Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 207, Ed. 1 Monday, July 9, 1956 Page: 2 of 6
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2—Monday, July 9, 1956—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW
STAIRWAY TO THE STARS
* EDSON IN WASHINGTON %
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PRIZE FIGHTING--ANDLS
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I'LL TELL YOU EVERYTHING
/F YOU'LL SPARE THE LONE
RANGER AND TON TO. ,_____
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ULST WHEN PR. WONMUG
SHOULD BE REMOVING
HIS FOLLED-LP TIME-
TRAVELERS FROM THEIR
MEDIEVAL MUDDLE, A
NEARBY MISHAP CALLS
HIM FROM THE CON-
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WHY YOLK 0 WHAT HE THE MANAGER!
MEAN HE MAY WHY SHOULD HE ACCOUNT FOR
WANT CREDIT ALL SLGGESTIONS FKOM HG
FOR IT HIM- 1-----*-------- -
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PLAN O' YOURS TOM
INCREASE PROFITS,
I’D LIKE TO STUDY )
\ IT, RITA' J/
...LEAVING OSCAR BOOM AND
OOOLA TO GET ALONG WITH
ALLEY (OUT-OF-H/G-MIND) OOP
AS BEST THEY CAN/
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Were returning four, up's —
COULDN'T PICK UP ON SIX L.NS,
BUT we found three M B’S /
BUT IF MK. PATRICK LIKES IT HE'LL
§UBMIT IT TO YOU, EASY! AND YOU
MLST PROMISE NOT TO MENTION
|7 KNOWING ABOUT IT BEFOZE.
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IF I COULDN'T DIG
MODERN BOPTALK ,
I'D STARVE TO DEATH !
Rez, U-S-
■
Hope Two-Price Export Plan
Will Relieve Cotton Woes
SHE'S FILLED
JOE/ TAKE
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229
ALL IN THE VIEWPOINT
A new diagnosis of the cause of hus-
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MISS HAWKES...
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FIELD WARMING
. UP HIS JET/
WELL, SHE'S
WININ’ ,
AN OPEN
DATE.WVTH
NOTHIN’ T’ DO
BUT RELAX.
AH KIN
’ HARDLY .
BELIEVE IT/
"A LIMIT?/ •2
:) CASHWELLS
3 HAS NO LIMIT/
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YOU'VE EARNED IT, HONEY,
WHUT WITH PLAYIN’ BAWL
AN’ COACHIN MISTLH
MILLS’ LITTLE LEAGUHS/
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STAFF? I DID THIS FOR THE
GOOD OF THE PLANT.. NOT FOR
HOW ABOUT \
THOSE KIDS,
DINAH? )
THEY SHO J
PLAYED 44
A GREAT
BAWL GAME/
WHY---
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BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
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= WHO KNOCKED HIM OUT
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TH' PUNCH HE USED ? >
^JACK DEMPSEY, THE \ \
GREAT MIDDLEWEIGHT-- ) /
GEORGE LE BLANCHE, A J /
MARINE, KNOCKED _K /
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gratiatingly. “Under ‘Experience’ could I persuade you to be just a
bit more specific than ‘Oh, boy!’?”
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YOU'RE TELLING ME!
*--------------By WILLIAM RITT——— ———
Central Press Writer
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WASHINGTON—(NEA)—Before Aug. 1, U.S. Department of
’’ Agriculture hopes to come up with a new cotton export plan.
It will include what amounts to a cotton subsidy or two-price plan.
Its purpose is to enable U.S. cotton textile manufacturers to
■ compete on a more even basis in foreign markets with foreign-
made textiles woven from American grown, surplus raw cotton, i
How much this will cost the taxpayers and just how it is going
to work nobody yet knows. The Aug. 1 date is significant because
that’s the start of the 1956 cotton crop marketing year.
U.S.D.A.’s Commodity Credit Corp, now owns over six million,
bales of surplus cotton. It also holds another six million bales
as security on loans to cotton farmers. Most of this loan cotton,
will eventually be taken over by the government.
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20 Years Ago Today
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NOW HE DOESN'T LET IN AS
MANY FLIES
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PREHISTORIC
„ BEAT!
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A YEZZIR, WE JUST
" GOTTA GET THAT
' BUT I MUST SPEAK
TO JOHNNY HAZARD/
YOU'RE A65TUBBOKN AS YOU X SURELY HE'LL
ARE UNSELFISH. HONEY! OKAY, \COME N SOON)
ILL KEEP MLM.FOR THE PRESENT! ESPECIALLY
BUT WHEN DOES HE SHOW UP /SINCE YOU'RE
TO WORK? IT’S NEARLY NOOMfy HERE’ 2
E
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y
Tib NAIL {
POP FOILS a
A CATCHER !
SHOULD
BEG/N
FLIPPING
HIS MASK
OFF
AS SOON
ASHE
SEES THE
BALL
BOUND
OFF THE
BAT?
READ)
THIS -
LETTER.
"Vm- Ke
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RUSSIA plans to increase the
number of its television channels
from five to 20. Nobody seems
to know why, since the same
propaganda guff will, no doubt,
be shown on all of ’em.
» i t
1
Still another elephant breaks
loose—this time in Chicago. If
this is a GOP campaign year
publicity stunt, they’re overdoing
it.
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“Stop counting,” said
Mike firmly. “Even if I won
her my wife wouldn’t let
me keep her.”
* * *
“Under the hood of this
car,” boasted the proud owner
of the very latest model, “is
the surging, triumphant power
of three hundred horses.”
“I don’t need all that horse-
power in my car,” admitted
his companion meekly. “You’ll
know why when you see the
nag that sits next to me in
the front seat.”
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1© 1956 by N&A
Produced by Stephen Slcsiriger, Inc.
© 1916 by king Features Syndicate, Inc.
World rights reserved.
IT'S VITAL/ I
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( 111 clue you, MR.
M£ GOOSEY. L-P.
I MEANS LONG
'PLAY, U-N.ISTEEN ,
TALK for L16H!no/
AND M-B, IS ,
MUST BUY/ yug
n EWN
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7 -UAs
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385 ! Mew 1
18
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! ! !
Changing one’s suit several
times a day relieves nervous ten-
sion, says a stylist. In other
words, he wants us to trade cur
brief case for a valise.
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bands’ dying earlier than their wives has
been advanced by a 78-year-old Pennsyl-
vania housewife. “Young wives are killing
‘ their husbands by expecting them to do
too much work when they get home
from their jobs,” she maintains. And she
evidently practices what she preaches —
her husband is 91.
When .we poor husbands get home from
an eight-hour grind in an air-conditioned
office we are all too used to being greet-
ed with “Mind the kids, bring in the
laundry, fix this faucet, lift that sofa,
tote that trash, get a little lazy and you
eat cold hash.”
We husbands must put our collective
foot down on such work. Our only al-
ternative is to call an end to such drud-
gery - and, in the interest of keeping
peace in the family, consider as hobbies
to be enjoyed in our spare time such
pleasant pursuits as fixing faucets, lifting
sofas and toting trash.
GET GOING—AND HAVE FUN’
Sunstroke, drowning, insect bites, car
crashes, food poisoning, sharks, polluted
water ,high prices, jelly fish, forest fires,
sprained ankles over-exartion, summer
romances—these are only a few of the
many vacation hazards you’re warned
against. You get good advice from maga-
zines, newspapers, radio, TV, friends and
even enemies.
This column is as ready as any to ad-
vise you to carry rattlesnake antidote,
boil the drinking water, sit quietly in
canoes, and avoid college boys. But occas-
ionally we are haunted by a picture of
any family that might follow all the good
advice: Vacation preparations take weeks.
Once packed, the car is a moving drug
store carrying preventives and cures.for
possible emergencies. There’s enough
safety equipment for a Himalayan expe-
dition.
At last the family arrives at the sea
shore, lake or mountain, but life is a per-
petual fight against fear, seeking protect-
ion against the perils of nature. There’s
one consolation. They’ll be glad to get
home. We wonder how they got up their
courage to leave home at all. There’s some
thing not quite healthy in this picture. It’s
wise to take reasonable precautions so
that your vacation won’t be spoiled , by
accident or illness. But worry won’t keep
you well.
We would like to advise you to take a
vacation. Decide where you want to go
and what you want to do, then do it. Un-
less you decide to pack into the Canadian
wilds or the jungles of Guatemala, you
will not be too far from civilized, human
help in emergencies. Pack the car with
suitable clothes, crackers to hold off
starvation between hot dog stands, a sim-
ple first aid kit and a reasonable amount
of good sense. And for goodness sake
have a good time.
M\
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July 9, 1936
Mr. and Mrs. R. H: Burnett celebrated
their golden wedding anniversary at the
home of their daughter, Mrs. Dudley T.
Hascall in Houston. Mrs. Burnett was the
former Hallie Burnett of Cleburne ....
Dr. R. W. (Bob) Kimbro opened an office
at 6%2 North Caddo street for the pract-
ice of medicine and surgery. Miss Maude
Belk, who was with the late Dr. R. L.
Harris for a number of years, was Dr.
Kimbro’s office nurse. . . Fred McMurray
and his childhood sweetheart, Lillian
Lamont New York artists model, eloped
to Las Vegas and ended seven years of
speculation by friends. . . . Harlean Car-
penter Rosson obtained a court order le-
galizing her name to Jean Harlow ... J.
D. Rockefeller Sr., celebrated his 97th
birthday . . . Local banks reported de-
posits $433,998 higher than for the. same
period in 1935, with total deposits of $2,-
649,617.88 . . .J. C. ‘Penney’s advertised
wash frocks, three for $1.
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T.M. Reg. U.S. Pot. Off.
o 1956 by NEA Service, Inc. Pm
Try and Stop Me
-—------By BENNETT CERF.________
NICHAEL’S MEDITATIONS at the bar were abruptly halted
- by big Tim who boomed, “Mike, we’re counting on you
tobuy a.ticket for the raffle we’re arranging for the penniless
Widow Sullivan.”
06
CCC IS NOW required by law to sell surplus cotton on the export
market by competitive bids, at not less than 25 12 cents a pound.
With the government support price on cotton between 32 and 33
cents and the New York market price between 34 and 35 cents,
this gives foreign mills an advantage of seven to nine cents on
their raw material supply. (
It is this differential, according to the U.S. textile industry,
which enables foreign mills to undersell American cottons on
world markets. Another factor is’ lower labor costs. . |
But what particularly annoys the American textile industry is
that Japanese exporters have been underselling and increasing
their textile sales right here in the U.S.A. 4
One way to beat this is to lower the price on cotton going into
U.S.-made textiles for export. This could be done by the subsidy
or two-price system mentioned above. (
There is no legal authority to impose a processing tax to finance
these subsidies. They would have to be paid right out of the
treasury. The subsidy would not apply on textiles sold on the;
U.S. domestic market, so it would not end Japanese competition;
THIS BRINGS UP the other approach to the problem. It is to
apply import quota restrictions on foreign textiles made from U.S.-
grown cotton. This is what the U.S. textile industry really wants.
Alabama and South Carolina have already passed laws restricting
the sale of foreign textiles. 4
An attempt was made to amend the U.S. foreign aid bill to the'
same effect. The idea was to limit imports from foreign countries
receiving U.S. aid, if made from. agricultural products in surplus,
supply in this country. ,
But here the U.S. State, Commerce, Tariff Commission and other
government agencies objected. This was held a violation of trade
agreements and treaties with friendly countries like Japan. ;
Recognizing the American problem, Japan has voluntarily lim-
ited its cotton textile exports to the U.S. to 1.5 per cent of American
production. This amounts to 150 million square yards of fabrics;
and 2.5 million dozen cotton blouses a year.
63
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Published Afternoon Daily (Except Sat-
urday) and Sunday Morning at 108 South
Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phone
5-2441, all departments.
WILIAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publisher
PEYTON LAWSON, Business Manager
JACK PROCTOR, Editor
PAUL GRIFFITH, Advertising Manager
GEORGE H. HANNAH. Circulation Mgr.
" SUBSCRIPTION '
By carrier in city: 25c week. By mail in
Johnson Couny $5.75 per year, 6 months
$3.50. By mail in state $9.50 per year. By
mail ouj of state $12.00 per year.
Entered as second class mail matter at
the post office at Cleburne, Texas under
Act of Congress, March 3, 1879
National Representative TEXAS DAILY
PRESS LEAGUE, MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
ASSN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
LISHERS ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS-
PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN
_____NOTICE TO PUBLIC_______
Any erroneous reflection upon the char-
acter, standing or reputation of any per-
son, 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 publisher.
UNITED PRESS (UP) LEASED
TELETYPESETTER WIRE SERVICE
The United Press is exclusively entitled
to the use of publication of all news dis-
patches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and also the local
news published therein. All rights to re-
publication, or broadcast are also reserved.
The Cleburne Times-Review is a politically
independent newspaper vlacing the public
welfare above the interest of any party.
Truth and decency are its guiding prin-
ciples, and its daily determination is to
print the news without fear or favor.
LIVING IM A MICE NEIGHBOR-
E HOOP AMD ME TRYINJG HO
E TEACH HER REFINEMENT! )
EE \ EVEN GRAN’MA WENT /
- NTHERE WITH HER/ ——
that Prince Alessandro Torlonia,
richest man in Rome, had an in-
come in 1955 of $1,279,344, which,,
in any country, would be a right
princely sum.
! ! ! '
For the first time since .World-
War II a German military band-
will tour the U. S. Hans uni
Fritz—off on a toot?
! ! !
Three colleges are now teaching
atomic science. Nov/ there's a
class made up entirely of “A"
students!
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Statistics show do-it-yourselfers
bought 150 million rolls of wall
paper in 1955. No wonder so
many houses look like they've
taken an awfu pasting!
1 ! !
A dispatch from Italy reveals
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A N E N M , S G E E F G E H ]
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ERE is a 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 6 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 pone of your key numbers, left to right. Then
read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
THE RACE 15 ABOUT TO
BEGIN I GOTTA HANG N
IT IS CLAIMED these amounts will not cause serious disruption
of the American market. Other goods in which there is compe-
tition include pillowslips, printed ginghams and velveteens. I
U.S. cotton cloth production last year was 11 billion square yards.
In foreign trade with all countries, U.S. exports were 542 million
square yards and imports were about a fourth of that. ;
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THE FIRST FAMILY FAME gve •RMILLIAM>
_________._____J _1 ______09 1955 by NEA Service, Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
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As long as rock-and-roll music
is composed teen-agers who
listen to it will not be.
* * * I
Regardless of whether you
'yplant radish, carrot or lettuce
। seeds the same kind of weeds
come up.,
«o33885555SS5----e-S8
28888885 AL -A—/
s9 HE MEANS THEIR
/ WATER PIPE
/ BROKE AND THE
I WORKMEN ARE
\ GOING TO DIG UP
\ THEIR YARD •
J \ TODAY/ j
BY HAL COCHRAN
(RAPEFRUIT helps to combat
the heat, says a doctor. Or
try any kind of shower bath. <
- * * * -i
We predict there’ll be a
large sour grapes crop this,
fall—right after election. "
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MY BREAKFAST, /
SAMPSON!
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 207, Ed. 1 Monday, July 9, 1956, newspaper, July 9, 1956; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505618/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.