Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 174, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 3, 1953 Page: 7 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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Famili
ral Tex,
3.
,134
IN
LES
the using
thin ita
p
il in nc
tar protect
the total
Bruton
lus lour flor -hop
ve gi asses
in
e guies
ables
tided gate.
were not enough activity at Camp
Tesuya, the whipoorwills also held
convention.
t
ated by oil
Joshua Personals
Those making the trip were Caro- i
t
ti
lures
E4Mow1953KEIVINATOR
Look at the FEATURES!
Big Roomy Freezer Cheat.
F'
ipeedy-cube Ice traysl
y
l ,
T
ondy Door Shelves I
+
r 1
i
fl
-
1
!
Colonial blue Interior trim 1
‘ 1
6
L
6123
Ruth ( hins Hum
Model KSC iNlustreted
ookatthe PRICE!
67
274.9
95
:00 o.i# ASI EST TERMS IN TOWN
4
ITS TIMS TO TRADE FOR
, {
2
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111
a
ook at the
SPACE! ■
lOCu. Ft. 4
Sidelights From
C?mp Tesuya
Sow Early Varieties tor
Fall Home Garden Crops
mt 450 or in
how horses
affair
for about 1
The final
orge capacity sliding
neat trayl
A
twin, Moisture-Seal Crisp-
irs . . . roomy, shatter*
iroofl
roken
June
at Kansus City for $2.83 a bushel
The price was announced with the
same grade selling on open cash
markets for $2 14
Mall. That's the way Eire feels
about British royalty.
A
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MF A
mamaudftuemmda
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,umi.
lustproof, stainproof alu-
ninum shot vet I
if its Cut Down
nsect Enemies
battle between man and the
""1
, in3j l
■ c, "I
and V«
pa
a
c
s at milk
imnortance
ae2.
“.m
t2-
)/
-t /
Reffulur Meeting
Members of ie Ruth Class met
for an all day meeting this week
with Mrs Myrtle Tidwell and Mrs
Ollie MeCaig as hostesses.
Rev Threadgill gave the Invo
retion and Mrs. Carl Smith called
the class to order. Mrs Lilite Dan- -
Ward voiced a prayer
Those present were Mmes Lula
... vu nu-
III
1 7
Float Street It arched with
decorations fromLudgate Cir-
cus to Temple Bar but In the
middle of the gay display there
it a bare building facade. It
.9d
A ' •
eas where
nproved Ni
nearly all
HOPKINS
TELEVISION COMPANY
di-" j
S A
Ek M
group. Mr and Mrs G. R. Horton
"Jehosophat!
Will the kid be okay?”
E‘mB:ezuz
Ama puhuahaa a dha um
m,n"zgtaegee
been killed.
For winter greens, sow 'kale
which will be improved in flavor
by freezing and may often be
harvested as late ai Christmas
even in northern states
Though you are sowing late. rt
member in the case of tender
vegetables to choose "early” va
rieties, which means they ma
ture early. Early beans will ma
as been a
venue for
...
Street covered with white satin,
doited thickly with ermine tails.
The queen's taste in music is Biloxi. Miss , to join her busband,
xometimes unexpected. But the who is stationed there.
pm
were made of the
r J
- ■ — V3
am derail
s of explo
March 28
I cars of a
right inclu
explosives
blasted a
mature in the autumn weather
and give a long harvest of ex-
cellent quality with no danger
of going to seed.
Head lettuce ta easter to grow
in the fall, and endive is at its
best, improved in flavor by frost,
and surviving until hard freer
ing weather comes if you plan
a special crop for canning or
for storing in a root cellar, sow
beans. Leets and carrota
-7"
.....—0
Mrs Jack Gaither and son, Allan
Wavin', of T'yler, are visiting her
i mther, Mrs. Roy Dodson.
Mrs Jack Payne has gone to
merer Cori
v a broket
5
1
i legumes
rotation,
dams in
1 the grail
chance to I
mes were I
cweefclevt
ack medic I
few years
Kl Wiltemi
II proper 11
sphated. L
—=21
Mr and Mrs Jink Glasgow and
daughter have returud hume from ।
a visit in Mississippi ai: Ala-
bama.
Says JACKII OLIASON
CBS-TVStar
ays the dairy industry will and are needed Lv young and old
Ca me spotngnt for June n dairy atike for proving essential num '
Peter Do
n and his
r at each
" ✓
4
k « a
E
season of greatest inik pro
in and surpluses are ereaung
per problems They'd disap
says the specialist, if cua
er of the year Even
Mr and Mrs ( W Blakely had
as then dinner guests Sunday her
mother. Mrs Eddie Bills 'of Fort
Worth and her aunt. Mrs Eula
Autry and son and family, of Hico
Johnny Starkey of Seymour was
a weekend guest oi tdsel Broth
ers.
Wednesdav. June 3. 1953 CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW-7 eta
Coronation Highlights -
l.tlNDON. June 2 -UP—Corona Irish Guards were able to oblige
tion sidelights during a ball at Hampton Cqurt nq
The eyes of Texas are on the the other evening when she asked
• You might have witnesned this with your
own eyes.
Hot even thotiyh you were riyht at
chances are that vou had to tarn to a rwii't-
paper to yet the udioh story.
Then, for the first time, you'd learn that the
sei brought the devotional from the
123rd chapter of Psams. Mrs. it. •
2 amwe—=--e- ,
NE
( 7
In selecting varieties of vege
tables to sow late, for fall har-
vest. the Hi at step should be to
check with the local weather
omce The average data of the
first killing frost in the fall in
your locality may determine the
variety which you will sow
if 100 days of frost tree wrath
er remains you will have a wide
rang of vegetables you can sow
but do not start those which take
0 days to mature. unless they
will survive early frosts To ma
lure Chinese cabbage takes 90
days. Brussels sprouts, one of
the hardiest vegetables takes 80
days, but both these will sur
Vive several freezing nights and
yield a welcome harvest weeks
after tender vegetable* have
you all the advantages oft
neering and styling devel .
by the Columbia Broadcud j
ing System ... lcader la T .i
• Radio, Electronca.
There were 22 swats in Ite
abbey Tuesday which prpyMe..
n, view bu f-em w’deh she
Ras
ollows eat c
specially medi
We. It soothe
to baa
6" 1' * I ’ '
A "4992
milk mar
single out
child’s leg was caught in a water pipe ■ that
firemen cut the pipe first, unit then removed
it from the leg safely.
Being on the spot is not nuch better than
seeing u photograph of the action, or a head-
line, or hearing a brief announcement.
All of these can whet your appetite for
news, but they cannot satisfy your hunger for
the whole story. That’s what the newspaper
ia for—news. Meaning pictures and sufhi-
cient words.
This goes for advertising, too. The brief
message that hangs in the air ... or brief
headlines here or there ... may Indeed have a
momentary interest.
Hut the newspaper ad carries the brass-
tacks quality, the urgency of the newspaper
itself.
And since the newspaper reaches just about
everybody in town, you can see why the news-
paper is the nation’s most effective advertis-
ing medium,------------------------------
Mrs Jin Martin underwent ma
• >i sicery at Memorial Hosp.tal
i riday She is doing as well as
can be experted
Mr ard Mre Floyd Clark left to
day lor Harlingen, where they will
visit I er sister and family. Mr.
ana Mrs Sidney Yeats They plan
to he gone three weeks.
Nnrni'n Iorreit, the queen's
dressmaker. ha l the whole front
* I
W. A—Woods has Iman moved .
home from the Memorial Hospital.
Mt Woods was bitten by a copper
head snake Thursday on the river
bank
corvice can be heard perfectly.
Thev were essianid to the
blind, who followed the cere-
mony on brailled programs.
and infes'ed livestock and
’ go dim in condition be t9nrL‘ fitr
of the loss in energy and 1 " *’
IRY INDUSTRY CONTRIBUTES
I FINANCIAL-HEALTH PICTURE
dairy industry in Texas is a sumers wuul 1 step up theif pur
i important contributor to the chases of milk and other dairy
*+ 1 ' 8
pas * igag
■ - . 1
K ■■ • 58
d: » -
1 a40a5
n -I
_
-44' • j -M
-1-
aven percent highei than for
the same perid in 1952 but is ex
pected to slacken tar the remaind
E
........................... i
Major lerbert Bishop of North
Carolina spent two weeks at home
Mra. B.Jiup accompanied him
back to North Farolmna for the
summer.
sell No. 2 hard winter wheat stored
ture in •) days, lettuce in 46
days, beets in 55 days, carrots
In 70 dayl cucumbers in 45 days,
radishes in 20 days, peas in 60
days So all these can still be
•own At Iha fall barveit.
It is a great mistake to neg
lect the fall hurvest from the
vegetable garden, sice in many
ways it is the best of the year.
Some ciops difficult fot the ama-
teur in the spring are easy in
the fall Take cauliflower for an
ample in order to mature heads
in the spring before hot weather
spoils the eiop, plants must be
set out in the garden before
most amateurs spade up their
sol) But plants set out now will
houses she Dublin Evening
in UHU Col Noud was released
to inactive duty and made his
home in San Jose, Calif . until his
iecall into the Au Force I here
be was graduated from Sun Jose
Stale College with nil AB Degree.
US a Dan-Dan-Dandy!
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' II’ For once the Huth School lle subwquently tuught in the Sun
Girls are thriled with their Hand ta 4 lara County School System
craft projects Concho Bells The colonel makes his home in
if you are interested in statis Na v uilm i alif w ith is w iife and ‘ • i.
lies it is a proven fact thut It Ink teven
es 20 pounds of cotton (ut NOe a
pound) to stuff Ilk) sock dolls 'J . Millian Ruchel.
On the day of the coronation A" wI1"" "20
of Tesuya's queen, there were Of W lira! For Sale
thirteen committee meetings in the . ........ . _ ....
Executive's cabin, with each coin WASlIING ON, June 3. WI 1
mittee cutting, painting or punting The government put up 23 million
material to be used at the Cere bushel of wheat for pale We Ines !
day at prices guaranteed to drive
in! ... ... ... , , domestic customers away
Ante f rock cook The goverment offered, In an
out. Ilie girls dei ided if they were official announcement dated June
lost in the wilderness, they would 1, to Sell the grai fron its stock
eat their eggs raw of about 500 million bushels at 70
As if the Queens^ coronation cents a bushel above current mar-
"u ut Camn ket prices for some grade.
*1111* Comn.odity Credit Corp. will
mounted to about $200,000 000 let for the st. les dairy producers
H E Burleson dairy bus Surpluses are being um 1 in large
an for the Texas Agricultur- quantities for the making of ice
tension Service Total milk cream cheese butter undevapora
rton reached almost tour bil ted. condensed and powdered milk
ounds Dairy prolucts in any furm, says
ing the present month. Burl' Burli s.,n an among our best fowod
to the health and welfare of are of the utmost
tie s population The value of because the fluid
lk produced in the state last net is the largest
Mr and Mrs Roy Felty and
Randy of Benjamin spent the
weekend nt the home of Mrs.
Petty’s parents. Mr and Mrs B A
Brothers.
Beets Are Beat for the Table and for Canning ew
When aa Large as Golf Balla. S a
for the year is expected to reach
118 billion pounds or 3 billion
pounds ’more than for 1952
At the < 1 1 of 1952 Burleson rc
quirts ttial 9,000 herds in Texas
- U agricultural ucume ut the products
to say nothing of what it Stepped up purchase
—----- The world’s biggest family album
American visitors are frequently is on show here. The Re | 1 Aca
u disconcerted by the closing of the demv of Arts has assembied npr-
“ London pubs from 3 00 pm to traife of the British royal fam pt
~ 5 30 p.m back to Richard II, and covers
jbut Tuesday they were open the monarchs before that on coins
u, straight through from II a in to and seals back to King Peada who
Jg midnight, An one West Endbar „dtied in1056
maid said cheerfully, "we are op
" -"rat" non slop "
Daviess and Knox counties xere
also hard hit
I "Farmers are telephoning myt
। | office and coming in every hour," i
said Daviess County Agent Karl
EmP "ome "" team . "heir HAMILTON All. FORCE BASK, ! tOnahvesgoartrereaainlyast
kuil“ad“ihe‘prvendusttomptinscto ’i!^- peputy .... "pera;ifrsavnaryngnwatchcginerestioin,
Iosina round deshit. th.. r»..i ions and later V Ice t ommander of Ane r an. x10 sne. one
ttesenupdt dospitwetheofact tre 28th S" Division (Defense) il see a,corona itionvevery dayofoiels
ing t Ilamipon AFB «■»,, reper to life,.............
acres of farmlanas an Daviess and Camp Stoneman, I a if June' 26
Knox counties for OVevNeAs Nhipment HV Wil be
Ragsdale said the worms had J'^t^.'d to the Filth Air Force m
partly leveled a field of corn eight the. Far haslet n All Forces,
inches high on the Henry Kilgas Col Head is a native of ’ lebur ne, ;
। farm lex , and rceived his commission ■
' in other cases, he said, young in the An Poree In 1441 When.war
I clover, wheat winter oats, barley broke out, he went to the South
and rye wen' completely devoured Pacific servinK as a,bomberpilot;
or stripped ami destroyed when the In 1943 he returned to the United
worms moved in 1 Statea for hooling. back
Jackson county is in south cen to the South ।‘anific in 44 1is
Irai Indiana, and Daviess and Knox overaeastime durinu World WarI
are in the southwestern part of the totaled 38 months, and He particip
lloosier state ated in 85 combat missions, earn
ing the Silver Star, Bronze Star,;
and Ail Medal
Mrs Lee V Butler spent the
weekend with Mr and Mrs J Q
White in Cleburne
Crippled ani
ch openedkte
t
Wture.
2 —.. 3
___________— sk,
At this time the mdust ents
explains is having its troub- The specialist says that milk pro
st as are other parts of the duction in the nation for the first
/agricu’tural industry This four months of this year is about
, ihe sidewalk outside Buckingham Rag." Perhans she knows, the com*
Palace: "K A Hendri, cotton brok vosition was named for Twelfth
er and licensed classifier. 211811 Streel. in Kansas City, Mo.
Strand. Galveston, Texas " ——
mtng "T, a ' +0.1 %' 1" F"
f - pm----*
Farmers Fighting
Losing Battle On
Army Worm Blight
INDLANAPOLIS. Ind. June 3- . -
VP- Farmers, some of them shed
ding tears of frustration, fought a .
losing battle Wednesday against
"fantastic" aumbers of army ’ e
worms stripping crops in three in
diana counties
The invading worms were doing
"damage beyond belief," said
Jackson County Agricultural Agent
Edwari A Ragsdale
i
LOOK fOR THIS TAB-youT j
guarantee of America's top i
' TV value becauu it assures J !
wire producing Grade A milk, that
approximately 12,000 head of dairy
• ------ ------------— ----- — cows weie on test in the 23 dairy
0 2° Pere" kingdom goes on cohtinuous herd improvement associations in
acre, soever sanitation and control the state that 21,000 cows last
in» become ineffective, the year were artificially bred that
le well and |ag,. advantage of the situa 371 silos were filled ,n the state
. , “‘I rapid increase m num by dairymen, that 3 304 4 11 dairy
nave "ith a corresponding increase iemters owned .'>.424 dairy uni
a m*ges done The an mals and that 24,146 dairymen ut
oil taken by external para tended the 224 meetings hel 1 in
rom the producers in Texas tbe state last year by the Extea
Estock and poultry amounts sion service’s dairy specialists,
lions of dollars Right now Texas darymen are making pro
ra dollars are needed to press but must make plans that
eep i reduction on the black wil pros toe an adeyuate feeding
’ the ledger progrum including silage, hay and
entomologists of the I fas I asture develop a strong bree hng
College System have releas program fir supplyig herd re .
publication. < 324 A Guide I lacement and impruve day herd.
Renin ntrolling External Parasites inanagemen. and mar ketine prae
De9 II Estock and Poultry in Texas" tices if they are to satisfactorily
is avuilable at the office of meet compriton and the cost price
unty agricultural agents squeeze .- vs Burleson
manco. of I entomologists point out that . ----------
Oak statal parasites ure present the
■ al « dpa mand “hiklouaprs Leluuion
when the bugs are not con ... . x
in addition, diseases are orest
unday nigh innoyance organic msectic! The Junior ( lasses of the 1 eban.
ir more att ey say, will control the ma on Baptist Chureh with their teach
ernal parasites and there is ers, Mrs ( I Horton and Mrs
Marilyn I xeuse for allowing them to v L Waddell, and meir husbands
ded in the guide are for- journeyed.to Fort Wortb Sunday
mixing instructions and me Pi o rest k ark
of application for a great The party,me ‘w Lthe . chureh
r of insecticides along with and left for Fort Worth at, a.m
n longer list of the parasites The Sunday School and Training
► the most damage Th* in Union lessons were reviewed in the
ion is given in a condensed automobiles enroute to Fort Worth, lyn and Danny Helms. Barbara .....- .... -........,
nd is based on experiments and songs, daily Bible readings and and Wayland Horton, Linda and Mr and Mrs Jacn Blanks and ; Smith, KU Burnett, Truman Tem ।
led by The Texas Agricul. memory verses were given Doyble Jones. I.inda Shaffer.Alma children of Fort Worth spent Sun , pie, m C. Ward, Noiah Boyd. Myr- ! ccc will give exporters a better
‘xveriment Station, the Bur After visiting the zoo, a picnic Hughes. Calvin and Beverly Brown day with her mother, Mrs George te Boyd, Lillie Daniel, Byers, j deal but an official said "Any
Entomology and Flant Qu lunch was served on the bank of visitors, Cletus and Rayland Hor ; Bandy | Tidwell, MeCnig, Edna McVickers, I xalex we make will probably be di •
: afd Animal Industry of the creek The afternoon was spent ton; and sponsors and teachers. n.. a , and guests. Rev. and Mrs Perry | reel deals with foreign govern-
iited States Department of on the park playground, and pic Mr and Mrs. V L. Waddell and MiSS Barbara souuard accom , Threadgill and son and Mrs Fred ( ments "
■■ “ ...... pamed by Mr .and Mrs . ’ Walker Mr» Walker gave the dis The higher domestic prices is re
Gregory, spent the weekend in El misNal prayer. qured by law
Paso visiting Stanley Gregory, who '
is attending Off.cers Candidate 1
School at the air force base
I
3 IP
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coronalion. A match cover found on them to play The Twelfth.
on Trade-in for Yaur Prasant Rafrinarator
VW O E wWW E • "Vw9 •-U• "Y-“UV-
iba naa»te tew mmh w'll o>*w yau. Came se•
4 get a free appraisal today. Ne abNpaHea, d course.
The-newspaperi- alwayetfire
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SATISFACTION — EXPERT SERVICE
Guarontood On All Soft Sold At
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Mr and Mis c E Waggoner
of Boyd were dinner guests of Mr
and Mi J Burleson Sunday.
22; %
■ I J
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ace and
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 174, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 3, 1953, newspaper, June 3, 1953; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564314/m1/7/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.