Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 289, Ed. 1 Friday, October 16, 1953 Page: 1 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
m
4)
L
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
Fun Leased Telatypeseller Wire Repor of the United Press, - Worls Greatest Nm Agency
—i -----------------— . ... ____________ ___________________________ • ——------------- ,-----—
A
Ar
☆
Ar
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 11 1953
☆
☆
48TH. YEAR. MO. an
☆
☆
10 Passengers
1
• cuple of weeks ago.
33
,.N
gbh.
2 ■
Ee25"
f
-nbg
drive each year.
Ar
r
*. -
•' e
2w •0
Negroes Continue Attack
LOUOR CAN BE
could be left there.
killer of Bobby Greenlease before ’
2
Jenkins said.
10
IC
The
lea
-UP-The
where the murder took place.
'01
k for
Thimayya said
Texas Senators
would be
wy
dedicate the church parsonage on
fens were
question the landlady1
occesion for everybody else. U.S. senators from Texas, who dis-
two towns.
binoculars.
X
fuels for the Air Force. He said
I didn’t grow too big and expensive.
Springs and so far as the reports
women, he was ’'misunderstood
just good clean sportsmanship. In
Ship's officers said the fire was
(See IGMORE page
2
61
•2,
their
"deeds" -
fgave
)
and
reputa-
a -
...»
ljh
Ni
ke
—
rOinRFUl, SPY MAKES PROTEST
Fantastic Exploits Of War May
Come Up In Parliament Hearings
feotball
Walnut
fans who went euttosee football
game and remained to start a ruck-
Phel
mad
his men will go to the home of the
woman Friday M she does not up
Another bald fact, there is al ;
ways a certain amount of drinking i
Britain Touches Off
Second Atonic Blast
natural gas if enough was inhaled.
Crump said he had found a small
agreed on presidential candidates
last November. arc agreed there
Freighter Limps
To Port on Fire
LIVERPOOL, Eng., Oct. 10
Throo Court Cases Filed
A suit for debt and two divorce
cases were filed with the district
clerk yesterday.
death beneath a bridge.
They intended to investigate the
3
4
added,
to talk
’ T 4 'l '
ths Kar
teptt
Sc DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABUISHED 1904
One man did get his head cut,
but chances are the wound is about
heeled. Tee bad the other wounds
will Mt beet as quickly.
2
(n mm Wem Telephete Mature
MFI Oemtrel Fee Vesture
a Eima Meatene
who live here.
In accepting the check, Moore
j expressed appreciation and explain
Ana.ga
JJowdy ^JoILa
By PRbE.
tion considering my wild youth. But
I'm proud of what I did during
the war.”
Eddie's story is one of the most
remarkable of the war. When the
Germans overran Jersey he asked
for a Job with them, using clippings
of his crimes and an alleged desire
to revenge himself on society as
references. He was trained as a
saboteur and twice parachuted into
Britain.
He claims on his first trip he
contracted the British and hence-
forth continued, in the Nazi Spz
force under their direction. In this
way, he said, he enabled t
due ticket issued him by the
. highway patrol.
ime between Joshwua and
rings played at Joshua.
Em .'a
Head-Lines
By CLYDE MIAO
he admitted the slaying himself,
Marsh has been missing since his
i group that arrangements had been
I made with both banks so douations
LONDON, Oct. 16 —UP—One of
the most fantastic exploits of the
last war may come up in Parlia-
ment. and Eddie Chapman hopes
it will make clear at last he won
Hitler's Iron Cross not as a Nazi
spy but as a British spy posing as
a German spy.
"It’s very worrying,” said Eddie,
a tall, handsome businessman of
38 whose manners, attire and cul-
tured accent hint broadly of a de-
luxe background.
Actually Eddie, before the war,
A spokesman for Lykes Broth-
ers Steamship Co., Houston, said
the ship sailed from New Orleans
Oct. 1 with a general cargo that
1 included cotton and lampblack.
Just three or —----
all of the trouble. Just three er four
porsons took all of the ley out of
Australia, Oct 16
touched off Ha sec-
exptostom Fhursday
vhiing brown cloud
miles above the
ether words, the youngsters were
better sports than the throe or four
Ignoring 'Come Home Pleas
REDS CALL
"2i,9
"1.3
L^t
injured More medical help sped
to the scene from L.yon 20 miles to
the light locomotive to run onto j
the same track as the commuter (
train, which was halted at the ata-
ion.
..2
A
..2
—-2
the things with which I have dif-
fered with President Eisenhower.
I will continue to vote agai+st rais-1
ing the debt limit for anything
short of total war.”
Only in that event, Daniel said
should the nation spend more than
comet in from taxes.
name entered the case.
In Kansas City meanwhile, Jack-
son County Prosecutor Richard K
Capt. Fritz said the man denied
then admitted he asked another
Negro worker in the Walnut Hill
shopping village, where Mrs. Par-
ker worked, where he might get a
date with a white woman.
Fritz said the man asked the
question three days before he walk-
ed off his Job at a Walnut Hills
drugstore and never returned.
was overcome by methyl mereap-
InGasIncidei
HOUSTON, Oct 18
Federal Bureau of toves
dicated Friday it would
10 PAGES IN 2 SECTIONS ]
— -
aeyommaasnamaguusmay- |
g-urkmmmm
snen W
"Steel-helmeted Indian soldiers, d
armed with rifles and packing gas
masks, had surrounded the village 1
compounds,” United Press corres-
pondent James Morrissey reported
from his vantage point 1
Position of Battle 8
”The soldiers--we found out lat- 1
,4 31
V
12
took from vital Londe
The Germans were i
which sent a
two to Ours
staft Photo by Jim Weat
COMMUNITY CHEST gets substantial boost as O. D.
Crill, superintendent of the Santa Fe Gulf Lines, hands
Vernon Moore, general chairman of the chest drive, a
check for $1,000. The Santa Fe makes a substantial
contribution to the Johnson County Community Chest
‘4
22
, 7
Mt-
Bh l
ESSh. I
sd I
hie J
w
It would be good if these two
towns could forgive end ferget the
unpleasant affair. Attar all, the
fastball game was between the beys
of joshwa and mhe bays of Walnut
-----
mm-P-
was leader of the notorious “Geb
ignite Gang" of safeblowers. He
was doing two years ia
on the island of Jersey when —
war broke out and Scotland Yard
guy in the Bobby l
terious "fall
(ef
8
Argon road, two Hfl—__
114, just outside the Dallas city
limits, said she had started to put
some mail in her box when the
...... „ . . .... .. . I gineering professor in charge of
At 81 IN, Oct. 10 —UP—The two the project, said "we are at a loss
to explain what happened ” He
said he was "making a full inves-
tigation and will continue it until
shpul hegovernmenta economy I' the whole story.
Both Sens.- Lyndon B. Johnson, | Enokemn tnr 127 ,
H
4 Wither,
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY -
'artly' cloudy and mid through
fey-.
were speakers at a luncheon meet’
ing of the Texas Research Leaguetan,
Thursday. research project insearch for new
Johnson. the Senate Democratic i--— — — ----: —----
leader, said that while "big gov-the gas was about as poisonous as
PANMUNJOM, Oct. 16 -3
UP—Anti-Communist North
) 3* .4
1
m."0
g
"I am sure no large amount of
gas escaped, because it would be
obvious all over the campus,” he
said
a raw product used in the
Council of Churches. He will re-
present and convey Christmas
greeting this year from the U. B.
Churches to the military personnel
in Korea and Japan during the
holidays, a mission recently endor-
sed by President Eisenhower.
camp of President Eisenhower.
allocated. He also advised the
at a football game, no matter
where the game is played, Cie- (
burne. Walnut Springs. Joshua, |
Covington. anywhere There is also
a certain amount of drunkenness. I
h
■ •
-’-y
was waiting to pin from seven to
15 years more on him.
Late this month, Eddie's mem
oirs are being published and that
is why he dashed up from We new
home at Accra on the African gold
who stayed with the Democratic A spokesman for the FBI indicat
—.___‘--adn-i E-— ed government agents also would
investgate. \
i Crump, who described the proj-
1 cd as “top secret,” said Nestings
said he would set up legal
dry tor a state charge of
ng-ugainst HaB and Mrs,
in case any hitch develops
It was the second big defeat tor 4
the Communists since the Inter. a
views began Thursday, Only 10 of 2
the 500 Chinese prisoners inter-
viewed Thursday accepted repa-
triation.
Thimayya refused to give news- I
men permission to enter the Indian M
camp area and tome of the cor-
respondents climbed nearby hills
to watch proceedings through
cd to the group the four agen
ties to which the funds would be
Injured were rushed to Lyon and
Vienne after the Serezin hospital
i junction station Friday, killing 10
I ‘ persons and injurig 43.
Thirteen of the injured were in
serious condition and police fearet |
' the death toll might rise.
The three end coaches of the
flimsy local were thrown across
the main line tracks as the locomo '
live smashed into the laat car The!
L screams of the injured mingled
with the hiss of steam to turn the
I । peaceful wayside stop of Serezin
1 into an anguished inferno, eyewit- .
I i nesses said
Four local doctors dug through >
I j the twisted wreckage to reach the
alibi of the Negro that he was at
home during the time Mrs Parker
was attacked. They were sched-
i break in one pipe, but such breaks
| frequently occur and were not un-
usual
OFF TALKS
, PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
' DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNINO-PHON 5-2441
Koreans refused to leave
their prison compounds Fri-
day, forcing the Neutral
Repatriation Commission to
call off Red "come home”
lectures.
The 1,000 North Koreans showed
no concern over the presence of
lying on the ground, them rifles
pointed straight at the enclosures.
It looked like the beginning of 8
toward Mra. Wood’s home. She had
summoned police and sheriff's dep-
uties who arrived quickly. The Ne-
gro disappeared as officers arrived.
About 30 officers searched the area
for him.
The Negro was described as
share was no friction there, Daniel said that “running our
- nation into debt is something that
has to be stopped. This is one of
refetee.
It is when one of these explosive
situations gets out of hand that a
ruckus starts. It lakes a person or
persons with patience, experience
and know-how to curb such things
' before they get out of head. -
3% etunsaimagerent: Agree on Plans
ball pro Severel hundred o these V
‘Sremri For Economies
Bellevue Drive at 3 p.m. At 5
p,mw Bishop Martin will dedicate
the Methodist Church parsonuge
uled to question the landlady I at Glen Rose.The bishop is one
Thursday, but she failed to appear othehetter known lendersofthe
Detective Capt Will PritandMgthodltreharnhordihanNtorXi
controlled, and the cargo waa not
damaged, and no one war injured.
Btm
r j
Hr
e gang fight. However, eyowit-
nesses hem both towns say there
wasn't a gang fight at oil. Now,
If ayauitMMas foiled to observe a
gang fight, it must not have boon
principals Involved will he long - petty and supported Adiai Steven-
gone, but the two communities will ■ son for president, and Price Dan-
remain. There will always be a j iel, who bolted to the Republican:
little different feeling between the
sabotage after Henry Nestings of
Bandera was overcome by a mys
terious gas as he guarded a /‘top
; secret" Air Force research proj-
I ect at the University of Houston.
Nestings, a student watehman at
the project, was in serious condi-
Negro grabbed at her.
Her little dog, which had follow* wot
ee her from the houwe, barked and by
aried-to-bitethe WuroW* Ms
Wood screamed. TheNNegto raced
across the roads into a heavily
wooded area.
A
itiful part ebout .it all i
nom, aexidundBa
"“-vrymanqpmaerhn
l. This they do, provided
y wants to do the right
council table, created by the re-
cent resignation ofO,E(EARH
BANDY .. Attractive ladies NEW
lid BstellaAImart1inL' 02
drinks in a downtown grill while
being regaled with tall tales by a
gentleman story taller, »
The BILL WHITES hatnwish
CLAUDE FOX over ««MjB 32
3 - "“,2
82
1 77
of the Dallas-Fort
Police Friday planned to ques- thodtst CMn
tion the landlady of a Negro sus-
pect in the murder of Mrs.
H. C. Parker. She was knifed to
ernment" was here to stay, an
! alert citizenry should see that it I
a very big fight,
Aassrdinq to these witnesses,
the ruckus was cused by wee or
feur, maybe mere. men drinking
beer and making with laud cues
neises. The Joshe ceneteble made
a couple ef arrests and started to
make • third. The third men eb-
jected and the constable cracked
him on the head with a persuader.
*
What started out as a little ruckus
has grown into a pretty good sized
ruckus, with residents of Joshua
feeling badly toward first one and
another and the residents of Walnut
Springs feeling likewise.
A good many county officials
2 I : " ;
None Injured In
Traffic Accident
......An automebiie seetaapt on High-
way 171 near odley yesterday in-
jured nobody, but caused consider-
able damage to one car.
- Cause of the accident, according
to the highway petrol, was one
car making an improper left turn
off the highway and the second
ear following too closely-
- One car was extensively dama-
fed in the smash up while the
other was only slightly marred.
-— 1—i:-----—2—A
the pair on a atatc charge of kid-
naping. which also carries a max
imum penalty of death-
In St. Louis, a Mw theory on
the whereabouts of the tniaaing
8300,000 ransom money was ad-
vanced by Police Lt. Louis Shoul-
ders,- who arrested Hall Oct. 8 in
a hotel room. He Mid he believed
the money, half ml the 8600,000
paid to the kidnapers, was in the
hands of St. Louls hoodlums.
Shoulders said he believed the
money was stolen when Hall threw
a party in a St. Louis motel.
Burr-Burning To
Be Studied Here
A special meeting of the city
council waa held Wednesday in or-
der to get more facts on the
burning of cotton burrs and to de-
termine what could be done to re-
duce smoke from this operation.
Representatives of both gin com-
panies expressed willingness at the
meeting to co-operate in adopting
practical corrective measures if
such measures could be determ in
ed
On the suggestion of the city
fire marshal, it was agreed to sub-
mit the problem to engineers of
the Reynolds Burner Co. of Dallas.
An engineer from that company
will be in Cleburne this weekend
to make a study and recom-
mendations.
The Negro then stood and peered
Cool, Wet Front
Heads for Texas
By UNITBD PRESS
/ A cool front, pushing thunder:
showers ahead of it was expected
to enter the Panhandle Friday
night.
But no rain was forecast for the
rest of the state. The front wasn't
expected to lower temperatures
anywhere else but in the Pin-
handle.
Elsewhere, temperatures were
expected to continue above normal
in the upper 70s and lower 80s
Hottest place in the nation Thura
day was Presidio, which reported
a high maximum of 95 degrees.
Work Starts On
New Water Tower
Erection of the new water tower
near Cooke school began Wednes-
day and work is progressing rap-
idly.
The Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel
Co. is erecting the metal stand-
pipe structure and should finish
the job in a few weeks. When the
project is finished, it will mark
the end of the water and sewer
improvement program voted on in
a 1950 bond election.
anti -Com munist from the Chinese
compounds Saturday
Preprations of Fore,
Before calling off the talks, Thi-
mayya had ordered the troops to
surround one of the two North Ko-
rean compounds and the spldiers
made preparation to force the men
to come out. 3% T
E Lt. Gen. K. S. Th
imrauacmm
"“‘2
tin will preach at Main Street Me
thodist Church services Sunday
morning at 10:50 o'clock and will
rm-- tttmpde
Mra. Elma Wood, who livea on about alx feet in height sand 100
"locks off Hwy pounds in weight. Hs complexion
~ " Was light, Deputy Sherff Ernest
Liquor compels men to do' FBI Will Check
About 4 a.m., 2 man called j
police to tell them he got mad K akaaen Anni
at hia girl friend Before the 0UVIQMC AIIVI
eonversetion ended, the man l_ _ -#-*
was jailed on a drunk charge.- T--
it was also learned by police 1
*g that the drunk had an over-
ed his story severat times fine
thing he did not change, however,
was hia contention that he was at
home at the time Mrs Parker was
murdered.
The man admitted he had made |
advances to women in the past, but _
said it was "just my nature." He UP—The U. S. freighter James
said in five instances when he was I Lykes, which sailed from New Or-
reported for making advances to 1 leans after loading cargoes at
women, he was "misunderstood." Houston and Galveston, Tex.,
reached port here Thursday night
with a fire in the No. 2 hold.
loumetold; who wants to referee the BLAMED HERE..
hh ------—-
eimere ■
oymemmpxooyres-tm
aae a.
Dallas residents bought weapons
by the hundreds after a white
--------M raped and murdered
rw gu scene of Frduy‛s"fei,*
dent is' about three miles west of
Skating Slab Will
Open Saturday
Plans were being made today
for the re-opening of the skating
slab at City Park tomorrow night
No skating sessions have been
held since the beginning of football
season because the men who were
operating the slab are all football
coaches. Plans call for the slab to
be open each Saturday night and
if the personnel can be obtained,
it will be opened on other nights
during the week.
600 heavily armed Indiana toutside I
their compound who had been or- -
I dared to bring themhutgtorcibly,
E. girnecessaty." “326,33 0
1 - . _ L —-21 a Pvp-m _ ,
Lui ,28
■ -utOI
NA
91
w
1 V
pear at police headquarters and
question her there.
Police questionod the suspect, an
ex - convict, for several hours
Thursday and found that he chang-
find themselves on the spot as re
gards this ruckus and they feel
badly about the whole thing, too. ।
All of which proves that nothing
good comes from drinking beer at |
a high school football game
4
Nobody from Joshue or Weimt
Springs is happy ebout the sitva-
tion. They are meking demands
right and left and one lawsuit has
already been filed as an outgrowth
of the ruckus.
Some of these demands may b«
justified. However, for the most
part, unfortunate things of this
sort would bo behter left to die a
natural death, in this case, the
litigation appears to be reelly for-
A-a-L-
evEneG •
One thine for sure, the men
who were drinking beer at the high
school football game were doing
wrong. He eues0n oteeut "
253205883292842
A. e •222
. - .9
2.. ,
i । Vg
Coast, where he la in the contract-
ing business.
"Britain's ML5 (the secret serv-
ice ) have cut everything out of the
book relating to my service for
them,” he complained. "They
claim it cornea under the Official
Secrets Act. The way the book
reads now sll I did was spy for
the Germans.
Attempts In Dallas Area
behind the frame bungalow of Mrs
Die in French
Train Accident
ye. VIENNE France, Oct. 16 -UP
i —A locomotive hurtled through
■Q - t ground fog into the rear of a
E crowded commuter train at » Inn
Police Break Up
Boys' Fist Fight
A teenage fist fight ended ab-
ruptly when a motorcycle officer
arrived on the scene yesterday
afternoon.
The high school boys got into an
argument at school and began ficht-
ing near the American Legion Hall
The fight was halted by the police
man and the participants were tak-
en to the police station where they
were released after a lecture
---a
2x22258222
.2 in the federal effort to send them
ition in- Vto the gas chamber under the
Lindbergh law.
Phelps said he had asked federal
authorities to allow him to arraign
_ d
9 UaEiaansenannimninaMGNXaTEiSSMGTEE2Emam6E68IRM
wlomaaaaali. SSMEIETTIMIMSMeMI
by in West
ROTARY VISITORS—Twenty-five members of the Fort Worth Rotary Club broke bread with Cleburne Ro-
tarians Thursday noon at Lberty Hotel in a club relations gesture. Above, left to right, are: Earl Heath, sec-
retary of the Cleburne Club; Glen Darst, secretary of the Fort Worth elub; Ellis Sowell, TCU professor, who
was speaker for the day; Ira Kersnick, president of the Fort Worth club and Dr. J. E. Curtis, president of the
niwup W ah eight men and six Cleburne club. The visiting Rotarians provided the program.______-..................
Santa Fe Makes $1,000 Jail Prisoners Anti - Commie North Koreans
Donation To Chest Fund Begin Search For
i' Five Santa Fe officials visited loc al agent, both of Cleburne trill Body of Marsh
the office of Vernyn Moore, gener presented a check for $1,000 to; "scp, M. oc in up
al chairman of the Johnson County Moore and Paul Ashley, city cha ir: i STn0 .Jo riMorr" armed with !
community chest Drive, Thursday. , man In his presentation. ( nil said , Qunt{ Jai prisoners Hr in
for the purpose of making the that the Santa Fe was proud to Pad 58 bnin • Eridayn.or
company's contribution to the fund, have the privilege of participating th ThomaV lohn’mL i
The oticlals were O. D Call, in the chest,drive in Johnson Coun of Thomas -ohn M.r.h, the my.
superintendent; E B Melton, div. ty due to the fact the Santa Fe
sion passenger agent; H K Hall, was very closely tied to the com-
traveling freight agent, all of Ft. munity life of the county through
Worth and A. J Baker, purchasing its many employes and officials
agent and storekeeper; S. S. Rowen
•a"iE
The ruckus was first reported as
V» 2TSTRSGgSFS80-GS
Mah ....... .Ah.
7 ; .h’eeagke
«440 z
i tioh at a hospital.
' Joseph H Crump, chemical en-
*’'■ -eer-tmnatmmremmmma
t .P. . Tahe ■ A • ■ " 2 12 . "•2
What a pity.
Ar . u
But the end is not yet. It is the
lasting effect of auch a ruckus that
really counts. In a few years, the
SULLEN—John Wesley Wable, right, in custody of
Albuquerque detective, waits sullenly at train station
for return to Pennsylvania where he will face charges
of murdering two truck driven on the Pennsylvania 1
. Turnpike. (NEA Telephoto)
1
CLEBURNE Lions Club members f
and their guests, viewed 4 gripping !
I film of the devastating WACO tor-
nado at their regular luncheon
। meeting today Many happy re-
turns of the day to droll ELMER
HARPER on hia birthday today... J
ALVIN (PAPPY) STUART, CE 9
BURNE builder, may be selected 1
to fill the vacancy at the city
SasmhamiHMtksmimeasamm
same yar . edge of Dallas but a little dog
Downs believes there is a chance chased the would , be assallant
| he will turn up the body of Maran. nwnV
whd was named by Hall aa the —
"Some people who read the cen-
sored version even said ‘This man
was » German apy—Why don’t
phtuomt“Eachoghm"besnthron. .......
en the couple of lifetimes of adventure, supply faulty
' doesn’t want to get shot at thia verted the Ge
date when he is at least making
a decert Hiving honestly.
“And, rd like to clear my name i
as far aa war service goes," he I
. aaddMM
--------— ----------------------
desa— - TT
F. . --8 a
K l - oe.l MhodN
v 41 ?■ 159
"M Md
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 289, Ed. 1 Friday, October 16, 1953, newspaper, October 16, 1953; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432915/m1/1/?q=%22waco+tornado%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.