Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 184, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 4, 1925 Page: 4 of 8
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TIM' -
SB
12
LEBUKNE MORNING REVIEW.
PAGE FOUR
5
Byan’s Sisteraat Funeral
STEWART’S WASHINGTON LETTER
Y V ■
everything ao expensive.’ "
4
' M
T
IHE tariff.” aaia the Demo
8
rv art of redocing taxes.
■ n
therrr
and they’ll
4
OUR SPECS
his
/
Close Friends Political Rivals
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN
■ tAllen (left) and Mrs. J. N. Baird, both of Nebraska.
I
f
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■ ’ California Fig Syrup" prompt-
L
1 •
If it had
There Are Much Nicer Ways of Spending Vacations
A
Opposing candidates in the Troy, N. Y. mayoralty election
=N
War Vet Regains Children
A
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Bom get.
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any more than
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PROSPECTS GOOD FOR FALL
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Sure Cure
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.. fine
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b
That hope was realized
\
•Hit
as secretary of state in
i
administration, which ended
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TRY REVIEW CLASSIFIED ADS.
somc•e.
■____________
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..•2.75
cred-
paper ■
SHE'S HAD A BAD QLD
AND IT SETTUED IN HER
THROAT- SHE HASN'T
BEEN ABLE TO TALK TbR
SEUERALDA¥S AND I'M
AFRAID SHE MAY LOSE
The Republicans are painfully
conrcious that this may be so.
The
(l•]:2G! 01»}
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/
7 Somethin© N
f UNUSUAL. FoR
NACT BECATe-
. SEND HIM IN ,
I WHEN HE /
V ARRIUES /
1
I
Tennessee became the center
of all Christendom.
- na
• of
onto '
MOM’N POP.
AMR.MCNAB KNOWS ACL '
{ ABOUT THOSE REPORTS S'R-
h BUT HE HASN'T COME DOWN .
BGJ i
•du
r'
- ■■
-
85
Editor and Manager
__________City Editor
TO FREE SCOTT Srott is innocent and I am willing
' to die in his place. I am too big
Answer to Sunday's
Crossword Puzzle
. ee —
%«
a
KrV
I
I"
•721
(d
Don't WORRV-
MOM HAD A •
Similar attack
ONE TIME BUT1
DiScOVEEDA
CURE FoR IT i
IMIGRANT MH
WERE iseDREN"
V
Measured by concrete achiecmenta, Mr. lain Luiore August 15th.
Bryan may not be given lofty rank as a
I *,
O. H. POOLE-.
H. J. ADAIR--
--T
a*
unsuccessful years
Wilson's firss. i
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/ ^ORRY I COULDN'T >
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MR GUNN BUT MY I
\ WIFE IS ILL AND I J\
) DIDN'T LIKE TO ,
\ LEAUE HER__/
* Cleburne Morning Review
Published Daily Except Monday by
THE REVIEW PUBLISHNO co., INO.
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gaaegEtr/2
,-,2
LIB C10*)1j[3 -------------
/
. ’ A
beginning of his larier ca
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'in every section.
re-
cd.
1882-°
Nh,, a
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-- — — o--—
WISE AND OTHERWISE
F
i
noth parties Will be doine thelr
hollering with a view to its sr-
feet on the 1926 congresklonal
electionn
1.
q.,39g
38333822 333 ■ 73988
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22.122
i ——————
BANDIT ADMITS
CONFESSION LIE
The high tariff's arhat makM
/Sxy22498(-/758513/5
Sisters of William Jennings Bryan, rarely photographed, Ut j
seen at the funeral in Washington. They are Mrs. Thomas S 1
•....... ■ - ■
18
-4,
evolution in the schools into the political
forum as u paramount issue.
At times it was difficult for Mr. Bryan’s
cities—he had thousands in both the religious
and political fields - to reconcile his deep
piety with his ruthlessness in battle. He was
unsparing in denunciation of those with whom
I he was not in agreement, and frequently im-
433
Ik "
HER VOICE
wumen==Paul— .
i 1
(
! CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP-:
! {
• CHILD’S BEST LAXATIVE ;
ty—mees te poisenw, gemen, -bike,
ourinz food and waste right out.
Republicans meant to
MOTHER! WThen baby is con-
stipated, han wind rolic, feverish ,
breath, coated tongue, or diarrhea.
lock, the moutofdoinzit__
And in the 1926 campaign, every
’ m a imocrat pipads for a
<• —— • -J
Claude N. Logan, veteran of the A.E. F., has at last unravellea aeveral-
miles of red tape and resained his children, Nathan Barzen, & (right). and
Velmnr Barzen, 2. He married a German girl, Cecilio Barzen, while with
the army of occupation in Germany, but military officials wouldn't sanc-
non the wedding and he had to leave his family behind. Then the mother
died, and he nent money for the children to corns to his home at Spring-
ftetd, O. Immigration ofcers held them up again, and it was only through
the intervention of Senator Fess of Ohio that Logan finally got them.
6"
ran
23.1333 2cenman)
j2i m 3 3n*j6 gmgj
MM3 SUU :20E4
.............3:1/90 de
“7**
...... . . n 1: a coward to commit suicide, but I „
WICIIITA, han., Aug. 3-His woul gladly die on the gallows if '
fear of the penitentiary prompted iu daingaol1cauld save another
John Gordon, wanted in more than life."
, statesman. His preeminence rests chiefly upon
his eloquence. His career was £ creem of
speech rather than of action, as his official
life was confined to two uneventful terms in
the house of representatives and two rather
was co-extensive with civilization’s bounds,
and he became a political fatet of power and
influence of which the country was ever con-
seious. His leadership carried his party to dis-
asier repeatedly. He was not, tolerant in the
-ti
vonchesafed to Mr.
T. refrin frm evil, to’achieve the good,
11<> pirily one’s own heart, this is the teach-
iuiuthe awakned. Jhammapada V. 186.
the statute books ' Why to ask
Congress about it, of course
i Congress PSMMI It .If anynxdy
Know* what Congrens’ idea was in
doing it. it eertainly must be Con.
Crete itreit.
180 Why, when the enecutive
branch of the government rune
VP azinst one of these incompre.
Pensibty-worded enactmente, does
hi go to the legislative branch ana '
any.»"Thin thing doesn't make
•»nte ^what In heck were you try.
tng to get at?" i Then it coula be
explained, or fixed.
,, ’
RVT no. That isn't me ey*^
D tern'at All Inetead, the pur
Heleither le passed- on up
29 the courts rr an ’Interpreta-
tion lor turned over to one of the
BY CHARLES P. STEWART
NEA Service Writer
IYTASHINGTON—The Demo
W crate have doped out «, pro-
gram they believe will make
the Republicans a heap of trouble
at the next weasion of Congress
The Republicans have doped out a
counter-program to ward thin
trouble off
a
We
E--*,25
i1—T <
The Democratic acheme tn to
I make an awful racket about tariff
reduction The Republican "cheme
is to make ao much more racket
, about tax reduction that the tariff ■
reduction racket win be drowned
I out '
xineteenth euntury. Frem iht time hie famelmstsimer-usof
Vc
3—2h
".4
cN
57
nenators by the people, woman’s suffrage apd
prohibition. He took particular pride of (hr
wircumstance that, though not successful in
U • " his efforts to 'reach the presidency, b* saw
most of the reforms advocated by him writ-
We ten in the statutes. His passion for innova-
8 . tion it well revealed by the fact that at the
E time of his death, he was preparing to carry
E his bottle against teaching the doctrine of
time in nil history look through American ! T
‘ glases. anything may happen.
assparches —t-t—vrurv nt • cr ~tHr- Amerivun tourist— .....— ---—.-----—■
-un to im 11 Sa himself on th......usejousness NoMud-Slingingin This Election:
"of Erpu, thrariaturist abroad has-sought --° -P - — ---- - —
ja figure recognizable at onee as typical of alli
Nnerican. To imlicateour government he
had requrse to the established symbol, Une hl
. *K-e1-z
v2e •'
.3, /*
221.3,
punged their motives. This intolerant animos-
geo ity, however, was confined tor the most part ,
Ito dissenters in his own sect and in his own I
and Louk how the cont of housekeep-
I inK has iH-in rteltis lately. And
i women pay the bins They'll be I
mind tolnten when we tel 'em. ,
Sam. But until our soldiers started pouring in-
to France he had nothing to represent the
everyday merican who haunted capitals of
i the Old World and poked around among its ।
"g,
,..5
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Ecp.3 A
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3
s always a corner of silenre.in the t—PA
I < ]
35"
, f J t, *
/t $ ,t.
entralPress Photos
government'* ” numerous admin-
lxlr.it Ive burenua or commissions
to be guessed on
Now a Judicial decision on h
question of constitutionality to
one thing. If Congress attempt
something -the fundamental eMd
forbids, then doubtless It's soms
court’s business to point out that.
It can’t be done
But interpreting and gurssins
laws into shape is direrent-it
amounts tn making them.
The judges do their Interpreting
with xuch straight faces—their,
faith in their own infallibility is
so well grounded—that the by-
stander, watching them at it. isn't
aje to realise how ridiculous it la.*
How do they know what meaning
lessaexs means, any better than
anybody else! e
• The executive omclala, however,
don’t al tske their zuessine quite
to serloualy.f
A"The fact to." a high function-
ary of the Soand-eo Bureau cold
me recently.’■ "We never*ve been
able to dope out how Congress in-
tended the Buchendsuch Act to
work, but we’ve agreed on what'
we thought perhaps o meant «ndl
that"adhe-"Na"e "otpten-5
* People“go-to“san Qnapay big
fines on the strength cf IL too.
‘THE Republicans can't prevent
I i he Democrats in Congress.
.... —trom_telling.the nation. In’'
dozens of speeches next winter,
what a good thing tariff reduction
would be -
They can contradict, but they
suspect the Democratic argument,
presented as evidently it’s going 1
to be prenented, wlH have a pretty j
ktrong appeal. They want bome- ;
thing to talk about themselves—
and something to show, that
they've actually dons for the
voters. .
... • |
rTE Republican offering will be
1 tax reduction. Every .time a
Imorrat urges tariff redue-
thin a Republican will remind the
nation ihat hin party is in the
WHAT DIDYOU X I WHM I CAME HOME
M• A^O ^CDGK
with but few scattered ections, during the
past week. Merchants ho had been writing
pessimistic letter to wholesalers are now
jubilant in their aurance of a good season.
Cleburne banking institutions that had been
feeling the financial pulse of the trade ter-
ritory, perhap without alarm, but at least
with concern, are now hearing glowing re-
ports from'their qualified observers through-
out the ntire trade territory, and the ver-
dict yesterday was "'Full and complete re-
cover' from the symptoms brought on by
the threatened drouh,
Cleburne bankers and merchants declare,
hat in their opinion, an early and heavy fall
business was never more favorable. Cotton
production will be much greater than first
anticipated, considerable feed stuff will yet
be made and melons will continue to be in
demand.
The turning tide ha also been felt in labor
circles. With from fair to good crop prospects
in Johnson County and the tremendous
amount of public work going on in Cle-
burne, there is no reason why we should not
feel better than in many former years.
half teaspeonful of genuine
TO WORK YET-
have nothing but praise for each other. Mayor Harry E. Clinton
1;=
1 athos. . iTubl'er bred glasses. Not that Europe has
Whatever may be the judgments o men „. lilc (< ,r,coginze the American in the begog. ;
upon his greatness or upon the permanency of glen scimen of the cartoons. Not at all. I
his achievements, it will not be denied that But merely that the king showed up at Wem-
lbby the other day in a pair of shell-rimmed
posed.
The apostle of prau Hi a
the arena of polities he was
abruptly in a disagreement with his chief.
But he traveled the country and the world
continuously and delivered thousands of ad-
dresses, thus exerting influence of varying
power.
, He originated none of the ref, n - that he
ao eloquently advocated, but it an not be
doubted that he gave a decid' d 111- to the
movements that resulted in re-tiaint upon
corporations, the election of Unitel States'
V.on iA'TID PRESS
=uxetaimetglemtatkite
thine to lower living cost by
tarit roduction, a Republican wi '
rtMrFhat‛stak._Wa acted.
W‛ rut taxes down.” —
1-------- . —---^7"^= |
(life behind the burs." Gordon is
reported to have eaid. "I think
Red to rt or not otherwi" "reli in
and also the local new- 1. ",lp 1/
All rights of vu1 । a ' ‛ "I' lal
herein are alo reseyyvrd.
at its dose. and the party schism that fol-
lowed his entry into polities was never com-
--- --— favorable. Practically the entire citizenship
t two widely separated fields kept him actively of Johnson County was pinnings/s hope on
; employed. single hope—and that hope/was a good
=
| liam Jennings Bryan imparts, t the cause - .
] that was debated there th* must startling {rank and file. Then, somewhere in the Post
• climax that was convesvable. But for Mr. [war period, a type miraculously emerged to
! Bryan the Scopes ci- wcbl have at wie ted typify all Amen'an abroad. The eharacteri-
■ no attention. The s-ment that he proclaim- zation centered in a pair of enormous shell-
i ed its elemental importance and enlisted as rimmed glasses through which our innocents,
1 the advocate of revealed religion, an issue abroad were made to peer in artless wonder
of worldwide concern was mad, and for the J at the European scene. Even Americans re-
time being, an obscure momtajn village in i cognized tliemselves at once in this figure,
of the atthntipn I for thousands of them had adopted the over-
size rims. And, from an artist’s point of view,
Brvan to it was a convenient type, for two or three
. 1 .. ku I lines made an American of any otherwise
shape and direct the closing events of his
career, and he had chosen the Dayton trialasqleeriPt— ----- e
, ’ • i j, , 1 .1 Now unfortimnatel v, our Briish brothers oi
its last scene, with flu- certain falling in tho •U"‛ — ", ‛.1 -
■ । .. .. , the m u are faced with a new problem. It
peace and ealm of a Nabbath day amid the I P L , ... . . ,
I .. . . .. । may be that considerations ot taste will drive
lifting summits ot the ( uruberland~, he could I- i,
i them into another struggle with the old pro-
more imnressiv* drama e ‛ " •
Any erronen rel ' ■
atanding or rep'iU"'o'1
poratiou whien tuny . i
Review, will be zll
brought to the atteul
MEMBER of 'HIE
- ' tkx 'Air n '4*
the use for publication of
he was one. of the great wrld’figures of his
time His fame had reached every part of the | ana that thl. queen a week later view-
earth, not because of what he did, but be- ed the opening tennis matches at Wimbledon. g
cause of what he said and the manner of jthronEh a pair of ponderous and unmistakab- 2
his saying. He was the outstanding orator of 1y Nmerican spectacles bound in shell. i
his generation, and he pled ins great art • When a British king and queen for the first . I
eompellingly with litte interruption for more. ...
than thirty' years. .
Bryan came into the National arena while
crate to thiemselves, "e an
important Assue, but tittle
undenstood. except by economintw,
11 tlx- chnraetr, | torian may acord to him. he will be remem- v whom there are precious tew
mt. omi ffiSl JESSIE
anl~uueeuliarly dramatie ending ofhis,-t.Erclous: Maybe we em.
'.ic-r ii iT’ evoke wilspread regret
-path}.
if
I ‘
0
J
By Blower
'That's too bad'
MAC - anything
k SERIOUS ? • ____
in his mid-thirties, and won a presidential
nomination by an eloquent oration that end-
ed one of the greatest political debates of the
Or nobody's able to figure
Just what they Mo mean.
What woula neem to he the
tural, thing to do when .nir
thee mixed up laws geta t
Neve r rramps or overeoats. Babice
low its delicious taste.
Ask your druggist for gentine
•‘California Fig Syrup” which
hus full directions for infanta in
ar him, and children of all ages,
piainly printed on botile. „Alwuy»
shy ‘ ‛ (:lifornia ’ * or you may get
:tr imitation fig syrp.
Next to mflting a wound the thing that:
wonr inost ' 1 in is bandaging it.—Paul '
Ierget.
i monuments and ruins. -------- ------------f
| In lf»l h he finally evolved a character to
typify the American soldier, tall, long-chin-
ned, dour and hardly representative of our
BY CHARLES P. STEWART
NEA Service Writer
Ky7 A 8H I NOTO N—Congress
W pasnes a lot of laws Am im-
ponsible to understand They
can be rend in two or more difer
•nt weys.
Or they contain ronting
clauses or conflict with other 1.
City Delivery:
One Month___________________
Bix Months, cash in advance
One Year, cash in advance---------
One Month, in Texas, earth in advance-.....--25 i
Biz Months, in Texns, cash in advane2......— 23.25 1 party, . . ।
One Year in Texas, csh in advanc.......-94.00 | like the majority of men who reach pro-
Mai): . „ ominenen, Bryan possessed conspieuously both I
One Month, qntsid"oppf -10-99.00 ■ virtues and faults. He was courageous at all
30ngn“ountl"koviw,w-ekiyoneycar---.$1.00 times, a man-of incessant industry ami gave
Lan example of public and private integrity
Entered in Cleburne l’ostcifiev ns Seconi Class Mail , and moralty that was commendable in the
Western Advertising K. pi c ntativ e, C. J. Anderscm, highest degree. His great orations will enrich
Special Agency, 360 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. Ill the political and religious literature of the
Eastern Adveriping, ke 1r", nt-t" w Ralph K Mu l j nL'lish tongue for generations to follow,
ligan, 30 East Fvrty Se 31 ‛ "" r ’ j Whatever, rank the impartial pen of the him
a st ore of citie oil burglary and ( _ ____
jailbreaking charges, to , Dalras people Here
Saturday to the murder of Joseph *
Maurrer, Chicago drug clerk, for Mr and Mrs. .John I'. Jaeh.d
whoso death Russell Seott is un- Preston Javobn, Mrs. It. P K, ith
der sentence to die, the prisoner anel little Kranlson, Davi, of I».H
told officers here early Sunday las, muotored to tin- city Munday and
night , ’ spent the day with relatives
-+-nm tired of living and 1
don't want 0 spend most of my No substitute for circulation.
field or another. Thus he appeared before 1 Some sections were assured of a fair to good i
(. the country a progressive, socalled, in politics jcrop, but the general outlook was far from
and a fundamentalist in religion, and the ........
/60y0,,)
/ • A
, —A
” p
(' 1
II ffpver l^id his armyr asillc. and he hail little ' nnJersti 1lu;itia 111111'11 — wonderful- to un
! respect nr merey fur those who disagreed 11 rstane! yourseli. Tb rough the Meshes.
j with him. In his party he was feared and — -■ o — ——
. fawned upon by scores of subordinate load' —
j ers who trailed in his ‘footsteps rather than 1 Contemporary' Thought --------
risk the displeasure of the large personal .
' following he commanded by reason of his —__________
From Houston Post bispatch;
The Dayton trial, pre-.uing often in its
course aspects smacking ul the larcical, 10W.
looms to an interested world in the light of
! tragedy. Surely the sudden death of Wil-
. ■. 1 uipon its being
t •11 yubisbers
STEWART’S WASHINGTON LETTER
> [
> *
> \
t eloquence.___________
Repeated defeat at the pells, aggyvated - - ___. —____, _
by his habit of scolding, intime dimiinished i louds of doubt have given way to sun-
his power as a political leader, and the ra- 1 lursts of optimisi on the horizon of the
vages of age in later years dulled the magne- i oinercial and financial world in Cie-
tismofhis personality and the charm of hislburne trade territory as a result of the recent j
voice, but he never surrendered. Supplemen- rains. Only a week ago a strong undercurrent
-= ting his political activity with a religeus faet- of pessimism in the agricultural sections of -
or of his life, he fought on, bringing to his Cleburne was making itself conspicious in ।
■ide newer affiliations that kept his personal business circles. Farmers were blue, merchants/: :
following well recruited, and made him a were uneasy and bankers beginning to be
figure of commanding importance in one j worried.
vorld at arms, in ----
a gladiator who it is a wonderful thing to have some one j
’'".TS
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Poole, O. H. Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 184, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 4, 1925, newspaper, August 4, 1925; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1474698/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.