Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 162, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 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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CLEBl'RNE TIME3-REVIEW, CLEBURNE. TEXAS
PAGBrWO
By i
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is still
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tion
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IILIPPIN
it/k
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suRtetin: and
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run
I
VISITING RELATIVES.
will starve or need food fl
Dr. -Clenening
Cleburneites On
one
The juice of from fl* .
few days
ufacturere Record asked
of colda and
juice is sed in the.
Texas Technological College. Lub-
)
)
RENFRO'S” THREE STORES
tanned
T
WrH
y
BARK
THE OLD HOME TOWN
Wl
±
2/
C<
41,
I
-f
A
3
4
!
4
Dut goon'the resttime
((
“ovy"ght, 102, by Central Prens Azsoeiation. Im..
&e
PAST
cs
mo
Q im* Ltt tv Kamp Canuai fraea
b
u
>
WHY SuFF€RFRom
TROUBL€ ?
{into Conflict in Europe
f Norris Upholds His Stand
I ways and means committee and their war
cry is, like that of the political kingfish of
BASIL-
A NAME FOR
SEVERAL
BASLL-
AASKIN
aces of the industry. He was the keynoter
of the business planning conference at the
University of Texas, bureau of business re-
search. and he.sent his message straight
from the shoulder: . ,
HERBS OF (
THE MINT-
FAMILYK)
i
' „i
United Press Wire Service
central Press News Service
Dr. WillfamL
physician. to ex
successfully adopted in competition
foreign countries.
- "The great bulk of our cotton
, A ‘
I ’
I HOPE MB
DoESeT HANE
Mrs. W. B: Featherston is spend-
ing the week in Fort Worth with
relatives.
i
I
lea
hit
it
mqe.K
Tnul
- I
[. Mackenzie, retired
plajn how grapefruit
{
/
•l
trophe, h
. "Mlainly because of that war mont
Ra
five
. It a
,, was
that
going
play*
HAROLD V RATLIFF .
Editor
DID.YOU KNOW? - - - By R. J. Scott
/•
e
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The WANT ADS reach into practically every home
ALL WINTER HE PDF OFF CLEANING
UP HIS DESK TILL NICE WEATHER
. — GOT SPRINT T
FEVER’
R
------—o-------
MAJOR PESTCH IN THE PICTURE.
Maj. Alfred P. C. Petsch, of the historic
city of Fredericksburg, is an announcer ex-
traordinary. Less than two years ago he
practice
ETGENE POOLE
Manager
Cleburne Times - Review
Published Every Afternoon -Except Saturday) and
Sunday Morning by
CLEBURNE NEWSPAPERS Inc
108 South Anglin Street, Cleburne Texas
' IN MEMORY OF A FRIEND
• AND NEIGHBOR.
L
, DOES Senator Norris belleve now
-ehat-he was right or wrong in the
Ji 'At
LN eat h The Shelterinn Palms
LEAVES AND
SEWING TREIR
EDGES fGETER, (
HSING H'S BILL AS A
NEEDLE AND VEGETABLE
FIBER. AS HRED
RH€UmATISm,
romACH orKiDn€
Riva
bumc
years
i. - no .
BASIL-
1E ANGLE -
AT WHICH AE
CufftNG EDQE
OF AfOL
IS
GROUND
S5
"aswa
L T
OUR DAILY FOOD
By COLONEL COODBODY
(n
of kind ownremedhsend one dollarfok large
. sue trial package, testi-
—K monials and descriptive
literature. Money refund-
ed if Hot satisfactory.
HAROLD
Knowles
CF SEATTLE
and HiS-oy . %3
boston bull , T
LADY BUNTY, * .
DO A N-Foo
DOUBLE DIVING
ACT
(‘
V J
7
RECOVERING.
Mrs. H. E.Sloop of West Hen-
e
egja
c>
BLc
sea
for
wot
Ie
| By CHARLES P. STEWART
n Central Preet Staff Writer
U WASHINGTON, D. C. — F L
teen years ago at thia time the
name of Senator George W. Norris
was one of the six most unpopular
' an the United States. The country
that he should have been able to carry on 1
as he has. Cotton farming is still a process I
I of mianual labor. It does not lend itself to I
i large scale of mss production — the de-, I
fense which most of our industries have, I
A
Regiatered U S fatent Omee
"I- i
was
wou
year
regr
buri
who
Port
Al
secu
Nob
last
pct
basc
the handicap of a high tariff and to sr
rest period.
I was over.
epidemic of disease there.
One pleasant thing about Moose-
heart schools is that there’s no
homework. School lets out at 3 or
4 o'clock. WThen there are all kinds
of sports, Including swimming in I
Mooseheart Lake in summer, and
skating on the lake in winter/
After dinner there are band and 1
orchestra rehearsals, glee clubs,,1
and play rehearsals; Boy and Girl
_76
BETWEEN HE CHANGE I SEASONS
AND READY-MADE AVBS THE • "op
EDITOR OF THE WEEKLY CLAfION ,
JDsT CANT SEEM To GT ANNWHERE
comparatively few will own all the
wealth of the nation while the re-
mainder will be peasants and eco- -
nomie slaves. ,
"The one duty which confronts us
now more than any other is by otr
system of taxation to place a tax
upon Inheritances which shall be at
a rate progressively advancing and
sufficiently high to bring about a re-
distribution of the ownership of prop-
erty and the possession of wealth.
"I can see no other way into the
open and into the held and realm of i
happiness for our people unless. we
levy a tax upon targo fortunes glv-t
ing liberal exemptions—n tax never-
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
=692
t
\
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1
========--
derson street, who has been ill . . . . .__
from influenza, is reported to be Eurtis Vick, Jack Doughtie, Leon
improved Ince, Mary Elizabeth Warren and
'■ ; ■ Ada Meyers of Cleburne made the
CANTON VISITOR. honor roll for the sprins term o
Mrs. C. H. Corse of Canton is '
Scout meetings, music
classes of our people, innocent
though they lie, are suffering beyond
the limits of imagination to under-
stand, and will continue to suffer. It
is not only the tears of the widowe
and orphans for the loss of loved
ones, but it is the continuous toll and
sacritce which we are all making to
eave our very civilization from de-
struction.
Influenza. S.
"Dr. Mackenzie claims a remark-
able record for this remedy, and his
explanation fottows: "Investigation
showed that influenza thrived and
became virulent in an add medium,
and was inhibited by an alkaline one.
If true—a treatment was simple and
plain, viz: to render the system of
Its victim alkaline. How? Many
means were available, yet the sim-
plest and most universally prevalent
were citrus fruits and baking moda.
“ -Fearfully I tried grapefruit juice
and soda in my next case of influ-
enza. a virulent one complicated with
pneumonia Results were startling
—symptoms mitigated in a few
hours, hemorrhage (severe) stopped
im mediately, recovery was rapid.
" 'Being called into the United
iposition he took?
I "In my service of nearly 30 years
Un congress," answers'the senator. "I
rundoubtedly have made many mis-
She told me that each of the
seventy cottages has a cook and a
housemother—some of the larger
homes have two. Most of these
women are mothers who have chil-
dren living in Mooseheart. Every
mother is on the payroll and re-
ceive* a regular salary.
been successfully used to deny
right to exchange in the most
him The
States public health service. I he
02 canes of the most severe t
within 60 days without a single
tality; thia in spite of the fact
double pneumonia, violent hen
rhage, cerebral infections. Intest
inflammation. Inadequate care,
treme poverty were among the th
with which it was necessary to I
tend. The same treatment tried
other physicians and ..myself in
numerable cases since that time
give the same happy results.
“ ’Following is the treatment In
tail: At the first sign of ’cold' or
ffuenza, all food la stopped
plenty of cool, pure water te g
throughout the course of the
case. Food in an inflamed alin
tary canal (a worse than uselesn,
not digest, and taxea the flag)
heart in an effort to get rid of it.,
A tailor-bird .
construct rs
NEST ATfE
‘ EXTREMMoF AfWq,
Yaking one LARGE
• OR <^0 SMALL
I ed nineteen years ago by Senator
James J. Davis- of Pennsylvania.
It la a home and school for more
than thirteen hundred children-
the sons and daughters of deceased
I members of the Moose fraternity.
It's not a toy village, but a thriv-
ing, growing town, stuated west of
; Chicago, on the banks of the Fox
River. Every small cittzen who
lives in this, city can slay until he
| has grown up. learned an art or a
trade, apd graduated from the city
high school.
The town resembles a magnifi-
cent estate. sloping down to the
river, with beautifulbuildings laid
I out in a green, tree-shaded country.
The city includes about fifteen hun-
dred acres of land—red - roofed
houses, schools, shops, a hank, a
radio station, a big farm that sup-
plies milk and fresh vegetables, a
United States post-office—every-
thing you'd see in any other city.
One of'the things to see in Moose-
heart is the baby village.
Five small cottages are grouped
I around the nursery school. ■ Every-
ting in the village is just the right
size for children—tiny tables and
chairs and even small chinaware.
The day I was there I had to
wait a while, for there's an Iron-
clad role there that no one is al-
lowed in the haby village during the
el fee
socke
to 1
tie
It
cr.
mon
,01 .
, has'
t ime
style
products in the free markets of the world.
The political power of the majority has
.Vhog•
su*ys2,
\ ogc
Gi .
UKMMKffiffiffiffiffiffiffil I
Much of the food the children eat
comas fresh from their own farm.
They told me in Mooseheart that
they use sixteen hundred quarts of
milk a day—for the fourteen hun-
dred children. More than a quart
of milk a day for each child. That
must be one reason why the health
of the Mooseheart children is al-
most perfect—plenty of milk to
drink. This city, by the way, is
often referred to in medical jour- ■
nals as an example of what can be .
done to raise child health stand-
ards. They have never had an
balance of trade on the side of the repub- (
lie. William L. Clayton as a contributor to |
cotton industry literature ranks among the 1
15 grapefruit is given daily, div *
in portions every four hours er! )
ener. In between the juice pot < (
not with them, sodium bicarbd
is given, a teaspoonful ip a glat
water, then a quarter teaspod
every four hours or oftener I
symptoms are practically gone.
" 'Orang* juice and lemon ;
may be used instead of grap*f
■but are not so satisfactory. On
juicejs sweet and tends to disturi
victim‘s digestion, lemon juice is
sour to be used in quantitlea Or
fruit juice alone will acHva res
but the soda hastens alkaf
citrun frits taste acid but 4 •
acid makes the system *1M ,
Grapefruit juice and soda will ui
ly cure an ordinary cold tn frot
to 48 hours, relieve bronchitis, 4
prevert or mitigate pneumonia.
" 'In influenza, grapefruit julc
water attend to all the eliminj
necessary in a fasting patient.’"
Nest: Why Love Is Listed as a’
ease ef Spring.
a flood of letters
is received in
protest. Each of
these relates a
method of pre-
vention. Some of
the methods tire
worse then hav-
ing the cold, but
the . latest M at
least harmless
and pleasant. If
IC prevents colds,
we will be very
glad to hear it,
and It is pub-
lished because
this department
does not wish to
itheir Hvea Many times that number
Jare crippled aKT injured so that they
afeleading lives of sL=--- - 2
misedh-s- |
pt AROMAfIC -fvet ‘ ^EP
find that they themselves are being well
nigh destroyed by the tariff. The world can
get along without other industrial products
but it must have our cotton.
Now it is said that the administration
-and the Id-partisan leaders are determined
to force an adjournment of the congress
early libsIpne. If successful, there will be
niff hgi>Ution. Many important meas-
ures will die on the-calendar. Sen.. Huey P.
i Long of Louisiana hasa-slogan, “sock it to
the rich." Many representatives regardless
—of party affiliation appear to have-adopted
I the slogan. They have smashed thetax
measure, drafted by a democratic house
w/7
"We kn»w now that we will not ret
from under te results of the stryzsle
during our Mies ar the liven of our
have focmJ *l~Mt immeili- i By LOGAN CLENDENING M. D.
Thousandshavesiourdat tioueh the EVERY TIME It is Mated In this
ate andpermanentie Mineral Water column ’-hut there is no certain drug
BAKEWE-- Mineral water 1 se rur- or treatment that will certain-
ly prevent colda.
. . took me-hack tozhe kitcheny-wliere
two women wefe busy tidying up
and gelling ready for dinner. There
he introduced me in the house-
mother. •
theless heavy enough not only j
to raise the money to operate the
government and pay the expenses of
the war by this means bat to bring
about a more equal, distribution of ,
wealth. -__L____• •
.“K't."™" « ~~ -. “ TCHSegi -ATineral Water
pensive to collect and with a liberal . Crystals. NOT a druubut osy
esempt ion It brines nn hardship upon curative waters producedaONI »
Tr.....> SinganaputlapTeceystaffotmsfottcon-
■- venient use. Nothing added—Nature s
akes. but my vote against tbe
declation of war was not one of
them.
i "We. with the remainder of the world,
are still suffering from that unjust
ana unnecessary struggle. The ter-
irible condition we now are in and the
rterrible depression in which all classes
of our people are suffering would ar-
itect us only in a minor degree it we
had kept out of that war. It was.a
war in which,no victory was pessible.
-rhe vanquished suffered no more
than the victorious. It was a struggle
in which so far as Europe was con-
cerned all parties to it were com-
pletely exhausted.
: "IN TUA"' STP.re.GLK.bout 100,,-
1o00 of our noblest and best gave up
be heloful:
"Th* mu
For .ACHES .md PAINS
A, BALLARDS ,«
5NOWLINIMENI
Penetrates / Soot hi
MRS. S. J. MMAHON.
___ . back, according to a report from
I spending the week here visiting the registrar's office.
deepest Mr. and Mrs R. M. Armstrong. ; yj^ pn)j poughtic each made a
B i'll seventeen term hours oi work:
the other three made a B-plus.
1 Ince and Miss Meyers on seven-
teen term hours and Miss War-
1 ren on fourteen term hours.
__
i-
i sorrow withher words
- Any ri a nrous reflection upon the character. stand-
. nv0 sopuvation of any person, firm or corporation
whir n mdy appear in the columns of The Timed-Re:
iw—ime ctudiv"corrected upon. lU Wing bfouiiilt,----—------- —----—r, ,
W"i . at 5 thr publisher" growing asit was half a century ago by the
-------------
MEMAER OI THE IN > tividiat families. Mevertheless, the Souths t
The United Press is exclusively entitled to the use- . ..
fo. pubheatton of all news dispatches-credited to it euncotton farmersholds his own, Under a
otnerwise eredited in this paper endabothe , great adversity, against the rest of the
Huws publication theiein world. He is, by force, living at home be-
terms of SUBSCRIPTION eatisr present urk'e* leave him nothing to -
tq- CARRIER..in the city oi Cleburne per tnou.b spend in town. Those who have exploited
by MAN per year 4400 six months, $325; nut- him tor so many years by forcing him te-t
side «>i rexasoneyear s7 0e—cash in advance buy their tarif f-protected products now
MINERAL WELLS
WATER COMPANY
Baker Hotel •
Mineral Wells, Texas
eeeeee
w La„j!
gum i Grapefruit and Soda
Treatment for Cold
A VISIT TO A CHILD'S CITY
I ETS go out tc Mooeheart, Illi-
H nois, and see a city of children,
for children; and, in large part,
built by children.
L ..1 Mooseheart, the Child City pt the
- 1 Loyal Order of Moose, was found-
National Advertisin Representatives, TEXAS
DAILY PRESS LEAGUE~Rallas, Chicago, Kansas
City, New York St. Louts. ~
Tech Honor Roll appart any information which will
eliliren. Unhorn_neration will
yet toll and sufer and swetto pay
for our participatton in thatctas-
~ ! 2
2
74
2E
Hi
Entered at the Postoffice at Cleburne Texas, as
se< olid ciass mail mat ter
i and tears, joys andh--sorrows and
We had known her twenty years' through.theseayearz TSIS
• For over half a century the cotton pro- and that Dan Moody would not. Moody and loved her as a mother butted over Death's enuy tide where
ducers have been treated as the stepchild I commented “Petsch talks too much." Well, we whasmsnherttdhdermcare and nosear nor sorrow) enters,
of the nation. I Hogs ran and pan didn't. Now the major, will listen for her footsteps, but - -contributed by a Neighbor,
affection Life"ts1made of smiles
"HE SELLS LX THE CHEAPEST AM)
RUYS LX THE DEAREST."
Texas is and will continue to be through
the years the banner agricultural state.. It
is the largest producer of cotton of all Am-
erican states. It is the largest producer of
wool, mohair and hides. For years and
years it furnished the new money of the •
Southwest and for decades it threw the '
-* •.
! the natural resuiitv<" ”? tnr country
not have been del eloped. ’
• • • •
A stinging indictment.-to say the least,
in his review of conditions as they arc. the
Houston cotton authority placed the fol-
lowing in. the record:
•When one ontemptates the enormous
handicaps under which the cotton farmer
•T>p<Tat0< in this country it seems incredible
.— ----------1
---1
By STANLEY
the children hurried hour* and so on.
Louisiana: “Sock it to the rich," regardless
of cost nrcnnsequences in the future.
/ ' -
V A
? Fu0i-
• h
duct of labor of others. He has been forced [ foes are of the opinion that the major is an comehome beckons for loved ones
by a kind of political tyranny to sell in the anvil iinger as well as a political announc- -belad that they may follow in
cheapest market and buy in the dearest. , J er. Whenever the major is napping at the her rootstePsnSomehowtmeneoud
In spite of all this, cotton has for a . switch his police dog is on guard to fright- Skies were always blue.
century provided a favorable trade balance en away all curiosity seekers. Timidity is 1 She could comfort in
for payment of interest on foreign invest- 1 not the other) name of the major' or his ■
ments in the United States, without which J guardian.
37
"THE TASK which face* us bow la 6", (
to relieve our country and our civili- i Kbh
zatior of a possibility that only a 1223
down to the kitchen, each with a
; cuptizhtly clenchied in his hand—
in a dasl for a mid-afternonn drink
of milk. ......
The children are used to visitor*.
A red headed youngster earn*
running up to me and introduced
llimselt. "I‘m Micky," he said,
“Can I show you around?'' He
.... _ -------— ’ • r--------------------•me
“He has been forced to produce under | has taken the bull by the horns again. He! onBhesechbersurterna through both i
i’ll his not only announced the candidacy of Gov.; day and night and bore it patient-
Sterling for a second term but he outlined 1J and with a smde. was only wait,
, , ing for her call and in the turn
the platform points and prophesied a of another day the Death Angel
sweeping victory first in July and again came with- outstretched arms oi I
favrhl. 1 * XT 1 a 1 ■ e -r mi • love and bore her weary soul above
ayorabe next November for his favorite. There is a for her work was finished. He said,
market the product of his labor for the pro- time to hit the anvil. His friends and his "Well done, thou faithful one.
P
“ I
$
"I ALWAYS have been and still
am an optimist.
"I believe that better days will I
come, that honesty in government!
will regain its foothold, that civiliza-
tion will recover and that men. worn- }
cn and, children will one day be re-
lieved from the struggle and will:
have the necessities, the comfortsand a
j even some of the luxuries of Ufa.
"But before that day eomea we '
must continue in our struggle and in
- -oue-eneuRcea with earnesmneax ana—
hope.
“After every war of any magni-
tude there haa resulted th* drirtine ”
of property into the band* of a few.
While thousands were risking their
usea.upon the batilefeld, other
thousands were coining the blood of
their fellow men Into gold And thin
war, heing greater tbananx wblt.ii ।__
ever preceded it. has resulted in a i
smaller number of people owning 1
more of the wealth of the world.
BOYS
BAI
The
. and t
' defeat
away
Jor Ci
Ont
the bi
to fu
runs
was j
Coll
two
• min
Boys
in hi
who ]
There'* Interesting experimental
work going on out there, under Dr. I
Martin Luther Reymert, child pny-
chologist. The Universtty of Chi-
cago conducted a nutritional study
there on the effect of citrus juices
in the diet A hundred and fifty
children cooperated In the experi-
ment. It was found that orange
juice is very beneficial -In the diet'.
Mooseheart is without a doubt
one of the country's very interest-
ing model town*—well worth a
visit. ©a at I——No. «
----------------—r
Ind us t
it w
season
' * give t
pions
selves
they *
out fo
Iaf
to Hit
Lawre
Sande
I was straining
every eneray to-
Eapu ward actye
F> “K• ticipation in tic
I 1a World war and
■ e1 with live fellow
I a. 8V senators-I .u
■ " \ 2 Follette
h.E elder; Gronna.
E -- I Lane. Store
B."e M Vardaman — the
m- .7 Nebraskan w
•la"ad on n
4bam
wVMaa 1 in
Faddn into thn
hdgan Of
-rtm- dozen who cast
Senator
George Norria senate. votes.on
April 6, 1917,
against the declaration of hostilities
mmih GermnanySenator Norris alone
Be Hrieg. —— -
, announced that Ross Sterling would
--J W-r " ------11 not.
. and inal D
stepchild I commented
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Ratliff, Harold V. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 162, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 13, 1932, newspaper, April 13, 1932; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562517/m1/2/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.