Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 168, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 27, 1952 Page: 1 of 6
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
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NII L^ot^ Ttl^typMH^r Win Nport of the U^/M Prtu. - Worl^ft Gnafti Newe Agency
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• PAGES
47TH YEAR. Na 168
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Ridgway Predicts Possible
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ierchants or bus-
Anti— administration Democrats,
1, Tex. Mi
led by Gov. Allan Shivers, dom-
The Texas
an executive
Pvo — administration Democrats
SAN FRANCIS. May 29 I—
AFL deckhand* turned their stop-
whether the Taft or Eisenhower
Demos
majority. The
ed that the
+
wer
Democrats and
not legal
their
The ex-
ties.
However, some of these
Troop 220. C W Jone* and Thud
Meets. Henry Gi
son and L. A. Gi
the precinct
voted for
Considerable
weekly for his
by the
fresh southerly
7
•I..
d
}ab
i
4
I a
mm"B
posing delegations to the Demo
cratic national convention in Chi-
One Armed Hero
Saves Children '
Republicans In
Major Struggle
Over Delegates
RED DECORATIONS—U. Col. Mills C. Hatfield, Ada.
Okla., commanding officer of the prison guards at
Pusan POW enclosure No. 10, holds a blouse deco-
rated with four star epaulettes and resplendent with
Scout Leaders
Attend School
Of Instruction
day i
south
Texas Democrats
Will Elect Two
to end
case er
afraid of reality, usine the bottle
to escape and all of the time
covered
nighere
6
I
V
any possible looks
1 after it has boon
- have said they continued to drink i
to escepe the pain of a hang-
over. whioh always come sooner
quartermaster; Otis Kitchens, as-
sistant quartermaster; B. J. Jack-
son, Scoutmhaster, in charge of the
weekend "program.
Scoutmasters attending the school
Included Travis White, Troop 249,
votes in the convention proper.
They will elect a 52-man unin-
otructed delegation to the national
convention.
Pro — national administration
Democrats, of whom Fagin Dick-
in the now
asnembl.
drunk. Oh, yes he has
most of it false.
and M. A. Claybrook, 214
Hobby Davis, Scout executive,
of Red Oak, also attended the
training program.
Nine Scouts from Troop 240 per-
a
Grand Jury To
Study Slaying
NACOGDOCHES. May 27 a —
rising* t km is at
Calls Ike B<
i whether the
•
Sc DAIr
10k SUNDAY
ESTABUSHED 1904
-,ET-rTIT
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. TUESDAY. MAY 27, 1952
Weather
---—a---
CLEBURNE and VICINITY
were used as instructional guides.
Leaders attending the meeting
were* Dr. Tolbert Yater, district
chairman; Dr. Alex Hward, dis-
trict health and safety chairman;
Carl Collins, district commission-
er; Glen Mitchell, district train-
CLASSIFIED PHONE 7000 • ”
OTHER DEPARTMENTS
133 and 134
L.
mrS in jail
Rut the baby sitter problem
was solved when the officers
returued to the city jail to find
the husband and father there
on a drunk charge
He was fined $15 and escort-
ed home to keep the children
and the mother was then ar-
rested.
*nebuc-en
----------
the street, sober. Mo moots a per- ‘by government request.” He said
fact stranger end wenders if the I the union agreed to sail because
stranger mw Mm when he wm of the 400 ।----------- 4 —‘
giving the clerks the necessary in-
formation. All findings are confi-
dential
Members of the county school
He drinks b
stand to walk
or taler anyway and the longer
If wes postponed the greater the
pain.
E
i
Hr the suoport of
I eridden mother,
testified in criminal
Monday that he was
eash tyving to meet
other obliztions he
over.
An alcoholic is afraid of losing
Ms Job, or Ms wife, or his repute
tion. To make a lone story short
he is afraid the public will find
attle.
The union's chief demands were
for a five per cent wage increase
and overtime pay for work done
on Saturday at aea.
Local Train Crew
When the Takos Chief rolled
over the new traczuge hetween
Eopve and Blum Monday./T.
W. Chatin el 708 North Anglia
Street, was on duty as enginer.
Fireman of the stow was 1. M.
Jones of 102 Marengo Street.
The remeihdr of the crew.
fe
turned to aid Ross be
red. His body was re-
Ae
.»
farewell for awhile. Sh is taking
a thre-months leave of 4bkn
for some necessary remodlihgo
her home.
GENE TURNER attending to , 4
business matter with dispatch . . .
Rumors that one of Cleburne’s th”
mt • •
The annual x-ray survey is soon
sored by Johnson County IB As-
Head - Lines
by Clyde Head
Ted Clancy .Troop 212;J.C. Bennett
Troop 218: Joe Newiserry,
Aeane
। the night'to Fundon
esptons from 21 coun-
AFL Sailors Union of the Pacific,
announced the strike Monday
night He said union members
voted for it, 3,300 to 87.
the bayou Monday
. ' -
Million Man Army
PANMUNJOM, May 27 an —The idlers massed in front of the 155.
Communists threatened Tuesday mile Allied defense line could not
R
ft
)
‘a
V
tticduat
aervace tuos wuo wou une u> at-
ieaa in a boay may pnone 445,
ana u tne unie mb bos already
deen jakea n may up peerVed.
100 mucn empus can no* be
placed mi tne asapdriance oi tak-
uay amsaturuay, may JU aud 31,
Tlevheto Pietures
i6e 5
medals and ribbons which was worn by riot lender
in the May 20 riot in the enclosure. In background are
home-made weapons used by the unruly Red POW's.
(NEA TELEPHOTO) .10
district court 2
so hard up for
business Ande
could not pay
Red Attack Of West Europe
PARIS M 27 f11^ GaW
+—_.___________________________—-------* mmPa -—X 4 ataz
; Matthew B. Ridgway, arriv-
ing to assume the Allied s-
promo command, said Tuas-
day that a Russian attack
on Western Europe was pot-
. sible. At the same time, be
aenied reports that he had *
I outlined in' Washington a
I plan tor ending the Korean
I war.
I At a carefully screened press
MW alcoholics are readv to
fighit you when you tell them thev
art cowards. hiding behind the rich
amber fluid in the attractive bott-
les. They want to fight you because
4 Drunk Baby Sitter
I - RAYTOWN, Tex., May 27 An
1 — Police were stumped when
they went to arrest a mother
of four children on a charge
of assaulting her mother in law
and father in law.
The woman wax alone Mon
day with the children and po
lice were unable to find a re- !
j -wpensible person tor take charge f
I jof them while their mother
Stanford and Melvin Hayes; Bill
* “ "urley, Marvin wil-
_______ _ Griffin, Troop 218;
W. T. Whitworth, Troop 212; Mel-
of staff, and French Gen,Alnboate
Juin, central front commandor.0-
It was nearly eight years aza
that Ridgway parachuced intoNOr-
mundy in command of American
paratroopers to fight the German
occupation forces. This time Gef
man troops will be among tne
forces under his command ready
to meet any Soviet aggreMteO,
Bodies Returned
state's 28 nominating votes at the
party's national convention shall
go to Sen. Robert A. Taft or Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
" - - -1
----——1
N unou
Temperatures around the state
were also somewhat down Yom the
highs of the psst few days. The
high temperature reported was at
Presidio with 98 degrees and the
JAW Monday was 24 degrees 04
'al Eisenhower,”
. .--Fort Worth, Taft
leader in Texas and a Republican
national committeeman. said.
""-2:
end to its conservative leadership Russell, Troop 214.
and • •h—a--- -2------ M” Committeemen included Dr. Step-.
les and J. D Frankin, of Godley,
Johnson County Box Scout lead
ers held an instructional meeting
At Cleburne State Park, last Satur-
day and Sunday, it was reported.
The meeting began late Satyr
day and terminated with a cook
out at 1:20 o'clock Sunday Train
and orientation lectures
est new homes is for salestint
.... NELL HARRISON petal
New York City red. Writes tle
that she has run completeyiou
ued paint. 1
Motor scooter riders are ihxk
troube when they deliberately-
.o run over pet dogs. A sharp; i
or two with a folded newspa
will do the trick without enr
dog lovers . ,, NewspapOrwbn
BETSY BATTLE desperately to
to get all hr belongings aqe
into the 60-pound limit ptebe
tory to flying to Honolululw
she will be employed tn thefut
. . NOELSMTTH purdtiain
lening wi ioeWNentkt
contract work for wgr plartscM
Emhb *
SIGN TREATY-- British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, French Foreign Minis-
ter Robert Schuman, Secretary of State Dean Acheson, and West German Chan-
cellor Konrad Adenauer, left to right, smile broadly after signing the Western Big
Three, Western Germany peace treaty. The highly important and controversial
document can be seen on the conference table directly in front of Secy. Acheson.
(NEA TELEPHOTO)
the Pacific Coast. Ships now in
Honolulu will be allowed to return
to the mainland. ____ .
Neither union nor company
sources could estimate the num-
ber of ships idled by the strike.
Earlier, the Pacific Maritime As-
sociation. against which the strike
was called, Mid two dozen Ameri-
can shipping firm* and 350 ships
would be involved.
turn
---
Mrs. Anna Robinson, president
of the Johnson County TB Associa-
tion acts as supervisor and coor
dinator of the survey.
Although, the courthouse will be eon of Austin Is executive director,
closed Friday in observance of Me- will bolt the regular convention,
mortal Day, the basement will be i bold a convention of their own and
opened so all persons wishing to elect 52 Instructed delegates to the
lake advantage of the free service netional convention.
may besserved. Pvo _ administration Democrats
Water Cut-Off _
Set for Today
City water sorvtco will be cuf
eft tonight between the hours of
1:20 and midnimh, for ell con-
turners north of Oak Street and
Met of the Santa Po railroad;
Oliva Street, east of Brazos and
Reyal Street, east of Knopo Street,
City Manager, J. B. Sarty an-
J'S*1** gh are. scheduled for
2 cutoff lost Friday night,"
Buriy mM. Due to Me otormy
weather end reins. Me fob was
2ostpened, M residents would not
have to be without the water set.
vie any length of time.
iEavlyalso explained why some
2tches for the new water mains
tad to remain open longer Man
the others. The ditches are left
Friends, relatives and loved ones
of .an alcoholic ask. Why? Why
does my husband drink? Why does
my wife. daughter son, uncle cou
sin drink, when they know what it
dore to them and to me?
There to a thousand and one
to the vital question, ell
of them wrong. An alcoholic can
think up more excuse* for taking
a drink, than Solomon had wives.
He can rationalise his plight,even
to the point of getting bved ones
to sympathise with him and make
excuses for him—yet all of the
time, he knows in his heart that
experience to see that all persons,___ __.. _________________
in Johnson County are served byTimted to per rent of the 1,227
the fine plan for checking the dread
disease, before it la to late.*
^''Pno.
A Nickel For
Mom’s Support
PATERSON, N.s., May 27 a-
Building contractor Clarence Ben-
nett must report to th* vrobation
director here everv Friday and
to unleash their million-man army
in North Korea against the Eighth;
Army of the United Nations in re-
taliation for the "massacre" of
Red prisoners on Koje Island.
North Korean Gen. Nam II, sen-
ior Red delegate, delivered the
gravest threat of renewed full-
scale bloody warfare in Korea
since the truce negotiations began
last July 10.
He told the UN that the masses
of North Korean and Chinese sol-
Keene Scene Of
Adventist Meet
KEENE (Bpl.l—Some 3000 Ad-
ventist* from over the state are
expected to attend thh* annual 10-
day camp meeting which will con-
vene here Thursday night in Tur-
ner Auditorium.
According to Elder N. R. Dower
of Fort Worth, Texas Conference
president, more reservations for
rooms and tents have been re-
ceived than in any previous year,
Several months ago every, room in
both college dormitories was re-
served. Many homes in the village
will offer rooms for visitors. Many
fore tents will be pitched on the
campus than ever before. Family
tents will be furnished with elec-
tric fights, end floors a« wett as
the usual beds. tables and chairs.
The conference president also re-
vealed some of the special features
of the first week-end. The Faith
for Today television group from
New York will be present Friday
and Saturday, May 20 and 31. The
Voice of Prophecy radio group
from Lol Angeles will come Sun-
day, June 1.
Speakers from denominational
headquarters in Washington, D. C.
and a number of returned missions
ent durrngtk8 sessions WhichPwi
run through June 7.
"Three-fourths
tndesunezanus-apnorntcna
Come *
is pot always
right,".2weifel said. the commit-
tee. should decide what is to the
best interest of Toxas.”
(CP) Ceniral Fraap Fealures
(KF) Kina Featurea
Heavy rainclouds dumped 1.78 of
an inch of moisture on Del Rio
the past 24 hours and rain was
alro reported at Brownsvijle, .is
ofan.inch. El Paso, .30, ®»1‘ Flat,
.06, Wink, ». Midland, .25, and
Marfa, .14 of an inch.
The rainy front was just west of
Abilene Tuesday morning and is
moving fastward, the weatherman
said. ■ ”
eat the troth. That to why an al-1 However, some of these ships
coholic drinks - a paradox, an over were exempted from the strike
titth’ening noose, with each drunk since the union promised to sail
drawing the noose a little tighter, ships carrying military cargo to
* I the Far East.
Why is on aleoholic? Lundeberg said the American
An alcoholic goto drunk. Men President liner. President Wilson,
aeber. He tries walking down will be allowed to Mil Tuesday
"sit by” while Communist prison-
ers of war were being "slaugh-
tered" on Koje.
Threat or Propaganda
The warning brought varied re-
actions from UN officials. The
chief UN spokesman. Brig. Gen.
William P. Muckols, described It
as a military threat Maj. Gen. Wil
liam K. Harrison, new Allied sen-
ior delegate, said it was "propa-
ganda."
Nam's, threat came as Allied
troops on the western front were
alerted for a possible Red attack
down the classic ."Uijongbu corri-
dor" of invasion leading to Seoul.
A Communist attack pummeld
UN outposts 50 miles north of Se-
oul on Monday, the day before
Nam II made his threat. UN pa,
trols thrusting out in search of
the enemy found the Reds in un-
usual strength.
Recalls Earlier Warning
"I strongly warn your side,”
Nam told Harrison at Tuesday’s
42-minute meeting, "that our bare-
handed captured personnel is in
the custody of your side.
"Your side must bear full and
absolute responsibility for any new
atrocities and acts of massacre.”
Nam s choice of words recalled
the veiled warnings made by the
Chinese Communiste before they
entered, the war In November,
1950. They .said they would not
stand idly by" while the UN army
gyerran alku North Korea and
threatened the Manchurian fron-
M were really tag films
elections were
who call themselves "Loyalists"
will supnort any candidate the ad-
ministration nuts un for president.
The other side will support the
candidate that is strongest for
"atntes right and home rule."
The course of Tuesday's conven-
linn was laid Monday by the Dem-
ocratic state executive committee,
which met and heard the Loyal-
lata' arguments in the cases of
27 contested county delegations.
As Ruel Walker of Cleburne,
chairman of the executive com-
mittee's credentials subcommittee
questioned each witness, he point
edly asked what the issue was and
whether "those who remained" at
county conventions outnumbered
those who left.”
la every case, an instructed ver-
sun an uninstructed county dele-
•ation was the issue and anti-ad-
ministration supporters outnumb-
ered pro-administration support-
en.
Bo. the executive committee rul-
ed in favor of all 27 anti-adminis-
trotion delegations. The pro-admin-
istrption forces protested that
"might does not make right," but
they had planned a rump conven-
tion before they arrived at San
Antonio
MINERAL
27 UN ____
embrpiled Tueeday I
struggle to determine
There was no argument that in
the cases of a majority of coo-
tested delegates, the Eisenhower
candidates had been elected by a
forces contend
who elected the
Cleburne Man
Jailed After
Auto Accident
Jimmy Threadgill, 20-year-old
dleburne man. was held without
Mond today, after his arrest on
gharges of hit *nd run driving, ag-
gravated assau:t with a motor ve-
Mole and drunk driving. It was re-
"Ons the pine has been con.
eted the diteh I* toft MM, 24
hdurs to cheek for teak*. 18 work-
Men And a look. Me leek mun
-wi.i
tima wiih old water Knee.
and the possibility of thunder-
storms within the next 24 hours,
the weatherman said.
' derived from the sale of Christ-
i mas Mils.
There is no inconvenience com
. nected with making the chest x-
rays. Nobody n required to dis-
robe. The pictures are made white
the subject is fuily dressed. The
conference at Orly Airport where
he landed from New ork, Ridi-
was was asked if there was a
chance of a Soviet attack on West
Germany,
‘anyting which has capabill-
ties is a possibility and were u
ecutive committee met N
and through
contested del
great cupaoiuity ware," he said,
Damas Any'War Plan
He was asked then about Wash-
ington reports Wat he told the Sen-
ale Armed Service* committee
that h had "a ‘very definite pten"
in end th* Kbrean war in case the
truce talks failed.
"I have not seen the report in
print yet so I can not comment
un its authenticity,” Ridgway Mid.
"If that (Washington report) has
been carried, the report is not
correct I made no such state-
ments." - '
(The Armed Services committee
made public a heavily censored
transcript of Ridgway's trrtfilfliRy
to T. According to the transcript
ported.
The charges grew out of an ac-
TMt
some pride, because- it ____________
refrigerated food for servicemen in
he can't the Philippines. . -------
_________the atotat 1 The strike directly affected the
windering if every man, weman, 1 ports of Loa L
hildhemeetskmewstharhewas icisco, Portland,________
Membec-- Tekaa Trea Asevieii
Tesas Dally Fgess Lragu:
Seshern Newsvaver tai ban
Ridgway, the first United States
general toqarrive in France with
uw liberation armies of World War
II, cume hers irom New York aft-
er conferring there far otto hour
Monday with Gen. Douglas Mac-
- —---imcattszy gi ---------------- Arcur, his predacesapr as nb-
Reds May-Release#-
■ .....' 0 kWmW.
supertendent’s staff including the
county superintendent, J. B. Blight cago.
and others give of their time and
and to the wives, sisters and moth-
ers of this great nation."
(Maiority Not Always Righe
ETTSX'm SU’S
■ "u-isgop"eomamur
cartying through their slate of del- vin Davis, Troop 221; A. B. Scott
egates .for Taft, the Blaenhower ‘ * - - - i
supporters will.senda competing
delegation to the Chicago canven-
tion
meat. T-‛
A 2 20.11
—-
.'^t. Asi vduo"
'It (the executive committee)
has repudiated mob rule and the
forced majority tactics of those
supporting Ge *
Henry Zweifel
More Rain For
Texas Tonight
By UNITED PRESS -
Texas may be in for some more
boat he was piloting. He held the
.... boys above water until their fath-
thunder- er. Bill Waldrip, andalompan-
night and ion reached them from shore,
i ""extreme When they ri——‘ • -t “—
The strike tied up ships manned Eisennnu
I you have hit the nail right square | but htsetrectgtwererstieaerppron
on the bead. ' TTmi
2 Oh, they may be rough ough
barroom brawlers, battle -.caned
brand an tat They are not such
cowards about physical things. ex
k cept, of course, the pain of a hang-
15
Sen. laeverott Saltonstal
Masa.) questioned him on
he had "a military plan
the fighting in Korea" in
failure of armistice nogs
Ridgway was quoted as r
"1 had a very definite pU
Talked to MasArttx
ta aicaea to rdp.pargonadri of*4 vecy aduuin Johnson County, oom wiu- have aymptoms which
being a man-or woman. Others is urgru to take auvantage Ol u j will show up in the X-ray before
- aree • Fays wien ie joDue A-; other indications are notice
t ay uut • um.- lai i ubereuiur । able
ASaociauon Vaus Levurae uu ru- .—'
. Opposing Groups
entire x-ray takes only a half- j ’ ’ • ■
minute, after signing the cards and SAN ANTONIO, May 27 SB —
The Democrats of Texas opened
ibeir state convention Monday and
• was certain to produce two op
_Ther Janne m6re
TESORO for Camp Fire Eirls, 40-
vIms VERA MANGUM, camp ir-
tor. Sorry, but that’s the.wsy it ta.
Girls will be off at 4 p. m.,
Wednesday, for their annual a6fl»
ing . . . - MARJORIE JACKSON
moaning the fate of a picture
ruined in the malis .... Fhlei
ALICE HENDERSON bidding tinda
area*,, ing stahhed in the nhed
pie’s home. -0
-
committee appeared to have pre-
sented Taft with the 20 delegates.
But Elsenhower supporters, vot-
ed down every . time they put a
contested delegate before the com-
mittee. promised to hold a rump
convention Tuesday and elect 38
delegates to oppos Taft's.
,r.. ....... ..........__, If that happens, it will be up to
work meeting into s full Hedged the credentials.:committee at the
,__________ _ _____ strike against Pacifie Coast ship national conventign to determine
oinkine deeper and deeper into ping Tuesday to back demands for “
the.rlutches of a disease, which | wage increases and overtime at
etrikebs at them in two ways, phy- t ses.
aically and mentally. Harry Lundeberg, head of the
n-
formed the Investitur service.
They wore Lew Piumiee, Paul
White. Douglas Haynes, Don Pugh
Jerry Walker. T. Stanford, Ogden
Spurlin, Jimmy Jones and Don
Powell.
are worried, or because they feel
the urge to celebrate. Thev drink I
because they are broke or because i Anv urou.
they are making a lot of money. ines9 men Z
They drink because they are siek
auu agau ou aucauay anu weune-
uay, June 4 auu 4.
* ue uut wu ve set up in the
A. 1.1 .. basemeut oi ue courinouse wiu i
ATahaMta drink, .according to iecmncauas anu nurses ou nund. A-
their rationalizing, because they ru ys wul Legan ai 8:3 in use
murning anu wul coatunue all oay
cadiu4 •.30 p.m.
ing chairman; J. A. Browder,
A grand jury was scheduled to
hear more evidence , Tuesday
against Mrs. Charlene Looney who
is charged with the butcher knife
slaying of her husband Sheisac-
cused of murder without malice
The jury recessed Monday
without acting to the care. Hugh
Looney Jr., an auditor for Stephen
f. Austin College, died April M
cident on highway 81, aouth of
Burleson, Inal Sunday night.
Threadgill, already under proha-
lion, crashed his auto into nnoth-
Ur autn and failed to atop. No-
body was reported to he injured
in the accident.
PORT ARTHUR, May 27 an ----—.
7 History Mode By
day thanks to the efforts of a one- ‘
h, scattered armed man who drowned in Alli-
iy and Tues gator Bayou after rescuing them,
and'in the east and .Melton Ross, the victim, leaped
____ on wednesday. Cooter into the bayou to aid Ronald and
ta Wednesday. V ' Gary Waldrip, who had been
. - I - thrown from an outboard motor-
EAST TEXAS - Parti- eloudv ‘
Tussday. Tueaday night and
Wedhesdv, Scattered
sFowers Tu
and the alcohol is the only med-
ictne. They drink because they
ar healthy and robust, therefore
the alcohol will not hurt them
To hear an alcoholic explain
the situntion. he drinks because his “Ml advantage om tnese free ex-
WMe demenda tO0.much. of his ruys. ulen uie "naie and nearly"
time or because his wife never .. .. _ .
pays him any mind.
wne an .leadie snan, AFL Deckhands,
- X dmvnoqebraonasinond Strike Against
uahredrinks steroe him streight Coast Shipping
Mest etoabalics find Mat they --- —..... * - -
drink because they are cowards.
, ... -......
n Geivesten. wer W. R. E. mumsm cu,
dye condutra W. CMautu, in a Naeogdeeitoo
vrnem.-L.NemE
none of the excuses are cause for,
Ilan “hn.i. attompts to b* Free X-Ray Clinijc Opens
perfectly honest in answering the •
question, why, he will Uy, I don’ I __ ' . , p
Cleburne Next Friday
seeletien and-supperted-by-funde
From Korean Wa
SAN FRANEScO, May »।
The bodies of five TexAnk h
been returned to the United 8t
aboard the, Jericho Victory "
day, the Department of Deft
’TOtum. wpamo
Americans killed in Korea ta
ship,
yadgnnazviartmkde
aS?
Army Bgt. Duward H. pe
STWrix
N. McCuan, Il Paso, and MK
Sndonark F. RelordGE,)
.......
JMoudly
By PROC j
memm'q-"0T
i" om" -
" •. •edur
m-tt-a-
Yseterday an attempt was made
to identity the alceholic. N«* ee
Me generel public would knew
and recognize Me sufferer. Rath
er, ee Me eufter himsel could
recornize Ms own ailment, pro-
video Me sufferer to strictly hen-
eel with himself, which is lust
aheu impessibl, with en ective
. A booh director. In one of the
largest banks in Me Southwest,
amem ana da ana een wunanld-h ha
•vew •mvw •• VBse u wVv'W • •="
Move anything my boat end moot
trusted friend told me, if I smel-
ted whisky on Me breath. It is |
almost imposiible for • person
with a couple of drinks in Mem
to be strictly honest."
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 168, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 27, 1952, newspaper, May 27, 1952; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564230/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.