Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 224, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1929 Page: 4 of 12
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PAGE FOUR
TIM
01
CleburpeTimes-Review
Published Weekday Afternoons and
Sunday Morning
Lby the
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$ George Rowley, Business Manager
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- Nor SPEECH BUT LIFE-Not
-every one that saith unto me. Lord,
7 shall enter into the kingdom of
E heaven, but he that doeth the will
"-ot my Father which is in heaven.-
i Matthew 7:31 .
PRAYER—My life, my Lord, I
“ give to Thee.
12799=---------------------0----------—-
REACHING FOR WICKER-
SHAM'S SCALP
Chmn. George W. Wicker-
1 sham of the Hoover law en-
1 forcement commission has
...many, bitter critics trailing
him. T'hey are reaching for
his scalp. They demand his
resignation. They say he is
dreamer. He is the French F
foreign minister. After the
signing of the armistice he
had a dream. He made It
more than a dream. He ad-
vocated ‘the United States of
Europe,” and his confedera-
tion is said to be receiving
increased serious considera-
tion under all European
skies. Why not? Some day
there will be a United States
of South America. Some day
there will be a United States
of Canada. Why not a Unit-
Gets Her Man
• •••• ••••• eecee
He’s 15,000 Years Old and the Talk of
* Paris
BY ALMA SIOUX SCARBERRY,” aummoROMA PETS
CHAPTER LVI
HpHERE was a wire for Vivian
1 from New York. She dreaded
ed States of Europe.
MEXICANS FACING .
. DEPORTATION
Under the new immigra-
tion regulation thousands of
Mexican laborers in the low-
er Rio Grande valley, “who
are apparently there legal-
ly” are subject to deporta-
tion because they do not
know how to legalize their —
interests. This is the view-
point of Sec. J. F T II of
the San Benito Chamber of —
Commerce. His theory is
that some of them do not
have funds to hire attorneys
or to do anything else, that
is nedessary to legalize their
interests.
Now Mexican labor must
be saved for the valley work
and Sec. Bell advocates a
valley immigration bureau,
which will give information
and service free to the Mexi- :
BOY FREND
can of the lower country
Rep. Box is swinging
around the circle in Texas.
He is for deportation re-
gardless. Valley wealth mak- F
era seed seasonable labor. •
They should get busy and
back to a finish the program
outlined by Sec. Bell. If the
Mexicans are legally here
then they should not be de-
ported. If they are ignorant
of their rights then they
should be taught their rights
by employers of labor in the
Rio Grande flections of the
commonwealth. If they are
illegally here they should be
deported. Law is law.
a rank wet.
Chmn. Wickersham is an
outspoken individual. He
gave great offense to the
— urys while addressing the
students of William and
Mary college before his ap-
pointment by Pres. Hoover;
• he made use of the following
“The policy of the Jones
law which seems to compel
5 observance of prohibition law
by more rigorous penalties,
probably will defeat itself
through 1% consequences it
ecution by indictment and
not by information in every
. ease. This will mean one of
two things, either a very
large increase in the number
Of special judges or the con- proclamation raising the em-
Itinued embarrassment of
scivik litigants in the delays
C."liminal‘ indictments and
j trial under the prohibition
| .Wickersham husbeen PEL
HOOVER LIFTS THE
PRESSURE
$
to open it
Bark had just had time to get her
letter, telling him she could not pos-
sibly marry him. It would be a Pros
test, of course. She had hoped be
would sit down and writs her a nice.
* understanding letter. ...
But slowly Vivian opened the wire
and sat down to the porch swing to
read it Ths blood drained from her
face. Her hand shook so that she
could scarcely hold it
“Your letter was our blessing. We
knew you could never love anyone
but Kent. We were married this
morning at City Hail Shady Dell a
/ ravins hit last night. Bids fair to
be one of Broadway’s longest runs.
Cuddles a star over night. Hope you
and Kent will always be as happy as
we are. Love and kisses. L
- -----PAT AND BARK."
- When the first shock wore off, and
Vivian came to her senses, she went
-up to her room. Her pride had re-
2 celved a very staggering blow.----
1 It certainly hadn’t taken him long
to forget. Then Bark really hadn’t
loved her. He had loved Cuddles.
- "No doubt both of them had sent the
■ story about Dovie Jansen. Perhaps
they had thought it might bring hey
- and Kent closer together. _
Jealousy poured through Vivian
for a few minutes. Then she found
herself getting ashamed. What
right had she to feel that way?
If Cuddles loved Bark she had a
perfect right to marry him, since
she, herself, had turned him down.
If she didn’t want Bark there was
no one in the world she would
rather have marry him than ber
she would be the envy of millions.
She shook off ber feeling of de-
pression and shock and put on ber
white flying outfit. It was the day
she was to meet Cubby to make plo-
tures for the newsreel. What would
he think of the marriage? The Sul-
livans, no doubt, would be overcome
with joy. Mrs. Sullivan bad been
right, after all, when she said she
believed "them two children had a
case on each other.**
Vivian had some time before ber
appointment to meet Cubby at the
hangar, and decided to walk. She
must collect her wits. Kent came
home earlier than usual, and called
to Vivian. When he found she waa
out he sat down in the porch swing
to wait for her.
The judge came up the walk.
“You kids fixed the old house up
pretty slick. Looks Iko a regtar
little love nest to me."
"Vivian to a wonderful house-
keeper." Kent moved over for the
old man to sit down in the swing.
“But, I feel like a beast,that she
has to do her own work."
The judge squinted his old eyes, and
knocked the pipe on the porch swing
and ashes on the floor.
“Well, she sure don’t look broken
down to me. Never seen the like of
how marriage has agreed with that
girl. You young folks is, what Id
call an ideal couple."
He was glorying in the ‘chance to
talk to Kent alone. It was his op.
portunity to give the young'whipper
snapper an earful of something to
think about. .
Kent was not in a talkative mood.
a Dr IDA TREAT
aev arluss “Wore,"
By ROY J.GIBBons \
Central Press Staff Writer
CHICAGO,July 27—(UP)—Dr.
Ida Treat, paleontologist, and her
“man” are the talk of gay Paree.
She hunted him for years, it to
authentically stated, worked liter-
ally with a pick and shovel for him.
Probably he’s not the type most
women would care about, but, then.
Dr. Treat to a paleontologist, one of
the few women engaged in that
profession in the world, and her
man's the apple of her eye. —
He’s old, very old, and most of
his teeth are gone, but what a man!
Even-Dr. Treat doesn’t know his
Pres. Hoover has issued a
TDTAMY DDDADCI
Doubt Expressed as
to Workability of
Sliding Scale
His eye fell on Bark’s wire-
opened beside him. He picked It up
and read it It was almost as great
a surprise to him as it had been to
Vivian. Barkow-married to Pat
Sullivan! That meant—slowly the
significance of the message began to.
sink into his brain. e
.5W..2L-D1.107*Twatemong vieen de her foot stunts
What did it mean? Could it mean
that Vivian had written Barkow a
letter and told aim she couldn’t
marry him? She had actually re-
fused to marry the famous artist-
turned him down cold. Why?
It was hard to listen to ths judge
telling him he was such a happy
married man when be really wasn’t
a married man at all. Then the
judge was seized with an idea. If he
could get Kent out to the field.
meat, more stout now the Ana
what say, Kent? I ain’t rot a thing
to do-and I never seen movies took.
But .n. anany fore him. It ^^..^
they got in his car.“How's busi-
ness goin‘?” the old man asked.
“Pretty nice of that Kansas City
man to put up shop for you, wasn't
it ?" -00
"It saved my life," Kent said,
soberly. "I really think I would
have gone mad if I'd had to work
for someone else much longer. It
association. He is a former
ttorney general of the Unit-
d—States. He knows his
wn. mind and he speaks it.
Ie further offended the drys
n an address before the
Berkley Divinity school com-
nencement at New Haven on
June 4, when he linked the
burch and crime, or else the
militant preachers of the dry
ause insisted that he linked
hechurch and crime when
is of course common
knowledge that the ministry,
which a century ago disput-
id with the bar the primacy
n education, has fallen to
me rear and can no longer
pretend to intellectual’ lead-
irship in any branch of hu-
man knowledge. The church
formerly exercised a re-
training influence upon the
lawless tendencies of certain
ilements of the community.
Perhaps it still does to some
stent but no one can fail
bargo on the shipments of
arms and munitions to Mex-
ico, an embargo which was
imposed by Pres. Coolidge
Jan. 17, 1924. It is a mat-
ter of history that the em-
bargo throttled the Obregon
revolutionists in the not dis-
tant past and the settlement
of the church row in Mexico
may bring about a stable
government which will en-
dure throughout the years.
Lest we forget, the air-
plane with its fighting war-
riors and its terrific bombs
crushed the recent revolution
in short order. In wars of
the future the war plane will
beCMitnem-man has at his
disposal frightful weapons
of destruction. Slavs and
Chinese may go to it for the
possession of Manchuria be-
fore the close of the year
with Japan in the look-out
chair ready at the finish to
take the turkey and hand the
feathers to the Russ and the
Mongol. ------—
exact age, although she ay there
is no question but what he is at
least 18,000 years old—but well pre-
served, you understand. -
,— ------Found to Pyrenees
The doctor dug him out of the
Pyrenees in Spain recently and
brought him to Paris, according to
wordrecelved byfriends here.
Temporarily, he’s being put up at
the Natural museum.
"He's an old man with most of
feet for a thousand centuries. Her
fingers touched bones, stone imple-
ments, the teeth of men and and
mals, as she labored.”
Teeth Tell Secrets .
“A tooth,” she says, “to always a
pleasant surprise. You can tell all, ....
sorts of things from teeth. In my ID
work I have found all kinds and
conditions of teeth, including teeth
carved out of ivory, used as orna-
ments thousands of years ago."
In the end she unearthed her
man. Somewhat weather worn, he
was, as a result of his 15,000 years
of lying there, but a man of which
to be proud. That is, if you are a
paleontologist. ---.
“Forty thousand years ago, men
and women were huge to physique,”
says Dr. Treat. “Women had a
brain capacity superior to the men
of today, but in the next 10,000
years both men and women deteri-
orated."
Career in Paris
Dr. Treat has been a resident of
Paris for nine years, and has been
affiliated with Marcelln Boule, an
eminent anthropologist" For five
years she was associate professor of
romance languages at Western Re-
serve university in Cleveland, and
later received a second doctor’s de-
gree at the University of Paris,
whence her digging career began.
best friend.
Nevertheless, it stung. Bark bad
certainly taken her letter as final.
It would have been much easier to
bear if he had written her at least
one heart-broken letter before he
married Cuddles.
Were all men like that? Could
they all forget so easily? Even
Kent, now that be knew the truth
about Dovie, seemed to have put her
entirely out of his mind. But, per-
hope she was still a little in his
couldn’t mean that she had written
Barkow that she loved him.Not
after the way he had messed up her
life and his, too. A girl like Vivian
would never want a failure like him.
He could never ask her to be a real
wife to him. It wouldn’t be fair.
Besides, she could never forgive
him for telling her frankly that he -----
could never fall in love with her goes against the grain.”
and that was why he was marrying *XA- Me Men
her—because he didn’t believe in
women. It all came back to him
clearly. The things he had said-
and the way he had neglected her.
Night after night out with Dovie-
treating Vivian as though she were
nothing but a piece of furniture to
the house *
of the pact year, when old Judge
Potter, his inevitable pipe in the side
of his mouth, halled him from the
MOVEMENT OF TEXAS
WHEAT
A Galveston dispatch says
that 27 ships are at the Gal-
veston docks to load Texas
has been greatly weakened
Chmn. Wickersham’s plan
vas not accepted by the na-
lional convention of gover-
tora. He advanced the pro-
posal that the 48 states
should make large appropri-
itions annually" for the en-
forcement of the pro laws,
leaving it to the federal au-
thority to enforce the Vol-
itead and the Jones acts
gainst the importation of
intoxicants from foreign
countries, as well as to the
rest and punishment of so-
Called higher-ups who are
said to be responsible for the
-Canadian inflow of liquor,as
■ vell as the inflow from Mex-
Co, South American nations
European countries. ,
e Those who are close to him
ay that Chinn Wickersham
will not resign, that he will
Lot muzzle his tongue, that
U intends to go all and not
Calf the road and then the
commission in the distant fu-
NEe will submit its findings,
his teeth gone,” Dr. Treat explains.
“I found him lying prone, an al-
most psrfect skeleton, in a cave. '
“Thousands of years ago, the
cave dwellers who lived in the
painted caves of this region of the _
Pyrenees were mighty in size and Dr. Treat is of the type that An-
far handsomer than the men of to-ita Loos says gentlemen prefer,
day." -
It's a tale to cause comment even
in aris, the gayest city to the
world, this story of Dr. Treat’s hunt
for her man. The paleontologist,
who is Chicago born, and bred to
Cleveland, crawled deep into .the
bowels of the mountains to make
her find. 2
Dressed in a one-piece overall, a
French beret, and bearing a small
acetylene torch. Dr. Treat crawled
into apertures that had not known
the pressure of human hands and
She has blue eyes that laugh at
the adventures she has been
through to the pursuance of her—
most women would say "weird"-
profession. In the scientific world
of Paris she is an important figure.
And her “man” has added largely
to her laurels. You may hear of
him in Montmartre and the Mont-
parnasse. He's an object of inter-
est to the Acaderaie Francaise.
What a boy: friend! But, then,
really, and after all, it's all a mat-
ter of personal taste. —
Eastland Man Dies
In Highway Crash
EASTLAND, July 27,(UP) -
Henry Drake, 40. was killed last
night when an automobile struck
the rear of a wagon in which he
was riding on the highway near
here. ----
The impact knocked Drake under
the team. His head was crushed
and his legs almost torn from his
body. —_______..... _
The iron coupling pole protrud-
ing behind the wagon passed
through the radiator of the ear and
entered the back of the seat. Jule
Karkalits and Ben Burleson of
Cisco, who were riding in the car,
were painfully though not seriously
injured.
wheat and 6,000,000bushels
are booked to go out by the
, last of the current month.
More than 1,800,000 bushels
of wheat will move ost on
steamers sailing for Elrope
in the next two or three days.
Texas wheat growers are not
asking for relief this. year.
Canadian wheat growers in
the drouth, sections may go
broke. Prospects are rosy
for the man who has wheat;
they are .gloomy for the
grower who hasn’t. He will
be compelled to grin and
bear it. Cotton growing is a
gamble; wheat growing is a
gamble; life itself is a gam- ___, . , .
ble. Executive session was declared
Allows Students to
Smoke, Is Ousted
Himi IN THS COST OF
FOOD
James J. Davis is secre-
tary of the federal depart-
ment of labor and a bulletin
-
-
The folks
U. of
church wild
noon at 39
Circle of
North Roll
Circle tv
Wardville,
The
derson ST
have a II
home of ■
home 1
On Free
Palmer B
I
WASHINGTON, July 27.—UP)
The rising sugar scale as a subsi-
tute for the proposed three cents a
pound worid rate in the house tar-
iff bill, became the center of con-
troversy at the capitol Saturday‘as
republican members of the senate
finance committee continued re-
writing the house measure. .
As Chairman Smoot was finish-
ing his scale proposing to guaran-
tee a six cents a pound sugar price
in New York and Rudolps Spreckles,
California sugar magnate, was ex-
plaining his two sliding scales up
and down the corridors of the sen-
ate building, a critical attack
against both methods was made by
Senator King, democrat, Utah, who,
like Smoot, comes from a suget
beet state.
Sliding Scale Won’t Slide 5
"The trouble with a sliding scale -
is that it will sot slide but will fix
the price of sugar for the Ameri-
can consumers," King sat. “It base,
gins to look as though the Cubans.
were preparing to get together with
other world interests outside the
United States to cartel the Ameri-
enno sugar Jusv ao was attempted
recently in the case of rubber."
Smoot said he would announce,
details of his scale Monday and de-
nied he had submitted ft to Pres-
Went Hoover in a recent White
House conference.
---------------
Germans A mazed a
— ‘As Poincaire Quits
— “You're lookin' kipper. Vivian
must be feedin'you pretty well."
“That girl’s a born cook. I don't
know how oho does it. She had
never done housework before."
The old judge laughed heartily.
“When a woman loves a man,
Kent, my boy, she can do anything
to make him happy. She is getting
more joy out of makin' a home for
you than she would out of ten mils,
lion dollars. She told me so herself,
just the other day. She's Areal
mother woman. Some of these days
_ you'll be havin’ a little family and
— you'll see she’ll be just about ths
finest little mother in this town."
He glanced at Kent sidewise, and
saw that his laws were set. But he
gate.
— "Hey, there. Kent! ‘ Where’s the
missus?"
“Just remembered. Judge. She’s
doing tricks for the movies today
cut at the hangar. I had forgotten, s-s--
too, and was sitting here waiting for continued his monologue. -
mmko n inmoun Tear out of Her and nor," siroe (To BE CONTINUED) 1
Little Cuddies would be the one
to go all over the world with Bark
now. To Paris, London, Brussels
all the wonderful places ho had told
her of—and moot his friends. He,
with his money and influence, would
Book Chatter
NETTIE OARMBR BARKER
CIRCLE
-—------
(Continued from page one)
09
WASHINGTON, July 2—(P-
The question of where Ying Kao.
Chinese vice consul at San Francis
co, his wife, and Buen Foon, chan
cellor of the consulate, shall an-
swer in court for their alleged com-
plicity in a gigantic opium smug-
gling conspiracy remained unset-
tied today because Buen Foon in-
sists upon being tried in this coun- 1
try instead ofin China.-------3
• The Chinese Legation, through
the consul general at Ban Francis,
co, today was making a final at-
tempt to persuade Suen Foon to
follow the example of the Ying 1
Kaos and agree to return to China
for trial.
Texas Judge Annuls
Louisiana Marriage
Maud Diver, born in the Himal-
ayas and living for years In the va-
rious British army posts in India,
first with her father, later with
her husband, is qualified to write
an excellent story of that interest-
ing country. She does just that in
her "A Wild Bird”, a novel of in-
spiration, temperament, and color.
The heroine, Eve Challoner,
eighteen, and a budding genius,
worships the memory of her fath-
er,'"the one member of the family
who understood and sympathized
with her. Her music, her violin, is
a part of the fabric of life to her;
she cannot imagine living without
it; and through it she expects to
catch the over-tones in life and
beauty.
Her father’s win makes it pos-
sible for her to be independent of
her mother and her stepfather. She
chooses to go to India to live with
Vinessa Vane, the woman Daddy
loved, the woman who understands
her and her music.
Her "financial freedom almost
associated with them and claim to
be something of a student of human
nature-and can say that among
these men of the rails will be found
some of the most noble characters
that ever trod the soil
Good Nose Leads
To Big Distillery
DALLAS, July 27—(UP)—A good
nose for smelling whisky was what
led w. a Bray, federal prohibition
—— wrecks her future in permitting her
to follow her impulses. Her first
mistake is to becoming engaged to
Major Monteith because he re-
sembles her father in feature and
action.She realizes the error of
trying to mate eighteen with forty
when she meets young Lance Des-
mond, keen on the whole of life
like herself, fond of hunting, polo,
books and playing the plane, things
the major considers too exhausting.
Life in India brings Eve tragedy
and disillusion. But it brings the
gift of recompense, too, in a na-
tural love and its fulfillment with
TTSUALLY, in a way, gruff, and
P sometimes rough, but withal
under apron of their greasy over-
alls a heart that beats true as steel,
and under the grime and grease
that cover their face a smile that
is cheerful—and within the horny
hand a clasp of friendship that
makes a fellow glad to number them
among his triends—========
THE old engineer with a long and
* successful railroad experience
appreciates life — the life that
stretches out further than drag-
ging his cargo of human .freight
from ons destination to another-
the life that because of its sweet-
ness builds into its fabric the Mend-
ships of others—even the freckled,
barefoot country lad who is always
out to exchange greetings when he
PeAna believe me," he nata, *I
never fail to wave back at those
kids—I wouldn't know what to do
with myself if it wasn’t for my lit-
tle friends along the line.”
SAN ANTONIO, July 27.—(UP)-
Two San Antonians who could not
wait three days to obtain a mar-
riage license as prescribed by Texas
law and flew to Louisiana last week
, to be married, were single again to-
day as a result of annulment pro-
ceedings in district court here.
Gene Bailey and Mrs. Cora Lan-
drum, who side-stepped the Texas
"gin-marriage law,” had come to a
parting of the ways today. The
annulment suit was filed in blank
and although the district judge vol-
unteered the information that the
annulment was sensational he re-
fused to reveal its contents.
Bailey did not contest the suit .
a liquor r*
work for a
cation.” .
NEW Y
William D.
dry” congr
getting a*
cub reporte
1c, which hi
His first
4Z
rgia, is
job as
Graph-
5 cover
nue to
Jf “va-
Nicaragua authorizes use of our
troops in canal survey. -
Chig wl^
SOLD B DRUGGISTS EVER
:1T
agent, to the big still found near
Richland, Navarro county, he tes-
tified today at the hearing Tor
three men he arrested.
Bray said he smelt the whiskey,
while investigating a heavily wood-
ed ravine was without a search Lance and Dess “ al, maturity in
warrant, uno neurine disclosed. "9 Ther must, the power to "lay the
T. B. Swink, found at the place I moon ndte a out Duthe
when the prohibition agents ar-
rived, was placed under #3.000 bond.
Robert B. Foster and J. 8. Lans-
ford, who arrived at the ecens while
the officers were present, were plac-
ed under bond of $2,000.
Lance and beat of all, maturity in
out of the
the sky."— (Houghton Mifflin--
$2.50). -5
ASHEVILLE, N. C., July 27-
(PU)—The “Liberal tendencies" of
Dean Henry Dexter Learned, who
allowed hit co-ed students as well
as the boys to smoke to the halls
removal by the Asheville Board of
Education in executive session last
night. ~—~
when the applause of a committee
of parents and students, who at-
tended the meeting to support the
young dean, interrupted discussions
of the board in open session.
BROMLEY DELAYED
--------— TACOMA, Wash., July 27—(UP)
isshed by the department lets —The proposed flight of Lieut. Har-
* =old Bromley from Tacoma to Tok-
yo met new delays today when the
aviator announced that he would
wait for new parts for his mono,
plane City of Tacoma before tak-
ing off. He said it was improbable
he would leave before Monday or
Tuesday. P
it be known the retail price
of food in the United States
increased 1 per cent between
May 18 and June 15 and has
advanced 58 per cent since
June 15, 1913. . Well, who
takes down the velvet? Far*
more everywhere are de-
Topeka Resents
Magazine Article
4 TOPEKA, Kas., July 27—(UP)—
Great indignation was expressed
here today regarding an article of
Vice-President Charles Curtis ap-
pearing to the current issue of the
Fellow townsmen of the vice-
president united in declaring that
the article was unfair to Curtis.
“I know Charley Curtis is one of
the biggest men that ever came out
of the West and I don't care what
any damn Washington correspond-
ent says about him,” said George
A. Clark, lifelong friend of the ex.
ecutive. -------- 0
-----0--
Bombing Planes
.... To Cross Country
“Individual psychology to not
psycho-analysis. It is a method,
initiated by Dr. Adler of Vienna, of
gaining knowledge of Individuals,
including knowledge of their inner
life, but it to a method founded
upon a view of the individual as a
whole in himself, an indivisible
unit of human society.” —.....—
Philippe Mairet’s “ A B C of Ad-
ler’s Psychology” gives the leading
Ideas of Individual Psychology, and
a sketch of their origins, written for
the general reader, floundering
on warning of the city dads -
about keeping dogs in the city
well muzzled is well taken and will
be appreciated by a large percent-
age of the citizenship of the city.
This is not the time of year to -
take any chances with rabid ani-
mals. While nearly every fellow
loves his dog, we must remember
that there are others who love, their
children more and the best way to
play safe in the matter is to, see
the the dog to mussled.======== -
TT has been given out that all dogs
X running at large without, mux-
Ess will be killed.
, We believe they are correct in too
matter as it is not asking much of
any good citizen to proteot his fel-
lowman to the extent that he would
either keep his dog off the streets
or keep it muzzled. .———- -
CITY HEALTH Officer Dr. M. T.
noTOH " EN of wphold
we believe that caution a good
many things would pay our citizens
bout, trying to find a firm foot-well.
WE might say—again in favor of
- the city council that they are
probably getting the new sanitary
toilet appliances installed at exact-
hold in psychology. Doctor Adler's
work is scientific and general in
method, yet essentially the study of
the separate personality we all are:
therefore called Individual Psychol-
ogy. This " A B O'of Mairet out.
lines and defines the unique and
Can They Sing?
No wonder mosquitoes sing. They
WASHINGTON, July ar-cup)-
A tactical flight by eight huge
bombing planes from Langley
Field, Va., to the west coast and re-
turn was authorized by the war de-
partment today, Major Hugh H.
Knerrwill command the flight
which win leave early in August.
Tonally known, Aris’ out the “INC'place them back * back and put A monologue is a conversation be-
------ She R" mm •”--’'='^^&5^^
OTHER LEAGUE OE______,=.......w
NATIONS.....manding relief. Consumers
[eminent Frenchman,
are paying high prices. Point
lor. Anywhere me.
.To make two postage stamps stick. .
where one wouldn’t stick before, .
land, is a practical
chainT
Bindea
characteristic theory of the great 1
Adler, showing how the principles, are not bothered by mosqitoes.—The
if applied to experiences, will give 4 -
a practical knowledge of human na-
ture.-dt
“Although no one calls Adler an
optimist, his system of individual
Psychology to founded on en-
couragement, an dis deeply reassur-
ing.It shows that the sins of
the individual are in truth no more
pur! hto own then arehlsvlr-
Rend this " A B C of Adler’s
Psychology” to understand Adler’s
manenakeyrchoigt,, “d.ue
==-===:
Ashland Daily Independent. —.
health and harmonious behavior.
Adler resembles no one so much as
the great Chinese thinkers. If Eu-
rope is not too far gone to make
use of his services, he may well
come to be known as the Confucius
of the West."—(Greenberg—$1.50).
PERIODIC PAINS — One dose
white's Head Ease usually relieves.
Money back if not pleased—Adv.
sour, ^^^th^
NOTICE
This to for single people who would
like to have more ready cash after
they marry.
The MATRIMONIAL MUTUAL
ASS’N OF TEXAS is issuing a policy
to single people that pays up to $1000
when you marry. Why not secure one
or more policies with this company for
your future happiness.
For further information see or phone _____
-V. C. Mead. District Mgr.
Salesmen and Salesladies Wanted
— How to Choose a Bank-ou
This is the age of speculation. Your bank, accordingly,
mould be chosen for its expert qualifications—age, experience,
judgment, size, methods of doing business.
This Institution has qualified for every banking service the
community’s needs demand. We solicit your account.
CLEBURNE STATE BANK
Capliar and Surplus $125,000.00
“Yours for Faithful Serotee"
Ms ,
MAT
mal dan
Mudred
IE at
F.
oulmina
es. Nang
Ea
59
Merwa
I
the ho
S Wl 1
CE
Ai:
melon
RR
ourA,
ward 1
“.f
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 224, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 28, 1929, newspaper, July 28, 1929; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1667120/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.