Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 69, Ed. 1 Friday, December 19, 1958 Page: 2 of 8
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4
STARLIGHT ROOF
20 Years AgoToday
* •DSON IN WASHINGTON ★
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DECEMBER 19, 1938
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At the sight of captain BORK,"THE DHREEN girl
SPRINGS LIKE A BOLT OF ANGRY LIGHTNING/
OUT OF
BUSINESS
I KNOW. BUT THE STATE UNIVERSITY
IS LOSING A DIRECTOR IN THEIR
F
Do you have a sympathy card for a girl whose
telephone is out of order?”
"The Doctor’s explosive experiment was a great success until
it reached its fifth stage.”
BE IN SCHUUL IHEKE: I CAPTAIN EASY6 CAR TO
TOOL THATS WHERE IVE NTAKE U5 TO THE TRAIN:
V
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T TERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every
Ll 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 one of your key numbers, left to right. Then
read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
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ike's Still in the Middle---
In More Ways Than One
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
J.(Ha.0.
A scientific article reveals that wild animals in North America,
the earth is bombarded daily by ' may become extinct, fears an of-
some five billion meteors. That ' ficial of the Audubon Society of
makes all-.-those space rockets ; Canada. THAT would be bad?
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BULGANIN
(Continued from page 1)
only that he be allowed to ‘‘live
up to the high calling of a mem-
i her of the party” and “try to re-
move the shameful blot on me.”
The case against Malenkov,
Molotov, Kaganovich and possibly
Shepilov appeared to be growing.
Bulganin pleaded that he be al-
lowed to keep his party card but
there was no immediate indica-
tion of his fate. Today’s official
newspapers Izvestia and Pravda
reported without comment his ab-
I WISH AUNT
FRITZI DIDN'T
SEND SO MANY
CHRISTMAS CARDS
bers of the group. He said he.
saw the error of his own ways
last June. *
“Here with all plainness and .
all sincerity I declare that I will
honestly, without sparing myself,
try to rub off the shameful spot
on me” Bulganin told the Cen-
tral Committee.
Agrees With Criticism
“I promise the Central Commit-
tee that I will be an honest and
faithful member of the Commu-
nist Party, and I will be such. T
repeat that I will do everything
in my power to live up to the "
high calling of a member of the
party and to struggle together
A MICROPHONE OUR ”
Secret CONFERENCEu
1§ BEING BUGGER/ BY
WHOM. KEITH ZOR,z
MOST OF THE SPEECH dealt with labor-management relations.
He said it was not true that what was good for management was
bad for labor. Their interests were the same. They should work
out voluntary solutions to industrial disputes. They should stay
out of the ditches of class warfare.
“I believe that kind of philosophy has always guided me,” the
President told his last press conference when a reporter asked him
about recent press comments that he has taken a sudden turn in
a more conservative direction.
“I am not aware of any change whatsoever,” the President said.
But he added that in Washington—where compromise is the order
of the day—he has had to accept a number of things not in accord
with his own convictions.
Now this is an interesting self-appraisal, coming at this time. It
gives a tip-off, perhaps, on the messages the President will send
to Congress in January.
• fa
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PRESS LEAGUE, MEMBER TEXAS PPESS
ASSN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
USHER* ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS-
PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN. ________
NOTICE TO PUBLIC ~
Any erroneous reflection upon the ehar-
acter, standing or reputation of en‛ per-
•on, or firm or eorporatlon whirh 58! I
appear in the columns ef this paDeE, ’W J
be cladly corrected upoo the nete •f
same beinz given to the publtzher..
#1
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_________ ______
TELETYPEBETTEE WIE.EEEVI._ ! A
T-'henited Press ts ezelwafvel entttied 16
to the use of publieatiem ef all MW «’• E
patches eredite W % * net phewie l
•rodite* in this pepe and alee Me.kee1 2
Ewa publiabed thereia, AU Febt F-1
publicacaoz or brondene ar alse reneeved. fl
rhe Cleburne Tmes-Revlew to • poltteel E
independent newspaper plaeins the vuble N
—_____intaroat of any party. j Z)
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MOTHER MAY
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ON THE FARM .
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!XJello( mips. DELILAlb^-K
( SAMPSON PUT AN’ ICICLE DOWN,
THE NECK OF MY SWEATER!}
k - MAY I COME IN _ A
Mu AND GET WARM ? J
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=E2me
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MAKE NO NNECESSARY MOVES
■■I |
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\ THE
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2—Friday , Dec. 19. 1958—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW
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TYou certainly mat ."-ano miss \ -v
MYRTLE CAS JUST STAY OUTSIDE - }
ANO 'SEE HOW IT FEELS TO ,
bgeUGET COLD.— .
B V R ■
■ eV
=F- 3 "
20
6
= N Y?
HOW FAR \----
IS ITALY/ OH,
FROM (ID SAY
HERE?/ ABOUT
GOOO
D\MILES
--Mpe
■ KM,, 7/t 5
c 5 ' 7 .
r—4
torian points out. That makes
To combat locusts in the Mid- , Bc)l the lUst of. Uncle Sam's No.
die East the UN plans to spend rt nepheics to look like the old
over S3 million. Those critters man
have a terrific appetite for every- i ! ! ’
thing—-including money. . , .
, , , Zadok Dumkopf admits it wasn t
i,i. , until he went to school that he
Greatest known depth in the learned the phrase "Knights of the
Pacific ocean is ' 400 feet-Fac Bath" did not refer to Saturdays,
tographs. What a wonderful place
$ ‛R
ject confession before the party’s
governing body.
The bearded marshal was oust-
ed as premier last March made •
president of the State Bank and
then shifted to his present post a
minor one as chairman of the
Savropol Economy Council in the
Caucasus.
Released From Hospital
He recently was reported ser-
iously ill in a Moscow hospital
' and apparently was released from
the hospital to address the Cen-
tral Committee.
The anti-party group ousted in
July 1957 included former pre-
miers Vyacheslav M. Molotov and
Georgi Malenkov former Foreign
Minister Dmitri Shepilov and La-
zar Kaganovich a member of the
Presidium.
It was only recently that Khru-
shchev connected up Bulganin in
a speech as a member of the
anti-party group.
Bulganin appeared before the
Central Committee Thursday and
bitterly assailed the other mom-
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
rublishea Afternoon Daily (Except Sat-
urdey) and Sunday Morning at 108 South
Aaglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phone
& ■ 2441, all departments. _______________
WILLIAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publisher
FEYTON LAWSON, Business Manager
JCK PROCTOR, Editor
FAUL GRIFFITA, Advertisine M^aaw
GEORGE H. HAMAH, Circulatkja Maa.
. SUBSCRIPTION
Ey carrier ln~clty: 25c week. Sy m»il in
Jnnson County $5.75 per year, • maonths
♦a ill. By mail in state |9.50 per year. By
xuall out of state 812.00 per year.
Eutered as second class mail matter at
tne post office at Cleburne, Texas under
Act of Congress. March 8, 1878
National Representative TEXAS DATLi
TPP6-
gE
—
HOLC THE MEETING FOK
A MOMENT, SENOR KEITH/
IT SEEMS THAT WE HAVE
OVEKLOOKEPONE THING,,,,
BUFFETED BY CRIAICISM from both left and right, the Presi-
dent will apparently try to steer between them.
From the Democratic Advisory Committee, he has just been
handed a program far more liberal than anything he is likely to
propose himself. The Democrats present this as the result of their
“mandate” from the November election. It would cost a minimum
2.5 billion dollars a year more.
It would include a foreign development loan fund increase of a
billion dollars, a community facilities bill to cost another billion
and a depressed areas bill to cost half a billion. President Eisen- ..
hower rejected the last two this year.
This action, and some of his subsequent declarations on the
need for greater government economy have led some abservers to
contend that the President has turned his back on the policies of
modern Republicanism which he advocated after his 1956 renomi-
nation and election.
W €
«s. -
H.k
,s '
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
---------------------By WILLIAM RIH-----------
Central Press Writer
MAO TZE-TUNG is being pres-1 we’ve been sending up appear to
sured out of his job as head of j be just Man’s feeble effort at
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C S
BY HAL COCHRAN
People who insist on driving
over the speed limit should, at
least look out for other idiots.
A dog saved a little girl who
fell in a back yard well in a \ '
Michigan town. Little girls’ l
best friend, too, eh? ,
ta * # •
J.R. WILLIAMS 1
C 1958 by NEA Service, He. T.M. Reg. U.S. P«». Or.
A Christmas party for all “kids in Johnson County” of jun-
ior high school age or under, will be held Saturday morning
at the Yale Theater. Admission is free...Christmas week gets
underway in Cleburne today with a number of yuletide events
on the calender. Scores of college students returning for the
holidays give evidence of the approaching birthday of Christ.
...Miss Eloise Carroll arrived Saturday from Hardin-Simmons
College at Abilene to spend the holidays with her mother,
Mrs. Winnie Carroll...Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Wade of Newton,
Kansas, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith and daughter, Marilyn,
of Dallas are week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Wilk-
erson...Miss Belly Lu Boyd will be at home Tuesday from
Denton where she is attending the North Texas State Teach-
ers College...Misses Marcella Dempwolf and Mary Margaret
Sullivan and Mrs. Alex Houston of Wink, spent Friday in
Fort Worth and Denton...Glenda Jean Gillis celebrated her
birthday, which occurs on December 25, by a party given
Thursday by her mother, Mrs. R. B. Gillis, and her aunt,
Mrs. G. G. Windham, at the home of the latter.
ALLEY OOP
HEY.' AIN'T \WHY NQ
PKAMA PEPAKTMENTTHISYEAK.
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WASHINGTON—(NEA) — President Eisenhower, by his own
definition, is still a “middle-of-the-roader” whose views have
“never had one single change” in nearly 10 years. 1
He madecthis rather astounding statement to his last press con-
ference in recalling his speech to the American Bar Association
in St. Louis, Sept. 5, 1949. He was then president of Columbia
University.
Rereading that speech today does not reveal it as charting a very
clear or definite course.-He titled it “The Middle Way for America.”
He declared that “progress is down the center.” He said, “To be
neutral is not to bg wishy-washy.”
AR)/ E
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THE REST OF THE TIME-
MACHINE IS MADE UP
) OF STUFF WE CAN
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7
I Q—For what composition is
I,Franz Lehar, the Hungarian
-composer, best known?
I A—The “Merry Widow Waltz.”
| * * *
I Q—Who first proclaimed the
I principle of the "3-mile limit?”
I A—The 18th century Dutch
I, jurist Cornelius Van Bynker-
-shoek. This was in 1703, when
I cannon could shoot a maximum
of three nautical miles. Hence,
the 3-mile limit.
* * *
Q—How much does the weight
< of a poodle vary?
A—Poodles may weigh as little
as 10 pounds or as much as 50.
Those under 15 inches at the
shoulder are called miniature
■ poodles.
2-l
wVaL
__
M S
J / MYRTLE PUT AN N.
- / ICICLE DOWN TH' NECK \
OF MY THWEATER/ L
A MAY r COME IN and J.
WARN•
257
9
W .4
&,
g 45 ’ 7
t^ditorial Comment
H ODDS RISE EVERY YEAR THAT YOU
» WILL BECOME A VICTIM OF CRIME
Entering your car one night you're jumped'by
pair of thugs, robbed and beaten. Or, your home:
y be ransacked by burglars, or your business
rt by a stream of hot checks. You may have your
ull fractured or your leg mangled by a crazy- '
unk drivei. “Why me?” you moan. “I thought
Eese things always happened to other people!”
Me very month, every year, the odds rise in favor
M your becoming a victim of crime. Felonies this
Mar in Dallas County will have increased 20 per-
nt over 1957. You may well be the next victim
N a robber, thief, dopehead, assault artist, swind-
M — or even a murderer. Why you? Because, you,
e, and thousands of people like us, have failed to
ercise responsible citizenship. The criminals are
inning by default.
If all of us were fully able citizens we would
come well informed. We would read newspaper
ories about crime intently, and between the lines.
■ any qustiens would arise in our minds. We would
■ok .answers from the police and other law en-
Ercement agents. Then everybody would become a-
are of the shocking inadequacies that exist through-
Hit the whole gamut of our law enforcement ma-
inery. The shortage of police, courts, prosecution,
Eenal -and other facilities would appall you. You
ould become indignant at the many foolish laws
Miat help criminals to mock justice. You would com-
Hle a list of needed reforms as long as your arm.
■ Then you and your fellow citizens, singly and by
rganizations, would march upon city,, county and
Hate officials. You would demand swift, thorough
Emprovement, a crash program against the rising
■ de of crime. You would end the heyday of crima
Mhals in Dallas and Texas. The taxpayers would save
hillions of dollars. We could, all of us, feel safe to
Ho out at night.
■'SILENT NIGHT' RECONSIDERED: OR HOW
■ BOUT 'CHA CHA BOOGIE' FOR HIGH MASS?
■ It comes as . a surprise, wc . gather, but we can
■onfirm it as the fact: Some people do not want to
Eisten to Christmas carols all day long, day after
■ ay, from Thanksgiving through Dec. 25.
I From this it will be supposed that they are people
vho nurse some deep grudge against Christmas and
vould like to be spared its. obligations. Or else it
vill be concluded that they have no ear for music
■md simply do not recognize a feast of sound when
hey hear it. Or perhaps that they are just gener-
lly anti-social and cannot bear to see someone
Ilse enjoy what they take no pleasure in themsel-
Ives.
| These conclusions are wrong — every one of
■them. The people who object to the constant repe-
tition of the familiar carols are the people who
treasure them the most and would dearly like to
see them preserved for their proper time and set-
lling. They have a special — almost a sacred —
■place in the Christmas celebration. Properly sung
lor played, in the silence of the night, they summon
up remembrance of every Christmas past and cast
la glow over the entire observance. Nothing else is
Iso successful in inducing the sense of quiet, the air
of deep mystery and the awareness of things long
gone and come again.'' ‛ " 1 " :
! Dinned and droned to a captive, hurrying audience
from’, every shop door and street corner, ground
out mechanically from dawn to dusk, they become
shrill and needling. Heard fitfully over the whine
of traffic.and the clatter of the crowd they are of-
fensive. It Came Upon a Midnight Clear” at high
noon' in downtown Charleston is about as appro-
priate to the occasion as the “Stars and Stripes
I Forever” at a requiem mass or the “Cha Cha Boo-
gie” at the offertory. — Couldn’t we just go back
to a happier time when the people who wanted to
hear Christmas carols went to the Sunday School
pageant to hear the cherubs sing?
. -/243 !
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in which to get rid of old razor
blades!
! ! !
'THE POSSE Y5 COM/M DACK FROH
r THE MANHUNF'^---
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Red China’s Communist govern- shooting back,
ment. Well—Siberia is a lot j ’ ! !
closer to Nanking than it is to' No President since Benjamin
Ry)
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He.se-2
SAON/F',
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ALWAYS PLANNSP TO ---y
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HELP//
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 69, Ed. 1 Friday, December 19, 1958, newspaper, December 19, 1958; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538254/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.