I have a condition where the parts of a procedure that feel the most obvious to me are apparently exactly the opposite from everybody else. This means I find a lot of tutorials very frustrating, because it feels like they spend 20 minutes on something I took apart immediately, then they say something like "then just go ahead and remove such-and-such" and literally skip the part I'm stuck on.
In that vein, I'm sure this information is already a dozen different places on this site, but since google sucks now, you remove a Ranger clockspring by pulling the cover off the steering column and prying open these 3 plastic tabs on the back, one of which immediately snapped off and flew away:
The NOS clockspring I bought was listed "either w/ or w/o cruise", which I guess is technically one way to describe "w/ cruise". There's an extra pin in the long narrow connector on the front, and 3 in the square brown harness plug:

Fortunately, all of the pins are populated on the truck side of the harness:
Haven't checked for the plug where the cruise module lives in the engine bay yet. Now that I'm under the dash, a PO hacked the ignition wiring all to hell, so I'll probably spend the rest of the day sorting that out.
EDIT: Okay, cruise is good to go. Based on this bright orange sticker I found tangled in the wires, ignition hacking was because a PO had a DUI interlock at some point. Cleaned up without too much trouble.
Overall, adding cruise to a '95 is considerably easier than a '94. There are fewer pieces, more of them are actually available to buy, and most importantly, the truck was completely prewired.
This is the minimum amount of material you need to remove from the rear steering wheel cover to accomodate the cruise controls. I guess you could also just make straight cuts across.
You don't need a donor wheel, and you can get replacement controls basically anywhere. I used interior door strike screws with the points ground off.
It's possible to reinstall the air bag module too deep so it's shorting the horn contacts, and the horn goes off when you hook the battery back up.
The combined servo/amp was prewired, and bolts right on to the closest fender bolt.
The master cylinder pressure switch (also prewired) is NC and opens when you brake, so even if you're bypassing the failsafe system, you need to plug in a switch or otherwise jump those wires.
Cruise light on the dash isn't working. I swear there was a socket for it in the cluster, but I guess there's not a bulb in there.
Ultimately, the only junkyard donor part you need is the servo/amp, but if the NOS clocksprings dry up, someone will have to figure out if the '98+ clocksprings will work or not.