Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 62, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 14, 1930 Page: 4 of 14
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SUN
SUNDAY; DECEMBER 14, 1000.
the editor of the Victoria Advocate, Victor-
Christmas Mourn!
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PRES
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l’elephones
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Dr. Clendening
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9
gress to a fatal termination.
poration which may appear in the columns of Ihe
troua for children than tot grown- coin, for each, andaselr-addressed.
Lack of vitamin D causes rickets. "Reducing and Gaining." "Instruo-
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2
Whafs What in Washington
2
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17
‘Chair* Terrifies Lad
Good Job-Done Well
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cent more this year than the 1929 year to-
6
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The Question Box
- - By Ripley
9
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THE OLD HOME TOWN
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land, population, 900,430, area in
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“Many of the public improvements ap-
proved-and projected at this time are for
the expressed purpose of relieving unem-
ployment and attendant business depres-
7 sion. If contractors engaged in public works
Sunt
ternoor
The
Baptis
at the
day an
gallon
during
The
or the
the skin. intestinal disturbances and
sore mouth and tongue. It may pro-
Full United Preas Wire Service
Centri Preas News Service
Ther
Fulton
Tuesda
Mrs.
teas M
at 3 o
134
133
The
dies O
burr
Monds
2:30 o’
ner’s <
STATE,WARNWY
• DUILDUIG •
The
Woma
Main,
be he
churcl
The
ty of
churcl
progra
‘ churcl
also b
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Preti Stat)‘ Writerg,
lies are stationed at Carrizo Springs. They I
will remain there until the completion of I
the line, a matter of three or four months. I
Jobs for the jobless is the battle cry under I
the skies of Texas and wise prognostica-
tors have satisfied themselveshat the yeau
circulation ...........
Editorial and Business
I LL GIVE A )
Ducky little
SET OF FOUR
Hand-Painted
EGGCUPS,
AND SOME
SHERBET
1 CLASSES. /
added to the historical aeronautical collection of the Smithsonian Institu-
tion. "ernigih, who, like Hawks, is a war-time flyer, piloted the plane
which towed Hawks in the glider from San Diego to New York last
spring. More than a million persons have seen the glider on its cross-
country Journey and at scores of exhibitions since the big flight •
Subscribe Now For the Times-Review
one of the industries which the gov-
ernment regards as best left to In-
dividual enterprise.
!
i
|
Review, will be gladly corrected upon its being
brought to the attention of the publishers.
MEMBER OF THE UNITED PRES8
€
I
This is a disease causing softening of
the bones in children.
» a S
689
,‘V
L. • i
The
Street
Monda
circle
circle 1
A West
The
• Presby
Metho
rehear
latter
tions on the Treatment of Diabetes*
and "Hygiene of Women."
)
CA§Y-
MMONey
The
Christ
mas i
o’clock
F. D.
TALKING
BOUTM
?
J
page four
==========
CleburneTimes-Review U has extensive publig-tmprovementa
TAe,INDI ANS WERE A/OT CHEATED
By The Dutch when THEY t
SOLD MANHATTAN FOR*24 / '
dtfThey had PLACED IT at 77COmPOUND INTEREST
IT WOULD AMOUNT To THE STAGGERING SUM
0F8 16,116,333,360 oo ,
G
___ Ohio’s Census__________
What was the population of Ohio'
In the first federal census In which
It was included? In the second?
The population of Ohio In the first
federal census In which It was in-
cluded, the census of 1800. was 45,865
in the federal census of 1810 it
showed a population of 230,760.
New Delicious Dinner Rolls
8 For 5c
At Your Grocer and Market
/ Get Your Grennan Fruit Cake for
. Christmas from Your Grocer
2
4
{
THE SQUARE MEAL-the bal-
anesd meal of the vitamins—the meal
not out of cans, but which contained
all the necessary vitamins in the
_______-■ ■. form of the fa-
.a
(X N w/V
/AND WHAT
WOULD YOUSE
KE FOR
:CAR18IMA8?)
r "
Published Every Afternoon except Baturday) ana
Sunday Morning by
— Which is nearly
TWICE THE ASSESSED
VALUE OF a
NEW YORK 5
CITY 4.
Today — WIc
' ..
3, 2
- ■
AUNT SARAH PEABoD DROPPED IN ON
THE CLUB MEE TNG JUST AS THEY WERE
making Up A List of articles Foe
A box Fon the Poor, families in TOWN
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:--------------
FIVE YEAR BAN ON IMMIGRATION
A five-year ban on immigration is a pro-
posal pending under the big dome in the
fruits. In the lower right-hand cor-
ner of the table, vitamin PP or B2,
in the form of lean meat and cheese.
WHAT IS the church population of
the United States?
The latest available figures, com-
piled in 1926, give the United States
* churCh membership as 54,576,346 for
all denominations. The compilation
is not exact, as some churches report
only the number of commanicants
while others include all baptized per-
ions. . ... .....,..... T-i
48"
Prine* Consort
Who was the husband of Queen
Victoria?of Great Britain. -
Queen Victoria was married Feb.
10, 1840. to her cousin Albert, Prince
of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. He died Dec.
14, 1861.
Na
■
400*4
2.
phGta
M
it
Mi. He said the preliminary estimate for
1930 shows that motorists on the average
will pay $33 in motor taxes in 1930 as com-
pared to $20.56 in 1929. He said something
more to the point: Under 16 different forms
the taxes on car owners are being constant-
ly pyramided. And then he quoted figures.
They are given the reader. In the ten yar
period 1920-1930 motor vehicles levies from
gas taxes and license fees have increased
509.6 per cent, as compared with an in-
crease of 159 per cent in motor vehicle reg-
istration and 150.3 per cent in expenditures
for highways. Now what happened to the
re-
e*
ft
ya
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW, CLEBURNE, TEXAS
-----\ " 4 -------- 1
derway. This is the attitude of the Advo-
cate:
g Ml
Ni{W
------goose that laid the golden egg?-
-----------o------------ .
WAGE CONTROL ON STATE WORK
Chmn. W. R. Ely of the state highway
i .. Commission, who is for the enactment of
I ' the 42nd legislature of a minimum wage
law. for laborers engaged on public work
in Texas, has a champion in the person of
f - BELIEVE IT OR NOT -
4),
upa ~___
. Lack of vitamin A bringsor an in-
flammation of the ay ea, "called
Xerophthalmia. It occurs almost ex-
clusively in Infanta
, city of Washington as an unemployment
relief measure. Fhis han if enacted will be
Ohio River
What are the plans,. If any, for
the dredging of the Ohio fiver in In-
diana and when does the work start?
The Ohio river is drodgedat vari-
ous places along its entdiength
from Pittsburgh, Pa., to Co, III.,
during the summer and autumn. Th*
work is done by the U. S. engineers
under a continuing appropriation.
{
styles. "
• • •
THE ARMY‘S,World war compila-
tion is being. shaped and th* yavy’s
ia virtually completed along substan-
tially the same lines.
Th* navy’s, historical section has
perhaps not worked faster; the
army’s has much the greater volume
of records to handle. The world con-
flict (at least after America’s en-
trance) chanced to be a war which
was marked by more incidents on
land than at sea. A A-•
It was a struggle, too. in Which
txa8>P
The
ty of 1
churcl
noon a
. gram,
er.
»
(9
Areas
What is the area and population of
each of the 12 leading cities of tre
United States?
New York City, population. 64981,-
937. area In acres, 191,360; Chicago,
population, 3,375,329, area In acres,
126.704; Philadelphia, population, 1,-
364.430, area tn acres, 81.920; Detroit,
population, 1,573,985, area in acres.
OH YES I
HAVE A
HAND
CARVED
bread
BOARD
(LLGIVE!
• Diet and Health
LOGAN CLENDENING,M.CLXuUtorafTHE HUMAN BODY
Disease May Result if Unbalanced Meals
Lacking Vitamins Are Habitually Served
of 1931 will not be gloom covered or
fron hued. '
$
3
=2
And Market
SCHEPP'S BAKERY
1. J. BOWERS, Mgr.
........
‛ SAY, DID YOU GIRL'S \
EVER THNI OF PUTTING
A HAM, SOME BACON )
ANDA FEW CANS OF /
CORN AND .BEANS IN,
THAT CHRISTMAS BOX
along WIT those 7
USELESS KNICK A:
KNACKS Youe=,
-------------0-------------
CARRIZO SPRINGS’ IRRIGATION
- -PRO/^CT
Contract has been lot for the construe-
7ww«
{AA..\
IA 6
10.
€3)
$5,
SS
EDITOR’S NOTE: Four pamphlets
by Doctor Clendening can now be
obtained by sending 10 cents In
M
di
m i
.questions, nor will the estimated
- - ]}y Stanley value of old coins be given.
Answers to questions on Informa-
tior. and fact can be obtained by
writing to Central Press Bureau,
1435 East Twelfth street, Cleveland.
O., and enclosing a self-addressed,
.stamped envelope. No answers will
be given to marital, medical or legal
o
-
=—■—— Any erroneous reflection upon the character,
standing, or reputation of any person, firm or cor-
"WAR OF THE REBELLION
RECORDS'* And a corresponding
naval series of about 30 volumes are
not histories. In the ordinary accept-
ance of the term, of the army's and
navy’s ativities during the war of
secession.
No regularly IInked-up history of
any of his armed struggles ever has
tjeen undertaken by Uncle Sam, nor
ia such a thing contemplated.
The records are'available for the
information of private historians, but
formal history writing appears to be
4
acres, 44,302, ‘st Louis, population,
822,032, area th acres, 39.040; Balti-'
more, population, 801.741, area in
acres, 60.560; Boston, population.
787,271, area in acres, 27.634; Pitts-
burgh, population, 669.742, area in
acres, 31,859; San Francisco, popu-
lation, 637,212, area in acres, 26,880;
Buffalo, population, 573,070, area in
acres, 24,894.
The navy department could begin
publishing Ite records of the World
war on short notice, if it had the
money to do IL
Not so the department of war.
The war college’s historical section la
still Indexing the mass of orders, re-
ports and assorted documenta. No
one will estimate when all the ma-
terial will be ready for the printer.
in horrible fear of death in the
I electrc chair, or life imprison-
ment, John Woods, 14, spends
most of his time, in jail, at St,'
, Cldirsville, O., in a sort of coma
which his physician says is the re-
sult of hysteria and fright With
a cmpanion, Lewis Kuhn, 17, he
held up and shot John Meeker, <50,
a Colerain farmer. Woods was
sentenced to the Boys’ Industrial
school, at Lancaster, O., but, when
Meeker died, he was brought to
St Clairsville, although ’he had
Just undergone an appendicitis
operation, and charged with first
degree murder. Judge W. W.
•Cowen must decide whether or
not he must stand trial and who '
shall try him.
stamped envelope to Dr. Logan Cl*n-
dening, in care of this paper, or
Central Press Assoclation, 1435 East
Twelfth street Cleveland, O. The
pamphlets are "Infant Feeding."
You get vitamins in any balanced
meal.
What happens if you loss the bal-
ance?
Suppose you do not eat the upper
left and right-hand' corners of the
square meal I This is more disas-
are to bp permitted to take advantage of
these projects to the extent of under-paying
and over-working labor thenUhe main pur-
pose of expediting public improvements
will be defeated.”
Furthermore the editor of the Advocate
insists that the municipal authorities of
Victoria “can enforce Chmn. Ely’s proposal
by stipulating that the successful 'Contrac-
tors must pay a decent minimum wage for
labor. In fact sch a policy has been under
discussion there for sometime and has met
with general approval." Chmn.Ely started
something in Texas. Now what action will
-the lawmakers take in the coming month of
January. . ’
’^UTO TAXES RISE 11 PER CENT IN
YEAR
.This for owners of motor vehicles. This
for the boys and the girls who use the high-
ways and pay for their construction and
upkeep. This for the lawmakers who be-
lieve that taxation should be equal and un-
iform. Thomas P. Henry is president of
the America!) Automobile association. He
made a preliminary estimate of motor-vehi-
cle taxes for 1930. He placed the average
—that car owners wilt pay at about 14 per
Europe— Italy, Greece and Bulgaria.
You see It is a really square meal. It la characterised by an eruption on
tion issue—that is regarded as an acute is-
sue by the very ultra pros and the yery
frantic wets. Just now there are millions
of Americans who are more concerned in
what they are going to eat than in what
they are going to drink.
miliar foods—ths
meal wsast down
t o yesterday —
had. I-the upper
left-hand corner
of the square
meal table vita-
mlna A and D in
butter and cream.
In the upper
right-band cor-
ner vitamin B in
the form of milk.
In the lower left-
hand corner vit-
amin C in the
form- of green
vegetables and
American operations overlapped tPose
of various foreign forces. Only
recently the navy department re-
celved the British admiralty's con-
sent.to the publication among Amer-
ican documents of all those of British
origin which. In their nature, are
necessarv to a complete understand-
ing of the doings of the fleet under
the stars and stripes.
The war department will,need simi-
lar authorizations from' French as
well as English sources before issu-
ance of- its series, whenever that
may be.
11 ilD-e
tion of a high line to Eagle Pass to fur-
nish power for the Eagle Pass irrigation
project. Fifty workmen and their fanlie
4
, 6%
&28,)929,, e
8-
r '28
&g95q
a further limitation on immigrants who
migit displace American workers or be-
come public charges. Canada and Latin
American countries would be affected by
the pending resolution. It would restrict
Filipino immigration to Hawaii except in
cases certified by the commissioner of la-
bor. Filipinos are said to be shipped in
great numbers to the Hawaiian island of j
the Pacific and the planters are opposed to
the proposal giving as a reason that it would
affect sugar and pineapple industries there.
Sen. David A. Reed of Pennsylvania is for
suspending immigration for two years and
it is said that Pres. Hoover is for the Reed
proposal. Jobs for the jobless is the slo-
gan of a great number of influential con-
gressional leaders., Home first in their de-
mand. - ’ -
D. C. — Th"e
Dec. 00. — The
World war may
be over with a
third of a cen-
tury before the
g o v e rnment's
official record of
it is completed.
It was 35 years
after the Civil
war ended before
the 140 volumes,
known collective-
ly 2s “War of the
Rebellion Rec-
ords," mad* their
appearance. At
the present rate.
World war rec-
ords will take as
long.
CLERURN& NEWSPAPERS Ina
10« Bouh Angus etreet
Cleburne, Tezaa
MEMER„y-—
----------.....----- ------------ For information apply to U s. En.
236,561, area In acres, 281,412;.Cleve- gineer's Office, Federal building,
*-* ------------ ...... ._ Cicinnati,o.
yuAyeGoN* \
,weves G
Ej, a,—-
. GRAVESTONE IN
PRINCE5S Anne CoJNTy, Va . |
---—... f
I
J
4 AS SCr I ATOM
EHerec at the Postoffice at. Cleburne, Texas, as
secone class mail matter
%
s.
Lack of vitamin B causea many
disturbances In the diet of our
cllmate and civilization it is seldom
absent from the diet of adults be-
cause it is present in yeast It is
also present tn the shell of cereals. ,
It not eaten zegularly by adults a
paralysis of the nerves, called beri-
beri, results. Lack of the proper
amount of vitamin B in Infants' diet
results in retarded growth.
The little folk also suffer with
the grown-ups when it comes to the
lower left-hand corner of the square
meal table. This is where vitamin t
C, present in fruits and milk and
vegetables, le located. It causes
Scurvy. Both children and adults
need tresh fruit milk and vegetables.
Lack of the vitamins found in lean
meat cheese and eggs is responsible
for a disease called pellagra. It oc-
curs only in adults. Many cases were
recognized some years ago in south-
ern United States and also southern
I AHAVE.A,.
LOVEL_LACE
Pillow you .
CAN COUNT 4N I
■ And some 1
CANDLE /
\_ sticks!' )
W 71 5
a
28 5"
WM-
388ssn 33 i 28 9 . X f
x 2 ade
88989388838 2 . .
' in THE SELECTION and ar-
ringement of material for their"par-
aid Civil war publications, the army
and navy compilers exercised their
dkeretion; not otherwise.-
Trivial papers were omitted.
Records are grouped by campalgns,
geographically and chronologically.
Both sides' orders and reports are
Included—first the Union comman-
ders', then the Confederates', period
by period. - .
Some are dry and perfunctory?
some dramatic and colorful.
They are th* official accounts of «
their own and their followers' dolpgs -
told by thousands of mostly dead qnd
gone officers. In as many different___
HOOVER IGNORES PROHIBITION
In his message to the congress Prs. Hoo-
ver deftly sidestepped the acute prohibt--
-42
IA1
P,hs
and
- Lsezww Ee-—42
(APTAIN FRANK M. HAWKS, famous speed pilot (left), and J. D. "
V (Duke) Jernigin exchange congratulations as the transcontinental
glider Texaco Eaglet makes. Its last hop in Washington before being
5
5.
I’
F
j,
L.” i
N_-2
=7 3Lgpvava
/ "Ev,DE,,.
—__ 4
remained AFLOAL IN The water, / I
FOR 68 CONSECUTIVE HOURS "
■ ‘ ■ varetA, Malte ♦ RCee °* /
IF ))_"
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Ag
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saf- \ I
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uM........... 1
The United Frees is exclusively entitled Jo the
UM for publication of all news dispatches credited (
to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and
also the local news published herein. ,
Ax AU rights ot republication of special dispatches
herein are also reserved.
- D. A. R.
Where is the heaaquartersorthe
Daughters of the American Revolu-
tion. and who is chief executive of ,
that organzation? 7
Daughters of the American Revo-
lutlohThafnlain* headquarters nt Me-
morial Continental hall, 17th and D
streets, Washington, D. C." The chief
executive officer of the organization
is president-General Mrs. Lowell
Fletcher Hobart
EUGFIR POOLI J. LAWRENCE DEAN
Manager zditor
MBA ■,
W A "Ge j
TEXACo
r
-V—H
three.
Walnut
, busine:
. 3 • North
/Ro--7
N . -
lerms of Subscription
By carrier, tn the city ot Cleburne, per month. 50c;
per year, WOO; six months, $2.75~By maul, per year.
|4.00; six months $2.25; outside of Texas, on* year
47.00.—Casb in advanoe.
National Advertising repiesentative, TEXAS
DAILY PRESS LEAGUE, Dallas, Chicago. Kansas
City, New York City. St Louta.
1**2/
.n
1
f
l > ewoommeremRy
1 . 1 -1 1
3"22
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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/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.