Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 134, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 19, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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Since July 1st a Lot of Peoples Minds Run to Cellars
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THOL’GHT FOR TODAY
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eni- and Bill Rose, and sung ty John Bol.
tiiv11 j*i t,i |*i<visior
especially arranged by Ferde | ture of ..Thjp MeIting
Drm tar ftis MU' RsfcW
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An entirely different’ number is the
rey sequence,
One Year ---.
8lx Months ..
Three Months
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INTEKNATTONAL CARTOON CO.JI. Y.
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WHAT GRAiN IS RAISED ALLjL___
( 7COPN
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face of a
reation which
which was not
Thomas Nel-.
Cooperation is not a sent.ment — it
is an economic necessity Charles
Steinmetz.
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IIVASOTA IAILT
EXAMINE!
rwHleM ■sa.jy AftaMMM —»i>l
«4u>d»y. By
HF EARS > WHITTEN
Owners and Publishers
Navasota. Texas
11
Entered as Second-Class matter Feb
22. 1916. at Navasota. Texas under
ct of Congress, March 3 187»
I HEf^RD 1
kTHEM CuftP
■ I-----
□a
^TOuntleslMd^ttu
fon PAPAS HTTUfl
J TOE
Plans arp rv w brine prep.aied for •.
sviniminu p f' r. Navasota A *winl-
K'°
23
to msdts all people pay tBair taaea If
everyone paid hie taxes the tax rates
of this state would te reduced >0 per
cent. In other words we that pa^( our |
| taxes have to pay 30 per cent more
tocause the o0er fellows do not pay j
anything.
Sou rKlMHLjJ »
Bvft.LLAftS
A*' j
come. come, jimmy,
You surely ought
TO KMOV THAT
E&A
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OF souQ.se Bumuwt
rav ro NAxe A5 ewe*
HOME a; PQHmx .
F’-LI. Th.r
payers.
*peot published at on<
word.
the various nationalistic sequences.—
English. French. Spanish. Scotch. Ital- The'Russel Markert Dancers C7Z
Russian. German and American .heir perfect precision work are a fea-
• ■* Pot " Two thou- Monterey ”, written by Mabel Wayne
DO YOU KNOW WHY - - - j Woman Will Spnng 1 foolirt Iili[ Uli W
Any erroneous reflections upon the
character, standing or reputation Of
• y person firm or corporation which
may occur in the columns of THE
EXAMINER will be gladly correctea
anon being brought to the Attention
' the firm.
Ger Clark is attending the four day
Firemen s Training School 'r ing held
at A A M College and by so doing
is helping Navasota to save on her
fire insurance premiums. His qualifi-
cation at the school gives Navasota 3
per cent credit George aJso holds
fire drills semi-monthly and instructs
the firemen in various uses of the
equipment and ways of fighting fires
These regular drills entitle us to an
additional 2 per cent credit. The com-
bined credits save the citizens of this
city over $2 04Xi annually on insurance
premiums.
WjVj.
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\MS
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE- ;1
WITHOUT CALOMEL .
And You’ll Jump Out ef Bed ia
the Morning Rarin* to Go ( £
If you faei tour and aunk ud the WwM *■«
looks punk, don’t (wallow a lot of (BlM»
mineral water, oil, laxative candy or cbewiag
(Uta and expect them to makw you au44Mdy
sweet and Buoyant and full of mumHm.
For they can't do it. They only mo** tha
bowels and a mere movement doesn't (at at
the cause. The reason for your down-andwx* I
featinc is your liver. It should pour out two
pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. K
If this bile is not flowing freely, your food .v
doesn't difest. It just decays in the bowels.
Gaa bloats up your stomach. You have a -K I
thick, bad taste and your breath is fouL
akin often breaks out in blemishes. Your bead
aches and you fsei down and out. Your white -sH
system is poisoned.
It takes those rood, Old CARTS*** .- •i®'i
UTTLK LIVER Pl uA to ret these two . ,
pounds ol bile flowing freely and nuko yog
feel "up end up." Th'v contain ■ midtetel. s
harmless, fentle vy. le < itracts, atasteaC "GM
when it comas to making the bile flow freely.
But don'taak for liver plUa Ask for Carter**
Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter**
Uttie Liver Pills on the red label. Reseat a 4
substitute. 25c M all stores. C,H3>C. M. Co> f
1 ■
’ * 7-26
_______J >5
Grofe. based upon national anthems sand musical instruments were
required for the dancers to interpret I and folk .■ engs and played by the in- ployed by the orchestra in this num- • a.
comparable Whiteman and his band. An entirely different number is the Music equally as memorable and
Dancers with Mont rey sequence, which introduces beautiful is heard in the "Song of the
- —■ he exquisite song, “It Happened in Dawn" episode, which is sung by Bol-
• -nd a chorus of male voices known
as the Cowboy CbOT^frS '
One of the moot umBW
C.l o* 1 usu al <•( rnposithfrt
\ 1 he Rhapsody in BlLK^fr i
!>><■■/.•<! with mualcal Me<mPM4MMRP!‘i
of cour**, in King of JW, BMi
Whiteman who first intrntuewljp®' 'i'
tgy Orchwin symphonic Ju* Hiftfl.,
[X.-Itlon to the public at * c°’MnWwWv
Carnegie Hall in New York, lnt*rpiW|
it with his bund in thia production «£|
here the hauntingly fascinating «aSH
is played exactly as th* otMnpRagB
wants It to be played, bringing gut
q.peal in the fullest and mo*t
thetic interpretation. A huge planted
.orty feet long and seven f«t hfr| J
was constructed to contain the entfMl
Whiteman orchestra. JRkJotF
In "The Ragamuffin Romero", **lfl^
py Feet and The Bench in the Park*rfl
the most intriguing dance enaembte* Jj
which the combined talents Of
Murray Anderson. Paul WhltMna|tifl
and the costume designer, HermfAhK
Rosse. could contrive, may be •een.-.'^'
---O------
Tucson, Arix. (UP) — Seven large,
j .no!oes, centuries old, havu bang.. *
found in the San Pedro Valley by De. ]
Byron Cummings, noted archaeol«f|*k'
of the University of Arizona.
The ruins, located near Mammotfr !<rs
Ariz., show evidence* that • taut** ■
group of Indians once lived them, ac-
cording to Dr. Cumming*.
Dr. Cummings said the pueblo*
bably were last used by th* p*ace
Ing Sobapuri Indians.
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THE FEAST OF HARMONY Bet-
ter is a dry morsel, and quietness
therewith than a house full of sacrifi-
ces with strife. -Proverbs: 17:1
----O------
A great factory with the machinery
all working and revolving with abso-
lute and rhythmic regularity and with
•he men i ! driven by one impulse and
moving .n unison • though a consti-
tuents part of the mighty machine, is
one of the most inspiring examples of
directed force that the world shows. I
have rarely seen !-.■
mechanic in the act ■
was not fine, never on>
earnest and impressive
son Page.
A BIB1.I
f. i oi l >•••.! <b ti*!-. e .
..Id ,nd j.'iung dike may enjoy
.-■a ininonu iii • Bring on the pool v. e
will -urely er.j iy it next summi i
OvEf? THE WORLD iH
(TREAT ABUNDANCE?
E rQAQE 4 wan
SuQC xou Hfwe\ to ’
uocxeo all TXlzSS^
DOOfiS OOwn v
7*r*V
/**’•'
■ATOOTA DAXI BXAimm WBD10MDAY, JOLT IB, IBM
ClMsHying Him
CORRECT, NOV/JIMMY. [
WHERE DOE5THE
DiQCEST CORN Grow?
The Mayor a>f McAllen . issues ar.
t y warning tn prospective vendors
of 32 bee: if Texas votes for it on.
August 26. Th-- Mayor'states that no
i'll! I--U* i to persons ’h:.’
• ;. i . I t . 1 e.ty t axes I B
I- one v. iy of putting
beat on. delinqu/nt tag
We wish there was some way
--It loo^s like we might be able to
30 OU i secure some aid from the government
33.Ot’ on control of the flood waters of the
j Navasota and Brazos rivers. Mr.
I Vance, State Reclamation Engineer
was in Navasota Monday and stated
j that he thought part of the reforesta-
tion army could be secured later in
the year to start clearing out the chan-
nel of the Navasota river and doing
some work on straightening out the |
crooks. Once we get the state and
national government behind the pro-
ject we will get something done. It
will mean thousand of dollars to far-
mers and business men when the wa-
i ters are brought under control.
--O---
. "KING OF .JAZZ" COMBINES
SEVERAL PRODUCTIONS IN LOVF j
In "King of Jazz", the Paul White- I
man feature which Universal has re.
issued and which Is playing at Mil- ,
lers Theatre Thursday and Friday,
there are really seven shows in one,
in addition to several clever black-outs,
comedy sketches and specialty song
and dance numbers. Each one of the
revues could very readily be sold as a
show in itself, for each has been exe- |
cuted with infinite care, atention to 1
detail and a lavish production hand.
There is a novelty and diversity o^f
style which is very refreshing in “King j
of Jazz". John Murray Anderson, who I
is master of stage revues and who j
has to his credit many of the popular
New York stage hits of the past ten
years, gave the best of his talent and
'creative genius to the revues and en
I semble numbers of the Whiteman pic-
j ture.
"The Melting Pot" number is per-
| haps the most pretentious of all the I
units of King of Jazz". Huge revolv-/
ng stages were especially built to ac
■ riincdato the hundreds of extras
. r. 1 principals required in this color-
ful episode which is a composite of
many short national numbers. The
spectacle takes place in a huge melt
ing pot set upon an elevated terrace,
beneath which,are golden gates lead-
ing from a subterranean chamber be
low Eight changes of costumes were |
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 134, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 19, 1933, newspaper, July 19, 1933; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373366/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.