Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 313, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 2, 1930 Page: 2 of 6
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1980.
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW, CLEBURNE, TEXAS
sot.
PAGE TWO
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Full United Press
Central Press Newsservice
Dr. Clendening
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ture on Saturday night, Oct. 4 at
Theater goers of this city and
Melvin Mass
Wray and is an under-sea produc-
ll
Bounds, to thn Co-operative Marketing as- something different.
Is on Mon-
The next picture
: s ed among other things 10,000 German let- ' way out of the Texas agricultural picture.
Diversification farming has the call. Scien-
terheads, 3000 Jugo-Slav letters and many
Greek sample ballots. The foreign vote is tific farming has the call.
By Ripley
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FEATURE PICTURES FOR COMING
WEEK ARE ANNOUNCED AT YALE
THE MINNESOTA congressman’s
explanation of the rumors has had
one noticeable effect anyway—it has
served to concentrate attention upon
a number of little incidents and ut-
terances which probably otherwise
Congressman Melvin J. Maas of
Minnesota may really believe what
he asserted in a speech in St Paul
would have passed practically un-
heeded, but which may have a cer-
It is a fact that such rumors have
been in circulation for several weeks.
Queries -concerning them have been
arriving from all directions at the
Washington offices of the Association
Against the Prohtbttton Amendment.
recently — that
G. O. P. leaders
d e l i b e r ately
started rumors
(to see how the
public would re-
act to the m}
that four per
cent beer-mak-
ing is to be per-
mitted to start
about Oct. 1.
Or maybe Maas
said it to see how
the O. O. P. lead-
ers would react
to his assertion.
2
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Wire Service
He usu-
onekind
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for a great deal of eating,
atty hasatomaeh-troublesat
or another.---—
—Of course in certain-inetao
ing a recent tour hand convinced _
farmers and ranchers in certain sections
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=--o—;——— --
SHIPMENT OF TEXAS MOHAIR TO
" BOSTON
A trade journal lets it be known that
the Bandera Ranchman and Farmers asso-
ciationhas made an early shipment on this
fall’s clip of mohair, which totaled 200,000
2D a
Ifna
Mig
22983
A-rMGOING
{THIBTHANWINNINADOEB
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evopy- A CAT - Owe esbyPhihp-0K4-0-
c RoXbuly, EATS CORN ANO .
CARROTS Ano DRwKSIeAAnpCoEF6E
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THEMPTO
189136889
RDOR 1 FHN MK
U GLENISIER.
Nltp ON HI 5
TOM OPORTO. Povtugat
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worth having, but to get it is expensive.
Other items on the printing list include one
million- windshield stickers, 100,000 8-page
labor pamphlyets, 1000 balloons and 253,-
400 campaign cards. ——e . —-a-
2
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THERE- SANERRORIN
TE PREAMBLE oi THE
COT snufON or tut UNTED States
—ITREAPS-=-E-
.AMORE PERFECTuo
weu ISAGRAMMATCAL
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■Cleburne Times-Review
Published Every Arternogn (except Saturday) and
Sunday. Morning by
. JLERURNE NEWSPAPERS Inc.
. • 10S South Anglin Street
Cleburne, Texae
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NEARLY A many people ask me
how to get fat as ask me how- to
get thin.
Both are tough jobs. As everyone
- known who has
umum ever tried. It is
suspected the -very thing that Rep-
resentative Maaa so nat-footedly
states. However, they were far from
sure of It if Maas has more definite
information than they have, they
would like to be told.
at Paramount’s Hollywood studios
through the invention of a new mo-
tion picture camera which is able
to operate on the bottom of the
ocean in synchrony with sound re-
cording apparatus and without the
protection of a diving bell. This
-EXP
-696
dues if the fat one will just work
hard enough. But you take a real
natural thin one and there are times,
no matter what you do, when you
cannot get her any heavier.
This is largely due to the fact that
the eonstitutionally thin person alm-
ply cannot stuff too much food into
himsei maveryEHfhnesbgosWTT
a dropped stomach and a dropped set
of intestines and he is not designed
Entered at tm Postotrice at Cleburne. Texas, as
second class ma matter
EUGFNE POOLE J! LAWRENCE-DEAN-
‛ -
below cost.
~s h rps where- •
hand-’ -upen
WAS CONFINED IN A SHIPs HOLT 5385226
. FOR. 33 YEARS-
v=----- and rever kheuj the ovtcome
Qe a o the wor '
• aay to make
rules but bard
to follow them
out Mako no
mistake about it
If you are out to
change your
weight you have
to work.
To get a thin
person fat, how.
ever, is really a
harder piece of
work than to get
a fat person thin.
It la possiblo in
every case to re-
him sections are daily becoming ac- 1:15---—
-
be chartered in the last month at English
ports. And the Russians are selling grains
at any sort of price “they can get and this
probably will continue for two months
more." As it is, the Russian bear is giv-
ing the British lion a lot of trouble and the
American,eagle is flying low "to see what
it is all about.” There is a lot of fiction
embalmed in foreign correspondence and
foriegn reports" these' bal rty fat! 1 Thtys. ’
______ o ____
REMISSION OF TAX PENALTY
State Comptroller George H. Sheppard
appeared before the annual convention of
Texas Tax Collectors’ Association and sub-
mitted a proposal that the state remit the
10 per cent penalty on delinquent ad val-
orem taxes as a relief measure for farm-
ers in drouth stricken sections.. Declar-
social ion at Boston and the additional in-
formation that the Texas mohair clip will
be very heavy this fall. Needless to say
the one crop cotton farmer is working his
88802
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eeese
■ Hon —
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k ■' An
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may be actual disease present
There may be tuberculosis. If it is
an old chrome fibroid type-Utein will
be no cough—none of the ordinary
signs f tuberculosis.
w in other instances diabetes may be
present The likelihood of its pres-
ence should: be more easily suspect-
ed. The onset is usually falrly
abrupt The weight loss occurs rap-
idly. and hunger, frequent urination
and greatthirst go along with U.
Other chronic diseases which cause
tion’that has been made possible giving, taking.earrying on through
a great emotional upheaval. What
— 'RVTH ttH Lit Ab FORD TO PAY' -
.Campaign expenses have soared skyward
✓'at the same time that the American peo-
Z pie, through the direct primary, are sup-
—posed t tive con-
trol over their elected representatives,
Writes Oliver McKee in the Outlook. The
’direct primary has thus failed to accomp-
lish one of its major purposes. It costs now
so much to run for public office that only
a few can make the rac&__ Democracy has
— narrowed, not broadened, its base.
In 1925 in Japan each candidate received
the right to send one free letter to each vo-
ter in his district. To send out one letter
gge
s*.a.
of Texas had made no money last year and
stood small chances of making money this
year, the state comptroller indicated that
he would bring a remittance proposal for
1930 taxes before the new legislature con-
vening in January. What of town and city
dwellers who made no money last year
"and stood small chances of making mon-
ey this year?”
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to each one of the three million voters in
Illinois would cost approximately $120,-
000, including the cost of stationary and
printing as well as the postage. This ser-
ves to illustrate in a practical way the mag-
nitude of the job which confronts a candi-
date for the senate from one of The Iarger
states.
It is the system, rather than the candidate
that is at fault. The primary has really
placed two elections where one existed be-
fore. To run a senatorial campaign may
require an effort comparable to that put
forward, bya big commprc.ini company in.
a national sales campaign. A candidate
— may cost as much to advertise as a safety
razor.
. In Illinois the successful candidateprint-
\
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The printing bill alone amounted to
$25,000, a senator’s pay for two and a half
years. "Postage, mailing and addressing,
entertainments; the rental ofballromst
and iheeting halls, dinners, etc., swelled,
the total: Owner of one.of the largest for-
tunes in .merica,and With the baeking of
ore efthe most-Wealthy families. “Ruth 2
McCormick could 'afford to pay for this
organization” iskhe McKee verdict. Yes.
---------—o..... — /
VISIBLE SUPPLY OF WHEAT IN THE
WORLD -
Mr. ahd Mrs. Harry J. Leonard
left Wednesday for an extended
visit in eastern cities. They ex-
pect to stop in Chicago, Buffalo,
Detroit, Boston, Philadelphia, St.
Louw, Indianapolis end- -Nagera
Falls. Southern Canada will also
be visited, m Boston, Mr. and* Mrs.
Leonard will attend the national
convention of the American Legion.
——O—— .
day, Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct.
5, 6 and 7 and is regarded -as the
biggest laugh of the season. You’ve
probably already heard of the four
Marx Brothers who made the world
laugh in “The Cocoanuts." Well,
those same boys afe coming to the
Yale in "Animal Crackers” and
from all reports, you'll be laugh-
ing so much and so often that
you'll miss a third of their wise
cracks.
. The story is something about
a stately and social proper hos-
tess’, with a house-party on her
hands at n palatial country
A big game hunter, just back from
an African expedition, his secre-
tary, and two vagabond musicians
engaged to-attend to the musical
appetite of the guests, is the busi-
ness assigned Oroucho, Zeppo, Har-
po and Chico Marx, respectively.
They arrive simultaneously and
with their usual hurricane momen-
gg—---
jdje-o—— ■
g ———
a
"All Quiet On the Western
Front,” the story for which the
world waited, the human side of
the war as seen through the eyes
of youth, is the most talked of
screen production of modern day
and will be presented at your Yale
on October 12, 13, and 14.
Out of the pages of the world’s
best seller walk the characters of
the story that swept the world,
men and women—hating, loving,
gv.g.
e, Rea,*
*,"‛‛es
7o,,
picture is thrilling and will be
-
rerms of Subacription
By carrier, in the city bt Cleburne, per month, 500;
per year. 85.00: six months, $2.76. By mail per year,
' 44.00; six months $2.25; dutaide Of Texas, one year
$7.00—Cash in advanee ‘ '--—
National Advertising repesentative, TEXAS
DAILY PRESS LEAGUE DaTas, cmcazo, KamS"
City. New York City. St Loua
When a picture bares the soul of
an individual it is great: when it
bares the soul of a generation it
is tremendous And “All Quiet" is
a tremendous human document.
It's more than a story of war—it’s
the heart-hitting story of Youth
face to face with internal turmoil
such as youth never before -was
called upon to experience—it's the
drama of youth's reaction to little
things—the drama of human
hearts hungering for happiness—
the drama of simple emotions mag-
nified by their very intensity into
the most moving ideas ever pictured.
You've seen the heroic side of war
screened many times- -its color, its
glamor, its lure. Now see its hu-
man aide—the angk that makes this
picturization an entertainment
thrilling in its epic sweep of drama,
yet most poignantly powerful In
Us ability to lift you to the height
of human feeling.
. ==----o--------
quainted with the good pictures
being brought here by the mana-
gement,of the Yale Theater, Cle-
burne's first Class A. play house.
No"sIcethe formal opentnghas
Mr. Jackson been abl to offer to
his patrons better amusement
than will be in store during the
next week or ten days. The first
unusual picture will be shown on
Friday and Saturday, Oct. 3 and 4.
This picture, "The Sea God," fea-
tures Richard Arlen and Fay
------ MEMBER OF THE UNITED EXES8
The United Press is exciusiveiyentiued to the
use for publication of all newsdspatches credited
to it or not otherwise credited to tnis paper and
Mao the local news publishd herein.
AU rights of reputyton of special diapatches
herein are also reserve
THE VOLSTEAD ACT, unlike the ‛
Eighteenth amendment, can, as the
whole country undoubtedty is aware,
be modified by a simple congressional
majority—but congress wil not meet
until December, unless by special
presidential call, and even Represen-
tative Maas has not heard rumors of
an extra session to repeal prohibl-
tion.
But, for that matter, Mr. Maas
does not guarantee the 4 per cent —
rumors' accuracy.
He says only that G. O. P. leaden
deliberately started them—as whal
statesmen call "trial balloons."
Diet and Health
ttj LOBAM HUMAN DOOY^
It Is Harder to Get Thin Persons Fat
Fhan the Fat Thin, Declares Doctor
HARALD BRACG J
(TWe TRAITOR-- 7 -
ENTENCED by , eg
Lincoln to • "le
solitary CONRINEMENT
ATSEA—-
By CHARLES P. STEWART
— Central Press Sta.Writer, tala amount of significance, taken in
WASHINGTON, D. C.—
: TRovne i ’
• ORGIVEE i
' ,.....and other foodatuffs
^7_porattpri whirl’ may appear ID—the columns ot/he Ru
—Review, will be-gtadty correeted upon it/being .
. hr-- t-’-c p / -vn them. Three hunffrea vessela_ttrfi_ttfflBlft
the aggregate.
Illustratively, it is uhilkely that I
Senator Frederic C. Walcott's re- l
marks at the Republican convention
in his home state of Connecticut
would have been so much commented
drama. Drama that you and I can
feel. Drama that scales the heights
and plumbs the depths of human
experience—Drama that catches the
letter and the spirit of the book
and flings it forth in a mighty
crescendo of unesapably gripping
flashes of life—Drama that strips
Laie’ (tie glamuui and gLi/ of wmt.
Awesome, gay; drab, beautiful;
glorious—it’s a human document
written in pictures and words that
will sear their way into your mem-
ory forever.
*
f)
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me
x22
New the American grain agencies art-dji,
receipt of bearish news that the world
stock of wheat in sight increased 27,000,-
000 bushels lastweek, bringing the total ■_____
to the staggering figure of 413,343,000,bu-
shels. Last, at the same time the
world’s viahle supply was 393,493,000 bu-
shels.---
Rusia is-saidtobeincesperateneetknF “
nrrmpy-tn1 pay foreign bills and is selling;
48 1
PA
P .....i.
tum_ at a time when the festive I
gathering is being diverted by a
butler weighing just, a fraction -leas-. J
than a half ton, a feud between 1
the hostess sort a rtva matron-over •
the authenticity of a fine paint-
ing. ahd more pretty girls Th UH- 1
gerle and bathing suits than most
_ revues boast You understand
what we mean bv pretty. when we
say Lillian Roth heads the femin-
ine talent.
This is the premise, or the prem- ]
ises, upon which the riot iS fash-
ioned— and the developipentis. dwarf
superlatives that Webster intended a
for even the Most hilarious narra-—
tives.
Mr. Jackson states that these
will be a pre-viewing of this plc-
A.
. ■■ Aa
,,3 /jd
/5, /2
* /dcg
on but for Maas’ talk in St Paul.
Assuming that he spoke for him-
self alone, the complaint of “intoler-
able prohibition conditions."attrib-
uted to the senator, might be regard-
ed as an expression simply of his in-
dividual feeling, but the Maas hint
that it is an opinion shared In by at
least some few O. O. P. leaders gives
it decidedly greater importance—es-
pecially coupled with the nutmeg
statesman's assurance to the conven-
tion that the administration can be
trusted to solve the wet-and-dry »
problem when the Wickersham anti:
crime commission reports—coupled
also with the knowledge that SenatoE.
Walcott is reckoned very close to the
president, emphatically is persona
grata at the White House, and lives
la Washington in the, old Hoover
home at 2200 s street-
BELIEVE IT OR NOT.
-
Piles are caused by bad circu-
lation of the blood in the lower
ahescl.’
parts. Only anmterhartmretrenme
ean remove the esuxe. That'1 why
external remedies gnu cutting fall
Dr Leonhardt's HEM-ROID, suc-
becnuse it relieves this-eon«-
gestion and strengthens the af*
fected parts. Dr. Leonhardt's pre-
scription has such a wonderful
— record fdr aUlck. safe mid lasting
relief even in chronic and stub-
born cases, thatLFoster-Fat Drug
Co. shys try HEM-ROID at my
expense. Your Pile suffering must
Ad or money back.
VISIT EASTERN CITIES___ and association officials admit having
WBy A)
’I / /
thinness are goiter of the exophthal-
mie type, and a rare disease of the
nervous and muscular system caus-
ing atrophy. In acute conditions
i such as pneumonia or Influenza the
। body loses a great deal of weight, but '
, thif is known and easily recognized.
What we are talking about here
is none of these. We are talking of
the constitutionally thin person. Born
thin—never gets any fatter.
Usually tall—at any rate of nar- .
, row, slender build. Vertical as the *
। crossword puzzle fiends would say.
not horizontal There are several
kinds of people in the world—draught
horses and race horses—St Barnards
and greyhounds The constitutional-
ly thin person is the greyhound.
But with the external confotmation
go certain peculiarities in the ar-
rangement of the internal organs.
The chest is very long and narrow.
The lungs are enormous They can ’ 1
breathe in and out twice as much
air as the fat horizontal persons
The abdominal wall usually sags.
The stomach hangs very low. It is
hard for the stomach to push food
out of its opening (the pylorus) into
, the Intestines The latest Inas them-----
- selves hang very-lew-to therebde-
men. Phese people are usually con- —
stipated. Their muscles have no the
body nor theA strength that other
people's have.
With-att-these dimeultles U is W
r wonder the fattening cure must take
into account the whole body. How
, that cure can be arranged we wifi" ’
. take up in detail temen-s
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Clenden; $
• Ing cannot diagnose or give personal
answers to letters from readera.
■ Where questions are of general in- .
' terest, however, they will be taken
■ up. in order, in the dally column,
i Address your queries to Dr. Logan
Clendening, care of this paper. Writ*
i legibly and not over 200 words ]
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 313, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 2, 1930, newspaper, October 2, 1930; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1557523/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.