Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 79, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 8, 1941 Page: 1 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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. I
WEDNESDAY. JAN. 8. 1941
36TH YEAR. NO. 82
PRICE FIVE CENTS
-v
F"
Between
At Tobruk Sweeping Shakeup In
se
Navy, War Strength
WORLD AWAITS MOVE OF RU
A IN BALKANS
<
Youths To Colors
not !<•••
v
*
fit Im’
.■ halt
Is
th.y
11 IV
talhei
and
'Ilion shall not covet.
mlV
unto
9
linden
2.1<)
10-13
IB?
2.95
ruler
we
3
Is
I
•I sc
IK'
V
N
worker
a
drntlal
as
jeves
already
lull
the
6 10
be
re-
oeh
■ ' >'
r i
the
tar ,
to u
» Ft MF I
8. Meador.
Cleburneites Will
J
St
lj- W
is
hie
oil
tex
c
I
'W
i
IJl41
ht
frffi N(>rl
**» <>»
Battery ‘B’ Has
Official Order To
Leave Thursday
Founder of Boy
Scouts Is Dead
Im ■ oi
I I< -1'
IO IJll
pie on earth
class
west
the
,-i led
tin-
ea. l(
lime
connection!
with 5.251
HMo. Total
compared
week id
make
<2i
"highway committee-
men and possibly members of tile
. . .. . „... t are expected
Austin ’ Monday for the
at
the
X
Sr
I Funeral Home
’all ariangi-iuc'its
I he
lour
one
two
that
din
(led
gfa nd
cess
Haden-Powell tiled at
Tuesday GST).
were
to
for
i total o
edlng weel
I hr
Hl
United Keaa Wtre Servio*.
United Feature Syndicate
60c Per Month by Carrier
Tn City
ly-nri a I
I hiKh
an
reported
rapidly
area.
are
>halt
me
4
I
niKh’
I
IN
principal
nt
at
and
Bat -
lutve
Ixi-
Mother of Mrs. S.
Scroggins Diet
I*
Us ... .
Hv JOE HHGt'MlN
Federal Checks
Pass $200;
5
shaTl
IL’^*'
-
active work.
I it ' I It A
ESI
Axles'
tn I rtbtory
ouniy
pa I
Indus ’
AAA Resolves To Go
Limit During 1941
On Conservation
cold
the villager
this writ-
'i!brt« with
trial
to increase this figure 8ur-
| veys tire now
second sitting, this session of court
will t^e the lightest tn tile history
of the court |
“n turned
I, with
fispatch-
mad tn send eight trucks to
re to move the battery to
P
t c
who is being field in the |
jail, lor theft ovi>r-'$5() .and I
Brown, Waurika. Okla . for
Another
was
noment. and
sit ta na<U-
««*■. . .
^*,^7 ■
I FOON©
ot Directors passed
on a
them
Merchants
wherein
1. J. Tom Walker, command -
.the battery, contacted regi-
in Dallas this
i that no or-
[ there for the
| '•
‘I i- .
Temi
malted out today
tom checks were
irgea To
IT -a. a 2: i
r I
Ihrrrnoinrlrr ft4*ftdin*a -
8 9 1U 1 11 I 12 I 1 I a
42~ .■*4~4~5t't59n ST
Word haa been received here M
“ — Mrajom
at her home
Javarro Counit who
Hia" ww* mnTLr $
nn! sh it I
not (•(Miuiiit
—
f t ***
nWN<' u,sT n **
L fOMHROY, O.
F
i*
^3
p ‘•I
1
ninety-two
the office
J to *21,-
_ it the total
M
Cleburne Times-Review
The Only D*Uy NewnpapiBr Published In Johnson Connty
rva“t>n payments
e Cleburne AAA offiefc
d the tot*J well over
and started the
ks toward the *300.000
n. expected to be paid
hie i»unty
irtred and r
k •
e; ' A ■. rJMjiv''';..
Influenza Hits
Peak, Health
Officer Says
Commander
of
The official or-
ders were received here at 3:30
p. rj). today
L4eut Herbert Bishopmet
from Brown wood last nMt
the IhformaUon that the disj
er
Oli
Caipp Bowie, beginning at 1
in , Thursday
er o?*l
mental hbMlquarters 1
Brown, manager.
—1 a complete 1
activities and
• forthcoming t
services for Daniel Ed-
Son of Mr.
3a.to. M»
Im
policy aad
RMmSmNp*
Two Indictments
Filed as Jurors
Wind Up Session
a num-
and" a
CT and
to those
:
town la A
Infant D. E. Adam*
I* Buried Today
< Funeral ser.
warte Adams,
and Mrs A.
I South I' -
lR
i 4
St.-
New Year’s resolutions may
a lot of nonsense, but there's one
icsolutlon that every farmer in
Johnson County would do well to
make and keep.
"I resolve to go the limit in soil
cnnservatlon work in 1941. to cam
every penny of my soil-butidiiig
allowance, and even to dig down
into my own pocket to carry* out
additional practices and thus to
enrich my land as much as pos-
member of the Johnson
\AA committee haa made
lution and intends to keep
. M*m, committee chair-
nta out ke h lifting all
I
tGION H
BCTMNMg.<*1 ;'.K' r tc
/'T*.. ■ .. A ®‘
•Week M *?*£!£< rt
I Pioneer Farmer
Dies of Injuries
_______ • ■. ■ Jj
Hanson, retired farmer and I
of Johnson County, died J
tn Fort Worth nf 1
..r’.y this mornlas J
been struck by an a
— while I
rt wwth. |
sible. ”
Every 1
County A
this reaoit
It. J. A.
man, poll
communit
■
I
Employee Dies
Late Tuesday
a ,
haa <
I)ates 1 oi Johnson
Conntv I an Made
September I'M 3
I <d ♦hf |tavnft
, vuirktd out ;i»
'I I r < a- urv ;in<I
/ IJI’
i ! 11 I <
. .• r./ •• ■ • ' ■ ■■ ■ -Bl
. KIY MIN OF RUSSIA—Whef part Russia will play in e«0wr
nowadays Hgre^re her key men, recently photographed bn tri
From JbfhjSI'etini^Vice Ckairmen-Klementi Voroshilov and Pn
Cliunib<;r of commerce directors'
were ndvlscit by .1 l^inlwri Lain,
clxiirmun of the'liighw.iy commit-
ter. that still another hearing on
the improvement of U S Highway
<>7 w'ts being requested lot M'on-
<ia., Jan 13 Lain also advised that
Dallas', Ellis and Sotnervel Coun-
ties were Joining in the road bear-
Thls request lor still a fur-
hciiring on the U H.* 67
Improvement is but another effort
to secure much needed work from
the Dallas County line to Glen
Rose X^f'.bca'
Fair and
year
set
inclusive
The Board
a motion of endorsement
request and proposal made
by the Farmers and
Compress Company wherein the
compress is seeking a permit from
the Railroad <#>inmissidn to pick
up cotton nt points of origin. In-
land gins and cotton yards by
truck and transport to the com- .
press. It was . explained that. the
compress, if granted euch a per-,
mlt could, increase, the efficiency
of their- service and be beneficial
to farmers, ginners, cotton dealers
and financial institutions. The
directors instructed the manager
”to, provide tlie Farmers and Mer-
ch'ants Company with a letter of
endorsement.
Seek Armory Site
A committee composed of H C.
Custard. Lain and Cash Zimmer-
man was named to Investigate the
possibility of securing a desirable
site for the profxjsed *100.000
National Guard armory It is ex-
pected that local citirens. com-
munity. or local governmental ag-
encies will have to furnish the
site for the proposed building.
The committee appointed at a
previous meeting of the chamber
mark whkft
farmer* of
Throe hi
chock* wort
this mornl
M.M.: 1
amount t?
THE WEATHEB -AUD
l'i Xii, Considerable cloudiness to-
ai.d Tlmi ><iay, somewhat colder
ii.wt a and north central portion* ,
im-
idvantoge
no under Attend Service*
Ad- -nil—- -
Tobruk base
more than a gesture
and stake everything
stand farther west
MM
..*. •
1 8
pioneer
at his home tn Fort Worth of I
pneumonia early thia morning J
Hanson liad been struck by _ an 1
automobile on Dec. 29. while .4
crossing a street In ^fort Worth, j
and never regained
Hte was a former railroad work-
er and fanner, and lived near
Cleburne for Ml yaara. Who®-WoM
retired from farming and
WortA; (our halfI
<4i
hull ii<»i lake
Idild. Illy <j(Kl.
Another Hearing
On U. S. 67 Is
Set for Monday
_- , —- - ■ —
European affairs is’"modl question
Mne. of Lenin Mausoleum, Moscow.
iWenf Hn^hail Kalinin-
Former Santa Fe Burleson Post Office
Burglarized; Loot $1.81
1__ _____________
II Duce Calls Up
Half Million
columns bln/.••<<
I ibvan
i! v *'500 IMHF
suiniuoni'ti
Oo'i A
I roubles / divnlrfl
\a it.n violent n,i/i pi1
H<t
nt (•rriiiun.
NA1R( >Hl
! drill Gen
founder of
CLEBURNE. TEXAS
17 Billion Dollar Budget Is Handed Congress
. ____._____1__■- ____
British Forces Surge West Of President Directs
Vital Italian
George Roy Hartman 49. former
employee of the Santa Fc died at
ills home. H3 Mansfield Street,
at 6:30 p. nt- Tuesday
Hartman was employed in
Santa Fe shop* until about
th illness prevented
<‘■<1
Nun 11’ci
( )i I lus C
iiSw
Gean Turner.
dei lined lli.i: aith one exception,
tlie ihroc cn .ri. were the only ones
investigated liv tlie lurors. A.’theft
‘-V!1 national defense industries
| year over
- *
tarbert Rainey
'■oi-t tlie taxpayer
to dcfebd this stake
paying now and there
to lie many more tax-
Mi Roosevelt made
i ecominendations for
llie when and how
Will have to be
conferences between
Congressional' ex-
' niit' and Mr, Roosevelt said that-,
..■ hopes that th»‘ result will be a
1 ‘ i mpletfly revised, and improved
' is \stem His brdad recommen-
I dat ions seemed to ‘ rule out such
ri'.,tt it t i\j? taxes as sales levies . in
soldiers and
operatives
times, died today al
Nyeri where ho had
weeks
Lord
a m IB 25 p in
Funeral services were announced
for 3 30 p m tomorrow
Famed As Spy |
(Imperial Scout headquarter’s in :
London announced that Scouts ■
throughout the world would at- |
tend a synchronized remembrance
service for their chief scout, lord
Baden-Phwell. either -Ian 12 or
Jan 10.)
Soldier, sportsman, author, sculp-
tor. defender of Mafeking irt/onc
of the proudest actions in recent
British history. Lord Baden-Powell,
nearing 84. had been ill a long
tlnje He was perhaps least known
for his exploits as a spy. which
had grown out of his daily scout
work in South Africa and India.
previous meeting of the chamber years ago. wl
board to aid in the securing of a i further oirthl
site for the R. E A warehouse | “ ‘
and experiment station building
reported that there liad been no
progress due to plans being held
up in Washington
Industrial possibilities were again
outlined to directors by John C
Young, chairman of the industrial
comittee as well as President P
K Warren Activities of the com-
mittee together with the Chamber
of Commerce staff were outlined.
Directors were advised that any
industrial concern which might
be induced to come to Cleburne
would cost local business men
some money if such a factory was
large enough to provide large pay-
rolls and the like
It. was reported to the board that
the chamber was still following
the ixisslbllity of the securing of
an srmy camp or an officers
training camp of some sort and
that a trip, probably at (he first
of the week would be made to
Fort, 8w tn Houston to push further
| consideration
Election IHaeussed
Instruction was issued to start
the machinery for the holding of
the annual director’s election. De-
finite announcement as to voting
would be announuced later, it was
advised. Directors who will con-
tinue their term of office for an-
other year are L. R. Dole.man.
Sylvan Gray. John A King. W A
Sanders. Ruel C. Walker and P.
E Warren
Retiring directors inc’ude L. D
Aston, H. C, Custard. J Lambert
Lain, J. B. Standley. Cash Zim-
merman and Roy Armstrong. None
of these will lie eligible for re-
election except Roy Anderson who
was named on the board this sum-
mer to fill the vacancy of John
E Wade
Herman fi
nounced that
to 1940 I "
would be
7 .(Spl )-
n.ldlllH.-, f<>!
vrv 4 wen
15.316 fol
Influenea cases are believer) to
have readied their |>euk and will
begin to decline wllhltV the next
few days if the weather such
today ronllnues. according to tlie
city health officer
About 10 days ago. the health
officer said that a conservative es-
timate number of tire cases would
be It is believed that (here
are many more cases, but the ac-
tual number Is hard to determine
Absences In the Cleburne school
system due Lo Influenza is esti-
mated at four per cent ot l.he '-tu-
denX,body. Superintendent Emniett
Browh said todav
This figure is over.and above
the normal absence during the
krfBgei months of six is’r cent
Tlie hii|>erlntendcnt estimated ihat
1 140 students were out of school
today due to tntlu<piza
The city, health officer declared
that if the weather would con-
tinue as it is today that flu would
definitely be on tlie decline, if
not blotted out to a minimum
Superintendent Brown <’
that the numbr of students out
with flu had not neared the point
of pie Januury ; favor <>f’hlgher assessments on in-
to a sudden re-( come
afternoon when
MCDuff rtianded
to District
five slstars. Mks E
of Tyler. Mr*, H E
Tulsa, Mrs Charles Crandall of
Geneva, New Tfork: Mrs Alfred
Dudenalng of Houston, and Mrs R
M. Fore of 'Burtut, La . and several
nieces and nephews
Dillon Hqiv
is in charge of a
i (iciti.Liii Riess Makes
i * \ lolent At tacks on
I ’t esident Roosevelt
aa-
_mS:S
after th* *
dn, to the 11
1>articularly' those -fattened ■ ,
by the defense program. ~
The figures he presented for I
the 1#43 fiscal . year, beginning
tills July- 1, shattered precedents
in almost, every category
President ■ Roosevelt's *17,485,-
000,005. budget for fiscal 1942 sets,
no record In .1918 appropriations
totaled *18.881.940,243 In 1919
the total was *27,065,148^33
But estimated federal revenues
of *8 971.000.000 for the 12 months
beginning next- July 1 will set a
[ new high for tlie country: if col-*
I lections conic anywhere near that I
l figure I
Largest icceipts in any past fis- I
cal venr were *6 694^6'5,389 ill
1920 *
Tlie J.7 1-2 billion dollar budget I
will be swelled by wtia^ever aid
Congress agrees to extend to Great, I
Britain under flic Pptesident's lend- I
I irtfc-leasing plan. It will certainly-. I
to go to
hearing
Meeting nt. ;t p, m , Tuesday
Hltcrnixni. the directors set the
dales lor the 1941 Johnson County
Fair dates tjiis
will tall n week earlier being
fpr the lour days -Sept
lor Education
We art' not tlie most pious pco-
(>He would probably
rathi r tar down the Hst
from tiu>t group, but. .there is one
Thing which we do object stren-
k’ uousiy to.’
That is sonieone taking lite Bible,
the most sacred book In the world,
anti using it for some purpose
• oilier than u means at informa-
tion regarding the right way of
living This tampering with the
Hply Book is rather irksomg to us
even it it is for- education.
d) I
,<d -. j|l(.
! I her
otieug-H)
pit.one t<>
tmic sitengHi
W V "! 11 sfl 'i )N
t 1'1. I'll 1.' !<■ ■ . V.
be held
lOOn. at. 4 o'clock,
ilrcet Bap-
r ~ Cul-
Dr.
W.
What Nent" . '
Prof Paul ,R. Farnsworth of |
.Stanford flmveisity psychology (it I
partment asked 119 Wisconsin stu- I
dents. 42'Stanford students and 55 i
' "old maid" teachers tjj Wisconsin
to, revise the order ot the Ten
Commandments, in the light ot
modern social conditions
They ranked them in the follow- I
ing order, with the Biblical number |
in parentheses
Thou shall not kill
Thou sha
Thou
ultuy 17>
4 Tirol i
' witness <9>
5 ' Hi mor
mol her i5t
6
I Sil I Illg
jury came
yesterday
Foreman S. E.
two mdicUnents
Clerk John R Heaver.-
tl wax what is believed to be
the smallest number of Indict-
ments returned by a grand jury
at the first sitting dunftg . a ses-
sion in many years Old timers
said they ootild not remember wheu
such a small number of indict-
memi had been- (lied by a grand
.mi v
The imiiclments were against
l> Fuller, v '
qounl y
C A
rliivtog wlillc intoxicated
driving wbilt intoxicated suit
iranstciifu Ip county court upon
the grjgiui i'ii v recommendation.
Second sitting of the grand Jury
will begin Feb 17
Dijil.ru P At'ol ney
declined that witli
FOHT WORTH LIVESTOCK—<U.*B
Cattle 1600 calves liMXt, active and
~ strotig . steers and yearlings 6 50 to 9 25.
fat COWS 6 26-6 75: cutters 4.26-6.26.
calves 7 50-9.50 Hogs 1800; steady to
10 higher: top butchers 6 95-7 00; moat
good butchers ,6 85-6 95. mixed grades
6 00-6 80, pigs 3 50 4.50; packing sows
5 75-6 00 Sheep 1300, steady; fat lambs
8.25-8 50
the
concentrating
that casualties
fewer than 600
commander at
may
lhe base with associates
Bad Humor
Maybe it is because at
Ing we are rather out of
tljc world One feels that way
once In a while wixejy/ it seems
all efforts tall to produce results.
Work which seemingly tails to pro-
gress the worker is irksome Tliat
Is the way with us now Despite
all that, we -can, it seems as
though our energies are wasted.
While writing that paragraph, a
through flashed through our minds
! for the second tipie today It
j was: we live lor a pat on the
back
Don't lake that to mean we want
a pat. but, it is, a thought which
we might remember when people
t working under us do a good (job
Try it with your employees, your
family or your neighbors.
Just a Quit)
Beth Archer, a worker on the
staff, handed the following to us:
"Delving into history a little,
few facts concerning the month
of January have been noted Tlie
month of January, as everyone
knows, was named after a two-
beaded man. Tlie Romans nam-
ed the month for Janus, the god
of lieglnnlngs and his festival fell
at that time of lhe year Hr was
a bird with a couple of heads which
signified Ilia.', of the past as well
as the futuie
"Tlie yefti originally began In
March, on lhe early Roman Cal-
endar, but s Roman, Numa Pom-
pillus. asserted his authority, and
created January, also giving If. 30
days Julius Caesar then added
a day lo January, so that wc now
have 31 dfiys in the month
The Hcandinavians called
month Thor in honor of tlie god
of the storms and file old Anglo-
Haxon spoke of it as Wolf-monlh
because the extre ne cold drove
the wolves Into the villages in
search of food
"Anyway, it is » mean, bad
month thia year, wLh(coki daiup-
- By l,l|pt< (I 'Press''
Bl i la II r -' qesert
west pa.I Italy's
'Tobi uk
youth::
Fascist
Ubly :
ttrill w li.li \jnh'fit Nazi
' num fui ii’ii--1 J, I’" I'b’ib H>«.-.e•• •• 11 .
' as" lhe ’enemy" .ot German. Italy.
Japan and Russia ami Iresh iikU’ j
cations ol something brewing mi
the Balkans
Bulgarian government, announced i
that Premier Bogdan Filoff will;
go before the people Sunday 'tn*
explain Hie government |x>llcies ' >
There was no indication as lo-i
why tlie government policies need-
ed explanation and Filoff repeat-
edly denied report* of Hie German
ultimatum or Bulgarian acqulese- only
ence -
Russia maintained silence
The RAF reported another strong
bombing attack on the Aibanla'n
base at Klbasan and tlie Greeks
said they would resist any attempt
| by Germany to force her to patch
up a peace with Italy under threats
I of intervention
I British
past "as compared to the possible prison I force*
sentence which will taec.the burg-
lars The loot from Hie post office
amounted to *1 81 in small change
and a 45 automatic pistol Noth-
ing was taken from the liuto of-
fice
The burglaries were discovered
j Hits morning alxiul, 6 o'clock when
. I-Postmaster A H Loyless opened
up the post, office. Tlie small
change which had been put. in a
tobacco sack wa^ taken from (h6
cash drawer. ?t
Federal authorities will take
charge of the case and the prose-
cution when the burglar is appre-
1 bended Tlie sheriff department
will work with the govertunent
agents oh the case
Milam Loyless, brother of the
postmaster who was sleeping in
the adjoining building, was not
awakened last night when the back
door of live post office -was pried
open
Tire automobile office was brok-
ed into by breaking out a window
in the reai1 of the building
be included later Ls
training civilians for,,.*
7111*
a million men and worn- j
en are included in apprentice
training, vocational training and
pilot training The President pro-
poses to increase thLs figure Sur- 1
under Way to deter- ]
mine how great the increase should
be
The new program will put great-
er eipPt'Mls on training for Jobs
| in defense Industries'; less on pilot T
training The government is
• spending W7.009.000 this year for
’ pilot training, only to find that ,1
i some of the young persons being trf
* trained to fly will not voluntoer --J
I lor military service; that some 1
I can not qualify . ]
! Also the Army and Navy are ■ .‘4
dissatisfied with the kind of tralu- ' 1
ing being given . 1
Result may be. a induction in
number of trainees, and intensifi-"',’|
‘...L.;:. t training; also a re-
' quimnent that persons promise to I
enter one of tlie air services of J
tlie armed forces before they are I
Halned ■
| Burglars Woke into the
office and an auto dealers office
In Burleson last night, and federal
and county officers Ix'gan close
collaboration on tlip case this
morning.
Loot of the burglars wrfs small
t Henderson 81
W». Dr 8 B
relating Assisting
be Rev J
B A Baker
Fatfbeerwa -Will be J D 1
nw»A W. Kan»w»ke. John Wi
i- Wallace Homburg, Bill Gray
Ted Burd
Survivor* are MS wife;
daughter. Mrs Burch Luck:
sons, Harry J ^iartuian and Billy
George ffareman:- three brothers,
Cl ar enoe Hartamn of Wichita
Falla, and Karl H*r**nan and Wil-
liam Hartman, both of Houston;
----- “ H Wright
Crawford of
Charles Crandall
The Battery B ’ ol the National
Guard will leave here Thursday
at 1 p m . according to an offic-
ial dispakcU teom ___
t General Claude Yt Bfrkhead.
deciared jthe 3801 Dlvte,on
out .
with flu had nol neared the point
where closing of the schools wotild
.be considered He continued that,
the schools were talcing every pres
caution possible to prevent any
spread ot the disease In the
schools.
ordered .<* |
sli.ik.iip ol the mival
* miun'ml jiuI aiitlruiijed
imiei-.e III the .letilo I'ntl'Jcd
ol the navy from
. V'l' iioo. m,iking war-
1110(1 shall Hot covet < 10l tnrli oil,! }M,nsiv>y in
j am Hu Lord, thy God, thou ; commissioner's court
have lip other gods Ixrtore
Gi.
Thou .'.halt
thee a graven utiagr
Rernetnbei Hie Sabballi Day.
to keep It holy
n> ‘'thou -
name 01 Hie
vain <3.i'
i lore congress a $17,485,528,1)49 bud-
| get tpr Hie nun! detense of our
democracy
Hi' served noth'- that he soon
will ask still more billions to pro-
vide uiuiiltions lor Britain and
'<itlua ' ( oiintries battling (lie axis. ,
lufoianed legislators .talked in
Ivlin., of $?.,000,(881 .<>G0 to *10,- ■
I 000.900.0(8) tor Ketping Britain over
u long period Any such stun
would push lhe budget iar past
I $20 (MMI (XXIJNM) • But today's budget
wa.. all for America—an’ America -
■; in which Hie President said ''De-
ime i )(■ \ .i. .i «av <>1 life Is at
i' : iki '
| It is gmiig I
i •* lot more
I Hi,in lie
'■a ill I1HVI
I paver-, tail
i iio .tini’llli'
H VsHIM, I ON Ian X
I In- President todav (In,
-ai i i ping rein ganr/a-tum of
1 s I left iml ordered
vv.(i slop maiuii il al vv a e
- I raalg t II'
It ini'-' veil
nt
a ml
Kenya lau 8
lord Badcn-l’owell.-83.
the Boy Scouts and
Girl Guides and one of tlie most t
famous soldiers and military' in-( catton of their
telligcnce operatives of modern ■' ‘
Ills home at
hn-ti ill for
I Tobruk
j Bardia
Ihat Italian
I din hits vanished and
' (led the base with
lore it capitulated
British forces have driven
of Tobruk, next objective in
British Empire's lightning offen-
sive in Libya, and are cutting off
the Jortrcsl, as they did Baidia,
60’miles to the east, military au-
thorities annouheed today
It was now imixissible. Inform-
ant* said, for any large body of
Italian troops either to leave To-
brukror to enter It, as reinforce-
ments. without a battle—a battle
for which, it was Indicated, tlie
Empire forces are eager
. It was reported that Britain's
lightning advance across Libya
frotn Bardia might com|x>l Italy
to abandon its great ~
with little —a--- ‘‘"w»
ol defense
on a
Tanks, armored cars and recon-
, -------- —i---- _•----,.. wrl p
the
ness and Hu " M
We think lhe last line rather
appropriate, considering the dull
gray of the sky and the chilling
bi ee*c
not lira I
I
I nuissance planes
I sounding out weak spots in
25 mile perimeter of descrl. torts
tinging Tobruk Tlie main Tobruk
nil ixii 1. El Adem. 15 miles south
ot t be cMy. had fallen and thou-
sands of fresh British Einpirc
irisi|>s wetc nCving on the Him
by truck
irnt-leasing plan.
( pass the 1918 figure
; Also
| ttioney
meanors were found and the Jury
passed over further investigation.
With the two imliftments being
returned, indications arc that erime
in this county is definitely on,
tire decline Unless a great num- '
ber ol indictments are found at the I
years ago, when ________
Ivlty
Funeral xte-vicea will
Thursday atlgti
at the Rast Hen
tlst Church. W|t
tapper „
Culpepper will
Bruner aqd Aev
______.„ _. .. Nttn-
. W^ Kiuwwxke John Wright.
“ t and
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Ferguson, Joe. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 79, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 8, 1941, newspaper, January 8, 1941; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310503/m1/1/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.