Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 229, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 24, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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■
e--
XL,
T
PRICE FIVE CENTS ~
= ■
=
irytoy*
AGAINST JAPAN BY FORCES
'yoxma
•chunnik
I
Chuguye*
!
'OREL
I
balokltyo
Ji
(T
P
I
I
received.
•».
T
steadily
com-
et-
It-
"It
few
P
R.
and
hot
On Highway 67
V
Spreading of a single coat
The 20-month-old daughter
of six months'
re-
Edinburg,
can for them.
446,
4
>o
Germans
Ic
h
K4
immediately.
An Exception
chi
hi
situation But
I
Oil
■
I
1
8-Day Meeting
Largely Devoted
To Pacific War ~
Hourly
Temperature
her from a visit
. She has been in
up .two miles from the airdrome
. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's com-
as
the
and
Ntw
nounces,
New contributors Include G. C.
Hart, *5 00; Joe Nunn. 41.00; An-
Mon
celvl
I
"The fundamental, issue is not
whether we are to draft fathers,"
whether, in the con-
the W effort, we
londM Is
Catty fighting
Four Boy G/vws
JOO par coot;
How about year
BondbeytagP
GRASS FIRE
No damage
f of the J
itt month
Cleburne Times-Review
Puh/is/ted Daily Except Saturday United Prene Leaned IFire
and -
of Edinburg.
ooe.ooo men
Selective
and Sep- _ „ ,
more group deferments
last i
WASHINGTON. Aug. 34. (U.R>—
Edgar Hoover of the
S
Weather l-oreasi
tttttr—rhrm~e tn temperature
tonight and Wednesday forencon.
>6scow
Another Conference «
May Be Held lBe4ore "
End of This Year '
Four Square Miles-
Of Citv Bombed in
Less Than Hour
Orders Given to
Strip Rome of
Military Works
“ EAST TEXAS
tills afternoon.
8 9 | 10 , 11 12 ; 1 | 2
84 88 |K| 961 98 | 100 102
. J. J. Moore, Mrs.
frs. Earl Chedester,
the
an-
no late
force
the
T8 E^HAZI-tttLD AUA
held Kharkov, breaking German defenses. Germans in Kharkov were stronger than expected,
but Soviet Army machine rolled onward, despite resistance. Map at right shows continuing
Ruaaian advances in Bryansk and; Smolensk sectors.
rauroaa iu ■ ' - 1 .' v - • ■ • ------ -----— ■».. r--*------------------------------------
Bombers Smash Infantile Paralysis Fund Donations
Railroad Hubs
In South Italy
LONDON, Aug. 24. (U.R)—A
large number of Allied botnb-
bers. flying too high for defi-
nite identity, crossed the Dovre
Straits this afternoon, headed
toward France
ilHl
■
P'dUju$ •/? t j
pi®
MILES
aljiUp
he explained to the boards, there
were only 1,427,000 men avail-
able. leaving a deficit pf 446.000.
Five new
Johnson (
Infantile Paralysis Fund brings the
total amount contributed to *770.68 1
W -
& * ■:
Ryoion
Tula V-*-
7
X, '
1 Total $770.68; Goal Set at $1,000
ew contributions to the! The huge four-engined Stir
County *1000 Emergency , Hallfaxes and Lancasters, each
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Aug
24 (U.R>—Allied ground troops have
a bridgehead across the
their
1
on 1 _ - ......
leaving the rail junctions wreath-, aircraft
ed In smoke and flame.
Punctuating the Intense
assault ripping apart the
Another appeal for cotton pick-
era was issued togay by County
Agent 0. A. Munich
Because of the extreme
a
Canine Globe Trotter Pauses in
San Antonio Between Trips at Sea
(Asphalt Spread
Highway 67
BRITISH LADY—Mrs. Winston Churchill, who accompanied
her husband to Canada, is an Interested spectator as Canada’s
Prime Minister W. L. Mackenaie King points out scenic high
spots at Quebec. Picture taken during reception At grim
Citadel, on famous heights overlooking city.
The services will be conducted
at the Baptist church in Covlng-
> ton with Rev. C. F. Polston offi-
ciating. Interment will be in the
Covington cemetery with Crosler-
.Qharge of arrangements
------s include her husband,
the Central Station extinguished two sons, * daughter, and her
the blase. brother and her parents.
i.....J
te >3
ft
flfl
super block-".’W
LRostov
Camp Adair. Ore.
Mrs. H. i;;., -—
with Her daughter At the
her death, while Mtw E.
vail and Mrs. nuw ——
of Cleburne, have gone to Houston
to Attend their sister's funeral
Mrs. Stewart Is survived bv her
usbnnd and two daughters of
oufcton. a son. who Is stationed at
Mhp Adair. Ore.; her mother, Mrs.
. King, Cleburne; five sisters la-
uding Mrs. Duvall and Mrs. Mc-
laln of Cleburne, and five broth!
j. w. and G. 1*.
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. North
Africa. Aug. 24. (U.R) — Allied
bombers have smashed three more
railroad hubs In the
transport system of South Italy.
It was announced today, and Gen.
Sir Bernard L. Montgomery said
that “we shall very soon be gt-1
tacking."
American
mldr'l*
AMERICA’S
PRAYER
MINUTE
Create in us clean hearts, O
Ood; and renew a right spirit
within us. Thou deslrest not
sacrifice; else would we give it;
thou dellghteet not in burnt of-
fering. The sacrifices of Ood
are a broken spirit; a broken
and contrite heart, O. God, thou
«S ■* sm-aa---
slon should be asked for duration
deferments.
WMc officiate pointed out that
_i are impossible
under the Selective Service Act.
War Manpowtr Chief Paul V.
McNutt, thus far. has declined
to comment on the
Qt'miJO, Que., Aug. A*. Wb L
President Roosevelt and Prime,
Minister Winston Churchill an-
nounced today that their elght-
. day war conferences had been
largely devoted to the war against
Japan and promised that powerful
"forward action” would be executed
soon by the fleets, armies and air
forces of the two nations.
In what pfobably will be regarded
as their “declaration of Quebec,"
tile two leaders announced the pos-
sibility of a tri-partite conference
with Soviet Russia, but in an ex-
planatory press conference accom-
panying their statement explained I
tactfully that Russia was not asked
to this largely Pacific ipeeting be-
cause she is not at war against '
Japan.
a.'- -J
h
Ha ■
I
Erf’. ........
power to cope with i
tualitles'the intensify.... ,----s-------- ----
against the Reich may Brthg. • I Arrested on spy charges we
The significance of the shuffle, Mrs. Theresa Behrens. 44. of D
reported in broadcasts making clear troit. German-Hungarian secrete
that Adolf Hitler himself engin- I of the International Center, Yow
eered it, was not fully apparent Women's Christian Association; r
Fred William Thomas, 44. of C
troit, a surgeon and physician, ai
Grace Buchahan-Dineen, 34, of D
troit, Canadian-born beauty w
was used as a counter-espiona
x agent by the FBI In breaking t
plaints filed before U. 8. Con
istoner J. Stanley Hurd in D
With QhtAlnlPT mintesw Infam
for Germany.
Gee Rite* Today
In Covington
Anyone1 La,t rttes w111 be held today at
‘ - — for Mrs Dora Lee Gee,
Aid to China
Refraining from any positive J
statement on details of the de- j I
dslons reached here. Mr. Roosevelt
and the prime minister told in |
their joint statement how the war
talks were devoted “largely" to "the
war against Japan and the bring-
ing of effective aid to China."
Then they announced their unan- J
iinous approval of the plans reached" |WH
t»y. their combined chiefs of staff
and agreement On "political issues 1
underlying WTArising out of the
mBltarr“0p6Hra#».* “—”11
--rT- • French IteoognlUen --
The statement also disclosed that1 I
the question of recognition of the .
French national committee for lib-
eration had been on the agenda
and that announcements from a'
good many governments on this
point, could be expected some time I
late this week.
British and American leaders will
hold another similar conference be- .
’ fore the end of this year, the an- [
nouncement said, "in addition to
any tripartite meeting which it may |
be possible to arrange with Soviet
Russia. I.
Then clearly saying that Russia |
lias no part in allied plans for the
Pacific, the statement continued: I.
Pull reports of the decisions so 1
Car as they affect the war against I
Germany and Italy will be furn-
ished, to the Soviet government.”
Accident Takes
Life of Baby
LONDON. Aug. 24 (UR)—Rome
radio said today that the Italian
government had asked the Vatican
and Switzerland to notify the Al-
lies of orders to strip Rome of
military works and make it an
i city.
An Italian stefont News Agency
dispatch broadcast by Rome said
the Italian and-German commands
were being moved from the capi-
tal along with ail operation^
forces except a garrison to main-
tain public order
Defense installations in Rome
we ordered put "oTit Of" US«. the'
dispatch said, and directions were
being given for anti-aricraft, bat-
teries to withhold their fire and
for fighter planes not to engage
any Allied craft over the city.
Stefanl said the Rome railroad
junction no longer would be used
to supply the military or for load-
ing, unloading or as a siding for
military trains.
i Former Resident
tiDies in Houston
were awaitirtg classification and!
physical examinations and <n Classi <
Liberators from
east, Mitchell
was
to|L. Montgomery. Dr.
nette Gross. 25c; Mrs Cartwright,
*1 (X) and Billy Jack Bigham. 50c.
Names of Joshua contributors to
the Fund have been
Joshua donations were (
Mac and Tommie Crowder
Frances Gardner 1-------„
list of the contributors:
A M Cleveland. Mr. and Mrs
A S. 1
Mrs Allen, M
O, O. Seals, . L_
Mrs Una Bowman. Mrs. Johgi F.
Liunb, Mr and Mrs. M W. Crow-
der, Mac Crowder, W. H. Gard;
ner, Mrs. Robena Patterned, Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Vroom, Lota'Faye
Chaney, Mrs Glen Claybrook, Mrs.
W T. McKee. Shirley Page, Mr.
and Mrs. R. L. Drake. Mr. and
Mrs.' J. Ar Casey, MB*. 4^ W. ;
> Airmen who participatetf in some
Kelly, *»f th* nine raids that all^ but
blasted Hamburg ' off the man
• Z* iz -
-•'■j
■ ■■
• J
■» jrI
--- -.7X3
> 1 xHH
38TH YEAR, NO, 229 < ' - CLEBURNE, TEXAS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1943
■I........ , -rrss=a=s-' i; " , . ..... .. — _______
a ARMADA DROPS 2,000 TONS OF BOMBS ON BERLIN
Deep into Rich i (• - i'- "8 soviet ( 10i War Made on
PROMISE FOWARD ACTIONS Donets Basin t'-Av I (’erman CaPito1
Whole Axis Position
In South Russia
Is Threatened
l Feminine to the tips of her droop-
ws aaaass £
-• •- to pierce her. ears and decorate
them with large red and green ear-
rfofk.
I
WASHINGTON. Aug. 24. (U.R)--
Local draft boards which will have
to draft 446.000 fathers before
the end of th* year were asked
today to measure each man’s con-
tribution to the war effort care-
fully and to choose first tSose
fathers who contribute least.
Maj. oen Lewis B. Hershey,
national director of Selective Serv-
ice. revealed the number of fa-
thers that must be taken to fill
letter to the tjBOO local draft
— ----- resulted from a
continuing graasjire (ttJgL.f,Robbins ^street PettrBon ,
IMSIJT 4(Wg|,WU mri
leaving a deficit pf
pointing out that this num-
ber could not * be obtained from
the occupationally deferred with-
out upsetting food and war pro-
duction, nor from the physically-
deferred unless standards were
lowered by the army and navy,
Hershey said;
"It therefore, appears that the
only large deferred pool remaining
from which men can be called
is the-group of fathers, numbering
6,869,000.”
There was growing concern in
the aircraft industry as to the ef-
fect of future draft calls on their
production rchedules Top War
production Board officials are
studying the situation to see whe-
ther the War Manpower Commw-
Davis, Mrs.
r pounded
panose base
■ up the
— MOSCOW. Aug 24. (U.R) — Red
armies smashed deep into the min-
[eral-rlch Donets Basin against
1 fierce resistance today, liberating
i territory held by the Germans since
i 1941 and threatening to collapse
I the whole axis position in south
I Russia ■ v
i The two-pronged offensive —
fourth by the Soviet armies this
summer—gained momentum along
a broad front as other Russian
1 forces surged through burning, re-
r*r'c'nprnrfd Kn4fEdv irf a <mve to
1 hammer the enemy back behind the
! Dnieper River, and farther.
) More than 30 towns and villages,
tnduding DonetSko-AmvroBlevka on
[ ‘ J the 8taIlno-TfegAlifog “l-----
[ .miles southwest of Voroshilovgrad.
fell to the Russians in the first
three days of their break-through
of the axis Mlus River line into
the Donets -ati.isin.
Advances of up to 22 miles since
, Saturday through defenses that
stopped both the 1941-42 and 1942-
.143 Soviet winter offensives were
I reported in a special communique
t last night One Russian formation
| alone killed 1,500 Germans and
wrecked 15 axis tanks. Seventeen
‘German planes were shbt down in
[ | aerial combats.
1 * The Mlus River advance, coupled
with a twin drive from the Soviet
; bridgehead on the west bank of the
' Donets below lay urn, to the north-
west, gravely menaced the Ger-
! tnun salient runhing east to Tagan-
rog on the Sea of Azov.
Swift Russian advances in this
sector probably would force a gen-
eral withdrawal from this sector,
possibly aa far west as the Dnieper
River, to escape an encirclement
similar to that which wiped out
the German Sixth Army at Stalin-
grad.. „ v
Such a retreat also would doom
German forces in the Crimea and
along a narrow stretch of the north-
west shore of the Caucasus
Lashing out ttxt. ----
bridgehead below Ixyum, the Rus-
sians yesterday captured positions
officially described as "of great im-
portance," then beat off eight sav-
1 age counter attacks .Often in hand-
to-hand fighting.
L. Vicrciariu, m* . «as%s *vaa o . ; ’ A l»C LAJIIUUU OV riling OUinaarCl
King. Mrs. C. E. Putman, Quoted a German broadcast that
1 In
the raid, but the broadcast. was
not reported bv anv other listen- ]
Ing post and the 8th U. 8. Air
Force denied any of 1(8 planes • "
wers out last'night.' r
"The assault was delivered in
*;lear weather just befoiw midnight
and preliminary reports indicate
fh<t th hcmbing was highly com —
penalty of death if
MRS F M. BUST D
Mrs F. M. Rust d
2:80 p m at her ho
Brown./ Funaral arret
Allen, Ray Bowman, Mr. bnd Mrs I
A. R. Clark, C R- Putman. Jr., *
Eulen Gowqr,- Mrs, W. A. 22.. . ..
R C Wicker blasted Hamburg off
; W T Anderson, 8. A. West, between July 24-Aug. 2 said last
Seth Davis, Mrs Frank Lo^e, W. nights raid appeared fully as "
esiern approacnes w|L. Montgomery, Dr. C. C. Brad- fective .
Field reporta said the font B E Oo88e“. Mrs. M. T. | “It probably will take g
Davis, Mrs. R. P. Clark, Mrs. j extra '••'’Ids to wash out Berlin.”
Stewart Clark, Angus McMillan, M. onp p'lot said, "but we certainly
mad- o good start in that di-
rection ."
Swatm Over Berlin
The bombers swarmed over Ber- J
lin in what was officially descrlb- I
ed as “very areat strength” at a
time when the German govern-
ment . was rushing the evacuation
of. non-essential civilians from the
capital In entidiDi|tion of a
“Hamburg" offensive.
Dispatches from neutral coun- S
tries said Berlin residents have
been frantically digging trench
shelters In the parks.
Air,experts have estimated that
Berlin. ia elty of 4,000,000 inhabi-
tants. could be destroyed as an
effective military center in 35
ma lor raids.
)• Last night's raid, believed among
the thr-e or four heaviest ever
made on Gormany. waa the. flr*t ..
major attack on Berlin since 900
tons of bombs were dropped on
the city last March 29. However,
small formations of' twin-engined I
Mosquito bombers have made I
many nuisance raids on the city J
of bombs.
LONDON. Aug 24. (UJh—A huge
British air armadj. opening what
may be a "Humburg" offensive,
dropped l,50(i to 2,000 tons of
bombs on Berlin .last night in the
heaviest rate nr the war un ttw
German capital
Great four-ton
I busters and hundreds of thousands
of incendiaries turned Adolf Hlt-
] ItrT' caplteT Into a raging Thfefn3T"
i visible for 250 miles, returning
crewmen said.
j Fifty-eight bombers were lost.
I the greatest number ever lost in a
• single British raid on the conti-
| nent.
The huge four-engined Stirlings,
i cap-
I r.ble of carrvinr up to eight tons
■ of bombs, loosed destruction on
^,7-1 “ ’ trc“urer' «»- four square miles of the city and
left smoke rising 15,000 feet into
the sky.
— .Less Than Hour
The whole assault took a' little
less than an hour, but (neverthe-
. rrcciveu. , lcss twlce as heavy as. any
collected by | of the 72 previous raids on Berlin
and , and perhaps four times as heavy
Following is a as any single German raid on
Mphait on Highway 67 from a can assist in this work and it Is
point about 10 miles west of Cle- vitally improtant that they
burne to the Brazos River bridge snond to the appeal. Ll,— a
got underway Monday morning, ac- Wishing to pick cotton is asked to * P- m for Mrs. Dora tee Gee,
cording to the 8tate Highway De- contaft the obunty agent', office “• a VevXa ?t h«
partment. , X Tj- «nd their names and addresses at dispa
■£ - - '.I- * ”” «« K oondue- .
be made after the war. About
10 days will be required to do the
work,.
Thb department la.. I
poet-war planning work
locating Highway 47 from a point
west of Glen Rose.
>v_'-«-4Ve!enszl«
Cotton Crop
(Must Be Saved,
~ Pickers Needed
Ground Troops
Tighten Seige
On Salamaua
Berlin Announces
Major Shakeup in
Security Branch
LONDON. Aug . 24 W.PJ-BerUn [
state security branch of the Nazi
regime today a few hours after a Director J. —-------
shattering air raid on the German Federal Bureau of Inveslgation to- -j
.capital. In which Interior Minister day announced the arrest of three
Wilhelm Frick was relieved of his persons, including two women, in
'post. .Detroit on charges of wartime es-
Heinrich Himmler, chief of the pionage—-the first case of its kind ,
Gestapo, was appointed minister of In the present hostHitlea.
interior, placing in his hl(nds more | Two Germans simultaneously
power to cope with whatever even- were seized as dangerous alien ene- k
Allied war mles on presidential warrants.
Successor to
Yamamoto Killed
In Allied Bombing
tZ ' —! . I—
CHUNGKING. Aug. 24 <UR) —
Th* C2_------- —---,
said today that AdmiralMlnelchi. life raft, plane, train and car trips.
Koga, successor to the late Admiral An Exception .
- “ “ ------- ■ ,_LIn addition to being widely trav- boards made public late yesterJ’
fleet, was 1 eled, Dinah counts celebrities among day i
*- -* A- - —■—L - <— 4----- s- — Ota.. J— <«VTV1-.— ■ m4* — Am 1 4ai««a* la wzsA
■welfle. i Vallee who 1
ary source, ha - npnarkist --- — __Vi
Central said Koga died aboard his Dinah Shore. And the skipper of
Hagship during an attack by allied her ship banned all other pets from
planes in the New Ireland-Now the boat, making an exception of
Britain Island area north Of New DSnah, the pet of all the crew.
yamesnoto, I
clflc in an air combat, Tokyo ra-
vealed lB,t May *
■ " n space of
time. And it was only
. the orders for the car-
on which she was travel-
__________ _ _ I **®’:4’ ' ■
Juries received at noon that day to that war zone.
- -..... ^a.'- ... . ... W/wdk aaawB OLmsAU
that she was carrying. Australia, and Asia
The bottle was broken, and ac-
cording to Word reaching here a
piece of the broken bottle pierced
her ___
Time for the fUMHI »W«i h{. U1 -- ■
was not known here, but will whUe UvU? . "
n b* hel<1 S°m‘‘ Tubbs Xed'ffiT a thor-
ararsuuuu. ‘oughbred Oocker Spaniel, from.
Mrs. Hopkins is the former Jim- 2222* .. I
Ji. li.7i. uv friends in San Pedro, Caiu., when
Wonklm wL of J^hn *he W“ *“ eVen smaUer PUPP>
HopG* T*.—v.*—*°n of Johnithan she is now. eight months
CnbUf?.?' w mur She h“ Rn envlftble »ylPh-
Oort*tt *!?P* n*„ 01,ff Uke figure and a glossy black coat
“ Mrs. Earl Hopkins and that would indicate that she has
Jimmy Burning all JjeiJt been receiving excellent fare along
y for Edinburg, after re- with our men of the Merchant Ma-
word of the tragedy. 1 rines.
Ivon Include the parents But sheAlso shares their hard-
sister, Peggy Hopkins, all ships, forShe recently spent three
days abMRl a life raft when the
ship on which she was traveling
was torpedoed in the South At-
lantic. This and her plane trip
from a South American port to
Miami only added to the long list
of conveyances in which she has
toured the world. This includes.
' A ricksha ride in South Africa, a |
loosed destruction on
the seized
medium Francisco River tightening
bombers of the Northwest African siege of the Salamaua airdrome
Force, and British Wellingtons on the New Guinea coast, it was
teamed in a synchronized assault announced today.
Bari. Baltiuaglla and Bagnoil.! The crossing was carried out
- - — -**- ,aircraft( st*"***" -----J"*
I strongly-held
aerial warships . rai
. Guinea coajt to* shell the Finsch
munlcations of Lower Italy, Mbnt- Hsrbor area for the first time
gomerv was revealed to have told, While definite lines in the 8al-
l__ Canadian troops of his Eighth amaua area were not clear and
mt “fron7"tb^““Donet8-Army that action could be ea- s^ mop. up opemUons Va^t
E.---------L.--------- Ejected at wy rime 1»4raggieu^*ontlnued behind Allied
Dawn 14 Fighters I lines, the crossing put Australian
After losing 114 fighter planes forces in strength approximately
in four d«|yp. the Axis gave l
attempts to'ifiterfere with the op-
eratlons by the Northwest African munique said the crossing, anpar-j
forces yesterday. The Liberators ently made without opposition,
striking at Bari at the base of the j at the "western approaches"
Italian heel, however, ran Into | the field. 1---- ----—
stiff resistance and downed 14 j Aussies met opposition on
enemy fighters. • south bank of the rlyer at
The attacks on Bagnoil, in the ] other point. There were
Naples suburbs, and BattipagUa. 40 reports of the American
miles to the southeast, added new 1 moving northward nearer
devastation to the network of i coast
csmunlcations * radiating from tlie
city. ,
By the light of a waning moon,
the glow of dawn and aerial flares. I
the Wellingtons laid string after
------ string of bombs across the Bag-
weather, the cotton is maturing \ noli yards, blowing up rolling
rapidly and pickers are needed, stock and rail installations,
badly to save ths crop which is
essential to the war industry.
Children of Cleburne are asked
to aid in harvesting the crop.
Opening of school has been de-
of layed one week so that students
Pitta. T R. Strube, L.P. Walters.
Mrs Jesse Locker, Mrs J. C.
Clark. R. T. Chaney, Mrs. B. E. ;
Doggett, Mrs. D N. Kincaid. Mrs.
O. R. Landers, Harold Clark, Robt
Stuart. George Minton, Jr., Mrs.
L. H. Hunter. Roger Bradford. Mrs.
Herbert Brawner, Deacon Wright,
Mrs. T. Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Brumley. Mrs. H. T. Brooks. Ches-
ter Carlock. Mrs Lora Williams.
Mrs. Alice Stem, Mrs George
Bowman.
Mrs. C. E. McPherson. Wynno-
gene Hughes, Alma Valentine. Mrs.
Annie Foster, Jackie and Jacque-
line Guthrie, Patsy Jo and Nelda
Gale Martin. Joe L. Frizzell. Mrs.
Chas. Putman, Darla Gardner. V
R. Brpoks, J.. Q. Porter, L. R.
Briley, Lee steed, Boyd Heine, J.
C. Bryant, Geo. W. Blair. W. W.
Galbreath, N A. Aldridge, O. C.
Riddle. J. A Rollins and wife,
Mrs. H R Terry. Graves and
Son, Mrs. Grace Calvert, Ben Field.
Mrs. Geo. Blair, Mrs. C G Lock-
ett, Mrs. J. D. Myers, Mrs T. H
Simpson, Mrs E. B Henderson.
I. E Bransom, Mrs. O M. Hen-
•""“n- M«tUe
Three Arrested
(On Spy Charges >■
announced a major shakeup in the i
any
London.
(The London Evening Standard
i American planes participated
' the raid, but -the bros Am
Yamanmto as commander
bomb-1 her acquaintance*; It Was Rudy
fie | Vallee who gave her a name when
tnac she sang like he said, "but,
will call those mpn least, valuable
to the war effort,"
Hershey said that 966X?
were requisitioned' from C.
Service for Julv. AiMniM ar
tember. and that 907,000
would'be required for the
three months bf 1943
Against the Med for 1,873.000
men during Qi* *lx-month parted
most-traveled dogs, having visited
all continents in the. world except
Europe within the short space
Y — — --- — — time. And it was o
bh-. and Mrs. Morris Hopkins jf a change in i
_222-.‘_ formerly of Cleburne, go
died Sunday at midnight from in- Ing
when she fell with the milk bottle North and 800111 America. Africa,
Australia, and Asia.
1 Dinah's master is Morrison Tubbs,
of Rio Vista, a member of the U.
8. Merchant Marine and a fonder
resident of San Antonio who was
employed Uy. Interstate Theate®
Fathers Needed to Fill Army and Navy Quotas
Between October 1 and December 31, Hershey Reveals
he is scheduled to make his first
radio address in two months to-
morrow night during which he is!
expected to discuss all manpower!
problems in detail.
Hershey pointed out that 1.566,'
000 registrant^ -aa of July 1
awaitlrig classification and
X-A. but after physical refections ’ Mrs J. A. Btewart, who form-
only 788.000 would be available for1 erly resided in Cleburne, died at
induction An additional 644,000! an early hour this morning at her
from new 18-year-cld and reclassi- home in Houston. She was the
flections, he said, made th* total > former Mabel "King of this city,
available for the slx-month period I Funeral services are pending word
1,427.000 men. exclusive of pre- ,rOm h*l\ *°n' 5**° stationed at
Pearl Harbor fathers. . • c„alr' , e
Under the pattern set by Her-! H.Klngofthtaety was
»hey, fathers z in the decimated i dp^hd ’hnT Mrs F J^Du-
non-deferrable activities will be , "fS * nJ. MoCNait both
called before those lathers who bro ““ M" MoClalh' •oth
in Job* that are not classified, or
who are in ps**nttal work.
■ It previously had been learned
that the October call could be
filled with single men. childless >
married men and fathers in non-
deferrable activities, but there was
no estimate available as to how!
many would be available for the m Including J 1
November and December Mila. I King of Ctebume.
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 229, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 24, 1943, newspaper, August 24, 1943; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310963/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.