Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 226, Ed. 1 Friday, August 20, 1943 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE TWO
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1941
1940
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victory before 1&44, .at earliest, is in for an unpleasant die-
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appointment.
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CLEBLRNB TMES-BEVIEW
AXIS POWER LINE^~
By Paul Berdanier
i.iii-:
la
R
H
( THEY'RE TRAPPED
HER* ANO
THBRl’G no
WAV OUT FOR 1
THEMj 4
I
powder lied -
l era- room.
I
"W
W
remembered that^ ehe tweed
the drug'
larmon was a
2fe—
thetr-just deserts. To them our
forgiving spiHt and our low of the
right is Ignorance and we should
therefore be enslaved.. M
A. READER.
, 8U1
. itei
: 7
Uaferl
ring . .
rha. ...
& I
YA
l
> Cl .hUURNE TIMES-REVIEW
fublishc | Afternoon Daily
>08 So. Anglfti Street
i
L
Ff
V
lib,r<9
' i w-ae-VJW^M
TARZAN
IF* A
| PHONOGRAPH
FOR
OCC^INO
-St
WHAT'LL THGY ] I DON'T KNOW.'
DO WITH
US, PATCHBSe
Spiced wi
with fun!
star YOU
Don
I
■r
mi
if
"sx£i
".xj,
■ *>
Bin THEY MAY CONSIDER U6 _?
THUR LAST PERSONAL VICTORY
AND TRY TO MAKS THS MOST
OF IT J ~
IXL HAVE TO TAKE THE PHONOGRAPH
AW NOW- I NEED IT FOR I
"--IMV PLOWING !■
ytars ’ and
•nvlrf. nnn CHAPTER I
THERE was no house-to-
1 house mall delivery tn Little
Harbor.so at five o’clock every-
one Ln town came down to the
post office to await the distri-
bution of the evening mail.
nS//^
Secret
i WO1
D Presented
1 • Now r
i th<
1
, , FRIDi
Among
AmeTJcan
ronventlo
day and
mN. R
but. ms
Jim Cas
Dock, iu
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
vl SMALL RBMAIN: TARZAN ANSWS«6d/un-
TIL I AM SUET I WAVE DONE AUlOhNWRYOU!
WMSN DR . BRAKE IS LEFT TO fWfPKRS
TNI MIPIONE, OBCIA SAlD?KXJ MUST
ESCAPS.RATHE* WtUKJUyQU/y^
T! ■ 11 taNsi
«
i»v
Miss Dawn Dyer of Van Buren.
Ark., who has been visiting her
grandparents. Mr. and Mirs. 1.
F. Dyer of Eulogy, left Wednesday
for her home.
By Ernie Bushmiller
BESSIE IS AN OLD CIRCUS
HORSE AND SHE WON'T WORK
7 UNLESS SHE MEARS ---
\ MUSIC! j— fY
■ <
n.
l—iaien ■■■is a iihih i ■ iWinn- ■ ■
GETTERS FROM
THE PEOPLE
(Miter's Note: The tlmea-
Revlew prints letters from its
readers because of their general
Interest. The views wpresaed
should not be interpreted as re-
flecting the editorial opinions
or polioles of thia newspaper).
Uditof'
Timea-Revlew >
I must say Amen to your editorial
in Tuesdays paper
I, like you. believe In forgive
aess but I also beiirve tn common
sense - The Japanese have proven
themselves wholly incapable of un-
derstanding anytbiiig prelalnlng to
decency. To forgive them and to-
ever again trust them. Would be
i... more, sensible than forgiving
and trusting a rattlesnake. In fact ,
the rattliwnake deserves the pre-
ferenee and la In reality more hon-
orable.
This way of ivavlng our boys
taken from their homes every 28
years and murdered, and then pat- i
X 1
■ ■ ’
ELLA CINDERS
[ What luck/bbvbntbbn nazii
LS*T IN AFRICA, AND I COMR
ALONG WITH AN EMPTY
GAG TANK;
f*’
4------
C Deborah \
ireW het.
--was doubled under
-<* her, and her ankle hurt cruetty, L
tie tried to smile—wlncM. f
"You’re hurt?" the young man * 1
asked anxiously. - . t-
“No.” . . '
She tried to stand, but sank back ’ 1
............Tp:
‘HERE IS THE HERB ‘TARZAN SAlD/BOIL
I IT AND YOU WILL WAV! THE ANTI DOTI."
COME ON, LOOSEN UP > |
If ypu are among- those hoarders who have created a
bottleneck in $10,000 bills, please disgorge. The Treasury
is setting worried. Theie are less than 2?00 in circulation.
You have no real, need of $10,000 notes. They may
’ l*> a bit more convenient to carry than, say $1000 notes.
but it still is possible to get the makings of Sunday dinner '
. for no more than a normally healthy man and jiia w<V
can take to market in t^e smaller denomination. So please
don't hoard $10J»00 bills.
- The OWI has*dropped -a few’ hundred frohi^Jti' pay- -
npll. That’s one move in the right direction—every govern-
’*““5en< bureau and every department is overloaded with help
tjiat, could be used to advantage elsewhere.
yy****,‘*>" **' * I ■■ *gBBiw^ii.»i. ■n * < ... 1 . ■ -M| ■ .
One thing you can say of a hurricane—it known how
to beat a heat wave back for the time being and no foolin’.
< - .... , -o—-----------------
Shoe rationing boosted the shoe business about 78 per
gent, which hasn’t hurt the shoe business.
NANCY “
AM' I
AihtnrA^'
nwif-w
iaw ‘S'
__________1
ih
i
Lin n
L
I ■
gw. ”--
- -
Bar--;
SUMMER
1 BEAU
By MARGARETTA BRUCKER
courses as well as elementary fly-
ing training. Upon completion of
the course he will be classified as
a pilot, navigator or bombardier
and go on to schools of the Flying
Training Command for training in
these specialties.
JOHNSON TO BE
KEY MAN IN CREW
U. S. SUBMARINE BASE, New
London, Conn , Aug —Ne,t,heU
-------— — ----Y. Johnson. 25, a first class ship’s
tton lasting approximately five (cock of Burleson, hae returned
here after completing a series of
war patrols during which his sub-
this psried ■ marine sank and damaged a-iwwt-
glanCNl—TDWh glfls dressed In
_j and shorts to imitate the
ANY LITTLE OLD
GIRL •••YOU WK
I'M CRAZY?
ting those responsible for it on
the liead and saying “we forgive
you,'' does not sound like Chris-
tianity to me. To remove Hhe
cause would be more Christian
like and decidedly more humaneh
sensible. I can set neither sense
pot Christianity in .permitting a
lot of savages to exist, who bring
about the murder of our boys every
few years. „ Experience has taught
us that . they . cannot be civilised,
much less Christianised—that they
are bent on murdering us <Sd
other civilised people—that they
havf gotten worse instead of bet-,
taf^-that it 4s either kill them pr
kill ua anef It is time kljiecok-
ntso what we are up against.
After this war J» aw. I do" not
want to be a 4>a»ty to any unger-
tainty as to anything that would
make it posible to happen again
Wo triad that furgiving business
once and got into a worse war
than ever by trusting a buach of
cutthroats. I believe in forgiveness
in its place, but there is no place
for it when dealing with savages
that insist on bringing their sav-
agry into our home#, and destroying
S(
HKNRY
OWEN-1
ggHaMctiq
Fro«««l
B...4 (lpn
A M.
w
(Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning
Cleburne, Texas, . Phones 133 and 134
~ 1VM. RAWLAND. Publisher " I
Entered as second class mai) matter at the postoffice at Cleburne. Texas.
Under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
HUBSRRimON RATES
By carrier in city: 70c per month; One year 87 30.
By mall in Johnson and adjacent counties: One year 84.QO; 8 months
•1.50: a months Si.86. i
By mall in state: One year 86.00; 6 months *3.60; 3 months *2 00. I
By mall out of state: One year *7.00; • months *4 00 ; 3 montbs *0 28. 1
Subscribers falling to get a paper please call 133 or 134 before 6’48 I
p. m on weekdays and 9:30 a. m. on Sundays.
~UNITED FRGM (U.W~UCAHro WIRE — UNITED^FBATURRB
i The United Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publlsation
:< all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in thia,
pap'r. und also the local news published therein. .All rights to ita
ftib.icutl»h of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ~
NOTICE TO PVBMC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
.ton of any person, or firm or corporation which may appear in the
jolutnris of this paper will be gladly corrected upon due notice of same
yeing given to the publishers. '
M . ;--—
1 POLICE RIGHTS—
The Keystone Automobile Club denies the right of
police to Mige motorist#’ ration book#. There are many
who will agree. Unless the legislature has enacted federal
rationing regulations into state law, it is very doubtful
whether the police have any rights in the matter.
Unfortunately the (Question i# a bit academic. You
might he Able to defy the cop and drive on. Meanwhile
ho woods only to take your license number and report it
to the GPA, which thereupon call# in your gasoline ration
tiook or penalize# you otherwise. Anv victory would be -
pylrtitc. It’s easier to obey th,e regulations. —. ----—r--
■
V.lL^,
i
OUR MEN
IN SERVICE ♦ !
(Editor's Note: Be sure to send;
S i us a picture of your son, daugh-.
Ul ter, brother, sister, husband, Vfdej
or sweetheart, who U in service
along with W 00 for the price of
the cut, *o that your man or
woman In service can be included
in the special section that is .
coming soon. Fill in the needed 1
Information in the blank printed |
elsewhere in this paper).
• • *
CtoCTL DAYlf lB
"TSRNMBMBBm ' ~
—Mrs, L. I. Q*vl* W had word. : !_______j___ M
from her sen, Cecil Davie, who i»|
in the border patrol, that he and *
family are being transferred ■ _
from Corpus Christi to Laredo.
CFL WALTER M TKIBBLE I
WRITES FROM NORTH AFRICA 77 E"
BUly Joe Beene of South Wllhke |
street has received a letter from
‘ Cpl. Walter M. Tribble stattng
he has arrived safely in North 1
Africa. He states That he is well
and enjoying himself, but that he
can't quite understand the
"lingo.” Cpl. Tribble is the son
of Mr and Mrs Bud Tribble of
Covingtori.
So AM I,
HONBY.'THBY'LL
FINO I HAVt .
VERY HIGH ]
NUlSANCg
, VALDB/ W
Mata be I'Mtod FeMwe* BsMIesto taw
was serious had been town gossip ferently. She did not remem
throughout the winter. She had that she had aspn him before,
been ah utter fool about Craig last had smooth dark hair, a ■*“
summer because he was a hand- ta»ned face, and wore his u
some stranger and had swept her like a resorter.
off her feet with his lovemaking. He had a dog on a leash, a
Fred came over to her. “Not haired terrier, who began to
much Interested in the mail these furiously at Deborah.
Business men up and down Main ble?” he taunted. harmless,” he assured her.
Street.left thgir stores and waited - ... iwww. u« awuw unr.
outside the poet office doorway ex-
changing views on the prospects
for the summer resort season.
Housewtabe loaded with brown pa-
w . per bags elbowed smart summer
race. Tpere is only one peopiv. Marts from the eottagea
J ~ (
•Robert Pi
ta S Hinds
Tl , Carter Ch
Eddie Mil
■ IWELVE
W Must Be
I My Mane
I Hl. Chai
t •. -
— ■
t By Charleg Plumb and Fred Fox
OH, DARLING,
I'M GLAD
YOU’RE HERE
.WITH ME/ ,
K^S
> w . .
day even f< _
Deborah Parrish brushed a stray
lock of damp hair back from her
forehead and sighed as she expert- _
ly shot letters into tha lock mail puff "I'm going o sock
boxes. Maud Harmon
her letters and went <
a money order. C
th* assistant postmaster.
L _ ’’’ ’ , X . ' ‘
foe*.
As Deborah went to work on the
magaslnM. Fred Cravsn's insolent
voice rose above the whirr of the walking.”
*neh^hHr*fmmTh?t><:^? Iw-uu aus ui nei wi rwr iwi cwr —Ul i 'tfaat'lte n—
—F th ‘ keys “Wen—if you’d rather walk. J,ha2,, L1?*. h1appfnedI„,Wh«n
cage guy today? he^ where if®*, 7 _ —
Fred asked the same question tomorrow."
every day tor no other purpose Deborah watched her walk away
!ha"*’“rw humiliat* her. toward the park tag lot. Ttare™
far Fred knew as well as everyone no Uke Maud. stout. clalm
tow- u?*t-*fae yuM “ver to beauty Carefully waved grey
hear ftrom Craig Benedict again. hftlr RmiHae -----—f
* thin man with b
WASN’T It enough, thought j^Hunt’hepc
»■ Deborah angrily, that she must Joe and Maud
L, L -
eanataat reminders? 1
ehe tad gem
sho uld’ . „
lent grudge?
types.
Johnson in a 1934 graduate of
Burleson High School where he
played basketball. After serving
three years in the United States
Army, he enlisted in the Navy
in 1939 He came to the sub-
marine, service after serving aboard
cruisers for two years.
Now here fpr, to a
new submarine, Johnson will be a
key man In the crew because of
his combat experience. He is Uie
eon of Mrs. Mary .Iniipenn at tar. ,
leson.
<3L^
“ glanced —to Wh glfls dressed fn FOR fifteen minute# there wag no L __ _ ___
slacks and shorts to imitate ths F time to think of anything but disay .
summer folks. < ’ ■ selling stamps, answertag questions Kenny came around th* counter
The air inside the post office was and exchanging the battered pack- and started to help liar to her feet.
Stifling. It was a record-breaking age slips for parcel post packages, but the stranger thrust th* dog’s
day even for the middle of July. Then Deborah and Maud were leash into Kenny’s fingers and said
A
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Jl' uV ER OPTPtffiM AUAtN --------------
Once more, this time because of the feeble opposition
our invaders have met in Sicily, a wave of over-optimism
is sweeping the United States. It i# easy to find optimist#
•voidAring whether we might ndt even win the war in
Europe before Christmas.
Don’t get false notions. The Italians aren’t, the Ger-
mans', nor ore the German# prepared to go all out for the
I tart? ns. Without doubt Allied prospect# are brighter now
than at any tiip* sln<* Dunkirk.- But anybody who expectr
FRIDAY, At'C-VSt 20, 1M> ‘
BACK HOME AGAIN - By Ed Dodd
K MAMIK 9MAD!
7 iMHAr^oueor
k YDLR WA'R
(
abominably and she felt slightly
Kenny Mine around the counter
and started to help h*r to her feet,
to Kenny’s fingers and"a2d '
back in the little cloak room. briskly: “Here—let me.” »»
“Some day.” said Maud, batting He picked Deborah up and car- *
her nose with an enormous powder ried her back to the prescription
_ ...T ,_Z. Z._ j Fred Cra- room. He set her down gently in a
a finished with ven when he annoys you.” swivel armchair, ordered Kenny to
off to write up “Which would accomplish noth- tie the dog to a table leg and bring
.™. twice as vlndlc- a glass of water. “And some arc-
nw avMiwuJk puaiuiiwiri, uuuipru nve. ueooran smiled iainuy. “li’a malic tpirita of ammonia," he said,
a load of magazines at Deborah s my fight. Maud and I can take it.” "before this girl faints."
. «,j won>t Deborah pressed
her Bps tightly together.
When K*nny cam* back with th*
Maud dug in her bag for her car **“L "* •*“* **?•’ JT*1
— ‘ ‘ you’d rather walk. 8orr3' that «**• happened. When
leave you. See you you f*®1 *° *®»v|na. TH take
you home
He knalt then to examine the .
ankle. "I know something about <
this.” he sift, -although tin just
an engineer. I’ve had to know a kt* f
about everything when I wm In |
SWSSjRLgSWX j
this la just a wrenched ankle, and I
1 ke®p *5 hours, it
can take Debbie home. She I
right across from me." said J
■sy •
"I shall take her home. After afi.
. ----far the |l
A/S JAMES BANDY
AT OKLAHOMA CITY U.
OKLAOMA CITY, Okla , Aug.
20. (Spl »—A/8 James H. Bandy.
19, of Burleson, Texas, yon of Mr.
and Mrs. J. H..Bandy, Route No.
1, Burleson, Texas, has arrived at
Oklahoma—CUy—University—far-
ce urse of Army Air'Force instruc-
ts;. lL-w-4
months prior to his appointment
as an Aviation Cadet in the Army
Air—Ferees-—Bttrtor ‘ , ____________
1 he will take numerous academic ber of Japanese vessels of various
now and waving to a
'*C«m* torntavtaer
be awstfe rfbwhurt Witeout Fred’s 'hear^'year"aw. but »<aud hadto
-----7 because break ber engagement because ehe
’L-X--ZL-— uTJT1 to suPMr? her brother Urea .
whta they were klda in high school. Kenny, then tael * baby. Years of i-T? ' ’
ahould he continue to nurse a vio- reepoosibriitlas and yet Maud came ,
-r—’ up «’«“»• Jo* married to a wo- rm
tame day ahe would scream man who was * threw. Maud meet- L“‘
right tack at him. "No, I didn’t tag him every day and never show- J! •?:
hear from Craig Benedict and you Ing by word or aoiton that ehe e«il) JJ? u??®,’’
knew itl I donT want to heaf frotu cared. That took courage. withher hmdagah
wuldn’t any that In a needed a box
Uk* a port office, where and entered th
could watch her every Kenny Hartnor.
Craig's fickleness and There was a
iahnesa tn believing he to Kenny. Debo
i /
M
‘i
our liberty and our Christianity. |
Japan has been planning a war
against us for many --—J
when they failed to provide one
they sneaked up on ua and killed
about 300 of our fine young men |
Now I say we should ask no quar-
ter and give none, but kill every
Jap we can and keep on killing
them until there is none left, and
that Is the only kind of forgive-
ness that fits the occasion or
could be understood by these ruth-
less. murderous beasts and this goes
for all other bandit nations whose
chief business is to produce soldiers
on the same level as we produce
■wattle and then boast of being a
hi Mit er r.’.'iT".—~ —
way to handle people of this kind down the shore flirted with chauf- ~ Ocorge Mitchell said. “Cut it,out.
and that is in accordance with tJ1” OPen th*Jenerhl delivery
Fred opened one window, and
Urange man with eager, questing side surged forward.
------ ----- -----— —Id accomplish *oth-
Oeorge Mitchell, mg and make him twice as vlndlc-
itmaster^ dumped tire.” Deborah smiled faintly. "It’a
rht Maud artrl T y*ovi tmlieb <♦
jr iiBiib, iwauu, uhu a vcuj l«mw
They left the poet office together.
“Want a ride?" asked Maud.
Deborah ahook her head. “Fm
•days? Not like last July. eh. Deb- The man smiled. "He’s quite
ble? hs taunted. harmless," he assured her.
Maud Harmon frowned blackly But juet then, the Bog plunged -
from the money order window. Mr. forward. The leash caught Deborah
Hunt, the poetmaster, looked up around the ankles and thretf lief,
from his one-finger pecking at the
typewriter to stare disapprovingly /ANE slim leg
<?ver his bifocals. V her, and he
George Mitchell said. "Cyt ibout. She 01
“ , "You’re hurt?" the young man
Town"gTrts squeezed through the window. ,4
crowded doorway to lounge about r 72 - ‘
the writing desk and appraise every George the other. The crowd out- - _ _
She was hurt. Her ankle pained
The dog’t lea»h caught De-
borah around the ankle
* and threw her.
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 226, Ed. 1 Friday, August 20, 1943, newspaper, August 20, 1943; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310960/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.