Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 297, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1946 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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See the amazing
SHOPPENNEY’SEVERYDAY ,
FOR GOOD QUALITY MERCHANDISE!
new
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A MAN’S FAVORITES--
AUTOMAGIC
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WASHER
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tion trial.
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4-BUCKLE
Coats -
GALOSHES
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HOG FATENA
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Top Quality Comfortl
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SHORT BOOTS
4.98
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SMITH’S FEED STORE
• 7
heels
4ede
trends, too
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A POINT TO
REMEMBER
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Royal Neighbors
Meet on Friday
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NTSTC Home-Coming
Set for November 23
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Raise plenty of good
pork, get lots of red
gravy by raising your
own hog on Hog Fat-
ent. It grows 'em fast
and easy. Feed it
straight or along with
table left-overs.----
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EiNA Dog Chow
BUiDS CONDITION
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62 ’
SWEATER
WEATHER!
iy-
/4"
""" PURINA
CALF STARTENA
Build energy
and stamina
from the in-
side out by
giving your
dog America's
favorite food
for hunting
7 dogs—Purina
-for the Toon Ago
Crowd
q sunda} Oct. 27, 1946—CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
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days. Choose .from coat sweaters—with novelty
fronta ... all wool slipovers with V or crew necks.
4.98
Smooth black patent
-another winner. A
flattering wedgie 9
Resists Water and Coldi
MEN'S 4-BUCKLE
ARCTICS
rymia
TT#
Sskeki.
Smooth, aleck»black
patent — for dating
and dancing. Com-
fortable sling back.
4.49
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8
wear on cool, breezy
It’s the wonder washer of all time . . . streamlined,
compact and with TWO separate inner tubs (you can
exchange them in 1% minutes!) so it can be ... in turn
... a clothes washer and a dishwasher. Both operate
at the flick of a dial... both have washing features
never possible before. See our Thor demonstration •..
toaLay!
V
SOFT WOOI SKIRTS with sparkling
belts and gentle front pleat*. 24 to 30.
MEN'S. COAT AND SLIPOVER
SWEATERS... They’re comfortable, good
looking—just the thing for1
CHECKERBOARD STORE
= IS
FEED LIT HEADOUARTERS
L
infested steer is slaughtered. Grubs
also ruin hides which are valuable
t.
4 <8
Wenwhaeshipments
•f Purime Oattle Check-
• coming in. Meke
przongementa now to
teke bare M veur ran
end Wintmr nede
BOYS' COAT AND SLIPOVER
SWEATERS... What you've been looking
for! great for school and leisure Wear! Coat sweat-
ers with plaid, herringbone or tweed pattey
front, aU-woo| slipovers in gay knits 8-16. $ 98
1 V322
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6
7370//5e9
' a. eguwar eo.. tn».
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V.
Part Wool Shacks
Soft weave slacks for
smart combinations! Well-
cut, with pleats, zipper.
Plaids, checks, and stripes
5.90 and 7.30
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e in and try it free/wi
supply I oY
of hearing
14)
I positions have been opened, accord-
ing to Fred R. Carpenter, VA branch
• personnel director.
| Starting salaries for training of-
। ficer and training facilities officer
will range from $3,397 to $7,102 a
year. Applications for the posts,
which will be with the vocational
rehabilitation and education service
at VA offices in Texas. Louisiana
and Mississippi, must be on file not
later than Nov. 14 with the executive
. secretary of the board of U. S. Civil
। Service Examiners, VA branch of-
fice, No. 10. Dallas.
Application forms may be secured,
at any first or second class post
office, at region civil service offices
1 in Dallas and the VA Dallas branch
I civil service examiners board
( I
Treat Cattle for
' Grubs in Fall Says
I County Agent
| Although heel flies, the patents
■ • of the cattle grub. do most of their
"damage in the spring, the first
Etreatment against grubs should be
[ M given tn the early fall, says C. A
E Munsch county agent.
! ; Loss of weight is the greatest
B damage that heel flies do to beef
2 cattle. They lose weight by run-
E nine from the pests or by refusing
• to feed and standing in water to
B protect themselves from the lies.
The grubs spend seven to eight
8 months tunneling around in an an-
, f imal's body. From 10 to 15 per
1' cent more feed is required to fatten
E a grubby steer than a healthy an-
I tonal. and two pounds of choice
Emeet are lost each time a grub-
* “Ee
9 UNCHW;
PURINA
TKCATTLE CHECKERS
6 NoKvailable!
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For those who want the
finest in quality and the
most in comfort! Here’s
the best boot we've seen—
a heavy duty boot, fa* ’
mous for its dependable
wear in the factory as well
as on the farm! The soft
cushion insole gives ex-
tra comfort for day-long
wear — more insulation
against shock. Heavy duty
black rubber soles and
-- IEiNENNISIN"A
■ w
E Ia
Mrs. Edna Cliatt, above, zz-year •
old Augusta, Ga., health depart-
ment clerk, recently inherited
$265,000 from her grandmother. »
She is keeping her job, leas con-
cerned about the sudden wealth
than about finding an apartment
lor herself and her ex-Marine
hehenA
ARCHBISHOP ALOYSIUS STEPINAC,
highest Catholic churchman in
Yugoslavia, was sentenced to 16
years at hard labor upon convic-
tion on chargee of "erimes against
the state" before Marshal Tito’a
government tribunal at Zagreh,
Yugoslavia. Nine other Catholic
ctergymen rtrrw 3 to 14-yearprts- ■ —-
on terms in the treason-collabora-
i g
N
7
Rise and shine in one of’
these dapper sport coats!
Single breasted, in nov-
elty weaves. -
16.15 ~
Brown Sport Shoes
Brown straight toe ox-
fords styled for the com-
ing winter season! With ।
the popular fancy pattern-
ed toe, in a rich-looking
russet antique tan.
5.85
PIG"
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"822420.
GQet...
Mrs. Beulah Rappe of Ballinger
has been here visiting in the home |
of Mrs. B. H. Turner, and with I
other friends and relatives.
DENTON, Tex., Oct, 26. WUP-
North Texas State College is point-
ing toward homecoming day when
more than 3,500 "exes" are expected
in the college’s largest homecoming
in its history.
The celebration, scheduled for
Civil Service Exams
- Opened for Veterans
Training Positions •
DALLAS. Tex, Oct. 26. (u.P—
A’j Civil service examinations for two
J Veterans Administration training
One bag of Calf
Startena can eave.
40 gallons of milk. N
Grows big, thrifty
calves. Saves time
and labor
8
•2
tri,!,."
RAISE.A GOOD CALF AND
$6/
Mrs. -J. W. Chandler and her |
house guests. Mrs. Arthur -Caudle i
and Mrs. Floyd F. Vestal, spent Fri- ;
day in Dallas.
A3___"In the
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for shoe leather and other purposes.
Most farmers and ranchmen pre-'
duce their own heel files, because
the flies do not fly over a half
mile, the county agent says. There-
I fore, a thorough treatment should
rid a farm or ranch of the para-
sites.
In the early fall, when the cattle ,
grubs are mature and ready to
fall to the ground, the first treat-
ment should be given. Rotenone is
the most effective insecticide against
the cattle grub, and it can be ap-
plied either as a dust for small
herd, or as a spray for large herds.
An effective treatment, advises the
county agent, consists of spraying
the backs of the cattle with a mix-
ture of seven and a half pounds of
' five per cent rotenone for each
; 100 gallons of water.
For snow and slush!
Sturdy uppers, fleece lin-
ed! 4 strong buckles. Plen-
ty of shoe room! Light
weight.
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29
—
——
Nov. 23, will include the NTSC-.
East Texas State College football
game, and a barbecue and stage
show for former students. Two 15-
piece orchestras, furnished by or-
chestra director Floyd Graham, will
play at the mens and women's
gymnasiums to accommodate an
expected overflow.
Special events have been planned
' by traternities, sororities and cam-
i pus organisations.
a v e non-skid
Heavy cloth arctic—when
you need overshoes to re-
sis slush and keep the
feet warm. Tops made of
50% wool for warmth,
50% cotton for wear. Heel
and outsole of heavy long-
wearing rubber with deep
treads to prevent slipping.
4 strong buckles.
the newest, smallest, lightest one-
piece hearing. aid at the Liberty
Hotel, Cleburne, Monday, October
28th; and at the Hall Hotel in
Stephenville, Tuesday, October
29th. Demonstrations made be-
tween 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Latest developments in electron-
ic research and engineering make
possible this new complete-In-one-
piece hearing aid. There is a sepa-
rate battery pack to wear or car-
ry, This aid is adjusted to your
individual heating loss . . . turhing
blurred sound Into clear, under-
standable speech without noise or
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obligation 1
| teries for all
SpotCothes
4a 34
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ss Ads Get Results
■
Come in! Come in!
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• all-wool sweaters and
season-new skirts
SLIPOVER CARDIGANS in fitted 3 go
or boxy types. White, pastels, darks. 9”-
. T
5.00
-30A4A
A Mr. W L. Mac-
key. laboratory
HF consiltanttef the
^^T exas Hearing
•Aid Service, will
■E" demonstrate free
YOU'RE TELLING
ME!
By WILLIAM RUT
----Central Press Wrier----
NICE THING about that life-
and-death struggle in the World
Series between Boston and St.
Louis is that it momentarily
took our minds off the puerile
business that was going on at
the Paris peace conference.
! ! !
Now that a portable dog
home has been invented it it
possible for hubby to arrive
home at 3 a. m. from “lodge
meeting"' already comfortably
enetted within it.
Iff,
Zadok Dumkopf had a wonder-
Rd dream last night. He dreamt
he was reading the autobiogra-
ku nG -ka mauas enen
Pny wi M 9eneru WIW neVeI unto
mentioned the magnificent stuff
he did between Dec. 7, 1M1,
and Aug. 14, 1945.
Ill
An editorialist complains of
finding restaurant lemon me-
ringue pie "dry, tasteless and
quick to fall into crambe. ”
Sounds as though he got hold of
an old refugee from an ancient
Mack Sennett movie comedy!
! 1 I
There it nothing that dis-
courages the October bride at
much at the newspaper items
relating that the County Fair
cahe prize was won by a H-
year-old: gender: male.
. ! ! !
Now that the professional out-
MAne Aunmie emmenm la nuav ha
HI vervu» -H-VI •• VV"", "V"w
m oney players, s ugg ests the m a n
at the next desk, are probably
totalling up their net profits.
I ! t
“Sweet Adeline,” we have just
learned, is now more than 60
years old. But the old gal still
holds plenty of charms—if one
believes the would-be house
party tenor after the sixth high-
ball.
ESKIMOS, we read, are hard
to fit with spectacles because
their noses are so flat Now if
they could only learn a British
accent, monocles might solve
the probiena.
! 1 1
An interior decorator says
too many homes are full of un-
necessary furnishings. Such as,
for instance, a steak hnifel
! 1 1
We're convinced now that the
cow really did jump vp to the
moon. But when is the dum
thing coming down again so we
can get a crack at it?
Ill
A lake in Kenya Colony.
Africa. Is noted for tU very
soapy waters. Zadok Dumkopf
suggestu the Africans might es-
tablish a thriving business do-
ing the rest of the world’s
laundry.
NEW ONE-PIECE HEAR-
ING AID TO BE SHOWN
m
-Mkm-gom-um-e-ma,
Royal Neighbors of America met
in regular session Friday afternoon
in the home of Mrs. A. B. Ganong.
At the business meeting plans
were made for the annual Thanks-
giving dinner on November 22, in the
home of Mrs. Ganong.
At the close of the meeting, re-
freshmepis were served to Mmes.’
S. M ABallew, F. A. Fry. R. A
Arnold. W. E. Randolph, Weldon
Hanson, Pearl Vaughn. Mattie
Pugh, 3. A. Rothermel, and the
hostess.
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 297, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 27, 1946, newspaper, October 27, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423228/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.