Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, October 22, 1934 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.
Extracted Text
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A BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY
THE TENDER SHEPHERD:
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AN B0M4S
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ASKED How) MANY
HE DREW HE
MUST TELL.
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WH¥ AREN’T
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•hall feed his flock'likela shepherd:
He shall gather the lambs with his
arm, and carry them in his bosom.
Isalah 40:11. , ‘
( HEY, ADON16, Look
WJHAT I Got - A
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(THAT LITTLE GAME”
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IM Every Afternoon Exoopt
Sunday, By
SPEARS A WHITTEN
Owners and Publishers
Nuvanota, Texas
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for 306 persons were enrolled in the
service Sunday morning. The pastor
stated that he was pleased and that
the only trouble was that “The goal
wasn’t high enough,”;
'■ .— _ —o— —--
A PICTURE TO DEHIGHT
THE WHOLE FAMILY
At Miller’s Theatre Tuesday.
"Murder' In the Private Car”, to an
accompaniment of delighted screams
and laughter. ‛ '
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Fans not knowing the cireumstan-
ces have criticised Captain Sam Bill
Bournias for attempting the second
field goal but the Captain undoubted-
ly used hie head this time. They lack-
ed only two feet for first own but
there was only time enough left in
the first half for two playa! Had he
tried for the first down he probably
would have made it but he could not
have gone over the goal line for the
touchdown for lack of time but had
he kicked the field goal he would
have bad the extra three points.
; a new cycle of
—a return, per-
Ta A. 6 rehan, advertisement man-
ager of the Dublin (Ireland) Inde-
pendent' Newspapers, Ltd., says:
"My bunch of newspapers all na-
ia®rc,
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CHRST FOR ALL-ALL FOR CHRIST
leDSNeMENFSod
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Entered as Second-Class matter Feb
32, 1916. at Navasota, Texas, under
Act of Congress, March 3, 1879
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305,
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„tano.
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tion-wide circulation have just gone
through a period of complete ‘silence’
lasting almost nine weeks. That is to
Helsay we were unable to issue one copy
' i over all that time. Labour trouble
was the reason, but let that ‘pass
haps, to the fast-moving comedy-mys-
tery plays that scored so heavily in!
the days of the silent‛screen-—this pic-
ture lives up to its billing. It is top-
notch entertainment.
o . - ----
STOP THAT ITCHING
If you suiter irom a akn troblt
uen as Iten, Eczema. Athletes Foot
Wngworm. Tetter or Pimples, we,win
sell you a jar of Black Hawk Oint ,
ment on a guarantee Price fifty cente
ID© A3 1 SAV. |
| I’M BOSS f-1
A ROOMD J
HERE 4 d
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It MAKES no1—
DIFFERENCE WHERE
SHE IS, YOU GO r-J
TO BEDS---
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1
^7 DON’T CHA -
VoLoNtEEREL
nd ~
Obituaries ami resolutions of re |
upect published at one *1) cent pei )
word
other theories are always active-end
there i danger that they may turn
persuasive to a people struggling with
great, yet temporary, problems.
The public cannot be too strongly
warned against seeking temporary
benefits at the expense of permanent
principles. Even the worst of depres-
sions pass—and we will be a sad na-
tion indeed, if after this one passes,
we find that we have lost those con-
stitutional guarantees of corporate
aud individual freedom that have
made us great.—industrial News Re-
view.
- - -
I will think—talk—write . . .
Texas Centennial in 1936! This
it to be my celebration. In its
achievement I may give free play
to my patriotic love for Texas'
heroic past; my confidence in its
glories that are to be. t•:.
A
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tried all sorts of other devices Ao, get
over the handicap of Ahis no-newspa- Hailed as heralding
per period. They tried the street cars, screen entertainment-
'the bill boards, the movies, the hand.
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A goal of three hundred in attend-
ance was set for the First Baptist
Sunday School, Sunday, and this goal
was reached, with a slight margin,
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The Amusement Company for the
Grimes County Fair at Anderson ar-
rived Sunday and began at once
erecting the shows and concessions.
They are expected to run all , this
week.
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THE AMERICAN SPIRIT
' / __—— r
To a great many citizens, American-
lam is just a word. They pay it lip
service—but they have a very poor
knowledge of Its actual meaning.
Real Americanism is a spirit. It is
that spirit which inspired the found-
ers of the country—a spirit of unself-
ishness, self sacrifice, iron-clad char-
acter. It gave us liberty of church,
of press, of political belief. It freed
us from intolerable monarchic domi-
nation and established a nation where
the government was to exist for the
individual, not the individual for the
government.
Today, the American spirit stands
for these things precisely as it didin
the past They are as important to-
The Grimes County Fair opens for
a three day run at Anderson on Thurs-
day of this week. The Fair is to be
held on the association's new grounds
this year and the committee has been
putting in extra time getting the
grounds and buildings in shape but
this is expected to be ready at the
opening hour Thursday morning.
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day as ever, and perhaps more im-
portant. The public is beleaguered
from many sides by those who would
effect sudden and irrevocable Change
in the very foundations stones of our
government. The advocates of fas-
cism, communism, dictatorship and
Any erroneous reflections upon the
character, standing or reputation or
any person firm or corporation whirb
may occur in the columns of THE
EXAMINER will be gladly corrected'
upon being brought to the attention I
or the firm
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C^\oh!
CtAON!
IF THR
DEALER HAD
The point is that as a result of that
elimination of our newspapers, the
business of many of our regular ad-
vertisers went completely wallop.
There was undiluted desolatjon. Stor-
es here that knew Crammed floora
regularly as a matter of course, re-
sulting from their budgets of adver.
tising offers, were as idle as a paint-
ed ship upor a painted ocean.
"As an old campaigner', it stunned
mi to see just what the valueof news-
paper advertising is ur merchants
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years that I thought I knew how the
thing worked. I didn’t know. This just
concluded newspaper silence has
taught me a volume of things, and if
1 there is one thing above all that
a country withouts its newspapers is
a country blindfolded completely. Our
people here were positively bewilder-
ed. 4 We all went around wondering
what in tKe name of blazes was go-
ing on, but the poor bewildered ad-
‘yertisen felt that the wind had com-
pletely dropped, his business craft
was becalmed, business movement
was, as, I said at the outset, as ‘idle
as a painted ship on a painted ocean’ I
If eveh I f it lukewarm, on the
question I of the value of newspaper
advertising, and I doubt if I ever did,
I am now a ’roaring, tearing, hot.gos-
pejler’. Boys, it has been an amazing
eve-opener. So, let us say, out of evil
cometh gpod." - j
DAX-AMGH mordat, ootobxx n, it
■■■■■I Ifl SCHOCK
USE A
L COURT
Room
diplomacy,
ask him
How MANY HE
DISCARDED.
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bills, even the air. No worth while
results alccrued altho I have reason
to know that the cost was a heavy
in the aggregate, in some cases de-
cidedly heavier, than if the money
involved had been expended in news-
papers. And remember this big point,
the results in business were definite-
ly unsatisfactory. <
“I have been in this live business of
newspaper advertising for so many
B„ChaleMeMe
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, October 22, 1934, newspaper, October 22, 1934; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1402581/m1/2/?rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.