Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 269, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 23, 1953 Page: 2 of 8
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YANKEES AND DODGERS I
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by Morgoret Millar
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"My job la to listn"
a"And obsorve."
"And observe, of coure"
"What ar* you observing about
me?"
"Do you want the truth?"
"Naturally."
"I was wouder ing how you lost
WRLL..FiNAuLY FOUND A RA
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HERE is » 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 « 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
Copvriuht 1961, by William J Miller Distributed by King Veature Ine
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"Like mnther, like dauahter. it‘s
a peculiar thing: though they
were separated all these years,
the resemblanc were strong,
right down to the Anal one. They
both ran away trom me without
MAYBE THE ARMY h
AMMUNITION WAGON
RAN INTO TROUDLE !
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AT the motel Calloway mtxod
A the drinks It was obvious,
tram the deft way be managed
with one hand, that the losa of
his other waa not recent
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• tingufrom where we are
• to "Where ml* want to he,
- we will have a working
* rule that provides us with
" both w purpose and expand-
• lug possibilities for our
"You're a restful young man,"
Calloway said suddenly.
don" talk much."
’ I HAP A TALE
e3e
nme AND HR
FEELGHEC
BE 'Do BUSY
TEACHING TO
take time our
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ARE SHARP ANQ HELL SCRATCH-AD.
rv2m2
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I r was a familiar cry to Frank
1 the too-strict and unimagina-
tive parent ami the child who
escapea into dreams or iliness
"She wanted to be angetreaa like
her mother?"
"Yea She had the lead in a
few experlmental plays that
were put on back home and ft
went to her head Possibly she
has talent—l wouldn't know, the
plays seemed extremely silly to
me- but she's too old to begin
a career like that. I tried to ex-
WARDS
" The ancient Egypt Inn*
used ostrich feathers for or-
• naments.
2........ -- -• —
: CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
: musezszee
plain this to her last March 28
1. I believe it was Whan I re-
f Thais WHAT We HAVE
ltpk‘/ ,
4dV Mi-—*,
lack ot reason “You've heard
nothing nop I". . (
"Not a word, in two months.
There’a not much I can do about
it Lore's a urown woman of
30. Actually she's quite imma-
ture like most of her friends,
though they call it being 'crea-
tive' She talked u lot about ex-
pt easing herself, but the only
thing she really expressed was
an antipathy to good honest
work "
)
fit
FORGET rr.
JUNIOR-
Is A
) 2865 !
in the bourding house and won-
deied whether Hose herself had
given out this miainformation.
"Fur a long time I've bed the
idea that Lora intended some
day to try and find her mother.
Durins the past year she talked
about Ruse a great deal, and
once she even mentioned the
posipipty Ha veunion .with her.
I told her it waa ridieulous, and
the subject waa dropped. I'm
afraid Lor picked it up again "
“You have no proof of that’"
“None Yet the more I think
of it, the more obvious It seems
Lora believed- and, as s matter
of feet, so did I—that Rose was
well provided for aftei her ca-
reer and her aeries of husband*.
We had no kiva she was on her
uppers."
"So you came here to see
Rose."
“She wasn't listed ui the phone
book or city director y or credit
bureau, and she wasn't at either
of the hospitals here in town
I intended to make further in-
qulries, but as it turned out, I
didn't have to." He set his empty
glass on top of the radio. It
came down with a decisive thud
and a sharp impatient clink of
ice. "How did she die?"
"Apparently of a heart attack."
“She was strong as an ox "
"People change with time,"
Frank said “Rose lived pretty
high, I guess "
"}.
TN germ FA LK ITS FOOZV s
I De SA. (sTEy
muk —a**' I CAME AND
MAMMLh MITERPL XXX ie
MMN. 2< [ w*; < /
Virtue, like art, constant-
• ty deaia with what la hard
Aoto do, and th* harder the
task the better the suc-
AjqbamuuuunuuzunursArintotie 15110
Experience shows, how-
ever, that you have to have
more fhan the body chem-
icais perking to beat the
Yanks. If the Yanka have
any secret, it seems to be
a mattar of spirit. They not
only think they can win.
They never consider that
they might lone.
•uT.-.A* JOHNNY SAT«
another OSTER.-, be
b >
F •
Wella it‘s almost that time of year again when the
' National League world serles entry trtes to do weme-t
thing about the New- York Yankees
The Yanka made sure they'd Im- on hand for the ex-
periment by sewing up their fifth straight pennan, a
baseball record, just the other day. The Brooklyn Dod-
"gers earned their fourth crack at the Yanka in seven
yearn by winning their second straight a couple of days
earlier. The Dodgers have yet to win.'
There la a legend about Yankee luck in thene mat-
ters. But the team’s record seems too good over too long I
a perlom to be explained sway we gHhly Since 1921 the
- Yanks have won 20 pennants—this time five in a row-,
onco four in a row, three different times three in a row.
They’ve taken 15 of the 19 world series played. Last time
they lost was in 1942. and before that, 1926
The Dodgers of 1953 profess not to be affrighted by
these statistics, nor bv their own sad memories of com-
bat-with the Yanks Tills time, they mutter, it's going
to be different \ .
Could be. The Brooklyn team is a baftiK. power-
' hotse, having racked up all kinds of offensive records
It lr, strong afield^ And though it has but one pitching
ace. H has commanded effecfive pitching in most of the
critical spots.
The 1953 Yanks aren't so spectacular as earlier
chnmnions. Some of their top pitchers are getting creaky
But they seem to have more youth than is generally real-
ized, and a lot of solid worth Not to mention that field-
ing demon al shortstop, Rizzuto. Any time somebody
looked menacing, the Yanks knocked him off
Old Casey Stengel, the Yankee manager, isn't ready
to concede a thing He thinks his "fellas" will be as hard
to beat as ever. He hears l hr Dodgers have n flashy young i
। second baseman, but he avers "I don't think he can
make the double play like my fella"
Hr admits some or his fastball pitehers throw thei
ball so gently some days it looks like paper fluttering in,
. the breeze. But hr’s got them on rest cure and feels they
mny be able to throw pretty hard by I be time l hr Dod-
gers show up
The Dodgers have lost the series too many times
to be tense about the affair any more. And every time
they scan their own batting records for the year, their j
confidence climbs.
Yet they’re not so foolish as to underestimate the I
Yanks. Jackie Robinson, who does all right on a normal
diet, is chawing vitamin pills in preparation for the se- |
ries. Some of his colleagues may be doing the same.
" >
muudae
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------- x ♦TROulE? THROUGH
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moneR LET ME OEK§LEEV \ BEAUTIFUL 9TT NO.
vI. 66 ALWaVe VN5T-4IN3S ) X MAY A MEAN AAG-
LIKE THAT, HOW WA6 YOUR N- BOlET- THINK I CAN
{WA-KfS dh.GALIFY A A MM5E5
274336
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23 «** 9kE 1 5
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aau--TAcA a.k
"1 loat 11 in the most unherole
way posaible. Caught li in •
bum-naw. 1) xour drink too
weak, too trongr"
"ust right "
"I'm not a drinking man, but
there ar* times " it* paused "I
suppose Rose died penniless?"
-Yes."
••Sb* was a fool about money "
"Rose wasn’t bitter about lark
of money. Th* only thing she
wanted was somethina ilk* a job
to get intereated in."
"She bad a job once, looking
after her own child. But that
wasn’t’quite good enough. She
preterred th* cireus." Dalloway
stared grimly into his glass
Victory
Sells C
Members
King » Daug
ternoon tn t
ATA 2 98,8′2
, ________
E“tsjy
32
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LlrT
“"THESE people, the Good-
- telds, in whose garden
Ros* was found. Who ar* they’
What do you know about them'"
"Jast what Greer told me
while we were driving down to
Malgradi’s place. Goodeld and
his wife and mother are from
San Francisco. Th* mother is in
bed health, and they’ve spent ths
lest tew months or so traveline
around the country to tind a cli-
mate that would agree with her
They Anally decided on La Mesa,
rented a place, hired a maid,
etcetera. They’ve only been here
for two weeks, but according to
the maid and the next-door
neighbor, Gooddeld is a devoted
son and his wit* Ethel is a
devoted daughter-in-law, and ,
that'S about all there is to the
Goodfelds "
(Ta Re Connued)
1__15
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$72
' K aRwEmes•Fa
zme-hinn--
s ■ « .
turned home tor dinner that
night she was gone. I telephoned
some of her sorry crew of
trienda, but they professed to
know nothing about tt After
two days I reported her aa a
miasing person. The police were
unconcerned. even a uttie
amused, I thought. Their as-
sumption was that Lora had
eloped with a man, and they
advised me to go home end wait
for a letter I'm not a waiting
man, but I walled a whole
month Theo one day in the sub-
way station at Cambridge I hap-
pened to pick up a New York
paper. There was an article in
it about a proposed television
program that was to tealure
some oW-Um* movte star*
Rom's name was among th* one*
mentioned as possible The ar-
ticle said she was retired and
living on s big estate here in
La Mesa "
(Yank thought of Rose’s room
— MYDSTEWPER
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Al the co
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held, with M
presiding J
devotional I
3.9 Mrs K
! charity rep
plans were •
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canned gooq
each meetir
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Mmes Ci
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mar Sloan
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 269, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 23, 1953, newspaper, September 23, 1953; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1403168/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.