Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 238, Ed. 1 Monday, August 17, 1953 Page: 1 of 6
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1-.
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
s,
6 PAGES
☆
CLEBURNE. TEXAS, MONDAY. AUGUST 17. 1953
☆
☆
☆
☆
N
i
134.Bythe time church
About 1 o’clock, the church was
►. The crowd
ed into filled agin for the special music
-12
' XVM.
*
"A
, ice box or celd sterege vault.
Lloyd Golston were caj
Sunday by Assistant
of Wynne Prison Farm at Hunts-
only from the outside.
ising num-
a handful
ville, after "he saw them
walk
lama and Aubrey
lohn
and
capture
fail
caped
ing
fsun boot down upon the
whose economic reform program
Ea
were "restricted trusties" at 1
stham, working under super
x
jury in its inve
called "mistake
WICHITA FALLS, Tex
-2
Petition
22
days
death
mously approved by the court
• eave.
P
OFFICIALS IN GLEN ROSE
today.
Mgither
TCHIE.
WASHINGTON Aug. 17 HUP-
in
in #, refrig
Weather
pe
MI
be
holds.
any
loot
are
.a
■ 1^1
chax
■
HMEAmM
Beneficial Rains
Dampen Cleburne
LaMarqueNow
Back to Status
of the
a world
Educti
jgso
a motion to approve the election
valid, which would mean that the
PT- 4
5 4
city, was at
instead of
in force and taking their habitual
places to plants around Marseille
It was at Marseille that the Com-
m uniats instructed members of the
Why do
discarded
Laughlin Hearing
Gets Underway At
:5
Texas
loot moi
atinexih
Head-Lines
ByCLVDEWEAD —;
union
the gov-
RETURNING POW'S REVEAL
RED ARMISTICE VIOLATION
—IP-A
accident
' g
against Laughlin.
The Texas Supreme Court named
of food was left over to
a home.
urtly clou
1 rstorms
ju fmp
Se daily
" Me SUNDAY
, ESTAQUSHEP 1904
U. S. Prisoners
Who Tried toGo
Red, in Disfavor
INCHON, Korea, Aug. 17 -UP
-Chinese Communists purged an
udewalks. Why?
ing little fellow
and want to in-
goes an arm or
caped convict,
brought about
many’s post war debts except those
made in trade agreements he can
le keep these old.
teration units?
Sunday School rooms After a and aong service which followed,
onsive song service and a good + There were duets, quartets. soloist.
Abbot. former secretary
Smithsonian Institution and
driving the loaded coal truck across the span when
it collapsed; the passenger car, coming In the other
direction, stopped abruptly at the collapsed section,
signs.
Parisians, grown used to the
strike, got up earlier than usual
Monday to go to work on the crip
pied transportation system. Only
a few regular buses were running
and the subway was operating on
an irregular achedule.
Bono School Vote
Gains Approval
The Commissioners Court can
yassed the Bono school election
ballots this morning in s regular
session and approved the outcome
of the election.
ob S Floyd Jr., last September
at Alice. t .
_J attorney and
_______foe of Laughlin
and longtime South Texas political
• of another inmate who as-
Wynne farm a week ago.
| tore Friday were back in the cot-
ton fields at the Waldo , I jx , pen
mett More, Fuasell admitted his
identity. t
"You can’t blame me for trying
warden," he said with a grin.
Williams, serving a life sentence
as a habitual criminpl from Floyd
of food and ice tea for approxi
mately 175 people who attended
nissiqners, who
two ordinances
M17' de tannexe
WELTQ
calve to
union f
fiym
held at t
But from there on, there to dis.
agreement. Roger Allen, of the
weather bureaus division of scien-
title services said the bureau has
accompanied by Jo Ann Stansbury
and Rev Geo Beckett on the ac
cordion Jack Burton from Cle
burne played the marimba, giving
several solo selections, then play
t, on the other hand, says
found correlations between
yet IMP__, _ ______
e the picture during some of
eking long ■
ss for many
ran get mueN-of
by
these experiments,
d
eq around.an old boggy, wagon.
-2.YEAR.NO.238
repatriate
Another
epye, some ae yeu can to an eld
rtrigereter. We noavly mads >
enee when we were yeung end
teeHsh.
---------
CLEBURNE ami VICINIrY" —
places for some reason
childish mind could expli
._A_.-
Almost every day now, we read
Once discarded, they are seldom
reclaimed. AlL they do ia clutter
up back yards, farm yards, side
walks and back alleys.
If these units must be kept, why
not rip the lid from them, yank
the door off, or otherwise make
them safe. This seems to be the
Eleven Sign P
Floyd Sr., an Alice
outspoken political to
sheppardAir
noara openaa
"honthas,ymEommumatirand
not hav jet bombers in North Ko
me by. nothing pleased
in more than playing with.
4. Monda
I of study be also believes that
these changes in the "solar con-
stent", affect thekbther in a way
that can be forecast over '
might come alo
vestigateSnap,
band, maybe a
si
by
Socialist and Catholic
gMafs kept to contact with 1
ernment of Premier Joseph Laniel,
*
. 8.69
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
makes a forecast calling, say, for
no rain, the reversed forecast
would call for rain. 2n
"On the whole, the re
casts have worked a
others." £ .7
* Attorney Retained.
The organization of attorneys
—. —J retained Erl P. Hall
of Fort Worth, a former chief jus-
tice of the Second Court of Civil
been studying Abbots work for
years and, regretfully. has come to
truce agreement. 2H,
Board Opens Probe e
On Plane Accident
------------- -lmam-
Bono schools will not consolidate District Judge D. R. Wood of
with the Cleburne Independent Georgetown as master in the case.
School District., /. Wood was directed to hear testi-
Vote to the Saturday election was 1 mony and ‘evidence and report to
67 agaist and 38 for consolidation, the state’s highest civil court by
A mutilated ballot and one ballot i Oct. 1.
' which would participate in proper
ation of the peace treaty and draft
eters mey skill — ______
traps. Right here end new, we
whuld like to advise any yeung-
ster againet diging “ —‘3
Yev con smther l
HERO'S WELCOME'——Lt.-Col. Thomas D. Harrison,
Clovis, N. M., ’ receives a warm greeting from his
wife, Dotis, when he arrived at Travis Air Force .
Base. Calif. Harrison, a cousin of UN truce negotia-
tor Gen. William Harrison, lost a leg when his plane
was shot down over North Korea. He was one of
nine prisoners exchanged In "Operation Big Switch”
to arrive at Travis in the second shipment Of POW
sick and wounded. (NEA Telephoto)
county; Colston, serving 25 years
for armed robbery from Harris
county. snd Doggett, serving 15
normal in that arearand the drouth
will prohably be worse i '
than the one this year.
The weather ‘
Rusalan -28, a twin JM MM
bomber, , ’ M2" 2
However, FE AF refused t om-
ment on the report until It has re-
celved official information from
Korea. " •
Fifth Air Force ‘at Seoul said "no ’ 5
aircraft of tht nature were ob-
served on North Korean bases by
Fifth Air Force photo reconnais-
sance during hostilities.
Seoul headquarters said the jets
could have flown down from Men- - ..5
churia, participated in an air show
and returned without breaking the
Austin Courtroom
AUSTIN, Aug. 17 -UFA hear
ing opened inan Auti court t,om
Monday on an unpretedehted leg-
al attempt to remove the Texas
79th Judicial Distrit’s elected
judge. C. Woodrow Laughlin of
Alice, from his bench.
TWINS RUIN IN
THIS FAMILY..
Skeptics who believe twins
are not hereditary will change
their minds when they visit
the J. K. Graig family. Twin
daughter* were born Friday at
Memorial Hospital to Mr. and
Mrs. Graig, each of whom la
also a tw:n.
The twins are Janet Marie,
who weighed 5 pounds, 2 ounc-
es and Mary Geanette, who
weighed fl pounds, 1 ounce.
Their father is James Elvin,
twin brother of George Alvin;
and their mother is Patricia
Ann, twin sister of Bobbye Dan.
The Graigs live on Route 1,
Covington. Both the twin girls
and their mother are doing fine
at Memorial Hospital.
investigatians supporting Abbot’s
conclusions. The weather bureau,
he said, is not convinced that Abbot
really hss established variations in
the solar constant And even if he
has, the bureau ia not persuaded
that snybody knows what such va-
riations would de to the weather.
pAdbotaa Afia
"AAaru"
/
g—-
only solution. Youngsters don’t
like grown-ups about such
k They see adventure in just
every old castaway. Young
____ delight to playing in and
around some old track ar auto. In
-----g-.......।.....—---------------------------------;----——F
riendship Homecoming Is J
Veil Attended By Friends I
■ nW
“ -c-
E2t““20"K04 Ehsotropicg New^Yoric, Barharg at tammed salone Tthe
and causing an estimated $1,300,000 damage. The-winds clocked at up to 100
miles per hour, churned up the Atlantic Ocean into an angry, - white-capped
monster which battered Atlantic City’s steel pier, shown at right (NEA Tele-
photo) •
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
-»----- .----------- f '
" - T L. T , uTt , „ ’ . I (P Tulted Fgom Tolerhet• Ftetur
-- —..... fm- I Full Ueted Teletypesetter Wire Report of the IMled Frost. — World's Groafast News Agency U" kn" vnw. *
-mm-
_E12
Williams and Colston were re- ,
turned on recapture to the farm.
Eastham Warden Capt. Alva Med
Gill said he sent them to the cotton
patch Monday. '
, "I need a lot of cotton pickers,"
he said.
Prison officers continued pa trot
LAMARQUE, Tex , Aug. 16 —
UP-lamarque, until last month
the nation’s largest unincorporated
itll Lamarque Monday
, „ fexasity—k consid-
erbly whittled.downs
Building New
Aerial Rower
PANMUNJOM, Aug. 17
—UP-Returning American
war prisoners accused the
Communists Monday of
building a strong new air
force in North Korea in
violation of the armistice
agreement.
The information that the Reda
were uaing the truce to strengthen
Fight Enliven* Reunion
What had been described by the
sheriff’s office as a peace Al-
‘varado Reunion was not qulte so
peaceful Saturday night. Five per-
sos were arrested for fighting on
the final night of the affair.
All five paid fines for particba-
tion in the gang fight.
........
22
lar con- 2
1 Allan hi
lack of la
an election law.______ _____________ were -tn
'* The Big Four conference on the
treaty should be held within six
donths, the note said
. It proposed that Germany cease
making reparations payments on
Jan. 1, 1954. and that all of Ger-
Abbot’s basic
the earth's M
rea. ' "
Cpl. Charles W. Jewell, 23, of
Wimington, Del., and Pfc. Leopol-
do L. Howard, 23, of Mancom, Colo,
said they saw the twin-engine jets .
when they passed through Pyong-
yang on their way to freedom.
"They wre flying in group 6€
three;” Howard aald. "Then were
some YAKs there too. It wen aomo
kind of demonstration. I think they
were preparing a welcome for the
prisoners they were getting back.
' Jewell said MG-15 jet fighters
also took part in the demonstration.
Cpl Michael A. Giannini, 22, of
ling highways and roads in the |
Huntsville vicinity and in the Trin
ity River bottomlands in search for
Doggett, who had "to come out
somewhere,” McGill said.
teetered momentarily and then plunged Into the
river. (NEA Telephoto)
power George Parr, the "duke of
. __- ___ Duval" county, was one of the 11
Commissioner Sam Evans made lawyers who signed the suit
with aeetteeed chun- €
nday and Tuesday.
dampi spring and summer in 1976.
They’r not saying it will or won’t
they’re just applying the “re-
versed forecast” testing technique
CsilrenznorrrdictionbyDr
Children like to explore They bers Monday and only . ...
' tokPi Tolwawathe-lender dark of militant Reds obeyed Col
. ferhumatety, if1
■MIS, autes and the I
quits as dengereus to
frigereters ore yerp
Ehing we can thiek of,
he saves, which veu
*• dig in the greuna I
American arttoL who h
carleaturesotrormer
Truman and Goh. Ml
Arthur for Red leaflets
renoumced commumlam.
■HM. wa-
evow "netu3.
lme yeung-
Huntington Station, N. Y., and Cpl.
Richard L. DeLaney, 21, of TNace
d*h, Wia., confirmed the other pt-
oners’ report,
. . Description of IL-28
n . For East Air Force headquarter*
• iniTenyanaidubmanidleranagi
tion of theplanes fitted thpt of the
Swimming Pool
Is Open Today --
. The swimming pool, usully clos-
ed on Monday, is open today, be-
cause of the forced closing last
Friday and Saturday.
Pool employes’ worked sround
the clock Saturday in otr\r to fill
the pool and have it open yester:
day afternoon. A fire hose speeded
up the task of filling the pool which
would normally take four or five
days._____
in 1976
"‘One of tha simplest and
lucid l at e e a eV Verification
schemes," Alton said, "is the 're-
versed forecast.' When someone
an stairs ted been set up inbeta
alate* and at the back of the At
There are literally millions al dis-
cap't expct toe children to.do it
ML We should take on the obU-
gation of adulthood and try to
make things as sate as possible
tar the yonagaters, who love life
ae well aad make our lives so plea-
Certainly, none of us would al-
low beer traps to be sot in our
backyard, front yard, in the streets.
' and longer the concluion that his findings are
3." "not proved.”
agrees with ""entmim
; The sun, to
The freed prisoners said they
saw new, twin-engine, swept-wing
Jet bombers iput on a show over
the North Korean capital of Pyong-
yang after the armistice had been
signed. >
i Wouldn't tacroaso Pelentat
; Terma of the armistice stipulat-
ed that neither side was 6 M-
crease its military potential dur-
ing the truce.
through its earlier report accusing
Laughlin of "reprehensible” sets
as a judge by joining in the legal
setion against the South Texas Jur-
TRUCE, CAM FALL 30 FEET-The driver of this
truck, Forrest Redmon, 65, of Mt. Vernon, Ohio,
war killed and four passengers in the automobile ....... _
‘ njured, whentheir veniclea plunged W feet TastJuly
Into (he Tusearawas River from the Roscoe Bridge
on the outakirts of Coshocton, Ohio. Redman was
------------------- action against Laughlin was under
District Judge Penn Jackson and taken accused the Judge in seven
District Attorney Jack Altaras are other instances, than the accuse
holding grand jury in Glen Rose tion he "did obstruct the gand
Jury.
Eastham tai
Russia Moves I
For Treaty In
Germany Soon
Moscow, Aug. 17—UP- Soviet
Russia advocated Monday forms
tian of a provislonal united Ger-
man government and a Big Four <
conference on the German peace t
treaty within six months
The Soviet Union also called for
free German elections without for
elgn supervision and reduction of |
Germany * World War debts |
These Russian des.res were made I
known Sunday when the Soviet |
govemnment handed notes to am- I
bassadors of western nations. ’
The note argued that four power .
preliminary talks should begin Im l
mediately with the Germans sitting I
in on the conversations. |
I it also proposed that the East I
, and West German parliaments I
I should get together and organise a "
uhified provisional government
Conroe as a possible escapee from
------- i. Confronted at
Hm-egm
namn
- —Le-ae3
at ■ *a0bi . er 2 ■ #E9A2eg
The homecoming Sunday atsermon by Rev Bill Suhr, lunch
riendahip Baptist Church, tar sur was spread on tables out under
nesed toe hopes enddreama at the shade trees There was plenty • I
e pastor and members. .....M ‘
For Sunday schooL, there were
vacations at thousands of tourists, one of 27 witnesses scheduled to
The union heads were attempting testify in the history-making legal___..
to end the strikes before the gov- action undertaken before the Texas years for rape from Harris coun.
ernment collapses or before the i Supreme Court. . ′ ...........
Communists firmly take over the 1 The petition Jaimed at ouster of____ ___
walkouts for their own political de l Laughlin was filed under a provis- vision of guards but sometimes’out j
ion written into the Texas Consti- l of sight. •
tution in 1879, initiated by State
Sen. William H. Shireman of Cor-
pus Christi and signed by 11 South
Texas attorneys.
Allegations brought against
Laughlin include a charge the port-
ly-bespectacled judge "did ob-
struct" a Jim Wells county grand
mitigation of the so-
s orardar" of Jac-
uniform and Isy there stark naked,
Didn't Feel Sorry
"We didn't feel sorry for him,
because we still held a lot at things
agsinst him. But one guy tried to
slip him an overcoat, but the guard
stopped him." i
Two days later Ika arttst was
sent to jail and never was seen
again.
"There was another guy—s real
progressive,” Balkcom said. "He
spent a lot of time in regimental
headquarters. He wrote a lot of
peace appeals
But Balkcom said the Reda
purged him.
"He disappeared from camp in
March or April, 152," Balkcom
said, ‘‘Last June some man oom-
ing from the labor camp told ua
he wa there serving out his Ume.”
riods. The weather, he says, ■
to repeat itself Merv 23 years-"
In a report oar his work, the
Smithsonian said Sunday that
. the downtown portion. Annexa-
tion of approxitately 8,000 acres
of residential Lamarque still held,
however.
The commtasloners and leaders
of an incorporation movement at
Lamarque agreed to abide by ma-
jority vote of Saturday’s straw bal
loting on the annexation question.
Returns from the elction, which ac-
tually hsd no legal basis, showed
Lamarque residents voted 1,280 to
544 agsinst annexation of the down
town portion by Texes City.
A petition asking that an ejec-
tion be called on a proposal to
incorporate the un-annexed section
of Lamarque still was pending in
the Galveston county judge’s of
flee.
The petition ufready was filed
when Texas City commissioners
followed up annexation of the 8,-
000 acres of Lamarque with an-
nexation of the rest of the neigh-
boring toWB,. . . .
M wenk about 3:45, so folks could get home,
ite Ar".rin‛" do the chores, eat a bite and re
iveain "emalves. H isTtarro- tun for the night services. There
I jeoking sect at a tree, which were visitors from Kansas City,
hes H more deadty to unaus- Covington, Lebanon, Mt Carmel..
etingrehildren. - Joshua and Cleburne There was,
Ti donth tree 1111*11^1 it tah- much hand shaking, greeting of old
i auch a heavy' leM on ite friends and families, durng unen
M precious ihings on and after the evening song service I
rih, it juer a piein old retrigera- _ —---------- [ 4
h Workers Two Escaped Convicts
Return to Jobs A D , , * —
in Mass Moves Are Returned To Farm
the make modal or type of refri. 5"UWee •‛UVV Wed „ .
UAG,HC mH A, E, LU - 451, -“i *•,, ,,, — « HUNTSV ILLE, Tex , Aug. 17-•
o them'haxs.onne,th ng PARIS, Aug. 17-UP-. Workers UP—Two of three convicts who
Incommon,a.catch.whichsan returned to their jobs in strike ned Eastham Prison Farm on trac
opened only from the outside, bound Franco in increar-------1 - -
...H I nwian ■ I III , IIIIMMIIW
3&
By Free
. - .... ,
Many happy return* of the day
to Mrs 3 . HAYNES M Mr
birthday Sunday ... Beauteous
DIANE BOULWARE, queen at the
ALVARADO REUNION, posing or
photos to be used as advance pu-
blicity in ter quest for beauty queen
honors at WAXAHACHIE thia
month ... Former Cleburne grid
greats. FINIS WHITE/" DAN
BUCKNER, ODELL GRIFFIN glMl
‘'‘Occupation coats should not ex-
reed five per cent of the combined
ast and West German budgets,
the note said.
• Monday morning newspapers
said the Soviet Union has invited
an East German government del-
egation to visit Moscow.
The note to the Big Three in-
hassadors said the prpvisional gov-
ernment should discuss "barring
the inclusion of Germany in coall-
Sons snd military aiances direct
Art against any state which took
"Phr ih-the wer eueine Hiter'
Germany."
end summer at
7 be drigir than
By and large, D
___________________thia year’s weather
famous student of solar radiation, tsK, so for aa gam
Harry C. Fussell, serving 20
years for robbery from Tarrant
county, was picked up by High-
way Patrolman Fred C. Bums of
0T°222882323
g ! ■' 22′8
j their aerial punch was offered at-
| er 73 more American* went through
Freedom Gate aa Operation Big •
I Switch neared the half-way mark.
. Low-hanging thunderheads an __„a
leased 1 95 inches of rain on the last week
Cleburne area from 11 a. m. to
,------ in 1976. This has been,
vyyw™ for example, an extraordinarily dry
a lite- spring and summer in the Booth-
Southwest Due To Enjoy Damp Spring And Summer
. — . — WASHINGTON. Aug 17 -UP- belleves thesunse gutpouring or----
■teMm Anma Weather bureau experts, if they’re heat varies
"7*7*“ « onrougtza
2 ' Southwest enjoys an unusually these ‘
torders tostage stdown ter'XT'&i
in privately-owned factories
Report* from one factory after i
another told of workers appearing
Armnat, there to oar gataalh anmen
storedto item to pllwehiien
2• live very leng nce the d®or
has slammed shut.
On the larger type sterege
taxes. even it the tock felted te
catch, the beavy daer would be al-
meet impossible for a child to open
by pushing from the inside. Once
these big deers are fitted tate place,
euctten makes them even more
difficult to open.
"r
was shipped to a Rod labor camp
when he fell Into disfavor. <
These purge* of Amerians who
tried to change their politic* ware
revealed by Pfe..Willam M. Balk-
com, 24, of Lindale, Ga. .
"One guy drew vartoons for
propaganda leaflets," Balkcom
said. "He drew John Foster Dulles
with fangs and dollar signs for
rye* He drew the same kind of
pictures of Truman and MacArth-
ur.” bl ' • ” 31
Balkcom said the artist made
the fatal mistake at seeing the er-
ror* of his ways.
"He changed his mind about
communism snd tried to'become
a reactionary," Balkcom said.
"The Chinese put him in a building
with the windows snd doors brok-
en. It was December or Jnuary
snd below zero. 2,
"He must have gone erssy in
there. He ripped off his psdded
Red-dominated OOT metal workers
to begin iMen strikes,
reyed union laders tare
from all-night meetings
across U.S. 75 near hire about 2
p.m.
Prison officials said, meanwhile,
that the search for William*. Col-
that the judges could not interpret The hearing opened before Wood
were .not counted at 10 a.m. in an Austin district
The motion by Evans was unani- court room.
The State Bar of Texas followed
ra tdez =m
1 .J -M* Er.2"0Y.“20"01 monial period gave those who want I
L*^*1*-!^* .L/T JT- u ed to testify for the Lord, a chance
.".2".,! to do eo. Then there was more ,
a."a"nt"ranMaw‛Tk.""‛7 singing. Brother Bryant dismissed
8 11, • 203 a2dspi 5
tigation Monday into the crash of
s T6 trainer on open ground Mt
westher reported excellent. Two
men were killed. .
The victims were reserv capt.
Elbert R. D. Donham, a3, the punt,
and M-Sgt. Burt L. Farris, 2 Both
men lived al Wichita Falls, where
Farris was stationed and Denham
was acivian employe at Shep-*
pard Field. A
Farris’ parents, Mr. and Mn.
Jesse E. Farris, live at Lovington,
N.M.
"• : 2 • 4 tez
Appeals, to join Shireman in pre-
senting the case against Laughlin.
Attorney GoneralJohn Ben Shep-
perd also wss invited into the
case by directors at the State Bar
and volunteered services of his of-
fice.
The petition on which the legal
nomam -aretmpmekdaM
C ;........
--eE ' ------
12:30 p. m., according to U. S.
Weather Observer W. S. Ownsry,
with an accompanying drop of 20
degrees in temperature.
The rain was reported general
and proved extremely beneficial to
shrubs and lawn and pasture gras-
ses
☆ ☆ ☆
%i2
0132 g B
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 238, Ed. 1 Monday, August 17, 1953, newspaper, August 17, 1953; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1403138/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.