Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 33, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 12, 1957 Page: 2 of 8
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2—Tuesday, Npv. 12, 1957—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW
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Editorial Comment
★ EDSON IN WASHINGTON *
The News
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The wagon WHEEL
STRIKES A ROCK - -
YOUR HOME, JEFF YATES
COULD GET MEW AFFIDAVITS'
AND BLACKMAIL ME.TOO’
9 WOKE ME UP?
Y I THOUGHT
I IT WAS TH' >
Coates
foANpaes
OH, HO! SO P
SHE MISSED
HER OLD BOY
FRIEND, EH?/
I MIGHT AS WELL GET
MY MONEY'S WORTH /
INVEED I HAVE,
EXALTED MILITARY
PERSON/ HOWEVER,
MY DUCK FARM 15
ENOUGH REWARD FOR
THIS HUMELE
—1 FARMER,,, Y----
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HAPPY TO SEE
.YOU AGAIN...
n I THINK’ peg
AH, SO-SO... BUT
MINE LITTLE
BRLINNEHILDE...
IT HAS NOT
BEEN GOOD
WITH HER
6-
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I'M
GOING
UP TO
BED
FOREIGN PARACHUTIST 15
LAND NEAR HERE... THERE
15 REWARD OFFER FOR HI5
CAPTURE, LOWLY ONE/
—t HAVE YOU SEEN,, y—(
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IN THE
) WINDOW
TO SEE IP
MY Tie WAS
STRAIGHT/
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Your eyes
•OUT! /
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PSASTESALLY REFLECTION
BY THE TIME I'M THRU WITHYOb,
PAL. YOU'LL BE GLAD TO FORGET
2 THE WHOLE THING! s.--i
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COOK
GRINDIN'
COFFEE/
OTHERWISE, ANY strength which the Republicans can show in
the South will depend on strength of individual candidates.
To make up for the loss of from seven to 10 House seats in the
South, the Republicans will have to win that many more in the
North. It is doubtful if they can do that on the civil rights issue.
The GOP will have to win 20 more seats in Congress than they
now hold, to control the House.
On the Senate races, a new survey has just been made by National
Committee for an Effective Congress.
It indicates the Negro vote could be the deciding factor in only a
few northern states where there are close races.
In 1952, nine senators who are running for re-election in 1958
won their seats by 51 or 52 per cent majorities. Six were Repub-
licans—Goldwater of Arizona, Williams of Delaware, Jenner of
Indiana, Potter of Michigan, Malone of Nevada, Barrett of Wyom-
ing. Three were Democrats—Kennedy of Massachusetts, Mansfield
of Montana and Chavez of New Mexico.
HUH?
WHAT
BLONDE?
ta
NEW YORK — Aneurin Bevan,
foreign policy spokesman for the
British Labor Partv. in saying he
was astounded at the American
reoetinn to the Soutn.ks: j
“You ought not to be too im-
nressed. Two Sputniks do not a
technical summer make.”
AUNT ,
FRITZI--- ) TOLD ?
now the girls will have time for
homework.
I / Jihmy
/Walker
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FOLKS UP
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VOEMITORY
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T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
© 1957 by NEA Service. Inc.
i understand they have some wonderful bargains—
items that have been damaged in other sales!”
{9
hopes to break his world speed-
boat record of 225 miles per hour
—news item. In these days of
18,000-mph sputniks that kind of
traveling almost seems like stand-
ing still.
! ! !
Astronomers say temperatures
on the moon vary from 243 above
to 243 degrees below zero. How
come, then, people are so anxious
to visit it ?
3
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v» P
Y GOT
IT ALL-
WRONG,
DAISY-DOLL 1
L WAS
LOOKIN'
) AT MY OWN,
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YOU'RE TELLING ME!
____By WILLIAM RITT-----------------------
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YI ASKED /
k YOU FIRST.
PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN
NOTICE TO PUBLIC ______
Any erroneous reflection upon the char-
acter, standing or reputation of any per-
son or firm or corporation which may
appear in the columns of this paper, will
bo gladly corrected upon the notice of
same being given to the publisher.
UNITED PREsS (UP) LEASED
TLLETYPESETTER WIRE SERVICE
The United Press is exclusively entitled
to ’ the use of 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 broadoast are also reserved.
The Cleburne Times-Review is A politically
independent newspaper placin« the public
welfare above the interest of any party.
TFuth and decency are Ite guiding prin-
ciples, and its dally determination la to
print the news without fear or favor.
M
WILDCATS
LEAD
6-3!
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---. SOON AFTER YOU REFUGED
NOLAN, IF I BOUGHT S-7 to SEE HIM TODAS,
YOUR SILENCE BY SPARING I THAT WHEN HE GAN
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The first Russian earth satellite
has already passed through sev-
eral meteor swarms, say observers.
Just rockin' and rollin' along?
Japanese star gazers report the
nose cone of Sputnik II has
broken off and is speeding some
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AS THE FARMER ENTERS THE HOUSE, IN THE ATTI
ABOVE JOHNNY COMES TO,,,
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WIASHINGTON—(NEA)—Rival claims by Republicans and Dem-
‘ ocrats on the political effects of President Eisenhower’s sending
Federal troops to Little Rock just about cancel each other out.
The result is a new political appraisal that there will be little
or no shoTt-range gain for either party in the 1958 congressional
elections, on the civil rights issue.
For presidential elections in 1960, 1964 and beyond, the answer
could be something else that can’t be predicted now.
A few Republican leaders are ready to admit that their chances
of holding their gains in the South are gone for next year. In this
session of Congress, the Republicans have 15 congressmen from 10
southern and border states.
They may hold their two seats in traditionally Republican east
Tennessee. They think they might hang on to one or both of the
two seats they hold in Kentucky, one or two of the three t cy hold
* in Maryland, and the one they hold in Delaware.
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ARIZONA, NEVADA, Wyoming, Montana and New Mexico have
small Negro votes. A shift would have no effect on the outcome.
In Indiana, Delaware and Michigan, any shift of the Negro vote
from Democratic to Republican would help the -incumbent Repub-
lican senators. In Massachusetts, any shift of Negro voters from
Democratic to Republican would make Senator Kennedy’s re-
election more difficult. But there aren’t enough Negro voters in
Massachusetts to swing the election.
Nationally, it is generally conceded that about 65 to 70 per cent
of the Negro vote was Democratic during the Roosevelt and Truman
administrations. The Republicans claim their 30 to 35 per cent of
the Negro vote came from the better educated Negroes?
9
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WISHING WELL
Registered U. S. Patent Office.
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I eEE! WELL. I'M GDlN6 TO TEACH YU NOT TO
BLACKMAIL MB! WHEN SHOATSTHRU WOKKING
yOU OVER. YOU'LL BE GLAD TO SAY WHERE THE
SIGNED AFFIDAVIT AREGUTIKNOWTAEIR
NAMES! I CAN HAVE
W‘EM WRITTEN AGAIN!
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An atomic war wouldn't deter-
mine who is right — only who is
left.
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■ 435 miles ahead of the satellite
ENGLAND’S Don Campbell
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20 Years Ago Today i -
November 12, 1937 QlJOi From
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THE BROKEN SILENCE
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“THE RANKEST KIND OF
FEDERALISM"
- Representative Durham of North Caro-
lina, who is chairman of the enormously,
powerful Congressional Joint Committee
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-.........--------------------------------
T TERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every
1 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.
where the Crown Prince of Sweden was due at 9 a.m. to re-
ceive the keys to the city. At the conclusion of Walker’s wel-
coming speech, the Crown Prince shook Jimmy’s thand warmly, i
murmuring, “Your poor, tired, red eyes!! Undoubtedly you’ve i
sat up all night doing research!”
© 1957, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features s-ndicate.
STORY BEHIND THE STORY
The argument of men being, better dri-
vers than women may go on forever, but
the facts seem to prove the ladies are the
better pedestrians. Three out of every
four pedestrians killed by automobiles last
year were men.
The American Automobile Assn, attrib-1
utes that fact to man’s more natural ag-
gressiveness which leads to taking more
risks in walking. Women, the AAA be-
lieve s,are more patient and will more of-
ten wait for a traffic light to change be-
fore crossing.
Judging from Jackson traffic, the story
behind the story is that the ladies own
more of the automobiles and hence there
are n ore male pedestrians to be hit.
jThe WILDCATS —
KICK OFF
TO THE 2
GATORS AFTER / A.
SCORING A j 0 F
TOUCHDOWN... / A
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Thieves broke into a girls’,
dormitory and stole a TV set SC
1s 77402008x0
By UNITED PRESS
WELCH, W. Va. Former i re- ,
sident Truman, in saying that,
percent Americanism PI eached by
the American Legion and other
veterans groups must include em-
phasis on freedom of speech.
“True Americanism is being un-
derminded by some people in this
country who are loudly complain }
ing that they are its first defend-
ers.”
WASHINGTON - Gov. Joe Foss a
of South Dakota, in saying he was
confident the United States would
recover “lost ground’ in the mis-
siles rce:
“Thank God it was the Sputnik
and Muttnik rather than another
Pearl Harbor that brought the
American people out of their le-
thargy.” ___
CHICAGO - Willy Ley, Ger-
man born rocket expert, in saying
a manned U. S. space station g
would establish snace superiority -
until another nation developed a
similar satellite to create a bal-
ance of power:
“A balance of power is a fine *
substitute for good will.”
VIRGt4e,3
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293
Fs—
‘Re. UA Pat OH. - Allfhis reserved
PCopr. 1957 by United Feafure Syndicate, Inc.
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sg
2
I PUT A PEANUT
ON EACH STEP
AND EAT MV WA¥
UP TO BED
--------By BENNETT CERF--—----—
rHE LATE FLORENZ ZIEGFIELD once talked a group of
I distinguished gents, incl«ling Mayor Jimmy Walker, the
witty Harry Hershfield, a viderbilt, and seven others, into
acting as judges for a beau- .__________________________
ty contest. Walker insisted mgnee.
_,2
11
A4
0 FProduced b} Stepheh Slesinger, Inc
11 FS© 1957 by King Fcaturcs Syndcate
B22 oiA--World rights reservcd N3 A
NNNN
7 oops' \ *
1 AH DIDN’T 8*
TV
1
4,2
I PREFER TO WALK . -
~ Home ALONE/^ 3
tiling of top importance to say about the
production of electric power from nuclear
sources.
The government, he pointed out, is
deeply concerned with any atomic devel-
opment, and so certain types of govern-
nlent regulation and control are inevita-
ble. Then he said this: "But the regulatory
responsibilities of the government in the
field of the development and utilization of
nuclear energy must not be exploited to
e pand and enlarge the government ac-
tiv dies in the field of power. Electric pow-
e is a needed public service which the
citizens of ths nation can provide for
SHOWER OF STARS
nmocvnpn"yegmT.-KaGS* ewawaee-Mc-—------—
L\\ Sa \ । t if
NE cl
1 hemselves, under effective regulation,
rotion that federal government should
build and operate generating stations just
to have public power is the rankest kind
of federalism, is wholly repugnant to our
concept of free enterprise, won’t assure
the nation an adequate power supply, and
generally weakens our economy by the
unsound tax manipulation which results
from federal power investment . . .
"The industry must, over the next de-
cade, prove by accomplishments that the
privately-owned electric companies of the
nation can and will do the job that has to
be done if the nation is to realize the
promise of atomic energy within the
framework of a free enterprise econ-
omy.”
There need be no fear that the industry
will not or cannot do that. Power com-
panies, both singly and in groups, are
deeply engaged in all manner of atomic
research and pilot projects—the kind of
projects which will assure us abundant
electricity from the atom in the shortest
possible time and at the lowest cost. The
question is whether the industry will be
permitted to do the great job of which it
is capable. The public power fanatics
seek and will continue to seek a tax-sub-
sidized federal monopoly of power from
the atom—just as they seek a tax-subsi-
dized federal monopolv of power from
conventional sources. That is the problem
now confronting this country as we move
into the atoms-for-peace era.
33F58
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Published Afternoon Daily (Except Bat- P TEST 2 -
urday) and Bunday Morning at 198 South 1 - i
Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phone ; M S kA
6-2441, all department*.__M x SY \
WILLIAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publisher (/0) _
PEYTON LAWSON, Business Manager .— ■ —~ E 7 1
JACK PROCTOR, Editor /
PAUL GRIFFITH, Advertisins Manager _I L
GEORGE H. HANNAH, Oiroulation MW. V) /
suBstalteriON ~~~ • La
By carrier in city: 25o week. By mall 6a ' *864Va
Johnson County $5.75 per year, 6 month* - - n
13.56. By man In state $9.50 per year. By /(J
mall out of state $12.00 per year. 2}--)-
Entered as second class mall matter at Wn WM5—U¥
the post office at Cleburne. Texas under
Act of Congr***, March 3, 1879
Rational Representative TEXAS DAiLl? e -8 — 2* --
PRESS LEAGUE, MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
ASSN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
LISHERS ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS-
W\
CW 6
----H-HOWDY, YOLR-
‘ WELL, WELL,\ SELF, YOU
MINE OLD OLD FRAUD!
FRIEND,THE / HOW HAVE
MAGICIAN! K YOU BEEN? ,
i_k5
p? $28/02
-45 6*
3 8 4 7 2 8 3
OXAFECU
4 2 6 3 7 4 8
E C N F R C U
3 7 8 4 5 2 7
N S I* E N I T
4 6 2 7 8 3 4
T U P A E A T
2 3 7 4 5 6 3
C T E E R T H
5 3 6 2 8 4 5
E R R S F S A
3 4 8 5 7 3 4
W R T P B S E
BY HAL COCHRAN
WJEVE often wondered how
W many words alarm clocks
have added to our language.
* * *
The honeymoon is over
when he begins to think she’s 1
plain fat.instead of pleasingly j
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Neither Party Stands to Gain 1
Much By Negro Vote Switch | d
BY PETER EDSON
)‘ Es
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6 3 8 2 7
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4 2 5 7 3
S W T I R
8 3 6 4 2
S I D R R
3 5 2 7 8
E D S R V
6 3 7 4 5
S I T R E
2 5 3 8 4
A H G I A
3 4 7 5 6
O U O R Y
T Y 003$. WE DON'T 017 \
VAIN NO LEEP TMISHhe (
•/5M THEY'VE STARTED UP
"F 5848 TH'ENGINE OVUHAT )
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THET WHUT
J. Lambert Lain, chairman of the highway com-
mittee of the Cleburne Chamber of Commerce, and.
Manager J. T. Webster will go to Austin Monday
morning with other representatives of the Brazos
Chisholm Trail Association for a conference with
Julian Montgomery, newly appointed State high-
way engineer . . . Johnson County ginnings for
1937 are still approximately 3,000 bales ahead of
last year . . . The annual fireman’s party will be
held Nov. 24, with proceeds going into a fund to
purchase uniforms for firemen, Fire Chief Bob Pat-
terson announced Saturday. The party will be
held at the WOW hall, and will get underway at
(9 p.m. Howard English will furnis' orchestra mu-
sic .. . Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Nelson and Irs. R. M.
Taylor of Fort Worth were guests Friday of Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Nelson . . . Misses Helen Lee Shan-
non, Lula Mae Pace, Anita Ewing and Mary Lou
Walls are spending the week-end with friends in
Denton . .. . Mrs. C. A. Parrott, Mrs. A. E. Sheeler,
Miss Bernice Sheeler and Miss Gladys Hardin visit-
ed in Dallas Thursday . . . Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Stalcup and son, Phil, left Friday afternoon for
Dublin to visit relatives. Mr. Stalcup will visit in
. Brownwood also . . . Mrs. C. P. Aker visited in
Fort Worth Thursday with her daughter Janice
student in the Harris School of Nursing at the
Methodist Hospital.
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on a unanimous decision.
He knew well that he could
cutlast the others in a pro-
tracted symposium on pul-
critude.
Sure enough, Beau James
sank all the other judges
but Hershfield under the
table. Then the two of them
solemnly declared Walker’s
cute favorite the winner.
The Mayor barely had
time to -take a cold shower
and rush down to City Hall,
Q3 11-12
< 1957 by NEA Service Inc " J R WiL L iAMS
XA.
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( WESTERN FLIER FLEP THROUGH $885
YONVER GROVE ABOUT FIVE MINUTES Fg
AGO/ THIS HUMBLE PERSON WAS E
POWERLESS TO STOP HIM,,, I OO )447
NOT HAVE BRAVERY OF OUR Ae-
1 GLORIOUS WARRIORS/ (=4 “0
LONE RANGER
‘ $vw
6
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($27)
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Q —W hat limitation will be
. on new interstate high-
way markers?
A No interstate number wil
have more than two digits.
* * *
Q—When is the Great Seal of
tae luited States affixed to a
d ocument?
A—Only after the document
has been signed by the president.
* * * . .
Q—When; does day actually
begin? ' ■ g •
, A - The day begins at mid-
i . it and lasts until the next
midnight.
* * *
Q— What are baroque pearls?
A—Irregular-shaped pearls.
They are the least valuable.
a * *
Q—When Congress tried Pres-
ident Johnson under impeach-
munt proceedings, what was the
final vote in the Senate?
A—Thirty-five senators voted
him guilty; 19 voted not guilty.
One more vote was needed for
t ■ two-thirds majority required
to cohv-ct.
itself. There’s one race, says
Betcha Dollar Dennis, that almost
certainly won’t wind up in a
photo finish.
j t t
An English widow won $574,-
658 on a two-cent football pool
ticket. Now, that’s what we call
a real investment—one that- pays
I off 2,873,290,000 per cent.
F.E.F. says that news story
about the lucky widow makes for
a mighty INTERESTing subject!
’ ! !
If the family’s feline spet is a
bit grouchy these days it may be
because there’s been so much talk
: about the doggie in the sputnik
; that folk have forgotten all about
: it being National Cat Week.
AM I POING HERE? g A
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SPELLING
TOO ?
B_- 3
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33
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 33, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 12, 1957, newspaper, November 12, 1957; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1532314/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.