Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 251, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 22, 1931 Page: 2 of 6
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW, CLEBURNE, TEXAS
Whas What in Washington
The Real German Heavyweight Champion
IND HIS
wheat farm-
I
M
61$
G
,,
2%
t
cotton, or
stipend varying from $14 to 125
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4 i
Rep. Charl
Hahn N. faru r .for
COOLIDGE RETURNS TO THE FARM
• ' ‘ • *
Capital Dictator III
I
nt. It is true ; -
=
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%
!
5
1
Dr. Clendening
the old Coolidge farm, in Ply-
Coolidge have been passing
a
short vacation.
4
242
ME TOWN
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THE 0
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NOW TURN TO THE WANT ADS 1
Cal! Circulation Department Phone 133
ma
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230
53
memm •
AFTER. FEEDING
ON LIMING CORAL
.MHE PARROTFISH
TEXAB
Kansw
deuta
the pr
k i
r
I
i
f"
g ■
I
UPENDS IN MID-
WATER AND HOLDS
tfSELF MHONLESS
WHILE A SCHOOL. .
DF WRASSE
CLEANS THE LARHE
fish's HE.ad OF ALL •
ADHERING DEBRIS
1
7A88
! 4 NK
(•
t
Go
backed
•masaersmm
mexmm
industrial plants of the 8 American com
mnweulths.
EUOENE POOLE
Manager
/
/
+ ' Do You Know?
\
venth
g)
11
/
■------—0---------
Mrs. C. C. Pattersoh and daugh-
ter, Elizabeth, MFs. E. M. Wilson
and Mrs. Ida Cleton of Forp
Wrth were guests Thursday of
Mrs. John A. James.
L
) /
8
Kis DANQEROUS
-ro LOSE VOLR
KEMPER- BECAUSE
HE HEART QALLOPS
AND NHE BLOOD )$
FOECED Af’SuCH
SPEED AND PRESSURE
To THE BRAIN THAT
ance companies. Heha all the figures. He
1
Pi
uai
8 1
an
f
5,"2
every two weeks (not weekly) and
out of that has been paying virtually
everything he has made to the com-
pany store, and for rent, and then
strikes, he has no reserve capital. He
is evicted from his shack and his
neighbors are forbidden to help him
under penalty of discharge and evic-
tion. '
It Is likely, therefore..that striking
miners and their familles have been
gesa
e
<
1
If you are going away, keep up with
your friends at home by letting the Times-
ki, view follow you.
, N
X
W.
:8a26- -
J. LAWRENCE DEAN
Editor
66
Washington’s most famous dow-
ager, Mrs. John B. Henderson,
widow of the late U. S. senator
from Missouri, who once offered
her costly mansion as a perma-
nent home for vice presidents,
suffered_a paralytic stroke, at her
Bar Harbor, Me., summer home.
■
r
1ga
Timd
Mr. and Mrs. John A. James
and family and Mr. and Mrs. T. L.
Bramblett and family of Fort.
Worth returned Monday form Gal-”
veston where they spent the week- ,
end. .
v a lrge umber of farmet* ol his
A VESSEL _ '
MAY BuRsT I
33, • ,
\,
hands, the arm-
pits, the skin be-
i ween the legs
(the crura), the
face and neck
-areatso likely to
be places where
It appears. If a.
person gets the
fungus , which
causes it on tbes
lingers, and espe-
cially under-the
nails, he is like-
ly to transmit it
by scratching to
any part of the
body.
It goes by va-
inited Stales "was mortyaged by install- .
ment ales statements of popular writers
ane after dinner speakers te the coat racy
J1H3)
A)-A"
(0,0o
fine. lacy network. In this way the
fungus may infiltrate the skin very
widely. It also goes Into a resting,
or spore, stage, which may remain
quiescent and produce no eruption
accidents involving actual passengers on
the trains. Safety first is the slogan of the <
rail operators. ■ ‘ .
—------o— --——
Mr. and Mrs. C. A Rothermel
and son of fort Worth visited here
the first part of the week with
relatives.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1981 <
call them."
' fa this grass any nourishment’
"Oh,” the minister replied, "there's
a centain "amount of iron, in almost
i
democrat; pledged to
: an/
Pennsylvania strike area.
Lack of Food
Pennsylvania's health authorities
term it "under-nutrition." Lack of
food causes that
Governor Gifford Pinchot called
on the Red Cross to give aid, but the
Red Cross repllod.lt was beyond its
province.
When a man has been trying <for
several years to support a family bn
__4-----0—----:----
installment sales myth
EXPLonEn.
C (' Hneh Ilf Uhicagd is veneral man-
agerror tin Natiemnul Ashociation id bin
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Preet Staff Writer
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — It was
Cleveland, O. The pamphlets are:
"Indigestion and Constipation," "Re-
ducing and Gaining," "Infant Feed- '
Ing," "Instructions for tha Treatment J
of Diabetes," '‘Feminine Hygiene" I
- .7
- -ee
• «
cannot control the produetiou of oil,
rodliiction nt wheat, the produetion oi
c-e --
f —53
mhatok
rious names besides, athlete's foot-
ringworm. dhobie itch, jockey-strap
Itch and red flap.
At the June meeting of the Amer-
lean Medical association .It was an-
nounced that It is greatly on the in-
crease in this country, and is one of
the three or four commonest diseases
of the skin.
It is caused by a microscopic veg-
etable fungus, entirely invisible to
the naket eye. The name of the fun-
.gus is trichophyton, although there
are numerous related members of the
same family. When It- gets under
A KAN $ 1S FARMER
pictures.
Fir d Kannet I* a Kansa
notwithstanding." He reported that the ex-
act amount was 2.8 per cent as shown hy
an analysis of the install ment debt of the
nation: It appears that "popular writers
ana after dinner speakers, have been placing
I HOPE THAT D12Z —
SHING DOESNT SPILL
“THAT LEMONADE ALb
the annual output of the great
the figure as high as 20 per
that figures never lie?
2
on the skip. When it gets out of the
resting stage, activity in the skin and "The Care of the Hair and Skin." I
RELIEF.
. ‛rrren E. (rcen <
Entered at the Postoilice at cleburne Texun «
second class mall matter.
msgeA *
IT IS TRUE that athlete’s foot
does not occur exclusively in ath-
letes, and also that it does not oc-
cur exclusively on tha feet. The
m6629______ •
GA RNER A N p TH E SPE IA ERSIIIP.
the speakership honoi, W.a1 th"
Phofogipn,(
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Johnson,
who have been residing in Silshee,
will spend a week here in the
home of her sister Mrs W. O.
Hopper, en route to WashingtD
where they will- reside in ethe
future.
.es-edshoa
.gaesse*
I 4
I V
F #4
1 • V9838
64
*8833258
_____ . .... . gefmi-7
has I ida blletin showing that less than *
thee per cent of the annual income of the
wizened, anxious and singularly old.
They are prone to skin diseases. They
do not frisk about. They simply
stare dumbly.
Though otherwise emaciated, a
starvation victim's abdomen usually
is bloated. I observed that in par-
ticular when I visited the Chinone
province of Kiangsu with Red Crose
explained.
“There Isn’t much picketing now."
my Informant added. "The folk ars
half starved. They can’t stand it.
Alongside the procession rode four
mounted state policemen, holstered
pistols on their hips+grimly silent a
“Is It true," someone asked, "that
miners’ families are eating grass'"
"Yes," according to the Rev. W.
a Nowell, of the Methodist church
of Hays, Pa. "It's the species known
as sour grass. Miners’ familles eat It
with bread. Gross sandwiches, they
still as good a farmer a hr ever
was by driving the hay dike on
)o2. ’I
83822 9’
state adofted a rolution asking federal
aid for grshopper infested areas of the
Rosebud cquntry. First they ankeu nesis-
tance to fight the grasshopper outhreak
and now aid t» provide farmers with wood
and coal during the winter? A federal agent
who knows all about the sterminat ion o‛
hoppers reported that the vrst could be
wiped out by an organized kampaivnbut
($600,000 would'. eded to huy pison
Yes, Texas rem. . the big white spo ol
the map of America, . /
'ItiOdni
ansthtnnosininers do not fnd even hungry for some unie.
S" .9
,28
, .1"a6882ad
Ma , ■ Vxtaamdad83zddi
■IF sedddeedt
. "2 02
MhjS ¥
ms ' '
8a#
' S.
EP"6
k Ik J
-vfr-o----- I
AMERK RAILWAYS ESTAHLISH \
1 NEW HIGH RECORD.
According to' 1930 report made to the in-
terstate "commerce commission only seven
passengers were killed in railroad accidents
during the yelr. This establishes a new recs,
ord, the total of ten deaths in 1927 hav-
"-08
/ 2 e L
2 1
n
Werbh,.u-r . • 4:
Pa- -
rNHAT at Mont Jolie i the Province of Quebec there is a little general
1 store whose front s decorated, as shown abov, by figure heads
found drifting Ih the St. Lawrence River more than one hundred year
-ago. following the wrecks of wooden ships? The figure on the top
of the building is believed t bs from the bridge of a French Admiral *
ship and the lower r ute s from a Swedish bareque and represents #
Scandinavian prine ese The medallion In the center is the head of
General Wolfe, conqueror of Canada. The owner has refused many
thousands of dollars foe the - curiosities.
the skin it grows in the form of a, In care of this paper,-Or Central Press
Association. 1435 East Twelfth street.
member of the next house lo dio lppublh
cans now have 215 mrmbers 21 ‘er the
democrats, while there are six ancies ’
and one Farme labor m mher Three ret
publicans and three democrat i' P" nted
the.six vacaneies. Old King l leaf li a ppi at s
U. be shuffling the cads in the cminncon-
test for the speakership prize. Maybe T"X-
as Garner would be be just as hat ol
dating as minority leader. Why shotild the
democrats load their party down with "e .
sponsibility and apresik ‘ial । ampais"
year flashing its signals of : oprneh Why
not permit I’rea. Hoover ajul th ' ubt
Cansto. carry, the load ‛
........... 1) —
grass in th« Immediate vicinity of
"company towna." The acrid fumes
of burning slag envelop the region,
killing virtually all vegetation.
Children Show It
I have traveled through famine
.districts in China. I know some-
thing concerning starvation. Chil-
dren show it most
Children’s little faces look pinched.
57AANLE
(maw partridge was FoRCED TO
OpENUPTEPARLORTODA (THE
I Eest TIME IN FOURMEAl$)
] E} WYLLIE brought HS
I BEUPE FTSOM THE CITY _
. cENTNAL 7-21-31
-------—------— . . .
MtYOR OF SEATTLE VICTIM OF
THE RECALL.
Mayor Frank Edwards was the political
bos of Seattle. Many of his constituents
YOU WANT -
TO TAKE i
A WALK i /
9^ 2 '
4 M
vg,
2 c
■ ■■ ;■ #; '
.<-■ ,. fe‛ ...
-u2e
-ge
members OF T" UNTTFD PRFNS
Tha Unuted Prasa L ■ cluively "ntiimdetth".
um for publication of un newa dipatili r .
to it or not otherwise 1 redited in tlin P Pe
the local news publicallon heroin.
(Appeal* tar aid of etriking minert
and their familiee in the buluminous
coat fleldt of weitern Penneylvania
and touthern Ohio, have brought
forth queriet at to the eztent of the
tufferlng. Chartet P. Stewart, who
hat been making a turvev at' the
coat lituation from all angler—em-
ployer, employe and the government
_in a graphic, comprehentive series,
given a flrit-hand view here.
This It the eighth diepatch in the
terict. Final article followt tomor-
row.) . -
262“ a,
' ftl
2,
Fl
BS MHE BALD-EAGLE
Z IS NoT BALD
Ke
iZTaT
Any erroneous reflection - upon Hr ' horacter
standing. or reputation of nny PI "I, of rhe
poration which may appear in , t, I -
TUncs-Review, will be eladly correptm,upoe
ing brought to the attention l Ur PuPh h"
National Advertising repretenfau TS.
pAIEVPRESS LEAGUE. fnica,o
city. New York, Et. LouH
Cleburne 1 imes-Review
Publahaa Evey Afternoon (except Saturday) and
Sunday Morning by
M1BURNE NEWSPAPERS. Ine
1M South angiin Street
j Cleburne, lexas _
MEIS-"a...
MxpK/PAESS
Mr. and Mrs! R R Barnard and
Miss Dorothy Bridges of Hillsboro
spent Sunday here visiting their
mother Mrs. S. E. Bridges.
-— ---o----:
James Young left Wednesday for
Rockwall where he will visit with
relatives and friends.
------------ ... —---------------•-------
Misses Hattie Lou and Doris
Bridges have gone to Hillsboro for
a visit with relatives.
""uuv $)
. Y
“Athletefs Foot” Seen
Greatly On Increase
i: fdwnre o| ■ < iorrria, a
just after 5 a. m. I was being pruvug „—„—
whlzzed from mining town to min- relief workers duringsthenv2tn th
ing town.
I passed a melancholy procession
of men, women and children, plod-
ding wearily along the highway in
the direction of the next mine tipple.
"Mass picketing,” my informant
DID YOU KNOW? - - - By R. J. Scott
rglt, 1*, tyicetra! Fi M - A -nc-u"
may again ba seen. This is what
makes the disease so chronic and
liable to recurrence.
The fungus gets into the skin
through small fissures, and devel-
ops best in warm, moist spots. Thus
the skin between the toer is par-
ticularly likely to be affected. A
great number of these infections are
picked up in shower baths. The
mechanism is easy to understand.
Staying in a shower for some time
the feet are constantly wet add ma-
t-crated by . the water. The water /
splashes on the floor of the bath and
dislodges the fungus, which has been 1
deposited there from the feet of other
people. On the soft moistened skin’
of the bather's feet they find a good;
soil for their growth. >
Prevention is easier and more sat- [
istactory than cure. Most gymnast- I
ums provide paper bath slippers. I
which should be worn by every one I
even while standing in the shower,
A dry pair should be substituted I
while walking throug the room. If I
infection occurs do not get your On- I
ger nails Infected by scratching.' If I
you use a brush to serub. the feet,
have it boiled e very day. and do not
use -the same brush on your finger-
pails or hands.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Six pamphlets '
by Dr. Clendening can now be ob-
tained by sending 10 cent.? in coin, for '
each, and a self-addressed, stamped ?
envelope, to Dr. Logan Clendening,
did not fancy his methods as an administra- _
tor They filed apetition for recall. When-
the votes had beon .counted the mayor "i C.Wn mouth, v,„ he and Mrs.
on the outside looking it), An idol toduy > 1,1 —n * "
the discard'on the morrow.
“A United Prens Wire Servin
v ; "a Central Press News Servi •
Ag"
qgeg
. ‛p®cor
2"- ■ -
0-,.
dh 5
m,s
28355“,"* w.
ing been the best, thus far. As regards pas
.sengors injured, only 790 persons receiv-
ea hurts while riding on railway trams.
Again the report shows that there were
SOCTH DAKOT I DEU VXDS FEDERAL 101,581,000 passengers for every fatality
SHI . i ami 9,000,060 for every accident during the f
- year Of course, the report^-refer only to 1
of South Dakota ? —
.)
3225188
PAGE ‛ ‛O
OVER THE x KCQ
„VBRLSSELLS I-
**FCATPET-LNDSNVon
M - 22 \--------- _ 11A
-t . ’ 'Terms ot suhncription
Sv carrier. In the civ “I ' teburne, ir tonth.
lOti per year ,5.00; six months, $27 1, muil P
yer,Psoo;“sxmonthsszasoutalee ot Tx8.
year »7 00—Cash in ndy /T
tr. He trucked a load to Rueklin, tii 1 eart
(1 wheat buying (-enter. Rather thalb el
the wheat at 27 cent- a bu-h-l.he ' ’ ne
the end gate of his truck arul allow । 'he
grain co spill out on thentreet as it "'I '
through Bucklin,. Kannet must be a humur
it He displayed two pictures of dpi ’
One was iabelod "Kansas Whcat Fa 1
and the other "Federal Farm Board" Ami 'j
that i what is the matter with Kana ""
gardh 8 of the plaintive appeal mart
th presiehnt by Vice P’res.harlslor.*.
and Sen Arthur Cappr imphrin the,
1 chiet magi st rate of the repuUlic to 1 e h '
infhereg to Tahilize t hr wheat market
Pekidents are not miracle makers: Presi
Stanley v
Md,-
-t> . ■
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 251, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 22, 1931, newspaper, July 22, 1931; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1557904/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.