Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 270, Ed. 1 Monday, September 24, 1951 Page: 2 of 6
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blade found hot the soft kidnev tat
but the hard Ober of the great bark
muncle
Slatemeyer turned in mM air ns
the steel entered his bhek. freeine
enine of his left hand.
The sewvered bark musele was
civine away.
Exerting my whole force I threw
my knite-arm up and torwacd. The
thin blade found his left tide, low
down, fust above the hip-point, and
Main I knew it had gone deep.
tn staguertn bark and away he
nearly tore the knife from my
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I could see the sweening arc of
the broad bowie knife comins from
the ground up. There was no time
to go forward or to either tide. I
leaped and fell baekward. ezpect-
Ing to feel the bite of the steel in
my vitala at I went over. InMead
I felt a tearing through my right
buttock
A soldier ran go into any action
knowing beforehand he may get
killed, even that he probably shall.
Yet not until the enemy wounda
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who elalms the combat record 1 do
mold be to unatrum as was 1 IB
the opening of the duel.
The full answer lay in gw
owrigh 190 to Wi
Mbbw Uw4 to *"•»»
■wet yih "e publuyhn
Aonden Meune. Im
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Clothes Last Longer"
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"Work te Keeping with the Name"
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tar errenegus MIU MI IN aon tae ehar-
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sacred buffalo-hide doll owned by
ever y holy woman.
Hut now I hud a figure more
eompelling than a rawhide doll te
examine Slatemeyer was enter-
ing the ring.
All the man promised by the
war Ma buekskins drew over the
curve of thigh and birep now atood
revealed, fur he was naked at 1.
save for a loose douskin breech-
clout and bare-bladed knife
There it no use describing that
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WAFCH Hemet
T T ERE is a pleasant lttle game that will give you a memsege every
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more, subtract 4. If the number la lees than 6, add 3. The result to
your key number Start at the upper left-hand tenter pt the roe-
tangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right Then
rood the memnage the letters under the checked figures give you
Copuvtahe imi. W wunam I «*•' Detitutad to Kite Venturen. tne. 924
-hmnee
Well, Slatemeyer had blooded
me and I woo beginning to Aaht
2 MEa
MYRTLE
7"/nbtt TW -ward AN
kwDqe minDU
y
___________
T1adau,
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man with shoulder, arm, velly.
To i
intellive
bave on
ne Namie la mtennpra
■ ■ .is eneme namea *inepmee
zzk rmmem#
SaMMOtr. Ma Fanet"ea,
E, Jburt F
INb?/Moet
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Convenient Drive-In Service At Prescription Pharmacy
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E Al the conclu
fl at the l ni . sit
H Im three frate
Ethe pledging of
sigma Alpha F
Ered the pledging
Ehon of Mi and
Eho is a ficsh
E year.
E John Redmon
EMrs A H Re
Ehhe l niversity
pledge of Lamt
E George E K<
Ekmmett Bruun
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■as tv womlo
7
knives A knife to not the white
man’ weapon We feat H hufng
thnse who use It The White who
win brass anv man whh • run
erowe weak at the sight of bare
steel.
•eL
Snow
OMahet erwaitea 1. l « nd otnerwi
•.•OlleS la thte pavet •ne Maa he Boeal ,
Awa oueunea W.IWM Al Hente to 1- 1
‘puuiuatign er brandenat et lawa du i
ntohea heresn ar. alne "eservea.
TWO ME
E THAT
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to elediy rartMtog upen
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OF MI
go deep
Arm-locked we strugeled, his
welht and strength driving me
backward I felt a sudden weak-
•‘Inviem vemewee • •••
d
100% HOME OWNED
mever u .••■••.• nifwa wee
kaa wemtera a.B. • neine •»« >•»
Ctn
y REMEMBERED a eute little
“ thine Yellow Bird had tnusht
me Drovoine both horde to mv
aides t moved wtraleht in Mv op-
vonent ntonved rrourhine As I
rame on to him he etruk at me.
hi rfght arm throwine the knife
at mv left aide I moved te m•
right, shift Ine the blade te mv left
hand in the movement, whinoine
It at him in a backstroke as his
body rushed bv me
ClassleaWl•, this maneuver it de-
siened to make your enemv miss,
hi mins eorrvine him naa» mi hl
left aide ernmine vour rleM with-
out the shift of knife hands vou
wuld also be out of position, but
with it vou are readv as ht» body
basser vour to strike to the rear
into the kidnevs The danger Ilea
in maMne "he shift of handy tne
toon. «Hewing him to twist away
from it j
l made the shift beautifully but
wne an tarred bv the impact of his
hodv brushing nast mine that the
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WHII.E I waited I examined the
" knife Peering closely at the
1 shoulder of the blade I made out
I the fowing Soanish inscription M
as Bbr«wr u"ugt-“GrTu By man la
Mu* aM ndjeeyet mUN HW per
pen s b>MhM MM l montha RA by
ateu la Heu mm ew veen. He meu ow
■>» ewemv vumret «
Anae-- •w SUIrerWf
"ureet, metaarne, Tsaos Fhone in ms
sea tan
' vauaat rawunST AMUbw.
rerron LAWeON,hstnen Maaaew
Sami hioutor hai6
PAVL oatnW, SgurUilnt Mnoneer
hAnV -Xam, nroiatlen Mhanmeer
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One Day Service On Kodak Films
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[pDOURMSTEROUSYr
5333, ‘
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2 freedom by crushing the
K hones of these people. . ----------------....
h ' Whet kind of freedom is’ Vilialohon Toledo MCDI IV Man-
H fhat h only for men who wMColoredo undeed’Corte’ him:
salroady have if I tmenahave "heathed "hi” "len-
_______________________ . _________ My fingers lightened on the aged
deflected The
Complete Truck Service-CLETEX GULF SERVICE STATION
Jimmy oung — taxi Jones Your "One Stop Station" MM E.Henderon
It
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t_ FWXKLES___
CRAZY HORsE entered the ring
— and with no delay issued his
brief statement Any tighter step-
pina out of the ring would be
lanced The tight could end only
with the death of one or both
tahtera. The suryivor held full
right to all the status of the van-
qished if Cetan Mam won be
had hi- lite it the wnite dog won
he had hi lite and hip treedom
He imkra al ooth of us eare-
fuliv stevpea omekix to the edge
of the circle called out sharply.
"Hopot Let’ go1” The feral voice
of the Stoux tender released Slate-
meyer almost before I heard it He
renis their ommumist musters Manv who flet rointeily
a mention Weqtern promngunda lil null'll! Is is st 11 1 in 1 hem
to ac1
They muster their courave, erash through the lion
Port nin, and are welcomed to freedom in il Western
inil. ‘Thereafter except for the luckv few, they mv left to
founder in disilluslon and despuir, in n prt of Europe
atrendv sodden with honelessnes*.
Is 1hb the dream of democracv we dailv paint for
them on 1 hr Voice of Ameriea and Radio Frer Furope’
is this our refugee policy?
Nenrlv nil these people bave inerediblv vaMble In
formation ahout our poten. , •
• POOR •ITTLEN fAnt*-
■ THING--SHE J
fl MUST BE SO : J .
hqeE $-
cimrAu
7noLpeov OORPN-T GEEW
( teoun0 60Ts6A_
\ oooo we TO cLeAN
BUauovse’---
,mE,E 6 AM
Els
ieidiroctiv thev bave bccri encotiruved
ogmrp"" -I
ETs, »
bask and leg museling to shame
the best imagination Looking
across at nit easy slouching stance
I met hi» pale aaze and knew he
in his turn was "looking across the
ting "
I had been with the Sioux seven
months the last two spent in toin-
cloth moccunna. even though tght
snow still lav on the ground The
soring sun ularina of the llgnt
‘ynowa. had burned me a dirty
rahogany, I was no pygmy in
structure.
Slatemeyer may well have been
toiling up some of these point* bi
he watched me but if he was. nis
expression gave no indication he
found the sum total impresatve.
/
33.’
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5—r
me,, win awei la lb. aenin »llb
uwiven
add confusion, two dintinet brnne hes of military
uge o*en comnete fo the informution refugees
hnditions bebind Uif (‘urtain They sometimes
T Y
T “
tint enemtes. Only a rela-i
live bandful are tapved, Ilf-,
_ ter prnner sereening fee
snieq Most of them av
workers, techniclans ane
fnrmer whn would make a
valuhle nddition to the free
world's labor forc»». A large
pronortion are able-bodied
young men who exulicity
t vniep a denire to join the
U. S. firmed forces find fight
communism. <
Much of thoir Information
J" bein Inst, and most of
their highly useful services
are wnsting |n disuse. But
these losses are as nothing
comnaren to the deep injurv
we inflict upon the cause of
GIOR
1 y —7 I
N N L t
d E25
aasaEXda
Im TAKING A BATH-
JUST LEAVE THE
—7 TRA ON THE
BED f— i
VICFLINT--------- ” " =---— a -
We Service All Makes Cars And Trucks-Coleman Motor Co.
748
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414
4 T
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7--s
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T—3
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a T
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detuin Hit’ fugitives for weeks for ouestioninv.
Fventillv. these during folk get out of lull Then
-what” With luck thev mav contact the IR0 mid vet on
mi elivibl, hat for overseas resettlement Bui otherwise
thev are left strnded in rorntries nirendv overcrowded
and "’vi ighu d with unemoloyment mat other problem-
Think how t his trikes men w), have brnvee death
univer mum iUm LANW•
WHN euavi
- ' —1 enanien
newa dt-
" ' >me—L 2
“reg
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5316
ARM
T--1--T
NNM
3 T—2
U a i
7—3—r
j 5
T B
z--1
4-4
naf A stronu warmth flooded up
ry knie-arm. teeming to come in
*sine wuves from the etrnnre
torvign blade lying so tightly in
my right hand
"Cetnn Mani’"
Healing mv name called I
wlanced un Star was seatod upon
* rnimed dal» aerons the ring be.
fund the row of lanrers Around
her wonatted and stnod the medi
cine men of the tribe Ai mv ever
found her she rained a slender erm
mward me, calling out softly.
"Enuranet
Smiling in return I noticed she
Wai corrying something In het
nther arm I perceived it was the
L R B I
63—1—T
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r a ■ L
girRR
setg.
53===
Eo
Editoriai COiidc it • ,g
IS FREEDOM ONLY FOR THOSE ■
PEOPLE WHO ALREADY HAVE IT?
We hailed an a story of great courage the recent ex- fl
press train escape of 31 Czechs across the West German fl
border. Americans always are heartened to learn that 2
men still are willing to risk their liven for freedom
It in instruetive, therefore, te ebnerve what haw hap- fl
pened to these stalwarts since their spectacular encape. "
llalf of them have been arrested for lack of "proper pa- w
pers," and the rest may share that fate
To be sure, U, S. officials have asked German au- ,3
thorities to atop the arrests, describing the sifuulion as -1
"very embarrassing." It is indeed that, mostly because 01
these particular refugees have had front-page piblieity 1
But the full story 1*1 far more cmburrassing. and H de,-
. serves in he told to everyone.
According to Donald Kingsley, director tovneniI of
lli<’ International Refugee Organization from 1700 to 190
refugees a month escnpe satellite countries, with moat
- —finding thetr wiry to rGermany and Atistrie • - —
The shocking fact is that they stand a better than
two-to-one chance of being swiftly jailed like ordinary
eriminals- on grounds of illegal entry. Languishing in
fall for several days with tramps, prostitutes and the
day's haul of vetty thieves, thev have ample time to re
flort on the Writ's noble promines of political asylum for
refucees
Michael Hoffman. New York Times correspondent in
Geneva, reports that a survey of nine sectors along the
German frontier showed I' S official pursuing ninenep r
orate nrocedures in hondlinu refugees In one place a
I’ S wree automatically jailed every bor del < i cner lor
15, to 36 du vs
-
6.
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 270, Ed. 1 Monday, September 24, 1951, newspaper, September 24, 1951; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1563294/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.