Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, November 14, 1952 Page: 2 of 8
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UNION WORKER PROVES AT POLL
HE'S LIKE ANY OTHER AMERICAN
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ERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a mesaage every
day It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune.
IVE BEEN WANTING- TO DO
THIS SINCE LAST SUMMER
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Snow White Washed
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Count the letters in your first name it the number of letters is 6
more, Bubtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3 The result la
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
Copmen 1053 by wiiam J iiner Ditributed Kig Vetur., Im 1-14
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' What’s that?"
"All my speculation adds up to
the fact that the one who mur-
dered Al was somebody on these
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WE found Eddie sitting up in
W bed, wearing a big white tur-
ban and a weltoming grin.
Healey sat up and moved across
to Eddie's bed. He sat down on
the edge and eyed Eddie closely.
"We've found Kemmer's will.
• Ke butn Ang
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"Um aorry I have to do this, but Pm <
ladies’ club this afternoon mH I know you
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"Simple Al would never have ;
left all that dough to Eddie Fields.
He wasn't quite that crazy about
him."
"Was he so hot on the Lane
"No, he was thinking about
ditching her, but he might have
elophant. in 1882.
felt remorse." a
(Ts Be Conthued)
j__________1
Prepa
The Won
Johnson < J
•UI svonso
students nn
niches This
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FRECKLES
Al. As an afterthought, he picks
their pockets to make the cr! ne
look like robbery."
Healey looked so impresned I
was impressed myself. "One
.’ -ji
uAnD loose spot there."
1 .."I don’t think so. But there's
"ixo.mMAnA ' something else I've thought of-
ma "0r*t something that's really loose."
N
A "knight errant" in old-
I en days was a wandering
knight.
I thing," he nald. "What ubout the
open safe?"
"Oh, yes . . . well, after he
slugged them, the guy probably
; justed the safe te switch the rest
I. -Mit. biphony money and then
MATC Jsr IT PALP < N
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suusscubuiezii
mthmrgemmmrmemmme
1 - at
llvuloy’s head moved.back war-
ily •What do you medb?"
Eedie gnve n smile that heeded
a crutc Yot# me l ‛m .aud- l
denly rich, and I have t tell you I
- Lge /
5
I ! ( ----------- still a pocketful of phony money
The Statuc Of I ibertv’ burning his leg. At least he can
Ln"POy-iPLT! * someshina on that. 8o after
has -been in New. York Har danoeour triend goes back to
| bor since 1886, । the omiee, opens the door and gets
1 1 the surpriae of his life to find Al
Wahington D C is call, and Eddie there. Al takes one look
eri "The Fitv of Mngnificent and realises t is his big itch.
— ni0. •• maEnicenii the blackmailer and aafe-opener.
[ I in Jin S Al jumps up, either to grab the
• | villain or the phone, and the visi-
the cireng lor snatches the nearest thing
handy, the ax, and swings, first
knoking out Eddie, then ruining
/ TMERE dors Tu",awacaobe
OZAAK KiD HASMING ) (fMuff r Mn* A )
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I CAUGHT up with Healey down
' the curt ider "Where did Dillon
find the will?” I asked
Healey kept walking "in Kem-
mer's trunk "
"I went through that trunk my-
self early yesterday morning, and
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You’re due to got per cent ot
the estate. The High Hill vlace,
the bunk m counts, everything."
It wus the most i estr Mined show
of enthusiusrr. on record Eddie
shook his head slowly Hr closed
his eyes anel grouned a little Then
he oprnes his eyei mid sald, "‘This
is the scrowiest thing that ever
huppened."
) (WHEE
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Snow White Laundry
-.....———
Elizabeth Blackwell was
.the first woman doctor Ini
- the U. S. .
The mausoleum, or bur-1
ini tomb, was named for
King Mhusolus.
".anbvuzamnnu.
womaN Ou MET INTS
veur/FMa. AMAMI
r AonesAe wa
priert an
t > th- cni
$- ~oon •5
I The enu,
Mrs C e
view • •h
wy Mrs
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He demon
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ed bv sut
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bv usine J
bleaching J
wood an o
premises, not an outsider if that's
the case, what about th car Eadie
heurd apording out of there light
after the suuininf"
"There’s nothing hard about
iKaL___To hug llf! “ll/bodywho
might be awake and listening, the
killer jumpa into your elation
wagon, uuns the motor. theh lets
it die down to make It sound like
it's going away," Healey said
"Maybe several people. Roslyn
Fields gave Al a pretty hectic
urgument about more dough for
Eddie- she leally put her heart in
it. And Kitty Lune ahe might
have been wanting to pile together
a little dough for the future, since
Al was beginning to make moves
to slough her o if we step out
of the official family, we have an
interesting character named Leo
Hitchie. He happen: to Ie In it-
rears in his board bill "
The office door opened. Corporal
Dillon barged in, walked aruund
the desk and pushed a tyvewritten
sheet of paper in front of Healey
He stood up. "I'm taking a rule
down to the hospitat, Morrison
I'd like you to e le along."
I followed him out to his gray
sedan. "What's it about?"
He grinned. '-‘You won't even
let me have a little fun, eh? Okay.
Answer me something serious
What would you say Kemimper was
worth?" .
"I'd guess $,000"
"Okay. You've just inherited
live thousand."
"Now what s this?"
"Dillon has just turned up Kem-
mer's will. It leases 10 per cent
to you, 10 to Kitty Lane and 10
to Chris Witmer And the remain-
ing 70 per cent goes to your tunny
little riend, Eddie Fields."
I said a very quiet wow.
I can’t take the dough.”
"How do you mean that, Fields’”
Healey said weakly.
"Just before I passed out, while
I was lying in the office, Al
moaned out he wanted everything
to go to Kitty."
Healey sat there scowling at
him Hr got up and turned "Why
didn't you say something about
this before""
"I was waiting to see you"
"You mean you're voluntarily
giving up your claim'"
•what < an do ' Cheat n dead
man?"
T
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-y
I didn't not li e anything that
looked like a will."
Hekley swerved around, his blue
eyes sparking. "So you're the guy
who oroke the lock’"
"Nope— somebody got there be-
fore I did."
"Whot"
"I don't know, but I think who-
ever eracked the lock borrowed
some canceled checks to copy
Kemmer's signature on a fake
will.'
"What makes you think it's a
-Mit..•
Pr.'"5 " | ’from the rec hall"
Mm m, mnowen. j "Why didn't be just cart off the
! dough in the safe instead of tak-
iv" •num* banr ing time to switch bad money for
tiema. Yor good’"
’ ‛nA“Batim. i l waved that one away. "When
•?—B'.■'■■rr— ----j you’ve worked out a plan Ihor-
MsoMMa we enar- oughly, you aometimes carry It 04
mvUUm at SM w* hr the letter even if you're in a
rporien "z dane."
"up “U.PMonT."N 1 Healey shook his heac, not car-
• ih pubtaher. ing for that. "I think you've got k
k5-~
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*82
(14 «N H4T CM/.
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n t Pornom
r-M rhrehnner Tumbo, the
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XXVIII
I WENT on with my theta y of the
1 murders: "I hayen‛ rehearsed
4bU part. Hut just piking at ran-
— dom. tt might go like I ld« Qu
John Adams in1g00 wna friend sneaked down to the Fudge1
si n Acams, in 1800, WAN 10 piek up tlx dough, and noth-
■ the first occupant of the inu‛. there.Something’s wrona. he
White House. { doesn't know what Hui 11 ere’s
"KN
A e
eTtqr,. * +m --m
gesaMkegamtmni
tediaha
T O
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iexeh
■ Nover in our history have so mnnv ton Iahor lender
B 4hrewn their weight behind a presidential nominec
B . as in 1952.
| The CIO endorsed Governor Stevenson and so dk"
E) many of its individual union chieftains. The A FL lumner
Etin on the same side, a move it had made on!v nnce b"
I fore when Sen. Robert M LaFollette. the old Wisconsi’
■ Progressive, was a candidate in 1924 John I l wi
7 » ined the parade, though he is generallyi viewed in hnv
51 ing Republican leanings
Bl Yet when the votes were counted, It was t horoughl
fc. 'Far that the rank and file of Inbor had not follower
/ f their leaders' adince in anything !!•«• the expecter num
j l bers. Stevenson's ma ferities in New York Chieago
E Ctevelnnd, Boston, Pittsburvh and many anthen nor-
4 mallv Democratic stronghold fell 'way short of pas'
3/ marks.
h Evidently labor’s brass exert* no magin power ove
■ | the average worker. This lesson hnd been demonst rat p
E resoundingly in Senator Taft's 1950) re-election in Ohio
Ei Rut. although union leaders sought to nvoid some o'
e their old mistakes this time. thev still did not epneor t‛
V—tnke sufficiently to heart one big part of 1hnt lesson
A working man is fust like nnv other Amerienn H'
B has the same hones and fears He is a consumer a fath
H er, he rears children who mav live to be drafted In- pavr
■ [ taxes, he can be outraved bv immorality, lle 1m mor
K than iust an annendage to a union bntton
■ By the millions workers voted this time for Eisen
E. power becuse they saw in him some hone of pelting
H rid of a portion, at leaAt, of our vexing nathonal an
Eworld problems. They plain!v felt the Demoeratic appen‛
m was narrow and perhans a bit stale They turned awn’
H- from the certaintv of Democrnti rule: but thev’re nof
■ ' sure what will come, not sure if I heir hop's will now in
K fulfilled.
K As one working man put it "I voted for Ike bermnse
■ I was sick of the mess in Washington Now I fer lik'
I a man in a varachute, l‛ve tnke he ’can but I don’
I know where' I'm goine to land I‛m waiting for Mr HI
M senhower to show me"
■ It is characteristie of nverave citizens in the whole
■ western world today that they do not give political par
l tics great leisure to provlde solutions They want ar
E tion if they are not "shown," they will speedily turn
M elsewhere.
I That could havnen In 1956 if the American workinv
■ num is not satisfied with what Eisenhower and II''* Pe
l : publicans have done But if he switches back, It will b*
1 because he sees once more In the opnosition mar'v the
I best hohe that all his broad needs will be met it wl”
I not be because the Democrats promise to pass u good
I inhor law.
■ ----------
... .
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Say. rve got an Aspte .
SAMPLE OF AN hxa/ lsts
ROUND UPSOkSE oct AAM
[CLOCks — PRON1 —
Get a load
OF THose
BREM-
CASES!
3 •
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, November 14, 1952, newspaper, November 14, 1952; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1402983/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.