Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 273, Ed. 1 Monday, August 25, 1941 Page: 3 of 6
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INDAY. AUGUST 25, 1941
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YOUR GOOD HEALTH
5OVIET RUSSIA Q
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BOYS J GIRIS
TURKEY
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IRAQ
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ARABIA
EGYPT
with
TICKET
Here’s How To Get the Free Ticket
or
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115 N. Main
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Angelo
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TARZAN
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. Thpandablefanervl Director
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M^cza
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Exercise Often Too One-Sided—It Should Stimulate
and Benefit Entire System
.'/UK.
—
Bring any old tire regardless of how old
what make to our store, 115 N. Main, and for
FREE
PICTURE SHOW
W/fi
-
Lo
MEANWHILE, THE NEAR-NAKED FIG-
URE DARTED INTO MIS CABIN. HE BE-
UMD EGAUS DEAD. MS JOB WAS DONE
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.xs..-...-.--.; ■ ”7 ~vr "V~~
eport-
karrls
fl ,n
•gent
K
Mrs.
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Jirestone
AUTO SUPPLY & SERVICE STORES
l*hoiM M*
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FOR VICTORY—British sailors loose "V for Victory” balloons
rom excursion boat on Hudson river, New York, i<j boost Bundles
or Britain drive. Balloons carried V-shaped cards, which finders
ould exchange for V-pin.
to
and snore—
— i > *
In Cleburne It’s
_t-----
-62 J-
L(
k
•Kharkov
// j
■.....
SIRVICE
MLASDRLD
NO! BY * ‘
GOAD • ’
BUT BY • ’
GQLlfcN
HULL • ■ ,
a
ti
r Hi "
GASPING THE
SINGLE WORD
’TARZAN.... "
I THE WOUNDED
PETER E GAL IS
LAPSED INTO
’ A TOMA.“T......—
F-
I ' Ji
k *
!•*< ♦
z
Ml Lt!
A,
le
F W
c y
! H
ABOUT MIDNIGHT,
A MAN, NAKED
EXCEPT FOR A
LOINCLOTH ---
CREPT ALONG
A DIM PASSAGE- -
WAY.
Jlillnit
JFunrrn! ^luinc
‘v;ja
'■ .^9
Cadets Study Spanish
UsTIN (tl.Pj—Army air corps
its are learning to, speak San-
aa well as fly, The Texas
’« board for vocational educa-
i, acting upon a request by air
ps officers, is conducting classes
Spanish far army fliers at San
lonlo, San Angelo and El
RMtk.
MA
SHI
fi
1
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I
Ry R»ce
■ • MV.. . . ,
trier Tints, Preserves Milk
AN FRANCISCO <U.PK— Milk
Ikers can have pink milk if they
i now. This expansion of na-
t’s limitations has been effect-
with a green powder called phe-
hiasine Pink milk will keep In
Warm room for several days
hout souring.
■ i-kiaiSj8MMKO
„ X-Seo
L 'x • VtL
Ok *■
iv m f
SFar. '
THROUGH THE DARK-
NESS THE FIGURE
REACHED THE SLEEP-
ING STATESMAN •
A KNIFE ROSE- —
AND FELL /
Australia Adds Legation
CANBERRA, Australia. (U.K)—The
Federal government has decided
to-open a legation at Chungking
and maintain a minister at the
Chinese capital hereafter. This will
be Australia’s fourth legation, oth-
ers being established at Washing-
ton, Ottawa and Tokyo.
^--e~r.rR hording < ’
vessels- are checked by tug'Depart-
ment of Commerce to prevent over-
crowding
German
PenatreHan
Oil FieMs
> = O<l Pipa L,naa
19. I’omS as t'olonel
CAMP SAN LUIS OBISPO. Cal
<U.P> — A trainee here had not been
in the. army long enough to know
that a Soldier could hardly be a
colonel at the W of 19, He en-
joyed this rank and all the social
pcrogatlves that go with it at a
nearby resort until the M P.'s
caught up with his ’triumphs.
exercises that wlH promote a better
cooperation throughout the anat-
omy, there must be some sort of
r incentive, That Is the reason we
recommend games that have some
distinct purpose. But when all is
said, there are still stretching and
pulling and rubbing exercises
HE STOPPED at A DOOR AND
TRIED IT WARILY. MR. EfiALlS,
BELIEVFNG HIMSELF AMONG
FRIENDS, HAD NOT LOCKED IT/
IN HIS DACE HE
\nAs calling ON
J. TARZAN FOR HELP,
BUT HI5 FRIENDS
THOUGHT HE WA5
,7/- NAMING HIS
ASSAFLAMT,
'4
HE BEAVER CONFERS — British Minister of Supplies Lord
eevOrbrook, left, with OPM Chief William Knudsen, after their
onferenee in Washington. Mr. Knudsen told newsmen U. S. must
ake up to proper spirit for defense. "
JACK HOME AGAIN -
EPERS CREEPERS, YtRY TD BUCK
WeFi’HEW’! TH ’ MILL ’! J
PAGE THREE
- ---------- .--.g.-MS^
if
each tire we will give one ticket to the theatre.
\ /
THE ASSASSIN'S
FLIGHT WAS STRANGELY
'' SLOW, several
passengers, a-
roused by the
noise, SAW HIM
IN THE DARKNESS.
I
Bring your old lire in on any day except Sunday and get
your Free Ticket.
s^-’eyrgu^
* hAcdi tef f oneon S4*o *
a ;
_____ I SAW i
running away." others'
THEY HURRIED TO THE CABIN
OF THE BELOVED PETER
EGALI5. HE WAS NOT
DEAD, BUT gravely
WOUNDED.•
--------
■ -<B ' ..........
QUICK WORK—Frederick H.
Osborn, 52, New York banker,
who became brigadier general
almost overnight, by appoint-
ment by President Roosevelt.
Six-foot-8* civilian is Army's
neyv morale chief. He was with
Red Cross in World War and
has recently handled Army's
recreational problems.
I -
■
I
Iceland replaces Norway as the
Chief source of our medicinal cod
liver oil, Department of Com-
merce records show. ,
THIS WAS LUPIN JAGGER, WILY SE-
CRET AGENT ASSIGNED ID KILL THE
REFUGEE STATESMAN. NOW HE AP-
PLAUDED HIS CLEVERNESS IN
"FRAMING* TARZAN. ; x
•■. a.. ,-crriiwfimt i iliF
SIMM
I
'«-■■■ 1
which can be carried out with only
a little determination, and which
will stimulate areas that have
lacked exercise.
What is hardening of the arter-
ies? Well, it is a tendency of the
tissues to sog down into a solid
mass through which the blood can-
not penetrate. The network of tiny 5
arterial tissues thicken and atiflen.
and the heart is no longer able to
furnish force enough to send the
blood current to their extremltlee.
The discovery that a forced cir-
culation was a primary need, tn
cases of hardening vessels, was the
most promising disclosure made tn
many a year. The PaVa Ex ma-
chine was designed and developed
entirely on the basts of the need
for forcing the blood through the
arterioles to enliven tissue that
was getting stifT and thick. But
that Is not altogether enough. The
blood must not only be forced Into
the area that is dying far lack of
it, but it must be drained away
again Thus the normal process of
the circulatory system is carried
out. And the PaVa Ex (passive
vascular exercise) machine must
dreate first a vacuum and then
supply a pressure or suction to
draw the blood back into the
emptied vessels.
It is to stave off such deadened
conditions that we advocate ex-
ercise of the voluntary sort that
will keep the muscular tissue pli-
able and vigorous.
There- are no prescribed sets of
exercises that will do for every-
body Some of us may like to skip
rope, but to some others it might
prove disastrous. You do not need
to run around the block You can
do a stationary trot that will liven
up tlie leg muscles.
Climb up an imaginary ladder
that is placed on the Wall of your
room, shake your wrists, swing
your arms, kick over the chair
back (if you can). Anything to
stimulate circulation and shake
things loose.
Minimum* use of first and second
gear increases gasoline mileage,
the Department of Commerce
says.
The Poet’s Corner
By Ed Dodd
(well WHAT DIFFER- M
/EMCE WULD THAT- J|
AAAKE? WHAT SHE T5
COES TO HIM COULD- )*
NT MAKE HIM /
PEEL ANY WORSE )
than he does /
ALREADY’ p
JEW BATTLEGROUND?—Gorman* have stated oHicially that
II of Ukraine we*t of Dnieper river, with exception of Kiev and
lack Sea port of Odo»$a, ha* boon occupied by them. Map
how. how German* might now attack to e.tabUh base, for irraii.ee.
Irive on British-controlled East and how British and Russian*
night move to balk them.
Policeman Gets Pli.Ti.
TURLOCK Cal. <U.R> David O.
Pefe/s won his PhD. degree from
the Blackstone College of Law at ____ _____T---------------
Chicago with a thesis on "Law and . seem, that, in
Social Order," written while,serv-
ing as desk officer at the city police
station The thesis was the result
of seven years of research work,
Peters is' a retired clergyman.
iL>- 1
*
■ . ■ . *
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1
kVa UX1
Rl at Jr
P Wl
..... -
' t
THEN, STRANGELY, THE MID*
NIGHT ASSASSIN IMITATED
A STIFLED CRY, AND PUR-
POSELY overturned A CHAiR
BEFORE HE FLED-________
"TARZAN..." THE STRICKEN
w
"YES, TARZAN DIO IT,"
SPECTATOR .CRIED; ’I
him r._. -,. . _
nodded agreement.
By CLAUD NORTH CHRISMAN, M.D.
•THERE are many people who ' "
* think it U too much trouble to
exercise Many get enough, they
think, in their daily occupation.
That la all right, providing that
their occupa-
tion lends it-
s e 1 f to a
general wak-
ing-up of the
entire system.
But occupa-
tional exercise
is too often
one-aided.
Some muscles
are overdone,
others get
sluggish from
disuse. Folks
who sit in one
posture, or do ua. chbisman
the same thing
all day long, are seriously in need
of exercise. More so than others
who have a more varied method of
using themselves during the work-
ing period.
Exercise before going to bed at
night should be such as to waken
those areas that have not had
their fair chance to stretch and
receive a full blood supply during
thg hours of work. Occupational
paralyses of several sorts develop
because of the tendency to use
certain muscles and to neglect
others Writers' cramp, painters’
tetany, slightly bent knees, heads
cocked to one side, are all forms
of partial disability resulting from
the overuse of some muscles and
the disuse of others.
The entire process of living is a
series of efforts to maintain the
genera] balance or equilibrium in
the whole of the system. It would
BILL C’OLLtX’TORS
By Mrs .1 M Klatt
When we’re sick and weak and
weary, ...
And nuf day is dark n;wi dreary..
They come knocking at our door
Knocking, knocking oY-r and
o’er . .
While wc try to sleep and snore.
Often as we drift in slumber
With our worries put asunder,
There they come back to our door
To rouse our ire and make us
sore.
Sick and sore to our heart’s core.
Long we’ve yearned to earn some
money
So our days would be all sunny:
And we could settle down ohce
more
excursion! There to quietly sleep
.rrtsHavV. s(eep ana srivie
/ s^arsiai
* c
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Ferguson, Joe. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 273, Ed. 1 Monday, August 25, 1941, newspaper, August 25, 1941; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309354/m1/3/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.