Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 269, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 20, 1941 Page: 4 of 6
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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WFTD
CL1BURNEJTIMES-REVIEW. CLEBURNE, TEXAS
FOUR
THE HERO OF VERDUN
B
i
*
I
5P
AH«
m ;4i
ELLA CINDERS
For a Few Pennies Per Day
Protect
'i
♦
Vi
Horace Wilkerson
1
Crosier-Pearson Funeral Home
7. .
1-41
? often you
KEENE NEWS
Thirsty?
*
1
F
I
I ;
I
<
n«uel Richardson
Karon CrosiM
17
" "*• ■
i
♦
TV
—
1S
.s'
fo
I.
SS
*
In Beautiful Fabric* of the Latest Color.
I
*
Big Line of Solid Mahogany Tables
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
jS J
/
I
7
J
DICKSON’S
Hardware & Furniture Co.
1 *
<—
1
li 21
*5
MENTHOLATUM
PR
I
p»
T«2iuk
)V Z
►Ci
r m
TAMAN
AND ~
THE
Miss Nadine Odom Is recuperat-
ing from a tonsillectomy she un-
derwent at Klmbro Clinic.
7
In a
CIRCLE.'
(To be continued)
(The characters in this serial are
Hctiiious)
*
7]
........ ’...O—---—--
Sum* huabanda suffer in silence and others for the
lack of it.
We Are Now Showing Our
NEWLINE
TIN
FOIL
? ,
. ■ • J
IS
’ V
. A-. .
r ■
5. .•
KROEHLER ODD SOFAS
AND CHAIRS
Boe Our
Bed and Bath Rugs
In Bright. Cheerful Tones
-ite colo
lemonadc
Y 50<
K PRINK
Wall To Wall Rugs
Excellent allriimwit of woteewas —y rias, up I* IS feet
wide tn any length.
Bunter Pearson
804 Neil P. Anderson Bldg.
Ft. Worth - Ph. 22461
\V.l
/\e/f'eves
SUNBURN
Li..'
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20,1941
■ — " i<
’SSI
L 000!
LETS I
lelped I ,
‘ pw.ln I
kness. I
help I
uldJn I
GTH. I
FELLOW
NTLY ID
Circ
1 list
I rar
Mem
First <
<la\ all
E F
Si-. ‘ <
&'■ 1 . •
his arm. Im scared. I think Lori
is behind this, and that it’s some
sort ot frame-up. You stay away
from tile police, and let me find
AT IT THIS WAY/ IF THEM
SIGNS HADN’T BEEN THERE,
HOW WOULD you KNOW,
WHESE TO GO TO GIT
n SOMETHIN’TO DRINK? /
y^YLER
** I Guess
PANAMINT
NEVER WALKS
HOME THE
WAY A CROW
FLIES? J
cops were looking for you.” but this has me scared!
JIM stood up. “I think I’d better
U find out about this.”
"No, Jim!” Julie jumped up.
came around the desk and gripped
Representative Will Be at Liberty
Hotel — Cleburne
Thursday and Friday, Aug. 21-22
Of COURM WE
ARE/WE’VE WAlIeD
THIRTY NtH.ES, _
1 BET ..
ZoCU| ON A z
HIGiTHORSEj
[ bM JOSEPH CHADWICK ™
"LiTL! "• IT"— , .'.■ZL'.1--
Oean B Turner underwent an
appendectomy at Harris Memorial
Methodist hospital this morning
Mrs Turner is in Fort Worth
attending him.
-
<V7E BEEN
ZK3-ZAGGIN’ AT
LEAST TEN MILES,
. blackie/
• v.-. < WT’-
A ffiANaL<OF <?,ED °JT*
l—----p-OL-------2121
»ta^
1
1
Pvt Baxter Lawson of Camp
Wolters, In Mineral Wells, spent
Saturday here visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs 8 W Lawson, and
other relatives and friends
A
-J^YES—1 ORPHANAGE' J
( BUT I DON’T J-tA,
> WANT THE V (
(CHOCOLATE- J
k ’JS
By Bill Con»elman and Charlie Plumb
Well,cut off
MY ARMS AND CALL
ME VENUS.' DON’T!
THAT BEAT Z
EVERYTHING.' r(
Elder F. T>. Wells has been re-
elected president of the Texas
Conference.
Mr. mid Mrs Howell Brook and
daughter, Betty, of Canton, Oa.,
are the guests of Mrs. Brooks’
mother, Mrs. W. A. McCutcheon.
Miss Nannie Wittenburg of San
Antonio is here for the camp
meeting. Miss Wittenburg was the
first matron in the ’’Home” as was
known back in 1894 when 8. W.
J. C. was known as Keene Acad-
emy. - •
. ■ Sunday morning about 300 met
at the pool east of Keene where
42 candidates for biptism were
baptized. Elders J B. Hampton
and Cree Sandefer officiated. Elder mother, Mrs. Alice Ranson.
H?r.r comfortably I
ami c!'*arly at any
dtetarMKWhhNKW 1
TJXKX with Tooo ;
EQiia’itMT ajm v-’ou- ■<
trolled rcedbuck.
Made t»v cretitoAi
of world h Kirak
Waai cb^ s >i *iunu
i Tubu-<'ryniul tfrar-
Al«l. I’tiona or
TCI Ci hearing
ILIlA Aid s.rvlca
Address
a-gwa
•?
By Ernie Buahmiller
■ -............a 1
Mrs L Vick and Mrs P C
Montgomery of Dallas left this
morning for Wichita Falls, where
they will visit relatives of Mrs. ,t
WgntconMi^. (
SEIZED THE
FLUNG HIM VIOL
DECK.
_________I'll find a pay phons
somewhere.”
Jim, smoked three cigarettes in
the time it took Burke to do the
errand.
When the latter returned, he
looked puzzled and uneasy. -
“That Markham got all excited,”
he reported. “He wanted to know
who I was and where you were.
_______ ____J&ty to go to
the police and tell them where
they could find you. He wouldn’t
tell me a thing, so I tola him to go
to blazes.”
Jim rose and began pacing the
floor, his face darkly intent.
“This knocks the breath out of
me. I thought Markham was my
friend. I don’t mind fighting some-
thing I can see and understand,
Kiif- tVrie hoc ma
•ms /Miue
1 Straight ahcai
tW«n turn
LdFTe—►
■
CHAPTER XXXIH
JIM was staying at a rootning-
** house on the edge of town, a
pL.T..7.
KW.
A completely air-conditioned chapel which is
the only chapel in this territory among whose
many advantages Is the use of the Hammond
Organ.
I
TARZAN
- ■■
■H ., ' . t' ,
tOD1
-
Pl’.: ’
AS TARZAN DP
NEAR, HE S.
THE STRUGGLI
GIRL VVA5 YVE
Relieves ftrin of Periodic —
Wt Weakness
AND MIPS BUILD UP RED BLOOD!
Lydia E. Pinkham's TABLETS
(With added iron) have helped
tftousawds f. girls to relieve puln
ot functional monthly weakness.
Pinkham’” Tablets ALSO help
build up rec. I lood and thus aid Jn
promoting MORE STRENGTH.
^Worth trying!
It la our desire that our services to you in your
hours of sorrow shall always remain a living
tribute to your loved ones.
1, NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or
P, rS°n‘ ftfm °F cort!?raUon whl*h rnay »n
Mug given to^tSe'iMMlBhenT ’ ,
“How will you find out?” he
asked, amused by her earnestness.
/“Never mind how.” she replied
“Just promise me that you’ll keep
---------------------- ___?ou
after he had taken the job, he hear from me. Will yop. Jim —
He hesitated, then riSddid “All
right. Julie.’’
As they left the little office and
wbnt through the doorway into
the restaurant, they saw ^Dick
Charters at the street door. He
had the door half open. When he
saw them, a startled expression
swept across his face. Then he
turned abruptly and went back out
into the street.
Jim said. "That’s queer."
And Julie replied. “I told you he
had been acting funny,”
When Jim departed, a few min-
utes later, he looked up and down
the street, but Dick had vanished.
He walked on. heading baok to-
. ward the rooming-house. He was
„ puzzled by Julie’s news, and a Ut-
’ tie worried.
DURKE sat playing solitaire when
O jjtn returned to their room.
He looked up in surprise. “Some
date, pal ! Did Julie stand you up?”
“Burke, we joked a while ago
about the cobs being after me,"
Jim said flatly, “but the joke is
on me. Julie sent for me to tell me
they really are looking for me.
And I haven’t the faintest idea
why.” A
"Jim, yffij better blow town!"
"No. I haven't done anything—
not a thing." .
“Is there anybody whb'd like to
frame you?” i
"Yes. Lori—the guy who runs
the Crystal Club."'
“Let’s you and me go out and
rough him up.”
„Jim shook his head, then said,
plenty, anxious to find you. I told ‘,D°
them you had come here several I'J’A ^Marit*
nights ago to say goodby. but hadn’t h “’.l-.ver1 Here this tthla
said where you meant to go. They £am. a . J*1 ® ,
wanted to know if you were hy.^
friends with Lori’s man. Carver.
' And they asked about that trouble S^.,tl2S,p?1li^hp ^n
you had out at Lori’s place.” ne SSi/JnSinv
Jim frowned. “Maybe they’re °ld ***W*n**nF
trying to pin something on those t’P - . r,hr,rM>
two, and think I might give them Okay. Jim. Ill find a pay phone
some information. «Don’t look so
amrrted, Julie— I haven’t robbed a
She seemed about td say some-
thing, but didn’t. She went and sat
down at the desk.
“Look, Julie,” Jim said sudden-
£!Crk * «■« —
trouble with Lori? What about the He ald u was my to go to
money he lost at the Crystal Club?” ”e • • ■ - «.!!
“He told me everything was all
right, but he seems worried. He
doesn’t talk much—Just brodds.”
“Have you seen Carver about
lately?”
“He was here the other after-
noon for a cup of coffee,” Julie
said. "It was he who scared me
.first. He said that he’d heard the
^nnC WF»rr* Irwalrinor fnr vmi ”
DEFENSE STAMPS AT YOUR RETAILERS
A number of the principal chain atore systema are now
planning to place Defense Savings Stamps on sale in their
storM Thia ig* being done at .the request of Secretary
Morgenthnu, who wrote to one chain store association: “We
will indeed welcome the type of cooperation outlined.
Knowing, as I do, the group of retailers you represent, I
feel they will render a great and permanent service to the
National Defense Program.” •
These storgg should prove one of the best possible out-
lets for the stamps. The purpose of the stamp sales is to
secure money for defense expenditures from a broad crose-
’ section of the public, rather than from a relatively small
number of large investors. And the chain stores’ patrons
are families of average and moderate means. The stamps
sell for ten and twenty-five cents, and the typical customer
can afford to purchase one or more when doing his shop-
ping. When a sufficient number of stamps have been
accumulated, they may be exchanged for an interest-bear-
ing defense bond at banks and post offices.
The chain stores are to be congratulated on this new
• activity. Tens of millions worth of defense stamps and
bonds must be sold weekly if the defense effort is to be
financed on a sound basis. Keep that in mind when you do
your shopping-—buy as many stamps as you can afford.
Every purchase you make helps to liuild you a financial
cushion for ths future.
Your Income with a Mutual
Benefit Health A Accident
Ute Time Volley. .See,
.. —4 ......—--—
A deer was killed by an auto in the Adirondacks.—
Probably mistaken for a pedestrian.
i. ■ .i.o■ ■ -■•■■■ —
All some people have gotten out of their garden
thus far this year is the neighbors chickens.
nouse on cne eage or town, a lrom tlw police, and let
five-minute walk from hia job out why they want you.”
at the aircraft factory. He
shared a room with a fellow
worker named Burke. _____________
On an evening a few days away "from the police'untti
__— _a a.— a.s_j_ a _t- J t-_« MkA 11/411 «rx*at lir
- ‘stood In the center of the rdom, ----
rubbing his arms with alcohol,
while Burke lay on the bed,
1 watching him.
“YouTe soft. Jim.” Burke said
lazily. ‘‘Why don’t you throw tn
tlie sponge? That drill has got you
t licked.”
Jim grinned. "Not licked—just
shook to pieces. And I never quit
what I start. I’m trying to earn
train fare to Texas.”
"Got a job there?”
"No. but that’s my home," said
Jim.
Burke studied him. “You puzzle
4 me, pal. you don’t talk or act like
■ a laborer.” He paused. “I once
■ worked with another guy like that.
■ He was hiding out from the cops.’
Jim laughed. "The cops are one
0 jump behind me. If they turn up
■ tonight, tell ’ein I’m out on a
B date.”
■ “Okay.” said Burke, with a grin.
■ “Who's the girl friend.?”
■ “Julie, at the cafe. She phoned
■ me to stop around.”
.I.a—ai
VtAJ’VE GOT TO LOOK
THE POWER
THE (3IRL R<
WORMS >
Inside you e* your child
TlM>u^snd« ct ffrfiwtvupi find ilittjrrn tuvo ln.uel
Hurnii (ruyiM|worA»M WuUh' hT lhv v Miming
dgu., Ibwellhl. Hetty ircf.r gr»t rent, tint a y
JEmaCtt. rwHlwas kl*H' It >OU JMapcuf wuiid
woriua, geX J«yna*» TtrmLfUrt® nirlx Juyrc t
H \merles’« IWIaIuR .jdXiprleUwjr wnriu rmdlrinc.
Usv‘| by tnOlii'iri rUi’Lvt J u ‘ L’1?’ A' * t' ’' I
mpsh wufi.u. DouzsuJ J.tfiNlFd VUiAHI VGtl
< MMglmSHyFX
• A cooling, soothing application ot
Mcntholatuin relieves hot, flaming
sunburn quickly. Its modlcUnU tn-
gresUenta also promote rapid heal-
Is squally helpful In
treating other<minor skin Irrlts-
tku)s. fuch as chailng. Insect bites/
prickly hut, supvrnclal burns, cuts
*nd cruises. It will bring you a lot
»■ of comfort.
1
“■...... - /
■ ■■ ■■■■ : I
J
... S
■ I
fl
Mr and Mrs L. L Boyd had
as their week-end guest's Mrs,
Boyd's brother, 8 J Thompson*
of Alvarado, and her niece and
nephew. Mr, and Mrs. Dick Pres-
•eur, of Fort Worth
ST .H'z M
NANCY
i ,;r
YES-PM GOING
TO SELL IT AND
BUY SOME MORE
DEFENSE SAVINGS
---- STAMPS ' l---
Income with
JULIB waan’t^busy when Jim
•» reached-the restaurant. She
took his arm and guided him into
her cubby-hole office iti the rear.
“Jim," she said, looking at him
anxiously, “you’re not in a jam.
are you?” .
“Not that I know of. Why do you
aak?"
“There were two cops in here
today, asking about you.”
Jim's eyebrows shot up. "So?
What did they ask?” '
“Where you'd gone. They seemed
plenty, anxious to find you. I told
them you had come here several
nights ago to say goodby. but hadn't
LSil
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
FUNUM Afternoon Daily (Except Saturday) and Bunday Morning
UM So. AagUn Street Cleburne, Texae Phone* 122 and 134
——....
WXULIAM BAWLAND, Publisher . JOB FERGUSON, Editor
...... o-
■ntered a* second ciae* mail matter at the poxtofttc* at Cleburne,
Texa*. under the Act of Congress, March 3. 1879
* NOTICE TO~THE PUBIJO
.-.lection upon the character, standing jpr reputa-
, wifi be gladly corrected upon’ due notice of tame
pcMtehen. ’ ■' ", z'
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
* By Carrier in City: 80c per month; One Year 16.00.
By Mail in Johneon and Adjacent Counties: One Year 04 00;
1 Months 2.26; 8 Months *1.26.
By Mali, tn SUte: One Year 06.00; 6 Months 02 76; 3 Months »1M
By Mail Out of State* One YeOr 17 00; 8 Months *3 76; 3 Months *2.
Subscribers falling to get a paper please call 133 or 134 before
0:20 AM on week days and 0:30 A. M on Sunday or after those
Sours oaU 110 and the paper will be delivered promptly.
> PBSBS (U.B LEAflRD WIRE — UNITED FEATURES
ilted Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication
dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this
also the local news published therein. All rights to ro-
of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
Sandefer baptized his father, R.
J. Sandefer and niece, Linnie Mae
Sandefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Grant of
Washington,* D. C„ are visiting her
sister, Mrs. Claud Dortch and Mr.
Dvrtch. |
The camp meeting closed Sun-
day night. Over the week-end the
crowd was estimated at about
2,000.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sanders
are the proud parents of a baby
boy born Saturday at the Cleb-
buiiie Sani'ariun. Mrs. Sanders ;
i det baby are doing wooly al their
home here. i . 1.
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Schulen-
berger of Philadelphia, Pa., are I
spending their vacation with her |
P •*/
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Ferguson, Joe. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 269, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 20, 1941, newspaper, August 20, 1941; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309350/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.