The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1949 Page: 1 of 8
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VOLUME 64, NUMBER 46.
WHITEWRIGHT, GRAYSON COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1949.
5c a Copy, $1.50 and $2.00 a Y ear
TO ADD POINTS
l._
1
dollars.
on
Sun Honor Roll
But this year
j
is au-
per-
toothbrushes in
the►
Jameson Is Now
With Air Force
Rights Proposals
Given ‘Must’ Tag
Poll Taxes Payable FARMERS TO
Following Election VOTE SATURDAY
County Home Gets
Furnishings From
Raid-Closed Club
Ida Farm-Market
Road Completed
Influenza Reported
Spreading in Texas
Court Rules U. S.
May Be Sued for
Military Accidents
High Birth Rate
Prompts Warning
Tokyo Rose Boards
Train for Prison
91-Year-Old Wins
Divorce Saturday
BONHAM VOTES
SCHOOL TAX
R.Q.GRAY DIES
ON DEER HUNT
’48 FIGURES SHOW
16 MILLION IN U.S.
GET UNDER $2,000
Windmills first became common in
Germany and the Netherlands.
White-
Commerce,
“EARLY BIRD” POWDER
FETCHES UP WORMS
The 1928 Olympic games were the
first to include women’s athletics.
were against the issuance
bonds for building purposes.
a
chaplain’s
as
of
the
The WHS Tigers added another
victory to their list last Friday when
they defeated the Wolfe City High
School football team by a score of 41
to 0 on Bryant Field. It was the;
TAFT PREDICTS
16 BILLION RED
FOR FAIR DEAL
HIGH LIVING COSTS
PROVE EARLY ISSUE
PET BULL CARRIES
GIRL TO SCHOOL
p.
that
have
j matters, and to
keep them abreast with ministering
spiritual, moral and cultural welfare
of Air Force personnel.
The Whitewright - Ida - Sherman
farm-market road was completed
Monday, according to Cecil Cagle,
district highway engineer at Sher-
man.
The road is eighteen feet wide and
was built by the Austin Road Com-
pany. It is 16% miles long, making
the distance to Sherman from White-
wright about two miles less than by
Bells. It gives the Ida community an
all-weather road for the first time in
many years.
TIGERS CONTINUE Extra Seats For
Thanksgiving Day
Football Game
SBii
Revival To Begin at
Central Christian
Church Nov. 23
Colored P.-T. A. Ends
Successful Drive
brought back down the steps in the
same manner.
coming in fine.
$611,000 on the tax bill of approxi-
mately $1,000,000 was collected, in-
cluding collections for county, state
and school taxes.
State taxes paid this month will be j County,” Gunn said,
allowed a discount of two percent, m
those paid in December, one percent.
All state and county taxes are due on
or before January 31, 1950.
SAN FRANCISCO.—Mrs. Iva Tog-
uri D’Aquino, 33, convicted of treason
for her wartime “Tokyo Rose” broad-
casts from Japan, left Tuesday to
start a 10-year sentence in the worn-
today be-
of “no re-
The election for Whitewright and
section will be held in the room just
north of the city office. This room
was recently completed and equipped
for holding elections and the recent
election was held in it, which was the
first time it was used for an election.
al. They have most of their letter-
men back this year.
Many of the sports writers
announcement,
farmer in the
Through October I county to vote on this important is-
sue.
The men selected will be called up-
on to make important decisions that
will affect every farmer in Grayson
The Van Alstyne Leader had the
following comment on the two teams
last week:
“In nearly every conference, there
are two teams who are traditional ri-
vals, and the team which defeats
their traditional rival considers it a
successful year. Remember last year
when the Texas Aggies lost ev?ry
game and then in the Turkey D'ay
classic tied the U. of T. Longhorns,
which changed the complexion of the
season for them. So it is with thx.
gers
Miller has a
Coach Sam Montgomery’s
We’re predicting that the
'will bring home the district cham-
pionship from Whitewright on Tur-
key Day.”
This writer is not an expert on
football and has not seen the Panth-
ers play, but he has a feeling the
Panthers-will have all they can take
care of on Thanksgiving and prob-
ably more than they will be able to
handle satisfactorily. The Leader is
mistaken when it states that the Ti-
gers have most of their lettermen
ex-employee, Edward Ernest, who
said he had been making wigs for 54
years, but “had not had time to make
my own,” said that the price of a wig
should be from $28 to $31. He said
his former employers promised he
would get a wig through the health
scheme.
The judge, pondered.
you charge the National Health Serv- jual moral and morale
ice for making a wig?” he asked ’ 11----- ------x —
Pasco.
“I cannot tell. It is a secret con-
tract,” replied Pasco.
The judge frowned. “You must
tell. I want to know ” he insisted.
“I understand the new contract
s price is $40.40,” said Pasco cautious-
ly.
The judge ruled that Ernest must
pay for his new wig but cut the price
to $33.60. He said Ernest “must have
known it is necessary to go to a hos-
pital to get a wig out of the govern-
ment.”
SOUTH THOMASTON, Me.—Mar-
ianne Lufkin, 12, couldn’t have a
WHEELING, W. Va. — The high
cost of living was stimulating con- •
troversy as far back as a century ago.
An item dug out of an old Wheel-
ing Weekly Intelligencer reported
formation of an “anti-beef eating as-
sociation” in Philadelphia, with its
members pledged to buy no meat
costing over eight cents a pound.
It was printed in the Intelligencer’s
45th edition dated July 22, 1853. The
newspaper is a daily now.
BRITAIN’S PRICE
ON WIGS BARED
LONDON.—The secret of what the
government pays for wigs distrib-
uted to hairless Britons under the
national health scheme was revealed
in court here. The new contract
price is $50.40.
The secret was pried from Cecil
Pasco, chairman of a wig manufac-
turing firm, by Westminster County
Court Judge Maurice Drucquer. The
firm sued a former employee for re-
to meet expected shortages in
sonnel and equipment.
The commission pointed out
United States census officials
predicted — on the assumption that
the birth rate would decline sharply
from the 1946-47 peak—that school
enrollments will grow until they
reach an annual total of more than
34,000,000 pupils in 1948-1960.
much to defeat Van Alstyne last year
are not with the Tigers this season.
They graduated. We admit that Van
Alsayne has the Tigers outclassed in
weight, but it takes more than weight
to win football games. Well, we will
see what we will see Thanksgiving
Day.
tration “must” measures
hind his fighting slogan
treat and no retirement.”
The President served notice Tues-
day night—in his second civil-rights
speecch in five days—that he is en-
listed in a finish fight against “racial
and religious discrimination.”
With Southern Democrats up in
arms against his call for anti-lynch-
ing, anti-poll tax and other anti-dis-
crimination measures which cost him
four Dixie states in last November’s
presidential election, Mr. Truman
threw out this blunt challenge:
“We are going to continue . to ad-
vance in our program of bringing
equal rights and equal opportunities
to all citizens. In that great cause
there is no retreat and no retire-
ment.”
Praises Negro Woman
Mr. Truman spoke at the 14th an-
nual meeting of the National Council
of Negro Women and lavished praise
on the record of Mary McLeod Beth-
une, 74-year-old Negro educator and
retiring president of that organiza-
tion.
HOLLYWOOD.—The nation’s mul-
timillion dollar “falsie” business is
periled by plastic surgery.
Dr. H'. Otto Barnes, Los Angeles
plastic surgeon, told the convention
of the Pan American Medical Wom-
en’s Alliance Monday, that an oper-
ation can increase a woman’s bust
measurements. The operation, which
removes the need for falsies, requires
incision and rearrangement of tis-
sues.
He added that it has been under-
taken successfully and is valuable
because anything that uplifts a wom-
an’s morale “is beneficial.”
on Wednesday preceding the game on
Thanksgiving, if the weather prom-
ised to be favorable for the game. If
fair weather prevails more than 2,000
people are expected to attend the
game.
Mr. Cummings said Head Coach
Ray Morrison and John Clark, busi-
ness manager of the Austin College
Kangaroos, were glad to loan the
seats for the game without cost to the
local schools, but jokingly remarked
they would like to have some of the
Tigers join the Kangaroos when they
finished Whitewright High School.
Ferdinand does more than sit and
smell flowers. He carries Marianne
to school and back.
Marianne has taught t|ie 6-months-
old bull to obey—most of the time.
Riding astride a saddle made from an
old belt, some burlap and a blanket,
she steers with rope reins.
Laddie, her collie dog, trots along
behind. If the reins and switch don’t
convince Ferdy to mind his business,
the dog’s barking usually does.
A
DENVER, Colo.—The Tenth Cir-
cuit Court of Appeals ruled Wednes-
day that the United States Govern-
ment may be sued for accidental
damages suffered by military
sonnel while on active duty.
The ruling was on a suit brought
by Edith Griggs of Denver against
the government for $15,000 damages.
She claimed the dameges were due
her in connection with the death of
her husband, Lt. Col. Dudley Griggs.
The officer died Sept. 18, 1947.
His wife’s complaint charges that
his death was a direct result of “neg- get all the bait they need
ligent and careless treatment” re- x --- --
ceivdd while a patient at the Scott
Field, Ill., Army Air Base Hospital.
“This ruling may result in a flood
of suits,’’ said Assistant United States
Atty. Henry Lutz. “Every sailor who
slips on a deck and breaks his leg
and every soldier injured in a jeep
accident will be able to sue for dam-
ages.”
Lutz said he would appeal the case
to the Supreme Court.
“Falsie” Business
Is Imperiled by
Plastic Surgery
WASHINGTON. — President Tru-
man’s civil-rights proposals w.ere
ora
Four out of five 1
use in U. S. homes are in unsatsfac-
tory condition, according to
Britannica Book of the Year.
United States exports in the first
ten months of 1948 declined 27 per-
cent from the corresponding period
in 1947.
SHERMAN.—Poll taxes are due as I
usual and Grayson County tax office
is ready for the collection, Robert
Dean, tax officer, said Saturday.
Defeat of the poll tax repeal
amendment in the recent election
validates the 1949 order for poll pay-
ments, Dean said. Earlier he had! —. x^xx vxw.xx.b x^x.
advised delay in paying polls until- tives on the PMA community
Grayson County farmers will make
two important decisions when they
go to the polls on Saturday, W. W.
Gunn, director of the Production and
Marketing Administration program
for the county, said Monday in an-
nouncing polling places.
In addition to electing representa-
..----Com-;
the election decided the tax repeal ,mittees in the 12 distrcts in the coun-
issue. Ity, farmers will select delegates to
Though the tax office did not add the county convention.
the poll tax to the regular tax state- | Convention delegates, at a later
ments mailed in October, a poll tax date, will name representatives to the
order is on the back of each state- ! county committee.
ment. I In making the
Dean said that tax collections are i Gunn urged every
U'' ’
■
wright, T. A. Gray of
Roger Q. Gray of Killeen and Luther
’shown in the last few games, and
unwrapped their new pre-holidayI
I fashions, some of them quaint, more [
of them flappery.
Camisoles, for instance, were a
flash in the panorama of the “new
look” four years ago. P
they’re more enticing, scheduled for
a bigger fashion future.
Most of them are cut
On last Friday a number of credits
and corrections were made on The
Sun subscription list. Look at the
figures to the left of your name on
the first page or on the wrapper, if
you receive your copy of The Sun in
a wrapper. The figures give the date
to which your subscription is paid.
If they read “11-50”, your subscrip-
tion is paid to November 1950.
1 The following have renewed their
subscriptions this week and their
names have been added to The Sun
honor roll:
Walter Robbins
Dr. W. M. Holland
Prentiss Compton
J. R. Hicks
R. E. Robinson
C. N. Ross
E. T. Blanton
W. M. Waldrum
W. R. Hamilton
C. J. Davenport
Mrs. J. H. Bowen
Alton McDowell
Marshall Hasty
F. G. Hoover
Mrs. Walter Adkins
Lloyd E. Alexander.
W. G. Harrelson
BONHAM.—Voters of the Bonham i
Independent School District Satur-|
day gave their approval to the is- !
suance of $460,000 in bonds by the
district for the purpose of erecting a
new elementary building and mak-
ing repairs to four other buildings in ,
the system.
The final count on the
showed that 496 votes were
SHERMAN.—Furnishings that for-
merly graced the gaming raid-closed
Hi-Lite Club now decorate the living
room of the Grayson County farm
home.
The club closed after Texas
Rangers raided it July 30. The fur- •
nishings were stored in Dallas. This
week they were delivered to Grayson
County after Justice of the Peace
Ralph Oliver ruled the furnishings
and $476 cash seized in the raid be-
came county property. He ordered
destroyed the gaming tables and oth-
er gambling equipment.
County Judge J. N. Dickson said
the cash would be placed in the gen-
eral fund. o
Three air conditioners seized in the
raid are the object of a suit for re-
covery by Koeppen and Baldwin,
Denison appliance dealers, as lien
holders. The company’s suit named
as defendants Grayson County and
Arthur Willingham, Hi-Lite Club op-
erator.
as low
possible, made of several layers
sheer material, trimmed above
bustline with dainty lace. They have
elasticized waistlines to keep them
from slipping out of low (necked)
gear, and some even have a ruffle
apron below the waist so they can be
tucked into skirts and used as eve-
ning blouses.
Slips Are Shorter
Slips are two-thirds as long as they
were last winter. Newest slips fit
slimly over the upper hip, then
flounce in semifullness to three
inches above the knee. Harking back
to the “giggly girls” fashion era,
they’re short enough not to interfere
with slit-skirted dresses and to serve
as combination camisoles and petti-
coats.
Bloomers—knee-length and nylon
—are returning for “inactive sports-
wear.” Daintily set with lace inser-
tions and satin ribbons at waist and
thigh, they’re typical of what 1920’s
girls wore before they took up “dance
sets.”
For active sportwear, makers are
hoping to sell red, ankle-length
snuggies.
Chemises are chic, the designers
say.
Most high-fashion chemises have
“tank tops” (scooped out and sleeve-
less, after the fashions of ’20’s swim
suits), and lace-edged panties that
fall to mid-thigh length. Many are
accordion-pleated.
Sleeves on Gowns
Nightgowns are newest when
knife-pleated all around the skirt.
Chief trimmings on new high-fash-
ion gowns are silk braid straps over
the shoulders, balloon sleeves, and
lace insets, also accordion-pleated.
Petticocats are a necessity this
year, to complete the camisole and
complement the strapless dress.
Most petticoats for daytime wear are
gored, fastened at the waist with an
elastic band, or—on costly models—
zipped up the side for flawless fit un-
der smooth silks.
Unlike the “new-look” half-slips,
they are straight instead of sweep-
ing.
r
r
..... ■
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/
_
BONHAM.—Mrs. Ellen Harrison,
who will be 91 her next birthday,
Saturday, was granted a divorce from
Joe Riley Harrison, 68, by Judge A.
S. Broadfoot in Sixth District Court.
They were married in September
1948.
Mrs. Harrison was carried to the .
second floor courtroom in a chair and pony so she settled for a bull calf.
i i i_ j 1 Purdin and dnp^ mnrp than sit
WASHINGTON.—Senator Taft of
Ohio said Tuesday that adoption of
President Truman’s program next
vxo xxcvv. xxxxxxxv xxx .year would add more than $16,000,-'
back this"year."Three Tigers who did '000,000 to the federal deficit and lead
- - ■ ----1--L-----America to “stagnation and auster-
ity.”
Taft attacked “the entire Truman
program” in a statement from his of-
fice here. The Ohioan, chairman of
the Senate Republican policy com-
mittee, was in his home state press-
ing his campaign for re-election in
1950.
“We face a deficit of $5,500,000,-
000,” Taft said. “Yet the Truman
program would add to that $6,000,-
000,000 for UMT and other billions
for services of all kinds.”
His references were to the system
of compulsory health insurance fre-
quently advocated by the President,
to the “production payment” plan
sponsored by Secretary of Agricul-
ture Brannan, and to a long-pending
proposal for universal military train-
ing—“UMT.”
NEW YORK.—Those rumors about
bloomers and predictions on petti-
coats are true—they’re coming back! i
What with the 1920’s style trend, I
i fZw week7have"come'in reports from dered by Mrs. Lucy Mae Freeman,
in and around Whitewright that -they reading from Dunbar, and Mrs. Imo-
I are not too sure of victory this year, gene Roberts recited the books of the
The powerhouse the Panthers have Hible and their origin and class.
... vxxx. 1-.. J as I Gloria Jean Roddy was crowned
well as their improved running of in- queen of the colored elementary
tereference and blocking, have school. She was very attractive in
‘changed the minds of many. Some of the evening frock made by her moth-
the coaches of teams which have er- .
played both the Panthers and the Ti- I The regular meeting night for the
have stated that Coach Wannie Colored Boy Scouts was used to
stronger team than crown the queen, therefore the meet-
Tigers. inS will be held in the elementary
Panthers school Wednesday night at 6:30.—J.
L. Huckaby Jr., principal.
In the eight! Alstyne football game on Thanksgiv-
o __o ' i- getting 400
have made 323 points against 12°for ; portable bleacher seats from Austin
their opponents, an average of more ; College. Mr. Cummings said the
than forty points per game. This ! seats would^be moved to Whitewright
must be some kind of football record.
The Tigers will get a well earned
rest this week, no game being sched-
uled for Friday. Coach Sam Mont-
gomery said the Tigers are in good
condition, and will be ready for the
game to be played at 2 p. m. Thanks-
giving on Bryant Field. This game,
as all know, will be between the Van
Alstyne Panthers and the WHS Ti-
gers and will decide the champion-
ship for District 15-B. The winner
of this game will play Cooper for the
bi-district championship. Van Als-
tyne has not lost a game this year, so
the two teams will meet with clean
records, and one will go down in de-
feat, unless there should be a tie,
which no one expects.
Plans are being made to take care
of the largest crowd Whitewright
ever had at a football game. Van
Alstyne will be here almost 100 per-
cent, and many are coming from oth-
er towns to witness the battle of bat-
tles between two good teams. Van
Alstyne and Whitewright have been
keen football rivals for years and the
standing of the two teams this year
had added to that rivalry.
A. G. Abbott of Fort Worth, state
evangelist for the Texas Christian
Missionary Society, will conduct an
evangelistic meeting for the Central
Christian Church of Whitewright,
beginning on November 23 and con-
tinuing through December 4. All
services will be held in the building
of the Central Christian Church, be-
ginning at 7 o’clock each evening, ex-
cept Saturday.
Evangelist Abbott has been in the
active ministry for 28 years, and dur-
ing this period he has directed a most
enthusiastic evangelistic program in
the churches he has served. He re-
signed his ministry with the church
at Electra in July, 1947, to enter the
field of evangelism.
Evangelist Abbott is a faithful pro-
claimer of the Gospel, cordial and co-
operative. All people of the commu-
nity are invited to attend the serv-
ices,-with the assurance that they
will be challenged and strengthened
spiritually through the influence of
these meetings.—J. E. Mangrum.
Rumors About
Bloomers Are
Based on Real Fact
CLEVELAND. — A chemical has
been developed which will bring
worms to the surface of a lawn.
Fishermen now can sit back and
1 without
digging and without injury to the
worms or the grass.
This chemical worm digger is
called “early bird.” It is a white
i powder which is dusted over the
ground and then thoroughly sprin-
kled with a hose.
Within a minute or two worms (
come out of the ground. Some more en’s federal prison, Alderson, W. Va.
sprinkling soaks “early bird” deeper
into the ground and brings more
worms to the surface.
, AUSTIN.—Influenza is spreading
in Texas at a faster-than-average
rate, State Health Officer George W.
Cox reports.
Cox says that for the week ending
Nov. 5 Texas reported 1,072 cases, as
compared with the average for the
last seven years of 856 cases.
The health officer suggests that
persons “keep fit by drinking plenty
of water, by eating simple nourishing
food, by exercising out of doors ev-
ery day, dressing according to the
weather and getting plenty of rest.”
The Colored Parent-Teacher Asso-
UJX. ciation ended a very successful
xx, ..x„xx the hrive Sunday. H. E. Holley was in-
Van Alstyne and Whitewright teams, spired to plan the plan that brought
The Tigers won the district title last m,>ny dollars. The total amount
year and went on to win the region- rais-?d was $65.01. Every negro fam-
— ily in, town gave a dollar per family.
| The program was an excellent af-
..x have ^air> with several, numbers being
picked them to win the district title rendered h^^KBfejUibers of the as-
i this year over the Panthers. Well, sociation. Mrs. Alma Roddy rejd an
jmany picked Baylor to beat Texas interesting paper entitled, “Are Yo’4|
every woman will have underdraw-^st Saturday, too. Within the last Ready?;’ Other_ numbers w_ere ren-
isoles hchemiser petticoats^nd Sid- in anT^round WhYte^ghTtt^^ reading from Dunbar and Mrs. Imo-
thigh-length shps I are not too sure of victory this year, gene Roberts recited the books of the
The inside story on lingerie was
disclosed last week when designers
NEW YORK.—The continued high
birth rate since the war has made the
nation’s school crisis even worse than
had been thought, the educational
policies commission of the National
Education Association has warned.
By 1955, the commission estimated,
enrollment in elementary and high
schools will be 6,000,000 above pres-
ent levels. The commission called
for immediate and long-range plans
to meet expected shortages in per-
WASHINGTON. — Congressional
probers reported today that nearly
16,000,000 families received incomes
of less than $2,000 in 1948 and that
their “unfilled wants” constitute a
“great, under-developed economic
frontier.”
The Senate-House economic sub-
comihittee, headed by Sen. Sparkman
(Dem.) of Alabama, said that 8,000,-
000 of the low-income families got
less than $1,000.
The 16,000,000 families represent
one-third of the families of the na-
tion.
In making its report, the subcom-
mittee said that “to maintain maxi-
mum employment of the nation’s ma-
terial and human resources, the econ-
omy must consume and invest the to-
\ tai quantity of goods and services
produced.”
4
An agreement has been reached
between the USAF and the Depart-
ment of the Army which permits the
exchange of chaplain personnel, if
the individuals involved desire to
transfer to the other service.
The purpose of Air Force chaplain
reserve training is to afford chaplains
“What do the opportunity to cope with individ-
CdY'xr Im! m /-J winv’nln mottar’C' on Tn
making a wig?” he asked
returns !
, L4.U1 kJ J. vv K— XX Uli XJkXX X. X • X-J kJ
the training is with a reserve unit, or
of the
Roger Q. Gray, 57, of Killeen,
brother of T. A. Gray of Commerce,
formerly of Whitewright, died of a
heart attack at 3 p. m. Tuesday on a
ranch about sixty miles from Cotul-
la.
In the hunting party were E. T.
Doss and Geo. M. Hight of
T. A. Gray-
Hight of Dallas. Mr. Doss returned
to Whitewright Thursday morning.
Mr. Doss, T. A. Gray and Roger Q.
Gray arrived at the ranch Monday.
They were joined Tuesday by other
members of the party. Mr. Doss and
another member of the party went to
a lake. near the camp to. fish while
the late arrivals were taking a rest at
the camp. They returned to the camp
about 3 p. m. with a nice string of
fish, Mr. Doss said. Other members
of the party had left thd camp to lo-
cate stands for their deer hunt the
next morning. Soon after they left
the camp, Mr. Gray fell to the
ground, dead of a heart attack.
The body was taken to Cotulla,
where it was prepared for burial and
sent to Killeen, accompanied by
members of the hunting party. The
funeral services were to be held at
Killeen Thursday.
He is survived by his wife and son;
three brothers, J. M. Gray of Killeen,
T. A. Gray of Commerce and Wilfred
Gray of Goldthwaite; two sisters,
Mrs. Lola Davis of San Angelo and pushed to the forefront of adminis-
Miss Lucy Gray of Killeen.
W. C. Cummings, superintendent of
It was the !the Whitewright Public Schools, was
18th consecutive victory for the Ti- in Sherman Monday to arrange for
gers and their sixth game in a row‘extra seats for the Whitewright-Van
without being scored on. Lx vxxx. ^x&xxv ,A 1 h “ " "
games played this season the Tigers jinS- succeeded in
College. Mr. Cummings
PERRIN FIELD.—Chaplain (Ma-
jor) Ashley D. Jameson of White-
wright has been transferred to the U.
S. Air Force Reserve from the De-
partment of the Army Reserve.
He will receive reserve training as
desired and as approved by Head-
quarters, Twelfth Air Force. Usually
favor of issuing^ the bonds jvhile 143 i on. mobilization assignment with
regular unit near the
home.
Chaplain Jameson is of the Meth-
odist faith and was educated at Mc-
Murry College, Abilene, and SMU,
Dallas.
Both regular and reserve USAF
chaplains recently were on “loan
status” to the Air Force, but actually
assigned to the Department of the
Army. A chaplain’s service
thorized for the Air Force.
A chaplain’s service of chaplain
reservists is being developed in the
AF reserve, which has been made the
responsibility of the Continental Air
Command and further delegated to
the six numbered Air Forces under
fusng pay of $70 for a new wig. The its command in the Unted States.
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Waggoner, J. H. & Doss, Glenn. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1949, newspaper, November 17, 1949; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1354427/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Whitewright Public Library.