Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 58, Ed. 1 Monday, January 21, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
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2
----------
T
1946
Cleburne Times-Review
V
United Pre— Leaeed Wire Service
PnblUhed Daily Except Saturday
UNO Committee
4
Starts Tonight
E
At Local Church
3
I i
88
ua
3'. A );
ment.
. -
the opening speaker in the Teach:
. were represented oh " the
7
CT
resolution
1
capture the presideny.
$
prei
from voting.
' -
unexpectedly
2
Ne Kt
A-mdud
Following Mi.
11
-
ac-
Aircraft Plants
i
For NU Student Circle Ten Dinner
i
*
Church of Christ will close
+
with
Thomas Dearing.
highest citation given by a council
is entitled to make four of these
orale—-
sses
8
pi
aool
offerd
will I Luzon, Philippine Islands. for the
diecuss
e
Pickets
has made him a
the
Tabora tories connected with
Cut Government Spending in Half President Proposes in Message
6
ent B J. Jackson and R. A. Kil-
man." also was submitted to the
m
l
1425,000,000
8,517,000,000
/
«
Finance Chairman H. C. Custard;
J
3
5
»
1
2,000.000
$
-
sTh
uX
an
p.m ... 4212
President will lay before Congress
tic. foreign and financial program
-- -2Eeeemm4# 7j *
de-
i
!
west portion. Continued cold. I
ments
U te
L EV
IRF
jUNCLE SAM PAYS OUT:
I’
u
Blum Resident
Dies Here Sunday
J. Wesley Hook Given Silver Beaver
Award for Service to Boyhood
Presbyterians
Open ‘School of
Missions’ Series
mjttee adopted unanimously today
the Moscow resolution for estab-
j production research.
Christian Democrats
Win German Election
Rebellion Flares
in Athens, Greece
‘Diversion’ Purpose
In Rarido Crossing
Says Gen. Walker
Body of Baby Girl
Found in Shallow
Stevenson Approves
Southern Filibuster
College Boy Fails
To Appear After
Police Summons
Urges General Wage
Increases; Would
Retain Draft Law
The
em-
Moscow Resolution
Passes in Voting
By Count of 46-0
$16,000,000,000
5,000 000 000
Thief Suspected of
One-Legged Romance
NET INCDME
$31,51,000,000
wealth
member
. 44 8
43 10
With failure .of the President’s
11th hour intervention in the wage
dispute the union's onge- postponed
knows he is being sous
dergast said. "His corn
Nations
commit
The
Dowse
and
of
3-
ay n«
le to
orderly. The strike Ras settled
down to‘sparse picketing with
cleverly worded signs such as
the two above. (NEA Photo.)
J
the
an
Overby,
le School
-------
The First Presbyterian Church
The
services
nose near where parts of the six-
yeartold child’s dismembered body
were discovered two weeks ago to-
day.
HATIONAl
DEFENSE
PUBLIC DEBT
SOCIAI '
i SECURITE
PUBLIC WORKS
■ vet PENSIONS
A BENEFITS
! DTMER
. EXPENSES .
2
4'
8
in
12
Citation Made to
Alvarado Man at
?
4
"Although he
.ved. it is reason
suspicion on eh
ure to appear
police.
HOUSTON, Jan 21. (U.P—Police
wondered today if the man who
entered the home of Mrs. Charier
L Thurber has a one-legged wife
or sweetheart
His only loot was one nylon stock-
i
If
, cept
M • 0 Steel Production
Seizure of Jap
ed States Steel
.$1,20.
S V
6
41
39
N
35
32
He
P8
Sunday
p.m. . f . 40
Military Arsenals
. Included in War
rations Move
imself by bls fail-
voluntarily before
Monday
a.m.
a.m. ..
a.m. 2..
a.m. .. .
noon
Shutdown Costs
Nation 200,000 Tons
—__ I
ATHENS, Jan. 21. tPA force
of 1,500 to 2,000 rebellious Greek
monarchists opened an attack on
the Peloponesian port of Kalamata
today in an effort to overwhelm
hy the Central Church of- Christ
and the i Eastside Church of Christ
p.m,
p.m.
p.m.
Mrs. X Wesley Hook; Mrs. Truett
McClung and Field Scout Executive.
Truett McClung
from Athens.
Nm-am sE003
t f
.I ,
1
cd for s delay in the voting, but
th- v were overruled.
Arthur’s headquarters today in a Of Steel Per Day
Summoned for Jury,
it
'i
coun-
silver
%
' v ’
■■
of
ar-
on
---------------
eeemr -------" me wmmr --epn
Search Ordered
Negligible As
750,000 Walkout
tening the
f
: 1
t
a
lit
------
sence in the fac
he has received
FRANKFURT, Jan. 21. (U.P
firs* com|
--
aum.m
gde cor
meta.
I greatest bid for power in France today by demanding that its
leader Maurice Thorez tie named president to succeed Gen.
Charles DeGaulle, who resigned last night.
-sum4000,pab
8,191,000,000
a aa w-ww AAN
6344,000,000
5529000,000
132,918,000,000
L a. j • t . ~ ----t
___
FT. WORTH STOCK YARDS
SILENT. Strikers at the Ft.
Worth Stock Yards and meat
packing houses have been very
for Sidnev Lester Sherman, 21-
year-old Northwestern University
student, wanted for questioning in
the kidnap-slaying of Suzanne
Degnan.
Police Commissioner John Pren-
dergast told reporters that Sher-
man. a former Marine, had cast
% ' j
<e$‛
~ o
-----
which, he said, would be violated fog. He left its mate behind.
the. largest party,
with the Socialists
address tonight Dean H. E. Speck I
dean of Southwestern State Teach-
er’s College ot San Marco#- will
This’ll Make You
Whistle—You Don’t
Owe as Much Now!
, _. -nT‛
-
a Communist president. the
Eldon Sanders is
First Speaker of
Series on Program
the Socialists refuse to
jon
dent of
szatnmp-an40-
DeGaulle Quits; Communists
Heads Department Work
button by next year. That works
out 41 $1,935 per capita, thanksa
tocamincrense in population as
well as a; lower debt figure.
Gen. Mark Glark. The resolution
was adopted overwhelmingly.
The resolution, referring to the
"Rapido river fiasco," claimed
losses totaled about 2900 men in
two days in January, 1944.
■
a majority in the assembly and
$292 billion this year. That would
have been $2,118 for every Amer-
ican—man. woman and child.
But with the war over and
government finances looking up,
the debt now figures to be $271
tlic economic
ty district to receive
J terday in a speech accepting a
t stnte park on behalf of the divi-
a sion,
h Earlier in the division’s two-day
• reunion he had declined to vote on
a a resolution demanding a congres-
2 sion 41 Investigation of the order by
11ST YEAR, NO. 58
Buckner:, wagze increases.
He opposed further lax rodue
lion at this session. 'Ie asked for
las Friday evening. The award was
accepted by Mrs Hook in the ab-
sence of her husband, who is ill.
The Sliver Beaver award is the
Starts Peacefully
The strike began pemeefullye-
Management officiate in Pemsy1-
vania and Ohio, where half the na-
tion's raw steel is produced, report-
ed they were "receiving excellent
cooperation from the union" in clos-
N en
- .
] Mr and Mrs. A. N. Ratteree,
m continues tonight rived home Sunday morning
from her home since Christmas Day,
has been found in a shallow grave
in a wooded pasture 17 miles south
Eldon Sanders, outstanding ed-
ucator of North Texas, and at pre-
sent superintendent of the Tipton.
Oklahoma Orphans Home, witk be
munists were
“Together
teacher and has been an' active
be invel- ' Scouter for the past 25 years. He
ssume he has served as Scoutmaster of Troop
it,”. Pren- 202 of Alvarado and was respohsi-
nuedab- "
must total
_______ except 24 to 28 in upper
Red River Valley tonight. Tuesday
_____I___- mostly cloudy, occasional rain in _ u.
__netie Love, daughter of Mr northeast portion and near upper the loyal garrison before the st-
and Mrs. William Delbert Love of coast and occasional show in north-, rival of government reinforcer
near Jarrell, west portion. Continued cold. I ' men!
Council Member John
aircraft parts plants located in,34 More than 1.200 plants closed,
prefectures, tenbranchnavaar Virtually oil had banked furnace,
senate. 34 military arsenals..andu3p and shut down mills in anticipa-
tion of the walkout. Some were
with two motion pictures entitled terminal leave. He has beep sta-
"Peovle of the Congo” and "Giant | tioned in the southern part of
CHICAGO, Jan. 21. (UR) -An in- for.service to boyhood. Circle Ten
tensive search was ordered today f
e,«
and. demand his return, presum-
abty after the June elections.
Hook has devoted many Vears to
the youth of his community as
counselor, advisor, Sunday SCI
STEEL STRIKE GETS EARLY
START. Steel workers at the
Johes A Laughlin Steel Corpo-
ration in Pitisburgh, Penn., got >
off to an early start in the na-
lien's predicted steel strike.
was adopted 46 to begin tonight at the Central
Church of Christ in Cleburne His
He did it after he got an official
Tuber- letter from the sheriff.
The Communists are the largest political party in
France, but they are too weak to form a government with-
-- — . .__ out joining a coalition with at leas one other major party,
Development (ourw;wh_ edfprobably the socialists. Excellently informed political observ-
ers believed the Communists would fail in their efforts to
awards each year based on the
number of units served. This year
three of the four awards were made
to men of Dallas. the fourth going
to the Alvarado counselor.
Community Service ■
The citation stated ■ that' Mr.
LONDON. Jan? 21 (U.P—:
The vote came
! touay" alter the big
j appcaled: (or quick
delegate was the only
isnt who abstained
The Philippines rais-
AUSTIN, Jan. 21.(U.P—-The body
o a O1month old girl, missing
could have-
/
4-
Maximum temperature 50
grew for past 14 hours
Minimum temnperature ' 32
gregtor—past 24- hours
take advantage of these courses. Afelee - and of the progress in I parents.
They are offered tree of charge *
WM— UNO potitien- and—seeurity
m
BROWNWOOD, Tex.. Jan. 21. (UP
The 36th (Texas) division was or-
dered to cross the swift Rapide
' river in Italy "for the purpose of
f diversion supporting the Anzio
I benchhead operation” according
I 1o Mai, Gen. Fred L. Walker, for-
I mer 36th commandant.
4 Walker made the statement yes-
Lt. James A. Ratteree. son
Pcpple." Miss Lula
report eerly this week s curtail-
ed Version of his fact-finding pro-
posal The Senate is paralyzed
by filibuster of southerners against
the edmintstration’s Fair Employ-
Adopts Bill (or
Atom Commission Demand President Vacancy
..... , .i . * — --------
I ‛* To 0n‛ ‛n‛0k
' Teacher Course French General’s Latest Tantrum t -
r— — ---------- ---- social I past six months. He plans to re-
ielopment of the African Congo i sume his studies at Baylor Uni-
—dons. Dr J W. Pickens .will versity in March
telL pf his experiences in North Sgt Murray Bratcher called his
FIVE CENTS PER COP)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. (U.P--
This might cheer you up a bit.
Your per capita share of the
prospective national debt is com-
ing down. |
A year ago President Roose-
velt figured the debt would be
priorities. k
Operations were limited to a 1
.scattering of small companies, led J
by .Henry .-J. Kaiser’s Fontana i
Steel Co, in California, which met__
the union’s demands; firms which I
held fixed-term contracts with the
union, and unorganised plants such
as Weirton Steel Co. in West Vir-
ginia.
from the European Theater of
__ . He will go to San
African missionary who is Antonio for his discharge. His
on leave from his assigv 1 wife makes her home in Brown-
Tdl1e ' a '■ : wood. ;
found Japanese heavy • industry/a .
"lot better off than had been ex- strike call became effective at one
pected." The commissfon was en- minute after midnight. Pickets
route to Washington from San 1 marched to the mills to take up.the
Francisco today.) 1 wage battle.
Installations seized included 256 1,200 Plants Closed s 1
first evening of
. *
CLEBURNE. 'I EX AS, MONDAY, JANUARY 21, 1946
==;=-#=- zaemsamuasdmesaz=zesma
British Foreign Secretary Ernest
Bev in led the campaign for action
now. He said the resolution had
been circulated for 16 days and
no nation ’ had proposed an am-
endment. If there were further
delay, he said, the world would
not understand.
"The people of the world may
think we are not as serious about
this important subject as we should
ment Practices bill. That bill .
would make it a federal offense |
to discriminate because of race,
or religion in giving employment. I
With his combined message the
maior suspect " the Alvatade Lion s club, and an
Prendergast disclosed that arti- active member of the Methodist
cles of the youth's clothing had church He takes a leading role in
been taken to Washington for an- city and community projects. He is
alysis by Federal Bureau of Inves- the third Scouter in Johnson
tidatien technicians
_____ - Mr and . Mrs. A. M.
mDedlical science ■ that is being | Bratcher on Saturday fRom New
mede there, - . Tersey. where he had just landed
-Romortow's ‘ program will high- ...........
!ixht an address by R. F. Cleve- [ Operations
out-of-town lahd, African missionary who is Antonio f:
the armed
from now
men. The
to 0. . The
President will lay before Congress I. L . ne . c.ic
plc his over all •MKge Pi8misses elk
' _ W Houston. 21 m _ Grave at San Antonio
s nighuy -sehooi or Mis-Sgt Bratcher Lands
siens" series last night with a 1 In U. S. for Discharge
owistration of over 50 persons at-
ble for the organization, of the
of the publicity Negro Troops of that city.
m--e -— a Mr. Hook is s charter member of
Philippine common-
powers had
action.
topic will lie "The Valuqy of a
Graded~ Bible School.”
The Teacher Development Course 1
planned by the churches of
Chtist in Clcbarnc will besin with
tonight's session at 8 o'clock and
will end promptly aft 9 30.
After the lecture cach evening i
the audience will be divided intol
departmental groups for laboratory J
work in teaching differed* age r
groups. ’ 4 A ■ 6-1
left-wing bloc," Duclos sid.
Alternate “Candidates
A blood-stained handkerchief, Beaver award. County Superintend-
with the marking "3168 S. Sher-
I
$
».f
AUSTIN. Jan. 21. — Gov.
T cplie II SlcvihiM today WM" he
, wo on th«> side of the southern
senators who are seeking to force
A pbhishment of W8 Fair Employ-
ment Practices Commission. 1
Stevenson said his attitude "is
a year pro when he protested to
the EEFC administrator at Dallas
| that FEPC orders would require
breaking of state lws on segre-
gntioh of races.'
At that time Stevenson compil-
ed a list of the state statutes
lishment of an atomic energy
commission. >
Committee action on the atomic
energy "resMtution was tantamount
to final approval The resolution
still requires formal approval by
the full assembly before the com-
mission can actually .be created.
But the same early action appear-
ed assured, since all 51 United
wage increase of $1.48 a day.
Operators, headed by giant Unit-
g when
as the
esses to
t c h e n
s pic-an -
ity flor-
button-
kJ
2
coherent durable
Speaker
Sanders ope 1 mg j
Brown has served for the past
eight years. Fred Diekson also serves
on the Executive Board. John
Buckner was elected as a mem-
ber at large from this county.
Those attending the annual
meeting from Johnson county were:
District chairman Fred Dickson.
Selective Service law must be con-
tinued beyond its May 16 expi-
ration date if the voluntary enlist-
mehts are Inaequate, Mr: Truman
said. He asked a decision
on Selective Service extension
in March.
The President deplored work
$ INCOM TAXES
dPr Corporete
W " EXCISE TAX
* ter Other Receipt
he TOTAL INCOME
A OLD AGE
M • TUST FUND
series Friday evening
76 - resi- address on "Thr Tes
Blum Tor the past 37 sporsibility.
closed as early as a week before the
deadline by premature walkouts.
Local grievances and disagreements
I over maintenance arrangements
for the shutdown were blamed.
TOTAL 7 Th S-
OUTGO $35,260000000,
NtT ' ‘ ’
INicOME 3 15 1,900,000
beniem 4,307,000 000
kreis counties for township
Nazi voters in 17 of 39 hessian ■ ed the walkout a •national disas-.
councilmen in communities up to l ter." He warned that some of the
. 5,000 populations. Voters in, . nation's factories may be forced to
townships outside Berlin.will hold suspend within two weeks for lack
similar elections throughout the 1 of steel. Preparations were made
American, zene next Sunday. for suspension of outstanding steel
..3
Jacques Duclos, Communist party secretary, announced
after conferring-wth-the popular Republican party leaders
and later with Socialist leaders that the Communists were
demanding’the president's post in a new coalition govern-
Believed Final: Scramble Ensues
L------------=--------
PARIS, Jan. 21. CU.P.—The Communist party made its
ELDON SANDERS who will
speak tonight as part of the
Teacher . Development Course
being held at the Central
Church of Christ.
slightly colder this afternoon and
...----— r-------- ---------tonight. Lowest temperature 28 to
‘of San Antonio, the State Depart- 32 in'/northwest and north central
President said
even a year
! BOOSTS VETS' EMPLOYMENT
INDIANAPOLIS (U.P — Postmes-
I ter Adolph Seidensticker hns an-
nounced that his post office is
doing ita- part to emnley -discharged
servicemen. He said that 108 out
ne the last lln full-time emplovees
hired for clerks and carriers' here
have been World War .veterans.
1 The Weather
WASHINGTON, Jai.. 21. (U.P-
President Truman sen: to Con-
gress today a message proposing
to cut government spending al-
most in half in, the 1247 fiscal
year and urging generhl industrial
deliver an addtea# Tuesday even-
ing on "The Qualifications? of fa |.
Bible Class Teacher.” On Wddnes-
day evehirg, CoU-m^
outstanding editor of Bibl
EAST FEASedMstiy Cloudy.
-- . --------
ed the only objection to the com-
’position of the proposed com-
such a government
A
“.ad
t m A J Wesley Hook, of Alvarado was
in Degnan Case
; untiring work in behalf of Boy
1 Scouts of Circle Ten Council at
1 the organization a annuak meeting
held at the-Athletic Club in Dal-
in Clebtrnec
Approximately 400
_ . reparations demanded from Japan
main aloof from politics until the were ordered seized by Gen Mac-
nation grows weary of squabbling
change shis mind:- Ma - zstute TOKYO Jan 21: U.MMATheErirst
observers believed he would re-
UNCLE SAN AkES IN
ing planta.
At Houston, Texas. haN the 5.000
employes of Hughes Tool Co., mem-
. bers of an independent union plan-
de- i ned an attempt to breach the CTO’s
picket Tine at 7 a m. (OST " 7
Patrick being the remaining two
FBI laboratory. The handkerchief recipients.--
was found attached to a wire Hulsey Succeeds Brown
D. A. Hulsey was elected to suc-
ceed Milton Brown as president of
th Executive Board of the Coun-
cil according to an election reprt
given at the dinner Friday night. 1
teachers are expected to attend hope
the Miseries. • moot
N mission.
,. .... . . .0, . I Some of the smail nations plcad-
They called their workers out
ahead of rest of the industry
and are shown here in a revolv-
- ing picket line at the main gate.
of the Jones A Laughlin Cor-
poration, (NEA Telephoto.)
■years, died Sunday at 3 p. m. in
a, local hospital >
A native of Alabama, he was
born on August 19, 1869. He mov-
ed to Ellis County in 1892 from
Alabama, and in 1909 he went to
Blum, where he had resided since.
Last rites will be ‘ conducted
Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. at the Blum
-aptst Churen with John Wat-
son. Lawton Ward, Ovie Clark.
Clay Hyder: Bert Erwin and
Warner MoHee serving as pallbear-
ers. Rev. Cecil Ellis will officiate
sod interment will be in the
Blum cemetery under the direction
of the Crosier-Pearson Funeral
Home.
Survivors inelude five sons.
Thomas J. Dearing. Houston: John
Dearing. Pasadena. Texas: Phillip
Bearing, Elayborn Dearing and
Bill Dearing, all of Houston; four
daughters. Mrs. J. . C, Brewer,
orth Cam’in c Mrs. Il >yetzer
Jneksonville, Fla.; Mrs haces
Shabowan, Houston, end BNte
Lylian Dearing, Jteksonvile Fla.,
and 14 grandchildren.
County T. B Ass’n.To Distrtet dudge LanstonG Kineto-
. day dismissed potential Juror Lan-
Meet at Legion Hall ston g. King.
.•' .A
.A,-',
Heading the departmental work
tach evening will be Mrs M E
Blake. Cleburne, supervising the
pre-school department; Mrs. Low-
ell Wimbish of Itasca will direct
'Cachers of Beginners: Mrs C A.
Buchanan of Denton will have
charge of Juniors; Logan Buchan-
am Grand Prairie will teach the
intermediate group; Earl Craig
of Fort Worth will direct® High
School teachers and Coleman
Overby of Dallas will Instruct
Adult teachers.
These departmental heads have
enlisted the • aid of’ some 35 out-
standing Bible teachers to help
with the series. Every Bible
teacher in Cleburne is invited to
U. S. Steel corp, estimated the
______ _______ The strike will cost the nation 200,-
firs* complete couhty return from j 000 tons of steel a day.—enough to
Sunday's free elections, the first build 1,000,000 refrigerators.
In Germany since 1933. gave the i Giant’ Aluminum Company of
- Rightist Christian Democrats 112 America also was closed. "Fhe
out of 156 local council seats a er aluminum workers union merged
unexpectedly heavy balloting, with steel workers in 1944. ci-
Tne elections were held by non vilian Production Administrator
John D. Small in Washington term-
directive placing under Allied mill- ’ - -T*
James Ratteree Home; —me SS&J
The action destroyed the last as 750000 CIO United Steel Wozk-
vestiges of Japan's ability to make । n khe
Installations seized were consid- tpry 1 ' t te country. ■ . ■ g
ered first priority material’' by Al- The strike was labor's answer
lied headquarters' and the U.S.Re- to management's regunai to meet
parations Commission that recently President Truman's propesaksa
completed a first hand study of
Japan's ability to atone materially
for her, damages .
(The’ reparations commission ar-
rived in San Francisco yesterday
and a spokesman said they had
T T
- ??" i; s 3 . ng S.: ■
2277
M.
be," he said, "This conunizsion
should be set up aS soon as pos-
sible to begin grappling with its
serious problems.”
i
MM
p
1 054 000000 sabmd
1,081,000,000 5"
4,203,000,000 dr
The Johnson County „ _ _____________—
ulsis Association will meet Tues: The judge opened it and found ment of Public Safety announced portions except 24 to upper
day at 3:30 p. m at the American । he had drawn jury duty. ' I today.
Legion Hall. i "H-m-m," h-m-med the Judge, The child was identified as Sher-
All officers and, directors of the "they can’t do that. Be a juror in ry Lay
organization are psked to attend my own court. I’ll just dismiss my- an
this important business meeting self." Aad he did. I near Jarrell.
a S
♦ The consultative assembly was
expected to meet at 3 p. m Tues-
day to hear DeGaulle's resignation
letter read officially. Heads of
all political parties will speak in
Uic debate 'leading to election
of a new—president.
Left Wing Attempt
Communist tactics seemed to be
an attempt to form a purely left-
wing povernment with the Social-
ists and Radical Socialists, headed
by a Communist. This would be
virtually a revival of the 1936
. popuplar front# ---- '
Ducloo said such a government
; would be logical since the Com-
stoppages and called for collective
bargaining adjustment of disputes.
He said long confinuation of ma-1
Jor strikes would heavily check
the reconversion Mgfram But he
gave no plans to Eope with labor
problems other than collective
v bargaining, fact-finding boards
and a general upward wage
trend.- Aut___
Little Progress
Since the congressional vaca-
tin ended one week ago there
has been little progress on any
Of the President’s bills although
the house labor committee may
emergency extension of trice con-
trol authority and urged that it
be expanded to put a cLllang on
sales prices .of id and new
houses.
Continue Draft Law __________
leading choices for president of a
left-wing coalition were former
Premier Edouard Herriot. Radical
Sarialist, and Vincent Auriol, So-
cRist minister of state.
1 DeGaulle definitely will retire
from politics for the present, ob-
.servers belleyed, desptte fortorn
popular Republican efforts to
constitute a
togers
Iward ‛
Anglin ,
e their
literature, of Dalas: will speak
on Effective Teaching Aids.” 28
On’ Thursday evening, Byron
Fullerton, who has moved for
years in educational circles' F
Oklahoma, and who at the present
is working with the students of,
Oklahoma University will address
the group on "Expanding the
Bible School.” Logan Buchann
minister for the Grand Prairie
—-
V. S. BUDGET FOR 1946-47. mary of estimated Federal Bud-
These two charts give a sum- get for fiscal year 1946-47.
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Morey, John B. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 58, Ed. 1 Monday, January 21, 1946, newspaper, January 21, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432458/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.