Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, December 5, 1960 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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
OOT
HAL BOYLE
Editorial Comment
Business World
/
313.9
flue set fire to the roof of the J. M. Johnson home,
1223 East
—
V
9
8
© J
f
.7
6
' e
7
5
-Aer2
L
4
V
3
2
1
Newschart
p
A
SALLY'S SALLIES
III
g‘
)
NOHEART?
X,
7
COMB
HOME/
.63
/
—==
—a
a
1
53
1.
I
“)
v
i
V
A
Py
Q
I
■ -I
1
la
172-5
DEC.-5-
5
MURDERE5S HE WAS AFTEK 16
IF POLICE DO
MUGSHOTS THAT MAY IDENTIFYK SHOW YOU THE GUM
SHE USED'
YOUR FRIEND AS-
5
3
V ()2
a
SUBSCRIPTION
7/
JOHNNY HAZARD
WILL you KINDLY 7
!
NOTICE TO PDBIIC
V
\
i
C
=
BE PROMPT/
(/fa
t
«
1
I
s
Ol;
1
E8
\
12-5
=mhme=
MYRTLE
FRECKLES
4
WELL
HMM — (HEY
BARBS
G
V
9
(
J
$
$
3
j
HF
(
LONE RANGER
5 THEY GOT THEIR 2
/ TOLD YUH 77E MAED NA¥ T
*
M
si
%
&
7
Ei
a
144
$
&
?
Pann/s captors listen in the next room •
1$. INVESTMENT IN PRICE SUPPORTS
TOTAL investment
Ml
MUHIIUAII
WE'LL DECIDE THATL KELLER'S X SHE'S NOT THE GikL .
FEI OFFICE IN OHIO SAYS THE \ BUT I KNOW WHERE
I'LL GO TRY TO CLEAR IT UP, BEFORE
THEY FIND YOUI TAVIA. LMAY NOT HAVE
TO MENTION IMMIGKATIONAND MAYBE
KOZYAND SKURVEY HAVE
BEEN FOUND—ON THE
PLANET ULTIMO/ THEY'LL
BE TWO YEARS AT HARD
LABOR BEFORE THEY 4
MY TRAR I SHALL
SUMMON HIS
EXECUTIONER/ .
TNE LONE
RANGER.
7ONTO /S
OUTS/DE—
$
X
MY DREAMS
ARE GETTING
ABSOLUTELY ,
RIDICULOUS J
IN INVENTORY
— (STOCKS)--
-
r;
4
—By WILLIAM RITT—-
Central Press Writer
8
s
I
LOLLY SEE THE TROUBLE
YOUR ROMANTIC URGES
HAYE CAUSED? nma
E
HE)
d ——
1
. i
I
!
)
!
3
Ji
(
Br-=RN/=4
By carrier in city: 30c week. By mall in
Johnson County $6.25 per year. 6 months
mail out of state $12,00 per year.
$3.50. By mall in stale $9.50 per year. By
Entered as second class mail matter at
the post office at Cleburne, Texas under
act of Congress, March 3, 1879
F
1
RY
P
li
By HAL COCHRAN
It’s as bad to spend all you
make as it is not to make ail'
you spend.
5
P
6
YOU CAN LEAVE FOR JAVA BEFORE THEY
g1—— aUfPROSECUTE!)
502828 g
85
Santa On Way
To Visit The
ya
‘2
•c;
809
s1ll
CORN
Million Bushels
1,158
GRAIN
SORGHUM
Million CW 1
3 19.3
OF
I CAN SEE
YOU —
. WHY?
-
It won’t be long until sleds
will be popular again, from
coast to coast.
[i
a
A supermarket in the East
has a spot where helicopters
can land. If they don't come
down prices may go up to
meet them.
ERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every
■ 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.
YORE RIGHT, FLASH/
BUT LEG TALK LATUH.'
AIN'T NOTHING LIKE
SPOONIN’OUT HEAH
IN SPACE/ A
COM’UPPANCE,
FLASH/ CROOKS/
OH, FATHER,
HAVE YOU ,
WHEAT
Miliion Bushels
1,195
When a city is wide open,
why give celebrities a key
to it?
2
i-
{
POW—-
PRODUCTIONS
INC-
5
H
4
F
3
IN TO ONE OF THE ■ ;
TOP NOICH WESTERN ,
SHOW PRODUCERS /
// )
pl
■»
L
8
IT
6
I
5
S
6
U
8
S
/COULV EE YOUR IBIGI
FRIEND’S CALLING TO
MUST RECEIVE
THOUSANDS OF
REQUESTS FOR
try-outs 1 TD
BETTER WORD
(HIS strongly
IF IM To SET .
bgRESLL[Sf
” began
a faulty
"If that meal’s good enough for ‘Ike’ and ‘Mamie’, it’s good
enough for us.”
{F
8,2
; % ‘38
!
(wHN£
\ HoUSE
.8k
CCC Price Support Loans and Commodities' Inventory
Billions of Current Dollars
ec) -
E v '
A
YOU RE TELLING ME!
i y
"^^(^©^60 by NEA Service,- Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
-WHAT WITH OOOLA BEIN
AtL ALONE BACK IN
r
L4j
f
■
I
i
C
I
WILLIAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publisher
PEYTON LAWSON, Business Manager
TACK PROCTOR, Editor
PAUL GRIFFITH, Advertising Manager
GEORGE H. HANNAH, Circulation Mgr.
I The literacy rate of the African republic of Liberia
' is estimated at only 5 percent.
CAPTAIN EASY
33(,446458
*n„
dKe
you ARE THE SHER/FF-
WHO /s YOUR MASKED FR/END ?
11 ;
N
X
(
(6
————7
L
8
A
t
h
8425
i
1
X { K
"h"
F FIRST,,, A SLIGHT^ HUNTER K
FKECAUTION, ) SPEAKING^
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Published Afternoon Daily (Except Bat-
urday) and Sunday Morning at 108 South
Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phons
MI 5-2441, all departments.
SUSPECT ME, EASY I-
CAN’T CLEAR MYSELF
WITHOUT ADMITTING I
WA§ HIDING FROM
IMMIGRATION. I'D EE
SENT TO PRISON.. )
THEM DEPORTED! }
§5
n
7 24
I
12-5 J
NV
PICK UPCAP-w\IN EASY X ILL 5AVE YOU THAT'
AT H§ HOTEL! HE KNOWS! TROUBLE, LIEUTENANT.
I
%
WHERE WE CAN FIND THE I DIDN'T MENTION HER
BECAUSE SHE HAD NG-
n
A
1
K
2- Monday, Dec. 5, —CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES REVIEW
' I a “
t f)
THE SITUATION in Com- 1 days and most of our college
munist East Germany must football coaches will discover
w
=,L,0.[*56%
20 Ed
__ de
MUKVEKE55 He WA5 AFIEKIS I TO FIND THE ONE
MOLLY SCARCI. THEY'RE RUSHING/ YOU WANT! FIRST,I'Ll.
WISHING WELL
Registered U. S. Patent Office.
"im
I
0
11
r K98.
"1
-EWE
“Oh, I know the way to get ahead is to do a little more 1
than they expect of you, but here that’s impossible!”
NANCY
AUCTION
TROTTING-HORSES
I pl -
GZFL}
f
7
i 20 Years Ago Today
I —- — I _______
DECEMBER 5, 1940
Greek armies smashed Italians back from South Albanian
bases today, British bombers raided German and Italian war in-
dustries and the house of commons shouted down a proposal for
peace negotiations...The W. H. Tate service station at 401 East
Henderson street was broken into last night and tools taken from .
the office...The temperature climbed to 66 degrees by 2 p. m. yes-
I terday and the prediction for tonight is even warmer weather...
V—-
) L
/ 32025, f /
jA
,0,1.
1947 1952 1960
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP)-Deck the
desks with boughs of holly, and
put a plastic evergreen tree on
the filing cabinet.
Santa is on his way to visit the
business world.
Christmas comes but once1 a
year. This is probably just right
for the average office or factory.
If it came more often, many a
firm might find it hard to sur-
vive.
For the yuletide spirit does
strange things to the usual busi-
ness routine, which ordinarily
doesn’t embrace such problems
as where to hang the mistletoe.
It also does strange things to the
hired hands who people the realm
of the typewriter and dictating
machine.
Here are a few of the cast of
Christmas characters you’ll prob-
ably find in your own office:
The senior vice president—for
years he never has been known
to speak. to anyone except the
president and the chairman of
the board. But each Christmas he
meticulously sends every employe
a greeting card—signed in his
name by his secretary. If you
thank him in person for the card,
he looks at you as if you had just
landed from Mars.
The joyful imbiber—All morn-
ing he nips from bottled spirits
hidden in his locker. He spends
his afternoons sitting at his desk
humming seasonal carols all
alone. On Jan. 2nd, he sets out to
look for a new job.
The tightwad Romeo — during
most of the year he takes turns
trying to romance every stenog-
rapher in the office. The day af-
ter Thanksgiving he starts pick-
ing quarrels with each of them—
so the only girl he’ll have to buy
a Christmas present for is his
mother.
The all-for-one organizer — He
has his secretary shop for his
presents, then gets* the supply
room to wrap and address them,
the mail room to stamp them
free, and the office boy to carry
them to the post office. His theory
is that at Christmas the organiza-
tion should work for the organiza-
tion man.
The do-unto-others realist — if
you sent him a card last year,
he erases your signature, signs
his own name and mails it back
to you this year, in an office
envelope.
The self-protecting receptionist
—She doesn’t take any chances cf
being overlooked by Santa. On
Dec. 1 she hangs a long stocking
from the front of her desk. This
is a gentle hint to salesmen that
if they want to get in to see the
purchasing agent they’d better
dren a little token of crisp folding
green into the kitty.
w
CONNECT ME WITH )
MR, FOKTLEY’S Jl/
— KOOMZ AAl
N E
THIS IS THE PALACE 2
CALLING, IN REGARD <
TO YOUR INTERVIEW
WITH THE PREMIER,
THE APPOINTMENT
HAS BEEN CHANGED
IQ 8:05A,M,Z Pl FASE
gi not, within the Social Security system.
Now the sociologists have strongly defended their
findings. In a letter to the New York Times they state
that the critics “have not cited current figures to
quesion our findings hut have rather emitted cries
oi disbelief, and have made public speculations about
techniques or motives of the authors which could 'ex-
plain’ our findings. It is obvious that some of our cri-
tics have been unable to find comparable date, or have
not troubled to do so.”
Their study, they add, was given the cooperation
ol 25 sociologists and psychologists at universities
throughout the nation in conducting the interviews. It
hes been validated by other independent studies. One
of these, interestingly, was conducted by the Social
Security Administration itself, and it was found that
more than half of the persons surveyed had spent less
than $100 in an entire year for medical care, even in-
cluding the cost of aspirin.
No' one denies that a proportion of elderly people
must be financially aided if they are to have adequate
medical care. We now have a federal law designed
to provide that aid — and to provide it on the basis
of need through joint federal-state action. This is the
proper way to deal with the problem — and the way
to get maximum result at minimum cost.
COTTON
Thousand Boies
5,017
-
V,,
a
6 KU
w4eL.
(fe=s
’I (A
B3. J--
s
ExYOUVE BEEN
CHALLENGED © A
.DUEL!
\/
7 W
7%
“2 /1*m-
46/ ph
-L
SI
52
*
UG
PLOANS H
OUTSTANDING.
I
J
T
Richard Arlen and Andy Devine in “The Leather Pushers’
? two-day run at the Palace Theater today...Sparks from
1 Av
89a
3
8 2
O M
(MAN,IM.
( FAST/ FAST
( ENOUGH TO BE
ONT! g
Chambers street, early this' morning...D. E. Allen is reported to
be improving from an injury received when a piece of steel flew
into his eye...Miss Maude Selvey transacted business in Fort
Worth Tuesday...Mr. and Mrs. Orvil Doggett and son, Charles,
spent Tuesday in Fort Worth...Mrs. Will McCowen was hostess
Wednesday to the members of the Priscilla Club at her home.
511 West Heard street...Jack Russell of Cleburne, Baylor’s sopho-
more end who starred in every game he played, was selected
on the United Press all-Southwest Conference eleven...An after-
noon of sewing was enjoyed Tuesday afternoon when Mrs. Doro-
thy Ward entertained the members of the Idle Club at her home
in Keene.
741
: /2-5
$9888.5
8 | 349 “882948
_L. 4
ALLEY OOP
«
IN
/ --
.<oU ~
°/
certainly be an unhealthy one.
Within the last two years, la-
test reports reveal, 2,054 doc-
tors have flown that zone for
sanctuary in West Germany.
! ! !
A shipload, U/,717 crates, of
Japanese-made toys has arrived
for sale in Cuba. Wonder if it
includes some bearded boy
dolls?
I® 6
-O
.7 8®
fR
_0.3 4
El,
LIEUITENAN
g ■ LU6ER
<
925
e--
/Pse
' 6 _
-
E p
' 1e 4 65 -
) Le= -
mppuuC-™TAUT
W/T7/ 7FE \
PUSH-BUTTON FARMING
A honse organ issued by one of the farm equipment
manufacturers says: “An imaginative cartoonist the
other day gave his idea of what farming may some
day be like. He showed a farmer sitting in front of a
| large control board covered with switches, blinking
' lights, dials and gauges.: This was the cartoonist’s
idea oi push-button farming of the future.”
This, of course, was a deliberately far-fetched con-
cept. Push-button farming, to so ultimate a degree,
doesr't exist and may never exist. But automation
and mechanization are playing an ever increasing role
in modern agriculture, and there’s certainly no end
in sight.
As the house organ puts it, “It’s just a matter of
Hollars and cents. You can’t afford to do chores the
hard way any more. Time means money — in .farm-
ing just as in any oilier business.” Also, present wage
ensts make hired labor on a. substantial scale prohi-
I bitively expensive. The machines do the jobs better
and for far less money.
At the present time intensive research is being .giv-
en to the further development of mechanical tools
which will do the farmslead chores — loading, con-
veying, cleaning, baling and so on. Models to fit al-
most anv farm set-up are being made available. The
mechanical revolution in agriculture moves steadily
on toward a future when surpluses will be a thing
nf the past and maximum agricultural efficiency will
become a necessity in the face of a rising population.
..mN IUL VOPES/ OH, WELL FIND A ) SLIKE WE WILL,
NOT KNOWIN' I WAY TO GET YOU ] OOP... AND JUST —
HOW T'GET MEBACK THERE /AS QLICK AS
BACK THERE/ 2 SOMEHCNV K. POSSIBLE, TOO g
! ll
406 FY
-—.a n
)1
l /
\0
8 N
13.0 n
1947 1952 1960
143.3
,o. n i j
1947 1952 1960
(67
43
11 ’ •
Himmmmyrmm
"35e, =7 i
==aL EdES "
I S
8 7
L S
7 2
I O
8 4
S T
2 5
Y E
CRITICISM WITHOUT FOUNDATION
'Two sociologists from Emory University of Atlanta,
Professors James W. Wiggins and Helmut Schoeck,
recently published an independent study of the health
care situation ol persons over 65. The gist of this
iully documented work was that most of our elderly
citizens are not suffering a high rate of sickness and
1 are not experiencing great financial difficulties in mee
ting medical bills. Another finding is that about 90
percent of the respondents to the study dd not know
Oi unmet personal medical needs.
The study’s validity has been challenged in some
circles — notably, those circles which support federal
medical aid to everyone over 65, whether he needs it
S
ASSOCIATED PRESS (AP) LEASED
TELETYPESETTER WIRE SERVICE
The Associated Press is exclusively en-
titled to the use or publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not
etherwise credited in this paper and also
the local news published therein. All
rights to re-publication, or broadcast are
also reserved. The Cleburne Times-Review
is a politically independent newspaper
placing the public welfare above the in-
terest of any party Truth and decency
ire its guiding principles, and its daily
ietermination is to print the news with-
out fear or favor.
(
I =Es
emeg
,9 v
%g."
Any erroneous reflection upon the char-
acter, standing or reputation of any per-
son, < r firm or corporation which may
appear in the columns of this paper, will
be gladly corrected upon the notice of
same being given to the publisher.
National Representative TEXAS DAILY
PRESS LEAGUE, MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
ASSN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
ISHERS ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS-
PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN.
Hi
NOW THAT I HAVE
BAITED7TART INTO J (
gAg e%
263857 4 6
AYFYAPSO
7 3 5 4 6 2 8 7
A I A A U O U Y
*5 28 7 3 6 5 4
A N O E L B PE
3 4 5 6 2 8 7 3
AFYLY.TIN
'6 "" 8 2 4 3 7 6 8
Y O H A • D L I K
8 3 6 5 8 2 7 3
R H S A I B F R
6238 4 53 6
PBL EELLE
FOPSES.
DI
it’s possible to sleep on. Friday
nights, too.
! ! !
The hide of a rhinoceros is
often more than an inch thick—
Factographs. Perhaps that ex-
plains that look of utter indif-
ference most rhinos wear!
! ! !
Women may be prone to often
change their minds, says Grand-
pappy Jenkins, but not as often
as they change their faces!
! ! !
It takes some icebergs 200
years to melt—nature item.
Sounds like a bartender’s dream
of a perfect ingredient to- chill
a you-know-what.
923
Xy~0o
IM GOltAO TO WRITE
(VAG 7NE LONE RANGER/ |
Q8221M3karmommecpgsgereren
«4
an”.
KEW THAT EITHER Th'
DRUGTHTORE THCALE WATH
BLTHTED—OR ELTHE
I'D JUTHT ..
-O"APPE&EA
. Inqnudries cWned by Commodity Credit Corp. 194/, 1952, 1959 .
A 1.2
, 0 ,
1947 1952 1960
' Bhae
s7eg
! .1947 '48 '49. 150 '51 '52 '53 54 '55 '56 '57 '58 159
FARM SURPLUS AND COST—Government storage facili-
ties for farm surpluses are at the bursting point. The cost
of owning these vast crops and price supports is creeping,
upward. Newschart shows crop inventories, government’s
investment in them and in price support loans outstanding?
Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture.
I •
/ PLEASE/ N OH, FATHER?
I OH, PLEASE, HAVE YOU ,
> FATHER/ /NO HEART?
f WE NEED (IT'LL SOON BE
I COAL, AND CHRISTMAS!
\THE RENT I PLEASE, <
( IS DUE”/ FATHER— )
M-—C
OT
13.
3 7
R R
6 8'
R R
7 2
R E
6 8
T O
6
T S
7 3
E I
3 6
S R
BLONDE HE FALLED TO ______________ - -
MENTION WHEN HE WAS/ PART IN THE MURDER.
QLESTIONED-gm-- ---
... umn =- S
Z" '
Eg
K-gv
‛gu2ed
‘6
gg-1,
22245
59.* 240
#aM
Tm. Reg. U. S. PatOk.—All rights reserved
Copr. 1960 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
‛ ’ I
R
1860 WITH COL. JACK
EAST AN' HIS
CAVALRY. _siLE
i
/ YEAH: WELL
' k I FIGGER I
— \ / MY GOSH, OOP I \ GOTTA RIGHT
— I NEVER THOUGHT T'BE UPSET
i r AbOULOOOLAo
S,3/:129s
37)6
) THEY DESERVES /
/ IT.^
CAN GET SACK.p )2es
oe
cs...
t ; t
A special type sports cap con-
tains a compartment for the
storage of golf balls. For play-
ers who let their game go to
their heads?
t ! j
Just one or two more Satur-
W/ 7
•3
===
. W L
b=g-gse *
" " " J.R.WILLIA5 12-5
BORM FIFTY YEARS TOO 5OON ' e 1960 by NEA, Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat
. A" 4-
0$
54 (2
272
* B
Oke N
“) 3 2
—*a
CANCEL THE ASSASINATION, V
EH, FOKTLEY - WELL, LET'S i 497
—7 SEE ~--( —8 T' 5
76-82 c
S2T —
86
1
M62%
g_
7 (
„M,me=u
A Sdd„—MSimmagjM——
1,4 Mhh.
> 12-5 @ i960. King Features Syndicate, Inc., World rights reserved,
FLASH GORDON
AND WHAT ABOUT/ AHLL. -GUlPz.
yO'JR SHARE OF J6IVE IT BACK!
THE STOLEN g NEVUH WANTED
MONEY JED 3 A. IT HO- HOW/
M,Garferwnad
-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, December 5, 1960, newspaper, December 5, 1960; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1542785/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.