Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 3, 1946 Page: 2 of 6
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.
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I
old faithful
1
1
(
HERMAN BROWN, Editor
5
I
>
—.n}
MJ
ion
I
publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
T
T
I
i
75,
-
C0
-
I
CLOSE OUT
; RTTTTRt CHRISTMAS SEASON OPENING
M\
30 Land-
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peemi
a 3
meae
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$
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- •
(RYPTOQUOTE—A crypiogram quotatlon
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1713
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iter suffered minor cuts immediately after the
of its
of life or the glory of
It be revoked imme-
of Mr.
diately and
V
Bronchitis
C
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"me.
(9
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h
12-3
KHE LONE RANGER
*
1 Main
J Phone 403
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Merkea Distto
A Service, Inc.
for weeks."
-33222222222
XXVI
l
“Let’s say from New Year’s Da;
*
4
8
66T
ir
-ERNIE BMSMAMA
-pec-S
NANCY
C
to miss.
too obvious for
»
OUT;
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taken
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wanted
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Honestly, I was ashamed
si I RTLE
G.c-w,a _L..
4
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, 4,
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D[9 A
Ek
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d,
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34
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and
and
BOOM HOUS
ATH. CLOSE II
Ron
Tin
ou wouldn’t
the truth."
RANCESI
RUSSELL V
JANE GR
Mrs. J. T. Joplin, who has been
visiting in Boston. Mass., for the
Reds
onste
OH,
SHE
DID.
MiSS ‘
RITZ
100 acres aboil
ast of Cleburne
ation, balance
louse, large b
uildings, house
‘rice to sell at
ion on or beta
Priced cheap,
1000, 33,150
ayable 323 pe
v appoint men
6. River ,
(Eur )
T. Amazon
estuary
8. Distilling
vessels
sounded for the game in v
Gaels defeated the Uniw
San Francisco Dons, 6 to (
It will be the second
succession that the Gaels h
25 Agreements
28 Biblical
mount
2? Cut
1 K
11%
MORAGA. Cal., Dec. J
Galloping Gaels of St. Mai
lege today extended their
1."
MMA--- pat .
WAS A GOOD
LUNCH ,—-{
ling stories,” he
•y, "and I wes
22 ACRES WI
JOOD LOCATI
______. ___
» may stimulate you
)
Well Known Man Felt
Like Swollen Balloon;
10 acres in
see good na
•d. 4 big j
lenty of sod
ath. butane
Itchen cabine
ome. Six mils
de $70 acre.
15 Capital
of Peru
17. Mischievous
person
20. Belonging
to him
21. Obstacle
The S
Of I
a
CROOK,
• AND
EVERY-
BODY
LGAAAne
VWJe.
“g
LUU3:L 4
0612
_ „-n.
r /70E
(FE4ToN
shaken with shame,
‘faspsir, that she had
to speak. A
such matters.
CLEBURNE DRUG
Phone 347
2”
M
are o
lodter room swa
had explained gi
"w
r 22. Unstraps
24. Bovine
BUT IT TAKES HEF
QUITE A WHLE TO
_ CHOOSE A.-,
A DESSERT 71
'this 16 1ME BBONhMNG OF
'YOUR LESSON!----
■V----_ (
" Gayle’s whole
t that she felt as
PRINI AND.;
SA HES A CROOK’
i
।
9. Food from
heaven
11 Literary
earn posit ion
grass
28 Breezily
29. Rent
31. Ballets
C4.Kindot
wolf
foctazcf m O
partrnant oF
--em- - —m- ms w ■* ■
CJtKFPY /s s2,
and We
Front Whee
GLAM FOB
SAFETY Al
Polishing ar
Electric or
HUTTO
PAINT AND B
305 E. He
Phone
41. Digits
42. Not hard
DOWN
I. Having
NANAM
PAKS
2 Pressingly
Shoo
F
IS Woman
under
religious
17 Brosen
water
f Sycamore
lied all right" -
"You lied because—”
WHY, SLUGGO---I THOUGHT
NANCY WAS HAVING LUNCH
------ WITH YOU pepamdd
3. Body of
wter
4. Insect
M6--2
AL’obMANGCO
Do SS0L (
ALCttEcbet
Then just after midnight the two
of them had disappeared for more
than an hour. When Gayle had
asked on the way home where
they had gone, he had said he
hadn’t been with her "Some of
the fellows were down in the
fol
reached for her hand, but she
snatched it angrily out of reach.
"I have not got it wrong You
lied. I know you lied.” . ,
“I lied.” he confessed. His head
sank and his cheeks reddened. “I
British Railways claims that
the chances of a passenger being
killed last year in a train acci-
dent on their Unes was only one
in 150.000,000.
ngr, and
een afraid
I
JI
Author ol "The Plastic Age"
“A Tree Grown Straight"
Etc.
totyh--
• Miss Charlotte Ryser has return-
ed to Denton where she is a stu-
dent at T. S. C. W, after spending
ACROSS
|. Stage of
insect de-
velopment
5 Serpent- ’
lizard
» Mentally
deficient
person
10 Diab . /
1X Cent
13. Hillside
dugouts
14. Christmas
15 Standards
of
■
F0 4
I .»
33. Immatuve
3S.CMa<*ir»
$7 Pish
38 o»t»
«reniniab
^Oevatry
H Pirenide
Kegsg
o-ps*Km
. ---- 1...... -
- "Because I knew y
believe me if I told
Guess ASAN,
SMILEY.,
hmt
7
s Ru3
Ev.A
2
Bart, I feel ashamed."
- He had apologized then and
promised never to humiliate her
again, and until the New Year’s
Eve party at the Country Club the
night before she had had no cause
to compiain. But he had drunk
more than he usually did, and his
attentions to Beth Mono had been
SM
FACT
A GL-
its name to I
means "graspi
35 A decoy
30 The
moon-
goddess
(Rom
■ Relig i
38. Cravat
for money, and six of them were
a handful. The name stuck. al-
y lide like they
Irom a bonderine
vone, a new fer-
t
though the iron spits didn’t.
RAPHS !
used today owes »
The drachma -
A Htle mere
than 2,000 years ago iron spita,
l or skewers, were used in Greece
DAILY CROSSWORD
NW
9
,,AGME
L/VNe
"N
.Ai '*
E
'Sr:
r
,2
d*.*
1;9a
OPEN
0
SBHh oi
were benten by the Okl
& M. tehm, to fo to, last Ji
----------
WED.
9c Op
We note that again, now that the war is over, towns
throghot the country are staging Christmas Season
nnn rings
Pemember back -to the few years before the war
"hen shortly after Thanksgiving Meh year, the Christ-
mAS Shonning Season was opened with special events on
• given date. •
i.. ,
WOOD?
W)_
.luu
with them. I don’t knew when
He had left the balroom with
Beth. Gayle had seen them go,
and it had just happened that he
partner swung her past the main
doorway when they came down
the stairs together. Ma had lied
Gayle knew he had But she had
been so swept With emotion, so
(8 2
VrUrnh) • A fl
9fc -l- C
1 AN
MICE
•The damage he has done is im- | California Sehoc
measurable He has openly courted; „d—-x.2FL
Soviet favor as UM expense of our ‛ Play in Ou Bowl
Landing and prestige abroad
in Rm end Gayle forgave him.
but long after ha was asleep she
lay awake wondering if he had
told her the truth.
daaoatotalyfa bdlisvd him
(To Be Continued),
"Gayle! No! I tel you, nol
oxye got it 9 wrong." He
•nM forward inThis urgency and $i
The orators. poets, painters,
sculptors and architects of once
glorious Greece have long since
pAssed and their works have yeild-
ed to the mutation of time. Im-
perial Rome raised her head sub-
THEE
AUTO REP
Best Lacquer.
Beat Synthetic
Also spotting
AUTO BODY
nything from a
a complet
Auto Fender :
• a e
FOR three weeks Gayle kept her
• discovery entirely to herself.
Pride would permit her to confide
la M one, and she could not bring
hersetf to speak to Bart But the
pain she was suffering, the dis-
inusionment and shame killed all
her seat IB living. A.-
Then, altogether unexpeetedly,
eran to herself, she spoke She
if she must scream. Where the
sudden rush of rage came from.
"cwmco
she . never knew; but without
warning, the control she had exer-
cised to carefully was all gone.
“Yes, I’ll tell you what’s wrong.
I didn’t think I would, but you
asked, and now Tm going to tell
you. I’ve been acting queer be-
cause my husband led to me."
“Lied to you?” Bart’s eyes
opened wide. "What’s got into
you? I haven’t lied to you.”
. "Oh, yes you have. You said
you weren’t with Beth New Year’s
Bra. You said you were down in
the locker room. Well, you lied.
You lied, I toil youl I saw you
go upstairs with her, and I saw
you eome down with her. You’d
AS GUSST OF TERRIFIC PRo-
DuCTONS, AND ON BEHALF OF JI
pEreR VA GUY OUR GRAT —
STAR. I ONE YOU THE ON TO OUR
wwT4e2SIARND
qihipi, —J he ordered back tel her parents
the United Sates?" Smith wrote.1 My seg.
gucty -
CREOMULSION
for Couzhs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis 1
• i
TE BOGS DON’T UKE )HE 16
IT WHEN YOU COME/ A
►
UNVEIL THE NORiEsL
FOR THE CAMERAMEN,
• DARLING • —-----
its promises. Eternal as the .Eter-
nal God; immovable as His throne;
Breathing the promise of Beaver,
itself. the Bible stands today the
Hope of sincursed mank nd
(Adv.
By cheeking the retraction of
their eyes, the doctors found that
they (should have had better vision
in the first plaee and that the im-
provement apparently was due to
"better visual eftort" during the
test*.
18 note
19 Respiratoty
mupua
21*deeefa
.Receptacle
MBswafaMb
ship’s seam
27 Pertaining te
the surface
season to play Georgi
Jan. .1 at Houston, Tex., in
Bowl Game .
Morris Prank, special i
tative of Oil Bowl. Inc., at
St. Mary’s acceptance of
vitation yesterday at Kesar
Passports, Senator
Requests of Byrnes
WASHINGTON, Dec. •. (up-
Bep. Lawrence H. Smith. R.. Wis.,
cember of the House Foreign Af-
tairs Committee recommended to
tecrotary of State James F. Byrnes
today that Elliott Roosevelt ’» pass-
oort be revoked.
In a letter to Byres, Smith re-
'erred to remarks attributed to
Rosevelt by the magazine News-
week and said the late Presidents
son had constituted himself an am-
bassador of ill wih,"
Should not passport privileges
K V SMFHM-RBCG
Yesterdays cCryptoquote: WHAT BETTER THOUGHT
THINK ON GOD, AND DAILY HIM TO SERVE ?-TUSSI
Distiibuted M Kinu Fegtures Sv na KMa lac.
Many tores and business houses this season have
already presented excellent and beautiful windows and
displa vs of Christmas merchandise for which they are to
be complimented. But more and more merchants should
be ready and that can only come about through definite
planning on the part df civie minded erw witteas.
Though we would be the first to raise our voice
against too much commercialization of the Christmas
Sea on we do think that as a community wo need to again
start welding our group into a spirit of cooperation on
ETTA KETT
- T___--- -
you feel ypunwer with ineremel'energy.__
amazing aid for restoring the |*p, enerEy ami
yigorou interest in life > activities ao envien
in gquthlul pereone onaaim a was tofal
combimatien of efteetive inreilienen ehne
you should try at once. TTramone im woid by
.....,. -fl druz stotes everywhet»
Sh
• PERCY MARKS
the Thanksgiving holidays here with: ed a New Year's Day
Mr. and Mrs. John
Merchants would get together on a cooperative move-
F ment and provide, through the Chamber of Commerce,
special entertainment and a round of aetivities to usher
in the Christmas Shopping Season. The band would come !
downtown and play, or make the rounds to the stores 1
’ unveiling special Christmas Windows in a contest. Deco-
rated streamers and lights were strung up and the people
all came to town amid a spirit of the Holiday season.
4 Merchants were really out bidding for business then,
on a cooperative basis, to get shoppers to come to Cle-
d burne. -
Recentlyia wel known manstat- Morace king has gone «O
ed that he used to feel like a
a/I
IM NOT TAKING ORDERS FROM BOSS__
toRTON! J---
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth Jones of
aunisvuie, where Im is a student
at Sam Mouaton State Teachers
Cellege, spent the holidays here
with their parenta
Bobby, of Godley spent the Thanks-
giving holidays in Fort Worth,
where they attended the wedding
of their son and brother, Alfred
Fred Vidler and Miss Dorothy
Hulsey.
1 "6 • ■ _____
Mr. and Mrs w. M Ables have
moved srom 214 West Brown street
to 74g North Anglin street, where
they wil Make thote home in the
futures ade
U sat in her living room smoking
a cigaret and staring into the
leaping flames to the fireplace.
| “It doesn’t look like play to me. .. _
1941, Gayle Bart, and it doe an t look like it to just to be exact.’
a anybody else but you, J1 didn’t was taut
mind very much when I knew you
were just playing, but now—well.
DM PI VDKMBKOEMH I M H K I F O B
N V ! T H. GCK .EFPMH BVK KXVC
4 e
7
Brooklyn was
YOU’VE GOT TO LEARN
s68
235
32--
eE f
• 4
iku-ez-
om "rP “ r"v ve- ‛
2 Entered as second class mail matter at the post office at Cleburne,
Texas under the Act of Congress, March. 3, 1879.
I soficETO PUBLIC .
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
tion of any person, or 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 publishers.
~ UNITED PRESS GP LEASED WIRE — UNITED FEATURES
The United Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication
2—'Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1946—CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
mdsamamanmmindu
cusodna them wish only •w1 Revoke Roosevelt's
INJURED IN ACCIDENT
BONHAM. Tex., Dee. L (UR— Mr.
and Mrs. O L. Phillips and their
baby daughter of Wichita Fails were
under treatment today for injuries
suttezed last night in an automobile
collision.
Doctors said Mrs Phillips was
in sevious condition. Her husband
Food that the flappers of 1917 gave to their sons
caused physical deficiencies, says a national vice-pres-
ident of Parent-Teacher Associations. Let’s see, wasn’t
that about the time spinach and carrots were first re-
ported to have food value?
♦ « a
New drug develops giant dachshunds. Seems impos-
sible to prevent German rearmament.
lime, and from th* seven hilled1
city spread abroad her power and
her influence over all the world,
then humbly bowed her head and
ceased to be The picture of the
world wide domination painted by
Napoleon has long since faded,
and the “man of destiny’ died ,
amid the lonely scenes of Saint [
Helena. Empires have been over- ,
thrown, dynasties have fallen and
the meteoric light of would-be re-
formers has flashed across the
arched sky, only to be swept into
oblivion and forgetfulness; while
’the Bible, a divine product, woven
into the texture of human thought
and history by the gradual un-
folding of the ages, still stands,
bidding defiance to every wave
of infidelity, giving comfort and
hope to Christians and pointing
sinners to the Lamb of God who
takes away the sins of th* world.
The forces of oppositiop have
beaten themselves to pieces in vain
onslaughts against it. Time nor
tide ha* marred either the luster
NMl Baunsfel to attend her
sistern-law, MW Vickers, who
M rat 18 ।
— .. ..m- su - - past several months, returned home
Full of Stomach Gm -this, week-end.
‘ -dta—dfai a i .In,.*.. . ,
WILLIAM RAWLAND, Publisher
----
Mrs. Alfred Vidler and
4 ' “a
I of you. You did everything except,
trump your partner’s ace.”
"Did I?” said Gayle She sat
down, lighted a cigaret with trem-
bling fingers and repeated, “Did
I?”
"Did I? Did I?” he mimicked.
"I’ll say you did. What's got into
you? You’ve been acting queer
Exercise May Help
Persons Who Are
Near-Sighted
CHICAGO UP — Some persons
who are slightly near-sighted don't
see well because they don't try.
Three electors from Washington
University at St. Louis performed
experiments to determine whether
“exercise" helped correct near-
sightedness.
They reported to the American
Academy of Ophthalmology and
Otolaryngology that 55 per cent of
th* 54 persons tested showed no
improvement.
But among those who showed
some improvement, the doctors
found that the greatest change oc-
2L==35
to soothe arid heal raw, tender in- down "
don’t be silly, Geyle," he
otested, laughing. “You
don’t dive f dim» about
She’s a mond-leoking gi
fa of iteuM rag appral
S UBBCkl M ION RATES with New York a, to 1AM.
Bv mail out of state: One year $900: 6 months $5.00; 3 months .,,""" . .
| Ey carrier in eity: We per month; I year 2840
E- R • mni in‛‛ehmson end ediacent eounties: One year $475- f months
5700 1 month” 32.00
■■ml
K4A<e"
swollen balloon after every meal.
L He would bloat "ful of gas and
spit up acidulous liquids for hours
after eating. Was terribly consti-
patedr This man is one of the
hundreds in this vieinity who now
praise INNER-AID. He states he
was amazed at the results when
he took this mediine. Now he
eats what he wants without gas
or bloating, and bowels are regu-
f lar for the first time in years. He
feels like a new man
INNER-AID contains 12 Groat
Herbs: they cleanse bowels clear
gas from stomach act on sluggish
i liver and kidnevs. Miserable peo-
pie soon feel different all over.
So don’t go on suftering! Get
INNER-AID Sold hv all drug stores.
mER-AL
M-w Available at
va NO ABB DRUG STORE
How To Relieve eeedeecc
• You’re Not Too Old
To Feel Young
/ New Waxo Nalp You
men and women who are run
r DON’T FMBAmS
k HIM/ “["AVSTH
( Tp
Mi$SED
<3 55
The >stotes i at saluating a
ship’s quarter-deck is attributed
X 1 \/ 7
24.,
THANKS,MR,
WOLFCAU.?
iMTOWecY
5XOTED.T
and Bart camo ham* from a bridge
perty, and anas they had taken
of their wraps, ha askd, "What's
He lifted his brad and looked at
hev pleadingly. "I didn't know
what else to do. I’d had too many
drinks, and I guess Beth did too.'
We want upstains, and I'll admit
there was some necking, but that's
as far as it want. I know that's ,
bad enough, but don't make it
worse than it was. I’m sorry,
Gayie—honest, I am. I‛ve been
sorry ever since— pretty damned
ashamed, too,*
M /%
LAI
9c Op
Fn”
l kA
4
5. Gardentool animal
-Le
y—-«
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Published Afternoon Daily (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning
I 108 .South Anglin Street Cleburne, Texas Phones 133 and 134
V ■
if V*
53
Women’s hats provide the U.
of all news dispatches eredited to » or not otherwise credited la thia R with a retail business worth
paper.’ and also the local news published therein. All rights to re- . $250,000000
IO
tmvi Kiru -an- «n.l
------- -
) Al
119 . iff 4
ema
7"2epis
She could hear active movements
in the kitchen and dining room.
Mrs. Mays, Tom, and the maid
were all extremely busy, because
there would be many people com-
ing later in the afternoon for
cocktails and eggnog Bart was
sleeping He had awakened in the
J middle of the morning, had break-
fast. and then gon* back to sleep
again. Gayle knew she would
have to rouse him soon. Well, she
would—and she would hide the
fact that her world had fallen in
ruins around her along with all
the rest of the world.
She felt tird, too numb and
beaten to think, but thoughts
i , seemed to pysh theft wny, into
her resisting brafh. They formed
21 themselves tn spite of her, and
once formed, they taunted her
with her blindness and stupidity
•mp
“66887562,
y,
pr-mim
-
I MEET MP. WOLFCALL OF?^1^
H- TERRIFIC PQODUCnONR!)
• m m 1 ght ’• have kn.....
I ‘ E ago • .he told herselr wearily '•
E I , was as plain as anything ”
E 11 the past months " '
E ' E tions had grown both more n
-m-
I E E She had protested "You owe - ■
’ ’ I . nhidernti • Eart ’ •
“ raid carerut to keep her voice
qutet and controlled. “Maybe it
Lis just fun to you, but ye hu-
. aka Neim+.
TO nO-PM DIK TIWIRITAI"
ppose you arraft --—,
et serioie. If Beth didn't
ea tonight you were mad
r she must bo terribly
Md I don t think she is"
—577
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 3, 1946, newspaper, December 3, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423270/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.