Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 283, Ed. 1 Monday, January 29, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
four pages: ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilmView a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-n
. 2516
,. : "-2
planting Heed, which
of quality cotton
1
।
Manager
______Editor
-
•7
- 2
X
1
regional organization.
■ accomplishment thatinoluded the con-
*
. i
V .
ME
IE
Tax
N
)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
T-
3)
1ititiiiza ihighiy infetions. -Prac
evetyone is sukceptible in it.
A BIBLE THOUGHT
N
rest unto your souls.
‘ 1Wt
THE VILLAGE MOVEMENT
M
well ventilated room.
•3
*2
&
C
CITY
“y
7
4
ple
M
ed on
W,
of-g
9
*
e
1K
1
e,g
od
b’
S
e
w2nem
f/s
Mwste-6 IN
hollow the dRoadto Romance
G. Willard Brooks
Vucile Nemir ....
uh
FOR TODAY
DO NOT BE
For Constable Precinct NG 3:
MAJOR M. 8 BREWTON
flut'd te the East Texas Chamber of
Commerce. But like all leutlers of the
Regional Ohamber, who without ex-
s
2
S
Obituariee and remolutiona M re-
•Mi pubushed at one (V voent per
wama.
Accident
Burglary
-15.00
-$3.00
$1so
Dne Tear--
8 Months
Three Months
S'
JOB PRINTING
At Reasonable Prices
Public Liability
Automobile
"“An erroneous reflections upon the
enaraoter, standing or reputation of
amy person, Ann or corporation which
may occur in the columns of THE
MAMINER will be gladly oorreoted
upon being brought to the attention
ut Iha arm:
-
cating. go.
Keep yourself as fit, an possible.
rt,
gl
. Ee
a
Envelopes, Sale Bills, Circulars, Folders,
Programs, File Statements,
' Letterheads, Invoices -
Ua
and t
Shop.
'We never hire
people with
halitosis".
For Justice Of Peace Precinct No. 3:
JOHN R. CRITTENDEN
For County Commissioner Precinct
No. 4:
JOHN A. GARNOR
For County Commissioner Precinct
v 1:
I. A WHITAKER
COWDEN C. OHANEY
f c
. 335
HENRY C. BAKER, Agent
NAVASOTA. TEXAS
To those who like fine, neat printing and prompt service
we offer a complete service—clean printing, good paper. Let
us figure on your next job—no matter how small or big I
1.
15
P
dale. New York, a movement was
recently started whih is. typical-
ly in the American tradition.
xaw
sarxa
best I
usual
Writ
7096
283-1
e
: s a
0 D
- 1/G.
Ed
MW
. ebatmef
wjaddy
(Hditor’s Note; The following article
is reproduoed froth the current issue
of "Huet Texas", official publication
of the East Texas Chamber of Com-
merce.)
should be enoulat
possible scale by
For, County Commissioner Precinct
No. 3:
IICHARD (DICK) JOHNSON
W. 1. STONEHAM
E. L. DYER
restore representative government
to let business expand and make
more jobs. Its ten objectives in-
clude: To uphold the Constitu-
tional division of power of the
MS
i Nomattr how many time# you mins
have had influenz, you may contraet
in business-life, just as in the social
world, halitosis (bad breath)—fre-
quently due to food fermentation in
the mouth—is considered the worst of
faults. Employers, with so many to
.choose from these days, can’t be ex-
pected to retain or hire people who are
careless about this offensivecondition.
Why risk your job, or your chances
of getting a job? There is a quick,
easy, pleasant way of protecting
yourself. Just gargle regularly with
Listerine, the safe antiseptic.
Listerine Antiseptic halts this fer-
mentation, said by some authorities
People who get
and hold jobs know
about mouth hygiene
s
* w
t2assj
M B
For County Commissioner Precinct
No. 2:
HOMIER C. NEASON
ASSCIATION
MEMBER
Texas Gulf Coast Press
Association
• ' NM
3323
vh
"e
u
89
auo
amini
view.
--
N
.■ 6
Ne
1 2"
* tt
« rhek
n
. ,u
1 Ha
p. a
Team
-
3.447
6
5% "
5384 _
3 —
Pubilahed Every Afternoom
Except Sunday
Navasota, Texaa
to the Federal government sim- farther1 han most of us know,
lieity of form and econemy of bp- 1 ’ .
64
h
bl 4-0«
' i
•• A
oo,
5 -05
e
l ■. -a.
Phone 84 and we will call
ng B‛ fodefei S - 229
a group representative citizens of Jcold, coming on, go to bed. If the cold
the community. Its purpose is to-becones worse. send for your physi-
FN
JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS
QunlitWork At Reasonable Ptices!
the people and the local commu-
nity with the traditions of the
gation’s founders. Few of us real-
ise how far we have strayed from
the principle of local self-rule.
characterized the .Movement for three decades. Scouting offer
venture, fun and achievement—attractive to all boysthroug
democratic life of the Scout Troop and Patrol, as essentialAne
ents in its character-influencing program for the boys of Thau
Drawing on the rich experience of the Movement, local and hal
Scout leaders anticipate the opportunity to serve more boys ann
As chairman of this important farm
committee of the East Texas Cham
her. he leads the most important and
popular movement that farmers and
business men are interested in today.
To this undertaking of saving the
fertility of the soil and averting un-
necessary loss of life and proprty by
floods, Mr. Rogers brings the experi-
ence he has gained as director of t lie
Brazos River Conservation and Rtecla-
niation Distriet, which will have to its
eredit this spring the coinpletion of
the Possum Kingdom Dam at Mineral
wells.
Iy no mennslave hisciyiccontribu-
t hius of unselfisli serviee been con-
■
• i,
-
i.
a
t-1
, J
■-w
2
THE HOTEL Of TOMORROW ,
m r Minto a mm. Munagina owdd t
.y/i
d
i ,
For many years he has been an ar-
dent advocate of .co-ordinated soil
erosion and flood control. His thor-
ough understanding of' the value of
this work to the agricultural welfare
of Texas was the reason for him be-
ing called by President Perkins' to
head the committee on soll and water
conservation and flood control of the
it independence and rights of
cal government have been lost
He by little, almost without no-
em'regg ’
What these Scarsdale peo
t P Aw '
to be a major cause of mouth odors, ,
then overcomes the odors themselves.
Almost instantly your breath be-
comes sweeter and more agreeable. If ।
you value your job, get in the habit
of using Listerine Antiseptic morning
and night, and before all important,
engagements. Lambert Pharmacal
Company, St. Louis, Mo.
1 . . . C J ■ ■ ■ ■ . '
LISTERINE
for HALITOSIS
(BAD BREATH)
** 2a .Yu 14239223
-2-,
i
..................... ............. ’ ......."I 'I1!1
” "" ......11 ' 1 . ... .................. । -UI I' ........
THE TRAVELERS INSURANCE CO.
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
Volume of Life Insurance in Force $4,644,922,861
Assets 7 -----------------------------I_-$ 975,527/444
Reserves and All Other Liabilities .--22.2.012222-...$ 922,170,982
Capital and Surplus 5,356461
OTHER LINES WRITTEN
(OUT
VaoaP
Federal govemnment; io restore
if you feel /an attack of flu, or even
Movement,” and is sponsored by what you may. think is an ordinary
r e*
60-
BS-2V i 7"
emphasis placed on soil con-
servation.
A well-equipped municipal
auditorium for Navasota.
A modern hotel for/Nava-
; • Rota. ,
A Chamber of Commerce
home.
Modern store buildings and
offices in Navasota,
Make Navasota and Grim-
es County known over the
state for their historical
widely separated parts of Texas to the
state Health Department indicate that
ifluemza is on the incrense Recent
snows and markedly coldet weather
account, for the upswing in influenza
ptevatinc, according to Dr Ge. W.
Ci a, '-tale . health officer.
lufluenzais belived trans missable
irnu person to person through miucous
I diselei rges "from the nose a ml t hrout.
IEo irotekt yourself and others from
co rae ing influenza or colds, here are
precautions to be followed :
Kh been shipped to fourteen nations
Because of his vital interest tn cotton
nprovement and in rebuilding the
Aioli to bring about better erop at a
lower cost he has after yeurs 1 of in-
tensive research and steady work ac-
complished inestimable results in the
field of agriculture.
Baek in thte little town ofSoars-Mour"hing"tod,'exitise g
every day,. dress according to the
weather, and get plenty of sleep in a
lowly in heart: and ye shali find i Never use towels. Elashesio person
- - ’ . For my.(al articles other than your own to.
which the cold getms .might adhere,
‘ Ohe Riot CapialtfAmeliai
For your trip to Mexico, an ultra-moder hostelry wih
in the immediate vicinity of all the glamorous sigh end
activities that make Mexico City Americos greatest •
retort.. Deluxe roomi and suites at European Plan
vates much lower than for comparable accommodo
tions in the United States American and Mexican food
4 Queries in English answered in English
E -
are to maintain
sound andsglvent
9 must be g 5
, , if again. Therefore, keep awiy from
•, {people who are .sneezing, coughig of
PUFFED l‘l’: sniffiig or who are actively ill with
Take mv yoke upon you, and colds, inffuenza or penumonin.
learn of mie; for I am meek and Keep MW from crowded pliees
places of interest, as a blue’' 1.,
bonnet center, and for their taly
natural advantages.
eration; to resist government en-
croachment upon legitimate busi,
ness; to encourage agriculture
and industry, and aid those in
need through local machinery; to
support labor in its right to work
and bargain collectively; to foster
all social improvements of reason-
able character which the country
can pay for, and to resist the
coercive tactics of all pressure
groups.
The underlying purpose of this
movement is obvious—to impress
—
—
Dntered M Second-Claaa matter
Peh. 22, 1916, at Navasotr, Texas,
undar Act of Congreaa, March 3, 1879.
Jobu P. Rogers has been active in
the affairs of the East Texan Chan-
ber of Commerce for a number of
years, having served on mduy of its
committees.
4 8
As vice president, Mr. Rogers has
been very helpful to Pres. F. D. Per-
kins and the staff in executing one of
the most far-reaching programs of
work ever inaugurated, by any State
or Regional Chamber.
struction of a modern high school
building, erection of a brick building
on the negro school property, the
bringing of gas to the city, and much
“street paving improvement. He was
one of the fifteen men that prepared
the charter for the eity of Navasota
when a commission form of government
was adopted in 1920.
In college Mr. Rogers ntudied agri-
culture and played baseball oh the
varsity team of the Lniversits of
Georgia. Tedas, ns a oonsequence of
the application of his studies and his
experience in direct ing one of the
State's largest cotton .plantations, he
has received. wot Id fame as a breeder
A--u- -----—-- —
clan and follow his direetions. A cold
can too' easily develop into a fatal
nistale.
ception are community bullders, Mr.
Rogers is doing his part unstintingly
to, main* Navasota a better owh in
which to work and live. His neigbbor-
ly attitude has carried his bnsines in-
fluence to a large area of the Brazos
River 'Valley. He has long been an
outstanding citizen of Navasota.
At the present time he is vice pren
ident of the Navasota Chamber of
Commerce, vice president of the Brazos
Valley Cooperative Assocdation, rice-
president of tile Texas Co-operative
News Publishing Company of Dallas,
and president of the Brenham Oil and
Manufacturing Company.
Progress has been the watchword of
this leader, who has gained commu-
nity and regional recognition for his
civie and business activities. National
organizations have apprecinted his In-
tereat in agriculture.
He served two terms as inayor of
Navasota, leaving the city in sound
financial .condition with a record of
P<PREN
«
- '
149g
’ -
It is known as “The Village
TaE NAS ASOTA DAILY ETA
•------------------------------
The Navasota Daily |^|an of Tlle Month-- John
Examiner
A V 4 Me
34
: .e
J fE 109y
320*100/8
g
.n
■...
-2.
tn,
■ 0825
-
« Arzoe’
e
E 828
, 8"
35
■ Mr/N J
* *
- 588
23 luil
8-,
bi'" a' et ■ 19 e oe
muCAMEA, swenhem
AOMOPMIZ EpAem.m
W VITAMI)
M2 SMITH BROS. A
d62d COUGH DROPS AS
(BLACK OR MENrHOL-se A67
_ -1 :7 C . ’.V1'1 1 '■ EMRa
- _lmmk.
When the Boy Scouts of America celebrates its 30th birthday on
Thursday. February 8, all of the 1,330,000 Scouts, Cubs and Seoot
leaders will re-dedicate themselves to the service motive (which ho
2-1* • eg j! • ’ '
enemy of true repreentativ
government. Ami the s Village
Movement seems to be a good
cure for a trend which has gone
" ••
N 6u0
Fire
Group
yoke is easy, and my burden is
light —n. 29/ :lo.- and always; wash your hands before
it was while working for a packing
company in Macon, Ga., after finishing
his work at the unfversity of that
State, that he recelved (word of the
death of his grandfather, Col. Jhn
D. Rogers, owner of the 4,000-acre
tract Allen term plantation in the rich
alluvial valley of the Brazos River,
“I came to Texas on a thirty-day
leave of absence in 1900 to look after
the land temporarily, and have been
here thirty years since,” Mr. Rogers
humorously remarks when he tells
about taking over the management of
the Brazos bottom plantation.
Mr. Rogers was born in 1886 at Fort
worth In. 1914, he and Mias Caroline
Giddings of Brenham were married.
They have one son, Giddings Rogers,
who is associated with his father in
business, and one daughter, Miss Carol
Rogers. He is a member of the Pres-
byterfan Chureli. HHis many duties and
responsibilitles have not in the least
taken from the warm, cheery greeting
and plensant smile which he has for
everyone he meets, making a friend of
each individual who comes in contact
with his magnetic persemality: ■-
Soil Conservation and improved
farming practices are irow recelving
his foremost attention. Ami in him the
farmers of East exas and the" South
will always have a friend and a true
champion nt their best interests.
s." TUI YIU COM! T9 "
MEXICO
2a
9. Pum
AISTIN, Jan. 29. Roports from
Our Platform For A
Greater Community
A united Grimes County
wghnharonomyznities work HEATTH NOTES
. Intense agricultural and j .
livestock development with
E Wi
v
Hune
I
L F.
d
y 163
ua,
We are authorized to announce the
following candidates for the office
specified, subject to the action of the
W. M. U. A. primary, which will be
held in April 1940.
-. ' u,
NO EXTRA COST
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Nemir, Lucile. Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 283, Ed. 1 Monday, January 29, 1940, newspaper, January 29, 1940; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1382368/m1/2/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.