Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 168, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 13, 1943 Page: 1 of 8
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1
TWELFTH DISTRICT TO
SELECT DELEGATE FOR
NATIONAL CONVENTION
—
w
*
J
of
A
r
MRS
J. .:
Dwight D.
Eisen
I
■
b :
I
at
Caroline York.
Will
JS
»r>’
1
Master
Sgt.
Victor
Robertson
the
Texas;
Sue June 30 to Salt Lake City, Utah.
dispatch
news
agency
REIEL LEMMONS
L'l
Cleburne will become the focal
I
i
grandson *
Gets M. A. Degree
<um—
of
William Pittman Roberts, jjpn
3
WASHINGTON. June 13.
been pastor of the church |
I
announced today that
Thomas, chairman of the Senate
A
A
and
1941
Confederate
the
and
gone on
hat
rest
, i
—r
n. 1
-
i
■
J*
’ T
»*
li/omia
,t
Texas,
heft
Army Private
Captured after
Bank Robbery
Civic Service
Meeting to Be
Held on June 24
Allied Forces
Occupy Rocky
Italian Island
To Continue
Scrap Collection
For Vital Metals
Shoe. Stamp 18
Valid to Nov. 1
Heaviest Air Raid
Of War Leaves Nazi
Cities in Flames
Temperature
Hourly
He
one
■ County Judge Roy
elected president of
playing the flag from a staff pro- , something
HrvV»4azar> t a 11«* r»v al On ortorl* ort. amaah
from a window sill,
front of a building.
resulted in the
Inhabited locality
hi.
me
!<!■
ed
Will
7:30
Dm beffls wes <toM ssf wte
• war. We've fee feefiler
Maes ekeed.
Buy More
WorBonds
The validity period of Stamp 18
Is only 11 days longer than that
of Stamp 17. ---
h black
[«r. Roll
dga and
graaMd
m unrl.r
tar, and
2S to 30
n or any
Camo Fire Gii
To Return T<x
. J. ----L*
Cleburne Times-Review
Published Daily Except Saturday United Press <W0 Leaned IFire .
I
4
i I
f't *’■ X
$1,200 Goal for Camp Fire Girls
Assured, Campaign Leaders Report
Tlje SI.200 goal for the Camp
Fire Giris Organization for 1943
Saturday ‘as cash
Cam-
that
"the only weapon he haa when ne-
gotjatlon has failed
ran c ..... . ,
voluntary no strike,
Ing the ground or trailing in the
water
evening
ot the
at the City Hall
business
R. Ji
J.
_ WASHINGTON. June 12.
urged to talk to Ensign Niebuhr The Senate, holding its first Sat-
durrtfc his visit here,
crultlng party will be
Cleburne, and mani
Oklahoma to I
and Cleburne over
do always behold Thy face in
Heaven, may evermore protect
Thy little onea on earth from
evWty danger, both of body and
soul; through Jesus Christ our
sessions this afternoon
dude the convention.
“"* .
■ ejkli1 -4
■day —
Mi
Ladies Auxiliary
To Have Program
At 2:30 p, m. Today
pi
Named Head of
County Judges
today iU the 11
m. wta*.
1943
a
time in the Navy’s construction
regiments, popularly known as the
Seabees, Ensign Niebuhr explain-
ed. Seventeen-year-old boys also
are wanted for general service.
Men with construction experience
in 1-A or 3-A classification are
that
pht ' 5
DISPLAY
. Iv-
Tho continued cooperation
the citizens in the collection
scrap i
Dallas, and Mrs Harrlette
Burd. Cleburne, two sisters, Mrs
H E. Oldfather. " ’
Mrs. Rosa Johnson.
City, Okla ; ten grandchildren
two great-grandchildren.
President P. E. Warren. President-
Elect J. Lambert Lain and Sec-
uneral services will be con- retary R A Kilpatrick
on Sunday afternoon at 31 *
Paul’s Metho- ,
Robertson Twins
Address Club
Hee.
Applicants will be divided
classes according to age |
and two series of lessons,
ten lessons to the series, will be
offered, he said,
ably be a 1~~
between the series.
In addition to classes for be-
courses In Junior and
Rh ’ -'0
n I
Legionnaires.
Arrive Saturday
For Meeting
iiliuu^liuut VI
[ Councils with various
their council leaders
F>..
nee J.
SHKHMAN I’rx June 12 (UP)
A gunman Identified by sheriff <
authorities as Pvt Emmett C.
Gray of Overton was oaptured, PROPER WAY TO EXT
’ter he FLAG—1. Yeoman Elaine B.
Bank arsen of Baltimore. Md . here in-
./ dioates the proper method for dls-
Convention Held
On Friday at , 1
Corsicana I
occasions during the two days and
it is reported by a dozen or more
. who heard him. that
his addresses were as well received
the third time as they were on the
--„.i of his first address
1 “To hear Jeff William*, will def-
’ initely lift a person up in these
~ trying times and give a person
some new angles regarding our
On Dec ^26 ,^1888, she was mar- state as a democracy.’' one spokes-
~ ' *“ man said.
| The entertainment and feature
Reuel Lemmons, minister of the ’
I Church of Christ of Tipton, Okla..1 pj*ogpaiq
interment will be in comes to Cleburne next Sunday. j-“-- -
the Caddo cemetery with Crosier- June 20. to conduct a two-weeks
Pearson in charge of arrangements, revival at the Central Church of j
‘Christ. The revival will close on
t dsya.
L 1 a P*
I
38TH YEAR, NO. 168
Jeff Williams, nationally known
inspirational speaker. wUl address
a distriet-wide ’’Civic Service-
meeting to be held in Cleburne
Thursday evening June 24, accord-
ing to Rotary Club officials. Ap-
pearance of the famed speaker is
being arranged by the Rotary Club.*
The "Oivlc Service" meeting will
also feature good enter, tlnment
preceding the feature address to
be made by the honor guest. All
civic clubs in Cleburne together
with Rotary and Lions Clubs of
nearby surrounding towns are be-
ing invited to participate in the
meeting. There will be no admis-
sion charge.
Jeff Williams, who hails from
Chickasha. Okla., is an attorney.
Recently he was the official rep-
I resentative of Rotary International
I to the 127th District Conference
twta. In filing
he addressed the
then attended Emory University in
j Atlanta, Ga ., where he received
, his A B decree, snecializlntt in _
American history with emphasis *t the homes of the workers in-
* on the period of the war between 8uad of having them meet at a
the states His Msster’s thesis I central point, the county agent
Gainesville. Ga,, and
of Mrs. M. M Pittman of this
received his Master’s dearee
urday night, a dance was given at I W8s the daughter of. Pate Ward I
the Legion Hall for the delegates j Clements and Susan Jane Tdl
and convention visitors This mom- ;mcre Clemente She moved to Cle-
ia». ~ **"' *" *“ *“
held at 11 o’clock at the First
Baptist church by the pastor. Dr.
Albert Venting, and the business
* “ ----—(jo,,.
were said to
the German lines
Guardettes to
Hold Meetings
On Thursdays
Weather Foreast
EAST TEXAS: Little change in temperrur*
this afternoon and tonight
Election of a delegate and an
alternate to, the National Conven-
tion and transaction of business <
will feature the business session
this afternoon at 2 o'clock at the 1
American Legton Hall for the 12th
District, Department of
convention Which convened
late Saturday afternoon.
Dr. Reuben A. Wansley, com-
mander, will preside and voting
strength will be based upon 19431
membership as certified by the De- | Pil„„ T-J-,, a.
tspartment Adjutant. This is two I\ll6S I OudV Hl
votes for the first 15 members and | *
one vote for each additional 25 Cl O' 1*
members or major fraction there-101* I aUl.S aUl
of. !
The Legion Auxiliary will hold A rr A J Raculani
Ila business session in the county nECU IXvolUvlll
courtroom at 2:30 'ootock. A patri- w
otic program will be given.
Delegates began arriving In Cle-
burne late Saturday afternoon and
approximately 100 legionnaires and
At the morning service today.
Rev E Buford Isaacs will preach
his first sermon as pastor at the
First Christian Church His sub-
lect will be Solomon’s Example
for a New PreacheY."
Rev. Isaacks. who came to Cle-
burne from Alpine. Thursday, is
the new pastor of the local church,
judwe O. B McPherson, chairman
' of the official board of the church,
win preside at the morning serv-
ice
The Christian Ohurch has united
and help the Mome Defense Seabees Will Be
Guard in any time of need. i , ITT
To qualify for membership, wo- ‘ If Ail HPfP
men must be between the ages of UllVU 1I.VI V
17 and 45 inclusive, American .« ] « « j
citizens of average intelligence and |Y|rkITri^V 111 TIP 14
in goo dphyslcal condition Ateo ' i™UUdy, JUI1C l*t
satisfactory character references — *
must be furnished
Revlstration for swimming class-'
es whiteh will start at the City
Park swimming pool on Monday
' oarament ana were supporvea oy
June M. will get underwav this concentrated bombing and strafing
week. r——“— •*--*- —
visor Howard Parker ’
siring lessons are asked to
by sh«11
Emmett.
was
today less than an hour afi
robbed the State National
Uf DenISOn. uawnvu iv, uin-
• The amount taken was estimated playing the Stars and Stripes when
h- • ** between jt u used with another flag against
a wall The United States flag
-,r _l the observer’s»left,
AMERICAS
PRAYER
MINUTE
Pray A tor' Childhood
Youth: ’Grant, O Father of all.
that Thy holy angels, as they
■F - ■ ■
Jefft Williams,
Oklav Attorney,
WilPBe Speaker
to
Reba'
The meeting this week
Thursday night at
at the American
i The drive leader
more complete report early
' week.
Those de- of Russian planes, an official DNB
are asked to reg- news agency dispatch broadcast
ister this week at the pool of- tr<irn Berlin said.
I Counter-attacks
into nave restored
groups rimming the Orel sallant Jutting
ount of military training. One
night each week Is set aside for
such training, which in Cleburne,
is under qualified members of the,
Cleburne Defense Guard.
One hundred women and girls
of Cleburne and the surrounding
area are needed for membership
Immediately In the local organl-
■aMon.
I
IT’-.'W
of High ratings are l. — ------
.. of the Seabees at the present time, invite unrest affecting war pro-
scrap metal, tin cans and collap-. and nearly arly man wl,th several duction.
slNe tubes was urged in a com-1 years experience In a construction ---2----- ~ -------------... ..JB
municatton received by L H El-j trade may gain the rating of Labor Oommltte. declared the bill vahd through October 31.
tod. chairman of the ----(-----
Ccunty UBDA War Board. officer, it was explained.
Copper, brass and bronze con- -
tinue to top the list of critical
metals needed at the present time
tn war production and a large col-
} lection of tin cans will help meet
I the copper deficit it was announc -
) edi. one tablespoon of fat saved
' W day will be equivalent to a
nevnd of fat at the end of 31
•e firms having collapsible
aa Shaving or toothpaste
are naked to ship them lm-
elected president of the ffi
Texas County Judges and Q
missioners Association for thk ■
Ing year Friday at the anpual <
vention held in Corsicana.
Judge Anderson succeeds Jt
E D. McCormick of Corsica]
Other officers named
County Judge Al Templetffi
Dallas and Drew Gillen. Bag
ing Orove, Navarro County Ci
missioner. vice-president, and.
F Sanders, Van Zandt CowltjA
secretary-treasurer. |
The 1944 convention CIW a"d
time will be determined by "th*
executive committee. A resolution
was passed requesting the Fed-
eral Government to provide oontrl-
butlons to the counties tn. Which
the government owns and holds
acreages and metropolitan proper-
ties in lieu of taxes such proper-
ties would pay if privately owned.
; Judge and Mrs Roy Anderao i
attended the session*.
The re- urday session of the year to take
__ stationed final action on anti-strike legls-
in the Post'Office from 10:30 a.-’latlon. was warned today by 8en.
m. to early afternpon. Elbert Thoma*. D.. Utah, that
High ratings are being given in enactment of the measure would
with eastward into the Soviet positions
:: " midway between Moscow and Khar-
a salient which withstood
ten day rest period tfte eight of the Red army winter
in which troops swept
on either side of the
regular James D. Bullock—his Mission In I
1 City Europe and the C~^ziz—tc
, Naw ••
session., Bill’s brother, Lee Roberts, Who
WWreven aJdn4rine"high whooTwhl enter.
Killoe force uttle Mknory on Jui>e 15 Mrs.
for 1943 Register for
was assured Saturday ’as cash ,
pledges totaled 81.193.11- cam- \vsrim I Lee
paign officials announced that M Tv 1111 VldoO
$56.82 was reported to be on hand , __
by A. T. Lohmann of the Santa Fe I
Shop group Herman Brown ad- * 1115 " CvK.
vised that there yet is a number
I ot pledge cards still out and urges
captains to see that all reports
are turned In by Monday. June 14.
Most of the pledges have been In
cash payments on an annual basis.
More than $800 has been received,
Several will pay their total amount
this week. The balance, some $300,
| will be paid on a monthly basis.
The spring finance campaign
for funds is usually conducted
earlier in the year and as a usual
practice precedes the annual sum-
mer camp However, due to various
conditions, the campaign was not
started this year until after sum- ,
'mcr camp had already gotten un-’
! derway. The camp Is an annual
levent. Camp Fire Girls work, of-
1 ficials remind the citizenship, is ginners.
not Just a summer camp activitiy. senior Life Saving will’be’ offered",
Throughout the year Camp Fire classes for older boys who will
n--------.— ladies as
meet each
week and carry out a constructive
. The Camp Fire Organi-
zation program accomplishes the
same for the girls of a community
as the Boy Scout program creates
for the boys of the community,
indicated a
this
in War Ration Book One. .which Edition to nis ministerial work I
become* good for the purchase conducted classes three nights each fhu nsxflreek from the ’ftnlvertRy
of one nalr of rationed shoes next ***k at the TJPton Orphans «"««« of North Carolina and has accent-
Wedneeday, June It. will remain «1 a teaching no-ltlon at Uttle
Fmorv College at Oxford. Ga. He
’will be a professor of history. ”
Bill, as he is known here, is
m' onlv 21 vears old. He attended w
j Uttle Hknory for tw<> y»ars and wln be given Information If they
hlg office on the main
floor of the courthouse.
The fanners have been calling
United States Hag should be placed
at the centei’ or at the highest
point
3 Lt. Kathleen Hogan, United
States Marines, of Stamford. Coqp.,
demonstrates- the proper display of
the United States, flag when used
horizontally against- a wall or in
a show window. The blue field
should be uppermost and at the
left of the observer,
. 4. Corporal Michael Biriannl,
Headquarters Squadron, of Phila-
delphia. shows the proper method
of holding the Unlfod States flag,
exercising care to prevent its touch-
and their wives were guests of the
Lions Club Friday. The Robert-
wauis. miaiaiiu, vwv —twins are back In Cleburne
‘daughters. Mrs. J. Freeman Clark, for_ a jrtett, but wlU_ return about
for re-asslgnment. Both related
ly interesting things in regard
their activities since leaving
three years ago.
They were at Hlckam Field on
December 7, 1941. when the Japa-
nese planes came, and since that
time have seen much activity in
various phases of the war.
Irwin Ward and Marvin Wright
had charge of the program.
On June 18th at 8 o'clock the
Lions Club will have a picnic at
the Nolan River Country Club.
1 It will be a family affair, and
j each family is to bring a basket
supper. .
Herman Brown of the Rotary
> extended an invitation to
2.' ■
9 —— tha states 1 ______
business was trah*acted was on the sublect of “General (said
—*_T at the 1---— * — ------- —. -----—-
Cleburne
“ “ .“.mj may gain the rating t.----------------
Johnson - second class or first class petty would create a "serious break" ’in
■ _«<— .a---—. the country’s Mbor relations,
said the bill would “move
step away from the voluntary sys-
tem of labor relattons In Am-
erica. ’’ ui uiie wiui WM^-Hinc vim imiiiiivaiw —-
He said the anti-strike measure | from the all-time high in shoe Council Transacts
counter to the industry—labor purchasing during 1942. but the Friday
- .. J®,-----.
by Denison police ___
$5,000 and $7,000 I* wall T..-
Gray was apprehended two miles should be at
from Sherman on the old Preston and ita staff In front of the other
Bend highway by Sheriff's Depu- flag.
Iles F. O. Mangram and Joe 3. Sergeant Caroline York, of
Hall. the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps,
Police said Gray was armed but of Meridian. Texas, and a cousin
offered no resistance. or the famed Alvin G York of
They said he was driving a green World War I. is standing beside a
sedan carrying the pistol group of flags representing our
lap at the time he was taken ' >etotar republics la a group the
The money was carried in a ---— — --- ■ —
sack. • |
Ralph Poster, vice-president of .
the Denison bank, said detail* of
the robbery were being checked.11
H< said no details were available 1
and refused to comment. r]
Judge E A. Wright. Denison
Justice of the peace, said the rob-
bery occurred at 13:15. By 1 P-
m. Gray was being questioned and
ccunty official* were checking the
loot at Sherman.
Police said few persons were in
the bank at the timer of the
lobbery.
County officials said Gray wae
attached -to an army poet- at
Sherman. 1
---------- |
Conway Services I
At Joshua Today j
Lonnie E. Conway, 58. life long
resident of Johnson County, who
suffered a heart attack at his
home late Friday evening. and
came to Cleburne for medical at-
tention. died here at 11:15 o’clock T? ■ Tk A „ —£
that night. 'Future Eastor 01
He was born on Oct. 28. 1884,
near Joshua, and at the time of A_ II - I J
his death he was engaged in farm- I UU111*CI1 10 ilOlU
ing near Joshua. |
Funeral services will be conduct- I) 1
ed at 3 p m today at the Joshua J16V1¥«U flci C
Church of Christ with W. K. Rose
of Fort Worth officiating Pall-
bearers are Ed Williams. Will
Graves, Charley Graves. Johnny
Evans, V. C. Bentley and W A.
Kelly, and i.™----- —
Nearly 400 Cleburne residents are
assisting Johnson County farmers
in their fields at the present time,
but more workers are needed.
County Agent W N. Williamson
announces. '
Three farmers, who came to Cle-
burne one morning during the past
week looking for farm workers,
were unable to locate any. Wil-
liamson stales that person* deslr- | ' ^‘^‘Thurol
ing to work on farms but who have , for the summer unlon
not been able to contact farmers I Sunday evenln(rK wln
no services st the church build
at the evening hour.
Every member of the Guardette pojnt for the recrulUng of Seabees dub - -
is requlred^to have^a jsertain am- ln area when EnSjgn Ralph the Lion* Club members to at-
“ Niebuhr and a special recruiting tend a meeting to be held June
party visit this city Monday. June 24, sponsored by the Rotary Club,
14. when Jeff Williams of Chickasha,
Ensign Niebuhr, stationed in the Okla., will speak at an all civic
Dallas Navy recruiting office, will meeting.
be accompanied by Yeoman first Guests of the club were: Col.
class Carl Childs and Yeoman Ed Hazlet, and Herman Brown,
third class Allen Bogan, Jr. I ....---------------- 1
Men between the ages of 18
and 50 are needed kt the present Thomas I»8Ue8
Warning on Bill
Enactment
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North .1
Africa. Jurte 12. <U.B—Hie rocky .1
Itallap island of Lampedusa sur- -
'-.rendered under terrific Allied -I
aerial bombardment today and is. 1
being occupied by Allied forces one ' |
day after the reduction of the 4
fortress of PanteUeria.
Allied naval forces also joined-
tn the final 24-hour attack on the
island, which lies 90 miles off the
eestem coast of Tunisia, a spe-
clal communique from headquar- \1
' ters of Gen Dwight D. Eisen
power said. J
"After 24 hours ot intermittent
naval and air bombardment, the
bland of I amjiedusa today sur-
r< ndefed ^nd is being occupied by
Allied forces." the text of the
■ communiqpF iStW * ' 3
INDUSTRIAL CITIES
ARE FLAMING TARGETS* ^
LONDON, June 13. (UJh- The
..jimr heaviest air onslaught of the war
5. Spar Geneveve Fraleigh. Coast turned the Nazi industrial cities
Guard Headquarters, of Shreveport, % Duoeldorf and Munster into
. . flaming targets battered by con-
La.. here demonstrates the proper Hderebly over 3,000 ton* of ex-
dlspiay of the flag when flown plosives as a climax to 24 hours
from a staff with the blue field of European aerial offensive by
uppermost and to the observer's more than 2.500 Allied planes
left. | -In the west. It was estimated
fl Yoeman George Giammittorio that the United Nations sent,
of the navy. Alexandria, Va.. around 1400 planes over Europe
shows the correct manner for dis- in the 24 hours period which saw
playing the flag from a staff pro- something under 1.000 RAF bomb-
jectlng horizontally or at an angle en. smash at the Ruhr and Rhine-
J balcony or land.
Tn the south, an estimated 40n
'or 500 Allied planes hammered
lumpedusa and other targets. In-
cluding Reggio Calabria on the
1 toe of the Italian boot In the
east, the Red air force was repdrt-
, ed out in great strength again
1 today after a record 700-plane at-
I tack on the German* in a single
-; night r
IHEDS PENETRATE
MAIN LINE
1 LONDON. June 12 (U.R1-Russian
{••hock troops attacking heavily in
I the region of Orel, key Nazi base
Unking the central and southern
t rents, temporarily penetrated the
main German defense line at two .
points the Berlin radio reported
tonight.
The Red army onslaughts which
drove two edges into the German
line follow intense artillery bom-
bardment and were supported by
according to Part Super- Of Nazi positions by storm forces
8 I 9 10 , 11 | 12 | 1 I 2
80 8fl 90 ; Bi, i 98 i
.............. ....srs= .
CLEBURNiS. TEXA^> JUNE 13, 1948 PRICE FIVE
LAMPEDUSA SURRENDERS UNDER
TERRIFIC AERIAL BOMBARDMENT
Wallis, Hr.
J?J
1M2. but
remains approximately tha
I
There will prob- ){OV a
! me eigni
campaign
westward
P^ket. .
Though silent for tfee moment
on the reported assault in the
Orel area, the Red army said that
Survivors include hi* wife. Mrs.
L. E. Conway of Joshua; one son, ,
Doyle Conway. Fort Worth; two Sunday, July
daughters, Inez Ellen and Margar- J Lemmons will return to Cleburne
et Conway, Joshua; a half brother, I with hl* family on Aug. 29 to be-
George Conway, Joshua, and one gin his pastorate of the local Clrngtrlartn rtf
{church He was recently called as' runuayii «■
j pastor to succeed Elbridge B. Linn. Mrii. Pittman
! who entered the armed forces as . —
an Army chaplain. Gets M. A. Degree
i Lemmons, a graduate of Abilene —
i Chrtetlanr College, has resided in wllUaln rtltm,n Robert*. u>n of
...___________ —... <UR>- TIPt®" for a number of years. He Mr ,nd Mrs w A of
The Office of Price Administration been pastor of the churc*]' Gaineavilte. Oa., and grandrtm
Stamp Id there for the P®st eMiht^yeara and I
ill aaoiuon lus iimiisveriai
conducted classes three nights each | ^tt_-
■ *««k at the Tipton Orphans Home 1
wiil”7emaln During his Tipton pastorate, he
has devoted three months out of
the year to evangelistic work
J. Eddie Weems will preach at
of Stamp 17. 'The OPA said that the church
the rate of shoe purchasing un- and 8:30 p.
der rationing had been reduced . —--
in line with wartime curtailment* „
the reoorted
soon be in the armed services will
a ho be given to instruct the boys the south of that sector a sud- ]
in the type of swimming which soviet blow i-_
they will need capture of an
Bill Smith, who has •just com-1 near Belgorod
pleted a course at Camp Rio Vista 1
at Ingram, near Kerrville, quail-' —
fying him to be a Red Cross Life f ID*
torvXXru^seSw,n ** ,n8truc‘jIsaacks Begins.
Many Residents of Pastorate Here
Cleburne Are
Assisting Farmers ’
. no ktokout -gte remain* approximately the
pledge and would take away the M(ne M set In the period free
laborer’s lawful right to strike— mg through :
Where the expiring Stamp 17
- -r u u*«<1 tOT m,ja order*, the OP<
The Armv. Navy. Maritime Oom-1 said, it is valid tf the envelow
mission and War Production Board containing the stamp to poatmark*
£jwe gone on record^stost the ed before midnight June 15. the
Mrs. Stella Pate Wallis,"80. resi-
dent of Cleburne for the past 66 {held »t Abilene, Texas.
-- . yeare died Saturday afternoon at; this capacity, he „„
auxiliary members will be in at- i;3o o'clock at her home, 1129 E t large assemblies on three separate
tendance before the sessions close Henderson street. I-----— •
this afternoon In order to stream-] Her husband, J. R Wallis. Sr.. R to reporte
line the program and to assist in | pioneer citizen and contractor of local people
the war effort In every way possi- Cleburne, died last September. -
ble. no banquets or luncheon* are Mrs Wallis was boTd on Sept. ule vn,„
included on the program On Sat- [ 15, 1862. In Carthage. Texas, and 1 occasion
- , , _ ____—---w----- --‘ ate
the Legion Hall for the delegates , Clemente and Susan Jane
anH rAhvanllnn visitzirR T’hifc mnm-
ing, special church service* will be burne with her parent* in 1887
—a aa .a ml*.* * *_
ried to Mr Wallis at her home
> on North Main street. In 1938. the
couple celebrated their golden wed- ’ address will be held at 8:30 p. m.
ding anniversary. , m order to afford the privilege
I Mr*. Wallis with her busband oy attending to as many people as
| was a charter member of both 1M)SSibie. The committee handling
the Brazos Avenue Methodist the arrangements include Rotary
{church and the St. Paul’s Meth-'*,——*. ™ — •••---—»
j odist churche.
I The funeral services will be con-
ducted «___ ___
(o'clock at the St.
|dist church with Rev S. A. Baker
and Rev. L. L. Felder officiating.
... - , t Pallbearers will be Arch Boulware.
----- ,C. W. Cox. W. 8 Marvel, Ted
Meeting time of the Cleburne B“5d- Owed Friou and Lee Battle,
unit of Guardettes has been chang- ®nd interment will be In the Cle-
ed from TUMUky evening until <*™«tery with Crosier-Pear- (
Thursday evening, according w :
announcement* by Capt. Reba j“ebmne c ’ R -d Master Sgt. VlrgU Robertson
Brumfield. The meeting this week JJ- ,,7®“^' fr ' , 7* • -----
be on Thursday night at s- a„d' w n
n’rlork at thr American Wallis, Wichita Falls, and w. ,B.
o clock at the American Kirkland. Texas; two ~n
hi n<Mi
X Guardettes Is a Texas oor-
gantaation composed of Texas wo-
men. who are interested in the
Victory program of their country.
It to a supplement to the men’s
Nome Defense Guard and was
<|rganI4e<1 dtoMMy lifter Pearl
Harbor by three Dallas women.
Duties of Guardettes are to roll
bandages, sell bond*, give first aid
the ]|[>me Defense
of need.
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 168, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 13, 1943, newspaper, June 13, 1943; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310902/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.