The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 338, Ed. 2 Monday, May 27, 1946 Page: 2 of 10
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Monday Evenln
PAGE TWO
TAKE LEAGUE LEAD
Hose Seek Series
Sweep with Iross
The Blue Sox are back on top in the West Texas-New
Mexico circuit standings today after squeezing past the
Albuquerque Dukes twice here yesterday afternoon.
A crowd of 1,700 fans jammed Blue Sox stadium to
watch the Abilenians beat the Dukes, 4-3 and 7-4.
The Sox will send fastballer Dick Tross against the
New Mexico club tonight in an effort to sweep the series.
Tonight’s game at Sox Sta-1
dium starts at 8:15. Oilers Get Big
Last place Clovis, in the mean- , D ."...
time, whipped Amarillo, 9-5, to Lead, Beat Loboes
leave the Blue a full game ahead ___
of the Gold Stockings. LAMESA, May 27—(Spl)—Pam-
the other league games Pam- pa’s Oilers pounded out an 8-run
bock outlasted in a land held the Lamesa Loboes well
wild affair. in check on 7 hits as the Oilers
Abilene came mighty close to copped an easy 12 to 5 win in the
dropping Sunday s aftermath. series opener.
The Sox were down, 4-2, going A Sunday gathering of 1254 fans
into the last round. ____watched the Pampans pummel
Ken Olson, who notched his sey; lefthander Muley Toten and Re
enth straight win with a three hit lief Hurler Spangler out of the
performance in the opener, led off box in a hurry,
with a homer in the seventh. Ken Score by innings:
Quevreaux batted for Pitcher Bill Pampa 270 1008 101 12—14—3
Werbowski and drew abase on Lamesa 010 004 000 5- 7-1
balls. Leo Thomas, sacrificed him Batteries: Garland and Zigel-
to second. Then Ed Krage advanc man, Toten, Spangler, Gray and
ed Quevreaux to third on anin Cook losing pitcher Toten.
field out. Manager Hayden Greer . 1o
singled to right, scoring Quevreaux Lubbock Wins, 21-18
and sending the game into an ex- Borger 002 020 743—18 20 6
tra inning Lubbock 151 902 03%—21 21 S
tra innins. c A Ridgeway, Hair. Clawitter. -V. Gil
In the eighth Danny Ozark and christ and Clawitter, Johnston; Nelson,
Jim Matthews got on by walk and Pickering and Miller, Vaushn.
hit batsman. Pete Spatafore then
broke up the game with a homer reaux 2. Olson, DeLaGarza,, Trusky. TI C 1 1 nil
that landed high up on the light tnceee xr.," 1 D IT Bills
pole in left field. Quevreaux to Ozark to Greer: Dixon to IE VMTIS LIL
Joe Tysko, rookie right hander De-er-a, toelds-en. 2222.77m
who worked the last inning, got | be “ABuquerque 3, Abilene a Bases
credit for the victory in the sec- on balls - Scott ” Olson 2 Struck, out
ond game. Bill Morgan started for out * scotr. passed ban — piers,
the Sox but was relieved in the Umpires — Fritz and Sandt. Time —136.
sixth when the Dukes staged their SECOND GAME:
four run spree. ALBUQUERQUE
Thomas, who hit safely for the D.A 2
18th game in a row in the opener. Goldsberry, ib ..
went hitless in two trips in the # •
In the other league games Pam-
FARMER NELSON — Byron
Nelson, who tackles Dick Bur-
ton, British Open champion,
in International Challenge
Match, relaxes between tour-
naments on his farm near
Denton. Tex., on tractor
equipped with hydraulic seat.
Top Teams in
AE
0 0
second game.
ALBUQUERQUE AB B H PO A
Dixon. 2b ... 3 0 0 0 2
DeFazio, If ........3 2 10 0
Goldsberry . 1b .......1 1 0 5 0
De La Garza, ss .......3 0 1 3 1
Trusky, rf .........3 0 1 2 0
Pride. 3b ............3 0 0 0 1
Robinson, cf...........3 0 0 3 0
Diers, c ..............3 0 0 5 0
Scout. p------------2 0 0 0 1
TOTALS........24 3 3 18 3
ABILENE AB B H PO A
TOTALS ...........23 4 V 9
Albuquerque ........10200
Abilene 022 00
Runs batted in — Matthews,
Robinson, cf ..........a 0 1 4 0 0
Diers, e ................3 0 1 3 1 0
Behl. p ...............3 0 0 0 0 0
Casterino, * .....00022 33 0
TOTALS ......... 314 133x10 1
X—One out when winning run scored.
0 ABILENE
0 - 3
ib
• 1 Tysko,P
1 0 Quevreaux,
REMOVED FREE
Dead and Crippled Animals
Can Collect 4001 ar 6513
CENTRAL RENDERING CO.
Ml Locust
Nights, Sunday Holidays-Cah erne
• • TOTALS ...........25 T 5
- — Albuquerque .........000 0
12 2 Abilene ..........000 1
0—3 Mum bated in — DeLaGarza
X—4 I Greer. Spatafore 3. Robinson. H
Quev--— DeLaGarza, Olson, Spatafor
base hit — Diers. Stolen bases
fere Greer Anderson. Left on
Albuquerque 7 Abilene 5 Bases
- Beni 9 Morgan 3. Struck ou
2 Werbowski Morgan 2. Tysk
1218 Butternut
THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS_______________________________
Sens Close in on Red Sox
And Yankees in American
By JOE REICHLER
Associated Press Sports Writer
Those amazing Washington Sen
ators practically are breathing on
the necks of the second place New
York Yankees and have closed
within 7 1-2 games of Boston's Am-
erican league leaders.
Overshadowed by the Red Sox
with their spectacular early-season
15-game winning streak, the Nats,
after a dismal start, kept pecking
away and since May 12 have won
10 of their last 12 games to climb
from deep in the second division
to third place.
has been their GI first baseman.
Mickey Vernon. Vernon remained
on the Senators’ roster only be-
cause. as a returning veteran, he
was entitled to a 30-day trial.
Meantime Manager Ossie Bluege
used Jack Sanford and Joe Kuhel
at the initial sack. Then Bluege ex-
perimented with Vernon, and once
in the lineup hits began flying
off Mickey's bat with astonishing
regularity.
Spearheading the Nats' advance and
The Marcus Hook, Pa., boy cur-
rently is leading all major league
hitters with a .405 batting mark
as hit in 22 consecutive
Monday Evening, May 27, 1946
By The Associated Press
Top ranking teams of the Texas
league split double headers yester-
day to furnish sport fans plenty of
baseball but no change in league
positions.
The league's top team. Fort
Worth Cats, necked-and-necked a
4-3 and 3-4 thriller with the sec-
ond place Dallas Rebels. An over-
flow crowd of 10,601 in the Dallas
stadium was estimated as the larg-
gest in the circuit since 1939.
Third place Tulsa took a 7-5
off Oklahoma City, then gave back
a 1-6 in the second game. San An-
tonioshared 10-3 and—244with
Houston. Beaumont took Shreve-
) port 10-0 in a single game.
1 The Dallas-Fort Worth fracas
J featured the Cats all the way in
9 the first eight innings of the first
0 game The Rebels scored three
i runs in the ninth to threaten. In
; the nightcap the Dallasites came
i from behind to tie in the sixth,
i then run in the winning run with
, two out in the seventh
bases —
on balls
— Behl
innings. Werbowski 2 and 0 in 1 2-3 Inn-
ings. Behl 3 and 4 in six innings (none
out in 7th) Hit by pitcher — (Matthews)
Casterino. Wild pitch - Behl Winning
pitcher — Tysko Losing pitcher Caster-
ino Umpires — Sandt and Fritz. Time
— 1:57.
MONOGRAMMING
Cocktail Nopkins—Book Matches
Leather Goods—Fountain Pens
And Stationery
ONE DAT SERVICE
MUNDEN COMPANY
Tulsa rode high in the opener
against the Oklahoma City In-
dians. but were held scoreless un-
til the seventh in the second game
by Pitcher Leonard Gilmore
San Antonio rapped out 17 hits
to take the Houston 1. in the
first game. In the afterpiece they
ruined a couple of chances to re-
peat with faulty base work.
Manager Jim Turner pitched
his Beaumont Exporters back to
an even .500 in the standings by
whitewashing the Shreveport
Sports 10-0 in the opener of a
three game series.
Ortiz to Fight
ITS LIKE THIS
Jimmy Zinn, Duke’s Pilot
Says Amarillo Club to Beat
Bv HOWARD GREEN
TIMMY ZINN, one of the three former major leaguers managing
• in the West Texas-New Mexico league, believes that the Ama-
rillo Gold Sox are the bunch to beat.
The Albuquerque skipper likes the all-round balance of the
club led by Suitcase Bob Seeds. He also is high on the Lubbock
Hubbers. He rates the Hubs as second best.
Zinn renewed an old acquaintance before yesterday's double
header, chatting with Tire Dealer Jesse (T-Bone) Winters for some
minutes. Jimmy was with the Pittsburgh club when Winters was
with Philadelphia. Zinn hurled six years in the majors and among
other things was one of the best hitting pitchers of his time.
The New Mexico manager has made one pinch hitting appearance
this season and popped out to deep short.
"Where did they pitch to you?" Winters inquired.
“Across my letters,” Zinn replied.
“It might have been guess-work but they knew what they were
doing,” the tire dealer smiled.
PRESIDENT BRANCH RICKEY of the Brooklyn Dodgers had
I nothing but praise for the way Hayden Greer is handling the
Abilene club. .
The Blue Sox are higher in the standings than the Brook-
lyn officials expected.
Brooklyn’s two Texas farms are acquitting themselves nobly.
Fort Worth is way out in front in the Texas league and the Blue
Sox are a game to the good in the WT-NM.
Several fans have inquired as to why Earl Benson isn’t play-
ing. The popular right fielder suffered a severely "skinned" knee
sliding into third base on his second triple last Friday night, and
Manager Hayden Greer fears be will not be in condition to play for
several days.
Benson was beginning to find his stride when hurt
TOE TYSKO, who shone for the McMurry college Indians this
• spring, is a brother of John Tysko who pitched for the Abilene
Apaches in 1939.
Joe was recommended to the Abilene management by his
brother John, and came South from his home in Dillonvale, Ohio,
for the purpose of “trying out” with the Blue Sox
Upon arrival in Abilene he learned that a spring semester was
starting at McMurry and that the South Side school was fielding a
baseball team. :
He had not signed a professional contract and was eligible for
intercollegiate competiiton. Tysko enrolled in school, pitched for
the Indians and then finished the spring semester before joining
the Blue Sox
“Little Joe," as the McMurry coeds called him. dotted an Abi-
lene contract Friday afternoon and waa in a ball game Friday night
Yesterday he was credited with a victory over Albuquerque. Tysko
hurled one inning in the relief role.
THE evening mail brought a letter from Ray Marshall who until
A recently was employed by the West Texas Utilities in Abilene.
Marshall is now living in Albuquerque.
“I really enjoyed watching Hayden Greer pound the devil out
of that ball (he got eight for nine) and citing him for my little
boy. Hayden broke a bat or it would have actually been 9for-9
in that double header
“I am also happy to report that the Abilene kids made a great
impression off the field as well as on. Greer has a bunch of
real gentlemen. Their morale end deportment on the field waa
marvelous." .
Marshall was one of Greer’s top boosters when he was playing
softball for WTU in Abilene back in early 1940.
games.
Vernon collected three of the
Nats eight hits yesterday, includ-
ing his fourth home run, to pace
Washington to a 3-2 triumph over
the Philadelphia doubleheader.
The Red Sox, aided: by Tex
Hughson’s masterful pitching, gain-
ed an even split with the Yankees
Sunday for a 2-1 game edge in the
■crucial” weekend series. Hugh-
son blanked the Yanks with three
hits in the opener to shade Floyd
Bevens, 1-0. Homers by Joe Di-
Maggio and Phil Rizzuto, the latter
with one on, gave the Yanks the
nightcap, 4-1.
Those dashing Dodgers extend-
ed their latest win streak to seven
straight by sweeping both ends of
a double header from the Phils in
Philadelphia 5-4 and 6-2. The twin
triumph, together with the St.
Louis Cards split in Cincinnati, in-
creased the Dodgers first place
lead to two and a half games.
Cincinnati came from behind to
defeat the Cards 5-4 after the Red-
birds had won the opener 4-3.
• • •
The Chicago White Sox cele-
brated Teddy Lyons’ debut as a
big league manager by trimming
the Detroit Tigers twice 3-1 and
2-1 and burying the Bengals deeper
in fourth place.
Bobby Feller was just another
pitcher to the St. Louis Browns
who slammed the vaunted fire-
baller for 13 hits to whip Cleve-
land 8-2 in the opener of their
double header. Steve Gromek
handcuffed the Browns, 2-0 with
four hits in the nightcap.
The New York Giants used a bar-
rage of extra-base hits to bury the
Boston Braves under 12-4 and 7-0
scores at the Polo grounds.
Pittsburgh handed the Chicago
Cubs their fourth straight defeat
by belting a trio of hurlers for an
8-2 decision in the opener of a
scheduled twin bill. Rain forced
postponement of the second game
The Standings'
DOUG JONES
Hogan Captures
Western Open
ST. LOUIS, May 27.—(UP)-
Ben Hogan, par’s public enemy
number one, was on his way to
New York today, with the Western
Open golf championship and $2,-
000 more to add to his total as the
game’s top 1946 money winner.
Texas Ben, as economical with
words as he is with strokes, didn't
have much to say after he shatter-
ed the Western’s 17-year-old record
of 273 with his 271.
He mentioned only casually that
he intended to play in the Goodall
round-robin, but if his performance
here is any criterion, that means
that the other contestants had bet-
ter concentrate on second place.
The pint-sized, wiry golfing ma-
chine displayed the coolness and
deliberate concentration that made
him famous in putting together a
string of four sub-par rounds of |
68. 66. 67 and 70. There was no
better proof of his consistency
than that there was only a four-
stroke difference between his best
and worst round.
City Meet
To Finals
Gervise McGraw, a 16-year-old
making his first bid for the city
championship, and Defendi
Titlist Doug Jones rallied yester-
day to win semifinal matches at
the country club.
McGraw and Jones will meet
next Sunday for the crown
Young McGraw elinimated James
Dixon, 1 up, while Jones put out
Max Park by the same score.
Dixon was 1 up on his youthful
foe going into the 17th. Dixon
three-putted that green to lose the
hole and then dropped the match
on the 18th when he hit two ball
out of bounds trying to drive
the trees on the dogleg. Mc-
Graw had a bogey five, but it was
good enough for the victory
Jones also was down going into
No. 16, a hole he copped with a par
four, and then he went ahead on
the next hole with another par.
They halved the final hole, giv-
ing Doug the verdict.
The score cards:
Jones out
Park out
Jones in
Park in
554 433 434 35 a
534 434 533-36 •
353 556 434-38-35—73
453 535 544-38-36-74
Phene 21672
HOLYWOOD. May 27.—IP—■ m
Manuel Ortiz, world bantamweight mm • mera ■ peon g
champion, will make the fifteenthCDILTT VIICCTS
defense of his crown in San Fran ■ PA T • " " ■
cisco. June 10. against Jackie
Jurich of San Jose, Calif. gov ■ - AA
= Speedway Mark
eetecas Pct C
RESULTS YESTERDAY
WEST TEXAS—NEW MEXICO LEAGUE
ABILENE 4-7, Albuquerkue 3-4.
Lubbock 31. Borger 18.
Clovis 8. Amarillo 5.
Pampa 13 Lamesa 5.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston 1-1, New York 0-4 (second game
called end of seventh rain)
Washington 3. Philadelphia 2 (second
game postponed, rain).
Chicago 3-2 Detroit 1-1.
— St. Louis 8-0, Cleveland 2-2-------- ----
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York 12-7. Boston 4-0
Brooklyn 5-6, Philadelphia 4-2 (first
game 11 innings; second game called at
end of seventh, Sunday law)
Pittsburgh 8, Chicago 3 (second post-
poned, rain.)
St Louis 4-5, Cincinnati 3-4
WEST TEXAS--NEW MEXICO LEAGUE
W L Pet.
ABILENE ..................21 8 723
Amarillo ................20 9 689
Pampa .....................20 10 .667
Borger .....................16 14 331
Lubbock ...................16 14 531
Albuquerque................9 20 310
Lamesa ..................• 21 300
Clovis 8 23 .258
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Brooklyn ...... 23 10 697
St. Louis ................20 12 .625
Cincinnati ...............IS 14 517
Chicago .................15 15 500
Boston ..................18 H 485
New York .................16 18 471
Pittsburgh ...............13 18 448
Philadelphia 8 24250
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston.... 29 9 763
New York ..............23 15 .805
Washington ..............19 14 576
Detroit ...............18 18 514 |
St. Louis ..................16 30 44
Cleveland ..................16 20 444
Chicago ..............12 20 375
Philadelphia 9 27 250
GAMES TODAY
WEST TEXAS—NEW MEXICO LEAGUE
Albuquerque at ABILENE
Clovis at Amarillo.
Borger at Lubbock.
Pampa at Lamesa
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York at .Brooklyn - Koslo G-3)
vs. Hatten (2-2)
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh — Heussea
(4-1) vs Ostermueller 3-1-
St. Louis st Chicago — Pollet (4-1) vs
Passeau (3-1)
tOaly games scheduled)
AMERICAN LEAGCE
Washington st New York (night) —
Loons rd (4-0) vs Bonham (2-1)
Detroit at Cleveland (nignti — But
chinson (1-1) vs. Harder '1-H
Chicago at Bi Louis (night) — Lopat
2-3) vs Milnar (1-1),
(Only games scheduled)
UT Finishes 51-2
Games Up on Bears
McGraw out 444 534 433 34
Dixon out 534 444 335-35
McGraw in 354 446 535-39-3473
Dixon in 254 455 546-40-35—75
Teacher of Years
Ago Visits Here
A former teacher in the old
North Ward school here was a
visitor in Abilene last week.
She was Mrs. G. T. Stevens of
Winslow, Ariz., the former Chris-
tine Morgan, who — accompanied
by her husband—visited in the
home of Ida and May Kelly. 1132
North 4th while en route from a
visit with her father at Munday to
southeast Texas points.
Mr. and Mrs. Stevens were mar-
ried in the Kelly home, then 757
Hickory, 35 years ago. Stevens di
postmaster at Winslow.
By the Associated Preu
The University of Texas boasted
one of the best records in South-
west conference baseball history to-
day—14. victories against no do
feats in championship play and 18
wins out of 22 games for the sea-
son.
The Longhorns wound up 5 1-2
games ahead ,of second-place Bay-
lor in the title race. In non-confer-
ence games Texas lost four—two to
Tulsa of the Texas league and two .
to Oklahoma university.
Bobby Layne, Texas pitching ace. |
won nine games and lost none—
probably the top record of all time
for conference hurling.
Texas last week beat Texas
Christian 13-1 and Southern Metho-
dist 3-2 to wind up the campaign.
ITS
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FOR
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Complete Security
• THE SOCIAL SECURITY ACT is a milestone in
| social advance. It marks recognition by our
government of the right of every wage-carner
to a retirement income. It recognizes, too, the
need of family income by providing incomes for
widows and orphans of wage-earners. Every
American eligible for its benefits should know
and appreciate the value of Social Security
legislation.
But the Social Security Act offers basic existence
incomes only; it’s up to you to bring real secur-
ity to your family. Social Security plus life
insurance is the ideal way to family security.
The Family Security Plan of The Life Insur- *
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meet and living in comfort. Let us tell you how
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7. 4. Sarlocs, Manage.
LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF VIRGINIA
812 Mims Building, Abilene, Texas
REDWHITE
CorFis
RED & WHITECOFFEE
INDIANAPOLIS, May 27—I-
The Indianapolis motor speedway
gave driven an extra five hours
today to qualify for the 30th runn-
ing of the 500-mile race May 30.
but a couple of middle aged pilots
already had grabbed about all the
honors available in the time trials.
Fifty-year-old Ralph Hepburn of
Van Nuya. Calif. veteran of 14 pre-
vious races, shattered the qualifi-
cation records for both one and
four lapa yesterday in the rebuilt
W. S. (Bud) Winfield car from
La Canada, Calif.
The mild-mannered driver, who
limps as s result of one of his
crashes, gassed the ultra-stream-
lined blue racer around the two-
and-a-half-mile course in one min-
ute 6.94 seconds on his fastest lap
' NOENAMEL Klein to Join
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1218 Butternut
Phone 21672
Vera Cruz Club
MEXICO CITY. May 27.—(UP)
—Second Baseman Lou Klein, who
jumped the St. Louis Cardinals to
play baseball in the Mexican
league, was assigned today to the
last place Vers Crus Blues where
he is expected to break into the
lineup right away.
Klein's team mates will include
former major leaguers. Catcher
Mickey Owen, late of the Brook-
lyn Dodgers; Outfielder Danny
Gardella and Pitcher Harry Feld-
man of the New York Giants, and
Outfielder Bobby Estralella of the
Philadelphia Athletics
Klein arrived by plane last
night with Bernardo Pasquel, vice
president of the league, who re-
portedly persuaded him to jump
along with two other Cardinals,
Pitchers Max Lanier and Fred
Martin when the team waa in New
York last week.
Pasquel said Lanier and Mar-
tin still were in St Louis and that
they planned to drive to Mexico
City.
for a speed of 134.449 miles per
hour.
He will be the oldest driver In
the race.
Hepburn’s total elapsed time for
the ten miles was 4 minutes, 28.77
seconds for an average of 133 944
miles per hour. The old records
were 130,754 miles per hour for
a single lap and 130.138 for four
laps, both set by the late Jimmy
Snyder of Chicago in 1939.
The California driver's pal. for-
mer movie stunt man Cliff Bergere
of Indianapolis, already had won
the pole position for the race by
turning In the fastest time in op-
ening day qualifications, May 18.
Bergere, 49, and also starting his
13th "300," qualified at 126.471
miles per hour.
Hepburn's performance In the
eight-cylinder, front-drive car earn-
ed him only second position in the
seventh row of starters The 19
drivers who qualified earlier will
keep the positions they earned
under the speedway rules Qualifi-
cations will continue from noon
(CDT) until 3 p m today and
from noon until sundown tomor-
row.
Conn Puts Blast
On Gene Tunney
GREENWOOD LAKE. N J.,
May 27 (UP)—Manager John
ny Ray and Challenger Billy Conn
issued belligerent statements to-
day. indicating that the little pilot
—as well as his pugilist—was get-
ting thst “good old fighting edge”
in advance of the June 19th battle
with Joe Louis.
Conn took a verbal sock at Gone
Tunney, and Ray put the blast on
referees.
Conn, fuming over recta belit-
tling remarks by ex Champlon
Tunney told reporters here at Ted.
dy Gleason's camp: Maybe BI
score a double knockout at Yan-
kee Stadium Bl belt out Louis;
then I'd like to jump down into the
ringside seats and hit that big-
mouthed Tunney right on the
whiskers.”
Pittsburgh Billy was genuinely
peeved at Gene Leaning against
the porch rail of the white-stuc-
coed. green-trimmed hotel. Conn
used his words like the flame of a
blow-torch to blister Tunneys
career, from infancy to the pres-
ent. Only a few of his bursts could
be printed in a family newspaper
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Report
These schedul
responsible for the
KRBC
NABC MBS, 1450 1
2:00 Morton Downey
2:15 Dari-Ann
2:30 Ladies Be Seat
2:45 Ladies Be Seat
3:00 Jubileers
3 19 Bride & Groom
3:30 Bride & Groom
3:45 Victorious Livir
4 00 Social Security
4:15 Platter Party
4:30 H-S U Musical
4:45 Hop Harrigan
♦00 Terry & Pirate
5:15 Weather: Marke
5:30 Captain Midnig
5:45 Tom Mix
6:00Fulton Lewis J
6:15 Elmer Davis
6:30 Melody
6:45 News
T OO Gabriel Heatter
7:15 Hedda Hopper
7:30 Evening Serenac
7:45 Town Topics
8:00 Love Letters
8 15 News: Sports
3:30 Fat Man
/ 445 Fat Man
9:00 H. J. Taylor
9:15 Salute
9:30 Questions
9 43 Questions
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10:15 Cal Tinney
10:30 Quick as Flash
10:45 Hotel Penn Or
11:00 News: off
11:15
11:30
11:45
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6:00 Morning Round
8 13 Farmer's Houi
6:30 Musical Clock
•:45 Your Exchange
7:00 Devotional
7:15 Lest We Forge
7:30 News
7.45 Top O’ Morning
8:00 Breakfast Club
8:15 Breakfast Club
8.30 Breakfast Club
8 45 Breakfact Club
8,00 True Story
$15 Story: News
9 30 Hymns
9:45 Listening Post
10:00 Hollywood Brea
10 15 Hollywood Brea
10:30 Home Edition
10:45 Ted Malone
11:00 Glamour Mano
1115 Glamour Mano
11:30 Markets
1145 News
12 00 Baukhage
12 15 Connie Bennett
12:30 Luncheon Lift
12:45 News
ooCedric Foster
1:15 George Byron
130 Among Shops
149 Dixie Playboy
Forgot Some
BUFFALO, N.
—For more the
George Filsinger,
year-old brother .
a home-made 12-
dreamed of their
Yesterday they
craft, climbed in,
were promptly api
river—they had t
vide the boat wit
2201 SO
Let Us
RE COVER Your
• Lawn Furniture
• Beach Umbrellas
• Gliders
• Lawn Mower
Baskets
( Quality Materials
and Workmanship
BROWN AWNING
FACTORY
141 Oak Street Phone 8382
YELLOW CAB
4334
SIGNS
HODGES
Loons
Fire and Auto
Insurance
SH.
Charles Bacon
fJ !" C AHELH %
ACON
CURATES%
COMMERCIAL SIGN PAINTERS
Truck, Bulletins
and Window Lettering
Reasonable Prices Phone 5907
Bowman LUMBER Co.
THE BUILDERS SUPPLY STORE
902 North Fifth
Phone 5264-5265
The
C
Specializing
-IE!
Visit us
dine in c
Enjoy g
Steaks, '
Onion R
We pre
to take
Curb Se
Registry
Sum
CLAS
SALE
All sizes of
HEAVY TARPS
THIS WEEK
ONLY!
Plenty Of
WHITE FINE
Some Yellow Pine arriving Daily.
Come end see us, we will moke
] 0% Discount every effort to help you.
Several Sizes
CYPRESS WATER TANKS
2 STOCK SELF FEEDER 16 loot
OVER HEAD GARAGE DOOR
At a saving
HARDWARE At Bargain Prices
Just Received!
RED FACED BRICK
Plenty of Cement
Composition Roofing
Rabbit and Poultry Wire A
Bring your needs to us
Opportunity
Summer Ses
oil deportme
of regular st
Work is espr
their prepor
medicine, pr
Special court
Refresher co
required well
HARD
SMALL NUN
MARRIED S
DORMITORI
for further I,
Secretory.Tre
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 338, Ed. 2 Monday, May 27, 1946, newspaper, May 27, 1946; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1644748/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.