Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 3, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 7, 1942 Page: 1 of 6
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PlMiaMt Daily Except Saturday
88TH YEAR, NO. 8
LEBURNE, TEXAS, W1
PRICE FIVE CENTS
950-Americans Held In
J
J
*
VMt
£
■
J
by the
Ger-
III
4;
L '"2
Texas Soldiers To Vote
11 11111 — ==——
DOWN AfltICA WAY—Th;, ship it 31 it cargo carrier built
Grocers Asked
To Ration Some
Foods At Once
provl-
r.ent Norwegians and
a
Jr .,
services
Ld
of Cleburne.
Roosevelt Plans
«♦ > j
many and Northern Europe
Chat Next Week
ard Payne.
A new examination for all stono-
Market*
To Junk Pile *
Veteran Think*
I
Unborn Men Will
If they come
'i
Iron but does not sup- Chief Quartermaster Pink L. j,
i. He does not stay at I (Spud) Murphey, a native of Tyler,'
you
*• 41
1
■
Cleburne Times-Review
' . . jpf.; . \
Cotton, Advice
Of Broker
il
Postal Receipts
Up One-Third
Examination For
Stenographers
To Be Held Here
•. r
Three Men Join
Armed Service*
Many Interned
Persons Lack
Needed Clothe*
Limit Ordered
,To Cooperate
With Roosevelt
Nazi* Make No
Mention Of
Stalingrad
- -J
*
■v
1
the second front issue and aid to
Russia problems
ahd several nloces and nephews, |
--------- r Mrs Bin Bradbury, also
views, are advising
be put in the loan
~1 spring rather than
, of
of
been
!
1
60-mile Speed
Markers Coming
Down; 35 Now
Tkl Ms
Mta. Jaoi
j
1
..Ui
* I
•NESDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1942.
c™ 1 ' usgiatiBxrs
H
I
Another Source Of Scrap
ST
I lice.
100 Women,
850 Men In
Group Taken
Russians Continue To Hold
Germans As Relief Column
Continues On Toward City
Willkie Says
He Speakes As
He Pleases
Lawson should follow its
sions.
* Lwson requested the ruling be-
Imprlson'cd cause the Federal act permits men
Baker, pastor, doing the
The meeting will last
tlw
•t his
family He does not stay al home
He haa a wife and two children.”
Yea, the Selective Service Board
“ ‘ instruction* on how _
■ bualnes*. I but the mediately re-enlisted.
Enlisted Reserve Corps
Army. He also is a member
the Reserve Officer Training Cory., |
Senior Division, at the school.
New Bunch Of "Crank" Letters Reaches
MUCH SCRAP HERE—Old counts end po.toffice biding
in Louisville, Ky„ historic landmark jn city, is headed for scrap
Funeral services for Private Alvin
Dennis Leonard, 30, have been
tentatively set for Thursday after-
noon at the Dillon and Sons
chapel, pending final release by
Army authorities, which It is ex-
I pe< i «d will be given by that time.
The army is investigating the
conditions of Private Leonard's
death Leonard, whose home was
on Route 2, Cleburne, was found
in a dying condition in a rooming
mm period enoing oepl , hoUM! here The coroner retum-
year were *12.086 48, and1**1 vertl,St, taten‘
I year
I
tation
The naw spegl
ed under authb
highway o»n«M*
'lature, wMn-WM
mal *peaiMM|
mission was*4H
establish apeeigp
OU* portions of’
tern.
' tMJ ■■■■■I
ment maintenance
passport records before notifying
tiie State Department.
From the Embassy list the United
Press was able to. make a list
.AmericaA-bocn women, some
whom triay possibly have I
freed by now.
the Texas Highway
whose members have
ported
Receipts for September this year
were g4.oao.li; for last year they
were g3.05t.91. Receipts for the
three-month period ending 8ept.
30 thia y«M WWW ^AW.WW.W
for the same period last
were 8B.72O.73.
AMERICAS
PRAYER
MINUTE
Bdgar comes to Cleburne from
i Karnes City; he *l*o taught two
year* at YorktowN'.i LaM year he
Was manager of the clothing and
shoe department of the Post Ex-
change at Brownwood
Weather
I
gs tfo
Take Loan On
AUSTIN, Tex.. Oct. 7. (U.R>—Atty.
He married Marjorie fi teak ley of
Cleburne, whom he met while
they were both students at How-
fioer, warned would-be speeders of
aiipther possible penalty—loss of
eligibility for replacing tires and
•Rationing boards will keep
blacklist of persons convicted
speeding, and those , whose
name* get on the list cannot get
additional rubber for their cars.
tionally self-inflicted No reason
has been determined for his action.
Survivors Include his parents,
three brothers, and five sisters
i for U. S. Maritime Commission under long-range program at
i Federal shipyard*. Kearny^N. J. On jggmpletion she ll be put
Ljjfo zervic* oh America-South African run-
Brlnkler. presi- ,
the National .
Grocers, and
copper are expected to be salvaged by razing of buildin''
ordered removed by Public Works Commissioner.
>y to Ut<
"If th* '
ii
. ■■ ■■■ <
atum this often
get* lota of Instructions
to run their bualnes*. I
members still think their inStruc- been attending the . .
lions laid down tn the law are the Legion convention as the delegate
oti^'OMe to' iollbw. - ---------iof Hawaiian UgtoN.poeMu—....
(By United Fraas) .
Aset Texas ; MMWMe Janper- -s
.-rr ------Ton; W .Wen
eTesi *3mm fej
. * *
lopuiii naurpney, u iimvr ux
believes unborn Americans win be
fighting in this war before the.
Japs are wiped out.
Murphey, who had retired from'
navy service in 1M0 to make his
home in Honolulu, witnessed the,
Pearl Harbor attack from bis home
high above the harbor, an* im-
bug the mediately re-eolieted. He haa
ingtruo-' been attending toe Amerjpan
’1 i ^Hawaiian Lagion'paKe,.. .
day by Roy Doak. postmaster Re-
ceipts for the three-month period
ending September 30 were up ap-
pioximateiy 20 per cent over the:
seme quarter last year, Doak re- !
An increase of approximately
33 |-3 per cent tn postal receipts
for September over the same
month last year was reported to-
ll
Wenwi Tends CnxMins
NASHAU N. H <u»—Mrs An-
drea L Hogan of Nashua, mother
« three boys, has the distinction
of being the first woman crossing
tender in Botoon A Maine railroad
history ghe was engaged because
«m iMss gM mm
men employes.
has taken some graduate study
Texas Tech In the same
Nov It's Hewfa
BAN JOSE. Cal. (U.R> Police
here believe that a local thief had
huw>h t»i*t the government is
?>out to ™tlon automobile hoods
I new hood from
. i Nelson but left
itact.
>*ow " This le for your informs-
The writer apparently did not
know that none of the informa-
Autof™!^ <M^m?ehe*^ld
be called for examination and in-
duction. but that it did take time
from toe limited staff M toe
eral service In Louisiana and Tex- -t-i- a hr»n/i
as. as well as Washington. D C,'
! was announced today by L. a, Moore, ,n four urm lots
1 secretary, local board of U. B. CivU I T" ..
‘ Service examiners.
The positions to be filled are
’ Junior stenographer, 11440 a year;
senior stenographer, glean; Junior!
typist, giaeo; and senior
(Washington only), $1440.
Applicants for toe V*
D. C., positions must' . „
T7% years old. Dictation must bo
taken at the rate of So words per
minute to qualify tor toe Junibr
stenographer position, and typiete
must be able to type at least M to
40 correct words per minute. gg
The field examination for Louiat- *tu
ana and Texas la open to both mon
and women, with 1g yeen as tog
minimum. ‘ s'" 1 ‘
ui noy daeitud from
any person engaged in war ‘
unless the position for which
Full infortnation aqd appUbatitm " ck^k”'
fflKmT JS ML K*tb(
described as f
any yet launched
mans.
Nazi propaganda on the
strange turn.
log of canned goods may have -to
tapped to Till orders, and 1.
merchant doesn't start
merchandise to
he may have diffi-
a supply on hand
Wednesday
O lord, we ootiftas unto Thee <
our sins How often have we
been ungrateful for Th/ rtoh I
mercies! How far have we at 1
time* wandered from the path
of ritoiteousncMl How near
have we. through unbelief, conw
to toe brink of despair! Grant
that Thy love may renew oath
gratitude Thy power may w-
sture owr souls, and Thy truth
may strengthen our faith Help
wercome our fears, to nn-
our tempetetoms, and to
R our sorrowing hearts
battle'
took a strange turn The Nazi I'
high command omitted the Stalin; I
grad battle from its communiques1
and Nazi radio broadcasts dis-1'
missed it with briefest mention,;
ixissibly as part of a move to shift
German attention aw.ly from the'
44-day struggle. j ,
Wendell L. Willkie made a
sharp statement at Chungking in
apparent reply to the coolness i '..----- e.. rvy e^r-w
with which second front state-I P'1®- Upward of 0,000 tons of wrought iron and two font of
menks have been received in Lon-! ------ *' ‘ • • • • • ■
don and Washington.
“I'm Wendell Willkie.’; he told
correspondents after being advised
ot .President Roosevelt s refusal to
comment on the Willkie statement,
■'and I say what I damn well,
please I am here as an individual1
whom for some reason 23.000,000 ,
Americans voted tor.” I \WrJ«- I A,. A X Il
-Tirx^y p^rrz; Without Any roll I ax
turn to the United States for the | * '
announced purpose of speeding j
Russo-American war collaboration, j
He conferred with Premier Josef
Stalin and presumably obtained Gen. Gerald C. Mann today advised
Stalin's latest views on the war, secretary of State William Lawson
““ ■“ “ '*• “
German occupation authorities In soldiers yoking }s,lvalltl1 an<1 ^*a^
Norway were conducting a spread- -u'”• '**
Ing campaign of ruthless repres-
sion, having executed 10 promi- !
r.ent Norwegians and 1..-
another 700 in an effort to halt *n the armed forces to. vote without
mounting sabotage and unrest
Nazi-Occupied France
I. ----- -----.-------g-:--------------- -------------—- I I -----
Will Carry Cargo To Africa
HHHE I '
■
\ ■ i 1 .
,x.
JHL
makes u* sfck and tard of taken
some and let some off on a count
of the jobs in the Santa F* shops
and-1 hapen to no men that just
has wife a* dependens that ar still
there Is that fair. If the war
Head* men treat than* all a UM
and we wont fuas. But to "MM
*1 you all tot men off you will
keep having a headaek. Borne of
toe poor men won
when they get bad
bank." (Unlgned)
Another party who won’t give
hl* name, write* a* follows:
“Mr ....... ha* mlsrepnw:>tr<i
toe fact a* to his depend-nL
to you HU mptoer-tn-tow works
at a loo*) store and get a pension
from to* State Also own* a*
•ere* M tend. Kto wif* 1* a achool
; The women have the freedom of
>1 a large barbed-wire compound
within which are three hotels, a
I casino, a theater and a park. They
( are crowded with British women
I interned since the fall of France
| four and five to a room because of
' lack of sleeping accommodations.
I Their meals are cooked in the
i kitchens of the Grand Hotel, based
i on the German civil ration stand-
I aid.
j Many of the American women lack
i clothing and toilet necessaries. •
J About 850 American men now are
in occupied territory.
I About 150 have been released. Some
! remain at the internment camp at
St, Denis, others have been sent
| to a permanent internment prison
, at Oomplegne.
I “Through indirect agencies ' the
! American Embassy has received a
j list of American Women arrested.
| It is now checking the list against
VICHY, Oct. 7.- (U.R)——About 100
American women have now been
interned by dtaunan Ttocupation au-
thorities at Vwtel, it was under-
stood today.
Numerous French women who ac-
quired American citizenship by
marrying Americans have been
freed, but others refused to claim
their French origin and prefer in-
i ternmeut as Americans.
his pica,
government.
navy
th— ..... tw innd lend-lease requirements from
M to 38 >*'' wnt °f the 1942
iin#»H ini* fliTYipri tjorvirfR arrnra- ... . r
As a re-
sult, he said, an order is in the
: FORT WORTH, Oct 7 (USDA)
Receipts 3.700 cattle. 3,000 calves;
1.300 hogs; 7,900 sheep. Market
• atagdy. •“
Beef staara Hi36-13 », common
0.00^11 00 Beef OOW. 6.50-10.60;
medium 8.50-0 36. Heavy bull*
• 75-10.00; tight 8.00-0.39. Choice
killing calve* 11.90-13 39; common'
,8 38-11.00. Stock* calves 1150-
113.60. Hogs, top 16 00 Choice fat
.tombs 13.00-13 50. yearling* 11.56-
12 00 iviins mi
Bffeetiv* pct 5, all lamb* born obtained from
tn the sprli^ of 164* olaaalfled a* Pegu**. 7T
lamb*.
Local volton market' 18.95 mid-
dling
a qualified voter (In election of tubes,
federal officials),” Mann said.'a bia
''•Whether the person Is a qualified of
voter at such election is a question
to be determined ... by proper lo-
cal election official*.’’ |
Although the Federal law applies rw aa pi »»
also to presidential elections, Mann K IV| EH (Yay IMaIAJ
said that in the interest of time livn
he was ruling only upon applica- ra ■•■•w-,f\« .
tlon Of the act at the Nbv.'3 gen- Ka|)H I JlrPCfni*
eral election for congressmen and ******** *■*** VVIUI
U. 8. Senator. . ;,7'., |
"It will be seen." he added, “that
Article 1, Section « Atoll led; “.It-
Constitution) ,spectfh*Uy authorises
the Congress to sWiMMStlons 1
regulating toe ‘manuer/of. hoMing'
elections for U. S'. Benhtort ! itnd'
Representatives. PaBlloMMn impos-
ing dutie* upon you 'ai Secretary
of State simply provMtes the tnMhod ____________ ocvc
by which a certain class of persons strumental music in Howard Payne. I (rvinding
may be furnished ballots for voting and
In elections for U. 8. Senators and at t
Representatives, and toe method fWd
by which such ballot shall be ~ ‘
transmitted to election officials.
mounting sabotage and unrest puyhig a poll tax, which is required
Trondheim appeared to be the by Texas election law, and also be-
main trouble center and it was cause some of the provisions for
believed In London the Nazis were absentee balloting. if followed,
deeply perturbed, by Norwegian in- would force him to violate the Texas
cigents In that harbor city which law.
they are employing as one of Mann's opinion said that Lawson's
their main naval stations along the request had not concerned the
const constutionallty of the Federal Act*
The Royal Air Force carried out Public 712, but had asked whether
another attack on Oanabruck, the the Texas Secretary of State legally
Nazi comunicalions center, and could issue absentee ballots .for sol-
Air Minister Sir Archibald Sinclair diers.
.eported that nine months of op- "No duty rests upon you, either
erations, to September 30 has cost under public 712 or under any state
the RAF 1,062 bombers over Ger- law, to determine whether the mem-
i ber of the land or naval forces is
I “ ------------------------
Soldier’s Funeral
! Awaiting Release
Of Body By Army
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7. (U.F>—
----- " ‘ ~ -----'t today sifted
Ideas for a fireside chat he prob-
ably will make late next week.
He told Ills press conference
yesterday that he would make a
! brief radio talk sometime within
a week or 10 days. He said he
had up to a dozen things to talk
joined the armed services, accord- j
Ing to word reaching here today.
Lawrence Patrick McNally, Jr.,
of Godley, Joined the Navy.
Richard Leo Dempwclf, 512 South
Walnut street, enlisted in the
Army.
Thomas J. Young, a student al
John Tarleton Agricultural Col- ,
lege, Btephenville. has Joined the I
Reserve Corps of the I .
He also is a member of • t *’
portioning
tenners now.
culty keeping
by that time.
The grocer urged continual care-
• ful handling of coffee, already
|scarce
| There will be worries for the
grocers on the meat problem, he j
said, as rationing will come at ----' '•
the consumer level, just as with Two Pilot* Ride
He forecast a normal supply of ' Their Scrap Iron
flour nnd potatoes, macaroni and — ~ ----
cereals and dried beans.
J. Erwin walker, aged 54. for-
merly of Grandview, was burled I
Tuesday at Santa Anna, Calif., ac-
cording to word received here
Walker died of pneumonia at his
home in Santa Anna Sunday.
. Walker formerly was associated
Wit*. r' ’rIth Wftlkfr’ Hayden, and Harrell,
.-.States Brownwood, arrived here this week--•—-
toort*e* to teach band and instrumental
aiaUons music in the Cleburne High
lowing' .Sdiool, ; ' ,
‘ d , A graduate of Howard r .
'• MW*-,, flag** is wen.___________
r^^ SAf^b^U.ndafn::^-MrS ^na 8hns 01 <Wn>f.
DALLAS. Oct
; of the impending certain ration-1 Rev George M Greebon, pas-
I itig, or id least curtailment, via tor of the Methodist church In
the quota basis, of nearly-all foods • Walnut Springs, will direct the
I the nation's grocers today were congregational singing arid render
■ urged to itelp case the blow by special numbers each night at the
, instituting voluntary rationing of revival meeting, which begins to-
j many commodities at once , night at the St Paul’s Methodist
This plea was voiced here yes-' church
'terday by P. M. Brlnkler. presi-i The services will begin each
, dent of the National Association evening at 7:46 o'clock with Rev
of Retail Grocers, and coincided S A
I With the statement in Chicago of preaching
j Secretary of Agriculture Claude through October 18.
Wickard asking Americans to vol-'
u.itarlly cut consumption of a
number^of essential foods
Brlnkler, in stressing
pointed out that the
j Is earmarking for the army.
While they pay but little atten-
tion to them, every mall for the
board bring* another group
“wank? letter* telling members
““ about ,0^, registrant
I.totters contain mate-
J Of no concern to the
Ko.^ ,?.rk' ,aw bv men out of their
inch they rettttar order number, while oc-
f higher casionally they are Just abusive
Pillion to.nMMMI of to* board.
ppltoaitan Drank” totter* of this type *re
“r never from th* regls-
themaelvw. ,
. ---fM(uon, who apparently
think, every man should have been
takes at toe same Mme. though the
mrent'i policy is to take only ----------- ----------
that can be provided for, te*ch*|r_ and very much needed
to your ho*4oc)Le. X ,
we dont have a
re give up our
i to totot for you
But I want you 1
itrato. I have all '
mrtoi and t am
JI 1 tot Mt to j
He Had A Reason
For Snubbing H er
■jc. .tr *xii .>-
KBW YORK, Oct. 7. (U.PJ— A
woman stomped out of a grocery,
threatening to report Jerry Ryan,
toe manager, for snubbing her
Wtxat she didn’t know: the two
men she thought were customers
getting more attention than they
deserved were holding a gun on
Byon. His two helpers and a
laundryman had been forced to
biirrender their trousers and stand
in a back room. As soon as the
angry woman was out ot sight,
the two men made Ry»t> open his
Utofo. They escaped with *600
*
Meeting Begins
Tonight At St.
Paul’s Methodist
7. (UP)—In view
impending ceiiain ration-1
least curtailment, via
(By United Press)
The Dusslan defenders of Stal-
ingrad today fought off heavy
Nazi assaults a4 Marsha) Semyon
Timoshenko's relief column moved
slowly southward toward the be-
sieged city along the Don-Volga
corridor.
Moscow reported the relief col-
umn had made further progress,
driving the Germans from an oc-
cupied locality and inflicting heavy
casualties. At Stalingrad the Red
army held firm against assaults:
equal in ferocity to!
nrhod hv thp ei.»r- '
\. ■
■ ■
4
I 1
Draft Board In Every Morning’s Mail
ion must M -Z •
board to handle the letter and
other* like It
Two cards were received from
what was evidently tire same per-
son, but one who had never heard
Ot toe "good neighbor" poltcy
This person would have the draft
board Induct men whose conduct
she (or Jie) did not approve, as
la punishment, and in Violation
have no job of the selective service regulations.
1 The first card read* as follows:
"Please take in the
army. jL „„ „„
family. He run* around with an-
other woman. His brother keeps | DALLAS, Oct 7 (U.R>—A veteran
bl* family up. He haa a wife and i of 30 years in the U. S. Navy.!
four chlMr— ■—- -— ---* — - 1---—- —- . .
port them
home maybe on* night a week.
And the second read*:
‘•Ftapae take «.in
Army. He does not supnort
family. He doe* not «tay Ji h
MIAMI, Fla , Oct 7. (UB—TWO
unidentified air pilot* drove their
automobile up to a Junk metal pile
here, stepped out and said to the
scrap metal drive workara; J
"Well, here it to.” . ..
The gnirtog metal gatberan ware
too surprised to obtain th* name*
ot the pilot* , . . "3
--------- — ---———
RED CROSS
CtoMtoar
sewing Room: Mr*. O. F. 11
Akers. Mn. C. Lawson, MM. 4. I
H. Ince. Mm B. H. MW**- IX
Dressing Room; Morning: I
j. B. Bright, Mre. A L. Darar, I
and Mr* Byron Oroalar.. I
Afuwnocn: Mre. Matt MaOow- I ••!
an. MM K B
Grave*, and
*ni»n. '
I
I prisoners
Walker formerly was associated
TTwuMn, unjucu, ni«u nuiirii,
merchants In Orandview
He is survived by his wife, for-
merly Ida Clayton ot Alvarado,
and his mother, Mrs. Louise Bev-
Payne j hm of Cleburne, one brother,
. 11 Lenox Walker, Cleburne, one sis-
bond and in-.
Help Whip Japs
— —MM6V7 ....... Ill MIC
. He doe* not support his |
ly. He runs around with an-
His brother keeps
fruit and vegetable pack
making to allot 35 per cent of the President, Roosevelt
remainder to civilians by Nov 30. ‘ ’ ~~"'>Ar'
another 35 per cent by March 31,
1943. and the other 30 per cent
after April 1. 1943
By midway the second quota.
i Brlnkler added, the present back-
' log of canned goods may have to , -
’fjbi' <«PWd to Till orders, and If I’1*’".1 o>»1 that his speech might
------------- ”------'• ap-
cu-
AU8TIN, Oct 7 (U.R)—Highway
speed signs marked "60” were be-
ing supplanted throughout Texas
(oday by new sign* marked ''38"'-
the wartime motor vehicle speed
limit of toe nation.
The Job of putting up new sign*
was undertaken simultaneously in
26 state highway districts by maln-
tenanoe crews, under an order of
Commission.
. been in | wouid
rise to 22 or perhaps
-------- -------------- ...... „. ------- ... ___ ,j
Honing program suitable to too Richard T Harrlss. past president
state’s vast distances and «*’J®f the New York Cotton Exchange,
,, “ _J cottoh dealer in
■New York. I
t A copy of >a 'letter from Harrlss,
the large
offered on
m received
tnions are
ng cotton
tow of
action
touch on all of them.
Pressed for some of the topics
• he has under consideration, the
President said that White House
Press Secretary Stephen T. Early
had a list of from 30 to- 40 sug-
gestions that have come in from
I many people, including member*
: of the public and sothe newapaper
editors.
at
11 fanners wouldiplace their cot-
ton in the government loan instead
of selling at 18 cents, the price
--------------- ------- ---j— < ■ ---■! soon l—.. ™ ZZ
Washington seeking a caaollne ra-1 even 25 cents, in the opinion of
AT' . *vi
___ _ _______ and of tLv «
pendency upon highway traMpw- antt p^inent
“ ■ • AS - • ijk.»' -
the .. _________,_____
limit had not been received by under
highway police who wtll enforce corded
to.* he expect* ‘tL? bTX.Xo^cXm^te^n?
the new speed limit to create little change in present textile cell-
—-— »— ,u. ---- lnps
. ■ , . Many local financiers, agreeing
Speeders have about disappear- with Harrlss' ' - •
ed from our highways,’ he told, 'that cotton U
“Moat drivers have been travel- and hold until
JnS *bout 4* and toeyll cut dowK sold at present price's
to.M now.5L.. .. 1 _______.... ■
Mark McGee, state rationing ot- « « ■
Former Johnson
County Man Dies
In California
T,
ithi
* -in which" h*" retaet»
J ««MUnO> eFimMltoVMM
6 itte marire*TtoW,«MFt)*<
* In CFburhe,
I highly voMM88|jH^mo
■ de«M8' of' thF'WUtttry
Ms promfnem>Tute long
) e ‘ Mth the cotton market.
Hodges, highway *part- ; "The farmer holds the ke;
uwol uwiiivciwive engineer, said situation,” Harris* says. “If tit*
It was n*cessary to replace the farmers would put their cotton In
speed markers, rather than re- (he loan, they wilfget'21 cento-for
paint the old signvJtoMM most lt But. as long as they sett it
show “60” to daytln^ driver*, but freely at present price*, the market
super-imposed on tnem are glass cannot advance, and it they sell
sparkler* which warned night driv- too much of ft, It never will ad-
ers of * M86” mile limit. <j vance "
Th* oMgd signs are erected sti, Harrlss also doubts that a ceiling
*11 points where highways en|e> j will be placed on raw cotton, re-
the state and at all highway en* gurdless of the present law.
lra.'!?uS I?* . ‘I "Henderson will operate indlrect-
, A,th‘*'4gp the highway commto- iy through the ceiling on goods
Sion onier was announced yester- and yam," he believes "He has
day, PubMc safety Director Hainer given repeated assurance that raw I
Garrison. Jr., said that official cotton could rise to 21 47 and still
notification of the a 36-milk leave plenty of <proflt to the mills
present i filings. He has re-
himself in black and white
he expectk that b® doe*
: in
extra work for the highway po-
♦
■
1912
S' TT'
====F
Soldier* Come
Younger, Now
The youngest active soldier in
the world is the 6-month-old
corporal at Camp Edwgrds,
Mass , If a letter received, this
morning by A T. Griffin,
Johnson County Clerk, is cor-
rect
But Griffin believes there is
something wrong with the let-
ter.
The corporal, wilting for a
copy of his birth certificate,
states that he wa.s born April
18, 1942 He requests that It
be forwarded at once, as "it is
required by his commanding of-
ficer."
i
1 Jirfl
yr 1 n w ■ w..i
-■
■ -fotolMte ■ ~ 1 ~~ .
____A
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 3, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 7, 1942, newspaper, October 7, 1942; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310693/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.