Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 217, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1960 Page: 10 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
8
Editorial Comment
'J
0e
1
C,
/
1
.
<
/
i
* '
■■
In Dutch Guiana, we note in
--
a travel folder, there is a high-
",
T
LAST TIME I WAS \ BOTH—BECAUSE
T
■■ ' -1
(o-)
( '
-6/
■
I
5 >
6
2
3
7
©
1
A
Lr-
$:338838
"pl. I
4
-t
})
f 0)
a
(4
0
s
"4 ® t
(2)
2 ■
3,
72/
© 1960 by NEA, Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
W6
THE EFFICIENCY EXPERTS
..2-1960 NEA,.. -
CAPTAIN EASY
SIRL FRIEND
A
I
I
3
/
hl
]
®
c
W
k
)
Jdy-2i-
.85 0-88:
ALLEY OOP
^3
EH? SOME- \ NO ...NOT REALIY.. JUST
7 •
MY DEAR... NEITHER
84
5:
...AT
A
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
(4
9 c
PLANE OLT(
)
@
(
/
E
29
•2
3 •
*44
I48Bl
7-21
)
7-2
1s
7-21
\
frPi
\
MYRTLE
FRECKLES
i
{A
EASY—
I
y
)
‘o
E
9.0
\
A
ft
3
He got a life ‘
.3
k
W-
#
LONERANGER
FLASH GORDON
(
" NO ONE LAYS HMDS 1
%
j IF ONLY DALE COULD
, VISIT ME, DR. EISEN
4
-IF I COULD SEE HER
FOR JUST A FEW
MINUTES...
o.
F
E
)
11
15
5
0:
tF==z
\
Wv
k
)
!LSJ
C’D
8)
u
WEAR AND TEAR ON
A GIRL'S ILLUSIONS
THING
WRONG?
WHEN TH’ BULL
WAS BY HERE,
HE WAS SITTIN'
DOWN WAITIN’
ON TH'CRANE..
EA§Y,BUT THEY'VE
MADE IT AWKWARD
FOR US HERE... .
-ASSOCIPTED PRESS (AP) LFASED
pi TELET’ "ESETTER WIRE SERVICE
BY HERE I HEARD
TH’ BULL TELL
HIM HE OUGHTA <
BE ASHAMEP,
WAITIN’ ON A
I
(
tangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Thex
ead the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
fl
23
3
95
Snead BECOMES bold after the lone ranger hands
OVER HIS GUNS TO CAPTAIN BRYAN..
i
• 721
JOB IN HIS
MACHINE.' JUST
WHICH IS
EFFICIENCY?
ONION
AND
GARLIC
FARM
o
0
I
i
3
ATTA BOY, KILLER
O'DELL—BASH
H/S TEETH OUT
) BOSS COMES
. BY TH'CRANE
) MAN IS SITTIN' {
< Waitin’—so \
X THEY'RE BOTH
(~ RIGHT/ )
r
s
c
n
\ ______
9
e
SEE HERE, MY MAW, ’
I WHAT DO YOU THINK
| WE MAINTAIN CRANES
HERE FOR? WHAT IF
YOU STRAINED YOUR
BACK ORTHAT SHAFT
FELL ON YOUR FOOT?
THOSE CRANES ARE
FOR EFFICIENCY--
CALL ONE WHEN
YOU WANT A
LIFT."
EK—A TOKEN OF
AFFECTION, CHILDREN
u FOK A WEVDING
KING AN? A NEW
START IN LIFE/
>
-FRNE
8S4M/LER
/
1z
i
I ^T \h fir k==
Tm. Reg. U. S. Pot Off.—All
3 :33
8
223338888
0
s 4 %
As
F-A=es
7-21
Q0/
‘Everything’s been said about perfumes, so try this and see
-----.. what happens.’* .
-—I
hg=y
)
NE"
■
—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.
E 2 asai
ISN'T IT DANGEROUS, \ OOP IS NO SUBHUMAN,
X HAVING A SUB- -------- --------
‛ BASH HIS
TEETH OUT, KID
) KLOUTE/Z
e
jui.
I !
(2
I
1
0
r
i
(
SAY, HOW CAN YOU
ROOT FOR BOTH
’ h
7
HM—AN
, OLD
‛ GAS
, MASK
f VO/JP ) -----~
CHANCE, BOYS/ &HAB An'T/E THAT MANf
aluminum. That road’s no high-
way—it’s more of a high-cost-
way!
t “How about it, Pop, could you let me have a dollar to
tide me over until Christmas?”
~ NANCY
•7*"
A
Ry-
Ak
4
SEPARATE NOW/ I'LL
CATCH THE NEXT
I
t
(
MB
73
$g
BLSY CRANE WITH THEN WHEN THIS
SUCH A LITTLE ------
UT, SAHIB,,,THERE
15 NO "NEX" PLANE/
AND THAT ONE POES
NOT RETURN FOR
/MANY MOON52
687087
, .■ i
l
v
l i
U---7 N
) "
SA
-g96, {
F:32332
(0
v U
•.E
‘7
gsi
a•
get
Now Is Time to Mesh
Gears On Foreign Affairs
BY PETER EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
rights rerved
> Syndicate, Inc.
1 - 88
’ 2
I
K/ J
6S(
A
E
a-i
I!
1
.1
2
“LIKE A LATENT CANCER”
A very real fear that the forces of inflation may
again be unleashed exists in the highest places. Wit-
ness a letter written by President Eisenhower’s Ca-
binet Secretary, Robert Gray, to President Davison
of the American Meat Institute: •
“The threat of inflation has not been eliminated
from the American scene, even though it has subsided
in recent months. This is the insidious nature of the
inflationarv danger: It is like a latent cancer which,
it detected soon enough, can be checked, but which
can never thereafter be neglected except at mortal
risk.
"'The coming years will test the capacity of the
American free-enterprise economy to prove that Mr
— 64 w—-
, “y~
■■
/,
K9
>--<
r YES,
WILLIE..
COME IN!
r
H]N28K-
\/\ _/ WE'RE TRYING
W 4: NM 7 TO ARRGE IT,
W 7 Ea STEVE.' IN A FEW
s5*_.ek WEEK5, PERHAPS...
•4
ON THE MASKED
MAN WHILE I'M
...MATTER OF FACT, >—"
HE'S ONE OF THE / OH,
MOST GENTLE SOULS NO/
I EVER MET X
I
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
— - By WILLIAM RITT
Central Press Writ er , . -
r AND Hi
/Ll back
TONTO'5
PLAY/
being 3.7 billion miles away
. from the sun. Sort of a distant
way built of mahogany and j relative ?
)EE“-EA
b '' ' .. - i" -
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Pblished Afternoon Daily (Except Sat
urdav) end Srindav Morning at 108 South
Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phon.
MI 5-2441 all devartments.
-
21, ECO- CLEBJPI, TiHAS TT1n7.V2.7/
4
ME EHOOT A NYONE
WHO TRY Io-
. ir/ 262349
• gtle of beer in his car. The judge 2
$ Smade a case of it. 5
THE HORDES of beggars
that plague Cairo are to be
forced to live in a town of their
own, near the Egyptian capital.
Maybe they’ll be able to make
their living mooching off each
other.
L/N
y
L ।
El --)
Fi 12
6
ISINCERELYCORCe
02!
( J ..kte- Copr. 1960 by United Fsoture
JOHNNY HAZARD
A
—5
-A ■ 32(
g•
A . I .
g2cin-- •
- 338885 33385 - 38888888888888
BY HAL COCHRAN
u 'An Indiana girl married a ma:
after she had had him arreste
LOOK/KIVS, IT TOOK \
TOO LONG FOR YOU 1
TO FINV EACH OTHER,,,
YOU RE NOT GOING TO
NO TICKET — Monique Je- .
rome, 20, of Nice, France, .
claims she has never been on.
a ship, plane or train. But she’s .
ready, to leave Nice for the first
time for movie work in Paris. ..
I' ft
3,%
2
SALLY'S SALLIES
IPERFUME}A
f,
eA,)
6
g,Fm
20 Years Ago Today
JULY 21, 1040
s.A ■
Pk
56*63
",e. <
% TSa‛
ggy7 — IL
,455 / ■ _/2
202).)
WE'RE PACKED WITH RESEARCHERS,
NEW LAB WORKERS.' THERE JUST
ISN'T TIME OR SPACE TO HANDLE
VISITORS YET/ TRY TO BE >
PATIENT... T
"-g
y
-4
fl
216254KK//8
£=-—10 7/21/Ea
,"8
1
9
a c
! from a sudden downpour Wednes-
j day swept a 16-year-old Dallas
I boy four blocks th rough an under-
ground sewer.
, The youth, Robert Gcodgion,
lost consciousness at least three
times after being taken to a hos-
pital. Doctors described his condi-
tion as fair.
Khruschchev is wrong in his estimate of our ability
to hold our lead over the Soviet economy We must
grow and expand in the 1960’s. For Mr. Khrushchev
to be proved right, he would have to have our help
in weakening the strength and stability of the American
dollar in the world.”
Mr. Grav then added that efforts to balance the
federal budget and reduce the national debt “must
be matched by equal discipline and decisiveness
throughout our economic system if we are to achieve
orderly ard sustainable growth,” and concluded by
e-vino. “The American Meat Institute can render
ufor kissing her.
} -sentence.
8x
p%,
a
Lt A
4
I*
t
o
■
—
4
CALLS ON 185 WSAE FOR ALASKA?
. 333333
I/i
Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or • wa s
more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is 1- 1
your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rec- s
MFYEE5615R.ALEK.BASKARPEROSPE5
IN MAYEVEN HIGH altitude weather A------ “
STUDY... TO AVOID ANY KISK
OF ANOTHER INCIDENT! NOw, -
WE’RE FLYING’EM HOME! Z NO DOU8T TH’
REDS ARE ALERT
FOR CHANCES TO
ADD TO THAT
K TENSION! 4
ek
tea
With a youngster, licking' ! Hh
the frc. ng bowl is no slip of 1
>, the tongue. , "
| • - u l '
A Michigan man was pinched ___
for having a single opened bot- 3323
----
* EDSON AT CONVENTION *
se E
MN4 AX
#8% 453.
a
r
“so
-oe
r
§ "2
A
5-
s,
-[3d3g3
g2,
nV
Ez4
FIISiR’Eg-e’ " •T =a—alas-amaana-
1 _LLL10e/ CeLrLeD WITH RUSSIA'S THREAT TO RETALIATE
ioe( g ON eases sending spy planes over red
THOSEEITNG. TERRITORY, ITS MADE OTHER JAPS JITTERY
EANAT ICSAKEA N ABOUT US LSING THOSE gASE5.j•
2MBEL MINVK171
4
•,N
Vji
\
V_V,Ui‛A
vEwd
tV
c2kh
P}, A
t 8
WSB
$2262:3
i
Mmhi
1/ 11
o
, Bill
gbeeR •
gX\ ’
p2"h' ■
n
j FOR IF EVER THE COUTTRY NEEDED a unified and nonpar-
I . tisan foreign policy behind which to rally, now is the time. The
I four .men could even constitute a bipartisan planning group for
j smooth transition from the present to the next administration on
L foreign affairs.
8 New blood and new brains are obviously needed in the direction
E of American foreign policy. The present team is tired—played out
—and needs relief.
The U.S. president, though hailed in many friendly countries, has
been snubbed by the Russians, rejected as a visitor by the Japanese
land insulted daily by Cuba.
THE TROUBLE IS THAT THE PROBLEMS faced by the Unitea
States all over the world aren’t going to wait until next January.
They need immediate attention.
As the Democratic platform’s foreign policy section declares, “We
must regain the initiative on the entire international front with
efective new policies to create the conditions of peace.”
This has a familiar bipartisan ring. “Regaining the initiative” j
against Communism is exactly what the late Secretary of State •
John Foster Dulles proposed to do, when Chiang Kai-Shek was
; ‘released’ and there was talk of “liberating” the satellites.
i .Somehow, these policies never could be made to work. But that’s
, still the number one problem for both the Republicans and the
Democrats.
IT'S A
SHAME TO
LET IT GO
TO WASTE
2
Any e, renenns renlection upon the char
acer,alanding or reputation of any per
son or firm, or corporation, which ma'
appear 'in the colnmns rf this paper, wi’
be gladly corrected upon the notice of
same being given to the publisher.
r yr
2
l 8359 ;
27
1 "g.
--A a
87 A REAL,
5 SURE-ENOUGH
A CAVE MAN.....
J®
RUSSIAN CRUDE!
Ezmozrnmzeye
1 sd6
=l
*
...... E
--==-=8
—. (s.ATTACKs,
47//9,
\...
! !
*7%1
Ni 634
4%/
1N
PATIENT? IN A FEW 3/
WEEKS SHE MAY BE "
GONE! I CAN'T
WAIT... I'VE GOT >7
TO SEE
CWVNjVNWiyv,
wVvVuN/wV,AM •
Wswl ’
dg),
g/Mhma4
’ 'I
- v A
• • t
mngeee
a
M5*0ea
r 5 jGg
_ e"
L
-K:
-------
3 5 82 6 4 8 3 52 748
AW O A A C F H Ei H L A P
3 2 4 5 3 6 7 2 8 4 5---3---6
EOUEEDO, MRSKAA
5 3 6 8 4 2 6 5 3 7 4 8---2
OLT SE.E.EFTVETP
4 7 2 5 6 3 4 8 .2 5 6 3---4
Q E RW. Y H RO I O Q s G
6 3 4 7 5 6 2 4 3 8 7 4---5
UTRAN WZE E CHA D
2 4 6 5 3 8 4 7 8 5 6 3--8
E T A E P O PEN_RNUS
4 3 8 4 7 5 8 4 6 8 7 4 8
R P I IASDDTEDER
-¥4
7
BEADY BABY—Eight-month-
old Carol Lynn Steeves strikes
one of those arty model poses
to show her mother’s beads in
Sheridan, Ind.
Youth Saved
From Sewer
DALLAS (AP)—Rising water
_____________
e BARBS
CHALLENGE OF FREE ENTERPRISE
CONFRONTS LABOR AND MANAGEMENT
Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell underscored
a point of great timeliness and vital significance to
the future of the nation when he stressed the joint
responsibility of management and labor, as compon
ents of the free enterprise system, to meet the chai
lenges and needs inherent in the country’s almost ex-
plosive growth Which shows- every sign of continuing
"Who is going to solve these problems, the federal
state and local governments or the genius of America
that is labor and management?” he asked in posing
a question on which the United States faces a funda
mental decision. What he was saying, in effect, was
that unless labor and management together and co
operatively meet their full responsibilities to the nation
in an acceptable manner the alternative is assump-
tion of increased responsibility by government. The
public will demand solutions from one or the other,
If it is government to which the people must look
the inevitable result will be socialism in one degree
or another.
Although Secretary Mitchell did not have the oppor-
tunity to go into the situation as deeply as he might
have, it is becoming increasingly clear that there
must be a general recognition by both management
and labor of their joint responsibilities as well as their
mutual interests. If the free enterprise system is
to survive over the long pull, both of its segments
must find a basis for co-operative endeavor and col-
laboration.
Above all, it must be recognized that there is a third
party involved in the negotiations. That is the con-
sumer, for whom management and labor both work
in the final analyssi. And unless the rights,' needs
and interests of this third party are taken into account
and respected, price and wage controls exercised
through the instrumentality of government are almost
a certainty eventually. One way or another the con
Sumer is going to demand that his voice be heard
and his interests served.
• “))
......
h
t 0
I <
8 3,
a
sum
:333888 83
i 388888
998: 32: 33332233388888
.o i
33 3333332388883838888
c
< il
s 3388 88888888383 8
• -03 !
4
9
0282
g--,
{3
6
— ,
-p
E,1
i T feo
1
6949g
1437 7
Members of the local Knights of Pythias Lodge enjoyed a
picnic at Chaney Springs Friday night, as the outgrowth of a
recent attendance contest. The losers captained by 0. L. Gurley,
entertained the winners, of which Morris Irwin is captain...Mrs.
I. L. Doty was hostess Friday to the members of the Sunshine
Quilting Club at her home, 512 Poindexter street...Lagene Martin
entertained the Sunshine Sewing Club . at her home, 1615 North
Robinson street, Thursday afternoon...Mrs. Ora Campbell and Miss
Daneta O’Brien returned Friday from Henrietta...Mrs. W. S. Ownsby
left Friday night for Austin to attend her daughter, Miss M ry
Elizabeth Ownsby, who underwent an appendectomy there...Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Hoblit announce the marriage of their daughter,
Miss Alice Mildred Hoblit, to Henry Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William E. Ellis of this city, on Wednesday evening, June 26...
Naming Mrs. J. Lambert Lain as honoree, in appreciation of her
three years of faithful service as president of the WMS, the circle
leaders and officers of the First Baptist Church entertained in
the home of Mrs. John F. Buckner Thursday evening...Mrs. Floyd
Ellis and son, Alec, Boya Johnson and Misses Barbara and Nan
Bradbury left early Thursday morning for a vacation trip to Ros-
well, N. M....Mrs. Joe Kavecki, Mrs. J. H. Harris and Mrs. Fred
Chaney Jr. entertained with a miscellaneous shower Thursday
night complimenting Mrs. James Lyland, who was the former
Maxine Chaney. The affair was held on the lawn of the H. W. Boyd
home on South Caddo street.
£€68?
Ee-
_atgerz=eeeF — ■ =2"*k
-- ~~__
Gz= — ■
525
g)
g22,(
-E022 N
s «
i ;
5 d
g "
-
g: gs--
h. w
- LOS ANGELES — (NEA) — Political male beauty contest's heTo
uthis month in Los Angeles and Chicago or the classified golf scores
— Newport seem trivial business indeed when compared to what is
happening outside the United States.
On most days during the Democratic convention, news from
abroad was so big it almost crowded the Los Angeles tumult and
shouting off the front pages. And yet nothing could be more im-
portant than naming the men who must direct U.S. foreign policy
the next four years.
L Confidential briefings on foreign affairs from Central Intelligence
L Agency would go to Kennedy and Johnson alone, as present plans
- stand.
1 . DESIGNATION OF ADLAI STEVENSON and Chester Bowles as
- Democratic presidential candidate Kennedy’s liaison men with the
h State Department on foreign affairs is considered good. Both men
' are knowledgeable, imaginative, experienced, trustworthy.
What their appointment has suggested is that as soon as the GOP
presidential nominee is elected at Chicago, he appoint two equally
competent Republican statesmen as his foreign affairs liaison men
: at the State Department.
Co-operation of the two Republican and two Democratic interim
foreign affairs advisers might even be in order during the campaign.
w* 6
- ' »
9 i
© I960, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World, rights reserved. ..
‘ 3
fl
sl 1
\ me
. ^3. W ' | “
WISHING WELL^
Registered U. S. Patent Office.
Ag
$- I
0 T
r ,F.
—2%
Lcs
The Associated Press is exclusively
I entitled to the use of publication of al
new dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper and also
the local news published therein. Al'
-rieks to re-publication or broadcast are
also .reserved. The Cleburne Times-Review
is a poliicilly independent newspaper
placing the public welfare above the in-
terest of anv party. Truth and decency
are its guiding principles and its daily
determinati n is to pri the ‛‛h-
out fear or favor.
V, YS
• 4
{• *2 I
Ro-,;
-gg
P
===ge69
—eef
8(e25
Re5
•swa,gm
0
(-MY POP 15 A )
FIGHTERS LIKE 1 I ST !c $ 2 6
-426
N • P (fo
L eS )
=
! ! !
A snail travels at the rate of
90 miles a year—nature item.
We know some chess players to
whom this would seem to be a
case of downright recklessness!
! ! !
Same snails, incidentally, have
14,000 teeth! Could it be the
reason they move so slowly
they're bound for the dentist?
1 j t
Pluto, according to astron-
omers, is the farthest out in.
space of our family of planets.
I
>)
! ! !
We don’t know how well that
new beggars’- town is to be
landscaped but it should have
plenty of outstretched palms.
! ! !
Zadok Dumkopt says he al-
ways takes his annual vacation
before June 21 because, after
that, the day's grow constantly
shorter.
A<R
ro
Wg
eGahPR
3
\ '
the Nation a, vital.service..by bringing these facts to 4
the attention of the American consumer.”
The institute’s president says that its members have
stepped up their efforts to combat inflation in accor-
dance with this request. That must be done every-
I where in the ranks of labor, management and govern-
j ment if the rampaging tiger of inflation is to be
“ chained.
Ag3 (©
X,4
7 "S
» )
i
P© {~
® 3— 38
5Feecees.
P—.
=-2
>‛A
/4f
‘9 A
85320,
88FA=.
By carrier in city, 30c week. By mall 11
Johnson. Hill, Hood, Bosque and Somer
veil counties, $6.25 per year: six months
$: ; .rei m. state, $9.50 per year
By nial ou-. state, $12.00 per year
Entered as second class mail matter al
thepost office at Cleburne, Texas, tinder
Act of Congreis, March 3, 1879
Nati nn F presentative TEXAS DAIL'1
PRGSSLH40TE, MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
ASSN. TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB
I SFFRS APSN. SOUTHERN NEWS
PAPEi PUBLISHERS ASSN.
WTTLIAM RAWLAND. Owner and Publishei
Pn.____. LAWSON, Business Manager
JACK I R"CTOR. Editor
PAUE GRIFFITH, Advertising Manager
dEORCE H. HANNAH, Circulation Mgr.
"ti-----.
SUBSCRIPTION
Think of all the money spent
• . on music lessons—and how it
- could be saved if the kids had
' j | their wau-
: ' gguogg-voC..N 7-2) 728
2 1960.byNE.JC.L.M. Rea. ILS. Pat-off. A2M
“e•
W (» (S I =•, sex
2E
*8«/*{
N,3
4p, I
HUMAN SAVAGE / IS HE A SAVAGE
LIKE... LIKE HIM / LEAST NOT/
AROUND? , ANYMORE €4
(ac4
W2 k { Y
@
/ VV @
\ y
AeJ—
5
e--Y,
•0)(/-
A
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 217, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1960, newspaper, July 21, 1960; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1542621/m1/10/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.