Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 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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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW, CLEBURNR, TEXAS
By Cargill
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Presto!
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Regintered U. S. Patent Omice
the rest of South Dakota.
ies post a higher price for crude oil. This is
announced.the
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American world.
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DID YOU KNOW? - - ■ Ry R. J. Scott
$
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HIM
cmtrat. F’m
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regularity.
2x3
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’M 1
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$1.50.6
5”
25 Cents
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Be
Pev pexoon
4-
AND keeping your money in Cleburne
$
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■ ■
23
Corn
4
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‘—oven for ten
ike in hot
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wM.k
MM
0
. adeddkendduda A
INE-w
1y
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IMES can't bo so bad when
you can eat a dinner like the
following at an average cost
circulaton
Phone
13
CHNESE
SET FIRE
-fo BAI IS
1
I
I
Why buy your PRINTING SUPPLIES
from mail order houses and peddlers
JED BARRYMORE HADA FOLDi BE®
PRACTICALLY SOLD TODAY WHEN THS
DEAL JUST auL5 FOLDED DP ON
!
equiable rendition of all taxable values. A
state board of tax review would work won-
ders under the skies of Texas, if its per-
sonnel tracked the constitutional mandate.
It has never been tracked and perhaps it
never will be tracked.
ft
5>
1
■
-
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(
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
VITAMIN A can be used to demon-
strate how it has been proved that
such things as vitamins exist, how
their chemical nature is tested, how
their presence or I
absence in par- wmeaewa
i • r rood /a
l mihout- hemta-
tion that the ais-
___
Phone
133
eF MONE•
AND CAST
rr ADRIPI
I ON RiERS
I, -fo
k==
7 .
■
{TNis it thi flnal ditpalch tfOm
Stuu.e City bu Chariot Stewart. who
• is tourino the oountry to atwrtalu
BUT OF COURSE these three-
thirds.of three different states da_no
add up together. _ ■ "
Northwestern Iowa is modified by
' uui
J APPEACE
} Tiis
” PuRSUIN
DZVILS
pNM
than 100 prominent oil men and publish-;
era were invited by the Tyler publisher to
49P
“E
een/
ACT AS WATCHMEN
AND foom CLEANER
FOR THE BiQ h
REPDLES- H
TIMES-REVIEW JOB SHOP
PHONE 133 a
trade and local tradesman are m
mad as hornets over it.
—----<--0----------
Gov. MURRAY POSTS WARNING.
Gov. William H. Murray is out of the
h
HAROLD V RATLIFP
Editor ____________
--
MEv WARN THE
CROCODILES OF
.APPROACHINQ
DANNGER,AND
PICk SCRAPS 1
oF FOOD FRoM ,
BETWEEM ' fl
-fHIRETH 4g
"Eaa
---:----0—----
IOWA FARMERS ARE VERY
AGGRESSIVE.
-----------0------------
HIDALGO OFFICIALS CUTTING TO
THE BONE.
County Tax Assessor D. C. Earnest has
announced a $20,000,000 reduction in Hi-
* LOWEST PRICES IN FIFTEEN YEARS
PAGE TWO _____
.......I !■ .......... ' ~
Cleburne Times -- Review
Puhliahed Every Afternoon (Except Baturday) and
Sunday Morning by
caMoa REWBPAPERS, me.
108 Bouth Antun Street, Cleburfe Terne ,
litical fate. Great men have a right to their
peculiar mdods. Why not charity for all as
well as a huge democratic victory in the
ee
—
4"vntT
Tauge700 ur aomeu,
-—--yoacesatuse-me- a .2.
the economical and political trend )
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Stop Writer
SIOUX CITY, lowa.—if Siox
City were! the" metropolis of one
I
as vehement « progreshive as, nay
Senator Norris. C -_
chief thought being to win his;
P
idcal news
EuoxugooL-
'GREAT MEN AND THEIR POLITICAL
MOVEMENTS.
- America has three distinguished as well
0-
iro
d-
The WANT ADS read
WMH FEW EXCEPTONS, ALL
INSECTS HAVE FIVE EYES, L
- fwo OF WHICH ABETE COM-1
-v Pound EYES AND ARE LoCATEDA
EON EACH SIDE OF THE HEAD- 2’4
Sm REMAINING THREE.
?) EES ARE found on 65
55/ foP or the head , ARE MB
•B:FTE ORDINARV KIND "S
eEE- AND THE MOSTSEN$rv3
E- fo LIGHf - WHEN ESE
bh, EYES RECEIVE LiQHT
in IM EQUAL AMOUNT'S .
— THE INSECT FLIES
Towards and DIRECTLN
• into the source _
of illumination
EVERYTHINGS
JAKE!
♦ ++++++*******+*+++++++***************
into practically every home
Ji
□I
Gives Edge to Roosevelt
in Republican Stronghold
Ow
re-election on the U O P. tieket
without ractuany opposmgPresidenr
Hoover’a, as Senator Norris la doing
But as to lowa, I would not car
to do any betting. If I hail lo bet, I
would bet on the Repnblican ticket,
but I would stake my money with
keen apprehension.
®d
e88
K0eee
BY CARRTER m the City otctetrnet per month
Me: per year, $6.00; * months, 82.75.. .1m
4 X *
Sty, New Tort. BL Louls.
talking purposes until the big day in No-1 f) • . . . p., py,
vt'mlier when the ballots will decide hH po-( UISLUII ItJIll III I IllIH Ilf II
--1 IN f.E
--95) OF PLAqut
g22.f iE
5
$ ,
When you buy from us you ?re getting 3
quality, material and workmanship. 55
3
1 publication therein.
- —+ me- •
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTTON
into something milder, aa one pto
gresses to the eantward, southeast,
ward and southward in -lowa, to 4
westward, southwestward and sourh
ward In Nebraska and to the north,
ward, northwestward and westware
in South Dakota I have not yet trav.
eled for enugb to nay wilh certainty
My surmise Im .
That Nebraska will prove to be
generally Democratic.
And that South Dakota (though I
am not so confident of this) will
prove to be Democratic also, modided
hv the Norbeck influence—mong
Senator Norbeck is of the progressive
Republican pattern. Still, he is not
es.a . —aun
ucin
uwtovp Moe
Xuad-t
Entered at the Pobtomice at Cleburne, Texas, as
econa class mail matter. 1
.,,1 i- • This point, where the three states
his mandate: “One dollar oil is but a living meet. Is the very -center of farm belt
Happy Warrior became the editor of The
Outlook. A very busy man is Alfred E.
Smith. He is said to be one of the chief
promoters of a huge project to dismantle
1 the slums of the East Side and substitute
for the unsightly tenements modern homes
or apartments for the toilers, white collar
men and others of his native city. Last but
not least, Washington correspondents de-
clared that Pres. Hoover would journey to
| Des Moines not far from the town where
he first saw the light, for a heart to heart
| talk with the people of his native state. If
he is given a chilly reception he is going to
return to Washington and use the radio for
THE OLD HOME TOWN
3,wuce —HGsevp I/N
-MM" 4325) S-Fa 4
(449)—ov \ c
until brown on the bottom. thes „
place in a moderate oven. 350 ,
until flrm and top dried off. Fold
over, and turn out onto a hot
platter, garnish with bacon s tripe,
and serve at once. Serves eli
liberally.
Fear Cobbler: Mix two table-
A
— .... jrr^ si " w ana n of wahama
fields until certain major pipe line compan- and southeastern south Dakota by
NEBRASKA. While perhaps tend-
ing slightly to the Republican column
on an average, is unreliable enough
to rate aa at least a doubttul stats.
South Dakota assuredly ahould be
regarded as Republican in all ordl- ■
narycircumstancen, but hardly safely
so; In Senator W. J. Bulow it already
has one Demqeratic member of the
upper house 9 congtesa, and Bulow
prewiousty bad served n couple of
terms as governor. , 1
of a‘quarter per person;
Scallions Radishes 104
Com Omelet 124 Bacon Stripe 23#
Broiled Tomton 204
Franck Bread and Butter 184
IF alder( Salad 254
Foor Cobbler with Cream 284
Cofoe with Cream 104 ' <
that their omis-
sion from the
diet results in
.certain diseases
or deficlencies
Scientific inves-
tigatior of diet
was not begun so
very long ago.
FROM THE city limits outward
however, farm feeling is dominant
Beyond any question, It is a tees
Ing that any polipeal change incer
tain to lie a change for the better-
that nothing worse is nonsible, ane
' Unitea Press Wire Berviee
c, Central Press News Serce
===z=e=
14 the atteuUoq of tt* puhiFhcre. _____
MEMBER OF THE UNITED PRESS
[ Me United Press is exclusively entitled to the, Uae
L nM-ucention of all news dispatches credited to it
NPtotherwise eredited in tis paper, and also the
county, everywhere under the skies of the
© 1913 Dr W sarle 1
UP, and beat yolks until thick
and whites until stiff. Add six
tablespoons hot water, three
fourths teaspoon aalt and one-
third teaspoon pepper to the
yolks, then fold in the whiten.
Add the contents of an s-oumee
can of corn, and pour into a but-
tered, hot skillet, or, better, into
two smaller ones. Cook slewly
spoons augar with one-half table-
spoon four, add with one table-
spoon butter to the peans from a
yone-pound can, bring to boiling,
Ometet: Separate "Sn And pour into a baking dirt.
Make a baking powder biscuit
dough of one cup Soar,- two tea:
spoons baking powder, one-hair
teaspoon salt, two tablespoons
shortening, one tablespoon sugar,
sir tatlepoons milk, and drop by
upoonfule on top at the pears.
5 when we are meeting and BEATING
532 most of their prices?
o29.e.
dalgo county tax values. There is a man- produets is de-
flate of the constitution which calls for an termined, and
— why it is belleved
WE, 9nS
that anything else aa taa is hiehis
instead of .the metropolis -Improbable.
■■ ‘ That thio feeling does not shade oS
seminefe =oieierminereelmgcnoroeagern
rosvesnive ub, say
of Nebraska; ahi--
ng to win his owa I — 1
her of South Da-
kota. I coutd
guess more Intel.
Hgently. from the
tone- of political
comment here,
what its tribu
tary area’s frame
of mind la likely
to mean fi elec-
toral votes tb
President Hoover
a n d Governor
Roosevelt next
November.
I;!
,74=-
»pff 8
-- )
to i twelve minutes. Serve hot
with one cup light cream.
. . v.mrr. .........
manytptmndnsmidsnsshBorh ™t Taahttnt “wkn
1 4 P _
.... Copvright 1912. bv Cemral Piru Amnriatson Kne
entation to Sen. Smith W. Brookhart. This' state i '
meeting was held 6n the day inwhich a nuthennortohwetarnncoomr -
concerted movement began in Minnesota, Nebraska and the southeantern cor-
.2
lowa farmers started the strike-for-
higher-prices movement. Three thousand
assembled in an lowa town and drafted a
legislative program of farm relief for ।
"Gmm. e
“VAph=-4a
P>
umg" '
Crocodile Birds
of fe NILE RIVER
I should say
quate according to all the known
s facta se animals under observatioel
, showed Joss of weight and a general
dealine. When milk fat was put in
the mixture to replace the lard the
weight was restored and the animals
perked up again.
"Tard," as one of the Investigators
■aid, "is as much of a fat as butter
fat. When our Investigators found
the substitution of lard for butter
fat produced loss of weight and gen-
l,
In Diet Diajug Experiments
eral decline, they attributed the ae-
burne and all nearby towns—your message or
are sure to be read and studied by those who
erested in the things you - are advertising
price and must be maintained." Col. Carlthatntennt"ltsanttnreat’ncreeuroe
L. Estes, the Tyler editor and publisher has rather, i -should say, in this vicinity;
- coming to Texas or
Magee, editor of the Oklahoma City News, a community of mifdle men. nvinc
_. -i : on the farmers, and the farmers’ hol-
I here is a Southwestern oil price str ucture iday l interfering with that living
conference scheduled for Tyler, and Magee It by no means fs an air-tight em-
. , , . , ,‛1 .. hargo, but H W stfTiciently no to hve
will lie one of the chief spell binders- More thrown a nerioua crimp into local
- ing of the famous pulpit orator and writer, - u„
Bonnin A^eclof Loss
t
i
q
of the soil. He nr** - — ."J mw inde-
pendent candidale. LakclheUnited -Statesl
.^.ThWUrmer. .fa j" . k predanu.
wry significant sign *d the tijMea.. "res, nant sentimiept is
Hoover is scheduled to go to Iowa, his na- “urtheaBternosxatraska unmita.
tive state, to make a desperate effort to ably is Democratic, southeastern
hold hi lincthe agriculturists of the "com- ienocraticatgtq“e “atonametwchat
monwealth* Tie mav sueceed and then again, nt favorable to the Republican sena.
27 it- .iutee it torial chndidate. Senator Peter Nor-
he may not. As for the republican taritt, Iti beek. Rorthwesteru Jowa iselone,
never did protect the farmer Whether grain whiciis ayinga great deal for bo
H , e I normally Republieanly rock-ribbed a
grower or cotton grower or producer or any i territory.
of the minor staples of the soil. ' *
dependable NamlltoQlan common-
wealths in the Unlop—by around
80,000 In the.dags before women wore
enfranchised and by » far wider
margin since then. Parenthetieally.
It did haye two terms at a Demo-
cratie governor — "Uncle" Horace
Bqles-bach,inthe 188028. but -that
waspurrery" ommnepromiemomTSsme:
It likewise gave • term lo Senator
Daniel F. Steck more ‘recehtly. but
that was due to conservative Repub-
ll -an opposition to the radical Sena.
lor Brookhart—and was a doubtful I
verdict, too, which only a post-elec-
lion contest settled.
1...........
A,
the first W5MN.•
WSS HM2MM3
; Carl Volt He =
suggested that a Dr. Clendening’
good way to ob-
serve the pctlon of foods would be to
feed animals mixtures of pure ex-
traete of the three food principlesm
protein, fat and carbohydrate.
. This was dene tiling milk protete
and substituting lard for milk fat
adding sugar for the carbohydrate.
Then a puzzling thing happened. On
this diet, which was completely ade-
the Dakotas, Nebraska, Iowa, and Oka- .
homa -to withhold noil-perishable products
for 30 days.Two million farmers are said
to have joined in the program for a peace- ;
till that .lul'imt include picketing an d :2
violence which characterized early stages
' of the farm strike. Sen. Brookhart attend-
- ed the conference of the Hawkeye farmers. I
He remains the idol of thousands of tillers I
By STANTJV
W//CoMEENMAW,
WELL Go (
Y44ACRoSSHE
27 STE ETTo )
1 (fbBNSONS /
) ( MEBBE N
THEYLL \
, k WAIT ON )
3 Wus:J
When It Is finally Isolated Vitamin
A will probably ba found to be yel-
low in color. It is found in carrota,
and corn with yellow kernels con-
tains mors than corn with white Iter-
nela ' •
The foods which contain the nfost
Vitamin A are butter, cream, carrbta,
cod liver oil, eggs, spinach and wat-
ercress.
Cooking does not destroy any con-
siderable amount of IL Nor does
canning, or home prenerying. - a
42 t
—----L---;--------
ASSCIA
| has a clear alibi for his latest. Mrs. Borah
has a parort fever. Latest advice from
Idaho is that her recovery is due in the
very near future. Alfred E. Smith has not
smade preparation^ orrarrangementsfor a
R political speech in the near future. He does
not know when he is going to make a speech.
F He is the editor of The Outlook. Away back
in the dead years Henry Ward Beecher was
editor of The Outlook. Years after the pass-
-—lr
’
lER 5, 1932 ,
f WELL,THAT M
CLERK WA$
HEEEAEMINBTE
* AGo - TH ATS
>TH WAY WITH
? TH ESE SMART
ALEC-TOWN J
-t Fomes: -
ficiency of lard not to the fat atmeit,
but to eomethino accompanying the
butter fat and not the lard.”
The "aomethino" is Vitamin A.
We nee then that it is associated
with fate—fat-soluble. It is removed
from its source by fat solventa, such
as ether and chloroform.
In order to prove whether a given
food contains Vitamin A the food is
ted to experimental animals, usually
albino rate, and their behavior ob-
served Two general aorta of tests
are uned. The most convincing la
the curative tesL For thia the ani-
mal is fed a diet complete in every
respect except that food known, to
contain Vitamin A is excluded. When
signs of Vitamin A deficiency occur
the animals are then fed the food
(under investigation. If the signs dia-
appear it is concluded the food undex
investigation contains Vitamin A.
The most striking result of the
omimelon of Vitamin A from the diet
ia the development of an infecton of
the eye This has occurred in hu-
mahs. <’ Ig fact omission of milk fat,
or butter, from the diet of children
win result in the condition with great
nLAANK.L/g
46s
1 - 4
.......- V" "'I--—---
I J
tie
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Ratliff, Harold V. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 1932, newspaper, October 5, 1932; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1598191/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.