Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 31, Ed. 1 Monday, March 20, 1933 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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■even stepped out on the way", ax
plained one of the four. The lock fail-
ed to function. W
Kansas Oity, Me, — At MM one per-
son ready for the return of beer is a
thief who entered a brewing company
office and took 11 oopper beer muga
valued at IB. U
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r' ____By JACK BISCO
(UP Staff Correspondent)
Sfe Dallas, March 20 (UP) — Medical
4 science, which recognizes no internat-
i ional boundary, will be fittingly rep-
f recent “ “ *
nlng
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Chicago — Everything but
air tank is planned in a repll
ocean liner which will be at the cen-
tury of Progress fair herd this sum-
mer. It will have bare, lounges, grills
and portholes. . •
yeah.
Right THtRE!
Bov Please
Point To YooR
Stack .
You’re in,
Ail right, —
L T»<0 CENTS'
For The knit
WASH BASIN /
AND Stove /
LIFTER' /
“$l
Chicago — The "new deal" in pret-
zels (mostly for women customers)
will include new designs /epreeentlng
flowers, stars, geometric figures and
even monograms, revealed C. J. Eick-
man, local manager, American Cone A
Protzel Company.
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United Proas)
, Mo. — Prom ths boom
moe, the patrol wsgon
station with 11 negroes.
4
The formulas and processes which
make Chesterfield a milder and
better-tasting cigarette are secret—
to prevent others from copying them
If every person knew the method and processes
of tanning leather, it would be of interest; but what
people want to know is: Is it a good shoe? Is it
comfortable? Will it wear longer? Is the price right?
So it is with Chesterfield Cigarettes. If smokers,
men and women, knew all of the formulas and pro-
cesses of manufacture, it would be of interest to
them; but what smokers really want is the result.
/ Everything that goes into Chesterfield Cigarettes
is as good as money can buy.
Every process has in it all that science knows
about cigarette manufacture.
The formulas are secret to prevent others from
copying them. The mildness and the better taste
you may prove for yourself. May we ask you to
try Chesterfield?
CUT -THE
Rough Stuff I ?.
And lets plat /
if ‘ Dr. Mario Toroalla. profaaaor of pa-
diatrica at the Central Unhrereity
; Mexico City; Ova Herbert Stanley
Birkett, Montreal, Canada, profeeeor
of otology and laryngology at M.XBI1
University; pr. UHees Valdes, profes
•or extraordinary of surgery at the
National University, Mexico City; Dr.
P. Brook Bland, profomor of obetetriee
and attending oboterician at the Jef-
ferson Medical College Hospital PhlL
adelphlai '
Dr. Frl
feaaor of
wa ........
la Dr. Julius J. Valentine, New York,
urologitt at the Doctors’ Hospital in
that city. * , ;•? u ■ ; -W < ■' .
In addition to the scientific sessions,
the association members will find a
full program of entertainment and re-
creation awaiting them and during
their stay in Dallas. T^e Dallas Cham
bar of Commerce and other civic or-
ganizations are cooperating with local
members of the medical profession in
arranging the latter features of the
convention.
—" i' ..... ~~ ~~ ■ r. —
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ILc Chesterfield
T S
I I |
FORMULA
■L’ end paving the way for an outdoor
brawl with Jim Londo. later en -
Johnny Kilbane, who held ths fsatber-
weight title for so long, is a boxing
^. instructor in the Cleveland public
4-f'MAoola — when Harry Davis, first
Mjlmman. Stepped onto the f|eld at
^. Detroit last spring for ths opening Isa
■ »v<ue game it was the first time Bucky
KlinrrU had laid eyes on him — DavU
B^Was a last minute purchase to replace
■ Dale Alexander and arrived a few
E V . hours Wore gams time.
? K^" Tbsre’e no getting around It, "the
old gray mare ain’t what she used to
be” — Alden Calkins, world s greatest
t; trotting horse expert, has dug up, the
# fact that there is but 1 promising young
J K tier sporting a gray coat on harness
circuits this year — and that’s Fay
J^Mack, fully owned by W. N. Reynolds
K «f Winston Salem — Pepper Martin,
Kbsro of the 1931 world series, won’t
;- Behave his eigth birthday until 1936 —
Eiyou see, Pepper s a leap year baby —
Wy Fred Merkle, whose bonehead pla;
X • Will go down in history, played in five
jU world series and was on a losing team
IK'.'oach time. •
news item tell“ UB that Jimmy
Foxx, Athletics slugjger, can hit a
■F golf ball 360 yards when he really
Wrtriss — horsefeathers! — John Me
’ Oraw thinks the Cubs, Pirates and
■te?"Cards will run one, two, three in the
K f national this year.
Johnny Gilbert, the best jockey In
the business right now, got. his first
V training on a shetland pdhy belonging
ft? t« a Pittsburgh, Kansas, veterinarian
ft- —some of the jockeys we bet are still
fe, riding shetlands — Santa Clara’s foot-
Vktten coach, Maurice "Clipper” Smith,
■L’•'.■•goes in for deep stuff to compensate
&'for lack of material — beat California
last year with a pass that called for
W passer and received to be two feet
p ( off the ground at the same time —
L" gets cadence In his plays by having
the boys do gavottes with the ball to
the tunes of an old calliope be picked
up somewhere — Clipper doesn’t use
technical terms in coaching, calling
an end-around "free-wheeling.” ,
Mercer Beasley, generally recognlx-
the best tennis coach in the
r. can hardly hit a ball — yet
■L" BUsworth Vines, Cliff Suttsr, Frankie
Parker, Caritas Babcock and a hqpt
i" • of other greats, learned the game from
L him — trainers at Ague Caliente are
having trouble training Boy Painter,
British thoroughbred — the horse 11k-
es to circle the track on the left as
they do in England — Mrs. Babe Ruth
( is so particular about her husband's
g diet that she took along the family
ft hook to prepare Babe’s vittles in St.
BVy iPeterburg — speaking of the Babe,
It he’s a powerful poor hand at answer-
ing fan mail — his locker at the Yan-
kee stadium is jammed with unopened
letters and telegrams — Nick Altrook,
K the clowns is the eatingist man in the
Ki Senators camp — actually eats as
U. much as five pounds of shrimp at one
sitting — with beer, preferably.
EARCHWORK
USSEDl
AT CONGRESS
—
in Dallas for five days begin-
eday, March 26. when leading
practloners of two continents assemble
here fore the fourth annual congress
< of the Pan-American Medical Assocla-
| tion.
" As estimated 1,000 persons will gath-
’ er to hear 200 eminent authorities out-
; Bns the latest findings of research
workers In a never-ending vigitance
T for the conservation of human life.
I Last minute preparation for the
$ meeting, the first to be held among
English-speaking peoples of the West
ern Hemisphere, are being directed by
■ ®r. John O. McReynolds, Dallas, the
I pongress president. iyU'
L : Among the scheduled early arrivals
;'to that Of Dr. Francisco M. Fernandez,
Havana, Cuba, president of the hseo-
clatlon. Dr. Reynolds as congress pre- ■
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the 7 best helps known to modem
to take. Nonsrcotica, Your dr
refund your money if anycou
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 31, Ed. 1 Monday, March 20, 1933, newspaper, March 20, 1933; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373263/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.