Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 85, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1932 Page: 1 of 6
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'leburne Times-Review Features Local, State and National News While It 19 Newt, Bringing to the People of this Section the Latest and Mostlnteresting Stories of the f
6
I
PRICE FIVE CENTS
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, WEDN
•AY, JANUARY 13, 1932
VOL. 27, NO. 85
HIRTEEN PEOPLE DIE IN MID-WINTER STORMS
Mass Meeting Called to Consider
GRIFFIN CASE
OVER NATION
Wife Attacked By Hawaiians
BOND SET ON
n
I
>
whose name
Underwood and who is said to be
- The- man was arrested Tuesday
0c,
T
r
e Anderson stated.
County Agent Has
ex-
I
was discussed at the last meeting ton was a deml-god but to show
CONTEST IN CLEBURNE
MARKETS
losing selected New York stocks:
on
a
wondered
1 3-4 past.----
&
Santa Fe Head Here
rat'road ticket, Pullman fare and
Tie
visited 5 in Cleburne, Fort Worth
and Dallas Sunday.
। and part of
back th Cleburne. -
Godley Man Heads
. f Our Daily Poem 1 Texas ULaw Bodu
Mrs J. M Flatt
HITCH-HIKERS. .
.....r..„.
st all of them.
the trail.. a treacherous one
m start to. end.
--f
i
Lh
lud
j
0888
>
misinformed. - New
do not drink any
Blizzard Follows
In Wake Of Dis-
astrous Twisters .
z
TORNADOES DO
MUCH DAMAGE
four
seeing
lleved to have something to do
with the recent reports that the
Fort Worth offices would be moved
burne district.
Dr. J.E. Crawford of Nashville,
Ranch In West Tex-
as Can Accomodate
Cotton Pickers
ad
bo
ng
KJ
1
a Olen Rose doctor on a charge
, of driving a motor vehicle on a
public highway .while intoxicated.
Programs On First
President Sponsor-
ed By -Miss Ryan
states that ■ it wiil take about 60
days to complete the picking.
"This demonstrates the fact that
Death Sentence is
Given Negro Slayer
h j
L)
Kingdom Extension:
Institute At Main
Street-— .
Citizens’ L o yalty
To Be Shown In
Drive Response
the subject.
e traveled a road for about
THE INFANTRY BAND
A FACTOR IN OUR
CIVIC LIFE.
CITIZENS TO -
DISCUSS PLAN
IN STATE MOVE
red
ont
m-
. 6-1-2
5 7-8
. 31 1-4
. 45
. 6 5-8
Salesman Wanted
Here To Sell Seed
METHODISTS
HOLD SESSION
Society Woman and
Maid Murdered
. \
.. 83
.. 18 1-8
.. 17 1-4
. ..132 3-4
.. 11 7-8
..148
3 1-8
.. 22
14 7-8
.. 12 3-8,
.. 3 1-4 ,
.. 15 1-8
TO ATTEND
“CIMARRON"
Starring Richard Dix
, Temight at
----
Yale Theater
Sign and Present This Coupon
At Box Office
■ 1--- 2--
Organ izer—Of.T ex-
as Association
Works Here
The Times-Review
Invites
MR. and MRS. BOSS PEACOCK
-tn Poindexter,
of the 200th anniversary of the I steering wheel and an old man
birth of the first President of the ‘ was in the car with him. The dep-
unable to reach an agreement as
to whether they should give the
negro the death sentence or life
imprisonment.
use
ted
American Can . ,
Am P & L . . ..
Am Smelt.....
Am T i T . . ..
Anaconda ......
Auburn Auto . .
Aviation Corp Del
Beth Steel . . ..
Byers A M . . .
Canada Dry . . .
Case J-1
Chrysler . • ■.. ■
Curtiss . Wright . .
Elect Au L 7 . .
Elec St Bat • . .
Foster Wheel . . .
Fox Films . . ..
Gen Elec ......
Gen Motors . .
Gillette SR..
Goodyear . . ..
Houston Oil . . .
Int Cement , —
__ A
, By’UNITED PRESS)
West Texas; Cloudy, probably
100 LABORERS
CAN GET WORK
them would come
PLEDGES READY
FOR CAMPAIGN
50c gaa.
xumigopu Berries <Mts< Fog
Whisevtee; Centrel Frem
ves Lecl Newa: Btery.
About 80 pastors and laymen of
the Cleburne 'Methodist district
gathered today at the Main Street
Methodist church for a Kingdom
Extension Institute and a pastors’
1 1
given Carter Rolhns, IB-year-old
negro, by a Jury which found him
-gullly-ot the—charge of fatal y
wounding D. L. Reed, 60, near
The essays must be limited to
a maximum of 500 words, writ-
ten legibly in Ink or typed on
ona side of the paper, in In^..
lish only.
now," Mr. Webster declared.
Cleburne does not have 50 per
cent as many unemployed people
as last yeat, he stated, potnting
es were: crumpled and power and
communication lines were torn
down. Resoue-parties sought other
victims.
QLebwrne 0l0us-ew0
CUturnt Morning Review and Cleburne DoUg TUnSo Coneolldated Oct. 1, 1918 .
uty said he found a bottle of
tcnic partially empty. The tonic
contained 22 per cent alcoho’, he t
said.
Underwood was, released on bond
Tuesday night to appear at the
hearing today. He made the $1,000
bond set by Judge Bicknell this
morning. -----------—
pense of government, precinct,
town, county, state and nation, by
eliminating and combining de-
partments, bureaus. -commissions;
eliminating duplications, extermi-
nating the fee , system, reducing
salaries, stopping the padding of
pay rolls, the enacting of an in-
come tax law, readjustment of. tax-
ation so that real estate will not
carry from 80 to 90 per cent as
it now is," Mr. Nelson states.
“The taxing of intangible, or k -
visible properties, so they will share
their part of the burden of gov-
ernment, the squashing of all bond
issues tor the present, a budget
plan for precinct, city, county and
state. An adequate provision for our
public school system. New laws with
teeth that will stop the exploiting
of our state and citizenship, and
the putting to flight of the petty
politician, and chronic ofiice-seek-
<cr. The drafting of business men
for office from our own ranks,
many of whom will serve in low
and high offices at one dollar per
year.
“The asschation hopes to hav?
one hundred of the most populous
C'unties organized before the July
primary and hold the balance of
power in this year's elections. Thit
fs a non-partisan movement, and
seeks only to save our citizenship
from serfdom. which now is so near
a great per cent of our best men.
women and children. A correction
of these ills and abuses is • in our
immediate power.
—------ "Glerion- Call."_____________
This is a clarion call to every
red-blooded taxpayer of Johnson
county, who is in sympathy win
this movement. There is not a man
in this organization who seeks po-
litical preferment and everyone so
far is giving his service gratis to
this important movement _tha is
sweeping the-state like an uncon-
trollable fores) fire.
'■Free men and women under the
flag come to this mass meeting-
Join this movement, dedicate your
ransomed powers and energies to
its policies and work of salvation
for our great citizenship of Tex-
25 i j
i n a
d-p•A
< ■ W
PERFORMS MARRIAGE.
Justice of the Peace H L.. Bick-
nell performed u marriage cere-
mony this week for C B White,
Sr., and Mrs. Essie Hullon, both
of Cleburne. — •—,:
hotel bills and meals, to the
International Convention in Los
then any .other class News-
paper men are Just observed
more because they are in the
public eye, because they are
supposed to set examples of
the community. —
Newspaper men on the large
papers may drink like that
but we know what we're talk-
ing about when he pring up
the smaller publications. There
is very little of it in such or-
ganizations as far as we can
learn.
Mrs. Griffin succeeded her hus-,
band as tax collector cf John-
[ weather
E E. Taylor, superintendent of
the northern division of the Gulf
Colorado and Santa Fe Railroad,
With offices at Fort Worth, was
Cleburne Lions club members
will sponsor an essay contest
being conducted by Lions Inter- ■
national.
A call for a Cleburne man with
an automobile who would be in-
terested tn working five coun-
ties to sell a particular brand of
seed was placed with the chamber
of commerce this morning.
Anyone interested in the propo-
sition can obtain complete Infor-
mation by celling At the chamber
of commerce.
miles recently without
g —V
g *. I
Jit
L * :4
A
A
.1*30 1-4
.... 29 1-2
.... 10 5-8 '
4 5-3
.... 25
23 5-8
- 13 5-8
.... 16 1-2
.... 11 1-4
.... 18-----
.... 26 1-2
.... 23 1-2
..,15-
.... 16 1-2 |
.... 91-2
.... 24 7-8
.... 11 1-8
t; .. s 1-
_____________
.... 5
.... 14 1-8
.... 8 3-4
.... .35 3-8
... 3 7-8
.... 36 “
.... 29 3-8
.... 10 1-4
.... 12 1-2
.... 13 1-4
... 24 3-8
.... 21-4
.... 18 1-2
.... 23 3-4
.... 44 5-8
15 1-2
... 28 1-4
... M 1-4
WOMAN HONORED.
LITTLE ROCK. Ark., Jan. 13,—
(UP- Mrs. Hattie ,W. Caraway
today held the honor of being the
first woman ever chosen a United
States senator by popular vote.
The widow of the late democrat-
ic senator, T H Caraway, on in-
complete returns from 57 of the )
States 75 counties in yesterday's
special election had a lead of ap-
proximately 15 to 1 over her near-
est opponent.
meeting conducted by Rev. D. K
Porter, presiding elder of the Cie- savist wilk receive a round trip
and at the next session the fol-
lowing subjects will be taken up:
Type of dairy cow, feeding the
dairy cow, hog type and feeding
hogs. Elva Payne is president of
the club, Lewis Pugh is vice pres-
ident and -J. C. Smith is secre-
tary’. Lewis Pugh and Herman
Smith form the program commit-
tee.
Flower Lovers
To Organize !
R. B. Anderson of Godley has
been elected president of the Hil-
debrand Law Society at the Uni-
versity of Texas. . .
Other officers for the spring se-
mester have been chosen as fol-
lows: Byron Singleton of Lufkin, ’
vice president; Jack Roberts of
Austin, secretary-treasurer. Flem-
local club Judges the
Int Harvester
Johns Manville......
Kroger G & B.......
Liq Carb ..........
Montg Ward . .......
Nat Dairy ..........
Para Publix......
Phillips P .......
Prairia O&G S
Pure Oil . . ........ •.
Purity Bak . . -.....
Radio . ‛........i...
Sears Roebuck .......
Shell Union Oil . .
Southern Pacific . . ..
Standard Oil N J .
Soc Vac..........
Studebaker
Texas Corp . ______ .
Texas- Gulf Sul —i- --
Tex Pac C & Q . .
- Uruf Elliott . r ......
U 8 Gypsum . . .....
U S Steel . .
Vanadium ..........
Westinghouse Elec
Worthington
Curb Storks.
Cities Service ........
Ford M Ltd .........
Gulf Oil Pa .........
Humble OH ........
Ning Hud Pwr . . ....
YORK, Jan. 13— (UP)--
was given as C. L. 'the'death of the woman,
- "hf " " " fo 1W'persons and heavy prop-
erty damage in Mississippi. Hous-
k-• --r *"
f Another enterprise is going
’ to be lost to Fort Worth un-
* "-less Cleburne citizens come
through with a little cash in
a pinch. We’re getting awful-
ly tired writing about this
and that going to Fort Worth
or there being such Hable to
happen.
Cleburne got the 144th In-
fantry band from Midlothian.
It came here with the under-
standing that Cleburne would
pay the director’s_____salary of
$200 a month. In return the
government would furnish pay
rain in southeast portion; rain
turning to snow in north portion
Tonight and Thursday; tempera-
tures near 20 degrees in Pan-
handle; livestock warnings north
portion.
filling station. We
if civilization had
-The contestants will write es-
says on the subject: "What Can
a Civic Service Luncheon Club
do for my Community that is
Not Being Done?”
The contest is open to accred-
ited high schools or private
schools with a course of study
equivalent to accredited high
.schools and the essays must rep-
ern Mississippi. A Mexican wo-
man and her child were killed
when wind razed their home near
Eagle Lake, Texas.
Ten negroes were reported killed
by a torhado that struck near
Moundsville, Ala. It was believed
the same gale Liat had caused
pcan countries are to Join in the
observance.
.1 r,
- /,
IMPROVES FROM ILLNESS.
"Frod Brownell, Sr., who _ has
been seriously ill for the past
few weeks. is reported to be great-
ly improved’. «-
Hearing Held Fol-
lowing Auto Col-
lision Here
Bond of $1,0c0 was sc? at an
examining trial held this morn-
fgsin Justice of the Peace H.
Burleson, last October,
At a previous trial, a Jury 'Was
GOES TO TEPLE.
F W. Roberts left Wodnesda
morning from Temple where he
will take treatment at tihe Santa
Fe Hospital. He sustained a bad-
ly Injured hand m A recent acet-
dent which had to be amputated.
Mr Roberts is deported to be
getting along nicely.
NOTICE FILED.
One notice of. intention to mar-
ry was filed Tuesday in County
Clerk Homer A. Gentry’s office,
it was filed by Miss Mattie
Wooley and Corl Timmins. Josh-
un. .
Tenn., and Rev. J. W. W. Shuler
of Itasca addressed theassemhly Angeles.
son county upon his denih.
■local unemployed people do nt. “-EL--
have to wait until we begin oper- ORInMIT C CTITHTI
ation of a labor bureau for them N HI II II \ \I
to get work, but they can talt UVllVVUU UI W 1
WASHINGTON
“ not come" into that territory
as yet.
Mrs. J. M. F att. who writes
the Times-Review Daily Poem,
penned one Tuesday about the
writer and Will Rogers. Now,
____ maybe somebody. will be kind •
enough to mail a clipping to
will. It might be embarrass-
ing to Rogers, however, to
know that he had been men-
tioned in the same 'sentence
with your columnist.
-------
Land Possession '
Suit Is Settled
Miss Sylvia Johnston of Itasca, j in Cleburne today conferring with
eieed. in Cleburne, Fort Worth a group of local business men and
Ing Waters of Austin.-clerk of the"
-? court, and Hirsh Schwartz of
• scmenburg, sheriff. -
night by Officer Roy Lay and
Deputy Sheriff Tobe Bratcher fol-
lowing a collision between a ear
driven by Lee Hand and another
machine on North Robinson street.
Assistant County Attorney Roy
lece Lions Club to put over the
essay contest here and Mr.
Scott announced this morning
that in addition to the school
students competing for the na-
tional award that his commit-
tee is offering $5 for first place •
.. —n. Cleburne, regardlesse <»(■
whether the essay wins m d3- "
ti let competition or not.
Any high school student de-
| 'siring to enter this contest can
j get material for its writing by
conferring with Secretary Cliff
Scott or sitting in on one, r
the luncheons.of the club. ""
resent the student's own. work. FORT WORTH, Jan. 13.—(UP)
—The- death sentence today was
A garden club will be or-
ganized Friday afternoon at 3
o'clock at the Cleburne Cham-
ber of Commerce auditorium.
Mr. Herfty B. Trigg OL Fort
Worth. State president of Gar-
den dubs will be in attendance,
according to Mrs. F. R. Petten-
gcll. and all women of the city
and surrounding section, who
are interested in the organiza-
ton of such a elub are urged
to be in attendance.
The purpose of such an organ-
izat ion., would be to know the
i various f’owers of the section,
how to care for them and nec-
casary facts about planting and
preser vtion.
. I
. A
MIDDLEBURG, Va., Jan□
(UP)—Murder of Mrs. Agnes
for about 35 enlisted men
who wou d furnish music lor
Cleburne at its programs and
sport entertainments in every
way the unit would be a val-
uable asset to the town.
The band has kept its con-
tract. It is an important fac-
tor in local civic life. It
• helps turn loose money that
goes into the pockets of the
local merchants. Cleburne owes
the band Its promise to pay
the salary of the director.
We believe the investment is
a good one. Cleburne an ill
afford to lose such an organ-
isation of high-class music or
to lose members of the unit
who would follow it where it
might be moved.
alty on the part of the citizen-
ship in this campaign," Mr. Web-
ster declares.
“We are going to forget what
lias been done by the people in
the • past toward trading away
from home, but will concern our-
self very much with tlx future in
an effort to remedy a condition
that sent $2,000,000 a year out of
Cleburne for products that could
have been purchased here.
“We plan to call’the names of
those who refuse to trade at
home before this campaign is
over and those who sign the
pledge now can get. qut of this
because we are going to forget
what they may. have done in the
The Real George Washington j Deputy Sheriff Bratcher at the
_ p, , ,, 'will be the theme of programs • hearing stated that he found a
Hoys ( Uto Meetng lo be held in the Cleburne public car in the ditch on Wilson streel.
_____ schools in February in celebration that Underwood was, under the
essays as.it sees fit. The basis
on which ratings will be made
are: Subject-matter, 70 per cent;
rhetoric and gremmer, - 20+ neat- -
ness, 10.
W. A. Scott and T. V. Lawson
form the committee from the
Blanks for signing the loyalty
pledge in the trade-at-home cam-
paign of the Cleburne Chamber
of Commerce can be secured at
that office beginning today, Man-
ager J. T Webster announces
----j "We are going to produce evi-
1 ' dence of disloyalty as well as Toy-
civic leaders.
। It was not learned what the
conference involved, but it is bc-
out that many of those helped
with the labor bureau in 1931 had
gone to other fields and secured
employment. Most of those seeking
work are from other places.
rw
“1x
Anoppor tunity for 100 laborers
of Cleburne to secure work is
presented in a letter received today
by Manager J. T. Webster of the
chamber of commerce.
Mr. Webster stated that the let-
ter was from Southwest Texas
where the man owned a large
ranch with 1,400 acres of cotton
that has never been picked.
He oi teis 40 cents per hun-
dred pounds for the work and
Here are Lieutenant and Mrs. Hawaiian authorities assert that
Thomas IL Massie, son-in-law and Mrs. Fortenscue, Lieutenant Massie
daughter of Mrs. Granville For-' and Lord kidnaped the Hawaiian
Yerx and Washington matron,'of Mrs. Fortescue. The kidnap-
who with Massie and E. J. Lord, ing and murder are said to have
naval enlisted man, is held at1 taken place after a jury was un-
Honolulu on kidnaping and mur- ■ able to agree on the guilt of
der charges growing out of the, Kahahawai, whe with several other
death c€ Joseph Kahahawai, native natives was accused of altacking
Hawaiian accused of taking part Mrs. Massie. The Massies are
in a recent attack on Mrs. Ma^ie.: shown at their wedding in 1927.
LIONS SPONSOR ESSAY
-Up i kind down-the way they go
R Hdin or shine.
The: y seem to think they'll get a
e show. . .
----ft
$
Sor, pewhere, sometime
) But t hey have a risk to run;
I Mo
Find
Fn
that he was a flesh and b'ood ------
man who has withstood the thrusts . “
of the muck-rakers, Mr. Brown
stated.
Miss Dora Ryan, instructor of
American history in the senior I
high school, is planning a series of ■ ■■■
four programs* The first will be - NEW
VISITS HERE.
during the morning session. Lun-
Aeon was served It the noon hour
by the women of the hostess
church.
The programwasto have been
contihued through the afternoon
with talks being given and re-
ports from various department*
read.
All essays, must be in the
hands of the local club com-
mittee by Feb. 15. The local
winning essay must be in-the •
hands of the district governor
by March 15. The winning dis-
trict essay must be in the inter-
rational office by Aprir- 15.
The winning international es-
L. Bicknell's court for a man
ry
- Speaking of prohibition you
might get a good deal of fun
asking the candidates and
prospective candidates for
county office where they stand
033 IVIUGLI IS VailtU •U~VlluEl SETTLEMENT
Question of Taxationin CountykiS
--- ----------------------------------- trict Court,
United States, Supt. Emmett
Brown announces.
Tiie first point in the observ-
ance will be to honor Washing-
ton for what he, did for 'his
country. Next in importance will
be to erase from the minds of the,
children the idea that Washing-
discussing prohibition the oth-
er day. One of them wondered
which class of men drank the
most" whiskey. The other an-
swered .quikly that it was
newspaper men. /
We fear the fellow had been
An agreed Judgment has been
reached in He case of Mrs. A. D.
Griffin. et al, vs. Johnson County
in which suit was Instituted for
back fees in the county tax col-
lectcr’s-office. Judge W. L. Wray
anncunced this morning.
Mrs. Griffin filed suit in district
court for certain fees for the col-
lection of ‘delinquenttaxes and
preparation of tax rolls accounted
for by her and her husband when
tax collector as fees of office under
a law which was afterward held
unconstitutional The county had
filed a cross-action.
Under the agreed judgment, sign-
ed by Judge Wray Tuesday, Mrs.
Griffin's three children were paid
$468.20 which was one-half of the
sum earned by their father. This
is in accordance with the law. Both
Mrs. Griffin and the county agreed
to release their claims. r
Feb. 19 and the next will be two
weeks hence with the third two
weeks from then and the last
two weeks later. These programs
will be in the auditorium at
chapel period with'the general cit■
izenship invited to attend.
Miss Ryan states that she will
taka up the life of—Washington
on through his services as presi-
dent and statesmen, plan to have
patriotic music in accordance with
the- oscaskina and to present a
Heard a couple of fellows
Ilsley, one of the leadingmem-
bers of the fashionable colony
which rides Ita_hounds 'of ttic
Virginia Hills, and her maid. -
shattered the quiet of the social
colony today,
Arthur Bobing, brother of Mrs.
Ilsley, came to his sister’s home
to find Mis. Ilsley lying beaten
to death on the floor of her
room. In a nearby room, he
found the dead body of Mrs.
Ilsley’s maid; Mrs Anne Buck-
ner, said to have been from Mil-
waukee. In bed. She likewise had
-been, beaten to death.
A hatchet and a blood stained
bootjack were in the house. They
were believed to be the weapons
which brought death to the two
women. N
son. Meanwhile the At antic sea-
I boart and she-Eastsgenerallx
I basked under springlike'sunshine.
. «ATII nrf a m pr Three deaths were known to
I II ll Illi? I II A Di M have occurred in the tornadoes
LlUUn Vil «A 111184 and upwards of 100 were injured.
---- Woman Killed.
A woman was killed by a tor-
nado that tore across, northeazt:.
advantage of this opportunity
(By United Press!
Thirteen persons were reported
dead today in tornadoes as nid-
winter storms swept eastward
across the nation with a blizzard,
high winds and bitter cold in'
their wake.
Areas Iron' .the Wabash valley
to the Pacific coast felt the fury
of what threatened to be the
major storm thus far in the sea-
costume dance reminiscent of
Washington's time.
The bi-centennlal this year will
be international in scope. Not
only will America observe.it gen-
erally but even some of the Euro-
County Agent J. C. Olsen re-
ports the West Liberty boys ag-
ricultural club showing much
progress in its annual program.
There are eleven members, five
of whom have dairy demonstra-
tions, four show hog demonstra-
tions and due has-a poultry dem-
onstration.
Feeding and care of dairy cows
De fendants were awarded jude-
mem' on the question of homestead
cxermption and the plaintiff on
persc mnal property converted by
him in the amount of $75 in the
civil suit styled J. H. Coleburn.
a, invivinepcposun:
slon *of land. Judge W. 7* Wray
* annodunced this morning.
Th qe case was heard in Eight-
eentr h‛ District Couprt and involved
Mr. i Soleburn being named admin-
tetra tor following the death of
Mrs. W. I. Sherman. Sr., the
prop qlerty of whose husband was
invt • ved in the suit.
Reduction of expenses of govern-
ment and readjustment of taxation
are objectives of a meeting of John-
son county tax-payers set for the
afternoon of Jan. 23 at the court,
house in Cleburne.
The meeting is called by the
State Tax-Payers Association with
headquarters at Dallas. D. M. Jones,
farmer and manufacturer, is presi-
dent. All farmers and business men
are invited to the assembly.
J. T. Newsom, State organizer,
was in Cleburne today and an-
nounced a meeting for this after- .
noon at 4 o’clock at the county
court room at which time plans
for organization in Johnson coun-
ty and appointment of a committee
lor the mass meeting will be made.
Prominent tax-payers were invited
for this session.
Meets Favor.
Mr. Newsom reports that the
movement is meeting almost uni-
versal approval of tax-payers of
the State, and already a number
spaper men of counties have organized.
more liquor - "The Itentlon andwork..of
association is to reduce the
PRO and
CON
——*_' * - >
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
a"
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Ratliff, Harold V. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 85, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1932, newspaper, January 13, 1932; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562439/m1/1/: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.