Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 290, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 13, 1942 Page: 1 of 8
eight 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:
Accredited Rural
PLEASED ITALIAN PRISONERS
/
In Attendance
Start Fall Work
la
k -
Bond
TT.
to
there was a Kain
F
a
W-■'
along the
Col
There have
I
to attend.
j America’s
productive
might
conference.
on
Introduc-; in®®t Grandview on Oct.
. _ —_ * flea nadtHatx anU WA «*i
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12. (UPl-
war
trierr
Nazis Continue
and
Industrial
arte
LAarty Chapel
An ordinance providing for the
roll Monday
route of State Highway No. 174 In
fl
con-
WOWk
Mr
•tar at
• III
Schult*. To Be At
Welfare Office
Wendell Willkie
Is In Jerusalem
Anti-Inflation
Hearings Tuesday
1942 Revenue Bill
Total at Nine Billion
He worked on
Wag-
scheduled
over
Lunchroom Plans
To Be Discussed
At Mass Meeting
Grandview
Grandview
taat
The
that
carrying
Cor-
Howell of the
■ totaling
paid back
_ Ja_— **' W«lfl
<Xftet ta'*ta* Chamber* str
•aaoMlng to anncunawnante
Judge Mor Andaraon.
MwMtat wW aMtot th* tanv
Burleson .
lhe Burleson School will begin
program
Johnson
Friday
was
ex-
rails
land-
V' 1
I s
Mattox, the primary. All work was
iocredited last year and a 9-mont.h
gchool term is planned for this
daughter on Friday,
11. at the Cleburne
The little girl, who
Same Fair Building Will House
Poultry Exhibit and N.Y.A. Project
I WASHINGTON. Sept. 12. (U.P>—
Treasury estimates today set the
and shot down at least one before
—I. A few
Burrell Bar-
opportunity to select those subjects
most suitable for their particular
careers in high school. It is said
that the Junior High boys will fight
the finish of this war and sclen- i
lists will be in great demand.
and
.stahips for t
$71,774 05. or
Al Pk
with I
minutes
"Mast of the steamers and barges
were sunk. A few minutes late*-
— — anot,her American for-
hm to-
M Stalin-
Geraldine Floyd. Eng*
mlah; Mr*. Kart looker.
W R. Rhodes, science
British Broadcasting I
day quoted the Maae
reporting the sftuatlo.. „
grad a« "critical" and mid heavy
- f I
/.j
II
the first half
$29,041 70 worth of stamps
bonds had been purchased
the poultry show building
there they will see on c_l
the prize poultry of the section1
™nl£ M.cLeXp whSh
7o miles to
miles to 18
life
The
advocated a
of 35 miles an hoUr to conserve
rubber and Mr Roosevelt _
heartily endorsed this restriction.
GUAYULE PROGRAM
TO BE SPEEDED
r-;o
"I
s' JT
Glen Rose
Glen Rose school children will'
at
g>7
lEl < \ /
portions of
the past to
on their
going Into
MR. MRS R L ANDERSON,
Jr., HAVE NEW DAUGHTER
Figures Show
Ne^eipity For
Slow Driving
important . role
offensive against
/ •
~ JU.
■v
• Y. ■.
PLEASED PRISONERS — Hemmed in by berbed wire, tfreiq
Italian soldiers, taken prisoner on the Western Desert Front in
Africa by New Zealand and Indian forces, seem content. Most
ef them belonged to the highly-touted Brescia division.
—- This project has been and
is now in operation in the poultry
building at the fair grounds when
officers of the fair began to think
about housing the poultry show
they were confronted with the
fact that the machine shop waa in
the poultry building.
wa-.s- set
of bonds
month
broaden* recorded hero
The BBC said maiin*.
Cleburne Will
Have Increase
Ttaehtea are Mrs L. B. Ban-
dage, primary; Mrs. Jewell Dunn
Oradk, intermediate and Mrs W.
D. Ktag, principal. School
taaataM ar* Dtok Beaetey, h d
ski* ‘js cs
EJFtuJ*1’* u chairman of the
E
-----Ny. white wyanttottai:
Hampshire Reda.
•iWMliiiaInly Kk pupils will en-
‘ r morning when the
ibarty Chapel ached begins Its
Sept, 12
conferred
UI1U
barges carrying troops across Lake
Poyang were sunk by the American
raiders during the offensive sweep
against enemy positions in the
work at the Obi
plant at Fort Worth
operate so that
WiM get to see mwiira in action —‘.7 ... «.
and to view the articles turned out , adJ'"riln<t the sprawling plant
by them. "*st -------—" ‘
L. ‘B, Nix la chairman of the
America’s
Axis. -
for planting of not more t
75,000 acres of the rubber-produc-
Ing shrub, said he had received
word from Wa.shlngton that the
Wth
Remember that
p<st out-in-front
How
discussed at length
All persons interested,
principals, school board
and trustees and [
association members, are urged to | of
be present in order that they will
understand the set-up for the Ann-,
fng school year
er Association is scheduled for
Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock
in the school auditorium. J. B.
Bright, principal, will discuss and
explain the longer periods and the Tuesday. f
for the J War Labor Board Chairman Wil-
liam H. Davis, Price Administrator
Leon Henderson,’rand Agriculture
elementary teacher and Mrs: Lucille discarded
The govCrment
many other small items ol
iron apd steel, which the
Start Pump Test At i ■.
Well Near Qodley
»4 ’ ......... -e ’ J S- ’ 'a '« JU
OUlng having peen »et at 4*0 '
feet on the test Well tor the pros-
pective army camp near Godley,
the drilling crew ha* started a
40-hour pumping teat on the ,
Paluiy aand
Following the 4*-bour test «k
the well, .the contractors will re- ,
move th* tubing and casing and
Get Several Planes
Robert L. Scott intercepted
the school lunch program will be i a flight of six Japanese fighters
discussed There pave been sev- s ; „.
era! changes made In Hie eligibility ! the fight was broken off
<>: commodities and in workers and minutes later Lieut
these phases of the work will be ' num. Old Lyne. Conn., encountered
i---... thP same group of Japs and shot
including down another
Japanese attempted a re-
1 waves
18 and nine fighter planes
attack on Hangyang irtr-
A heavy
of
discussed Friday 1 mln8. hut not
18, at 2 o’clock in ' s,1llps. were blazlnK within
mass meeting to
burning
the roof
! war
disregard
as to the 1
when necessary I
movement of
1 passengers ' ■ -
! 'Die ruling suspends laws now In
' effect In several" states limiting
, the length of freight trains to not
more than one-half mile, the num-
ber of freight cars in a train to
70. and the number of cars in a
passenger train to 14 or 16
The commission said that It be-
lieved such action would consider-
ably speed up transportation and
reduce wasteful use of locomotives.
W A Scott,
from Frank f
Admliustrntor
Johnson County Jacked approxi-
mately $18,(MX) of filling the
August War Bond and Stamp
quota according to information re-| ngKlnst pnpmy pofiltlons in _
eelved by W A Scott, county Nanchang and Klukiang areas of
chairman, from Frank Scoffleld, I Kiangsi province.
War Bond Administrator for] lli(
Texas
The August - quota
$88,400 and sale
the
a
The football schedule lor season
has been announced and the first
] game will be played Sept. 25 at
. I Birdville, Oct. 2 is an open date
At the conclusion of the cere- and on Oct. 9. Midlothian will
a-Y... -J Pord.
. was
in-
who make the
Some farmers 1 afternoon, sept
j ——*1 _ t 1 ft cniiint V-U'lrio
I be held in
according to County Supt
Ga things
Several speakers from the State
WPA office will be present In-
cluding Anson Cone, supervisor of '
the Surplus Commodities
poratlon. and W. E
AMA
Gathings states that planning
and proeeedure of carrying on
the school lunch program will be i a
Barkley agreed that proposals for
a simple, blanket grant of power
to President Roosevelt had been
abandoned.
‘There is going to have to be
specific mention of both farm prices'
and wages," he told reporters.
I Wagner said that there was no
disagreement about the necessity
‘ ___i; but “I
I don’t think the Senate will agree to
a bilk that is so general- that it is
jwithdbt a formula on wages and
than students.
The buses will make their regular
runs and the new bus route will
bring the Oak Grove students in.
rubber committee
i its report t.. 1 ,
’t that all re- morning, but pupils will enroll and
strictions to the guayule program lessons will be assigned on Monday
lhe old high school and elemen-'i
tary school buildings will be used
h aw-well as some of the class rooms
• m the new building. This struc-
I ture will not be completed for some
, t imawand the lunch room is not
> yet^Wallable.
Venus
] All pupils in the
; art Qrged to enroll
morning at a o'C-locL
I may not be in attendance for
I while, school officials state
school will co-operate In any way
possible in aiding the farmers io
What will prbbably be the most
uniue display ever to be held at
a fair will be exhibited at
Johnson County ’’Victory’’
come September 30
For the past several months the
.fair association officials have been
working in cooperatlonq with Na-
tional Youth Administration of-
ficlais and the machine shop work conquest of American territory. ’
training ^project ha* been con-' ------------—
Bomber Plant
Is Dedicated
They be- j .. .
old
dam
hind
the Scrap now.
In addition to assisting in the
war eflort, the citizen is also able
at the same time to earn a few
extra dollars, which will help now
with the beginning of school and
tin need for those extra pencils,
papers and notebooks
total of the 1942 revenue bill at
about $9,000,000,000 as the Senate
Finance committee virtually com-
pleted preparation of the measure
but held it open for a few more
possible changes next week
Of the total, an estimated $7,100.-
000.000 represents direct nek taxes
that will be retained by the treas-
ury The rebateable new "Victory"
tax on individuals and the rebate-
able share of corporation taxes will
bring additional reci
_ ,»1,900.000.000, but Will
contribution, for which they would j ev®ntually..
receive equivalent benefits from a
Juat peace In the future.”
CHUNGKING. Sept 2 —(Delayed
By Censor) —(UPc-U. S Army air
I force plane blasted Japanese army
Ik udquiirters at Nangchang, start-
I cd "innumerable’’ fires among
(enemy warehouses and mowed down
Japanese soldiers aboard a troop
train today in what was described
as America's biggest single “air
Show’’ in China
Several Japanese steamers And
have a life of 140 per cent
a. 50 mile an hour driving speed i
reduces the life of
per cent, 60 miles to 50 per cent, j j
30 pcr cpnt and gp |
per cent or normal <
Baluch rubber j z*. 1V1 Dryam. oi vne r-aiKer ocnooi, i
national speed limit .^lasses will start Monday morning
an hoUr to conserve it 9 o'clock.
Mr Roosevelt has
JERUSALEM.
Wendell Wlllklc
officials today
At a press conference. Willkie
dwelt on America's tremendous war
production and the effect it will
have on the United Nations’
effort
"There Is an increasing under-
standing throughout America ot
the purposes of this war. and pro-
Axls elements are practically non-
existent." Willkie said "America
could have kept out of this war
since It was i emote from the con-
flict, but we want a new world
where pqople live happy, decent
lives f A »<*.“ >
The present war Ls global In Its
character, krid 'Wrefore the United
j interested that all coun-
make the fullest possible
miles an hour
100 in the life
tile, the cEart released by,
| Senate changes made a’ net in-
crease of $830,000,000 in Ute House
1 total of $8,270,000,000 in non-rebate-
,/w .fe BB 1 able ta¥8 totel federal tax
I Irrlinan/'o Paccori 'revenue to about »25.ooo.ooo,ooo •
VI Ullldllic 1 aaocu year If th* senate MB to enMted.
By City Council
An ordinance providing for the view of increased national income
reconstruction of a portion of the forerort for neat year,
route ot Btate Highway NO. 174 in to *®*'
the City of Cleburne waa paaeed opinion, he sate.
Jhriday eveplng when the council; ' •
met In regular eemion A the 1"
city hall. ’
Routine bualneas waa transacted
and a permit *ae granted Thana*
McKael to operote • qate at the
—‘ - of the Santa F* .hop*
e of Sidney BUton. ^ub-'
August War Bond
Sales in County
Short of Quota
Production at thf plant was halt-
ed only temporarily when the test-
jlown plane caught fire late yes-
terday at high altitude and craahed.
meteor-like, down upon the buUd-
ing Test Pilot J. Bertrand Purnell,
33. who balled out, wae injured
aeriously
Purnell sata ha did not know
what, started The blase which en-
gulfed the cockpit After “the engina
caught on fire’.” i
T tried to put out the flamea
before I Jumped.’ Im declared,
adding that the Intense heat and
Hamas darting at hia face farced
him to loop.
The plane tore an ’xmbeitevably
■nail" hula in Um roof, company
officiate «ald Tte motor ws* eta-
bedded in the concrete floor. The
nghtlua wa* in progress for ah'
important height
"The CtoafeuN continue to
launch omm attack*, but so far
harebeen unable to break
through." the BBC said in a
* i by OM*
mad homes
.. C Bchultoe, who la
ted with the D B. »nplo
rtoe and win be here <
o*Mm
report Monday morning
school a*tn9 o’dock "* *1B" 1 WASHINGTON’ s*Pt >2 <U-» —
An important meeting of the Democratic Senate Leader Alben
Fulton Junior High Parent-Teach- Barkley, Ky.. said today that hear-
ings on the new anti-inflation leg-
islation, originally scheduled for ducted*
Monday, will be put over until
"We chased the
over the Yunnan
i ceiling," said an /
At least one Japanese plane was
i shot down and another was dam-
, aged
AKteaai. O^ S*pt. . u- ftMW-r
Legislation enabling the speeding
up of the guayule program as part [
of government efforts to find new it* program at 9 o'clock Monday
rubber sources will be introduced morning, After the opening pro-
!P,M??n8Tess Jmntodlately, William gram, cliisses will meet to get books
i miNe"’ presl^cnt the General and assignments and buses will
T R',bber Co ■ 8ald I take children back to their homes
I ONell, whei sponsored the gua- at n:3o a m. The afternoon will
j yule which originally called pe used to finish enrolling irregular
for nlunf nn * i, . . . . o
Mr and Mrs Robert L. Ander-
son. Jr., of this city announce the
birth of a
September
Sanitarium ---- ---- w_ „— w>c
has been named Mary Angela An- of preventing inflation,
derson, is the granddaughter ot ' - - —”
Mrs Ruby Blackburn and Mr. and
Mrs R L Anderson, 8r.. and
the great-granddaughter of Mre. 'prNes
W L Cunningham.
The school lunchroom
for rural "schools
County will be
a tire to 70
lleved that the poultry show was' RUN' Mlch ■ ^P* 12
Important. 6o the first thought <U’?^""n<!®reecretary of War Rob
™ ihv «,„w under lrt JY PYtYr'KY tO<Uy ha,led thc
could not be real- ' .ord bomb*r plant as a *ymboi of
. —st — | America* productive might and
shop and together with Supervisor- 1 P,0'"1*ed th*t "one day soon” huge
__ * . . — — _ .. _ _ . fMllYlKmra — * WWH1»——RUM
Will jam the air road* to Tokyo
WASHINGTON. Sept. 12 (U.RX—
President Roosevelt offered new
figures today to impress upon the
country the necessity nt low-speed
driving to conserve rubber.
He made nubile a chart show-
I Ing that the normal life of a tire
| Is doubled when the average spfeed
from 40 to 20 miles year. County Supt I. B Gathings I
An increase in enrollment for the
coming school year over the past
year was indicated by the large
number of grade pupils reporting
Saturday morning at the various
elementary schools in the city, Supt.
Bmmett Brown states.
Nearly 200 more elementary pupils .
reported Saturday lor assignments
than reported on Saturday before
the opening of school last year, ]
Brown said. However, about 1001
less students in the high school
division reported lor programs this
year as compared to those of last
tall, but there will be a 5 to 10 per ]
cent increase in thc total attend-
ance lor the 1942-43'term over the
1941-42 term.
Durham Resigns
Because of the resignation of L.
W Durham, band director, on Sat-
urday, it seems Improbable that
this position can be filled before
mid-term as the agencies contacted
announced there are several hun-
dred vacancies of this type because
of the large number of eligible
persons for these positions having ;
entered the service, he said. How- ,
ever, a fine spirit of co-operation !
has been shown by both the pupils
and thc citizenship in general, and i
the situations will be handled as
rapidly as possible as thay develop.
Brown further stated there will
toe;a number of local people used
iw substitute teachers this year, bht
they must be eligible before they1
are employed. However, prospects |
for thc school year are better than
they have been in thc past four or
five years he said. ],
Report Monday
Pupils in all ward schools are to >
at >8:30
high |
thc
with requests of the State Board
that these pupils be given science '
and vocational guidance In the
lower grades, (seventh and eighth), i ln8s -°n Monday.
to acquaint them with these sub- it today with Sens. Robert
jecte and also give them a better ner D N y, ftnd pre.ntls* Brown,
I" Another meeting was scheduled
for thia afternoon, when the three
Senators hope to talk to House
leaders.
Ing shrub, said he had
ww.d from Washington that
program would be expedited in
Houses
the | The Baruch i
Fair recommended- In
• i President Roosevelt
' rir>f Inne
be removed and that it “bi gten
every possible support as the pB-
cipal source of crude rubber wl®i
could not be lost to use short
j ttnii
county-wide mass meeting
thc county courtroom I
I B |
| we. saw another American for-
mation again attacking the train.
i This time the locomotive
: blown up completely The
l plosion destroyed cars and
and threw steel over the
, sen pc
combination of subjects for the I
junior high grades and parents hav- 1
ing pupils in these grades are urged
to attend. ’ |
Several new subjects have been Secretary Claude Wlckard are to
added to the schedule to conform I appear then.
Barkley said it would be impos-
sible to get the bill ready for ttter- a"tent but
was to try to house the show under
that
teed They tnen went out to the
sl.v,, «uu wiwi supervisor- . —» ■
Superintendents Walter Mudge and Willow
Frank Knopp decided that by ar- w. * —
ranging and. moving the movable Rer“n „
machinery and equipment in the /alMfr*on Gov Murray D Van
machine shop that ample space ’Wa<<,ner ot Michigan. Edacl ft j
would be afforded to house the ;?rd Prre|dent 'he Ford Motor I The Grandview school Ls
poultry show ' 00 ■ and R J Thoma*, head of, scheduled to open Monday
So when visitor* go to the fair, I ^„,Unlte? Automobile Workers
be sure and spend some time In ,, ',Poke at ceremonies dedl
nng jror gating the $5,000,000 highway gys
exhibition | bomber plant
monte* Henry Ford, 79-year-old; ftay Grandview Granbury will
suup wilier, u at J, A E-----• wa* introduc-1 meet Grandview on Oct. 16 at
the present time training girls for ] ed ^mld ft thunderous cheer from <3rafidVtew and thd next week, Oct.
machine work. Girl* are trained 7°rlunen Ford, making one of 23, the Grandview team will go to
ten weeks and are given oppor-, rare appearances on a public ] Handley. The last three games
tunlty to work in war production! pl*yorm’ “W: | scheduled are Oct. 30 at Mansfield;
work at the Consolidated bomber' 1 c,?n 1 taJk but I do want to Nov, 6 at Alvarado and NOv. 13
plant at Fort Worth. Two shifts y®u’/’ Iat t*?0* -
---- - - ntaht fair patron* Pa,t*r*-" ---------- -1
th*1 girl* in action
iron hitching
of the house?
about, that ojd wheelbarrow,
Mrs. Dick Hardison will be the which has rusted out and Is now
behind the hen house?
needs these and I
11 metal, |
11
Hl ,
and I his men unloaded most of their
| incendiary and demolition bombs
ion Nanchang city.
amount'l We h11 'be Japanese head-
I quarters squarely, setting in-
; numerable fires among warehouses,
j Six Japanese fighters were in the
i air, but they refused confbat "’
"Whep wa passed over Nanchang
I could sec the Chinese giving
the Japanese merry hell," the raid
leader continued “The Chinese
within a few miles of the
Men In the rear waved as
we roaicd over, but those In front
had no time They were putting
on a swell show In close quarters
. fighting, with the Japs having
i a hell of a time.”
Kight Train
' We headed north along the
I railway and sighted a long freight
train We peeled off and buzzed,
. j over, wide open, blistering the
train with machine gun bullets.
I “The train halted, and Jap sol-
diers poured out the windows an, I
* doors It was a bloody slaughter
; "We sighted a string of steamers
I towing barges In a canal off Laka
1 Poyang, and strafed them heavily
A few Japanese escaped by swlm-
many, because the
--—J.U.-j a jpw
Hit Headquarters
I ■ -The lean and handsome Amerl-
I can pilot who led the air raid said
totalled j
shortage of $16 -
625.95 In filling lhe allotment ,
Scott stated that the amount' we
ol bonds and stamps sold during ■
the past month was more than
thc previous month and though
the shortage was very discouraging I “
’..I.cl; „.... .. in sales during ;
the last 15 days of the month over i '
To August. 15. only |
and )
. were
__HIU.K llrtU l?f»"Il IJUI CllUfiVU
Tile September allotment has not ,
yet been announced but. Scott ,
urges every citizen to do his .share
and if he Ls not operating under
the 10 per cent salary allotment :
iltizens j plan to start immediately
of Clcbtlrne overlooked in the re-
’ cent city-wide collection of scrap.
The scrap collection is a con-
tinuous drive and any citizen, who
finds metal items of no more use
- both small and large—Is aiding
greatly in the war effort by turn-
ing them in to the junk dealers,
who are licensed agents for the
collection of this vital war ma-
terials .
Former < it y dumps have become
good sources of scrap to the
diutrioiis citterns, who make
' eflort to collect It
Alvarado ; have
Regular class work for Alvarado ~’J
to School pupils will begin Tuesday
Venus School rp • v .
, .•o.™, “•X’lRi 1 rain Length
"' Rule Suspended
gather their cotton crop. It was an- '
nounced
i The faculty for the year are J
Rice Finley, superintendent, Claudia
Jarvis, Ruth Wllkirson, Opal M
Finley, Bonnie E. Brannon, Lillie
I Mae Stewart and Mary Belle Reece
I'-L.
The
used discarded
automobiles in
un water gullies
These, too, are
A-A- "7';
\ ' \ >
■'A'-Y'YW-
' 4 <1 j t-'*
Death Toll Rises
(After P[ane Crash
BUFFALO, N Y., Sept 12. (U.PL-
cue iour-motored B-24 bomber '*•**'*•■ u*viu>,i(g <»<> 9:45 The death toll caused by the crash-
were building wa* destined to! "’cloc>( for another years' school Ing of a burning Army plane
— ------- | through the roof of a Curttar
faculty consist* of elemen-, Wright Corporation plant here rose
‘“f department: Mrs Neville to 12 persons today. (
Mltam. Mln Viola Price, Mrs ; Nine of the 37 persons Injured, States Is
Charles Gibb*. Miss Roxie Ford,in the aebident were In critical
MTO. Marte Alsup. Mrs. Estha West, condition and it was feared the
Mrs Creola Lane. The hi<h school death toll might rise even higher.
Utanda Reda,
I. (UJS—The and history; It. C. Leactv super-
g n (j
taxes, swelling
aue to about
ha treasury*
nonservaUre" In
I
Is reduced
»n hour.
Taking the 40
figure as equalling
of a tile, thc cm
the President showed that tires of
a car driven at 30 miles an hour ,
^^ey,-'
! pv
IW W. JJalbrefllh Keene,
rfco'; J ”
I erintendents
1 the same group of Japs and shot
________miucuci .
members I The ,*~“----- .
parent-teacher j tnliatory mid and sent three
j ] , .. . .
Je an attack on
jSftome, American basF /.
'haze made interception difficult
Japanese all
and Kiangsi
American pilot.
I ... ...... wsiqy unpminw
..shot down and another
WASHINGTON. Sept 12 (U.RX—
i Tlie Interstate Commerce Commis-
sion . ruled today that for thc
duration of the war all railroad
carriers may disregard present
regulation* as to thc length of
trains when necessary to assure
I prompt movement of freight or
also
Patterson told thousands
^irering worker* assembled in
that the four-motored B-24 bomber 'mro11 Monday morning
122.
----— - lilitl lirmiA wivii - >»in nuiu-
; All independent ’ school districts mobiles."
Suri all accredited rural schools In ' 1
.Johnson County arc scheduled to
open Monday for tfic 1942-43 school 1 w n
| announced Saturday. I j UXU 111
| ’lhe following will serve as sup- I F
(erintendents of the independent! req wv | ' a |
districts: Rio Vista, Douglas Cooper; I- I I |nn |nt*P A till
Alvarado. L It Green; Grandview.1 Ill I Jr*/I |f,| X /-|||l|
Criswell; Venus. J. R. Fin-]| ” WillVI V XlllU
Burleson, J, W, Norwood; |£_ a
podley, S. V. Dickenson; ^ua/lf D . A ‘
looper, and Parker, A M. Bryant. llvlU Llv<11 XlAIv
Parker
I; According to announcements by'
committee A. m Bryant of the Parker School,
1 tai ....1) ..*_..* >*___i__________*___I
na
I*'
RED CROSS
WORKROOM
Mn.
J
After
off tea*, waa
m.wm •»
1
)
‘I
1
1
ii
Monday After Summer Vacation
J
l-ta
J
I --
Americans Mo.w Down
!Enemy Sold iers On
Train; Sink Transport
U.S. Planes Blast Jap Headquarters at Nancfiang
Johnson Co. Schools to Reopen
Cleburne Times-Review
Published DnUg Except Saturday
CLE1BURNE, TEXAS. SL'NDAY, SEPT. 13, 1942
37TH YEAR, NO. 290
MARKETS— 11' S D A . I—Fort Worth
Cattle 300; steady to weak; beef cows tapped
10 00; cutter grades, 7 75. Calves 250; Stocker steer
calves 13 50; stocker heifer calves 12.50 Hogs 250;
30c lower than last week; Saturday top 13 85; pack-
ing sows 12.50-13 00. Sheep 1,500; slaugnter ewes
50c to 1 00 higher, medium grade yearlings ranged
down to 10 25; cull and common ewes 4.50-5.26,
Feeder lambs 9.50 down
pur
f<
and
AMERICA’S
PRAYER
MINUTE
O God. who hkbt appointed *
day wh«n th* kingdom* of thto
world *b*ll become th* Kingdom
of our Lord and of hi* Ohriat;
quicken our loyalty to Um. that
we relay now and alway* chooae
thy wtfi a* our will, thy way aa
our way. thy peao* aa tr
Bo lock our fortune* to
poa* that we may be aatiafied
with nothing tern than a World
at unity with itaalf. and. In
hip, win for man-
dam and mutual
will enable all
f their
hener .1*
change,
but
, THE WEATHER—OJ »
East Texas: Little temperature
coclcf In extreme northwest portion
Ibertnomeler Keauings
« n I 10 ] 11 I 12 I 1 | 2
«o 85 ] 88 90 ; 92 j M 96
t
i
* t ■
Warn Motorists
To Watclj Out
For School Kids
AUSTIN, Sep! 12 Watch
out lor those school kids!
You'd forgotten about that,
school crossing during thc sum-
mer. hadn't you? The kids arc
coming back now. and you'll
have to watch out for them
"Let's be thankful," State
Police Director Hofher Gar-
rison said todny. "that we still
have schools to send our chll-
dten to Even with the bene-
fit of education, which now Is
denied many peoples of the
world, our kids arc growing up
Into a world that’s going to be
pretty rough on them Let's
give them a break by not
breaking their mins and legs
mid heads with otir auto-
mobiles."
■ mags
_______z____
Tt "- -
=
_____ *L
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. 37, No. 290, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 13, 1942, newspaper, September 13, 1942; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310672/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.