Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Ed. 1 Friday, May 7, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
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F
CLEBURNE MORNING REVIEW
smmmmmmmnmmmmmmmmmmm
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What Is The
Condition of
4
ETHEL CLAYTON
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Come down to
Copyrighted
(19
BILLION DOLLAR DAYS
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until order house
four whisky
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. four corkserews and a handsome picture all
433044*+*+*+***********+********
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
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THE TEAM
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SEELY DRUG COMPANY
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
Si
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A
pie of the critic ilk turn up the
rnful nose ; its hood
SAM PEACOCK, Prop.
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Why Don’t You
7
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W. H. Griffith & Co.
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
When the Hopi Indian maiden seleets her hus-
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up-
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YE5, we nNow/
EveRrMeel
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William MeCandless went to Austin
Thursday to attend the track meet.
band she
every
uc7he Chocolates "with
the "Wonderful Centers
FRI
—•
Cecil Rodgers and Mr. Ingenluit will
leave Friday night for Austin to be in
attendance at the track meet.
your
Refrigerator
■
Published Dally Except Monday by
na aavIw ponLIsHnO co, 0,0
D. B. POOLE........
OKdL HORNE,_____
D. M. THRASH------
is badly out of date, the windshield slant is vile, the
body lines, which should be straigt, bulge out in an-
lo think that a few years, ago a
FACTS ABOUT FUNERAL OF i
MRS.M.O.FEATHERSTON ;
peo-
Refrigerator in first class condition.
DICKSON HARDWIARE & FURNTUREGO.
We Make a Specialty of Furnishing Homes Complete
i
Ea
"Unele"’ Frank Grow, Milmore, Ky . continnes
to wear a brondeloth suit in which he was married
GO years ago and for which he paid the then high
price of $23.
MRGVERITE Clark.
Cftuu/ndu/itC putuns
At the Tain Today and Tomorrow
EA» 06,
tr
ALonE
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#sse
g, RipplinRhamos’
G4ALwett2sonwe,
PAGE FOUR
---------------------- ■■■■ I I ■ "■ —
CLEBURNE MORNING REVIEW
PEACOCK BARBER SHOP
THE BARBERSHOP SUPERIOR
Invites you to give him a call when in need of a
good Shave, Hair Cut, Shampoo, Massage,
Tonic, Etc. Workmanship the best, and guar-
anteed to please you. Our shop is clean and
sanitary. Hot and Cold Baths.
WE WANT YOUR BARBER WORK.
I
""Itmiwiw"
........Business Manager
..........Editor
7""________City Editor
uvegrRies/
JREdesr
€_
It should have more careful consideration than any
furnishing in your home—strictly sanitary, easy to keep
• eatables.
I V
clean, perfect refrigeration—to keep your
We can help you solve this problem.
our store and see our big line of Refrigerators and Ice
Boxes. You certainly can’t afford to use only a sanitary
)
to-date and new; and in six months, I ’If bet
'twill be a has been ton.
Ey-EEnd
Franeis Bishop left Thursday morn-
ing for Austin where he will witness the
track meet.
(
doesn’t waste any time wooing him, albeit
for thoop Year with the Hopi girls.
uld send you a gallon of whiskey
Miss Marie Tntweiler, Yonkers, N. Y., claims
the Leap Year proposing ehampionship.
She says she has proposed to 106, ranging in
ages from 16 to 70, and was "accepted" by 86, all of
whom, she says, "were disappointed when I told
them it wall all a joke."
ences. Write Box 185.
Another thing that makes married life party
expensive is th’ craze amongst women t* dress jest
as foxy underngath as they do on th' outside. Some
fellers prefer t‘ loaf on th' job an’ others on th’ cor-
ner. . . .2u..
| tumbril's out of style, it looks like Noah's ark. and
when I push her for a mile I go out after dark. For
if I take it out by day,'by jokers it's abused ; they'
ask me if it is the dray the Pilgrim Fathers used. My
wife declares she'd rather walk, and proper pride
maintain, than ride with me around the block in that
ancestral wain. And thus the motor game is played
upon the trustful chump, whose last year's model
looks decayed and ready for the dump. My van is
Ro, now that we’ve started,
Are you smiled and hearted
To back them through good and through evil report?
] f so, as a fanner,
We hand you the banner;
You're a genuine, thorough bred, full-blooded Sport!
SUCH IS LIFE
buy this beautiful 6-room house at 510 College
street? 75 foot and east front, with plenty of
shade trees. This property is well worth
$5,000, but we can sell it to you for $4500;
$2,000 cash.
Good 4-room house on North Anglin St.,
corner lot, $2500. Good terms.
A country home, 5 rooms, screened-in
porch, situated on four acres of ground, two
miles north on Fort Worth road, interurban
stop near. Price $4250; $2500 cash, balance
easy.
We have some cheaper, and some higher, -
for sale. Come in and let us show you.
just as fine as silk, so far as chugging goes ; but
WANTED Furnished rooms for light
housekeeping. Will exchange refer-
Dr. W. F. Johnson returned yesterday
from Sherman where lie wen to see his
brother, J. W. Johnson, who was oper-
ated on at the hospital nt that place.
Dr. Johnson said his brother was very
low and all the relatives are being
called in.
Dr. Johnson stated between Fort,
Worth and Dallas the storm Wednesday
night did great damage. Evidence of
the cyclonic tendeneies of the storm
was seen where houses were cut in two
one half being destroyed and the other
lalf not damaged.
46+44+*4+4+44444*+4+44***044**44*444*4444**
#34333433035335340400*6+*+*********+**
^he goes straight to the young man's mother,
and, having obtained the mother'■ consent, they men-
tion the matter to the bridegroom-to-be, and he can
do one of two things:
(1)—Run away, or
(2)—Get married.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
Dm Meath-------—.........—-..................270
One year, paid in advance (in sity)--------———— 000
Ona year, paid in advance (on rural route)............ 2000
W—kly, one year........................-........
Eatered ia Cleburne Postoffice an Becond Class Mail
wetern Advertising Roprenentative, c.J.Anderson, Bpecial
Agency, Marquette Building, ChicAg°“Mumicnn
Eastern Advertising Representative, Ralph, E. Mulligan,
SO East Forty second Street, New York.
Anyerroneous reflection upon the charneter, standing
or repulation of any perepnprirmgorgorporaton o!
anneir in the eolumns of The Renew, win ue a f .6.
#PPted upon its being brought to the attention of I
tjlhim. - । ... ......
-MFMKERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PEMiktd press is exelusively entitied to the use
for publication of all news dispatches ereditedtogitworpnot
etherwine credited in this paper and also the loca “ '
iahoAirergjnta of republkention of special dispatehes herein
are also reserved.
Iw wears a No. 6 shoe never says a word about the
act that he wears a No. 6 hat.
The trouble with giving a boy two middle names
is that he 11 waste a lot of his time in life using both
of them.
Alter the world saddles the blame on a man it
will spend a lot of time riding all over him.
If a girl can get familiar enough with a man to
make him drop the prefix "Miss” when he speaks
to her, she is getting ready to have him substitute
the prefix "Mr«."
A married man shuld not crow over the fact that
he can fol his wife. This is one of the rules that
work both ways.
Lven when a man hasn't anything to say he
would rather talk than hear some other fellow talk
ing.
Man is born to wish. He spends the first halt
of his life wishing he were married and the second
half wishing he wasn’t married.
Sealed proposals addresse« to the
Commissioners ’ Court of Johnson Coun-
tv, Texas, for furnishing all equipment,
supplies mid labor for unlonding gravel,
sand and crushed stone, from enrs on
railroad sidings, approximating 350,000
tons of material, will be received nt the
office of Claude L. White, County An
ditor, Cleburne, Texas, until 2 o’clock
p. m.. Friday, May 21st, 1920, and then
publicly opened and rend.
Detailed pinna and specifications may
be seen for examination and informa-
tion obtained at the office of R. O.
Whiteaker, County Engineer, Cleburne,
Texas.
A certified or Cashier’s Check for
One Thousand (♦1,000.00) Dollars, made
payable without recourse to the order
of O. O. Chrisman, County Judge of
Johnson County, must accompany each'
proposal, as a guarantee that the bid
der, if suceessful, will enter into con-
tract and make bond in accordanee
with requirements of the specifications.
The right is reserved by the Commis
sinners ’ Court to reject any and all
bills or to waive ull technicalities. 5 18
--0-----------
DR. JOHNSON'S BROTHER
VERY LOW AT SHERMAN
The following item, concerning the ±
funeral of Mrs. M II. Featherston, nf I
Dallas, is from th Dallas News, of May 1 y
5th:
l"E"
cient style. And KO I || have to buy it gig that ‘s
(By Edmund Vance Cooke)
WWhen the Reason’s beginning
Ami Our Team is winning
The pennant on paper and prospects and form
it's well to remember
There'll be a September,
And then, will our boast and our boost be as warm?
Although he has been married since last Novem-
ber, William Coyne of San Francisco declared in his
annulment suit that he doesn’t know just exactly
what his wife's name is,
it’s no lie, or libel
(We’ll swear by the Bible)
To say that our instincts are loyal just now,
But will they diminish.
Or stick to the finish ?
Will me buck up the boys to the end of the row '
One ofuthezrotentpreaty theprorits
aroundslooin"or“ownhy a few figure in con-luln
Wction with the cost of running the government
for $1.67.
Of course it is none of our business. But any
man who uses a white horse to haul a coal wagon
should send the poor nag to the laundry once in a
while.
When two men have it in for each other they are
looking for a chance to have it out.
The man who ia always advertising the fact that
________________________________ TOMORROW— ’ 2.
| SHIRLEY MASON ;
Luke McLuke Says trtr |
- S I Illi 1——— ... - - - ---------------
With the band in the band stand,
One's girl in the grand stand,
And the team ou its toes all the way to the flag,
4). then, any mortal
WWill chirrup and chortle
And talk up the team with a bit of a brag.
IX
ALL your favorite
x* centers each in
a substantial chocolate
overcoat, You’ll have
to eat one to learn how
good they are—and eat
many to learn that
they are all equally
good. Come in as you
go by today, and get
some. Packed in a
handsome box that
will please anybody.
is
"THE MYSTERY GIRL"
Ole, boys, never judge a girl by her
riot lies. The beautiful ambulance
driver so girlish and innocent in her
uniform may really be well, some-
thing quite different from what she
looks. Sos for yourself, Also
"TRAILED BY THREE"
Stowart Holmes
+++4++**+++**+****+4*********+**************
:i Oil Strike in Johnson Co I
■ • Has caused considerable activity in real estate in the last few X
• > days. We have a number of bargains for sale in city property, X
1 ; Call and see us before the rush begins. $
]: We also write Fire, Tornado and Automobile Insurance. ♦
W. E. Bauldwin & Co. |
5777”
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
<: East Side Square Phone 689 |
*++4444+44444444444444444+44+444++4+444444444+444++44
Funeral serviees for Mrs. Leta Will- |
banka Featherston, 37 years old, who
died Sunday, was held nt the home of
tin- family, 728 West Jefferson street,
nt 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, the
Rev. Glen L. Sneed, assisted by the Rev.
H. Wrenn Webb of McKinney, offiei-
ated. Mrs. Featherston, an accomplish-
ed violinist, was a popular teacher and
it member of the Dallas Symphony Or-
elestra. The musical part of the fun-
eral service was by well known musi-
ciana, with Mina Alice Knok Ferguson
as aecompanist. Mra. Charles Bowman,
Miss Ruth Strong and Mrs. Howard
Parka sang "Tread Softly,’’ and
“Peace, Perfect Peace,” the latter a
favorite hymn of Mrs. Featherston. Mr.
and Mra. Walter J. Fried, violinists,
played "‘Traumerie," by Sehumann,
and, na the casket was being curried out
of the house they played “Prayer from
the Jewels of the Madonna."
Burial was in Oak Cliff cemetery.
The active pallbearers were Doty Feath-
erston, George Parsons, Stanley Patter-
son, Boyd Keith, Harry Jolnson and
C. C. Millington. The honorary pall-
bearers were W. H. Harris, Dr. Donald,
Walter J. Fried, JI. M. Patterson,
George Basham, P. G. Quisenberry, Ray
Thomas, Luther R. Evans, L. A. Stem
mons, L. Mackey and C. H. Teeple.
Mrs. Featherston is survived by her
husband, M. H, Featherston; three
daughters, Elizabeth, Leta and Grace
Featherston; her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
G. W. Willbanks, and a sister, Mrs. Ed
gar Wells, all of Dallas, and a brother,
Ney II. Willbanks of New York.
PERSONALS
| »♦♦•♦♦ i ..................
) REX
♦HMMIHUIIIIIIHIHH
The Home of Popular Prices and Best
Pictures
CHANGING STYLES
Last year I bought a limousine,
the latest thing in boats, and it
was painted blaek ami green, and
cost me many groats. "It is the
Very latest word in cars." the
agent cried; "all other cars will
look absurd, this noble bus beside.
The pride of ownership 'twill give,
ami fill your soul with bliss, and it
will last you while you live, I wot
and ween and wis." And now my
Even when she finds that her clothes won't fit
her. a woman won't admit that she is getting fat.
She’ll explain that her clothes are shrinking.
Whisky is $100 a gallon in Chicago. And just
Peter Cooper Hewitt New York electrical ex.
pert, believes the time is coming when air may be
eaten as well as breathed.
" Electricity is now being used to take nitrogen
from the air." he said. "I am perfecting an im-
provement of this system by mentis of which it will
be possible to erente food from air."
Which means that mother will have to get up n
little earlier each morning to drag the food out of
the air before she can cook breakfast.
And if we’re going to get food out of the air
what will those pretty farmerettes do with those nice
new overalls?
A person 32 years and 9 months old has only
lived a billion seconds.
thia great ami glorious country.
Take, for instance, th- first nine months of the
fiscal year. B took $5,028,176,000 to keepthe ma
einer; moving, so that it is estimated bytreasury
Ofrieials that the total government expenditures.for
the twelve months period ending next Jum
reach $6,750,000,000. .
Going some, is it not! That's at the rate of
92,000,000 a day. Thus we find that every minut
the government spends over $83,000 and every sec-
ond out of the year nearly $1400. Every thousand
dollars in taxes is spent in less time than it takes o
way "one."
What is the money used for ' well, the war de-
partment requires *1.301, 605,000; the railroad ad
ministration $776,590,000, to make up the loss in gov-
ernment operation of the railrads; the navy 0-1,
364,000; the shipping board $433,100,000; interest on
public debt 66 1,923,000. It eosts $15,000,000 to main-
lain congress and $6,000,000 for the executive of
fices. ... . . -i
Yew, indeed, we are some little country. A mil-
lion dollars has become a mere bag of shells, so to
speak. These are billion dollar days. The high cost
of government has as much to do with the high cost
of living as anything we know. It has to be met out
of taxes and duties ami the peopple pay the shot.
A town's reputation
]r judged through the nation
By its spirit of sport and the brand of its ball,
But surely you've noted
( For oft it is quoted)
That the lads on the diamond can not do it all.
But when the team’s slowing
And tough is the going,
NWith some glass in the arm and some wood in the
head,
O, then, are we rooting?
Or howling and hooting
Ik the ink in our arteries yellow, or red!
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Horne, Cecil. Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Ed. 1 Friday, May 7, 1920, newspaper, May 7, 1920; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423025/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.