Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, December 29, 1950 Page: 2 of 6
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work «4> much nympathy fof the
pat who teritra fmwi fltf'
Ha that he « har iup rnbte vofi*
his golr wwtup
har
They celebrated nt the depot the other
ilny because old No. 6 came in on time.
Then they discovered the arain was a day
lit te.
death.
friends ,
VELCOME,
TIRICE
weLcowe!
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T-ig CEara or FLNrG • HOTTEKN A
TWO-DOLLAK MSTOL. AEOMNOWON
IM WALKIN AN KBLPN ORE EOADS/w
ITS AM oAcHEsTA ...
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•"THE brother, who only recently
' had returned from a long
and honorable career in the Navy,
went to the courts and asked for
tn
HIS NEW WAIES
Eve RARTY---WiOUT
WOWNO WHAT THT .
SAL CM 00 o A BuoGer!
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Count Um letter la vour frst name fl the number of letters is 9 or
more, subtrect4. I the number la leu than «. add 3. The mult is
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your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the re:-
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the message the letters under the checked Arures give ye"
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By exchanging the "e" far an
“F" Christmes bells become Christ
moi bill-wit a lithe help, how.
ever, from "owe •
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yrs - yas - you SAy
YOU HAVE E-NAbab A
NAME BAN ec
WHAT. MAY I ASK. IS
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AND THAT PECK .THE JEWELER,IS y
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YOU'RE TELLING ME!
------- —BvWIAMRITT ______________
Crniral Writrt
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BRIGA GRE AT
FRIEND wu0
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This Last Night
hu Ferd Nauheim
COPYRIGHT 1951. BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
Then there was the fellow who spent
nil his money lo rid himself of halitosis,
only to find out that his friends didn’t
like him anyway.
<$o voureYthats right, A
(ALIVE/H JAKE' rMAUVE.l
F — AND VOUVE ]
/ A PROVED YOURSEUF
/AA CLAM
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CAREFUL A
I Ly ERE It a pleasant little game that will give you a mennage every
Il day, Il la a numerical puzzle designed to spell put your fortune
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propriated the wife of the soldiercommentator had said had tol-
was a per on ot wealth and it* lowed her own sympathy and
dal reasoning without deviation. His
compelling words had moved her
and she was aware that her eyes
g. - 2
gradqu
ONE SToK ■
OF RUMLr '
GUM. ANO
HAND IT To <
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The dout
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hiriv . i
Mr and
ittnded ।
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tilt. NTOH!* May. m walsresm Mi
f*ete‘a •••«• •« m Wess virwimin t
vomi amlalag lewm, wuiehes a ।
strawgyr whe nlene Im a bneth. I
lie B dveuned lib* • minew Reel
Krr. • eomsethina dhess blM ibMl
xnsk"zmez*h"nsa
Leela and Daitaa
” Norwa en pvmj<
As* erremegoa retieotton upon the enar-
:snipndnzm;
enpear I the ef Ibu user wit
W etedy eorreten sees the notiee u
name Mina wtven re the puiaher.
said, ‘No. The child stays with
her mother
"You know the rest of the story.
You know that on Monday after-
noon of this week when little Judy
Twing skipped down the steps of
her school she found her uncle.
Paul Twing, waiting for her. He
was waiting in his cur. They went
for a ride-- a long, long ride. Four
days have passed and no one has
seen them since.
"This, then, is kidnaping. Kid-
naping is a crime punishable by
* 'J"1 v ■
he has done something that calls
for the supreme penalty? Do you
think that if the soldier had been
your brother, that lovable little
girl your niece, that you might
have done what Paul Twing did?
It is a strange case and these re
strange and sad < ircumstancea
when n man must take such meqs-
ures to do the thing he knows to
be right." ...
THE voice from the little box
I over the- bar carried on with
some news from the Far East.
May let her shoulders sag. She
had been listening with tight at-
tention.
The case had held her interest
THANKS FOR TELLIN’ US YO0 1
KNOW1 WELL MAKE SURE YOU
DONT GET BACK TOSPREAP ,
M—THE
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IT AI MT VAN TUtSHERel
A BOY AT ALL' ITS V ISTWE,
T MARSHALS J ( MARSHAL' )
DAUGHTERIM
( HOPE THE )
[ aors REEL ,
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Daughier '• growing up when
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IN CANADA an automobile
hopped a ditch xml jumped a
fence, only slightly injuring driver
and pasnenger Grandpappy Jen-
kina, who rememhers Ma carsot |
yesteryear, wonders If it could
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- (PooR LNERMORES MEAH.HE Pur
IRALLY WORRIED/ SALLY INCHARGE
< • Or PLANNINS
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wACMp maturda» ena omMiw
We Mornine at t N Mouin AnFi
"rf.Sleburne, Ter-, Phone 153, IN
wa 2000
Jack-
• *** weuceckesyt
( Ai
lol of /ftlk” nr- dolue tin ir (’hrUt-
can-pman airappiun fOrly.
1w you would have reacted?
Some would ■•trike out with then
tists- Some would kill. Some
would dink away in abject de-
spair. This lad swallowed his
bleeding pride. Through the day
he pleaded with hl* wife to give
their marriage the chance it de-
-creed With what an anguish of
love mid despair he must have
held that little eight-year-old girl
of his. And then, in the evening,
he ran out into the streets to be
alone with hi* awful torment.
"Late at night he showed up at
his brother’s apartment. He had
been • drinking heavily but hi*
mind was cok and clear. There
he sat with his head in his trem-
bling hands and sobbed out his
pitiful tale. Ho told his brother
too of hisgconcern for his little
girl From her tips he had learned
at the long hours she had spent
alone and unprotected while the
mother was out with the man who
had alienated her from the clean
and decent love of the absent hus-
bund; nt wretehed mornings when
the mother slept nwny her dissi-
nation and awoke cross, angry,
and cruel.
"Later that night he did what
the Germans had failed to do. He
destroyed what was left of his life.
had filled, that tears were run- |
ning down her cheeks. She dabbed
at them with her apron.
The man had settled back in the
booth and was staring nt her. His
voice was very low. "Are you so
sorry for the mothser?"
For the mother-’'* she repeated
incredulously.
• Sure. She must be worried Sick
about the kid." 100228-48
She made no effort tozfep the ( 1
contempt she felt out of he voice. I
"You're probably trying to be
funny,” she said acidly, ' well. It
isn’t funny. I think it'* terrible."
■ | E just sat therFand toyed with
11 his beer glass. She wondered 1
what he was really thinking. She
wondered what would happen it
Paul Twins were captured. . "
Do you think they’ll renily kill
him if he’s caught''*’ she asked. I
Thats the law," he said: softiy
He was still rolling the glass back
and forth between stif fngetsbut
his eyes were on her faceehzksci
”I hope to God they neve find 5
them!" May exclaimed. 5p53 J
"With live thousand reward 922
fered by the mother’s boy friend? I
he reminded. . . 2^ 1
She waved the suggestion away: |
“Who would take such money?"
(To Be Continued'
Sowie hee fir nlhr
Editorial Comment
TRE MEN WBT FORGET DREAM
EV IL the councils of the United Nations
V w newspapers and over the radio ta
E sHons of ‘fre meepleg in mnny Asiatic and
E European lands, on the h1 reels and in the
E Ehops and factories of their citiex, you
F hear the refrain:
E "If the United States and Russia want
Ewar let them fight. But let tx stay out of
' it. —et ng be neutral ’
K' No one can attempt to sav accurntely
hbw widespread these sentiments MU
Happily they are not general. But they
must be viewed with sadness by nil who
appreciate how vital it is that free meu
everywhere stand together lo resist the
evil ourse of totalitarian communism.
, We know these attitudes spring more
from emotion than from reason. The emo-
lion la fear, buttressed by a sense of frus-
tration and defeat.
• . But In all attitudes rooted in emotion,
men seek to find reasons to justify them-
selves. If these peoples are ever to muster
fresh ccurage to ace the reality of their
present peril, they must lie deprived of
the comfort they are gaining from falsc
roasoning about Soviet-American rela-
tions.
They profess to see this as a straight-
out U. S.-Russian struggle. Actually it In-
vol von every corner of the globe. No patch
of earth la likely to be unaffected by the
final outcome.
. The one great reason why the focus is
on Russia and this country in that they
represent the two noles of supreme
gtrepgth in the world. We may thank Hit-
ler for that. He NO devastated Furone thnt
thg belancing power of once-great France
ad Britain was taken out of the world
sealen -e-
When the last battle was fought, only
we and the Russians walked awny from,
the field strong. What if the fates of war
had decreed it should be BRITAIN and
Russia? (’an we doubt that all of Russia’s I
venom and energy would todav be pour-
ing into a contest with the British?
The vacuum crented by Hitler’s de-
struction gave Russia its golden opportun-
ity. It saw easy conqueatN looming up on
(t
% eamnie tn din week Ny mell i,
ana ed/qeens pounste. MM M
. monthe ••• • monisa n,
"eu. tn ntete W so per renr •’ mal ow
>t *•(• MM per ear.
ntered.mn..rnona elnsa man matter »•
the *o.i ettiea ki citumne, tmu unde,
am of domered,Mareh i, un
r
A a
J
7 HATE \
TO BE
ALONE /
VNITEN *■«>■ (0p LANED
wis mvio
The Unitea Him to exolutvet, enenwa
U •( Mil M«« 00
patohen ereditea ‘bare
- areatted in mu paper, ana (Im um 10001
, "ewa pebitahen therein. All Mehtn to to.
vubitenton nt brondenat at lenled die.
mtehe• herein are nine renervea
trI —\ TODAV
& he
WITH TRF KING OF
raoptes f FT VtHE2UELA ’
A‘k HE 15
AT eAT!
r pen. ■
u
ll
‘FHE listeners in the bat room
• waited (or the radio commen-
sator to an on mth his story.
Finally, his voice came ngain from
he loud speaket :
Many ot you wi hin the sound
t my voice tonight are men who,
-ih hearts heating wildly, eyes
ma i with tears n( geatitude, with
e and hope soarine to the skies,
in nd with enger fcet paths lead-
n h deors such as his. Many
eineiu nt you stond in those door-
• UP THE •6>
$ ZEOftET
¥ i.
MMud2d-2 e
■
MMM
THE BASEt.TNEY ’F* THE
ARE LOADED _J HOME RUN
to receive these boys w ith.wiid
jay. You folk know what his
< motions must have been. Up to
th. t point you have muctin com-
mon. Here the story difTers
Instcad ot the anticipated,
i nged I'lt. needed warmth of love
nit devotion, in place of paeon*
< 1 thanksgiving and expressions of
endearment, this hoy was met
■ ith the ciml r-l iha rater North
- with a declaration that he wasn’t
wonted — that another had taken
hi* plce.
. The only halm in hi* home-
roming was the unspoiled, natural,
heart-Ailinz love nt a little girl
This want-ad ill a Texas newepaper
brought results "MON’TH OLD BABY go-
ing crazy looking for a 2- or 3-room apart-
ment-for Mother and Dad. Call 2616 "
Mnny a num has joined the n«vv be-
cause the shins are kepi clean and tidy.
Then he suddenly discovers who keeps
l hem I hnl way
i'
I A turk.
nour The
coraird v
loa
An oper
day afte
o’clnn h..
Bw
. and
IA0•1 . • I
Iwith a (i
bers of b
I About .
“ende d
I Games
Canasta
In number Santa Claus Ind
Bethlehem Pa Holly Colo
Chrietmas OWe, Me , 'and Noel,
Va
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she's maro intersted in wher the
mistletoe it hung rather than how The Runaan Hear, Kremlin
handsome will be the Christms | propagandista would have the
traa. ' b worid believe n really just the
. ! J * 6 ! Dove nt Peace in disguise All
At this time of the year out ' we have to say is hat the dis-
favorite towns happen to be I've guse ia fat from perfect.
tAwSEL’ SCAKCE/
yV0
3
bGl’a
225 P,GG/£
ITBANks
5-
yeN
{ em
—
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• l l ' ■ u EI • ’ ' • • m • ' • I • • I ll’ I• '
•i t had withstood the potsoned Tensliunu
Oa Mondas arternoon, when little Judy Twing skipped down
the steps her uncle was waiting far her.
"We humans are strange and di- uo ...
v creatures. Dealt such a blow < custody of the child. But it wasifrom the time it firstnubappeared
such a moment, ciin jou snyinot to he. The man who had ap-lin the papers. Those things the
every hand. Prostrate nations were reay
to topple toward communism. Same did
Others, shored up by •the Marshall Plan,
narrowly missed.
From the moment Allied victory ir
World War II mis assured, Russia knew
this country would be fhe one real ob-
stacle to its glohal ambitions. Russia— not
the United States made it a two-hation
struggle.
The United States did not seek thin
fight. It did not seek leadership as a world
power. Both thene things were ihrust upon
tit. by the harsh realities of Europe’s post-
war ruin.
The Soviot Union directs ita fire upon
ng because we are the only nation that
needs to be defeated. How long would any .
other hold out against the Bed tide if w
were wiped from the scene’
Far from this being "our" ' war with
Pursia. if Ik every-free man’s war. If we
xhould go down, they would all go down
The notion that free people may some-
how remain neutral and free in a world
wept hv an all-devouring communism, i*
a feverish fancy, a wild illusion born of
ninhtmarish fear. .
If troubled peoples in many places do
not noon awake from thia dream, they will
be ahaken out of it rudely by the pound-
ing trend of l hr totalitarian’s boot
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—464
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Ne oorwowrT
44
IN!
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, December 29, 1950, newspaper, December 29, 1950; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432900/m1/2/: accessed May 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.