Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 16, 1944 Page: 1 of 12
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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Weather Forecast
atock
Colder.
-
J
»
j unit I
number of
sizeable* section
■fe
■ I ■
book placement in the county and
Mtas Ollie B. Hendrick ol FolI j CeunUv Unit, ot
point to point at high speed
To Announce
who
P
■nd
3>
Judge Andemon
advised that
the
Mtonr-
J
-
r
CllXr
r
GERMAN AIRCRAFT CENTER
» \ '
Brunswick Hit
In Shattering
Bombardment
J
I
J
... w.
C. Custard.
night's mall and urged
r bonds, is com-
*, chairman:
I. Abbas and
, Mobile Unit io
Visit Cleburne
skies
most o
■
a. ThUrt-
and *»•
IS
Ai
rs
Of,"
fords.
TfflWT
Ihort-
boys'
►3.000;
chatn-
employees
chamber o
” ' for junast
j
I
************** •’
IM lb*, of wait*
paper will make
<* preteetive
bandi for 250-
Ib. tombs. Star*--
lading aow.
I
» I
I
S3
-
-2
I
t
H I •
Cleburne TimesReview
Published Daily Except Saturday United Preu <u*> Leased Wire
Is Now Captain
“ Julius Alexander Buchanan, who
is now in Cailfronla on a military
assignment, has ben promoted to
ntrol of Hu-
hilnea today
at American
ed” two and
e other Jap-
shall Tplanda
-to- i
--------- __rancin< two
along the northern coast.
pecta for the It
posed of Gary
Roy L Doak,
h. _ r u...
The industrial and large employ-
er committee, which committees
duty it will be to organise the
contacting of all employees of the
larger ‘ -
5 '-.iSa
. w. I
—tSwMI
1944 .
tlonal i
TiCUl-
outh-
*'■ oil ;
I® .4
Dies in Meridian
r \ \
tatii f'
request to aid the campaign tn
Monday i V ’
that all men asked to work,
must be remembered, commltu
■M* stated, that those of us y
committee is working on'prspara- saart^Ute
tions for the -aCsome 100 war campaign.
■ 4
SAVE
I A BUNUll A AtIK
"59
- ■ W
8. Coast Guard, and 1
Curtis, U S. Navy, foi
and a brother.
ances in
lleved that the quotas may be met
by each town. The $706,000 Joint-
son County Quote was divided
as follows: Alvarado. W0,000; Bur-
JPW.0. M.000; Cle-
burne. 1601.000 Godley, $10,000;
.Grandview, MO,000: Joshua. >17,000;
Keene, >10,000: Lillian, $2,000; Par-
ker,-MDOP; Rio Vista. 110,000.
rr
if
county clerk's office:
Thornton of Cleburne
Alice Scarbrough of
EAST TEXAS' Fnir tuiiduy
panhandh irrte Sunday
-If! ■{
" mounted an attack north of
Lake Ilmen, indicating that
the long-awaited Red Army
.. ft; -1
man salient tinix-d l>v Lenin-
1 .—■■■I was underway.
Entire Fiont Moves
a major Soviet
I mlnmad front <
• Ion liic enure 1
firm
Crime a
be more
Department to encourage more in-
dividual purchases. '
P. B. Warren, chairman bf the
County Towns Contacts Committee
r . . ■ t----- “ *—
Lt. Bill Dement
To Be Instructor
LONDON. Jan. 15. (UP)—
The Roval Air Force drowed -J
more than 2.240 tons' of ,
I tombs on the German air- |
", craft center of Brunswick in
23 minutes last night. hitting j
a peak of 150 tons a minute, j
the air ministry announced f
today.
Both the 150 tons a minute I
at the heiirht of the raid and—-]
the average of more than 97
tons a minute for the entile
attack constituted new rec- ’
ords for concentrated bom-
Iwrdment. j
The shattering bombardment of I
Biunswick in a follow-through of
the American attack on the same
target Tuesday,. kindled fires vis- I
ible 150 miles through dense clouds |
which sent’ up a column, of smoke ,
more than three miles high.
Light Mosquito Sombers struck I
at Berlin and Magdeburg In a di- I
wrsf-wjary feint which drew off 1---—------—
,f‘g11 ter strength-.and, noj.---
tlrffiiSe planes illTlVM over Bruns-
wick during the attack.
The British raiding fleet, how-
ever, ran into stiff fightgr oppo-
sition on the way fa, many of the
German planes launching rockets
in a frantic effort to break up the
RAF formations.—---------
Brunswick was covered by brok-
en clouds, and Pathfinders ringed
the target area with Incendiary
markers before the bombardment
began. The first bombs crashed on
the city at 7:IQ p. ••m.. unusually
early in order that t|e raiders
could be well on the way home
before the moon came ’up.
Hundreds of the RAF's foiir-
cnglned heavyweights blasted and
seared Brunswick from end to end
in an assault obviously designed
to erase the city of some 200,000
persons and its Messerschmitt air-
craft plant
While American bombers concen-
trated their entire weight of
bombs on the Massenohmitt-factory
and probably destroyed all hut one
plant in their record precision at-
tack Tuesday, the British night
ralderts sought to blot out Bruns-
wick's housing, commtuUcattoih.
warehouses and subsidiary indus-
tries, as well as to complete the
destruction of th^• plane works..
Higgins Is
t >£>*Kr :
I 1
and the rank of captain. t
Capt. Buchanan, who is to; the
CAB FIR* f]
The small booster truck of the
Cleburne Central Fire Station was
J? * ?ar .nrUat th*t
urday morning. Damage was done
to the wiring. 1 K
RAF DROPS 2,240 TONS OF
BOMBS IN 23 M1NUTES ON
‘ i L
W-
Cold Snap on
Wane in Texas
Australia Troops Close aw
Trapped Japs on Huon Peninsula
s- j ' .
• r £ j • -A’;-
Auslraila^ truuph closing
trapped enemy forces fort
showdown battle tor er *' “
on Peninsula of Jlew ;
as it was disclosed ti
bombtag had neutral!
seriously damaged thn
ana.se bases in the Ma
MiSr
miles C___ ________
captured the village of Nambarlwa
and brought 8io, the main Japa-
nese base on the peninsula only
four miles away, under artillery
fire.
Japanese attempts to evacuate
the troops caught between advanc-
ing Americans on the north and
and planes Which hunted them
down
~r; -v~
.....'.tyU.......A, / ....... .
AU the chairmen of the Red
Cross special service work and J
heads of the various branches of ’
up while res- the Johiison County Red _CrgM
»T*a: CnRptcr will rnpot at 2 iJO
p.m. at the Red Cross work room
r
ous leaders' and all committee nwm* . fl
bers and leaders are urged to be ' •.«
present.
'"1^1
ci
_____«
to gel the drive set-up ready in
die various towns. '
County-wide committees for the
drivt have been appointed as fol-
lows: executive committee Judge
Roy Andemon. chWrmkn; Lyle
OMMM B- L. RM, W. A. Ban-
of the middle portion of the
.... -------- at below
.. ... .......-"■.'■■BF prer"
indicate that "Ole Man Weather” ~
hadn't recovered from that tipsy
spell which brought seven inches
of snow at Austin and tire south-
central area Friday.
A warm wave coming in over
tins Panhandle caused simllai fleak
weather conditions
Only • little fog and cloudy
, weather tn the southeast portion
near Beaumont kept the entire
state from being clear Saturday.
U. S. Weather Bureau officials at
Dallas said. They forecast clear
* rising temperature for
state for Sunday'. Tem-
™, .dW probably teach the
middle fifties for the Dallas-Fort
Worth area today.
RISK IN
RK8ATURDAT---W.
Mk of cold weather
rains, sleet and snow.
j A charge has been filed in Jus-
tice of the Peace R. L Derry-
berry’s court against.Joe McGow-
an, colored, in connection with the
theft of an Automobile belonging
to H. A. Brewington near Grand-
vle* on JanJ12. McGowan's com-
panion Was of juvenile age.
and U. 8 marines in the Cape
Gloucester area of western New
Britain counted 500 additional Jap-
anese dead, bringing the total al
Gloucester to 2^75 The marines
agarnst HUi M» of the Borgen Bay
front. - ,
as "justice of the "peace.' AJMttgyan based Allied bombers,
Mace 1. 1 . flying a'2,500 mile round trip, at-
tacked the oil port of Ballkpapan,
Borneo, causing explosions in an
WflMKy In the fpnrih air at-
t^ck of the war on the port, white
Wo Vessel " staking1 off KaVte^. to*start
New Ireland. '■ ' is Lrn,*d ahnrw
Medium bombers from Ute Sol-
omons destroyed seven enemy
planes at Rabaul, and heavy bomb-
ers downed Rve of 40 Japanese
fighters in another raid on the
l
' < jp HI *4ii|i-■»»’**«*■» ' "I i—1*1—«—I I .1----—- —. ■- I,... «'■■««■ .......
/ V
Rural Teachers Discuss Christinas
Observances in Schools of County
■ ■ .....-------o -----
«>
I 'RcportE on Christmas observances
I Th the varlolls rufhl
I Johnson County were heard Satur-
] day morning tire January meet-
Another Donation
—____________________ J
-An additional contribution of A
>11.00 to. the Johnson County
Community War Chest from Grand- son (
vtaw has been reported by W A. &
* isws:
Fe. is made up of 1, L. .toidst
chairman; R. A. Kllpatrlck W.'
E. Boger and L. D. Aston
The retail and business firm
), headed by
vice-president
under the direction of Bryan Duff j
; with four selections
>. Is ft
g, and ...
largest group M workers in the en-
tire campaign) J. */. RRMI. T,.
H. Brumley,- Rm*Robertson And
John McClure make up the others
of the committee. ’ This particular
W „ Sco
I Walker,
lir, W
John M.
W. T George, Dr.
Dr. W P Ball. Frank Lacewell,
W E Miller, M L. Cato, Scales
Ball, Elbert Ewing and Jacklstam-
pcr
Survivors include a daughter. Mrs. I
Rebt cca Fain Curtis, Meridian; two 1
grandsons, W H. Curtis,5tjr.. U.
« ----- ------ ----ROert F.
oiif sisters
i MARRIAGE UCENSES
----- <T»._ i..
The Red Cross mobile* unit of
the Blood Donor Center of F„.,
Worth will visit Cleburne some-
time in the near .future with the
date to be announced later, accord-
ing to Miss Li.’zabcth Clayton. I
chairman of the committee here I
Tlic unit is accomiranied by an '
anny and navy doctor and six
nurses At least 200 vohmteers
must be signed up before the unit .
comes Recruiting conpnllleek are i STvci|il Icachmsl reported that
being appointed, but . anyone de- . pupils tiiadc <<dai wreathes and
siring tp volunteer to give a pint ] calendars Tor men Un service,
of blood for th% use of the I ' ' ‘ J u
over there, may call the Red Cross
of floe and sign up.
with the Legion for a joint meet-
ing of th»4>wo group* the hall.
Executive committeemen an-
nounce also that bond purchase
prospects will be contacted at the
"places of employment" which will
•---convenient for the work-
The quota for SERIES "E'
the high flfttes Saturday after-
noon. rd\
V. 8- Weather Observer W. 8.
Ownsby Saturday night reported
__________ __ 7 - Mta Itowwy which had drop-
417 West Willingham street Sat- ped to IB degrees early Saturday
“ J sraraflwyr*
—--— —— i- • -
They Jtlll were fight-
ing for the approaches to Mount
Trocchio, the last barrier in that
sector before Cassino Itself.
The Allies ^simultaneously un-
leashed a heavy air assault from
Italy One of the heaviest form-
ations of Flying Fortresses and
Liberators mobilized in weeks paced
the attgAk with u shattering bom-
‘bardmetir of Mostar. Jugoslavia, 70
mites east of Split, where the Nazis
had concentrated air strength for
the defense of the Balkans.
Beat Off Planes
Lightning - escorted Fortresses
made the first attack, blasting run-
ways and hangars and trapping
German planes on the ground Llb-
eratwta -followed closely, beaM*»g nf(
20 German fighters, of which three
were shot down by Lightnings.
The capture of the three moun-
tains put the French in position
to develop their flanking threat to
Cassino.
They took Mount Ferro. 3,000-
foot peak two mites northwest of
Aequafondata overlooking the
mountain stronghold of Valleroton-
da, well within the northern de-
fenses of Cassino <’
Special Service
j Work Heads to
.....
today with clear skies and wanner
weather promised by weathermen
for the week.-end.
Saturday’s reports that the Pan-
eral hotly contested races in XbcL
county. 'CandidaUki tor recta, in
1 ‘ the city election are aUo expected
to file in the next few weeks.
• All indication* pdlnt to a large
i vote in both the. city and county
eiebUons. Courtly Ttax Collector
nounced thia week-end that 2.71#
* polls had been paid as amnpared
to 2,148 for the same time to "—
. and City Tax Collector and
sewor W H. Wilbanks stated last
week that 141 more polls had been
issued than to the same week last
■ RMT. Deadltoe tor paytag poll
taxes is January 31 and
' or exemptions by that time?
Grandview Make*
to . ’ ,«M \ . to-to.
4
First candidate to filtt- for a
-» ptece on the Oemoerette prinwrv
> ticket is B. %. Higglh*. Jr., who
Saturday announced he is seeking/
rc-etectlOn i
Precinct 1, Place 1. •
Although only one candidate has
fll«d, others are e;---—
nouncr m tne next
County Agents to
Meet 4-H Clubs ~
County Agents Maeona Cox and
C. A. Muprch will meet with a. (
iaree number Of 4-H Clubs this <
weak.
Following fe their schedule
Monday, morning, FriendsiU]
Bono; afternoon. Oodley, 1
day. morning. Liberty W1
Greenfield; afternoon, Alva
Wednesday, mominf, Venus
- itheada; afternoon,
morning, Hopf
hua; afternoon. Rio
On Thursday aftemooR at »!<
in o'clock, county Ager* MMfliJN
>r- meet with the Fairview WMfc> di
in the home of Mrs. 0. G. Mm
and will give a r“ “----
monstration.
he will fiv<
11:30 oWoeL
tlie Burleson shto
Mn, Joe Branaom.
Kites Today at
Local "Chapel for
Long I ime Resident
——— I
Blair M Fain, 85, pioneer drug-
j gist ot Cleburne, died at 8 20 p ■
j m .Friday- at the home of his ‘
j daughter, Mrs Rebecca Fain Cur-:
i tis. in Meridian'
j A native of Georgia, he was born I
I on Sept to. 1858. He came to f
! CTebuftie in 1876: Tn the “fall of
j that year he was married to Miss
j Mm l ha Wilson, who taught in the
I Cleburne schools. They were mar-
riert at her heme in Columbia.
-tTrrm . and rettirwd to CtebUrne
to make their home, where he re-
sided for 63 yeata
Five yeprsi ftgij, after suffering
a stroke, he retired from the drug
business and moved, to Meridian,
where he made his home with his
daughter and her family.
When he first went into the
til ug business in Cleburne his firm
, was known as Fain & McPherson
mid later ax Fgln &i Williamson
For many years he was associated
with the Foster-Fain Drug Co.
During his residence he was a
member of the First Presbyterian
felting , j .
ichat- ’i
Because of th" outstanding work
<>l Johnson County Junior itr-d
j 'Grws memte rs. Mrs. It A Kil-
patilck, county chairman, has been
askf(lJto furnish a letter booklet
I lor <« I libit ion by the iteadquarters I
—-WTrttYTtwwt^^r”
to mukc ’booklets ant' one will be
.... i for exhibition mui the
ether? will be sent tc schools in
is'ether countries. Letters from hos-
A ticiiiiaii vi thanking’ 'children for. -
> Xouug, Gayland Davis,. Gbitetena* rtdwKterx were also read, handle was warming
Pou and Dr. Albert Teaflurs were urged to continue Idents of the middle
’ - . .....i- oiain wafa taftll ahlva
TOAutt—Italians are 'eturning to their
homes in Lagone, Italy, after hiding In hlHs while Allies and
Nazis battled In their tows. This girl, carrying her belong-
iniacitsiHrw 4»T8 st' rtresirNaii sdTmer arawm read.
their I .
in the Leningrad area. The Ger- ...J
mans have been shelling Lenin- ■
vrml it'elf for some time, and
Moscow had gnen no indication
that the besiegers had been pushed i
back from the outskirts 6t the
metropolitan area
'Hi.' Red Army blasled a corridor 1
through flic German siege Unto
in: I winter mid rosed the plight I
ot i-ningrad.. but for 'mohtha
ihrio had i "fi> -no definitive sign 1
of major chahrres otf that front'
The Germah ronununidue report-
ed that tire Russians had been
thrown back northwest of Kiro- J
vograd in the upper Dnieper bend
and south of Zashkov, 37 miles ' ,J
below Belaya Tserkov. «.*•. .Jfl
.Mownto’ dlrpaU^hCfc r€tx>ftt4 thwt -J
a great battle east of VtnnltM.
In the lower Ukraine before the ”]
Bug River defense line, iiad reach- - -.J
ed a pitch of extraordinary fero-
city . The Germans were reported J
throwing in tank and infantry re-
seives in ’’wild’ attempts to pene-
trate the Soviet positions and block
the advance against the Odessa-
Warsaw railroad >™
Red 3tar. Soviet Army organ, i
said the German attempts to wedge
the Russian line? had failed, de-
spite multiple attacks shifted from-”"
church here having made his pro-
1 fession of faith in 1889. In 1894
I iw wm matte a deacon and served
as such until he was elected and
| installed As an elder in 1923 He
MPWti !im r'tanear-period of Ume
: jM=Atorfftafir irf thlr. chnroh then
aynone else.
Last rites will be conducted
today at 3 p m. at the Crqsler-
Pearson cltapel with- -Dr.--• Albert-
Lieut. and Mrs Bill Dement
have been here visiting his parents.
Mr. and Mrs W. S. Dement, 1204
Prairie avenue, and other relatives i CHARGE FILED
and friends for the pash week
Lieut. Dement received his wings
on January 7, at. Douglas. Artz.,
and has been ordered to retuni to
that training field and assume the
dutita of an instructor at the
closp 0( his leave ' r
Allied planes continued attack- U/am I aam I\mC, - UlZll D- 1 - -
rourtli u3r Losii InWfr i i3ns Vrill Be AnnoiiDceo
and U. 8. ‘ marines in the Cane *• '
This Week by Chamber of Commerce Committeemen
“—,ynmwwwee--wm»mi4---j-drew)-tf-^LkHibwt twin1 and ’•wrrmm*wwgBrr~"TH1l^T^^ W^'T5nf"TTTT<T‘”
teemen announce thiV ^final plans Brown; publicity committee.Mack I held January 20 fe to be composed | to mul
"wi the Fuuitli Wm Loan Drive Ingle and Hunter Pearson; county i of all of the retail workers group' cijosen
will be made the first of the week. * ------ j. . ... - -
preparatory to the opening of the
drive for the sale of $706,000 bonds
ta _ Johnson cmintx 8pecial^ mjr-
engse prospect committeemen Mil
,aton fiinitinn dur to,, Mtaidii^ eitfL.
is good Ahape. Johnson County
chalrtnan. Judge Roy Anderson, an-
nounced Saturday that the general
worker sales and Instruction meet-
ing. would be held at -the Ameri-
can Legion Hall on Thursday. Jan-
T Godley Youth Is
Hurt in Accident
Gene Paris, ‘
was tat#h 'to’ —---
tarium Saturday night
conscious condition after the car
in which he wu riding crashed
into a concrete bridge between Cle-
burne and Oodley. The accident
B oWock . flfl____________
ttf Parte, ton of Mr. and Mrt. W. announces that committeemen win
... Paris of Gpdley, Was taken to contact towns Monday and Tuesday
the Muiitartum by a Crosier-PW- ----* ““ --------------
son ambulance dauaa Of the acei-
. «*<ennlned Saturday
night, but the car waifeported to
te badly damaged. It was stated
■ * * -’j• > •." - toiL •urf,p‘d m bre*en
__" L.-.;
ciruuvy eauuBtiuii iuuiii wmr vww sswrerwio.
Most of the programs were pre- I While the French sliced in above |
j sented 'bv ■ the. children but. in /i j Cassino, American units on
numberTpr JqWtlS. members Of the left pressed toward it Tor jt-
t ■ -1 parent-tyJachef arrociation andi®i assault rew— «>-
f'ort I ol,ler . ih ,,’e communities
| provided'' tlti’reshment.s of < candy
| nnd frutt at the festivals. One
I school repdrted a Christmas party
for the mothers, who were present-
ed with itifU made by the chll-
| dren hiu'J another rejiorted pupils
j sun'' UlufetniMS enrols at the 54th
i «i'd(linA4<iinivei:ak'y celebnilion for
a eouprain tlie community
j srvcifd teucliui’sl
' pupife made «dai‘
39TH YEAR. NO. 43 * ' --------- ct.TBVRNE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JANI ARY 16, 1944 ------- «=3S=S^, ' ■’ PRICF FIVE CENTL
RUSSIAN ARMY STARS POWERFUL OFFENSIVE ON LENINGRAD FRONT
- :--——*———"1-^ - v ----r -
------------------ -- Blair M.Fain, '----
Pioneer Druggist, |
wl —■’4
Griuiienba-um. ancient resort com-
munity by the -sea, was the nite
rt n tJurni-pniare end many vttttiS—“
where the old Russian nobility 1
iroin L'minarad disported. ’M
,„Xlul^CJSinLittdlJ^ lAcgjmftM^ta^wMdk.ftadJjeld_outi________>ntu uty________
| county education room I for Mmye two month.s, ^ lhp gp .ljn repoH of flghtlng
in ‘hat area was the firs) recent
DRUG STORES WILL
HONOR B. M. FAIN
Ip .honor of Mr B. M Fain,
all local drug stores will remain
closed from 10 a m. untit after
j I funeral services today, accord-
j | ing to an announcement made
I by Faul Colquitt.
i Ms Fain, for m
years, was in the drug store
■ business in Cleburne, and has
tire admiration and respect of
all druggists who have known
him.
ORANIENBAUM
AREA AHACKEDl
White Russia; Northwest Ukraine Forces ""fl
Closing Trap*Jftws on Nazis in Marshes • i
'1
LONDON, Jan. 15. —Ihp (reiinaii high comniand
i’epoi t al today that the ftpd Aouy had opened-,a powerfiri
ctfpnusive cn the Leningrafl front, attacking- in strong force —I
in the aiea of Oranienbaum, resort town on the Gulf of • i‘3
—EiH^hd 1!) n.iiles ,'yeatof t heboid czarist capital. '» ' -J
A-ReHm rnmmnT>t^ rhoiW the Russian Orive In
region ot Oianienbatirn .'also said strong Soviet forces had '
Aequafondata, 3
Mountains Seized
By French Units ■'
Americans Fight J
> For /Approaches to f
Mount FroccHlb:
' »■ 'I ------r..^ , J — I
ALL RIGHT AS IT IS—You don't need to turn this picture allied headquarters.
upside down. It's all right as It is. It shows a row of surf suits | “ r™? i
hung up to dry at Coast Guard air station at Elizabeth City, | tured' Acquafondata and th*to stra’-1
ed today
list '|m-
defense bastion on ;
AcquaJumlkta. six |
' CasabrJ
Frthch offeh-
:ampaigh yvhicli
les through bit-
wise
boys I are in hospitals, aiid a number of
Jross I Junior Red Crors members wrote
j and sent gills to a child stiiy out
' oi school because, of infantils
> 'paralysis. ’ ”, .
The following marriage lice'hses I During the prograin a double
were issued this week-end by the j trio from the Cleburne Higli School
rtTklBMiw zxffiort’ I‘. pa*^**** irxva r»< T4**VQt4 Ollff
and Miss j entertained T
Brockton J alter which the question of text-
Maas.; Eugene A Byrd and Mary t ■ “ ’ '
Walker, both of Cleburne. and I state was discussed by J B.
Frank P. (House of Alvarado and ! Bright, president of the Johnson
Mtaa Ollie B. Hendrick ot Fort j GounUy Unit oi TWA, and Miss
'**’***!• j Mary'Shipp Sanders. The latter
■-----a—s—- | ul4() feavc a brlef r„])orl on recent
conferences at Austin on juvenile
I delinquency and Inter-Americanism
-• d’ ■
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS.
Algiers. Jan 15. (U.R)—French cr.it/.
ot the Allied 5th army h«Ve cap-
N. C. Suits are used when flying boats are being moored, tegic mountains in new t
[ two miles which threatened
to outflank Cassino. ttje I
portant German
1 Hie Rome road
j The fall of
miles northeast of Ca:
I the most successful —
sive-of the Italian ci
I liad carried five miles
j ter cold, the roughest terrain of
j the entire front, and* hekvy Ger-’' , - --------. —
man resfetanbe. , L' , | llB,1y reflecting German reverses.
Section C
Gen. Alphonse Ji
Soviet
and
' eh sing
then'a nds
Indi, capped ' ;
I First
Russian _
t front failed to indicate the trend
ICT* VUIU, V1IC lUUfllGOb IClIftHI Ml
j the entire front, and hehvy Ger-’
tllapse*
drive was
schools UT rolling up flte deflfnwS HOrthffisT
of Cassino, a sizeable! section of
which collapsed Wfth the loss of
E together with all others,
and James I ’ —i“~' *J --
Announcement of county | ooi
soon as the various town
usiucula have been vcrUted
T----T------
Cleburne (ampaitn
Cleburne • has been assigned
$501,000 of the >706,000. Cleburn ?
ecanmittees to organize and mobilize
Workers come within three cate-
gories: special purchase committee,
Target Area Ringed
With Incendiary
Markers
ap<*’ a large number took
la^from tlie library on the
Guests al the meeting other than
i. Bright were Mrs Miriam
31. especially on the part of in-1 e taiford, a foimei teacher and
rtlutremta *Vha‘araniit.tww rtnrnrrtttT’r f ws. ------Wnzpftr—Sriiulenbcrger Of
haS set the quotas for the various Keene.
►■■ma ^nununitles within tlie ! . . ................ , -
on past perform-j f a ra 1
campaigns it fe be- J bUClianail
by each town. The >706,000 Joi>»-
Oounty Quote was
announce thiV final plans I Brown; ,
for the Fourth War Loan Drive Ingk and Hunter Pearson;
town contact committee.
Warren. , chairman, and James1 A special events Committee
Barnett. Announcement of county j composed of Herman Brown, chair-1 pitafe
-tffilHL.jaaunlttees. wlU toe ..madaLmaa; clyto” -------
g-- soon as "the various town Hp- WBoBIF toi. rvu »nu Ml . muviti wetv uqjvu y~- - - . . -. ,
BPln.teepnta haw hawn vertfWl and I Wenttaff - _ the fhidy of "whal
IWdiTt.......... I' ’ "^'^ttajr-fttabtfehto ’ ‘ ' ?ood ftemmtrry:school tn my
War Loan Campaign commit let munity
men advfee that the Treasury De- out Ixw*
partment is ;naking a special effort stibjedl.
to get extra purchases during the C„„„
campaign for January 18’through I Mr Bright w«re Mrs
31, , especially on the part of. in- Etafford, a fonner teacher
dUlduate.F-Thr«tecuuw: committee’ mit. 'Muzelle Scjiulenpcrger
I ' ffeitsiye on the
would set in mo- ' .
1 20C-mlle Russian
the Gulf of Finland —:
i tiunt
to th, .
At the /enter, the Red Army of
White* Russia was sweeping west-
ward 2o tidies tevond captured
Mozyr and Kalinkovichl on the
way to Pinsk and Brest Lltovsk—
tin road that the Russian* .call ,
"tlie short cut to Berlin."
armies of White Rtfesia" «
the Northwest Ukraine were
tin- jaws of a trap for
in
Nikolai
Va'.iitJn’s t.roopq struck up
tlie Sarny region.
Nazi reports of the new
drives on the Leningrad fl
- - -
ot the fighting, an omission us- fl
Nazis battled In their town. This girl, carrying her belong-
u Venting officiating Pallbqarers will
. be Dr. A C. Burns, O. B Mc-
Pherson, Vestal Wriglyt, Paul Col-
j quitt, VY E. Boger, Bill Abbas,
Jim Ragsdale and C M McIn-
tosh, and interment will be .made
in the Cleburne cemetery. 7 ’
Honorary pallbearers will be T,
Scott. Emmett Brown, T? R.
, T B Scott. W S. Bow-
A Scott. G’ A Raker.
Wylie, W S OWnsby.
T. George, Dr. M T. Knox.
W P E-dl.
E Miller, M
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 16, 1944, newspaper, January 16, 1944; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307493/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.