The Llano News. (Llano, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 11, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 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:
WA^AHDi
he efTert ,
^y-Navy !
Faction
%***e»en
irom have
r efforts
,ons «
t*sk ’ry
nr tur
°f *ar. r
fe*s i,
V Sg**.
e/’i'im the
f f:Jtlorml pa(t uf
Ctjf N»1» ijork (TimfJ
Omt, r 23. 114 }
«£>««<(«
G7*»Z% 10 «£g lw**£v'™'*- -
17-.S'/«
❖ //c^ *** saT>enitio*glhB /0r <•/
A/ Food A£*ive the 1 of honor„de‘ /
'hyl GcathosdZlnistrat‘o,r8 *r(J„of the to*y d°i|
he/ a^'ard u •;, .* ^ ^ / loo m
hit
v%rp^cha*°Tration C^cts’ 47/ -jP
/ V^tl°n and?L p :°erams Vhe '’arh* f 7#
..... , „ booklet
* w, hive Pr^,t jj0t the M
K-'erOot,h'C,7MfDoo'e/‘.
t„nd'heOu7lto«h« P°we' r
.. ii.ir interest .,Dh«n* <r
GENERAL CABLE CORPORATION
fl,,u'be =-n. -n rrply *« * yrr„ Ccn
cr-^,7>H'
RUSSELL HAYDEN
PAT 0 BRIEN
—In —
‘BOMBARDIER’
Also Short Features
TUESDAY . WEDNESDAY
Nov. 16-17
WILLIAM TRACY
JOE SAWYER
— In—
“YANKS AHOY”
with
Marjorie Woodsworth
Also Special Color Feature—
* ARMY SHOW”
and a Bugs Bunny Cartoon
‘‘Tortoise Wins By A Hare”
VALLEY SPRING
By Mrs. B. L. Greenhaw
•Mr. and Mrs I'mncls Talley and
daughter, Beth, of Cherokee, were
visaing with relatives in Valley
Spring Sunday.
Mrs. Alton Barclay and little son,
Jerry, who have been with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tow, in
Tow Valley, the past three weeks re-
turned to her home near here Sun-
day. J
Mr and Mrs. Walter Parks, Sr., |
and Mrs. Sam May s, of Fatrlaud :
spent the weekend in th ■ home of
their son and his family, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Parks. Jr. They also
visited in the home of Mrs. Parks
parents, Mr. and My Jack Hall-
mark.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Summerville, of
Austin, visited in the homes of her
sisters and their families, Mr. and
Mrs. A J. Bauman and Mr. and Mrs.
Louie Bauman, thP past week.
Nolan Talley and J. A. Mayes, of
Llano were visitors in Valley Spring
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Cecil Simpson, of Waco, and
Mrs Maurice Barclay and daughters
in
“SADDLES AND
SAGEBRUSH”
BOB WILLS
and His TEXAS PLAYBOYS
Also the THREE STOOGES
“THREE LITTLE TW1RPS”
“THE BAT MAN” Serial
SUNDAY arid MONDAY
W. L. Blizzard, noted judge and
cattle expert, Dean of Agriculture |
at the Oklahoma A. & M. College, j
Stillwater, has been selected as ,
Judge of the International Short- j
horn Congress Show and Sale, to be
held in Chicago in conjunction with
the Chicago Market Fat Stock !
Show, November 29th to Decem-
ber 1st.
He is shown with Ashborne i
Orange, the Shorthorn steer that j
was exhibited by Oklahoma A. & M. j
to the Grand Championship over j
all breeds at a recent International, j
'V /. l
THE LLANO NEWS, LLANO, TEXAS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1943.
AAA
(Continued from Page One.)
part of their Income on a farm or
ranch and who earned a payment un-
der the AAA program during the
1943 program year are eligible to
vote In the community In which" he
resides. Producers wlio are qualified
to vote are urged to attend their res-
pective meeting and help elect next
year's AAA committeemen on next
Thursday, November 18, the secre-
tary stated ‘ L*.
—«— Hr member Penrl Iflnrimr —
Mary Nell Johnson spent the past
weekend in Llano visiting with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Joha«On
and other relatives and friends. *
— •— Iff me ruler I'enrl llurlmr, •—:—>* *
Mrs. George Porter and little
daughter, Betty, of Hollywood, Cali-
fornia, are in Llano for an egteded
visit with Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Porter.
DR. J. H. HUFF
Optometrist
AT HOTEL LLANO
Each Thursday 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Thursday & Friday Nights
Matinee Thursday Starting at
2 P. M. continuous until clos-
ing
ROBERT TAYLOR
in
‘‘BATAAN’’
Plus NEWS OF THE DAY
SATURDAY
Increased Demand Placed On \
Service Industries by War
Mrs. Ann to Aria ms.
Harold, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
W'f lister
Mr and Mrs. Bill Scott, Jr., and
son of Llano visited in the home of
Underwood, of Pontotoc, Mr. and Mrs. Hay Adams Sund. /.
THI ELECTRIC UTILITIES
<939 HQDQBQDQQQI
1942 □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□[
Kmeh eymbol represents 5 billion kilowatt hour* output for
industrial um.
THE RAILROADS
1939
i-, tA
1942
Each tymbol represent* 100 trillion ton miles of freight.
THE TELEPHONE INDUSTRY
1939 g
1942
Each eymbol represent* 10 million long-dietance telephone
ealle.
• visited friends in Valley Spring Sat-
| unlay eft moon.
| M>’s M'lrl'ir, Rescom visited In the
home of her sister and her husband,
Mrs and Mr. Wallace. Hazelwood, U>
Llano Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Riley Ray, of iLlano,
visited Mrs. Ray's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. is’orence Osbourne, Sunday and
attended Sunday school at the
Church of Christ Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Honson and
children, Freddy and Sherry, recent-
ly of California, and Mrs. Stanley
Reid and daughter, Glen, of Stanton
are spending this week in the home
of their parents, Mr, and Mrs. S. N. [
Redford. Mr. and Mrs. Hopson, ex-
pect to locate somewhere in Texas, j
Mrs. Wilson Radford, of California !
spept the weekend In the Redford
home. She left Sunday for Denver,
Mrs. Dan J, Harrison, of Houston,
Is visiting In Llano with her mother,
Mrs. H. E. lie,Ionian, and her sfster,
Mrs. W. B. Lewis.
• »f • *t.‘ cf • *•' 11 • •*
Mrs. Clifford Martin underwent a
major operation in the Llano hospi-
tal and is now doing nicely.
FOR RENT: Furnished apartment q
with private hath. . , t,.. ,
lt-p
MilS. GERTRUDE HARDIN
Colorado, to be with her husband
who is stationed at Fart Logan.
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
How Avar's impact has added to
the responsibilities of America’s
utility, railroad and telephone in-
dustries is shown graphically in
the above chart.
The magnitude of the added
volume of work placed upon the
men and women of these great
service industries is difficult for
the layman to grasp. The chart is
worthy of study.
In every instance these indus-
tries have met war’s challenge
while maintaining practically nor-
mal standards of service to the
civilian population. The workers
who have quietly carried on these
Pr*p»rcd by fitch investors service
enormous tasks are not eligible to
receive official government awards
for their truly great wartime ac-
complishments.
In an effort to give credit where
credit is so obviously due, General
Cable Corporation — the nation’s
leading independent supplier of
electrical wires and cables, — has
undertaken to publicize their rec-
ords of accomplishment. An edi-
torial from the New York Times
calling attention to the patriotic
contribution of these war workers,
has been reproduced in a General
Cable advertising release from
Coast to Coast.
JUDGE OF
INTERNATIONAL
SHORTHORN CONGRESS
Wanda Carrol, o£ Llano, visit.d in
the home of their grandparents. Mr.
and Mrs. Wm. Barclay, the past week
Mrs. Simpson works in an airplane
plant in Waco. Her husband is with •
the 5th army in Italy.’ Mrs Bar-j
clay’s husband has been called and
will leave November 20.
Mr. and Mrs. John Tomme, of (
Llano, were visitors in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Moore Sunday
and attended Sunday school at the ;
Church of Christ Sunday afternoon t
Doris Lee Adams, who is attending
high school in Cherokee, spur the
weekend with her grand mother
‘‘Mornin’, Judge...meetin’ someone?”
“No, Sam, I’m just going up the line
aways on business. Wasn’t that a troop train
that just pulled out?”
“Sure was, Judge...stopped over here for
ten minutes and what a swell bunch of
fellows they were.”
“That’s true all over, Sam. Our present
Army is the best trained, best disciplined,
best behaved in American history. That’s
why I get my hair up when I hear of some
people trying to dry up the areas around
Army camps. Why, in a recent report made
by the government, it said the Army usually
prefers its camps to be located in wet in-
stead of dry communities. And there’s a
sound reason. In a wet community the
Army can control drinking. In dry com-
munities where bootleggers run wild it’s al-
most impossible. We know that from our
nearly I t years of experience w ith national
prohibition.
“There’s no getting away from it, pro-
hibition docs not prohibit.”
Thit advrttisftnrnl ifwnsorpj by Catifererue of Alcoholic Barrage InduMnu, Inc.
Meet your friends at
IDOL ’vS
Where the Beer is always cold
and the Food is always good.
i v K h v ft i t ( mn ai m< ft r n., •
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.
Collins, Will. The Llano News. (Llano, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 11, 1943, newspaper, November 11, 1943; Llano, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth816299/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Llano County Public Library.