Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 93, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1958 Page: 2 of 6
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JJTERE is a pleasant little gamt that will give you a message every
A * day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune.
Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or
more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is
your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rec-
tangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then
read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
| WISHING WELL Age
J Registered U. S. Patent Office.
20 Years Ago Today
• January 14, 1*233
A total of 1,802 garments have been macle in the
Clebbrne and Burleson WPA sewing rooms since
they were reopened on Nov 17, a report of the
I county superintendent reveals. The rooms were
'closed during the month of October . . Josef Bias-
i fro, concert violinist, will be presented in the third
Cleburne artist series at the high school auditor-
ium Monday night . . . Vending machines release
peanuts, gum, candy and even cigarettes when you
put the coins in the slot, and if plans of the Cle-
burne Park Board go through, athletes at the city
park will secure lights via the coin-in-the-slot
route. Plans are being discussed for installing au-
tomatic lights on new tennis courts being con-
structed at the park that will be operated on the
[ coin system . . . Forest Floyd, manager of the Cle-
| hurne Brownbilt Shoe Store, will leave today for
) St. Louis where he will attend a shoe convention
and buy new stock for soring and Easter. Mr. Floyd
will be gone one week . . . Honoring Mr. 'W. A.
;Adams, whose retirement in February will mark
The dose of 32 years in the postal service, of which
j31 were spent in the local postoffice, employees of
y+he Cleburne oostoffice were hosts at an apprecia-
tion dinnr Friday night rt the home of Mr. and
(Mrs. Dop.glas Pegues on Bellevue Drive.
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BUILD /ACRE
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CANTEENS
TO HELP AS
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MR.
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AH GOTTA
ADMIT THIS IS ‘
A HEW SIDE TO!
^CASH WELLS/
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■7 NOW WAIT
/ A MINUTE,
GENTLEMEN)!
\ .VOL! ASK THE
\ IMPOSSIBLE
mto
m/j
I rodmcd hv StLahcD
/ 5T/LL CANT BELL EVE
WNAT TNE ZONE EANGER
TOLD ME
*
» president ever elected directly
*■ by the Senate?
A—Richard Mentor Johnson in
7 1836.
DON'T SEEM TO BE
Zl DUNNTO
ABOUT THAT,
OSCAR...LOOK
JAN,-/#’
z^RmJU.C Dbj OO »4» rinkp-rmaraafl
JOHNNY HAZARD
I LIVED WITH MY
PA ON AN OLD,
RlW-DOWSJ RANCH !
HE TRIED HARD,
BUT THINGS JUST
DIDN'T WORK
K, OUT!
V*
u V
JlilO
r*f~ j
rr 1
Ye^.IT ALL SEEMS
SO POINTLESS ' I'D
MUCH PREFER TO
EXPEND MY ENERGY 1
TOWARD ACHIEVING |
SOME WORTHWHILE |
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T.M. Rejr.TtS. FaVtlH. .
r when will this J
CABLE ARRIVE IN J
CALCUTTA? - 45
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f ALLmect-and i
I^QlEMSMOWASAirL/ /;
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But that bit of thrift 15 goina
iw
B Mi 1
I Hi
Mi
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♦
Is
A WARTIME SUPPY OF MINE ■
WHO RUNS A SMALL FREIGHT
SERVICE IN CALCUTTA HE'LL
HAVE A 5EAT-UP OLP PLANE
REAPY FOR US WHEN WE
num, j arrive/
THEN ONE DAY I
WAS HELPING
HIM DIG A WELL-
&AMO .‘WE WERE
COVERED WITH
< it^o/lj
BUT ONE WHO
CHOOSES TO
...INSTEAD 7 YOU CAN COMMUTE A DEftTH
OF CERTAIN SENTENCE TO A PRISON TERM
PEATH IN \. “.........'
THE ELECTRIC
CH MR ...TH ATS
DIFFERENT! )
OUR
LIGHTS
WENT
OFF
OBJECT?/
I THOUGHT WE WERE
GETTING OUR OWN
PLANE, JOHNNY,,, WHY
THE FLIGHT TICKETS?
< You \
WOULD,
x x'-
07
A
LX
I
ANY CHANGE
SINCE THE
LAGTIME WEi
WERE HERE^ ’(^/Er'therE .
Ik,
RUN TO THE
STORE AND GET
SOME
■X 7S
The Cleburne Times-Revlew li b politically
(X
1 Sir—- BE6GIMG Youp-
; PARDON, BUT I OBJECT
' TO THIS FORM OF r-
X EXERCISE/
4^
1
IjLi^
£■ J
I - ....... - "• - C ' -. ■. >.■-■ . rt
Just t-ink,sonnY'-ycure furnish^
ING HEAT FOR. 169,000 CUBIC FEET, 1
NOT COUNTING THE HALLWAYS /
'—QCT~~ IT”'" 1
7
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KI
it
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Next morning, at the Seoul airport,^ SI
WE 'LL' MAKE- f HE LONG".
RUN COMMERCIAL,GINGER
,„THAT WAV WE CAN USE
A SMALL PLANE FOR THE
FINAL LEG INTO NEPI5TANZ
r-F __
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YOU WANNA) EM?
LOAN HIM
TO ME, '
COACH? >
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ZEA V/A/ ‘ ME MS MONEy
AND MS GOLD M/NE /
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SOON AS MASON OPENS TNE DOOP
/'LL LET MM A/A
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ALL RIGHT THEN,
WiNXSET, \ LET'S GO... I'M
L ( 0BCM.MB ) ANXIOUS TO
I k RIG'S OKAYZ J LOOK OVER T
' THIS MOON 7
k OF OURS./T
wSr®
TOMORROW MORNING,--.
SIR/ IT 5H0ULP BE •
PH0NE7 IN TO THE
RECEIVING PARTY;
BEFORE NOON/
L , 4>Kg
stw
CAPTAIN EASY
IM SCIENTISTS TELL ME V
THERE'S NOT ONE CHANCE \ _________ _
IN FOLK OF THE PASSENGER I TAKE THAT RISK,
SURVIVING THE FIRST SUCH J GOVERNOR... >
TEST, TOMI I CAN'T LET X
A VOLUNTEER RISK ITl^/
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/■BOT.'THrtH l-W 7\ t LIKE J .!
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TRIALIST HAS THE RESOURCES
L TO DO IT, VOU HAVE! BUT HOW
• DO I FIT IN ?
I
WHY, THAT LOOKS/*”1
LIKE A FLAG, 7 YEH... AN'
DOESN'T IT? f IF IT IS, WHO
L 74 PUT IT
THERE? A
Ml
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...................................—*
THAT FIGURES/WHY CHECK, SNAP/ SO I'VE WIRE?'
WASH OUT A BIG; ‘ - —.....-
EXPENSIVE JOB
FOR A ONE-WAY
FLIGHT, EH,
g JOHNNY? -togg$
Q—When was the B’nai B’rith
‘ Joimded?
A—This service organization
was conceived in a New York
cafe by 12 Jews in 1843, as an
instrument for bringing together
all Jews, regardless of religious-
opinion, geographic origin or
economic status.
*
Q—Why was the U.S. trade
dollar issued?
A—The U.S. trade dollars of
1873 to 1885 were issued for cir-
culation in the Orient to com-
pete with the Mexican ,peso.
Some trade dollars are still cir-
culating in the Orient.
:■: :::
Q—What was the name of the
« famous colu-mn edited by Eu-
gene Field?
A—This column was called
“Sharps and Flats.”
q—What is Delaware’s state
» flower?
A'—The peach blossom.
V *
q—Who was the only U.S. vice
IP ftMV INDUS-
{AcKEETELLG
GOVERNOR
5L0AN OF HI5
MANNED 5ATEL'
LITE project
IN COOPERATION
WITH THE MIUTARf
gr?T-'ut, "if
to- in/
if., p
O* W)
--i Y'/
THAT PUT US ON EASY
STREET... BUT I NEVER.
FORGOT THOSE
STRUGGLIN', MISERABLE
PAYS, .
.OZARK..,
HOU CAN COMMUTE A DEATH
IN EXCHANGE FOR
HIS—
1t7^h
/A
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Published Afternoon Dally (Except Sat-
urday) ana Sunday Morning at 108 South
Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phone
5-2441, all departments.
Wir aiAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publisher
P3YTON LAWSON, Business Manager
JACK PROCTOR, Editor
PAUL GRIFFITH, Advertising Manager
GEORGE H, HANNAH, Circulation Mgr.
______g^Bg^R3[pTIQjj - -
7 By ey.rrier in city- 25c"week. By mall in
Johnson County $5.75 per year, 6 months
$3:50. By mail in state $9.50 per year. By
mail out of state $12.00 per year
Entered as second class mail matter at
the post office at Cleburne, Texas under
, Act of Congress, March 3, 1879
National Representative TEXAS DAILY
PRESS LEAGUE, MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
ASSN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
LISHERS ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS-
PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN [f-h
__NOTICE TO PUBLIC ‘
Any erroneous reflection upon the char- !'^
apter, standing or reputation of any per-
son, or firm or corporation which may
appear m the columns of this paper, will
be gladly corrected upon the notice of
eaEf_ b®1*18 given to the publisher.
UNITED PRESS (UP) LEASED
■ TELETYPESETTER WIRE SERVICE
- The United Press Is exclusively entitled"
. to the use ot publication of all news dis-
patches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and also the local
news published therein. All rights to re-
publication, or broadcast are also reserved.
independent newspaper nlaclng the publlo
welfare above the interest of any party,
Truth and decency are its guiding prin-
ciples, and its dally determination is to
print the news without fear or favor.
Meanwhile- at miser masons home nearby
”"T WWT '.—~WMnr^~miirMtr*Teh- ‘ '—~~~i > imbbii
Quotes From
The News
HOLLYWOOD — Mrs. Margaret
/Allen Gibson Griffith, mother of
actress Debra Paget, in announc-
ing Miss Paget’s plans to marry
singer-actor David Street:
“I think he is a fine, sweet boy.
I am very happy for Debra to
marry him.”
MINEOLA, Kan. — Alf Landon,
1936 Republican presidential can-
didate, accusing Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles of fail-
ure to heed expert advice on for-
eign affairs:
“As a result, we have steadily
been clobbered flank and rear.”
WASHINGTON—- Navy Secre-
tary Thomas S. Gates Jr., in
launching a campaign to prevent
he public, from building up great
hopes that the next Vanguard test
will place a satellite in orbit:
“I want to emphasize that the
Text Vanguard test will be just
hat — a test. I appeal to the
public and to the information
media to lend us every assistance
n keeping this test in perspect-
ive.”
MALIBU, Calif. - Sheriff’s dep-
uty Barney Miller after arresting
actress Sarah Churchill on a
Irunkenness charge:
“She kept. . .cussing and talking
■.bout how I London was going to
bomb the United States. She said
'there will always be an England,
but I’m not too .sure of the United
States’.”
WASHINGTONWhe Air Force
in disclosing that one of its bomb-
ers carrying a nuclear weapon
had crashed and burned without
causing an atomic explosion:
“The plane was destroyed by
fire. No nuclear explosion was
possible and of course none oc-
curred.”
By UNITED PRESS
PHOENIX, Ariz. — Gov. Orval
Faubus of Arkansas on denying,
Negro students at Little Rock
High School protection if federal
troops are removed:
“It is improper to put a police
force in the schools. It isn’t my
role to promote social changes.” •
SLOPING shoulders and nar-
row trousers are decreed as
smart new spring ga?b for Rus-
sian males by Moscow tailors.
Glad to hear the Russkis are de-
signing other stuff besides new
type sputniks.
! ! !
Appears such bulky boys as
Khrushchev and Bulganin will
have to diet if they want to look
like up-to-date Boris Brummels.
» j j
The new Soviet slim suit styles
sound pretty sharp. In fact, we'd
say they're strictly Ivan league!
! ! T
A single Prince Edward island
family boasts of five physicians,
four nurses, two optometrists, a
dentist, a druggist, a medical
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
—- — By WILLIAM RIH .u-.".c., .■ -
Central Press Writer
laboratory technician and a mu-
sician. That last one seems to be
out of .tune with the rest.
! ! !
A senator accuses the State
department of suffering from “in-
tellectual arthritis.” Sounds like
a pretty stiff charge.
! ! !
Moscow's city council has
changed the name of its Meschan-
skaya street to Peace avenue. Even
if it doesn't mean anything, it's
easier to spell.
j j ;
The Regional Conference of|
Northeastern States wants the
observance of Labor Day to be
moved from the first to the sec-,
ond Monday in September. That,
opines the man at the next desk,
shouldn’t be such a job.
is
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INNER SPACFPROBLBW ~
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• BARBS
; BY HAL COCHRAN
JYHOTO albums are what par-i
, ents intend to paste family'
pictures in but seldom do. J
t,„ # » * ’
Some women pick dresses.!
I that make them not only the <
; woman of the hour, but of the -.'i
a IB
1 A new fur coat will keep a
Wife warm and quiet—for al
whUa' ’/I
A
.. -(TO" '
i
1
■
zz—1/
7/
— T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
P © 1957 by UEA Service, Inc.
“And as president I want to assure the trustees that
we are doing the best we can to make Yahoo U, the
kind of school our football team can be proud of!”
f ? J
J77
-‘i
. CTRJ
1953 b
'A5 ■
'.Williams.
>58 by NEA ^erviefe. frtc.
' Hi
■
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HEROES Ag£ MADE-NOT BORM
K ,w,l
^4^,
‘ita
tyMiteguftpimy, ■
nassiwk
I MA*AM,I <5iT WHUT 1
—. \ ^HMEAMAWX 7
^Xf SHORE A6P.EE / 5
Y I • WITH YUH ! S'ES, \ Tf ,/ N'X , I
\ THIS YERE MOPERMpV</ / 2
X. \ MOPEO’LIVIM’ J 7/ jC
f®
-J. 7'^1 _
-13
sJ
■ R I ■
NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS
an-
antisisychologist,
anti-sociologist.
L
- I II ■!! ■ !■! 1 | Id JIMI illlll ITT—■ll—l" I ■
editorial Comment
Dick's Jet—Jolly Red—Capital View-
Ski Blue—Capitol Phones—Ike's Dog
WASHINGTON— (NE A) —Vice
President Nixon, is upset over
.reports that he now has a big jet
plane as his personal air taxi.
The fact is, the Air Force is of-
fering the use of a passengerized
jet tanker to all government offi-
cials who might want to use it
lor domestic or foreign flying.
The Air Force has long been
annoyed by the fact that all Rus-
han officials fly into foreign
countries in jets, while U.S. offi-
cials have had only conventional
prop planes to travel in. That’s
why it outfitted the big jet tanker
for official use of U.S. govern-
ment big shots.
There’s only one gimmick in
this Air Force offer. If a mission
calls for flights over 40,000 feet,
all passengers have tb have their
spleens examined. If the spleen
doesn’t pass, there’s no ride, at
least over 40,000 feet.
The dictionary says that the
spleen is “an organ found in
most vertebrates, near the stom-
ach, that produces certain modi-
fications in the blood.”
It’s reported that the V.P.’s
spleen is in excellent condition.
sweated, a hog who speaks I1
man-wash, and a cat who
lets gdssips out of bags. , . 7‘
' : J 7' * * *
A venerable clergyman, vis-
iting a church over which he
had presided many years earli-
er, was greeted warmly by
a white-thatched parishioner.
“I don’t, remember, the. name,” ?
confessed the parishioner, “but __
thp faith i« familiar” J
2—Tuesday, Jan. 14, 1958-CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW
★ Washington News Notebook
WASHINGTON SOCIETY is
anticipating the arrival of new
Soviet Ambassador Mikhail A.
Menshikov with considerable
pleasure. Menshikov served in
Washington in 1945 and won a
reputation as a jolly, gay fellow
who was an excellent dancer and
good joke teller. He speaks ex-
cellent English.
The departing" Ambassador
Georgi N. Zarubin deported
himself efficiently and with good
manners here, but he never quite
seemed to be having a good time.
CAPT. RALPH PARGAS,
Philippine armed forces attache,
asked pretty Broadway actress
Sue Trevathan at a recent cock-
Itail party what she thought New
iYork City had over Washington.
iShe replied:
i “Pernod in Martinis, fewer
phonies, a mayor, less Sputnik
cocktail chatter, better hors
| Try and Stop Me I
’---------By BENNETT CERF—- I
JOHN FULLER envisages what certainly will be the most
unusual zoo in the world. It will include a school of i
whales that has a people of a good time, a boy •’footed bear, I
a clam that mans up, a ... ^ . . ;■
human-hearted lion, a.tur- : i..j
BY DOUGLAS LARSEN AND JEPvRY BENNETT
NEA Staff Correspondents
d’Oeuvres and
■ waiters.”
But she assured Captain Par-
gas that she couldn’t wait to
come back. “There’s one thing
that Washington has,” she said,
“and that’s more actors than I’ve
ever seen in my life.”
GUESTS WERE surprised to
find ski champion and expert
dancer Count Andre de Mande-
ache sitting out a rock and roll
number at a big Sheraton Park
hotel dance the other night.
“Count,” a friend said, “I
didn’t know there was any dance
you didn’t do.”
“Rock and roll is the one,” he
answered. “You see, practically
every dance step corresponds to
ways you balance yourself when
skiing. And what those dancers
are doing now is exactly the
movement I made just before J
broke my leg on a ski run.”
IKE’S BIG GERMAN Weimar-
aner dog Heidi almost unbal-
anced the U.S. budget more than
Russia’s Sputniks. When- Ike and
Budget Bureau officials were
working on the budget message
during the recent sessions at the
Gettysburg farm, they had big
stacks of paper neatly stacked up
all over the floor of Ike’s office.
And when photographers were
permitted in the room to take a
picture of the session, Heidi
romped through the door and
almost messed up the piles of
paper beyond resorting.
Fortunately, one of the photogs
grabbed Heidi before she had
done more than mess up the De-
partment of Commerce stack of
papers.
IN CASE YOU want to bring
your private phone list up to
date, they’ve changed the Capi-
tol number to CA-4-3121 and
given everybody there new ex-
tensions. I
Here are some of the new
numbers:
Vice President Nixon, 2121;
Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass.),
4543; Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-
Tenn.), 4944; and House Speaker
Sam Rayburn, 2796,
IT PROVES SOMETHING
A lady reader recently accused us of
—..... .‘‘j -•’’> anti-sociologist, anti-
psychiatrist prejudices. Anxious to atone
1 An executive of the Standard Oil Com-
pany of New Jersey recently spoke on
‘Cr-eat Issues in the Oil Industry.” One of
those issues is the depletion allowance,
which is a percentage credit against in-
come taxes, and is often misunderstood.
This provision, he pointed out, has come
under fairly constant attack as a tax
loophole for many years. The truth is, ne
went on, that “the principal beneficiary
of the deduction is al] society. The pur-
pose of Congress in incorporating the de-
pletion principle in our income tax laws
was surely not to confer benefit upon a
particular industry for its own sake. It
was to achieve what is considered equit-
able tax treatment for the industry and tc
advance the public interest.”
Why should oil producers be given this
special credit? The answer is that oil
wells are declining assets. In other words
they ultimately wear cut, ’become worth-
less and must be replaced. That is an ex-
tremely costly matter at all times — and
in this age of inflation the costs have
soared. The depletion tax credit simply
recognizes that fact, and helps to make
needed new development possible.
The Standard Oil spokesman said
other important thing about this fax pro-
vision—that it has worked. To quote him
directly: “It has encouraged a level of in-
vestment that has enabled the industry tc
meet the needs of an expanding peace-
time economy, and the extraordi tarv
needs of the country in time of war.” As
the old saying has it, nothing succeeds
like success. The depletion allowance has
been an outstanding success to the benefit
of the whole country and everyone in it.
, we have searched the current theories and
found one which we approve. It follows:
After a study of five years, some Fin
1 nist psychologists have concluded thai
’ women are more likely to be dishonest
■ Wan men. This was arrived at by a series
. of simnle experiments: customers chosen
- at random in stores throughout Fi dan'1
. were given too much change.
7 Men. the psychologists found, were five
- percent more likely fo return the exc-ss
than women. However, one critic
r.of'the conclusions pointed out tha^ w i!
this may prove, man’s superior honpstv 1,1
■ may prove instead woman’s inferioi’ ^b’1
■■^ y to a <ld and subtract. , To show hqw
-open-minded We can be, we’re prepared tn tle with an athlete-necked >
..accept either expanation.
)■ Arpspent rolls represent the crescent
tlle Turkish flag and were firs!
• .made in Budapest in 1686. The Turks had
, planned to take the city by night but Were
f he;tr;! by. the bakers, working in the night,
who gave the warning and saved the city’
A-s a reward they were permitted to make
rre‘WFchnr~d rnlki . ' the faith is familiar.'
•._ . t—* — —~ r"'——•— --------------
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 93, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 14, 1958, newspaper, January 14, 1958; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1223501/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.