Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 66, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1954 Page: 3 of 14
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Thursday, Jan. 28, 1954—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW_3
CROSSWORD
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WHITE SWAN
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PINK BEAUTY
WELCH
WHITE SWAN
GRAPE JUICE
SALMON
25c
36c
11/2 PT.
FLATS
SPRING COTTONS
Ph. 5-4781
116 S. Main
TEXSUN
7
25c
SHEETS
Type 128
PILLSBURY—White. Chocolate. Yellow
81x108
81x99
3 for LOO
CAKE MIX
NATURE'S BEST
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59c
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FIFTH AVENUE
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CORN ON THE COB, 4 whole ears
35c
40
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GRAPEFRUIT
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5 LB. BAG
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PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
401 E. Henderson
Phone 5.2281
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CHAMBRAYS
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WHITE GOODS
ALL AT ONE
SPECIAL LOW PRICE
A FORTUNATE SPECIAL PURCHASE
OFFERS VAST ASSORTMENTS OF
0.5% butterfat . . . and you'll
love the delicious flavor. -
Save Pacific Stamps
far Valuable Premiums
DOUBLE STAMP DAY
EVERY WEDNESDAY
Reversible, Wool Filled 72 x 84
Safin Comforts 5.99
14 OZ.
DOTTLE
SPRING
PRINTS
45. Slopes
46. Expect
LOW IN CALORIES
LOW IN BUTTERFAT
h)
Mrs. Seals is
Hostess to Circle
Sia
JOSHUA, (Spl) — Mrs. M. B.
Seals entertained the members of
the WSCS Monday afternopn in her
home here. ,
Mrs. A. E. Crosier gave the de-
votional and presided over a short
business session. Mrs. John Bran-
som and Mrs. J. R. Veatch direct-
m
J
739
the
inside
29. Fuel
30. Continent
31. River (Fr.)
33. Bamboo-
16. Own
20. Perches
21. Mine
en-
trance
23. Cue
26. Pole
27. Zinc:
com-
bining
form
28. Toward
39. Biblical
name
WAS
8
hi
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 28
— UP—The city of Knoxville
has agreed to sell lot No. 175
to Louis Sharp to help him out
of his dilemma. Sharp, already
owner of lot No. 174, discover-
ed he built his house on the
wrong lot.
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TAFFETIZED
PRINTS
tion,
44. Behold!
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40. Invalid’s
food
41. Conical
mass of
thread
I freshments of angelfood cake top-
[ ped with strawberries and whipped
cream were served with coffee and
salted nuts to the above and Mmes.
| R. J. Stuart, A. C. Cruze, J. W.
I Edwards, J. R. Veatch, John Bran-
som, A. E. Crosier, Charles Put-
l nam, Bessie Clark, Una Bowman,
Frona Bowman, and Cecil Reed
BROTHERHOOD MEETS
SAND FLAT, (Spl) — The Men’s
Brotherhood met Monday night at
the church to re-elect new officers.
Fourteen men and two visitors at-
tended.
Evo’yone is requested to meet
next time, and to encourage new
members to attend.
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g
Mr. and Mrs. Truett Bailey Jr.,
Miss Barbara Bailey and H. A.
Hutchins attended the singing Sun-
day afternoon at the Burleson Bap-
tist Church.
DOWN
1. Prairie
chicken
2. Humble
3. Elevated
train
4. New lino
(print.)
5. German city
6. Blunder
7. Girl’s name
8. To face
again
9. Pulsate
11. Pauses
13. Surfeit
15. Not
abundant
222
19
WORK SHIRTS
F00
Sizes 14 to 17. SANFORIZED. Two button
Double Bed Size
Bottom
Contour .
1.99
SWIFT'S BROOKFIELD
CHEESE
2 lbs. 89c
8 OZ. OVERALLS
259
Blue or striped. Wide vest back. Sizes 30
to 44.
BURLESON, (Spl) — The Burle- summer through Canada, Alaska,
son Garden Club met Wednesday, Washington, Oregon, Utah and Col-
2
16
PREVIEW OF SUMMER—Guy Petruzzelli slices and serves,
while fellow employes enjoy a taste of summertime as the year’s
first shipment of watermelons from Cuba arrives at a Chicago, I
Ill., produce house. _____________ --
WEB
NW
-47
Sand Flat Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Adams
are visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. M. Adams and Eddie.Char-
les was recently discharged from
the service after serving several
years.
Mr. and Mrs. O. Smith and family
of Corpus Christi spent the week-
end in the Claude Baker home.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hutchins and
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hutchins
spent Sunday afternoon in the H. A.
Hutchins home.
DAILY
ACROSS
1. Narrow,
secluded
valley
5. Equipment
9. Super-
natural
being-
10. Command
12. In what
manner
13. Shell
fiercely
14. Ruthenium
(sym.)
15. Title of
Persian
ruler
17. Roman
pound
18. Bone (anat.)
19. A waterfall
22. Conduct
oneself
24. Poems
25. Anger
26.Hawaiian
food
27. Bluish-
white
metallic
element
29. Placard
32. Concern /
34. Excla-
mation
35. Northwest
(abbr.)
36. Consumes
I 37. Interna-
i tional
t language
38. Floor
covering
141. Peruse
carefully
42. Mountain
nymph
43. Run away
and marry
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MANY OTHER
FASHION FABRICS
EM
NE
Bwwee
LOW FAT SKIM MILK
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—
I Wave goodbye to an oversize
shadow. Let BOSWELL'S LOW
FAT SKIM MILK help you check
waistline expansion. You'll get
I
milk's vital minerals, but less than
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GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 4 6 oz.
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Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Patton of
Cleburne visited in the home of
their daughter and family, the
George Zandts. "
Guests of Mrs. Mittie Carter and
her mother, Mrs. Terry, Sunday,
were Mr. and Mrs. James Davis
of Fort Worth; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Nabors, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Terry,
Claude and Rufus Otwell; and,Mrs.
Effit Short, all of DeLeon.
FLOCK DOTS
— ClassiAieds Pay -
(,70,
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LOS ANGELES, Calif., Jan. 28
—UP—Rising coffee prices have
given rebirth to the old fad of
chain letters.
A “do not drink coffee” chain
letter currently is making the
rounds in southern California in an
attempt to force coffee prices down.
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PACIFIC
TRADING
ISTAMP-
10
The J. N. Long Blue Birds met
at the school Tuesday.
Joan Dwyer was elected presi-
dent; Sandra Huckabee, vice pre-
sident; Lena Chapman, secretary;
Carol Sue Spann, treasurer; Nell
Ransom, candle lighter; Linda Par-
ker, candle snuffer; Jeane Johnson,
door monitor; Danva Curington,
reporter; Sharon Blair, scrapbook
keeper; Glenda West, hike leader;
Joyce Davis, song leader; Janet
McNatt, Judy Hubbard, Marynell
Fletcher, Marsha Frazier; Ferrel-
lyn McWilliams and Bernadette
Mingus, cleanup committee.
% The girls started working on the
birthday project by making sew-
ing bags of large feed sacks. They
learned a new song, John, Jacob,
Jingleheimer Smith. — Virginia
McBride, reporter.
The Tanda Camp Fire girls of
Adams school met Wednesday at
the school.
The meeting was brought to or-
der by the president, Patricia Har-
per. The minutes were read by
the assistant secretary Dorothy Ro-
den. •
Susie Fine was welcomed as a
new member, and cookies were
served by Iris Weems. The girls
are working on their birthday pro-
ject and in addition to the above
Frances Waldrip and Linda Autrey,
Joan Kirkham and Mrs. Floyd Ran-
dolph were present. — Iris Weems,
reporter.
orado.
At the close of the meeting re-
freshments of coffee, cake squares,
and olives were served to two visi-
tors, Mrs. Armstrong, and Mrs.
P. W. Johnson, and the following
members: Mmes. J. R. Baker, G.
E. Bransom, N. L. Clark, A. E.
Cappieman, C. M. Collins, A. E.
Frazier, J. A. Gregory, L. H. Hard-
grove, A H. Loyless, W. C. Mose-
ley, C. P. Murphy, C. M. Parks,
R. L. Smith, Clyde Tatum, J. M
Taylor, W. A. Taylor, ‘Kenneth To-
al and H. N. Warren.
The next- meeting date will be
February 17, when members of the
club plan to make a tour of the
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Birdseye, 27” x 27”
DIAPERS.....
to Mr. Jack White, student in
Brownwood.
The marriage will take place Sat-
urday, January 29, in the Coggin
Avenue Baptist Church in Brown-
wood, at 7:30 o’clock.
Mr. White formerly made his
home in Joshua, with the George
Russells.
Kidney Slow-Down
May Bring
Restless Nights
When kidney function slows down, many
folks complain of nagging backache, head-
aches, dizziness and loss of pep and energy.
Don’t suffer restless nights with these dis-
comforts if reduced kidney function is get-
ting you down-due to such common causes
as stress and strain, over-exertion or expo-
sure to cold. Minor bladder irritations due
to cold or wrong diet may cause getting up
nights or frequent passages.
Don’t neglect your kidneys if these condi-
tions bother you. Try Doan’s Pills—a mild
diuretic. Used successfully by millions for
over 50 years. It’s amazing how many times
Doan’s give happy relief from these discom-
forts—help the 15 miles of kidney tubes and fil-
ters flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today!
30 W
Boy's 8 Oz.
BLUE JEANS
739
Double-knee. Zipper fly. Tough 8 oz.
denim. Triple stitched at all straining
points. SANFORIZED. Western fit. Sizes
2 to 12.
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BLISTER SHEERS
"55
Unemployment Claims
Reflect Sharp Drops1
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 —UP—
The government reported Wednes-
day that new unemployment insur-
ance claims dropped slightly last
week for the first time since Oc-
tober.
The Labor Department also re-
ported that a total of 1,951,000 per-
sons were claiming unemployment
insurance during the week ended
Jan. 9. This was the highest num-
ber since May, 1950, and represent-
ed 5.5 per cent of insured workers.
The department said 444,800 per-
sons filed initial claims—of notices
of unemployment—during the week
ended Jan. 16. This was 24,100 few-
er than in the previous week when
the total was the highest since im-
mediately after World War II.
Since October, the number of new
claims filed each week had been
climbing steadily.
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PEANUT BUTTER, qua rt jar
Jack White To
Marry Saturday
JOSHUA, (Spl) Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Nabors of Brownwood an-
nounce the approaching marriage
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PRINTED
LEMONS 13.
Chromespun 42 x 84
PANELS Allre
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SPECIALS FOR FRI. & SAT.
JANUARY29 - 30
PEACHES
21/2 CAN 9Q,
Heavy Syrup 6
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Adminisiration is
Accused of Breach
Of Promise on Law
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 — UP—
CIO President Walter P. Reuther
accused the administration
Wednesday of breaking “sweet
sounding” promises in proposing
changes in the Taft-Hartley law
that will make it “even worse
than it is.”
Reuther told the Senate Labor
committee that the 14 Taft-Hartley
amendments proposed by Presi-
dent Eisenhower would make “few
improvements” in the law and are
designed to “disguise the anti-
labor restrictions.”
He was the first witness called
before the committee in opposition
to the administration proposals.
Reuther declared “the administra-
tion has defaulted in its campaign
promise to bring justice and fair-
ness into the law.”
Reuther said legislation intro-
duced by Committee Chairman H.
Alexander Smith (R-N.J.) to carry
out the P r e s i d e n t’s proposals
“would not rid Taft-Hartley of its
union-busting provisions as the
President pledged during his cam-
paign.”
“Rather, it adds new ones to
it,” he asserted.
Reuther said the proposed Taft-
Hartley revision was not a “middle
of the road” approach but was in
line with the thinking of the Na-
tional Association of Manufactur-
ers, the U.S. Chamber of Com-
merce and “the anti-union employ-
ers they represent.”
He heaped new criticism on the
administration proposal for gov-
ernment - supervised strike votes
which he termed a “strike-break-
ing” provision that would hamper
collective bargaining. Reuther said
the “misconception” that union
leaders do not follow the will of
members is “insulting” to both the
leaders and members.
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COLLECTOR’S ITEM—Prize
specimen of any matchcover
collector’s treasure trove would
be one of these exclusive match
books. Designed for President
Eisenhower’s personal use, the
books feature two crossed golf -
clubs on\a blue background,
with the President’s initials,
“DDE,” imprinted in gold.
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22248
RUSSETS
POTATOES 39c
WAXED
RUTABAGAS 5c
FANCY (Carton)
TOMATOES 19c
SUNKIST, 360 SIZE
•-21
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Mrs. Les Armstrong Speaks To
Burleson Garden Club Meet
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January 20, in the Vocational Agri-
cultural room at the school, with
Mrs. A. E. Frazier, president, in
charge of the program.
After a discussion of how to cul-
tivate and fertilize empty flower
beds, and the planting of various
kinds of seeds and bulbs, the group
was entertained by Mrs. Les Arm-
i strong of Crowley, who showed col-
orful slides of scenes made on a
trip she and her husband made last
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 66, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1954, newspaper, January 28, 1954; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505407/m1/3/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.