Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 209, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 7, 1932 Page: 1 of 6
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The Only Daily Newepaper In Johnson County
United Preet Wire Service—Central Preet Service
VOL. 27, NO. 209
PRICE FIVE CENTS
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1932 .
- - - -........•-...... ' ■ -■
«
{
of Mail Trtdn
A 8 Bonus Marchers Took Possess^
PRO and CON
A Good Library.
OF GRANBURY BRIDGE
0
BY HAROLD V. RATLIFF.
!
NAME ADDED
DEDICATION
/
-.
ernor
Tax Adjustment
1
M1
Me-
j.
BRIEFS SENT
IN RAIL FIGHT
Venus Man Succeeds
MARKETS
Am T & T .
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. June 7
Settlement Reached
Home Telephone Co.
/
LOB.
in
1
WISDOM’S WAY.
Urd Elliott, , ,
IPENING
ng tt this nd '
-
)
, tJ
A
r
I
Mil/I/Imiitlmilili
Bonus Army Parade Route Changed When
Police Hear Rumors of Communist Plot
shows that defendant Texas Homne
Telephone Co. paid to the plaint-
iff. $2,000 and defendant sinclair-
"Prairie Pipe Line Co., paid $1,000.
Rabbit Breeders To
Plan for Banquet
CORPORATIONS
ARE ATTACKED
WASHINGTON, June 7.—(UP 1
—Police strengthened their super-
vision of the bonus army of 4,000
and prepared for emergencies to-
day as authorities disclosed what
Eighteenth District Court.
Lackey entered suit due to al-
leged personal injuries sustainea
reived today hy John L_ Cleveland.
< hairman of the citizens commit-
Two Cars W Pecked
in Collision Today
> I
Structure To Honor
Memory। of Crock-
ett’s Son
truck
carry
that
and
over
' Williams
here visit-
d Mrs. F.
TO CANDIDATE
COUNTY LIST
(Note—A book of poems publish-
| by Mrs. Flatt can be secured al
• Cleburne Book Store or MG-
F< Drug Store).
horse by a telephone wire.
In> .the records of the case filed
2 7-8
25 1-3
10 1-3
17 1-8
Commissioners To
Pass On Renditions
American Can
Am-P St E . .
WOUNDED MEN REPORTED
RESTING WELL TOdAy
Azi
1
c
and sister,
companied
, were at
es Friday
r, Herbert
loma:- -
Over 8,000 books were read
last month.
That’s more than were read
per month in 1931 which set a
record with 70,967 for the year.
On the basis of the May report
the total would be around 100,-
000 books for 1933 . ■
The number of borrowers was
increased by 831 last year to
make a total of 10,362. This year
the number will be much larg-
1
Waves
$3.00 $5.00
. Ue to 48s
Tinting
BARNES HEADS
JERSEY CLUB
Serving Purpose.
Compliments.
1982
Da
es te-
IC SHOE
Joint Rites Held
For Mother, Baby
Limits Both.
Webster points out
ESTS.
umont ar-
it with his
R L, Har-
“e°
S '
8
Vanadium.......
Westinghouse Elec . ,
Worthington , . -
Curb Stocks.
Ford M Ltd........
Gulf Oil Pa ........
Niag Hud Pwr . . ...
Standard Oil Iiid . . .
1
)
t
I
)
1
1
BACK FROM TRIP.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cate have
returned from a wedding trip to
cities ig north Texas. Mrs. Cato
was formerly Miss Effic Martin.
Mr.
this
Our Daily Poem
Mrs: J. M. Flatt
The Times-Review
Invites
MisS MAUDE TORBRON
and MOTHER
303 North Main
To Attend
"CARELESS LADY"
With Joon Bennett and
John Boles
—=atthe—E
Yale Theater
Sign and Present This Coupon
At Box Office
ITS
ready to
t eervice e
oti rellade
R
.... 6 1-2
.... 97-8
.... 18 1-8
.... 45-8
.. 1 3-8
.... 10'3-8
.... 91-4
.... 13 1-4
.... 71-2
.... 10
.....15
. 11 1-3
.... 11 3-4
.... 51-8
... 16 1-3
— 2 1-8
.... 3 5-8
... 3
6 1-4
.... 37-8
.... 14 5-8
.... 27-8
.... 03-4
.... 87-8
.... 165-8
.... 71-8
23 3-4
.... 35-8
.... 10
.... 14 7-8
... 9 1-2
.... 15
.., 27 5-8
.... 61-4
.... 20 3-4
.... 7 1-2
Posey Rites Held
At Grandview
There are 19,071 books in the
library. Last year 997521 was
spent far new ones and 8202.80
for periodicals.
The library does a rushing
business and really needs an-
other helper but under pres-
ent conditions will probably
have to make out as best It can
like other institutions.
But the library, in the opin-
ion of Pro and Con, is one of
Cleburne's greatest assets and
we hope it can be kept at its
present state of efficiency and
to keep it that way funds for
its operations can not be cut
down.
(. ‘ 7
I
planned te .parade dawn Pcnnsye ----------—- ———
vania avenue. j ' Briefs contaiping the recommen-
Pure oil .........
Purity Bak ......
Radiq .........
Sears Roebuck . ,
Shell Union Oil . „ .
Soc Vac . ........
Southern Pacific . .
J C Penney.....
Ohio Oil ........
Standard Oil N J . .
Studebaker . . ..
Texas Corp . . .....
Texas Gulf Sul .. . .
50c Per Month by Carrier in City
I song and dance by Miss Detyght
_ a 1 Lancaster of Granbury, an address
SUlt । by Walter Morris, Fort Worth, n -
j drill by the Cleburne Drum’ andm
Tennis Club Meets
in Business Session
ENFORCEMENT
OF TRUCK LAW
HAILED HERE-
Cleburne Times-Review
Cleburne Morning Review and Cleburne Daily Timet — Contolidated Oct. 1,1928 .
cherson
rhone 231
1
TAL
7 4. gn * 3
—s2"‘rr52
• Guaranteed
......... 45
......... t5e
......... Me
......... 2M
......... 15e
the auditorium of the First Chris-
tian church. The public is invited
- to attend, ---------------
Only one name was added to
the list ol candidates for district
office in Johnson county Monday
afternoon.
I Imr for filing for places' on the
ballot with R. E. Mitchell! coun-
ty democratic committee secretary,
was up at midnight.
J. P. Word ol Meridian filed for
a place on the ticket as a can-
son of David Crockett, hero of the ‘ 1
Alamo. • ,.72
It was here that Robert Crockett, S
helped erect the first bridge in 1
west Texas and it was here that- J
the Crockett family built up Texas , fl
history. The widow of David Crock- ' 3
ett sleeps in the little cemetery at 12
Acton near here. Robert. Patton -J
Crockett is dead also but without
a monument to his memory.
Through Senator Ward the State
Highway Commission has given
permission for the erection at a "0
tablet or monument:
frem his
Anaconda ,
Auburn Auto . .
Aviation Corp Del
Barnsdall . ...
Bet h Steel ....
Byers AM,.
Canada Dry . .
Case J I . .....
Chrysler . .....
.... 37 1-4
5 3-9
...; TH
85 5-8
. 4 1-8
.... 35
.... 17-8
.... 4
.... 95-8
. ... 8
.... 8
.... 191-4
For district Judge—O. B. 1
Pherson. Cleburne.
For district attorney—Penn
was thrown
the district
VISITING IN JOSHUA.
Misses Vida and Guenette Locker
are visiting in Joshua with Mr.
and Mrs. Jess Locker.
et al, in
when he
trailer both cannot
An attack on corporations, star-
ing that it is a well-known fact
that due to financial and political
influences they do not make the
proper rendition of their property |
for taxes and in fact their ren-
ditions are just about what they’I
years ago. He has been in ill
health for several months.
Mr. Posey is survived by eleven
children and one brother and num- —
ATTEND OPENING
clerk's office it
T<» PRESENT PUPILS.
Piano pupils of Miss Christine
George will be presented Tues-
day evening at 8:15 o'clock in
tee here opposing the move, and
Manager J. T We bster ol the
1 chamber of commerce, active - in
the fight to retain the route.
Car Runs Too Slow; Examiner* R. R. •Molster recom-
r....—A----n----2:0 mended that the,rlread he per-
/ WO A re l/UeStlOneO mitted to abandon its line on the
{grounds that the territory was as
Two men were being questioned well developed as
CLEBURNEITE
1 TO CONDUCT
NEW YORK, June 7 tVP
Closing selected New York stdeks:
TO ATTEND SUMMER SCHOOL.
H. A. Parks, principal of the
Hopewell school, will leave Wed-
nesday morning for Commerce to
attend the summer session of East
Texas State Teachers College.
He will take a complete, course
1 in Education, this counting on
his degree.
Candidate For Gov- ne“mibrldeaststnnter, thonnereing 1
Pleads For Johnson and Hood counties, to the » *
memory of Robert Patton Crockett, H
A settlement was reached Mon- ! Bugle Corps and selections by the
day afternoon. In the civil suit I Hightcrust Doughboys of Fort
styled J. B. Lackey vs. Texas Worth made uP tne remainder of
- . . I the morning program.
During the dinner hour visiting
bands gave concerts.
The afternoon program was to
include an accordian solo by Mrs.
Sam Moore of Granbury, selections
by the Lucas Entertainers of Fort
Worth, address by W R. Ely of
i Mowers and
th machine.
Two cars were badly wrecked [Urd Elliott
but the occupants sustained only U s Ind’AIc ,
minorinjuries this morning when I U 8 Steel . .
means that a
Funeral services were conducted
at the Grandview Baptist church
Monday afternoon for 8. 8. Posey,
94, a former Grandview man, who
died at his home in Memphis.
Texas. Mr. Posey had resided in
Grandview for about 25 years be-
fore moving to Memphis a few
Jackson. Cleburne; J. P. Word,
Meridian.
Fort state senator—Pierce B.
Ward, Cleburne, W. M. Tidwell.
Ennis; W. M. Martin. Hillsboro.
For associate justice of the
Course of civil appeals—Geo, W.
Barcus, and J. A. Stanford. Waco.
For congressman— Fritz G. Lan-
ham, Fort Worth.
A vocal solo by Miss Doris Swei- '
fel of Fort Worth, address by
Henry Zweifel of Fort Worth, ee-
lection by the Fort Worth Cham-
ber of Commerce quartette, ad-
dress by Walter Beck of Fort
Worth, vocal solo by Mrs Lucious
Downs of. Fort Worth, address by
Jewel P. Lightfoot of Fort Worth,
Ion-Rock Island Rslroad Co. for
abandonment of Ils branch Tine
from Cleburne to Hillsboro were re- Am Smelt . .
It to be and that other means of
transportation prevented sufficient
revenue coming to the line to pay
cost of maintainance and opera-
lion.
Cleburne will carry the tight be-
lt ore the I. C. O. and will furnish
expert testimony contending that
the futtre developmet of the ter-
ritory will make operation pay and
that more business will new be
thrown to the railroads due to re-
cent truck legislation.
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF “fl
GRANBURY, June 7 — Eight j
thousand penplc gathered here to- 19
day to perpetuate rexas history, j
and see another milestone, placed '
in the' path of this State's prog- -.'j
ress.
This afternoon Senator Pierce B. J
Ward of Cleburne will dedicate the 1-7
7,000 - Pound- Maxi-
mum To Help Rail *•
Iines
Enforcement of the 7,090- pound
maximum- truckload law begins
today in Texas and jga«*halled this
morning by Manager J. T. Web-
ster of the chamber of commerce
as the first big step in bringing
business back to the ' railroads
and to legitimate truck opera-
tions.
This law applies to 300,000 motor
trucks in the State and results
from action of the supreme court
in upholding it despite numerous
injunctions granted. Many of these
injunctions were dissolved and tne
attorney general's oft ice is seek-
ing to have the remainder dis-
solved immediately.
The law will be enforced against
all trucks not protected by in-
junctions.
Visited the Carnegie Library
this morning. We always did
like to go there because it’s so
quiet and restful and Mrs. V,
M. Fulton, the librarian, has a
cheery smile.
No, you’re wrong; we didn't
go there to read a book. We
read a book once and it didn't
end right so we quit. But we
did learn something that inter-
ested us greatly in our visit
there today in search of news.
Depressions are just boosts
for libraries. The folks out of
work go there to read and for-
get their troubles. Others go
there to gain more knowledge
so that they may benefit them-
selves.
And it's surprising at the
amount of technical informatior
sought by the public there.
Mrs. Fulton stated that for
the past three months circula-
tion in the library had grown
over 1,000 books a month, the
largest in the history of the in-
stitution.
Which shows that the Car-
negie Library is serving a dis-
tinct civic service In Cleburne.
much Interested in a city hav-
ing a good chief and fire mar-
shal and we are thoroughly
satisfied that your city has one
of the best in Texas and we
want you and your beard and
the citizenship of Cleburne to
know that we feel that way
about him. He is an honest and
tireless worker and this is what
counts. I am thoroughly con-
vinced that he has done much
to keep the fire losses of Cle-
burne at a low total for the
past few years compared with
what they would have been had
he not worked hard.”
Jumping into the cab of a loco-
motive of a Pennsylvania mall
train carrying 25 passengers to
Pittsburgh, bonus marchers Wash-
ington bound, from Detroit, To-
Me and Cleveland, held the train
j *"7 ’ - ' - - —-——— - - •
CMurne Times-Review features Local, State and National News While It Is News, Bringing to the People of this Section the Latest and Most Interesting Stories of the Das
---------------------------------------pa
AT SUMMER SCHOOL.
Miss Ora Hartin, instructor in
he Santa Fe school, is attending
ummer school at North Texas
Itate Teachers College.
erous relatives in Grandview and
Memphis. The children are: Mrs.
Claude Pool, Grandview; Mrs.
Ela nor Hales, Dallas; Miss Helen
Posey, Memphis; Jervus, Quintus,
Dunbar. Fred. Jess and Felix Pos-
ey of Memphis; Garland of Grand-
view and Onley Posey of Hous-
ton. The brother is. Virgil of Mem-
phis. Mrs. Posey died several years
ago.
Rev. W. M. Joplin, pastor of the
Burleson Baptist church and a
former pastor of the Grandview
church conducted the funeral.
Rootes Bros. of Grandview were
in charge.
6a ‛ ’
today because their car couldn’t
cover over 40 miles in two days.
The tWo were takch into cu-
today near Santa Fe school this
morning about 3 o'clock by Depu-
ty Sheriff Tobe Bratcher ann
Policemen John Miller and Will
Burton.
They said they had been on the
road seven days and, it had taken
two days to come from Hillsboro,
they having just loafed around
Anyway they’re being looked over
by the authorities.
The Cleburne fire prevention
board is complimented in a let-
ter from Eugene Sanders, State
fire prevention chief. A copy
of this letter, addressed to Fred
Jackson, chairman of the board,
I was sent to this writer.
“We have given very close
attention to the work of your ’
board and we feel that much
| good has come out of the cre-
ation of same and certainly
r your board-ts entitled to the
support of your citizenship for
it is to their best interest that
you are working.
"Also we have given very
careful attention the work of
I your local fire chief and fire
marshal. A. B. Russell. You
know this department is very
G.
nder, who
; operation
allas, last
o be doing
datin ol the Inn i state Com-
merce Commission examiner rela-
tive to application of the Burling-
transportation to the national cap-
ital. Photo shows some of the
veterans seizing the locomotive
and, Inset, two of the bonus
marchers inside engine cab with
Engineer F. McGowan, center.
We should think more and talk
less
jf ye’re in quest of happiness;
For silence holds the golden key.
lb wisdom, charm, and witchery,
rhoughts are things, both great
I apd small.
By them, we either rise or fall;
Boletus weigh each passing
| thought
Which enters in our daily talk.
good roads ".
Relative to the gasoline tax he
TURN TO LAST PAGE
Abilene, State Highway commis-
"stoner, selecttons by the Dough-
boys, address by Governor Rosa
Sterling, dedication by Senator
Ward and a baseball game and
a dance In. the evening.
Bands on hand were the Fort
Worth Recreational, Weatherford
Lions Club and Glen Rose.
i , I Elect Au L . . .
cver hoped for Elec st Bat . ,
Foster. Wheel . . .
Fox Films . .
Gen ’ Elec.....
Gen Motors . . .
Gillette 8 R .
Goodyear ......
Houston Oil . . .
Int Harvester . .
Johns Manville .
। Kroger G & B
I Montg Ward . . .
Nat Dairy.....
. , c. . j .. ... Pars Publtx . . .
The I. C. C. has based its find- phillins p
logs strictly on interstate com- .. ’ ■ A’
Findings Of I. C. C.
Examiner Receiv-
cd Here Today
H. W. Wiseman,
Resigned
Plans for a banquet prelimin-
ary to a fall show will be made
by the Johnson County Rabbit
Breeders Association, meeting at
the chamber of commerce tl •.
evening at 8 o'clock.
The committee on, arrangements
for the banquet is composed ot
Fred Jackson. J. B. Rudd and
John Hardin.
The show to be held in the fall
is planned as the largest ever
staged here.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock
at the First Fundamentalist Bap-
tist church. Chase, avenue, for
Mrs. M. O. Reeves and her infant
son. I
Mrs. Reeves. 35, died Monday
evening at .11:15 o'clock at a lo-
cal sanitarium.
Surviving are her husband; her
mother, Mrs. W. A. Ledbetter and
the following brothers and sis-
ters: Mrs. E. J. Steadman, Mrs
V. W. Martin, Mrs. C. G. Hor-
ton, Mrs. E C. Payne. Fay. Hazle.
Ray Loyde and Virgie Ledbetter,
all of Cleburne. and Arthur of
Holland. Mrs. Reeves was for-
merly Miss Ada Ledbetter.
Burial will be made in the Cle-
burne cemetery with Dillon &
Sons Funeral Home in charge of
arrangements. )
Pall bearers will be Harley
Griffin, Nathan Walker, Wade
Burgess, G. W. Rone. O. L Har-
din and Orvil Martin.
The Johnson county commis-
sioners court today was sitting as
a board of equalization on county
tax renditions.
It will require several days to
finish the work of determining
values, cBunty Judge T. E. Darcy
stated. Where raises are made in
renditions notices will be sent
out so that hearings may be held.
At this setting the court will
also cut 35 per cent from the 1930
valuations on real estate in ac-
cordance with a recent order.
Nearly 1,000 re-enforcementa
joined the new army oft lie Pot-
mac yesterday and last night
Thursday morning, the police will
stop feeding the Veterans How
they will eat when the police md t
ceases is a question that remains I
to be answered
8ON ARRIVES.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stype of 110
Nunn Avenue announce the arri-
val of an eight and ape-half pound
son on June 9. He has been named
Delmar Quinn. Mrs. Stype was for-
merly Miss Hallie Maye Martin
didate for district attorney.
Only two offices are* uncon-
tested on the district ticket. Dis-
trict Judge O. B. McPherson o.
Cleburne has no opponent ana
neither does Congressman Fritz G.
Lanham of Wort Worth.
Candidates for district offices
filing for places on the ticket fol-
low:
For county representative — J.
Tom Whitson, Venus; John H.
Veatch, Joshua; R. B. Anderson,'
Godley; 8. J. Howeth. Alvarado.
For flotorial representative — J.
L. Bird, Walnut Springs; Vernon
Lemens, Rainbow; Ed Handley,
Clifton.
SHOP
Squar ‛,
(UP) The Texas bonus army
J. G. Shirley, 63, and his son,
Bardin Shirley, 33, both farmers,
who are in sanitariums at Fort
Worth with wounds sustainea
Sunday night at their home four
miles south of Burleson were
both still alive at noon today. The
elder man is in a more serious con-
dition and is not likely to sur-
vive. Bardin Shirley is also in a
grave condition
more than an hour in the yards of
the Pennsylvania railroad at
Cleveland before permitting it to
continue. The war veterans tied
up all traffic in the yards in their
determination to obtain free
Members of the Cleburne Ten-
nis Club of which Miss Jimmie
Squyres is president, met Monday
evening at the Cleburne Chamber
of Commerce for the first meet-
ing of the summer.
Business was transacted and
plans for the summer were out-
lined.
they claimed was a communist
plot to forment rioting during the
evening’s paraae of war veterans
to the capitol.
Supt. of Police Pelham D. Glass-
ford announced he had learned
communists were organizing a
"combat fighting unit" of 100 to
clash with police along the parade
route. He said communists wer
urging that the veterans' bonus
could be gained only by blood-
shed. and not by lobbying •
Glassford promptly cancelled
plans to permit the bonus army
to parade past the White House
It will be shunted to Cohstitutinn
avenue, a full half mile from the
backdoor of the White House ‘The-I
tattered and grim veterans had |
meree, Mr. Wehster- points out.
whereas the line in question oper-
ates wholly inside the state.
Mr. Cleveland announces (lint, he
will call a meeting of the com-
mittee within the next few days
to discuss next steps to be taken.
made up principally of veterans
from Dallas and San Antonio ai -
rived here before noon today and
appeared jubilant about their
chances of getting to Washington
want to pay. C. A. Frakes, Poet
Arthur business man and candi-
date for governor, addressed a
fair-siwed crowd of voters al the
district courtroom Monday ' night.
He was introduced by Mayor
J. "8. Hoffman of Cleburne.
"If elected governor I will ap-
point State assessors to visit all
corporations and their rendition
will be In accordance with the act-
ual value of their property and in
accordance with the little man or
home-owner," he promised.
He said they would be forced to
pay their proper amount of taxes.
Would Tax Trucks.
Relating to trucks he said that
"I am in favor of trucks. It is the
greatest and most convenient
method of transportation of mod-
ern times. In my attacks on trucks
I wish to be understood that I do
not refer to the small truck or
the heavy truck operating within
the city limits or the farmer's
truek But I do refer to the three,
four, five, six or seven-ton truck
operating every day for profit
only over the people's highways.
"If elected governor I will pro-
ni me tegtstationtotax each and
every big truck operated for prof-
it only, about 8200 a year and
according to (he best estimate
Asecured 'at Austin this will place
in the treasury of the State $25.-
000,000 a year to be Immediately
transferred to the road fund for
maintenance and building of more
no k
Filing For Places
On Ballot Closed
At Midnight
7,000 pounds which will reduce
long hauls materially,, create more
business for the long haul rail
lines and help the short haul
trucks get business, they being
good feeders for- the railroads.
At present time, Mr. Webster
states, there are few big trucks
in operation, having been hind-
ered so by law enforcement offi-
cers despite the injunctions that
(they have gotten off the high-
ways.
Mr. Webster also points out that
limitation of the trucks as to loads
will cut down materially the dam-
age done to the highways, f
The Interurban Express Co.
which operates trucks here will
not-be affected in the least by
the law, Mr. Webster states,
having been Careful to meet all
Ite requirements ever since it was
inaugurated. Moreover the com-
pany does not have large trucks,
makes short hauls and is really a
big transportation benefit to the
city, he pointed out.
In Civil
thefmdhines collided at the in-
, tersectih of West Chambers and
i North Field Streets
The cars were driven by T. D.
Fields and Morris Peters. The oc-
cupants of both cars were thrown
। out, but no one receiver serious
' injuries.
(By United Bress)
East Texas: Generally fair and
continued warm tonight and
Wednesday.
West Texas Partly cloudy to-
night and Wednesday; possibly
showers in Panhandle. Wednes.
day, cooler in west and north pon/
lions. ’ •
Opened With Parade.
The opening of the bridge her ’ ‘ I
today is being celebrated with a M
program the like of which Gran- • 2
bury never saw before, 138
Beginning with a two-mile pa-
rade composed of 200 horsemen and
75 automobiles and trucks .and ‘
carrying stale notables and some i
of the best bands in central Texas.* 'J
the ceremonies will continue S
throughout the night.
State motorcycle officers headed' J
. the parade with the Drum and I
Bugle Corps of C E. DeLario post
of the American Legion of Cle-,,3
, burne furnishing the tuning for. J
the march.
Winners in the parade were Miss
Viceroy Baker, Granbury, first in ,.58
lady riders; a J. Herrington,
Granbury, first in nuns riders; ^3
Miss Joyce Riley, Granbury. beaii^M
decorated car.
Program Held. —-2
Judge Sam Cleveland of Gran- E
bury gave, the -weleeming- address—fl
at the program following the pa- 4
rade with F. 8. Abney, Brown- 12
wood, chairman of Highway No. 10 -
Association, responding.
Willard Barnes of Venus was
elected president of the Johnson
County Jersey Cattle Club, meet-
ing Monday night at the cham-
ber pf commerce here.
Mr Barnes succeeds H. W Wise-
man of Cleburne, who resigned
due to press of business. He haa
stated before that he would con-
tinue to serve as president only
until after the local Jersey shows
were concluded here.
The Jersey breeds discussea
sending an exhibit of cattle to
the Dallas Fair in the fall. A
county herd will probablyy be
sent in Addition to a number of
individual entries
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Ratliff, Harold V. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 209, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 7, 1932, newspaper, June 7, 1932; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1562564/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.