Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 203, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1961 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
6
f
l
"THUNDERBIRDCOUNTRY" '
2.
1
Editorial Comment
P
e
SOME KNOW THE ANSWER
A
JULY 10, 1941
U.S. Opposition Runs High to
$
3>
}
4’
0.S.A.
1
1
F
2.2
WISHING WELL
r
Registered U. S. Patent Office.
1
■r
।
)
E .
3*
A
-
9
I
S
2
‘=
/
2
8
<
(
4,
*
8
2a
r"
*
))
)
3
4
78 —
=====
55
7-/0
7-10
“Just how personal do you have to get on this job?”
62
NANCY
CAPTAIN EASY
Ae THE TRUCK LEAVES
•) THE STATION ONE OF
M2282E28
THE UNIFORM'
11
-g
L
s
3
"3•
4
==
1
.3
#a
7-/O
b 4
JOHNNY HAZARD
ALLEY OOP
।
t
J NOSWEAT/ANP
TOMORROW WE LANV AT
i
6AIGONJN SOUTH VIETNAM-' I NOW DO YOU FEEL
)
' CLDYOU—WOULD
222
DU HELP ME
73
7
889
9
-...2
!)
i
7-10
FRECKLES
MYRTLE-
SUBSCRIPTION
77
$
Al
Q
%
8
$
{ll
®o
»
V9
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
LONE RANGER
FLASH GORDON
yes. /s//'t s//£
)8752e
NEN OWNER OF
I(SH/S./
I
It®
k ME, /-ARKIN?
, J
l
3
e2
12
y
3)
7
)
\
_3
5
Beapj
WOUED YOU PRIVE ME TO
THE MILITARY CEMETERY
g OUTSIDE THE CITY? —
GOSH,I DONT
NEED TO 60
INSIDE-
SUPPOSE A
THERE'S MORE '
OF 'EM AROUND
SOMEWHERE? /
k
t
mill
ian
its
yea
ion
pro
rest
Ir
1958
$ »<
: 8
(-
F©
■ i WtHnmiij
wy eo you NEED
A
N
V - .
© 196], King Features Syndicate, Inc.. World rights reserved.
It
mits
#9) is
of i
mo:
{ hig
imp
hel
. 12-1
ian
T
city
as
hcu
, She
196]
and
exc
. poii
a s
T
4
-I LL
/ OGo— %
FRANK,
AIN’T IT
DANDY?
EE-HEE.'
OO-OO,
GOLLY? A
Sti
New
for
oth
pat
suf
J
sto
. giv
ren
l
is
pre
be
* mo
a The disguised LSNE RANGER meets
j AN OLD FRIEND IN THE CAFE - -
- fz
; F —
In the continuing clamor from people who want to i
know‘“what they can do for their country,” it should |
not be forgotten that many have long since answered
57AF
—-‘4 © B
CHLLDREN OF
THE EAGLEOR,
THE CUCKOO^
t—-€_
1K
5
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP)—Death lay
waiting around the corner on the
road to Palermo.
It was just 18 years ago this
week that the Americans and
British landed in Sicily. It was
a bright, brief, bitter, dusty cam-
paign that in 39 days broke the
,2-2
feeE348
’ / -TH" FIRST I KNEW THEY
-- WERE FLYIN'AROUND
I
%
Tell FRECKLES I CAN'T )
see HI NOW-I - Z
- HAVE A CLIENT/
0
S'
i
$43 Sdbb
'2,8,34/
r'
48
ww
eXM. —!
-
9
A1/*'
3-4“t—1
YOU'RE NOT •
LEAVIN' US, KID?
UP TO GIVING ME
THE TOTAL PICTURE?
E WHY,,Z ws
TIP.. SON h
./SHESOSEE
OL,MR. .
MGOOSEY! .
- "F-
Z . 9995
7' I
547
THAT'S ¥
OUR NEW E
STOVE— A
WILLIAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publisher
PEYTON LAWSON, Business Manager
JACK PROCTOR, Editor
PAUL GRIFFITH, Advertising Manager
GEORGE H. HANNAH, Circulation Mgr.
bN-
SHE means to ruin
- me/ -amm
FGEEWHITH-WYRTLE —
I'M THARRV! IF I'D COME
ALONG A MINLTE THOONER-
I MIGHT HAVE TAANVED
you a
f //
ill cet gafel where we’re bound.
AzBi .- Er
e- /
" )
Xi
9)>
By carrier in city: 30c week. By mall in
Johnson County $6.25 per year. 6 months
$3.50. By mail in state $9.50 per year, BJ
mail out of state $12.00 per year.
Entered as second class mall matter at
the post office at Cleburne, Texas under
Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
“That old Mr. Green is almost as bad as Mom when it
comes to interrupting a person when he’s
talking, isn’t he, Pop?”
2- •-h
© 1961 by NEA, Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
1
e
2——=.g-„
I —*bA
Eeg-
o
•2
gs
27(
a2beg
d /
e-’
i
%
V.
,2
a#
=-3
/
* ?
Mg
c
ox- yy)
(
182
•0
gz}
829 4(
6 ,
VA%
; >. 33345
! ' •
-
A TOTAL of 171 American,
flags were raised and lowered
over the Capitol in Washington
on Independence Day. It was
not only a thrilling spectacle
but a mighty colorful cere-
mony!
20 Years Ago Today Anniversary
----—--------------— Of Palermo
TEH PM. AND A COOL BREEZE.
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Published Arteroor Daily (Except Sat-
urday) and Sunday Morning at 108 South
Anglin Street, Cleburne, Texas. Phone
MI 5-2441, all departments.
FS5
M2MNG5-
L. 1
CM
N tlbg
/2
TOWER
m
JO. .MI/ 1 -I THOUGHT y " —--—*
T COULD FACE THIS THING YOU MUST KNOW HOW
hl DNE . BUT,., I/VE FOUGHT J I FEEL'ABOUT YOU,
, Ji OSiNG EATTLE ! —( FRAN-JUST NAME IT?
II
THE CAFE P
- TAETING TODAY: ■
35 "DEAPORMISSINGZ“
,/
National Representative TEXAS DAILY
PRESS LEAGUE. MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
ASSN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
LISHERS ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS-
PAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN.
BUT SO FAR, NOBODY HAS FORMED any citizens’ organiza-
tions. to back up American and allied nations in Berlin or kick
iussia out of the U.N. for trying to wreck the organization.
, On the other hand, opposition to admission of Red China to.
the.•.is widespread and intense. Young Republicans, meet-
18 in Minneapolis, passed a resolution against it and recom-
mended the U.S. get out of the U.N. if Red China gets in,
American Security Council, an active anti-Communist organi.
zation supported by some 2,700 U.S. business firms, has just
issued one of its strategy reports against admission of Red
China to the U.N. It was signed by Admiral Arthur W. Radford
formed chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and half a dozen
ebier retired generals and admirals.
-i mi gross has voted opposition to admission of Red China to
8 L.N. 16 times since 1948. This year another resolution has
fen introduced. It has not yet been voted on, but 283 repre-
ntatives and 55 senators have signed it.
-Mucn OF THE INCREASED OPPOSITION this year comes
-com a belief or a fear that key figures in the Kennedy admin-
iet-ation are soft on the subject.
7 :. ., ?
1 - ■: • —s —
' 7 -
7'. -Gc-
-
oth, g05
L
—-MERCY
y-
nAL BOYLE ,1053 .
a-.
"e
7 //07
4-,
NAe 1 Xa
Germany hurled powerful reinforcements into a second wave I Fight Noted
blitzkrieg offensive against Russia’s main defense line today, but
the Red Army reported turning the enemy back with severe losses
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
-----By WILLIAM RITT--------------------
Central Press Writer
THANKS, JAKE'
'... JUST SAYING
GOODBYE TO ga M7
MY.FOLKSL’. {
NWi%16 .
VW
ASSOCIATED PRESS (AP) LEASED
TELETYPESETTER WIRE SERVICE
The Associated Press is exclusively en-
titled to the use of publication of all
news dispatches 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 newspayer
placing the public welfare above the in-
terest of any party. Truth and decency
are its guiding, principles, and its daily
determination is to print the news wltr.
out fear or favor.
t 1961 by NEA. Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat' O‘f.
u ‛U
'I o
C. 7„ Mee
LUl
S'—THEY FORGOT TO SEND
=4 THE IN STRUGTIONS
.1 ' ’ | "
■CH SURE... AN' WE'LL \ N
PROBEY HEAR FROM \L
'EM, TOO, WHEN THEY \>
FIND OUT WHAT WE /
\ DID TO THAT SPACE A't,
J CRAFT CREW OF X
- THEIRS! V1652
Ag5F
"( 15 SMALL WITH
. NO CONTROL
J
727.
The United Arab Republic’s shoes. On the heels, no doubt.
miwE=
u
J.R,WILLIAMS" 10
K N;) £
o o G o o
gt4
< MG/
LERE 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 num-
ber 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
uppar left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one
of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message
fl
0
2
Ec
A
IL
“2
L« 1.
va M
a —E
p/lim
A 6 .
1, J1 50
se ILOCKMCEELEEAN { THEAiOOZT
“ A ------ ------- —== OFFICER, SO I WILL WEAR) at CAYO MAMEI
-
Tm. Rey U. S. Pot Off.— An righis eecea ’
Copr. 1961 by United Feature syndiccte, Inc.
or counter-attacking strongly on the main fronts defending Mos-
cow, Leningrad and Kiev...Word has been received in Cleburne
of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barnett of Irving
on June 6. The baby, who has been named Annie Lois, is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Lane of 419 West Chambers
street. The mother is the former Miss Annie Mae Lane of this
city...After a new record of 106 was set yesterday afternoon, the
temperature dropped lower last night. However, the year’s record
of 106 degrees almost reached the all-time high of 110 degrees...
Circle Two of the Field Street Baptist WMU met Wednesday af-
ternoon at the home of Mrs. E. V. Kerr, 302 North Douglas street,
for their regular Bible study...Mrs. W. W. McDonald was hostess
Wednesday afternoon to the members of the Fellowship Bible
Study Club with Mrs. R. L. Mansell as leader...Mrs. Ed King en-
tertained the members of the Entre Nous Club at her home on
Prairie avenue Wednesday afternoon...Word has been received in
Cleburne of the birth of a son on July 1 to Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Kirkham of Borger, formerly of Cleburne...They called her A
Scarfaced She-Devil — “A Woman’s Face” starring Joan Crawford
and Melvyn Douglas starts tomorrow at the Yale Theater.
M.e
G]
HT)
2 FKAI
ge(G
•Nde, V ]
EE i
-=== THE REBEL5 FOLLOW IN
THE LOCAL POLICE: CAR...
A
PSe J
L-q,
2=2
J
I
i
l
the question with steady, quiet, dedicated effort on
many fronts.
. $ VW
-tle
4-~ed/ '
.. PWK.
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—There is more organized opposition
to admitting Communist China to the United Nations than
■ here is to keeping the Russians from signing a separate peace
treaty with East Germany and making Berlin a “free”—Com-
munist—city.
This is a curious inconsistency of the cold war,
American and allied troops are lined up opposite each other
in Berlin and both sides have strong forces in support. The:
chances for an accidental incident that might lead to a major
war are great. In the event of a hot war, Soviet Russia with its
missiles and nuclear weapons could inflict terrific damage on
the United States and western Europe. £
By contrast, the United States could annihilate Red China
without its ever laying a glove on America.
w, y\ X
r BECAUSE 1'7 LIKE
TO TRY ANV FIND
MY HUGBAN 17 5
___> GRAVE! 4,-
EM//N
WHATS GOING Y
ON IN YOUR 77/n
D/O YOU NOTICE THE
--- HOMAN I WAS
, --r TALKING
036s
fey 7 -10
I
I
co
n
Axis airpower in the eastern
Mediterranean and gave the Al-
lies a stepping stone to Italy.
Each man who fought there, of
course, has his own memories:
The smell of the unburied dead
in the bombed ruins', the shim-
mering heat, the sweet taste of
watermelons plucked warm from
the vines, weeping Sicilian wom-
en as the long lines of Italian
soldiers walked or rode cheer-
fully into surrender, glad to be '
out of a war they didn’t want to
be in, the pinch-faced children’s
hands held out for bread.
But I remember Sicily most for
a rare combat vignette you see
seldom on sprawling battlefields,
where individual actions usually
are lost sight of.
It happened in a winding moun-
tain gorge on the road to Palermo
the Sicilian capital.
A German engineer, his hands
upraised, his myopic eyes wide
in fear, stumbled from the under-
brush to give himself up to - a
U.S. armored column.
“There is a 90 mm. gun around
the next bend in the road,” he
warned.
What should the American com-
mander, Brig. Gen. Maurice Rose
do? Believe his captive or not?
Rose, one of the ablest and
most handsome tank leaders in
the Army, was under strong pres-
sure from Gen. Patton to get into
Palermo at the earliest possible
hour.
But he unhesitatingly halted
his column. He dismounted two
squads of armored infantrymen
and ordered them to flank the
gun and bring its defenders under
rifle fire. One squad moved for-
ward up the hill to the right, the
ether disappeared in the deep
gulley to the left.
We felt a hidden menace in the
silent picturesque setting — no
birds sang in the tall pine trees—
as Gen. Rose moved a halftrack
carrying a 75 mm. cannon to the
fore.
The column trundled to the
edge of the bend in the road and
paused. Did death really lurk
around the corner, or had the
German engineer lied.
The two gunners in the half-
track who would test his truth
chatted lackadaisically. If death
came to any in the column it
would come first to them. But it
was all in the day’s work; they
were inured to danger.
The general strode back and
forth impatiently as the moments
passed. What was holding up his
flanking riflemen? Finally, he de-
cided he could wait no longer.
“Get it!” he crisply told the
two cannoneers.
The halftrack immediately
lurched around the' corner. Just
then rifles cracked simultanecus-
ly from each side. Our infantry
was firing on the waiting Ger-
man gun’s defenders.
Caught by a double surprise—
the rifle fire, the sight of the
wheeling American halftrack—
they paused for a bare fraction
of a second.
Then the first American cannon
shell crashed through the shield
of the 90 mm. Nazi gun. The sec-
ond shell hit its’ nearby ammu-
nition dump, and world seemed
to explode in reverberating
echoes.
It was all over in less than
five seconds. The riflemen raced
back to their carriers and leaped
in.
The column moved on to Pal-
ermo—and victory. But because a
general believed a prisoner and
paused, he saved some of his
own men tc share that victory.
Julv 10, 10C1— cl:
l (, } i
N.
fmA.
Z -j
)) M T
h $
7/ j BE THE PLANE
/ — CIKCLINd,
/ ■. ANOLAND:
~............gugA
72 E
•Pg:
=//—s8.
U.N. Seat for Red China/
BY PETER EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
8572638 7 4 5 2 3 8
DA N P Y P A E A F A R I
3 6 4 5 3 7 2 864573
O O J I G W Y L U O N R R
2 5 3 6 4 8 7 3 5 2 43 7
G E E C. B Y I SROTSG
6374523 684573
A T H O I E H N G E G T R
7253684 536786
C SHI A A NT LFL, I F
3 7 4 6 5 7 3 8 6 2 5 ^3 7
L O J O S T S NRUTYH
6 4 5 2 3 7 ' 6 5 4 8 3 7 6
DOEPOEIPYSUST
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.
h,
26700
, 14} THREE wog sus
,~Rg2Xe
se
kitchen ?
_ iL
—p
/A
gn**
N g2-g2—,
N,8VNKS 446
4
. 1 ’ -pg--
O SATURN'S s
§ LARGEIT moon.F
J TITAN.••
W
26 ” cnsce ■ ’
csbgcdbos
.\
•s
A"•
... —INNON3- *
e-Wtew wW * ‘Mb XII '
-qgskN U
Typical among the nation’s unheralded heroes is th
businessman or professional man who gives long, tax
ing hours of service to his city or county school board.
Earning a living today is in many respects more
trying than ever before. Problems mount. Getting to
and from work can be a real production involvin'1
many hours and miles. The family breadwinner c i
be forgiven for wishing to put his feet up and sip a
cool one when he finally gets home.
Nevertheless countless public spirited men somehow
mobilize fresh resources and plunge out at n.ght —
or on weekends ,— to do the public business. For most
it is not a trivial sideline.
As a sample, a man who serves on the school board
in a big city’s suburb totted up the time and effort
involved.
He found that in the nine-month period when the
board was meeting regularly, he and his fellow mem-
bers put in the equivalent of 22 eight-hour working
days. It’s the same as if they had given nearly 1 of
every 10 of their regular working days to this enter-
prise.
If they could find the tim manv schoolboard ma
undoubtedly would like to c cant te. this work
those do who perform annual military duty. But the
nature of the ta- doesn’t allow it.
Our sample board member says the board averaged
five r-tings a month for nine months. The high
mark +his season was March, with nine sessions. On
top of those, the board met 19 times with some portion
or other of the public.
Even these 61 formal meetings don’t tell the full
story, for anyone who ever has been involved in such
work knows there are long hours of informal discuss-
ion of school business.
Not everyone has the energy or the resourcefulness
or the kind of iob which will permit him to undertake
such sturdy effort.
Well, then, cut in half the time this school board
man devoted to the job. Surely all of us ought to
think enough of our public responsibilities to donate
10 or 11 full working days a year to the broad needs
of city, state and nation.
If not, why ask the question: “What can we do?”
( r -m
I r
' 13
' I
e A
2
gssgg
DAD/Just slip )
FIVE BUCKS /
UNDERTAE 1
— DOOR/,
ba
(s,_.
J®
T
e
I 0
hir2m
L
-6 SSey
■Mi {“ i' “g
N4
222
v ee3*/
-2-
QW/7H?
gE
255-2*8/
ata,,/
22/8
hhuhhhhm
■ E
E—6
Z Z EPe“---~-
123 MOMENTS WE‛D LIKE TO LIVE OVER— "
nil n£
* WASHINGTON COLUMN *
19
THE WIND 15 THE \ . g—e
NORTHi AND THEY'LL LAND \ U ■
WTO 1T..50 DRIVE TO THAT z-
ENP OF THE RUNWAY! A LOOK.. Y ••
THAT MUST \
iA “g*4n
9.) A,~E
15X48
cyd
IF DOC SAYS T WE'D MISS YOU, FINA! ) ; I
OKAY.' NOTHING YOU GREW UP :. j
MORE TO KEEP k HERE WITH US.' b.. I
ME HERE.' / • 9N2Aef
meeeT
Q Q o @ o o
©(e
E
G
$
(, e
! ! !
Four teams of mountain
climbers are simultaneously try-
ing to scale Himalayan peaks.
Looks like there’s a sport that’s
getting over-crowded,
! ! !
Octopuses actually have three
hearts — Factographs. However,
when they put the squeeze on an
enemy they don't use any of 'em!
j j »
5
_H—-
gH,AaE.
AEesEeHe
lNW
00000 o ooao
QaaQ
©@)
A 5462’
-fAr.-F •
minister of state is a fellow
named Abdel Hatem. He hard-
ly sounds like a proper candi-
date to send abroad on a mis-
sion of good will!
1 ! j
Rom,an soldiers, we read, were
paid their salaries in coins made
of salt. Well-seasoned troops?
! ! ! k
An Italian shepherd frightened
away a huge bear by biting it
on the nose. That settles it—the
tooth IS mightier than the claw!
1 j !
Ancient Egyptians, according
to an historian, ■ had a custom
of painting pictures of their
enemies on the bottom of their
—==:
TOF ANY LUCK MAKING
Ar CONTACT WITH M YES I'M
+-13 OLR OTHER / GETTING
—9 COLONIES? / THROUGH TO
__qpgd AYE BEE ONE
ARee NINE TWO!
‘5 7^
“WATCH FOR ME — I’LL WATCH FOR YOU” IDEA
There are few trains on the rails these days, and
fewer unprotected railroad crossings on highways. But
there are more automobiles going faster than ever,
and an unhappily large number of them seem to be
getting to the crossings. at the same time as the en-
gines.
At least one railroad has set out to see if it can
do something about it along educational lines. The
Gulf Mobile and Ohio Railroad has issued a rather
striking namnhlet in the name of, its engineers. It's
entitled “I Watch For You: You Watch For Me.”
The idea, of course, is that the engineers will try to
look out for you at grade crossings, and driver sought
to do the same thino since it’s pretty hard to stop a
wo cor train on a dime.
RTrroN crossing fatalities are- really only a tiny
q nor+ nf the traoic annual highway death toll. But all
fotalitiec on the hichwav could be reduced if only all
of us would live un to the olep of that GM&O pammh-
1o+ Tf eserv turn. hill, intersection and straight-
av “T xiotch for von: Vo watch for me”, perhaps
•iMi
EL '
• e=i
nVe
"0-
F ,
ee-
A,," ■
9 96'
4 /!
l- ' j
ZSIIM
■ Mw
91 -wE= E
■tew
Z ERONNTEnWSLHy
. LE HAVEN'T LTWENTY-FOLKGLY!
YOU , OOP?_S--—-gsaz
m/a7
■ - 2 ,2
%kKS
1'
1
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. 56, No. 203, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1961, newspaper, July 10, 1961; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552772/m1/2/?q=%221961-07%22&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.