Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 182, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 13, 1954 Page: 1 of 16
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4
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
5c DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press, — World's Greatest News Agency
16 PAGES IN 2 SECTIONS
A
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CLEBURNE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 13, 1954
49TH. YEAR, NO. 182
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Man Suspected As Kidnapper
Identified By Woman Victim
Move To Strip McCarthy
Rapped By GOP Senator
Fightin Words Hurled
By Hearing Principals
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
mist
has
Opti-
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Catholic Militiamen
Turn Back Red Force
HANOI, June 12—UP— Several risen and smash the Red assault.
ed a ceremony honoring memory of a
student killed 25 years ago in clash with
police. At least 15 persons, mostly stu-
dents, were killed and 40 wounded in
Thursday’s clash. (NEA Telephoto)
Memver— lexas Press Association
Texa. Dail; tress League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
1,500 Homeless in Argentina
BUENOS AIRES, June 12—UP—
Nearly 1,500 persons were report-
ed homeless Saturday in the wake
of floods of the Bib Paraguay and
Parana Rivers.
PHOENIX, June 12—UP— Mrs.
Evelyn Ann Smith identified an un-
employed welder as the man who
kidnaped her for $75,000 ransom
but the suspect refused Saturday
to admit or deny the abduction.
The welder, Joseph Marsin, was
trapped, in part, by his persistent
mispronunciation of the Supersti-
tion Mountains, where Mrs. Smith
was held captive, as the “Super-
stitious Mountains.”
Police were searching Saturday
for the $75,000 paid by the victim’s
husband, well-to-do Herbert Smith
to win her release Thursday.
(UP) United Press Telephoto Pictures
(CP) Central Press Features
(KF) King Features
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Head - Lines
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Birds Give Jell-O Sign ^The Bird^
Some bird apparently doesn’t like Jell-o. . . .
. . . And he tried to do something about it yes-
terday . afternoon.
The bird was probably disturbed over why the
big bowl of Jell-o was not melting in the 95-degree
heat about 6 p.m. yesterday. So, the little bird took
a lighted cigaret to the top of the signboard on which
the dessert dish was painted and set it on fire.
At least, firemen believe that’s what happened.
The fire originated on the top of a billboard in a pas-
ture just south of town. Nothing else was on fire in
the vicinity and no persons were around. So, the birds
get the blame for setting the sign on fire, probably
by carrying a cigaret or a live match into a nest at
the top of the board.
The blaze was extinguished by firemen, with
only the top of one side being damaged. The bowl of
Jell-o is still unmelted.
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CLEBURNE & VICINITY — Wide-
ly scattered afternoon thunder-
storms, extreme northwest portion
Sunday.
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Trouble Brewing
Again in French
Cabinet on Peace
PARIS, June 12 —UP— The
French national assembly voted
“no confidence” in Premier Joseph
Laniel’s government Saturday, and
the burly premier immediately
summoned his cabinet to decide
whether he should re-sign. The as-
sembly vote was 306 to 293.
The “no confidence” vote was
the direct outgrowth of defeats in
Indo-China and the government’s
failure to reach agreement at the
Geneva peace conference.
It pitched France into its worst
political crisis since World War II,
and could seal the doom of the
Geneva meeting.
Summons Cabinet
Laniel immediately drove alone
to the Elysee Palace across the
Seine River to see President Rene
Coty, and then summoned his cab-
inet.
The assembly was to reconvene
to hear Laniel’s decision.
Under the law, Laniel is not re-
quired to quit. Had his opponents
achieved an absolute majority of
314 in the vote against him, resig-
nation would have been mandatory.
However, the alternatives were
almost as bad as resignation which
would leave the French state rud-
derless and the way wide open to
the Communists to make new mili-
tary gains in Indo-China and propa-
ganda hay at Geneva.
19th Post War Crisis
If Laniel resigned:
France would be thrown into its
19th post war cabinet crisis.
There woule be no government
to represent France at the make-
or-break stage of Geneva, although
a “caretaker” delegate presuma-
bly would remain.
France’s stand in Indo-China —
while the Viet Minh Reds build up
their assault forces at the very
gates of Hanoi, would await the
drawn-out negotiations to install a
new government.
WASHINGTON, June 12 —UP—
Sen Henry M. Jackson said Sat-
urday Roy M. Cohn threatened to
“get” him because he poked fun
at Pvt. G. David Schine’s plan to
fight world communism that in-
cluded the use of “pin-ups.”
The Washington Democrat said
t was “not the first threat” Cohn
had made during the Army - Mc-
Carthy hearings. Jackson said he
was “one senator who is not going
to be intimidated” but would con-
tinue to go after “all the facts” in
the row.
The reported threat to Jackson
came to light after a heated quar-
rel and near fight late Friday be-
tween Cohn. Sen. Joseph R. Mc-
Carthy’s chief counsel, and Robert
F. Kennedy, counsel for the Demo-
crats on the Senate Investigating
subcommittee.
Asked to Fight
The flareup boiled to a point
where Cohn asked Kennedy, “do
vou want to fight now?” the words
waxed hot. But no blows were
struck in one of the sharpest shows
of tempers since the hearings be-
gan.
Kennedy, 28, younger brother of
Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.)
and a son of former Ambassador
*e Rritain Iosoph P. Kennedy of
Boston, said Cohn approached him
dicer tne hearings recessed for the
weekend to relay a message that
“we’re going to get Jackon Mon-
day.”
The 27-year-old Cohn denied that,
he had “threatened” anyone. But
by local authorities, stormed from goville as the Texa
their homes to reinforce the gar-1 person of the year.
stand fast after firing into crowds of
students staging demonstration in Bo-
gota Thursday. Trouble started when
members of Bogota University conduct-
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Members of the newly-form-
ed Cleburne Industrial Foundation
met in special session Friday, for
the purpose of completing plans
of organization and action, to raise
$100,000 capital as set out in the
charter.
Fred Dickson, executive chair-
man, presented members of the
committee with a plan of action,
used by various organizations in
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raising capital funds. Dickson ex-
plained in detail, the methods.
The group agreed that a financi-
al committee, to handle big con-
tributions, should be headed by co-
chairmen and named Trent Root
and Tom Davis to the posts.
Other chairmen and committees
will be announced later.
The Foundation will serve Cle-
burne and Johnson County by fin-
ancing the construction of build-
ings for small industries, interest-
ed in locating here. These build-
ings will be leased or sold to such
.industries, according to the wishes
of management. Rental and pay-
ments will go back into the fund
and used over and over for the con-
struction of still other buildings to
serve new industries.
The Foundation plan has been
highly successful, where ever it
has been put into use. Several Te-
xas towns and cities have profited
by such an oranization.
The Foundation will be a non-
profit organization, with dividends
coming back to contributors in the
form of better business conditions
and growth of Cleburne and John-
son County.
“I look at it this way,” one Cle-
burne businessman said. “Suppose
I contribute $1,000 to the Founda-
tion. Then, according to all reports
on other similar foundations, I
will profit by increased business.
I figure I can benefit by addition-
al business and profits, which will
repay the $1,000 several times with-
in a year.
The fund raising campaign is
expected to get underway soon.
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he said Jackson had been “very
unfair” in his questioning regard-
ing Sahine, Cohn’s close friend
and a former McCarthy aide who
is a central figure in the Army-
McCarthy dispute.
Jackson had asked McCarthy, on
the stand for the third day, a series
of questions ribbing a four-page
“psychological warfare” plan he
'aid Schine had submitted to the
State Department. Kennedy helped
form the nuestions.
'Elks Lodges in Pakistan’
Jackson askod at one point if
the Schine plan involved the use
of “Elks lodges in Pakistan?”
Schine’s plan proclaimed itself
to be a "long-rane strategv for
immediate execution” designed to
operate in areas where “the enemy
has established a salient of terrify-
in seove." It proposed, among
other things, a union of Democratic
norties and sugosted the use of
“pictures, cartoons, humor and
pin-ups.”
■ The Wisconsin Republican said
the plan, plus Cohn’s recommend-
ation, were major factors in his
decision to make Snhine a consult-
ant to his subcommittee in Feb-
ruary of last year. Another factor,
he .said, was that Schine would
work without pay.
According to Kennedy, Cohn told
hi mthe McCarthy side was going
to “get” Jackson. Kennedy said
Cohn told him “in essence” that
“we are going to bring out stuff
on his being favorably inclined to-
ward Communists.”
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EXPLOSION — Fire sweeps through
chemical plant in St. Louis after a pow-
erful explosion ripped the plant apart
late Thursday. Five persons died and
11
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32 were injured in the explosion. Prop-
erty loss was estimated at $220,000.
(NEA Telephoto)
Maricopa County Attorney Wil-
liam P. Mahoney Jr., said that
Marsin “would neither admit nor
deny” the crime during several
hours of questioning.
Confronts Suspect
Mrs. Smith confronted Marsin
Friday. She said that although
Marsin was wearing different
clothes than her abductor, she rec-
ognized physical characteristics.
Mrs. Smith, whose husband is a
co-owner of Smith Pipe and Steel
Co., here, said her kidnaper was
hiding in her car when she left
a beauty parlor Wednesday after-
noon.
He held her captive in the car at
gunpoint. For a long period she
was locked in the trunk apparent-
ly while the kidnaper left a series
of notes for her husband.
The notes gave an intricate se-
ries of instructions which led Smith
to the mountains where he paid
the $75.00 ransom and Mrs. Smith
was freed.
Seized 2 1-2 Miles Away
Marsm was seized Friday only
2 1-2 miles from the scene of the
nav-off. Ha was bedraggled and
“very thirsty” and claimed be
was a prosvector searching for the
legendary Lost Dutchman Mine.
FBI agents questioned Marsin
but released him to local police
after annorentlv deciding that he
was not linked with the kidnaping.
Phoenix officers, however, turn-
ed their investigation to him again
after questioning Mrs. James Ruiz,
who works on the quarter-circle
R Ranch where Marsin was found.
Police then brought Mrs. Smith
tn headquarters where she identi-
fied him.
Robert Pulcinski, a worker at a
service station where the ransom
note was dropved off in a bag of
golf clubs on Wednesday, also iden-
tified Marsin. He said Marsin left
the clubs with him, saying a “Mr.
Smith” would call for them.
CRYDP Sponsors
Set for Awards
A total of 13 sponsors of Cle-
burne Rur’al Youth Dairy Program
Foundation animals, will be repre-
sented at a CRYDP awarding
scheduled for Friday, beginning at
9:30 o’clock at Barn No. 1, Jere
Swatzell place, south end of Prairie
Avenue.
Directors of CRYDP voted on the
morning hour so that participants
in the awarding ceremonies would
enjoy cooler temperatures, than
later in the day.
Sponsors to be represented at
the awarding include Aubrey Pres-
ton and Bryan Miller, Donald Dia-
mond, Berry B. Taylor, Dr’. R. W.
Kimbro and Dr. W. R. Whitehouse,
Westway Sports Wear, Inc., Mrs.
Neina Baker, manager; H. Wall
and Son, Southwestern Bell Tele-
phone Co., John F. Buckner and
Sons, W. A. Sanders, Wooldridge-
Meals Grocery Co. Dillon’s, Mate.
W. E. Howell and C. A. Munsch
and KCLE, John Marti.
An orientation meeting has been
scheduled for Tuesday night, at
City National Bank, beginning at
7:45. This meeting is being held
for the purpose of orienting par-
ents and youngsters, who will par-
ticipate in the Program, beginning
when each of the 13 fine heifers
is awaraded, to descer'ning boys
and girls, residents of the county.
‘Handicap' Committee Meets
AUSTIN, June 12—UP—The an-
nual meeting of the Texas Com-
mittee for Employment of the
Physically Handicapped met Satur-
day with representatives here from
more than 60 Texas cities. Gov.
Allan Shivers will present an
award to Cecil E. Downey of Sea-
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piano for six
years, appearing
on Big D Jam-
boree, for a per-
iod of three
months and on
other r'adio and
television shows.
MISS LODEMA
G R I F F I N, 12-
year-o l d daugh-
ter of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Grif-
fin, 505 South
Robinson Street,
has been elected
Sweet heart of
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French missionaries converted
many of the villagers to Catholi-
cism in the last century, and they
have formed their own militia.
The French command announced
that although the attack was de-
feated “appreciable” casualties
were suffered by both sides. Many
of the militiamen were taken pris-
oner by the retreating Reds, the
French said.
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thousand Catholic nilitiamen turn-
ed back a sneak, pre-dawn attack
by strong Red forces on the village
of Vinh Mo, only 18 miles north-
west of Hanoi, the French an-
nounced Saturday.
It was the first big attack
launched in the upper Red River
plains since the fall of Dien Bien
Phu, May 7. The. village lies be-
tween the surging Red River and
the town of Vinhyen, 20 miles from
Hanoi, on the Hanoi - Kunming
railroad.
The Communists, led by Gen.
Vo Nguyen Giap, now have a
horseshoe line made up of elements
of seven Red divisions hooked
around Hanoi and to the north
and south of the Red River delta.
Hundreds of Red rebels, loaded
with grenades, mortars and auto-
matic rifles, launched the attack
Friday morning against Vinh Mo.
They jumped off from underground
hideouts on the island of Van Coc
in the Red River. They crossed
to the north bank of the river on
rafts and in sampans and pushed
northward.
The Reds sent wave after wave
of troops—apparently regulars —
storming against the village out-
post, which was held by a Franco-
Viet Namese garrison.
The village defenses held, but
the Catholic militiamen, organized
Methodists Elect
District Laymen
Doyle Stalcup was elected Cle-
burne District Methodist lay lead-
er, at Texas Methodist Conference,
held at Waco, Friday.
Associate lay leaders for the Cle-
burne district are Tim Williams,
Cleburne; Earl Brackett, Grand-
view; Galen Gilbert, Stephenville;
Clyde Hurst, Burleson; Johnny Lu-
ton, Granbury; Howard Sego, Glen
Rose.
Two Injured In
Traffic Mishap
A Negro man received a broken
back in an automobile accident,
north of Alvarado, about noon Sat-
urday.
The man and his wife were
brought to Cleburne and re-
eived .emergency treatment at
Memorial Hospital. The woman
was not seriously hurt. The man
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital
in Fort Worth, in a Dillon am-
bulance.
The accident occurred, when the
driver apparently lost control of
the car.
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Jet Plane Hits
Classroom; Five
Persons Killed
MEMPHIS, June 12 —UP —A
scheduled Navy air show featuring
a new tail-less jet fighter was can-
celled Saturday after one of the
craft crashed into a naval base
classroom killing five persons and
injuring eight but narrowly miss-
ing 109 sailors.
The Navy identified the dead as
Lt. Robert Woolverton, 33, USN,
Abilene, Kan., the pilot; Mr's.
Elaine House Branch of Memphis,
a civilian employe at the base;
Chief Petty Officers George Hurl-
burt , 36, Portland, Ore., and
George Wright Woodruff, 42, San
Francisco; and Francis Brous-
seau, 40, Manchester, N. H.
Woolverton, a security officer'
with the Bureau of Aeronautics in
Dallas, had just taken off on a
practice flight in one of the three
faster .than- sound Cutlasses flown
to Millington Naval Base here for
the demonstration when it crashed
into the building.
Flames quickly engulfed both the
plane and a two-story H-shaped
classroom building where some 100
sailors had filed out three minutes
earlier.
Lt. Cmdr. R. D. Aylor of Hous-
ton, Tex., who was one of the
eight persons injured, said he was
talking with Mrs. Branch and three
chief petty officers at one end of
the building “when I heard this
whistling noise of a jet.”
“I had started back to my of-
fice and was about 10 feet from
the front entrance when the noise
got louder and I turned in that di-
rection,” he said.
Aylor', who suffered critical
burns about his face, hands and
legs;’said “'about that time a flash
of fire hit me in the face and
knocked me off my feet.”
He said he ran out of the build-
ing and drove his car to the dis-
pensary for treatment.
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Bee......................... A___________________________•
RIOT — Colombian Army units, right,
We read a story the other day
that smacked of very fine logic.
The story had to do with an al-
coholic who was a prospective
member of Alcoholics Anony-
mous, the organization which has
done so much for alcoholics by
following the simple teaching me-
thods of Jesus Christ.
The story isn’t necessarily con-
fined to alcoholics. It may be
applied to any problem of life
and work successfully.
According to the storv, this
prospective member of AA was
more than little concerned about
remaining sober for all times.
A
The alcoholic went to see his
sponsor', or teacher and guardian.
He opened the conversation with,
“Look here old chap, I have read
the 12 steps from cover to cover.
I guess I understand thoroughly,
but I can’t see how this program
is going to keep me perpetually
sober.”
His advisor said, “Pick up that
book, there on the desk. Open it
anywhere and read one page, no
matter' what it concerns.”
The pupil obeyed, picked up the
book, opened it and selected his
page, which included a recipe for
making a chocolate cake.
A
When the teacher was inform-
ed as to the nature of the sub-
ject, he said, “Go ahead and read
it to me.”
The pupil read the recipe, from
start to finish.
“Read it over again,” the in-
structor requested.
When the pupil had read the
complete recipe three times, he
was allowed to close the book.
His teacher said, “Right. . .
now, you have studied and read
the recipe for a chocolate cake,
but you don’t have a chocolate
cake, now, do you?”
☆
The teacher went on to explain
that his pupil had studied and read
about a way of life that would
help him to obtain perpetual so-
briety, but he still didn’t have so-
briety. Then the teacher gave the
punch line, “Both recipes need
practical application. You certainly
won’t get the cake until you have
obtained the ingr'edients and made
the cake and you won’t obtain so-
briety until you have done the
same.”
Somehow, folks get the idea that
everything should be handed to
them on a silver platter. They
think that all they have to do is
shout in a loud voice that I have
read thus and so, therefore I am
supposed to receive all the bene-
fits, as outlined.
\ .2
So many people think that
reading the Bible is all that is
required to become good Chris-
tians. You have met such per-
sons, people who go about quot-
ing one verse of scripture after
another without having the slight-
est idea concerning what it is
all about.
Unless we put into action, the
knowledge we have gleaned from
the Bible, we might just as well
be studying something else.
A
There is nothing wrong with com-
mitting to memory every verse
in the Bible. Many pride themselves
in such memory work. They like
to get out in public or sound off
in a group of friends, quoting and
arguing about whether such and
such a verse is worded this way
or that.
Such a waste of time could be
used to good advantage by such
people, if they would only get out
and obtain the ingredients.
A
God has entrusted to us a thing
called will, not will power, as
some are inclined to reason. God
is the power. God is all power
ful. He has seen to it that We
have access to this divine pow-
er and wisdom. However, he ex-
pects us to use our will to ob
tain the ingredients for’ the Chris
tian way of life.
LAFF - A - DAY
e
Pert ISABELLA COOPER and
daughter, PAULA, coffering up at
a downtown grill. . .CLEBURNE
visitor, RANDOLPH RHEW, gain-
irg an affection for the town. . .
HOWELL (SPLIVENS) HOPKINS’
a member of the great Oak Cliff
High team which met the YEL-
LOW JACKETS here in 1926, died
of cancer at IOWA CITY, IA., yes-
terday, according to word received
by his friends in CLEBURNE Fri-
day night. . .Attractive MARY FA-
VER the ad gal of the TIMES-
REVIEW, returning with her fami-
ly from an extensive vacation trip
through the middlewest, the East
and CANADA. . .DR. ALEX HO-
WARD, the dentist, partaking with
refreshments with a couple of
friends.
City Judge CAROLL COOKE,
chatting briefly with a friend. .
KARL MADSEN completing the
arduous task of mowing an ex-
tensive patch of high grass at his
home. . .Two new houses are going
up rapidly on BELLEVUE DRIVE
. . .BOB BRADBURY, the mer-
I chant, enroute to the bank.
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AS "MISTAKE"
WASHINGTON, June 12
—UP — Senate Republican
leader William F. Know-
land Saturday sharply crit-
icized a surprise move by
another GOP senator to
strip Sen. Joseph R. McCar-
thy of his committee chair-
manships.
Knowland told reporters that the
bump-McCarthy motion, introduced
Friday by Sen. Ralph E. Flanders
(R-Vt.), was “a mistake.” He
warned that a Senate showdown on
the motion — which Flanders or
any other senator could demand at
any time—would set off a fight that
“might completely disrupt the
legislative program” for the
balance of the year.
Flanders told reporters he would
demand Senate action on his mo-
tion “not later than the middle of
July.”
Mundt Seeks to Stop Feud
The GOP leader spoke out as
Acting Chairman Karl E. Mundt
(R-S.D.) sought to quell a bitter
feud that almost led to fisticuffs
at the Army-McCarthy hearings
Friday.
The antagonists were Roy M.
Cohn, McCarthy’s chief counsel,
and Robert F. Kennedy, counsel
for the Democrats on the Senate
Investigating subcommittee.
Mundt indicated he was ready to
use his gavel vigorously when the
hearings resume Monday to cut off
any renewal of the angry quarrel.
The dispute stemmed from Cohn’s
resentment of a Democratic sena-
tor’s remarks about a “psycholog-
ical warfare” plan prepared by
Pvt. G. David Sehin,e Cohn’s close
friend and former unpaid chief con-
sultant to the McCarthy subcom-
mittee.
Referred to Plan
Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash.)
referred to the Schine plan at the
Friday hearing, saying it called for
such measures as establishing
‘ Elks lodges in Pakistan” and
using “pin-up” pictures to spread
Democratic ideas.
Kennedy, 28-year-old brother of
Gen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.)
said Cohn came up to him after the
hearing, very angry, and “threat-
ened” to “get” Jackson by bring-
ing out at Monday’s hearing “stuff
that he has written favorable to
communism.”
Denounced in 3 Speeches
Flanders,. 73-year-old Vermonter
who has denounced McCarthy in
three Senate speeches in recent
weeks, said. Saturday he will move
“well before adjournment” of Con-
qress for a showdown on his mo-
tion to oust McCarthy from the
chairmanship of the Senate Gov-
ernment Operations committee and
its Permanent Investigating sub-
committee.
He said, however, that he will
wait about a month to give McCar-
thy “a chance to clear himself” by
answering questions which a Sen-
ate elections subcommittee raised
two years ago about McCarthy’s
personal finances, tax returns and
use of funds contributed to him for
fighting communism.
Knowland said he had three main
objections to Flander’s move: (1)
It was introduced before the Army-
McCarthy hearings were finished;
(2) Flanders gave no advance no-
tice to the GOP leadership; and
(3) He objected to the procedure
of taking the issue directly to the
Senate floor, instead of working
through the majority (Republican)
caucus which actually selects com-
mittee chairmen.
☆ '☆
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 182, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 13, 1954, newspaper, June 13, 1954; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518728/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.