Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 156, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 1, 1925 Page: 4 of 8
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WRIGHT BROTHERS
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advance
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ALLEN A SILK HOSE
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Come to Texas.
PETS AT THE WHITE HOUSE
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At $4.89
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‘Todiy
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Men’s Shoes and Oxfords
5
At bottom. patriotism is love of country.
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CROSSWORD PUZZLE
if not presently very active, business re.
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PECAN CULTURE
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No Wonder the Monkeys Are Worried
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payment# on back — -taxes
increase in
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HORIZONTAL
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32— Child.
round it with pecan trees?
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TYPHOID PREVENTION
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imports than May. But this
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month of sping is admittedly dull in
jargon with winter and early spring months.
5485
68—Honey inseet.
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statistics on our foreign trade. Tax money
has poured into the treasury in such copious
last
com-
- One Month, in Texas,
Six Months, in Texas,
Published Daily Except Monday by
THE REVIEW PUBLISHING CO.. INC.
showed larg
is not a disi
eash in advance
cash in advance
Answer to Sunday’s
Crossword Puzzle
an
1 it
i funds.
Our foreign trade for May shows a favor-
able balance of $12,000,000. The outflow of
Ladies’ tan calfpumps, black
satin straps, suede straps, pat-
ent leather straps.
4
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ply repaid by an exrellent dinner
by their friends.
it in this way:
' What is patriotism?
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.Editor and Manager
..........City Editor
—$ .50
. --$2.75
--$5.00
...» .50
.-.$2.25
... 84 00
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which are expected to offset this loss to a
considerable extent, serves to further deepen
the--ipression of the ability of business to
jIlarkie developed an appetite for birds and'
nquirrels. atoly he- has done so much day
- -
country, he will understand and respect the
love other men have for their countries.
37—Mm*.
30—Unit.
40— Ago.
41—To sin.
44—Fowl.
46 Degraded.
48—Female vereifier.
60—Cavity.
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I
ISAYGEpMGVE-N-
INTISEVoUTON 1
CASe-AEREY i
Te/unG CLASS I
. The Texas Press Association recently ses-
Hinretf "ih Tyler, and Editor Spencer ol the
Mart Herald participated in the exercises.
From his report the following is taken:
“One of the treats of the Tyler visit was
of the world. Christianity teaches the broth- •
ci-hood of a man. As a man loves his own !
56- By.
58-Piece of furniture.
60- To peol.
61—Part of a ship.
62— Delivered.
64—List.
66-Small tumor’
67— prone bee.
70.—Point of compass.
72—To exist.
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the conveyance of letter*.
7—Entering. ,
14—Total.
16—8pring holiday.
17—To regret.
18—Geninsen or gift*.
21—Egg* of fiaho-.
22—Cow-headed goddesa,
24—Myeteriee-—----
25— Aecomplished.
26—Adverbial negative.
mains at least decidedly healthy, as is shown
| by collections on the federal income tax and
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year by more than $100,000,000. This is good
news for the-taxpayers, who are looking for
- . - " '. - . • ———u——— —— -——-— m —
We will have on sale between five and six hundred pairs of shoes.
; . ............. - - ----------------------
—? Dr,J. D.-Oshorn, city health ——
) called to the attention of the ?1 ning Re-
[#Gl
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. is in new surroundings at
White House secret service
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At $1.00 -
Children’s brownsandals, pat-
ent leather sandals andstraps.
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At
At $1.19
Children’s brown play oxfords,
patent leather sadals and Bil-
liken straps.
We want to sell out completely in three days
.Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday
At $4.89
Patent and blonde kid straps, ‘
black satin pumps, patent
... leather pumps with Spanish
heels and block heels.
NENWRMOK#Ys /
XWWM /
{. WAMENQ /
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than they have for any recent month. This
year’s excess of gold exports over imports
amounts to but $112,274,691, as compared
with an excess of imports over exports for
1924 of $381,905,595.- ost-but
about one-third of the gold we gained last
year, and with indications of approaching
• The time has’come for builders
and architects to look further than
mere mechanical safeguarda against
overload* and streesea, in planning
and erecting building*. They
shuld give definite protection
.Against the spread of’ fire.
62— Malo cat.
55—Earthen drinking eup.
64 -Native.
the home of a
I
s
; The magnificient contributions of busi-
: ness to govermht support is shown in other
operations of the jneonie tax besides nrdi-
nay collection. Refunds on tax payments,
which indicate large amounts paid in,reach-
ed by June 1 the handsome sumf $132,-
000,000. Though this represents a loss to the
treasury, it indicate with what generosity
expensive and exhaustive disease, when
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Ladies’ black satin straps, pat-,
ent leather straps, black kid
straps and oxfords. tan calf-
skin pumps in low heels, mili-
tary heels and high heels.
—-- — o — - -
PATRIOTISM
Its basis lies in the defies •
what is necessary for its welfare. This love
_Smithyille-Wethbegimom
way from Gidding to Waelder.
-------- $1.35
Service silk in finest Jap thread
silk, full fashioned, black, gun :
metal, airedale, polo, Russia,
Beige, Aztec, chestnut, navy
in vance
ad vh nee- -.
________ J
Contemporary Thought
=,
Cavell said, “This I would say, standing as I lend of the fiscal year on June 30, will see
do in view of God and eternity; I ralize that collections reach the total of $1,775,000,000.
' when congress convenes in December. And
I it is no less encouraging to business.
T
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At $2.89
— Ladies’.white kid straps, black
satin pumps, tan kid straps,
black kid straps, brown calf
Qxfords, with flat heels, mili-
tary heels and Louis heels.
Abilene—Contract let for new
is patriotism, and then proceed, to .answer
-Charge estnblished by law for 7;^
pure, would not stay home and has been giv-
. • । en up as a hopeless, case, while Paul Pry, the
t the family and ! Airdale pup, became so officious that he had
------ _ — Ito be muzzzled. --
1.oi home has expanded through-the centuries [ —-------0------—. *
Men s shoes and oxiords, tan
calfskin, bhack calfskin and
black kid, values up to seven
dollars.
tinging indication. The
man on the. outskirts of Washington.
The cat is .the third. White House pet to
We are closing out all ladies’, misses’ and children’s pumps, straps and oxfords in whites, blacks
and tans; also men’s shoes and oxfords in browns, tans and black.
Rerstly published figures- bhow—
that food pricea in 1924 were 61
per cent.* above 1913 level,while .
cost of electric current in 1924
was 6.6 per cent below the 1913
level.’
One Year in Texas, eash in
Mailt - —---
One Month, outsiele of Texas
One Year, outside of T xa* -
-I.......... 1
Member C. I. A. Faculty Dies
DENTON, June 30—Word wap
received here of the death Satur-
day night of Min* Mattio Beth
Morgan, a member of the faculty
of the College of-Industrial Arts,
which occurred at the home of her
parents in Georgetown. Mina Mor.
fan was 33 years old and had been
a member of the college faculty.....
fer five year*. She formerly taught
in the Fort Worth schools.
a erm n try without moisture, the one being
dependent on th6 other. Out there at Mart ________ ______ ... ..
. they ara putting in * -bigleke; whynot vnr«- nx ports will "proven drain upon our bank 30— To administer.
*khib|tin'n ‘building ia XalT
Ese- I
a*
then a city or state where great businesses--Ir
are transacted, and t inally a country inhabit- :
... sesi by millions of people, with their institu- i
tiOns, traditions and ideals. Why should it i , ,_____...... .
stop with a country: survly it should not. | BUSINESS HEALTHY IF NOT ACTIVE .
hot. should embrace 'all mankind in all parts ;
At $5.89
Ladies' white straps and
pumps, black satin D’Orsay
pumps, patent leather step-ins,
blonde kid pumps, black kid
oxfords with block heels and
Spanish heels.
31- Dryoun l.
35—Point of eompass
36—To cut wood.
38—Ta deelere solemnly? —=
41—Gossip receiver.
42—An allowance.
43—Basket twigs.
44—Carmine.
46—Purifier.
47—To knock.
49—Force producing hypnotism.
50—Friend.
51—To place.
53—Behold.
54—Nothing.
55—Geographinal drawing.
At $3.89 —
Blacks and browns in dozens
of styles, values up. to six dol-
lars. -
74—Avenue*. :
VERTICAL
1 1 — Portion of time.
■ 2—Burden.
—a—Mug.
. —Seventh note in scale.
1 g-Skiu, ’ ——---—
1 6—Piece of mechanism.
j 8—Fishing / bags.
1 9—Combustible fluid. ’ '
' 10—Bone. ___________ - - 1
Ilt^- SIlVfT HHrale.
| 12—An inert gaseous element .
13—Less mature?
)5 itenter. 1
: 19— To tug.
20—Cluster of knots in wool fibrer
—=+ 23— Brunkare:------------------
25 - Forge pattern bloek.
27- Pertaining to matters of cur-
1 ' rent interest.
29—Dressed.
31—Rowed.
33—Special kind of fishing.
34— Almost a donkey (pt.f
35—Pertaining to the nose. —
gold does not seriously subtract from this
figure. We lost something less than $2,000,-
(MM) on this account. Experts and imports of
ihe prerjons metal more nearly balanced
ISFnd"
—wogk-
se--
will serve to guarantee againaLTufcfition..
ntgr- fa5000
•a8ks V
Aa0S fPce 1
N58go Evs,=
Re8egee
supply the government with necessary
-—At $.89
Satin pumps, golf oxfords, pat-
ent . leather straps with low
heels and military heels.
a trip into the country, .where water from
an- unprotected source was drunk. Tourists,
campers and picnickers should take precau-
tion of boiling drinking water from an un-
certified source before drinking. Typhoid is
J™
5
Do you know what patriotism is? The and night prowling around, the White House
chances are that most of us do. Although we ,' -rounds lookinjrfor prey that Mr. Cbolidge
#may not have made as complete a study of slerided"to give him away.
the subject as we might have nor indeed as
we should have, nevertheless we know that
patriotism is first of all love of country.
1u. Ranger Times asks the question what
a trip Friday morning to the Butterfield
Pecan grove, perhaps the largest in - the- -business is able to meet its tax obligations,
world, containing a thousand acres in pe-
can trees of about 12years growth, valued
“at $1,000 per acre. Mr. Butterfield and his
charming wife courteously showed the visit-
" " ors over the plantation, which is one of the
wonders of East Texas. The acres of pecans,
---------—------same month last- year. —Exports were $370,-
4fer, -has- +0,000 as compared to only $335,098,701, im-
ports were $328,000,000 compared to $302,-
987,791, or a difference in the whole volume
of trade of nearly $60,000,000. Though May
of this year registers such gains over May
1924 all the months since last November
peaches, tomatoes, berries, melons, roses, etc.,
seen in that'section of Texas means that the
■ people are utilizing the soil to raise products
1 best adapted to it, and make it pay.’
That’s a million dollar pecan orchard. .Here
in Central Texas are magnifi ent pecan
growth, adds the Waco Times Herald, But
we need more pecan groves. Along Waco
creek there might be growing ten thousand
pecan trees, more or less. Every land owner
; along the Brazos and the Bosque should be
growing pecans. A country without trees ia
ti
4
57-Period. • •
59—Gniter.
61—Meditate*. ammdjef
63—Mixture used in making beer.
•-----
69—Obliterates.
fail to mensure up,to official requirements.
' Tige, a feline of an unusuially dissolute na-
cd water supply is still the mst prolific’
medium - of. iyphoid. infection, notwithstand-
ing the fact that a greater percentage of the
population resides in cities where the water
supply1- ordinarily is safeguarded in this re-
spret. Most of the Dallas ‛ typhoid cases have
arisen among residents of districts not served
by city water mains. Typhoid today is a dis-
<use that is almost altogether confined to
such sections, thanks to the modern methods
of purifying water in city water systems.
There are two other mdiums for typhoid
infection to which users of city water are not
immune. These are infected milk and infected
food which may cary the germs by reason of
unsanitary conditions in dairy barns, or in
handling or by reason of exposure to con-
tact with Hies which transport the germs.
There is but one source for typhoid germs,
and that is excretions from the digestive
tract of human beings actively or dormant-
ly infected with the disease. Thus it can
be seen that filth is the only reason for
—----—i -ZZC.C.... A _
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CLEBURNE MORNING REVIEW.
- "gfti
. dtymhoi
ANebraska eoHgprsident has pregerib- )
That last May was so much better than May
1924. and yet worse than the preceding
months back to November, 1924, is proof that ... - __c -----
business this year has every chance itoequal,86s0ia , bet:
if not exceed, its record 6T last year.' T" —5
---—0--------—
A group of Honey Grove fiddlers recently
made a trip up into the state of oklaloma, ’ l’resident and Mrs. Coolidge are having
where—they—srremr -thir—t-rr-mh- all the -haTd.hlel; with their pets.
way from Boswell te Hugo. They were am 1, Blackie, coal black White. House cat, has
ervel them incurred official disfavor and has been shorn
of his rank. Although fed .plenty of choice
| -etarps of food from the .president’s table.
28—Opening in a fence.
balance there is no need to fear that 011 r 29—To hn «jek s---
vaults. / - 4
The May figures for our foreign trade ex-
ceed by substantial increases thos for the
ed the dress for women in the school, but he
can't restrict their thinking.
. .I j. - --------------- {• — .
A New York legislator- would make hypo
crisy-a misdemeanor. Wiiat, dot s he want'
to make us build new jails?
» ” । it is no worse, and in the heated period it
There haveberno heartteaths in Texas as j is terrible punishment. A healthy suspicion
a result of the recent heat wave. At the same oftll imaccustomed sources of food and drink
-■ time, hundreds of deaths haveocrured in the .js thy best protection against infection.—
— North ’and East Troniteforridwather. . —____________
to cover first a cave or tent, then a village, 1r
Dallas—New Irwindell, grade
school, costing 810,000, under con- '
•truution.- - . . ——t
is a faet, physicians say, that most cases
— .. id fever developing among ressi-
dents of eities, have a previous history of
patriotism is not enough. I must have’Toshat- 1 With this sum in sight, it is confidently pee-
red or bitterness toward any one." dieted that receipts will exceed the estimate
Patriotism is love of country.. Expressing । made prior to the beginning of the fiscal
ritselfin loyalty to the ideals' tor which the j ** - *nnem "hi — 2
i country stands. If these ideas are not worthy !
then patriotism has always demanded revo- a substantial reduction of their obligations
lution as the right of the people.
«
Wednesday, July 1,19
First come, first served. i
Any erroneons relit
atanding or reputat iou of
poration which may atpwat
Review, will ’ be : •
brought to the attont 111 <
O H. POOLE.....
H. J. ADAIR......
City Delivery:
Oao Month________
Six Months, cash
Ono Year, cash in
---- ###-4+4++#—4-4*+ ++--#+8-——tphsenf-thpetertinmof-the-pnbticsagainst
The ' Associated P'rns i- ••.,< lipdvely entitled to j1hi disrasc, which is asliseredit to’anycom-
the use for publication of ill. "IW- dispatehes ered- ! mtmit x. , Adequate protection of food sup-
ited-ta-it or not oth'rw ult in the paper -plies against flies forms another phase. In-
and also the ‘tea news le n-in blishe. 1 , , ? ' . .. ’ 2-f
„ . " , . ats... divilualrrcantions in the matter of water
All right* of publiatin uf.swc1a1 dtxpM-h'H | 1 ----------- H-f
karein“areatresea-------------——=---iWrir: where- the citymins are not avail-
..... ...... -. __• ’ able, form the third phase. Together the three
The Big Shoe Sale
For vr first day of July, the e romyword puzzle should be easy.
Here if is, with words you should bo able to discover without the
se of a dictionary. ■ . •
.........8 75
............
your... 81.00
From the Wichita Falls Record-News
A 6—--58977N
I MOORIST DRIVES 2
A E—CBILEN—2, 4
FE.5 v-gesames
, -X
“Today's sage of patriotism is almos in-
riably yesterday's table of sedition.
Un the day of her execution as a spy. Edith amounts that it is now estimated that the
Entered ip Cleburne Potoif '< a* Secoud Clasa Mail
Wo* tern Advertiaing Kapfewtahhe, e Anteron,
Bpecial Agency, 360 N. Mi higa Ayenne, Chicago. 111.
Eastern Advertising, Rrpr -nfative, Ralph I. Mul-
ligan, 30 East Forty Seon Stre 1, New York.
Johnson County Review, Wewhly
upon the charaeter, . u
erson, firm < r cdf- typhoid.
th. rolu/: • The [ Rigid Aanitary regulations imposed upon
•I ' ) Iis. 7. hanilers f food ami milk, kept efficient by
trequent and thorough inspection, form one
' view, * a recent editorial ajumrine in the
• Fort Worth Star Telegram. It . n line with
i" a recent interview given by Dr orn, re-
garding typhoid prevention and liscusses
that subject in a clear and wise manner.
This is the editorial and it is reproduced be-
cause it is worthy of your careful considera-
- tion:
Discovery of some 50 cases. of_typhoid
fever in and about Dallas has resulted in
turning up the usual medium of infection
which physicians find when they investigate
_ the presence of typhoid germs. Contaminat-
K
we"-
FM-
Poummunnannaygvwnurustamuraaxuuiudamaarn ' udndradnixaocamu » VI
PAGE FOUR
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Poole, O. H. Cleburne Morning Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 156, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 1, 1925, newspaper, July 1, 1925; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1474669/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.