Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [48], No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 24, 1953 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
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WE GIVE S&H GREEN STAMPS
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duce
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7
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EAME PROM THM SECOND
THAT ULDINGf
--t,
blowing the
horn methodicahly
Itom . quviy»
The town
d
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at-
- IN SPOT wsseus CNFG.
1)
around, hop-
23
whigh had worried the more tar-
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angiah sweqt and Q-tever
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enight have emerged rroi
won0t0 vuo
$ome
%.4
•r firip er
at An the
,"91
pepen
nt windi»
I
5a
2-3
ticles of dust.
A cursous teature
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7
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his
at their posta, and
more had enlisted aa
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appei
> assumed
upon par-
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“tA-
the stihient rackhng ot a hen.
"I covle play det oltve by going
I and
areas
AeF
I"
tempt* at quarantine
in an interview a notable bac-
well I "
6uD )
MoX teLX ’
ALL Raar,
1 600rt .
A
Any erreneowa tea
••tor etehee et
The French originnted the
sit-down strike in 1936.
I
3 -d •
3h0
cBe
"wa
/
henne. Neenel) Mie. The tenbii-
•••• *»•(•**• sim.
d before. 7
wea tha
Um mum
pubiher
pieuttsmvee
wnsuFnwn
8
>
*
I
I
I
of the snake bite
better. Then sud
bail wee awe»»ef
he had not consid
had alno
only he a
g
F2s tu
1W
ri
"a
— _I
1
World oldest royal throne
I* that of Japan.
7558
v ’
it
l
6:30 p.r
o
a
tefhats—but
hubby isn’t
unparalleled rpidity of spread,
and fatality. Katimatoa for various
elties, admittedly little more than
u handled on an emer-
rjUST TO MAKE SURE YOU LEFT NO}
TRACKS. YOUD eetTERGODNCK
AND exMNE TAt EPTY hUll OHG.
"E4-a"
1,
R-S
ya
Whole area* of eities had
Mnated a* hospita zones
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X " J
1, U
; 972
e
.a
2g. *
2 2-—
1*862...
Lkmch
pgS25
‘owp
Um eqlmne 4
_ eorreeted M
e#me betne eivem 09 Wb
"a--mU2
M are aold in some ।
Whatntxt—pumpkin
7"17
1 uppase 1 COuL
Mm MCN WEAKEN
ABOurTMAV bes
MISS SPrigwe
behind, he » vung
mer head wiva..
the do« loek The
tered, the do rr let
teemg
MR *
ns hoi na the sun's surface.
Nore thin half of the peo.
ManUae a« .
■■ i—=
uuwraS-Ngaeep
"The Vnllul Pr«M 5 exol/tvet, emeqa
to the mm ot »ublleaten ef aU meya ai
1,"‘
With a wild teelina al leaving olvilantlon behtna. bs swhne the
heavy hammer acainst the deer leek.
the street, m if a policeman might
be bearing down upon him.
But the empty street brought
him back again, and panic vedr*
bore the raatntatn
With a wM
report*, he read, wer available tor
Noston, Atlanta, and New' Orleans,
ludituting that th* new* rervtces
in those cities had already broken
down The disease was 1 iter n kind
of suiper-mennles No one was sure
in what part of the world it had
originuted: aided hr e‘ plane trav.
wawai:
8^
stepped in.
The.newapaper-4 -plehed
was like a little rountry we
a singie folded aha* V M woe «
Wednesday of the p. ecedine e
• * •
Ml
t
were reported as escaping from
the elttes, but thost remaining had
suffered, aa far as he could make
out from the newspaper a week
old. no disgraceful panic. Civiliy
zatloa had retreated, but it had
carried its wounded along, and had
faced the foe Doctors nnd nurses
we* thut the isolation ot the indi-
t idual seemed to be of i.o avail.
A certain amount of looting,
warticularly of liquor stores was
"regorted. On the whole, however,
order had been well preserved,
posalbly through fear. Louisville
and Spokane reported confagra-
tions, out nf control because of
decimated fre-departments
• • •
CIVIIZATION, the human race
• —at least, it seemed to have
gone down gallantly Many people
3 Ranor
t
p
Tmam iToan Nehevweet wn.
Ueto*, beawe M "lah," whie 1
<*• memmtnin la biete by ■ *a<-
rlwMbe. M* given atmecie wen-
ment, bet Salla avrlaaalr HL TWe
men *tal< bla aeMe, bet nee atea
lab aara ba la a lab. Wbae ba
A
• r -4 m'
Flevntors were known ns
erly as 236 B C
ri
rop despite 11 certnin rufflins of feathers
arcomplished a good drill
"gjsegs
, Mha0Nhee ■ h0
VEe.5K,nyBN g5F.3
LWN,‘ I *4
! abrador, with nn area of
112,0%) squnre miles hud a
popuation of less than N,
(yM in 1951.
el. It had sprung up almost
multaneousiy in eveiy center
....-----... outrunning all
COMM
WELL A
Commu
the WHD
funda for
despite «
communii
The «
was held
and send
cake wes
purchasec
to the Ms
A cake
a recreat
abd cans
ettertaint
ies were
Commit
munity n
Sihh, Qi
Mia The
elab mei
ckket. cot
cor. Abe
; cui
ubi Pa
euct for
res
vfe
).t‘8
regulations for imnmediate maas
vitus. produced b mutation; it
might be an escape, ponsibly even
a vindictive release, from some
laboratory of bacteriological war.
3049 WEAR-
ruXESo! -
a 41
V.
—■ to
flue. The disease was
to be airborne, possibly ।
KHSJKS1______
quarter of an hour he waa back
vv here he hud star ted. Hehadseeh
no one, and heard no answer. Ha
find observed four dog*. several.
tertelogiat indicated the
Smargaiice of sothe new disease
had always been a possibility
( Meet
JOSHU
Lions Ch
a hanque
rd veniso
cabbage
pie and
Followi
president
iness me
made a f
i stgnal
arm to
was also
ground*
After tl
"raves *1
on Ms va
Mountain
Messrs. 1
Edward*.
Seals Jr,
NNNB
mK, 4
&..
2.
0,5•
of । vats, a considerable number of
wee Um eher- Into ste of these >Umc* and look-
d t2! I Ing atound." lie thought Then lie
"2* "M ' had ,i bettei idea.
working. He let the tube* warm <
up. and then searched carefully.1
Only faint cackles of italic ten-
pinged on his alerted eardrumha
He shifted to the hort-wave, but I
it too was silent Methodieally he
searched both bands again. Of
course, he thought, some stations
might atill be operating; they
would probably not be on a 24-
hour sehedule.
H len the radio tuned to a
wavelength which waa—or had
been-that of a powerful atation.
If it came on at any time, he would
hear it . He went and lay on the
davenport.
He awoke in the fun light Me- "
Ing his hand, he found that the
pam of the snake bite had shrun
back to tercel soreness Ris heed
felt clear too, and he realized *M
the other illnees, if it had teemi
another i lines* and not eh etteet
•)
a: JI 1
*cattered hen*, one cow grazing in
a vacant lot with a bit of broken
rope dangling from her neck
Noning along the doorway of a
very decent-looking house, there
had been a large rat.
Copyeiphe 1949 by George R Stewart Usd b, orvangement wish
"he publishers, Rendom Meew. Ine Distributed by NEA Sei
mtee
g4
A.
bu*y afternoon. He could not
merely drive on, he decided, be-
enune he must report the dead
,9
Pakistan ig a
of five provinces
sillies nnd tribal ।
1 .
>
1
the. Quusies “ r
- t ’ H
*5
452. A
again, but drove on and
‘9 yhA$ he now knete th Oe
It the best hous in town He got out
of the car, carrying the hammev
EE
wuensea, indicated that between 23
per cent shd M per cent of the
population had already died No
P -
+
animal reervolr of
might he cairned by
mietu-organasm, mest
window,.and saw newspapers on
the rack. Suddenly he saw that
there were headlines as large at
for Feurl Hurbor:
• CRISIS ACUTE
B R A B R € With sudden determination he
W-U •0 ' strode back to the car, and picked
i T " ' 2.- . ■*. \ up the hammer. A moment later
MAL COCHRAN I he stood with the heavy head
HAVE you noticed winter’ new poised in front of the door. Then
N 24 slam Oil the hit and run—or suddenly all the restraints of habit
haven’t you been bopped by a i stosptdjhim.Qivization moved
snowball ydtt \ T in, anfl held hia arm, almost phys-
ically. You didn't break into b
, a law-abiding
I flp and down
"TpPTI
xu=ue...... .
ptxss"g
disrasn It
some new
likely a
- •' .F
MR •Ou A? - C? ‘
m-AT D0u‘- ~< 3-
TALl?lttp, J
‘THE headlines told him what wan and i
* moat egsential. The nited -
Ced"
some new and unknown disbase M
,7---N
( Ngvr-lao «fMogg ‘
nor Mtors nnaqrour
-."268*0"
Eq--.2 Mm *,2
mi. >«. oredited *• h ar not therwie
ctvdited in Uiu paper and •)■• Uto it
. 5 ev cicore 1 t-ene ae * s
1 .6. 0+ 64905 e»~0 E
I 640Me IC.-D St roe Po6rc
; F I CAN .9 ’ so $0 •- •3 )
\ " MA<t -E PoC= or OF.
burial* ",,a zta
The sun was nearly down dhenLa l fl
he toused himaels. He startethe -
engine, and dove the cat dowh , ' "
the stiwet, stopping now ahd then
to blow a bla- upon the horn. He
turned off into u side street, and
mode the rounds of the town.
2:30 pl
' 2:30 p.«
mhuss SSK??
• tummvache pto,eppendieitis.
W2a2......P -
85 ■
/ its A veesiA,\ /
($\po A AKE ] f '
\ tOSTOTSDe J (
( CH WARM < \
\s.we vs-"5 J Y
MAYBE Thi6 ICE BAG
WILL CURE My
HEADACHE AND I'Ll
GET TO SLEEP
7 rf» FLAseAwecH ‘ 34
MENFLNTMbeT fl
amn8raF
n MEKEl_IKA
Selentists are able to pm
he flames Marly tivice
99,2
HidteratAapsin
though miner outbreaks as he cemeo vhAt he nos
/ HAW HAW HAW • \
Hrs u *unee$‘ • NC )
r Eve HAoF ’ J
Qve cetfnq ‘ K‘
9 e: A SCGTR s9v \
( EVER Oa Oj .vt' L
, ‘ym,128****
222,8
* Tin’ Anti-Saloon lengue
WAs founded May 24, 1893,
at Oherlin, O.
N9rA9T-asUK-
rwK> HAGe
Ebbv ID Fia
ADAK, VC §wwes
EROM Mg HEELS..,
E: 1 ’■
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, T lex--- 1
E-horBiTNKTueMuDe
( OP TH)
(2. 28
newa pubtehed thereia, AU raht to re-
pubtie •ii**, ar brondeen er atea reserved.
witi him This time he did not.
hesitate before the locked door; he a.
struk it hard, three timet, and it ‘ E
crashed inwards. Aa he had sup- 3
posed, there was a large radia in r
the living room. Be
He made a quick round of In- ‘ •
spection, d o w,n it lira and up P
"There’s nobody!" he decided. j ”
He snapped the radio on, and ;
mw that the electricity waa still
fftXutS -
thorities were entoteing"atrit
L.. ..
lsisems.he-
..... ma.sana
..........rnene X
IM0m
! T JVENSON’S CRITICISM SHOWEL
V -RELESS LACK OF VITAL FACTS
Adla Stevenson’s first major speech since nis aeteat
for the presidency was ndmirable in its generalities of
fair-minded opposition nnd its tone of good-humored
sportsmanship. But when Hu descended to particulars of
criticism against the new administration, it often show-
ed a ginring lack of facts
Stevenson’s celebrated sense of humor obviously
we not n eashity of the election He mnde hh IHfH
jokes ii nd turned many a happy phrase
in more sober vein he pledged conxtruetive opponi-
lion 1o President, Eisenhower and the Repibiienn &3rd
Congress, nnd said Ilie government would hnve Demo-
cratic support so long ns it worked in the public arid the
national interest,
He declared, more sensibly than many of his eager
followers, that 25 days is too short a span in which to
judue a new President Hr proposed to hide time and al-
low the Eisenhower administratjon full chance to dr-,
velon its programs.
Despite these fine resolves, however, Stevenson!
could not resist commenting upon some events since
Jan. 2(1. especially in Ilie foreign field And here he
strayed sadly from the facts.
Secretary of State Dulles' rerent blunt warnings to
Western Europe on the issue of European unitv seemed
10 Stevenson a sign we have turned to bullying our al-
lies and ignoring their legitimate doubts and fears.
Stevenson apparently fell Dulles’ ((induct in Farope
resembled the "bull in the ilnna shop." and he Implied a
contrast to Democi afic handling of these matters. He
sermed to suggest furthe that much American opinion
runs contrary to the Dulles appronch
Bui the fuct is Hint the overwhelming mnajorfy of
Ame t leans support ibis new tick, including manv Demo-
crats in Congress and in my of Stevenson's Blends in
Hie Slate Departnu nt
Furthermore, some evidence exints that ( hancellor
Adenauer of Germany and one 01 two French lenders
act tin II v reqesuted Dulles to speak blmntly in public.
Adenauer now clearly believes the warning may have
Naived the unity project, and the general feeling in u-
ly come poppln
w to । ou l foam a door or at least a head
•He ala window. He paused, gnd again
w’iAonN-EAMArREC
JUST AS YOU SA, OEv
0086. YOU 4susbecrd
MtEPNT ™
GEe88
egA4(wavokTERE for]
kuboe) scuesm«uERL2
93b —M-df-cE
r 40
to^ .....■
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^k... f-„.. ......- — t-----------—.
-4--------------
Actos the atiert was a little
poolicm whee he had often
stopped to buy a newspaper. He
went over to ii. the door was
lorked. He looked through ue
The corn which we eat
is called fechnicnlly n gruss
plant.
sMky—K
OS
Poelu
2 wE-
. A, 9. T, J !' 681583 > "2
n mgeeat
] Srp
-1 2/
I
• a--
n-
ll
before elosihg ttn, and ba wap
' mre (tha more ba shqushkpt M
1 that the day muat be TUeBday 6
Wodnesday or poselbly Thuredeg, 1
j, .1... ‘What am I anyway!" he thought. '
Mle of thb Netherlands live Rip van Winkle?* Kven go. MF
helow SON leve) Thrv are van Winkle, though he had elep
protected by 1,80 miles of 20zqerbad.comehackton.vm-
cikes and 2,000 pumping
beyond the bank waa open Ha u
went in, and again he called, and
•gain there was not even an echo
federa Hon coming bak for answer. Re looked
dernlno in at the bakery: thin time there
12 was only a tiny noise •nch a* a
scuttling mouse could make.
Now he noticed that several cars
were parked along the atreet, jus;
•» they might be on eny not Ino
i vou -p I Ia wre 1 E4
1 eJ1 HI mert f voGor
"ACDru. yOU-TIATED/ TOLOXCKn#6
to ne- 1 1*4 । hAMHEK , fu4*‛ NJ
r HxjT iIW UJU»' wfUT > W*/I -WHN
wu; DN*AJK"‛ X Thb TIME /
..... -------—-------------------
TAT CAN MEAN
ONETtoNg 1.1 y
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j)A e vW 89
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7:00 P I
igg
R!wuke'-ep!speariAuAS
HOUK. SHAKING MOW
Nails our QP iT i
RTH ABIDES,
by GEORGE R. STEWART 5
1 •
•2
gLHEwAa
ge" /
Gg f
ENd* ' A Cm ,9
"*ee/ A Ipy
man. So he pushed upon the horn-
ring, and the greet batant aquawk
nounded alonq the deserted street ..._________
through the quiet at the arternoon. elviuzation
-______________ He blew twice, waited, and blew
•T----aunacadnu--------— | twic again. Again and again, m
zaN2nea ssaw’**-•«*’
m.rrpsici“ptipa,"k2 instoseesom
=ntred at saMoe Haas r‘ ----—
Uto vost en ** Otokwraa
am M n******* m*m
222. „
lant • Leata. Wee ksteaes aM elles
Tewac.smsicalsenon..
55 5 3___ ' .....• ■ . ■ ■ - ■
—to—-=---
y. L‛ or,,, h ' •
___
-L -Al
2, "
uijdge
u • Xnegds
mr a
s1feiya
l m/Da
was small, and in a
• ; AT LMT merke)2
5 P p
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is-
AM
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [48], No. 88, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 24, 1953, newspaper, February 24, 1953; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1403067/m1/2/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Johnson+County%22: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.