Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 270, Ed. 1 Monday, September 24, 1951 Page: 1 of 6
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SIX PAGES
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1951
iTH. YEAR. NO. 270
IT
emper-
which part or all of one lung was
stood, one or more ribs
oracticed extensively for the last
*
thing they have.
destroyed. It just changes form. j The bulletin was signed by five
like water turning to steam and of the eight doctors who perform
back to water again- This line ed Sunday's operation
bullet fired Saturday b
fire nt her three-room home Sat-
ti
furniture, clothing. food and fuel
tie am
conference... .
B&PW Club Designates
From the viewpoint of the mill-
it
Baker said the
Tbe first drink of beer seemed
-)
win
kept
1
the
way the youngsters found it- uran-
&
of pute
ago. But it wasn’t umtil Friday
vion-
George Epperson, the land-
find.
to that which the boys found, came
the
ng a
burned a little hole in Mrs. Ep-
i’s dress.”
person"
That
dium when it decays.
bra
has won
tl into ।
sionable; the splitting of its atoms.
two
thick"
acroes Be aMy
MMW
The youth told authorities that | Iiu desperately against the Com-
he and a 12 year old boy wenttomtmists.
POLICE FORCE
GETS IRED UP
Korea, Monday, Sept. 25 IP —The
battleship New Jersey opened its
16 inch guns Monday against the
hills on the eastern front to aid
/United Nations Infantrymen bat-
most of them heavily populated. ;
rvery inch of top soil is worth its 1
uary, 1942. and in June of '42 Miss
Young organized the Red Cross
motor classes and put into action
the corps which served, after in
struction and training, for the dur
The king is not expected to be
out of danger until the end of the
If everybody would just realise
that everything they are. every- |
thing they ever will be, every-
presumably was a
Allied memorandum
cess Margaret stayed close to the
king's room throughout the day
The queen visited the king brief
iy during the morning. but the doc-
tors would not let her stay long
earth, maybe we would be a little
more considerate of our mother.
T
1
Four Americans blazed their way
to the peak of "heartbreak hill"
he
>n
1 their
portant
lication;
iously ill
e quick-
a
m
ray s
the
sta-
the
Today is designated by National
Business & Professional Women's
clubs as Armed Service Day.
One of the contributions of the
Cleburne B&PW during World War
II, was the Motor Corps in Octob
er 1941, the first Red Cross, first
aid class was organized by Miss
HOME
EDITION
4
DALLAS, Sept 24 IIr—A 17-year-
old boy was held Monday after he
admitted giving a year old baby
"several shots" of beer to see how
the child would "lake it." The in
fant was strangled.
youth told him he thought it would
be "cute" to feed the baby a drink
of beer to see its reaction
rm
Sunday morning examined the pa
tient Monday.
Standing By
LONDON, Sept. 24. cu.p —
■ 0
J
ATED"
nursing
if serv-
was <
N Y .
4
atd
Eight Medics Drunks Keep Cops
Busy on Weekend
gni-
ake
ng;
ire.
ing the bushel of corn taking 33
cents worth of materials out of the
SOIL
how
Pan>
in most of the states, Including cut away and also, it was under- i
Texas, soil conservation has been etn or more rihs
to light. It was reported taken from
a scrap heap here, and was said to
weigh 64 pounds.
The FBI refused even to acknow-
ledge the existence of the larger
parking places on Caddo Street
early this morning...Violating dou-
SracSLhndindy Feared
Front of Frigid
Weather Halted
By UNITED PRESS
A mild cool front which
I
I
I
soil, are doing their level best to ,
rducate folks along these lines. '
1 j
The three youngsters,Don Mon-
roe, 12. Jodel Golden, 13 and Wal
ton. Fowler, 12, made their dis-
eoverymane th— thrwa months
tary aviatr, the Kaesong neutral
zone is but a few minutes removed
from the most important military
lino of supply in your rear area.. .
The likelihood of an accidental oc-
curence involving Kaesong is ob-
vious.
area. Those uncontrolled elements
may at any time take action which
could compel a suspension of-the
He turned it over to AEE offi-
cials. They said it was uranium—
but that wa# MI.
fa Radlatlon ts Harmless
Uranium. the heaviest natural
element in the earth, produces ra-
was killed two miles sot
Houston city limits Sun
"headon automobile colli
into a
the of
a friend,
rt Werth,
"22
amused himself and his family for
a time showing how it gave of
trying to solve the mystery of
Shnuernumot to D^hart^ s^^_
turn is as harmless as a block of
lesd. It throws off radiation st all
times, but the radiation is harm-
lees. -------------- -■
Meanwhile, the discovery of s
session rf.it. He said it w
"half of a cake about 10
wide and throe or four
n
1
I
j
and jumping down."
“I saw this piece of iron or
something sticking up out of the
ground and figured Id better move
it so we wouldn't jump on it and
get but," he said
"Jodel and Walton helped me
dig it out, and we were awful sur-
prised how heavy it was. We gof
to looking it ove and quit jumping
mH of the tree. J
“After a white. we threw some
socks at it. Every time we hit M.
sparks would fly up. And after the
I "Oscar.* can border. . }Dm Mid that he and
—nr gais” Beyond that, nobody was talk- friends "were climbing
lit start a fire in the house,
te she was at our house
about it," Don said, “I hit
ig and a spark flew off and
•r -
r3ea
rt said
a cri-
"some
aithout
of this
tending a movie.
Detective T L
with their nine is inch rifles.
'They knocked threc feet of rd Si
estate off one hill." un enthusia»-
lady, said she waa worried that
the sparks given off by the cylind-
cision will be made until the king <
is pronounced out of danger. Eliza- l
both would become sovereign if her *
father died '
All eight doctors who were pre- (
sent at the operation on the king .
Maybe it was the weather...
Police were busy during the
weekend with drunks. Sia men
and one woman were arrested
Saturday and Sunday for drunk-
enness.
The woman was arrested at a
tourist camp. She told the City
Court Judge Carroll Cooke, her
home was in New Jersey The
judge told the woman she had
better get back to New Jersey,
adding if she did not leave town
by Sunday night, who would be
detained here for another 30 days
none of the days in the tourist
court.
Urf. M. 2
of the i
’ in a “
I that 7
PHOTOGENIC INGRID
HoLLvwooD. Sept 24 -an -
ameraman Ernest Haller, whose
A is photographing the WWW’s
vost luscious women, says Ingrid
ergman is tops on his list of the
» most photogenic screen beaut-
i Haller whose ability to put
-
I
4-,
The communist liaison officers
demanded at the morning meeting
that the armistice talks broken
off Aug 23. be resumed in Kaesong
at once without further wrangling
sure the king s heart had not been
displaced as the result of the oper-
i ation, and a general consultation
' of his physicians was held to assess )
week A long convalescence must
follow, and it seemed doubtful that
s bein
s; they
tel* on
have, comes from old mother
ovor will .
Officials Lower Iron Curtain Of Secrecy On New Uranium Find
- - Dr. LAncoln Lapaz of the univer- “ ' — * - “
sity of New Mexico’s Institute of
Meteorics, took the metal and ex-
low years in foreign countries,
am
POLO, IN.. Sept. 24 •—Both
members of Polo's two-man
police force said Monday they
were sure of e vote of confi-
fen co from the city council
backing up their claims to be
thet.
"My dander’s up,” sold Sam
Abry, Polo’s police chief for
N peers- "Just anybody esn't
%rew me out."
W. C. Albright, appointed
chief while Geory was on vace-
Hon recently, said he felt the
seme way.
"I like being chief here. I'm
staying," he sold.
The decibion fell to the city
council which meets Monday
ma.Ma
"W"VVe
Only member of the force who
showed the white toother was
1. Pluribus Unum Powell, who
quit as patrolman and said he
was going back to carpentry to
make his living-
Pluribus Unum—known to
his friends os Rlury—was oust-
ed because he didn't catch
enough speeders going through
town- He said the police car
was in such sad shepe that it
was impossible for him to cetch
anybody-
The desk you use Your home
her husband, the Duke of Ed-
child's mother. said her husband.
Clifford was overseas with the
army.
visit a teenage girl who was baby Standing just off the coast, the
sitting with leslie Fietcher.Satur gun crews of the big butule Wugon
day. The child's mother was al 82.000 tons at fyll load-put pin-
point fire on enemy held peaks
Mechanic Injured
Weldom Sides. 20-year-old auto
mechanic, was reported improved
todsy st Memorial Hospital where
he was taken after receiving a
head injury. when he fell at Wea-
ver Motor Co
Sides apparently fainted, strick-
ing his bead on the concrete floor
bulked Monday at resuming the Korean armistice talks
in incident-ridden Kaesong on grounds that the city is
"unsuitable." •
I IN* liaison of ficers told Communist liaison officers
at an hour-long meeting in Kaesong that the truce talks ,
cannot be re-opened until the Reds agree to "new condi-
tions, more conducive to progress toward an armistice.”
Violence Claims
14 Texas Lives
During Weekend
which would not "Wep".FFort
Worth dairy truck blocking out two A
. JJoudy 32
By PROC
sparks when struck.
“ButI got tired of IL and kinds
“aboutit Don said, on
determine whether alcohol
present in the child's body.
Mrs. Betty Lois Fletcher
No agreement was reached. mid
it was decided to hold a second
meeting at 10 a m. Tuesday (7 p
m. Monday CST.)
Reds Handed Memo
The UN officers handed the Com
munist liaison delegation a mem
orandum summarizing the U N
postion. The Reds in turn called
a UN liaison officer to a Red
check polnt below Kaesong six
hours later to receive a Communist
memorandum.
South Korean Lt Col Lee Soo
Young picked up the Communist
I Maybe you are tabbing this rea
soning juvenile. Something you
Etulied when you were in the first
becond and third grades This may
be true, but the chances arc you
haven t studied much about it since
bther wise, old Mother Earth would
hot continue to be robbed of her
substance without replacement.
man I love" put his brother into
the monarchy arrived in London
ation of the war, and wherever - . 1
their services were needed there .not to affect the. child, Baker said.
after. ,
The 21 ladies who formed this
Panhandle temperatures off pace
with the rest of the state Monday
probably will not probe much
deeper into Texas, the U.S. weather
Bureau said.
The front pushed the mercury
down to a low of 46 degrees at
Dalhart and 51 at Amarillo, and
by mid morning Amarillo still had
cool 57-degree weather and light
north winds.
Elsewhere over the state, skies
were partly cloudy and the weather
was warm and windy with south
and southwest breeze* of 1520
miles per hour. Readings were in
the 80‘s in the interior. Towering
cumulus clouds promised showers
for the lower coast.
dom save. comes from the soil
ilow much materials each of these
items took from the soil would be
lintcresting It would also be inter-
esting to know just how long it
would lie before the materials are
returned to the soil. From your
jtesk chair or money.
SCENE OF TRAGIC BLAstS—Thin in an overhead view of Antlers Drive in
Brighton, N. Y., one of the streets hardest hit in a series of gas explosions that
ripped apart 30 homes, killing three persons and Injuring scores of others. The
picture, taken from a Gannt Newspapers helicopter, shows one house blasted in
center foreground and one on each side burned. Across the street is another hit
by blast and two damaged by flames. (NEA Telephoto)
• %
piece.But Albert Law, editor of ing
The Texan, said the FBI had 1
and A. Z Motley, 80.
killed Sunday । afternoon. . 0 , > -
Al San Antonio 80-yearold Dol-
urea Garza burned to death in a
north of Yanggu, on the bloody
eastern front only to be forceditos.
surrender it two hours later. ds-
and
& an |
Ton.
teles -J
joke ]
by UNITED PRESS
Week end violence in Texas kil-
led at least 14 persona in traffic
mishaps, shootings, a plane crash
and other accidents . '
0, to the I Two pilots from Reese Air Force
lepty to mi i Base. Lubbock, were killed Sunday
when their training plane crashed
and the money you spend,or aelm aP* Puke of Windsor.. whose ab-
“ dication of the throne for 'the wo-
The youth told him he decided hi
give the infant another drink
immediately after the second
shot, the child's hands started
turning purple
Then, the youth told Baker, he |
gave the baby some orange soda,
but the child gagged. The three
youngsters then called a doctor
The baby died cn route to a hos-
pital.
The baby-sitter and the other boy
told police essentially the same
story Their name* were withheld
and no charges were filed
An autopsy was performed on the
infant Sunday, but no report was
issued pending laboratory tests to
We read somewhere that it
took 33 cants of meteriels out of
the sell to produce a bushel of
corn. Generally, none of this
cost is ever replaced- according
to the story.
This robbery has been going on
tor a long time now. especially
in Texas, where land was once
the cheapest and most plentiful
of all things, back in the eld
days picneer Texans have been
known to trade 100 acres of good
black land far an acre or two of
land with fresh spring or branch.
ed would have been about, ________ ■
100--$1,000 a pound, one scien- sparks went up in the air a ways,
guc like litde fire-
SHALL culling over the re
purchase of a fur coat.
Former CLEBURNE grid
GEORGE HARTMAN, wsitin
friendiy letter from PARIS-
IOR COLLEGE where he is
“orming on the gridiron this
son. to friends in the oldh
own ... Blonde beauty NE
lewis, making a quick budi
'rip to ALVARADO r .-ata;
Frictuny BILUE MAGERS 1
UN Balks At Resuming Armistice Talks In Kaesong
. - ' • : -=2,---- - -- ■ ■ ------------------------------------- . — . ■ _ - —
| England s King
na For Life Rule Out Parleying Until
-Mm-um Conditions Are Accepted
aeamdie l(1y6 l b ' . I lb rniici Nation;
document at I'an Mun Join It
Cuties PATSY ADAMS
DONNA BOOG-SCOTT handl
errand chore with alacrity,
sorial Artiste EMMETT MJ
AY calling a friend on the
phone to impart a racy
That settled it. Mrs, Epperson dium when it decay*.
bundled Don and his hunk of metal Ito property ofbeing esaily fu
Frightened. Thieves
JOSHUA, «Spl) — Thieve*, who
entered the Joshua postoffice last
light by forcing a lock on the back
door,left empty handed.
They moved the heavy poetoffice
safe only a few inches toward the
door, using a small pair of two-
wheel trucks to do the job.
The thieves apparently were fri-
ghtened away, before they could
finish th job -
.4.By ROBERT VERMILLION
BTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS,
plto reinforcements, to a Commun-
ist regiment.
The four had survived a vicious
buyonet and hand grenade battle
through-he night to reach the sum-
mil in the crisis of a hitter 13-day
fight for its control. Other mem-
ber* of their unit were forced to
full back from the peak which con-
trols the rugged surrounding area.
At 3 a m.. the exhausted quar-
tet gained the crest American re-
inforcements moved up quickly but
fiercely resitting Reds drove ull
UN troops off the peak just before
dawn Streams of deadly machine
gun fire mortar barrages, and
small arm* fire punctuated the all
night clash.
Enemy Busy On Two Fronts
The "heartbreak hill" dash
came an the Reds turned increas-
ingly aggressive on all sectors ot
the east-central and eastern fronts.
Southeast of Kumsong, Allied
troops beat off four sharp enemy
jab* from squad to company stren-
gth yesterday Just to the west of
the hill, other UN forces failedoaf-
ter an all-day battle to conquer
another important crest. They with
drew Sunday night under wither-
ing enemy fire.
Heavy Red reinforcements were
reported building up west of Kum:
wha in the old "Iron Triangle"
area, farther west. They used in-
creasingly heavy amounts of small
arms, mortar and artillery fire in-
cluding that from self-propelled
guns. UN advances, if any, were
slow and both sides were paying
in casualties.
A Navy announcement disclosed
the U. S. destroyer Perkins was
stvuck twice by Communist shore
batteries during a 16-day bombard-
ment in support of ground troops
The ship suffered no casualties and
no serious damage, the announce-
' ment said.
amined it. When he first brought
home, hepurit on’the dining
room table but hie wife noticed it
burned holes in the cloth and scar- second chunk of the metal, similar
red the wood." " ‘ “
Today Armed Service Day
ed number of hours early in Jau
Gpotted rem.e Tree
The briek -shaped chunk was said
to be eeven or eight years old.
It was processed and molded dur-
ma World War I
Ito value at the time it was pro-
and burned on a ranch near Level-
land in West Texas. They were
2ND Lt William H. Malone, 22,
Panadena. Cal., and 2ND Lt. Arch-
ie N. Walters. 25 Santa Crus. Caj.
Dallas hospital authorities said a
12 months old baby strangled on
beer and soda water. The victim
Leslie Fletcher, died late Satur-
day night and police held a 17-
year-old youth who admitted giv-
ing the child the beverages.
The shootings included Bobby
Joan Holloway, 14, of San Antonio,
fatally wounded by a .22-caliber
and took them both to
vl Hie Dalhart Texan,
"pePe
fjoimhinuean
Youth Who Gave - U S. ‘Battlewagon Unleashes
Baby Beer Held Onslaught On Red Strongholds
In.DallasJail
U.N. Officer* Rafuss
But U.S. Col*. Andrew J Kin l
ney and James C Murray refused
They sald arrangements must be
completed first to assure that the
talks will not be interrupted again
by real or imaginary violatons uf
the conference neutral zone.
Supreme headquarters of Gen
Matthew B. Ridgway said the UN
delegation put the Allied case this
way:
"The Communist forces and UN
command forces have been in con-
stant maneuver, daily posing the
chance of unintended violation of
a tree
MB my hous nua
e‘m - "
---
Reports from the silent, anxious
palace said in mid-afternoon that'
ever since he recovered conscious
. . .. ness Sunday afternoon the king had but went Marlborouvh House
weight sinozold andthen someucn been in * semi-coma state due to 'h- home of qeen Mother Mars.
bJ few Xhze H Another entur the administration of opiates to instead of to Buckingham Palace i
"r tl^ may roll by Xe the fact ease the pain of the desperate oper i Council Ot State
is brought home to the majority Condition Said Satisfactory Members of the royal family I
Of course persons who realize Monday morning's medical bul were expected to form a couneil
the importance of conserving the letin said: of state to carry on the king's du-1
"The king has had a restful night Ues it will comprise Queen Eliza-
His majesty's condition this morn- beth. I rincesses Elizabeth and i
ing continues to be as satisfactory Margaret, the Duke of Gloucester
as can be expected " | and the Princess Royal
New X rays were taken, before | Gloucester is a brother and the
the bulletin was issued, to make , Princess Royal a sister of the king
Hhadm, a
dijBMM
injured four other persons.
Ruy Brumbelow, 02, Amarillo,
died Sunday night wncn his car
was involved in a collision with a
Santa Fe train at a crossing on
I
Local Attorney
Aids Law Study
RA. (Bob) Kilpatrick, Cleburne
attorney, returned from Austin to-
day, where he attended a meeting
for study of constitutional amend*
ments
A Committee of Texea lawyers,
Including Kilpatrick,.were primar-
ily interested with the amendments
which will give strength to disci-
plinary measures brought against
the unauthorized practice of law
by unlicensed individuals.
Concluding the meeting Saturday,
the committee members discussed
methods and means of proteeting
the public from dangers of such
unauthorized law practices. The
members voted to employ s full-
time attorney to prosecute flagrant
cases of such practice in ell areas
of flic state.
Kilpatrick is foamer chairman of
the committee- Other members of
Um committee are W. T- MeNeil,
Beaumont; T. Keills Dibr*n of Ssn
Antonio; Mrs. Jeen Clark. Austin;
Owen D. Cos, Corpus Christi;Truett
B. Smith, Tahoka.
Cleburne TIMES-REVIEW
1 I
United Press Full Leased Wire Service — NEA Telephoto Pictures — Established 1904 — Published Daily Except Saturday
"The Communist commanders
have alleged that u number of vio-
lations of the Kaesong neutral zone
approaching the figure 200 have
occurred
Kaesong Hold Unsuitable
"Could any fact argue more per-
suasively that Kaesong is unsuit-
able as a conference site?"
The UN command bulletin said
Allied liaison officers expressed re-
gret that the Communists had re:
lotted Ridgway's original proposal
for cease-fire talks aboard the
Danish hospital ship Jutlandia.
However, the Allies apparently
did not mention any specific alter-
native site to Kaesong at Monday’s
meeting
motor corps, at least half of whom
were B&PW club members, served
this community. Camp Wolters.
Camp Howse and Fort Worth. Red
Cross, Home Service, blood bank,
army hospital assistance and ev
cry phase of motor corps work was
done by the group.
It was directly and entirely
through the efforts of the Cleburne
B&P.W. Club members that this
community had recognition from
Washington and St. Louis offices
for the splendid volunteer work
done in this district.
Three members of the B.&PW.
Club left Cleburne to serve their
country: Misses Dorothy Davis and
Lucille Clancy who were also mem-
bers of the motor corps: and Miss
Alite Jarvis, who served in the air
corps. Mrs.John Butner, another
club and corps member, was an
outstanding first aid instructor in
the Cleburne area.
Another way of looking at the
I picture is that all of these things
K with which we have been blessed.
I are only loaned to us tor use dur-
King our span of years here on
Hearth.
J None of them is ours. They
are passed on from generation
Uto generation and there isn’t a
|| thing we can do about H, except
14 try and pass them on to the
I neat follow in a little bettor shape
I than we received them.
*
| Here in Texas, the greater por-
iion of the land* have been passed
on minus much of their productive
quality. ,
I Many oldtimers living today, re
nember clearing up what they cal-
l ed "new ground,” because the old
I ields had washed sway and were
I armed to death, meaning they
I vould not produce in paying quan-
I ties anymore Finally, the "new
I ground" would play out and ano-
I her patch would be cleared Why
I otr This was the path of least
I esistancc a path beaten hard and
I month • by countless thousands
I town through the years.
The AEC confirmed that the
cylinder waa pure, processed ur
urday,
JK of traflic .
-witehupedineludedi~-- - —4 -—M
Mrs. Dolly Maddox Hoi
Scientists say nothing is over them t he will be able to sail Jan 22 as i
The bulletin was signed by five j scheduled for a royal tour of Au* ,
. trails and New Zealand
However, Princess Elizabeth and ।
the Kaesong neutral area ....
"It la plain (also) that partisan
221 groups, responsible to nejther com-
l hand, are uetive in t«o Kaesong
5c PER COPY
of reasoning might appear to con- Queen. Princess Nearby
flict with the statement concern- Queen Elizabeth, the king's wife, inburgh, still hoped to fly to Can
and their younger daughter. Prin- ada for their scheduled tour of that
country next month. No final de-
DALHART, Tex., Sept 24a —
The FBI and the Atomic Energy
commission Monday lowered the
troneurtin • seerec
Gnannu’ pumP°u“ «ree boys *» 1 that they learned the value of une
a Texas roadside. L » find. —-tuddam-e
at
THF WEATHER
CLEEURNE & VICINITY Partly cloudy
Monday afternoon. Menday night and Tues-
day A Ditto warmer a Panhandie Tuesday
accounts for its use in the atomic
bpmb.buHtspure-stats-the
anium-- the rare metal which
forms the nucleus of the atomic
bomb.
And authorities said they were
“-"7
e * 1 '--tr-------------------------- ... ..... *.-4
.......... ......... ‘ ----,2
ble-parking laws plus prev
other motorists from parki
the curb...Pert WALLINE ,
Frail King George VI, his
life hanging in the balance,
drowsed Monday in a semi-
coma under the influence!
of opiates while eight doc-
i tors fought for his life. ,
। A Buckingham Palace medical
i bulletin said the king spent a rest-
ful night af'er an operation in
We have been and are now a
nation of wastrels, and the mater-
ials we waste are ng* Mir own.
They belong to the earth end
should bo gosrded and collivat-
edsothe next generatien and
foe next, would find the going ■
little easier.
We have been worse than the
prodigal son. We boon not only
wasted our subetsneo but the
substance of Mother Earthwhich
was not ours to waste-
We may. Ube the prodigal son.
have to return to our home some-
Idov and unlike *• wredigel son
i Elmarine Young. B&PW club mem-
; bcr This class finished the reqduir-
Plan Discussion
Of County Park
Site at Whitney
Judge H G Littlefair received
notice today of a public hearing to
be held at the Whitney gym, Oct
18 at 10 o'clock, concerning the
Whitney Dam and reservoir and
lands surrounding the project.
The MU includes information con
cerning an area on Ham Creek
known generally* as the Klondike
region, which has been proposed
as a perk for use by residents of
Johnson County If present plans
go through, the Klondike area will
be awarded to Johnson County to
be developed by county funds and
used by Johnson County residents
for fishing and other outdoor activi-
ties.
Hie bill also includes policies for
management of the park areas
and other general information con
cerning rules and regulations gov-
erning waters of the reservoir and
the dam structure.
Everybody is invited to attend
the public hearing. Judge Little-
fair and other county officials are
already planning to attend the
meeting.
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 270, Ed. 1 Monday, September 24, 1951, newspaper, September 24, 1951; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1563294/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.