Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 233, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 3, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
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Reporter
Listen To
Station KXOX
Your News and Pleasure
Station
1240 On Your Dial
64th Year Number 233
SWEETWATER, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1951
Full Leased United P
Wire Service
Britons Are
xcited Over
oming Vote
Texas Demos
Set Rally To
Build Fences
Issues At Stake
Familiar Subjects
In America Too
NEA Telephoto Service
. > " .1 "A *> - !# '
* i ; \ -5
The Weather
Temperature, high Tuesday, 97, low-
Wednesday morning, 87; barometer, 29.73
railing. Continued fair, windy, not much
change In temperature. Relative humid-
ity, 40 per cent.
Price Daily 5c, Sunday lOe
By HARRY FERGUSON
% UP Foreign News Editor
The British and American elec-
tion systems differ widely, but
the issues on which the voters
pass are about the same. Brit-
ons go to the polls three weeks
from tomorrow. The things they
are excited about will sound fa-
miliar to Americans:
1. The high cost of living.
2. Heavy taxes that have been
levied because of the necessity to
.ym against the threat of com-
munist aggression.
3. The vague fear that any gov-
ernment that makes a mis-step
will plunge the nation into World
't War III.
There are several political par-
ties in Britain, but only two have
a chance of getting enough votes
to control the country—the La-
bor Party and the Conservative
Party. The Labor Party is what
its name indicates. It is by, of
£(hd for the worker. It is com-
mitted to taking care of every
Briton from the cradle to the
grave, and it assures the voters
that if they will work hard, and
turn over a sizeable portion of
their earnings to the govern-
ment they will have nothing to
worry about. Medical services,
false* teeth, insurance — every-
thing will be on the house.
Conservatives
. The Conservative Party puts
■more emphasis on free enterprise
and the right of the individual
to work out his own destiny, al-
though it probably would retain
many of the social welfare proj-
ects established by the Labor
Government. In the popular
mind the Conservative Party
means the bull - dog figure of
Winston Churchill who will be-
come Prime Minister in event of
a Conservative victory.
^Betting right now favors the
Conservatives. The principal rea-
son is that the Labor Party has
been in power long enough for it
to make lots of enemies, inside
and outside of its own ranks. The
Labor leaders are busy right now
trying to patch up their own dif-
ferences and go into the final
weeks of the campaign with a
united front.
Labor Party
The Labor Party will try to
Jinvince the voters that it is the
Party of Peace" and the Con-
servatives are "The War Party."
It will picture Churchill as the
war - time Prime Minister who
would like to he the same thing
again — this time against the
Russians. It is the same issue
the Democrats used years ago
when they elected Woodrow Wil-
son President on the slogan "He
Kept Us Out. of War."
The Conservatives will appeal
£ the voters' stomachs and pock-
etbooks. They will pledge more
and better food. They will talk
about lowering taxes. They will
try to convince the voter that
they will make him the captain
of his soul instead of a man de-
pendent upon the government.
Britain does not elect its Prime
Minister directly. The party that
wins the most seats in the House
of Commons takes over power.
Oil Test North
Of Trammell to
Be Started Soon
A wildcat oil test north of
Lake Trammell in Nolari County
has been spotted by Mar-Tex
Realization Corp., it was an-
nounced this week.
. The test will be No. 1 Boothe
with the drillsite 330 feet from
the south and west lines of sec-
tion 76-22-T&P on a 480-acre
lease. Projected depth is 6,000
feet.
The site is on the Boothe es-
tate land, near the old Ada
school house and not far from
an oil test many years ago. It is
about two miles north of pro-
duction in the Lake Trammell
*eld.
Thomson's Homer
Beats Bums 5-4
NEW YORK, Oct. 3 — Bobby
Thomson smashed a home run
with two men on base in the
bottom of the ninth inning to
give the New York Giants a
thrilling 5 to 4 victory over the
Brooklyn Dodgers for the Nation-
al League pennant at the Polo
Grounds today.
The Giants were trailing 4-1
going Into the last chapter.
Thomson's blow climaxed the
greatest comeback in the history
of baseball. The Giants will meet
the New York Yankees in the
World Series, beginning Thurs-
day.
SECRET ATOMIC MEETING—Secretary of Defense Robert Lovett and members of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff shown after leaving a secret session with members of the Joint Atomic En-
ergy Committee, (L-R) General J. Lawton Collins, Chief of Staff Army; Admiral William
Fechteler, Chief of Naval Operations; Secret ary of Defense Lovett; Senator Brien McMahon
(D. Conn)., committee chairman; Rep. Carl T. Durham, (D„ N. C.), member of the com-
mittee; General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Chief of Staff Air Force. (NEA Telephoto).
Special Train To Angelo
Many From Here To
Attend Annual Game;
Train Tickets, $2.24
By BUD WORSHAM
Strong indications that the
Sweetwater High School Mus-
tangs might be able to win
their first football game of the
season at San Angelo Friday
night has produced more inter-
est in the annual contest among
local fans and a largo number
of Sweetwaterites will make
the trip to the Concho City.
A special Santa Fe train has
been scheduled to carry lo-
cal fans to San Angelo for the
game.
The special will leave Sweet-
water at 4:30 p. m. Friday, re-
turning after the game.
Tickets—priced at $2.24 for
the round trip—will go on sale
Thursday morning at the Repor-
ter office, higher school and Ar-
mor's Drug No. 1.
The Sweetwater Athletic As-
sociation and Reporter, co-spon-
sors of the special train, expect
little difficulty in securing 200
ore more passengers.
The dangerous highway he-
ll. S. Casualties
Up 2,181 In Week
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (UP)
The Defense Department today
reported a new total of 87,050
American battle casualties in Ko-
rea. an increase of 2.181 over
the number reported last week.
The total represents casualties
whose next of kin had been noti-
fied through last Friday. The
actual number is higher since
one Id three weeks are required
to notify next of kin.
The increase in casaulties was
about the same as that reported
for the preceding week. Both
were considerably higher than
for many weeks during the sum-
mer lull in fightiiiR while cease-
fire negotiations were in prog-
ress.
The new total includes 14,734
dead, 00,725 wounded, 10,053 miss-
inR. 170 prisoners and 1,368 once
missing but since found.
Fury of Storm
Damages Florida
MIAMI, Fla., Oct. 3 (UP)—
A small tropical storm, which
inflicted an estimated $2,000,000
in damages to South Florida,
boiled up into a hurricane wilh
95 mile an hour winds today and
was expected to pass just cast
of the North Carolina coast
early tonight.
The new hurricane was rumb-
ling along on a northeastward
course at 20 miles an hour. At
10:15 a. m. EST it was located
200 miles south of Cape Hat-
teras and 175 miles southeast of
Wilmington, N. C.
Forecaster Leonard Pardue
said the Capes off North Caro-
lina's coast would get winds of
60 to 65 miles an hour early to-
night if the broad storm con-
tinues its present course. Storm
warnings were hoisted from
Cape Hatteras to the Virginia
Capes.
The hurricane, which brought
floods to South Florida as it
moved over yesterday, has
fringe winds of 30 miles an
hour or more over 750 miles off
the Atlantic.
"It's just now assuming hur-
ricane characteristics after be-
ing a large area of scattered
squalls for three days," Pardue
said. "However, its center is still
poorly defined."
tween the two cities will be an
extra incentive for many fans
to make the trip by train instead
of auto.
It will be the Mustangs'
fourth non-conference game of
the season and the first time
this year that they'll be rated an
even chance with their oppon-
ents.
Both the Mustangs and Bob-
cats are dominated by junior
and sophomore players as the
coaches attempt to "build for the
future." The game will be play-
ed at Bobcat Stadium.
Tickets for the contest will
be put on sale at Darnell's Sport-
ing Goods Store Thursday morn-
ing.
Britain Gives Up Her
Big Iran Oil Holdings
A BA DAN, Iran, Oct. 3 (UP)—-Great Britain gave up her
greatest Mid-East oil holding today.
A half-century of British development of the rich Iranian
oil fields which created the world's biggest refinery at Ab-
adan, ended at 1
p. m.
Her cruiser Mauritius, her
rails jammed with some 300
British oil workers and her band
playing a rousing "Ship..AN>y "
steamed slowly away from Aba-
dan to complete Britain's evac-
uation of the oil fields after
three years of wrangling with
the Iranian government.
Nine lone Britons stood on
the muddy banks of the Shatt-
El-Rab river t,o shout goodbyes
to the departing oil men.
The Mauritius sailed at high
tide with five tugs of the nation-
alized Antjlo-Iranian oil com-
pany puffing ahead and astern
to ease her down the river.
Sixteen British nurses and
one wife in Abadan left by plane
earlier.
It was a sad and solemn mom-
ent. But the humiliation the
British oil workers expressed
privately was hidden by skylark-
ing and ceremony when they
pulled out under the eyes of
watchful Iranian guards.
Some men spoke feelingly of
the "weakness" they felt in con-
trast with the British power
shown in 1001 when Iran first
granted a 60-year concession in
the oil fields.
rounds for farewell drinks with
former Iranian colleagues end
goodbyes with weening servants.
Wives and families of Iranian
employes at the refinery rush-
ed to the British sector of Aba-
dan to bid for the AIOC's air-
cooled bungalows even before
the last Britc.ns were gone.
Iranian civilians demanded
last night that the liquor stock
of the British "Riverside Club"
be "frozen." But the oil men had
a farewell party just the same.
In Tehran, the Iranian govern-
ment announced that Premier
Mohammed Mossadegh will fly
to New York Sunday to fight
Britain's complaint against
Iran in the security council.
Crowley Appointed
As Deputy Sheriff
Orville Crowley, veteran peace
officer, has been appointed sec-
ond deputy by Sheriff Cal Mont-
gomery with approval of the No-
lan County commissioners'
court, it was announced by
Kenneth B. Ross, manager of Montgomery Wednesday.
the Abadan refinery and the No.
1 AIOC man left in Iran, stayed
behind with eight other officials.
On* the jetty steps, he shook
hands with each worker as the
Britons filed past to board the
Mauritius.
Today's show of British calm
followed tearful scenes last
night when the Britons made the
Mr. Crowley was deputy under
Sheriff Wilkins at Roby for
three and a half years. After his
son entered the service during
the war, he went to Houston
where he was a guard at the
Houston ship yards for five
years. He and Mrs. Crowley re-
cently moved to Sweetwater.
More Drastic Steps Are
Planned Against Czechs
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (UP) —
American officials today promis-
ed even more economic retalia-
tions against Communist-ruled
Czechoslovakia in an effort to
open American newsman William
N. Oatis' Red jail celj.
Economic warfare is the chief
weapon being used by state,
commerce, treasury and bureau
of customs to bring pressure on
the Czechs to free the reporter
sentenced on July 4 to a 10-year
term for alleged spying.
Further actions to dry up and
harrass Czech trading with this
country were under close study
by all interested government
agencies, officials said. But they
declined to even hint at next
moves in order to surprise the
Prague regime.
In closely-knit moves, the
United States yesterday:
1. Announced that tariff con-
cessions on Czech imports would
be withdrawn at the close of bus-
iness on Nov. 1. The 30-day noti-
fication period was granted to
protect American importers of
Czech hops, beads, glass, jewel-
ry and other products.
2. Told the Czechs that clear-
ance for Czech shipments to this
country are "being indefinitely
delayed" because of the Red or-
ders'to reduce American clearing
personnel in Czechoslovakia and
the need to deal "with present
problems" — namely, the Oatis-
case.
Information reaching govern-
ment agencies indicates that
these and previous measures in-
voked against Czech trade are
hurting the Czech government
and may force negotiations to
free Oatis. Trade diverted from
Czechoslovakia is expected to
benefit west German exporters
to the U. S.
"We've still got some other
cards to play," an official told re-
porters.
Russia Explodes
Another A-Bomb
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (lTP)
—The White House announced
today that Russia lias exploded
another atomic bomb recently.
It was the second Soviet atom-
ic explosion announced by this
country.
Austin Meeting To
Be For 'Loyal' Ones
Leaders Announce
AUSTIN, Oct. 3 (UP)—Demo-
crats intent on keeping Texas in
the liberal line for 1952 have
slated a statewide parley in Aus-
tin next week.
Plans for the liberal-faction
meeting followed a request by
Gov. Allan Shivers for an unin-
structed delegation to the 1952
national convention, and a call
by Attorney General Price Dan-
iel for Texas to defeat President
Truman in any bid for re-elec-
tion.
The session, built around the
scheduled appearance here of
Secretary of Agriculture Charles
F. Brannon, could spark a split
in the Texas Democratic party,
something that Shivers has been
striving to avoid.
Invitations were being limited
to "Democrats whose loyalty is
above question."
House Speaker Sam Rayburn
notfied a temporary arrange-
ments committee, headed by Har-
ry L. Seay of Dallas, that he
would attend the strategy parley
if his congressional duties per-
mit.
The meeting is being billed as
a "breakfast" honoring Brannan
on Saturday, Oct. 13.
However, members of Texas'
congressional delegation have
been invited to furnish lists of
party members "whose Demo-
cratic royalty is above ques-
tion."
Dixie Crats were given notice
they won't Vie welcome.
Woodville Rogers, San An-
tonio attorney and a member of
the arrangements committee,
;• Apliriced, "we don't want to
have to contend with any Texas
Regulars or Dixiecrats."
Rogers said members of the
committee "hope to have 250 to
300 Democrats at the parley—as
many as we can get."
The governor ano attorney gen-
eral, he said, were invited.
"I'm inviting them now," he
added. "I'd be glad to have
them."
"We'll be glad," he said, "to
have any Democrat who will
support the party nominee—who-
ever he is.' '
He said he wasn't worried
about the loyalty of either the
governor or the attorney general.
"They'll stay with the party,"
he said.
However, both the governor
and Daniel have bitterly oppos-
ed the idea of Mr. Truman mak-
ing making another bid for re-
election.
Members of the arrangements
committee, while not mentioning
the President's name, have been
largely known as down the-line-
loyal to the Truman administra-
tion.
Allies Begin Drive
Across Broad Front
Temporary Blackout
Is Imposed On News
EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Thursday,
Oct. 4 (UP)—United Nations troops attacked along two
thirds of the Korean battlefront Wednesday and thrust at
least two armored task forces into enemy defenses.
A news blackout covered de-
tails of the fighting.
(Army censors in Tokyo an-
nounced a "temporary partial
blackout on news from Korea."
They said they did not know the
reason for the blackout but it
could only mean that some mili-
tary event—either Communist or
allied—was in progress and de-
tails were being held up for se-
curity reasons. There were some
indications the blackout would
not last more than 12 hours.)
Tank Attack
A two-pronged tank-led UN as-
sault west of Chorwon, stalled
Wednesday by fanatical Red re-
sistance, rolled forward only
after infantrymen went in and
burned the Communists out of
their positions with lame throw-
ers.
Americans, South Koreans.
French and British Common-
wealth troops were reported in
action, much of it at close quar-
ters. Fighting raged across the
front from the Yonchon area in
the west to Kansong on the east
coast. In most areas the Reds
almost fought the attacking al-
lies to a standstill.
Air Battles
In the air, however, 12 U. S.
Shooting Stars—America's slow-
est jets—caught a dozen crack
Communist MiG-15 jet fighters
over North Korea, probably shot
down two of them and damaged
another.
The air victory ran the 5th Air
Force's toll of enemy jets in
three days of air battles to seven
shot dowii, three more probably
destroyed and five damaged. No
ran into a stonewall enemy de-
fense and vicious counter-attacks.
Even one of the heaviest artil-
lery bombardments of the war
failed to discourage the Reds.
West-Central Front
Only on the west-central front
were the UN forces able to hack
out gains. They used flame flow-
ers to cremate enemy troops
fighting from deep bunkers and,
according to a front dispatch,
made "some progress."
On the east-central front, an
Aerican tank-infantry patrol ran
into a heavy rain of 120-millimet-
er howitzer and 76-millimeter ar-
tillery fire in a valley east of
"Heartbreak Ridge" and were
forced to turn back.
The same story came from oth-
er sectors running from the hills
north of Seoul in the west to the
Sea of Japan coast, where the
45,000-ton U. S. battleship New
Jersey was pounding Red shore
defenses with its 16-inch guns.
Hand-to-hand fighting was re-
ported west of Chorwon on the
west-central front, below Kum-
song on the east-central front,
and northwest of "Punchbowl
Valley" on the eastern front. I
Security Blanket
Is Dropped Over
Atomic War Test
LAS VTGAS. Nev.
The atomic energy
Oct. 3 (UP)
commission
American losses were reported, j threw a security blanket today
On the ground, UN attacks in-
to the Communist buildup area
Postal Receipts
Here Show Gain
Sweetwater postal receipts
continue to run ahead of last
year, which was a record.
Receipts for the past quarter
were $32,791.20 compared with
$30,496 for the same period last
year, Postmaster M. J. Sweeden
reported this week. This reflect-
ed an increase of $7.52 per cent.
Total cancellations for the
the three months were 668,639
or 10,613 per working day.
In the past fiscal year, postal
receipts here were $143,026 com-
pared with $137,832 for the
year ending June 30, 1950.
Downtrodden Peoples
Constitute Greatest
Threat, Speaker Says
CHICAGO, Oct. 3 (UP)—Deane
W. Malott, president of Cornell
University told a session of the
American Bankers' Association
convention today that Americans
must turn their attention to As-
ia rather than to Europe to safe-
guard against the dangers of the
future.
Malott said that the problem
of America's responsibility to the
world "is not alone that of meet-
ing Russian Communism."
"The outstanding problem in
the world today is human mis-
ery," he said. "The down trodden
peoples in India, Asia and Africa
constitute the greatest threat to
world stability, the greatest chal-
lenge to our leadership.
"Our eyes must be focused up-
on Asia rather than exclusively
upon Europe. Every Russian
could die this morning, every
coirttrtunist be obliterated, and
this problem of under privileged
millions would still remain."
Edwin Middleton,
Former Resident
Here, Dies at 79
over forthcoming atomic war
games at its Frenchman flat
proving ground and warned that
unauthorized persons entering P- Dunlap said he has ordered a
the area would be expected to second check of income tax re-
Truman Flocd
Relief Ideas
Are Rejected
WASHINGTON, Oct. .3 (UP)
-—The House Appropriations
Committee approved $113,440,-
000 for flood relief loans and
grants today, but it rejected key
features of President Truman's
proposed $400,000,000 program.
The sum voted by the commit-
tee, plus present funds, would
make $257,590,000 in federal as-
sistance available to flood rav-
aged areas of Kansas, Missouri,
Oklahoma, and Illinois.
The committee flatly rejected
Mr. Truman's request for cash
payments to reimburse citizens
for part of their flood losses. It
also turned down his proposal
for a $50,000,000 flood insurance
program.
SURVIVOR BENEFITS
The House Appropriations
Committee voted today to set up
! a $5,000,000 fund from which to
j make $10,000 payments to oene-
| ficiaries of servicemen who die
I on active duty.
■ The payments will be in lieu
of benefits under the old GI in-
surance program which congress
ended this year as far as new
| policy holders are concerned.
; The appropriation still must
be approyed by the full house
and by the senate.
Internal Revenue — Congress
was told today that the Internal
Revenue Bureau is searching it-
self for possible tax evaders.
Revenue Commissioner John
"serious personal danger."
The AEC and the Army issued
a joint announcement outlining
restrictions on information
Edwin Middleton. 79, resident |
of Sweetwater until about 23
years ago, died at his home in
Dallas, according to word re-
ceived here Wednesday by his
sister, Mrs. S. R. Neblett of
1101 Ragland, and other rela-
tives.
Mr. Middleton and Mrs. Neb- i efj persons anc] tlie press would
lett were the only children of 1
the late Mrs. Emma Middleton,
turns of all bureau employes for
the last three years.
Jessup—Ambassador-at-Large
Philip C. Jessup branded charg-
es against him by Sen. Joseph
about atomic tests on the desert j R. McCarthy, R„ Wis., as "bare-
proving ground and about com- faced falsehoods, distortions,
bat maneuvers scheduled to get!an^ misrepresentations." A
under way* there sometimes this J Senate^ Foreign^ Relations sub-
month.
The announcement said the!
j committee is studying Jessups'
1 nomination to be a U. S. delegate
. . at the forthcoming United Na-
site was closed to all unauthoriz-, tjons general assembly meeting
in Paris. McCarthy had accused
the nominee of affiliation with
a pioneer Sweetwater resident.
Survivors are his wife, the
former Miss Alta Roy, daugh-
ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. A1
Roy, pioneer residents here; two
sons, Roy of California, Melvin
of Dallas.
According to word received
not be admitted.
"Any persons entering the site
without authorization violate se-
curity regulations imposed by the
atomic energy act, and also dur-
ing and after tests may expose
themselves to serious personal
danger," the announcement stat-
ed.
The AEC said information re-
here, Mr. Middleton died Tues- leased to the public about the
day night at 10:30. tests would be "the minimum re-
Funeral services have been set quired for operational reasons
for 2 p. m. Thursday in Dallas and for safe-guarding the public
at the Lamar Funeral Home. 'in the site region."
Lost Boys Found, Safe Atop
Bearcat Heights Near Here
Three Sweetwater lads who be-1 the boys were located about 10
came lost on a hike Tuesday
p. m., they were seated high on
evening were happy youngsters
when searching parties located
them huddled together on "Bear-
cat Mountain," seven miles south
uf Sweetwater, between Lake
Sweetwater and Highway 70.
The boys, Paul DeBusk, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy DeBusk, and
Tom and Larry Wilson, sons of
Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Wilson, saun-
tered off for a hike, striking out
east on Arizona Street toward
the hills, late in the afternoon.
Somewhere they made a wrong
turn and instead of getting home
before dark they were lost.
An alarm was spread for help
to find them because the rough
country has rattlesnakes. Par-
ents and friends grew anxious.
Police furnished men and cars,
neighbors volunteered and Capt.
R. E. Amos of the Texas State
Guard Reserve Corps was asked
for help. In 15 minutes Amos
had a squad of his men ready
with four cars.
The searchers combed all roads
and finally the boys were located
by exchange of calls and flashing
car lights. Rut the boys dared
not move. Roy DeBusk got a
Jeep to go across the rough pas-
tures and pick up the happy
lads.
It was estimated that nearly
250 persons helped in the search
in one way or another. When
I a round rock, waiting. They said |
i that they thought it would be
I dangerous to strike out across
j the rattlesnake infested area to-1
ward the lights of town.
October Heat Wave
Expected To Ease
Off In Few Days
By United Pros*
A record • breaking October
"heat wave" baked Texans again
today after running tempera-
tures to above 100 degrees at
several points and clearing the
Southwest of clouds.
The peak readings yesterday
were summer - like 102's at Min-
eral Wells, Presidio and Del Rio.
it was 94 at Dallas and 99 at
Fort Worth, both record highs
for Oct. 2; 50 degrees at Dalhart,
56 at Amarillo and 55 at Lubbock
early this morning.
Weathermen said conditions
would remain unchanged until
tomorrow, but temperatures
should fall short of yesterday's
levels by a few degrees. A hfgh
pressure system moving in from
the Pacific Coast should cause
some temperature declines late in
the week, forecasters said.
six organizations which the
Wisconsin Republican called
"Communist fronts." Jessup
gave the subcommittee an "un-
qualified declaration that Sen-a
qualified declaration that Sena-
is false."
Boyle—Sen. Richard M. Nix-
on, R., Cal., charged that Wil-
liam M. Boyle Jr., paid an RFC
official $1,261—and deducted it
from his income tax—after be-
coming democratic national
chairman in 1949. Nixon said
the money went to H. Turney
Gratz, then a $10,300-a-vear
See TRUMAN—Page 8
Circling the square
The Athletic Association and
the Sweetwater Reporter are
sponsoring a special train to
San Angelo Friday for the Mus-
tang-Bobcat game. Roundtrip
fare is only $2.24. Tickets on
sale at Armor's Drug, Reporter
office and various members rf
the Athletic Association Thurs-
day. This special will leave
Sweetwater at 4:30 p. m. Friday
and will unload one block from
the stadium at San Angelo. It
will leave for Sweetwater im-
mediately after the game is
over. Avoid any possibility of a
wreck on the congested highway
by riding the special.
* * *
Members of the Lions Min-
strel group are reminded that
a practice session will he held
Thursday evening at 8 o'clock
at Dorothy Brandt's studio in
(he basement of the Macie Ho-
tel.
* * *
What gums up most family
budgets is the necessity of bor-
rowing from them until next pay
day.
* * *
A woman can keep her house
alone, hnt need# another wom-
an to help her keep a secret . . .
some women, that Is.
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Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 233, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 3, 1951, newspaper, October 3, 1951; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth290560/m1/1/: 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.