Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 210, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1932 Page: 2 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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Above, the new $5,000,000 liner, the Santa Lucia, which
will operate between New York City and the West Coast
via the Panama Canal, is seen as it slid down the ways
following her christening at Kearney. N. J.
New WMOfiM liner LamfM
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»••••••••»•
H C HAHSELBRING
• Teacher of VWId and AU Band
• Music Studio Ml Washington Ave,
• Phone 359
• ••••• •••••••
• L. G. WOOD, JB.
• Insurance Agency
• Fire, Life, Automobile & Casualty
• Office In Leake Building
• PHONE NO. 11
• •••••••••see
• BEATRICE HAMMANS, D. C.
• Chiropractor
• (Palmer Method)
• Martin Apartment
• Telephone MT or 475
The American Legion Auxiliary will
meet tonight at 8 d’clock at the Camp
Hotel with Mrs. Maude Leigh.
dunavant’s
mobtuaby
Ambulance Day and Night
Courteous Comforting Sendee
Phone 93
■" ?'* ' . ' .....-
state and federal crop reporting ser-
vices announced nere today.
Most Other crops have about the
same prospects as a month ago. Cot-
ton prospects have declined 39,000
bales while corn prospects have in-
creased 2,858,000 bushels. Both tame
and wild hay yields promise to be
slightly larger than last year. Sweet
potatoes promise a yield of 6,391,000
bushels which is nearly double the
average crop ahd more than a million
bushels over last year. Peanuts will
also be nearly double the usual crop
with 103,500X100 pounds in prospect
Citrus crops have shown slight im-
provement with indications the com-
bined orange land grapefruit produc-
tion will be about half of last year's
A production of 19,500,000 pounds of
pecans Is expected in Comparlspn with
last year’s 32,000,000.
*, Snap,beans are given a condition
rating of 80 per cent compared with
64 last year; broccoli, 85 compared
with 80; cauliflower, 80 compared
with 75; cucumbers, 88 compared with
90; ®K8 plant, 87 compared with 75;
green peppers, 85 compared with 86;
Irish potatoes, 82 compared with 78;
tomatoes, 84 compared with 77.
Strawberries are rated the same as
last October at 90.
.....
LEGION AUXILIARY
Big Bananas, per dozen . . . .
Idaho Potatoes, 10 pounds
Green Stringless Beans, per pound __
Fancy Bell Peppers, per pound
Jonathan Apples, per dozen
Cabbage, per pound
Yellow Onions, per pound
Lettuce, per head .
Fresh Prunes, per dozen
Tokay and Seedless Grapes, per pound
Glided No. 2 e,rn 1 E m
Pineapple IOC
'iarly June
Peas •
No. 1 can
5c
Gibb'ii> per can
Pork & Beans
Saturday
SPECIALS
Soap
10c
I
25 oz.
19c
--o------
I
CLOWN’S CAR PROVES
DETECTIVE’S NEMESIS
Laundry .3 bars, 16 oz.
Soap
K. C. Baking
Powder
Fresh White
Peas
I’ratlow Y. C.
No. 1% can, per can
Peaches
Miss Alice Bieker of Houston is the
week end guest of Miss Mary Rodes.
She will attend the festivities at A. &
M. College tonight.
Garden Complexion Toilet
3 bars for 10c
13c;
— Texas green
more promising this
year ago except for
/iv-fin, Oct. 13 (UP)
v< TCt.hles are
October than a
Green Vegetables In
Texas More Promising j
per lb gc
San Antonio, Texas The life of
a clown isn't just one big laugh, San
Antonio detectives have decided.
When the circus was here they found
an automobile abandoned on the west
side and the two officers decided to
drive it to headquarters.
The find proved to be a trick knock
apart automobile which had been re-
ported stolen from the circus equip-
ment earlier in the day. J
The detectives, in trying to move |
the strange vehicle to headquarters,
found that it backed up when it
should have gone forward, turned to
the left when it should have turned to
the right, gnd fell to pieces when tjiey
put on the brakes. After a conference
the two officers called a wrecker and
dragged the car to the show grounds
in time for the performance.
25c
No. 2 c®n
5c
No. 2 can
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables (
Choice Dried Baby
Lima Beans
Navy Beans
Blackeye Peas
••
Encore Spaghetti or
Your Choice
3 pounds
IZC
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Macaroni
Encore Prepared
Spaghetti
KikSfand
SYRUP
(gallon can
8 oz. pkg. 2 f°r Qc
No. 1 tall cans
Pillsburys Verigood
FLOUR
24 lb sack .. 37c
48 lb sack 69c
(98 lb sack $1.35)
Friday Afternoon & Saturday Specials
Quaker Maid 14 oz. bottle 1 A
KETCHUP IOC
Alaska Pink
SALMON
Red Ripe Full Pack
tomatoes
High Grade ■ (16 H, pun $ijp) 8 |b pai)
SHORTENING ’ 62c
Delicious—Bulging with Fig Jam
I FIG BARS
J —__L----;__
' Del Monte Sliced or Crushed
1 PINEAPPLE
15% oz. can f°r 15c
45c) half gallon j
------—1
2 11
10c I
lb
13c
Sugar
32c
I Smoked Breakfast
Bacon
E. H. Terrell & Co.
__:______JI
4 pounds
Shortening
10 pounds 43c
I
Creamery Company
Phone 401 Phone 512 ,
• s
I
I
What Navasota Has Been Waiting For
Pasteurized Grade A Milk .
I , ;-r*- ‘ ' • • ' •"
You Know Lilly Pure Cream Ice Cream
You Have Eaten Lilly Sweet Cream Butter
NOW DRINK LILLY PASTEURIZED
GRADE A MILK
We Begin Our Retail Delivery Sunday
Morning, October 16th
Call In Your Order
- w
COATS
first thing .you’ll notice
a-
Have Quality and
Charm this Fall
^i
printzcBu
/Mi
The
bout fall coats is quality —- in
line, fabric, and rich fur trim-
ming —- ami the second out-
standing point of fashion in"
Ici est is charm. The elongated
silhouette of slim, fitted liner
is apparent in every new jityle.
The fabrics are wool crepes in
r variety of weaves. Both short-
haired and luxurious fluffy
furs are used in original ways.
There’s chic to
Printzess Coats
$19.65 to $49.65
The models we feature today
are I’pntzess fashions. Print-
zees <?annents are exclusive
with us and we are enthusiastic
in (^commending them for per-
irfanent chic and satiefttetion.
Printjieaa Shop—Second Floor
A
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Anderson News
,E THOUGHT FOR TODAY
---O—--
Mi.
by the Expi
of
North
D.
SAN
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mo
ADVERTISING’S SERVICE TO
BUSINESS RECOVERY
. O
ACCIDENTS AND DICII'LINE
repeatedly
I and
W
Annie
B8 a WHrrTKN
ivaaota. T«>um
• •
a
Will
were
(11*1929 to 50,009 in
Texas Service
Station
Why buy any
second-choice tire
T:’ °
GOOD^^rEAR
,, -----$500
MMUm —------------$3.00
M> Months----r--^— 3LB0 i
lag. The rall-
«t*nc« ot what
The experionco of tfM-users
U that Goodyear Tires give
greatest value at every price—
•very year ths pubnc buys
MILLIONS mors GoMyesn
then any other make. That e
a pretty definite indication of
superior value.
Sept. 1Sth Goodyear Built
Its >00 Millionth Tira
st of Congress,
Hr-.-.—r-‘—
OUR INHERITANCE The Lord
naweth the days of the upright:
Dd their Inheritance 'shall be for
iter.—Psalm 37: 18.
SsoonSOaas matter Feb.
. Navasota, Texas, under
3. 1879
JS and resolutions of ro-
published at on< (1) cent per '
CL—----------
My erroneous reflections upon the
giaeter, standing or reputation of
I person firm or corporation which |
b occur in the columns of THE
LSMINER will be gladly corrected
m being brought to the attention
ths firm.
B’ New York Times: Accidents may
i not be exclusively a. product of the
P^nschine age. Knights in armor fell ofr
?tbeir horses ahd broke their collar
|bones long before automobiles were
[j^gvented. and ladies tripped on castle
Rktairs who never dreamed of slippery
Bhathtubs. But the machines have
taunena iy increased the toll. Man has
ntver been able quite to master his
ppwn inventions. They run away with
‘’him. That the “safety first" movement
Bbw»8(1,1 plenty of worlds to conquer
‘evident from sohie of the figures
\ presented to the annual congress and
imposition of the National Safety
MBouncil In Washington this week Ac-
■fiflents were reported to have taken
■the lives of 97,000 Americans last
Hbar, and to have injured nearly 10,
MB/000. .The worst single offender is
Km(U the automobile, which accounted
Mm more than a third of the year's
fata; I 1
? If MVhopefu! lesson is to be learn- [
jfj|e|rom'tweent statistics, it is that dis-
WjJMfipUne offers a means of effective I
^Kol In the fields whi-ie it opcates
Of the speakers at the conference
• survey in which It was report
while accidents in private's
^^^Kgars had increased 50 per cen’
years, those involving taxi
gevreawd 85 per cent Th
has been observed in thn
9 Economic history will repeat itself <
-as It is wont to do and some strik
ig invention or development, creat-
)g a "public want, will bring back
Posperity. So, in effect, predicted
lenry W. Stahley, trade-extension di
•ctor for the Dallas Chamber of Com
ierce, in addressing the San Antonio
dvertising Club He has just conclud-
L«d in this city a three-day Business
^ Institute, sponsored
E JPublishing Company
L Mr. Stanley recalled that the auto-
|, Snobile-tire pulled the country out of
E the business slough into which it had
k fallen in 1907; that the munitions in-
Bgttustry led the way out during war-
Iv-Ume. and that radio supplied the re
n||Uired stimulus in 1921. What device
■Mil captivate popular fancy and thus •. <
j. (give new life to business in 1933? Who
r jean prophesy with assurance?
P Not long ago, Henry I Harriman,
(.'president of the Chamber of Commer
[ <e of the United States, suggested a
'possible turn of events: Providing the
Lpeople with modern. livable homes
jT'taay be the next generation s juajor
K project, he asserted. Birt fteed so hu-
■gnane and helpful an enterprise be
( Qput off that long?
President Hoover repeatedly has
e pointed to the social and economic
^benefits which would accrge from
I doing away with the slums and rear
. ing “garden cities" in their place. .Of
r 'Course, the financial and technical
s- problems involved in such an under-
® taking are great. Philanthropists and
EiJWactical-minded businessmen alike
pi-are giving thought to those problems,
which will be solved. Perhaps that
E> Solution will come sooner than expect-
f ad and point the way to an industrial
Ljwvival.
I No matter what form the recovery
KjZnay take, advertising will play a
* leading part in it, as Mr. Stanley said,
g’jDbed more generally; more persistent-
•• ’ty, intelligently and efectively in this
r 4ay than ever before, advertising—to
|$ greater degree than any other in-
KdRuahce—creates public wants. It may
^bring out inventions, form taste for
^MaiUtttodities, stimulate new uses for
^MjpHtlliar articles or materials.
Ef What is more important, advertis-
Bgilg forms and fosters the buying
Hanood. Too, it inculcates that “con-
( fldent state of mind" which, writes
PMerle Thope, editor of The Nation's
■LJBUainess. “is a necessary prelude to
RaU>V durable recovery." Given that at-
titude, “the cessation Of hoarding, the
■will to buy and the impulse to build
r follow in natural sequence." As Mr.
Epjriiorpe put it :
‘‘Activity begets activity. Little by
'/ittle fear is dispelled and confidence
£WUmes Its sovereignty." San An-
*0nio Express.
Anderson, Texas, Oct. 13 — Misses
Ruby Cook and Vivian Binford of
White Hall spent the week end here
with Mrs. J. L. Harrington.
Rev. and Mrs. Paul Mertchen and
little daughter of Taylor spent the
week end here. Rev. Mertchen
preached Sunday morning at the Luth-
eran church.
Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Smith of Keith.
Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Black of Roans
Prairie, visited friends here and at
Erwin over the week end.
Rev. and Mrs. Gerhardt Obenhaus
of Apoose Creek spent the week end t
here with Mrs. Obenhaus' parents,
San Marcos, Texas. — You probably
have never seen a “tricyclomobile."
That's the name which has been
suggested for the queer threewheeled
motor drive machine which friends of
Ed Horton, invalid former captain
of the San Marcos Teachers football
team, ■ have fashioned and presented
to him.
Mechanics spent more than 100
hours constructing it from parts sal-
vaged from automobiles, bicycles and
tricycles.
Business and professional men fur-
nished the parts for the machine,
which is guided by a bar to which
levers are connected controlling the
brakes and other working parts of the
fnotor.
It is capable of making a speed of
25 miles an hour, but will be geared
to have more power.
Horton was presented the machine i
in order that he could attend athletic
activities.
---
uM«t>t WHetln, <rff JK
i, r»v®»l» that rail accidenta drop.
pad from 75,000 ‘
1990 and 36,000 in
That tha gratifying showing la not
to ba credited entirely gp tba depression
is Indicated by the fact that the num-
ber of employes killed tor every thou-
sand employed also registered a strik-
ing decrease If only the same kind |
, of discipline copld be applied to the j
! driver of |he private car, the traffic
I accident statistics would tell a differ-
I ent story. The real menace td safety
I on the highway to still the “rugged
individualist’’.
here with Mrs. Obenhaus'
Mr. and Mrs. A. Muenker.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cuthrell of Na-
vasota, visited Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
tuthreli and Misses Mollie, Augusta
and Clara Lange, ’ Thursday.
Mr and Mrs. Dave Howard,
and Mrs. Lee Guerrant of Iola, spent
Thursday here.
■ Joe Ashford of Hempstead attend-
ed Old Settlers' Day program here
j Thursday,
H. Binford and daughter, Miss
Ruth of White Hall attended
the fair here Friday evening.
Mrs. It. M. Hudson and Mrs. B. L.
Williams of Courtney spent Friday
here.
Mrs. J. S. Chaney of Navasota spent
several days here last week with her
laughter, Mrs. L. T. Boggess.
Mrs, B. B. Hicks and Mrs.
Gteor and daughter of Carlos
here Wednesday evening.
John McKinney of Angleton visited
brother, M. L. McKinney and fam-
ily last week.
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Hicks of Keith
spent Thursday afternoon here.
Messrs. L. G. Andrews and Mr. Cox
of Navasota were here Wednesday
evening.
.'Ira. George Brown of Florida is
here visiting relatives.
Rev. C* aT. Cummings
Zulch spent Thursday here.
Mrs. Cummings Wood of Houston
is visiting her daughter, Mrs. A.
Kennard arid other relatives.
——--O - —-—-
MARCOSITE OWNER
OF QUEER MOTOR CAR
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 210, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1932, newspaper, October 14, 1932; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373132/m1/2/: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.