Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 11, 1946 Page: 2 of 8
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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CROSSWORD
Nazi Envoy Back
n.
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B5TDONT
HEMMAN MOWN, Editor
27. Novel
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30.Rubaut
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wam
-RECE v. HE SARDINE IDLES FISHING BOATS
LAFF-A-DAY
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nutemeat whole.
can m KIXG VLaTuaxa smoucat, Im, womu mzomre nunivEo.
For the first time in 75 years the year 1945 was with-
l.
fit
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ETTA KETT.
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w2
e they were going and what
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associated for the past three yean.
when we go back east? Youll
worked out so
smoothly that Gaye said she
R
GIRAFFES
some place satisfactory to
659
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me if you were
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around there:
Al
ou mean you couM Mve at
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well with the other
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ONHYR
pcpNxF
not to
thority
ed she would teach, but she had
been too tired and confused to
begin hunting for a position. Mow
it was too late; the schools had
already opened. And why not a
war plant? And why not Bedford
rs
a
efor
tion
s Covered
with
small
SAW US
OFF!
GROUND
HOGS
in New York state; she would be
near Mr. Godfrey when, and if,
she needed his assistance; and ehe
would be completely out of the
. IN sos ANGELES A ARBOP, 271 fishing boots He Idle. but the fishermen insist they are not on strike.
"We’ve juet not fehing:" say the workers, who want $50 a ton for their sardines instead of $40.
wiite EArEnes enjoy the branther, fishermen and cannery operators meet separately. (International
6. More
slothful
7. Const ella-
A
o
2vg
r 3
“3
PUT FT BACK IN TWC
BOX and tie rr up
RIAL PRETTY/zB
regardless of the au-
d the cdmmands.
“The F B. I ain’t so super—I outsmarted ’em ten time
to once!"
21. Fetish
22. Disfigure
23. A wing
25. Conflict
26. Part of
“to be"
to
fSycamore
«sym)
34 Moth
25.KKnooks
36.Brilliantiy-
colored fifth
Az.melody
CO Edible
• ootat ock
3 Voided
escutcheon
• 4 . The right
to vote
6 Bon of Odin
DAILY
ACROSS
1. Abome
6. Endures
i
1
the
| mt1
for
jd.
44 Wicked
<2 Skin
dd.Celor -
45. Unhappy
l,
XXXIII
WHEN Gayle and Mrs. Mays
packed the car once more,
I
A
/Y
• '
9.
I a
.
2
ate--
d
pnAe
A "
354
. The World of Tomorrow, in that world of day be-
esterday, definitely didn’t promise to be One World,
s for Lake Success. it is enough to say that the
ibly, for ail itsaceomplishments, didn’t quite achieve
mph of unanimity consistent with the promising
if its locale.
New kind of nutcracker not only cracks nuts, but
h tweezer-like edge lifts the shell off and leaves the
9
db»
1 WILLIAM RAWLAND, eublsher
C.
— Po4-
$,)
wheels for her,. With Barney to
guide and advise, she and Mrs.
51,
=‘-.p
ISMATTER,
' POP?
V
9/
i(
ila \w
tkmwrautewved
king her seriously, as he al-
did. Barney wrinkled his
ead and considered the prob-
In the years 1936 to 1939, six out of ten corporations
in America earned no profits.
Mep"
"w-i
v‘*
"ei
11. Large,
low truck
12. Pertaining
to area
13. A tooth
14. Genua at
palmilke
erees
15. Soibeit
16. Music
note
1?. Tmee
P
m.“
Finally he said."Well, ma'am,
ell you. My mother lives in
ord Village, up near the Con-
rut line. I gotta support her.
s why I ain't been drafted
My sister lives with her. It’d
ighty niee for
7
qe
YdeE" €
A*
out a single bank failure in the U. S.
M“es‘m. My elater’s workim’.
nenu hi a plant in Norwalk. B.
3’
"a
I
Gk,
1
rapped Kent, all brown and
—-ched and bruised, into his lit-
MAD IT SENT OUT ON
_ PPPOVAL, BUT I CANT
#2, KEEP IT--ITS TOO
3d ~E X PENSIEL---
figures, etc. 31. Puts out
(Hex) 32. Thallium
9 Appendage
10. Bang
06 .Reraonal
pronoun
19 .Exdlama-
tion
WE CAN
GRAB,
ABUS’
R-y "T*
THERE YOU ARE, POP •
VOUR TQOMBLES 5-7
"7 ARE OVER / J-
32
I'
033:
were going to do, and they
Barney to thank for the idea,
yle had been teasing him
avpouankedsonetodayte"nare ombke ot peopie with whom she had
FA new wire cutter also serves as a stretcher, splicer,
staple puller, pliers or hammer.
* * •
Don’t marry a girl because she looks sensible A sen-
E sible'girl has more sense than to look sensible.
MYRTLE-
dh 1
Rub I
i
9
r t . 1
Wed., Dec. 11, 1946—CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
---1-----—---_
Scue
18.
21. CW aeb.)
24.Kindoftee
28.slamdin
Pacific
Xempedog OHMf : ™£ PEtWaOAN IS
-15 demtk to Mine mamtune Aynauchte. Enc
3 GUM E
Eym u
at irmci
make gadgets, but now it‛s
n‛ ports for planes. Maybe if
were around there, I could get
> at the plant, too, and make
2 extra coin. I sure need it.
h ay you help me out. I could
track of you edsy."
< course," Gayle agreed, smil-
ht W stmplicity IM trusti
ybe l mould get a job in that
» plant, and then everything
ld be perfect, wouldn’t it?"
yyle hadmqent to be amusing.
officers. He
__fthem, and
they haven't got much use for him.
Theyndmithe’sa marvelous pilot,
but the^- say belt « rotten soljtwr
He doesmt know how to take or-
Shade o
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Mays found a satifactory cottage
in two days’ time. It wasn’t in
Bedford Village, but it was in
Poundridge, only a few miles
away, and Barney aseured her
earnesti that it was close enough
for him to keep continuqus watch
over her.
It was a pretty little white cot-
tage with three bedrooms, and
both Gayle and Mrs. Mays were
delighted with , it. For a .week
they shopped as if driven by all
the Furies, seeking bargains in
furniture and rugs in Norwalk,
Stamford, and White Plains; and,
by the end of the week they were
able to declare themselves ade-
quately settled
Barney’s sister took him and
Gayle together to the factbry in
Norwalk and left them with the
personnel manager He turned
Bmmey over at once tn More-
man, and then considered Gayle's
problem.
“I think you are probably just
-------
UKE TO OWE "
YOUR MOTHER SOMETHING
VERY NICE FOR CHRISTMAS,
BUT I DONT KNOW and
NWHAT TO GET' uadd
STOP-
DREAM-1
n WG"g
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HANS THOMSEN, teat German
charge d'affairs and acting am-
bassador at the time eg the das'
laration of war in 1941, is shewn
as he arrived back to Washing-
ton, DC He has been returned
to the U. 8. to testify befone the
federal grand jury in the mass ' !
sedition trials. (Internationan
be on the job, won’t you?" •
-hink so, ma'am. I sure hope FVERYTHING
ao me Now, whe mewoula l was muretbazehttarwas oiling the
like me to be? It might as -- - ------ — •
33.Baniehment
35.Decay
M Wwr (B.)
39.Atair
43.Rier
(cSo.Am)
45 Basks
hole to
46.Partofa
door
47.£aglelaneat
48.Lean4os
49. Comical
.mnaiMgLi
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW .
Published Afternoon Daily (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning |
108 South Anglin Street Gleburne, Texas . Phones 133 and 134
K'(
=20055
Rge
Positive laws are not so, but
are to be practiced and obeyed
because of the authority behind
them. There may seem to be no
reason or fitness in the things re-
quired but nevertheless they must
be obeyed. They are Divine laws..
They are of a higher order than
moral laws.
Positive laws have that force
of authority to make that right
which is not right instrinsicaly
in itself, and is the highest test
of respect for Divine authority
known to men. The man who
obeys a command when he can
see no good, or reason in the
thing commanded, does it because
of a faith and truat in the author-
ity that demands it. Immersion
is a positive divine law and must
be obeyed, not because we see '
the efficacy in the water but
because of the authority of God.
- (Adv )
SRRY I CANT DRIVE YOU •.
BCi‛ HAVE TO GET UP EARL-—
=-3 BIG DAV AT THE STUDIO
(# 3aTOMORROW.‛m
The laws of God may be di-
vided into two classes. These are
those that have been designated
as moral laws and those that have
been styled as positive divine
laws . ..... .
Moral laws are those that are
right in themselves always were
right, and are required because
they are right. The things required
by moral laws can be seen to be
right in the reason and fitness of
things it was always right to
speak the truth, not to steal, and
.0
c~-
-
—s.s..
ISASWOONV
g-'
1 )6 3)-
COME ON, CHlCie,1--s
THE RARTVS FOLDED
TLETSSLOW.’,
catch on to it easily”
• • •
I o Gayle at times it seemed un-
1 believable that by moving a
few miles uway from her old home
she could leave her old life com-
pletely behind. By driving 10
miles in almost any direction she
could reach the home of soncone
she knew, but she came in"ton-
tact with none of those people.
They moved on one plane, and
now she was moving on another
plane far below. Those pianos
were parallel; they touched no-
where. The name Gayle Bartlett
meant nothing to the villagers or
to the factory workers, and
Gayle’s activities isolated her al-
most entirely from anyone else.
She was busy and almost con-
tented.
Bart, of course, was not forgot-
ten, and Barney was ever present
to keep her reminded that Oc-
tavia Bartlett had not forgotten
her. There seemed nothing to
worry about, however, not even
when a letter came from Nate
Kent late in November. He had
written from Hawaii.
The third paragraph of his let-
ter brought Gayle up sharp; and
as she read, her heart began to
pound “Bart is here,” the para-
graph began, “and I’ll admit it was
embarrassing to bump into him.
But we're in the same service, and
so the meeting was unavoidable.
I don’t know quite why, but he
seems like a kid to me. Even at
■first when we were pretending you
didn't exist, I felt as if I wewe
talking to a kid But then you
were mentioned and everything
blew up. He’s just the way he
was when he got into a mess with
a girl when he was in college, hit-
ter and hard at nails Every-
thing’s your fault. He hasn’t done
a thing. All you want is a lot of
dirty publicity, and so on. Look
out, Gayle. He wants revenge.
“One thing surprises me He's
atways tmem awfutly poputar with
everyone, but he doesn’t stand
MIi
fl
? l part of the World of Tomorrow, others declined the
vition,and still others packed up and went home
Those who remained strove, with a friendly but
e naionalism,to outdo one another in advertising
own partieular charms, beauties and accomplish-
> mt worn a DA1HIE. ivu UE-aU w
0 y.
-/roi
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Mntered as second class mail matter at the post office at Cleburne,
Texas under the Act of Congress, March, 3, 1879.
- SunSCAIPTION BATES
» ' By mail out of state; Ono year >9.00: 6 months $5.00; 3 months $250.
By carrier in city: 80c per month; 1 year $8.40.
By mail in Johnson and adjacent counties: One year $4.75; 6 months
$3 10; 3 months $2.00..
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Any erroneous veflection 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
Hbemng given to the publishers
, USrTED FRMiS SMB LEASED WIRE — UNITED FEATURES
F The United Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication
I of all news dispatches eredited to it or not otherwise credited in this
Epapet and also the local news published therein. All rights to re-
■&»> lk«at ion of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
y—
2_
«6232
'MOVING DAY FOR THE UN
The United Nations, like the first United States Con-
gress and millions of subsequent United States tourists,
; has decided that New York City is a wonderful place to
I visit, but it would hate to live there. And so the great,
| busy city will shortly say goodbye to the transients of
i the youthful world organization and return to its cus-
tomary preoccupation with commerce, the arts and the
sciences, the Yankees, the Giants and the Dodgers.
New York is often accused of being heartless, but
L let no one suppose that the UN’s departure will go un-
[ notled. New Yorkers are generally proud of the city—
pot conly the natives, but the others, perhaps millions,
I who have long since shaken the dust of their native Kan-
is:);,’Ireland, Michigan or Poland from their feet—and
I they "probably feel slightly snubbed at the moment.
Their city, they will tell you, has everything—acces-
[ sibility, conveniences, color, variety, culture and beauty.
I Why then, they will ask, was their city passed up for
I another? - ,
Perhaps, as the UN committee said, the organization
I justheeded more room Perhaps it was because a Ukrain-
| ian delegate got shot in a holdup, or because Britain's
I Mr.Bevin was booed as resoundingly by a Polo Grounds
I crowd as if he had been one of the Brooklyn Dodgers,
I who are regularly booed in those precincts.
I But we are inclined to credit the UN’s departure to
I the locations in which the delegates, by a particularly
I capricious chance, found themselves working. The Secur-
ity Council met on the site of the former World of To-
morrow, while the General Assembly convened at Lake
I Suctess. Perhaps there were too many disturbing mem-
I ories in the one case, and a discouraging inability to live
I up to the name in the other.
I It will be recalled that, in the world of day before
I yesterday. New York set up a world's fair on a paneel of
I reclaimed Long Island real estate. There visitors were
I supposed to get a glimpse of the shape of things to come.
I EBut some of the world’s nations weren't invited to
i.e.
'XT d 8 '
--------------
/wE’RE IN HOLLYWOOD'-V
REMEMBER • - AND THERES
A PERFECTDV CREAMY (---
MOON - AND A MOVIE I
GrAR TO DROOL)------y
--- OVER.jg. 7
By PERCY MARKS re Grown
j ' 9 by Percy Marks: Dietributed by Servica, Inc. Ete.
1
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11
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what we are looking for. Mrs.
Hartlatt"h-zaidatudyingthe
guestionnaire rite had filled in.
"We'pe having great trouble get-
ting satisfactory forewomen. Youll ders. • • •
have to be trained, of course, but (Te
′ 2
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cci t-io.
A E $9
s...
crre.
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Douglas Shouse, son of Mr and
Mrs. John Shouse, is reported to be
seriously ill at the home of hie par-
enta an East Henderson afreet
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F
11-26
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 11, 1946, newspaper, December 11, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423279/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.