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CISCO !.*>■* f*. above sea, Liikr Cisco thiee mile- long .87 (t. dorp at Williamson 1 How concrete dam, fish hatchery; 127 K ks paving. A-1 high school; Junior col- ^r, natural gas, electric and ice plant., home ii M E BOSS WALLOPER Work Glove. T he C isco D aily P ress L'OMtilNLD WITH CISCO DAILY NEWS AND CISCO AMERICAN AND ROUND-LT, NOVLMBKR 1, 1937 CTSr’ O One r f :i * hraithie* t Aieas in l' S A , with ci cuuntrs side devoted to blooded rat- tlr, Ik» r> ,ho«‘f j Ccif tit rottoli 11.*;t feed.-, poultry, g.i-, o * ' id i, ad Byukhpiid highwiv’. iiusji * iu ; t‘ tc . a .mining pool; bass and ciappie li&hmg. VOLUME XXIV. CISCO, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 23. 1941 NUMBER -49 I DENCH REGAIN THEIR PARIS o RANGER BAP-CROSS PLAINS 11 ST S HE RE MAN KILLED IN LAST NIGHT PLANE CRASH Brotherhood of First Hap- ii h held its monthly nicot- o.-d.iy night at Lake Cws ith the plagium brought Rangei Brotherhood R k. program chairman, a-- by Pastor Cooper Waters. :i charge. watermelons furnished by . were cut and eaten before •jam began A luisines- followed with President 1 LaRoque m charge, during ,i committee was .ipjiomtcil innate officers for the new OCR.lining Octolx'r 1 ('■ in- named w as W W Fewell, ’ Coldwell and Coofier Wa- .. • men from Ranger attend. Hugh Smith, president group, in charge. He pre- a in.ilc quartet, followed talk on ‘ Science. Art and !i" by Dr. W H. Clark, pastor Clark showed Id Bible characters posscs- .nspiring knowledge of • ii ts and sciences, not with- g many of these sciences ; t discovered bv Us until centui'ics later. the lound table discussion 'tons were made a* to the programs that should bo • ! next year. All .(greed otter fellowship hnd been .'growth of the present .n 1 1 v it a s Some of the ac- ments were recited, m- g the establsihmcnt and of a Mexican mission and the equipping of a > furnished building lit 30 men were present, from Ranger were Di W. lk. Dr. \V. L. Jackson, L. .ce. Joe Graham. Lloyd K F Kirk. It .1 Rains Hugh Smith A Mi Jones Abilene was present and on Brotherhood activities city. TEXAS wool. CLIP. sTIN. Aug 23 —A 1344 wool g 81,000.000 pounds, compar- .'ii 81*713,000 pounds last .s forecast for Texas by the i States Bureau of Agricul- Fconomies. i Mis- Don Joe Pyle and Mis. I Ina Pyle Martin were notified Sunday of the death of tliei ’ nephsw, I.t Fail W Pyle, killed Saturday in the i sh of a B-24 i Liberator bomber Iro n the Tono- j pah army air lie'd. Tonopah, Nev Tiie ladle- left inpi.ied ately | for Cross Plains where the par- ' cits. Mi and Mgs Karl W. Pyle, Si reside L.eutcnant Pyle. , graduate of j Cres Plains high school received trainuiR , t Sheppard Field, the Univ.'isity of Denver Santa Anna army (ire-flight school and Thaii- derbird Field. Ark. Burial arrangement,- have not' been completed, but the body will I piobabiy be benight to Cross Plains „t the- weekend ' CLUCK SPEAKS TO LIONS ON JR. COLLEGE CORP. JACOBS TO HOSPITAL IN ENGLANDBY Mr- W. H Jiu roii 1Ci.,co. has been not if h (hat -AT* Corp. V. 0 ' in France r Jacob 1 1 Inl k luring 1 ]hc in1 vas Pj j'i 1 ' nas been » a GREAT CUT ENCIRCLED allied soldiers , pari - SIANS BUTCHER DESPOILERS England l* * STILL NO RAIN— teiupci atuic contimu s Here farmer G. W. Crosier of Evanston, III, examines dwarfed ton THE HOME FRONT. ' ,,en- disposed to complain ' ic minor restrictions and "iiveniences imposed upon by wartime regulations Id remember the story of voting soldier in the Pacific, o. blinded by Japanese bul- asked with his dying th to be raised up and i where to shoot. 'Hie most that home-front cricans have done or been "d upon to do. the full 'sure of their service and dice, has been trifling coin ed to what this boy in the 1 dtle lines gave to his eoun- ond to them. Ho gave life, and an example in cage and devotion that dd shame all of us who ! ’ r done so little here at name. To whatever may be essen- 1 to prosecution of the w ar to torious ends and to the win- : of the peace the loyal cit- •con should conform without "wplaint. Thousands of our sons have died as heroic deaths as this 1 ' i dea boy from North Da- 'soto. Tlie least we can do is !" carry on with our small, but ' '-rntial, part. The war has not been won yet. Harder going is ahead Winning the peace will be no easier. Rotttrian R N Cluck spoke at I Lions luncheon today at Mobley I hotel on Cisco Junior college, and how Lion. and other citizens might help make the school larg er and therefore able to render a more complete service. He was j introduced by Lion E G Damron. Homer Tompkins spoke of the football team and some of thei needs for making it a surer win ner for the coining season, among which wa.- the need for a lighted I field for night games. He asked j that the Lions club aid in some way to achieve these thing- Pres ident C. J. Turner referred the I matter to a committee composed of Charles S. Sandler. W. H La- Roquc. H H Tompkins. Norman Huston and C M. Nevill. Jay Garrett made announcements rc- Carding the scrap paper drive scheduled tin tomorrow. A feature of today's luncheon |was the accordion music rendered by Miss Peggy Jean Gallagher, continuously, during the meat. Other v isitors were Parks Bailey and Delbert Tipton. Lion D W. Dr-erens was introduced as a new cub. In beginning his talk. Cluck said. "No town rises higher than tlie vision and confidence of its citizens, the latter attribute be- j ing necessary for the success o f , tiic merchant, banker, church ot . school, for w ithout a highly vis-1 loned program and confidence in j the outcome, there would be lit tle achievement." He suggested club scholarships as one way Lions | I and other civic clubs could help , the school. Advertisements in the I |local paper paid for by clubs or j j individuals and boosting the col- j ‘ lege was another suggestion. Let- Iters to prospective students recoin-i I mending Cisco Junior College was (still another way of service, he ' said. I Continuing, the speaker listed * other means of boo.-tmg the at-1 I tendance "i the achool. 4 Paii time lob* 1 is *tu-1 j dents; talks to one's neighbor who has a so n or daughter ready for college; a local advisory commit- | tec, familiar with the school;, pointing out to the youth the need j ! for a college education, and t o ( pick out some relative or friend m a distant part of the country, advising them of the quality of training olfcrt'd by Cisco junioi j college. C. J. Turner, W. H La-| Ruque. O. L Stanley and others. I spoke to the subject during the I roundtable discussion which fol- ! lowed. These suggestions were ! reft red to the Lions committee on Public Education. Charles Sandler of the scrap pa- 1 per drive urged that no paper be allowed to get wet should it rain while on the curb, since it could not be sold in that condition. DESOLATION—P gh fo« wrecked French village of Ma; Su of Allied Armies of Liberation strolls through debris. This scene is tvpical of ai, roads to T in as Allies thunder onward for final showdown. AFL MAKES SE RIOUS CHARGE AGAINST CI 0 WASHINGTON. Aug. 23.— An American Federation of Labor , publication declared emphatically yesterday that the CIO was trying to "buy" the November election 1 because CIO President Philip Mm i ay and Sidney Hillman "and their CIO followers are afraid their organization will fall apart' and bo wrecked when the post- ! war pincli comes " The article in the AFL's week- j Iv news service was written by Philip Pearl. AFL publicist, and gave what he described as the "real low (low n" on the CIO s Po- [ litical Action Committee, headed by Hillman. ------------------ —o ........... - |>KYS NOT SATISFIED. HOUSTON. Aug. 2.1 A state-I w ide referendum on the liquor! question was predicted by Dr j Walter It McKenzie, executive secretary of the United Texas Drys with hcadquai tei> in Dallas, in an address to the Baptist Pas tors' Area Conference. “ We have literally scared the breeches off J the wet crowd in Dallas and Eort i Worth," Dr. McKenzie asserted . stating that Texas drys arc more 1 militant now than aver before. VISIT FROM THE GI V'NOR—Chatting^vith former Bahamar ubject. Duke of Windsor examines peaches at Chandfer Orchards Milton, Del. Governor of Bahamas is interested in efficiency of natives brought from Glands last year to relieve manpower short age in Amci ican fields and orchards. yc,.i s ed he 1942. All >1 age, \\ e and He j< 194!. an It.. SUPREME HEADQUARTERS patriots have liberated Pari great noose around 93,000 Tth Army and American t'lvi hilt v AEP Allied of 1 nils la Au Deatei ined the . 1 in Dt PARKS BAILEE HOME FROM 2 YRS. OVERSEA the capitcil to within !4'i mill; A.- thle armored might 0 f Gen. D\ S 'll armies buttered th ie life lr forces in northern and centra . France, "1 Fiend i patriots stormed throt'. h t rounding up German sti.y: ier> and Lad been left behind when tr ie lust Na The c :ity fell vesterdav. )*(>ui veals Tec ST Park.* Bailc oi George Bariev. arrive JSuture father ' h.is it in C triumphant Wehrm..cht r.a: omphe and seized the French Gen. Charles Dt Gaulle. , mitn i ol National Liber; • ■ capital to establish hi- provisi Gen. Pierre K wing. • • >nal -3.— French tightened a German, ed nut tar beyond German border. D. Eisenhower's emaining enemy reds of thousands -treets of Paris tx of Vichy who ■liments fled. 70 days alter the the Arc de Tri- ut firing a shot, nt ■I the French Coin- believeti ru-ning to the ivernmcnt there. /-i re j i and ough withi und . ; ........... — •• -in-chief of the French other relative.- He l0,^'es of the mtenor. said his Patriot Army. 50.000 strong rned from twu year.- supported bv countless thou>iiiid> of* overseas, hu\ir.g been stationed won back the capital in lour dav 111 England, North Africa and j that began last Saturday when the 1 t ii i ' **1 Paris was sounded. Sergeant Bailey was raised in! Cisco, graduated from Cisco high I The battle reached Its school and joined the air forces in * Ots obtained light artlllerv 1940. in August, 1942. he was I American batteries in the c sent overseas as a crvottiEraoher , . . * ,. 1 Get man garrison posts. (code work) ana gunner. He re- ' ^ turned tc tins country August 9.1 Parisian gendarmes s The Cisco young man saw j the Seine River in th many things of interest during hi absence. He said the people of North Africa arc mostly French and Arabs and more friendly than the people of Italy. Hcwevei. Italy is a much prettier country than North Africa. One of the most impressive sights, lie said, was the ancient city of Timgaa__ cowering behind bai neari aimed Parisians, i"cd\ street fighting ; a general uprising i\ yesterday when the Patri- parently slipped in from the suburbs—and began shelling the historic lit dt Cite in ' t capital and turned it into e Nazis spent their last. Jit less attacks. Notre Dame is on the i"n as to whether it had and the more or less constant eruption ol Mt. Vesuvius The Roman city of Timgait. bi.i i by an earthquake and tlie eruption of a volcano during the tune "I Caesar, was in the process of be ing uncovered when the war started That portion so tar un covered shows a wonderful state of preservation, Bailey said. During a more recerIt Spew ing ol Mt Vesuvius. plane trrew to which the Ciscoan wais attached flew over the volcano He -aid -moke boiling out of the nioun- tain reached a height of several thousand feet, with hot lav,a po in ing down its sides Following his visit heri'. Scr- grunt Bailey will repot t t<) Santa a bristling fortress against which strength in a series of bloodv and i (The world-famous cathedral lie de Cite, but there was no indie been damaged in the battle) With the island in the Seine «i rarely in their hands, the Patriots spread -wiftK through the rest of th« city, over whelming isolated German real gu ilds ricades. I he cheerutg. singing v .mis • oisted the tri-color on all public buildings *nd posted guards American armored column- massec Only about 93.000 of the more th defended Normandy • n D-Day wi re the narrowing corridor extending fmn > wait the entry of the ' < cit) gate.-. 400.0(H) Germans who dive and uticaptured in the Channel to the the Touques northern suburbs of Paris and from the Sei and Vie River lines. And those fleeing remnants were being hounded merci- trom land end air. bombed and shelled as they raced Allied planes swept through low-hang- he river crossings. lessly lor the Seine, when mg clouds to strafe Monica. Cal tor signment. Official silence hid the whereabouts of the U. S. 3rd Arnrty flying columns that captured Sens vesterdav after a dramatic. 65-mile dash southeast of Paris and swept on to- I ward Troyes. 43 miles to the east and onh 130 miles from the western borders of Germany. The capture of Troyes w uld put Lt. Gen. George S. Paf- .'on s tank columns astride the main trunk railways to Alsace- Lorraine and Germany's industrial Saar Valley, and would close the last direct main-line escape route for all the Ger mans in southern France. Correspondent Robert Miller, riding with the American MOSCOW. A..U 23 — A new !1’3' ' 31' * ^ into eastern France, reported the Yanks were using ! Red Army offensive, probably dc-J Patton's familiar leap-fi "g tactics, by-passing some enemy tidiig-points and reducing others by swift, overwhelming 37 ,000 NAZI CASUALTIES IN THREE DAYS Mttned ti> knock Romania out of i verc putting into practice Patton's in- "AU you fellows out to dc» to lick hell out of those the war and break Hitler's grip I attack. on the Balkans, smashed forward | f } le Americans wen Wednesday on a 150-nule front 1 rnctiol beyond las to within iso miles I , of J.ttei;. Bucharest and 153 of damn Germans is to kick them down one hill and up the next, the great Polesti ml center. j or knock them from one vallcx into another, all the way to (An ofticuil German broadcast Berlin." said the Russians had reached the , Far behind Patton’s racing spearheads, Canadian and I boacht • a. L ua . -w. i-i y British troopers rolled back the entire Nazi flank along the and largest Baltic states city, in- r dicatmg .1 new trap for the Gcr- Channel Coast, capturing the seaport towns of Cabourg, man 16th and 18th Armies i JHoulgate. Villeis-Sut-Mer and Deauville and penetrating Advancing over the bodies of Trouville in a general advance toward the mouth of the 25.000 Germans slain in three vin- , 9 ^ 11^, lent days while 12.665 others [ _______ tiVidged wearily back to prison 1 cages. Red Aimy groups drove] TRUN.— Amid the wreckage of the German Seventh Army lies the tell-tale evidence of how the Nazis robbed the j Frencheven when they were surrounded and their outlook MARION HARVEY DEAD was hopeless. RISING STAR. Aug 23—Chief I T. f. .. . . 1 Pet tv Officer Manon Harvcv. 30,' The fields and hedgerows around here are strewn with ! Ot the Seabecs. died oi a heart at- lhc smal| « ,K>ds tn4> Germans stole from thousands of French , tack in the Pearl Harbor ai-ca, homes with the hope of taking them back to their homes in I and was buried there, according the Reich. it., advice received from Washing- | They had held onto their Unit— clothing, shoes and little ton. Before entering the service, trinkets— until the last minute. Thev abandoned them only Haney was in tlie oil business . merm mny ! and had operated in the Cross w,ien they threw aWay their tin hats, put on peaked caps ! Plems and Rising star area tor a and came out oi hiding with hands clasped behind their heads ' number of year*. as prisoners. within 51 mile.- ul the mouth the Danube.
Transcript

CISCO !.*>■* f*. above sea, Liikr Cisco thiee mile- long .87 (t. dorp at Williamson

1 How concrete dam, fish hatchery; 127 K ks paving. A -1 high school; Junior col-

^r, natural gas, electric and ice plant., home ii M E BOSS WALLOPER Work Glove.

The Cisco Daily PressL'OMtilNLD WITH CISCO DAILY NEWS AND CISCO AMERICAN AND ROUND-LT, NOVLMBKR 1, 1937

CTSr’O One r f :i * hraithie* t Aieas in l' S A , with ci cuuntrs side devoted to blooded rat-

tlr, Ik»r> ,ho«‘f j Ccif tit rottoli 11 .*;t feed.-,poultry, g.i-, o * ' id i, ad Byukhpiidhighwiv’. iiusji * i u ; t‘ tc . a .mining pool; bass and ciappie li&hmg.

VOLUME XXIV. CISCO, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 23. 1941 NUMBER -49

I DENCH REGAIN THEIR PARISo

R A N G E R B A P - C R O S S PLAINS 11 S T S H E R E MAN KILLED IN L A S T N I G H T P L A N E CRASH

Brotherhood of First Hap- ii h held its monthly nicot- o.-d.iy night at Lake Cws ith the plagium brought Rangei Brotherhood R

k. program chairman, a-- by Pastor Cooper Waters.

:i charge.watermelons furnished by

. were cut and eaten before •jam began A luisines-

followed with President 1 LaRoque m charge, during

,i committee was .ipjiomtcil innate officers for the new OCR.lining Octolx'r 1 ('■ in-named w as W W Fewell,

’ Coldwell and Coofier Wa-

.. • men from Ranger attend. Hugh Smith, president

group, in charge. He pre- a in.ilc quartet, followed

talk on ‘ Science. Art and !i" by Dr. W H. Clark,

• pastor Clark showed Id Bible characters posscs- .nspiring knowledge of

• ii ts and sciences, not with- g many of these sciences

; t discovered bv Us until■ centui'ics later.

the lound table discussion 'tons were made a* to the

programs that should bo• ! next year. All .(greed

otter fellowship hnd been.'growth of the present .n 11 v it a s Some of the ac-

ments were recited, m- g the establsihmcnt and

of a Mexican mission and the equipping of a

> furnished building lit 30 men were present, from Ranger were Di W. lk. Dr. \V. L. Jackson, L.

.ce. Joe Graham. Lloyd K F Kirk. It .1 Rains

Hugh Smith A Mi Jones Abilene was present and

on Brotherhood activities city.

TEXAS w o o l . CLIP.sTIN. Aug 23 —A 1344 wool

■ g 81,000.000 pounds, compar-.'ii 81*713,000 pounds last

.s forecast for Texas by the■ i States Bureau of Agricul-

Fconomies.

i

Mis- Don Joe Pyle and Mis. I Ina Pyle Martin were notified Sunday of the death of tliei ’ nephsw, I.t Fail W Pyle, killed Saturday in the i sh of a B-24 i L iberator bomber Iro n the Tono- j pah army air lie'd. Tonopah, Nev Tiie ladle- left inpi.ied ately | for Cross Plains where the par- ' cits. Mi and Mgs Karl W. Pyle, Si reside

L.eutcnant Pyle. , graduate of j Cres Plains high school received trainuiR , t Sheppard Field, the Univ.'isity of Denver Santa Anna army (ire-flight school and Thaii- derbird Field. Ark.

Burial arrangement,- have not' been completed, but the body will I piobabiy be benight to Cross Plains „t the- weekend 'CLUCK SPEAKS TO L I O N S ON JR. C O L L E G E

C O R P . JACOBS TO H O S P I T A L IN ENGLANDBY

Mr- W. H Jiu roii1 Ci.,co. has been not if h

(hat

-AT* Corp. V. 0 ' in France r

Jacob1 1 In l

kluring 1]hc in1vas

Pj j ' i 1 ' nas been » a

GREAT CUT ENCIRCLEDa l l ie d s o l d ie r s , p a r i -

SIANS BUTCHER DESPOILERSEngland

l* *STILL NO RAIN—teiupci atuic contimu s Here farmer G. W. Crosier of Evanston, III, examines dwarfed ton

THE H O M E FRONT.

' ,,en- disposed to complain ' ic minor restrictions and "iiveniences imposed upon

by wartime regulations Id remember the story of

voting soldier in the Pacific, o. blinded by Japanese bul-

asked with his dying th to be raised up and

i where to shoot.

'Hie most that home-front cricans have done or been "d upon to do. the full 'sure of their service and dice, has been trifling coin­

ed to what this boy in the 1 dtle lines gave to his eoun-

ond to them. Ho gave ■ life, and an example in cage and devotion that dd shame all of us who

! ’ r done so little here at name.

To whatever may be essen- 1 to prosecution of the w ar to

torious ends and to the win- • : of the peace the loyal cit-•con should conform without "wplaint.Thousands of our sons have

died as heroic deaths as this 1 ' i dea boy from North Da- 'soto. Tlie least we can do is !" carry on with our small, but ' '-rntial, part.

The war has not been wonyet.

Harder going is aheadWinning the peace will be

no easier.

Rotttrian R N Cluck spoke at I Lions luncheon today at Mobley I hotel on Cisco Junior college, and how Lion. and other citizens might help make the school larg­er and therefore able to render a more complete service. He was

j introduced by Lion E G Damron.Homer Tompkins spoke of the

football team and some of thei needs for making it a surer win­ner for the coining season, among which wa.- the need for a lighted I field for night games. He asked j that the Lions club aid in some way to achieve these thing- Pres­ident C. J. Turner referred the I matter to a committee composed of Charles S. Sandler. W. H La- Roquc. H H Tompkins. Norman Huston and C M. Nevill. Jay Garrett made announcements rc- Carding the scrap paper drive scheduled tin tomorrow.

A feature of today's luncheon | was the accordion music rendered

by Miss Peggy Jean Gallagher, continuously, during the meat. Other v isitors were Parks Bailey and Delbert Tipton. Lion D W. Dr-erens was introduced as a new cub.

In beginning his talk. Cluck said. "No town rises higher than tlie vision and confidence of its citizens, the latter attribute be- j ing necessary for the success o f , tiic merchant, banker, church ot . school, for w ithout a highly vis-1 loned program and confidence in j the outcome, there would be lit­tle achievement." He suggested club scholarships as one way Lions |

I and other civic clubs could help , the school. Advertisements in the I

| local paper paid for by clubs or j j individuals and boosting the col- j ‘ lege was another suggestion. Let- Iters to prospective students recoin-i I mending Cisco Junior College was (still another way of service, he ' said.I Continuing, the speaker listed * other means of boo.-tmg the at-1 I tendance "i the achool.4 Paii time lob* ■ 1 ■ is *tu-1 j dents; talks to one's neighbor who has a so n or daughter ready for college; a local advisory commit- | tec, familiar with the school;, pointing out to the youth the need j

! for a college education, and to ( pick out some relative or friend m a distant part of the country, advising them of the quality of training olfcrt'd by Cisco junioi j college. C. J. Turner, W. H La-| Ruque. O. L Stanley and others.

I spoke to the subject during the I roundtable discussion which fol- ! lowed. These suggestions were ! reft red to the Lions committee on Public Education.

Charles Sandler of the scrap pa- 1 per drive urged that no paper be allowed to get wet should it rain while on the curb, since it could not be sold in that condition.

DESOLATION—P gh fo« wrecked French village of Ma; Suof Allied Armies of Liberation strolls through debris. This scene is tvpical of ai, roads to T in ­

as Allies thunder onward for final showdown.

AFL MAKES S E ­RIOUS CHARGE AGAINST C I 0

WASHINGTON. Aug. 23.—An American Federation of Labor , publication declared emphatically yesterday that the CIO was trying to "buy" the November election 1 because CIO President Philip Mm i ay and Sidney Hillman "and their CIO followers are afraid their organization will fall apart' and bo wrecked when the post- ! war pincli comes "

The article in the AFL's week- j Iv news service was written by Philip Pearl. AFL publicist, and gave what he described as the "real low (low n" on the CIO s Po- [ litical Action Committee, headed by Hillman.

------------------— o ........... -

|>KYS NOT SATISFIED.

HOUSTON. Aug. 2.1 A state-I w ide referendum on the liquor! question was predicted by Dr j Walter It McKenzie, executive secretary of the United Texas Drys with hcadquai tei> in Dallas, in an address to the Baptist Pas­tors' Area Conference. “We have literally scared the breeches off J the wet crowd in Dallas and Eort i Worth," Dr. McKenzie asserted . stating that Texas drys arc more 1 militant now than aver before.

VISIT FROM THE GI V'NOR—Chatting^vith former Bahamar ubject. Duke of Windsor examines peaches at Chandfer Orchards

Milton, Del. Governor of Bahamas is interested in efficiency of natives brought from Glands last year to relieve manpower short

age in Amci ican fields and orchards.

yc,.i s ed he

1942.

All

>1 age, \\ e and

He j<194!. an

It..

SUPREME HEADQUARTERS patriots have liberated Pari great noose around 93,000 Tth Army and American t'lvi

hiltv

AEP Allied

of 1 nils la

Au

Deatei

ined the . 1 in Dt

PARKS BAILEE H O M E F R O M 2 YRS. OVERSEA

the capitcil to within !4'i mill;A.- thle armored might 0f Gen. D\S 'll armies buttered thie life lr

forces in northern and centra . France,"1 Fiendi patriots stormed throt'. h trounding up German sti.y: ier> andLad been left behind when trie lust Na

The c:ity fell vesterdav. )*(>ui veals

Tec ST Park.* Bailc oi George Bariev. arrive

J Suture father

' h.is it

in C

triumphant Wehrm..cht r.a: omphe and seized the French

Gen. Charles Dt Gaulle. , mitn i ol National Liber; • ■ ■ capital to establish hi- provisi

Gen. Pierre K wing. • •>nal

-3.— French tightened a

German, ed nut tar beyond

German border. D. Eisenhower's

emaining enemy reds of thousands -treets of Paris tx o f Vichy who ■liments fled.70 days alter the the Arc de Tri- ut firing a shot,

nt ■ I the French Coin- believeti ru-ning to the ivernmcnt there.

/-i re j i and ough withi

und. ; ........... — •• -in-chief of the French

other relative.- He l0 , 'es o f the mtenor. said his Patriot Army. 50.000 strong rned from twu year.- supported bv countless thou>iiiid> of*

overseas, hu\ir.g been stationed won back the capital in lour dav 111 England, North Africa and j that began last Saturday when the1 t ii i ' **1 Paris was sounded.Sergeant Bailey was raised in!Cisco, graduated from Cisco high I The battle reached Itsschool and joined the air forces in * Ots obtained light a rtlllerv1940. in August, 1942. he was I American batteries in the csent overseas as a crvottiEraoher, . . * ,. 1 Get man garrison posts.(code work) ana gunner. He re- ' ^turned tc tins country August 9.1 Parisian gendarmes s

The Cisco young man saw j the Seine River in th many things of interest during hi absence. He said the people of North Africa arc mostly French and Arabs and more friendly than the people of Italy. Hcwevei.Italy is a much prettier country than North Africa. One of the most impressive sights, lie said, was the ancient city of Timgaa__

cowering behind bai

neari

aimed Parisians, i"cd\ street fighting ■; a general uprising

i\ yesterday when the Patri- parently slipped in from the suburbs—and began shelling

the historic lit dt Cite in ' t capital and turned it into

e Nazis spent their last. Jit less attacks.

Notre Dame is on the i"n as to whether it had

and the more or less constant eruption ol Mt. Vesuvius The Roman city of Timgait. bi.i i by an earthquake and tlie eruption of a volcano during the tune "I Caesar, was in the process of be­ing uncovered when the war started That portion so tar un­covered shows a wonderful state of preservation, Bailey said.

During a more recerIt Spew ingol Mt Vesuvius. plane trrew towhich the Ciscoan wais attachedflew over the volcano He -aid-moke boiling out of the nioun-tain reached a height of severalthousand feet, with hot lav,a po in ­ing down its sides

Following his visit heri'. Scr-grunt Bailey will repot t t<) Santa

a bristling fortress against which strength in a series of bloodv and i

(The world-famous cathedral lie de Cite, but there was no indie been damaged in the battle)

With the island in the Seine «i rarely in their hands, the Patriots spread -wiftK through the rest of th« city, over­whelming isolated German real gu ilds ricades.

I he cheerutg. singing v .mis • oisted the tri-color on all public buildings *nd posted guards American armored column- massec

Only about 93.000 of the more th defended Normandy • n D-Day wi re the narrowing corridor extending fmn

> wait the entry of the ' < cit) gate.-.

400.0(H) Germans who dive and uticaptured in

the Channel to thethe Touquesnorthern suburbs of Paris and from the Sei

and Vie River lines.And those fleeing remnants were being hounded merci-

trom land end air. bombed and shelled as they raced Allied planes swept through low-hang- he river crossings.

lessly lor the Seine, when mg clouds to strafe

Monica. Cal tor signment.

Official silence hid the whereabouts of the U. S. 3rd Arnrty flying columns that captured Sens vesterdav after a dramatic. 65-mile dash southeast of Paris and swept on to-

I ward Troyes. 43 miles to the east and onh 130 miles from the western borders of Germany.

The capture of Troyes w uld put Lt. Gen. George S. Paf- .'on s tank columns astride the main trunk railways to Alsace- Lorraine and Germany's industrial Saar Valley, and would close the last direct main-line escape route for all the Ger­mans in southern France.

Correspondent Robert Miller, riding with the American MOSCOW. A..U 23 — A new!1’3''31' * ^ into eastern France, reported the Yanks were using

! Red Army offensive, probably dc-J Patton's familiar leap-fi "g tactics, by-passing some enemytidiig-points and reducing others by swift, overwhelming

37, 0 0 0 N A Z I CASUALTIES IN T H R E E D A Y SMttned ti> knock Romania out of i

verc putting into practice Patton's in- "AU you fellows out to dc» to lick hell out o f those

the war and break Hitler's grip I attack.on the Balkans, smashed forward | f } le Americans wenWednesday on a 150-nule front 1 rnctiol beyond las to within iso miles I , of J.ttei;. Bucharest and 153 of damn Germans is to kick them down one hill and up the next, the great Polesti ml center. j or knock them from one vallcx into another, all the way to

(An ofticuil German broadcast Berlin."said the Russians had reached the , Far behind Patton’s racing spearheads, Canadian and

I boacht • a. L ua . -w. i- i y British troopers rolled back the entire Nazi flank along theand largest Baltic states city, in- rdicatmg .1 new trap for the Gcr- Channel Coast, capturing the seaport towns o f Cabourg, man 16th and 18th Armies i J Houlgate. Villeis-Sut-Mer and Deauville and penetrating

Advancing over the bodies of Trouville in a general advance toward the mouth o f the 25.000 Germans slain in three vin- , 9 11^,lent days while 12.665 others [ _______tiVidged wearily back to prison 1cages. Red Aimy groups drove] TRUN.— Amid the wreckage of the German Seventh

Army lies the tell-tale evidence of how the Nazis robbed the „ j French—even when they were surrounded and their outlook

MARION HARVEY DEAD was hopeless.RISING STAR. Aug 23—Chief I T . f . . . „ . .

1 Pet tv Officer Manon Harvcv. 30, ' The fields and hedgerows around here are strewn with! Ot the Seabecs. died oi a heart at- lhc smal| « ,K>ds tn4> Germans stole from thousands of French , tack in the Pearl Harbor ai-ca, homes with the hope of taking them back to their homes inI and was buried there, according the Reich.it., advice received from Washing- | They had held onto their Unit— clothing, shoes and littleton. Before entering the service, trinkets— until the last minute. Thev abandoned them only Haney was in tlie oil business . merm mny

! and had operated in the Cross w,ien they threw aWay their tin hats, put on peaked caps ! Plems and Rising star area tor a and came out oi hiding with hands clasped behind their heads ' number of year*. as prisoners.

within 51 mile.- ul the mouth the Danube.

PAGE TWO. TliE DAILY Fru.SS, CISCO, TLA AC. Wednesday. August 2b, 1 ;i44' THE CISCO I) MIA PRESS(Con«c!.dated with CV. I 1 \ \ <- and Cisco American and

Round-Up. N \ ember, 1937).

Entered a? Se> ndo f'

Matter Decern. er 1 1 1934, at the postAct of March 8, 1879.

LOOKINGAHEAD

|x G1 0 RC>f S B r V SOSFrautur. VurJmf Celie t

A B. O’Fl.AHERTV Put-other and General Manager.

Published daily except Saturday and Monday at Cisco. Eastland county. Texas, by Free Press Publishing Corporation, incorporated under the laws of Tex.o Ed ' rial and P ibhcation offices at 304-3U6 l> avenue Cisco, Texas

National advertising representative: Texas Daily Press League, Dallas, Texas.

SI RSCRIPTIt N RATES $2 per year (six months $1 501 by mail (outs v Cm in Eastland. --.t'-pher Shackelford and Callahan oun,lt" Text*. •u’saie above-menl .■ .ned : ' es $3 ai $5 00 ill U.

S. outside of Texas.

Place to I uc.

Per year, in adv; Per week by car

$5 MO 12c

war pru. perit> ' St;.iitmg rmhtthe! t\ a Nev. Yt k rcudt’ i ti-ktime to inform me l\Tat industrywas m i.ng securityof inv estment He presented <t

Astounding set of figuresabout personal investiiients.

The largest ?i| t* in ustmentmade by most Ament <ins. he de-CL- t'OSIfc is in a place t<> 1 ix e. Then

> • to pay off the remainingi>4 oOii in rent-like payments o l : s f '< a mi t :. They cover princi­pal inuvist and a few small as- -■ -. merits A home has been started.

\i..: 1 \ fixe years pa-s. Joe s four years old. There'

nave been a let of costly repairs, i - iceailly xx lien tile piano broke

i | raThe front ihmr no longer fits its frame Heating costs are like robhe y The place is not worth1 the $2,000 yet to pay on it and Joe is ready to quit The D'Oaksi f. x enters txiMpoiary q arteis and takes . loss ot $3,000 plus.

The Other *2 000. rh« hon e ,s not pa ai for. Jx»e

s . ,1 install! lent notes before hen \ed in The real estate man da anted them to a bank. Dues t! ■ l ank 1< -i ti e $2,000 • Certain-

TRAFFIC H E AD AC H E S .

x ' CtMV b tTF- ’ its

This is sound advic 1 aster than their rubboi

-■ me excuse if the ai :vv i ubber But too marv traight into *he ,u*-ki: >f s|>eed. Onlv th< foxx

Servicer-.« ,, j H

nnd hflx ing the i lans fire tir«d other things. (wheels thev vv>.

The in r re <

Studebaker Corp., ad- "1 America, warned i o f unrestricted att-

the greatest tra ffic Huffman, should be

le postwar problems,

fifty cars are running . certain ly faster than

■ : m uugh small cities, s. with no diminution e- great danger.

i « 'institute a problem

i’.v-.ibiding lives. But den's ,,i< something

. k.« ai< used ti speed n../ard thi n . C ivtl-

- s of gas. rubber and u- m w steering

i here is no cure

rva

\n I tlx 1'u lure.

CONNIE DAVI SReal Estate

Rentals & InsuranceAl'TO INSURANCE

A SPECIALTYA few choice homes left for

■ale.

PHONE 198

N E W M E X IC A N LEADER.New M- \ v r, r ,i

Otero, of an old M. \ told man" is dead. Miguel A.

AT: . . _ • ’ T - : (>* 4 ’nfrom 18,97 *~t 1906 .nd ti-' -j cut ;. • a- d.“ d it <84.

His life we*M h k v t» t.'ier lav - when rrt"St town-were trugh and m..>' nai . 4*t * ict IH’t squr. A a 9-vear-old bov he talked wit! ' Kansas scout . Wild BillHickok. Later he wa ■ fa>c 'he whole-c'jjp murdpror p *i , j/ j. ar.d wrote a book abinut him

Poll'. &]]l . ;v.- 'h r< ;L.h. ut most tif hie life

LET US DO YOUR L A U N D R Y .St mf youi '.iiindt v where it is sanitariU done. Your

clothe* .in- washed through nine ptiK-exses of soft water xx hen sent to n>.

shirt - expertly done for 12 rents each.

" « ' :»re glad to explain am kind of laundry serviceto you.

MODERN STEAM LAUNDRYTelephone 111.

EL VIE KOLMAR. Owner.

G o o f y , a m ! ?C.o ahead that's your privilege—thinking I'mjust plain hipped on everlastingly keeping this

\ engine's insides Olh-i’LATEU with Conooo N "i oil. Maybe there is and maylie there isn't sixty

...» other ways that would have kept engine mads from raising Nod with this pre-Pearl Harbor limousine. But one thing I know is this: it's , j ill i,nining swell on nothing but Conoco N< h motor oil. You needn't !>e a scientist to know that ai id i from every explosion are forever trying !u -pud an engine. Looks like the proper idea is to try blockading those acids by getting your engine oti.-Pl.AT! n. 1 learned there’s a modem synthetic in Conoco N «i oil that reminds you of magnetism, Uvaiise it makes inside surfaces at-

;l ...lucid of OIL PLATING. Acida can’t so , asily tear right into this. Then your o il-PIATlu engine has an extra < liance to last you. When new ear; arrive, hurray! But a real advanced iiii|>rnxeluent right now is to switch to Conoco Nfh motor oil, act.

CONOCO N tk W1M O T O R O I L

lv nut: th ■ loanEedi'i 1 Sihi’i the and iriixs endure, loss on and then

Adm stiHour ing EH A taki * the n ■ rlgai:, to ..ell xx hat Joe couldn't Government's avei age

such deals exceed SOW) arc plenty of them.

As of December 31. 1940. the EHA had insured 634.1123 mort­gages. During 194! tumble tint­ed devch ping in h 1935 and 1930 E. t*Cl

Migut

av f Theodore • Democrats. and convert ions His the last war and -. Katherine Stin- t, cut on the Rr-

mericfltl life made

THOMAS FUNERAL HOMEOur Service a Sacred Trust

See Us For Burial Insurance30(1 \V. Ninth Street. Phone 187

dehncia 1 i ej V clotures) numbered 5.4. is 9 4rl of loam insurer and 1936. If the same plied all the w;sy throi when 634.023 loans had sured. forednsuecs reaciu

The Tjxpaxer Pays.On the the -y th;.' F11.A would

red by ! e ho . If--i.-tainine. Congress tin t­ed it out in 1936 with about 35 million dollars. But the govern­ment's loss of $6ntl per re-posses - ed house, figured on 59,598 hous­es. exceed 35'. million dollars. It is not a fantastic figure. FHA's annual report says foreclosures in 1940 increased 26 4 oxer 1939 These pre-war figures warn that post-war safeguards are needed.

It is not fair if home-coming fighter; and war workers, bent on making homes, waste their sax- inus in houses that fall apart. It

and m. u , t ..nev is the key to column xx ill Ik1 nn the subjis ' , ; ! . ' in, id.n Next xxcek's "Mortgage Money.”

•es bill

igh

It in (and lore- •hi. h 1935■ip-

1940en m- - not tan lor older taxpayer- to 59.598. liq idate notes that these dx-f , ui-

e<i young men must default. The lution is in sound construction

IT TAK E S

!i 1 ( KRONET O BE

HEALTHYDR. C. E. PAUL

Northwest Corner Eighth Street and I Avenue. PHONE 680.

DIVIDING G ERM ANY.

it, L

treatment of Germany iers rot personally af-

sh • therefore to come ie xx 'V, first-hand knowl-

! the Gr i rr. -.n Menace,"

a1' it ion. with nr, inter- s'lp-vosted. Thev would ■ ite bv 'self, including

ift:. Schleswig-Holstein ........ ’ • Old H..n-

- • !ir--al combination of 1 - :ng *- pro• ect their,f j f t gV f 3^)

nto th« 17th centurv. At German cities such as

t}v viands and I^ovcjorocl ; ; oping and trading.

* 4 11 vp rv‘ Tv- !ik*' Hamburg. Bre-

Thi s to revive th I?3 German towns

in the( lerma

VITALAIRE

' ■ IMi *;$Ni 4 I

.! * « ? »

J*

r

/

V

Just received a late

shipment of white

Vitalaire ice

refrigerators.

20 percent down,

Balance on Easy

Terms.

CISCO ICE CO.E. Fifth St.

BOWLI NG A L L E Y S AIR - C O N D I T I O N E D

Two large cooling units have been installed at the Eastland County Bowl r.g Center, thus insuring summer comfort at this popular recnation spot, where four standard ABC alleys are always clean and trim.

All children under fourteen and women may bowl for 15 cents from 10 a. m to 6 p. m. except Saturday arid Sunday.

m a k e b o w l i n g a r l < r k a t i o n h a b i t .

EASTLAND COUNTY HOW LI NO (ESTER

CISCO. TEXAS.

imiuiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiinmiiiiiiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiimiiiHiiiiiiih

W A N T E D !POULTRY, EGGS. TURKEYS and CREAM.

Cisco Poultry & Egg Co.107 E. Sixth Street. Phone 148.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiRtiiiiiiiimimminiitmiiiiiiiiimtiffliiiiiimiiiiiiHiiiiimiih

R a d i o n i c H e a r i n g A i dA ( pi*t£ li ith rudmniC tub**. Cry ft a l

^ ^ • 1 1 m u f t,phone, hotter and battery *uw rFir utt.

mam by “& <uUo (^axpAtatiaH

COMF IN AND HEAR FOR YOURSELF

Henry A. Schaefer711 Avenue 11,

S I <19( 0. TEXAS.

Moves fo the FRONT LINESToday, King Uotton moves to the FRONT FINES to fight with our armed forces.

I rom a raw recruit, Cotton has been manufactured into ammu­nition, tents, duffle hags, clothing and hundreds of other articles essential to modern warfare.

In war, as in peace, the Texas and Pacific is proud to serve the C otton Industry, and to be a vital transportation link between farms and factories in the Southwest.

THE TEXAS AND P A C IFIC RY.BUY WAR BONDS-Today and Every Day!

C *c o ( s4 m e ric a il TdacCxaaKi . . . / f u Itn U c K f in 'Victory f

I

j iW £ 2 M 'm m m m

■ H H H P R

!>44 jijtsdav. Augustjp, 1H44. JTHE D A IL Y FRESS, CISCO, TEXAS. PAGE TTTREE.

CLASSIFIED,<•5: Four cent* ■ word

three insertions. Mini- , nli 411 cents. Card of «,ntts. 10 cents per line.

S O C I A L a n d C L U B STKI KPffi >\p 3g

' cd wan pi,

jjtB \v WTKD Good plate ' f »tt iy employment Dr. R • phone 298 251

" 'M '\ I II W ill |os" < » ' ....... twin i \i;n

Wand. 1 Jean Hamilton"i her eighth b

I was then ttn 11 cd to Mis V. H Bosworth who brought .111 interesting review of two ehuptei "i the book. "In His Steps." bv Dr. Charle M. Shel- >ion. Mis J. O Warren closed the meeting with prayer.

Those present were Mrs. Evan Holmes. Mrs. V. 11 Bos worth. Mi ;. .J. < > Wairen, M) s. Alvey White, Mis. Smith and Mrs. Ollie Hughes.

ju- ■eiiir ned tn

d;| P ,) ! •' songers g. ng

-s. •• . I .u_.,i • il. J. ( ’ . Uarnhill,

L ,t, ■ ■. Cisco. 254

1 tan I'u kner ,,t tlv.r home on I west Fifth

! by D'"> Ch-ne Kr ley. A huge , P‘ tik and white basket filled with u ift- \t.,s presented the The g.ft pack. .. wen

lay Tuty gi

is\U 1037 model Chev- ;p. Mrs. Arthur

251

t.Vl.l Automatic Mi - 1 .enter, double duty;

.j v udaril water heater. It Ti I. 251

iree.•ned

and dis|> 1.,., jHeireshments ot iee cream ant

y\I ! Heavy work team. \ own, 8t)4 W. Sixth

251

h tto: - ot tiny pleat­ed ha kr- f , ,n.|v- and ,, flags were p.e

fill) Electric iron in' oil. Mrs. A. /.

* 545. 250

Tl rer-room fur- ■. ent. 1007 W.

240

roller. Phono 243

x-room house with o yard and small C avenue. 240

-ue pass'd to Wanda Jean H.I iton. Anna Bel!. Ti gg, Tom-

K- d. ' . ( ’I ,1 Cai :oll B. ha 1 a s McGmigh. J< hrny Ti igg. Virgin 1 • Di, j.,i steveioGv ynette Tu kner. Buddy Hamil­ton. Jimmy Webb. Janice Carlene Grave . Dorothy Ann Cagle, Bet- tv Jean and M.u ie Arm Solo- man. Tyndall Webb, Robert Dale Whisennnt R t I m, Webb. Jan-

June Du: Sandra KavChance and the foil m r adult- Ml Id., White, g. .; :m -her at d Mrs W. J. T , . .

I* \KKs B Ml I V \k EDS ( M.IFOKM \ (.lltl

Tech. Nut Parks Bailey anti M, Jo G: - of San Francisco. Ci kf.. were married Monday night at if o'clock in the parlor of local i ■ r, ' ■ . u Rev. m . 1.A.mew tt t .ated in the double- : I. ■ ceu-mony Only a few rela­tive- and close friends were pres­et,' Attendants to the couple

1 ie Gift ' it Bailey anti Mrs. Loy Williams, brother and sister of thebridegroom.

The bride wore a becoming into two-piece suit with corsage

.1 white gardenias. Mrs Bailey,■ tt• Mr. and Mrs. 1. H.

Gro si of Port Chicago, Calif., is . r.uhmto of Port Chicago high school and 1 t French hospital, San Francisco.

Serge.

\l XII I \Kt MET IN-HI SINESS MEETING.

Pi esbytei sari auxiliary met at the church Tucstlay afternoon for monthly business meeting. Mrs. Homer Slicker was in charge of the devotional period in which the "Stewardship Prayer" was discu »ed. Sevcial members as- sisted with scripture readings The perioti closed with a cha n of prayer.

Mrs. E. P. Crawford, president, was in charge of the business ses­sion and minutes were read by Mrs. A. E. Jamison.

Following the bu.ine- session Mrs. Crawford presented Seaman L. J. Donohue, who is visiting his parents. Mr. anti Mrs. L. J. Dono­hue. Sr., v hile on leave, in a most interesting talk.

he grandmother. Mr J J I.ivp ingstun, visited her parents Mr. and Mrs J. R Livingston 111 H et eiiridge Sunday.

Mi - .1 H. E\ ■ U ,nd daugi -Ann of I.uedo- are v .siting mother Mrs. M W. Oldham.

C’lai Is oat daughter, Pats- . Abilene, Mr. and Mi Ve Snipes and daughter Betty Brovnwood, ai d Mr. and Don Hu./e and son1- i f Ci ■ o.

Noon dinner gm ts of Mrs. J. N Rape Sunday >vere hei child- ren Ralph Smith i f Pittsburg, Pa . Mr. and Mis John June and i.imily 01 Merkel, Mis. Alex

20 Degrees Cooler.

, NOW SHOWINGPALACE ;

POLITICAL.

BRIEFLY TOLD.

Gt B,

Gt

I .11 pay cash for one liable lots on or

1 ot on west side if C S Sillies Tele-

252

Morris. Miss M •• Tickner, MC E M. V. TickniMi . C.v Cl i M. A. Hamurn. Mi I •Carroll, Mrs. Albert Lie-ko

dilate

Bailey is a corps ;md a

11 ley of Cisco. >1 ( ser

member son of He is a

Staff Sgt and M r J. W. Ham­mond and baby ielt today for a visit with relatives at Ranger al­ter visiting her mother Mj - Clyde Mancill the past two weeks. Ser­geant Hammond has completed 50 air missions in the European area and has received several decorations and a citation.

The names of the following county, district and state candi­dates will appear on the ballot-' at tiie Democratic run-off primary of next Saturday. August 2fi:

COUNTY JUDGE C. H (Harl) O'Brien (

P L. (Lewis) Cross Icy

DISTRICT CLERK Roy L. Lane

R. F. (Edgar) Altom

FI.OTC)HIAL REPRESENTATIVE(Eastland and Callahan)

L. H Pearson Omar Burkett

sco high school and u e n l!*4t). He has

Mrs Arden Bell of Stamford is a guest in the home ol Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Ashenhust.

V — 1939 to 1941cvrolet. Phone 56

Motor Lines, ( ’ -

Mrs Van Ti 'kner.

U \l I III It I I \«.I I II Ml - l\ (. M>\(. -I \|l \4

Lutheran Walthei leagu,- Ice C Id a ound. Tump Lockers. 25

en-

’m residence on lots. E. P.

I •

y. Phone 453.

(iS — Have closed li for a reasonable

Present price is each. John Fru­

it sing Star.(thru N "v .)

Ri'\v binder. See • if. near Romney.

•) x | s: T .Me tr.udel ••!-th table, large'dTes­

table. HP) W.•i :»•(■* niw 496 250

: : N , i) ALTERATIONS1 ge McCall Clean-

t 28. 250

Pre-war bicvcln.

the

M -s Virginia Kennedy, who | makes her home in Cisco with

CONGRESS Sam Russell

Clyde L. Garrett

ATTORNEY GENERAL Grover Sellers Jesse Martin

TEXAS SUPREME COURT. Richard Critz.G. Simpson.» ■ ■ * a *

f i R f i I . I• H i

KILL THE ENEMYwho's after your

trier of d»«**ase . Anopheles. v ! <*r, f • where it breeds. Arm %

Spray F L IT .............. . . . . it - an N i fwav to kill ero q,i , B-m t .,!’ it wipe* out

ppe|... t " a i t . , that ipreadl■

jt kill* tha hahy n stagnant wat#>r* : with Flit, today 1

kills flies, ants, mothr. bedbuss andall mosquitoes.

Cof r ti/44. StatUX 1

®rm I

Hold-out Hit percent of alti heat.

I- dust prtH»f—-mind proof.

NANCY I* [ W i MSP' B( ,'AD {

' S H A T C H E R Y & F E E D

'II--IO N - II l>\ III I I) BY I \- 1 ( l- ( (I W Ml

themis

Ci-rhui

churchm of ct at

Th vpen-

VOM ti APPEAL — AmericanC in 1 f.,r Better Speech vuvs Anna Karen gill with' n 1 appt .ding radio voice, after six month contest. Dra- 11- ' is heard on "Dang-

crouslv Yours" radio show.

We have a complete line of Purina Feed.

Now is the time to lay in your Winter sup­

ply of twenty percent cattle checkers.

See us for best prices on all cattle feed.

Phono G.‘!7. 107 E. Ninth St.

1I___

PALACE THURSDAYFRIDAY

A Love Story Beyond Compare!

G A R Y C O O P E R C E C I L B. D eMSLLE S

The Story ofDr. W assell

IN rfCMN/COlO#

Through

\Y. Filth tinU50

HP- II MID l,KF>SED.r.' 5 K. Aug. 23. — The**•- r agency said in a x ' tch recorded by

o nvmiration ; com- ' .1 compulsory labor

w ! ,r girls and unmar-li..m 12 to 40 years

went into effect

L A K E V IE W C L U BOpen Every Night at 8:30 Except

Monday.

Open Sundays at 2:00 P. M.

Dine and Dance to Good Music.

10,000 Miles Of

ADVENTURE

* » . A« V

PMa l ---------- . }

i V

KIMSULInsulation

C A N M A K E Y O U R

H O M E 20<~f

COOLERIn-tall it vourself.

To find the girl he'd always loved— hut never met!

CISCO LUMBER & SUPPLY‘ ‘We're Home Folk-"

REAL e s t a t e SERVICE

"it'll this >acp for host b . m i .mi in -, city

Colorado River nan Co $84.M.

Wha. well improved stock lrm Bnikenridge highway, ‘*.50.“•-a< i• farm near Nimrod.

•’•arr,' country home de 6-'.„iin house all modern

b'miem cs, only S4.000.II irrell Hill stiw k farm

"-ali- with all equipment. “k u- for particulars,

cent I \ decorated 5 room ‘ southwest part. $2,500.

Good_ room house on \V.f 1 s'- ' .' 5(10.J "room hous< w est 13th St..■M'mod corner brick business

Sli.ooo.,r»"ni house West 7th St.,-..U-room brick hotel building.f 'lll,|

ns on farms, ranches, city"l*nv.

want to buy property,1 our list.

|11 v«u want to sell list it with

ten tat registry. Reg- "r tour rooms. Apts., and

y * ' 1 >r rent with us. No H f .

I( s M RI FS. REALe s t a t e s e r v i c e .

705 D Avenue. Telephone S2L

;• •*-gc. _ V SHw—, /S ■»7-,-. yN* ’ j-

Wm t..-«AWt'*WO**

These Are Busy Days for Us—

l ! i,i \\n riGERtiroe out from anti-Nazi strategic planning to bath* l-.is dog, Tiger Powerful leader who directs army in great fight against Germans

lives simply in cave hideout

j ... but we are doing our best to get your abstract orders { nit on time.' Shortages exist everywhere, and our fa- i eilities are taxed to the limit. Send in your orders now j Don't wait. Every minute counts — and say in placing | vour order: "I know we have a war on. You may have

I | plenty of time on this order." Thank you;

Earl Bender & Company, Inc.

I

<7 h iK * U i/U f a b o u t f iu ild L v u j

o i ModeiHiji+uj, afjie/L UJai ?

_ .F you own a leaky roof, see us about replacing it with Carey Roofing or Shingles. Our line is complete, so you can choose exactly the right type for the purpose. Not only can we give you the highest qual­ity, but you v4ill pay no more for Carey ma­terials than ordinary roofings will cost else-

Let us bid on your roof needs.

IEastland

ABSTRACTERS1923-1944 Texas.

^ ’M . M•Ti

• • A • • AI I j ! » l« HI «A» • A » »A» Ij« • A k*Ijl•A••AIli

PLAN NOWWITH YOUR ARCHITECTr* • • it • •▼••Ti iTuTi i

where.

Burton-Lingo Lumber StoreCisco. Texas.

ROOFINGS e. SHINGLESSTANDARD FOR

THANKS. CAR OWNERSFor Helping Us With a Big JobJR . Our Service Shop

has been a busy

place this past year.

Many car owners

depended on us to

help keep their cars

rolling, and with

their help we’ve

done the job.

Begin to moke your building plans with your architect. It is important if you would avoid the postwar rush. He is able now to give you unhurried attention in carrying out your new home ideas built around All-Year Gas Air Con ditioning. If you have your plans ready when materials and equipment are again available you will be in a good pos ­tion to secure some of the first del veries.

L O N E S T A R

Ford Protective Service has heen adopted by most of our customers. They bring their cars to our shop regularly for expert inspection and maintenance work, preventing small repair jobs from becoming major ov ei'hauls.

NANCE MOTOR COMPANYCisco, Texas. S. II. NANCE. Phone 244.

• »a» • A•>! # if . !♦! ’4i if! if! W. ’♦ ! # 5#; $ # # ! ♦ ! # ^ ™ *

i

\

I

exi ■ nr'toeRumeits 1 hoin

Vlr.rJpu.-pd f*nd'ond

lina non portu rhan i tha’ this to

Pr.ich of istod t

To ing si> iriff la

*%ki •ft dten

/o pj

rite >QdjIvpi < i

• fa re vpIxM. K-ftf Oti<*t Cij

i ,d l touyii’

ilk Iu4

oilit I

PAGE FOUR.BRIEFLY TOLD,1. A l

•»■ \ -

Albert L'.i'vxe o| Cros-by- i ' it U:. \ n Sum-

\I - Hilda Lu k« t RUI­N' M tu u■tutued hoivu . v ; 11 U .tl! . v. ivusm, Mis

Pin and Mar­ti.rd hav >• i eok here Mr- A l­

ii. Mi,aw

Hide till tie

J Doitoiior ,s heie

Mia L. J. Donohue

J .t Litchfield Herby K Litcnlicld

To the \ oters

Boyd Insurance Agency

General InsurancePHONE 19

I Will Greatly Appreciate Your Vote

Saturday.

S mir lov.il Mippnrt in the .lulv prnnarv PI.At I II 'll IN I III I I.All lot loiintv judge anil enabled me to lead in IS of the 27 Boxes.

I have made tin- lair ON M\ OWN MERITS, and have till'd to conduit in> iani|i.tit;n in a manner vvorthv of vour -uppott I therefore humblv solicit your vote next Saturday. Yiigust 2tith.

Sineeielv voins,C. H. ( H a d )O BR/EN( andulate for

C O U N T Y JUDGE

H e ' s the Centra l Of f ice M a i n t e n a n c e M a n —vital part of good telephone service.

keeps the central office equip­

ment in good working order.

I he speed anil accuracy with which

lu does his joh have a great deal to

do w it!} keeping telephone service

flowing smoothie — especially these

d.ivs when the wirts arc needed for

/ V

“ Pl ease l i mi t your

call to 5 mi n ut e s 1

wh e n L o n ; Oi s t a nc e

ci rcuits are c r o w d e d

S O U T H W I S T I R N B C C L T I L I P H O N E C O M P A N Y

THE DAILY PRESS, CISCO, TEXAS

her home <>n east SixteenthjlT the past week.

R E P L Y TO B U R K E T T 'S D I S C L A IM E R .

On August tith the Hunger Daily Times published an editorial relating to the clandestine mailing of a eer- tilii.de which had been previously circulated disparag­ing the previous political affiliation of Mr. \V. It. Starr, a candidate for Representative in the 107th District, and certain official acts and claims of Mr. Iturkctt, and sug­gesting that such political tactics are reasons why good men refrain from offering for public office.

There appears elsewhere in this paper a statement signed bv Walter Murray, and republished by Mr. Bur­kett denying that he wrote such editorial, hut he does not deny the truth of any statement made therein. Mr Murray in his statement, tenders to Mr. Burkett the columns of the Ranger Daily Times to deny the truth ol or to answer any statement contained in such edito­rial Mr. Burkett has not and will not so deny the state­ments and criticisms made in the editorial. Mr. Btirketl has not denied the authorship or responsibility for the anonymous circulars mentioned, nor has he denied or answered .mv other of the charges made in the editorial. Why has not Mr. Burkett availed himself of the oppor­tunity to deny the criticisms of his official record its made in the editorial?

It i> significant that Mr. Pearson received approxi­mately two-thirds of all votes cast in his home town in the first primary, and in the same primary Mr Bur­kett received approximately one-third of the votes cast in his home town of Cisco.

■ i.*. i -V i and p. i !>ir by ft tends of Mi JVarson.)

You'll Agree

TastesBest!

Nehi Bottling Co.Last land. Texas.

INSURANCEwith

E. P. C R A W F O R DAgency

108 W. Eighth. Phone 453

Insure in Sure

Ranger Daily Times Disavows Authorship

of Article and Disclaims Responsibility

Statement By The Publisher

In the August Utli is<uc of this paper appeared an article labeled "Editorial” entitled "Why Good Men ID Lain From Offering For Public Office."

This article was not submitted to the publisher and its contents were not known to him until after it pea red in print.

It wits not written by tin- editor, any member of staff or other employee of tins paper, and the publi-i t regrets the inadvertence through which the article u permitted to appi ar.

It is the established policy ot the Ranger Tinti - ■■ to take sides in local political campaigns and any import of the article or any other article which did so. as i , one m question, to that effect is expressly denied T article expresses the opinion of indent supportei ,f Mr. Pearson, and was composed by them, and its pie - eatioti should not have been handled as written.

The Times dentes any intention what-so-evei u jure Mr. Burkett. r< announces its policy not to t.i . • sides in local political races, and opens its columns Mr. Burkett for a reply to such article if he so destn

W A L T E R M U R R A Y ,Publisher.

(Tin. A'lv v i n- d fi'i by ti lends of Omar Burkett).

B U Y W A R

B O N D S

* *- S ' $ J t t |i i i j U 4

* V ! .

i r F -

• i • ’ ‘ . 1V 1

1

t - T p - - T -N - . *

4f t i \ i » j " -M -( t l J*-:?;*V ' i , * -

r»f** h r|r* f'Xr find mtpiring fartntfrw Tgrnnt.

O '*

NEW

T o d a y s W orld W ar is a w ar of m ach ines and m ach ines m ust h ave o il, e ighty times as m uch, in fact, as in W orld W ar I. The W ar D epartm ent put the resp o n sib ility of conversion and production sq u a re ly up to private industry. It responded "on the double w ith strange and lofty lo w ers w hich now m onum ent the p la in s.

The tow ers ore a tribute to the in ge n u ity of the petroleum technologist for he effected, a lm ost ovet- n ight, a m iracle of conversion to w a r needs: toluene for T.N .T., 100-octone gaso lin e for p lan e s, b u ta ­d iene for synthetic rubber — the list is endless.

The H um ble C o m p a n y has been in the very forefront in the m an ufacture of petroleum products

O N T E X A S P L A I N S

fot w a r; output in 1943 w a s a third more than in 1942. A p p ro x im a te ly 1 (To of the nation 's 100- octane g aso lin e for m ilitary needs w a s m a n u ­factured by H um ble in 1943.

G A SO LIN E POWERS THE A T T A C K . . , DON T W ASTE A DROP

O IL & REFINING C O M P A N Y; h u m b l e ;

J 4 &

S i r r i n g f o u r i tsm nt io l war t i m i needs today to h a t t t n your motor i ng pleasures of tomorrow

Hmhr«*»e I


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