The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 30, Ed. 2 Monday, September 6, 1948 Page: 2 of 12
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2 THE ABILENE, TEXAS, REPORTER-NEWS
Abilene, Texas, Monday gvening, September 6, 1948
Reporter-Haws Radio Log
Texan Responsible for Pilots’
Safely on Big Navy Carrier
N Where to tune in: KRBC, Abilene, ABC-TSN, 1450 KC;
KRBCFM, Abilene, 96.9 Mc., channel 245; KWKC, Abilene,
MBS-LSC, 1840 KC; KRLD, Dallas, CBS, 1080 KC, WFAA.
Dallas-WBAP. Fort Worth, NBC, «20 KC; KDWT, Stamford,
Mutual, 1400 KC: KRUN, Ballinger, Mutual, 1400 KC: KSTA.
Coleman, 1000 KC; KXOX, Sweetwater, Mutual. 1240 KC.
— MONDAY EVENING
is iter
FoWr-Fulton Lewis
WhX Supper as *
ES:7 Roundup
W. Kern Tips
imer Davis
wood Serenade
Smith
SMSE.
y Club
yHoward
: FL
3 raylor
T°K.ST.
tas
KRBC-Get Rich Quick
KRBCPM-Get Rich Quick
1782 N.S2 ."Enebook
KRLD-Talent Scouts
KDWT-Hood’s Casebook
WFAA-Firestone
KRUN-Hilbilly Parade
8:00
KRBC-Blaine’s Place
keRMILab
KRLD-Lux Theater
KXOX-Johnson Family
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Place
ene Baseball
al Medicine
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fude
KRBS
MRoundup
KRBC Sound Off
2u2tt,MSen
KRLD-Inner Sanctum
KRUN Cowboy Jamboree
Mes
KRBC Sound off
#*RCYE.C. Wi show
204 1222.
KRUN-Encore Time
8:30
KRBC Stars in the Night
a—TC-Quiet Please
WEce.
8:S
KRBC-Stars in the Night
KRBCFM-Abilene Baseball
KWKC-Quiet Please
KRLD-Lux Theater
*2 RIY *
KDWT-Qulet Please
KRUN-Star Spotlight
9:00___________
KRBC-Concert Time
KRBCFM-Jan Garber
KENSAL A Muntins
KXOX-F King & nting
WFAA-Contented Hour
KDWT-Fhing & H'ting
KRUN-Concert Hall
km
ov Jamboree
ten Quick
t Rich Quick
Casebook
M
Casebook
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9:18
A-Cor
9:0
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g & Hunting
s & Hunting
ated Hour
KWKC-Starlight Journey
KRLD-Freddie Martin
KDWT-Dance Orch.
KRUN-Hood's Casebook
WFAA-Concert Hour
KXOX-Sec. of Labor
9:46
KRBC-ABC Roundup
KRBCFM-Abilene Baseball
KXOX Dance Orch
KWKC-Moon Dreams
KRLD-Freddie Martin
WFAA-Coneert Hour
KDWT-News
KRUN-Hood's Casebook
10m0
KRBC-News
KRSBCFM Sign Off
KWKC-News by Air
KRLD World At Large
the
a 10:15
gone'ssor dune
KRLD-Jimmy Fiddler
KXOX-Dance Orch.
WBAP-Show Tune Time
KRUN Sign on
Kunc deme fog Thought
Eno mereuo.cEinde
WFAA-Night Serenade
10:45
KRBC-Dance Orch.
KWKC-Orch.-News
KRLD-Hillybilly Parade
KXOX-Dance Orch.
WFAA-Night Serenade
11:00
KRBC-News - Orch.
KWKC-Dance Orch.
Atop aurow Parade
WrAA-News: Ranchboys
. 11:15
*
WFAA-Cox's Ranchboys
11:50
KRBC Dance Orch.
KWKC-Dance Orch. ..
WAR Oiuncrore. o k
KRBC Music-News
ME
Orch.
HESAPSEESEeban euac Nrrsior
TUESDAY MORNING
.ontmwininnce ma t u ma unit onr. 96
-Why, yes, I did get my own breakfast this morning!
How did you know?"
Jersey Drivers
Join Truck Strike
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Neighbo
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Cora-wester Roundup
CABC-Foy wills
CaLD mamry 9
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Review
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Neighbor
Devotional
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EEY2AA Su Club
KDWT Bob Poole
KRLD-Coffee Carnival
KRUN-Tune Shop
KXOX-Musical Interlude
WBAP-Young Dr Malone
KSTA-Merne-Mix-up
KWKC-H maker’s Housepar
9:00
EBSW ITiRo
KDWT-Cecil Brown
KRLD-Coffee Carnival
ans
EEC NS 2,$.u*or,
KDWT Vocal Varieties
KRL D-Musical Album
KRUN-Meet the Bands
KXOX-Devotional
M
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WBAP-Life Beautiful
EWAE'PILine Parade
10:18 •
KABC-This and That
KRBC-FM-H'wood B'fast
KDWT-Tell Your Neighbor
KRLD-Arthur Godfrey
KRUN-News Summary
KXOX-Tell Your Neighbor
WBAP Road of Life
Kwkc hens % Listen
------10:30--
KRBC-Ted Malone
KRBC-FM-Ted Malone
KDWT-Heart's De sire
KRLD-Grand Slam
KRUN-Musical Roundup
KXOX-Heart's Desire
KSTA-Moods in Music
WFAA-Jack Berch
KWKC-Heart's Desire
10145
EBSTronoE . Corner
KDWT-Heart's Desire
EUR STELTET Roundup
KXOX Heart's Desire
kwkc hearts Desire
11:00
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Knox hel npornood News
M= .
—NEW YORK, Sept. 6. W—The
crippling five-day-old truck strike
spread today when 4,300 drivers
and helpers to metropolitan North
Jersey joined the 10,000 already out
in New York City.
Members of local 478 of the
AFL’s International Brotherhood of
Teamsters-New Jersey’s largest
local—went on strike officially at
12:01 a. m. (Eastern Daylight
Time).
Local 478, with headquarters in
Newark, N. J., Joined local 807,
New York City’s largest, whose
members have been on strike since
Wednesday to a contract dispute
over pay and other union demands.
With today a holiday, the full im-
pact of the spread of the strike
will not be felt until tomorrow.
Fears heightened that there
would be a general tieup of the
metropolitan area’s supply lines,
already greatly slowed.
Many trucks driven by members
of smaller non-striking New York
City union locals have continued to
roll since Wednesday.
Tha North Jersey walkout was
Ave"
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KRBCFM-Fiesta Time
KDWT-Rhythm Makers
KRLD-Helen Trent
KRUN-Listen ___
KXOX-Rhythm at Random
zrefhntt"Enoes
KWKC-News by Air
11:48
WEE
KXOXned niver Dave
WFAA-Golden Gate Quarte
KSTA-Devotional .___
K WKC Showtime from H'w
Top Atomic
Scientist Dies
PASADENA, Calif., Sept.-6 -
One of the nation’s top atomic
scientists. Dr. Richard C. Tolman,
67, died yesterday of pneumonia.
Dr Tolman, a faculty member of
the California Institute of Techno-
logy, was scientific advisor to the
United States delegation to the
United Nations Atomic Energy
Commission.
During the war he acted as advis-
or to Maj. Gen. Leslie R Groves,
who headed the Manhattan pro-
ject which developed the atomic
bomb. He also was scientific ad-
visor to Bernard M. Baruch in the
advisory group tor world control of
atomic energy
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
020
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KWKC Two-Ton Tony Bake
KSTA Jan Garber
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KRUN-La Hora Mexicans
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KWKC Request Club
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KRBCFM-Eddie Lemar
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KRL.D. Pro Call
KXOX-All Request Hour
WFAA-Front Page Farrell
KSTA Juke Box Review
KWKC Request Club
KABC Fun House
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Mason
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By TEX EASLEY
ABOARD THE USS PHILIP-
PINE SEA, Sept. 6. ®---A Texan
is the one man more directly re-
sponsible than any other individual
for the safety of the pilots who op-
erate from this modern 35,000-ton
aircraft carrier.
He is Commander S. 8. Searcy,
Jr., M. of San Antonio. He ans-
wers directly to the skipper. Capt.
John L. Pratt.
His title is that of Air Officer.
Under him come the men who guide
the planes for takeoffs and land-
ings. service them end make any
necesary repairs.
One of the highlights of these
present training operations la the
North Atlantic off the New Eng-
land coast occurred when fighter
planes snd torpedo bombers flew
150 miles to sea from a Rhode Is-
land base to land In total darkness.
A British Air Mission official was
ECA Loans
Are Lagging
on board to watch the latest de-
velopment in American "Carrier
Control Approach" operations. Like
the Air Force "Ground Control Ap-
proach." the CCA can bring the
aircraft in when visibility is at a
minimum. And a carrier deck is
a pretty small target.
It was a tense moment as the
first plane approached, banked
sharply and raced toward the stern
of the Philippine Sea. Her flight
deck is 870 feet long and 83 feet
wide. She was plowing ahead
through the waves at 32 miles per
hour.
Seconds before the pilot made a
sharp descending bank the faint
landing lights that outline the dark
switched on.
You held your breath as he
roared down over the stern and cut
his motor. The tires went whop,
and the lines that stretch across the
deck ss a barrier caught a book
which hangs down from the tail.
FAST ACTION
Instantly the lights again were
out.
And in a flash a dozen men
leaped up on the deck from the cat-
walk which hangs over the sides
of the ship, unfastened the line
from the tall hook, and pushed the
aircraft on up the deck out of the
DOG GONE UP TREE
Cats Can Be Glad This
Pooch Doesn’t Hate ’Em
VANCOUVER, Wash . Sept. 4
MI—It’s a good thing (for cats,
that to) that the Fred Laws’ white
wire-haired terrier, Blackie, is
broad-minded about cats. Blackle
can climb trees.
Blackie, says his master, has
been climbing trees for seven and
a half of his present nine years.
He entertains picnics and private
family gatherings, upon request,
by retrieving objects that Laws
places 15 to 80 feet up.
Not that the agile and eager
little dog can make entirely like
a squirrel. He isn’t built quite
that way. But if the first branch
or crotch is low enough so that a
fellow csn reach it by running like
heck and then sort of bounding-
scrambling up the trunk, he’s up.
And of course a tree with
branches spaced widely apart up
the trunk stymies him. He has be-
come proficient, however, st ne-
gotiating precarious toeholds,
canine Tarzan. Laws says. He just
Blackie wssn't trained to be a
took to climbing when he was a
pup.
His aerial adventures have not
been without incident, because
when Blackie misses there isn't
sny landing net. So far, though
TI
By HAM
voted by the truckmen yesterday,
and a union spokesman said there
waa little propeet of early settle-
ment
Smaller union locals la New Jer-
sey msy follow the lead of Local
478 la walking out
Stocks have been dwindling In
many New York City stores—es-
pecially food outlets. Milk deliver-
ies were endangered by a tieup of
trucking fiber containers. Wide-
spread store closings were feared.
The Newark teamsters demand-
ed a wage increase of 15 cento an
hour, plus any additional amount
that might be won by the striking
New York local.
Other Newark demands includ-
ed sick and accident insurance pro-
viding $25 weekly for a maximum
of 26 weeks, and a contract clause
'providing that only Local 478 driv-
ers pick up snd deliver within a
35-mile radius of Newark, New
Jersey's largest city
Leo Carlin, president of Local
478 which is setting the negotia-
tions pattern for smaller New Jer-
sey teamsters locals, said yester-
day "It may take four, five or six
weeks to straighten this out."
Carlin said he had instructed hla
local's members to report outside
their garages tomorrow morning.
He declined to tell newsmen whe-
ther the purpose was picketing.
In the New York City dispute,
the employers were expected to re-
ject formally tomorrow the de-
mands of Local 807‘s membership
for a wage increase of 25 cents
sn hour, an employer-firnced
health and welfare fund and other
benefits.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6. (P)—The
recovery program enters its sixth
month with foreign gifts rising
rapidly snd repayable loans lag-
ging far behind schedule, an
Economic Cooperation Administra-
tion report showed Sunday.
The report listed $1,379,856,688
(B) in approved recovery grants
for Europe and China. The half-
year program calls for dollar
grants of $2,000,000,000 (B) for Eu-
rope alone, plus $50,000,000 (M) in
loans.
If the recent rate of approvals—
shout $19,000,000 <M> a day, seven
days a week—is stopped up slight-
ly, ECA might hit its half-year
target for granta.
In the last few days shipments
approved but not shown on the new
weekly report have boosted the to-
tal of outright grants above $1,400,-
000,000 (B).
Officials say September will be
a "heavy month.”
However, unless the log-Jam to
lending la broken, there seems
small chance the ECA can hit its
half-billion-dollar target for loans.
Only one loan has been approv-
ed. It to a $2,300,000 (M) fisheries
credit to Iceland.
"A this took about 30 seconds.
he hasn’t broken any bones or his WOOPS: Blackie Goes up Fast,
enthusiasm. Laws sometimes has__________________________
to lend a hand on the way down, if he has placed the object he
Down came the next plane. The
third craft slipped snd was waved
off for another try ... the signals
given by a man in a suit with a
fluorescent lighting arrangement
that makes him appear like a gro-
tesque neon sign. ..
Probably the most impressive
thing about all this landlag .and
launching from a carrier, both day —ores , tret, thrtl
and night flights is the team work. Queen mother of, three three:
And on this carrijer it is due to month r old lion cubs, died, at the
the keen admiration the men have Fair Park Zoo Friday night. She
for Commander Searcy. Himself a had been uL for about three week:
pilot, he hover gets ruffled and
enlisted men under him say he is
as friendly and democratic as they
Lion Dies, 3
Cubs Orphaned
wants his pet to retrieve in a diffi-
cuult spot, but mostly Blackle gets
down on his own.
Of the four highest priced year-
ling race horses—New Broom, Hus-
tele On, Pericles and Broadway
Limited-only Pericles ever won a
race, and that was an obscure
contest for four-year-olds. Hustle
On never went to the post, a
RADIO
DAY BY DAY
Actor’s Daughter
Dies of Polio -
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 6. un—The
daughter of Actor Reginal Denny,
Mrs Barbers Denny Simmons, 32,
became the 57th poliomyelitis vic-
tim to die in the current Los Ange-
les County epidemic.
Mrs Simmons, wife of James W
Simmons, airline publicist, died
yesterday at General Hospital,
where she had been a patient far
two weeks.
She had been suffering from bul-
bar polio and had been la an iron
lung.
Two other prominent infantile
paralysis patients. Curtis (Buzzie)
Boettiger, 18. grandson of the late
President Roosevelt, and Will Fow-
ler, 4 grandson of Author Gene
Fowler, are improved. Will's moth-
er. Mrs. Beverly Fowler, stoe to a
polio patient and is reported Im-
proving
There have been 1.816 polio eas-
es in the county this year.
NEW YORK Septi 8. (P)—Broad-
casts tonight: NBC-7 First Plane
Quartet: 8 Voorhees Concert, Bidu
Sayao guest; 8 Contested Concert;
9:30 Radio City Playhouse “King
of the Moon.”
CBS — 6:15 Jack Smith Show;
7:30 Godfrey Talent Scouts: Wm.
Powell in “Mr. Peabody snd the
Mermaid; "6 My Friend Irma.”
ABC —7 Mark Warnow Sound-
off, 7:30 Rex Maupin’s Stars in
the Night, 8:30 Get Rich Quick;
9:30 Curt Massey Show,
MBS-7 The Falcon: 7:30 Greg-
ory Hood Casebook: 8:30 Quiet
Please. -
Tuesday Items: NBC— 10:50 a.
m Jack Berth Show; J p. m.
Double or Nothing; 4:45 Front
Page Farrell; 4 Sammy Kaye
Club; 8:80 CaU the Police . . .
CBS—12:30 Young Doc Malone;
Party; 5:15 Quincy Howe Con-
science; 6:30 Chib Crosby; 8 We
the People . ABC-10:45 a. m.
Walter Kiernans hKorner; 1:30 p.
m. Bride and Groom; 3:30 Treas-
ury Band, I Youth Aska the Gov-
ernment; 8 45 Summer Serenade
. , MBS—11 a. m. Kate Smith’s
Half-Hour;'! p.m Queen for a
Day; 4 Children’s Hour; 7:30 De-
tective Yarn; 9:30 Dance Time.
Famed Orchestra
Owner Killed When
Auto Strikes Tree
MILLIS. Mass., Sept. f un—Jack
Marshard, who with his brother
was agent and part-owner of many
nationally-known orchestras, was
killed early Sunday morning when
his automobile crashed into a tree.
Marshard died en route to a hos-
pital shortly after his csr ersshed.
He was on his way home after
directing one of the many Mar-
shard Brothers' bands in Man-
chester.
The IB-year-old. orchestra leader
and his brother Harry partly-own-
ed such dance bands as those led
by Vaughn Munroe, Larry Green,
Jack Edwards, snd Ranny Weeks
The two brothers also either owned
or were part owners of many night
clubs to the east.
Their orchestras played at many
society engagements On several
occasions Jack led one of the bands
at functions in the White House
while Franklin D. Roosevelt was
president.
As youths, Jack and Harry, the
sons of an orcbeatra leader and
composers, played in a band which
included Pianist Eddie Duchin snd
Rudy Vallee.
Both entered the Army at the
start of World War II and were
discharged as majors.
Survivors include his widow and
two children, one three and a half
years old and the other only two
weeks.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday.
come.
Texas is well represented smong
the enlisted men of the Philippine
Sea, too.
Up on an anti-aircraft station
shortly before dusk, I encountered
a young man who pointed to some
looping porpoises off the starboard
saide.
‘‘I saw three of those in a pool
in a man's yard once,” he said.
"That was down in my home-
town in Texas."
He identified himself then as
Charles Peters of Eddinburg, and
says he’s going back to the Rio
Grande Valley some day to live.
On duty in the same part of the
ship with him were Frank Coon of
Orange and Dail Dunlap of Ro-
chester.
Earlier in the day on hangar
deck I encountered Machinist Mate
Louis G. Di Iroio of Hempstead.
He's been in ths Navy 7 years and
was aboard the carrier Enterprise
when it wss bombed in the Pacif-
R. J. Harrell of Dallas elec-
tronics technician, snd A. L. Sim-
mons of Amarillo, engineer, also
were aboard the carrier.
and had refused to eat. Zookeeper
J. B. Burna said. He said he be-
lieved she suffered from sore
mouth.
They’re Back!
"A last request is a last request. But get right back
here M soon as you’ve had one of Leslie’s Fried
Chickens.”
CHICKEN "
2201South First.
SHACK
Phone 20391
3 Die as Light
Plane Crashes
In San Antonio
SAN ANTONIO. Sept. & Ufa-
Three persons perished Sundsy
when a light plane crashed in
flames at Roosevelt Ave. and
Military Drive. -
Police listed the dead as: Dick
Armstrong. 55; Mrs. Armstrong,
28; Lucy Ruis. IT, Houston, visiting
her uncle snd sunt. Mrs. snd Mrs.
C Afonso. •
According to witnesses, the
plane, s Piper Cub Cruiser, took
off from Mission Airport shout 8:-
80 p.m., circled south of the field,
foot altitude and dived 500 feet to
the ground.
The plane creaked into the Pat-
tern Machinery Co. owned by Sam
D Patton, setting the building
afire.
Queen was 18 - to - 20 years old
and had been in the Fair Park Zoo
about 12 years, Burns said. She has.
had 18 cubs in her Fair Park his-
tory.
The three cubs left are just be-
ginning to eat and Burns believed
that they can be raised.
Grand Jury Called
For 9 a.m. Tuesday
Judge J. R. Black of 424 Dis-
trict Court said today the grand
jury has been called for 9 a. m.
Tuesday for opening of his court's
new term.
The docket will be called at 10
a. m. Tuesday.
Bible Conference
Faculty Completed
With the appointment of Rev.
A. R. Posey of the First Baptist
Church of Hamlin, and Dr. Ray
Summers of the Southwestern
Baptist Theological Seminary .the
faculty for the Hardin - Simmons
University Bible Conference is
complete, according to President
Rupert N. Richardson. The con-
ference will be held on the cam-
pus Feb. 7, 8, and 9.
T E X A S
LAST DAY
' (7.
Kouak Flash 620 •
Only $10.50 (plus tax)
222
Phone 2-1722
1124 N. 2nd
Abilene
M South 14th
Flmwood
= SKYLINE DRIVE-IN
INDIVIDUAL 'INA-CAS' SPEAKERS
7:45 • Two Shows • 9:45
LABOR DAY FROLICS
waa "
...%)
6 Featuring....
- EDGAR BERGEN
) DUMA# SHORE
ondta m iko laooncrn’
TECHNICOLOR
Migrant Labor
Problem Studied
SNYDER. Sept. E (RNS)-L. O.
Connally of Big Spring, district
supervisor for the Texas Employ-
ment Commission, discussed the
migrant labor situation in Scurry
County st ■ meeting Fridsy even-
ing of the Chamber of Commerce
Board of Directors.
Coanally explained the Commis-
sion’s method of spreading labor
evenly by directing it through cen-
tral points. Plans for improving
facilities offered in Snyder for
transient labor were presented, and
a financial campaign for repairing
the labor camp building was dis-
cussed.
The group also considered the
adoption of s trades day for Snyder
and a weekly cash prise, to which
all merchants would contribute.
COOL
W.FT-FYVLTTNLA
•PARAMOUN
• Jean Arthur
• Marlene Dietrich *
• John Lund
“A FOREIGN
AFFAIR”
• DAFFY DUCK
• NEWS
MAJESTIE
"RUTHLESS"
Zechury Seen
Diene Iym
• Carteen • News
DRIVE IN
On West Highway 80
2 Shews Nishly • 1.5 - %s
Tonight
“Four Faces West"
wah
Joel McCrea
And
Frances Dee
Mm 4
Celer Career-
"BAND MASTER”
INTERSTATE
THEATRES a
QUEEN
Randolph Scent
Gabby Meyer
"RETURN OF
THE BADMEN"
• Carleen • Musical
PALACE
Alen Ledd
"THE MACK CAT"
And
“BLACK FRIDAY"
• Duke Eingten
Starring
VICTOR MATURE
COLEEN GRAY
BRUCE HUMBERSTONE
heduend by FRED KOHLMAR
sit DONALD DUCK • CHRUE MCCARTHY
MORTIMER SNEAD • MICKEY MOUSE
• Added Featurette a
ABILENE’S OWN
DAVI "TEX" O’BRIEN
i As The Texas Ranger
IN
"SHOOTIN’ IRONS"
Coming Tues. Only
That Hilarious Comedy
‘The Mating of Millie* .
Glenn Ford - Evelyn Keyst
BIG LABOR DAY FUN FOR THE FAMILY
A. 2 AmazinglAstonishingl Delightfull a
TARZAN
MERMAIDS
OHNNY MESSMUUIER BRENDA NOYCE
- Locoes iG
e SECOND FEATURE FOR LAUGHS •
“I NEVER KISS SINGLE WOMEN ‘
...they’re too sagor to get manied!”
kon FORD * KEYES A
Mating of Milie
. RON RANDELL • WILLARD PARKER
TODAY
and Men.
SEE ONE
OR BOTH
LATEST
• NEWS
COLOR
CARTOON
He Sees Se
And Hopes
MERKEL. Set
along the way wit
% Merkel a 1
buying all the t
and steel it can
owner remarked:
truckload I've w
today." Across tl
truck with an ir
cylinder smashes
I heaps of tin cans
and other expansi
l them to sm
loading. Three e
has been shiped
I —cently.—
Years ago we
old iron and steel
Lorsine. Little di<
1 that it was destin
into cannon balls a
to blow our boys t
We hope such to
repeated.
^t Trent. Railw
I Allyn looking inter
ship watch while
I sounder ticked of
L servstory time. It
I “If my watch to
and an inspector
reprimand." Allyi
I tion agents must
watches, usually
fairs. The figure
under the winder
— Win’t go in railro
watches that are i
winds is "no go.
are inspected eves
$ *
At Lawn Agent 1
- an electric clock in
TOD
BIRTH
CLAIRE L. CHE
Sept. 6, 1890, g.
chief of the Flyi
harried the Jap-
anese in China
before Pearl Har-
bor His tiny,
group was en-
, larged later to <
Vacome the 14th
Air Force.
He resigned late
in the war and
bossed a Chinese
air line Gen.
Chennault was a
school principal
who joned the U.S
War I. He marri
Chinese girl report
ber
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 30, Ed. 2 Monday, September 6, 1948, newspaper, September 6, 1948; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1645663/m1/2/?q=technical+manual: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.