Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 365, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 3, 1944 Page: 5 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
r
n
£
Surge
vReKfl
IWre
■f'
-'*ta
/
2801
at
a.
OW'i
—
Lo.
*;
IM
tr
109 South Main
■KJ*
a
i1
Built-In Waste Cabinet
.•' ,.i
•*
i ...:
::
I
at
::
y
and
I
..
Il!>
★ Fa SAVED
★ $’« SAVED
S
M’S DEPARTMENT STORE
’ J
a
Li
r ANY CAR
COUPON
M
S1.IIII
-
Save $’s
Save $’»
with
with
4
r?
Coupon
M
Fa '
REMOVI PLUGS
L ■<
• CLEAN THEM
MEN’S DEPARTMENT
7>-X;
or
■
i
MMb
1 L-' *•'
L
ll
A.
51*
a
OH*
M*OUt Of
, MM one
•y
nca
-¥■
tw-
it
<
»
(
Mackey K. Malone
325 W. Page Dallas, Texas
Landlords Work
To Evict Tenants
ce
13M
BILL'S
HOT TAMALES
The one thing that is accepted
at its face value is the smile.
ng
ted
Come and try them. They are
delicious.
Hamburgers. Snow Cones and
Cold Drinks
kept secret. Town was re-
cently liberated by Allies
This Coupon Worth
$1.00 at McKee’s Dept. Store
With Every $10.00 Purchase
THIS WEEK ONLY
October 3rd through October 7th
SET THE GAPS FOR
EFFICIENT SPARK
tTS*t-
I 011
T
H
I
S
r
J
1
» way
Store.
KHAKI SHIRTS
Sizes 14%j 1 7
h
s
E
Ma.,
weeks to a month with t
T 3 good for recovery,
«*of MtMWfoeki
' * b —t.aa. late
Q
I
a
U
§
Shi
COMPUTE
Open t—m «:ja -.». to ll p.m. |
F1' '
wife
Belknap, Fort Worth
„ —Other recent arrivals
'They left me then. I 'passe? hospital' arrt Pfc"
»-<JI |
* savedI j
Crosier-Pearson Funeral Home
!j 414 N. Main BL CMWfte, Texas Phone 242
T;
l*B ’ .-Vr
J
HURRY-UPPERS—German citizens didn’t wait to lock their doors when Nazi artillery.
Tt was a nlee, fat bird, with a bullet through the cheat
after giving away her position by
shakfog a bush. Daughertv said.
On the small finger of her . left
wirnnuc
voices, |
"deader
LIBER AT E D—Gertrude
Stein, one of world's most
famous novelists, as she
looks after living for four
r J
f -
C. IL ■ "f-s-
...
•‘m J
♦
■Igg*
I
1FV - Wyw «r
TUBED,
ra»
Em I
|k P'
it’lF
De.» M
Speak
__a 1Q..
V> J?*4 - ■- ■
J«M Has Acatatfo Settle wtik i
they are slated for a diet equal in |
caloric content, but consisting of |
sugar, potatoes, bananas and ce-!
reals, with only a small amount of 1
meat.
Each night the 12 men are to
swim 300 feet at top speed with
a short rest, period each 100 feet.
A blood sample Is to be taken be-
fore and after the swim.
DRESSES
Black and all new colors.
’MibW fca t 1 ME
SLIPS
Black, roee. Sizes to 52.
■
V
inn |
erased with a grenade before his i
outfit reached Cherbourg. He
heard them talking In thb corner
of a hedgerow, threw a greftade |
in the direction of the t
and later fotmti them
than' clay pigeons."
Next on his list were two snip-
LEGION HEAD—Bdward N.
Schefberllng, of Albany,
N. Y„ elected new American
Legion Commander at con-
vention in Chicago. In his
acceptance speech he urged
a “peace with teeth in it—
a peace that can and will be
enforced." In World War I
he served as a captain in the
Meuse-Argonne offensive. A
lawyer tn private life, he •
has been active in Legion
rffatrs since 1920. .
®
■1
JBj
R ]
J> . j
1
’«A» H*tuX**a‘
r ■ ■
k.A
I
•p«rfc Plu«« LubrfcflflM vimI Brcfks
“ “A '
i.. ....
1
I
^9
M F
Beautiful sanitary original scientific designs Exterior con-
venience to Interior for garbage disposal, wood, coal. Ice re-
frigeration Eliminates outdoor exposure Build it yourself,
modernise your home or business Opportunity for carpenters.
Illustrated instructions 50 cents postpaid
I IlM [.IM.
M Death Dealing
Best
3 ' Small Weapon
unr?. Li
_________^-.-VS
B1
MASTER MARimiR AT 22
QUINCY. Mass (U.R*- Charles I the
Winslow at Quincy, who is only 22
Is believed to be
i 1
■U
1
S i
I J ’ other institution ppr,»orting to be
; offering the course. There he found
the subject, would not be available
until after peace
When the veteran appealed to
the association, they told him the
University of Texas had the only j
course acceptable to the organ!- ■
zation.
1.75
LEVI WITH BRADS
hm a—mmAiiii.....auk !■» I.
Wool and Corduroy
3 JACKETS
11___________EffJfeg______
MM.a
. ARM to it
<
fl
futilely shelling their town in attempt to dislodge Allied troops there, ripped the houses
. . . ... /s yrtraym > tn. tto^le UmeT
Navy Trainees
Take Eating
Program Test
e ______
EMORY UNIVERSITY, Ga. <U.R> I
—Twelve Navy V-12 trainees here j
have begun a two-week controlled i
eating program in an Effort to
determine the relationship between
capacity for work and blood sugar
level, under the supervision of the
departments of physiology, physl-
t cal education and athletics
/ Dr John Ilaldi, associate pro-
fessor of physiology, said the ex-
periment may determine whether
proteins or starches constitute cor-
rect diets.
The 12 trainees will be given
tlie controlled diet on alternate
days One day they are scheduled
to be given steaks, bread, butter,
eggs, and other foods abundant in _
proteins and fats, and the next j years in NaZi-OCCUpied town
of Culoz, in southeast
France. Her identity wao
Qxken Dhinr Disappears in Blast from Nazi .8^!
’■ ’-v 1 ' ----------* - - - -* *
IB ■ j
■
n ■
PENNY BONANZA
BANGOR. Me TI RX Discover-I
Ing she had left her son's penny |
bank on a grocery store counter.
Mrs Cornelius J O'Leary returned
to find it heavy with donations. 1
SEAMAN LIKES BABIES
BOSTON <U.R>— When Seaman
Frank Cocchl heard a baby crying
in a locked automobile, he smashed
I the car’s window, salvaged a milk
j bottle irom the back seat,
played nursemaid for an hour until
I the infant's mother returned.
i -------
yearn old, te believed to be the WITHHOLD SAD NEWS
youngest licensed master mariner FCRTLAND, Me.. 'U.R>--Because
^tn the United States Not only that of his age, Jeremiah Campbellton,
jut he has three official po.d- I 105. has not been told that two of
lens. He is a captain in th< mer- i his great-grandsons have been
chant marine, a lieutenant com-j killed in action in World War II
monder In the U. S. maritime
Ixervlce end an ensign in Uie U. !
S. Naval Reserve.
T
H
I
S -r<id
Coupon
LADIES' DEPARTWT
Hosr‘ '
Men's or Ladies'
3 pain——.......— l.OU
11SN.MwnSt.
Phone 600
*4j.
Crosier-Pearson
—- Barial Association
15 years old—came through
hedgerow Where we lay.”
He said hb "played dead."
Making sure the two other men
Wbre dead, one of the Germans
Mid:
“Two good Yanks."
Daugherty recalled that
German kicked him in
^.<Jahd. said "desd ,,’t _
••“T’Viwsr luff mo
|out, and came to in England."
| In addition to killing nihe Ger-
I mans, Daugherty Is credited with
I putting two Tiger tanks
service. w
Kills Enemy
_ ’ His report
'not M • single esse of fols
<ro«p did | meet with toxic
’bad effects. * • • intolerance or
«»r»-iM» • • • Colusa may ba uaad
naar tha ayOs without danger • * *
If rallavM Ifchlng quickly. A llttla of
f the oil covan large areas. It Is non-
irritating. Soothing to raw and de-
nuded Mons Ind affected areas.
Sadly maesaged Into the skin.'*
Two other doctors make similar
flowing aftnlc fopyto Qhf, a Unltod
SSROe GoverndflOnt heal Bi phy
rwporring an cam, ana me
* • Mexican GoMfnmehf Maith
| clan repdrtlng In 43 cases.
the
: Dftrilel ‘Alaftft:, ’
23-year-old infantryman from La-
redo, Tex., apd Pvt. Billy V.
Cnhime, 21. of Wortham. Tex.,
out of both of whom were injured near
|St. Lo.
__________ I -----
Three of hit enemy victims were 1 Taxas U. Offers
Sole Airport Course
WHIN CONSTIPATION makaa yae fed
i pask as tk. 4ick«a*. Mags ON MlMOrb ,;
i ..—tamo, ga—y dicoMfort, take
' OB. CMLOGkU'S is tba ar*a«ferfol aeMM
laxaHv* contained in coed old Syrup Pag-
ein to make it so easy to take.
MANY DOCTOM nee pepsin preparatioep. 1
in preecriptioaa to amke the medicine more
palatable end agreeable to taka. Sn ba nore
year laaative ia contaiaed in Syrnp Ftpeta. |
. INaiST BN BN. CALDWELL**—toefevorite
. of Millions for SO years, sad feejflibtyhola- S
u some relief tro*coMtipatioa.BVM finicky
. children love IL
I CAvnoNi Uee ealy as flrtmifi.
MLCUDWHlTi
snRAUumt
~ snnrnrai
itncn
i.l^et
IK ULCERS- SS r-SS KX!.,’
Thousands ti DOCTORS Are COLUSA CattoaMts
SUMMARY OF CLINICAL REPORT ON S2 CASK
m a Gigg ef 5 dbys.”
states, "-«» • •>—
clinic*
HOUSTON (U.R>—Many and devi-
ous are the ruses landlords use to
get ride of tenants so they can
make minor changes in their prop-
erties and get higher rents under
OPA rules.
One landlady used three butcher
knives and a pistol in evicting a
tenant.
A landlord was more subtle. He'
lived in a duplex. The tenant on
the other aide was a woman. The
landlord removed the wail between
the apartments. The woman
moved. J \ £ w IS
A doctor who owns a hocplfal 1h TfiBN
•fl lesions completely in 30 days—4
were 70% clear and continued fresh-
men t; that oul of 40 cases of eciMM
fl but 3 were cleared of all WMene In
1 1 ————— —. w—<
who <M not
warn dMMNB___________ __ _
to 14 day« for acute casgi and 3
weeks for chronic earn; fflDt out of
CABflB of lou
NNkiltod In all 3 of the caaes In a
month, and In 8 caaes of pafeae ivy •
k eak, complete cures were effected In |
Thousands of USMS Wl
MUOCim IN 17 HATU RlHM
It’s a thrill to the service man when the
mail brings photographs from home.
Have a new portrait made today- for
your soldier, sailor, or airman.
Special Rates
CHAFIN'S STUDIO
Dr. and Mn. W B. O1M* <|
Hwanghaten Province, North
Will apeak *1 the Field
lUpttot Church Wednesday
at 8 o’etoofc.
I The public ia Invited
them.
J
_J
si
^^^■^■■■■■mmNNafbNMsafoii^aNNafosAiiiA^^mwdh
★ >’» SAVED ★ y» SAVED
-.....—r
Jr' "iH
KANSAS CITY. MO <U.» — j,
. Amftrfck’s .nMtt ftBdlr «M*11 anna I
weapon lx (he caliber M machine
gun. according to reports reaching
the Lake City Ordnance plant near
here
The "deeth-dealing fifty" Is sup-
plied to Army, Navy and Air Forces
bv the Ordnance Department of
the Armv Service Forces, which
developed the weapon that Gen.
■ H. H. Arnold called "the best gun
for airplanes to date.”
American heavy bombers are lit-
erally bristling with them and Al- '
lied fighters use them not only in I
split-second air duels but for |
| ground strafing operations, reports
indicate These "stingers" also ar- I
! "inploved as anti-aircraft weapons, :
In tanks and armored vehicles, on
I PT boats, battleships, airplane car- I UBMlt
_ ! rterw anh LJX*n.v 3N£a-jtMaate.
They spearhead the advance of the yafl th
infantry all over the world. Ord-1 ■•fly'
nance Department officials assert. ““
K:«s»g__! The gun weighs about 60 pounds. I
' J l*s f'Ve feet long, has an approxl-|
' mate rango of ♦ miles and can get'
off from 700 to 850 slugs a minute
st a speed of half a mile a sec-
ond Depending on the tactical
situation, the gun uses armor-
piercing. incendlaiy, ball and
tracer ammunition, authorities ex-
plain
AUSTIN, Tex. (U.PJ-The Uni-
versity of Texas by accident has
found it is the nation’s only insti-
tution offering a course In airport
management approved by the
American Assocaitlon of Airport •
Executives. I
A young ex-serviceman applied
to Assistant Registrar Max Fitch-
enbaum for the course. He related
DOWNRIGHT FRANK
BOSTON <U.P.>—Edward Simmons,
the famous painter. Baa widely
known for hi* loquacity. Once when
a lady begged his pardon for in-
terrupting him. he replied, "M»r ,
dam, no One can speak at all with-'
out Interrupting me.”
TtMfofcfc GMe , GB4i » WJB i Kafobir Ab ilfirn tjblM:.. -jipMMy. jtE_nne af whom- wa» a girt about
Ffc. JeaM Daughterly of Fort blew into gome Henle’s lap! I hope 18 years old who hid WTrt’trtm
Werth, Ninth Divteton borookaman he chocked oh a bone when he twice. She was killed instantly
who killed nine Oeimana before
he took the count from a Ger-
man .8* shell near Charbourg, has
a :pecial account to settle with
the krauts.
The 26-year-old Texan, who ar-
rived, with u convoy of wounded
at McCloskey General Hospital
here, is still put out over the
unannounced arrival of the shell
which sent fragments into his head
and broke up a chicken dinner In
the making.
Daugherty and two other men
were cooking what he described as
"a big fat hen” over a cognac
flame when the .88 exploded.
"After the blast, we couldn't find
the chicken,” he said, "I still
A...r
i
•»..
ktl ‘ &•
ate it.
to,” he lamented.
Pltyed Bead *
The two other men were killed.
After the explosion. Daugherty hand was a pahi steel ring, which
lay on ths ground near them. the soldier believes was a means
“I felt the hole in my head, and of -Identifying her to other Ger-
figured that I was going to die mans. She was dresjed in a Oer-
too. JU3t about that time three meh army uniform with one white
young Garmens—they looked about hoilzontal Ear on the collar,
t,ie - 13-Year-old Soldier
Just before he was hit, Daugh-
| erty killed lour more Germans with
. a pair of grenades. Also, he, help-
ed capture a German soldier who
I said he was 13 years old.
another I Daugherty's wife lives at
the leg
In n little over four years this. Association has grown
from 500 members to over 7.000 members Today it Is by-
far the largest Burial Association in Johnson County. This
growth has been steady and consistent. Each year it has
shown a substantial growth without the use of high pressure,
unethical methods. Thousands have come to our office and
solicited Uns insurance. There is a reason. Rates are low.
Il la safe and dependable.
HOME OI-PICE
_____ CL|HWRiNBjp||}B-REVIEW____
WK*
n i
; ; 1 selling his home and going to an-
< > ’ other institution purirorting to be
::
r
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 365, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 3, 1944, newspaper, October 3, 1944; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307714/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.