shown when the inventor
believes a Philadelphia-Jersey City
ticket should be about $1.25.
-------O------
Cat Eating Dog
Jails Master
I AN END TO WORRY -B« careful
I for nothing, but in everything by
g prayer and supplication with thanks
f giving let your requests be made
I ' known unto God. And the peace of
[ God, which passoth’all understanding
f (hall keep your hearts
Christ Jesus.
“Flying Train”
Vision Of
Camden Inventor
-f^V& i ■'
lb20c
-------------- ,_x
“15 c
. •>... hi' . -I.*: 'C.
■
j-.
, . .!!
[ coni ___
ii» quiet performance.
‘eiX.: Drive in today -
(™.cial brand mail order tires — make your own
^’/Values you get when yoqaaavel
TOM 1
terming. It has been
some time, even since the jrirls began I of a "flying train”.
A. - —S. A. A 1— A 1 u . *— -1 A . . » • VX M AX ■* AX lx AX A. I A V. a< ■ ■ a a lx • lx AX
La France Ready Mixed Biscuit
Flour
dog whom he loved
He was a police dog. named
Heinrich, but Antoine'called him Kat
• zenjammer for short.
Thi.-f dog. had one weakness
j overwhelming love of cats.
Now there were many cat lovers in
the village. So what was their hor-
ror when they began to observe that
after cat disappeared, never to
Fort Worth, Sept. 8 (UP) — In the
feed lots of middlewestern ranches
14,000 streets were* fattening today as
a part of a relief program enabling
growers to convert their feed crops
into cash.
The cattle were supplied by G. R.
White of Brady and associates, co-
' operating with Armour and Company
of Chicago. At various market cen-
ters, the steers were weighed and,
turned over to feeders. After fatten-
ing from 70 to 120 days, they will be
returned to market, White paying
eight cents for each pound the steers
have gained.
A gain in weight from 200 to 250
pounds per head is expected by feed-
ers, enabling them to realize more
profit than could be secured by selling
their feed.
- gives greater traction and safe,
•r• v *jr ’ * “ ■. iV *• * • * -* yi _v. **■. -^gjfflM
- let.UB^how you cross sections cut from Firestone Tires and spe-
■•''xSl
Camden, N. J. <UP) — Commuting
at 200 miles an hour soon will be a
noticeable for | possibility, according to the inventor fr'OmnIh7in7id‘e" o7patrick7c!r.*The
device is made up largely of old parts
[of a cream separator. Short wave
laboratory, | '
is
I i-i, TimMnfal lino Hot wppn Atlantic Citv
j and Camden so they may determine
' the practicability of the model. If the
I teats show the car can make the run.
between the two points in 19 minutes,
as the inventor thinks possible, it will
be feasible to establish a New York
Chicago run in five and a half
hours.
The car
FIRESTONE TIRES alone give you
these Extra Values— •
Gum-Dipped Cords t-
Firestone process that incre
of the cord body, and gives longer tire life.
Two Extra, Cord Plies Under the Tread
—the patented Firestone Construction that
hst
we are paralywd by our d«pea<
on an artificial economic aiUi
which baa failed ue”, la a resow
indictment of stock market gant. .
and selfish business methods
Ford does not beHeve W» ever ttiall
return to the kted of prosperity which
prevailed during the administration of
President Coolidge.
“This Is net •■ cycle*of hard times
from which -Wd shall return to build
bigger panics", he writes. "Thia is nt>£ wa
a period of depression to be tided -over '
until good times come back. If tee
could only realise it these are the
best times we have ever hMd.* They
have really (saved us from a major
disaster. Life U bursting old, coh-
flning molds and seeking something
more new and alive, more fitting its '
intelligence and morality."
Some of the salient remarks from
Ford's article are:
“It la a mistake to belldki'4hat only
a class of people Is going through this
change. It has touched Everyone. The
so-called rich have practically dlsap
peered." ’ ”
"There is no sence in saving mon-
ey. I have saved money. I have spent
HPIMPML''' ®y.1’
anything else, is use it or lose it.
The Jewish people are right in this
matter. They make a lot of money ”
and they spend a lot.”
“I am for. Russia in its creative at-
titude toward life and for its attitude
of self-help." ’ ' ' ‘
Ford’s article is the first of a
series to be presented by the outstand-
ing figures of the present era.
----o—---
WATCH FOR TICKETS IN
RUETZ’S BREAD
■ ----O——-- .
DRAINED LAKE YIELDS 1,600,
GOLF BALLS
ES
n*A ■:WM'
H
at'
smbwar a itoMB«
MAW1ABI,
AWDTWW uMBVHT •
MdcM,“ HW HOT &XN6
Tb HANt A THING To
ullTH HBG,-
1X> You KNOu) WHAT
tHBY -DO T
"ThsvplAY Pokes.-
isht That Tenoim.
Quiet, Safe, Long-Wearing Non-Skid Tread
Although the "train" still Is in the of a cream separator
One can | experimental stages in a laboratory, (jmpulges ar(, sent from the rad(o |n
tndustry the inventor. Walter H. Judson. >S|Patrick.s machine to a tubc receiver
convinced that it will regain much of , ins(dc the gara e
» V. ax F>.Axa<vtei ax vx a4 exneeonrrar kltiuinouu I Ik
Patrick has applied for patents on
such parts of the device as have not
already been planted.
When the garage' doors suddenly
flew open without any signal from
Patrick, he explained that it w a s
caused by some ghort-wave operator
sending on the Same wavelength to
which the garage was attuned. He
said that difficulty would be over-
come.
“ — ____--- __•
__ _ . JOINED”WITH
By GORDON K. SHEARER
(UP Staff Correspondent)
Austin, Sept. 9 (UP) — Former
Mexicans, now citizens of Texas, and
the descendants of Mexicans play an
important part in the Texas elections.
Along.,the international border and in
San Antonio, they frequently hold the
balance of power.
Figures of the U. S Census Bureau
for 1930 placed the Mexican popula
tft tion of Texas at 683.681 or 11.7 per
Cent. Percentages on participation in
elections are not available.
Number Reduced
In 1922 the percentage of eligible
Mexican voters was considerably re-
duced. Before that time the wife of
a Mexican who had become natural
ized in Texas was entitled to vote.
Since that date she, too, must take
out naturalization papers. If they
were married before Sept. 22. 1922, and
the husband naturalized, the citizen-
to her with I
to show their feet and the
thereto several years ago.
understand that the shoe
would rather have the feet stay small. .
But no Judge the freight and passenger
styles <
I pumps, the shoemakers are attaining
the same end by a different route, al- I
though one can understand that intrl- I considering the construction of an
cate cutting may more than make up j p< rimental line between Atlantic City
for the saving of leather.
Women use their feet in a more
I vlrgorous participation In sports than I
did their mothers. They may not j
•walk more, but even the relatively,
inactive task of pressing on an accel-
erator calls for some freedom of foot ,o
movement. Feet are bigger, but bet-'
ter j The car travels on and elevate a
"trough" with its four specially sus-
In feet as in everything else, quality , |)(.nded wh(.pls i (;]]lng ,n
two special I
: gutters made of composition. The side
members of the cai take up the side
and upward thrusts of the car as they',
develop at maximum speeds.
Built on stream lines with a large
three blade propellet in front, it will I
actually “fly” after reaching the I
I speed of 120 miles an hou*.
, ■ Based on an aerodynamic principle.
tolne's backyard - An alarm was :
■oundad. But It was too late. Thsy 1
found Halnrich smacking his chops.
To the police atatlon rushed the an-J j
raged cat-lovers. Within five minutes 1
Antoine was arrested and lodged it» ]
Salt Lake City, Utah (UP) — A lake
over which golfers of a Salt "Lake
municipal course must shoot, was*
drained recently yielding 1,000 golf
balls. (
‘ Silncte only "duds" fail to negotiate
the hazard, according to caddies who
harvested the golf ball crop, the balls
tekrS'Chifefly of a Cheap grade.
Statistics compiled by employes of
the course revealed that two out of
every three men hit balls into the
lake, although the distance from tee
to cup is only 190 yards, 100 yards of
which is across the water.
~~fxodT .'.o.UOs’Mjt jdyLf
-
8c
• ’ >■ i'l a- »7'
I '
I,'-
I
cat
return.
And all the while, Heinrich —*
Katzenjammer — waxed sleeker and
fatter.
It was not long before rumor?
spread through the village about An'x
toine’s cat-laving pet. Some people
even wdnt so far as to say that An-
toine lured the village cats into hisj
backyard to satisfy Heinrich. ,4.
Antoine had many friends. Ill-i
feeling began to spread. )
Things 'could nbt go on like this
forever. It happened when Fifl, a PerJ
slab cat and the pride of a (leading
and by her husband , citizen, was seen to wander into An-
Mrs. Fergu-
lass
DCS
Paris <1IP) In the village
Drancy lived Antoine Lepage, a
who paid his debts.
Antoine had a
dca rly
I
ship automatically passed
E him by the action. Those married
Er, Since 1922, however, must secure
dividual naturalization papers.
Importance Emphasized
Kp Importance of the so-called Mexi-
K- can vote" was emphasized in the re.
K; cent state Democratic primary con-
test between Governor Ross 8. Steri-
K- Ing and Former Governor Miriam A.-
•? Ferguson Spanish circulars from both
& aides were widely distributed in San
Antonio. The Ferguson circular recit-
ed ‘^he friendly treatment accorded
^Mexicans by Mrs Ferguson during her
^■^Ministration i---
|j *tehen he was Governor Mrs. Fergu-
ranon's pardon granted to General j. m
$ Rangel also was cited. General Ran
L «•> bed been given a five to 99 year
SE eentence on conviction of murder of
.. K/JCe®delario Ortiz, deputy sheriff of
WHY WE
J’S. -J 'I"'
ften
TO GIVE LOWER PRICES
and Greater Values
To Grimes County Tire Users.
We wanted the advantage locally, that Firestone has
costs and building volume business on a small profit.
Firestone leads in bringing down prices, Firestone leads in new tire improvements
and builds more miles intp a tire than any other manufacturer * Every advantage Fire-
stone has in world wide resources buying rubber and cotton at the lowest prices — is
put back to us for the benefit of our customers.
27c
business
of cutout i lost during the past few years to oth-
■ forms of transportation.
The sponsors of the invention arc
ex
Cleveland Plain Dealer
B feet are growing larger.
I convention of some one of the trades
concerned with pedal extremities an
1 nounces with an air of horror that
the average 1932 girl wears sixes as
fc compared with the threes or fours of
f her mother.
• The news is interesting, but not a ■
. b — -. - 1 — 1 * V. .. .. V.axaxvx wxAxIiyxAxol.l/k 4*Z\ r* ;
approaches
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 180, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1932, newspaper, September 9, 1932; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373102/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.