The Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, October 15, 1943 Page: 2 of 4
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PAGE TWO
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1943
see
ey
STOPOVER ON
)
(B
e I P
)
/
A
b • •
K
ad-
U
•aShi.
good.
old-fashioned kind of free
American enterprise that
THE GRANDVIEWTRIBUNES
and
wn
!
r
the
ce,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rose and Mrs. C. C. Jones.
and Man Street is symbe
are
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Dean and
ith
Main Street we would find most i daughter, Jimmie Ruth, were
vititors at Antioch, Sunday.
often.”
NOTICE TO TRIB
WHene
ad-
Rationing
i•
NOTICE TO THE PUB
E
IS NOT MEANT TO
'VMS
T
STOP BUYING
INSURANCE
Of All Kinds !
)7
25c
11c.
Q
ADMISSION
17c
lie-
O’Hara-Harrell Co
d
4
11C
ADMISSION
25c
“MERCHANDISE OF DISTINCTION
Telephone No. 13
(
_
daughter, Carline, Mr. and Mrs. I
John L. Irby and children, Won- '
zell and Wendell of Fort Worth
Mr. and Mrs. Laten fl
and children spent Sunfl
Mr. and Mrs. York in Al
Mr. and Mrs. Marsha
were Cleburne visitors, Sun
was
few
The people of the United Sta-
tes have again been warned that
suicide air raids by the Axis may
and Mrs. Allen Strother
Island Grove communit
Sunday visitors in the hj
Ale DELC0US FLAVOR O
AAPLE SYRUP 15 DEVELOPEV
a IlY AFTER eSAPIS BOILEV.
in—
c of
with
* for
n its
i
J
g
for necessary errands.
“Yes,” she. went on, "yov
the trend in all sorts of p]
RAIDER WORKING
IN THE UNITED STATES
Rock Tank News
Notes
T
8
-
Tribune will we as fol
lows: ,20
Grandview or on di
Route out of thil
$1.50 per year; A
where, $2.00 per %
Renew now and sl
difference!
If you want to buy
or sell_See me!
lg
'J
< uaLn
1
equipped with things found on
(Continued from page 1)
This Business
Of Living
Grady Elliott
Insurance
where in England—Stretching far
into the English countryside, this
double line of U. S. Army half-
tracks is a sample of the big and
growing stocks of tanks, halftracks
and other heavy equipment waiting
in Britain for marching orders.
; -s2 SUPER PLOW, DeALOPED FOR
RE WOREIN6 CALIFCENIA HRMLANV, CUTS
A FURRON 6 FEET DEEP/ w6e 74NA
AN, amp WE/6#WG i^ooo pwnp9.fr
7 PULLlMS POWER OF 7= 729C7DRS
Real Estate
. ""E- g8
A PHOTOELECTRIC INSTRUMENT
INDICATES WHEN ADDITIONAL
OXYSEN 15 NECESSARY AT
HIGH ALTITUDES — FROM
THE COLOR OF THE BLOOD
lM AN AY!ATOMS EAR/
THE TRIBUNE
SNAPSHOTS
The two piece dress is a “must” with the
well dressed woman today, and here is a
perfect example of a New York creation in
bright green wool for all days. Three shiny
brass buttons are used as closing on the
short flared jacket. Hat by Sally Victor.
preverrcon work, just as
3,
cAAKkets’
HOLDING THREE
BL AM SETS, THESE
STURDY WATER-
TIGHT COHTAMERS
ALSO ARE USED
BY SEAMEM 70
PlMCH-HlT AG
EMERSEHey WATER
HESSELS
THE POCKETBOOK
of KNOWLEDGE
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Basham
visited in the home of Mr. and
2 9
U
7 /
a
_______________ ★
Wha You uy With
WAR HONI5
In order to protect of
erty, we the undersign®
notice that we have po%
farms and will presecut
full extent of the law 3
caught trespassing on saif
erty: fl
C. W. Briscoe, H. T. fl
Mrs. Belle Lee, Mrs. T. M3
Boy Scout Cabin, Dr. A
Garner, W. W. Williams,!
Fleece, Cullin Poe, Mrs®
Woodard, Stim Beene,®
Davis, B. B. Brown, C. E. M
B. P. Germany, William’
Homer Hutchens, K. W. He,
78883
TUESDAY* aiid1 WEDNESDAYtiOCT.* 19-20—L U+P+E
VELEZ, EDDIE ALBERT and MAX BAER, in—
“L ADIE’S DAY”
ADDED—COMEDY and NEWS
•+++++4++++*+++++++4+++++++++4+++++++++++++++-4
MONEY NIGHT EVERY THURSDAY !
TOUCH AND GO—No job for a
nervous soldier is the task of
laying mines. Pfc. Leonard A.
Koller, of Mission, Texas, is
shown as he gets his training
for the real thing during Third
Army maneuvers in Louisiana.
t -J
mgkmd
are enlisted to sell war
EL/
+++++++++4+++++44++++++++++++++++++4++++++++++
THURSDAY and FRIDAY, OCT. 21-22—
MATINEE THURSDAY, 2:30 P. M.
FRED ASTAIRE and JOAN LESLIE, in—
“THE SKY’S THE LIMIT”
ADDED—COMEDY and NEWS
In her first official act as Queen
of the New Jersey State Fair,
beautiful 19-year-old Marion
Reid, of Kearny, N. J., pins the
Fair’s Blue Ribbon on Raymond
Paige, conductor of the Young
Americans Orchestra of the NBC
Tuesday night Salute to Youth
program, chosen as the “out-
standing music and entertain-
ment program of war and farm
workers.” ■
all sorts of jobs have accoints.
i, —A ■ -
are but a few of the fire risks
common to every war congested
area today. They are potential
hazards as deadly as any bomb-
ing raid.
There is little excuse for the
existence of such fire hazards.
They are generally controllable
through painstaking inspections.
all
• Il
E.
bonds. It is as important to pre-
vent a fire which 'destroys prop-
erty or goods which the nation
buys with the money from war
bonds, as it is to sell the bonds.
It may not be as spectacular to
prevent fires as it is to fight
them, but it certainly is a more
effective means of conserving
immediately needed resources.
ADDED—COMEDY
--ADMISSION--
, YOUR BEST
YS IN SOAP
As
i *
THE GRANDVIEW WEEKLY TRIBUNE
home of Mr. and Mrs. W. T.
Rose.
G. W. Smith and Mrs. Charlie
Jenkins of Dallas, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Sain and Mr. and
Mrs. Rufe Stanley over the
week-end.
Miss Mary Pearl Clark of Ft.
Worth spent last Week-end with
her mother, Mrs. Roy Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Doc Scott, Miss
egg
brew
WAY_TQ BER.
__
_______
fKSHOW OPENS 7:15 P. M.—STARTS 7:30 P.
SATURDAY, OCT. 16—ROY ROGERS and SMILEY
BURNETT, in—
“SILVER SPURS”
Added—“Secret Service in Darkest Africa” and Cartoon
11c—ADMISSION (Matinee - Night) ADMISSION—22c
—++++++++++++4++++++4++++++4++++++++++++++++++
SUNDAY and MONDAY, OCT. 17-18—M I C K E Y
ROONEY and FRANK MORGAN ,in—
“THE HUMAN COMEDY”
nd.home should be enlisted to
C-gSZ2 1(N
27)
your barber work doNo
week days! With youNco-
operation, things willwrk
out to a very mutual ad-
j/ K
//
2-A
-e—a*
g—E. -3
2
TA
" still be expected. In the mean-
time, another raider, fire, is , Every individual in every plant
working daily in our midst de-
worth of vital propetry.
|l' 8
.r
2
8
-72
“—==
3—4--L-
8s "j
weF gg
,o £
/ 7 f
US w
h
bout it on the radio. There
a time, you remember, a
D built
Main Streets. We’ve I egun
. _ „ - were Sunday visitors in the
would behomesickness for some home of Mr. and Mrs. M. A.
typical Main Street town and for Cooper.
some unpretentious frame house
L
$
‘h
Mrs. Henry Basham at Antioch,
Sunday.
Mrs. J. M. Shelton was recall-
ed to her home in Dallas, Tuep
day, due to the serious illness of
her sister, Mrs. J. B. Blackwell.
Mr. and Mrs. Gervias Jones
of Godley, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Kile, Mr. and Mrs. Coy Rose,
Mr. and Mrs. Miles Brickell and
Mrs. Travis Odom of Cleburne,
were Sunday visitors in the
Battle Wagons
When Japan attacked at Pearl Har-
bor we had 17 battleships in service
and 15 building. We were making
preparations but the war did not
wait. These 32 battle wagons cost
American taxpayers three billion
dollars for a two ocean navy. The
war seemed far away then.
ces.
They write glowingly of t in
stories, they use scenes fre n it
Now fifty million Americans have
a personal stake in this war. It has
been brought home to them. That’s
why everyone is increasing pur-
chases of War Bonds.
U. S. Treasury Department
-.........K"1 ”
< 420
0gi
Ph
. •ah
ge
our ------- ------L ■
agai nto admire men and women
who have the courage tc risk
their savings and their tim a
stare a business in the Ito1 -
where they live instead of ask-
ing the government for a job.
Right now, of course, mi lions
of men are working for Yncle
The candid camera catches band
leader Sammy Kaye in a pensive
mood, as he watches a rehearsal
of “Everybody’s Inn,” the com-
edy variety show, which is heard
every Wednesday evening at 8:00
p.m. EWT over the Columbia
N etwo r k. —------------- ------—
A
33333 x
I
Ji
J I
Ma ,
Sam, and war plants have huge
numbers of employees. Bu
spirit of freedom, indepe*
and initiative is stirring ag—
r
that spirit. Main Street
good, plentiful merchandis
everyday American homes
store windows, with movie that
people from coast to coal ;
seeing at almost the same ime,
with banks where people with
I
“The big cities with their ex-
clusive shops, their night clubs,
and their many sights have
their places in the scheme of
things. But if tonight we could
look into the hearts of millions
of Americans now scattered to
the four corners of the earth, it
housing developments of a
flammable character, by war in-
dustries operating in buildings
never intended to house them,
by shortage of irreplacable ma-
terials in warehouses where
grass or trash fires constantly
menace them, and by inadequate
or inaccessible water supplies in
areas never prepared for storage
or production purposes These
-M=
■ 3,9
464
/50de
' ' Ae,S P -
A • --
; 'I
r J
in advertisements, they tai c a-
Mr. and Mrs. Woody Evans ____
and son,/ John Ond Jimmie of 0100 auau
LBlufda}h andGeorge_Berrier of gIIoepIOA
Bryan spent Sunday with Mr. 1BCDBKrm*KNs3
! and Mrs. Edd SHOlton.
Obituary notices and cards of
thanks, one cent per word; unless
you have an account, money must
accompany the copy.
Programs Alvarado Theatre
. .. tlv......
-
• VW
Pem
",52
•~e#
1
5,,
2—429
On and after Nov. 1, ■
subscription price of n
The Government neither asks, nor wants, you to
stop buying your actual needs. The Government
will take; before the stores or you have a chance
to; everything it requires for the services. If
you find what you want in our store, you need
not feel that by its purchase you are depriving—
SOLDIER, SAILOR, AIRMAN OR MARINE
.... of his essentials—the government saw to it
that he got his first.
LET US HELP YOU WITH YOUR
RATIONED PROBLEMS!
' “That’s one reason,” —
mitted, “but another, it seeis to
me, is because we’re, getting
back our respect for the ’good,
Mma
4;
38ga
33238588
33898
■ J
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(U.S.VICTORY BONDS
av4,
OSOAp
seesm2m*idu
Entered at the post office at
Grandview as second class mail
matter.
M. L. Hair and Son, Owners
L
/5
69
years ago, when a lot of people
made fun of small towns. They
joked about the main streets of
America with their stores and
movies and banks and post offi-
ces so much alike. Everybody
seemed to want the streets of
the big cities.
“I see what you mean,” Isaid.
“Maybe one reason for it is that
hundreds of thousands of boys
and men from, Main Street
towns are homesick for them
these days. They keep dreaming
of the sights and sounds of
these streets so similar to each
other and so different from the
jungles or deserts or strange
foreign towns in which they are
now stasioned."
Mozelle Jones, Cleburne; Mr.
and Mrs. Calvin Sain and Mr.
mazeanmeumuxnamnasazazarzmsmamanacnxnenzazzmazmancauen
■
A NEW ALL-METAL
.45- CALIBRE M-3 SUBMACHINE
GUN WEIGHS LESS THAN
N/ME POUHPS AND 14
SO SMALL THAT IT CAN
BE TUCKED AW/AY IN A
BRIEF CASE
I
■
veb.-
■ ddbsdhn" 82-
g.gAI
.28.8 9
"akmg
L "M2 5.
Whether a factory or a home
, is burned or bombed, the loss is
the same. With . warehouses
now full of irreplaceable farm
crops, and with vital war ma-
terials stored throughout the
country, a warning should go
out for every citizen to be
doubly alert to fire hazards.
\ All over the nation, poossibili-
i ty of fire has been increased by
vantage.
I will appreciate y our
cooperation.
BILL STUART
____________________________________ I
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The Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, October 15, 1943, newspaper, October 15, 1943; Grandview, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468752/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grandview Public Library.