The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 169, Ed. 2 Thursday, December 6, 1945 Page: 1 of 16
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4
er 5. 1945
V. Lee in Win.
, which had a
daily in the El-
feet, with water,
zged nearly two
Inc. No. 1, Lee
ling below 318
nberger project
Albany on T. E.
Victory Loan Score
E Bond Quota $ 725,000.00
Wednesday E Sales 13,874.75
Total E Sales 332,212.50
(Overall Quota 2,430,000.00
VOL. LXV, NO. 169
PAY-
mpt placement with
better pay, broader
luates. Enroll nowi
4/072
Other Cities €
O. of Abilenee,
and
Bird
e all
om-
tion
s is
he Abilene Reporter ~32ems
"WITHOUT OR WITH OFFENSE TO FRIENDS OR FOES WE SKETCH YOUR WORLD EXACTLY AS IT GOES." - Byron
EVENING
FINAL
A TEXAS Duel, NEWSPAPER
ABILENE, TEXAS, THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 6, 1945 -SIXTEEN PAGES
U. S. Provides Pay Talk Wedge
By Hiking Living Cost Estimate
• WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.—(P).—The adminis-
tration provided a possible wedge, today for re-
opening some deadlocked wage disputes by
boosting its estimate of how much living costs
have increased since 1941.
Stabilization Administrator John C. Collet an-
nounced that the cost of living rise is closer to
33 percent than the previously accepted 29.5 or
30 percent. And he added that employers who
raised pay scales accordingly could use that
factor as a basis for seeking price increases.
Collet was elaborating on President Truman's
announced wage-price policy. In that declaration
a of October 30, Mr. Truman listed cost of living
•raises Among the few classes of pay boosts
which could be considered by OPA in passing on
price increases.
Neither Mr. Truman then, nor Collet last
night, offered any guarantee that OPA would
hike ceilings as a result.
Nevertheless, General Motors corporation and
the CIC-Auto Workers quickly scheduled re
sumption of their negotiations over the union's
30 percent wage increase demand. These talks,
only a few hours before Collett's announcement,
had been postponed indefiintely.
The corporation earlier had countered the
union's demand with an offer of an average 10
percent pay raise. Thia, GM said, would raise the
pay of its employes to a level 30 percent above
January, 1941. The union refused, and the com-
pany withdrew its proposal.
Collet directed government agencies dealing
with various phases of the wage-price policy to
use the new 33 percent figure in comparing the
increase in average straight time hourly earn-
ings of a worker with the advance in living
costs since January, 1941.
He said he was advised by the labor depart-
ment that 33 percent "most accurately reflects
the increase in the cost of living between those
dates."
A special presidential cost-of-living committee
headed by William H. Davis reported last spring
that 3 or 4 percent should be added to the then
estimat estimated 29.5 percent advance to take
account of poorer quality merchandise and the
disappearance of low-cost goods from the market.
Associated Press (AP)
United Press (UP) PRICE FIVE CENTS
MacOrders ■
Konoye and'
Kido to Jail
TOKYO, Dec. 6—General
MacArthur today ordered the ar-
rest of Prince Fumimaro Konoye,
three times premier of Japan;
Marquis Koichi Kido, who was
Emperor Hirohito's right hand
man throughout the war, and seven
others as war criming! suspects.
Reaching into the highest circles,
the supreme Allied commander
named as the
other seven want-
ed:
w*
Marshall Prepared
or Pearl All
low
ZONING
3------
Front, Back
Yard Rules
In Ordinance
e (This is one of a series of
articles designed to explain
terms of a zoning ordinance
proposed for Abilene. A public
hearing on the proposal, to
* which all citizens are invited,
will be held Monday evening
at 7:30 o'clock at the City Hall
by the Zoning commission.)
BARGAINING BEGINS
Motor Peace in
10 Days Hinted
DETROIT, Dec. 6.—(AP)—Hopes for settlement of the
General Motors strike were raised today as the corporation
and the CIO Uniteed Auto workers headed toward their first
wage negotiations in the 16 days of the walkout.
Neither side in the wage fight which has idled 213,000
workers offered a formal statement, but definite signs of
optimism were appearing for the first time. One report said
the there might be peace within]
Certain regulations affecting
front yards and back yards are
contained in the Abilene zoning
Ordinance recommended by - -
City Plan engineers, Koch and Fow- ten days,
ler of Dallas. Today's bargaining session, call-
The suggested regulations in- ed for 1 p. m. (CST). was arrang-
volve property use in all of the pro- ed at yesterday s meeting of union
posed zoning districts.
Todays" bargaining sesion. • V-Quofa Topped
and General" Motors officials 1 ■
Pittsburgh, attended by CIO Presihaerolare
Primary types of property use dent Philip Murray, ACHTOTO
... _ 21 - A citizens committee invited by T Wlldunuitti C
family dwellings; B—two-family the UAW-CIO to study the dispute . . . . .
dwellings: C. D. and E—boarding said jn its report today that the Shackelford 15 the seventh of the
houses multiple dwellings, hos- “full possibilities" of collective 254 Texas counties to go over its
pitals and clinics, libraries, mu- bargaining had not been exhausted, victory Loan E bond quota,
reums and other special types; F president Murray of the CIO John Sedw vick, county chairman
C-local retail: G—local business, said “all points in dispute” would reported from Albany, this morn
H—business; J andK—iindustrial be considered at today s UAW GM ing that sales had reached $86,000.
districts; L—first manufacturing meeting and Walter P. Reuther. The quota was, $85,000. He also
auto workers vice president, declar- told Lockett Shelton, sub-regional
ed that GM had agreed there would manager for the state war finance
be “no strings attached this time.” committeethat ^ over-all sales
General Motors previously had totaled $230,000. or $17,000 under
refused to negotiate other issues the over all quota.
until what it termed "illegal pick . Other counties reported success-
eting" had been stopped Such a ful in the drive were Denton,
practice, the management contend-
ed, prevented some 40.000 office
workers, in addition to 175,000
strikers, from entering the struck
in the districts include: A—one-
district; M—second manufacturing |
district.
Minimum depths of front
yards (from the property line
to the front line of the build-
ing, covered porch or covered
terrace or attached accessory
building):
A—35 feet: B. C. D. F and G—
25 feet; H and J—15 feet.
. In K L. M, and H districts no suncss, „„„, „.„.„.. ______
front yard would be required un-plants.
less the building were erected or On what terms a settlement
structurally altered for dwelling' might be reached remained the big
purposes, in which event a front question, especially in view of the
yard of not less than 15 feet in' union's demand for the 30 percent
depth would be required.
Where the fronuge on the side
of a street between two intersect-
ing streets is zoned for two classes
of districts, the set-back on the
most restricted street would apply
to the entire block. .e was
In all districts where buildings tions
are erected or structurally altered
for dwelling purposes there would
be a rear yard having a depth of
not less than 20 percent of the
depth of the lot, provided the rear
Brooks, Sutton, Irion, Sterling and
Menard.
San Angelo and Tom Green
county had another big day Wed-
nesday and this morning stood
only $43,000. under the $685,000
E bond quota. C. W. Meadows,
county chairman, reported
_______________________,_____Howard county expected to get
increase above present wage lev over Thursday, said Ted Groebl,
els and within the present price drive chairman at Big, Spring as
structure.
he stopped here briefly Wednes-
day afternoon.
E bond sales in Taylor county.
Vice Adm. Ta-
| kuo Godo, who
was unofficial
envoy to Ger-
many to present
Japan's side of
the China inci-
dent, also former
cabinet member.
Shigeo Odate,
long time politico-
economist
KONOYE Taketors Ogata,
vice-president of the Tokyo news-
paper Asahi and a foremost Japa
nose journalist.
Viscount Masatoshi Okochi, in-
dustrialist.
Lt. Gen. Hiroshi Oshima who had
been Japanese ambassador to Ber-
3
’Planes Rounded
Up for Defense
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.—(PP)—General George C. Mar-
shall tesitfied today that early in 1941 he decided "to rob
practically all combat pursuit squadrons in the United States
of most of their P-36 planes" for the defense of Hawaii.
Marshall, then chief of staff of the Army, also told a
congressional committee investigating the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor four years ago that he knew of no commit-
ment by President Roosevelt for the United States to go
to war before it was attacked.
The matter of sending additional pursuit planes to Ha-
waii was brought up by committee Counsel William D.
Mitchell.
NAMED BY HURLEY—Maj. Gen. Patrick J. Hurley said Mitchell recalled an Army-Navy department agreement
in early 1941 that attack from ~
that Joohn S. Service (left), career diplomat assigned to Gen.
Joseph W. Stillwell in China, proposed in October, 1944. that
the Chiang Kai Shek government be allowed to collapse.
Hurley said also that George Atcheson, Jr., (right) former
counselor at the Chungking embassy, sought to ‘"destroy"]
the Chinese Nationalist government by getting lend-lease -
arms for Chinese Communists. Atcheson. who now is diplo- me pacific ourrost e ne so
matic adviser to General MacArthur, promised to reply to
See ZONING. Pg. 8, Col. 6
Nevada Man Killed
In Highway Collision
BALLINGER, Dec. «.—(Spl.)-
Flay W. Snyder, 54. of Hawthorne,
Nev. was killed instantly Tuesday
afternoon about 1 o’clock when
his car, a 1942 Chevrolet sedan, was
struck by a Pontiac driven by Mrs.
Oliver Aver of Ballinger on the
highway just west of Rowena. The
Snyders were enroute to visit a
daughter, Mrs Ralph Kelly, of
Iraan.
Mrs. Snyder was taken to a local
hospital suffering from shock, a
Sroken right ankle, and other cuts
and fractures.
Mrs. Aver and their two and a
half year old son were uninjured.
Both cars were considerably dam-
aged.
Mr Snyder’s body was taken to
the Agnew funeral home in Ballin-
ger.
THE WEATHER
9 usper or CoMMERcE
WEATHER BUREAU
ABILENE AND VICINITY: Fair this
afternoon, tonight and Friday, some-
what cooler tonight, lowest temperature
about XI degrees.
EAST TEXAS Partly cloudy this af-
ternoon, tonight and Friday, warmer in
southeast, colder In northwest, lowest
temperatures 28-34 in northwest portion
tonight, colder in north portion Friday.
Moderate southerly winds on the coast.
WEST TEXAS: Fair this afternoon, to-
night and Friday: colder in Fenhandle
South Plains, and KI Paso area tonight
with lowest temperatures 24-28 in Fan-
handle and South Plains and near 33 in
P Paso area
Maximum temperature yesterday. 64
degrees. Minimum temperature this
morning 38 degrees.
• Temperatures
1 Thur-Wed Wed-Tues
A AM Hour PM
431 1 60 46
VICTORY
. LOAN
■ Sunrise this
Sunset last 1
30 7 4839
38 a 40-36
46 9 47—33
50 10 4032
54 11 48—32
w-36 12 47—32
morning 7:26.
night: 5.34.
Reuther, speaking at a strikers' E bond sales in Taylor county,
rally at Buffalo last night, said he had reached only $345,562.85. The
was “happy to report" that negotia- quota is $725,000.
tions were being resumed, but he • • •
gave no indication that anything STAMFORD. Dec 8. — (Spl )—
would be conceded in the wage bat- Jones county has reached approx
tle imately 75 percent of its quota in
Reuther and other UAW leaders Series E bonds. A C. Humphrey.
have expressed the opinion that county chairman, said Wednesday
any concessions gained from Gen night.
eral Motors—largest of the auto Sumford area, averaging 78
industry’s "Big Three" —are virtual percent, lacking $38,000 in com
ly won for the entire industry. pleting the Series E quota.
For this reason, a union spokes
man said, some 450 presidents and Bradshaw community has exceed-
stewards of Chrysler corporation ed its Victory War Bonds quota.
locals voted here last night to con Mrs Lovey Bailey. Bradshaw
tinue work "for three months, if postmistress, reported that on Dec.
necessary" despite a breakdown in 4 she issued 32 $500 bonds, three
contract negotiations. $200, one $100 and three $25 ser- [
Mrs. Lovey Bailey, Bradshaw
lin since 1938 and arrived in Japan
only today.
Count Tadamasu Sakai, member
of the house of peers.
Yarichiro Sums, long time diplo-
mat: formerly councillor of the
Japanese embassy in Washington.
Konoye, who was premier at the__________________________
time of the China incident and Hurley Friday, (AP Wirephoto),
held the post the last time just be-
fore Pearl Harbor, when he was CESSION STOP
succeeded by Hideki Tojo, has been ED9ION BIUAMT
one of the most talked about men
in post war Japan. Recently he had
been reported active in revision
of the constitution and had as-
serted he was doing the work at
the request of MacArthur although
MacArthur denied this.
He is a member of the Japanese
royal family.
Kido, who held the recently abol-
ished post of keeper of the privy
seal, was Emperor Hirohito’s clos-
est adviser and had helped elevate
to office such premiers as Tojo.
. The zr.'ss order me only iany" maf beint nentson malnsadetested America policies T| wsrsL wow or
shaken by another Deen—“destroved”and—"defeated‘ Amer-ithe near eastern country, - commitment by the President or
deeply shaken another list of ican policy in Iran. He and Chairman Connally (D- anyone else bv which the United
war criminal suspects which includ- Acheson now is undersecretary Texas) shouted back and forth at states was committed to engage
ed high Japanese financial, mili-of state, No. 1 man under Secre- each other before the testimony without being attacke.80.
tary and political leaders, includ- tary Byrnes. He formerly was an went into the record. 10 ANrS 1° HOPE MARSHA re.
ing Prince Morisama Nashimoto. -------------------------------. . . plied, sir 1 did not Marshall re- |
The white-mustached ex-diplo-P "Did these conferences
mat objected to Connallys ques-any commitment for the United But 'h' report did say that •
tioning and demanded to know if States to to war?” reduction in force at the atomic
the Texas Senator wanted to testi- #No cix 5 Marshall answered bomb project near Knoxville” to
fy in place of him. phatically 1 didn’t interpret them counted for the principal increase
Connelly admonished him the as such They were intended to in unemployment in the area
hearing was going to be conducted deal only with possible eventual- The USES report dealt with em-
in courtesy and repeated, referring ities."ployment conditions in 133 of the
to Hurley s assertions about Iran: , . . . nation s principal industrial areas,
"Who was it?" Simultaneously with Marshall’s with a total population of nearly
"All right. Hurley answered appearance, the committee receiv-1 70,000,000, persons.
_______________ed documents showing that months Ten of the 11 areas reported in-
" What did he do?” Connally ask-before the Japanese attack on Pearl creased, joblessness while in one
' Harbor he had told Lt. Gen. Wal- — Grand Rapids, Mich.—employ-
| gether today. | “I prefer to submit the docu- ter Short. Army commander there, ment turned upward as reconver-
Fourteen gifts totaling $119.50 ments." Hurley said of the danger from a surprise air >lon spurted ahead.
. : ."A document is only a repeti an submarine raid. In letters to p n
Christmas cheer fund to $730. just tion of fact." Connally observed Short from February to October. FOSE VrTICe pen
Eastern l under the hall-way mark toward If you know, your testimony is as 1941, he also cautioned that the Saturday Altamoon
' -----_ ’ good as a document. Do you know first six hours of hostilities would peruregy AIernoon
Admittance to the Goodfellow what he did” be the most critical period for the c m
------------... Pacific bastion The Abilene post office will be
Hurler hesitated. ... open Saturday afternoon to acco-
food and other things needed The -I don’t want to do this." Lt, Gen Leonard T Gerow, head modate mailing of Christmas par-
public will be given during the well don’t” Connally snapped of the war plans division in 1941 cels. Postmaster o A. Hale said
coming week detailed suggestions Hurley said: told the committee dramatically today-.,
as to the things most needed. | "I can do it I’m not bluffing All yesterday: Mr. Hale, is urging Abilenians to
- • • • right, here she goes. Square your- “If there is any war department mail Christmas parcels now to in-
New Goodfellow gifts are: self"" responsibility for failure to send sure delivery by Christmas. He sug-
$ 2 00 Then Hurley launched into a de additional warnings to General gests marking the packages "Do
5.00 scription of the circumstances sur- Short, it must fall on the war plans not open until Christmas.
1.00 rounding the writing and issuing of division and as chief of the divi-
10.00 the American British-Russian dec- sion at that time. 1 accept the 1
2.00 laration at Tehran regarding Iran responsibility."
2.00 When he completed that portion Gerow’s testimony was on the ThA
5.00 of his testimony the senators ap- point that Lt. Gen. Walter C Short se
peared at the connection with Ach had put into effect only a "sabo-
eson, but no one questioned him tage and not a full alert at Pearl 6
immediately on the point. Harbor in response to a
Meanwhile Artemus L. Gates, from Marshall
Navy undersecretary , paid his sec- " . J
ond call on President Truman Logan Named to
since his return from a trip which A I n A
included a tour of China He Control Board
wouldn’t talk about the confer AUSTIN. Dec 6.——Hall H
ence. Logan of College Station was nam-
======= ed today by Gov. Coke R Steven-
son to replace Harry Knox as a
1 a member of the state board of con-
T trol. Knox’term expires Dec. 31..
the air was Pearl Harbor's No.
1 danger.
As a result of that, Marshall
said, he sought "to see what rad-
ical measures might be taken to
the Pacific outpost.
"I made the decision," he said.
"to rob practically all combat pur-
suit squadrons in the United States
of most of their P-36 planes.
Thirty P-36's were rounded up.
he recalled, leaving most fighter
squadrons in the United States
with three P-36's each. Marshall
said the 30 with the pursuit planes
already in Hawaii, brought the total
to 50.
I Mitchell questioned Marshall at
length about the pre-war Allied
conferences, apparently in an ef-
fort to clear up contentions that
the United States was committed
Hurley Shouts U. S. Policy
In Iran 'Licked' by Acheson
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.- I assistant secretary. to war before the Japanese struck
Maj. Gen. Patrick J. Hurley shout Hurley, who resigned, last week Hawaii.
ed in a stormy session of the Sen as ambassador to China did not ' • • «
ate foreign relations committee explain immediately how Acheson Mitchell asked. “
Acheson hadhad defeated American policies in *__" ______
Navy Tug Reaches Goodfellow Kids
Drifting Transport CL 7
Carrying Baird 61 Show Saturday
NEW YORK. Dec. 6.—P—-A While Wally Akin of the Para
Navy rescue tug has reached the mount theater announced the an- ____.._„„ ______. ___...
drifting troop transport Henry nual Goodfellow matinee for chil- grimly. "It was Dean Acheson.”
Ward Beecher, the Navy said to-dren for 10 a. m. Saturday. Dec 15.
day, and has taken the helpless Goodfellows were really getting to- ed.
ship in tow. eether todav.
| The Beecher has been rolling in ____________. .
heavy seas since Tuesday when she received over night brought the
lost -her single propeller. * ■ 4 4 *2ae - -
Headquarters of the 1______
SeafFrontier made no mention of the $1,500 goal,
the progress of rescue efforts for
a second ship in distress, the mer matinee will be by presentation for
chantman George W. McCrar, the Goodfellow fund of articles of
which radioed it had boiler trou-
ble 900 miles off Bermuda.
• • •
Thunderbirds to Mrs Bailey reported total sold
T: E at Bradshaw reached $16,775, more
Disband Friday than the quota she said
BROWNWOOD, Dec. 6.—P)—------------------------
The 45th (Thunderbird) division is Manager Named
scheduled to be officially inactivat- 3
ed here at midnight tomorrow. 1 DALLAS. Dec. 6.-(PP)—The Dal-
The veteran unit fought beside las city council appointed V. K
her sister division, the 36th, st Sal-Smitham city manager yesterday
erno to the last days of the Nazi after he had served nearly five
in Nuremberg and Munich, years as acting city manager
Among the troops aboard the
Beecher is Joe A. Clark, former
Abilene high school student and
brother of three Abilene women,
1 Mrs W D. Walden, 1457 Cotton Mrs. F. E Haynes ........
I wood; Mrs I. W Flippin, 1541 W. Coke Mingus ..........
1 Oak. and Mrs L. W Lindsey, L S. Munger
South 8th and Pecan. His mother, Mr. and Mrs. T. C Anderson
Mrs. Emily Clark, and two other T. B. Blain
sisters. Mrs S. C Tollett and Mrs. Mr and Mrs. Bert Chapman
Louise Skinner, live at Baird Mr and Mrs. Roy L. Mills.
Mrs. M P. Brady
5.00
10.00
-------------------------------Arch D Batjer
_ Abilene Altrusa Club
Escapes Bomb Mrs.J.M.Radford
Mr. snd Mrs. J. D Miracle
LONDON, Eng Dec 6.—(P—A V. L. Shiflett
Reuters dispatch from Cairo said Cage Bros & J. Floyd
a bomb was hurled today at Nahas Malcom ..............2500
Pasha, leader of the Wafdist party
and former premier of Egypt, but
that he escaped injury.
TOTAL.
Previously acknowledged
GRAND TOTAL
5.00
25 00
1250
1000
$119.50
$610.50
$730.00
Iran Premier Not
, Planning to Quit
* TEHRAN. Dec. 6.—P—Iranian
Premier Ibrahim Hakimi denied1
| today he had any intention of re-
signing and asserted his intention
of continuing attempts to settle
I the problem of Azerbaijan prov-
ince. where the government!
charges separatists are agitating
for independence
Reports were widespread during!
the past week that the premier
would resign because of the situa-
tion in the northwest province,
and that he would be succeeded by
a government which would favor
the views of the Soviet union,
whose frontier borders Azerbai-
Jan
VETERANS’ JOBS
Harbor in response to
message
Atomic Bomb
Output Pared
At Oak Ridge
WASHINGTON, Dec.. 6.-P -
The United States is cutting pro-
duction of atomic bomb materials
in at least one of the key plants
where the revolutionary weapon
was developed.
This was disclosed in a routine
official report on job conditions
made public today by the U. S.
Employment service.
The report said:
"Declining volume in the pro-
duction of atomic bor . mate ials
at Oak Ridge, Tenn e rised a Alop
in employment (during November)
in the Knoxville area and reduced
its classification from one of strin-
gent labor demand to one of bal-
anced supply.
No figures were given for eith-
er the plant or the area.
@T Y DX2 030
BUY Kuatma SEALS
FROM ARMY CIRCUIT
Star Spangled Circus Booked
For Week Showing in Abilene
Benny Fox and his Star Span-ftraction presented at the camp,
gled Circus, a collection of inter-
nationally famous circus acts which
| has played to more than 8 000.000
| service men in the United States
and Europe, has been booked for
a civilian engagement in Abilene
| under the sponsorship of the Clay
ton M Leach post. Veterans of
Foreign Wars. Burl Lassetter, for
mer 36th Division major and gen-
eral chairman for the event, has
Soon after the engagement there,
the group went to the European
theater for a four months tour, and
then detached several individual
acts for presentation in the Pacific
theater.
The show presents all the attrac-
tions of the worlds greatest cir-
cuses, Benny Fox commented, but
announced.
The show, w hich has brought let
we use only one ring at a time so
that everyone gets a chance to see
(Apply to USES. 1141 North ' H UR L F. Y AS WITNESS- arne snow, which has brought let eyei is only because we have been
1 2nd). Patrick J. Hurley, recently re- ters of high recommendation from playing to army camps that such
signed U. S. ambassador to many army generals, will play a a collection of outstanding talent is
China tells Senate forei-n re. week’s engagement in the Behrens available in one group." Fox said.
A tens senate re auditorium at Hardin-Simmons uni We are just taking a week off
lations committee hearing versity, wjth both afternoon and from our army schedule to play
that he would not have quit night performances, except Sunday in Abilene, then we will go back to
his post had Secretary of Dec 26 through Jan. 2, and a mid touring the camps."
State Jamipe F Rrrnec made fight show on New Years eve Fox holds a commission as a ma-
State Pames onpi mass Booked at Camp Berkeley in jor with army special services, and
clear U: S. policy in the Far July 1944. the circus was rated has played only military shows for
East. (AP Wirephoto). / I highest of any Special Service at - the past four years.
5S Veterans placed since
Jan. 1, 1944
2098
8
28
131
EX PARATROOPERS TRIPLETS TAKE TO AIR—Sgt. Richard F O’Brien, discharged Veterans placed yesterday
after combat duty with the 503rd paratroopers, faced the problem of getting his triplets. Interviewed yesterday
10 weeks old, home to Dufur, Ore., from the Ft. Benning hospital. Naturally, he thought of Referred yesierday
planes. Here they are as the plane reached Minneapolis: Mrs. O’Brien (left) and Jerry: O'- Routed to other agencies
Brien and Jo Anne: O’Brien’s sister, Miss Carol, and Jackie; NWA Stewardess Terry Mac yesterday ...........
Arthur, who helped out, (AP Wirephoto). I l ' Jobs listed ........ 70
13
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 169, Ed. 2 Thursday, December 6, 1945, newspaper, December 6, 1945; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1636657/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.