Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 140, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 27, 1949 Page: 2 of 6
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Editorial Comment
Cleburne Times.Review
......i kow about pe Judge
the
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SOVIET EXPLANATION
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Advocate I
We sped
tDut It may be that a few of the more
logjeal-minded Russians are.sti wonder-
ing as they read the honor roll of their
unsung Inventor*. There was the remark-
able omonosnov, for instanee. Aeeording
to Soviet propaganda, he discovered the
secrets of atomic energy and cosmic rays
, and als3 made a clockwork modeL of a
helicopter back in the 17508.
It was Ivan Polzunov, not James Watt,
who invented the steam engine. Russians
gave the world the caterpillar tractor be-
fore 1850, and evera types of tractor mo-
tors in the second half of the 19th cen-
tury. One Ladygin beat Edison to the
electric light by six year*. A. M. Popov
INNING
LIONS
BUGS
/
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a 2
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8
Z
TQEV NV Mas
ANVON* burvu?NOTF
AS MUCH, I MGaN: r 4
GoricuaseG TO
Dav? wuL • WeA 1
r 3 3
-—A
S
rHDA
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1
VOU INVITED US 1O YOUR
AND EAIED D Pur IN AN APPEAR- r
AANCE. I DEMND AN APOIOGLSIR!A
There you have it, neat as a mathe-
matical formula. False claim* of achieve-
ment for a country'* seientists are in di-
rect proportion to the imperialistic ambi-
tion* of a country’* government.
4-303
Reading these claim* and perhaps be-
lieving them, the logical-minded Russian
must wonder why it was that other coun
WHvOONr
vowOMra*
i h
on
g
Silly *• that sounds, the propagandists
must have thought it necebsary to come
up with some story. For a lot rtf Russians
probably have wondered how it was, even
if their propagandists spoke the truth,
that thia wrong impression about electric
light* and airplane* and such had been so
persistent for so many year*.
1 HOPE M
US bugs 4
KIN MANO
TREE No*
, RUNS ON
sESSAAD?
/
2
The Umita
*• the UM In,
your kny numbar. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rec-
tangle and chech every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then
read the mensage the letters under the checked gures give you.
Conveigk 1040, a* wutam j hum. Ditibuta w Vaturu Inaa 4 -27
. FRECKLEE
r 1 1 ""
CoCA-Dooot"
CW?** 9
1M00-G,,A
Bor
MANANA
NevER
CAME! u
E =
Mm
OH NANCY— WILL «
--1---V YA THROW
ME MY
-s WATER
-- 3 \ PISTOL?
88"*
. DETAIND ON 2
Park for dinner. There were hun-
dreds of people in Great Falla who
had never been there at all.
great saw teeth of snow mountains "
Eoineazere2”,ag w.
seem to be going fast—not much
faster than in the plans amtter
that day. The road waa smooth .
and, clear at trame. In spite of
many miles of winding road, we
clicked of the 150 miles to the
Entrance Hotel in two and a half
hours flat Fur the first time since
rd lived in Montana id done what
LARD ( Tiu NOAM >
4 -■ "' ANO MIS
4A MAMA.
Park Below us, mountain peaks
skimmed past our vision; one sec-
ond we were over a low flat valley
bisected by e stiver string of water;
the next, a snow peak nudged us
Lakes, hidden in the fastness of
isolated craters. passed beneath
us. Even esgles’ nests were visible.
The Capners were getting their
first look at it, and I was trying
to make this bird's-eye angle con-
form to my usual bug’s-eye view.
It wouldn’t conform. Viewed from
the air. all height was gone, all
sense of towering peeks lost. They
were smoothed out to only an oc-
casionak fash of Land Ho directly
beneath us, too near for comfort,
and the next minute a valley floor
thousands of feet below.
It was thrilling to fly in a ver-
boten plane, but I was also tharilled
whan we approached th* Base
again. We had covered five hun-
drad miles as the crow flies in
two hours.
*
Even after «)1 the propagandists” ex-
planationN, our Russian mightibe forgiven
for wondering if there was some flaw in
their picture of hl* best of nil possible
government* surrounded "by the worst of
nil possible imperialistic aggression.
'5
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480608
mgen
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■
YOU'RE TELLING
--By wuuAM «in-------
Ctntrt! Press Writtr
And why I* It that none of these won-
derful Russian achievement* were made
after the revolution* Assuming the genius
of Russian scientists, our logical-minded
friend may ask why this genius, growing
in the ideal soil of communism, has not
produced a bumper crop of inventions.
Why didn't some of his Soviet comrades
come forth with such things hn radar, syn-
thetic rubber, nylon, the jet plane and the
atomic bomb? ,
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3 “ “AS a
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UI ia • pleanant 11 tue asms that will give you a message every
day. It is s numerical puzale designed to spall out your fortune,
it the letters in your first name, if the number of letters is * or
, subtredt A It the number is less than I. add 3. The result to
SHY SND SHED LOVE ME
MAGANA--
"wEuk""KWek*AN“
d wm u emeluaivelv entinted
lor vub/leauon ot all newe dte-
KN
Gmuma
tionality and race at the expense of other was sending and receiving ’ radio
nationalities and races The more rapa- sages before Marconi. And so on
• urr. she talks and talks-she s
iearhing to be A woman!"
A---*"AM -Hcfis
Kamaz.ce/Ex.mp)
Me p uewo TO WAik mo |
Pww" F--uvm wou • w• J
e.Htwe wene M
aFn F kos:J"M
tries not only took these discoveries but '
also developed them Czarist Russia, he J
knows, was bad. But how could this scien- I
tifie progress have flourished in the mon- I
archo - monopoly capitalist cuntis; "5
which he knows were jUst as bad?
c
2
5
PIEBLIS.Q
TE PONDS,
JARRV.A
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vdt
Mr
A FTER lunch th* insatiable Cap-
4 ners invited Rob and me to go
for a drive with them in their car.
I accepted, but Rob prefetred to
stay home. Then Major asked
again, "Where to?"
Th* day had remained sunny
and warm; the shining mountains
still beckoned me. “How about
Glacier Park? You'll get a differ-
ent aspect from the ground." I had
missed that sense of grandeur and
wasn't content to have the Cap-
ners think that what they'd seen
was IT.
Major stepped on th* throttle.
The speedometer indicated ninety
miles an hour. I reminded Major
of the new limit that had been im-
posed because of gas and tire
shortages. He winked. "A uni-
forma is a great fixer.**
'-Evidently you haven’t heard of
this police magistrate. He doesn't
fine speeders; he puts them in jail."
Major looked at me understand-
which took us near the foot of one
of the Big Boys. A storm wan
gathering and great gray heaps at
feathers, touched ominously with
black. blew resolutely over th*
summit, and sifted down the side.
The long bridge over the ravine
of the Two Medicine River waa
sheeted with ice. When we went
over it earlier, it had beau ciear
and we hadn't thought of danger.
Major jockeyed it toward th* .
middle of the road so a bad skid
would have room to wear itseit
out Our breathing was audible
Major slowed down to 15. The
car swung sidewise. Steady boy!"
he breathed aloud. We ware near-
ing the end of the fill. Major
gunned it again. We leaped for-
ward and onto the broad highway.
Half way home. Major pointed
to the gas gauge. It registered
nearly empty. "Where shall we
get some?" he asked, as though
ingiy, appreciating that a civilian
gas in Montana sprang out of the
ground in convenient artesian
wells. •
We asked a man walking along
the road how far it would be to
a gas station. “Ted Davis in Du-
puyer might accommodate you."
“How far’s Du—Du—that town?"
"Twenty miles."
We all looked at the gas gauge.
There were three sets of crossed
fingers. ..1
. (To Be Continued) id
Now ll'g all clear. The discrepancy fit*
right in with the west’s pattern of "imper-
inlsm." Further, the western countries
had been telling these imperialistic lie*
fora couple of hundred year*.
t-noneaqne,
174
6.2
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i 829.
-"Ba,
—cafL.m
CHARGE ‘EMTONTO! AND PIRC FAST
at THose puffs op anoxe/ gg
aB*HgXj.
_ 3
“9,86,58.1
WE ALWAVALU
Me WNM
cious and piratic the imperialism of the
given.country, the more insolent and
crude is the ‘spiritual expansion’ of It*
hlMortan* of selence."
“But I want tokeop my Hn olean wherFmweshinzt" f
A JAPANESE DOCTOR an-
nounces he has discovered the
perfect means of putting a
quick quietus on family quar-
rels It's a very hot idea -be
simply .puts a match to his
house
“The struggle for priority in capitalist
countries merge* Into a struggle to as-
cribe a* many scientific discoveries hn
possible to the seholars of one’s own na-
Registered U, B. Faleht Office _____________
2 4 1 St 2 A 8 1 $
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8
puthea oregutea to 11 M hot lherwie
reditea in lbw Mier, ana sIm llw Heal
Mwa ebbHekiA therein AU Mi hi. lo re
vubiteqsten, or wroadenas ot lensed dtm-
T Y . U
aLLOSrMEHEAELA,HAVANALT
i W A BVCk-EYED RUMBA DAME
LAST.oF7ENINTM.
A SHO' HOAR
E AN OIT ONg M*' 1
B.CHANCN r SNAKE 4
I THIS SLUAW, DINAH-. >
I ain’t SANaeo that |
I RMT ONE OUT UF X
R TH' LOT YE! .4
Soviet prope gandists, who have laid
claim to all those inventions on behalf of
theiv countrymen, have at last invented
t mething themselves. It is an explana-
tion gf why, so many discoveries have
been credited to non-ussians like Edison
and the Wright brothers The navy publi-
cation Red Fleet explains it thus:
^'7 GROGER THE LODGER
4 ggdghia35, ■ 6 By Elizobeth R Roberts umurwarpuueuae.
Pyhiwhee ARernomm Halts
Nturday, and Mur
Sar Mornin al 108 Howin
Anulin Sir•«< daburn. Trial Phone 111
IM and MM
WILLIAM RAWLAND Pubitaher
PKYTON LAW RON Buntnena Manncer.
JACK PROCTOR. naitor
PAUL onivor A4.irll.lm Me a a rar.
HARRY JONEe, cireutation Manauer
RAskire6
' and Tr WAS
+ewadgetE, tue
ONE-MAN tOQ! NOW.
OK A DIFFGINT
KINO OS MOiNO ---
1 clpsed for th* season, but we
were able to drive a short dis-
tone* toward Two Medicine Lake,
,runszongeMee-naepet- 4 galn to- the plastic noe* of th*
5“:” -"521 E JTJTu uhoebtruertae” point
-le-r‘ — ^fl. "eh-*-h- we were nyinL. aver Glaeler
I MNEW WWAT is AU .
Iasout.wnati maaai 4
that ciNN wants
Entered as secona elas. mill matter al
—2 "8". tjjtgd
Natlonal neprenentauv,, rExAa PRIM*
nonew to ri'M tr V,
An erremeuus retieelvn uuon. -M ,sMr,
meter, atenainu or rat utation •< mi pit.
aon ar tirm or croareuon whiK may
eppeag in IM eolumpa aT Ibu papm win
to sledly qoqreeted wpon the notjoe of
J sama brim a i tin i« the puniiehera
GO ON AN'SHOOT F MOV WANT . IM NOT
M/r. STICKING MY HEAD OUT' I NGVER
MZA S00GNPLAI:-
0922
and th* innurance laddies ar*
liable to get a bit stuffy about
the business
f l f
Dec Kifiti says tht litil
way ot itarting iht homa hrta
burning io to ignilo tha doors
whteh. in Jogan. aro mada ol
fiftr Mo ihfhultr at all. ha
raporto—tn fact, it'a a aingo.
I t I
Statistics show that durin*
1948 more then 23,000 Jopo-
nes hemes went up in smoke.
Apparenilw, the Miyala peace
plan is spreading.
I f l
la tha anaiung hubbub every-
body lotgati who waa fuaoing
ooat wh^t and why. taaidaa it
gives tha itaman a chance to
aatn thotr hoop.
Iff
The Tokyo medicine man-ene
Shigeo Miyato-haan’ patented
Me Idea Ne offers i ee • free
been io hearosed huabends and
•a ideal method of alum cear
ante
(22
AL
— -
mi mKwarsesGxuyap)
IMiMM EMba\,‘v/ c M/ EAQ /
1• "‘Vw"a E‘2 —/ ANOTOv A \
F94E
*12
ATY A m
.1iu,
XXVIII
MY foot Ware glued to the pedals, ,
' 1 my hands to the wheel, my
♦yes to the level, and my tongue ,
to th* roof of my mouth. I held .
tht frozen position for what
seemed an eternity.
Gradually, I reasized I was
maintaining an even keeL
“Why It I* easy," I thoucht So
easy that I leaned to the port win-
dow and looked down. B> mat I- l
taneoualy th* ship veered to that ।
side. I screamed and pressed hard I
with th* right pedal. We tilted to
starboard. Frantic, I a crone* ad
again, sure Major had not hoard
me the first time. I pulled up the ।
I wheel to gainraltitude, for we were
dipping front right to left like a
kite gone crazy. I couldn't balance
th* pedals and th* level on th*
mobar. Anyway, my eyes were
bulging out so far that I couldn't
i have read it, had the mark been
true. Terrifled, I gripped th* wheel
and setwamed again. We did a
nose dive. Earth rose to meet us.
I closed my eyes and waited for
I the end.
Hands lifted the phones from
my ears. I heard laughter.
I don’t sea why it had not oc-
curred to me that th* co-pilot was
। at his controls, but it hadn't 1
was certain the fate of the ship and
of all of us was in my inexperi-
enced and terror stricken hands.
And I was furious at Major. When
I could work paralysed cords, I
shouted to flak why on earth he
I had scared me so. “You looked ton
1 complacent’* he shouted, “sitting
there gazing out of th* side win-
dow."
As soon as the bones solidifedi
in my legs, I was ready to descend
to w.
“V. VwvvF in 04Y •e ween My mAI In
anqu. 230) «
toeAwteta^.. * s ■ mi * i» sA ’
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 140, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 27, 1949, newspaper, April 27, 1949; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562838/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.