Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 259, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1932 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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OFFICERS CHARGED WITH MURDER
44
DID YOU KNOW? - ■■ By R. J. Scott •
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8-4-12
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LOWEST PRICES IN FIFTEEN YEARS
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AND keeping your money in Cleburne
Sh
PHONE 133
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nothing. Delinquent taxpayers owe the City
more than $300,000,000 and it is said on the
delinquent list are to be found the names
of many of the most prominent and wealthy
Mrs. j
la visltl
Cir ulation
Phone
134
\
V
MILEPoS
ARE MADE Of
RUBBER IM
QRMANY
PREVENT-
AUTO ACCIDENTS
——------------- —" .......... “ । 't i
antidl-
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Mu nager
Editorlal
Phone
133
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By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Preu Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, D. C.—
“Arms parley ends with promise of
future reductions."
Senator Robert B. Howell read the
headlinea, glanced at the Geneva dis-
J
r
DAILY PRESS LEAGUE, Dallas
' v York. St. Louts.
=-
te
Nul
Pi FROLEUM AND ITS RAMIFICA-
J. Meals of Fort Worth
her mother, Mrs. W.
• y ■
MUST WEAR. WHITE,
FALSE WHISKERS AND A
bone crown on ASE
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1^5.^
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ms
CHBSER, IS AWAKENED 87 •
The royal flatterer, His
, VALET 15 THE HEAD EXEcu-
WONER AND THE SACRED
“hCowis SLEEP INIHE
EROYAL BED IFTKEy
ageous and justice-loving, sent the price
of oil from nine cnt.a 1
Wr‘
hi
of education. It is a high mark of credit.
— - - o--------
GOV. ELY FALLS IN LINE.
Gov. Joseph B. Ely of Massachusetts,
outstanding and hard fighting leader of the
Smith forces at the Chicago convention,
will go down the line until November in the
New England states and elsewhere for
Franklin D. Rooesyelt and John Nance Gar-
ner. Ely is the king of the democratic war-
riors of Massachusetts. He was elected two
years ago. Now'harmony reigns in the dem-
ocratic camp in the Old Bay states and else-
where. Mayor James J. Cur lee of Boston,
who led a forlorn hope for Roosevelt in the
primary election for delegates, has pledged
his support to Ely and the state democratic
organization and hand in hand they will go,
■so they hope, to victory in November.
HAROLD V.-RATLIFF
Editor
ED WURGLER,WHO DELIVERS
WASHINOS Fe HIS WIFE,CAME
Ab-
pg When you buy from us you are getting
quality material and workmanship.!
I
4 I
FACE FWO
■
Cleburne Times - Review
/ blished Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and
. .. . Sunday Morning by
OLEBURNE NEWSPAPERS me.
- . IPS South Anglin Street, Cleburne Tex—
perlences down to a sucoeeding gen-
eration than an individual can be-
queath his experlences to another in- •
dividual. Qur generation decidedly
does not want war at present, having
recently experienced one and fully
comprehending the suffering which
war entails, but the next generation
will. not comprehend it with any
1 8 I
I £ 1
R I
NI
L ■
.uuf
. ubligauon theren.----------—--
TERMS of subscription
’ T CARRIER in the City of Cleburne: per month,
sos r r year, $500; six months, $2.75.. •
"ir ail per year, $4 00; six months, 82.20; out-
stde i! Texas one year $7.00—Cash in advanoe.
Aspirations of Negotiators
At Disarmament Conferences
Admired by Senator Howell
HELP
THAT AGENT
WHO SOLD 5
ME THIS. $
COULD PUT?
- UP IN 5
2 TWO $
fcJERKS,
IH
. By CargtU
THE OLD HOME TOWN
37
2026
Madamoiselle From Armentieres! aiaxnic.
—H—-
5 ■ 1 -
- Mt
if I
q -
UP? ,1deamcc2•*46m625753*5F%
ButrettheraorMMMKehef/EMdbihmM
Although the city of Chicago ewes James D. O’Reilly, municipal
electrical inspector, more than $860 in back pay, his house has been
sold at auction because he did not have the funds to pay the city
<84 which he owed in taxes. O’Reilly’s house to show* here.
.worthy aspirations, which we must
respect, even though we consider
Wiem thoreeghly inipiecGo——
"ARMAMENT reduction to difficult
enough, to begin with, between
neighbors who consider one another
W"
1 1
.50 J d v
5s8a
SO, YOU EXPECTED
ME To RISK MY
y NECK SETTIN’
THAT FOOL CONTAPTON
UP EVERY TIME I
WANT TO I ISON
7kE
Le2
.4 A-
e—
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y 2
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rights as well as their pockets. He 4s for
the conservation of natural. resource
wealth which wns the heritage of the Txas,
people. Now get this: _ ——-----2--
Texas is sending to Chicago each year
the equivalent of 2000 tons of bitmuinous
coal—not that it is shipping so much coal
but that the natural gas from Texas fields
piped to the Western metropolis equals in
energy value thate amount of coal. Elmer
H. Johnson of the university bureau of busi-
ness research, who is .responsible for that
calculation, declares that in 1981 Texas
furnished 25 per cent of all natural gas pro-
duced in this country—and that it wasted,
by dissipation into the air, more than it
"This to approximately the aitua-
tion in Europe, except that there a
multiplicity of armed campa exist 1
"The argument that poverty is to-,
gurance against war to not always
Bhte to accept, either. There have
been instances in which poverty has
■iHven natlon^to tight, far aalleg—ha
the form of another nation’s wealth
These four officers of the Nassau county, Naw York, police force
have been held at Mineola, N. Y. on second degree murder charges
due to the death of a prisoner from alleged “third degree" methods.
They are, left to right, Detective Charles Zander. Detective Leslie
Pearsall, Lieut. Jeue Mayforth and Detective Chaces Wesser.
HOW CHICAGO IS GETTING EVEN
POVERTY BRINK.
Chicago has an army of unpaid school
teachers. They have declared war against
'the Cermak city government. In 15 Bsopthq
they have received only five and one-half
months’ pay in cash. Chicago city owes
them $28,000,000. In the face of facts other
billions of dollars"
, in the general revenue fudof the state.
,2
t. »
kU
( saALUAM! EXPLAIN
I THE DRESENCE OV
I THiS PEKSON:
NEMBER OF THB UNITED PTRSS
inted mas heselustvely entitled to. th•ue
--------n of el aowa dispatches credited ta ii
eherwiseczeditedtnthpeper,end-adee-tae
0
: *
red at the Postoffice at Cleturne, Teras as
; class mail matter. -
miumr’attair proclaim the ^orlvs
^a£ri^»%isb«f^mr%v— drrnn
committee dwells uppp the needs of
Uncle Sam’s ssa establishment, with
no indication that Senator Howell’s
autos is accelerated a count a minute
The tact remains that the Corn-
husker solon is "better acquainted
with the history of war than any
other member of the senate.
Annapolis-trained, his knowledge is
a professional's
Is it his judgment, then, that dis-
armament conferences are "the
trank," so to speak ? --------------------
"They’re not altogether *o intend-
sA" answered the senator, qualify-
ingly. "On the part of some ot ths
folk who share in them, they un~
dubtedly represent genuinely ven"
Me-0
9c4.
°gh
church will be held under the
Baptist tabernacle beginning on
Monday, Aug. 8.
Mrs R, O Bennett and son,
Hugh, Misses Jimmie Trull and
Georgia Mae Hall attended the
short course at Texas A. & M
College last week. ,
Mrs. Frank C. Coombs of Lub-
bock, who has been visiting her
parents, Mr and Mrs W H. High-
note, has returned home
Mrs. Don Tolbert of Dallas was
here last week visiting her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs W. T. Kincaid
Mrs Weaver Barnett and son,
Ewing of Briscoe are here visit-
ing her parents, Mr. and Mrs W.
patch under-
neath them and
smiled—not cyn-
ically, for the
Nebraskan to not
a cynical sena-
tor. It was a
pessimistic smile.
"It aounds," he
•aid, “Ilka one of
those promises a
man makes to
himselir on New
Year’s das"
sqAOR
HOWELL by BQ
means is a jingo
. . over, the Farmer says the oil industry ae-
-a. i .Uhla, for more than one-third of the en-
Uf tire manufacturing production of the states,
"INDEPENDENTLY of the fallacy
that the abandonment of war ma-
chinery can prevent subsequent wars,
there is at least a temporary eco-
nomic advantage in its abandon-
ment," agreed the senator, “but un-
lyokly the last war left dangers
«hich have not yet been removed. It
is only natural for the threatened
peoples to remain 1* mim againet
them.
"For example, the very fact that
reparations now have virtually km
cancelled wil mean a atzonu —
many.
"to it a juncture to taped
to think zerlouaiy off
•Tito Fr—ch
Mvx——— -
• .g -
RIO VISTA NEWSse.mESarsuFkanuszorm
------ ■ Hillsboro.
ESRANGESf King
, ON EARH (His MAJISToP
% BUNYORO , UGANDA i APEICA )
• • ----- ।
"OH, the intention* of the disarm-!
ament negotiators are excellent,”,
concluded the senator, “but they
never are quite fulfilled, somehow.
"They always are sure of concrete
results—at a future session.
“Indeed, it is scarcely correct to
speak of their intentions. ‘Aspira-i
lions' is a better term. 'Intentions' la!
ASSOCIATON
/easy edA
) DON’T LET C
I IT DOWN J
-YOD!F)
one year royalty paid Texas landowners
a d their assignees were $45,000,000, lease*
: niises to landowners $25,000,000 more
a i leases and rentals $8,750,000. More-
Why buy your printed supplies from 6)
mail order house and peddlers when r
we are meeting and beating most of '
their prices? . .®
-- It is said that republicans are ungrate-
ful. It should not be said that men who
* elnim to be Jeffersonian democrats fail to
appreciate the splendid work of’an Honst
‘ and upright governor in defense of their
A revival conducted by Rev. R Mr: and Mrs Moschella Moore
H. Pric, pastor of the Methodist of Fort Worth, were recent guests
------- of their aunt, Mrs. F. R. Barton.
pf $98,3611198. The oil total is $519,005,136.
Place this in. the record:
Ross Sterling as governor of Texas bat-
tling for justice for all concerned and the
( nse rvation of all interests concerned de-
’ckucd martial law in the East Texas fields
far t he protection of life and property and
the’abilization of the industry. He won
the balNe He stabilized the petroleum in-
. dustry in the Southwest. His action, cour-
The WANT ADS reach into practically every home
in Cleburne and all nearby towns—your message or
.wants are sure to be read and studied by those who
are interested in the things you are advertising
§°
. -
- . DARN NEAR BEEAICING A LE< WHEN
S7ANL=y HE ATTEMPTED TOSET DPA
‛* FOLDING IRONIN BOAfD ToDer
Q 4M» Central Prep
guaranteed abmolutex by ts wauna
Stat** and Grent Beitai -—g-
"But put that pogoejtiom n to .
tbi» countryi" -----—— ■ ■■ -----+
• • »
"IN AMERICA we hardly make
due allowance," observed the Ne-
braska legislator, ‘Tor th* dirterent
condition* which prevail to th* old
world.
"A* an illustration, if th* mouth
had won the Civil war, it to eany to
Imagine that the two countrles would
have continued to be armed camps
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW, CLEBURNE. TEXAS
•“ , ~ 1"
- TIMES-REVIEW JOB SHOP
88
Representatives, TEXAS
National Advertising
illuminance being pfovWby the fact that point witE pride to
the second largest industry produces valued ' ' ‘ - - -
Mra. 3. O. McClanahan and
little son have returned from a
visit with relatives at Gatesville.
Bryan Herron was here from
Dallas Sunday.
-3 t
sh. M OCCASIONS , CAM BEFD ONLY
ihi l . t x‛ BY HIS THREE SACRED MuLK-
h ’ *' B W MAIDS । IS OFFICIALLY BAwlE
2 ; h, W our EVERY DAY By THE ROYAL
Hv,\N \ i
sEv%
S
"7g-4 Covyrtghit; less, by Central Ffess Auocintion, ine SO WISH.
—
* a Howe
uxzomoyzi:
sold. Also, that Texas has proved reserves
of 4,000,006,000,000 cubic feet of gas lying
under 300,000 of land AND THERE ARE |
OTHER FIELDS TO-BE DEVELOPED.
Now why should Texans stand or vote
for proxy government? Why should they
turn their backs on a constitutional gover-
nor witha marvelous record asan ezecutive
Tbr a government tKat wduld be wWiWUl •
responsibility Why shouldn’t Texans place
men on guard who will safeguard in the ,
future this noble heritage of natural wealth
reserve that was passed on to them by the
fathers of the commonwealth.
Texas first. Place in the lookout chair
clothed with constitutional power or auth- '
ority men who will make Texas first. i
— ----—0------ • '
CHICAGO SCHOOl TEACHERS ON THE
.(KNEW ED. h
f WAS IN OVER '
k / HiS HEAD WHEN
/ HE WENT IN FOR
[ANYTHING ' ,
V mechanical if
t, „
United Pres* Wire Service
Central Press News Service
A : neous renection upon the character, stand-
i uta Jon of any person, firm or corporation
2 -n mi appear in th* coluzns of Tha Times-Re.
be gladly corrected upon T eeing brought
_ ntion of thepublishess. 1 .——
nepaga u»Patmt omes By STANLEY
i l,
city employes had . pay day last week to- ikangeroub"upontinged coundPbbrac-
taling $1,900,000. Public school teachers got | complished, it still would not pre-
... - -. — vent them from quarreling.
"Occasion arising,sthey could start
'with primitive weapons, and Improve
them as they fought
+ "The difficulty to that a human
generation can no more pass its ex-
TiONS.
o -.
c • • z4 cording to the Hondo Farmer 558,000
........... !*i Texas depend ■•tn—payrekls
1 a ide nt to the oil' industry, adding that in
,—3^' s
J
; I wV ’ y\ A
WK"7AVERAE
soFu.s:
. V ARMAR
BBL PiLoTS
29 VEARS
j.
•.-k
—f 4
-- — -
Mrs. M. L. Warwick was called
to Bryson- last week on account of
the serious illness of her, grand-
child. E •
Mrs. Chas. Coffman and sons
spent Eunday with relatives at
Mansfield
Mrs. Alvis Walker and children
are here from El Paso visiting
with realtives
LANDUDS .
W
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Ratliff, Harold V. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 259, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1932, newspaper, August 5, 1932; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1598128/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.