Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, January 30, 1956 Page: 1 of 6
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1
CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
5c DAILY
DAILY AND SUNDAY
10c SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press7 — World's Greatest News Agency
6 PAGES
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☆
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☆
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1956
51ST. YEAR, NO. 71
☆
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☆
Search Charred Ruins Of
Church For More Bodies
10 Perish;
a
agement for Good Living will in
elude talks by Dr. R. W. Kimbro
and Rev. B. B. Shiflett.
3
3
I
Mercury Drops To
I
ihe temperature stood in
had skidded to the 40-degree mark much of the Central Plains and
overcast, was sending the mercury
1 there
no moisture forthcom-
was
■
5
School Census Is
I
thunderstorm
warning
also
A
(
i
Weather
4
-
I
2
II
1I
temperature 71 de-
{
de-
&
The City Owns It, Alright;
Survey Will Be Conclusive
Will Renew Search For
Slain Plainview Woman
from Dallas—for questioning about
robbery of a bank run by a former
28 Degrees Today
A chill north wind barged into palachian areas to brace for haz-
.... 64
... 68
.... 51
.... 45
.... 42
.... 38
Member—Texas Press Association
Texas Daily Press League
Southern Newspaper Publishers
(UP) United Press Telephoto Pictures
(CP) Central Press Features
(KF) King Features
Photographer Resting Well
Times-Review photographer, Jim
West, was resting well at Memor-
ial Hospital today, where he is
undergoing treatment for a sto-
mach ailment.
the Cleburne area late Sunday, for-
cing the mercury down to the 28-'
degree mark just before dawn to-
day.
G•
Q 47
Henderson Street in most places,
it was learned today.
Many home owners on the street
have been inquiring as to just HOW
the City can own that amount, if
residential lots are as deep as call-
ed for on the deeds. AU surveys
have not been completed, but it
seems the City DOE'S have 70 feet
working with him at the time of the
blast.
Sunday
2 p.m.........
4 p.m.........
6 p.m.........
8 p.m.........
10 p.m.........
12 p.m.........
Maximum
Redhead Sought
In Fatal Foray
On Banker's Home
TOPEKA, Kan. —UP— A red-
732
>-2
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A
■
i So were two other hoodlums, one
of whom was shot to death early
I Saturday by Mrs. Gray’s husband
| when he broke into their home.
Just who the red-haired woman
Speaker Says P-TA Girded
To Promote Mental Health
None Injured In
Traffic Accident
No one was injured in a traffic
accident at Main and Henderson
Streets Sunday night.
Henry G. Vaughn, 46, 301 Heath
Street, was driver of one car. John
Edwin Baker, 27, 309 Moon Street
was driving his car west on Hen-
Two Charged After
Raid Produces Liquor
Charges of possession of liquor
for purpose of sale were filed today
against Jim Liggins and his wife,
Negr'oes, of 610 E. Chambers Street
after a raid by city police Saturday
night.
When police entered the house
several Negroes were sitting in
the living room and beer cans and
wine bottles were found through-
out the house, officers said. Offi-
cers found 12 full bottles of wine
underneath the floor in the kitchen.
Officers said the people in the
house had been drinking, but none
was drunk.
J'JoiUcLj Jos
By PROC
was paved. was much wider I’
it is now. The old curbing can st.
be found in many places aln ig tne
street. The City owns right-of-way
even beyond the curb fon sidewalk
space in most cases. Tne original
right-of-way was 70 feet.
The Highway Department has
told City Manager Floyd Carroll
that a check confirms the City has
70 feet of right-of-way in all cases
from Granbury Street west to the
city limits. Work to determine the
amount of right-of-way east of this
street is not completed, but is is
practically certain the same right-
of-way exists.
Home owners could not r'eadily
see how the 70 feet could exist
ond the street be only about 30
feet wide. Some of the owners have
indicated that if the City needs
only one foot of their property,
they will donate it. In some cases
it may be that buildings have been
constructed too close to, or on the
original right-of-way. Only a com-
plete survey will tell the whole
story. Property abstracts do not.
1-153
cgg
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"I’m afraid you’ve got the party
of the first part and the party
of the second part mixed up
with that party you were at
last night, Miss Gilby,", 7
warning was issued for a six-hour
period late Sunday—from 3 to 6
p. m.—for 50 miles either' side of
a line extending from Waco, Tex.,
northeastward to El Dorado, Ark.
The warning expired without any
damage being reported.
was, or what connection she has ' g
with the case, wasn’t definite. She g
became a suspect when she stop- |
ped at a Kansas filling station to |
"n
20380--0-"
the
blastI
ardous ice and snow.
Heavy snow warnings were is-
sued for parts of Michigan, Indi-
ana and Illinois.
Dumps Heavy Snow
high 70’s when the north blast As the storm moved northeast-
blew in. By dark, the mercury ■ ward, it dumped heavy snow on
e g 9
I m
Near Completion
The school census for 1956 is to
be completed in January. All par-
ents with children ages 6 to 17
inclusive as of Sept. 1, 1956, who
have not been enumerated are ask-
ed to call the principal or super-
intendent of the school district in
which they live.
Each child on the school census
roll mleans money for the schools
and each name left off means a
decrease in the amount of the
funds received for school purposes.
.8
bl
M
grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 32
grees in past 24 hours.
Yes, the City of Cleburne owns , in most places along the street. | slowly upward. Although the clouds
70 feet of right-of-way on West West Henderson Street, before ir [ appeared to pose a rain threat,
til after midnight Sunday night,
mapping plans for another wide-
spread search; However, they are
not sur'e that Mrs. Phares is dead
since previous searches throughout
the South Plains area failed to turn
up a body.
The case was revived over the
weekend with filing of a murder
charge against Phares. Officers
said they filed the charge when
Phares’ brother, Jack Phar'es, and
BREAK UP ROBBERY ATTEMPT—Mrs. Georgia Neese
Clark Gray, 55, former treasurer of the United States,
and her husband, Andrew, thwarted a second robbery
attempt against them by driving away with gunfire an
intruder who broke into their Richland, Kan., home.
An unidentified man was found shot to death near
their home a few hours after the 42-year-old Gray re-
ported exchanging shots with an intruder. The couple
are shown above on Jan. 3 just after Mrs. Gray was
abducted at gunpoint and forced to open the vault of
t/ie Richland State Bank which she heads. The ban-
dits fled with $2000 of the bank’s money. (NEA Tele-
photo)
h
Lu
Baby Pronounced
Dead, Still Alive
WASHINGTON — UP— An aban-
doned five - week - old baby boy,
brought back to life after hospital
doctors had pronounced him frozen
to death, remained on the “criti-
cal” list Monday.
The tiny baby was found Sunday
morning on the doorstep of Cath-
leen Weber. She told police she
monia tank apparently set off a
thunderous explosion that killed
two men and blew another through
a window of a small retail ice
house at San Juan, authorities said
Monday.
The inside of the 20-by-20 foot
concrete block structure was left
a twisted mass of blood-covered
machinery and woodwork. The
door and all windows of the build-
ing were blown out and one wall
partly collapsed from the force of
the explosion Sunday.
The dead were identified as Gar-
vino Morin, 74, of San Juan, and
Manual Martinez, 50, of Pharr.
Morin was killed outright, while
Martinez died about 30 minutes
later.
Salvador Arrendondo, 50, of San
Juan, required hospital treatment.
His injuries were not serious, how-
ever.
Fire Chief A. L. Wood of nearby
Pharr arrived at the scene shortly
after the explosion. He said an am-
monia tank in the building’s re-
frigerating equipment apparently
blew up.
SIGNER—Identified as the
signer of the controversial
Benson letter was Miller
F. Shurtleff, above, an as-
sistant to Agriculture Sec-
retary Benson. The letter
endorsed a magazine arti-
cle “The Country Slickers
Take Us Again.” Several
senators, both Democratic
and Republican, consider-
ed the article an attack on
farmers and demanded
Benson’s resignation. The
latter accepted blame for
what he called a “boner”
but he refused to resign.
(NEA Telephoto)
for the body of Andrea Phares, 21,
who has been missing since last
May 4.
Her husband, Bill Phares, 44,
was. charged with her murder Fri-
day after officers arrested him at
his parents’ home in Ada, Okla.
He was in the Plainview jail Mon-
day.
The couple had been married
only about eight months when Mrs.
Phares disappeared from their
farm home 12 miles northwest of
Hale Center. Mrs. Phares, an at-
tractive woman of Latin-American
descent born in Weslaco, met
Phares while she was working as
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were also on the table.
Wednesday’s program on Man-
of East Texas. It was bounded on
the south by Valley Mills Jackson-
ville, Carthage, and on the north
by Graford, Denton, Clarksville,
and Texarkana.
By early morning, the front ex-
tended on a giant arc from Tex-
arkana, southwestward between
Waco and Fort Worth, through Abi-
lene and Lubbock and swung back
into northeast New Mexico.
Forecasters said the front would
move on through the state during
the day, reaching the Brownsville
area by nightfall.
It produced light snows in the
Texas Panhandle, and blew up
dust that cut visibility in $,o m e
parts of West Texas to one-half
and a quarter mile Sunday.
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Partly cloudy through Tuesday. A
little colder Monday and Monday
night with lowest Monday night 15
to 25.
TEMPERATURES
PATH SATELLITES WILL TRAVEL—Newsmap indi-
cates the path—5000 miles wide—which the first Am-
erican satellites will travel. They will be launched at
Patrick Air Force Base, Florida. Following an elliptica
orbit above the rotating earth, the man-made “Moons”
will range in a path between 40 degrees north latitude
and 40 degrees south latitude. (NEA Newsmap)
ALL THE NEWS
(An Editorial)
The publisher of a southern Illinois county-seat
weekly newspaper was recently fined $300 and costs
for drunken driving and had his driver’s license re-
voked for one year. He ran the story on Page 1 of
his newspaper.
The Illinois "Press, publication of the Illinois
Press Association, in reporting the above facts, doubts
that any readers will henceforth prevail upon the
publisher to keep their names out of the paper.
During the time it takes to read this editorial
some editor somewhere is trying to explain to some
distraught parent or wife or husband why he has to
use the story that they don’t want published. And
the chances are that his explanation isn’t under-
stood.
There is no business like newspaper business.
Newspapers for generations have earned the trust
of their readers by printing what their editors know
to be news. Sometimes, as in the case above, they
would rather not use a story, but every editor knows
that he has no choice. To suppress a news story is
not only a matter of cheating his readers but it is a
slap at the profession which he has chosen as his
life’s work.
PLAINVIEW, Tex. —UP— Law a cotton weigher on his farm,
enforcement officers planned to re- Local officers and Texas Ranger
new a search in the wastelands of Capt. Raymond Waters talked un-
Hale and Lamb counties Monday
.. 5
—22
his sister, Mrs. Iva Bottoms
changed a story they had told ear-
lier.
Bill Phares said his wife left
home alone last May 4 in a Lincoln
automobile which was found aban-
doned the next day about a half
mile east of Hale Center. He said
he left looking for her in another
car but couldn’t find her.
Phares then notified authorities
of his wife’s disappearance and a
search began that has continued
off-and-on ever' since.
Last July, the Phares brothers
and Mrs. Bottoms underwent vol-
untary lie detector tests in Austin.
The results proved inconclusive.
Officers said Jack Phares and
Mrs. Bottoms changed their stories
last week and said Mrs. Phares
and her’ husband had an argument
the day she disappeared.
S gE
2 (/‘E
United States treasurer, Mrs.
Georgia Neese Clark Gray.
The ex-convict, Joe Herbert Hos-
kins, 27, already is charged in the
Jan. 2 robbery that netted $2,000.
", '
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Energetic ISABELLA COOPER
has moved her Letter Shop to 210
W. Hender'son...Dist. Atty. JIM
FERGUSON chatting with friends
... BILL WILSON, the furniture
salesman, chatting with a friend
over cold drinks in a downtown
eaterie... Perky BARBARA HAL-
BROOK hurriedly buying a school
supply item...Dr. W. P. BALL pre-
senting a friend with a huge red
apple, disregarding the old adage,
...“An apple a day keeps the doc-
tor' away.”
The usual number of CLE-
BURNE folk attending the Stock
Show rodeo each night at Fort
Worth...Local cage fans are set to
pack BROWN GYM! tomorrow night
to watch the JACKETS go all-out
to dump the district-leading GO-
PHERS from GRAND PRAIRIE
in a cage classic...MARVIN CUM-
BIE, the furniture man, waving
to a friend.
LAFF - A - DAY
33
A ununuristoni wai mug aiu derson Street. Police said he was
was issued for a 100-mile section exceeding the safe speed and failed
j) yield the right of way.
Auto Damages
Concrete Forms
Police said today somebody
drove an auto into the cement
forms where a service station is
being constructed at Brazos and
Henderson Streets doing about $50
in damage.
8-
■ old air poured into Texas from
the rorth Monday,- promising a
freeze for all but the southern tip
of the S te Monday. night. '•
An ice cystal fog brought visi-
bility to zero in seven degree tem-
perature at Dalhart early Monday.
Lubbock reported only four miles
visibility, but from another cause
—blowing dust.
The, weather' bureau said the
cold air will continue to flow south-
ward Monday, and predicted a
freeze for all the state except the
immediate coastal area and ex-
treme South Texas Monday night.
Rain showers ended along the
coast about 6 a. m. Monday. Meas-
ured amounts were .10 inch at
Houston, .18 at Galveston, .02 at
Waco and .01 at Corpus Christi.
Warmest reading in the state
early Monday was 63 at Browns-
ville.
The front, as it moved into the
state Sunday produced severe
storm and tornado warnings, snow
and dust.
The most severe part of the
front however' was north of Tex-
as — in Kansas and Oklahoma,
which reported snowfalls ranging
from three and four inches up to
10 inches at Ottawa, Kan.
A severe storm, and tornado
Insurance Probe
Group in Recess
AUSTIN -UP— Two legislative
committees charted plans Monday
for future investigation into the
Texas insurance industry, while
the spotlight swung to the courts.
Both Senate and House investi-
gating committees were in recess,
as trial opened in 98th District
Court at Austin on the state’s suit
to put the collapsed U. S. Trust
and Guaranty Co,, into permanent
receivership:
In Dallas, District Judge Paul
Peurifoy was expected to name
an auditor to examine books of
First Colonial Investment Corp.,
and affiliated companies.
Books of the First Colonial and
its subsidiaries were seized by au-
thorities during the weekend. Or-
rin Miller, a Dallas lawyer, was
named receiver for the companies.
Collapse of U. S. Trust and
Guaranty, based in Waco, set off
investigation of the state’s second
major insurance scandal in recent
years.
Action by the state to put U. S.
Trust and Guaranty into perma-
nent receivership is being contest-
ed by State Rep. Bert McDaniel
of Waco. He was lawyer for the
firm and for its president, A. B.
Shoemake, who shot . himself
through the brain Jan. 7 in a sui-
cide attempt.
Attendants at the Waco hospital
said Monday Shoemake had a good
night Sunday night and was im-
proved after taking a sudden turn
for the worse Saturday night. He
developed a high fever then, but
it was gone Sunday night, and he
had regained consciousness.
Small craft warnings were
hoisted from Brownsville along
the Texas coast to New Orleans,
for southerly winds 20 to 30 miles
an hour' shifting to northerly dur-
ing the day.
By UNITED PRESS
A fast-moving snow storm swept
out of the Midwest into the Ohio
Valley and the East Monday,
bringing sleet, freezing rain and
nearly a foot of snow.
The storm, spawned in New Mex-
ico, moved nearly the length of
the country in a little more than
a day.
It caused the weather bureau at
Washington, in a special advisor'y,
, to warn the Ohio Valley and Ap- •
and the wind was increasing in southern Midwest.
velocity. . ’ ■ At least 10 inches of snow was
Wind Still Blows .reported at Ottawa, Kan., and just
The wind was still whipping at about that amount .was expected
noon today, but a dim sun, which, j by,early Monday at Kansas City,
peeped intermitte tly through the Blowing and drifting snow, plus
-- ' a band of sleet and freezing rain,
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Mrs. Carl Kessler of Mineral
Wells was speaker at today’s ses-
sion of the mental health study
course sponsored by the Cleburne
Parent-Teacher Association. The
course is being conducted at the
high school club room each morn-
ing from 9 to 12 o’clock through
Friday.
Mrs. Kessler’s subject was Why
Mental Health in P-TA? She ex-
plained it was the aim of the P-TA
to promote the welfare of children
and it must see that they are men-
tally as well as physically healthy.
Materials from the Hogg Foun-
dation to be used during the course
were introduced.
She gave the definition of mental
health as being able to get along
well with ourselves and others and
to meet the minor irritations of life
and the major crises with confi-
dence and poise.
She concluded by saying mental
health had to do with our attitude
toward ouselvos and others. A per-
son must love himself before he
is able to love others. She sug-
gested that parents grow in emo-
tional maturity by increasing their
ability to communicate and grow-
ing in number of people they are
concerned about. "
Emotional maturity is our ability
to cooperate and carry responsi-
bility and is measured by our abil-
ity to love, she said. Healthy per-
sonalities are those which continue
to grow, accepting opportunities
and requirements in each succes-
sive stage of life. Personality,
which is also a capacity for fel-
lowship is 25 percent heredity and
75 percent environment.
Five stages of emotional growth
are Egocentric, loves only self;
parental phase, begins to love par-
ents;* homosexual, begins to love
those of own sex at about school
age; hetrosexual, begins to love
stepped out of her front door to
bring in the paper and “there he
was.”
The infant was rushed to the Dis-
trict of Columbia General hospital.
His temperature had dropped to
. , 73 degrees, over 25 degrees below
Morin had managed theicesta-normal. Doctors said the infant
tion, owned hy Southern Texas Icedid not have any heart beat. But
and Service Inc., for 20 years. Thethey began applying artificial res-
other two men apparently were] piration anyway. ,
opposite sex about teen age; al-
truism, emotional maturity. Five
percent of population never gets
past the first two stages.
The invocation was given by Rev
Ronald Prince. The theme of the
program was set by a table ar-
rangement using a tree Ul knov -
ledge with branches hung with
cards bearing words indicative of
things making up personalities.
Fruits were banked around the
base of the tree and a cut-out of
a home, a school and a church
After it appeared hopeless, the
baby was officially pr'onounced
dead. However, artificial respira-
tion was continued for a while.
Suddenly feeble gasps were heard.
The infant was rushed to the op-
erating room and oxygen was
forced into his lungs.
Adrenalin was injected into his
heart and soon an audible heart-
beat of 80 pulsations a minute ap-
peared. Several hour's later the
tot’s temperature had risen to 96
degrees, just 26 degrees below nor-
mal. Th official death pronounce-
ment was cancelled.
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extended from northeast Oklaho-
ma to Missouri. Highway patrol-
men warned motorists off icy high-
ways in northern Oklahoma.
Blowing dust cut visibility in
parts of the Texas Panhanale.
Farther east, the storm spawned
tornadoes and heavy tnunder-
storms in Tennessee and Arkansas.
A tornado north of Conway, Ark.,
demolished four houses and injured
two persons.
Lightning Destroys School
A fire started by lightning dur-
ing a thunderstorm destroyed the
Franklin, Tenn., high school 70
miles east of Memphis at a cost
of $500,000.
Severe storm and twister warn-
ings were issued for a six-hour pe-
riod from Waco, Tex., to Eldorado,
Ark., and in East Texas. No dam-
age was reported from the area,
however.
Fast-falling temper'atures accom-
panied the storm. Readings in the
Lower Plains states dropped as
much as 30 degrees.
It was colder over the Northern
Plains and Minnesota with read-
ings below zero over most of the
area.
Cutbank, Mont., with 19 below
zero was the nation’s icebox.
telephone and ask about Billy
Gene Ross, 23. It was Ross, re-
leased only last month from the
Texas penitentiary, who was killed
when he broke into the Gray home.
The filling station attendant said
the woman, driving a Cadillac
with Texas tags, called hospitals
and the sheriff’s office without
identifying herself. She left after
learning Ross was dead, the at-
tendant said.
Bank robbery charges were filed
against Hoskins, Ross and Louie
Dee Young Jr., 28. Young’s ar-
raignment was set before U. S.
Commissioner George S. Allen on
the charge.
Hoskins, who still is at large,
has a record of burglary and theft
convictions, authorities said.
Young accompanied Ross to the
Gray home at Richland, 15 miles
southeast of Topeka, early Satur-
day when Ross was shot to death
authorities said. He admitted be-
ing a companion of Ross, but de-
nied any part of the bank robbery.
The FBI would not say how Hos-
kins was linked with the bank rob-
bery.
Monday
2 a.m........... 34
4 a.m........... 33
6 a.m........... 32
8 a.m........... 32
10 a.m........... 32
12 Noon ........ 34
27 Injured
BALTIMORE —UP— Eye-
witnesses told Monday how:’
“men became beasts” when
fire set off a wild tramp-
ling panic at a church sup-
per. At least 10 persons died
in the flaming melee.
At least 227 others were injured
and several were still reported
missing.
The flash fire broke out about
4 p.m. cst Sunday in the quonset-
roofed community hall of subur-
ban Brooklyn, Md., as 1,100 men,
women, and children, were attend-
ing a festive oyster roast sponsored
by the Catholic Church of St. Rose
of Lima.
Tells of Stampede
Lawrence O’Brien, chairman of
the arrangement committee for the
ill-fated dinner, told of the horrible
stampede for safety that ensued;
“Men became beasts. I saw men
beating women to get to a door or
window. Men and women shrieked
and screamed and cried.”
O’Brien leaped to a table and
yelled to the terrified crowd to
keep calm, but his voice was
drowned out in the frenzied babble
of the crowd.
The Rev. Francis Wills, assist-
ant rector of St. Rose of Lima,
also made a futile effort to calm
the crowd. But the terror that
stalked the hall would not be stay-
ed. Many were trampled in the
crush for exits. Others jumped,
were pushed, or were thrown
through windows as flames sudden-
ly enveloped the roof.
Report Some Doors Locked
There were reports that some of
the doors of the hall were not
used. But fire officials refused to
say, pending an official investiga- i
tion report, whether they found any
doors locked or otherwise barred
from use. I
Rescue workers at the scene told
reporters during the night and ear- I
ly morning that 12 bodies had been
found, but Sgt. Thomas Smith of
the Maryland state police said
later that an official recount show-
ed 10 bodies in the building. Only
parts of some bodies were found,
and this may have contributed to
the apparent error in the earlier
count.
The 10 bodies were found in the
building near the 12-foot-wide main
door. Firemen said the crowd ap-
parently rushed for the main door,
ignoring to a large extent six
smaller exists in the building.
All Bodies of Women ’
Coroner Gustave Flaubert said |
all the bodies recovered Sunday
night were women. Relatives of I
women whom the police head count
revealed to be missing were asked I
to view the bodies for possible iden- l
tification. |
Many Trampled I
Many were trampled in the |
stampede for safety. Others I
jumped, were pushed and were |
thrown through the windows as I
flames suddenly enveloped the roof |
of the community hall in suburban |
Brooklyn. g
Most escaped through the broken I
windows. I
The dead were burned beyond |
recognition in what one witness |
called a “terrible nightmare.” i
The injured crowded Baltimore |
hospitals and were treated in re- |
ception rooms, spare offices, corri- I
dors and hallways. Many families I
were separated in the panic and I
confusion. |
“I’m still not exactly sure how |
it happened,” said Father Francis I
Wills, an assistant pastor at St. |
Rose of Lima, Roman Catholic |
Church. “But it was the most terri- |
ble thing I have ever seen. I
“I calmed as many people as I |
(See FIRE page 6) |
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Speeder Facing
Three Charges
Roy Stanfield, 23, of Keene, was
in county jail today facing three
charges, after a Sunday night race
of speeds up to 100 miles per hour,
police said.
The race was staged over1 an
area reaching from the Fort Worth
city limits to Alvarado and down
Highway 67 and north of Keene.
A Highway Patrolman chased the
car from Fort Worth to Alvarado,
where the Alvarado police chief
was waiting. The chase then turn-
ed to Highway 67, where a deputy
sheriff got into the act. Before
the car was stopped, about eight
patrol cars were working to head
off the speeding car on the country
roads north of Keene.
Stanfield was charged with
speeding, passing without proper
clearance and passing in no-pass-
ing zones.
Benny Hudson, 18, and Edward
Beck, 20, riding in the car with
Stanfield, were charged with being
drunk.
nr ,. /
W .......,
Ammonia Blast
Fatal to 2 Men
SAN JUAN, Tex.— UP-An am-
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 71, Ed. 1 Monday, January 30, 1956, newspaper, January 30, 1956; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505485/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.