Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 194, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 14, 1943 Page: 1 of 8
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EVE
JRSDAV
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(U.R)—
S'rir Catania
town rd
biggest flatland on
African
A
life-long member of
contact
to land.
made
interested
I
the army.
ff
V
the duration '.
al
The State Department announced
II
r
a
1
Amen.
»
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t
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1st
pv5
•as
• -*-
Thursday
1
Three Donate to
Milk-Ice Fund
First Aid Class
Opens Here Tonight
JET .
Universal approved by I os
Angeles court. Former New
York owner of rumba band
»y
v»
’ll
^British Bombers
Attack German
City of Aachen
raid on the cfty, which twid a pre-
war population of 200,000
The daylight raiders, also heavy
bombers, swept across the English
southeast coast in large formations
PACIFIC,
wedge into
rail-
other
in
on
that
s part
which
the
and
lias
iin
rk
fered only slight damage.
"The AlHed Navy has derailed
another section of the Tokyo Ex-
press.” a headquarters spokesman
told Tremaine
Section of Flotilla
Those sunk represented an entire
group in one section of the enemy
es
>y
S.
forces <>n the
The U S
the Oela-Lieat
be up against
T'JB
■ • i
I'
I
..u
RREY"
HAD"
ONE
VER
ng the
iriea
anffoel
¥
r
■SSS
SEIZES COMISO,
3 OTHER TOWNS
! ■ .i
xz:
IT
)S
cleansed FTFnch soil of the enemy,
the French people will again give
expression of their freedom in the
erecting of a government of their
own free choice.
Planes
this call and aid in furnishing
the books which sell for 25 cents
President May
Return Mines to
lairnuui —e
,**SS Private Owners
JI
U
Sister of Cleburne
Resident Dies
man to idleness in Thy King-
tttta.
the
wue, i»
a siater th*
I
i-----:—■— --
Ration Book 3
Can Be Obtained i
After August 1
------ c
Last rites w<
afternoon at 2
Monroe Miller.
. day r
East 1
< LiThe
the »
been canned • at Hopewell. Mrs. K<lll -41
Earl J. Fine la in charge of the of sgt
center in that community. U. s. /
coal operators repeated demands
that a War Labor Board order be
enforced against the
I that t*-*'-
I to them. After Lewis rejected the
WLB order last, month, the union
1 wenty
Lost in Raid on
Industrial Center
mg Fortresses that bombed Ger-
many and came home only on a
T wing and a prayer..
■•Old landawl
AN AMERICAN BASE IN ENG-
LAND, July 14. (U.R)—"Old Bill"
AMERICANS WIPE
OUT TWO POINTS
IN NEW GEORGIA
.. .. ?. ,* ' ’ .—‘ A.....
Allied Planes
? Rain Bombs on
Catania Base
"j
■a
pending
three of
been received.
The T 1
Baptist Church has made a con-
CT A* /VM , "A T — •——
U1UUUUII Ul l.i.nww. i ~ — *- » . a
Friend" has also given 15.00 and Plane and sent It crashing into
sea in flames
German Gen. Siegfried Westfil,
Red Army Clips
Off Nazi Wedges
sin Bitter Fight
orte De France
Fpuf French warships, including
the 33,000-ton aircraft carrier Bearn
and 11 merchantmen and tankers
I ' ■ i
Rationing Heved to be
Agrigento aiea.
Superb support
forces by
tw< more
aged two
42 enemy
pounding
nearly 450,000
pounds of bombs on the Cotrone
and Vibo Valentia airdromes In
southern Italy Three hangars -r
were wrecked at Vibo Valentia.
Significantly, the Liberators met —
no fighter opposition over Cotrona,
supposedly* a fighter base. ’ •----“”7T|
Z7'.]
US. 7TH ARMY |
:‘w
I
/J
Wreck, Damage
Ships, Destroyers
And Freight Cars
q
|R”
lerle, Otto
J. M. MiUer Buried
In Alvarado Today -
of France He assured the French
that their own sovereignty resided
with them, a statement Interpreted ,
indication that the United W
States will .mot impose or help to fundai
impose a government on French-
men
"One of our war alms, as set
forth In The Atlantic Charter." said
* Preaident Roosevjslt, "is to restore
the mastery of their destinies to
the peoples now under the InVaders'
yoke. There must be no doubt,
anywhere, of the unalterable de-
termination of the United Nations
tp restore to the oppressed peoples
their full and sacred righto.
"Freneh
-I-
+ Sewing Room
Sewing Supervisors: Mmes.
C P Akeg.’W. R-: Clay brook,
C. C.<. Jowell, Doc Ince. ?
Knitting Supervisors : MAfter-
noon Only) Mrs. Doc Inoe.
I
£
: I
-
Enemy Fails to
At hi£Y£jSuccetiiL; __
Losses Are Heavy
5>i
the. people of France.
"Today, this people is shackled
by barbaric oppression In the
freedom of tomorrow, when French-
Raid Coast
• German planes, including dive-
bombers, made a sharp raid on' an
as command reported
* " ——------— r
Kilgore Resident
ging for bodies Ulis morning, r
bakery and a number of dwellings
were wrecked.
British Mosquitoes, Beaufighters
and Typhoons roamed over France, „ . ,
Belgium and Holland on Intruder rouncil on July 30.
patrols during the night, attacking ‘ ”
air fields, railroad targets and
ground defenses. Some air fields
were bomoed twice within a few
hotlrs. German ground crews were
forced to douse flare path lights
as German aircraft were going in
tr. land ^^1
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, 1
North Africa, July 14 (U.RK—Allied
planes, supporting invasion armies
with the greatest non-stop air pf-1 -VJ
fenslve of the war, wrecked or (
damaged two supply ships, two
destroyers. 320 trucks, six locomo-
tives ahd 45 freight cars in 24 hours
of attacks designed to paralyse the • ■)
j Axis defense of Sicily, It wa,s an-
nounced today
Supplementing new naval bom- . ’3
bombardments of Augusta and Oa-
tanla, Sicilian east coast ports, ..
Flying Fortresses
WASHINGTON—Chairman Don-
ald M Nelron of the War produc-1 Cleburne; Mrs. Murphy. San An-
tion Board today revealed that In-i tonlo. and Mrs '"Speed of Colorado,
creased production of low cost | -----------------------
m,h‘XIdUm nP™mmde^ned’rt'General Rommel
in a slx-polnt program designed. arraa »
to stave off clothing rationing fori Reported Killed
‘"^L—__- In PI.ne Cr.di
tion to Collltr’s Magazine for the
camp /
subscription Is asked to
Mrs. Cummings.
Old Bill” Return.
To England on
j “Wing Snd Prayer”
51.00 to the fund.
Those wishing to contribute are
Invited to leave their donations
at the Cleburne ’ ‘ “
with Oscar Pogue,
—n- ... 5. . „„ t v arding address Is known.
Mrs Emma Walker, 65. of Kil- |
gore, who was visiting her daugh- i
Mabel Spears, In Alva-
temlty. May France live forever I"
““7 Roosevelt recalled that the
fundamental principles of democ-
racies were ‘evolved front the Amer-
ican and French revolutions and
that the keystone Of democratic
structure is the prlhclple which
places governmental , authority in .
\the peopje --\"and in, the people
only.” i •' I
"There oan be only one symbol
for Frenchmen—France herself," he
said. "S^ie transcend^ all parties,
personalities and groups; they live
indeed only in the ktory of French
sovereignty resides tn TiattnTihnod ”
. ' L' / i L. ■ :
.....-
_ ......... ’ . ..XatawiM,.?. ■ - 1
LONDON Powerfu,|| lotinations
ot flying fortresses were teamed
with British light bombers today
in a three-pronged assault on
German air factories and Instal-
lations on the outskirts ot Parisi
and in the Amiens area.
center The Post Office Depart-
ment is not authorized to forward ,
such books even tliough the for- ,
. If the.
applicant has a new address and
has fan.’d to receive this book, he s
should advise the Dallas mailing [
center which will forward him)
the book providing it has been re-|
turned properly. |
a.....Cgr-
Oct 31 if the government retained
control of the mines.
The president said later he did ■ on Feb.
not recognize the Oct. 31 deadline
the I $12.00(>,000 N AVAL BEPQT
SEATTLE.
■ War Ration Book No
I lore June 10, will be aple to make p,, running head-on into a show-
i, conducted this
clock for James
,J, who died Tuea-
ntaf' at hto home, 1302
person street. .
rvlCes were conducted at ,
.... __Henderson Street Baptist
Church with Rev. J. W,,Bruner,t
4r., officiating He was aaalated.
>By Rev. Jack Hayes of Fort Worth
z Palibchrers were Dana McCauley I
and John McCauley, Everett Lova-j
less, ;
loveless and Ralph Loveless In-i
terment was in the Glenwood
cemetery in Alvarado under the
direction ot Dillon Ac Sons,
flyrvlvors include his wife,, a
daughter. two‘ brothers, l
seven grandchildren add five great-
granrtnhttttotofc / ..........
in taking the Standard First Aid WHR ftdded ,l>dny lhe llsJ °f tv-
course offered by the Red Cross. *-----
.is requested to attend the class
opening tonight at the Dillon i
the,Sons home at 7;30 o'clock.
John Butner will be the instruc-
tor for the class, which will meet
each Monday and Wednesday even-
persons. who failed to apply for Lieut Gen. George S. Patton'i
3 be- united States forces appeared to
I ..... .... ..... „ ....---- « ------‘------Ct- ---------- —
application for them through their down battle with Axis armor be- craft also were wrecked.
' local War Price and Rationing heved to be concentrated in the
Board.rmfteF’ August 1
Local boards have been advisotf
not to accept returned ration
reports failed to make
extent of lhe drive tip
coast toward C-iCT-lx,
struck directly
»
----------coast
Flying Fortresses from the north- -J
wi*Sf fflHcan air fore® nWrtilly ’1
rained bombs on the Catania air —J
base. Which an RAF statement de-
scribed as' the "most important
Axis coastal air base.vf’
Hit Hangars .
The Fortresses l„_ ’ .
ahead" of Gen. Sir Bernard L.
Montgomery"* " northward ■■ tittvtng
Eighth Army, the RAF said, and
direct hits were scored on at least
two large hangars. Dispersed alr-
AMERICA’S
PRAYER
MINUTE
We, too, would offer to Thee
WMWL „?***.. penitent
’Ce kX dror
Lord, that Thou ddjrt call no
Give us our work and
ac to do it. We ask in
Official
clear the
the east
-blU vmk.UK.IftU 'If Aususla that
f prime Objective was only 19 miles
(ahead. •— —— ——•-————
I Gen Sir Bernard L Montgom-
i ery's troops were reported U. have
| broken out onto the patanla plain.
1 biggest flatland on the Island, at
j the northeast edge of which lies
' the city of Catania, the second
largest tn* Sicily.
Lieut Gen. George S.
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. SOUTHWEST
July 14. (UD—American jungle fighters drove a
Munda’s deletists today by wiping out two enemy strong
aiTnnd trih Jananw NA*
SubjectedTto a merciless 13-day air pounding and isolat-
ed by Allied land and sea successes, the enemy garrison
was figlfting despeiately to hold off a tightening ring of
U. S. soldiers and marines.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s communique said the Allien
advance was continuing and a headquarters spokesman add
ed that two of the enemy’s*-----------
outer position* had been destroyed.
- Wife W— the -Hl'St iepbi Ceil-Tom'
tact with the Munda defense peri-
meter although the American troops
had edged to within a mile of the
base.
Bomb Munda
Dauntless and Avenger bombers
dropped 32. tons of explosives, on
Munda yesterday in the 13th
straight day of heavy attack, while
fighters operating in the area drove
off 18 Japanese dive-bombers and
10 Zeros, forcing the attackers to
jettison theit bombs and destroy-
ing four Zeros. One Allied fighter ;
was lost.
Late reports confirmed the sec-
While the northwest
command concentrated on Sicily,
asiuu u. S Liberators from the Middle..
sank j East swept across the Mediterran-
■
__W-
1 ■ WQM. oraa . -------- --
practice bombs that won him all-instructor bombing compe-
tition are held by- LieutT. Robert L. Walker, Army Air Field,
I Midland, Texas. Bombs dropped at 10,000 feet on 30-foot
I bull's-eye. Walker out-bombed eight other finalists in contest
held at Midland Field before 4.000 persons
I LONDON, July 14. (U.R) British
- ; :* | bombers struck heavily last night
ond naval triumph over Japanese at the German industrial and '
cruisers and destroyers trying to way center of Aachen and
lolnfnr/'n IXimzfa r**a«4 T «* »■» *»•■»»«■ *
*»••••**•**<» us^sva v vpi’iivav gm- U1K lllflll
risons nortn of New Georgia in daylight
the Central . Solomons. ‘ '■
Frank Tremaine, United. Press j
staff correspondent at South Pa-
r
I N*
5: j
. J. •!
battle found in Kula gulf north | Belgium
of New Guinea Monday flight and; Though clouds obscured results,
early Tuesday ended with four! hundreds of tons of bombs ranging
out of ip enemy ships definitely j up to four-ton super blockbusters
sunk, two probably sunk and others were dropped on Aachen's steel
danuMted while AiUeo twees suf-i worita. ehemWt* pinto and vast
fered nniv slight damaae ' network of railway communications
between Germany, France. Belgium
and Holland.
Damage Heavy
A German broadcast reported
heavy damage to Aachen's "many
monuments." public buildings and
dwellings and said 21 planes were
l to private owners threatens to up- marts momentarily /
set the United Mine Workers back- ■ German pressure agamst the I
to-work teruu and rg^M ^lrey^proe-jol^thc^lronl Iras died
wvute . . l signs mounted that lhe Germans I
Roosevelt’s remarks, coupled have given up hope of driving a
federal pijj^ers around what they estimated
“---jto bc 400.000 Soviet troops in the I
Kursk salient
lhe abortive 10-dayOffensive so
far has cost the Germans 2,772 '
tanks. 1.187 planes and tens of i
thousands of officers and men. So-
! Viet sources said. theft-'
After throwing back all German ,
attacks in the Belgorod area yes- I
„ anti-strike law ]terday. the Russians passed over!
He called attention to jhe section ' to the offensive tn one sector and
providing' plant or mine (pressed back Axis forces that had I Ujcal hnve 4dv4frd ——rb, gupp(,rt of the invasion
sqlzed by the government must be , wedged their lines, th.- Soviet high ' l() iJC(.rpt returned ratlon b/ ^llled alr fleets i
books, retard less’of the reason for tw( more Axis supply ships, dam-' ean and dropped
which thev are returned two destroyers and downed,
In cases of absence from home 42 enemy planer* ir. dawn to dusk
o>- changes ot address, books will pounding of SScilihn transport,
be returned to the Dallas mailing shipping and strong points.
j . . ^.«r, ct. _
War Food
tn
14 uiupt 1 z y . .1 - ree .
l.ess’thnn 3.000.000 books are yet allocating ’he nation's prospective
, be Issued citizens in Texas. | food supplies where they will do’
Oklahoma mailing job has the most good, announced today [
that in the next 12, months civil-1
Ians — -
37 per cent less canned fruits and
juicas and 21 per cent less can-
ned vegetablrs than they congunf*
ed in 1942
Thursday in
Crosier- , SEATTLE Wa.sji <U.P>—A
Pearson are in charge of ’ the ar- 000.000 naval supple depot,
rangements. i pying
Survivors include her husbr.z.d. d.-.z.::;
:J. B. Walker, Kilgore, two sons. J pletcd
James Walker, U. S Navy; and
I George Walker, Kilgore; six daugh-
! ters, Mrs. C ---------
; shall; Mrs Bertha Conner. Waco; throughout the 13th Naval District.
I Mrs. Myrtle Seay and Josie Hib- (The depot will remain in operation
._; Mrs Mabel Spears. 1 after the war as the district's con-
and Mrs. R F Clark, trading and purchasing office.
- c plat, fl, c o Fl PM
Food Canning
Continues at
Local Center
.1 — —
Chicken tamales, peas and toma-
toes are the principal foods being
canned at the Cleburne Canning
Center located in the Adams
School, accordlg to Mrs. J. W.
Hassell, director of the center.
In spite of the heat-withered
Victoiy Vardens. Cleburne wothenr
ore continuing their canning pro-
gram where possible. Many are
buying fresh vegetables on
market and preserving them at the
c<*nt®r. - ■ 1
Approximately 10,283 pints of
food have been canned at the ing from 7:30 to 9:30 o'clock
center since its opening this spring.
The Rio Vista center has closed
hut 1,281 pints of food were can-
ned there. About 1.000 pints have
been canned • at Hopewell.
Any man or woman
’ - - I —/ ...... vv. Uli
reinforce Munda and Japanese gar- (big formations followed through
_» M ci* ._ t Wjlh strong attacks
objectives in northern France.
Twenty platies were lost in the
------ raid on Aachen, which lies just
ciflc headquarters, said the second | across the northeastern border of
SISTERLY WITNESSES
LOS ANGELES (U.R) — "Turn
about is fartreplay" for Mrs Lani-
gan and Fsnia Prack. now wife
Louis L. Ludwig of-the
U. S. Army. Miss Prack acted as
a witness In the granting of a-
olvorce to her I sister and then
Mrs Lanigar. acted n a witness
»12.-
occu-
| pying 180 acres and including a
husband,' dozen buildings h is been com-
on tin- Seattle waterfront,
and ■ In the depot will lie stored millions
- 'of dollars i\ori.h of supplies for the
Gladys Harrison. Mar- \ forces afloat and for shore stations
of her death.
will He
cruiser’. The rest were destroyers.
Four other warships, probably de-
stroyers, were believed to have
been damaged. They fled north-
ward after the light. A week
earlier, from nine to 11 enemy
warships were sunk In Kula gulf.
On New Guinea at the other
end of the Paeitio offensive front.
Allied planes rained 50 tons of
tombs on 8alumaua, setting off
heavy ..explosions, demolishing
buildings arid starting fires that
spread a pall of smoke over the
area. The enemy landing strip
was hit directly. Up the northeast
coast at Lae. 21 tons of tombs
set off fires. A bomber set two
enemy barges afire and forced a
third aground off the Saidor arta
of the coastline.
<Bv XTflltM Press)-------- ’ -----------------•—
lire Ajmtriv..h Seventh. Army, advancing ■dx to Ht niilem ~t
” l and expanding its beachhead to a depth of <50 miles!"ih SbutESS
I Sicily, captured .the strategic Axis base of Comiso and
I three other towns today, and strengthened its grip on the
l invh'sion rocked Italiai island. , ■ j
• On lhe other wing of the Allied front British forces
i driving up the coast toward Catania occupied the big Augus- .
! ta naval base and nearby Priolo.
| Axis resistance stiffened. American forces, who had j
been tlrrpwrr back at Gela rallied to advance against repeat-
ed countei- thrusts. Neu gains#
chrried them io within 10 <>r. 12 1
miles "f Agrigento tn the west]
BWffiBltWi! lit'ldf (WWH'ff
Niiro, Palma and PoimyOiivo, as
•-anr bnse west
"Old Bill"- landed on its home
field with the nose blown off, one
engine shot out, the top turret
smashed, without brakes and eight
of tts ill men wounded after a
raid on northwest Germany May
_ IS__________ ________________
When the plane landed, a flight
surgeon made a quick inspection
and said "there is nothing in there
but blood and empty cartridge
cases " Engineers wondered why
the wind, ruslng through the gap
where the nose had toen, did not
split the plane in two.
» fh.liWTO stot^-irid- t ,ta. WBy
Sergeant Ludwig, with both B«V-
he "*,ne ,UdSe th® lcp Crowes, eight Silver Stars and
e»ne sittings seven Purple Hearts. The navlgB-
■ tor, 2nd Lt. Douglas Venable, Jr.,
Columbus, Og., who was killed In
Mrs W T Bradbury. Sr., re--4
will have to get along with | ceived word this morning of the
death ‘on Tuesday night of her
sister. Mrs James E. Daley, at .<
her home in Houston. She died
suddenly. ,
Mrs. Daley has visited jiere on
numerous occasions. Her husband
was prominent for many years in
the hotel business.
Funeral services are
word from her spns.
whom are in California.
Survivors iuolude her husband,
• ,E Daley. Houston; four sons;
,<1sters. Mrs Bradbury.
W MOSCOW. July 14 (UR>—The 10
J flUy old battle of Kursk appeared (
< lt> have reached the turning point
I lu‘"" "JU' nivuniim; Riuslau <-mm -
! ■U-.aUlOkN pointing to a possible
IWflv full-seale lotiriter offensive I
f 1 lie Red Army," buttressed by s
< Wang reinforcements of tanks, was
^reported to be clipping off Ger-1
jt4sn wedges tn bitter fighting;
I wound Belgorod and* field dis- I
’ nitches asserted that the Russians '
were wresting the intiative from 1
: the enemy all along the 105-mllu j
- Kursk trlpnt
."The Russtaui were hurling large I
‘ (Tjfces into simultaneous counter- ,
- JUXavk.s against the point and Hanks
- -at—» adiias 1 driven , Inin ihair lines —
liem Belgorod in the early stages
<g die German summer offensive
last week.
Losses Heavy
I While it still Is premature to (
j dorclud'-, that the German often-j
1 sive lias been definitely broken,'
j it now is clear that the enemy i
- has not achieved any significant
I tactical success Russian looses
| have liecn heavy, but lower than 1
'those of the Germans. , A
1 iTxmdbn military expert^ said;
I their was no confirmation pf re- '
1 ports that. Adolf Hitler has as- , ■
I sraned personal charge of the Axis
; summer offensive around Kursk !
1 "We hope the reports are true,"
1 oim commeittator said )
1 Another London dispatch said'
! that the Red Army was believed j
iMiitf. Mini 1 •
Es. I well .df tiie C’oniTsr-
K) ] ot captured Rngusn
M | Reiiiforceim nt- were pouring
E* I ashore as llu- giant bridgehead
K' ' ncriis* Southeast Sicily bulged into 1
B ' r.i w Axis territory Gen Dwight
■ 1) Fist nhnwer's headquarters an-
g | ni'iinced fh.i' "disembarkation pro-
fl (■< < ded limo >t lily "
fl . Warships and massive fleets of
H' 1 plant s "nvr- the land arnfli^ pow -
■ I ertul support Naval units bom-
fl 1 burded Catal in and hurled shells
jg Into the. ranks ot German armored
, on the south coast 1
OKAY NOW—Ramsay ! The U. S troops fighting In |
Ames. 19, blonde beauty, has (lh‘' Gela-lfcata, area appeared to
had her film contract with > u” a«nin"‘ lh5 str°'?8e’t op^-
( sltion encountered anywhere on the
I front cutting across the southeast
" corner of Sicily and being extended
I 0:1 both w ings
went to Hollywood after war |
took all her musicians.
—— | J. E Da—., _
ti;—CL..1........ c....• and thre-
of the War produc-| Cleburne; Mrs.
..
Catania.
Late Bulletins
(By United Press)
WASHINGTON—The
Administration, now engaged
to be issued citizens In Texas. | food supplies where they will do|
The Oklahoma mailing job ha# the
been completed at. one of the four
mailing sites in the city of Dallas.
11 wu* tat,■<!
President Roosevelt's promise of
glc Caribbean Islands of Martin-, freedom to Frenchmen was made
ique and Guadeloupe into the fam- in a statement commemorating
ily of the Uhited Nations. Bastlle Day, anniversary of the
The Freneh possessions, for the. winning of liberty by the people
a* ikaa. __— •• ________ .. ‘ ____
the flight, was awarded the Silver spots to American security.
Star medal posthumously. ----— ■- -
A Service Gross was awarded to
the pilot. Capt. William D. Whit-
Son, Denton. Tex.
A Silver Star was awarded to
Tech. sgt. Kenneth V, Meyer, St
Glair, Mo. '
( AMP CANCELLED 4
The North Texas Youth Con- _ __
ference at Camp Cedar Brook ..
starting July 14 for the Praeby- turning tts ronroT' WRrat Marcel
I Arian vmtner vWbanln haw. haam
celled because of the infantile
(/paralysis cases in the surrounding
- cnilnttes
j------
: Johnson County Asked to Aid in
(Furnishing Recreational Material
A request that Johnson County I
aid in furnishing recreational ma-1
terinl for the men from the 84th
Division while they are- on maneu-
vers this fall has been received
by Mrs W O Cummings. John-
son County Red Cress Chairman
ot Camp any Hospital t
from Joseph F. Donahoe.
director of Camp Howze.
I In the letter to Mrs. Cummings
■ Donahue quoted a letter received
from William J. Flynn, assistant
field director of Red Crosh . in
which he stated thaf Maj. Gen-
eral Stonewall Jackson, command-
ing general of the ' (flth Division,
had asked tnat the Red Cross as-
sist m the ' recreational program
| for the maneuvers during the fall ’
' The letter stated, in nart thnt'
ack f
had U
of 1
group in one section 01 me enemy v.ct......,,o —,u oalu 41 pmucD weie I t
- - ^1.7c,“^d onX rttv^h^ dm&nrt?Wh-ifiT$4
I tent that the AWOL was very I '
discouraging LL.„
cannot -
equipment
DVUWlcaai W«DL ill IttUU 1U1 1I1UL1UI1D ,
with fighter escorts shortly after due.J?
dawn. They crossed into France
Just south of Boulogne One for-
mation, Including four-engined-
bombers and escorting fighters, re-
turned over Dungeness an hour
later.
last three years potential danger
■■MEMlB , were
won over in a bloodless victory
1 when Admiral Georges Robert VI- M an
chyite high commissioner, relin-
quished his command to the pro-
’ Allied administration of Henri
Etienne Hoppenot
American relief ship* are being
dispatched to Martinique with »up-
' Piles for the suffering population
and the State Department is re-
openirtg diplomatic relations by re-
of our risen Lord I h“ Mallge. to Forte
LONDON, uuly 14. <U.R>— The
German undprground radio station
Atlantic was quoted today as say-
ing that German Marshal Erwin
Romniel was killed While flying
to SicHy to. taket oyer command - .
Swedish dispatches reported the .
N~L. Class of the First t broadcast said that British fight- t
hurch has made a con-! e™ penetrated the strong fighter
trlbutlon of »S 00; "A Minister, £°™B e8CO,~n<
"Long live liberty, equality. fra-*| »«]• h“ cOntrtbuted th£
two other German" officers and
three Italian also were killed, the
Times-Revlew or broadcast said. ( ' t ]
I, fund trewurer.' ■■
k STORES 28.8M FUR PIECES
CHICAGO <u.R>-^Ra6ks totaling
one mile Ln length are neded to j
store the 28,000 fur garments pro-
tected tn Marshall Field 4t Co.'s
(vaults during the summer months.
A constant temperature of 32 de- j
.greet, with humidity at aero, pre-
‘ serves five million to seven million
i dollars worth of furs stored in four
I vaulto ' '
, insi ine itea Army was oeuevea ■
I to have recovered most of the |
' positions lost in the early days of
; the Axis offensive around BelgoJ !
WASHNIQXON. July 14 (U.R)— >’>d and speculated that the Rus- I
President Roosevelt's hint .that he(si*ns,may launch a heavy blow.
Intends to" return the coal mines | against the almost-exhausted Ger-1
to n 10 up- I “
set the United Mine Workers back- j-
'pects <5f a new ci
cosl dispute
Mr. 1
with investigations by
The letter stated, in part, that1 “Rents of wildcat^ strikes in Penn-
according to the gentral the lack sylvanla. indicated the possibility
of propec recreational facilities had of new administration moves
crused an alarmirg lowering of against John L. Lewis and the
AWOL was veryterday. the president told report-
Since the Red Cross !ers th»t for. thelr Information lie
requisition recreational
through the regular
’ L Li national policy
the drily' source of aid is through
the medium of the Camp and
Hospital Council.
The, council has askeil
Johnson County furnish Jte
of the 4,000 pajter-bounrl?1 p
(size novels and 200 modern’popular
recordings needed.
„„ „„ Mrji' Cummings asks that John-
England coastal town during the 'County residents respond to
night and rescuers still were dig- s .ca!} and a^d ln furnishing
A the books which sell for 25 cents
o each and also give as many records
as possible Additional information
on the recreational needs will be
discussed at the meeting of the
Johnson County has also been; ordpred lts members to work until
asked to provide a year’s subscrip- I ” *’ >
‘Collit r’s Magazine for the (
Anyone_i!hq will give thisj
4 4 Ort 4 « SA «8 4 — rt CTCT M 4 4 <CT ---- —--— . CTCT m WWW ——.....
• but last Friday he added that he
1 knety no way to force Lewis to
[sign a contract. The operators in-
fterpreted his remarks to mean that
the WLB order would not be. en-
forced aaginst Lewis and protested
again to War Mobilization Direct-
or James F. Byrnes.
Konald Duck’s ‘Voice’ Joins
KEESLER FIELD, Biloxi. Miss
(U.R)—Pugnacious Donald Duck of
the cartoon movies has it wartime
shortage, too. 'One of his three .
.voices, Theodore Gurtner. 18. of, don, ftasca;
Bellingham, Wash., has enlisted in ! Alvarado,
the army. Kilgore.’
Bastile Day Brings Promise of “Freedom of Tomorrow
From Roosevelt; Reopen Relations with Martinique
WASHINGTON. July 14. (U.R)— will- go into the service of the
Bastile Day brought to millions of | IMtted Nations as soon as they
Frenchmen today a promise from 1 c£n be put into commission.
President Roosevelt of "the freedom -------- — "
of tomorrow," coln&iFntOteih
. - * franHer m FrwMnflWAMita'
to the target and back, was decor- ; thorite which brought the strate-
gWne ,Ud’e 8t th6 lcTcro«re, eight Silrer
wanted to cite a provision of the
Smith-Connally anti-strike law | terday. the Russians passed
mine , pressed back
returned to private ownership
soon as practicable1 but not more
than fio days "aft«f!'^rt>dticlk»n
turns to the level prevailing
fore seizure.
He said the government certain-j EX • "41 1
; L)ies in Alvarado
have been prompted., by the soft, j
rnal TIYlAFatYWV AAtWAAf A/fl. zLnriu '
UMW and (ter, Mrs. ...
their properties be returned rado, died Tuesday afternoon at
... . . . .. j o'clock at her daughter's home.
Mrs Walker had been visiting
in Alvarado for only a shqrt time
at the time of her death. Sh^ j
( was born in Rusk County. Texas, I
, L_. ' 13, 1878
j . She was a
! the Christian Church
The body was carried overland
I today _to Marshall and interment;
will l>evmade Thnrs'iej' ,h“
Hickory Grove cemetery.
ir
7 !
1
J
1
38TH YEAR, NO. 194
-
1
12, 1943
of coffee
il restau-
Jfied the
■ there is
1
BACK UP
kYOUR BOY
J lacraaie year
payra/f tavfaf#
f yaar faail/y limit
i>4
b
-1
FIGIIRt
7- II0U1
VOURStlF
5
ROW
DC
t 3MTH_YEAR, NO. 194 CLEBURNE. TEXAS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1943^ - PRICE FIVE CENTS "
| i ALLIED ARMIES SCORE GAINS ON SICILIAN FRONT
..... 1 » rt, »in ai, »■ nil 4. ...i , 1— —1 1 . "a nW—,11 i.Mwt .1 ,■ .1 wwu i» 1 • ateiaitenSilliMtete ■ — —. —--CT... - 1 - - l» -iu hi l u •
Weather Foreast
EAST TEXAS. Little clmnge in temperature
trill afternoon and tonight Scattered thundershow-
rs in north and west central portions tonight.
Temperature 8 9 j 10 11 , 12 | 1 ]' 2 4]
Hourly ~ 80 82 |"»4 88 7*92 | 96~
Cleburne Times-Review
Publiithtd Daily Except Saturday ■ . United Prette Leased H ire
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 194, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 14, 1943, newspaper, July 14, 1943; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310928/m1/1/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.