Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 93, Ed. 1 Monday, February 26, 1951 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.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:
r
, ly
/.
o!
4
r
N
Y
orial Comment
H
am mm LMarrut.
1
wew.
(
1
\
♦
«8
Joy
3,
r
A
—_zuG.4
T
4
Hopkins Cleaners
4—-
4’.
37
I
Wt
h_
22
1 F
3
a)
Jvt
Where Prices Are Made Not Mef
8
5
©
L
P---I
7
6
It
-
J
9
Y
M
Tis The Taste That Tells the Tale" — The Ace
(
-V
I
I
‘2
uin
I
fi
lil:
2ete
fl
।
I !!
‘4
»-24
X
204 n. o
Dairy Queen Now Opertll A .M. to 11 P. M.
pj
ll
7FmusrG8
(mi
APAINTING/•
O
ries from ihe top . . . Two-
N
intry have been in
this
1
G
I
V
' po
y
.-5
O
Q
o
i)
• .
On hia thirtieth birthday, Mr.
o
ICY
Snow White Laundry
I n
. ri, J
^THOUGHT I WAS DEAD.EH'?^'
‘wtAveNORsEsYVES,TONTo.
SEE IF HE'S STL ALNE,
8
11
:II
1
)
2%
N
t
93
N
g=
Joan, stiu Im her topcoat mgist with rain, looked dame at the
skelch. "HY stunning," she said.
8
I
We Service All Makes Cars And Trucks—Coleman Motor Co.
harem
MANP L«E HM/
I
2
EMda
n
$
BY,HAL'COCHRAN,
to shake him down. -
it It has a lovely sordidness to it.
I
F
J-
VIC FLINT
-'Aa
For Goodness Sake-Miles Closer-Hours Fresher eCBugpSMdae
-------------—
I'
!
I
He was
He would forrge
MARKET 9 TUE WK
1
give us tor it I had just got there
the
the
W4
J
HAZARD
i
i /
A
I
dr
6
T • -
i
6
W H
CEANWIIE TIE RLOWER VeIDOR. AFTER BREA
NG Aww FROM TIE •PECTG. wew uG wav
neoug me cacuat to a CEETAN mouse nTE
from Lexinuton to Fifth, as he
peddlod ills aketches from shop to
out” flo
selection
Give th
the gift
Her a
• 0
o -
her. *You are
sacrilegious."
-pre
• 26
1
o0e
o o
l
g
when
Mr.
every
how ol
or spiri
smile v
On
open I
0
T
o
o
O
Phone. 104.
' 208 E. Henderson
=d
CUER
Prmhe■■ess
fzoky re
$850-a-n
today al
ned to q
The h
million*
spokesm
she arriv
better"
Smile!
-poor d
Tn
2
O
«
N
' 5
A •
we do
j,
Ir5 cur
irir
DCAL
muse •
A& a
was
YowzA4--
THS 6
YOUROD
FRIENID,
HOTLCKS
LAARY--
woman says
a, she’s talk-
TETLLDE
JI FE,
y-
k
.'il
The
On Pur
7
C
4
I
3
D
7
N
1
NEAR CAVE.
ENTRANCE?
SOME 1WH« VVOHTO. lu.FOLLOW,
ABOUT K1TOSE OTER MEN !
LONG-JAN?Nu-raFrA
' ,0
I
T
R
GADrDEATIOraf •
WE MAT BE ""
DON' A MILLION
, MILES PERMOUR.
L WOW/ .
o
O o
o J
c ’
FAT
•1
3
A
2
1
"5
__xTn« DUNGEON
WPMgTLoM-aooow,
Xe.
r2za ““
8,-1 .. A ,
v‛:2*3* *,%. •
which
ned al
It
time. I
one el
MDN / /8 aur MELP I
•• / Risscv Eu I,
Dairy Queen
WOW - - WHAT A DAY TO
GO IN SWiMMING r----
AFTER THE CRAG OF the ar
nocuey, oop LOADED his
M8°*g828es
OFF OUT iNTOcE,
■SI
c,M
uu-UM,UTTLE UDWnuT
ws just to oo« vougmoUT
tehwwlv. Evovu,ni
bun IN vou* am wu oom n .
hvucr wrsote?^ .
• 23
Cauc^) TuEM PaO CHAMPS N
MAV DON* GONS PLUMB HAWG-
WILD MERE IN TH’ SO TH A
. uAWTUHT...NOw 1
uuwr THEYRE AHAID.
70 *°S77
y
A
C v
o Q
. "Just selfish, my love" Jean
shrugged. We haven't been dinine
any too well lately.**
-- (TonCentinued)
1
R
-3
$
*
8
TEAN, still in her top coat moist
• with rain, looked down at the
sketch, *Tt*« stunning.," she said.
"I‛s genius, sweet!" He held up
the water color sketch of an eve-
ning sown. "The paper la crude
but the drawing is professlonal.
took at that une there. No master
ever drew a more lucid or lovelier
one.4
"It’s beatite, there** no doubt
about that." She took the sketch
from him, studied it "Pertect tor
me. I wonder what Cochet would
o «
05
o,"
---BRINIGUIG-
•OU a few
CRUMe$ FROM
THe CJC COOHM
JAR —
gnonem.vort
or firm, m
2 to ihe e
Neny eorre
i hetnu «ivem
uveu •
M Unua Fl
to -he tet n
MM eredited
Ited In thia
‘A, SWEET ANSELIGU=4 /
WHAT A PRETTY LIL KNFEL.
\cu ARE/ /HACNTH SOEE ■
L-o-Q±IVOU/ » —a-*
/ 1m TMaoudH veto .
1 ANT MAMNA!
)
e
MponVe mhr-
“XttSSX
“ win
.M2. neltee t
PT
(coav) UN- -GUfBt
AN bde As}..
BUT wyr AM AM <
biN’iT’CITf... .
ment-nationalizes
inti takes over the indne-
•tvah enuttee
I all new t |
nek ethsrena
",2
at Hmm di.
WISHING WELL^|
--- PakniBiLe ™ 1
-e proposition.
Id her to just act natural. I Straightway, Mr. Panciera, using
acreamed, _ ‘ ------.X 'hl« inheeitance and what he could
8"
AETER ALL,
THE ONLY
T4N6S IN
life THAT
count ARe
He
€sT1851ISar
feed the r
SOULE
/
M46lesa
now and then he would manage
a photographie study for a fashion
magazine.
But he taneled himself mainly
an artist in dress dwaiun. His thin,
black moustache and his. cane .
and gloves were long a familiar
sight in the East For ties and Mirties
Count the letters in your Aral name If the number of letters is e or
more, subtraci 4 11 the number is less tbep6 add X The result is
your key number Start at the upper left Land romer of the rec-
• tangle and check ever) one of your key numbers left to right Thee
read the message the letters undes the checked figures give you
Cowvrighi IHI t, winam i Miter Diiributed Kiss Vesture. Ie» >3:
AN AJR- MAKING )
GADGET HERE J
SOME WHS RE. A
2
-____________________ stared. Rut he did not stare long
An interior decorator? That was Almost Immediately he was at the
a thought. Yea, he had a talent tor I telephone t - .
that, more, perhaps, than tor dress
designing. He had several friends
who were doing well at decorating.
They seemed to be happy. Yes. It
was an. idea. He would look into
it in the morning. The revolver,
1 ---gmh
{nuscameT .
‘3 -
cea.v
intrigi and inlHltrate from UR PAUL PANCIERA was not
the botton and the Socialist I -V. of the conyentional mold,
gov C i ii m ent-nationalizes either. He had been a dabbler in
the indus-
Fwn *iHe rhythmic prose pieces for the
WBsAuEBGARVE AD VC AEB KEELEASEV _
Esmfimef
‛Mowna#5SE
pearl-handled or not, was messy
I no matter how you.looked at it.
ot course. Interior decorating.
...an FRUM myrttr 1
THAT CROWD! A-
TILLIN' SOMEWMARS
, NSAR NBA*. YUH D
tmink us hotshots
, wu---
Jacv-tatS*ugpc«ma Panciera had told her, "And I like
«* orades top men’a, Mavbe
MHAM RAWLAND, rubsisher
YTON LAWAON, Muninens Manawer.
9 rocrON, Mi Ur
24 untmtw. AdverLtnine Manauer
RNI JONIC&, Cireultlon Manacer.
svnacurnoN
arrier in <nsi Str week. By mal m
son and nasqonit ountlen 64 15 pr
S monthn UM. * month' SS SO By
A State " m wer vear. Hr mall Mil
IM* 4000 er veh.
EMan..zevond rias* mall matter at
at Citeurne, TegAn, under
gjto U Ihn^taaa. March a, in*
deeresentative, rEKa panas
e"e ""a FaibnxoaFoxaachrcaea
l
t
• 1
*, I
Snow White Washed ’
-Work ir Keeping with th* Nome” - Clothes Last Longer
as , , ,, ..11 art Journals, pieces darkly colored
hirds of the disputes ill the by hl* Eatin temperament, and
in short, ihe railronds cannot pay today’s and Lon
orrow’s costs with yesterday’s income and Ml the same
ine improve and expand their facilitjes to the extent
e present emergency makes necessary. Railroads UMI- । (
ir same kind at dollars us the resi of us. Past rale in- J
•-1--X ■ ■F-Vf"
o * KE
W
A t
aSam N»*a________ ,
Fel vnetre ta a 0*e •* L.
as* B medeT Ser wchet sad iSr.
panwtpyn Keveneem is* ene *• as*
beviv lw«n Taae n 50;
ae«eea and a invu rt*l>lrn*,
apralal “ebvz‛ :""ove vvivenr
da
5
o disputes are ten times
$ numerous in the Socialit
etor of our life ns they are
I the wide area of free en-
rprise|
| Winston Churchill shop.
F B, COCHRAN, a»*“mc Not now in her beautiful l survevea it 1 w.e. awn.,
Afy,d‛wu*ays *b hsbana vouthSheawanted luxurs bu aheat "
* the f salt i et r tte > earth—and wantod liberty. (furnished it himaeit. He would, _____._____-___
De...... ‘Opulence with independence, miss it. Perhaps he shoula have | He glanced casually at it, then
that s you slogan, my sweet," Mr boen an interior decorator. I stared. Rut he did nor stare long
sleopkig pills. Much easier, but! opened the envelope. A note fell
- ... . . 180 common. Heitor the revolver, I out. It was a single line sat
She could have married money | eapeclally sinee it had such a sketch was enclosed and, if
on manziocoaslonasHut marrin4e I pretty handle. considered worth anything, to send
had obltgatioM she did not wish to | He turned back into the room, any payment seen tit to General
but Delivery, Cedarbrook. It wg*
had atoned by the single name, Teresa.
Mr. Pandora took out the sketch
.r*«w srom
ata ht Now -
o o o c
Jean. After aU, she did not love
him. Jean loved only herself, only
herself from the tips of her beau-
titully pedicured toes to the top of
her silvered gold hood.
But why be angry at Jean?
When you came down to it, whom
did HE love? Nobody. Nobody
except himself. Nobody. He
laughed quietly it was quite a
love affair, he and himaeit.
He saw the large Manila enve-
tope on the table. It was coarse.
aat ionalized aren of one-
ifth of Ha total labor force.
EsudAWrgsok MG6t LOO* SQff AMAN?
okg"wONE)y MASLKEHAM/ ya
HAND ANsTa0eD { BUT an c--«
MM WITH ne onk/wAT, 52286N4
h -K-eLP--f 2"
-V‛ MUSr BE
SOM KIWO
SAM MIND QF DOLLARS / ____ _
kt January 16 the nation’s railroads petitioned the
tate Commerce "Commission for a freight rate W
2 on an interim basis, with the proviso that they
L honor claims for refunds as to any increase hot
Y approved by the Commission. Thi second action
lade for the reason that greatly increased operating
make it necessary in the public interest that the
lie auhorized to inerease their rates and charges
The Gold Mamiec
e n J
>OMV । "Jesn Faul," sea- mlam-ALK-17
. . ww. ,„WM •uumumommn
. > .............. mae
............. ■ • • m • 2 '
hevitance from an aunt and a few
days afterwards he met Jean Ro-
land. He had known her fame, of
course, and hud seen her picture
countess time* but it was nut until
that winter'* day when she was
modeling - a design for Monsieur
Cochet (whose glory she was) that
he met her face to face.
Straightway, the wily Mr. Pan-
dora saw a future, a radiant fu-
ture. He saw a business of his
own, a shop in which he would
design exclusively for Jean Roland
and she would model exclusively
(or him.
This was a very large order of
dream, but Mr. Panciera was a
born entrepreneur and a man of
more than ordinary persuasive-
ness when it came to women, and I
mu "i nonupauor *n<i un%; I Panciera came into a small in.
WM"Momnine at IM Nouth Austin
gr Clal.IIraw Txan rhone IM 1st
9000, -
jg
6nl
y
e-T t LAM V
HAROLY (WHEEZE) P
, BKEATHE ... <
soaes.to.men ta Ma a! ■ beautiful selfishness. With your
ju»t mate sourtex.t-vethe. egotism and mind we cannot fail."
men be fret... ahun . ze) Mr. Pandora knew his women.
..-a°A°2Bem6- and he knew Jean. He asked her
holdup.man pointed a gun at to be his partner, not his wife. He
Mie cashie to g Missouri town promised her wealth and luxury
Ai2xMCc. m and complete independence. She
I Mt. e) Iltall EMM liked the picture Ite presented
1*9AkK“M She saw in him, the sophisticat.
o
o o °
• o o
f , ■
<DO/T YOU HAVE
A bArE Tus _
EveNG. SALLY T
LTERE i» s pleasant little gam* that will give you * message every
JI JL day I? is e numerical puzale designed to speil out your fortune
0Qatf YOU M
22q-go
suE )
. “ ‛e1 1
p,lpN
445
10. A
N-K“
,*X"
LONE RANGER L i
it was not very long after this first
meeting at Cochet'* that the lovely ■
model and Mr. Panciera were on the fourth floor. Jean Paul was | common it disturbed the decor
being seen everywhere together. 1 going and Jean, too. He atopped He took it up to throw it into the
. * * lut the window, looked out at the waste basket. The name and ad-
JEAN waa, however, a realistic I chill, drinaly day. Perhaps he dress were amusing. "Terato .Gen-
2 young lady. Her dellgate young I should go, also The small pearl-l oral Delivery. Cedarbrook." Pro-
1 Iocn..was Mhe maak ot. a coldly handled revolver would sena him|bably an order for a night gown.
umbitiou* and entevprisin spirit. I guicki on his way. Me always I Or a Sunday dress. Or, possibly, -
She wanted money, and iorelkept it loaded. That wopld be I lingerie. Could it ever be lingerie?
« . Y..But she wanted more than | messy, of courae. There were I His curiosity prompted him. He
that. She wanted complete indo-1 --- — -- ■ - 1 ■ .....
pendeuce.
creases have not compensated tor the rines in operating
over which they have no control No enterprise can
do its job with maximum effitiency without n reasonable
profit—and investors will not place their money in an
enterprise when the outloqk lor profit is blenk. Tin- rail
Eroads auk- for•moderately . higher frcizht rates- hpca4#e-
Ethore.is no other i.solution to their problem.
IRETAILERS LOOK AHEAD
What in the outlook for the retailer for the near fu-
iture?
Four hundred retailers, including both chains and in-
dependents, were recently siirveyed ax to* this question.
EAnd their answers are of wide general interest.
First of all, most storekeepers expect an increase in
their dollar volume. But, at the same lime, they foresee
Eslimmer profits.
The reason for that lx a heavy incrense in retailing
I cost s. Of the reporting refnilers, 61 ner cent anticipated
I higher advertising costs, 70 per cent higher selling costs,
| and G7 per cent higher payroll costs The two relull prob-
lems most frequently and heavily emphasized were per-
sonnel and prices. And, according to a press account, "run-
I ning as a common pattern through the comments was
Ian Awareness at customer nroblems—the scarcity of
I wanted merchandise at the time wanted—and a. feeling
of uncertainty concerning the future.” ' \
The retailer, in other words, bears the brunt of In-
fintion. iust as all the rest of us do. Rising prices hurt
him, just ax they hurt the consumer. More and more doj.
liars may roll In—but more, .
Land more dollars must roll ’ f—.....
NOT ON* MAN M a THQUtoNP) SL
BUM HAI*** LIE THA we KANCto pufy ,n-iGM$£LL tel
oirt too, and the profi de-
elines,-
I The retailer for reasons
। of selt-iinterest alone — is
solidly on the eonsumer’s
aide when it comes to In-
flation.
"Nationalization . of in-
dustrv is the „-om of trade
anionsm. The tvadejunionN
are being attacked from
| both sides. The ommunists ’
$lLeX
8,-
—- -——.‛*t
For Better Cleaning
is soon as possible.
The railroads’ case is compelling both fqr ao interim
md n permanent rate increase. Between July 1949, when
tic last general increase was granted,' and January 1 of
his year, the annual cost of ful, material and supplies
ncreased by about $283,300,000, In addition to this, rail-
ondzwagesrwi inerease by at least $138,535,000 a year
Based on the settlements already reached with yardmas-
ers, switchmen and other operating employes. Further,
he Hues are coufronted with other demands for wage
nereases by substantially all other classes of their cm-
ioyes. As the railroads are a regulated industry, the gen-
ral price-wnge frecze does not apply to them or in their
vorkers.
• 3 5
LEa
T7 r
you phond."
Paniera, aghast, turned to
nothing less than
the charming man of the world.
the man she felt necessary tor her
* immediate future. She accepted hie
• •
A W
p
*e. ea*k — borrow in addition, leased a tour
try of she menfolk who story building on Fifty-sixth
w —Ied permanent- Street, and presently "ean Paul*'
______ ‘ Appeared in golden lettering across
2 a _____ the front. The beatiful dream had
.---- —1 become an imposing reality.
— 9 NOW, six month* later, Mr. Pan-
ciera paced the living room
1.23
S7g0Vmam7
11^ r. M WOMOUN NOW .
V A Ps ecN 4
/I NYe5B MAKIN-OUT
‘ * wiiE.
-- \ im
J... ii.. N Lad
7 4
A 0
1--3
a n
1—2
T a
• 2
Er V
3 4
R T
2---1
U N
1--4
A Q
3—r
b
' " p •
Pine Board Drug
I —----
“BARBS,
emem
me ’ w* •
W-h i VI l l
V T- I- 5 I I S t
U 1ARLSRD
$8-’
K F H
yrag
COY
l...... I F
3—6sz
4 f ji
Y K > K
3•,
•e i
652
|u o o
25a)
Inn
• HE LAC OUT ITS VENIJSIAia
CREW ANO JICCLFD GADGETS
ALLEY OOp-mEaeTauon
( 32
. (—7
eke P
da
oQ-OH!
THAT
ROMANTIC /
. voce! A
. —0.‛1
44
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. 46, No. 93, Ed. 1 Monday, February 26, 1951, newspaper, February 26, 1951; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1563247/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.