Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 11, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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4
TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1920
OLEBURNE MORNING REVIEW,
PAGE FOUR
tttttttttttrtttttttttttttttttttttttzttttttttttttttttttts*
We Have Just Received a Large Shipment of
TSURI AOKI
One year, paid in advance (•■ rural route)--- ---------96.00
$1.00
Weekly, one year ..
And the missus?
Also FISHING TACKLE of all kinds, and BASEBALL
TOMORROW
GOODS.
ALICE JOYCE
i
T
-0-
Luke McLuke Says ATTENDS FUNERAL OF
casg25s
PROFITS AND PRODUCTION
I
Copyrighted
aIlIIlillllllIBIIlllIIllllllIIllIllllll/l/illlllllllllllllllllllll/llllllllllllllllm
F
da
1915; Burns Brothers, the largest retail
I
Raw Material
0
9
225922
Cotton Company, doing nearly $8,000,000 worth
j”
3
SEELY DRUG COMPANY
kg'
ople, the prie
one
“Oth
sends pains up his back
( ‘ompany
three and on
His presses are creaking, they
, whose profits rose from $7 4,435
turing Corpor
REVIEW WANT ADS GET QUICK RESULTS
200000*0*00000000*********0*****4404000444004000
taveg rUh^l
1on /
IRE0V65T
t
T
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
u-"u, 7
g
SUCH IS LIFE
4
mmeom
______• .75
.......<7 60
Swift & Company
Does Not Control Its
--2
confesses to reading, I
x At ion threatened the ।
shot up nearly 300 per
to them every day
buncombe and win
PEACOCK BARBER SHOP
THE BARBERSHOP SUPERIOR
documents punk that no
wot come forth from the
71
B
e
Cotton, wool, wheat, lumber, iron,
steel, and other non-perishables, can be
held either by their producers or their
users until needed.
No one can foresee or stipulate what
they shall bring; prices must fluctuate
from day to day to insure keeping the
market clear.
Chocolates "with
the y^Dnderful Centers
But live stock comes to market every
day in fluctuating quantities from scat-
tered sources, wholly uncontrolled and
at times without regard to market needs.
An immediate outlet must be found
for the perishable products, at whatever
price, as only a very small proportion
can be stored.
id busir
of f lif old I Inited
ome of nearly 34
1917, and in 1919
i"
pl,
■ i ul
. Business Manager
............Editor
.......City Editor
Most wonderful Jap girl, in
"LOCKED LIPS”
Y€5, w€ nnOn)
Eve RYTHnel
T0 HieH 1
r up
poor
w hos
9
1: ■
Bicycles
Quality Kind for
Men and Boys
fold and pri
of erude oil
3,8
Lift
The only really solution for the High Coat of
Living problem yet advance—“work more, upend
less"-, doesn’t make a big hit with those who would
work less and spend more.
The General Cip
aeqnired the proy eny a
I
l
THE SPORTING DUCHPSS’’
A masterpiece, of seven reds
64++4444444444444444444*44
+******+*****+************
\
y
f
DICKSON HARDWIARE 4 FURNTURECO.
Our Specialty is Furnishing Homes Complete From Our
Big Stock.
I
4
।
The Home of Popular Prices and Boat
Pictures
/8-9
$7(wvj
of $50,000,000 an
{
8
44+4+++++++++++++++++4+*+++++++++********************
+*+*+*+*****+*******+*********3*****444+*****+******
TERMS OF 8UBSCRIPTION
Dm Month.......—.....................
One year, paid in advance (in eity)--------
CLEBURNE MORNING REVIEW
Published Dally Ksc.pt Monday by
TAE umw PUBLISRnG co, wo
presses as mountains of rot.
Only the most exacting care of every
detail of distribution enables
Swift & Company to make the small
profit from all sources of a fraction of a
cent per pound, necessary for it to con-
tinue to obtain capital and maintain
operations.
▲ay erroneous reflection upon the character, standing, |
er reputation of any person, fine or corporation which may
Appear in the columns of I be lieview, will be gladly cor-
rected upon it. being brought to the attention of the pub-
21
That ma
l coal dealers
of 40 a ton.
f the United
Only a truthful little school ma’am
of another race in sunny, lazy, Hawaii.
Just the hind to be loved for an hour
and then deserted. Also
8*
A
$
es it elear, doesn’t it!
remarks were to the point. I
presented statisties showing
■stored in Cleburne Postoffice as Becond Claas Mail.
Western Advertising Representative, C. J. Anderson, Bpecial
Agency, Marquette Building, Chicago, 111.
Mastern Advertising Representative, Ralph R. Mulligan,
80 East Forty second Btreet, New Yorh.
The youngman in the gent’s furnishings ex-
plained!
“It’s a necktie if it costs a dollar or less.
“It’s a cravat if it taxes you two or three dol-
lars
“Ami it's a scarf if you separate yourself from
$5 to get it. ”
__________ memmssse»>
A good selection Wool Art Squares, Velvets and Taps.
Big line of the medium priced Rugs in Deltox, Wool Fibre,
Japanese Grass and China Art Squares, Automatic Refrigera-
tors, solid white enameled and white enameled inside. Porch
Swings, Ice Cream Freezers, Water Coolers. We have t he
all-staple Cotton Mattresses, guaranteed to hold up to the Seely
or any other first class mattress—try one. Linoleums, Congol.
eums and Congoleum Squares.
in the • Jnited S
against 2312
Drug Company
"‘DOWNING AN UPRISING
Comedy
list, as presented I
11 age of earnings.
i
1
Those going to attend the funeral
were her sisters, Mrs. Aliec Garner of
Burleson, Mrs. A. N. Jone., Mrs. Ben
Pate iukI .on Collier, and a nephew,
Pearson Odom, nil of Cleburne.
-----------o-----------
THE NEW YORK HOTEL AR-
RIVALS SHOW NAME OF HON.
W. B. FEATHERSTON MAY 8
The list of hotel arrivals of Saturday,
May Sth', printed in the Dallas News
Sunday, contained the mime of Hon. W.
B. Featherston of Cleburne. The Re-
view announced a few days ago thaat
he had reached Chicago en route to
Poston, Mass. He will be away a week
or two on this trip.
----0————
EV-*
a K. POOLE,..
OMHL HORN!
D. M. THRASH
r Company, which in 1906
doing a bus
You can’t sometimes always tell. The man who
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.
SAM PEACOCK, Prop.
Mills' output of cotton and worsted goods produced
34 per cent more profit than in the year before th'-
just what he thinks of her.
It takes a baby about a year to learn to put his
And new stacks are added
tomes that are padded with
loot in his mouth. And it takes him about 50 years
( igar (‘ompany
cents on each d
this had grown
Amoskeag Cotton Manufacturing ( ompany, Stutz wears a vacant expression in a poker game may be
Motors and Nashua Manufacturing Company, 100 i holding a full house.
per cent each. American Tobacco Securities Com This is a <|i.....r world We call women the weak-
pany, 75 per cent; Manomet Mills, 66 2 per centier sex. Yet we know a henpecked husband who
Hood Rubber, 66 2-3 percent Crucible Steel, < lev would give his right arm to be able to tell his wife
land Akron Bag and I nion Bag and Paper < o. •0 I r
cent each ; Auto Car ('ompany, 40; John R. Thomp-
son Company, 331-3; St Mauriee Paper Company,
■States, made a net profit
in 1916; the earnings <
ALL your favorite
LA center, each in
■ 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 at you
go by today, and get
some. Packed in a
handsome box that
will pleao anybody.
guns on the
ing going on
Mjp, _________________________________________________________
MEMBERS nl HU v -v IATED PRESS
The Associated Press it exelusively entitled to the use
for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not
etherwise credited in this paper and also the local newS Pubi
linhed herein. .... .. ...
All rights of republication of Bpecial dpatehes herein
are alne ' - - I
. EHE2F" “2#
Hf-ee
a-t-*jas
ed
a’
ati
He mentioned names and
, what he deelared to be
: I T. O. WAYLAND, W. O.. W. Bldg. Cleburne
.......... ,, .-nHiniuif
< Hi, Unele Sum's spoiling the paper we need for news
hot and boiling, the stuff we would read. He's blow-
ing the boodle on volumes of slush- on endless flad-
doodle that's not worth a rush. His basements are
crowded admit it he must with printed stuff
shrouded in cobwebs and dust. “ Reports” and such
litter are there by the stuck, it makes a man hitter,
Over in India they have estes. And seemingly,
there are elesses here.
Man is in one of three elasses, necktie class, cra-
vat elass, or scarf class.
Once mankind was divisible thusly:
(1) -White collar class
(2) Shirtsleeves class.
the facts concerning the earning
large American corporations. I he
by Senator Capper, with the perce
ineluded ::
if many of the
ent and still is risin
Why does a Bride worry over having hand made
lingerie? The groom doesn • know the difference,
and, furthermore, he doesn t give a whoop.
Other industries can buy their raw
materials according to need or judgment,
and set a selling price. They need
manufacture only what they can sell at
their price.
business last year, made 30 per cent more money, al
though it sold 20 per cent fewer goods; the Pacific
mi those it gained
“Continental Oil, United Fuel (las, 200 per
cent ; Ohio Fuel Supply, I onquit Shipping ( ompany, |
times lare
‘seandalous and
in this country
groan and complain, with publishers shrieking for
paper in vain.
Aa
A
72,
“The Tobacco Produets Corporation has a divi- I through summers and winter
cents.
vernment and befriend-
riean Hide and Leather
r 1919 were more than
——
Remember when th’ James Boys used t' throw
th' whole United States ins flutter by robbin’ a little
bank out in Kansas! Hod Carrier Joe Lark did not
go t‛ work thia mornin’ on account o’ a defective
starter.
i...............
| REX
0000404444400444444004447
dend balanee showing a rise of 1.547 per cent over
its 191 1 profits.
in 1911; the Central Leather ('ompany. whose 1919
profits more than doubled those of the same months
in 1918, and the Endicott Johnson Shoe Manufac-
. amassed n i
llar of its sa
to almost 38
iolders of go
are the Ame
e profits fer
more to break himself of the habit.
Funny how She never notices that lie has pim-
ples on His neck until after they have been married
for a month or so.
When a girl wants to land a sucker she gets him
to tell her the Story of His Life.
Men are like a lot of other things. They seem
easy until you try to do them. /
Outside of his wife’s opinion of him a married
man isn't any worse than a single man.
Women may take to wearing overalls. But just
the same, they'll demand a new hat every month or
se. a .l.asuuaensim
SISTER AT ABILENE#
„ — s
Mrs. Ben Pate and son Collier, re- 44 .......
I turned Monday from Abilene where 4444444444444444444
tley went Saturday to attend the fun-
eral of Mrs. Fate’s slater, Mrs. Ewing
Shipley,
Mrs. Shipley win born in Tennessee
Sept. 19, 1867 and came to Texas with
her parents when she was eight years
old, and lived three miles north of Cie
burne. At the age of 16 years she unit-
ed with the Chureh of Christ. On Dec.
13, 1888, sle was married to Ewing
Shipley at the home of Rev. J. W. New
brough. The eouple lived at Union Hill
until 1901 when they moved to Stephens
county and made their home seven miies
southwest of Breckenridge. In June,
1919, they moved to Abilene where they
lived at the time of her death. She
leaves five sons and daughters, the
youngest being 18 years of age.
American Ice Company, which cuts ice by the mil
lions, but not profits, has in the last four years in ruay : 1* eca G*23G,
ereased its ■ 8 per m. th- International v lcpplm^l<hqmo$iW
4MAG yWalt Mason,-a"a 2:
Men are queer fish. A lot of them who wouldn't
touch liquor when it was 15 cents per copy now
cheerfully pay 75 cents per copy for it and think
they are cheating somebody.
A demand that sounds reasonable to the man on
whom it is made never sounds that way to the man
who is making it.
f Kansas, furnished
w / .1 he opened his
shameless’ profiteer-
today. The senator's
in 1915 to $9,791,580 in 1919 Despite these swollen
profits, the public is being warned that shoes are go-
ing to cost more instead of less.
“For four years wheat farmers, as a whole, have
little more than broken evet But the net profits of
the fifteen plants of the Standard Milling Company
have been increased 100 per cent, but not because of
increased wages and taxes.
“The humble banana, controlled by the United
Fruit Company, with its fleet of twenty-three ships,
has become a kingly profiteer. its net earnipgs for
fifteen months, ending December last, equal forty
per cent on fifty millions of stock outstanding.
“Our greatest industry - agriculture, tied hand
and foot has been made the helpless victim of spec-
ulators and profiteers.”
Senator Capper’s speech is interesting, at least.
It may have been made for political effect most of
these speeches are nowadays- but it reveals a eondi
tion which demands action, not so much by congress,
but by American industry itself. The cry for inereas.
ed production will do little good unless it is accom-
panied by an honest effort on the part of our indus-
trial chiefs and business men everywhere to do their
part.
Senator Arthur ( upper
■ome fireworks in the seni
“ During the coal strike, while zero
PRINT PAPER
The shortage of paper makes
publishers weep; and prices, they
caper still higher each week. The
publisher's legging around in the
mart; the publisher's begging,
with aches in his heart; for paper
imploring, he’s down on his knees;
end prices are voaring like kites
ip a breeze. Am! Uncle Sam’s
printers me paper as junk;
war, and the excess profit surplus of United States
Steel the surplus remaining after dividends ha.
aggregated nearly $500,000,000 in the last live years,
although #315,1 MM 000 was spent on improvements.
The Kansas senator didn’t stop here. He at-
tacked the “Wall Street melon raisers," said he was
in favor of raising the bonus for ex-service men front
war profits and coneludea with these remarks.
1 < .< >
1
I..
She, too, is in one of three classes, as the young
lady nt the dressmaking shop elucidated:
“If she pays $25 for it it's a dress
“If she pays as high as $50 it’s a frock.
"But if she pays more than a hundred it’s a cre-
ation.”
nually were 242 per cent greater than in 1916; the
30; F. Wl Woolworth, 30; Electric Welding of Bos-
ton. Deleware and Cleveland, 25; Hawaiian Pineap-
ple Company ami Electric Welding Company 25 per
cent each; general Chemical, American Multigraph,
and Truscon Steel, 20 per cent each
‘“rhe Standard Oil Co. of Indiana recently in-
creased its capital from $1,000,000 to $30,000.-
(‘00, giving its stockholders a stock dividend of 2900
per cent. The National Candy Company’s earnings
last year showed an increase of 545 per cent over
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Horne, Cecil. Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 11, 1920, newspaper, May 11, 1920; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423028/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.