Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 195, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 15, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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H YEAR, NO. 195
PRICE
■
1
£
m
t......
**-■«
|B/-
<
4
Germans Fall
i '
that the halting of the Germans
I
r;
10
4
i
Fthel Worthy
Moon. 54.
Mrs
third at Amiens.
LT
•XHthron-
Justice Dept. Extends Inspection to
Lt.
in
has been
service
in
Condition
Clay
*
in the
possible for civilian purposes, in the paper after the edition is in Its week-end report on Curtiss-
who
Ice
a
the navy’t
■ ■ 4 '
LSLlil.
*1
a
;WKRM«aniiwW'ii
I - ft ■
Meat Shortage
Relief Expected
Cleburne Rotarians Celebrate
Thirtieth Anniversary of Club
To Subject Base
At Salamaua to
Direct Attack
8
80
BACK UP
YOUR BOY
tooreua rear
payra/l zaviaga
ft year faatf y Datil
man
of
from several
o( Belgorod.
brought to Cle-
a Dillon Ac Sons atnbu-
I I
mlttee.
no
pl-
more
•t present
marketing:
livestock
lake fact J
5”
f *
ayi<
me
A
Scott;
Rogers;
and S
kt. 8. Lomax of 712 North wal-
who sustained a head
t serious
He Is in the Cleburne
--------y
fl
,1
L <1
! said today that Marshal
ckiasrilm InaHfnor a hl UFA
; JlilX-tf, 1943 —
(after-
A. Par-
Reds Regain
Upper Hand on
Irt.MiL,
a
JAPS TOWARD TOKYO
eat hit qort»wajj^t enemy bas<^
Byrnes to Study
Oil Situation
ofticiating.
r be Dr
James,-G
V 1 Friday
Sewing Room
Sewing ' Supervisors:
M w. /.Hard. “ ~
Murphy Pickle
S-.
*‘*T y4S«-«-as
- ®r"’
Helds which are now tydng
lasuedrtW*
i n mtirnftge stcenae watr • msuett
From Many Towns
. North of Belgorod -
_ '__ * * ‘J
J
o
MS
Bp?*:--' - 1
...... . — ■_____ •_ A
:1E BRfiUtelBONDS—Steady pounding of Lake irle waves ruptures earthen dyke in th
’»*Me sectton of Reno Beach near Toledo Ohio. This is one of four breaches through
Late Bulletins
| WASHINGTON, July 15 - Ojjfe-n-
Price *k
, Brown
Driverless Car
n congressmen. y y a w-v ■ »np
Bymefi met late yesterday with Hits r Orch, 1 WO
“ ----------- Children Hurt
g*.....r ?
j V4.. jcxriguruu. u loiutuuiuoi
»s .....r* oiiTiwd......Fbdfctyr ”iOlSBLL !tvSUG|
#4 4tfdtested that ttfc 8r»vtetj^
sn
Mmes.
W. Burton.
urpny pickle. i'
Knitting Supervisor:
noon only); Mrs W.
rtah. I-
GIRAUD IN U. S—At right is French General Henri Honore
Glraud, as he arrived in Washington on military mission.
He was received by Admiral William p. Leahy, left. President
Roosevelt’s chief of staff. Visitor will confer with military |(
leaders; j,
—-----------------k
NaaMMte MkMRR
The aerial campulin siriehron-
wy.h the invasion of Sicily
giving' it powerful support
waged with unabated vigor
African Air Force plus a X
of Liberators from the
J
the frustrating .the drive.
Altogether 100 German
and 47 planes were destroyed
, -
■
Br ‘ The
P** . __1 Mnuzhed. JL_sUf£
‘ e;<”
’T'tWF"
to Texas, where she
home at Mount Calm.
................I
.8
■L >
! ' I >
**;* ----------t-A—
LONDON. July 15. <U.»— Very
numbers ot allied planes,
i possibly including heavy bombers,
I flew high over the Straits, of Dover
, toward France today. ------S
American Tanks
Take Part in
Munda Assault
"r-r
yw. iw,'wl?W><tjw
I LONDON, July 15 turn — The
German Transocean News Agency
Timo- *
ally were' r. gain Ing
| hand all along the 165
I under assault in the
1 Axis summer offenaive.
Though fighting contmued at a
Iviolent pitch, Gennah! -f ~
1 around Belgorod were rb{ E
> ntinlshlng in proportion
wf RMB1 * ' I* '
At the northern end of the front.
i
tvy’i . odte. film burns \
. His de- Firemen from the Central Sta-
" ' tion answered a call to the Texas
Thekter Wednesday afternoon
where two reels Of film were
burned The projection booth was
not damaged.
, H...... ■
i
f >■
Eb
k: '.r
Mb
MOSCOW. July 45. 4U.8U.
'roops have routed the •<. K
more to^tW nurtp
an--J
“i —-''F'
. Seventh Army
[Seizes Another
Airdrome, Hills
K
I
W-’- 4 X-
’ e
____________ ■ - [J
* KRIE BREAKS BONB0—Steady pounding of Lake Eirie waves ruptures earthen dyke in the
[-4 lakeside section of Reno Beach near Toledo Ohio. This is one of four breaches through
j jjwhlch lake'waters poured to inundate wide area from which Coast Guard evacuated resi-
I •'i dents. Flood resulted from storms in northern and easter i Ohio.
i fcy. ' ‘
WASHINGTON. -July 15.
War Mobilisation Director James pictures.
JP. UM W WVMM^ --——---------- ------
the petroleum situation at the re-, service. The pictures are r___----
quest of Price Administrator Pren-■ without cost but there Is
tins M. Brown who believes Petro- cf " 00 fcr h‘”‘nc the "---------
leum Administrator Harold Ickes The pictures and Cuts will be re-
has not allotted as much gasoline turned to the persons putting them
it was learned todaf- ' printed.
Bernard M. Baruch. who ts desires, the cuts may be filed In
ehairman of a three-man commit- ■ the office ns they can be used
tee investigating the rubber situ-, again. ,w. ,
Ition last year, is expected to be | The coupon to accompany the
of today's issue of. the Times-
Re view '*
.4
CLEBURNE. TEX
BRITISH SMASH STTFF AXIS COUNTER-ATTA
ALLIED TROOPS START
DRIVE TO ROLL BACK
Service Pictures
Clebunw and
air
I Sicilian Conquest
He' Proceeds Rapidly
j' WASHINGTON. July 15
'^‘*3 conquest of Sicily has
a passel - • ceeded far more rapidly than
or I at the fighting fronts throughout
our I the world to determine whether
(U.P.) —IWo
a their
and
hurled 20 fset into the 'street to-
day when a driverless automobile
smashed the support columns from
beneath the porch.
The Injured were A. B. Halder,
Jr., 15, and his sister, Rosalie, 18, .. . -.. ; , <
the son and daughter of A. B. than doubled. There is no
Halder. Sr , a Houston shipyard
I worker.
lived In Hillsboro and whs married Some 200 ^>ombers of tile North-
1911. to T S. I west ----v *
! Hight of ’ Liberators from
.... In 1916 J middle east command hammered
Mr and Mrs Moon made their! at Messina, the gateway to Sicily
home in Hillsboro until 1916 when, across the narrow straits ffom the
they moved to Cleburne 1 Italian mainland. , ' r \
Mrs Moon Joined thn Baptist! The ferocity of the attack, cul-
cburch when she was n young girl, minatlng weeks-long bombard-
mid had been a member ot tha ment, appeared to have gone tor
1 First Baptist Church here since toward crippling Messina as a port
Uiie J 1of entry for Axis supplfts Msl. re-
Funeral services will be- held 011 Inforcements—and a potential port
Friday St 5 P m. at the First of evacuation unless the enemy
-—j-, s b found some way to check, the Al- —&
The . pall-! lied onrush.
A D Ray. |
W. Lankford.
Bicknell. Sr.. Pete Fine
Q Waldrip Honorary |
__ _ , coupon
consulted In his capacity asZad* Picture will be found on Page 6
crashes of airplanes
powered by engines produced at
the Lockland plant.
Representative Removed
.ary of War Robert.
ki a subsequent for- (
- 1
......
*—fe
!
I' ' I
—■. .L-^'^E
fl
j
)■ Creek. :yfi Mrs Monroe Bicknell,
' Jr., F01T Worth; four sisters. Mrs.
be'E. A Ray. Houston; Mrs. D B
M C.
I Jordan. Fort Worth, and Mrs. •.
• Elizabeth Dillenger, Durant. Okla., ' r
' two brothers, W. H Worthy, Dal- ! shenko is leading a huge Russian
i acute shortage of corn and other las, and C. L, Worthy, Mart, and , offensive northwest of Orel in
. ■ ,, , .. .. I __ I —--"w — r~~ — — - ——s— 1 —___• • __- X *_ -___•— — * -J — * ——. I Flsesosos /»*A K^Akll#! __s. X_ — -.11 . —. - PHS 1 A —m
Pvt. Leonard E. Davis, Jr., son northern part of Sicily A’icls de- .
, of Mrs. L. E. Davis of 319 Pen- fenders include about 60,000 Ger-1
mal statement, said army Invest!- bell avenue who sustained serious mans. I
* * " ” -3 an accident Bunday, Patterson noted that the allies
j night, was reported to be resting in the first few days of the cam-
““ —--!■ -• - — in
been still in » critical condition. He is the southern and southeastern por-
tions of the islands and have cap- ;
9 10 I 11 I 12 I 1 [ > ;
84 86 1 907 94 [ M 1» “ -[
-----------—-
165-Mile Front JT
Hl
some time but her condition be-, a trairf-buztlng expedition over oc- <J
-.7..C I rl,Pied territory by light aqoequito J
A native of Clay/County. Ala . bombcrt. One sortle ttafiled
was horn on September 2,' France to ^Stratbourg near the
She was
and Mrs
Alabama
At the age of eight, she moved ized
tnaae her and
Later she was
of cards were sent to the Camp
Wolters Hospital unit--
day by the Johnson < -
ter of Camp and Hoapltal Service, roism as commanding officer of
A subscription to the magaaihe the UBs Minneapolis during the
being sought for Camp,. Howze at'battle of Luga Point, off Guadal-
hoa been Secured, it Hanoi last November
-------today. ’.. ‘' — — —
I 2,000 Prisoners Are ||
■ i Reported Captured
j Jn Five Da^s
I
I_______l.'
I 1 w!
1
——.3——
...............—I
I
■■ V, i
WASHINGTON. July 15. <U.®—'
Details sb a food stamp plan which,
would pay low income families the
difference between their normal I
food budgets and present high fl
prices were revealed today by Ben.
George Aiken, R., Vt., and Reps.
1 Jerry Voorhla, D-, Calif., and
I Charles M. LaFUletto, R , Ind
.. US.,. ,|
Two Speakers on
9 Lions Program
Two speakers will appear on the
program t
Ing Friday.
Griffin and
in charge of the
The speakers t
Cleburne Times-Review
Published Daily Except Saturday ’ r United Press Leased H ire
|j
I l
(Germans Routed
there on “April 1,
Moon
Moved Here
„ Weather l oteast
east TEXAS; LittL- change in temperntRH...
Scattered thundershowers in extreme^west portion
this af’ernoon.
Temperature
~ Hourly
____________ _ 8B
effort to relieve the Rod Army in
the Kursk area, where the Ger-
mans launched an offensive last
week. " .
AMERICA’S
PRAYER
MINUTE |
„ We thank liwe, Lord, for the
mighty and powerful who fol-
low Thee We also thank Thee
for the humble. ” Thou hast
often chosen the weak thing
of the world to confound the
things that are mighty, for
which we bless Thee.
.
(inspection of airplane engines man-
ufactured by a xubsidlary of
Curtiss-Wright Corporation to de-
termine whether they have con-
structlonal defects, it was learned the Belgorod mea yesterday,
today.
A Justice Department official
said that a careful check Is being
made of all engines delivered to
the armed forces by the Wright
, Aeronautical Corporation's Lock-
tuu, Qi.. . 4>Hnt. . „
The inspection, Fx —,J
' t to those now
at the Uon» Club most-
-i. according to Truman ,
id will Beott. who ore i t
e program.
wW be U. Lucile
Clancy of the WAC and OM 3/'c |
R. B. Pipes, who
ed from ovwsgM.
' \ ... ,jkV ‘ *'
1./ ■ m
! overturned Wednesday afternoon
about five miles west of Godley.
was reported Improved today,
received a few bruises and lacer-!
ations. , ’
I Campbell was pinned under the ' -r^
truck but was freed by a passer-1 ceed.
by. The truck was reported' to be •( ames
badly' damaged,
Campbell was
burne by a “ill.
lance. .
JARRELL E BROWN
, lBy United Preyr
American an? Australian troops
opening a decisive ground campaign
in New Guinea, drove today to
pinch off Mubo and subject Sala-
amaua to direct attack, while U.
8. tanks were reported Joining
the assault on Munda In the Cen-
tral Solomons.
Ground operations at both endr
of Gen.- Douglas MacArthur’s 750-
mile offensive front in the South
Pacific appeared building toward
a quick ctimax tn the effort to-
roti the ^Japanese back toward
Tokyo.
Attacking after aerial blows had
reduced outlying defenses on the
road to Salamaua,, the combined
forces drove to smash resistance
by about 1500 enemy troops In
the Mubo area before turning on
the major base at Salamaua
miles northward.
Seise Hill
The Americans and Australians
seised Greens’ Hill in their latest
blow to take the points above'
Mubo and render that advanced
outpost helpless.
action was decisive in the steps,
to eliminate the Japanese bases
along the northeast New Guinea,
— coastline. —* ;-*71-
While a headquarters spokesman
reported only slight action before j
Munda on New Georgia Island, j
United Press dispatchro said an —
- “sHeout" assault had taken place »
Monday, spearheaded by tanks.1
which were reported In action there <
for the first time. j _ e* e *
The push forward by U. 8. sol- Plane Engines on Fighting Fronts
diers and marines slogging through' 8 , a
knee-deep jungle mud that ham-
pered operations followed a record • f)
naval and artillery bombardment VltlZettS KeSDOnO
»nd aerial onslaught I r
A Japanese communique acknow- m - n . f
tedged “further" advance* by jQ KeOUeStS 1OF
American farces east of Munda • , T
yesterday but said they had been ■“ * “■ *
repulsed and that U. 8. forces
landlhg on New Georgia from
Roviana Island, near Munda. had
been thrown off. j Cleburne and Johnson’ County
For the first time in D-days.' residents ate cooperating whole-
, there was no aerial blow against heartedly in the special “Men In
Munda yesterday but Allied bomb- Service” edition to be published
within the next few weeks by the iancj.
Cleburne Times-Review " There,.
were a large number of pictures confined solely
turned in Wedp“cH<>” and ------ *—--
and numerous call,
ceived by the office for additional
Information.
Every family having a
woman in the - -service
iBv United Press!
British Eighth Army has “T
,in...'he.1 a stilt Axis counter- __
Tatlack in tile Augtuta sector
1 Sicily [and driven some ihlTM
' Mt'st rmurt towiTtf 'CRbr
i while the American Seventh Amy
Hd'anced four mh«H lh hard fight-
ing to seize another Axis airdrome
! and strategic hills near Agrigento.
I North African headquarters agi-
! ucunced the new Allied .gains In
| Sicily- and at the«same time dis-
closed that the Axis had struck "
what appeared to be the first
major counter-blow ot the cam-
paign, a thrust which penetrated
■tnr lu Uit A-aewrte ■■
Harbor before it waa beaten back ,
Slash Spearhead
Units of the reformed Hermann
Goering Division sloshed into the
British positions before the Eighth
Army, turned on thq Axle spear-
head and bent it back in heavy
fighting.
Gqn Dwight D. Eisenhower's 1
communique on ti^C sixth day of
the Sicilian campaign reported
I unbroken territorial
I aims ot the front,
(U.R>— I
pro-
the
had expected and casualties 1
j are far less than anticipated. Act- j
Ing Secretary of War Robert P.
Patterson declared today.
“Thus far allied forces have over- I.
come all resistance without dlffl- j.
I culty," he said.
I However, Patterson warned that
I hard fighting was in prospect
! against axis forces numbering up-
wards of 300,000 which can stub-
bornly defend positions Jn the
.' | v Young Halder received a head
injury and was suffering from
shock. His sister received severe
bruises and the possible fracture
of several riba.
Traffic Investigator V. V. Irby
said the accident occurred when
an autqfnoblle. traveling at a high
rate of speed, struck a parked ve-
hicle and sent It careening Into
the porch posts
The driver was being held by
police, pending investigation of
charges the automobile he hau been
- driving was stolen.
Beptist Church with Dr
Culpepper <
bearers will
John A
Monroe
and S ,
pallbearers will be the deacons of,
the First Baptist Church.
* . Survivors
Interment* will be in the Cle- prjcp AdminUUator ptentiss M.
I burne Cem»tery under the direction Brown today named Chester
of Crosler-Pearson Funeral Home B,,W|es. Connecticut OPA admin-
j will lie in state at. the junior as ’general manager for
I funeral home until 3 p. m. Friday the agenCy ftn(j ^14 com prices
I at which time 4L ^-bej-emoved wouJd heid at present levels. "
to the First Baptist Church, where | ■
it will remain in state until time. WASHINGTON, July IB <U.lb—• -
tor the services. i A ught v s warship yesterday
Mrs Moon is survived by her shelled Japanese positions on Klska,
I husband. T. 3. Moon. Hr., Cle-4 the navy annnounced today. Ene-“7J
burne; one son. Cpl Thomas S j my ^re batteries did not return
Moon. Jr.. Camp Berkeley; two the fire Thls was the fourth time
i daughters. Mrs. Alex Houston. Goose this month that American ships
! Mr™ ' have Celled the enemy in th* «
Aleutians.
viror to Byrnes. There Is no in-
, dtcatlon, however, that the three-
1 ’ man committee of last year will
be reconstituted, as urged by east-
ern congressmen.
OPA. ODT. Petroleum Administra-
tion and WPB officials to begin
hte probe of the matter.
It was understood’ that Byrnes j HOUSTON, July ^15.
wanta to ’learn what the petroleum; children wen- pitched (rojn
sttnatton • actually. is. particularly beds on a second floor porc|
in light of various aonfMcUrig
claims, The petroleum Industry
Itself end a congressional bloc have
constantly maintained that gaso-
line reetrlctionaa can be relaxed
considerably , ___
1 School He graduated from Lub-
bock High School and has had one , -
[ year of college work at Texas 1 s®nlccl
i coh«*1’. Lubbock, vlgit<,h,
Thursday were:
I County Agent;
i Stevenson. Jr :
| M
I *
In the armed
j lacks.
[ A detachment ot
busters penetrated
I lines under the cover of darkness 1 Lt. Jarrell E
! and took up positions in the rear. 1 received his silver wings at Ttirner
When German tanks and infantry Field. Albany, Ga ,
WASHINGTON, July 15 <U.R>— went over to the attack, the Soviet, now located at
The Justice Department has ex- detachment opened fire from the San
tended to the fighting fronts its rear, setting fire to 12 tanks and celve' a
U) trucks, killing 200 Germans and pilot Instructor before returning
, Twmpr Field as. an instructor
tanks Lt. Brown is the son of Mr
in and Mrs IA’ O. Brown of 208
! Mansfield Road. Cleburne. He re- .
[ceived his grammar school educa- I
tlon at the Santa Fe Schoo) and b
I also atteded, Cleburne Junior High |
I ly birthday cake, baked and
to the club by Mrs.
Griffith, was cut (
attending 4
C
Will
Bill
'T Elwell of Austip
Lane of Glen Rose
(A London dispatch pointed put
that the halting of the Germane
between Orel and Belgorod marked \ >/
the first time that the Germans ”
have failed to achieve a decisive
treak-thrmigh in any summer ef-
fenslve anywhere ip Europe since . ■
the start of the war.y j
The strategic importance of the *
Foviet stonewall stand against 10 i
days of some of the heaviest at- < F®**
tacks ever launched against an
nrmy was reflected in newspaper '
reports quoting Adolf Hitler's order J
| of the day to the Gerngan army
on the opening of the offensive [>,
July 5. 'Wr
The order, as reported by 1st 5,,^
Lieut. Hans Frankenfeld. com-
mander of the 7th Company, 11th ”
R< giihent. 9th Panzer Division, who
deserted to the Russians, said the /
offensive "must be the decisive j
turning point ot the war t
“The battle will be difficult, but.
Il’s US last one fof vlctor»us Ger- ’
many/’ the order concluded. —f
■t.SOO Killed
j The Russians killed 2.000 Ger- I
I man officers and men in dislodging ■ • I I? D
j the enemy from the latest towns Lt. L. Dl*0WIl
I to be recaptured, a communique * *
[said In another sector, .a Rus- [ flf'll C
(sian tank unit destroyed 35 Ger- Will oCYVi?
1 man
[ tigers, In beating off German at- • .1 ■ *.
1 ■ , , , rllot Instructor
Rusiap tank 1
the enemy : -----. I Tliev ’
* J — 1 Lt. Jarjell E Brown, 22, who . „ 5
— I Brown
I )r *
on June 30, is !
now located at Randolph Field. >
Antonio, where he will re- I
month's schooling as a1,
i Lee
i 1919.
Celebrating the 30th anniversary . M* O*A 5
Of Cleburne Rotary Club Thum- i IVlOOIl 1X1168 10
day. Bob Kilpatridk arranged and _ - . — , -
presented a program full of fun. I Kp Hplg H FlQJl V
entertainment and facts | «z
Beginning the program Tyson A . ■} ’a * . /^l_
Payne sang two solos “Rose Marie.At DHOtlSt UDUrCD
and All Through The Night Af- ' r
ter which Kilpatrick gave a short |
address on the History of Rotary '
and .the Qleburite club ''In -190ft '
to be published
There
\ i i
I ’ | J
p ■ ' //
Fl
lias been inquiring litfo conditions attending him.
at Curtiss-Wright plantaThas been r”*"'r “ i
Rear Admiral Charles E. Rosendahl
Decorated with Navy Cross by Knox
Rear Admiral Oharles E. Rosen-1 measure to the destruction of all
dahl of Cleburne was decorated I enemy surface vessels within gun
w!U -4Ke Navy Crore Wednesday £f*?L^'-n?vy.“,d ln dccori“-
by Navy Secretary Frank Knox I h|itin1rhl ''
ity Chap- for Roeendahl’s extraordinary he-[standing airship expert.
. .. t cpmlion waa the flrat disclosure
Iptlon to the magaaihe the USB Minneapolis during the that he had commanded the crui-
—. . . per during a tour o{ sea duty which
„ ! preceded hla recent return to work
• Rosendahl contributed "in a large with airships ashore.
Gainesville hai
was announced
2
i ■
i ■*“
L-......
I J
.) j
r 11
’ /1
S®fl
_______ with a coupon giving
Byrnre has begun a study Of information as -to their branch of formance
without cost but there Is a charge; spectlon which is a part of the ,
of $2.00 for having the out made. | overall Investigation of the Curtlss-
i Wright Corporation, he said.
The Truman Senate committee,
*pvi niver me euiwun u> in ite week-end report Oil Ciirtise- _ - _ __ ,
However, if the family Wright, charged that motor defects Hvt. L. E. OaVlft
had caused crashes of airplanes HoEpitd
At Camp Howze
Clay Campbell
Hurt in Wreck
he said, is, not [ '* ~ ■ ' ' ' uevn »i me
. . . , . — ? — now in Condition of Clay Campbell.' since March. 1941.
inesoay and today army ftlr force depots , driver of a Snow White truck which ,
:alls have been re- •> ' , . f
Checking Started
“We already are checking them
or I at the fighting fronts throughout
j woman in tnr - -service oi our j the world to determine
(U.RI— country is invited to send In these they are defective.” he said.
Construction, condition and per-
» are being carefully
The pictures arc published weighed In the extraordinary in-
!•
r
Acting Secreta
P, Patterson. Jh
r/ z___ __ _______
gallon had confirmed most of the , injuriea in
charges made by the Truman com- ‘
“Mttec. But he emphasized that easier on Wednesday night but was palgn have penetrated deeply
io defective engines had l__L ' --***--• - -- ' J .1, ,
ila<fed in service. He made no in the Camp Hbwze hospital 2__ .21: ‘ '
mention of crashes. I Capt. Joaeph W. Bailey, who turned several good ports and jalr
Two army representatives, on? at'was seriously Injured in the same fields which are now t)efng used
the plant and another* at nearby accident, was reported to still be ’ t-—----
Wright Field, already have been unconscious but his condition waa.-----------------
removed since the publication ot slightly., improved — -f ____
fhe Truman report. *• [ Pvt *Davis is stationed at .Nor- on. Jyly 14 by ths courity clerk's
In recent weeks .the Justice De-' man, Okla. His mother and wife, office to J. W Calahan of de-
partment Investigative force which who rreides In Fort Worth, are burne and Mrs. Opal J. Lawson
I ' of Walnut Springs • ■
Pafterson noted that the allies
» wwas wiiuivivnre -
Curtiss-Wright plants, has been '
out rrel-akMak 4m »k
indication thu$ far, however, that
evidence warranting criminal pros-
ecution has been found.
" ......
Game Prizes Sent
To Camp Wolters
Sixty game prifes and 14 deck*! mL IZ”
* mt riMmn "’t
Wednes-
dl-
_______ to the
■mu txxinisr aitanlri.
around Orel and Kursk, tlw ene
hid not make it single atti
yesterday, the high command 1
nounced.
WASHINGTON. July 15. (UJb—
I The meat shortage soon may —
| relieved by a sharp upturn In live- I Walker. Hillsboro;' Mrs
stockmarketing. war food admin- —
I istri^Jon officials said today.
| They based the prediction on the'
grains on the market , dry south-[ three grandchildren
[ western ranges that may force' ------
[ early shipment of cattle from that . CITY OFFICES
I area, and the abnormally large , TO BE CLOSED
number of hogs and cattle on I The offices In the City Hall will [
farms. "* i be closed all daj? Friday because j ■
So strpng Is the conviction of of the death of Mrs. T. 8. Moon, I large
.some officials that a rush of live- Sr.. wife of Mayor Moon
stock to markets will develop with- | ----------------------
Tn a few weeks that they are again SUITS FILED
studying allotment plans to pre-J Two civil suits, styled Narvella
vent a swamping <ff- slaughter fa-> Beaty vs. National Life & Accl-
I cl^t ly i /pid Novela Beaty
The plan, under which marketing v<: tweflMWIWa iSjAaeMfent Ins.
permits Wbuld be issued to live- j Co., were filed this week in County
stock producers to prevent a mar-'Court,
ket glut, were developed last win- — r------—
ter by Secretary of Agriculture HEAD INJURY
Claude R Wickard to handle the LZ. L.
record number Ot- hogs and cattle nut street,
expected to reach, markets last Injury in a fall in a local plant,
spring. . is reported to be In a
Food officials emphasised that'a condition.
i revere meat shortage than Sanitarium.
■-----it may follow large-scale--“——
.jtlngs that would reduce j-
Z- numberr rm lernw " Stor-
.’acilitlea are insufficient ■ to
large quantities ot meat, t
~-----------i----V- .A •
reported
■mm on both .
le capture of
12,000 prisoners in five days, and
successful operations by American
and British air-borne and para-
chute tipops.
The Anglo-American air cam- .
palgn from, Britain lost impetus
because of bad weather after heavy
1.1 tacks on German air plants and
bases in occupied France yesterday.
Flying fortresses paced the on-
„„ sin ugh t by bombarding Le B*U8«
| and .the Qleburne club ’’In 190ft [ wife of Mayor T. 8. Moon, died 8®t and another field Outside Pari;
I the first Rotary club was organ- this morning at 10:10 o'clock nt and a third at Amiens.
I Ized in Chicago three ears later her home, 823 North Main street.) The only Royal Air Force aactlv-
I there were three clubs', and in Ehe had been In 111 health for ity reported during the night was
I 1910 there were only 16 clubs in ‘ ‘
I the organization," he stated came serious tftU past week
| The Cleburne "elub was organ- / —-» tv..
ized1 in 1913 and there were only J she was
110 clubs In the organization nt [1888 C/..
that time and Cleburne was the I Mr f.r.J
first town with less th^n 25,0001 of
I population to have a Rotary club I
I In 1942 records show that there
were 5.104 clubs throughout the
The dates when some of the
older members of the local club
became members of- the organi-
j zation were given by Kilpatrick.
Brown 2” who'They were as follows Emmett
nroyvn, wno , Rrnwn ln ]913; J(|n Davis 1913;
W C Gerstenkorn, 1915;
[ Lambert L»tn, 1920; Henry Lichte.
| 1917; Murphy Pickle, 1914; C W
| Smith. 1914; C. H. Warren, 1917;
. | Lee Battle, 1918;. John Buckner,
° i 1919; Charles Peyton. 1919
I 1 he following members of the
club made short talks vi) "What
I Rotary Has Meant to Me "; Dr
' Ambrose Ray, Jim Davis, Isom
Kennon, C H Warren and Walter
; pou
[ Aftex the club adjourned, a love--
I pre-
W.
lid served.
meeflnTt
Munsoh.
Coke
E | The body
J , funeral he
on September 2,' France t
the daughter of ( German border.
James H Worthy'
I
F </
. fa ,
;-,au, .'.XiLii'i t
•n
19-
ii
E
it*
f
this
tnons
ita. Texk
.r
__a_________
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 195, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 15, 1943, newspaper, July 15, 1943; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310929/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.