Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 273, Ed. 1 Monday, August 25, 1941 Page: 6 of 6
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I
MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1941
I
'AGE SIX
Place Your Order
*
Today
**". Il •
I-
Will Have Entirely New Body Lincs ’
Coleman Motor Co.
3
•
Chevrolet Salee & Service
first
PETE’S
I.
SPECIALTY
Uy PETE HM1TH
U7RIGHT ■
” BROTHERS
*
2.
new——
I
I
59c
Knit Shoes . .
4.
69c
Gertrudes
Philadelphia 4. Detroit 7.
$1.25
69c
Site
I’illow Cases
$1
Rompers
$1
Boys’ Dresses .
7t
50<-
Undershirts
. 35c
'©
si
t
. $1. $1.25
*
Shawls
25c
$1.98
$1
was
in
A free medicine show will
PALACE Now
•pecifica-
open
I
high. En-
style in navy, brass buttons ....... $3.98 to $6.50
years
I
3*.
.'•fl
Billy and Sue
Dresses
Play Togs 75c - $1
H-
&
I
a month.
MARINI — Judgai Vafiidu,
WRIGHT
IlBROTliERS
•-S
fr'»
I
lift
I
3
I
i
T
Bottle # Sterilizers
Bath Tubs, pink or blue $1.50
Cowboy Jawn Has To
Learn To Ride
Diaper Bags ..........
Johnson Bahy Seis
Din Din Bottle H«><iers $1.00
Cotton Stamps
Redeemed Here
. CLEBURNE T1ME8-REV1EW, CLEBUENE, TEXAS
DODGER-CARD BATTLE SEEMS
DESTINED TO WRITE HISTORY
Soldiers To Appear
At Pythian Meeting
, Other Hampers at
$1.50 and $1.98
Cotton Stamps
Redeemed Here ; •
"THE BRIDE
CAME C.O.D."
id west
given
I
MKDIOINt SHOW TO BE
HELD AT COLORED PARK
Star
the
71
77
84
86
Curity Diapers
Evenflo Bottles
alphabet
born in
715
573
BIB
611
490
441
390
380
Means
C<mifort . .
Pct
664
531
.519
510
405
435
432
431
■ V
III
• • •
Jiny Tucker of Waco looks over
For ’42 Chevrolet
Baby Books .... 29c - $2.50
Carters Knit Gowns $1
KI einert» Softex Pants 59c
Refill Pads for Pants 4 doz $1
ft- '
BASEBALL
HOW THEY ST AMD
WHERE THEY PLAY
LATEST SCORES
L.
43
43
50
55
ill
70
71
114
Pct
561
644
577
537
490
426
400
282
j. a
59
58
•1
66
HH
68
Quilted Rubber Pads
Pneumatic -- Washable
Waterproof — Odorless
59c and $1
Coolness
■
A
-ji
THE INFANTS SHOP OF CLEBURNE
“SAN ANTONIO
ROSE” with
- on the -
JACKETS
Pa!
• —
■■
due to
we can’t
They 'will
J J
Baskenettes with
Fokbfig Legs $3.98
Carrying Baby »
Baskenettes $.248
Baby Dresses
Sheet Sets $1 - $1.98
Little Boys Overcoats
Swagger styles for Sonny Boy — ages I to 7
years. Tweeds in brown and gray. Also military
Saques ..
Amoral Blankets $1.00, $2.48
. $1.98 - $3.98
another,fine team, but it has lost
its key men. It may not click as
did the team of last year. It had
two great backs in 1940. It has
lost both of them
kayoed th% Cubs
twice. 8-5 and 7-6 Dan Utwhiler
Stan
con-
Chenillc
Bedspreads $1.98 - $2.98
39
59
65
70 67
68
61
54
53
l/n •
-»
o
\ j
ill
w
Teichman and Mrs.
Dallas, spent Sunday
and .Mrs. A. F. Glb-
IL ■ "t
fc'
C
K-
I
fc'.' T
Todmers
L, z a
- M
■MH i
| H
Lt
B
K i.
L
PMflL Overall styles in rayon
■ shantungs and poplins—
I cotton seersucker.
at $1 and $1.98
Stripes - Prints - Solids
9 months to 31/L’ years—
tiny sister will approver
these—and mother will
like the price.
Dillon & Sons
(funeral Home
M(Mg(R. TMf ORDU W a M OQUXN Mill
LISTIN! Bl A GKNTLIMAN — But Johnny Kimbrough, former
Texas A. 4 M. football star, isn’t really booting Sheila Ryan, Sho’s
booting him—that is, she’s helping him with boots usf d in making
Hollywood Western.
The round-up club of Knights
of Pythias will be entertained by
Weatherfordxx Lone Star Lodge.
Tuesday night at the Pythian
home. . *
Members of Denton. Fort Worth,
Cleburne and Mineral Wells will
attend.,
Entertainers will 1 '
group from Camp Wolters
CaI„ annual fete looked over
many beeuties end chase Alma
Carrell, IB, Miss America of
National Defense. She repre-
sented Quantico, Va., Marine
bese in fete.
ed. the United States will pat JOO
new merchant ships to sea before
1942. it was said
A free medicine show will be
held at the Colored park tonight
at 8 p m , Cliff Smith said to-
day The show will be open to
white and colored residents of the
city.
r
K'
I’ :’
STANDINGS
4 rWurttr
Houston >. ■■ 95
Tulsa ..f. ... 78
Shreveport 71
Dallas
Fort Worth
Oklahoma City
Pcnumont
Han Antonio
- National League
Team W
Brooklyn 78
St. Louis . 18
Cincinnati 67
Pittsburgh «4
New York . 57
Chicago 52
Boston 48
Philarielphla 35
American league
Team— " . W.
New York 84 43
Chicago tMI
Cleveland 83
Boston 63
Detroit 58
St Louis 53
Washington .....n- 52
.Philadelphia .....53 69
YAUW
James vAGWEY
Bette DAVIS
Mrs John E Bratcher has re-
turned home from Whitney, where
site has been visiting her parents.
Mr. and Mrs W ,H Roundtree
Mr. Roundtree Iras been quite' ill
v - •’ Ml* trv-ff
Santone Wash Suits
Stripes and solid combinations
Sailors delight for All-American
boys / $1.00
si
——
11
I*
Hr; -
Kz"
KF'
Bi ■
K
K
11
BTT
• S ■ >
KA
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B ,
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p
K',‘3
(U.P) — When
colt gets big
Ship Launching To
Reach One a Day
include a
_ one
of whom Wilf be Mike O’Daniel.
son of Senator O’Daniel, it
said.
._____________________________________________________________________________________
Gsat Mothrr- ( oil
SALINAS. Cal
Harry Meldrin’s
enough to whinny for lta i
it may be rewarded by *e
motherly-looking goat wandef over I
In response when ths eolt’s moth-
er died it »m given to a goat forV
adoption.
Mrs. I
Lynn, of
with Mr
son.
Daring the het weather, the roolness ef nur fun-
eral home is a feature of Dillon A Sono service that
makes an undeniable appeal. We have air cooling
equipment, and thno can completely control both tem-
peratnre and humidity In our eatabSahmmri. »
Hollywood. Aug 35 <um—
Inasmuch ns he* had ridden horses
most of his llfw John Kimbrough,
former Texas A A M football (
star, was surprised when he had
to take riding lessons to appear in
a movie
Kimbrough was accustomed to
mounting and dismounting in the
moat expeditious fashion and
holding the reins in either hand.
But such. technique wasn't for
the movies. He learned that he
must dismount before the horse
stops and hold the reins in his
left hand, so he can carry a six-
shooter tn his right,
Babykins .
Comb and Brush Sets .. 59c
“Corsicana had a very good
team last year, and may have
another one. but its strength
bi doubtful It Is one of the
dark horses of the race An-
other la Bryan Early in the
season last year Bryan had the
best eiwb in .t^xas, and fal-
■ tered after It had disposed of
Its two moat dangerous rivals—
Temple and Corsicana Any
team In the district last year
capable of defeating Temple
and Corsienna should have
won the district title, but Bry-
an did not Temple Is one of
the outstanding contenders and
the Waeo team Is another
“Right now It seems that It is
Temple, Waco or Corsicana for the
title, and Bryan is the dark
horse."
Fontball training for the Texas
-high schools is only one week
away This district, will have nine
clubs "this fall and before the
practice starts about six of them
are counted out by most of the
writers over the district
Temple. Waco and Corsicana are
and 313 counted on to be the big three
of trie district this year with
Ennis and Bryan given a slight
chance of upsetting the dope We
can cut the loop down to three
teams all right but we would
make it Temple, Waco and Bryan
Waco and Temple are f
have good clubs but
count the Broncos out.
have another good club this year,
and if they get started like they
did last year, we don't look for
them to slip
is here at this store. Everything that is new-— proper —- dis-
tinctive! Exquisitea baby things p.lu» practical necessities!
TODAY’S SCHEDULE
Texas league
Fort Worth at Houston.
Tulsa at Beaumont
Dallas at San Antonio
Oklahoma City at' Shreveport.
American Leaigue
Boston at Cleveland.
New York at Chicago
Philadelphia at Detroit.
Washington |t fet Louis
National League
St LoUis kt Brooklyn.
Pittsburgh at Boston
Chicago at Philadelphia.
Pittsburgh at Boston
Built to game exacting sp_Z.*__
tions as our finest Baskenettes.
Double woven splint with open
work weave. Folding legs, nickel
plated trim. Rubber casters. 40"
long. 20” wide. 42’^” high. En-
ameled in sqft ivory with baby
blue or pink trim.
$6.95
WASHINGTON. Aug 25 <U.»—
Maritime commission officials said
today that the emergency ship
construction program would be
producing a new vessel every day
by December
By the middle of 1942. the com-
mission expects the rate Of
launching to be two a day "
At present, about seven ships
a month are being launched. The
first of the new emergency ships,
known as Liberty Fleet vessels,
will be launched next month, and
10 are to be produced in Sep-
tember By October the rate will
advance to 20
If present, objectives are attaln-
Wari^ers
........ 50c
Pete Campbell has returne
home from Denton, where he rt
ceiyed his degree from N.T S.T.C
Saturday night He Is the so
of Mrs Ora Campbell and grand
son of Mr. and Mrs. D F
O’Brien.
I NEW YORK. Aug 25 <U.M—
1 The Brooklyn Dodgers and St
Louis Cardinals seem destined to
write baseball history with their
day-by-day struggle for the 1941
National League pennant but the
Cincinnati Reds may change that
brogram if their present pace
continues. 4 ,
The Reds, pennant-winners for
the ■ past two years and world
champion*, last season, were heavy
Jawwrites • to . >lu their third
straight 'title at tnfc "stirt df thrf' *
season but they have been bog-
ged down near the second division
most of the summer.
But now* • fbey’re coming—and
fast Yesterday, while the lead-
ing Dodgers were- dividing .a
double-header with the runner-up
Cardinals, winning the nightcap,
3- 2 after dropping the opener.
7-3. the Reds won two from the
New York Giants, 13-9 and 6-4
to move to 8>^ games of
place
They have now won 15 games in
their last 18 starts The Reds
play tiie Giants, currently a soft
touch for them, in their next,
two games while the Dodgers and
Cards meet each other Then
Cincinnati tangles with Brooklyn,
Iras two open dates and follows
with a pair of contests against
the Cards while the Dodgers are
playing the Giants, who have Jx9-n
comparatively tough for BroWvn
this year
The absence of a potent batting
attack has hampered the Reds all
season but yesterday they ham-
mered out 19 hits in the first
game and 14 in the second. Hany
Craft and Lonnie Frey drove in
11 runs between them in the
opener Craft hit two homers and
Frey, and BiUy Werber one each
Ducky Walters relieved "in both
games and halted late-lnhlng
Giant rallies.
Pittsburgh divided with Boston
A single by ’Barna Rowell in the
12th Inning gave the Braves a 4-3
victory in the first game while a
4- run attack in the fifth Inning
clinched a 7-3 Pittsburgh decision
in thp nightcap, called at the
end of six Innings because ’of the
curfew.
The Phillies
twice, Z Z _____-
hit a homer in each game
Benjamin and Joe Marty
nected in the nightcap
The New York Yankees
if Ak
E:
Mr. and Mrs. Pink Hall of
Dalton. Ga., are visiting relatives
and friends here.
Marine Corps To
Enlist Men Here
During September
' —,t ------ . —
Sergeant W V Fowler, of the
U 8 Marine Corps recruiting
service will visit Weatherford. Mon-
day and Tuesday. Hept 1 »nd 2.
and Cleburne, Wednesday and
Thursday, Sept 3 and 4,‘to a>ccept
applications for enlistment in the
flUtaMM.
; The recruiting efficer urges all
young men between, 17 and. 31,
year* of age to call at the Post
Office in the above mentioned
fflgees and he will be glad to an-
swer any question concerning the
Marines.
Young men of draft age, who
are single, with no dependents,
may enlist In the Marines for the
"actual duration of the national'
emergency," with assurance of be-
ing discharged upon the termi-
nation of the present emergency
The Marines are offering all
young men a chance to continue
their education, ahd the oppor-
- tunlty to trpve). Men are free to
Select the type of service they
desire; on land, at sea and in the
air The Marine Corps maintains,
bases in more than a dozen for-
eign countries, and in the United
States on both the east am
coast. This opportunity Is
to all young men of good health,
excellent character and moderate
education.
Parents of young men are in-
vited to call on the recruiting of-
ficer in order that they may learn
of the many advantage* the Ma-
. fine* are offering their eons.
Miss Helen Caln has arrived
to spend the remainder of her
summer vacation here with her
parents, Mr and Mrs K E
Cain. Miss Caln, who has been
attending both sessions of sum-
mer school at Texas University,
will return to Austin in Septem-
ber for her senior year's work
WRIGHT"""—
Y » BROT1
IhIWKEYE Extra Isrfe
De tax* BUY BED
the district and pick* Bryan and
Ennis as dark horses with Hills-
boro, Mexia and Cleburne without
a chance:
“The n''w entrie* are Mexia
and Ennis Of the two Ennirf
■3 to be the stronger
Ennis has a good chance
Lieutenant Becomes Private?
DENVER (M.B—First Ueut. Eud
W Larson didn’t care for hi* B282
a month post in the Army re-
serve corps He said he wasn’t see-
ing enough /rction He walked into
a Denver recruiting office and
signed up as a private in the
marine corpe at a salary of >21
A very attractive upright type
loom woven fiber hamper with
—Z -------cover.
Very durable yet inexpensive.
Full length chrome inl^jd handles.
Sise: 18x16x25
Price $2.50
appears
team L....-W ---—. — w—,
to break even on its district
schedule Mexia Is dur U> have
a battle on Ita hands to keep
out of the cellar Hillsboro
will also be a weak jslntw of
the raws. Cleburne will be
better than last year, but .is
not given a chance for the
title
“Waxahachie had Ita best team
last year, and is coming back with
K ;
K
tl
K
I '
rtf ice in a equaled tenement dls-
trUct on Chicago’s west side ended
for an Italian couple today in
public acclaim for rearing “the
ideal American family" in one of
the worst envorinments iU the na-
tion
Mr.
now 1
'j''1' dft .Mfr ■Aviation Suits, Air Corps Blue,
Sam Brown Belts $4.98
* leather
7
went
17 games in front of the American
League for the second time tills
year by defeating the White Sox
twice, 5-1 and 8-5. Charley Kel-
ler belted 8 pah of homers - and
Tom Henrich hit one in the sec-
ond game. .
The Indians bounced into third
place with two runs over the Red
Sox, 4-3 and 5-2 Jim Bagby put
out a ninth-inning Boston rally
one run short of a tie In the
first game and Al Smith checked |
the Sox with six hits in the sec-
ond g»m«
Detroit slammed out 14 hits,
Including a homer by Tuck Stain-
back. to triumph, 4-7, over the
Athletics Al Benton gave the
A’s eight hits.
Bob Swift’s squeeze bunt with
the bases loaded in the 10th en-
abled the Browns to shade the
Senators, 4-3 The victory moved
St Louis into sixth place and !
dropped Washington into the cel- .
lar.
. and Mrs George Cascino,
approaching 80 and both in
frail health brought on by the
severest poverty, hard work and
self-denial, were singled out by
the Union League Club of Chi-
cago for a unique "family life"
award
To demonstrate that “family life
is the foundation of national life,"
the Union League investigated
4.000 Chicago immigrant famil-
ies to find the out that had
best the
ideal despite straitened circum-
stances.
George and Theresa Cascino,
who brought a family of five to
matqr//’- higb distinction in
the face of extreme financial hard-
ship and the environment of the
Italian slums, were announced as
the winners today At a presen-
tation ceremony on Wednesday
they will receive a gold-framed,
illuminated plaque:
"In • recognition of extraordinary
achievement in maintaining the
American ideal of family life,
parental responsbllity, and duty
to community and country . .
The -one-time shepherd boy tuid
his peasant bride, these words
meant they had risen far. In the
ill-favored province of Abruzzi
Molise in Italy, George first wrote
CHICAGO, Aug 25 (U.Ri—- his alphabet in stone. Theresa
Thirty-seven years of unnoted sac- • was born in a neighboring com-
JOTTINGS |^ea{ American
Family Chosen
THE MERRY MACS
Jane Frazee - Robt. Paige
[ lx>n Chaney, Jr, {
---—
I
is J
EX • d
YEHTKRDAY’H. REMULTH
TMa* Letaw.
Fort Worth J-4, lfou4ton 5-5.
Tulsa 8-8, Beaumont, 6-1
Dalia* 1, Ban Antonio 4
Oklahoma City 1, Shreveport
National League
St Louis 7-2, Brooklyn'3-3
Pittsburgh 3-T, Boston 4-3'.
Chicago 5-6, Philadelphia 8-7
Cincinnati 13-6. New Yrftk 9-4,
American league
New York 5-8. Chicago 1-5.
Boston 3-2, Cleveland 4-5
Washington 3, St Louis-
(Second game postponed, rahi).
Electric Bottle
Officers Khaki Suits,
iam Brown belts, up to
... .... $4.98
munlty not much further advanci
ed
Doming to America in 19M
George began work a* a street lai
bored and machinist After a quarl
ter Of a century of irreguleJ
employment, he was left withoi*
a Jeb seven years ago when hi
firm failed.
Theresa started at 12 50 a weei
in a pant* factory and workel
intermittently at various jobs unj
til 1929, never earning as muc]
as $20 a week. The children sufi
fered all the epidemic disease*
including diphtheria The Ca.l
cinos made a $900 down paymei*
on a home, but lost it three yeaJ
later because of a defective title I
They lived in a $10 a montj
tenement* in a neighborhood thd
wa* n bret-*'.i'- f?Sw»i<l far ganj
of automobile thieves and boon
leggers Other Italian familiJ
withdrew their children froii
school to augment family incomj
or took advantage of federal rd
lief.
The Cascinos did neither. Thl
parents went to settlement school
at night, became citiapns, and cod
ducted discussions of the const*
tution and American history il
their home as well as family cor*
tests on the names of supremi
court justices and Illinois % con
gressinon. Today they got the*
reward.
I ,El AND BURTON - Kfcs
teammates call him "Red
Bird," but, the 17-year-old lad
Is one of the stalwarts of the
C H 8 squad! Playing his
last year, Burton played one •
year with'the Yannlgans before
coming up to the "A" squad
last fall He received a letter
for his backfield play In
addition to being a good safety
man. thia "powerful mite” is a
good passer and a driving,run-
ner, A native of this city, he
weighs only 145 pounds and
stands five feet seven inches.
This summer he has been doing
construction work and also
worked for the park board.
Hobbies are saving match fold-
ers and reading "funny-books ”
The' Jackets will count heavily
on the prowess of young Bur-
ton to lead them this fall.
very attractive upright type
highly polished enameled
36TH
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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/m1/6/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.