Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 85, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 22, 1948 Page: 10 of 16
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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Tch, Tch, Too Bad!
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harvests
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6 Spills over
11. One who
‘SAY, YOU GIT OVER HERE
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GIT IT- TOO GOT THAT
BROOM SO IT ONLY
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CORMERS NOW! y
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her' funeral. She was not too in-
different to be glad that she still
was alive.
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(sym.)
6. Founder of
Virginia
7. Full-grown
pike
8. Metallic
rock
9. A root ’
vegetable
10 Place for
keeping .
gooda
14 Enclokure
16 Impresnes
by repetition
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A SHOWDOWN WITH
COLONEL YARDLEY.
$
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CLEAR,$AMNMOURE
HEADED FOR A
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I'LL HAVE
A TEN- j
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COMB )
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cared? She still did not care too
much. “How’s everything?- she
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COLONEL YARDLEY HAS ALWAVeL
BEEN AN HONEST MAN. I WONDER
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34 city (U )
07. Decay
:18. Disease of
chickens
Sleeveless
garment
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21. Fragrance
23. Blemish ,
24. Violent,
riotous
behavior
26. People of
Ohio
20. Removable
plowshare
28. Storage
ribs
30. Dining car
nf train
31. Striped, cat-
like
animal
32. Put forth
effort
D"
“At what age can I start noticing that boys notice me.
Mom’”
HERE'S A \
GOOD ONE- A
IT WILL.
KEEP YOUR T
HAIR NICE $
I
She did not care very much how
“everything" was, but it was po-
lite to ask aud Betty Jane would
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1 Dewey, Taft, Stassen and Warren Expound
- Lincoln, Jackson and Jefferson Day dinners are seldom of much
public significance. On these occasions, politicians, already convinced
of their party's rightness and virtue, meet to hear speakers convince
them all over again that political salvation lies only at the end of
their party’s road.
This year’s Lincoln Day dinners, however, found four entries for
the GOP presidential nomination giving their views on current issues
before as many audiences. Since those views might be presidential
■ policy if one of the four should wind up in the White House next
year, a brief digest might be of more general interest than usual.
Thomas E. Dewey favors a unit- -----.:---—■ ■
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2
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SlOTTEM,
FEON SIGHT/.
XXVIII
IT was rather nice, Janice de-
1 elded, being a patient instead of
a nurse. It was nice just to lie in
a comfortable bed with fresh-
smelling linen, with the shades
half-drawn and the room filled
with flowers.
Of course, she reflected, she
should be on her way to Mexico.
But this was almost as good. Mex-
ico would keep. Everything would
keep. She did not want to do any-
thing or think about anything or
anyone for a long, long time.
This P«
Really G
Someth
&eee.
10—Synday, February 22, 1948-CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW
CUSUBNE TIMEs- REVIEW, Published Afternoon bally (Except Satur-
day) and Sunday Morning at 108 South Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texaa,
mones 133 and 134.
inLUAM RAW! AND, Owner and Publisher- PEYTON LAWSON, Busl-
neas manager — LLOYD STEWART, City Editor — PAUL GRIFFITH,
Ad—rtaing Manager — HARRY JONES, Circulation Mahager.
-
4
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IT
o
3
T
2
O
4
“IM not coming bac," Janice
*sald. "That’s what I want you
to tell Miss Willows. And I think
she win understand—I think she'll
be glad." > . ।
“I’m glad, too," Betty Jane said,
and then she burst out crying.
She managed to stop almost imme-
diately, “I—I’m somy, I didn't
mean to. But—oh. Mise Hilary,
12. Marshal of
France *
13. The Orient
14. A Roman
statesman
15 Land-
measure
18 Fruit of *
the palm
17. Senior
(abbr.)
18. English
navigator
21. Sayings
22. Serf
23. Place of
confinement
nat.)
24 Plays
)
uneusn .
31)39Ka
p
0:_
n2aa-*-
1 . speech dealt with what he thought
^Lincoln would wish his party to
J, stand for if he were alive today.
4 may be assumed that Mr. War-
fmwould say amen to the advice
♦
u
f
I a
d R
r i I
EX-GI RAY MACK welcomes his
bride-elect, Mlle. Kay Trevi!—
named “Miss Paris of 1947”- on
her arrival from France in New
York. The couple, who met in
Heidelberg, Germany, where Kay
danced for the Yaka, will be
married ‘n Mack’s home at Co-
Hday.inPinumnericaipuzmethstgwtivspenouryourforun.
Count the letters in your first name if the number of letters is I or
snore, subtract 4. If the number is less than fl, add 3. The result is
your key number. Start at the upper leehand corner of the rec-
tangle and check every one of yourkey numbers, left to right. Then
toad the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
cumann,wwuuma. Meter. Diatributea be Ktee Voaturen, law 2-21
6
4,
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7
boisterously
28. Incline
27. Hailing term
(naut.)
28 Pole to extend
bottom of sail
29 Minute (abbr.)
30 Deliver, as
a command
33. River (It.)
34 A skating
area
35 Nine (Rom.)
38 Biblical
name (poss.)
38. A knight's
attendant
40 A dwarf
, 41. A thread
42 Compound
ether
43 Aloof
DOWN
1 Pointed
weapon
AboiT MET
mly
M9
nurse, her white skirts
f/A> dWWJ
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5 office ‘nurse
R By Adelaide Humphries
Fy- e by Adelaide butsibuted by NU SEKVIcE, INC
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Why Worry? Use Classified Ads
BOOTS SAVINS ABOUT K
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of yours! If you don't. I lust I
know you’ll live td regret it. No I
man will keep on waiting for a girt I
forever."
“What makes you think that?" I
J>“My “aig he tip and married
someone else." Betty Jane gava
sn argument that was convincing.
"A girl he always said he couldn't
stand, too. But I kept him waiting
too long: he thought I put my
work bcre him. Common sense
and love den’t mix at all."
"Maybe you’re right." Jnice
said. "Anyhow I'll think about
all that you've said. I'm terribly
sorry, Betty Jane, about your
young man. Onto, trls. I feel
sure that he couldn't have been
the right young men, and that she
right one, for you, will come along
some day.",
Janice’s words and smile were
so warm and sincere that they al-
most convinced the other girl.
HOh, thank you. Janice," she
Mid. "so very much! I'll try ' to
remember what you Mid, if you’ll
remember what I did. But I know
t mustn't stay any longer, or soy
anything more."
She wm right, as just then the
nurse popped her head through
the doorv ty again to say that the
visitor bad stay d long enouzh,
"We must not tire our patient."
7
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, readyoroot—"you can tell Miss
Wilews something for me, if you
Betty Jane said that she would
be glud to. She said she was glad
Janice was going away.
2-2Nbop IMS. Ring Fratvm Syndicart, Ine . t • <«md
(655
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worried, thinking I won't'be able
to take your place. But honestly,
even Miss Willows says I’m doing
all right."
“I’m sure you’ll do much better
than I," Janice Mid. .
"I could never do that,” Betty
Jane said modestly. “But the of-
fice is all I have now. That’s one
reason I had to come to see you.
Jahice. I wanted to tell you, only
I don’t know how. .2" Her voice
faltered, but she managed to go
on in a moment. “Don't you be
sepisible. like I always thought I
wee. What I mean'Is, don't you
put the office first. If you want t0
stay away a long time or anything
—well, just you do it."
"Thanks," Janiee said. She wm
not quite sure what she was thank-
ing Betty Jane for, but she knew
that the other girl wm trying to
help her., That was why Janice
added. “I am going to stay away.
As soon as I'm able I'm going to
Mexico, for a vacation. And"—tt
seemed now that Janice wm be-
dorimSAccKWHOis-81230 MAN)
AQFAECN)AN0, „l%uDecm7
r "* "3 J
CRYPTOQUOTE— A cryptogram quotation
•PA D A K Y O PTRY CPQU I A K T D M
MPHYSEJC URN PO ZYJRY-HPAAKM.
Yesterday’a Cryptoquote: EXAMPLES DRAW WHEN PRE.
EEpFAs3 ANP SERMONS ARE LESS READ THAN TALES
he assigns to Lincoln.
These are highlights of the Lin-
coln-Warren counsels: A party
that reflects the “needs and views
of everyone, rich and poor alike,”
but which does not prevent a
man’s acquiring wealth by honest
effort, provided the rules are fair;
a party that reflects an interest in
all the racial ancestries that make
up America, and that does not
limit membership by any boun-
daries of sectional or economic
interests. Now is the time, Mr.
7
9
l:-------|
rw m Iwv ) FOR IT, FARO.
FRIEND CERTNNY) INE LAW WiL
HANDLE ----------
ROU6H!}—1
8
/\
. .................I _ expect that much from her,
rustling, her face lighted up with “Just fine! Just finel" Betty
a cheerful, purposeful smile, pop- Jane Mid. “I know you must be
ed western Europe, and would
make this a condition of American
aid. He feels that the combined
industrial potential of the ERP
countries could be a major help
'to recovery if those countries’ re-
sources were interchanged freely
and used effectively. He would
also internationalize the Ruhr and
make full use of its productivity.
And he favors voting the full
$6,800,000,000 that the administra-
tion asks to pt the Marshall
Plan in operation.
Robert A. Taft is “very strongly
in favor of extending aid to the
countries of western Europe.” But
he does not favor "giving away"
American taxpayers’ money except
“for those specific projects of
which we can see the real value."
He does not specify the projects.
Mr. Taft would rewrite the UN
Charter to draft a law governing
the relations between the member
UN governments, with a court to
determine the law. He favors full
and active support of China’s Na-
2—4--6
K 8 N
tionalist government in its war
against the Communists.
/'l DIDN'T WANT HIM TO THINK !
SORRKLEpDr
E1ATHE
W/5*/
PAie A (
AT-)
3687.
L6H/qy
#
0ATWO "r W#9E
•I •——•3
For ■
Exterior E
Mtuonryt
You're in-luck if
tor masonry to P
Lumiau offers J
la beaity, ease of
durability-AVe
Weatherproof a
appearance of eJ
brick Comes in J
with water. Let J
BOB IM
PAINT & I
15 E. Hender
ba
-Harold Stassen, dealing with do-
mestic matters, wants food prices
stabilized at 15 per cent below
the high marks of a month ago,
with moderate betying to steady
< the market until it finds its "true
level.” Extended rent control and
lower taxes to give small and new
business a better chance are on
v the Stassen program. Though he
■does not think war inevitable,
Mr. Stassen wants the armed
forces to have their essential man-
power. He urges that this govern-
z ment achieve the front rank in
research.
Earl Warren’s Lincoln Day
A
THAT "tk.
Warren said, for the Republicans
to make sure that theirs is “a
party, not of expediency, but of
principle."
The above excerpts are sketchy,
but they do indicate trends of
thinking. They are not the first or
last statements on these subjects
by the four candidates. But they
give a partial idea of qualities
which will guide voters and con-
vention delegates in choosing a
Republican standard bearer, and
which might possibly be important
factors in shaping this country’s
history in the next four years.
I P:
7 3
0 F
2-6
D T
4 7
R O
ped her head through the door-
way to Inform her patient, bright-
ly, that she had a visitor.
"But I don't want to—” Janice
began, then she saw who the vis-
itor was and said all right. She
could not refuse to see Betty Jane.
She had refused nearly everyone
else, except, of course, her family.
“You mustn’t stay long," the
nurse wrned, ushering Betty
Jane in, one finger pressed warn-
ingly against her lips..“Our pa-
tient is oing mbel, bh we don’t
want to tire her."
"Oh, I won't! I’ll only stay a
few minutes." Betty Jane prom-
ised. She handed the nurse a
bundle wrapped in green wax
paper that could only be more
flowers
I wonder. Janice thought, if I'll
get this many flowers at my fun-
eral. Not that the flowers weren’t
lovely. But in her present mood
Janice was too indifferent to be
grateful for them.
Still. she thought. smiling at
Bettv Jane, she was lad it wasn't
WIFE "--5
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MY, you look wonderfll"
- Betty Jane Mid. But she did
not sound as though she meant it.
I must look a wreck, Janice de-
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Entered as second class ma matter at the post office at Cleburne,
Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
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TEXAS PRESS ASSN. ' ______i‛
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 85, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 22, 1948, newspaper, February 22, 1948; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432715/m1/10/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.