Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1960 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in. Scanned from physical pages.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:
r
1 Hal BOYLE
M-riday, July 8, 1960—CLEBURNE, IEXAS IIMES-RE VIEW
20 Years t Ago Today
EditorLal Comment
gm&LR»
©
Z
2
LN
5
J
SALLY'S SALLIES
$9
Parents should convince chil-
l
J
. A
p
e
/
. u
9
a
2 O o O
-49-<A
6
0
l i
, ■
r
1
7-8
5
(/
CAPTAIN EASY
MY WIFE J
h',
—
E)
u
($
We 22-
€
■
7)
i
*ujis
V
t
S
1
JOHNNY HAZARD
ALLEY OOP
SLRE.BLT IT WON'T
HEY!
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
/4
RIVER...
r
T~~
2
-‘U.THaEo.2.
7
V"
\
<*K(
1498311)
3
"e
AL
7-B
i’
FRECKLES
^CANOES
1
(
—49
LONE RANGER
FLASH GORDON
22
f
(
h
l .
V
4
C ‘
90
$/
55)
2))
V
,1
=,3
A
T= ==
V
1
I
\ . A
cl
uLca-L--a
-seG-aus2fa-ad6
11211
4
‘0
THERE/ ITHEE
—iT AGAIN / j
year
year
ZARKOV, I DON'T
MEAN TO UNBURDEN
WYSELF ON yOu —
BUT I MUST TALK
TO SOMEONE/
BELIEVE
IT IS! >
BE ANY CINCH
\ GETTIN’ IT UP
N OLTATHAT I
ARKANSAS'
YEAH...A BOLT OF
LIGHTNING COULD
WE CAME
TO MAKE
A WISH
WHAT’S THE MATTER
WITH HIM? HE’S WATCH-
ING HIS FAVORITE COM-
I DON'T HAPPEN TO.
HAVE HANDY A
i ‘
THEN YOU'LL GO
ALONG WITH A TRY
TO SALVAGE YOUR
WANT TO GET MY NEW
, DERBY WET! J
HI, FARMER
BROWN
* EDSON IN WASHINGTON ★
Money's on Parties' Minds
At Convention Time
2.AINT THAT Y
—POCOLT )
* Q—What days are referred to
as "the lost 10 days"?
- ’ A—in 1582, Pope Gregory XIII
. corrected the difference in sun
and calendar time by dropping
- 10 days from October. By this
Q—Is the U.S. still paying war
benefit payments as a result of
the Mexican War?
Do You Suffer
From Gout? Oue
Of 100 Afflicted
BY THIS TIME HE'S
LAUGHING HIS
HEAP OFF/
•n
0,
BY PETER EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
H. HANNAH,. Circulation Mgr.
SUBSCRIPTION
TWOTLLYOLGIVE
ME IF I DON'T
TELL'M ABOUT
a THIS ? r-
I
I
s
)
I
8
)
)
7
' $ 1
Hi
-=RN/=
854/2 LE
•28-
821
»
TO SOMEONE WHO'S
been shooting,
h at VS!
yQ\
/VE GOT BAD NEWS
FOR YOU!
%=
*2
W2
PI
*
EG"
-en
5
D
2
S
4
R
3
E
7
T
§
I
1l ))6
V ( 2
LTERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every
AX day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell ut your fortune.
Count ’he letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or
more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is
your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rec-
tangle and check every one of yqurkey numbers, left to'right. Thea
read the message the letters under the checked figures give you.
HOSTILE INDIANS WAITING
m IN AMBUSH. -
3 - fl
334,
; apricots. Sort of a fruit-salad
' bush?
XBE_
' / N WHAT IS IT,
E PALE 2 WHAT ‘5
THE TROUBLE?
i 2
1 “
2 "5
"/
3
P
7
E
6
P
2
E
93a
M)BAKK)
Az /
al
750
•11
FL
—4
N
JUST
RUINED
IHE - “
WISHING
WELL
e2
.. H
{,
F
) )
yv
WHEN HE
RETURNED/
BUT NOW... NOW
THAT HE’S
ILL..'. I,
. CAN'T! )
•2
s
YET, WHILE HE WAS GONE,
IT WAS FLASH I MISSED/
I GUESS I'M JUST AN OLD-
FASHIONED ONE-MAN GAL/
. - , _ Like,
for instance, how many not
dogs and soda pops can/be safe-
TIP
OVER
Too ’
EASY./j
2
sk"
A
6
46 62-
27(0))rS
-255
7 7
tR—SEARCHING
. g
26
- -arrangement the day that would
-have been Oct. 5, 1582, according
t 210 the Julian calendar became
* Oct. 15. Hence, “the lost 10 days.”
- Q — By what name were the
"Samoa Islands once called?
11 A—The Navigators Islands.
♦ * +
- - Q—Who was the first man who
- ad served in the U.S. House of
- "Representatives and later became
president?
A—James Madison.
. By carrier in city, 30c week. By mail i
* Johnson, Hill, Hood, Bosque and Somer
jell counties, $6.25 per year;, six months
#857*8
229
Fh
-] $
—<22
A,.’
4,-
-E,
i
NOT A 5IGN OF
EUVVHA MANUSCRIPT/
BLT SOMEWHERE HERE •
ITMUSTEE. ~
t i
-da
221
second class mail matter a
of state, $12.00 per
im
:“6,7
E9 * 93353 33: 3. i
TV
a Y. _1.
" Cdterea as
YOU'RE TELLING ME
—.....—-----—---By WILLIAM RiTT--------- -----
Central Press Writer
U
•,4
• a
FOR GOSH )
SAKES —
WHAT ELSE
IS THERE
THAT GOES
ONWATER-?
©
(
)5
1
! ! 1
43.60; by mail in state, $9.50 per
,34
AU
K'a
'A 22)
HUNVKEV-FOOF KOPE,
EONGO, THAT'S
gmr THE POSEK/ ——
V WHY, WS Your father /1
"SILLY soy J HE'S COFE /
'^To WALK YOU HOME^
WNAT D/ you
SEE, TONTO?
1V
j -
“885 (q
-20 J
_M5
i
■
—=
£
/R
3
293:8
g2* ■
2eg22gbcae
EASY! THEY’RE -#2-
E
As YUMI TURNS, GUILTILY, HIS CUFF BUTTON
CATCHES IN A SCKOLLANV,,,,
r- • ___Egg
MEM WELL ) I DONT..L
TAKE A IRUSTANY
ROW BOAT J KIND OF
(SHow,
MEK
(my g-
\ /A
\e
\ua
S Vasszikz
{8822
E.RID N E T
y MR. McKEEi YOU X IM NOTTPPINS WY:
/ NEEDN’T BE SO POLITE ) HAT EASYI I PONT
k 3
1 8888 388 HE I
3 92
5
O
M — N
1150. :
gE V“ ■ Xi.
T- ,
' e.mi V
sA
fEoN
PP-
23
~799
BUT,MRSWEMP, SIR--
W^Y CANiT I TAKE
DAIS/ CANOEIN6?
77/ E-5“ )
Y O L ABE
M
"L,
Kp ft
€6
® .g
'no post office at Cleburne, Texas, undei
• • - Act of Congress, March 3, 1879
- Ntionar Fepreseitative TEXAS DAILY
» PPeSS LEAGUE, MEMBER TEXAS PRESS
• ASN., TEXAS DAILY NEWSPAPER PUB-
< LISHERS ASSN., SOUTHERN NEWS
-"APER. PUBLISHERS ASSN.
/ 1 WAS GOING
" ""49 To TELL STEVE
L5
I K‘ HP
F ! A
4
3 #LA.-
Y.A
a
0
MN
" By mail out
OK- ANDWATERI
-3
A C.
( 2
2
)E,
----------------------- vinced this goodrwill touring
I dren of their limitations, says aj isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
5
\ SCROLLS, SCROLLS, \
EVERYWHERE,,,, YET J
)s
A—Death benefits are still be-
ing paid to four relatives of de- ¥
• DFFENSE
__3
— 272 ——
i l
; g—,20 .
M3:
de))
47
588888889 958
QHARLEs
PlAN>ES
7:8
-442,
IF > EPIAN ANP HE’S NOT
' ( EVEN SMILING--DSUALLY
N
<WsT,
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP)—One out of *
every 100 Americans has a dis- ,
ease at which many of the other
99 often laugh through sheer
ignorance.
This disease is gout, a malady -
which has had a far more im- *-
portant impact on our country
than, say, those twin ailments of '
the advertising world — halitosis
and athlete’s foot.
Those who laugh at gout might I
not be here at all except for the
dreaming boldness of a gout suf-
ferer. Between his pangs this •
man — Christopher Columbus — •
discovered America.
Those who laugh at gout might
, not be Americans at all except
for two more gout victims.
One was the brilliant English
orator, William. Pitt. It is said
that only an attack of gout pre-
vented him from stopping passage ,
of the Stamp Act, a measure that
speeded the American Revolution.
The other was Benjamin :
Franklin, whose diplomatic gen- •
ius—despite his throbs of gout—
• did so much to win American _
freedom and establish our nation- •
al unity.
Those who laugh-at gout do so »
in the belief that it is a heaven- ;
sent penalty for high living. The
truth is that gout is an inherit-
able metablic disorder, a form of ;
arthritis that afflicts more sus- -
pected sinners than known saints
only because at any, one time the
world usually holds many sinners, •
few saints. «
The long and honorable history
of gout is recalled in the current -
issue of “Geriatrics” by two phy- ■
sicians, L. Maxwell Lockie and
Richard G. Cooper, both of Buf-
falo, N.Y.
Gout, which is manifested by
painful deposits in the joints and •
body cartilage and accompanied
by a high uric acid content in the
blood, is one of the oldest diseases
known to man. %
It was accurately described by *
Hippocrates, the “father of medi-
cine,” and others as early as the -
5th century, B.C. As early as the •
17th century Thomas Sydenham, *
“the English Hippocrates,” class- Am
ified gout as a form of arthritis fl
and gave his view that victims
“have received ill seeds of the
disease from their parents by
inheritance.”
The general image of a man -u
with the gout was that of a fat .
red-faced English lord lying in 8
bed with a heavily bandaged foot
propped up on a pillow, a wretch , ■
who screamed in agony if even •
a fly landed on the bandage.
For a couple of centuries thou - '
sands of high-minded men suf- •
fered the tortures of gout in se- 8
cret and silence rather than ad-
EE
EEE
077 "L1
...BLT DON‘TCHA“M
THINK WE OLGHTA ¥
HOLD OFF TILL TH' M
WEATHER CLEARS Xc”
UP A BITPg(S
7 3 8 6
JIAO
6 8 4 2
Al
_E
=—> —
FARMER —
BROWN'S —
WISHING ~
WELL —
_E
--«« kaai,8f#te-- W/-8-
4 4
5 3
S R
7 6
S M
-------
GEE WHITH, MYRTLE/ 1 dUTHT
THAW A HORRIBLE FATHE .
LOOKING IN THE
. WINDOW /
"i
EVERYTHING/ YOU KNOW STEVE \
AND I WERE TO BE MARRIED /
WHEN HIS EXPEDITION /
WE'RE NEARLY
AWASH SLH! GUESS pyegi- A cvjr2
lit SHORE! j
fl
-k VTATION
A P
5 7
E U
3 5
=M
Cmee%
t r t
Having been struck and
drenched’ by a thrown egg on
his visit to Toronto, the mayor
of Moscow must now be con-
/HOW ABOUT
./ HELPING US. EM
YUMi,,WHAT‘RE
I you VOING, f (‘h
\ ANYWAY? ' —-7
m
- E : ■ /S 3 =
-Any elronnons reflection upon the char-
- acter, standing or reputation of any per-
- son, or firm, or corporation, which may
- appear in the columns of this paper, wt'l
. be gladly corrected upon the notice oi
I same being given to. the pubisher.
. "0SSJCIATED PRESS (AP) LEASED
. IELETYPESETTER WIRE SERVICE
P
9
F —-
E{ -© BP*
—
~ —
— :
rrD SERVE HIM RIGHT IF )
2*=
8 2
E V
3 7
Z T
1 M6, 88448
{72
8 MF '
THE CITY COUNCIL of Wisconsin phychologist.
Houston, Tex., is taking steps ‘
G*“_S
*69
THERB,
7
Ito annex 1,100 square miles of
i land to the 460 square miles .the
■ town now has. Wonder if that
I wouldn’t reduce the rest of the
! Lone Star State to‘The status
/of a suburb?
!!!
At last there’s an answer to
the old query of what’s rotten
in Denmark. Garbage collectors
of Copenhagen, the capital,
have gone on strike.
! I I
Through successful graftings,
a New Jersey plum tree now
also bears cherries, peaches and
ly consumed at the Sunday
school picnic?
I ! !
It’s rained so much in his
neck of the woods, postcards
C.J.T., the natives now refer to
the daily forecast as the “wet-
ter reports
I » !
Noise meters used in cheeking
cocktail parties indicated they
are far too noisy. A sound con-
clusion!
9%
. - 4,' ' 1-■. .
©4960 by NEA, Inc. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
_ 9 =2 -
7 SWISHING E —
yy—- - dWELL5 ——
..421,
- • - -e - _ --5
4’8 2 7 5 3 6 8
A I -A O A P N S
52 863745
R U T G I L O L
38 7 5 4362
N S A N W C A E
8 4 6 3 5 2 4 7
C A P L P H R N
3 7 8 2 4 5 7 3
34482.2523
=922E====334
ssessekxore.
« The Associated Press is exclusively
4 entitled to the use of publication of all
• nems dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper and also
; the. local news published therein. All
2 nights to re-publication or broadcast are
L slso reserved. The Cleburne Times-Review
Jis a 'politically Independent newspaper
* placing the public werare above the in-
- terest of any party. Truth and decency
* are its guiding principles and its daily
- determination is to print the negt itb-
♦ out fear or favor.
me go to far s/de
OF N/LL, THEN SNEAK INTO WOODS.
fe
“That young pup is still downstairs! Whp’d ever thought’ mit they had a malady others '
when Janie was this age I’d still be walking the floor!” ou8 comic. •
NANCY \ .
I'LL EE A SQUAKE'S
KISSIN' COUSIN, IT'S Y
YUMl‘5 RAFT/ SO HOW V
PO WE GET TO IT, ‘
’-(HAZZya
j) g5
X
| 7-7 © 1960, King Features Syndicate, Tnc., World rights reserved.
"If you want all your mother put in a meat loaf, do it your-
self.”
5—,BG GOLD NUGGET?
(I)H-N
eK® Fig 2
1 AA3
V HCW ABOUT MV T
Yi AGATE SHOOTER?
/S\ YOU ALWAYTH
7 ] WANTED‛IR.
T/—
-) A
g \ •
! ■ • . . :
! WASHINGTON—(NEA)—Republican National Committee claims
the Democrats have all the millionaires running for president. ;
Democrats claim in rebuttal that Republicans have all the money
with which to campaign. And they’re both right.
- Senators Jack Kennedy and Stuart Symington are admittedly
I millionaires. Sen. Lyndon Johnson may not be one in his own right,’
but his wife and her family own lucrative television and ranch,
1 properties. And Adlai Stevenson is in the millionaire class.
BUT THE OTHER HALF OF THIS STORY is that the Democratic |
I National Committee itself is barely solvent.
There will be a $100-a-plate dinner at the Los Angeles Beverly
- Hilton the Sunday evening before the Democratic convention opens.
The banquet room has a capacity of 2,500 and it has been oversold.
With that quarter-of-a-million gross,- Paul Butler, Democratic
chairman, hopes to be able to announce when he resigns at the
: end of the convention that the party is out of the red for the first*
! time in seven years with all ’52 and ’56 debts paid. It may even:
have a surplus of $50,000 or so, - . ,2
But that’s no money for launching national campaigns to elect
a Democratic president and Congress.
1 Present law puts a tharee-million-dollar limit on the amount any
I political organization can spend on a campaign.
' But that amount is cut down to two million for the Democratic,
’ National Committee by the fact that it has already raised a million
dollars this year to pay off its debts.
Reports filed with the clerk of the house show that the Demo-
crats, up to June 1, 1960 received $984,251.41 in contributions and!
pledges,
:. Expenses in this period were $727,597.42 and they will be welli
1 'over the million dollar mark when the convention opens.
The Los Angeles host committee is financing the convention itself
, by contributions and a sale of a souvenir book.
NATIONAL COMMITTEE MUST START FROM SCRATCH to
finance its 1960 campaign. It expects to receive $500,000 from,
“Dollars for Democrats” drives and from sustaining party member-
• ship dues. It will receive another $500,000 from the states.
1 Beyond that, finance chairman Matthew H. McCloskey or whoever i
succeeds him will have to solicit from the party faithful.
i Fund for Senate and House campaign committees must also be
liaised. So it’s touch and go to break even—or go into debt again.,
M A. N (I
"2,
* E
I (8f
mmf 17
I
)ca
(OH,I‛M
M SORRY,
X KIDS
CONGO CHALLENGE
The fires of independence burn brightlv in the em-
erging nations of Asia and Africa. They could not and
should not be snuffed out.
Yet it is one of the tragedies of this age that in
‘some places they have flared too quickly. The peopl >
he tndex are convertin into reality their aspirations
for freedom are not in every case ready for it.
Those who are just now achieving independence in
the Belg an Congo illustrate this difficulty.
For lone years the ruling colonial Belgian govern-
ment managed the Cong with almost model admin-
istrative efficiency. Many advantages were given th
native Conoolese which subject peoples in other
places never knew. Onlv toward the last did Belgia
policv bepin to seem, in some respects, shortsighted
from the humane viewpoint.
Atro time however, did the Belgians make those
efforts which would have prepared the Congolese
properly and fully for self-government. They did not
afford sufficient education. And they faded to trai:
and use the natives in civil service and other govern-
ment posts.
Now the Congolese are coming into their own. De-
spite its failures of preparation, the Belgian govern-
ment has wisely bowed before the surging nationalism
fanning out over Africa. But this present gesture of
good sense does not end the problems of the Congo- 4
lese. They will instead be magnified a hundredfold.
The free world, deeply concerned that independence
for the Congolese and for all emerging Africans will
work, must hope that in this delicate and dangerous-
beginning period the people of the Congo choose to
keep close ties with Belgium. The new mutual co-op-
eration pacts are a good beginning.
Even though it is late in the day, much could still
be done in a co-operative effort between the Belgians
and the Congolese to train the latter for the tasks of
government. While such a program went forward, the
burdens on Patrice Lumumba, first head of the inde-
1 pendent union, would in any event be tremendous.
He says he wants friendship and economic collabor-
ation with Belgium. Obviously, in the economic field
.as in the political, a close working together seems
. vital to the safe launching of this new free country.
The colonial peoples are rising. They will gain free-
dom whether prepared for it or not. Those who have
had it a long, long time must do all they can to ease
the way for new converts like the Congolese.
PEACE BY EVOLUTION
Peace and understanding between nations lie more
in a process of evolution than in summit meetings.
This process takes many forms—people to people pro-
grams, tourist travel, commerce, and, among the
most important, the growing practice of “swapping”
students. One of the most worthwhile activities in this
direction is conducted by the American Field Service,
an organization that was founded as a volunteer ambu-
lance service in 1915 with the French armies. The
AFS began its student program after World War II
and in 1947 developed an exchange program on a teen-
age level.
. Thousands of American and foreign young people
have participated, and have learned to respect and
understand the ways of life of others.
As President Eisenhower says, “This kind of ex-
change, as it grows and grows, will have a better
effect on- advancing the peace of the world, of giving
greater promise to each of us,young and old, to live
fuller and better lives, free of the burdens of arma-
ments, free from the fears of attack, living together
in the confidence that humans can trust and believe in I
othor humans.” If given time, there is little doubt I
but that the people of the world, through the process '
' o evolution, will remove once and for all international
। frictions.
pug .“2
E 5 aA
aL- $ yF.' j
As--. ■ /
76))/
> es -
B=E2e aF
8 3 6
M A S
6 4 7
U F U
5 2 6
I P H
7 5 2
R G R
4 6 5
DY.R
7 4 6
DOH
2 5 4
E N A
; SFURNE T!MES-REVIEW
. Published Alternoon Daily (Except Sat
‘ uraay) and Sundoy Morning at 108 South
- Arglin Street, cicturne, Texas. Phone
- EI 5-2441. aJ’ danartments.
- WILLIAM RAWLAND, Owner and Publishei
* FEYTON LAWSON, Business Manager
* JACK PROCTOR, Editor
<- PAUL GRIFFITH, Advertising Manager
- ceased veterans of the Mexican
• War, fought between 1846 and
- 1848.
I
/
0
=-
—=== " m
EEGRAK
Tm. Reg U.S. Pat of.—All rights rasorved
Ccpr. 1960 by Unit Foslur Syndiccie, inc.
5
X9 •
3 V
____:
oi, JULY8, 1940
The German press said today that the French parliament will
vote itself out of existence Wednesday and clear the way for es-
tablishment of a French state on the model of Italy and Ger-
many... Postmaster Roy Doak attended an executive committee
meeting of the Texas chapter of the National Association of Post-
masters in Waco Saturday...W. L. Meyer, Godley.and .Irene Rus-
sell, Grandview, were issued a marriage license Saturday after-
nobn...Three men were on their way to Huntsville where they
''ill be placed in the state prison to serve out two year sentences
after they were convicted in district court here. Otis Hughes and
I. H. Huzhes will serve two years for forgery and passing of a
check and Weldon Pittman was given two years for perjury. . .
Miss Gayle Burt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Burt, 1301
East Henderson street, who underwent an. appendectomy, at Knox
hospital this morning, was reported at noon to be resting well...
J. W. Vinson. 929 North Buffalo street, who underwent an ap-
pendectomy this morning in Cleburne sanitarium was reported at
toon to be doing nicely...Godley city park board - members have
et Wednesday as political rally day in that city...Nancy and
Sluggo are watching a parade on television today...Durwood
Davenport returned Saturday from Temple where he had been
confined to the Santa Fe hospital since Thursday. He returned
to ’work this morning in the Santa Fe offices here...Mrs. A. L.
Arnold attended the wedding of her brother, Sam Boyd and Miss
Mandy Lee Smith in Winters Saturday night.
RETURNED... A-
rassgamnof.E, °
2, xg§8a22
a-8kzk2a
\ 55.18 -
MYRTLE
SURE MESS UP 2
OUR OPERATION JY/M
ALL RIGHT K
M U/(827
)
W©
\ WIN* Nt _ ~ Fi
V “"“sr—ea
•B-s---------
/ISHING WELL^
Registered. U. S. Patent Office, ‘
AMP USUALLY BY THIS TIME \
HE'S SOT A TRAY FULL OF
CALORIES IM HIS LAP/ I'VE /
FINALLY GOTTEN HIM ONA
PI ET, SO STAYAWAY FROM N
HIM FOR A WHILE-ONE WRONG
WORD MIGHT SEND HIM OUT •
HERE TO TRADE IN THE SKIM /
MILK AND CRACKER FOR W
PIE ALAMOPE/
-6
56=
gpaas
PS
V-e
FOR KNOWLEDGE,
KO-HAZARD/ )
Wy,12
N/
I
X 24.4
-(2-2) „
)m ■ i; ■ ■ ■
Abe-
EHN F Ft===
7
"E=-/N
isss
8 1 _
„A,g/
SHOOTING THE .5
BOAT FULL OF }aeshssprns
• HOLE5! -92822,
daas wmdWAS.EMNTE
- ‘ . " / 1 re
HEROES ARE MAPE - HOT BORM
fe?
ml“-gs5a
“N fdtik.e
.d-map- 2
- 6'^5 ■J%
7 —3
zggs
— MC•d —8289
28
SHE WISHED A
WE'D STRIKE )NNNe
Ko/mpw"
G@p) NW,,
-3 N K'
£fs
A r
\ced 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.
Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1960, newspaper, July 8, 1960; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1542477/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.