Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 63, Ed. 1 Monday, May 25, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
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.50-
THE NAVASOTA DAIY EXAMINER, MONDAY, MAY 25, 1942
PAGE TWO
«
The Worst Is Yet To Come
Navasota Daily
Examiner
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»
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9. Willard Brooks -L---—Publisher
--Editor
Lcile Nemir ...
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For County Superintendent, Grtmee
County:
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GULF COAST •
W. T. WILCOX.
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States Army who shall “in action
See ns for BUI of Sales olanka.
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HAVE YOUR PRINTING DONE BYEEXPERTS
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OUR MODERN PRINTING PLANT IS EFFICIENT
CHARLEY,
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BE Possible
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MR PRINTING OLEUM QEALITY AFP ECOOMY
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Navasota Daily Exa
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iner
A
BUSINESS CARDS
CIRCiJLARS
LETTER HEADS
MANIFOLD FORMS
REOHIPTS
ENVELOPES
PLACARDS
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Any erroneous reflections upon the
aharacter, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporatien which
For County Olerk:
WILL D. SMITH,
Rules for Sugar
Substitution Given
10li
MB'S Glad
oo WON
BECAUSE
Kou Got
OOR MONEY
NOT HIS !
HE split
EveN: •
For Dlertict Clerk:
E. K. MeINTYRE.
■ 2
For County Judge:
JIM GIBSON.,
For County Attorney:
JOE FULTZ.
For Constable Precinet No. 3—
MAJOR M. S. BREW’TON
there."
(F/S. Tokyo, tain.’t so.)
For Commissloner, Precinca 8:
MRS. W .1. STONEHAM,
Stoneham, Texas.
—-$5.00
_-$3.00
—
One Tear------
*X Months ---
Shree Months -
For Reptesentative "of 20th Districi
. Composed, of Grtmee and Brazos
Couiles:
W T. MCDONALD.
Re-election.
For Tax Assesnor -Collector:
W. B. BAKER.
For County Trenauser:
F. M. WILSON.
■ n
FOR
STATEMNITS
For Reprseenti
Composed
mpeot poblished at one 4 1) cent per
woma.
involving actual conflict with an
enemy distinguish himself con- '
%' MnRMHRHMi
" i.t
-,e
' ha-g
between the neckband and on the
ribbon supporting the medal are
13 white stars arranged in the
form qf a triple chevron.
/Dom WALK
Along An*
DARK STREETS
WIH HIM,
CHARLEY,-
You KNow wMy;
- zowiE .
(F0ml0bL
ernti
isuni*j
nice du
CEAN •P
Published Every Afternoon
Except Sunday
Navasota, Texas
ggl.
1$
WA
eggs were shipped off to breakfast
tables all ,over the nation last month
[S'
FRSTKE
v-€ voN Pon
$y MONTHS.
\ MADE A
--—V--
See us for stamp pads.
quarter of the year 1942 was about
421,000 head, which was the second
largest movement on record for that
period and compares with 851,000 head
7
F'suii
6Vididliy
05
.5
For really effective printing
work, you don't have to pay a
lot! The Examiner job print-
big plant makes expert work
svallable to you at really eeo-
nomical prices. We are prepar.
ed to handle Jobe of an/ kind
forma, letterheads, hnaiit . .
see us for your next job.
P
$ Je
B -0
&
•e
Es
honey in baked products such
cakes or quick breads.
\ '
Egg Shipments
Show Marked Gain
learns through his own efforts the
meaning and responsibilities of free-
dom
"Both as a wartime responsibility
and as a stepping stone to oui future
for the same period last year.”
The USDA War Board goal for 1942
called for the marketing of 3,521,287
head of cattle, an 18 percent increase
over 1941.
B. F. Vance, chairman of the Texas
USDA War Board, declared that in
increased cattle marketings were a
good indication that cattlemen, along
with other branches of the agricul-
=•
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ta J 2 V
c
o
p
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k
Our Platform for a
Greater Grimes County
L A wnited, harmonious county.
2. Lower city taxes.
A IM per cent backing ef the food-
or- victory drive.
A Agricultural development to its
height with emphasis on soil con-
9 {ov WERE
9 SMEARED uv
LUCK .TONIGHT, ।
{ CHARLEY.
I fM Glad Moo
I CLEANED UP,
I I WANIED Koo
A To WN. J
CONGRESSIONAL
MEDAL OF HONOR
This, the highest decoration
awarded by the U. S. Govern-
ment, cah be given to any officer
or enlisted man of the United
1
tural industry, intend to meet their
pledges and to do their share in prb-
viding Food For Freedom.
- ---v--——
Don’t let a day pass without read-
Ing the classified ads in the Daily B*>
aminer and the Grima County He
Th. Examiner Job plant con. A.)
tains all the necessary mechani- \e
cal equipment needed to turn Ca
out good printed nutter rapid- *‘
ly tAnd this equipment la op-
erated by men who are speedy , -
and -experienced, too. Be sure to A-a
see us when you need printed U - I
material of any hind.
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‘‘THAT LITTLE CAME"IternaViCartoonCo.,N.C.By B. Link |
I selves dring the last air raid alarm: AUSTIN, Texas, May 25 — Texas
Cattlemen Are
Meeting Goals
COLLEGE STATION, May 25,-Re-
ports on movement of cate to market
indicate that Texas cattlemen are
meeting the goals they accepted in
the Food for Freedom program, the
Texas USDA War Board announced
today.
1 The 'USDA War Board announce-
ment cited the BAE range and live-
stock report for May 1, which de-
clared that “total market movement
of cattle and ealves for the first
J
spienously by his gallantry and
intrepedity at the risk of his life,
above and beyond the call to
duty.” It was first authorised by,
Health Notes
AUSTIN, Texas., May 25 "In
any war the future of the childten
must be safeguarded so that they
can live and share in the freedom to'
follow, declared Dr. Geo. W. Cox,
State Health Officer.
They must be nourished, shlter-
ed, and protected, even in the stress
of wartime production, so that they
will he strong to carry forward a
just and lasting peace.
“Our American Republics sprang*
from a sturdy people yearning for
tolerance, incependenoea and seir-
government. The American home has
emerged from the search for free-
dom. Within it the child lives and
act of Congress in 1862, and pre- f
sen ted "in the name of Con- B
gress”; hence the frequent allu- I
sion to it as the "Congressional 7
Medal.” ' 1
The present design was adopted '
in 1904. A bronze five-pointed /
star, surrounded by a laurel x
wreath in green enamel, bus- 1
pended by two links from a 7
bronze bar bearing the inscription ,
“Valor,” and surmounted - by an !
eagle. In the center of the star
is the head of Minerva surrounded
by the inscription “United States
For County Conamissioner, Prechnes
No. 4—
JOHN A. GARNER.
V .
, la
For Justice of the Peace Predna*
No. 8-
JNO. R ORITTENDEN
Entered as Becond-class matter
Feb. 22, 1016, at Navasota, Texas,
snder Act of Congress, March 3, 1870.
may occur in the columns of THE
Expe eraftsmanship . • they’re
Mm words that beet express the
quality of the printing work
we turn out in the Examiner
plant. This means eonplebe
satisfaction for you! No Job Ie
too large or too smil that it
can’t be handled by ue. , \
Sorry, But This
Story Isn’t True
SACRAMENTO, Calif., May 25—
Sacramento found out Saturday night
that she "lost” 21 of her Citizens'—14
men and 7 women—by suicide dur-
ing the last air, raid alarm here.
E. V. E. Harris of Sacremento, lis-
tening to Tokyo’s short wave sta-
tion was startled when .he heard
the announcer, speaking. in English,
declare that insanity throughout
America was giowing by leaps and
bounds, and then to hear this:
"In Sacramento City, California, 14
men and seven women hung them-
■=
Wilf
N
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■
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b
T
BI
of America.” Each ray of the
star bears an oak leaf in green
enamel. On the reverse of the
medal is engraved the name of the
recipient. - It may be worn with
a neck band. The ribbon is of
light blue watered silk. Midway
THAT Th to 6 3
2
V .
. L
*
We are author
tollowing candidi
jeet to the July I
t COLLEGE STATION, May 38. —
By observing several simple rules,
homemakers successfully can sub-
stitute honey or molatsses for part of
the sugar required in their favorite
recipes.
Hazel Phipps, Extension Service
specialist in food preparation says
the characteristic flavors of molas-
ses and sorghum make many foods
more delicious. Beth vary in mois-
ture an acidity, she says, so the
amounts she recommends for sugar
Substitution are "approximate".
It takes about 1 1-2 cups of mo-
lasses or sorghum to equal one cup
of sugar in sweetness. Each cup con-
tain approximately one-four cup of
waters to the liquid in a reeipe should
be reduced’in proportion. In products
which are leavened. about one-fourth
teaspoon pf soda should be used for
each cup of molasses or sorghum.
Miss Phipps gives thhs caution: Mo-
lasses and sorghums burn easily, so the
temperature for baking should be
lower than the temperature for bak-
ing mixtures made with'sugar.
Rules for substituting honey for
lor Sheriff: "
EARL HARRIS
sugar are quite similar. Mixtures with
honey brown easily and high heat
changes the flavor, of honey, so cook-
ing temperature should be lowered.
A cup of honey gives approximately
the same amount of sweetness as one
cup of sugar, so the exact amount
may be substituted. However, each
cup of honey, like molasses, contains
about one-fourth cup of liquid, so the
liquid requirements of the recipe
should be reduced one-fourth cup for
every cup of honey used.
The specialists’ final advice is: Use
approximately one-eighth to one-
fourth teaspoon of soda per cup of
1 ,•
R•
and thejrs, all cit ize ns should join
IXAMINER will be gladly corrected tosether to
snpn being bronght to. the attention of 1 Guard children from Injury In
mhe firm ' | danger zones.
obitunrles and reolutionis of‘re 2. Protect children from neglect,
I exploitation, and undue strain in de-
fense areas.
3. Strengthen the home life ofchil-
dren whose parents are mobilized for
war or war production.
prT.ort 9
n •
23556—
gawWSpsver"g
Did Yeu Place Your
FALSE TEETH
' In a Glass Last Night?
Thousand. So end wonder why their den-
Iwao remein dull and stained - why they
cumler with ofendine denture breeth. They
dag «mHw that water alone it not a Cleona-
tan euent - but now. there a a treat formute
eHetd by a dentiet, called Stera-Kleen
tbM •hacouthlv cleena sete teeth like megic-
e* eruahing Simply Put a httU Stera-Kleen
Howder in a aw of water-aoek
veer teeth - now they »perkle, l i U
•w coolly Heen end look like L—=U
the day your dentiat eid, Lvfak
Don't they look netural?" Try Uae
siere-Kieen - lent long - coati WYTI/
only 30« At all druggmi._______—W
■Old Farmer’s Recipe Mix AHlenru and
Lemon Juice to get quick relief from pains
aof rheumatics and neuralgia Druggists
beve Allenru - grocers have lemons.
1, 'V •1 ‘
L' ..
•.ki
I I
I
to the tune of 854 carloads, the Uni-
wversity of Texas Bureau of Business
Research reports.
Shipments of eggs, shell eggs, pow-
dered and dried, amounted to a to-
tal of 1,301 carloads, although 447
of these were intrastate movements.
1 This shows a very marked increase
over last year records when the to-
tal shipment was only 404 carloads.
Greatest jump was in the amount Of
dried eggs shipped, from 20 carloads
in April, 1941, to 119 in April, 1942.
The out-of-state shipments went in
greatest numbers to the Eastern
states of Massachusetts, Rhodle Is-
land, and Corhecticut, which reoeiv-
ed 395 carloads, almost half -ot the
total inter-state shipment.
. Contrasted with the increasing
shipment of eggs was the sharp de-
cline in poultry shipments. The num-
ber of carloads of dressed chickens
fell from 43 a year ago to 11.5, and
of dressed turkeys from 10 in April,
1941, to 3.5.
... . ■. .... .. ■. • 3 ..> . ... ■ ' ■ ■ •
—---V—--— .
7
A •
—
servation. ..
E Intensive livestock development,
bringing the increased cattle busi-
new to the forefront.
& Turning the unfinished N.Y.A.
building into a municipal audi-
torium. ' .
7. A modern hotel for Navasota.
& A Chamber of Commerce home:
a Drawthg small indusdrles which
could find the neceseary natural
reeources and facilities here.
ze. Modern store buildings and of-
eices Aw Navasota and the county.
U. Publicizing Navasota aa the home
of the Texas bluebonnet festival.
12 AU-oat patronage of home-town
businesses.
MRS. NEVHILL H C01800
(Re-election.)
BUCK PINCHBBACK,
Conroe, Texas. +
L A. CASEY.
(Montgomery County.)
fc‛*
1 —
f 1
' B ■ •' i • / 6ca .
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Nemir, Lucile. Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 63, Ed. 1 Monday, May 25, 1942, newspaper, May 25, 1942; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1383081/m1/2/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.