Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 246, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 11, 1945 Page: 2 of 6
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.
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=====
T
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
TUESDAY
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LLBUhN.TLXAS
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— —
WASTE 5
BASKET
search are favored at this time.
A new idea might be wry favor-
YOU POOR LI'L
STRAY CAT —
HERE'S SOME
affairs with
of good re-
3
IMAGINE
A CAT
455
r A R Z A N ______
AS THE RELEASED MAIDEN SUPREP
‘TO THE FLOOR THE JUNGLE LORD
SPRANG FORWARD AND SWEPT
HER UP IN AIS ARMS. u
Secret matters, espectally if they
bave to do with scientirie or me-
chanical research, may came into
foreground.
L
Adn
<
-ERNIE
- sus**NALEA-
somewhat under control ne man-
aged a smile at her that was itte
more than a grimace and said
"So now you know. What are you
are always able to help. You will
be .happiest ‘.f you do not live b?
1
■ ■ v t
ul0%b
THAT'S* IT, ELLA.'
TIE ME DOWN SO I
s3
,FLL ,
ER UP!
loving. companionable and congen-
Li) personality. Your magnetic
charm will draw pecple of both
sexes to you and you will become
a leader in your own immediate
group if not in larger circles. Fond
nt all human beings, you under-
stand them and ther problems and
a=
J
> ' ie
Moe-h
g, Iy)
In which you should forward your
own interests. Your talents should
3,
S-
INCREASE
IN
TRAFFIC
DEATHS
g
But until it is proved that there is no defense for the
atomic weapon it will he just as well to hang on to the
battleship. The old battlewagou has survived too many
prophecies of doom in the past to he cast aside until expe
rienee proves she has outlived her day.
r ■ -—L—-—o-------
--one-of- Hnsdleldar
which you would undouktedly
■ )
r
I PANAMINT, YOU’RE ’
PAYING ME TO KEEP
YOU FROM GETTING
y MARRIED— _
B AND I'M GOING J
Megan MacTavish wasn’t hav-
inc any easy time of manazinE
the Pleasant Grove farm— with
no help coming fromtan indolent
father. It was a little as if the
best years were trickling through
her lingers. Then, there was
Alicia Stevenson to make things
much worse—Alicia at best was
a malicious gossip. But some-
thins new is added when Tom
Fallon, the new high school prin-
cipal. moves to town His wife
has a "mysterlous" iltness and
Megan wonders if that’s why he
If a man dnos not know to what port he is steering, no
wind is favorable to him.—Seneca.
■ ----r--------0--------------
At last the Nips are where they belong—down oh their
Jaranese!
s
... de
-----—---?—„sa-
have a lot cf common sense which,
when combined with your rpiritunl
nature and ideslism, makes for a
fine and splendid character. You
migEt find that the church offers
you a happy life career. Even M
you do not enter the church, you
will become very devout and most
23
Most girls miarry a struggling young man, struggling to likely will be one of those whois
hetp.tt Ml T881811n18 Hi «1 c---1
I ■ p single, "atfairs as a layman. Ycu have a
very well • }
To find what the stars have in
store for tomorrow, select your
birthday star and read the corre-
sponding paragraph. Let your
birthday star be your daily guide.
Wednesday, September 12
Virga (Aug 24-Eept. 22)-A dav
****
ME LIKE
THAT—,
Met wisely now.
Taurus (Apr. 21-May 21)—This
too Work
-4AeL
eh
. .........—* ■———
Your Birthday
By STELLA
IMEDIATELY A MENACING GROWL
ISSUED FROM THE CROWD.
_______________________ T-I 8 9 2-]
Not just as good as the beat,
but. better than the fest.
written his parents, Mr. nd Mrs.
O. W Riley. 10« Dallas avenue,
that he is stationed on Okinawa
and has ben there several weeks.
and the regional office in the Mer-
cantile Bank Building in Dallas
Many district' offices and all of
the field offices already have been
closed in the Missouri, Kansas.
Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Louis-
iana region. The remaining dis-
trict offices are in St. Louis, Kan-
-- ypee-
,%
3
.2---Kmm-e
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
is a day for .you to court friend-
liness. Your charm should bring
you contacts which can prove use-
ful.
Gemini (May 22-June 22)- I
you will let dreams alne, for now,
and stick to practical, scientific
When afternoon comes you can re-1 dicated today in an announcement
lax and seek social contacts, Ro-|by E p McCallum. Jr., regional
mance is in the) air, if you arc director of the highway transport
looking for it. I department of ODT. that all re- S
——------------- ' maining district offices would be .
. . closed on or before Bov. 1. Only i?
FAMILY HEARS FROM SON | a Skeleton staff will be retained -
Pvt. Welborn Riley has recently 'after Oct. 12 in the district offices I
ELLA CINDERS
ELLA, HER PERFUME
EH WAS SURE powerful;
—2
Tn
_ _ au 1 yuu . .U, - , ycu have anything to do with
yourself. Even if you do not wed. sclentific research, today should be
ycu would be happiest in some: 2, cood one for your efforts
— 1 Capricorn (Dec. 23-Jan. 20' — You
b"rattended 2A.kugV2_Researeh Speedy liquidation of the orice
work is well favored this morning. ! of Defense Transportation was in-
mwmom
zam.p. ._______
FAndBeMLove 3
Hra*.‛By PEGGY DERN W
MNMNTTPTo'*
=10. j
-l I
^7
Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. going to do?" 1,
my wife alone.’’ stated Tom. and Meeganninhedstromntheoke ‘
Megan's eyesblazedqatthiswonena at him With wide, distressed eyes
shhajswiriyhersoncrakine , "Whatswt,eontodor"aonas.
with Anger. “You may be quite ImepnsWnyrotnstdswirty.“I'm
Zk ^^ai^ -
through the pines. opt before she “I know.” Tom brush* _ Ehe
had gone-half A dozen steps, Tom words away with a gesture of ne
was on his feet, laying a hand on hand that field his Pipe: Bu* 1
her arm. in swift, abject apology think somehow. I wanted you to
“Please wait — please, forgive know. After all you are my near,
me." he apologised humbly "That est neighbor We see each otnes
was unforgivable of me! It’s just often—It's inevitable you should
------ .... that—well. the subject is—an ex- wonder I—I hope you.went teal -
is so bitter. tremely painful one—” ' it necessary to—"
crAPIER HREE -rm sincerely sorry that I men- Megan’s face flamed with hurt,
CHAPTER IHKEE tioned it.” ahe told him stiffly, her "You may be quite sure that I
MEGAN and Tom sat quietly face still hot. shall reveal your secret to no one
IVI on the big flat rocks say- He looked down at her gravely, —why should 1? What right—or
on the. Dig nat roc y nis hand still on her arm, restrain- necessity—would I have?” she told
Ing little, their eyes following ing her as She would have walked him sharply.
the antics of thdogs and cats away. Tom smiled at her. a white, faint
galloping around in circles on "You see. Miss MacTavish. he smile that was somehow very
Pla. she thought she sald at last, his voice raw.with tragic.
the Ridge. She thought S12 pain, "my wire’s iness is—chiefly “i knoy you wouldn’t. Forgive
had never seen the pines look mental." me. rm "lumsy and stupid out
X) beautiful. He set his teth hard when he not intentionally or wilfully so.
Forgive me—for everything?”
TO DO MY e
Prjy 1
I
[: :
t,
l,
E—ec
.cs
-..e
W : (1
B\
A3
Ta "
de-ee .5’
(9 tte
I II WAMKED with her to the
I1 barbed wire fence, when she
saw that she must go because the
I she UIM ner nand to WC . gau uttle gesture, as she ientnanapgnaingi;,
saw him still standing there. . lower strand of barbed wire so
' He asked for permission to flfl had spoken the last two words, and shegcould era l under U without
■ " MergauntoecuPiatnimepmzered; "iSXXS'i— be.
lightly. “A a habit I’ve avoided IPocencedrae sne ' laughing across the four strands
i —I don’t think I’d care much for Tom’s face w white and rigid of barbed wire at him. "But I m
IL and it is expensive.’ now, but his eyes were alive with like the man who was going to
Obviously Tom understood the pain. fix the leak in his roof. only he
logic of that, and for a moment P “No," he said huskily "I mean couldn’t work while it was rain-
they were both silent. until he got that my wire is—mentally ill—that ing; and when it wasn't raining
f his pipe going well, she has the mind of a young child the roof didn't need mending. I
Megan said, after a moment —that she is not—not normal!" somehow never get around to it!
when the silence threatened to it was obvious that he had tried 8h« whistled. The two dogs
become awkward,"ow is Mrs. to say “insane" and had not been came bounding to her, and the
Fallon? Does the climate seem to able to get the word past his stiff four cats stepped daintily out of
agree with her, as you'd hoped?” Upa. a great thicket of honeysuckle
Tom's brown hand tightened . vines that sprawled at the corner 4
about the bowl of his pipe until NEOAN wag conscious of a mo- of the fence. And as she walked
20 knuckles stood up in little IVI merit of stunned, shocked back down the meadow path to
white mounds He tore his eyes norror. This man—chained to an the brook, she looked over her '
from the landscape and gave her insane wife! This man, whom shoulder, and lifted her hand to
a look that was hard and cold and everybody liked, with his fine mind him in a gay little gesture. as she
bitter so much so that she was and his keen sense of responsibil- saw him still standing there He 1
startled by the sudden, inexplic- Ity. and a woman who had the lirted his hat to her and bowed
able hostility mind of a young chndt in a gay burlesque of a sweeping |
“Mrs Fallon is__doing as well “Ohl" was all she could say, her old-world gesture, and she went
as could be expected, under the tone shocked and rich with sym- on, her heart a little lighter for I
dircumstanceshe told her. His pathy and touched with keen em- him. she was terribly sorry for . I
voice was harsh, and the very barrassment that she must witness him • but she admired the gallan-
sound of the words told her that his moment of naked, burning rev- try with which he carried hie bur-
he had repeated these words unts elation. "I'm- terribly sorry-" dens And. looking across the flelds
thev had ceased to have any mean- Tom brushed aside the choked, toward the drab little fve-room
ing vet he had never ceased to inadequate words and said with a frame house that was the West-
resent the necessity for them, sort of forced quiet. "So you see brook place and that now held
"Im sorry if I seemed—inqulst- why it has been necessary for us this pathetic woman, his wife, she ,
tive or rude," Megan told him to — deny the well intenttoned felt the tears in her eyes. Poor F
frankly her face hot with colo, callers—" man! and — poor woman! She E
her head up. "I had no such in- "Of course," Megan told him shivered a little and hurried as
tention. You have made no secret unsteadily, sick with pity for him. she went, as though to run away -
of the fact that your wife is an "She is—entirely harmless, he from thoughts that bit too deeply. ?
invalid. Naturally, in a small town told her. and his face was--
like this, people are interested and wrenched with the pain and the (To be continued)
anxious to be of service. If they enamghroinb“wornsE-ShePutqever {The characters in this serial are
“Thp nnlv servtcg anyone can do left for a moment alone and she 6 OUS.
my wife or myself—te to leave never leaves her bed. But if people (Coprrig"t 1044 Areadin Mouce Ie —
-a-
>
/ G4s f
Mrs. Rebecca Root, daughter of
momf= m.eags: I
STILL THE CHAMPION
Invariak it has happened in th* past, when the new
weapons have made their appearance in naval warfare,
that there have been some to insist that the death knell
of the battleship had been sounded. So it was inevitable
that the atomic bomb would lead ta similar predictions.
Arid it may be true that this most terrifying weapon in
hietory will relegate the old battlewagon to the seraphend.
Qre mirht be inclined to accept such predietions as truth
• ,• many similar forecasts in the past had not been prov-
wholly in error.
Pisces (Feb. 20-M>r. 21 —
types of technical work and
I/BE ST TO STAY "
Ek AWAY, MAM—
> BUT IT . J
।
P
38
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER
ODORLESS DRY CLEANING
.1
ably received.
be put to good use, too Work Aries ‘Mar 22-Apr. 20)—All
hard mining or mechanics would be
’Ibra (Sept. 23-Oet . 23 • —Money | likely to liave a confidential angli
matters are looking up today! This to their development today, so
facts today, you will have better : ADT n.. 1am
"cutsee (June 23-July 2- •L Vue
Creative work shouild go well for, | "
vou today The afTairs relating to Llqulaton
money and to children should alsoi »
afternoon you cquld, afford to re-
lax a little. Do seme studying,
perhaps.
Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)—This
is a fine morning for you to start
working on something really zood.
Don’t waste your time on un-
imp artant matters.
Sagittarius (Nov 23-Dec. 22)—I
i io w i HAMBiN5 ‛
All
Born today, you have one of those
sparkling minds which is often
the envy and at the same time the
despair of all others! interested
----------------x — — ’ tn a variety of sutlects, you ■ cem
The more we hear of Jap treatment of American prisor- tneberemeorrondenvorn Yuareaa
ers, the leos we want to hear of talk giving the Japs a plaee jack of all trades but unlike the
the worla They brim in what ~~
refer to as the hereafter and what Texans call plain hell, vsual and should bring you con-
siderable rewards -duting your
uretime. You are practical and
*
1
1 , /3za (qe Glanet
(ollnwAiMEEEI-E”
mIa PHONE888
iter on.
Aquarius (Jan. 21-Feb.
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW. ;
t ;« suuth khiglin street Cleburne, Texas Phones 133 and.134
- Afternoon Daily (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morniag
WM. RAWLAND. Publisher
ciit. red as second class mail matter at the post office at Cleburne, Texas,
under the Aet et Congreee, March 3, in«.______
SUBSCHIPIION RATES I
By mail in state: One year $6 00; 6 months $3.50: 3 months 22.00.
By mail out of state: One year $7.00; 6 months $4.00; 1 months $2.25.
bi carrier in city: 20c per month; 1 yezt 98.40.
ay mall inJhnson and adjacent counUes; One year $4.00 6 months
$2 50, 3 months $1.85.
UXITED PRESS cum LEASED WIan — UNITED FEATURES
The United Press is exclusively entitied to the use for 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 of special dispatches herein are,alo reserved.
- Nonca TO PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or r sputa
tion at any person, or firm ar corporation which may appear in the
colunus oi tfas paper will be gladly corrected upon due notice of same
veing given to the publishers.
L -*-4 - -
, a * r‛
4-
a.
There is a universal rule. “What-
soever a man soweth, that shall
he also reap.”
Apply this law to nature and
th? man who wishes a wheat har- 1
vest will sow Wheat, and he who
wishes a corn harvest will sow j
com
Apply this same principle to the
spiritual realm and tf you want to I
make a Christian, you will sow
the gospel for the gospel makes
Christians And the gospel only
makes Christians only.
Just as wheat will produce noth-
ing but wheat, and com will pro-
duce nothing but corn, so the gos-
pel will produce nothing but
Christians. There isn't any special
btand to the Christians either. It
takes a special kind of seed to
\produce any special kind of "Christ-
ian.” And any special’kind of gos-
pel is not the Gospel of Jesus
And Paul says that if any man
or angel pteaches any other gospel
than that which he preached, let
him be accursed
if we sow a twisted gospel we
will grow converts with peculiar
views That’s why the apostle said
that people wrest the scriptures
to their own destruction.
A pure gospel is what Jesus gave
to the world. That is the gospel
which Paul preached. J That afqne
is the gospel that will make men
Christians only.
t
MADE ME FEEL •/
LIKE I WAS WALKIN }
. ON AIR / v«{—
7 A
,”23
By Charles Plumb and Fred Fox
TRIED MY 44
" 6 '
CAN'T GIT LOOSE .
TO KEEP MY m
OVE WITH “
LORNA CABALL! }
By Ernie Bushmiller
O
Fou example, there were thomewhe saie that the-suh-
m- rine meant the end of the battleship. There were those
— r osid that a few small and inexpensive boats with ter-
id es ended the era of the mighty battlevagron. The
t olution of the airplane, the airplane carrier and the battle-
er rser brought similar predictions. All of these have prov-
ed tremendorsly powerful weapons ‘which are indispensable
in m dem wnr. Rut none has succeeded in displacing, or
•f % slv cha!lenging, the battleship as the heavyweiglit
ch empion of the fleet. No weapon of war ever has been
Me igned which can give or take as much as the battle-
vragon.
Certainly it may he that the atomic bomb can hit too
hard, ever for a battleship. On the other hand, it is a fact
thet man never has been able to-design a weapon for which
m n have not been able to create a defense. That may
er may net happen in connection with the atomic bomb.
some
profession where you are sur-
surrounded by people: Teaching can handle ordinary.
as a reeident professor in some a nermal anticipation
, - □
» 49
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER U, 1945
— ---- MB
here knew about her—mental con- 2
dition — well, undoubtedly tnej
would—well, feel that she should |
-ba- tocked away! Put in ____________fl
tutlon— ” The pain ef the houuht
silenced his words for a moment,
and after ne had got himse.
Asg
,5,
Synaicate, Ine.
MernifBiTTiit"MMFMWEMRAE
TEN FROM mE GROUP OF pRrast AN mH
POSING FIGURE STEPPED FOKTW.INUSTPNTY
TH COWD SURGED FORWARD AND THE
JUNGLE LORD FUN HIMSELF HEMMSD IH.
Megan melted beneath the look
•4 in his eyes, and put her hand in
G his and let him draw her back to
K the flat stone, where she sat down
{% once more. And as though the
lit 1 revelation of his tragic secret had
V cleared the air between them as
LB though they were friends now.
Mg , they spoke of other things. •
Ha mind was keen and alert;
Megan read a great deal and usec
her mind to think with, and it was
for both of them a pleasant ex-
perience to be able to talk of
things that had nothing to do with
Pleasant Grove Megan Hiked her
friends and her neighbors but
there were many tunes when she
hungeree for impersonal talk of
matters far afield from Pleasant
Grove, and she enjoyed this con-
tact with a stimulating mind.
: 293 ,
‘4 )
f
I ft
BUT AS TAI?ZAN CM2WEP 1
HER TOWARD THEM THE )
MEN DREW SACK IN >—
K QBVIUS FEAR, pe J
Haqaugd-
WAR’S OVER
-)
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 246, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 11, 1945, newspaper, September 11, 1945; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1558221/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.