Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 246, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1955 Page: 2 of 8
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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■
Editorial Comment
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HEROES APE MADE NOT BOR
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THERE GOES TIMER
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COME OUT OE THAT
SHADE.MOD SISY--
IM JnS DOW THIS TO
PROVE YOU WONT
orr NO HOT FOOT.'
.ITISA UTTUE
WARM, BUT LOOKIr
TREE PERSONS Ch
SMOkE, A OZN O
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That makes Senate report! and
radio-TV programs even.
P ve
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| BECAUSE
CF SOME
TROGLOOYTE’S
ASTUPDITY?
P,$>
JUST WHAT YOU
TOLD ME TO. I
SAD YOU WANTED
TO KNOW HOW OLD
- SHE WAS.
Go
bothers the rest of us is, wul we
all amre at "strikingly simar"
end* •
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WASHINGTON— (NEA)— What to do about President Tito of
W Yugoslavia is causing considerable head-sctatching in Wash-
ington, amid other, greater worries.
1,
set
NAVVAVAMAAAAANA
2LEELKcEorEe-
FE-DER s 3
eACK= to the ;
NEVER
chase a
BALL YOu
KNOw WILL
HIT the
CuTFIELD
FENCE..
STCP SHORT,
check
the angle
IT will.
HIT AND J
kets. not ‘low’ distribution costs, that* pro-
duce low consumer prices." American
F
L
I
N
T
/ MRG. MH SAD
TO TELL YOu IT .
WAS NONE OF
YOUR BUSINESS.,
-He asked me to hold his hat and coat—then he
hooped me!"
adverse efact on children with
delusquent tendencies. They re the
bad mm.
^19".
. mate in good service. He is offered a di-
versity of goods,in all shapes and sizes
and styles, to an extent unknown in most—:
' . of the rest of the world. He’buys leisure
........
-yrmur
-2Fednesday, Aug 24. 1955 CLEBUASE, TEXAS TIMES -REYIEW
mi i.. r . . ........... —......
* EDSON IN WASHINGTON *
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ME, wr FEET
TENDER ASA
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THe OLD FOOD Box rs KNDA
LOW • - Do wu OO FOR TSE
PKKLED MERRINeSP
a-iee- . 4 •
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■
As COUTESS $TEPWAGE STEPS OUT TO SEND
HER MESSAGE, ABY VLY tAQtS UP TME MURDER
Lockett was appointed deputy constable
of Cleburne Saturday .... Charles D.
M wmm> Mm Mk
MIMA Mueh a wm
ntaine Texas DALI
a M-212xas Pazee
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BY-HAL COCH*AN
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WHY, MVRTLE.
WHAT in THE
WORLD DID OU
-.ASK HER ? r-
ds"
2
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 8 or
more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 8. 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.
--
J
13 TH PRECINCT
i
y
NHep8
■
-
5
'Whither Tito?' Question
Gives Washington Headache
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
■' ‘2- '* * "rT‘* t" ,*• " !
THE firet thing the average
L young man does when driv-
mganeycari wonder ir al
the girts are looking
Loafinaround and trying to
zep cool seems to be very
nood way to get at and hot
‘ and convenience—as is evidenced by to-
dav’s processed and frozen food?. And be-
cause of this mass-distribution system of
ours, which the chains pioneered, the con-
sumer in the small town is served as well
as the consumer in the metropolis.
Fortune also observed, “It is mass mar-
- X ScORM , /
S H FOeTO~! )
/ / I ALL WE NEED A
//VSA BASE HIT ?
// ) T WIN T‘ )
m ( ( GAM - ‘ r
ihka, acsK.a
P- 2umdnmi
FED 1TS,
REBOUNO:
z low the present 36 cents of the consumer
। ng mum at dollar . . . This, in itself, is cause for con-
".3 .h.3
The atom scientists at Geneva
came up with the in/ormatwa
that the U. S , Britain and Rus-
I ‘
\
SLUGGO
LONES
VERA
j l
E
J
HING WELL^-
Utegirtcrel 0 j Patent dBn. <
+ SO WHAT? HIS
• HEALTH HAS
r | NO BEARING
JON MY
Try and Stop Me
--------By BENNETT CERF--
( pE OF THE MOST talked-about events at the Coronation of
’ 7 Queen Ehzabeth was the arrival from darkest Africa of
IKI -
L----CERTAINLY NOT'
OH, THEN \ WHY SHOULD I
YOUKE NOT GIVE UP A GODD
GIVINGG up \ deal Simply
YOUR TME-
\ PROJECT?/
Miss 1
In Sel
CKAND
riage of ■
daughter ■
W PollanE
lee Wilk
Mrs. Cadi
view took
at 7 00 o’!
tst ChureE
The RevI
the Fist I
ltasa tel
mony. I
Mrs. Rhl
gan and as
Wilson wh|
■Me, i .1
bride’s on!
link chiffoE
Sequins wl
fitted bodil
med with I
a colonial I
heart rose
bons fell te
Miss, Pal
Sutton lieh
dresses we
ne . I
" ta.t |
pink sweet]
Mr Pat I
brother of
man. I
Ushers v
Stoke of T
law of the I
Bnyd of I
Winkler of
K Hoff mail
En
The bride
marriage bl
sed in the I
fashioned w
brief sleeve
was layerel
in Alencon I
sequins A si
held her w:
Her bouque
pink sweett
orchids I
The bride
in Periwink
matching hJ
an orchid 1
Th • groor
pink chiffon
mgemarameuz
bh Mini
.Me"
MM Umm t
in many al
akin planE
been eagerll
months it wI
regional fairE
th. > ulmnatin
Fur of Texas 1
Texas possi•
age of large, I
than any other
big regional Im
atd have mor
than state fair
i t the nation I
The State F
tiu largest anl
States in temn
os er 2% nullo
of America, J
grounds with 1
mlhon. I
As with mosl
Texas events il
on livestock anl
inent naturally
from < amis al l
testivals to til
comedy Pajanl
| reented at til
tou in makingl
lent l akes and I
of traditional I
ocenpies a big I
most Tevas tail
Fairs in Tex
sears. The firsi
state may well 1
Christi in 185:
fights. a circu
works During I
County became
state to organic
was founded id
A good fair i
a valuable asse
the opinion of I
eral manager of
president of th
tion of Fairs ar
20 Years Ago Today
fen over
P:2
ooh/ uene copes
| SMALL CiNK---LErb
+AwAwEEWFCAN
HAVE A UrTLE
Perfm
3,8
1
mentally ill persons to institutions for
TRyNS to TRAP a "BRD OF
PARADISE’-- 9 MR. LEE
I
I1*1
9ij
dya
THERE'S A LOT TO A BALE
Ever wonder what you could make out
of a singl bale of cotton? The number of
textile items that can be obtained from
one bale is amazing. For instance the a-
mount of cotton in a bale is sufficient to
The Senate report says "blood sia have arrived at strikingly
“ -----------------.----I simitar' atomic results. What
IMPRESSIVE ACEIEYEMENT
Fortune recently surveyed trends and
developments that are taking place in re-
tailing in summing up it said, “The years
ahead should see a vast change in the ap-
pearance and in the substance of U. S. re-
tailing and w holesaling. Productivity will
rise, costs will fall, and so will margins
on mans- products. But the over-all coat of
distribution, as a share of all costs in the
economy, is not likely to slide much be-
to buy muen-needed machinery.
But these loans represent only a third of Yugoslavia's total debt.
Tito owes Britain, France Belgium and Switzerland over 300 mil-
lions.
Soviet Russia has just canceled a 90-million-dollar debt owed
by Yugoslavia. But this good-will gesture was to offset a long-
standing Yugoslav claim for 420 million dollars in damages resulting
from the Coininform break in 1948.
i » ’ 1,. ;
WHAT ALL THESE figures add up to is another picture of an
insolvent Communist paradise There is said to be no. use in
quoting figures on the Yugoslav budget With its multiple-price
system, the figures are meaningless.
The problem for the United States is whether it is worth while
pouring additional dollars down this particular Communist drain.
One of the biggest drains on the Yugoslav economy is support
of Tito’s 450,000-man army. The U.S. has been backing it as a
bulwark against possible Soviet and satellite threats to the West.
As long as Tito was not in a Moscow alliance, this seemed like a
good investment
Though Yugoslavia is not in the North Atlantic Treaty Organi-
zation, last year Tito signed a mutual defense pact with Greece
and Turkey.
Since Bulganin and Khrushchev went to Belgrade and made
their peace with Tifo, however. Yugoslavs have been playing down
the military aspects of this southern European alliance, and stress-
ing its cultural and economic ties
t I
JUST BEFORE TITO broke with the Cominform he had ambi-
tions to form a bloc of Balkan nations, wgth himself at its head.
He may still have such delusions of grandeur.
pink velvet,
orchid. I
When the
wedding trij
Colorado, th
a naw blue
of white at I
were white
orchid corsa
Mrs Wilki
Southern Me
was presider
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
-..............—By HOTT KINO-------•-----—
Central Press Writer
THE SENATE report on ju- i thing that will arouse a juvenile
venile delinquency says radio and delinquent's antagonism, it’s more
television programs do not always i study.
come up to desirable standards ’ ! !
•Emm—Hpege
Mi,
2 .
r;
la,
Hg
r . A
r l
M ♦
THE IN-) AN‘T DAT DA K HE WAS OUT To
BuRecyeuY scu called \ LUNCHLOLE.
LUM ) ON A FEwWN-LEvST-HM]
WONe^LffO AOO. viCi pe
L7IF
R 2 •’
2
e
manufacture
Seventv-five hundred handerchiefs, 650
shirts, 2,500 shorts, 8,000 brassieres, 580
dresses, 4,600 gloves, 3,500 pairs of full-
fashioned hosiery. 4,900 panties, 250
sheets, 115 bedspreads, 1,500 bath towels,
1(5 automobile tires, 2.700 flour bags,
6,000 office machine ribbons, 3,200 aundry
nets, 2,400 pairs of men’s socks, and 1,840
men’s undershirts.
Approximately 3,108,000 bales of cotton
were used to make wearing apparel last
year. Of this number, 65,000 bales were
used in the making of girdles, bras, and
other feminine unmentionables. More than
1,200,000 bales went into mattresses, pillow
cases and other products which we used
just to sleep.
Astounding isn’t it”
)'
1 58
ee.1
/ RESEARCH n
PROGRAM »H
I
kJ
“2
2:
-A
-------- —-RED,DAAe€- Eenn*T=e A
TO WORK! - $40,00. TENSURER,*OU
—‘2 GLET,MR.LEE. me
—A
i/A/L A- S-ERFE/AE
AreO HAS ~ASr£D A j
ry-r 47T4C«FD MF.4A
,(
1 i
i
2*
(
2
-^8-24
r
A
L
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E
Y
1 < '
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) e*JT A’ LEAS’ BOTH
* T RUNNUHS
MOVED AROUNO
ON 7 CATCH SKO
TEe J
424
dit
#*ex -s - -
3}
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--—:—
MWw ■ ETck5 M.E -‘uw । wdm
WEXPERENCE THAT CREATURES
GOSH, DOC, ISN'T ) I WDM ONE EPOCH CAN «? A
THAT TGEK YOU \ LITTLE IF ANY HARM RD A
TURNED LOOSE ON ) THOSE OF ANOTHER. Ks
9
A "blood and guts" program. The Gerty a scientists agr—d on
however, will not in itself make a nearly all atomic mafters. No foil-
child a lawbreaker, says the re- out with them.
port. A breakfast food eater, may- ! !
be, but not a lawbreaker J Red China's Premier Chou En-
ill lai appealed for collective secur-
The Senate committee feels that ity to replace military blocs in
more study of the delinquency Ana Either he collect! or some-
problem is needed. If there’s any- . body gets his bloc knocked off.
A
NOVEL-F
ts-
totheueet mMmmm* « an MM
z=2##-
-Ee---:re
Feering that Tito was swinging all the way back into the Mos-
cow orbit. Congress this year considered—- but did not pass-a curb
on further arms aid to Yugoslavia unless American military ad-
visory officess were given greater freedom to observe how US.
equipment was being used, and where.
। - _ --- - At the other extreme is the view that the United States must
ommand o the American Legion ... be even more liberal to Yugoslavia than in the past, to keep Tito
Mr. and Mrs JOe Fakenbury are spending from breaking his loose alliances with the western powers.
=tasrekenass"kateersamtnwamiacccet
tertained the members of the Friday Exact figures on US military aid to Yugoslavia are secret. The
Bridge Cub with a two-table party Friday unofficial estimate is around 100 million dollars a year for the past
. Miss Head has received a sum seven years.
of $500 to be used for her college educa- , _ ____________ - „ , . . .__ ,__•..
finn in Addition tn a “e,IuIT ‘ U.S. ECONOMIC assistance to Yugoslavia has been about 498
Lon,inadditon.to. a bronze Carnegie million dollars at this, some 268 millions have been for emergency
IMHO medal received two years ago. Miss aid like drought and disaster relief. The other 30 millions have
Head saved a 71-year-old friend from a been for military support—aviation gas and such.
- L,m;nc L.. The U.S. Export-Import Bank has lent 55 million dollars to
turning nome. _______v.^Lyi. .V- » Bank has lent another 58 millions.
■
9
V
ABOUT 1
Uwr‘ ■
>2
IVith s rew petting patrol in s
thern town, the girls now also
t e to look out for the arm of
, 11A
M|| I III* H mil »Au—M
" I
3575
$3
g
D A
2 6
T Y
JohnM. Tia
school day
school. It I
mands of r
in physical
You owe j
health. to
does not
WHICHRI
toration an
the advant
healthy mi
You owe it
correcton
possible.
ONLY I
Dr.
116 N.
■ II—
• ' I
9 d"f ■■ N ■ g—
ssuohe
gratulations. The fact tha retailing and
wholesaling take no erger share of the
consumer dollar today than twenty-five
years ago— and that th? sare probably
will not rise—is one of the most impres-
sive achievements of American capital-
ism.”
The consumer gets great value from the
broportion of his dollar that is absorbed
by the retail function. He gets the ulti-
'I
5 3 8
I R F
8 2 3
BYT
1 4 ?
Y F O
5 3 8
FDD
276
R C P
4 8 3
R C T
3 5 z
W D E
«Mm ane «e tsAy determmmasian I
POM *• mem suncua tear at dava-
■...................
August 24, 1935
, Johnson County will remain dry after
Saturday’s election. The vote was almost
two to one. The county also went over-
whelmingly for old-age pensions, and vot-
ed in favor of the amendment to commit
ine amazoman Queen Salote of Tonga She
f _t -Lil- and_her . perpetual - - —
sy
2 5 3 .8 4 «
V B F G A M
*5 6 4 5 2 8
G E C G R T
5 3 7 8 4 7
T PE E Q X
2 8 5 6 5 8
I O S I P N
3 5 7 2 3 6
O O I T R T
8 2” 3 5 4 8
R E G W O 1
7 5 2 8 5 3
A N A E R O
I °gi - j
kt i
/.
■
-------------
2 H28 •
a >
r
The waster, stnvang desperately for a big t.p ass.re! his custo-
*r Yes, indeedy. at Umberufenis Sea Fox Hous ye ctten fina
r
■Mb «M 01 asate san MT
Swum m hmm eam •
i y
eM
/ t J ----
c-+p
cu -
3K4
——H-
_Gde,- t - •
3497F-A42e
Frin delighted the English.
hn -cldifed her popularity
V he n during a sudden down-
r .. during the procession,
sne was the only notable who
i efused to put down the top
7* < f her carnage She was
saked to the skin in order to
X wave happily at the crowds
At a fashionable dinner that
a night, everybody was talking
about Queen Salote ”1 wonder
who tha* tiny man was at he r
side' ’ speculated one lady
m Noel Coward, bored by the
I vhore conversation, snapped.
' ‘Tt t was her lunch
a Ftfumne pearl in our oyster stew '
' A likely story, sneered the customer / can t ever, find an n.
/ ‛
M/—-
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 246, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1955, newspaper, August 24, 1955; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434455/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.