Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 85, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 22, 1948 Page: 3 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I—
A
and
‘exas
!
WILLYS JEEP DEALER
- AUTHOR]
603 W: Henderson
Cleburne, Texas
(UU want t lose M mot* pouhda M l now
===
FOR EVERY NEED, FOR EVERY PURSE
Hats Cleaned and Blocked
A
ITS KENMORE HOME APPLIANCES
F
Oft Safe At
vYa
A
/0
119.95
I •
Easy Terms
7
/
|
Jr
I
I
egV
G
A
you can shop with ease.
3 *
■
5.50
t
11.95
Three Heats
Again we say.
UL Approved ,
I
THANK YOU
• •
<1
n
J
%
C
ore
3diytadlrmegmunewwB‘engomempyym-SEAR
■
Amo--
E
28
0. 0e
{M
t
VA50]
AT PYEATTSJEWELRY
EAR
ROEBUCK AND C
EX AS
5
Diaper Changing and Playing Host
To the Old Man’s Boss Not Routine
Ginger Rogen
Gets Top Pay
Immediate Delivery
Washers and Ironers
denomi
i Metho
Sefe-Type Wringer
Easy on buttona. Safety bar
( RATED
anizations.
ng. Cleans
bert Gagen, an ex-army counter
Intelligence agent, reports he and
another soldier delivered the atom
bombs that were dropped on Ja-
pan to the West Coast in "an or-
Toy Gun Weilder
To Be Examined
Our Watch Repair Work
/s Lit C THON K AL I ¥
r E 5T£D ONA
i i%
• 5
Ordinary Box Car
Hauled Atom Bombs
"NEW YORK, Feb. 21. w.m — Nor-
alt-MITAL
iismctiw
u
■
There’s toasty comfort ahec . .
warmth thaf eases aches and pains,
Ad|vs4«Mo host switch for 3 saga-
cate heat. Washable blanket fabric.
(ankhovd Cleanev
« M SHIELDS OWNER
zRING
RAINB
rolls instantly. Adjustakle
prenure lever.
395
Sp
106 E. HENDERSON
Phone 1664
the Fox West Coast Agency Corp.,
and the National Theaters Amuse-
ment Co., $568,143.
ALUE
I $29.95
«CA Vietor.
Bea Thront"
h-i« "Magie
Model 65X1
, ivory ver-
ler. Hear Ml
1
1
—fh
m
.a
Imagine ironing by simple fingertip cnwol Irs as easy
at that... and much quicker... with a Kenmore ironer.
Two ironing speeds ... two thermostats for ironing tem-
perature control. 1400 waft heating element Convenient
collapsible shelf. See it at Sean today!
Chinese ked
.. Argentine Orang
d
92.
MMO ■*
Kenmore Heat Pad
And: many zothes, h
colors - all quick d
long wearing
9
er.
KR ■
Fest Action Pump
Empliet the large 25-gallon
(18% gals, to loodlns)
wsher tub, in 2 minutes.
Speedi up washdav.
• Thought for Food
A man told me that he belonged
to a certain church. I have been
reading the Bible twenty-two years
and if he had not t81d me L would
not have known 4hal such a church
exists.
The Way of Holiness
Wednesday and Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
436 Arbor Vitae Street m
(
9
--------- prei ' T‘ .e ", m2
Sunday, February 22, 1948—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REV IL'W—3
By Trained Hat Blocker.
Expert Service—done in our own shop at prices
you will like. New sweat bands and ribbons
also available at reasonable prices. ,
Kenmore Roaster *
Insulated 29.95
MAm olorious roastsl Thermostat,
automatically molnfains desred
temperature, hand control for
browning. With pan* and rock- x
Kermore’s 4-Stan Here** beauty, top quality,
peak washing efficiencs, plus new advanced
features at • prise that challenges comperison.
Washes all kinds of clothe* safely with gentie
Watch5/as
1 .
moa, hip*. enives and ankles, juat return
th* empty bottle for your money baek.
Hora 1 whet Mr*. C. M. Earsh, 305 N.
11th St., Mellem, Texas, MV* about Bam-
centrate: "I wa to tell you that I have
loet M pounds *iaM takine Barcentrate. I
LMMd"ET =3
Kenmore Mixer
3 Speeds! 23.95
Peaceful wart MW down or over-
boot in thickest batter. Bowls revolve
on turntable. Come* with’bowla,
benters, and juicer hood.
664 ■
New Kenmore Iron
,,x‘,e
Watch for our ad announcing a large sale event within the next few days.
idamay on ths clothss. Let us show you why
you’re ahead with ths beet for Isos ... In a
new Kenmore.
Six-Vane Agitator
for sefe, woter washing ac-
tion . . get* the dirt out.
keep* lbs Ilfs le. Safe even
for fine garment*.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21. (U.P) —
The question before your Con-
gress was: is a woman's place
Behind a typewriter or in among
the pots and kettle* in the kit-
chen? Diaper changing and play-
ing host to the old man’* bos*
didn’t enter Into it,
This was army and navy stuff
and had to do with whether the
Wacs and Waves and women
Jonquil Tellow
Pastel teem
m Blue--ipasterdrehi
Millions of Satisfied Owners Can't Be Wrong!
NEW KENMORE WASHER
# "1
for "the American way of living."
a T 0. ‘
THANK YOU
95
140
vplet let
hineTeole
10 highest salaried Americans dur-
ing the calendar -year 1945—and-
the fiscal year ended in 1946.
The “Big 10" included: . 1
Charles P. Skouras, president of
GET A ‘JEEP' ON THE JOB
Got some tough work to do? Then get a "Jeep" and
get it done. The rugged Universal "Jeep” does more
farm jobs and does them better than any other ma-
chine. It Works the year 'round as a light tractor,
pick-up, tow truck, and mobile power unit. Let us
demonstrate on your farm.
DILLION MOTOR COMPANY
Kenmore Easy Ironer
Saves Time and Work -
Full 26-inch Roll, 154.95
ftcmet j. HcMm
-
; onrn
INTO YOU
" nous
g ' 2
Charles H. Strub, executive vice
president, Loa Angeles Turf Club,
$541,412 in salary and bonus.
Louis B. Mayer, head of the Me-
tro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, $502,-
571.
Thomas J. Watson, president of
International Business Machines
Corp., $425,548.
F. E. Fowler, president of South-
ern Comfort Co., St. Louis, $375,-
616.
Leo McCarey, Paramount direc-
tor. $355,426.
Charles E. Wilson, General Mo-
tor* president, $303,990.
Miss Rogers, $292,159.
—Walter Wangar, Universal Pic-
tures, $282,899 in salary and bonus.
G. R. Fink, president of Great
Lakes Steel Corp., $275,000.
marines shall become permanent
adornments of the armed ser-
vicos. , -
The house armed services sub-
committee was digging into the
matter yesterday, with nervous
misgivings. Red-carpeted room
313-A of the Old House Office
building was jammed almost to
the chandeliers and there was
the smell of cologne and the
yakity-yak of small talk. There
was about as much hair-braid as
gold-braid among the spectators.
Meaning the Wacs and Waves
and feminine marines, of course
with figurative sabers and an-
chors to grind.
Rep. Le Roy Johnson of Cali-
fornia -hemmed and said he
didn't see any sense in sending
a man to the kitchen, so to
■peak, to release a Wac for ac-
tive duty. Women, he allowed,
are supposed to know how to
whip up an omelet and if we
are going to have them in the
army and navy why not put them
in there near the cook stove
where they’ll do the most good?
Gen. Omar N. Bradley was the
witness at the time and he wig-
gled a little in his redkl«ather
chair. He said women, could do
other things too — some of them
better than standing overathot
oven. Like being clerks and sec-
retaries
“Do you mean,” asked the gen-
tleman from California, “that .
men are better cooks than wom-
en?..... ’
dlnary looking box car” in the I
summer of 1945. I
to' an article in Varsity maga- I
zine, Gagen said only two soldiers I
were used as guards for the bomba I
"because a horde of armed soldiers I
would have caused attention and I
might have attracted saboteurs."
Cagen said another of his CIC
assignments was to break into the
Oak Ridge atom plant tp test se-
curity precautions. He said during
one week in 1943 he slipped past
the guards every day with a badge
he bought at a pawn shop, stole
documents, took pictures, prepar-
ed maps, and compiled notes.
"I wrote a report on Oak Ridge
a half-inch thick," he said.
—L i|
FORT WORTH, Texas, Feb. H
J.R) — A 27-year-old army veter-
n who held seven policemen at
ay with a toy pistol today was
cheduled to undergo an exami-
ation at a veterans hospital.
The man outdistanced motorcy-
les and a squad car yesterday at-
er he was spotted driving an au-
omobile which had been purchas-
d with a $950 bogus check. He
ed the officers on a 36-block chase
o his home, where he locked him-
elf in the bathroom.
Seven policemen were on hand
o arrest him when he was per-
uaded to leave the bathroom. He
ame out waving a pistol.
The officers fell back. Then a re-
stive who was in the house spill-
d the beans. It was a toy gun.
I Tea tasters in a London import- '
I ng house work all day smelling.
! sting and feeling samples of
| round tea, according to the World ,
I took Encyclopedia. At 4 o’clock,
hey pause briefly—for their after- '
l ao0n tea. 5
• mesct-m-zsesz-sgE
We ahbaecdate Airuos ~ad ( kort fou‘ ( lh-
Dial shows at a glance when heat
it right for the fabric you are
v rbfn lightweight aluminum sole-
-fatehoots super-fastl
West
1 C
ROB WATSON
PAINT 6 PAPER CO.
15 E. Henderson — Ph. 88
ud.ln o..
g. "st -
ide Square -
IF BURNE
mJeep K THE ANSWER
WHEN THERE’S WORK TO BE DONE
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21. (U.P—
Ginger Rogers was the only Holly-
wood star to crash the “Big 10"
on the treasury's new 1945-46 list
of top salary earners.
The blonde dancer-actress, who
hails from President Truman’s
hometown of Independence, Mo.,
drew a total salary of $292,159 to
place eighth among the first 10.
toe took the “leading lady" role
away from shapely Betty Grable
whose $208,000 topped Hollywood
celebrities on a similar compile
tion issued last August.
Deanna Durban was runner-
up among the movieland fig-
ures with $262,875.00. Den-
nis Morgan’s $261,000 made him
the top male star on the list. But
neither of these was among the
The general said he didn't
mean anything of the kind and
furthermore he didn’t want to
get hlmaelf mixed up in any
such a controversy. The Wacs
and Waves and skirted marines,
who had leaned forward wear-
ing wrinkles of alarm when
Johnson popped the K. P. ques-
tion, now relaxed. --
Rep. Carl Vison lifted- his
Georgia drawl at this point to
suggest that woman, were used
to cooking for three or four peo-
ple instead of three of four thou-
sand, and maybe that had some-
thing to do with it. Gen Bradley,
fingering his spectacles and
looking relieved, said that doubt-
less was true. And anyhow in
a kitchen a quarter of a mile
long, almost, a lot of the pots
were too heavy for a woman to
lin. What was the sense, he
asked, of having her in there if
she had to call for male help
every time she wanted to dump
the parsnips out of a vat?
The theme of the testimony—
all by the military and navy —
was that the gals in uniform are
loved by one and all, from the
general and admiral down, be-
cause of their efficiency on the
job.
Gen. Ike Elsenhower, who
would rather be president of a
college than the President, went
"along on that. He said that for
one thing women were easier
o handle. Married members of
•he committee frwned. Several
pened their yaps to offer a dis-
venting opinion, but thought bet-
ter of it.
So help him, said General Ike
he never heard of a single wo-
man in uniform who complained
r asked for a favor during the
var. All most of them wanted
vas to get up at the front where
hey could hear the roar of the
sannon.
' The general said to excuse him
—but that was more than he
could say for a lot of his men.
50 POUNDS LOST
WITH BARCENTRATE
M.W people have reborted mmazing semlta magle from neek, chin, arma. buit. abao-
with this homa roeip*. It'* e**y—no trouble t —
at all and soot* Utti*. Jost go to your, dgug-
■Ite and aak fof four ounos of Tlqula Bar
matrat*. Poor till* Into a pint bottle and
add enouah rapefruit Mm to All bottle.
Then toko sat two tablenpoonatel twice
a day, not’* all there is to it.
iuuh • # botondocmik, “ha” and wig” 107,. xdadton from 111 pound*."
haTTgfn'alender, mor* 0*0201 rarvmi To low wighe the rapetrul sule ep
If feducible pounds and Inees of exoens fat Ht Bapcentrate from your favorite vK
*WS 30 seem to aispdear atioa Ute kite today.
-
dh.v
tcun
1
-----t5‘!
f R
' I
geagq3
A r n qowpggrg
y--sag
/ - -..--.-me ■ ,
We want to thank you for your patience, consideration and business you have
I given us the last four weeks. In order to Keep up with Cleburne and the times, we j
I regime it was time for us to redecorate. You have been greatly inconvenienced. .1
| All this work is now completed and when you enter our store Monday morning J
fii ' •r • • ... .
I everything will be spick and span and o ur stock will be whipped into shape so
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 85, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 22, 1948, newspaper, February 22, 1948; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432715/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.