Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 301, Ed. 1 Monday, December 20, 1943 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.
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■j.r«£,v;>i■*■,' :*IV.- ■', .-.y r
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r#T«x« Monday; P«c. 20/1943 ^
¥i' ■ f „ . , ..... ..
Ktnety-NtneB, famed or-
inltttiun of women .flyers, has
its membership to all
i*ASP graduates — whether or
they 4&\& a private pilot'*
iU*h&.. ■-*- according to <u an-
fnouneeawai by Mrs, Ethel ghee1
:hy. personal representative of
Mis* Jacqueline^ Cochran and
her successor as Ninety-Nine
president, in the current issue
oi the Ninety-Nine Newsletter.
"A mbetihg of a majority of
the Executive Board has alrea-
dy been held," Mrs. Sheehy
savs. "and under the clause in
the ;i onstitntion which gives us
authority to act in an emergen-
cy, it was decided after delibera-
tion! to open the membership of
Ninety-Nines to the graduates
of the 318th AAFFTD at Aven-
ger Field. Texas, they to he eli-
gible for the duration of the
war and one year thereafter,
feeling one year after the close
of the war will be sufficient
time in which to obtain a CAA
license. I am confident this will
meet with the approval of our
members. We will welcome any
graduate of Avenger Field who
may wish to become a Ninety-
Miner."
The Ninety-Nines are glad to
bo able to invite graduates of
Avenger Held to apply for mem-
bership. AJany have long feit
| that WASP graduates have
more thun proved, their ellgibi-
' lity. Members of the graduating
J class may make application
B through. Eileen Evans, 44 W-3,
I chairman of the Los Angeles
I Chapter and vice-goveernor of
Southwest section of Ninety-
Nines.
H Tfie Ninety-Nines is an inter-
i national organization of women
| pilots: ind the only group which
British Combine
I, Pleasure
out UA ucense
requires a CAA Jleense for eliifi-
bility. Its background is - His-
tory of the well-'..now n women
pilots beginning with Amelia
Earhart, its founder. At the Air
Races in 1029 "A. E." called to-
gether the women participants
and suggested the need for an
association of women pilots to
promote friendship and further
the interests of aviation, parti-
cularly the part women could
play. The outgrowth of this
was. an organizati6n of ninety-
nine women pilots as charter
members.
As the organization grew it
began to play an important part
in the enactment of laws ami
civil air regulations. Ninety-nin-
ers were particularly prominent
for their active participation in
various aviation movements
such as the more recent "Air
Marking Project."
Today, a few chapters have
disintegrated because of travel
restrictions, prohibition of un-
necessary flying in certain ar-
eas, and because members have
scattered over the entire Unit-
chapters contact members per-
ed States, the war effort. These
chapters contact members per-
sonally when possible and keep
in touch through their publica-
tion, the Ninety-Nine Newslet-
ter. Other chapters are still able
to have occasional meetings
and assist in CAP maneuvers,
and bond-selling drives, in ad-
dition to. their regular jobs in
aviation.
—From The Avenger.
Training,
WITH BRITISH PARA-
CHUTE TROOPS, Eighth Army
Front. Italy—(UP) — The Brit-
| ish seem to have found the ideal
way of combining training ani
pleasure.
Reports from .Italy tell of an
English soccer team being drop-
ped} by _ parachute to keep a
dates with in "home" team
The men parachuted from
the |sky otito a playing field
which had recently been wrest-
: i'd from the Germans in a fur-
ious* battle. Ail'* as the EiiRtiSh
Tommies removed their chutes,
they.gripped to the waist in a
biting windj to take part in the
football"game dear to the hearts
of eVery Britisher:
GCOKCK WHITr.Vi; IlKAD
EFF1E PRATT, 32, daughter
of Mrs. Marian ^H. Pratt of 139 So.
Mesa pr., Meta, Ariz.
. Miss Prat }s a graduate'of Aft-
aona State' Teachers College,
Tefnpe. She- was a ground in-
structor at the Williams Flying
School in Cleinencean, Aria., be-
fore entering the WASPs. She
recently won a war bond prize
for a |x em about Avenger Field.
Miss Pratt, has logged .uoilt 80
hours of private flying time in
addition to fter WASP training,
Wants to ferry heavy planes for
the Air Corpsi
IMOGENE BARNES, 23, dau-
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Barnes of 330 Quapaw, Hot
Springs, Ark.
A graduate of the University
of Missouri; Miss Barnes is a
former newspaper woman, hav-
ing worked with the Carruthers-
vifle. Mo., Democrat-Argus; and
a flying instructor She had log-
ged nearly 1200 Hours of private
flying ttme before applying for
WASP training. In Hot Springs,
she taught in the Government
primary and elementary flying
school for instructors and flew
with the Civil Air Patrol. Imo-
gene would like to ferry "hot"
pursuits, now that she is a full-
fledged member of the WASPs.
MARCIA WENZEL, 22. daugh-
ter of Rev. and Mrs. E. C. Wen-
zel of 2 Livingston St., South,
Nor walk, Conn.
A graduate of Norwalk High
School and the Packard Busi-
ness School hi: New York City,
Miss Wenzel served as secretary
to the legal counselor of Asiatic
Petroleum Corp...at 50 W. 50th
St.. New York City, She began
flying over three years ago. A
> brother Cadet Albert B. Wenzel,
! is serving with the Army Air
! Corps. Marcia prefers high-pow-
ered single engined pktnes for
post-graduate WASP ferry work.
LOTS M. DOBBIN, 26, daugh-
i ter of Mrs- R. Alma Dobbin of
327 S. Exposition, Wichita, Kans.
A former student of South-
western College, Winfield, Kan-
; sas. and a graduate of the Uni-
! yersity of Wichita, she is a mem-
And now, saith the Training j ber of Delta Omega sorority and \
Command, it is time to talk of I the rifle team, and served as
graduations and graduates at
Avenger Field. Here's inside
lope,on some WASPs who will el Control branch of the Boeing
Airplane Corp., before joining the
ranks of the WASPs. She would
like to ferry fast pursuit ships
with the Air Transport Com-1
mand.
BOBBYE D. GRAIN. 22, -dau-
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester H.
Crain of 213 Gidding. Clovis, N.M. j
Miss Crain is a former student
of Texas State College for Worn-
m mm 7.
A COMMON SIGHT IN CALCUTTA—Four fain ine-stricken Hindu* die and their bodies are cov-
ered with cloths on which files soon settle while onlookers, emaciated by starvation, wait for
food—or death—in this Calcutta strcfl./ln Calcutta alone, at the height of the famine in Or-
tobcr and November, more than 100 bodies were burned daily. These photos were made at that
time and were just received in the I'. S. (NEA Telephoto).
MEET
THE GRADUATES
president of her graduating class.
She was employed in the Materi-
receive their wings tonight.
FRANCES A. JENSEN. 20,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H
Jensen of 207 Third Ave., No.,
Great Falls. Mont.
Miss Jensen is a graduate of
Great Halls High School and at-
tended the College of Education,
Great Falls, and the University
of Montana where she was a
-member of Kappa Alpha Theta | en. Denton, Texas, and of East-
"sorority. Before joining the! em New Mexico College, Por-
! WASPs last June, she was em-1 tales, N. M. She began flying
| ployed as a radio operator for \ in 19-10 and has logged over 300
l the Inland Airlines in Great ,hours of private flying time. Bob-
Falls. Miss Jensen would like to i bye lists pursuits as her "dream
ferry fast pursuit ships as her j ship" for a post-graduation fer-
post-grad WASP assignment. rving work.
DOROTHY I. ASPELL, 26,!-. HELEN MARIE SKJERSAA,
daughter of Clifford A. Ives of '22. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L.
128 University Ave., S. E. Min- j N. Skjersaa of 115 Riverfront St.,
50 REPORTED
Atlantic Coast
Mount, X. <
KtliliKR WHEN PASSENGER TltAINS CRASH—Two passenger trains of (In-
line Railroad collide at Buie, N. C.. and the chief clerk of ihr railway at Rocky
salil that perhaps as many as 50 person* were killed and as many more injured.
The wreckage of the trains are shown above. (XEA Telephoto).
I
neapolis. and Mrs. Jeanne W.
Ives of 154S Kelton Ave., Los An-
geles, Calif.
.Mrs. Aspell attended Washburn
High School in Minneapolis and
• \r<w YOftK _ ii'p, _ An the I'niversity of Minnesota.
|old-time vaudville.entertainer is I where she was a member of Kap-
; dead, lie was George Whiting,
| who wrote the lyrics for "My
I Blue Heaven ."
Whiting's first successful
: song was "My Wife's Gone to
the Country.'' Published more
than three decades ago. it was
written in collaboration with
I Irving Berlin. He was currently
I editor of the script for "Can
I You j Top This," a nationwide
Iraclidv -program..
pa Kappa Gamma sorority and
i the Masquers Club. She began
! flying in 1937. and has logged
I over 80 hours of private flying
time. She was in Hawaii at the
, time uf the Jap sneak attack on
; Pearl Harbor two years ago and
| for four months afterward. Her
I husband, Lieut. Thomas A. As-
pell. is serving with the Navy
Air Corps overseas. She would
I like to ferry bombers with the
I Air Transport Command.
Bend. Oregon
Mi. s Skjersaa is .a former stu-
' dent of Bend High School, the
I University of Idaho. Moscow,
i Idaho, and the University of
Oregon. Eugene. She was a mem-
j ber of the Hell Divers and Spurs
at Idaho, where she also served
I as drum majorette of the band.
1 At Oregon U. she was a member
I of A Ipha Gamma Delta sorority
and the Amphibians, and served
j as drum majorette of the Oregon
1 band. She has logged about 270
1 hours of private flying time, now
wants to ferry B-17 Fortresses.
A brother. Lt. Norman H. Skjer-
| saa. is serving with the Army
| Air Corps.
—From The Avenger.
JAc (OodbhA (bcuiqJllBAA
8y FAITH BALDWIN
I
H
fXDERBERRT STREET ,
CHAPTER XX HI
(GLORIA came back. She re-
ported from the doorway that'
Doctor Thompson had answered |
the telephone, he would pome at
once.
It \vas a long 15 minute®.
Onpe lie was there, competent,
cool, things fell rapidly into place.
Ambulance for Timmy. arrange-
ments made at. the Hospital for
Communi cable Diseases The
health authorities notified, yuar-
antine for the other children,
notification of the' city health
nurses. Mrs. Reman and her ap-
proaching confinement constituted
a complication. But that, too,
would be dealt with, properly.
Lunch hour F.mily drove home
with Jim, went up the back stairs
to scrub and change. Ellen
clucking with commiseration,
served them- lunch,, on the
screened porch. Nancy and Milli-
ter) t were out, and Doctor Hall
hadn't come in yet.
"In a city of this size," said
Emily furiously, "and -with the
money we have had to spend, con-
ditions such as those in which we
found the Remans are intolerable
and unnecessary."
He said, mildly:
"The crusading spirit."
"I know I can't help it. Can
you?"
"No." He added after a moment,
"I'm attending 'a board of health
meeting. It's a conference, really,
of the board and the Cranberry
doctors. Your father insists on
taking me along. There'll be a
fight on our hands. Conditions in
the mill quarters, conditions in the
section where the p«tfio started.
They'll say nothing can be done
for the duration, ft should be a
*ght"
She said somberly:
•Tfoo-n run into snugs when it
comes to the mill section. Carter
will win hands down."
"Seems to me asvtf'ftank Ed*
% i'—" he began. * ''
COPYftiaHT. IS4SL
Nt« SERVICE. INC.
"Don't blame Frank," she said,
"he does what he can. But he
hasn't authority. Carter won't
give it to him."
"I thought Mrs. Edgar ran
things since the old man's stroke."
"She does in a way. Carter
makes a point of consulting her,
but not in matters like this. Car-
ter," added Emily, "is wedded
to the stockholders. The mills
have always paid dividends. Car-
ter isn't spending a cent on the
houses if he can avoid it."
.Tim said, admiringly:
"I like to see you when you're
angry. Emily. Your eyes turn al-
most black and your cheeks—"
"Skip it," she said, "I keep
thinking about Timmy. What are
his chances?"
"Out of our hands now," he said
soberly, "but. good, I think. Lucky
for Timmy that the hospital is
well equipped, he'll have every-
thing they can do for him . .
"And the other children." she
said, "it will be a miracle if they
escape."
"A miracle," he agreed.
Emily looked at her watch. She
s^id, "I've got to inn. I'll get my
calls here and go."
"You're tired," he said with com-
miseration, "you look about allin."
"I'm all right," she said, and
rose and smiled at him, "Thankr,
for coming," she said. "I didn't
dare coave. I didn't know what
that woman would do. I couldn't
ask Gloria to call City Welfare tor
a doctor, she might have muddled
it and delayed things. There
wasn't a soul I could ask. Mrs.
Reman was nervously shot, the
nearest neighbors were away, t
did the first thing that came into
my head—"
"Which," he said comfortingly,
"was the right thing as usual." He
took her hand and held it. He
said, "You're a grand girl, Emily."
vt
7
it morning Emily sat
with MM Aft^ins In liei amaiil
tmtm
office while Miss Ansing, listen-
ing to her report, drew doodle bugs
on a square pad. She said finally:
"Do you know who owns the
houses on Elderberry street?"
"No," said Emily astonished, "it
isn't much of a street, really, most-
ly vacant lots, and four or five
scattered shacks."
"The Edgars own all that prop-
erty," Miss Ansing said. "You
haven't had occasion to go there
much, it's out of your district,
naturally you wouldn't inquire—"
"I was walking through, taking
a short cut," Emily said, "when
Mrs. Reman camc out of her
house. I don't think I've been on
that particular street a dozen
times. My district ends at Ham-
mond, which cuts across it. I
knew, of course, that the Edgars
had big property holdings out of
the mill district."
"It's the location," said Miss An-
sing, carefully, "which is being
considered as a site for the new
defense housing project. Natural-
ly, Mr. F.dgar's agent would not
burden himself with improving
conditions in the circumstances."
She smiled faintly.
"I see," said Emily.
"Wo all see," said Miss Ansing.
She went on afteir a mom en*, "I
wonder if you would speak at the
board meeting next week? You've
done so before, but not recently.
I think my cut and dried reports
are always enlivened, made more
interesting if they are supplement-
ed by less statistical reports from
my nurses. You can appeal to
people more directly through the
imagination than by figures. We
have several problems to facc this
year. Larger quarters for in-
stance. More and more patients
are coming here for routine treat-
ments, and our space is limited.
Unless our board is fully aware of
the work we can't expect them to
be as enthusiastic in raising the
money. I've asked Mollie to speak
briefly on the Industrial nursing
end and If you would talk about
your district, and give them actual
cases ..."
"I'll try." said Bmlly. "t was
pretty scared last ttme, but—"
Miss Ansing Mid casually, "I
hope Mrs. Edgar will be present.
She wasn't, at the ia«t meeting."
(Te BeOmttaittf! „
Fascist Labor Unions
Abolished In Italy 1
WASHINGTON — (UP) -|
General Eisennowcr has abol- j
ished the tascist labor syndi-j
cates in Italy and permitted lib-!
erated workers the right to!
choose their own unions. The |
war department says a cable
from Eisenhower's headquart-
ers reports that his; directive |
abolishing the syndicates was
issued in Naples. The calMe said
representatives of the new lab-
or groups have expressed their
wish to cooperate with the Am-
erican and British workers in
hastening the destruction of
the Axis:
The cable added that those
already liberated received a gen-
eral wage increase above what
it termed the • starvation levei"
existing under fascist rule for
more than 20 years.
I workers follows a pattern sot
The emancipation of Italian
during the allied occupation of
Sicily when a free labor mov>
ment was substituted for the
fascist cooperative societies.
London Philharmonic
Orchestra Will Play
In America Next Fall
i NEW YORK — (UP) —The
world famous London Philhar-
monic Orchestra will play its
first concerts in America next
| tall. The orchestra will tour
| U. S. and Canadian cities with
! its founder. Sir Thomas Beech-
| am as conductor. Nearly 100 mu-
sicians are expeced to arrive
I next September or October for
: a concert schedule extending
! from the eastern seaboard as
I far west as Kansas City.
Beecham. now conductor if
; the Metropolitan Opera, plans to
return with the orchestra after
ja summer visit to England. I-lei
said the musicians will travel
j by railway daycoach, making:
daytime jumps from one en-
gagement to the next.
The journey* from Englan d
i will be made by boat with the
cooperation of the British gov-
ernment. Sir Thomas- pointed
out that the avoidance of over-
night trips will eliminate the
need for travel priorities,
i Sigmund Spaeth, president of
the National Association of
Composers and Conductors, em
p ha sized that the appearance ol
the orchestra will be far more,
than a good will tour. He said:
"It will be a musical event
of supreme importance, our first
opportunity to hear the greatest
symphony orchestra of our al-
lies under one of the world'.-
greatest conductors."
v
JAI'S VANISH
CHUNGKING -- (UP) A
Chinese military spokesman re-
1 veals that not a single Jap sold
ier remains within 50 miles of
f'liangtch in the central China
ttlce Uowl area. The city was,
i the scene of a recent fierce hot-
+h"-
|'AM INK CACSKI) TIIIS'.-
IumI \ «.t l.rr baby who ha
\cm the homeless Indian
lli.it killed her child,
lion
Nwntl In Th#
%
-A yotinji Hindu mother coders (lie
. jn-t drawn his lasl weak breath,
woman, herself lacing; the slarvu-
in list wait for the corpse removal
men. (NEA Telephoto).
Japanese Admit Loss Master Barbers Host
Tarawa And Makin To .300 Orphans
SAN FRANCISCO (l'P>
Japanese linuerial headuuarters i
lias finally atliull t.it the loss ot
Tarawa and Makin islands . in I
I file Gilberts to invading Arneri-
ea'h Marines.
However, a Tokyo broadcast of
the official communique declar-
ed thai .'5,000 .laps died to the j
last man lighting 50,000 of our i
IrOops. The broadcast was beard i
by the United Press in San j
i-'raftpisco.
Tile enemy radio claimed that
\merican losses were several :
times Japanese losses. But offi-
cial American announcements j
have placed our losses well be j
low those of the Japs and also j
reported the capture of a few j
prisoners.
s.\NTA FE CHAMPIONS
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.—(UP) :
— Santa Fe High school has
been selected as the "champion"
of New Mexico schoolboy grid
eirifles. The Santa Fe school was
.selujcted by a poll of high schools
by the Albuquerque Tribune.
The state capital eleven bare
Chri it mas
has
li'iir-
b ort
I tar-
jour-
ly nosed out little Carlsbad high
iii tlie balloting, getting only two
Ul«
if. votes than Carlsbad.
I-'OHT WORTH. Tex.-—( UP.) —
Some three hundred orphans in
Tarrant county's tin 'e oipha'n-
ages have hud1 oih
present early.
Each of the .youngsters
received a gratis Christ ma-
cut as a gift from the
Worth local of the Masteu
bers association am I the
neyman barbers of 1* ort \Vorth.
The barbers had ample sup-
plies of peppermint candy to
placate the scjuirming youngsters
as they awaited their turn
Wife Of Former Navy
Secretary Succumbs
RALEIGH. N. ( '.—(I Pi—The
wife of former Navy Secretary
Josephus Daniels is dead.
The 71-year-old woman suc-
cumbed at her Kaleigh, N. C.,
home last night. She had been
ill for several years.
Mrs. Daniels was the daugh-
ter of a Confederate army offi-
cer. During the last year, she
served as president of the navy
Iletl Cross. One of her assist-
ants was Mrs, Eleanor ftopsevelt,
who at that time was vlec-prcsi-
dent of the organization,
•v ''' ■ 1 1 " « -
WINSTON CHURCHILL
Prime Minister of Great Britain
Some British officials still are
urging the appointment of a new
acting prime minister, aithtrigh
AVinstoM' Churchill to lie
recovering rapidly. They say that
the OS-year old Churchill should '
)\ave a good chance to rest and
4 t well after his second'attack
,of pneumonia within a year.
. However, the energetic Prime
Minister already has been able
to look over a few documents.
And he may insist on being in
the saddle when the United Na-
tions war steed crashes into Eu-
rope.
Twenty-odd years of crushing
responsibility have not dulled
Churchill's stamina or courage,
although they have tempered his
daring and mellowed his wit.
Not that Churchill isn't still a
master of witty conversation.
Oncc, in more leisurely unra-
tioned days, he said:
"My idea of a good dinner is to
have good food, then to discuss
,good food, and after this good
food is elaborately discussed, to
discuss a good topic—with my-
self as the chief conversation-
alist."
There's a story that, during
American prohibition, Churchill
accepted an invitation to lecture
in the United States under one
condition—that a certain amount
of a certain kind of brandy be
provided. A frieild of his said:
"Churchill's tastes arc simple.
He is easily contented with the
best of everything."
The rosy-cheeked statesman
never stops smoking cigars and
dictating to his secretary. Ordi-
narily, he spends a great part
of the morning in bed—smoking
and dictating. It's said that, he
even dictates in his bath, and
that, sometimes in the middle
of the night he will wake up
with a start and cyll for a sec-
retary. His mind apparently
doesn't even stop working when
he's asleep.
Churchill collects—and wears
—old hats, paints landscapes,
lays bricks, plays golf with in-
difference, and probably is Lon-
don's best mah jong player out-
side of Limehouse. He's a thun-
derous orator, and an eloquent
author of novels and biograph-
ies. Lately he's given up polo,
although he once was a star with
the riding mallet. .
As a boy—tlie son of a promi-
nent English aristocrat and a
beautiful American woman —
Winnie was interested only in
.guns and horses. He did rather
poorly in Saint Jaines and Hat-
row, but shone at Sandhurst mil-
itary college.
The young officer saw action
in India, but he left the army for
a career in journalism. The Boer
vwar put him back in the field—
until the Boers derailed his ar-
mored train.
In order to clear the line.
Churchill hopped in and out of
tlie engine cab, and took off his
Mauser pistol which got in his
way. He said later that if he had
hung onto his pistol the history
of South Africa would have been
different. As it was, he was cap-
tured by Louis Botha, who later
was a great Prime Minister of
South Africa. Churchill says he
would have shot Botha, if he had
had his Mauser.
Churchill later escaped to Brit-
ish-held territory, and returned
home a national hero. He ran
us a conservative and won. Then
he changed to the Liberal party,
and won.
Shortly afterward he married
one of his constituents, Clemen-
tine Hozier, and had three daugh-
ters and one soli. In subsequent
elections, Churchill ran as an
indepedent. He was opposed by
the women suffragettes because
he thought then that woman's
place Was in the home.
In 1911, Churchill became
first lord of the admiralty. But
in the Dardcnellesz a a a
a series of disastrous defeats in
the Dardcnellcs were .associated
with him, and he resigned. Later
he was called back as minister
of munitions.
As Churchill commented, "not
allowed to make plans, I was set
to making weapons."
As secretary of war in 1917
and '18. he was primarily re-
sponsible for the armed inter-
vention in Kussia. And he prose-
cuted his anti-Bolshevik Cam-
paign with feeling. His strong
opposition to communism did
not prevent his later realization
that Collaboration with the So-
viet Union was necessary to
British security.
For nearly 20 years after that.
ChurChill was just a member of
i parliament — but an eloquent
one. Incidentally, the rhetoric
I of King Edward the Eighth's ab-
i dication speech sometimes is at-
; tributcd to Churchill. Whether
' or not he wrote the speech, he
I did befriend the unhappy king.
On that day that England de-
elared war against Germany,
Prime Minister Chamberlain was
forced to recognize Churchill,
, who had been criticizing ap-
peasement. Churchill got back
his old admiralty post. He was
I shifted from one cabinet job to
another until in October. 1910.
he took over as Prime Minister,
■v
or tin am
KXOX
TUESDAY'S PROGRAM
Howdy Neighbor
Moods in Music
UP News
,P an* Afnm
Jyiitph'dnic Moods
w, Morning Devotional
8:45 Buceunners Malrf CMiMh
ftOO It's Odd Bnt Interesting
(tilS Musical Workshop
9:.'I0 Home Folks Frolic
0:15 Tlie Band for Today
10:00 UP News
10:05 Melody Time
10:15 Music by Cugat
10:30 Nolan County Heulth
Unit
10:45 Ricliard Lelbert
11:00 Corntussel Nooz
11:15 Reflections In Rhythm
11:30 Concert Band!
11:45 Hymns Yon Love
12:00 UP News
18:13 Noontime Band Wagon
12::M> Quick Bid Poultry
Program
12:45 Your Exchange
1:00 UP News
IKI5 Vocal Varieties
1:15 Henhouse Jamboree
1:30 Novelty Time
1:45 SlrliiR Band
2:00 All Request Hour
3:00 How About Dancing
3:15 Treasury Htnr Parade
3:30 Concert Hall of the Air
4:00 Ul' News
4:05 Hillbilly Frolic
4:15 Marching to Music
4:30 For Daneel's Only
5:00 Aloha Land
5:15 Modern Melodies
5::W Here and There In Music
(1:00 Dinner Music
0:15 UP News
0:30 Cvcursions in Science
0:45 Popular M'usic
7-00 Vaildervoort's Christmas
( alendar
7:15 Avenger Field Dance
Band
7:30 Let's Dance
8:00 Sign Off
Liberty Ship Named
For Otis Skinner
RICHMOND, California—(UP)
V—The 30!)th Liberty ship launch-
ed at the Kaiser shipyards in
Jtichmond. California, was, nam-
ed for one of America's most .-fa-
mous actors—Otis Skinner.
The ship was christened yes-
terday. while stage and screen
celebrities Constance Bennett.
Otto Krutfer. Katherine Alexan-
der and .I line Dayton assisted
with the cercmonles.
Cornelia Otis Skinner—the^ac-
jtor's daughter—was unable . to
be present, but sent n message of
appreciation.
PUM'AID CUKST
LOS ANGIvLES — (UT1 —
Officers arrested William Harn-
ey, a blind man. on a charge of
■begging.
Tn his pocket they found a
Biltmc/re Hotel room key.
The manager of the exclusive
hotel told police Ramey was a
prepaid guest.
Amazing Way for
"RUN-DOWN" people
> to get Ntw
VlTAUTY..Ptri
t llOONKR'S FATHER D1K8
GAINESVILLE, Texas—(HP)
—Nova Lucas has 1>ec'n buried
in GulnesVllle.
Lucas way a former Gainesvil-
le resident add father of Croon-
er Gene Austin. He died tn Tus-
con. Arlrdnp WetHlesflav
# America Win
i ahd t
Mon
to
6p
re
ot
$
-.Promote the
1 vital dig**'*8
in the stomach t
l-l.WtUe ourko4ywith
2 RICH, REP BIOOP^
I^HEBE two important steps may
1 help you to overcome the discom-
forts or embarrassment of sour stom-
ach. Jerky nerves, loss of appetite,
underweight, digestive complaint-s.
weakness, poor complexion!
A person who Is operating On only s
70 to 75c/c healthy blood volume or a
stomnch digestive capacity of only M
to tOrl normal is severely handicapped.
8o with ample stomach digestive luleis
PLUS RICH. RED-BLOOD you should
enjoy that sense of well being wbieh de-
notes physical fltness . . . mental alert-
ness I
lt you are subject to poor digestion or
suspect deficient rcct-blood as the cause
""" have no organic
of your trouble, yet
complication or foen
Tonlo may be Just what you naad aa It
the stomach and to build-up BLOOD
8TRENOTH when deficient.
<1 RhIM Sturdy Haallfi
Thousands ahd thousands of users have
testified to the benefits 888 Tome baa
brought to them and sclentlllo re
shows that It mta results—that's i
many say "BMTanlcbuUds sturdy
-makes you feel like yourself •
drugatores in Maud 30 oz. staaa.j
J
If
i
1
1
ft*f|M buf fef SrvMir HMtfM
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 301, Ed. 1 Monday, December 20, 1943, newspaper, December 20, 1943; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth282803/m1/2/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.