Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 62, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 14, 1930 Page: 3 of 14
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CI.EBURNE TIMES-REVIEW, CLEBURNE, TEXAS
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Route Traversed by the New U. S. Highway No. 67 From Dallas to Presidio
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Observation will show that one of most progressive cities of the State up to traffic a much-needed airline towns along the route with a view
thee most fertile farming and cattle
also located on the highway.
to its early designation and mark-
between the two terminals. Meetings
Asid? from these features it opens
the route. Many of the Iivest and
way No. (7 from Dallas to Presidio.
Your Milkman
SORDS POINTS
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Sun Beau Challenges Gallant Fox’s Mark
9
EIGHT CLUBS
Lecturer
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NOW TURN TO THE WANT ADS
Atkins Lecture
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331-3% OFF..
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PRICES EFFECTIVE NOW
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50c
' $
25% OFF
Ladies" Coat Suits Cleaned
and Pressed ...
..... 50c
T
Ladies" Coats Cleaned and
10% OFF
Pressed
a- •
... 50c jip
Hats Cleaned and Reblocked .: 75c
COMMUNITY PLATE
Hundreds of Useful,’Durable Christmas Gifts for All
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2EEEEEE2EEZRREEEEREEEEEEEEEEEEEZEZE22ERE
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County Basket Ball
League Organized
IwNTAN$
On Four Decorated Imported Dinner Pat-
terns.
A regular meeting of the Latin
club was held Tuesday, Dec. 9, at
Chapel period in the club room. At
this time a set of slides, “The Oth-
er Wise Man,” was shown. At the
Rev. Robert Wilson
Elected President
Of Loop
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ENTER DRIVE
THIS SEASON
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director of the Alvarado district: v
J. K. Bentley of the Godley dis-
trict; Bill McClung of the Grand- d
view division; I. B. Gathings of ,
the Rio Vista sector and John Jor-
dan of the Cleburne district
Cleburne will have no opposition
in its own district but will play
against the winners of the other
districts for the title. *
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Mrs. W. E. Watts is spending the
week-end in Oklahoma visiting
with relative#.
Lankford’s
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Cleaners—Dyers—Hatters
Do you remember, when your
milkman would drive to town in
a buggy with two milk cans, to
make his city deliveries, each
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Our regular prices on a very attractive
pattern of Adams Community Silver, 50
years life time plate, many single pieces
such as salad forks, oyster forks, ladles, .
spoons, orange and ice cream spoons, etc.
2EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
to ' , W
Sub who Is happi
•*-- est with the beauty
of old furnishings
"or modern repro.
L. M. Hulbert and son. L M. Jr.,
of Corpus Christi are here visiting
the former’s mother. Mrs. Mallet,
who is ill and his sister, Mrs. J. C.
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OUR WAY
Is The Modern and Sanitary Way
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FREESH and CLEAN
for the
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ductions will choose
the Adam design to
give a graceful ac- ,
cent to her Shera-
ton chairs or her
, Chippendale dining
room.
TEASPOONS
(thesetofsix)-$4.00 M
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. wiuus SAARPE Kuyes
/ doRSE, wAo AAS A CAAnc To
bA GALANT Fots MoNEY-WIINUING-:
TURERECORD/
Sport
Spurts
Harold
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! Ratliff
2$
Am}
can equipped with a faucet. He /
would measure your milk and
empty it in your tin bucket or
pitcher.
# There is an Old Way to Clean and
•E Press Clothes
4—
Map drafted . by the Southwest
Motor club, showing the route to be nee mus xerue xarung anu caue
traversed by the New V. 8. High- sections of the state is centered by oare
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ABILENE
S NyM
THE KID'S PUFFED UP
Johnny (Kid) Kaidwel, after
keeping comparatively quiet for the
past six months, has blossomed
forth with his braggadecie that
would put the shrinking violet, Art
Shires, to shame.
The Great Kaldwell comes for-
ward to say he's plenty good and
that if this writer don't start giving
him more publicity the oircula-
? tion of th/ paper will drop down
to absolutely nothing.
Johnny’s in the fighting game
again. The other night he beat
Walter Gustafson of Godley in
the third round while his fellow
townsman Alvin Cotten, was los-
ing to Tom Kuydendall of that
town in the sixth. "I usually put
them away sooner,” Johnny boast-
ed. "but I wasn't in extra good
shape against Gus.”
build its team around one play-
er due to the Inexperience of the
other youngsters.
Leo Baldwin carried Wichita
Falls Into the semi-finals one
season but Leo with all his bril-
liance could not take the club
furthre. Jake Wilson took Baylor
to the heights this past season
but Jake could not carry Baylor
7888888888888888888888877 |
Phone 204
- MORE FROM ELMER
Elmer McClelland, finding noth-
ing else to write about in his col-
umn in the Temple Telegram, hops
on us for saying Cleburne High
did not have the material for a
championship team this year. He
says that several all-district and
two all-State players should cer-
tainly be considered "material”
Entries in the Johnson County
Interscholastic League basket ball
campaign of 1930 must be filed
by December 30 with ths directors
of the various districts of the
county, J. J. Dyer of Plainview,
director of athletics, announced
Saturday.
The senior boys campaign starts
this month and the schools must
file their entries with the direc-
tors if they wish to enter the
tournament. December 15 is the
last date for paying the basket
ball fee without penalty.
Immediately after Dec. 30 the
district directors will make out the
schedule and each sector is to have
a round robin card. The first game
will be played this month if nec-
essary and the tournament will
end not later than Jan 33. Where
the entries are light the schools
may decide whether they play one
or three games.
The same plan used last year is
being inaugurated whereby there
According to Mr. J. T. Webster,
manager of the Cleburne Chamber
of Commerce, he is receiving num-
erous inquiries from various towns
and counties about the "Cle-Tex"
watermelon. It seems that thi mel-
on is a Johnson county product.
One letter from a man at Camer-
on, Texas, stated that he under-
stood that’the melon was proplgat-
ed here and that he would like to
have some of the seed. Other in-
quiries are similar. Mr. Webster
has seen the melon here and says
that it is a very fine product, but
he does not know who raised them.
Any farmer who has this kind of
melon orcan give information about
it would do a favor by calling at
Mr. Webster’s office at the Cham-
ber of Commerce. He is very anx-
lous to find out about this mel-
on and to do all that he can to
sell seed or melon itself.
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Prospects for basket ball to flour-
ish in Cleburne again this season
were given a big boost Friday eve-
ning with organization of the
Johnson County League and now
apparently everything is ready to
go when the clubs secure all equip-
ment necessary for the campaign.
The league was organized with
eight teams entering and with Rev.
Robert M. Wilson, a veteran bas-
ket ball player and official, being
elected president. Rev. Mr. Wilson
has drawn much interest in form-
ation of the loop and will call
another meeting of the circuit in
the next few days to perfect all
plans.
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Steele Named
Other officers elected were: B.
B. Steele, vice-president; and
Harold V. Ratliff, secretary-treas-
urer. The latter was delegated to
draft rules and regulations of the
league and-to submit them at the
next meeting. The general view
was the eligibility should be limit-
ed to residence in Johnson county.
The W.O.W. Hall on North Main
street has been secured for stag-
ing the games at a certain fee per
night and this money will be se-
cured through a certain amount
being assessed each player.
Eight Enter •
Teams entered at the meeting
Friday evening were: Main Street
Methodist Church, Marathon Fill-
ing Station of Keene. Santa Fe
apprentices, Dairyland Products
Co., Geatneek, 132nd Medleal Pe-
tachment, Cleburne High School
and Field Street Baptist Church.
It is expected that at least four
other teams will enter the race
which may cause it being split in-
to two circuits.
------...—o ■ ,
Get Inquiry On
Cle-Tex Melons
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will be five istricts .for the elim-
ination of teams. H. C. Allen is Fisher. •
Men"s Suits Cleaned and
£ Pressed ................
6 Ladies" Dresses Cleaned and
Pressed .. ...50c up
* THINK IT OVER
Look at the Breckenridge club
of this season. It had one big
offensive player in - Boyse Mag-
ness. Magness was the whole
team. Magness was stopped by
Amarillo and the Breckenridge
team was stopped as a result.
Cleburne lost Brandon at Hills-
broo, Cleburne players performed
well at Corsicana but the scor-
ing punch was not there when
scoring meant victory. No team
built around one player can win
consistently but Cleburne had to
INCINERATIN’
Ooi an envelop in the malls
addressed to us. All it had was
a clipping of Lloyd Gregory’s i
sport column in the Houston
• Post-Dispatch. Don’t know who
sent it or what it means, but |
Lloyd discusses the homeliness of
sport writers in general and we -
have a sneaking notion that
sender was "incinerating” some-
thing.
In the column Lloyd discusses
the ugly characteristics of Bruce
Layer of his paper and Vic
Emanuel of the Galveston News
but declares that neither can
hold a candle to the very homely
Jinx Tucker of the Waco News-
Tribune.
All of which will cause a stem
of protest from scribes of Cen-
tral Texas. Tucker, in some po-
litical manner, was elected the
most beautiful scribe In this sec-
tion at a banquet last year.*.,
Whether or not he earned the
• title is not the thing. We Cen-
tral Texans can’t let such al-
leged scribes as the Houston and
_ Galveston birds talk about #u
pulchritudinous fellow writer.
COUNTY CAGE RACE TO GET
_ UNDER WAY DURING M
Phone 136
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On a number of choice Decorated Imported
Dinner Ware-Patterns.
We are headquarters for all kinds of dishes
—gift goods.
Above is pictured Geo. W. Wil-
burn, who this afternoon begins a
series of kectures on the second
coming of Christ and the Book of
Revelations at'the district court
room. Rev. Mr. Wilburn is a radio
evangelist. Rev. Glenn C. Hutton,
pastor of 11. First Christian church,
will be in charge of the singing. The
meeting will be in the form bf a
general revival and Bible confer-
ence.
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not to mention a 180-pound line
and as good a backfield as could
be found in six out of eight dis-
trict title teams.
We might mention the fact that
all-star performers don't make a
good football team every time. In
1928 Waco High had three all-
State men in Hander, Pruitt, and
Leyendecker. Waco did not win the
district championship because
Waco did not have a capable back-
field.
Cleburne had a star center in
Hagler, a star tackle in Field and
a star backfield in Brandon. The
other members of the team were
not sensational players. Brandon
was the big offensive threat and
Cleburne’s line was all right but
Waco had a better balanced team
and so did Corsicana. And it's
balanced teams that win titles.
to victory over Texas, the club
with three backfield stars in-
stead of one. Redman Hume al-
most won for S.M.U. over the
Army one time but Redman
could not carry S.M.U, to a
Southwestern Conference cham-
pionship. And you’ll find it that
way all along the grid-iron
trail.
*
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Delivered to your home in van- a
ous size bottles—sanitary—that J
good pasteurized Grade “A” Me- £
Donald’s Milk.
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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1930.
ft t i i i i r - i r i I t i i i r i i i r it ’ 20—
By JACK SORDS
- Central Press Sports Artist
GALLANT FOX, just going into retirement after setting a record
for money won on the tracks, already, has a rival, and a formidable
one. 2 . ’
Sun Beau, star fiye-year-old owned by Willis Sharpe Kilmer, has
won 3272,000, and is entered in two rich New Orleans stake races and
may also enter the Agua Caliente, $100,000 handicap. Success in .the
last named race or the two first ones would put Sun Beau’s mark abow
the $341,000 record of Gallant Fox.
If Sun Beau wins all three his total winnings would top $400,000.
! McDonald’s
I Jersy Dairy
15
8
GEO. W. WILBUR
ardawNIN
ormumeenavaqA
ctebun
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eRosa $8
EKKomasawdan
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OMANCHE
same time Mrs. Snyder read the
story. This unusual and entertain-
ing feature was enjoyed by every-
one. • -
Plans were made for the forma-
tion of a mixed double quartet
composed of Latin club members.
Much appreciation was voiced
over the decided cuccess of the lec-
ture by Miss Atkins, sponsorer of
the club which was given Friday
night, Dec. 5.
-o—
CENTRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST
Roy E. Cogdill. Minister
9:45—Bible stdy, a class for ev-
eryone. " •
10:50—Preaching and communion
—sermon theme, "The Parable of
the Talents."
8:45—Service for Young People.
T:00 Evening worship. sermon
theme, "What is Truth?”
Hie public 4s cordially invited
to attend these, services and Wor-
ship with us.
-----------------o - ■ ■ ■
Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Leonard
will spend Sunday in Arlington
where they will attend the-twelfth
district convention of the Ameri-
can Legion.
■ \---o--------------
Ray Brandon, Tom Fitzgerald,
Wilbur Squyres and R. B. Roper
attended the Amarille-Corsicana
* game Saturday at Corsicana.
Miss Mary Jane Ridgeway of
Fort Worth spent Friday evening
here visiting with frienda.
———O——
Miss Iva Dewalt of Joshua spent
Friday in Cleburne transacting
business.
3 \
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• MUll EXu s
Q«AIa
are being held at many of the Ing aa a Federal Highway.
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 62, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 14, 1930, newspaper, December 14, 1930; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1557620/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.