Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 255, Ed. 1 Monday, August 4, 1941 Page: 1 of 6
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Cleburne Times-Review
• IU
•un
The Only Daily Newspaper Published In Johnson County
08
36TH YliAR. NO. 255
(Y5
Pincers Being Halted
it
WASHINGTON. Ann
(UP
said
on January 17,
British Planes
Temperatures showed a consider-
News Briefs
are
and
AU
(UM—Hili’ ’
to'
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tJj
WASHINGTON, Aug 4. (UM—
4
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CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1941
DEPART FOR ENGLISH SURVEY
Two New City Teachers
Conferring Here Today
Pastor Is Called
By Presbyterians
Last Rites Today
For Mother of
Cleburne Woman
Change Is Made
In Pastorates
Fowler Here To
Enlist Applicants
For Marines
France Refuses To
Grant Privileges
ToOutsidePowers
Sheignan and Oma Nell Wayland
of Cleburne; four brothers, Tom
■I—
for
Were
i hospital about 5:46 o'clock
morning after an extended 111-
day.
tion.
rear-
a
1
. nl
that
■ on
and]
•■<!'
Libit
and]
and]
... 88c Per Month by Carnet
•’ In City
the 1
----„----- were arrt
■ motor police.
Early Morning
Showers Cause
Temperature Dip
PRICE I IV L ct-bilr
Reds Claim German
United Praia Wire ftervic*.
United Feature Syndicate
3 i 4
DO I 97
House Banking
Group in Session
At Capital Today
Might Raise C eiling
On Paun Products
Under New Bill
Authorized To Call
Park Av'enue and Second Avenue , i Early House Action
Tr» «nral! fraaam nevlanna 46 waarew ———
To Retain Soldiers
J; t.ri ;
psts of production
waller government
•---•■ I,Fnrm wlrge' rate’s
the jiwhfsF’ttnce' 1930.
;r.tr t industrial activity
Men Plead Guilty
And Pay $14.15 Fines
’ . ? *L‘
Two Cleburne .men were arrest-
ed Sunday night on charge* of
drunkenness and lodged In the
►county Jail. They plead guilty in
justice court this morning to
charges of being intoxicated and
were fined $14 16 each and re-
leased.
Industry that lend to raise price#. 1
Henderson said he had been in-
formed that apiirokimately 15
First Monday Dollar Day was
moving along at a rapid Clip at 2
p. m today with a number of
three I participating merchants reporting
Gregg r a near'sell out of populag items
was typical O’Daniel showmanship
—one with his football stadium
inauguration and the second inaug-
ural barbecue on the grounds of
the Governor’s Mansion. T.._
ceremonial of the marriage of his
"little Valentine” daughter was re-
corded tn sound and film. A ra-
dio announcer was an conspicuous
",-------------~------------------------------------•
W. Lee Moves Into Senate
Seat As State Deficit
Increases Over Ten Million
4 (UR>—Mts. I John Wagner in the ballas News
pictured the setting for the wed-
ding before and followed through
with a description of the wedding
that was good, good writing Jack
Guinn, another juvenile writing
for International News Service,
turned ip. a description of the wed-
ding that was well night impec-
cable
There was a little of the sting
of shall we say satire or down-
right ridicule in both pieces (?).
And that is a very part of the cu-
rious O’Daniel phenomenon. The
man invites of newspaper men
both satire and ridicule He makes
himself a natural enemy Of the
newspaper man or more correctly
Young Men To Go
To San Diego Naval
Training Station
Seventeen members of the con-
gregation of the First Presbyterian
Church were in Weatherford Sun-
day night to hear Rev Clyde J.
Kennedy who has been called by
the local church to fill their pas-
torate which has been vacant for
several months since Rev. J. Ver-
non McGee accepted a call to go
to the west coast. ***'
The Rev. Kennedy has as yet giv-
en no decision to' the local
church
■Sergeant W. V. Fowler from the
United States Marine Corps Re-
ceiving station at Fort Worth is
in Cleburne today and Tuesday to
receive and examine applicants for
the marine corps. He is located at
the postoffice.
Those accepted will be taken
back to Fort Worth with him and
from there they will go to Dallas,
to be enlisted into the marine
corps where they Will be sent to
San Diego, Calif . for initial train-
ing from six to eight weeks after,
which they may get ’ a ten-day
leave of absence if they desire.
II enrollees desire, they may go
direct from Cleburne to Dallas
after tonferring with Sgt. Fowler.
KIRBYVILLE. Al« 4 '(UM—
Mra. J. L. Smith, farmwife living
near here, was killed and three
other persons were hurt yesterday
in an automobile accident two miles
south of this dtjrt
VICHY. Aug. 4 (UM—Aq auth-
orized government spokesman to-
night said France will give no
military facilities such ae granted ’]
Japan in Indo-China to any out-
ide power in any other part of
•be French empire.
Th<> government is studying the 1
statement of Acting Secretary of
State. Sumner Wells*. hinting the
break in relations would follow If
France acceded to the new Ger- j
man demands.
It was understood that Germany d
demanded the right to "protect- j
Dakar and the teturn of Pierre J
Laval to power.
AUSTIN. Aug. 4. (UM—Texas'
new governor. Ooke R. Stevenson.
M-year-old self-educated executive,
will deliver the commencement ad-
dress to summer graduates of the
University of Texas Aug. 26. Pres.
Homer. P Rainey announced to-
day.
Stevenson studied law while driv-
ing a freight wagon between Junc-
tion and Brady He passed the
bar exam at the age Of ».
> was 71, year’s old,
ide hb< home in Cleburne at 407
1 ' Braaa atix'et.. Ho resided
ploding along the French coast | ,
between Calais and Boulogne. Sleep
was impossible and thousands,
because today was the August bank ,
holiday and they didn’t have to
work, got up and stood at win- '
dows or along the cliffs to watch
The spectacle. . *'
Clouds obscured the moon when
the attack opened. United Press
observers along the coast .first
knew of the raid when two flares
suddenly biased, and the bombs
started crashing
German anti-aircraft guns burst
into fire. The English coast began
to shake under the blast of bombs
across the strait. For 20 miles
along the French coast the sky
was filled with stabbing lights as
hundreds of German shells burst,
The roars of great bombs were
evidence that despite the fire the
British plnaes pressed their attack.
As the raid assumed a big scale
the greatest searchlight yet seen
on the invasion coast stabbed the
sky with its beam. The light was
so powerful it threw its rays half
way across the straits when it was
pointed horizontally.
' fort Worth livestock—<ujo
Cfttili 3 000: calves 1100; steady: steers and
y earl frigs «00-11.60; fat cows 6.00-835, cutters
3 50-6.75. calves 6 00-1240. Hogs 1,300; steady
to 15 higher; top butchers 10.90; good butch-
ers 10 73-10.90; mixed grades 10.00-10.75; pac-
ing sows 9.50 dfrwn. Sheep 3.500; steady;
spring Jtunbs 8.75-9.25; yearlings 7.50-8.00.
supply of scrap.
I ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollar Day Joins
First Monday To
Draw Big Crowd
himself a natural enemy Of the
it should be stated, he makes him-
self an enticing target for the
newspaper writer. ;
’ Hast new of Helf-Portraiture
The bad feeling that exists be-
tween newspapermen and Governor
Wilbert Lee Q'Daniel has not been
occasioned by the fact that the
man denied audiences to the news-
became aware of the simple fact
a part of the ceremony as the
minister Camera flash light bulbs
were more apparent than the jew-
els of the common citizen con-
course within the storied walls of
the Mansion—and the governor
was before toe lens in almost every
picture
The wedding had a dual aspect
Inside it was a- solemn, somewhat
common-place ceremony, delayed
by the brides time out for tears
(a thing that has happened before
in novels and in life). Outside, a
worm-like canopied tunnel that ran
from the mansion doors to the
street, shut the peasantry out and
left them for two hours to wait
for the procession of the princess
and her prince and the ever-
prevalent Governor to grin and
grimace before the populace and
more camera lenses and to cut a
cake. In New York language, the
difference between the Inside and
outside was the difference between
East Texas—Partly cloudy tonight and Tues-
Scattered thundershowers in north por-
Genjle to moderate south and south-
west winds on the coast.
I nrwtiH'htdr*
8 | 10 | 12 | 2 |
82 I 84 , 91 ! 93
Jim' Persons, Lee Bizzell, Lawrence
Nickell, Jim Clements and K
Armstrong.
Survivors
daughters, Mrs.
l and Mrs.
. sa. was touna m zt> leei 01 water.-* *'•**'“*
I near midnight after his speedboat j Carpenter and Hardy Carpenter,
both Of Sulphur Springs, Sam
1 and Bob
Temperatures showed a consider- Sunday morning raid on Berlin
JreZ dweat^rHyofdVetrheth weekend !
When the thermometer at the Com-
munity Gas company read 98 deJ
grees at 2:30 o’clock this after-
noon . ..
Low was 75 degrees at 6 o'clock
this morning, with the temper-
ature rising' steadily during the
day. ,
The forecast was for partly
cloudy weather tonight and to-
morrow with scattered thunder-
showers A shower, which began
about 3:30 o'clock this morning
produced 51 inches of rain, ac-
cording 1,6 U. » Weather Observ-
er W O. Ownsby.
WASHINGTON. Aim I (UP I
(.The House Banking .and ‘Currency ’ .ngratulntionx
.Committee diet in extwuiiv^ (Ses-
sion, today and’ indicated ihc iiroup
might raise permiwMibli’ ecillng
farm products under 1
In small town parlance, it was
the difference made by the rail-
road tracks.
From, the outside, the peasants' wAzanmcrrxrrs, au< s. i
gallery on the lawn it was curious- The House Rules CommMtoa today
1X a«.glamorous and as gaudily authorized Chairman Andrew Mar
ghastly as a gangster's funeral. ' at Military Affaire Committee to
It was a punctuation mark In the' call up for yearly Houae action »-
Incredible political career at a cold solutions declaring national safety .
man who found a warm radio imperiled.
The voice and went to Washington tjy' May said he planned to bring up ,
way of the governor's office to sit the measure tomorrow which wcraM jj
in the United States Senate. give President Rocwvalt power to J
What next, MT. Texas, for Mr retain eltiafti eoldlara in eervioKjn
oiMnlel? I longer than one year. ,
. H
Sherman and Mrs. Hen H Way-
land of Clefmriie; two grand-
daughters, Toi Frances Rainey of sored monthly by Cleburne merch-
— • - • — ..... --------- ant,s Wjth the idet^ In mind of giv-
ing the people of Cleburile and
surrounding territory some real
bargains on high quality merchan-
dise. and impressing upon them
that. Cleburne really is the shop-
ping center of . this part of the
state, and that no other city can
produce more honest-to-goodness
values than the merchants of Cle-
burne.
I Htcvenson took the office and
I bis first, official act as Gpvertior
might raise perthlwble. ecfllng on I was to sign the. Land Patent for
farm product's under ihi jSt'ixUiMt! Kimble county where he was re“’-
price coptrol bill after postponing ed Then he sent O'Daniel
until tomorrow the start of pub- felegfam, of congratulations
• lie hearings on the anli-lnilation j At the same time, it was revcal-
’■ measure ' i ed-that the deficit in the state's
Price Control .AdmhiWrnloi Le(tn j general revenue fund indreased
Hendersph, who was to iiavc been l-c ore Uian $10,4<X).0()() during the
i Ute first witness, requested tin '*0 years" and seven months
____w_. ’I postponement to complete work on , o'Danlel served as governor.
public C* L * 1 1 ihe statement which he will read i State Treasurer Charley Lock-
„ probable . 5UCclimbs m Local to the committee 1‘ ari reportedtoday that the gen-
to locate their j
I Hospital Today
marriage licenhen
Marriages licenses issued over
1 the week-end included those to
Miss Hasel Marie Newby, of Cle-
burne, Route 4, and A. T. Browti.
Alvarpdo. Route 1; Miss Katie Mae
Pearl Jones, Hillsboro, and- J. O.
Moore, eleo of Hillsboro. Jeaee
Cooper, colored, and Georgia Oal-
houn, colored, both of Alvarado.
Rev L L Felder announced to-
day the appointment of Rev W
D Cook. Methodist preacher, to be
pastor of the Bono and 'Price's
Chapel churches, effective Monday,
August 11th.
Rev Cook will succeed Rev. H
D Huddleston, who has accepted
a call to the Denton district, North
Texas Conference.
RANQER. Aug
HGen _
M Camp Wolters, will speak L
nifdit at a -.patriotic rally staged '
here Jointly by the American
Legion Post, the Texas Defense
Guard and the. Baptist Brother-
hood.
men.
and deeper roots-—yea, and broad-
that the man O’Daniel wis an
extraordinary—a super salesman,
and they 1 didn’t mind that What
they couldn’t stomach was the fact
that he had sqld and was selling
to the people of Texas' a man
who' did not exist The folksy,
neighborly, people loving W. Lee
O’Daniel, whose words purred lame
verses and religious unctloit into
the microphone on Sunday morn-
ing was a creature of the fabulous
O’Daniel fancy His own resemb-
lance to the MAN Governor O'Dan-
iel has sold to the people of Texas
is one aW exact with the resemb-
lance of Lil Abner and Superman
to the men and boys you meet on
the street. It Is ^pot to belittle
nor deride Governor O’Daniel to
state in simple terms that there
never was such a man as he con-
vinced a large proportion of the
people his outer clothing housed.
Grown Folks Make-Believe
Nowhere in the O'Daniel saga is
greater evidence of the enduring
quality of childhood's "playjlke"
than In his wedding tfontrived and
engineered- by the governor to the
chagrin of some of the members
of his family and the mortifi-
cation .of most of Ms Trlends. id lx.
I’p einployee for many years, died
ih u " - ” ’ ’ ’--------
fW-i
“I Hess. *'
i j Carpenter, who
NEW LONDON. Cohn . Aug 4
<UM—President Roosevelt rode the
presiflwnt.taT yacht Potomac through
smooth seas off southern New
England today on the first leg of
a vacation eruiae that may termi-
nate with a sea rendezvous with
Rear Admiral Ernest J. King,
commander of tile Atlantic fleet
When thfr Potomac slipped out
of the submarine station at New
London last night, its whereabouts
became secret.. Regulations con-
ceal the whereabouts of all naval
Mr. Roosevelt was at sea for the
•test, seeking long unbroken sleep
relaxation, and deep am fishing.
r, 1,;.; . .
the statement which he will read j
to the committee
1 Henderson announced today that., mH fund -deficit c™ z
I the Justice' department is invest!- 1939; was $20,086,81" When O’Dan*
[ gating" alleged monopolistic pruc-1 iel left office last. Saturday tire
I dees in the scrap iron and steel ; deficit was $30,450,391. »
I jiidustry that tend to raise price#. | .—1; ■■—----- '■ ■ “
. J ntes Luther Carpenter. Santa I
2 - . .1. j 1VIIIit*a wiau aj/pivAiiiiTwvciy id
1 scrap Iron,- and steel dealers pur-
l purtedly had -gained control of
approximately 90 per cent of the
| scrap purchased by steel mills and
have "secretly maintained subsidies
and control'” In an effbrt to con-
IWe for~abou7’30 years, and Was trol Mlretiw..of graites and
! employed, until he became ill, as |
a watchman for the Santa Fe
railroad He wks a member of the
Chip-clv of Christ, u
Fifneral services ^wtll be held
Tuesday afternoon at-3 o'clock at
"re Ciosier-Pearson Funeral chap-
el, with Roy Howell and James
Johnson, ministers, officiating. In-
terment will be in the Cleburne
cemetery
Pallbearers will be Arthur _ Fox. |
W.
I
bls wife; three ' participating
John R Gregg r a near' sell-i
T Haley, both of It is expected that all merchants
(By United Press'
Wilbert Lee O’Daniel today took
the oath ns Junior United States
Senator from Texas, succeeding
(lie seat formerly held by the late.
’ Morrik Sheppard while in Austin,,
lean U’Ue Tejfan Coke R Steveiu-
son droved into thy governor’s
chair from the lieutenant-governor-
ship.
I O’Dnniel’s oath was administered
j I y Senator Kenneth McKellar. who
mpqrnrl.ly occupied the vice-
I j.resident’s chair He was present-
| ("I >v]th the pen he used to sign
j j is name to-clerk’s register. His
I first lick was to w*re Stevenson
Sunday Fire Results
In Small Damage
Small damage was reported fol-
lowing the explosion of an oil
stove at 102 East Robbins Bunday
between 6 and fpm. ' .
7Tie fire department made tire
call and quickly extinguished the
blase which had only damaged the
wallpaper
MOSCOW. Aug. 4. (UM — Red
Army forces were reported tonight
halting German pincers offensive
aimed st Kiev, and tn the Smol-
ensk area on Moscow front Were
said to have seized initiative With
series of smashing counterattacks. ’
The (Mgbtuen-day battle at Smol-
ensk, southwest of Moscow, was
said to be raging with unabated
fury as the Russians hurled re-
peated counterattacks in an effort
to wipe out Germaft, salient.
The Germans were reported
throwing huge forces ' into the
three-day-old, twb-pronged offen-
sive against Kiev, but Marshal
Semyon Budeieny’s forces were
said to have halted the forward
movement at Korosten and Belaya
Tserkov.
New Attack Starts
German forces started a new
pincers attack toward Kiev today
and fought fiercely to break Rus-
sia's stubborn resistance in the
vital Smolensk sector, 235
from Moscow.
Nazi reports claimed that
German-Hungarian forces cut Bov- I
let rail communications in the I
Kiev defense Urea snd the Rus-
sians admitted that the , two arms J
oi tiie German pincers now are at I
Korosten, 90 miles northwest, and |
Belaya Tscikov. 50 miles south 3g I
southwest, of the Ukraine capital I
But Moscow indicated that Kiev I
was in no imminent danger and I
reported the destruction of addl- - m
tlonal l.azi forces- in the bloody vflM
Smolensk. battlefields. I
Benito Makes Statement I
Premier Benito Mussolini was -"jt
revealed belatedly to have sent "I
Blackshirt Legions, off to the Rus- I
sian front with a declaration that ■ i]
the United States now Is lined ' > I
I up with Britain and Russia against ' I
the tripartite powers of Germany, J1
1 fitly .and Japan,
He said tuft, war now was a -4
I ’clash bytween two worlds” which 3
I has already reached the “fifth.
.1 act," adding that “we will win «
because history says that nations - -
representing the ideas of the past ,1
must lose to those nations which
represent the idea# of the future.”
Mussolini Boncludiu his send-off
address with a plea to the Black-
shirts for “exemplary conduct” and -1
I. to tight with determination.
Action Flares Ahew
Action flared on the African 1
! iront where Axis planes carried , ■;
Lout a heavy ad attack on the . J
; Suez canal area and the British I
| reported that Axis troops had with- J
m awn from advanced posts around . J
I Tobruk rather than give battle to
i the steadily more aggressive Briti
I tsh patrols.
! A Nazi Spokesman denounced the
latest U. S. warning to France to I
beWare of granting favors in the I
OCK. aou um- O.VU.V., ‘ colo“ie8 Hlo Axis, calling it I
ton. both of Garland, 18 grand- Part V t^eatening, partly imper-
children and 12 great-grandchild- Unent and partly stupid. The j
ren.
Holloway and Son of Grandview
is in charge of arrangements.
■■■ '■ ■’ .-■’■«---------—
VFW TO MEET
Veterans of Foreign Wars will
be entertained Wednesday night at
[7:45 <|’clock with a chicken supper
at the Cleburne State Park AU
members are urged to attend.
BY FliliLD O BAILEY
United I’ri'Ni Stall Correspondent |
WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (U.RL- 1
The Agriculture Department re-
ported today that tanners are earn-
ing WDO.Oun.oOo a month more
than a year ago and indicated that |
their. 1841 .income .may set a 20- j
year record at $10,500,0(1.000
The general level of prices
• celved by farinei-s will" r —■
nearly 20 per cent higher than last, i UNIONTOWN, Pa , Aug. 4. (U.R)
the Bureau Of Agricultural Econ- i___striking CIO timbermen and a
omics predicted. j non-striking independent union
Income 110111 i>rm marketings I fought on the national highway, at
rfn.-in„ th,, fi«t hnir this year! Addlflon. Pa , today, injuring at
$591,000,- j least sjx workers and wrecking
[ half-a-dozen trucks.
The fight broke out when a
"convoy” of trucks attempted to
haul loads of mihe timbers through
a p^ket line of the CIO Lumber,
Timber and Sawmill Workers Or-
ganizing Committee/which called a
three-state walkout In the timber
industry July 21
Members of the Trl-State Lum-
bermen's and Truckers’ Association
which the CIO alleges 15 employer-
dominated. "ordered its members
The non-strikers were assembling
trucks loaded with mine timbers
for the mine of the H. C. Frick
Coke Co., when approximately 50
pickets' arrived.
Police reported the strikers hurl-
ed the timbers from the trucks.
Deflated tires, ripped out wiring
and ordered the drivers to leave.
The nqn-strikqrs held their ground
and the battle ensued.
The CIO union called the strike
tq enforce demands for wage in-
creases for timber truckers, cutters
and processors, Last week the In-
dependent union signed a wage
agreement aftth the operators and
declared the strike ended.
The strike has affected .the tim-
ber areas of Maryland,. West Vir-
ginia and Pennsylvania which sur-
round this bituminous mining cen-
ter. .
Joseph Yablonsky, a CIO organ-
izer who was said to head the
L during the first half of this year
totaled $4,005,000,000, up $:>8i,000,- 1 ]ea8t
11 000 over the same period last :
| year," the BAE Said. “Goins in
| income from livestock and livestock
I 'producta accounted lor all but $20,-
I 000.000 of the Increase.”
During the last half of this year j
Income from erwps probably "will
I total ’'much more" than in the last
| • half of 1940 because of, favorable
production prospects and Substali*’
tlally higher prices, the Bureau
said.
Wage Rates High m u
Not all ni the Increase will be k”
prolit, the Bqreau warned. Oil- Jrn,„
to some extent
will, be higherV“ ' ' —-J--**—
and living, and!
benefit. payrneiH
are L
"Tlie rate' ot
is the higlyept in the history of tiie
country," the Bureau said “More
people are working nt nunagricul*
tural occupations than rever, be-
fore, and defense expenditures, arc
increasing- all of which points Io
a continued good domestic demand
for farm products."
In addition io domestic con-
sumption. the United Staties Is ex-
pected to hip between $250,000,000
■ and $300,000,000 worth of agricul-
tural ptodiicts to Great. Britain this
year. Other exports also may in-
crease over. Iasi year..
Largest Wheal Crop
Farmers have begun the harvest
of One ol the largest wheat crops
on ncoiii es'imated by the Agri- Dlclcet. anrf Ios,r.h
CUBure Det riment at -nearly
950,000,000 ixishels: The govern- C e t' M ■ ’ Were w
meat Wheat loan program will as-
sure farmers a price of approxi-
mately $100 a bushel despite a
huge surplus income Iropi wheat f
this year will Ire more than 501
jier cent ‘ lafger than from any
■wheat crop since 1937. the BAE
said. ■ ■ .' ' '
Cotton pfices are currently the
highest since lj;30. They have
been boosted by government price-
supporting loans of 85 per cent of
4 parity or about 13 cents ft pound
and by record mill consumption at
the rate of 9.500.000 bales a year
compared with 7,800.000 bales con-
sumfflj last-year.
“Feed grains and hay supplies
are expected, to he much larger
than average this year — perhaps
the largest in 20 years,” the BAE
said. There will be more livestock
on farms to oonsume the feed
than last year, however.
Cattle To Market
Fanners and. lanuhers sent a
record supply of Jal cattle to mar-
ket ip May and June, and at
prices averaging substantially high-
er than a year ago. Tire total
for the year wilj be" larger than '
in 1940, the Bureau-said
■ Tiie. downward trend in hog pro-
duction that began last year seems
to hftve., been halted- The spring
pig crop- was about tiie' sam<Ua ,
lltst. year, despite government pre-|
dictions 01 a 10 to 15 per cent
decrease, and the (all crop is ex-
pected to be substahtially larger
re - than last year. Prices, too, will
be higher. -
The 1941 Lamb crop, according
io Dei>artm<’nt estimates. Js the
largest, on record Wool prices are
the highest in 10 years. Lamp
prices, despite tiesvy marketings,
will average sotoewpat higher than
lost year, the BAE said
Milk produ^tioft i*' recent months
has been at record levels, but the
Department is encouraging still
4 further expansion t? meet increas-
ed domestic demand as well as
British needs "Egg and poultry pro-
ductton "lUcr wise has increased.
FDR at Sea for
Rest, Sleep and
Deep Sea Fishing
BRITAIN-BOUND—Bound for Enoland by ocean plane, to make
thrftft-month survey of methods for distributing American Red
Cross supplies are Mrs. Dwight Davis, left, National Director of
Volunteer Service, end Mrs. Grace Eustis, her aide.
„ b„,Give Germany
“'■-Wof Heaviest
Air Attacks
will have had an unusually heavy
run of business by closing time.
Tfiis special Doliar tjay Is spon-
ants with the idea in mind of giv-
___ D- ___1
LONDON. Aug 4. (UM-British
planes heavily attacked western
Germany during the nigtpt and
made one of their biggest raids.on
the French invasion coast .after a
Sunday morning raid on
ginning of a grim winter for the
Nazi capital.
TMk night’s raid# on Germany,
carried out despite bad xweather,
centered on Hanover and Frank-
furt-Am-Main Industries and
1 communications were attacked. I
Ottier plane formations attacked
docks at Calais One plane was
lost in all operations, the air min-
istry said:
Residents along the Dover coast
startled from their sleep early this
morning when, with a roar like
Funeral services for Mrs N O. I
Rose. 70. of Rio Vista, who died
Sunday afternoon at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. W. T. Ander-
son, of Route 1. were to be held
at 3:30 o’clock this afternoon at
the Rio ’ViSta Church of Christ,
with James Johnson, minister, of-
ficiating. Interment will be in the !
Rio Vista cemetery.
Mrs. Rose had resided in John- ■
son County for about 35 years. Her }
death Was the result of ■ an Illness I
of about two years.
Pallbearers will be Will Flippen. |
Coleman Gist. K. E. Lewis, Seth ]
Pyeatt, Eldon Ewing and Jim Wil- [
liams. v ■
Survivors are three sons, John, I
Tom and Jitn Rose, all of Rio
Vista; one sister, Mrs. Sara Wy- .
rick, and one brother. Torn Hil- ;
1 tlnent arid partly stupid.’
. spoilsman yaid that the French
press—which is centrolied by Ger-
many—would answer the American
I declaration today. ' ■ 7 ™
Another Axis warning came from
' Virglnlo Gayda whose editorials in
the Oionialde D’ Italia are de-
voted in large part to attacking
tiie United States and criticizing
various American policies. Gayda
warned that the United States
was inviting reprisals from Japan
by cutting off Tokyq's oil suppltea I
and .shipping fuel to Russia. - ..... -J
F armers’ 1941 Income
May Set 20-Yr.Record
Striking CIO Timbermen
And Non-Strikers Engage
In Highway Fight Today
average j
n last,
Econ-
Two new instructors for the! (J. ■ JT’ I?
Cleburne school system Were in FC LlDplOY6
town. today conferring with Supt. | r
Emmett Brown of the..... “ “ * "
schools and looking over i
homes in which t ,
families.
They were Richard E; Burleson, '
new vocational agriculture teacher
fob the high school, and Cedi <1
Bryant, Santa Fe ward school
teacher and athletic director for
the younger boys.
Burleson,* a graduate of A. &
M. College, was reared at Mqrt.jand
taught four years at Barry before [
the two years he has Just ceni- ■. ;. .. -
pletcd as vocational instructor’, at .
Grapevine.- Hfe wWc f8 -H meuU ■ ■[
of Texas University and they have I
I One fivecmonth-old daughter. He
| will begin his duties this week
1 Bryant comes to Cleburne from
Venus where he had a most suc-
cessful record. His wife and their |
two children are moving to Clp- (h
burne around, the first, of Bep-'IJ,"'
tember He accepted the place last .
Thursday which was vacated by B.
J. Jackson, Jr„ who has been
transferred to another post.
FORT WORTH, Aug 4 (U.R)—
The body of Edward B Gut.kowskL
23. was found in 25 feet of water
ripcar ruiHnitykil □floe Hie c-tinnrlFvv.i I 1
overturned 200 yards from the |____ ___
SKK? ~ ~
-- ; Springs, and several nieces
FORT. WORTH, Aug. 4 (U.R)— ] nephews
Units of the 45th Division. 3883.1
officers and men. were scheduled ' ■ ■ '
Wrather-O'Daniel Wedding Typical
includes 158 trucks. They will [ f « re-x T • ■ ■ "I rxi "I •
mu.«!»!(„Qf w. Lees Political Showmanship
4 (UM—Brig ' ' . ' ' . , ' >.?' ' • .
W. H Simpson. oonunand< i ' ‘ ——• men. It had altogether different er roots. Early in the game they
BY HARRY BENGE CROZIER
AUSTIN, Aug 4 — The books
may be closed on the O'Daniel-
I Wratiher wedding,—rather, the
Wrather-O’Daniel wedding (please
ALVARADO, Aug 4 (U.R# Hie parddn the abandorf with words!,
prettiest girls in Johnson county . but the event is deserving of. some
today preened for the beauty con afterthoughts as a part of the
test tomorrow when a queen will + phenomenon that hai been and is
be selected for the 49th annual [ Im tog the O’Daniel saga in Texas,
reunion of the Johnson County The wedding was a spectacle cal*
Pioneer Association. » (’ulated to bring forth some’splen-
—— [ did descriptive writing—and it did.
HOUSTON. Aug C “ - ■* 1 " ...... "
Lydia Reward, oparmtor of the
Joe D. Hughes Sales Stable# which
burned Saturday night, estimate<(
losses of $25,000 today. Mie said
21 horses perished in the blaze
The stables were located just out-
side the city limits S,
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Ferguson, Joe. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 255, Ed. 1 Monday, August 4, 1941, newspaper, August 4, 1941; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309336/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.