Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 191, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 11, 1943 Page: 1 of 8
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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38TH YEAR. NO. 191
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. SUNDAY, .11 I.Y II, 1943
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BEACHES
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fi
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fe
xhuwn 'I'UPIWTT
compre*
/
Attack Field
Liberators
its
RAF
T
Rev
G
C
against
12—Lampedusa surren-
16
were ordered paid
al
dell
Injured in Crash
George Killingsworth
Mrs
/ '
--
banks
in
♦
*
*
day. ■;
— Ben
L.
—
W. Institute
cannot see
il
J
7*
Amen
I
I. ,
;1
L *
■
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—
J
1U
Birth Notices
Received Here
U. S. Fortresses
Attack Vital—
French Targets
Labor Agreement
Is Threatened
Material Presented
To OfficiaWamL
Department Pleads
Distinguished Service Medal
and Silver Star.
4
r
• meret's new award, the
Legion of Merit. It can be
won only by members of
armed forces of U. S. and
•ar" _
Fortresses attacked vital targets in
France today while1 hundreds of
RAF bombers .were still returning
from a heavy raid on the Ruhr, in
j the first literal
will be
The in
ready i
cause, o
facts
Wide research Tor facts, figures
Herman Brown, manager of the
of commerce, leases 8un-
were
One
sacling
:. coi-
BACK UP
■YOUR BOY
leer ease yeof-e
peyre/f ssvfgff*
fe yew familf Hail
tension
Texas A
r.ial
the
the
A
Levy Lowered
For Bond, Note
Payment Funds
-a
4 ,
r
It might have happened-to
any girl in the plant but
Mr. Lurton picked Chris-
MUNITIONS
GIRfip
Monday
**
inslow,
lor the
uesdav
b'
fe
0 • Arm, Photo
NEW AWARD — This is a
C. L
Tex., 1
Mrs.
for a
go to
jr spe-
14 Complete Map
Drafting Course
A ten cent .reduction In the tax
rate for the City of Cleburye for
1943 passed Friday evening at the
rn-gai*TEniwii^ ,R41'
7 T7'.7.?r'ifT
•m-
Promises’.’
the July
County
jus before the r
nt was made last )
The milk and .;
by the Union O
thus
Sicily try*
a select
t dinner '
offl- >
»7\ -
'K
rW n
4MW —- —„
livestock numbers are reduced . __
aiseable quantities of f red are Un-2X000)000 more than last year.
» * ■
^^fl
n
was at work in his garden. ,
Mr. Russell, who formerly lived
),po South Wilhite street In Cle-
moved to Alvarado About
r ago. He was born In Ala-
bama but had resided in Johnson
■J -
Herman Brown
| To Attend C of C
Managers’ Meeting
' w..
to shew a girl a good time
but ha forgot fo explain
that the F. B. I. card ho car-
\ rlod was a ticket to trouble.
Priscilla Wayne’s now *or-
HI it or y begun
Cleburne Times-Review
. Published Daily Except Saturday \ United Press Leased Wire
TODAY
„ IN TUB ,
Times-Revi
tries? ships destroyed.
farmhands could move unIn- ~ — F-
- Hot suri partiy
1 Opens Cotton Bolls
Aufeust Meyer, who resides
y
7-W a-
JBIG SCALE BLOW
STRUCK AT ISLE
•JS
” Council Action
Means Saving
For Local Citizens
'Standing
will be the
meeting of
assoc lattonal
on
Baptist
ell will mean a
-g
Indicated by Agriculture Forecasts
; ' •
WASHINQrrON, July 10^ (U.RP7
jjjjjfc' pQKfllbly requiring r hbfirp
curtailment in meat and milk pro-
duction, was indicated today by
u . k Agriculture Department -tofecasta
flghres that so far as.oj production sharply below ewti-
sports are concerned? there are no — —- - 1^"“’ . r '
more worlds f<A him to conquer i
, He F......‘‘ — “7
i cast, got doubles on ruffled grouse
J rlMAlea and nnm h* Ka* Vhb»ahT> ~
tvs on Friday.!^* u«t whh bls first hole-ln-on#'iu(r'ln”Tn otherwisc,'generailv"fa-
Among thow vlsitkd were Cx.-; 1 “* 1------- - rr --
_a rtagler of Joshua, Reece Cpp-
JI
'*L 'fl
P 7
. ■
[ors Include
------- ~jb Russell of'Foil
I,Earl, Roy and Valter R1
j Alvaradd?
i. view an<'\ __________ ______
I two (MUghters, Mrs. Wayne Riggle
of Brazoria aiMf^lss Opal Russell
, M. Alvarado. . •
ALLIES LAMP ON SICILIAN
CLEBURNE TAX RATE
IS REDUCED TEN CENTS
ed up just in time to give them Legion Poet had appointed a spe-
*- gswd bembtng - nmi and yiat cUU~annmttt»e E. _
'bombs were -failing all over th® aiding the chamber of commerce
airdrome.- along the-runways and In Its effort* to secure recognition
among the buildings.” No enemy
fighters appeared and there was
little anti-aircraft fire.
gpuniMinn. — j
MAfiMMGK LKENSCS
Among those receiving marriage
licences this week-end Were Charles
Martin of Venue -end Lena Ruth
Rigby of Cleburne. . anM '■
Carroll and Mrs Helen West, both
of Cleburne. S’ ?
‘‘if
‘M
Licence Examiner
To Take Vacation
' Institute to Be
Held at Dallas
The Annual Cooperative Institute
“tnforma-
»■ __
to southeastern coast port Was bum-
will be dte-’ing fiercely when they headed for
home-------- -------------.
----------------- _ --------------------•
—7----^Contributions Made
1T0 Milk*Ice Fund
-
1
ing on Oet—1 earryBvr.r of- SOO.-- f- ?Tr Witt atxrr nttmd tt tnur-day
000,000 bushels, 2,000.000.000 bushels Chamber of Commerce Institute be-
less than a year ago 11 ‘ ‘ -----------*—
I The ’ department forecast
.. . tJoh a 3.000.000,000 bushel supply,
compared with estimated needs of
at least 3,400.000,000 bushels Offl-
•V WH»M»--- _
a short feeding or Importation ap-
ly peered to be a reduction In Uve-
eent less. Stock huinbers.
*L Farmers are now feeding some
b^- 80.000.000 cattle white smaller ship-
ments to markets have created a
of beef. Farmers have in-
in***1*! *0 tfrtrw a
record i2q.008.000 head of ho^<w
leans have been shipped to south-
*west U. 8 agricultural areas In
ten months expressly provided for
rigid governmental control of the
--““-“nonf ■*"
C of C Continues
Work to Secure
U. S. Hospital
MEXICO CITY. July 10. ( ~
A threat of the collapse of t
entire structure of the Mexican-
U 8. .migratory—labor agreement;
Is the unrestricted migration of 1
Mexican field hands into Texas to
work the cotton harvest, accord-
ing to a competent official source
here today
Mexico would abrogate ttte pact,
which supplies vital manpower to’
American farm areas, and, stop the
flow entirely before approving Un- |
controlled movement of Mexican ;
laborers across the border. this *
source said
The attitude was taken
face of increased agitation by <Tex-
as I. ..
border "free zone” wherein Mexi-
can f
hibited by imihigration restrictions.
Texas dftpatches -mdieated around
17,000 hands were needed to save
the cotton crop • '
t The Mexican government’s atti-
a graduate of
M College, came to
Grapevine where
AMERICAS
PRAYER
MINUTE >
Texas Dear Lord. We can .
but we may see Thee with the
eye of faith. Above the troub-
les of this world may we rest
our souls in the radiance of the
___ mountain summits, lit by the
Oten.1 glory ot and. Ite Jaeue' waaae.
RAF Bombers Make
Heavy Raid on Ruhr
In Europe Blitz
MgftpoN July 10. gUJti—Three
■.rtfeyLformations of U. 8. Flying
pital; and C. L. Moore.
n Brownfield. Tex., father of
dead child. Mrs, Wright'S
had been amputated.
Sheriff Curington said there
38 persons aboard the bus.
TAM.T-- -USinr ~ayTTlPff~S?7ireToara parV 5T“~A
Mossersciiniltt wing from pipage shot clown in Thames, Eng-
land. Natal Squadron keeps caicful check of planes they
down. Fliers- from eight nations make up group which ha*
accounted for 68 actAal. enemy kills and 47 "probables ”
Baptist Associational Workers
Conference Will BeJHeld Monday
Burleson Named
Hood Co. Agent;
Leaves July 16
U. S. Navy, and expects to leave
Tuesday. He will report to the
“ ' Training School in
Williamsburg, Va. ,
Reverend Hatch will deliver his
‘ final sermon at his church today.
' He has served as pastor of thr
local church for the past year and
a.s supply pastor for several months
* prior to that time while In sitlWt.-t ------
■ ——— r- I CORSICANA July 10
! ' C - D^. — A 'persons were killed, three
r Ormt^r Kf^Nlddir crltlcaUv iniured and 15
a
13—Linoea surrendered.
10—Stelly Invaded. -------J
-----:-----------------’ ....... ••*••••.----------Ji
i mashed Comteo end Taomiina. M
miles south of Messina, causing
heavy damage
(London reports describing
h Allied offensive of
I the'* shlpptoc:.
docks and cement plant at Ham- I
hong, French Indo-Chlna. tod|ay
with tons of bombe. ”,
An 8.000-ton Japanese freighter 1
in the harbor was left burning and
listing In the water and a smaller
merchant vessel was hit and be- I
--------g fliers said tEe cement 1
plant and the dock area of the
on God's
theme of
the Johnson
Worker';. Conference
Monday at the..North Cleburne
j naptist Church. Rev G C.
| Futler, pastor of the host church.
I
■ regular meeting of the City Coun- !
ell will mean a savings ot appyox- I
Imately *g,ooo lor the taxpayer^ of |
Cleburne,. ,
y a reduction of ten <
year
t This reduction comes in tiie levy ;
u«v July 14 according
tion received here.
Matters of vital Importance
farmers' oooperativy t._ '_ .
____________________________________<________________________________________
is Two Killed, Three
i
istered pigs given
Roebuck Oo. f 1
; Sewing Ho«m
Rawing Supervisor* Mmes
Stanley Mudge, H. Tim.
live; W H. were being considered. „A few j Fourteen studc-nts in the ete-
months however, presidential nuntary map drafting, course which
E. Corhltt
of Fort Worth received, certificates
WASHINGTON. July 10. <UP
|- | “It’s 'the beginning ol the end "
President Pjoosevelt tAuiT de-
I | scribed the invasion ol
revealing the attack to
| I p.ioup of White Houst
I-—-l-gttests two Ixteirs
L ; clal aiinuunci qien
L._ j,midnight. i,
I Tlie party was :n honort of the
L. | French commander, XJen. Henri
* llonore Giraud, and Mr Roosevelt
| promised him that the Sicilian at-
I | tack will oc followed later by
I other campaigns for the liberatftiri
I [ ot all of France and "the ehmina- |
j tlon of Germany."
I TO RESPECT NEUTRAL
STATUS QF VATICAN
i WASHINGTON, July 10, >U.R>—
__TlSSlflcnL. mJQM.YelL in u nienwge
i to Pope Pius, said today that dur-
ing the present Invasion of Italian
soil churches and religious insti-
tutions would "be .spared the dev-
astations of war" and that the
neutral status ot Vatican City would
~ be respected
It was explained at the White
House tjuit Mr. Roosevelt's refer-,
cncc tu the landing on Italian soil
referred to the invasion of Sicily.
Rut. ills nromlx® that, neiit.ralitv I
, , respected was taken as
diretien Ihnt the campaign wlii be
carried later to the Italian main^
land. The city of Rome, which
surrounds Vatican City, has not
been bombed, but a recent British
iuiuuuucement said . no commit-
ments had been inadg
bombing it
as a possible hospital site. The
American Legion has made con-
tact with high ranking government-
V- -^e5-‘-tude, the.-source poinuxi out. im-fthe WMt Ford community, brought
a avu"*!.*" Mrf .V,0,!1’ P1,ed rto discrimination against jnto the Times-Review office Sat-1
«i™ Donnen, Mrs Grfcy, W.. M'» Texas -The bilateral agreement urday several bolls of cotton.”
mon Gray, CatholFnr Hick*, Mrs. Ann un£jer which more than 25,000 Mex- which had been partly burst open
by the hot -4 sun, and then hac|
failed to develop further.
Meyer stated that the heat burst HEADQUARTERS. 14th U. 8.
the bells bef6re they, were ma'tur-fAm, FORCE. China, July «. (U.R> «
ed and that he doubted if there . ixlaredt—In the biggest raid
would be much cotton' this year if since they reached China. U. 8. jS
other fields of cctton showed the Liberator* pounded the shipping
same. (* *■ '---—
fl..in
for the bond funds and note pay- i
ment funds and Is also due to the ■
fact that the Water Board Is con- n. ,r nnmw ®<uo id <»
i,s bond 1,iatur1’ i likeness ol the‘War Depart®
ties and interest. i t, . j
The *2.21 Is divided as roliaws:'* ’
operating and trust funds, $l?37‘ti |
and bonds funds, 83cents. t i
; The operating and trust funds!
are divided as follows: operating I
1 schools, 75 cents; generaLIuud. 351 .
icents; street fund. 20 cents; 11- I
brkry, 5 cents: park purposes. 21
cents; Cemetery fund, one-half • ,
cent. I
Division in the bond funds Is i IJ Z1* IT IT . 1
permanent street and bridge bond j V. U< ilHlCn
" fund, 3 cents; school house and
equipment bond fund, 12 cents; I ’T
special refunding bonds No. 1, 9|JL6HV6S 1 UCSuHV
cents; special refunding bonds No J
3, 12 cents; ward, school refunding i F1 ’T’ • • .
bonds 8 cents; swimming pool > t* Ol" 1 F31IHI)£f
bonds, 3 cents; funding bond series j , O ,
1931, 8 cents; street refunding bond < ------
aeries 1926, IS rents street refund. '
tog I
funding bond gortefe 1934A, 5 cvhLb,
and refunding bond series 1934D.
3 cents. -
Contributions totaling 87.08 were
received this week-end for the Milk
and Ice Fund by the Cleburne
TUnea-Review.
mortal eyes is Mr. and Mrs. A;. L.
nated M 00 and two
‘Friends" for 11.00 •
"Friend” resided in the Nemo com-
munity.
Donation* to the fund may be
left at the TUnee-Review office oc
with Oeoar Pogue, fund
The milk and |ce an distributod ?
ALLfED HEADQUARTERS. North
Africa, July 10. (UFJ—Gen. Dwight ,1
D Elsenhower early today launch.
ed tlie.Ttrst hivksion uf BuryiF 111J42J
mdderti "KIsTdry, Tahtfing-slrong "1
forces of Americans, Canadhans 3
and Britons on Sicilian beaches a
under protection of an Allied air ‘ ; j
armada and the flashing gun* of 1
Allied warships.
The Allied amphibious one rat ion* ’
under command of Gen. Dwight a
I D Elsenhower began at ter two
I weeks of mounting aerial onslaugh
that was continued by hundred* of
But his promise that neutrality ,*'njl&ne* up to Friday, when U. 8. fl
ot the Vatican territory would be I Liberator* from the middl? eag*y:_M
a clear In-I ------------—j——------r—-
■ j <8uun!
^'S.too.ooo'ooo mrsheis '»?’ tV^rt wm attend-^"iniiSrWtind of
or the feeding year last Oct. 1. ! the Texan Chamber of Commerce
Consumption this year will be abput Managers Association Sunday even-
3.400 (MX).ooo bushels of com, lebv- 1 ing and Monday.
-- -------of - He wffl also attend a tuui -duy ewired
| teg held for eight southwestern ~T"
cast 19431 Rates which continues through
.706,55X000.. niday. The Texas Managers Aa-
sedation and the 8. W. Institute
have been combined this year to,
*jrve travel and time. ' ’ / 1
■ The local chamber of commerce
cials said the only alternative to official is a director of
.......... ib>r cf femtource
1 recdven norires nf th. ni-HvBi. JForHier Resident i critically Injured
7- - ^‘XhewsCeK °f the nrrlVaLS °f L. * \ . ~ ™ .ho.plt.hzed when
Mr. and Mrs J L. Smith ot, | Jipc at AlVAmnA
. Dallas announce the arrival of aj-—/lUu Ul <** VUXUW
ton on. Friday, July 9, at Dallas. ) ' •
Mrs. Smith was formerly Annabel ;
Mason of Cleburne. A son was born ' Friends here nave received In-
to Capt. apd Mrs O. A Kinzer 'formation on the death of 8 B.
of Tulsa, <5kla., on June 21 Re , (Steve) Russell. 78, which occurred
has been, nanied John Osborne.
Mrs. Kinzer was formerly LaBerte
Mason of > this city ji
T : VJlUme.
i Wfefear.
jCounty for many years. He was a
1 '< member of the Baptist church.
| ®uneral "services were held on
Jtllf 1 at Alvarado by Rev. George
] bidkey of Tecumseh. Okla., the
■ brother of Mrs Earl Russell ot
I Alvarado, daughter-in-law of the
I Survwors include Tils widow; six
I sons. Bob Russell of‘vFon Worth.
«. . ..-■k— Auggen c
ville Russell of Grand-
irton Russell of Waco;
+■ _ .
; office at a meeting In the office that negotiations* were still con- McPherson, ;
I Of the Johnson County War Price , tinulng with a large manufacturing Mortis Neal,
and Ration Board. ' 1 concern which Is considering the Shelton Poteet,
„ . 1 Howard English, chief clerk,' establishment of a manufacturing brook, Jr., W. H.
license°ther *“ ClebUrne’ ' M"m‘e WUema"
will be out of hte r***~ *--- -
July 19 through Xth, -
to announcements on C.
Harmon originally planned
his vacation from Jufy 23 through
the 28tti.
The local office will Maa. be
closed from August 23 thrbbgh
the 28th. .Thote having *
xt-~t- T.j~4.t1lMin— expiring during ------™TO™, xwre-.—r—
... . period* are asked to have them Mn. Jim Cakkey. all of
7 virAZklr aM/4 In *>
ACE SPORTSMAN
AKRON, O. <UJ>>
Invasion
Timetable
— (By United Press> ■ >)
The Mediterranean tatend*
stepping stone timetable for the
invasion of Europe since the
Allied capture of Tunisia May
13:
June
dered.
June
dered
Jun®
July
Richaid E. Burleson, locational
agricultural fc ichei in the Cleburne
schools for the past two years,
will- go to Hood County on ' July
for'the burncMi tebgin his duties «" the Hbodj
- , County agricultural agent succeed-1
mg C A Mtinsch, who came to • £
Johnsbn County , grncy Relief offering on or about
I
The meeting wilt start at 10:30 'By United Pressi
o'clock and the following program* Allied forces on New Georgia
will be given: song service. Wen- * Island were reported massed today
dell Moffitt, leader; ' devotional, for the final thrust .to take the
"Faith ^Accepted Premises." “Rev. I Japanese garrison at Munda, rid-
Charlie Club of Burleson; reci
nition of visitors, church i
sentatives, announcements, etc.
Reports Made
Reports were made to tihe board
E Wanren. and
Herman Brown of how Ihe com-
mittee had secured the cooperation
of the Industrial Department of
the Banta Fe Railway relative to
the site proposals, maps, the pros-
Open Operations
A furious naval barrage that'
Illuminated sections of the Sicilian I
J W<W*V Ugt.KAI VIIC UOOC.l MV-TI
| tion* in darkness as the Allied 1
were fleet — including battleships —
and threaded through the enemy mine |
field and put assault troops ashore
In tank-carrying bargee. There
was no immediate Indication that
Mussolini's scattered and battered .
Italian fleet accepted the chai-
3__
' I \. I I i- X VS i ’..I.: I ifk-.j •.-,riri '.IH j'.-i IK.O .
1,1. v.1'11 " ns I’ll...... l.’i’Ari ...nih Slid
“ ............
PRICE FIVE CENTS Mgflfl
:og-tdlcd by a bdmbardment from naval coast opened the invasion opera-
repie- vessels planes and land artillery. | lions in darkness as the Allied
:tc. j American jungle troops
' closing in from the east
, north. The bombardment started
| before dawn yesterday when war-
| ships started shelling the base
! A hundred bombers, escorted by
I fighters, followed, up with a -.70-
1 ton raid in th® heaviest single Henge to fight the nvaslon.
aerial attack in the South Pacific. | (Londi—---- -——
Forces two miles east of Munda , greatest
rprc“B two miicN nisi oi ivii.iiaH , Krtriivcsi auicu oiicnsiw oi viil
«u>)_ ' hauled up artillery and troops on ( war suggested that parachute and I
I the!Rendova were shelling the Japa- air-borne troops were used by the 1
I nese airfield from a distance of Allies to erash through the strong' • J
• ’ I live miles. rsictMah defense*, nntnned by »n j
Mitchell bombers continued at- estimated 300000 Italians and tier- , j
tacks in the Salamaua area of mans Radio Morocco repotted
New Guinea In support of ground the landings Were "being consoll-
troops to soften up Japanese po- dated” on the west coast of Stei-
sitions. i ly. but it was believed many land."
Forty-five Japanese planes were Ings had been made arpund the M
dispersed with a loss of four by shores of the Wand.-. wlth ths»
defending fighters over RendoVa ports of Catania, -Palermo and
A Japanese communique said six Trapani a.^ wtll as Comteo, Cats-
Allied warships dere sunk In the nia arjd Gerblni airdromes as tfle^. ”
Kulu gulf last Tuesday knit admit - main Objectives. .
ted no losses Previous American *Th* reported landing • at the ;
tn the I announcements set the results at western tip of Sicily indicated
e oi mcreaseo ag.u.omn oy <Tex-! American cruiser the Helena, that the first Allted objacUvasota®
planters for establishment of a 1 8unk and fi<imnine to 11 Japo- clu>led-Ore important Axte *•*•*****
. -- . . r.—. fwm eVInt rti«Inured--------— pnf TrtTpBTrt. MaTSDla Mazza 1'0,
* Milo and Castelvetrano, all on the
j western end of the island and ~
linked by a network of good road* >
'with the big port of Palermo.)
Liberators Pound ~
" Haiphong Docks -4*
. HEADQUARTERS. 14th U..
have made
trip to New Orleans to- conler
navy officials and Rawland i
Brpwn have conferred with
officiate in Dallas and have pre-
sented copies of the outlined pro- 1
(U P)—Two posals.. Congressman Lanham has
were been kept Informed and furnished
others with complete data and
----- —-------- ...... .. north-7 Wide research Tor facts, figures ’*el •
bound Bowen ^us crashed into a and data from all angles relative ‘n the near future,
bridge QVT£ Hichland Creek, ten to the suggested site has been matte —■ — >-
mlles south of Corsicana today. by the chamber of commerce which.
1 Read from injuries were J?’ through the cooperation ,of the en-
Hayden Savage. 20, Houston ship- glneers of the Santa Fe Industrial
yard worker, whose home Was list- Department, has been bound into
.loveve, nusseu. <o, wn.uu uvvu.ieu ,®s S?\e™8"'J*0? n ^r-yekr-oid a special prospectus
at Alvarado on Juhe 29 while he ldentif)ed by Sheriff Cap Objective
- Curington as Charles Moore. , j The chamber of commerce lias,
Three persons critically injured oh several occasions, made Inquiries
were Mrs. A. J. Wright, whose utegarding hospital possibilities only I
address was yet unkpown and who to be told that no new hospitals i
was not expected to live; ” ----- — ----'■*---■ * 1
Mitchell, about 48, < ‘
already moved to a Dallas hos- ‘
of duties throughout the nation
Hopes that Cleburne will be given
first, hand oonslderatam with re-
sptet to the locution of » ‘gnu?
ernmental hospital” were revived
here this week. The extent of the
■wr BeW ’ifohr Vy TFie chainlSer
of commerce In proposing Oleburoe
as a site for the hospital was made
in a report to the board of directors
Thursday afternoon, according tb
John Morse. Jr . organization pres-
ident.
‘Activities in connection with the
proposals being made has been
handled by the manager working
in close harmony with the war
projects committee, of which Wil- ---
around-the-clock ham Rawland te chairman. Direct.
... . ....... , _. ,u ww*W shuwil'MipiwriBrWffflf
I The roaring engines of hundreds site prospectus brochures and othqr
of bombers over the coast last night intensive data including compre.
and this morning kepi residents henslve correspondence which ha*
awake and Inspired comments that been had regarding the efforts t*
i "something big was coming off" «ft Cleburne Considered as a pos-
even before the news of the. in- s*ble site.
vasion of Sicily became general, i
I Attack Field
One Fortress formation attacked- by Rawlimd. P.
the enemy air field at Caen, an-
other pasted the klr field at Abbe-
ville and the third headed for Le
, Bourget, just outside. Paris, but
Philippines. It is between *■ was Prevented from dropping
- — - bombs because elouds hid the tar- - pectew iteelf and ot the close work-
get ing together the organizations were
During the night. RAF h$avy doing They related that Santa Fe
. bombers heaped new destruction on company -officials had also repie-
1 Gelsenkirchen An estimated 2,000 sented the chamber of commerce
ton* of explosives was believed •<' the presentation of the mate-
loosed on Gelsenkirchen and nearby. rlal in Washington to high gov-4
targets in one of ithe heaviest raids eminent officials and department
to date. Ten bombers were lost heads. .
on what the air ministry said was Directors were also informed of
a "very heavy" raid. " ... ■ | the support and cooperation given
1 The American Fortresses obtain- with respect to the hospital pos-
ed the • best results at Caen. Re- slblllties by the local post of the
I turned flier* said the clouds open- American Legion advising that the
___ fM-l „n Iv, (.." .at... . ,!•.»> 1 IDtrirtn hoa UArvUnt.H u onD—
SS 1926.15 cents; street jgfUBd-^__nSsfor *
bond series 1928. 5‘i cents; re- , 77 g ‘ “I
ttag bond -Nite 1834A,-5-cwuss ' *7** "“‘’5™??’’ Vhurch
r.r..nam» hnnri ..ri.- nun hfts teceTvccT the commission of "
’.1 Lieutenant, Junior Grade, in the
Routine business • was transacted
.. «PProved accounts. I chaplain's
11— Pantellerla surren-
LONDON, July »:
The Rome radio broadcast to---
night that Italian naval force*
had gone into action oft —.
Sicily
The broadcast also said
that Italian torpedo bombers.
attacking Allied invasion ships,
had hit and damaged three
transports—of 7,000, 10,000 and
12.000 tons
Violent air baittet Involvin; A
"masses of planes” were de-
scribed
order instructed that hospital fa- has been taught by R
—T .... v. v^w .........I be Q, w ui vil 1 r\.rr rv ,v.f< luitsv ,
the surveyed and further that an over- thjk past week at the close of the
leg al] plan be perfected to assure j course The course was conducted
I ample hospitalization and rehabil- by the Engineering, Science and
Management War Training Class
-
C IIM Iv 1VJK rVAIV*, */1 ■ ■ Ur*
Cleburne. There boy* own re<-
At the clos< of the last meeting
vrt* riiuimiav iiiRin- iuc Li
'cuke were served by Mrs. Ora A.
~ ■' “,s A N. Tiqi’nell, Mrs.
Gray and W H Wil-
Johnson Co. Price
of Panel Assistants
; Sworn in Friday
I Price panel assistants for Johi
sun County woie-instruoted in their
! new duties on Friday evening by
(.Mr. Anderson of the district OPA „„
[ office at a meeting In the office that negotiations*
I concern which' 1* considering the
Howard English, chief clerk, * establishment of a manufacturing
swore In the new assistants. Other plant in Cleburne.
... . assistants will be sworn in at a ——-------------— --------~—
office from later data. The asslitants will make .
■LStt&SSS.’US’^SiSenoiB Shortage of Livestock Feed
dBy"- .‘re— - - - - —
""', Those sworn In Friday 1
I were J. O. Murphree of Joshua,
Mrs. N. F. Hale of Grandview,,
- Mrs. A. H. Loyleas of Burtespn,
drivers Mrg A^a Hutcherson, Mrs. Onnie '
there low Raybum, MTU. ’ taTtata** »nd ♦
mated requirements
hre cjught two trout^on onp be^nly’Kr teat’ne?e*-
and duck*, and now ho ha* topped
th® list, with his flint, hote-in-nn*'
omu UI EU< MUWVWDV gencraii.y vn-
Owrl-]*1 \ vorable forecast of IMS food pro-
MMta7 ■ /A,
While livestock numbers have ln-_
creased about ten per cent over r ,
year ago, feed production likely peered to be *
-----— ton per eent ------1,111 ,1''' --
feed shortage,
in many area*
la! oom growers are
Allied Forces
Mass for Final
thy offWlh? to the World Einer-’ Thrust at Munda
) July 18th .”
who went to the Ex-1
Sit vice Department at
x M College as a spe-
dlstriet agent.
Burleson, who b,
A
from Grapevine where
t.s ’ .1 vocational agri-
teacher He taught in
Navarro County lor four years be-
fore going to Grapevine
Mr and Mrs Burleson and little;
daughter, Betty, reside at 105 Sun-
Thcy plan to move to~Oran-
as j *11 viiv nvcai iuvuic.
-^Burleson's successor in the Cle-
burne schools has not been named
County AgMt C. A. Munich vis-,
, ited with a^humber of Johnson
County 4-H Club
ton . , - -. —-j. -_____
pengei/of Godley, John Barker of
nrer Bono, end Niok Roof, Jr., of •- Tfl '
totem* gMg
by • Bear*- TT
The rate of total Income for all
persons In the United States In-
creased on an annual basis more
60 per cent between April,
and April, 1M3.
' . V-
will deliver the sermon for the
morning and will have as his sub-
I .feet "God's Promise of Victory to
’His Peopl^ ” ;
' This will be the last Werker'el'
Conference preceding the annual
Association meeting to be held hi
Cleburne dn Sppt 16 Every
church tr asked to make a "wor-
le to|
C Mensch took the place of W N
1 iaci wmi mgu raiiKing government- ' Williamson,
! al officials relative to the hospit-I
Wide Research
Warren and Brown ”
a t“
with
and
Texas A
Clfeburhe
he seised
cultural.
were Ration for war casualties. The I'-~"... ~
I main objective on the part of tlie and sponsored by Texas a" « M.
("civic officiate at the present time ; College < •
* is to get Cleburne placed on I he 1 At the dust ui’ the iasv inerting
J list ot proppred sites to be in*|»-te-! on Thursday night Ice cream and
ed. |--------- -- -- — -
Members of the war project com- Corbii'. Mrs
1 mittee include-William Rawland, Alline S.
[ chairman; H., C. Custard, P E.
| Warrten, W. E. Abbas. J Lambert
-Lain and- L ' D. Ast&n.
| The board was also informed by yr*. ,
'the manager of the organization Cray, CathoftTO Hicks Mrs
► were
R C. Myers, Mrs.
Mrs Frances’ Nix,
Tom W. West-
Wilbanks and
. ... • 1 movement.
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 191, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 11, 1943, newspaper, July 11, 1943; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310925/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.