Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 40, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 22, 1936 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Evi
IE TIMES-REW
.IZATION
6—
a
I
t"
!|i!
■' rr' vJ
■ [
.O
./I
f
to
. ■>
htw»
Jf
fi
HUM
7.
I’■.
f/j
Yj
Z
X.
PON
DEArHRA'
.. . 7*1 111 ' 1'4.
>
r
€
I
I
’(•
Cl
have Kbn bring her to on almoet-
p.m.
W'1
>1
Sf«-
* ■!
fir.'ST* attempt
7
SM«'
■ .i
V
7k>
1
‘
/
/EIGHT
-
CT
P
/
as
I
t
i«M>. cbmmu *isoc;,AT>i,A
/«.’2O ,,
' •
’ ■ .. . ' .
<5731
C±5
L*fc>
Mt temry Aflmoon
Ml
nd had never had any heart
sd to find yourself suddenly
T ■
MM
h
never <
want
•nd tender Monte* by
___k ten
______, Cleburtie, Taxa*
Phones 138 and 1M
a
e
UtfHTNiNG
•5 fatal
OHLY -Cb OHK.
IN RVK.RV Five.
PMHCMS HfTBf T
1W
Ml
Pagea
tert
ner
..... . .._,.>and
tn Dallam On Fri-
? I
’’7/L
w-»
Craddock Gobu
i1 '!_,.
Film's im di$ioQ..y
®»|tCLAR*iD A. t)W^
£
OLI
PA
W..o
■
’’ th'
K
d.
' r
I ';-
IK
B Mid
LINE ECHOES
Br~“
, . 1 7 . • ■ . :■ ■ ■ ■•
.fvv'4, I • ’ .e. A "lav ‘ r-f. ..
‘ B'dGiST SMIDGE InW *
pubUoatton
Hied to this
> Wfe
(. |
'■77 ■ I
1'77 77.. 1
l.'i ' '►•'•••- f
EU
*Ti>
awn enough to tell
1 to see the world
know what ehe
Something in the batch eaught her eye.
Her discontent began that night.
Lying awake on her narrow bed
hour* later, aha knew that from
that hour on .she could ho longer
be satisfied with pausing while life
passed by without touching her.
It seemed terribly unfair that,
haying tasted a little of what her
life had been Starved for, she
should be sq helpless to feed her
0
IB
* Leaves
0:36 a. in
0:28 p.m.
Leaves
8:65 a m
No. 5—11:86 p m. e 11.48 ptm.
Dallas Branch—.Dally
To Dallas and Paris—
Mrs.. Albi
MV. *•«
rt.ii.U Mi
’ I
I
Fl^f* Ai'IkMP'f'
4b tjuipc-fiit FUaht I
OF A BALLOON ia/v.
MAD*. VH-TH-fNE
BLANCHARD, NEAlt .
BB-4INNING OF I
-tUt l^-QI i
CENT U Ry
^YvYHEREf
J'/ °
x^L '
The battleship Constitution is
to be alr-coniNtloned Say It isn't
so—"Old Ironsides" going sissy!
The stock market isn't the
only institution registering new
tijghs for tbs year. For the tenth
consecutive day now no speaker
has misquoted Thomas Jefferson
'
A CdYV&N t^lH
IN ACTltjM
SHOWH ON IHI$ . .._,_
^TKm4-' cI MldERlA '' ■.
. Mu 0. N
; turned Irqm
■ > ■■■■ ■■;..;, M-
J*
■MM*A
7 - a . ,7
»' i-w.? .7 ■ ’• -•, ■-A'..:;,-.''
Rd
I
n she
■I
c? d
F~rnw..... ianrr'*m—r
I
. . ,
■ ' 7 , 7.-
A
.. .. -
A
y^/‘7
fe#
' r? ' 4 • •’/
SUNDAY. NO
111
Hitler and Mussolini can
be true allies They both
to seorc all the touchdowns, _
HoSses. we read, are outmoded
tor warfare Maybe, hut no
young officer can make a hit
iVlth his girt by cantering up the
street in hie bulk:
\’73r*
1
..... ■■■.... ■;.7'J77..'<,.,..7 :-.,7;;.7.:.;..x7.;.7,.,7'...........-../I,'......7. ■„,...........;<i.;.7^!7...7..7..;.)7..V.
RNE, 4*^
of Abilene, had h»
!1 . kt th* Meadow-
eft last week.
~U R. Morrisob and
nd Mrs J L Mag-
ng tn Itort Worth
<lr
tn mTaty OMjwiroi’plrm^h Me, par yw mm,
Sy’MAIL per yaar MIX), six months «12B. outside of Texas ana
» rtoo Cash in adeancg.
--Va
A—
Lv. Pt. Worth
Wm.
8:Jo p.m.
8:46 p.m.
. >-7-7;,7 <
An Ohio pecker announces a
new formula fqr curing hams
which Will give them a .naple
flavor Tha-V* wonderful, but for
(Sir sake we iiofai hams keep on
tasting just like ham.
MEW MAM'W&i*'
■ -
a a WOODSON, Owner and FWSaber
BOY BACtiH, Kilter
64 ,.■ ■ j ——r-S—---
XnwrKC* PJUSH8 CUJtl WTXB NWWS .
CMNTRAL HtteM (CP.) NCWS SBRVian (
•t the Poatofflaa at Cleburne. Texas, as saaood alaae
I an Friday.
I Mr. and
| Refugio ant
| Mttn lu
; bwm. niimwi
I'
Or Andrew Jaekson
Snake races are now popular
in the west. Thia is one sport
in which the eontretants and nbt
the spectators do all the hissing
• ♦ • ' j
A Riumian gttfernment ofttolal ’
eL,... lls^'Law-ABt_ ^.s_A.aei| '
Well, they can't say the
i‘t tried.
I
HI
who
^^KBNED OF fAMK
HBSii.'may think, it’a pretty soft for people who win
Klife-“h‘ri''>’P‘»P''1' heiidlines, radio appearances, social in-
All such evidence* of national popularity.
■k therr’k ont fellow who’g quite well fed up an the
Ht|0ng femoud.
^HEpfcy.lu Gray, the Iowa man selected by a national
igjizir. years ago.as the average American citizen,
t. and peace, the newapapera and euy siip-
■■KSvaa devoted to hia family, believed in God and had
• d. : <e in his fellow man and the future of hla coun-
•■'■
! Mrs. W. f
jin* in Port
onto, Mr.
|. Mi« G
W’-4
Wi
OntrnI Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, D C-As ft
•>i)<»-tlm« residsnt, for _
ths father M an’only child born
iiivder the Argehtlns flag, and a
Visitor, in my day. in halt a Uwen
others among ijiv new world'" w 1
Latin epuntriss. J f»«i a natural in- <
tAgathsr yj<in?th
Thars are 21 of us, big and hl
in proews of cffactlna a n al on!
’ wish there could be 22 ‘
That would include Canada,
tlnfortunately for the practica-
bility of welding all the peoplsa ot
both western continents Into «W si-
lance ot the wliole number ot them
Canada has overseas connections.
Obviously It would not do as recog-
nlaedgnembar of the family of new
work! sovereignties without a 100
per cent divorce from Itg British
relationship.
CANADA’S ISOLATION
Of course there is less than no
prospect of any such readjustment
And At would spoil evary thing to
have a Pan American agreement
tied in with European or *p)y Other
foreign complications.
Still, it is a pity toOnve Canada
omitted tMm ths bargain
I hav«rtttend*i a Pan-Ameri-
can conference Or two and It al-
ways haft struck me as too bad
that Canada had to be unrepre-
sented. \ ...
It 1* particularly too bad now.
Earlier Pan- American conferences
haVrf not amounted to much. There
has been a deal of friendly-sound-
ing palaver, and that was all. This
time, at Buenos Aires. It seems
llkelj that a genuine peace com-
pact (economic and mllHary) will
be arrived at.
And. as usual, as potent a new
world country ifor that Is whst It
amounts to) as Canada will be left
out of It.
X S'- .
W-
7,w« tepJU»•, "J
Mjeieewe " e .ess.!*', '..ns......—- --
, By WILLIAM R1TT
Central Press Writer
ASTBONOMRR ANNOUNCES
.ftscovery of a '*new heavenly
body". Shucks.'that’s not new
—a current Broadway musical,
hit Igfts 24 of them
No. 66
No. 66 (Mixed)
——---
« bw-
One of the
. HdST FAMOUS UEAV^
■ wM . . *
-V* AF'tER.
j *1rto Hou AMD TVl f hi y
|WW^NU'ft ■; of FiqmfNc* -—
" J >'
'> ’ *
' tart.'1" 'U.TTi’i '■ "l '• >'•
■7
> : -
CKl-sEt-
I MRS
T Bl
CHAPTWR3
| FROM WHERE she mH, Kath
ieen looked across the terrace ot
her father’s penthouse at Alix and
Kim sitting side by side, their slim
lengths identically posed in deck
chairs and was struck by the
physical resemblance between
them. They had the earns soft
fair hair, Uto same play of expres-
sion on. their high-bred features.
This girl who had come toto her
life so casually and this talented,
poetic cousin of hers might have
been brother and Mater.
Then she thoughts That was
why I was so attracted to Alix.
She remembered all her life
wanting to make things pleasant
for Kim who hadn’t really needed
anyone to make things pleasant tor
him. But he had the game wistful
quality that demanded It The
quality Ajlx had.
She wanted them to be friends
ami looking across at them she
could hear the murmur of their
voices and wondered what they
were talking about.
Kim was sqylng. ”1 never
thought of elves before having
honey-colored hair or wearing a
frock from a Fifth avenue shop.”
"Didn't you?” she asked gravely.
"Only very t good elves do. It’s a
special reward for being decorous,
for resisting the Impulse to tweak
cars, or tickle toes or any of ths
other things that self-respecting
elves know to J»e important”
"Do you Imply that the only
good elves are those with Inhibi-
tions?"
Alix laughed and said. "I'm sure
I don't know because I have no
Inhibitions I am a see-er and a spirit the things it 'suddenly cried
hear-er and seeing and hearing all *"’ **
the tilings there are to see and
hear everywhere—here, at my
work, In the Subway, wherever peo-
Pl« ?5t.^th®r^--theae W *re
down into the side of oneself where
inhibitions begin,"
"Are you so terribly young,
then?" Kim agked. "And what do
you do when you aren't seeing and
hearing? And where did you come
from? Not New York?”
m.’ ,trylnK,tO m-u —« uWe o. u.e worm.
"I'm terrihiv^Umt'°r|S ? order, albeit New York was another than
I m terribly old—almost 24. I
don't cornq from New York. I was
bom and grew up tn a little Iowa
town called Balrdsvalc, where the
streets are wide and tree-shaded.
r~" ___- -s’
brooks and birds and kindly anL
male to make the place seem big-
ger when you are a child "
She didn't tell him any more: she
didn't nfeed " — - ...
ST DAM INTHE VYORU
TMB /T > ("
BIGGESf /(SOLLV' Y
Train and Bus
Schedule
CLEBURNE-FORT WORTH
MOTOR COACHES
Union Ihn Terminal Ft. Worth
Lv. Cleburne
6:80 a. m. *
10:16 a m.
1:16 p. m.
4:00 p. m.
7:JM> p.m.
Hillsboro Division
Lv. Cleburne Lv. Hillsboro
7:oq a m. »-.oo a m.
8:30 p.m. 6:36 p.m.
Gkm Row and Meridian Divlstom
Lv. Cleburne
10;W ftm
Lv. Cleburne
3:3(i p.m.
at Houston tto iusiM,^
ftmes Wilton. ! death ,
’’1 r,f i FssOrtft.
Marvel. Jr., U visit- Mi- M»d
= = —I S--
prtteBrMilh 1ms ’.tit- , —
. vW to New York j " ■
-yi" 1 ' ”
amd the BKtGEST AUTO
!XAS
“FLOWERS AT HE R FEET”
-
before hqr mind's eye. And while
sha savored them, somo measure tenement to which she would not
of her appreciation was telling her * * — —
how his eager voice paid her
tribute.
Kim had wondered how long
Ahx would be content in her de-
tachment toward things, how long
befqre she would cease to find
tlrem absorbing,, how long betore
she would want to taste, experi-
ences, to be part of this scheme
of things which- she reached Out
tor onlv m solrit.
2J-*-*
9K,^
LV. Meridian
8:00 a. m.
Lv. Glen Row
___ ____ . 9:00 a.m.
2:30 p.m. leaving Port Worth
making direct connections for
Hillsboro. Msrldlan and Glen Rose
For Information pbour 261.
ALVARADO BUM
(Leaves Dickey's Cafe)
Leave Cleburne. 11:00 a m.
Leave Alvarado: 11:30 a m.
Running time: 20 mlnutos.
SANTA FE RAILROAD
Dalb
Northbound: Arrives
No. 8—6:26 ft. m.
No. 16—6:15 p.m.
Southbound: Arrives
No. 15-i 8:45 a m.
r- *' 2 ~:
Dallas Branch—Dally
No. TT (Motoi UrVLV. 7:00 am.
From Dallas and Faris-
No. 68 (Motor Car> Ar. 10:50
Woathfrfard Branch
(Tues, Thunt, Bat.)
lMlx«i> "tv. 10:46 Am.
Ar. 5:40 p<m.
by r. j. scon
BySX. ; ''7'X * .* ♦
I On.thkl ba«i« he wa.s dubbed the mdion’n typical citizen,
|fc|||$.Ri(>ii<'y and lama Hpuried in his direction overnight.
^^HnlMaF'Mr. Gray in tired of it all. He’s tired jif being
MMw-’In the middle of the night by telephone valla and
UMK atopiM'd <>p the street by craRjr- ♦
r He’s tired of receiving begging letters from Europeans,
r who think lhe average American citizen is wealthy.
\ ’ ' ' ■* * *
| , It wasn’t altogether disappointing though. Mr. Gray
| .». * lie discovered that the average man has far more
I f ida then enemies. Ho puts the ratio at ten to onoiiv
I 10•probably discovered, too, that friends are more im-
pry+sint than ail the money thrust at him.
—»-——,o--------■’ / '
Stars grade your standing in the school of experience.
----—•—o-—- .............. ' '■
■&»
' If you were a docW
you’d be sur* , ..._
? t ‘eken With a heart attack alone in your home.
7 you can understand Dr. Harold H. Biermeister’s
M !' * .ernent before he died. His sister found his lifeless
biwiy ,' and beside it were some notes in which he scribbled
qff his experiences, obviously for the benefit of fellow
m-litu.1 men. f
K’ Bwt there Were wme notes he could not leave us—notes
of what he found on the other side of the border of life
I and death t „;7 , 7'.7.
r. His Mirprisu. then might have bren much greater than
Ij7 .nonishment at the heart attack.
SCOTTS SCRAPBOOK
' ' '* CLEBURNE
TRIUMPHS OF MODERN C
——r
Kennelly had been writing. r
They annoyed her; they Wftre “
wrong- Who wanted a mattress 7 -
that would "spring" T , f
She folded the magasine and : y.J
coming Wednesday plftkod >*P * pencil. She had said A
______ >1 jAffr ruvwvMyym j ■ ♦jv Fttey I she was going to work. Well, she .? 4
something, she couldn't re- would! ‘ . 'If ?
-- - “' Three hours later she wrote Irer • .
name and department number 1 ]
nvatiy «»» a piece of paper and (in- ,
de rook th ft, the phrase—"For the
Rost of Your Life."
(To Be Ooatlnuedl
» ■ ns! Advertising Rspressntatlvs, TMKAB DAILY
■WVB. Dallas. Chicago, Kansas City, New York, BL LottM.
----_____------—_
war 1111 reflection upon ths character, standing or reputa-
person. firm or ooriwrstlon which may appear in ths ed-
I» Time.-Review will be gladly corrected upon tta Mag
As alter)Uon of the publishers
£ " ’ . —0--------
________ MBMBRR O.” THE UNITED PRBM
The United Press U exclusively entitled to the use for
of all new» dlspetclies credited to It or not otherwise credl
paper also the local news i- iiiiication therein.
. ---------------------------------------------------------------
if
n ft'-
something deeper, more mature In
her and, realising that, he won-
dered if she would find the thing
she was seeking now, patient In
her seeing and hearing, and find It
without pain.
He wanted to talk to her about
It but he found himself teUlng her
about a trip he had taken to Mex-
ico in search of photographic ma-
teria). didn’t know that she
-vas drawing him out fnd drinking
in all the things he had to teU her,
not because she wanted to flatter
him put because she wanted him
to be amused and felt herself in-
adequate.
Again she folded her comfort
about her and. in the pleasant
lassitude, the word pictures he
7'7--
7'lliiwi r ill
out to. ’. -
Hot tears stung her eyelids re-
membering her loneliness-all these
years. When Felix Carey had
too thrilling to l.ave'time 'ttTdelve l^l^^Z:^
------- AUx utUe chlw
But (|hgn Bill Boyd had laid Ms
licmHTmd his solid future at her
toe ” she was g
him that she h
and leant* to
wanted. J,
She’d seen Uttle of the world,
that which she had left. She’d met
people, other stenographers, their
beaux and brother*. She’d been to
parUca -partles that she hadn’t
and Where there enjoy*’1, parties that she remem- ahe d th(>Uj
brooks and mX mn u” bered wUh dWtaate-remembering want#d to
nrotocs ano biMs and kin,(to «ni. no(M ,ub,utute(i for
gaiety and vulgar play that passed
for pleasure. ’
didn’t need to Kim tarew harTin In the half light of early dawn ^WII call you so.
his poet’s heAri W khWtlA? the the shabby roo^ too hand." JUthleen rang
elfin thing in her was only in her °** was her home. She had done Ahx sat down at her d
grace and sinrnlicttv 'There was what ah* could with cheery cur- opened the tnter-ofllce ma!
„ iZ . . tains; her books and lamps meant SOmethlnB, In the batch
to lend soft glows; but nbw, in-
stead of being her retreat, it wm
an empty, shabby room.
Kim had said, speaking of her
frock, “A frock from a Fifth ave-
nue shop." She smiled Wryly,
thinking of the hours she had spent
going over countless frocks in a
Fourteenth street bargain base-
ment to find It
Impatiently, she threw back the
sheet and sat on the side of the
bed. She bad to do something
>q»out it l She couldn't remain
forever in her present position.
Slid wanted something better so
that she could have a pleasant
hpme. *
lassitude, the word pictures he It wasn’t she told herself, be- woras on roe page sue was yywg
drew floated in colorful procession cause she had been ashamed to to read jumbled into the phrases
____ . ...V,.- ________1__________< Kcnnsllv had been writlnr.
. _ . ■—■ - - •»*»•. -k w— * - - "WR»— a —- . ■■■ ...
Ha'SWHATATAGtBCE
alShli.n G T 6 N • WO UP
Ity CHARLES P. STEWART WW’ director, had more In mind
' W)0:) that.
[■>4 .Farfett was a good'deal laughed
_j at’north of the liio Grande, but
V^re'of th7"ArgWi>‘>e Republic^,u,‘; 1 *•«-'“,him._
M .n rhlM hern He had the hard luck to pass
, fr-ftn lhe picture before the pres-
’ :ftn» foreground began to appear in
It. i Diffctor Leo 8. Rowe,. Barhdt'ft
[erissor. has had the good fofr
i 10 be at the helm with inter-
‘riean relationships practically
,7jdnlthe ascendent
iUle.' He has made the most of them,
niqt*: b(4 Barrett should not be for^ot-
------—>
I You t e 1 Me! \ ’
u.....- — ■ ■—-*■
B. I Glflr
pcintrtf c
. ■ dlsUiG 3,
• ■ em Star
■ tei No
evwilnir i
with a be
Inembsn
Uon. ;
The iBu‘
cert ol tl
B reeled to
■ tables Tl
beautitullj
caidon wi
--------
invite him to come upstairs.
And Kim had invited her to
listen to a program of modem
music on the r ' _ ‘ ‘ 7
night. Something occurred to her
then, something. she couldn’t re-
member about Kathleen’s face
when she and Kim were leaving
and Kim' had turned to her sud-
denly and asked her to go with
him.
She didn’t remember It again ‘
}. TO - ' ("help::- boss- - ■’
\>ssru:.W
x ( >
J
read noa ratar:
WITH THE STORY)
BARRETTS EARLY WORK
Well, Canada can't be helped
Vastly more to the point, the
Pan-Americans (minus Canada)
are getting together
As I have remarked, the Pan-
American Union’s activities did not
appear to Le signifying anything.
Indeed, the Unton did not profesx
to be accomplishing anything petit • „ ......... ......
loal or economta; it called itself to now seeking bis fifty-eighth
only "cultural”. . «Mi - —
But John Barrett, the Union» m
^-i— _____-it-.....„, . . - '.■a__
M (/I A I Q W « Marve l, Jr . has gone to
Ki |\ YrAi Ttinpte on businew-
---»................iiieteWsiii'*—• I neV auxt Airs. W X Bhipp
W O Hopper returned home chUtiren '■■h * rwiu. o»
■ Saturday after a week's stay in ‘’•F -‘F'
__ M, .J.
Mr end Mrs. C A Roe’ and , 1 **•«
daughters nt tended the Qenum- KWn ' fg
i isl »l .Dallas the lacer Pli;- m Mr gjfl
L J week. jimiK 1
' I i ---- ■ nor are 1 J
Mrs E H B«l>xi atv'rtfl. I v ■' I
led the football game st Corrienna ’ _~1J
| an Frida V CAR.L _ .
. Mr and Mre^Ftank O’Dowrf ot , i■ t^toISglfi
1 Refuxfo announce the srrtvsi
us nmhis
I Asntli (4 <w rind aunt. MW
. _ t0/t lJw
|re Henry Owens,
Walker.
Alexander..
Henry Owns.
■ ■
Wftttw,
'tL
bXrl I
iizaru ■ /■.......
•—)./ I .
I I
?\\\!
Iv/ftiN THAT WW ' I
I STOP PEP THK MACHINE?, IT WAT.
J FS TIM A TEO HE RAt> Hi.QWN THK !
"':;v-7 .'i. 7
MaBMMMMteWte:
f
IN-TWL- BM
FDRNACK -
CLCANEffS Rm
J I
until Tuesday morning when she
was dialing Kathleen's telephone
number, and than she knew what
Kathleen’s expression had regis-
tered. She had been surprised <a
with a sort of hurt surprise. Alix
had seen that expression before t
and knew what It meant.
Kim had. undoubtedly
Kathleen to the concert an,
forgotten! ”■ . ■■
On the telephone she thanked
Kathleen for her pleasant evening
and had scarcely finished when
Kathleen said:
“Can’t you come over here direct
from the office tomorrow night? /»
We’re going to have supper here
and drive to the Stadium for the
concert In my »r.” I
Hastily, pefflaps too hastily. ' r
Alix said, “Oh, I’m afraid I can't >
make it, Kathleen. Will you please
teU Kim Tm awfully sorry? I . ..
I , , . have some wort to do."
“1 know he’ll be disappointed."
Kathleen answered. "We’d made
a foursome. I’M going with Ned
Blakely.”
Instantly Alix was disappointed;
she'd thought that Kathleen had
.—L* go with Kim. 8he
wanted to say that her work might
jfty put off but she had said It and
flMLwas too proud to withdraw.
11 call you soon- Don't work
too haril." JUthleen
opened the tnter-office mall. •
Something In the batch caught
her eye.
It was a mimeograph form in-
forming all the employes that the
contest to find a slogan for a new
client, the Holman Mattress com- .
pany, was open to every employe
of the agency. The prize was
6500.
She put it on Paul Kennelly's
desk where that young man gazed
at it for the rest of the afternoon
and spent the next day trying to
find the right words that went
with "spring”.
The next night, when she might
have been dressing with bright ex-
pectancy for her date wtth Kim
and Kathleen, she found that the S
words on the page she was trying f
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bacus, Roy. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 40, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 22, 1936, newspaper, November 22, 1936; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1306407/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.