Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 198, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 20, 1925 Page: 4 of 8
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CLEBURNE MORNING REVIEW.
Oh, See the Pretty Depot
SELF
of
and planting need shipments for
drouth
h
a
< ash in advance
ne Month, in Tex a*,
cer.
F1 :
J
STECK INCREASES
o
J
p
$
all of our holidays has no
**
of firework.' on
here,
lor continues to make trouble.
War Lord's Drath bantad
-
.thepeppy bran food^
E
+44444404444044444444*44444444*4444444*44444444*•
I l------ ---- --------. ... . —--- - d
THE NAME
in .1923, and tu the first l)c
Girl Is Jailed for Speeding
THE BEST MEDICINE
j '
•444044444440440444944444449444444444444400000
He Couldn’t Put It Off Much Longer
uni ry. Fven inth"
ing on throughout the
«3
the
been s.. inade-
arnir.
finally asked fur an ad
o'
n
P
.A
9
..
Cl
WISE AND OTHERWISE
r
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THE ELECTION
the hotel that we’ve
got a waitin' list."—Washington Star.
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EvRoPa
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dd
Contemporary I Bought
k
’ world all by itself.
No substitute for circulation.
By Blosser
MOM’N POP.
Brain Work
EVERETT TRUE.
By Condo.
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ANO HELP MOM
MAKE ouTTE
POSTCARD LIST
railways have been t
quate that they have
a
AUSTIN, Aug.
original destination
in - advande.
ah ance--
. A
l
the unruly element and eave their
places from possible looting.
MOTHER OF 6 JUMPS
I JUST DROPPED )
OVER TO SEE IF YOU
FOLKS ARE Alt READY
TO START ON OUR
> TRIP IN THE —
b MORNING J
two or three time* before to taka
his Ffe.—
man. A number of lumbremen traw
over North Texas assisted in ths
From the Sherman Democrat:
With ever increasing taxes and little of re-
4
I
e
.NvN 0
Editor and Manager
..........City Editor
e
•j
douit suvel thousands
lalnched, and it is
POLICEMAN LOSES
JOB; KILLS
W.
ve
-• .50
.62.75
-$5.00
.♦ .50
.»2 25
state agriculture department.
There have been several efforts at reduc-
wo
hej
d
•t
ibe
de
null
HOUSTON, Aug. IB—Despondent
over the loss of his job as a poliee-
_ . __________________ t
BUSINESS IN STATE DEPARTMENTS
government employes before but there
concerted move. Every voter will
La
-
k w
w
Age in its current issue.
Thy were $8,100,000 Tcut
TN-
-3
F
• { m ■■
1 8
4
BOADS DELAY REPLY
ON rm CUT PLEA
EMER YOU SAM
THE WORD- •
, MONTMOU
\. COME IN?
< ' "aeelN
1
Thirty days in jail wa» the nentence given Rene Larondenu. Hollywoce
•rtM model whep she speeded her car through Loo Angeles Reno ray*
her Cather L a bankev, somewber u> Frane
Thursday, August 20, 1925
of
en
ful
kno
thi
stre
72
-
citizen of Bryan County 16 years, I
coming here from Arkansas.
HOO-HOO CLUB IB
FORMED AT SHEEMAN
’ ' 7 ill'i '
(/L(/IIIIIIIL
till I
>>//l
■'/mi
. 'Mill
■ ke*: ■■
gem
r he nation,iowever,soutatert-thnkftt
i
■ ’
Jl , i I
46 - 13 . “
OH- INS neuREO
an easy WAY OA
%. OF IT- 4
EP
PEP brings pep.
Your grocer has
YA
kook with Favor on the statement of Mr. Cow-
an that every state department could reduce
its force of employes 25 per cent while many
could reduce 50 per cent and yet all function
ev rctt ill (
railway lines.
Those participating in the con-
ference were: W. D. Ferris of En-
nis, chairman, and A. L. Reed of
M
■ ■ — -----0----
A SAFE AND SANE FOURTH
"It's so murh better n
.‘A
era Public Service Company.
.1
PAGE FOUR _____
Cleburne Morning Review
Published Daily Exeept Munday by
Tini REVIEW PBIrBMDNG 00. IMO.
, - —
*. J
furn’shed to
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I
stricken counties will bo
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i
the—
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There is nothing more wearing than a long
rest for a busy person.—David Lloyd George.
LEAD IN CONTEST
WASHINGTON, Aug. IB—Daniel
F. Stock, Democrat, Wednesday in-
ereased his lead over Senator 8. W.
0 H. POOLE.....
# J. ADAIR------
Oity Delivery:
One Mouth.—-----
Bx Months, eash
One Year, cash in
r,K
i
f 6W
Fourth of July, statisctans bring forth the
information that approximately 1,500 per-
sons were casualities in celebrationsattending
upon the observance of our last Independence
day. Surveys in thirty six states revealed a to-
tal of 1,141 killed or injured. Death* were
lioted at 111. No reports were received from
twelve states.
It ig comforting to explain that these cas-
ualtie* did not ocCur on the Fourth. Acci-
denta from June 24 to July 1923— a full month
—are included in the survey, but t . ecidents
fZ L YE BEtN MAKING
• OUT A LIST TO-
7 IFS COME JOB 1d /
A THINK Or EVERYBODY
E YOU WANT Wo W&I5
W b-IVE COUNIED _
gk fifty so far J
of lives since it was
matter. It is a new creation.’’
it is Dr. Alexander Findlay of the Univer-
man, Bam Blokes, went into the
............. ■„ the common carriers I work of inducing the 25 members, bathroom of his home here Tuez-
of Txas, and after detailed analy- | THe officers are. W. J. Loeper of day and sent a bullet.from A. 19
sis of this information the rail- Denison, president, C. C. Langford, volver crashing through hi* brain,
ways will decide whether to grant Sherman, vice pfesident, and H. F. He died almost instantly.
action of 50 per cent on in-1 Young, Sherman, secretary treas- 1 Stoke, had been, up until three
tractate feedstuff, and planting urer. | days ago, the head of the humane
1*. O. Leslie, vice president of this squad ot the police force. Relatives
..... — of Stokes say lie bad threatened
19—Pointa of
Egan, 30 East Forty Seine J Mo t, New lurk.
net rtrn the
"r,
I Lufkin: New 8100,00 theater soon
1 to be opened; $10,000 organ now
Panhandle: City vqtes sale of he.ng installed.
municipal light plant to Southwest- l -----
just as effectively as they do now. The aver-
age citizen wonders why it cannot be done,
yet remembers all of the unfilled promises of
putting' busines into politics.
"My department is operating much more
efficiently now than it was when I took
charge Feb. 1, 1925," Mr. Cowan suid. "No
one is overworked, but every one has a suf-
ficient amount of work to keep him or her
busy for eight hours.’
With the tendency in city government* as
shown in the manager form to get down to'a
business bnsis perhaps time will bring such
reform into the state government and a con-
sequent benefit to the taxpayer in keeping
the rates down if not reducing them. In Eu-
rope employn nt with the government forms
a profession rid these people are educated
forthe plac^T Our city managers are business
men and more and more are men educated for
“Why is that bride suing for divorce!”
“She thought she was marrying a poor fel-
; low whom she could inspire to do great things
——mene wed she found he *1-
„dles of money."—Cincinnati En-
l that our
L
er in 1921 than ;
months of 1925 -
43
Seely
placed on the label of anything but
it—this new Wg
cereal with the )
tempting, tanta-
fixing taste* Ready
to serve. Chock-full
of body-building ele-
ment*. Kiddie* and
grown-up* love it. Eat
PEP for pep.
July Fourth casualties, were 10 i
than the incomplete survey shows.
pleasing improvement of the cas- j
- aowI’d attacks on person, suspect- ,
’ .uf of being Jewa. The persons SHANGHAI, Aug. 19—The rumor
attacked were badly manhanled. that Gen. Chang so-Lim," Mamehu-
Some__arrest* were made. Dur ng rien war lord, was dead, is authori-
he—Gisturbancesvartous busiuess tatively denied here.--------------------
house elosed in order to "Hap out
--- .. SHERMAN, Aug. 19—A Hoo-Hoo
feedgtaff | Club has been organised in her
It is a striking fact that the electron itself I
is a greater wonder and mystery than the fact |
that men are able to hrar the sound they I
make as they whirl in their ceaseless activity. | duction, the report came from Austin Mon-
Man made and therefore understands the deli- day that one of the state departments had re-
cate sound apparatus which enables them to dired the force of employes from 44 to 16
hear the electron. Man cannot explain the and at the same time not overworked any-
electron and its eternal movement—that is, I body. The real news was in the statement of
by science. But men claim they can explain is. B. Cowman, commissioner of markets and
it by a still older science than that of chem- j warehouses, that he wuold turn back to the
fairy—the science of knowing and understand- state treasury more than $27,000 when his
department is consolidated Sept. 1 with the
Sure - wen- Wf no thanks - iu.
- “ HAVE TQ GO HOME
.3OM00HING .
C ( I (5 ~o •
DO s:!.
water about an hour after she was < >
mished. Mrs. Williams was brought ±
to the sanitarium about six weeks , ,
0.
seed found for the drouth area.
This derision was reached at adivtriet, acted a, installing offi-
conference held Tuesday between
representatives of the Citizens'
Permanent Committee for the
drouth area and officials of six
The body was discovered in the ' ' ■ neve,
▼ ib iiuvcr
<
U_m
I
S sW
3 •i
62
/ $
es895
a compinent - te
are
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t
mat
and!
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-
ZIONIST CONGRESS ! special made 15 1-2 shoes are being
MEMBERS ATTACKED eompinted by a merchant here to
* 250 poand South Dakota farmer
1 -VIENNA, "Aug. 19—Notwith ut a eost of $20. The shoes, when
standing efforts of authorities to completed, will have required two
keep down disorder during the Onyx' labor and most of a kanga-
holding of the Zionist congress roo hide. They will be 14 inches
the anti semitic hakenkreuz tong Bird" have n - spread -©Ffire -
| inches at the widest point.
11
, j •
2.
“I am going to tell s little bedtime story
over the radio," "You have m£ earnest ap-
proval." said the nervous person. 11 am
heartily in favor of any method of inducing
sleep without the use of ordinary sedatives."
— Washington Star.
Farmer D:ops Dead 1 Republican Elocted to Congress
CADDO, OKLA, Aug. 19—. C? BATTEEEREEK, Mich. Aug. 19
McCollum, 66, prominent farmer of Joseph L. Hooper, Republican, was
Blue, near here, fell dead in a farm elected Congressman from the Third
wagon Monday. It is thought that District Tuesday by 6,641 majority,
his death was caused from eating returns Wednesday showed He suc-
watermelons. Deceased had been a ceeds the late Arthur D. Williams.
Dallas, secretary of the Citizens’ Brookhart in th contested lowa
Permanent- Committee; J. 8. Her- Senatorial election.
shey of the Santa Ee lines, Horace Registering gain* in colinties sup- l
- Horn her - -»>f ie-LulurnationalGreat-posedly- voting strong for Brookhart.
Not them (ulf Coast, H. G. Reed-of brought Steck’s lead to 12,763 in
the Southern Pacific, Donald Alien 58 counties. '
of the Mssouri Kansas Texas, W. ---♦-------- 1
F. Murray of the Cotton Belt and SHOES 14 INCHES LONG
1 A F. Swenson of the Frt Worth a RF, If ADR FOR FARMER I
land Denver City.
- ___ I OMAHA, Aug. 19—A pair of ‘
th Months, in Texas, cart iu alvanee
On. Year in Texas, cash in advanee
SC
“ IAFUNGED
& 98
Mail:
Owe Month, outside "f Tv’"*--
One Year, outside of rx*ha
Johnson County Reniew, Weekly
Entered in Cleburne Postof: ics as
latiuilal__and begged tu.tij.mu
her family.
“We cannot explain life itself in termns of j "Has anybody broke out of the new jail!”
physical science. Life is anew factor or a new I should say not," answered Cactus Joe.
-set of potentialties introt Fo into, inanimate
the‘ total—were due to so-called harmless
sparklers. Most of the victims were children,
whose clothing was set on lire by the spark-
lers.
That ought to interest the mothers and
fathers of red-blooded boys who like to stir
up a lot of noise with the sparklers, adds
ithe Temple Telegram. It proves that there
.-000 I |S nothing to the claim that the sparks will
, -6 not set clothing afire. The nation may have
1289.00 : zot a lot of fun out of the sparklers over the]
one year--..-61.00 Lillis Fourth holidays, but hardly enough, we •
1 fear, to Lave justified the taking of thirty-.
Second Clara Mal s, venyoung lives. That is a heavy sacrifiee
make on the altar of a puny pyrotechnical I
211 , 1
Sil '1
S 1 1 ■ I
igetirh
rEesz
LNEse.
_6
population ann-wr *5" —--
toraise-t’ain in general'«u every posHlVle oc-..
casion our holiday casualties art not as heavy
RAILWAY TAXES STILL INCREASE fastheyuseutbe.
=====----- ------ — +— — --7 - - --------------
TRUCK LAW VIOLATIONS
e , i ing
Just about the time most of us had ,om9) as Leen no
to the conclusion that this country had es-
tablished a safe and sane celebration of the
K°?
> - I'LL JUST SEND ONE CARO x
L ANO LET THEM Pe6S ITgd
^AROUND THE CROWD
N S----0—■— --—18
INTO BAYOU; DROWN8 . .
HOUSTON, Aug. 19— Mra Er- ! :
nest W illiams, 40, mother of five ' ’
children, drowned herself here , ,
Tuenday by jumping into the bay < 1
uu near a hanitarium where she had : ;
been a patient. < >
Ho L D©
o• Do
Le
_the place. Hefe’s looking forwawrd to having
state employes educated for the places,
are to fill, bringing a cut in the size* of the
1 force*.
nation’s foresight that despite the increase
da—aagU there
are included unless they posult, 1 from im-
plements provided fur tl ration of
independence day. Only thirty “ easual-
tie* ecurred in conne/tion witi. n eelebra-
tion, and that speaks w. II for 1r ificient
management and regulation of festi. itins car-
ried out on a national scope. Approximately
MO casualties occurred on the Fourth.
Another interesting feature of the survey
is that it is diselosed that New York City, with
it* more tha 6,000,000 inhabitants, suffered
only ten casualties on Ilie' Fourth and that
Chicago, .with more than 3,000,000 had only
aixteen casulaties. The handling of fireworks
western district, whe"
ago. Recently she hns appeared < >
----------------------------- x v 1
in those cities is rigidly restricted, and the
wisdom of such legislation is reflected in this
summary of Jely Fourth casualties.
Of the 11 deaths reported, 37—or one-third
The campaign of the State Highway Com [ •A "D
mission against truck owners who are vio- ]
luting the law in regard to weights, loadsjMie Hastings of Pendleton on
registration, etc., will have the backing oftnew Union station at Chicago When nehnn Vpeeuthescellingof.the
Irly everbody else than the violators
i s. lves, and none are more concerned in it Nldoancradtnesentiwhleridingaskyfshingbronc. Hanung
ater than in the first than the majority of truck owners who are * " a "teer in neven seconde nat.
-WM from the laws -------------------------
mfair comp tition from those who do not. |
in Denton County the eumpagin has
on definite shape in the action of in ।
fi,, r.s p garding weight and, hwl
GoSN-MULL\Ee
GET WRITERS I
CRAMP ADDRESSING
That many •
h CARDS- MT
9
1 I
——
_____• • ■ ' '!
7 —— - ----= 3v
- - X- A/
34 : - I/
$ —..... L
—E
SPpV
- 4
sity of Aberdeen, Scotland, addressing the
American Chemical Society at Los Angele*.
His talk followed a demonstration in which
members of the soeo-y heard the sound
made by electrons as tiey hurtled about their
parent atom. They listened through sound jiow wuon sue cvuuu •
amplifying devices which—maue the EO)AC 01 land after they were
the swift electrons fill the big auditorium. ready had on.. .. -
Time was when th.- atom was supposed to | uirer.
be the smallest partirl- of matter. Latter ,
ecience discovered that th. atom was divisible ].------
in other- particls, call'd eetrons. These elect- I
rons whirle about in the manner that the uni-
verse whirls. The atom, in short, is a little
R.~ —
g.)
_ "Whether railway traffie declines or in-
vi — creases,“whether rates ure-reteder adyane:
ed, whether service deteriorates or is improv-
ed, there is one thing that always increases
i... .and that, is railway taxes, " says the Railway
624
~—i
‘ Aly erroneous ref 1 tion u, i tim charaeter I heavier
atanding or rpuratiuu 1 ' y i "7', fir or M nat is a .
poration whjchuHayailtepikuponit» being ialties of a few years ago. One pauses to
Heview, to' 'ho “aticntlu 3 is puulishera. luunder what or joss in life and limb would,
--- ’ ppgrsg lhave been if serious agitation m-behall oi i
MEMBER OF THE •73 MEI IKE. I af, aa sane Fourth had not been launched .
..Therarcpuiatedti’nrt S'XXSL.’— vuun ago. Th war * inddisrrin.......
y ... Mbevu... . rs.». . J j* tk>* P*PT
~ at the local news ber.nrbhehed
" .anrighta of
herein are also reserved.
\ B
,, . 2 a‛m ■ ?
iW/tn
gy{V".
■ . ■I L II
‛ they were2 $6,565,000 E"
five months of IThemm .
slightly over $133,000.0 in the first “ve
' months of 1921 to more han $1.3",600,000 in iIre
the first five months ot 112), Thi was an *J. ! taken
------‘vance of 5 per uunt, aud i: it Lxm'd»ues at this ______________________________
rate throughout the year the total taxes ot Igistrations,and with the notification that j
the railways will encoe 1 itl,0" which (wners of trucks of excessive weights orcar-
will make them almost double what, they rsing 1oa1. bey..nd the capacity for which
were in 1917 and much mere 1-“" "0210 , tiy ar registered will be apyrrhuended and
___ what, they were in ,1916. The inernas 1 0 pupisacd.
....- -Tei.ks, heavily loaded, aremr more t
eair out improved roads than any other one
ctor rizhifntty—says the Inton Record
.... ' ( ,n1.The purple, of thewerht regis-i
value in rates, taxes were blKTaape lira in law is to penalize those which are ex;
1924 than in 1923, and in the fir'’ five months , ...ivll, 1 avy or which carry loads beyond
of this year were almost $1.0," more than 11, Hiaximum'capacity on which they pay re-
in the corresponding months ot last "a. me , cistration fees. The overloaded trunk causes
increases are entirely due to die Pole o peater injur.- to roads than those which stay
Mate and local authorities' who are supposed Within the limnit for which they were built,
to be directly under the control of state and is soundand it should be ‘enfore-
local people. The western roads alone will this , "
year pay at least $S5,000,000 more taxes-than
---they dd ten years ago, an amount, equal to a
— 5 per cent advance in their freight rates. The
public officials who are foremost in causing
these increases in taxes are also always at the
front opposing the charging of the rates nec-
es-ry to enable the railways to pay them.
-
76n4Se
w , —‘3 “; "y
VZd T"nde.
J I i
14
‘ 0 : 21
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Poole, O. H. Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 198, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 20, 1925, newspaper, August 20, 1925; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1474712/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.