Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 276, Ed. 1 Monday, October 1, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
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.
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Cleburne Times-Re view
— Established 1904 — Published pally Except Saturday
United Press Full Leased Wire Sarrica — NBA Telephoto
CLEBURNE, TEXAS. MONDAY,
BER 1, 1951
46TH. YEAR, NQ. 276
x.
U.S. Jets Destroy More
" ik
Press Tribute
Dedication at Lamar College
!
Communist Jet Fighters
- oc
" A
since 1925, it
Lamar
improvements
number of Argentine
.3RD
SORE A
‘Just about that time,'- Staff
lbcomotiv
destroyed
and 30 box cars damag-
one night recently near Yong-
ter and more military reverses-
it the dilficulties in transportatiom ithe Amy and Air Force officers
tired Gen. Benjamin Mendez, an
t
Wilson sald the "only
"6.
duction" in civilian
cast side of the creek.
day that the cease-fire talks will
‘The Communists must realize
that the time for bluffing is over," break down altogether unless the
is serving at the advance head
Budget Hearing "
slayings and miscellaneous acci returned in the case of Jose Maria
i
*4
Iranian police..
Britain has asked the Security
. K
A
...... . a'4
■
15 Texans Killed In
Weekend Accidents
George C. Marshall, former Secre- I
tary of Defense, paid tribute Mon
and su|
Rods,"
1
(
Cleburne Schools
Will Gain Funds
Cleburne public schools, partici-
pating in federal school lunch pro-
-North Korea, by a B-26 of the
i Air Force's 3rd Bomb Wing
Communiats agree to shift them
from Kaesong.
diet In 48 hours. Their decision ma
be announced Monday.
The government announced re-
understanding of our people. This
la especially true in these critical
days if we ure to succood An our
defense efforts.
“I feel certain that the tenaiona
"that frustrate efforts for a peaceful
world would be, to a large degree,
dissipated if there were the same
arrested and held incommunicado.
Pro • government newspapers char*
ged opposition leaders supported
the revolt.
(In Montevideo, Uruguay, travel-
ers from Argentina reported at
special "supreme council".
All major political parties oppos:
the broadcast said.
Unless the Reds choose to resume
D. Peron.
A group of Army and Air Force
near Brady .
A verdict of accidental death was
second train began to get up steam
for a getaway but we stopped him
cold."
Frag bombs and atrafing from
the hard-working B-26 bompletely
that
been
Street, weujd like te have their
end of the street improved.
The property owner went en to
say that a recent survey indicat-
ed most of the property owners,
if not all of them, were anxious
to have the remainder of
street peved and curbs
installed.
of late
NELL
VARA
Mass Production
Of Armament Set
By U. S. Industry
to Texas to help pay for the pro- *
gram, M. D. Murphy, superinten-
dent of schoola, announced today. - |
Murphy said approximately 40
percent of students enrolled in the
Cleburne public school system ware
Nations command told the Com-
munists Monday to stop bluffing
and make their choice between an
"honorable armistice" and all-out
war.
The UN command sounded the
warning while waiting for a Com:
munist reply to its proposal to
shift the suspended truce talks from
Kaesong to Songhyon, eight miles
to the southeast in the middle of
the western front "no-man’s-land."
Supreme UN Commander Gen.
Matthew B Ridgway made the
proposal last Thursday in a formal
note to Gen. Kim II Sung, North
Korean premier and commander
m « :
20
American jetsrshot down their 114th Communist jet
fighter of the war and damaged three others In a 67-plane
dogfight high over northwest KoreA. The rest of the en-
emy formation fled north to Manchuria.
South Koreans won the western i ---—-
, ineering Building at Lamar State
College of Technology here.
They were invited by Dr. John
? C E. Gray Lamar president.
J j Governor Allan Shivers and U.
| Revolt Leaders
| in Argentina's
1 Plots Arrested
1 BUENOS AIRES, Oct. I » An
inally planned, rather than be hus-
tied out across the
S indletop Oil Field about a mile
f am the college campus, marking
urne Sergeant Takes Part
In Strafing. Red Freight Train
hi -
(inter, is director of the Division press freedom all over the world
Engineering.’ /that we enjoy ben in America."
ume of goodsa nw WVT86vk
able to consumers will remain fall
ly constant during 1902."
8 PAGES
.....■ ■■■ . ■
22,
Brish government promines that
^adequate transportation will bo
By UNITED PRESS
Traffic mishaps, shootings, fires;
under heavy anti-craft' fire but es-
caped undamaged. '
The generate came to Korea for
a personal look at the war and to
discuss Allied strategy with Lt,
Gen. Janfes A Van Fleet, Cum*
mander of the Bth Army, and hie
top subordinates. Van Fleet met
them at the airport.
After a brief reception, Bradley.
Ridgway and Van Fleet were flown
to front-line divisions in light ob-
servation planes.
dents combined during the week
end to cause at least 15 deaths in
Texss.
A Lubbock construction worker,,
F. F. Lowe, wss crushed under the
csb of a crane when the machine
toppled as it wss raising a giant
setion of sewer pipe A second
workman riding the pipe lost a leg.
An investigation was underway
at Snyder, where the body of Mrs.
Harvey Barnett, 34, was found in
a mesquite thicket. Rangers said
it apparently was dragged to the
hiding place.
Houston police were still seeking
a clue to the slaying of Leon Eddy
Gryder, -year-old Universit of
ing Peron reported Sunday
some of their leaders had
County. The first petition returned
was from the Venus community,
the second from, the local Kiwanis
Club. One petition, circulating in
the Santa Fe shops, already bears
more than 1,400 signatures.
A public hearing will be held at
Whitney,Oct. 18, to approve intitial
campsites on the shores of Lake
Whitney
These designated sites will be de-
veloped by the agency receiving
them. Ham’s Creek Perk has been
designated as a park to be used,
developed and maintained by John-
son County. The 325 acre park site
Is located 13 miles south of Cle-
burne. on the north shore of Lake
Whitney, in an area commonly
known as Klondike.
Earlier it had been announced
14 other Army and Air Force of-
ficers had been arrested.
Under the '.‘slate of internal war"
declared by Peron soon after the
revolt began, the court mertial
may sentence the rebels to death
Thia penalty te invoked in ArgeW-
tina only in times of extreme am-
ergency. The laat executions fol-
lowed the 1930 revolt here.
J; "o]
Mhur
political party leaders
'ionjer arrest Mon-
A public hearing In the city bud-
get for the forthcoming year will
be held at the City Hall tonight
at 7 o’clock, Mils Johnnie Gordon,
city clerk, announced today.
A $1.56 tag rate on the $10 real
and personal property evalaution
for city tax purposes was set by
the council last Thursday night.The
rate wss set after councilmen and
City Manager, J B. Early had
made a detailed study of necessary
expenditures for next year.
The budget hearing te expected
to reault in a hot session, with
many contraversial issues coming
before the council. .
MThe UN command is poised and
prepared to strike, and strike hard,
should the Reds decide that they
have had enougk of the carmistiee
talks and wish to get on with the
war on an all-out scale"
The broadcast said It is cohceiva-
bie that the Reds "might choose
an honorable armistice in Korea
as the better alternative."
BEAUMONT, Oct. K(Spl )— Pres-
ident J. V. Peters of Southwestern
Junior College st Keene and J. W.
Crowley Sergeant
Serving at Front
Master Sergeant Cyrus W. Key
"1 —~
5c PER COPY
led and his father was injured
critically last night when their car
careened off the rosd and into a
ditch under a bridge.
Jimmy Golightly waa dead on
arrivaf at a San Antonio hospital.
His father, J. B. Golightly, 27, San
Antonio, driver of the car, waa
still unconscious this morning.
Other passengers in the car were
Mrs. Golightly, 26. and their 9-year
old daughter, aCarol June. They
were shaken up. I . (
The accident occurred just out-
side the city limits on the Austin
highwax. -
On the occasion or National News-
paper Week, Oct 1-8 the general
wrote Cranston Williams, general
manager of the American News-
paper Publishers association:
"I take pleasure in congratula-
ting the daily and weekly news-
papers of America upon their very
substantial part in the success of
our national defense program.
"The successful realization of
THROWING A CURVE—Jean McAlpine, of St. Petersbufg. FIs . I
• seems bent On having fun on the beach there. °
Head - Lines
By Ciyde Head
Bradley, Ridgway Fly To
All in all, the plan is sound ps
a dollar. A plan Iha* will benefit
everybody ran earned, could net
be otherwise.
=
Turner, chairman of the Board of
Trustees, have been invited to par-
ticipate in dedication ceremonies
October 9 for the new t.ucaa Eng-
provided if evacuation becomes
necessary" were received with
skepticism. ■
Some oilmen separated from
their tamiliet for more than three
months and Objected to daiiy nu
miliations by Iranian officiate, op-
only criticized the British goverh-
ment's handling of the dispute.
' J^owdu 3.M
ai . By PROC
perty, it will tend beauty to the
ereas which it will seres end in-
crease property values in Nw most
[densely populated areas of Nw
city, east, northeast aM south-
least Cleburne.
A few minor chenges may be
Locessary in Nw plan, which in-,
cludes moving two or three houses
the way it stands now. There
may be a way to eliminate this
expense. If there is not, it will
[still be a practical prefect. One
L.mn _ta.. — -Mamaa Am W W
The CNTY C •v9V “vore •9 *TP«»8
Polio Patient
Is Improving,
Linda Fickle. who was placed in
n iron lung in s critical condition
t City-County hospital in Fort
Vorth Saturday night, was reported
b be improving this morning.
[Although she is still in the iron
bug, physicians believed she was
jut of the danger stage
. By PETER watt "
ABADAN, Iran, Oct. 1 (—Brit-
ish oil technicians rebelled Monday
and cabled London that they would
rather leave Iran voluntarily than
become "political pawns" and be
expelled from’, the country.
The 330 technicians Informed the
Anglo-Iranian Oil company that
they are convinced Iran will carry
out its threat to expel them from
this southern oil center Thursday.
The company, on urgent advice
from the British foreign office. hsd
asked the men to hold out until
the last possible moment before
evacuating. Plans to begin s Volun-
tary evacuation Sunday were can-
quarters of the 32d "Queen's Own"
Infsntry in Korea. Key hss been
in Korea since September, 1960
and is the regimental operations
sergeant. He was in Europe during
World Wsr ll.
IueXJ .adUtu , m —
Joshua Resident
Arrives at Biggs
Biggs Air Force Base, Texas.
(Spl) PFC Alton L. Hensley, 18,
has arrived at Biggs AFB. Home
of the 97th Bomb Wing, and haa
been assigned to the 97th Bomb
Wing Squadron.
He is single and is a graduate
of Joshua High School. He haa juat
completed a Tech School in the
Air Froce.
expulsion order and to demand that
‘raw hold "" nott-ltetie of tr
British-owned Anglo-Iranian OS
company in compuance with s
world court request.
Envoy Talks to Premier
, , 8TH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 1. (UR—-
day to the nation * newspapers for United Nations forces hurled back the Communists in the
, ‘their very substantial par ’ in the air and tin the ground Monday as Gens. Omar N. Bradley
success of our national defense and Matthew B. Ridgway toured the Korean front.
successor to -28-year-old
oft tor a construction
ALASKA...Local KNIFE*
club will Continue Its dinn
ingsshere Oct. 16....Dr. V
on civilian industry — a pinch that
will not really be eased before 1953.
term of s "voice of the UN com- Gen Omar N. Bradley, chairman
mand" broadcast to Korea and, of the U.S. joint chiefs of staff. |
Asia.: 1 4 hinted at a prss conference Sun-
West Olive
County Park Site
Gaining Approval
Petitions circulated by the Cle-
burne Chamber of Commerce for
approval of Ham's Creek Park as
s county park for this area are
being returned with hundreds of
signatures, approving the project.it
waa reported today.
The petitions were mailed to var-
ious central points in Johnson
■ gram, will receive their share of
son of Mrs. Alma Key, Crowley, $3,397,057 in federal funds allocated
They apparently, spent the night
in Korea. The blacknofed Constel ______
. lation in which they flew to Korea But he
- returnod »te» Tokyo Monday night
- without them.
8 \Keene Educator* Invited For Marshall Pays
it 1801 brought in the world-famous publie programs in America has
"i ialways required the support and
least 13 opposition leaders had been — _
arrested in Buenos Aires by police
and vigilantes.) , IIM
"Winter is approaching, and with • The "supreme council" trying ’
--------------------------------—
Britain s Oil Technicians in Iran
Do Not Wish To Be Political Pawns
They said they sre reluctant to
stay in Abadn as "political pawns"
unless they had some evidence
the dispute.
that their setion would help solve
The cable said they would prefer
to withdraw "gracefully," as orig-
mranzz Sleeps TursLong
next few months will be in con-
sumer durable goods such as auto-
mobiles, radios, television sets,
washing machines and refrigera- 1
tors.1 • "
iotives and 20 box esra were rSergt Welter Thetford, the engi-
1 and 30 box cars damag- neer from Cleburne, added, "the
The broadcast said the Commu-
in chief, and Gen Peng Teh-Huai, nists have lost more than 1,250,000
commander of Chinese forces in in dead and wounded since the
Korea _ start of the Korean war, 188,000
fThe new UN warning* was in the I of them since last May.
t e first major oil production in the
1 orld.
Chairman of the Board of Reg-
4 Is of Lamar Tech is Dr. A M.
I eKfee of Port Arthur, nationally-
Imown research chemist. Dr. F. M.
Wler prominent young chemical
1 tlot from Cranford, NJ., spotted destroyed the aacond locomotive
locomotive pulling 23 box care
nd heading towardPthe twn.He.
mmediately attacked. Six box can
undinelesed nu
smrifhnorc
day as a result of Friday's short-
lived revolt against President Juan
ront; Fighting Continues
.... . _ 1 1 .,
Four miles out from the town,
First Lcut, Albert R Howarth,the
NEW YORK, Oct 1 IN—Gen ,
DALLAS, Oct 1 A burglar
who broke into a filling station
here Sunday night became drowsy
on the "Job" and lay down for a
nap. ,'
One of the owners of the station
found him in the place at dawn,
sound asleep on the floor. He waa
still snooting when police arrived.
They found the loot in his pockets
—one roll of pennies, 50 cents.
Junior College.
Because of is iocaioni in the mid-.
die of the petroleum and chemical
empire of Texas, Lamar is spec
aalizing in engineering and tech-
nblogical education although many
oher types of training are offered.
The too,000 building ia named
N r Captain Anthony F. Lucas, who
train. The locomotive and remain-
ing 19 box care, however, kept
right on going toward the town.
Circling back over the town,the
B426 crew again sighted the train
now parked alongside another train
and renewed the attack. Hleut.
Howarth strafed the entire length
of the Tirst train with hie six-for-
ward-firing machineguns, destroy-
ing the locomotive.
"We could aee our tracers going
Into it and then it blew up with e
big buret of steam," he eaid.
"We destroyed nine more box
care end damaged ten others on
our following bombing end strafing
passes," recalled the navigator,
First Lieut. Hubert Bruskotter of
Kiwanis Members
To Hear Editor
ipply that will plague then had been ordered to reach a ver*
the broadcast said.
crests of the hill Sunday night.
They smashed to the third crest
Monday morning, but were driven
back nearly 100 yards by the de-
termined reds.
Charge Wwith Fixed Bayonets
< The South Koreans charged up
the hill again with fixed bayonets
and routed the North Koreans af*
ter a bloody hand-to-hand battle,
other South Korean troops far
ther east captured a hill north*
westof Punchbowl Valley," above
Inje, againat light to moderate en-
emy rosiatance. Victory came 21
days after the UN initial ■ attack
on the position. A
On the west-central front, how*
ever, Communist troops jill but
stalled UN forces on the third day
of a drive to clean out a ridgeline
weal of Chorwon. Despite the atiff
renistance, the Allies stermed up
one minor height.
Allied artillery and tank guns
almost coaselessly pounded the laat
remaining Communists clinging to
the ridgeline. Dead Chinese al-
ready littered the ground over
which the three-day battle haa rag-
ed. In one email sector, 35 Chinese
bodies were counted.
Arrive At Advence Base .
Bradley, chairman of the U. S.
joint chiefs of staff, and Ridgway,
supreme UN commander, arrived
by plane at an advance Korean air
base from Tokyo.
Sleeping Youth
Killed in Wreck .
SAN ANTONIO, Oct. 1 ( A.
sleeping four-year-old boy was kil-
participating in the tedral school
lunch program. The federal funds
will be allocated according to the
number of students participating
in the program, Murphy /aid.
Seven southwestern stats receiv-
ed new federal grants totalling
89.494,898 o help pay for his pro-
gram. Well over onte-third of the
total amount ia allocated to Texaa
schools.
The U. S. Department of Agri-
culture said the grants were made
on basis of the number of school
sge children snd per capita income
S Secretary of the Interior Oscar ,
Clapman will be principal apeak- l
famar Tech is the 14th, newest |
and most modern atate senior col- i _____
lege in Taxes First one foynded program."
— “ ‘ thia roll as
Newspaper editors in Johnson 1 _
Is Set Tonight
6:45 o'clock In the banquet room
City Judge Faces
Full Day’s Work
City Judge Carroll Cooke faced
• full session of court today, as a
reault of weekend work by the city
police.
CItv jail with only three cells,
overflowed Mondaywith. a total of
four prisoners facing druns char-
gee. Several other persons, arrest
ed on complaints of drunkenness,
were released on bond for appear-
ence before the city judge.
Two men and two women charg-
ed with flighting were acheduled to
appear befor the city judge to-
day. The women were arrested oft
the westside of Cleburne, the two
men on the northeast outskirts of.
the city.
the first bombing pass over the
THE WEATHER.
CLEBURNE A VICINITY Generally fair
Monday night and Tuesday No important
changes in temperature.
Besides being.the most practical Houston engineering student He
of plans te improve traffic con- was found dead his car early
ditions and protect Mb and pre- Saturday, after tee left a dormi-
- tory drinking party
Three-year-old Tol Eugene (Bud
dy) Roberts of Rochelle died Sat-
urday at Brady from a bullet
wound received while a group of
children played with a 22-caliber
rifle ’• . ,
TOKYO, Oct 1 w - The United I ally satisfactory terms, It said; they
face the prospect of a terrible win-
officers, chat-god with leading the _
uprising, were on trial before a ma=
and five box cars and damaged 20
other, .box cars. During the attack
on the second train the B-26 was
Ramirez, 37, a laborer, who was
bit by a car as he lay across s
highway near Wharton. The patrol
waa investigating whether Ramdrez
was hit on the head snd left on the
highway. .
Police Seek Identity
Police st Austin sought identity
of s men about 70 years old who
wss struck snd killed by a car six
miles south of thst city ’ Saturday
night.
A Negro msn tentatively identi-
fied ns Willie Hunter wss shot
fatally Sunday at the home of a
Dallas Negro woman.
Jack R. Pulsifer, 35, of Beau-
mont, waa killed Sunday when his
car left the highway eight miles
west of Beaumont and crashed into
s tree. His body was. found two
hours after the accident.
Jimmy Golightly, 4, wasskilled
laat night when the car driven by
his father went off the road and
into a ditch under a bridge near
San Antonio His father, J. B. Go-
lightly, 27, San Antonio, was in-
jured critically.
Civic Club Will
Meet of Godley
GODLEY, Oc. 1 (Spl) - The
Godley Civic Club will hold its first
meeting of the school year Thyrs-
day st 7:30 p.m., it. wss announc-
ed today by Olleon Carroll, presi-
dent. * • .
The meeting will take the form
of a banquet served by the Home
Demonstrstton Club. Price of the
pistes is 81. All citizens ire urged
to attend, as ofticers will be elect-
ed.
This club was organized for civic
improvement, and for the discus-
BOMBARDMENT WING,.Ottawa, Ohio.
(Spl) —-Two Communist
uipment now must go to the
ast Henderson Street bridge akpj
Oss, when s fire breaks outco fe
, - HOME
< EDITION
Hundreds of workers emploved
by Santa Pa railroad shops, live-
on the east side of Buffalo Creek
in Cleburne.. Still other hundreds
of Santa Fa employes live in
Alvarado, Grandview and in rur-
al areas betweeh the fowns-
kinder the present setup, with
only one bridge ocreae Cast Buf-
falo Creek, at Henderson Street,
all of this traffic must flow dawn
Brazos Avenue which is narrow
[and crooked, to lost Henderson,
also narrow. The bridge would
relieve much of thi rangestien.
I Santa Fe school u one of the
largest ward schools in Cleburne,
ittended by hundreds of children
These children who walk to school
nay cross East Buffalo Creek
Ever s foot bridge. sll others must
ise the bridge on Henderson Street.
[ School buses could use the new
pridge snd keep their precious
largos safe from the congested
raffic on Brazos and Henderson
Streets.
Strongly Worded Cable
British oil technicians in Abadan
sent a strongly-worded cable to
the company's headquarters in
London. ‘
NASH will be first speakirYEL
LoW JACKET CLUB directors will
meet in important business ses-
sion tomorrow night at the
private dining room at CHAFIN’S
SANDWICH SHOP ... Pretty
GLADYS NELSON up from SAN
MARCOS for a short visit with
friends. j'
Plans moving for large contin-
gent of CLEBURNE rooters to
Journey to LONGVIEW next Fri-
day night to watch the YELLOW
JACKET gridders in action in the
Gregg County capitol Puri
IESSIC RAWINGTON planning a
trip to NEW YORK soon by plahe,.
Wrestling in Cleburne ended for
the year Saturday night after a8
short but successful season.
I— •'
WARREN THETFORD taking
a
of Lberty Hotel
Jack Proctor, editor of Cleburne
Times-Review, will be the princi-
pal speaker at the meeting, which
Week.Proctor is a veteran of more
staffs of big city newspapers lo-
than 30 years on the editorial
staffs of big ciy netwspapers in-
eluding Dallas, St. Louis snd Gal-
veston. He hss served as sports
writer, sports editor snd police re-
porter.
Proctor came to Cleburne
five years sgo. ss sports editor of
the Times Review He is currently
serving as editor.
It caught en. The improvement
fever is spreading 1*0 wildfire
throughout last cleburne.
A property owner on last Ol-
ie Street called us Saturday. She
Mid the property owners on last
Olive, after observinz the fine
Fires Claim Two Lives
Fires clsimed st least two lives
in Dallas. Arnold Bennie Clauch,
45-year-old drug store owner, wsr
fatally burned Fridays night when
fire swept his home. Johnnie Mae
Davis, 35, Dallas negro woman,
died about the same time when
fire destroyed her home.
Traffic vietims included:
Lee O. Straw, 63. Gatesville, kil-
led Saturday afternoon in a head-
n auto collision near Killeen
Humberto Guevara, 27-year-old
Laredo grocer, and Juan Villalo-
bod. 58, San Antonio, killed in a
head on collision near San Antonio
Friday night
Pvt Jack Carr Chambers, 23,
Odessa, killed Saturday in the
crash at a car and tractor-trailer
in Tehran, the Iranian capital,
U. B. Ambassador Loy Henderson
hsd a tong talk Monday with Pre-
mier Mohammed Mossadegh, who
is preparing to toad an Iranian
delege tt8a to the Security Council.
Mossadegh has let it bo known
thst be is ready to leave by plane
for New York if and when the
council decides it is competent to
set on Britain’s complaint. He coo-
tends the dispute is an Iranian in-
ternal matter. -
Thore was no announcement of
the subject of Henderson's talk
with the premier. However, the U.
S was known to'be trying to ar-
range sn 11th hour compromise.
With the case before the Security
Council opposition political leaders
droppe their criticism of Moms-
Vaders took the view they must
British company. The opposition
{degh's hasty natlonalization of the
[stand behind their country in the
[crisis.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 IP —
President Truman had the assur- j
nnee nf his mobilization chief Mon-
day that the nation is ready to
mass-produce arms and still meet
"reasonable"' civilian demands. 9
In his third qusrteny report tinea
taking over the vast defense pro- 1
ram Isst December, Defense Mo- E
bilizer Charles E. Wilson reported
to President Truman. Sunday: I J
ere emerging from the 'tool-
ing up' stage on fany military '
items and are at the threshold of
the period of volume production." 1
Wilson, who in his test quarterly [
report hsd warned that rearma- ?
ment was running 20 per cent be- . J
hind schedule, sald that there hss
been a "spectacular" jump in the 1
program in the last three months.
"By a year from now, the rate J
should have doubled again, reach- 7
ing ten billion to eleven billion
in (arms) deliveries per quarter" |
Wilson reported. , J
Wilson conceded thst the booming
defense program will put the punch
LAnother and much bigger pro-
"iect is also in the fire for East
Cleburne. The prelect was present-
ed to members of the city council
lost Thursday night and met with
fever forthwith.
The proposed prelect is by fsr
I the most outstanding and feasible
prelect outlined for civic improve-
ment in many, years. Thousands
of Cleburne property owners will
profit directly by the proiect,All
of Cleburne will profit indirectly »
as a resol of the project.
.*
I The project includes a new
[bridge across East Buffalo Creek
at the north extension of Washing-
|lon Street and opening a block on
[Knopp Street to connect Hollings-
worth. Brazos Avenue and the
Mansfield Road with the Washing-
lion Bridge
| The project will allow sn outlet
tor traffic from, the Santa Fe
shops the Santa Fe school and pas-
Isage across the creek for the East
hide fire department. Fire fiahting
UN Command Suggests
Commies Quit Bluffing
By EARNEST HOBERECHT the cease-fire conference on mutu-
I
, When-yo can see something
with your own eyes, sometimes it
makes a difference The West Ol-
ive Street project of drainage and
paving ia such an obvious improve-
ment that everybody in the area
wants to do s little something to
mske their property look better.
Incidentally real estate men are
[probably already looking at the
| East Clebure area now with an
| rye to making a deal or Iwo.
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 276, Ed. 1 Monday, October 1, 1951, newspaper, October 1, 1951; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1563300/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.