The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 325, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1939 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Abilene Reporter and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Abilene Public Library.
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PAGE FOUR
Tune In On KRBC
THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS
Monday Evening, April 24, 1939
Monday Ev
Also I say unto you. Whosoever shall confess me before men, him shall the Son of man also confess before the angels of God.-Luke 12:8. He that confesses his sin, be
gins his journey toward salvation.-Quarles. .
On S
They’re Not Afraid—Much.
1 TheGerman press on Saturday was exult-
1 ng er e-e*—made nn The world
I by the parade of Germany’s military might
. on Hitler’s birthday. The display of war
‘ weapons "struck terror to the hearts of our
- enemies" and "ama ed" the people of the
United States, according to the German press.
This is interesting el iefly because it serves
as awinterfoil to another German activity
which was in full swing on the same day Hit-
ler sent questionnaires to the countries men-
ti.....J in President Roosevelt s recent pro-
. posal for a ten-year peace par t. asking if they 1
fem the s s menaced I .....Such
replies as had been received up to Saturday,
including those from Belgium, Switzerland,
Finland and the Netherlands, said no. *
No other reply could be expected Ne self-
respecting miation could come right out and
* say it was scared to death of another nation.
__==a pretty spectacle, wouldu‘r it. to
see Belgium twisting her handkerchief into
—knots and saving to Der Fuehrer:-=
"Oh. Mr. Adolf ion scare me to death! I’m
----------=—leipbreati-for fear you’ll
give work to a small army of radio artists who
must conform to a new technique—lasting as
+ well as speaking. Perhaps new vistas of serve
ice are opening to many actors who have.been
having a tough time of it in recent years.
Ability to speak lines, plus experience in act-
ing, will come in handy for aspiring tele-
visionists...-
In five years, perhaps, we may be able to
sit at home and see the annual Army Notre
Dame football game in its entirety
Other Viewpoints
Japan’s Gratitude, - -
From the Washington Star:
Amid the ceremonial of receiving the ashes
of Hirosi Saito. former Japanese ambassador
here, a depth of gratitude to the United States
has welled up among the Japanese people al-
most without parallel since America came to
the relief of earthquake-stricken Nippon in
1925 : ‘ - ------
SHADRACH, MESHACH AND ABEDNEGO
hili 11
triesa sea
can’t come riel 110
s
----:---.-------------ThrIpanesepeople are simplefolk, direct
—all thermaller com-T
h of Hitler: only they |
in the display of their emotions, and as ready,
as-in the case of the Panav sinking, to show
f of him the
n ght - t h
e
nvites the world to
tremble. Inconsistent" Well. a. dictator ean’t
be ac used of consistency in but one thing;
Ruthless-disrgard-f*H4t— -------:
---------------------m-kihe-m it-ine-withhis
questionnaires. He is getting ready to prove.
- by hoens.pokus. that little countries do not
their sympathy for the unfortunate American
| v et ms of their own war machine as they are
.fa
Thus President Roosevelt’s assignment of
an American cruiser to bear home the remains i
—f-aapanese envoy who had striven earnest- :
ly sorinterbret his government, policies here -
—and to allay what he saw ivas a rising tide |
of resentment against . Tokio-touched the
irtes gs of the people of Nippon evoking
his oyrt r
.respected. AiT bout the gist of
his reply next Fridavato President Roosevelt:oxa.m
batspr 1 She st refra n. but a, symposium | hierachy in China this gesture of appreciation
si sizing t t -------because —be-
little countries 1 t fear him. They said s
spontaneous expressions of Japanese.
Against, a backdrop of constant American |
oppc siti n- to the/course of Japan’s military -
to a-pi.ni who had served the cause of friend.
shin between the nationsestirted a depth of
feeling Rigidly polite in their own personal
relations, the Japanese were quick to recipro.
eate the spirit behind the American gesture.
E st w......lajns at the la k. of And Americans are certain to distinguish the
. What Place Was That?
identifying s • the sniell r | difference between the spirit of the Japanese
1 rist 1 lay know people and the spirit of its government t
st reet sign en- America. - . 1
tens g is mblazonedWhat for Ameri ans was, a simple act of
with the place name He hates t be taken courtesy to a diplomat who had won their es-
for a simpleton by asking some native the teem was for the Japanese a step toward con-
eilation. But it would be a serious mistake
for the people of Japan to conclude that the
| tribute paid Saito indicates any lessening of
Ameriean’eondemnation of the barbarous war
against China or that it is in any sense is ,
name of the place, so. he drives on in blissful
ignorance.-
A great many travel
s like to know ti e
ames of the strange towns we pass through
nd the strange rivers whe
whizzed through a broad-place in the road i
ross: Once we-t rondonance of treaty violations on the part
of the Japanese government.
Virginia
arradsin
H
lame of the place
Appomattox Fire
f a chi
: any historic spot in gr rar e They are t
TI IST FOIKS By Edgar
1 L I1u A Guest
D
deesce.
OLD HOME WEEK MURDER
by Phoebe Atwood Taylor
The Characters
Asey Mayo, Cape Cod sleuth.
Kay Thayer, girl reporter.
Yesterday: Asey and Kay wait
for the criminal to come to the
Hollow. A car with blaring radio
stops. A dummy disappears.
Asey’s tires are slashed.------
Chapter 43
ROUGH RIDING
Asey jumped in behind the wheel
of Kay’s battered coupe, and grab-
bed at the key she stretched out to
him. .
"Asey, he’s out of sight!" she said.
"I can’t see any tail light—come to
think of it, there never was any tail
light. Here, I’ll pull the choke—”
The little car bounced off as
though someone had given it a swift
kick from the rear.
"Asey," Kay said, “you couldn’t
catch a bicycle in this thing! It
won’t go over forty. The tires-
open. It’s really closed. It’s sprung
for warped or—Asey, can you see
him?" a
"Yup." Asey said unexpectedly.
"See there, way ahead by the
school?"
“How’d you know it’s the right
car?"
"Headlights, no tail light, an’ the
mined by having a competent doc-
tor make a blood count.
The blood count will show not
only the number of red blood cells
in a certain measured quantity
of blood but also the amount of
red coloring matter in the red
blood cells. If either of these is
found to be deffelent there are
means for bringing about im-
provement.
It. is now well established that
the most significant materials
for increasing the number or red
blood cells and the red coloring
matter in the blood include iron
and material in the form of liver
or liverextracts.
People who incline to be at all
anemic should eat liberal amounts
of liver and jamb kidneys at fairly
frequent intervals. Iron is ob-
- tainable through food, but obtain-
- xas tis T ch—
5 nice ahent-Anst of the important
are clearly marked, but not all of them It
w ldn’t ost a great deal to mark all creeks I
and rivers Most of them bear commonplace |
names
historie signifi ance
Clear Forkhe
- Brazos" is ne sig .1 t far fr......1
. north: how much more appealing it would be
if the s - writers would give it its full name
—Rio B . s Dios." meaning “River of
the Arms of G * And we imagine travelers
Ab M knew its na
: —“Bullwage "
erce have seen t
• the proper 1 e of their towns but
many. mm ities this has be
Most si ers t for airme
but have neglected to inf rn the m torit. I+
real service and pleauuira to the paseer.hr
Television Arrives
Tel
RCA announced
- fall-----
Detoba P T—H -
the r
STOP HITLER
Stop H tlere Thus the ery.
Hitler in time will die.
So stop the thought that power
Can bring a rose to flower.
:syasa
Hitler from life w 1 pasq.)
But-st p the thought that might
Make man’s enslavement right.
St p.Hitler! There’s a way!
Stop thinking, night and day
In narrow terms of state—-
And creed and class and Wate?
St p Hitler Train the y ath
In God’s eterr al- truth.
That all men doing good.
Are one great brotherhood:
Stop Hitler: Step the things
Deceiving ezars and kings:
Stop lust for power and greed.
Till every slave is freed.
Stop cunning and deceit:
St P every high-placed cheat!
Stop love of shining braid
rmnern—be stayed.--------
(Copyright, 1999. Edgar A Guest)
any I ante that 1 : aser :
, within reach a 1 *
than a few r be E . are fr ... 1. -.
BARBS POPED Y
Washington Daybook
By Preston Grover
WASHINGTON—It is more than | through congress until mid-April,
six months since Munich and not seven months after Munich. The
a solitary plane has been ordered remaining $250,000,000 which the
under the new rearmament pro-army expects, to spend during the
gram, and it will be Munich-time next year probably won’t be ready
again in the fall before more than until late. June
- a handful are delivered. Until the money was appropriat-
Such is the speed with which ed it was impossible to order even’
democracy rearms. In war time we one new airplane In March the
would do it faster How much war department started the ball
- faster is problematical—but at least rolling by asking bids to be- sub-
a little In peace time," even in mitted early in July on several
days of emergency, we won t be tpes—of planes. Contractsprot-
.pushed.---. , ably cannot be awarded until in
• The president only recently sign- August Actual building will be-
ed the bill authorizing the con- gin after that
struetion program whith will bring OTHER DIFFICULTIES
—the Army air fleet to a top strength. Other troubles have arisen. There
of 6.000 planes More than a week is no assurance that the idle plants
elapsed before final touches could now waiting for jobs will get any
AbileneReporter-News
MORNING EVENING-SUNDAY
Published twice daily except once on
Sunday and Monday
By The
REPORTER PUBLISHING COMPANY
151 Cypress St ....... .Abilene. Texas
Entered as Second Class Matter Oct. 14.
1908 at the postoffice, Abilene, Texas
ader the Act of March 2nd, 1879.
able with much more certainty in
the form of iron as a drug which
the doctor can prescribe accord-
ing to the needs of the patient.
Significant also in this connec-
tion is a plentiful supply of eer-
tain vitamins, particularly vita-
mins A. B and C. These vitamins
no 2 3 00
are found in fats like butter and
cod liver oil and also in leafy
green vegetables and in fruit
juices. The diet of the girl who
wants to have rosy cheeks should
include sufficient amounts of these
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Four Weeks (Morning & Sunday) .. 60c | -—---— —----•— — -
52 Weeks (ering • Sunday) .. $7.8 exposure to sunshine will give
itel the face, at least for a while, a
*rosy and healthful appearance.
One Week (Evening a Sunday) ...
Four Weeks Evening. A Sunday -554
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be put on the appropriation bill contracts. They may fail to bid low One Month ...
making money available for letting enough, or they max submit unac- Eares.Monta
contracts. ceptable models A few years ago *
ceptable models. A few years ago
Munich was in late September. the’department would have given
In early October the president told them contracts regardless, just to
a press conference that the country keep them busy. But early in this
must put more planes in the air administration the air corps was
Then elapsed three months. Con- submitted to a shaking congression-
gress did not until Jan 3 al investigation for "alloting" planes
in this manner without the for-
mality of competitive bidding. It
doesn’t want to get burned doing
it now. Legislation has been in-
troduced permitting it to be done
legally. That will take time to get
through.
AC TION BEHIND SCENES
On the surface rearmament ap-
peared to be at a standstill. Back
of the scenes during these three
months the war department was 1
getting airplane makers ready for |
bigger production It was not noised
about but every manufacturer
making planes for the Army was
told to be ready to double or even
quadruple the-size of the order he
had. If he had a contract: in 1938
to build 13 planes he was to be
ready in 1939 to turn out perhaps
50 of the same kind
But no factory manager could
go ahead on the strength of that |
*—f is *--with completed
planes depending on the govern-
So the $50,000,000 may not start |
any idle plants rolling immediate-
ly The—money may have to be
spent buying extra planes from
plants already having army orders
from last year.
When the thing really begins
humming sometime in 1940 we will
begin knocking planes out at a
rate of several hundred a month
During the past several years we
planes depending on the govern-have averaged less than 400 mill-
ment to buy them The Army can’t tary planes: a year.
promise to buy until it has the
money in hand
The Family
/
(By mail in West Texas)
Morning or Evening With Sunday
One Year .*
......
000
Above subscription rates apply to Zones
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agement by reporting the same to the
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Society Editor .....................5033
This paper’s first duty ta to print all the
news that sent to print honest y and fairly
to all. unbiased by any consideration even
inc uding its own editorial opinion
important substances.
Finally, everyone knows that a
brisk walk in the outdoor -air with
YOUR
CHILDREN
• OLVE ROBERTS BARTON
Copyright 1937 NEA Service
We drove through the city on a
windy day. It was a liberal educa -
tion in itself to see ton upon ton of
refuse littering lawns and gutters.
Where did it come from, where
would it go? What manner of peo-
when these difficulties +
• and the television add t 1
most any pr grat
*175
the prices of receiving sets
-
MR. AND MRS.-
That a ifornia judge was right when he re-
lived a divorce to a woman on grounds her
| sband game home with lipstick on his col-
far The husband must have ducked, anyway.
Students planning tours to Europe
have been advised to come with enough
money for a return if war starts Dads
will appreciate this advance prepared,
ness
** mming suits are to be designed to
‘se stained claws, windews. The window
January 12 the president sent a.
special message to congress ask-
ng $525,000,000 for increased ar- TAAD
| mament about half of it to be spent I I i ( K
He wanted $50,000,000 at once B, DR MORRIS FISRSEIN
rder to correct the present lag in Editor Journal of the American Medical
aircraft production due to idle As-diation-j and .of Hvzela,
plants A half dozen plants, large IB Maeatine
and small were almost idle
But congress insists on studying
these matters Hearings in the
house began January 17_but the bill
authorizing 6.000 planes and other
expansion took until April 3 pass-
through congress and getting the
president’s signature
A strange letter;" almost like a
voice from the past, has just reach-
€ f this column A
girl from Massachusetts writes.
"Will you please tell me what
conditions, foods, etc., tend to
gite rosy cheeks."
In these days of widely adver-
tised cosmetic preparations it is
almost a shock and certainly a
Even then no money was avail-
able not‘even the $50,00,000 This _______. -.... ....
rush money was carried in the great surprise to receive a ques-
regular A department appropria- tion of this character
tion bill which did not course It would be very easy to say to
Spring Weather Forecast
I WISH WE COULD Go
ON A SPRING CRUISE
UH HUA
SOMEWHERE
Way CANT you PAY
SOME ATTENTION To Me?
You WERENT READING
UNTIL I STAR
no
SORRY JUST HAPPENED
To BE READING (--
THE PAPER -
76
SAY—
TALL To You
STORM SIGNALS REPORT
HURRICANE HEADING FOR—
%
LISTEN To This!
THis IS TER-RIBLE—
b
I KNOW! YouRE Just
MAKING THAT UP. Mouve
GOT A HURRICANE HEADING
FOR WHEREVER ITIS
00
WANT To Go
mate he’s goin’. Yessiree, that’s our
"Maybe he is our man, but you’d
better give up any idea of catching
him. right this minute,” Kay said. I
“You can’t!"
uive up nothin’,” Asey said. “At a
least we can trail him. He’s clever, #
Kay. Keeps his radio goin’ to mis- +
lead us—in fact, the might’s well d
have brought a brass band. An’
slashin’ my tires—yes, this’s our
man. Now, hang on tight. I got ,
to- catch up enough to see which
way he turns up at the forks.”
. He pressed his foot down on the 1
accelerator, and Kay began to un- ,
derstand that Asey meant exactly A
what he said when he told her to I
hang on. The little coupe was hurl-
ing itself forward in a series of leaps
and bounds, and it quivered trem-T
ulously, as though it were frighten-
ed to death. I
Right, Asey said. “So he thinks
he can fool me, does he? Huh.
Keep hangin’on. We’re goin’to
have fun—” 5 0 .
, The speedometer jiggled past the
last figure, kept on jiggling past
the zero, and arrived triumphantly ,
at ten on its second trip around. 1
Serenely and rather proudly, it,
stuck there. - ”
"Hey!" Kay had to howl to make 1
herself heard above all the noises F
of the car, "hey—Asey! This—this %
thing! This car? It was six years =
old when I inherited it at the of -
tires Six years ir a day. And the
Her knees hit against the dash, "
and she braced herself to meet the F
bumps.
CORN FIELD
They were on some side road or t
other. To her left, was the center 1
of Billingsgate; she could see the
yellow star on top of the mast at -
the midway, and as she watched, it -
blinked once and went out
"We ain’t ridin’,” Asey said.
"We’re flyin’—whee! Look out for
your head X’
"Red lanterns!" she howled ac-
cusingly at him. “Red lanterns!
The sign said ‘Road Closed’!"
"We ain’t on the road.” .
They weren’t. They were billow-
ing nonchalantly, but at a slightly
slower pace, along the edge of a
corn field.
After several moments the car
lurched back up on the road again
A bayberry twig slatted against the
windshield.
"That was just a little bad strip
there," Asey said soothingly. “I -
knew about it Honest, I did.”
"Sure." Kay said "Of course.
Mayo the omniscient. Asey, I hate
to bring it up, it withers me, but
are you just driving for fun, or do
you know where our friend is? I
haven’t seen the slightest trace of
any car ahead."
"He ain’t ahead. Asey told her as
he cut around a puddle. “He’s to 6
one side-------------
“Indeed !"
"Yup, he’s takin’ the high road,
an’ we got the low road, but we’ll
get there b’fore him--"
"We’ll get to heaven before him.”
- Kay said, “if that’t what you mean "
"Wonder how he missed your car.”
“Probably just had yours in
mind," Kay said. “Asey, you must
understand about the tires—my hea-
vens!”
They skidded in a puddle, and
the coupe turned completely around
twice.
"Now there,” sey said, continuing
his unabashed way, “is where this
thing beats even my roadster. The
Porter’d only of skidded half around
leavin’ us racin’ the wrong d’rection
Ple cared so little about ofdef. or/to Dr ‘And." Help M s eg/eppears
----------“How?" Kay demanded: "Want
beauty that wrappers, newspapers
and boxes having served their pur-
pose, were no longer a responsibil-
ity?
Any erroneous reflections upon the char
acter, standing or reputation of any per
son firm or corporation which may occur
m the columns of THE REPORTER-NEWS
will be gladly corrected upon being brought
to the attention of the management.
The pub shers are not responsible for
C9PZ. 0 i59RAxpoKrapDical-afrors--or--
unintentional errors that may occur
other than to correct in next issue after
-1s brought to their attention All ad.
verfising orders are accepted on this basis
only.
Wind is a busybody. It swoops
down on uncovered receptacles and
scatters the contents on lawns a
block away. It gets behind stores
and hotels, and flings fruit wrap-
pers and excelsior in all directions.
It seizes, in its merry rage, the pa-
per and foll of thousands of cigaret
packs and candy bars, and deposits
them in the most remote hollows of
the park.
it is surprising in a civilized
country that pre-supposes order
and” cleanliness, that instead of
keeping our outdoors immaculate.
Members of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively en
Utlede to use for publication of all news _____
dispatcher credited to it or—not other F we use it largely as a dump
nn and He me Now we come to the beginning of
--- | andi that is the training of
this young lady that all that is children. .
necessary is for her to get in t. hines come, wrapped now
touch with the corner drugstore and asjusual fruits, have skins
where a tremendous number of one of the very first things a child
rouges in the form of sticks should-have fixed in his mind is to
pastes, cakes and other materials take care of the candy wrapper or
will be found available at a price skin in his hand. .
to suit any purse once fixed, the habit of careful
Obviously however, she is one disposal will take care of itself. It
of those old-fashioned girls who smential character
seem to feel that it is much Het-NOT ALL CHILDREN’S FAULT
School children get all the blame:
for littering up the streets. They
seems to feel that it is me bet-
ter to be healthful in order to se-
cure the appearance of health ftterng up the L.........,
than it is th supply the appear- deserve part of it, but observe the
ance of health by masking the man open his mail and throw the
actual color of the tissues envelopes away before he boards a
bus, or the woman reducing her
packages to one and dropping the
Rosy cheeks are an indication
of two important facts first, that - -----__
there is plenty of good circula- superfluous bags to the sidewalks;
tion of blood in the skin and.
second. that the blood contains a
large amount of the hemoglobin
or the red coloring matter which
supplies a reddish appearance
The circulation of the blood in
the skin depends, of course, to
some extent on the blood vessels
that are present.’ Not much can
be done to produce more blood
vessels than are naturally there
at the time of birth.
It is now well established, how.
ever, that circulation can be im-
proved by the use of massage and
heat and the alternating applica-
tion of hot and cold water These
simple performances may be done
by anyone who cares to put in
the necessary time.
Before anything is done, how.
ever, to increase the hemoglobin
of red coloring matter in the
blood, it is desirable to know ex-
actly how much of such material
is present.
me to crawl out and sit on the hood
with a handkerchief? What do you
think I am. Id—”
“Hold the wheel,” Asey said, “an’
I’ll fix it."
Somehow with a sudden lurch he
managed to clean enough of a space
to see through. •
A few hundred yards on, he slow-
ed the car down and snapped off
the headlights.
"Ahead," he informed Kay, “is
the main road to Boston. An’ just
b’low us here to the left is the road
where that feller’s got to come out.
It’s two miles longer than the thing
we come over, bein’ a work r’lief
road, an it’s kind of windin’—" 1
"And what are you going to do -
with this fellow, providing he turns (
up? Shoot him?”
"I got no d’sire to kill him. I want -.
to find out who he is—aha—there-" *
A sedan raced out of the new
road and sped past them at a ter- 5
rific clip.-
"That’s it,” Asey swung the coupe :
over and followed. “License num- i
rber’s covered up—now, let’s see what
he does an’ where he thinks he’ll
go. Ah. There—there he turns off.
That’s nice. We’ll string along. "
“Where’s he headed?” Kay asked
as they left the main road. “Where
are we headed?”
FOREST
“Toward my home town,” Asey
said, “an’ I’d like real well to play
tag with him on some of them back
the storekeeper who sweeps out at
night and fills the gutter; the yards
with uncovered cans; the house-
wife’s “burn piles” that never quite
burn down. It is not all the chil-
dren’s fault, is it ?
Yet these untidy people were
children once. They simply never
were taught their-civic duty to keep
things in order.
It will soon be picnic time. That
means the defacement of parks and
country. The clean-up expense aft-
er a Sunday or holiday is terrific I
don’t think I ever saw a scrap of
paper in a London or Paris park.
Surely that wasn’t just chance The
strange part of it is that the public
here loves an unsullied vista. They
choose the inviting spots to camp
or picnic and expect heaven to
clean up after them v
Voting is one man’s say. Order
is one man’s job. Each of us must
roads there. I know them roatis.”
"You seem to know these.”
“Today, while judgin’," Asey said. 1
"I read through the whole blessed
Old Home Week program, includin’ . 1
a map of reads, past an’ present.
Looked like a close-up of a perm’-1
ment wave, but I got a lot out of it.
Fellows’ slowing down.. I don’t like
that—"
"Why not?" Kay demanded’ h
“Catch up- find out who he is—it’s E
your chance to—oh, dear, there he i
goes again! What are you slowing
down for now?"------—---------
do our bit and the result will tell
This can be deter- (Copyright 1939, NEA Service, Inc.)
"Want to see if I can peer through
this windshield an’ see—no, I guess
he didn’t.”
“Didn’t what?" Kay asked as
Asey’s foot again went down hard
on the accelerator.
“I though he might have tossed
a bottle or somethin’ for us to run
over—the road narrows here, Kay.
Hang on."
The speedometer tape jiggled
(Continued On Page 6)
Presic
Feder
On a swing
Texas to atter
of the eight (
Federation of
Joseph M. F
state federati
last night in
route from her
ton to attend
conference, op
"Convention
der way for
state meeting
American Rey
March, will be
xof the council
L’eral Federatio
in San Franci
With -other
bers, Mrs. Pe
Paso May 4 0
California. Th
ed in Los Ang
the grounds of
and at a tea 8
DOTTEJ
HROCKS lik
F be seen
dances this sp
of navy blue
keeping with 1
Open
Visitor
FOLDING or
• afternoon a
hours Sunday, N
as L. Brasher
street, complime
sister Agnita L
City Miss Leine
in Abilene in ot
of her cousins.
ON PIL
Dott
(one of the m
U bies in the
in one of the n
dens in Abilene
NEW LO
Rummers and Pu
ONE HOSE
TWO HOSE
Mrs. 3
, WADDI
250
HEAR YA
of Deny
IN GOSPEL
10 A. M. a
—April 22
CHURCH C
5th and 1
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 325, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1939, newspaper, April 24, 1939; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1631123/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.