The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 111, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 6, 1954 Page: 25 of 28
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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REAL ESTATE
M
THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS 11.B
Abilene, Texas, Wednesday Evening, October 6, 19541P
LOTS FOR SALE
MJ
SEE us for Building Sites, Business or
residences. City or Hiway Zuber. 25653.
BUSINESS tot and small house on North
23. 8809 7mn 2483
SUBURBAN
M4
art
ALE
NEARLY new 2 bedroom house and 44
acres at Clyde. $1300. handles. Zuber 2-5653.
FOR sale, trade or rent, so acres. 6
room, 1 baths, modern. Off Buffalo Gap
Rond, i’one 3-3220 or 2-0043.__
S ROOM house for sale to be moved.
Phone 6-2752. Anson, Texas. I
BETTER see this Mi acres, southeast
of town, to foot frontage. Can be bought
with small down payment. Terms to suit
buyer. Exclusive. 4-4818.
WILL trade $5,800 equity to good mod
ern country home with 1 acres land for
approximately 38 or 40 foot modern trail-
er house. Phone 9231 : Clyde. Texas.
LOOK! 44 rooms. bath. $250 down. Farm-
all tractor, equipments, $100 cash. Gooch
47112 6
omesites
ou want
to show
FARM A RANCHES
M5
STATIONS PROVIDING THESE
RADIO & TV LOGS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR
DHTHEIR ACCURACY.
ABILENE
KRBC TV CHANNEL *
WEDNESDAY
Fiesta-L
I mne KmrL
keener.
r Rabbit-Y
■ Bob’s Corral
ckey Show
Report-L
1 Larry-L
manre Party-NBC
ed Joan-NBC
Tlet-L
WBAP TV CHANNEL •
FORT WORTH
WEDNESDAY
ing Dong School-NBC
Time to Live
Three Stope to Heaven
lease
fusical Memo
toad Morning Pastor
lair Styles
arm Editor
12d
12:
y Peters Show
‘s Cooking
Greatets Gift
ETT
Y
9. 4 677
t Is"
I. home
TH"
bedroom
n. It is
time by
TWO farms, trade for Abilene Property.
40 acres good buy. Other farms and
ranches. Homer Sumrall, 3-2474__
640 ACRES, 556 under cultivation. Creek
bottom land, mixed sandy level soil. Two
sets Of improvements, $65 an acre. South
east corner of Fisher County on Sweet-
water Creek. See Mrs. Mack Hodo. 104
Manchester Merkel
FOR sale, good s room house and both on
old Highway 80 in west edge of Clyde, 4%
acres land, to pecan trees, some fruit trees.
See owner. M. C. Dobbs, in Clyde.
320 ACRES. $3600, down. 980 acres. im-
proved with free range $15. per acre.
Curry-Kirk Agency, 3133 South 18th, phone
2-9826.____________________
WANT to rent farm on crop rent basis.
Phone 2-9919.__________________________
160 ACRE dairy farm. 19 Jersey and
Holstein cattle, dairy equipment, 7 room
brick home. AB minerals, 1 royalty. 29
miles South of Sylvester on pavement. Ev-
erything for $110 per acre Bracken.
: 1
OIL LEASES
M6
AL’
see this
y $7500.
ablished
en with
a buy.
edroom.
ring you
st three
Addition.
WANTED - Leases. Minerals - Fisher.
Nolan. Jones. Runnels. Callahan, Coke
counties. Box 42-B. Abilene Reporter-News.
WILL, buy shallow on production. Pay cash.
Vergil O Hoop, phone 4-1623, Lubbock.
Texas. Write 310331st-Lubbock.
REAL ESTATE WANTED M7
LISTINGS seeded for any size or price
home, win list acreage, commercial, and
industrial property. For complete real es-
tate service - Eder Realy Company, 46626.
“SPOT CASH” for your equity. List with
W Willis Cox Real Estate. 47267.________
WILL pay cash for your equity. List
your property with us. N. R. Hailey.
, Phone 29131.„
NEEDED now, listings on clean 2 and
3 bedroom homes. Clarence Collins
Agency. Phone 48159._____
NEED listings. Homes, businesses or farms.
All cash or low equities. Zuber Boal Es
tate. 25653.____________I ________
HAVE buyers for nice two and three bed.
rooms homes. Call Perry-Hunter Hall at
4-4368.__G__
WANT to trade 34 foot trailer house for
equity in furnished house. Phone 27204.
WILL buy your equity, medium price resi-
dence, also have client for 3-4 bedroom.
1 balk home North side. Price range
$15,000 to $30,000 Traweek 290.
DEMONSTRATORS CHASED— Students at Anacostia
High School in Washington climb a high wire fence before
the watching eyes of police after a student demonstration
at the school had been broken up. A mob of yelling- stu-
dents paraded near the school to protest integration of
Negro and white students in the former all white school.
TEXAS PRESS SILENCED
REAL ESTATE LOANS
M8
(Continued from Page 1-B)
and his press safely were evacu-
ated across the river on March 30.
It is a distinction of Texas news-
paper history that the press was
moved at the request of Preside
David G. Burnet, to Harrisburg,
their the seat or government.
“As we were the last and only
medium of publication they could
possibly obtain.” Borden explained
in answering the president's re-
quest to move, "we felt that duty
called us."
With every other press in Texas
silenced as an economic war cas-
is per-
n -kit chen
place in
ID
ESTATE funds for will-secured Real
Estate Loans. No red tape, convient
terms, low cost. Hal McDavid. Tela.
phone 23
FOB SALE OB TRADE' W
FOR sale or trade lots 1434.1662 Woodard.
% block south of Blue Sox Stadium. $1,000.
each. Size 50 Xi40. Call owner at 27es.
2 Bedroom, den. patto. fenced. Corner,
southside, sale or trade for 2 bedroom.
Zuber. 25653.._____________
WILL build home or building custom made
for you. Any plan, any location., will con-
sider trade for cown payment. Call 27863
WILL toko anything of value, smaller
house to town or out of town, clean auto,
etc. for down payment on 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, double carport, carpet throughout.
Paved street, good location, 2-3465, 4-6608,
48486.____________________________________
SHORT on eash? Short on space? Why
be dissatisfied? We will build your new
home to the location of your choice and
accept your house on trade. Call Hugh
Horn 46583 or 18303. 3
SOUTH side 4% rooms each duplex trade
for residence or duplex north side. Busi-
ness income, property. For farm or acre-
age. Traweek. 4-9040. Abilene.__________
He turned then toward another
source, meeting success by mort-
gaging land. Obtaining a letter of
credit on Cincinnati, be obtained
funds with which a new press and
other printing needs were bought.
Setting up a plant once again in
a Texas capital city, Columbia,
Borden resumed publication in Au-
gust, with issue No. 23. There be
continued, also, to serve as public
printer of government documents.
The Telegraph and Texas Regis-
ter continued its existence at Col-
umbia until the capital was moved
to Houston, and to the new capital
Borden and his press made their
fourth and final move. The first is-
sue was printed there May 2.
Borden's tenure at Houston was
ualty, Borden went to work to turn
out issue No. 22 of The Telegraph
and Texas Register. Conquering
difficulties, the newspaper was but brief within a month the
ready for press when a Mexican | rounderiesseretas months the
advance guard stormed the town, win the publication disposing of
Borden's hopes went with the press #1 Jus.R JAE SAS
Mexican soldiers dumped into Buf- DIAL "‘Cuter and
falo Bayou 6 : U "20 con
RD
h. 46383
250
EX
dlition. s
er. 20130
me prop-
a Locat-
tails call
: BR
terms
IN
e NE of
yards of
ever dry
used for
4-5398
Juns
e. paved
1 Clinton,
im house
W.S
Mba «
000 will
ayments.
E G f
• house,
ice large
kitchen
co.
TO LIST CLASSIFIED
DIAL 2-7841
The Abilene Reporter-News
REAL ESTATE DISPLAY
REALESTATE
LOANS
FHA - VA
One Unit or 1.000 Units
Bliss Mortgage
Investment Corp.
West Seventh at Lamar
Fort Worth Phone ED-1234
FOR
BETER LOANS
ON
BETTER HOMES
Conventional Loans up to 20
years 5% interest up to 75%
of Appraisal. Also FHA Loans.
Flesher-Davis
Agency
402 Butternut Street
Phone 2-8409
HOME
LOANS’
• LOW INTEREST
• FAST CLOSING
• LONG TERM
• TITLE INSURANCE
NOT REQUIRE
CASSIE & CASSLE
INCORPORATED
1333 No. and Phone 23219
FOR
me
• RESIDENTIAL
• COMMERCIAL
• FARM AND RANCH
Low Interest Rote—Long Term
PROMPT SERVICE
JIMMY PARTIN
Insurance & Realty
4th & Cedur Ph. 4-8561
Foak con Berits use
WANT ADS
Tei ies C0 *
:00—News. Sports. Weather-L
:15—Movietime
:15—Vespers
WICHITA FALLS
KWFT-TV CHANNEL <
WEDNESDAY
:15—Musie
:30—Dorothy Wilson Show
1:00—TBA
hU-Tko Seeking Heart
1:30—Welcome Travelers
:00—Mid-day Matinee
:30—Hair Styles
ie Ml
, Alde
Marlowe
5.
5:
. atry
arren
count
atre
ANTH-INTEGRATION MARCH—At Baltimore, Md., a chanting throng of students
staged an anti-integration demonstration through town. Although there were demon-
strations at at least eight public schools in Baltimore, there were no reports of angry
disturbances and violence like the demonstration by several hundred persons at South
ern High last week.
School Plans Mass Meet
In Protest of Integration
A mass meeting of all pupils
was scheduled at stormy Anacostia
High School in Washington today
in an effort to end protests against
mixing white persons and Negrees
in classrooms in the national
capital.
Officials and student leaders
hoped the session would halt two
days of noisy demonstrations is
Washington and start a back-to-
classes movement similar to one
already under way in nearby Bal-
timore.
Anacostia High has been the
scene of the biggest demonstra-
tions against the three-week-old
program of racial integration in
District of Columbia schools. Yes-
terday Police Lt. William T. Mur-
phy said he felt "the peak of the
disturbance is past” at Anacostia.
2,800 Absent
The police officer made the
statement at day’s end after more
than 2,800 students were reported
absent at one time or another
from three high schools and six
junior highs. Six persons were
HOSPITAL PATIENTS
6:30—Baseball Hall of Fame
6:45—News, Weather
7:00—Arthur Godfrey & Friends
8:00—Strike It Rich
8:30—All American
9:00— Blue Ribbon Bouts
1:45-* Picture
10'05—Weather
10:10—Sports
10:15—Late Show
KTXL-TV CHANNEL s
SAN ANGELO
WEDNESDAY
4:00—Kitchen Party
4:30—Better TV
5:00—Garry Moore
5:15—The World Wo Live In
5:30—Your San Angelo
5:45—Musicale
5:55—Crusader Rabbit
6:00—Hollywood Half Hour
6:30—News
6:45—Let‘s Talk Football
7:00—Arthur Godfrey
7:30—Sportsman‘s Club
7:45—World Reports
8:00—Open House
8:30—Walt‘s Workshop
9:00—Blue Ribbon Bouts
10 :00—Tomorrow‘s Headlines
10:05—Last Word to Sports
arrested near Anacostia High. Two 10:10—Weathereast -
men were held on charges of dis- 10:20—Channel 8 Theater
orderly conduct. The others were
released.
During the day about 1M white
students congregated in front of
the Supreme Court Building, where
the historic decision outlawing
segregation in the public schools
was handed down last May 17, but
left quickly under police orders.
Exactly who or what was behind
the demonstrations could not be
KDUB-TV CHANNEL u
MOY
Texas was without a functioning
printing press!
A week later, at San Jacinto,
Texans won their decisive victory:
and freedom. The Republic of Tex-
as took its place among the world's
nations, without a printing press.
Borden, though, was not to be
denied. He asked government as-
sistance to re-establish The Tele-
graph and Texas Register, remind-
ing officials of unpaid printing
bills.
An order, in payment of govern-
ment printing, was issued on the
Texas Purchasing Agent at New
Orleans. Borden learned to his sor-
row there were no funds with
which to meet the demand.
tinued the publication for several
Special Venire-
Of 200 Summoned
For Windham Trial
A special venire of 200 men has
been summoned for Oct. IS in
42nd District Court for the second
murder trial of Ernest Windham
of Baird
years.
For it long, weary months Bor-
den had struggled to provide Tex-
ans with a newspaper, continuing
until the press itself became a
victim of the war; then, despite
difficulties, resuming publication
Starting at the seat of Austin’s
colony, The Telegraph and Texas
Register took the first printing
press to thre other towns, in
which a fleeing, fearful govern-
ment had established itself.
Thus, Borden left his Imprint
upon the press of Texas - a press
that was born in revolution and
ended in revolution: a press that
saw Borden as its last survivor be-
fore Texans were victorious at San
Jacinto.
Ironically, the Texas press that
was established as a means of
bringing independence to Texas
was not in-existence to record the
decisive battle at San Jacinto. The
last existing press had been
dumped into Buffalo Bayou just a
week before the objective of vic-
tory had been achieved.
HENDRICK
The following patients were ad-
mitted to Hendrick Memorial Hos-
pital Tuesday:
Mrs. D. F. Gough, 226 Sayles
Blvd.
Kirby L. White, Haskell
Mrs. William K. Sprayberry.
1726 Ballinger St.
Mrs. B. B. Thomas, 1134 Burger
St
Mrs. William G. Aaron, 2242
South Third St.
Mrs. J. P. Crenshaw, 2065 Bur-
ger St.
Mrs. Joe C. Hall. 1334 Vogel St.
James Norman Hoffman, Sny-
der.
Mrs. A. M. Edwards, Lawn.
Truman C. Shipman, Seymour.
Mrs. W. J. Clark, 2302 Meander
St
Thomas M. Mancill, Haskell
Mrs. Milton G. Mason, 2017
Green St.
Tollie O. Loilar. 2590 Simmons
Reese Jones, Winters.
Mrs. Thomas D. Turner, Jr.,
918 San Jose.
Mrs. H. P. Drummond, View.
Mrs. D. R. Bowman, 2301 South
Sixth St.
Mrs. Walter Ingmire, 865 Green
Maudine Foster, McDonald
Dorm. ACC.
Jimmy Trimble, 1619 Kirkwood.
Alton Kite. McMurry.
Discharged
The following patients were dis-
charged from Hendrick Tuesday:
Mr. Cecil E Mitchell, 1124 South
13th St
. J. W. Maddox, 825 Grove St.
Mrs. Thomas D. Roberts, 736
Mulberry St.
Mrs. Glenn L. Kirk, 2874 Pine
James Hubert Davis, 774 Mul-
berry St.
Tommie L. Dunn, 509 Meander
Eddie Williams, 640 North Tread-
away.
Mrs. Talbert Crow, Albany.
Mrs. Paul C. Franke, 1141 Syl-
van Dr.
James Norman Hoffman, Sny-
der.
Mrs. William F. Barnes, 809
North 10th St.
ST. ANN
The following patients were ad-
mitted to St. Ann Hospital Tues-
day:
Mrs. Cora Parker, 1034 South
14th St.
Lester C. .Burleson, 626 South
Treadaway.
J. M. Higgs, 710 Pecan St. e
William Harrell Brown, 1742
Palm St.
Mrs. C. E. Troutz, 1017 Oak St.
Mrs. Scott Connelly, 1049 Syca-
more St.
Mrs. A. D. Pursley, 2133 North
Third St.
determined. They appeared to be
spontaneous imitations of recent
mass protests against desegrega- 1
tion at Baltimore and at Milford,
Del.
The Justice Department said it
was "keeping an eye on the all-
over situation," but a spokesman
said the department's Civil Rights
Section has not yet come across
any violations of federal law. The
department declined to say wheth-
er "outside forces” may be in-
volved in the demonstrations.
At Baltimore, firm handling by
school and police officials, coupled
with a Circuit Court decision, ap-
peared to have quelled a series of
student strikes, picketing and mass
protests. Schools throughout the
city reported the situation quiet
Attendance was beginning to
mount.
Superior Judge James K. Cullen
ruled that white and Negro children
may continue to go to public
-schools together.
NAAWP leader
Vows Nationwide
Strike on Docks
Windham, who is charged with* - *
murder in the fatal shooting of his
brother John last Feb. 16, was
tried in Baird in March but the
jury was dismissed when it re-
ported it could not reach a ver-
dict.
Judge J R. Black moved the
case to Taylor County for the sec-
ond trial.
Maury Hughes, Dallas attorney,
reportedly will represent Windham
tn the trial here Oct. 25. Dell and
Perry Barber. Colorado City at-
torneys. defended him when he
was tried at Baird.
John Windham died instantly of
a pistol shot Feb. 16 while seated
in a pickup truck at his stock
farm north of Clyde.
, More than one-half the earth's
surface is covered by sea, but
only about one per cent of the
food for the world's 2,500,000,000
people comes from this huge water
area
LEGAL NOTICE
Due to End Today
NEW YORK mn—A one-day-old
strike that stopped all cargo oper-
ations in the vast port of New
York—except on military piers-
was expectd to end today.
Terms of the agreement were
announced by Federal Mediator
John Andrew Burke after a 24-
hour talk last night with union
leaders and representatives of the
New York Shipping Assn
The settlement included pay-
ment of an 8-cent-hourly wage
boost retroactive to Oct. 1. 1953.
which employers estimate will cost
about four million dollars. In turn,
the union would pledge not to
strike again for 45 days while at-
tempts are made to negotiate a
new contract.
The wage increase would bring
INVITATION TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals addressed to the City
of Abilene. Texas, for the construction S
Deadman Creek Diversion will be received
St the office of the City Manager, City
Hall. Abilene. Texas, until: 10:00 A. M..
October 15. 1954 at which time and place
the proposals will be publicly opened and
read aloud. Any bid received after, open-
ing time will be returned unopened.
Copies of the plans, specifications, and
other contract documents are on file in
the office of the City Secretary, City Hall.
Abilene. Texas, and in the office of Freese
and Nichols. 407 Danelger Building Fort
Worth, Texas, and may he examined at
either office without charge. __.
Plans, specifications, and other contract |
documents may be procured to the office
of Freese and Nichols, 407 Danciger Build,
fns. Fort Worth. Texas, upon 4----
of Twenty five ($25.00) Dollars
antee of the safe return of the
-------- full amount
led to each
• return of
•r
ad
le
E q
returned later than ten d
award of the contract wi
The character and am
to be furnished to each *
".. * CM"
less than the general m
wages which have been *
°" owner reserves the rtent to reject
any and-or all bids or waive any or all
formalities. No bid may be withdrawn
within air” (So days after date on which
arry or ABILENE
Austin F. Hancock
ager
Adv.
HEAM KIWANIS — Dr. J. N.
Walker, Fort Worth pediatrician,
was elected governor of the Tex-
as-Oklahoma District of Kiwanis
Tuesday at the close of a four-
day convention in Dallas
longshoremen’s pay up to $2.35 an
hour •
ILA President William V. Brad-
ley and other top union officials
who attended the mediation-meet-
ing were reported to have
promised to recommend quick ap-
proval of the agreement. Water-
front observers viewed formal en-
dorsement of the agreement as vir-
tually certain.
Although Bradley said longshore-
men would continue on strike until
the 170-man wage scale committee
acta, other union officials said
some men would probably go back
at the start of the regular work
day.
The strike caught 71 ships in
port and idled docks all along the
350-mile waterfront, biggest and
busiest in the world it came on
short notice yesterday and demon
strated the resurgent power of the
ILA after a year of bitter but
successful struggle to retain its
long control of dock labor.
Specifically at issue was the
union's demand for immediate pay-
ment of an hourly 8-cent wage
increase and a 2-cent boost in wel-
fare benefits, both retroactive to
Oct. 1, 1953. Although the employ-
ers offered to pay the wage raise
as demanded and the welfare in-
crease back to last April 1, they
balked at any payment unless cou-
pled with a contract covering the
next two years.
- Also involved in the sudden
strike was the union's anger over
recent statements by the water-
front commission of New York
harbor, accusing the ILA of being,
gangster-controlled. 2
Last night's agreement meets
the union’s demand for back pay
before considering a new contract.
Shippers and stevedore firms vol-
untarily started paying the in
crease on that date, making their
contribution * instead of I cents.
Mrs. C. N. Withrow, 1202 Mes-
quite St.
Mrs. H. J. Lubbering, Route 5.
Abilene.
Mrs. Vance Armstrong, 2130
North Third St.
Mrs K. C. Rhynes, 1341 North
17th St
Discharged
The following patients were dis-
missed from St. Ann Tuesday:
Nita Champion. 417 Butternut St.
J. A. Sparks. Clyde.
Mrs. E. E. Tennison. Ml Crock-
ett.
Mrs. W. E Plunk, 1325 Crockett.
Mrs. Howard Maroney and baby
3930 Whittier.
Mrs C. H. Stanley and baby,
1234 Portland. .
Teammates
ACROSS § Missile
1 Uncle Tom 5 Each
and Little - 7 Encountered
4---and Eve 8 Rajahs’ wives
9 Employer
10 The acid----
11 Corned beef
8---and
Naomi
12 Operated
13 Narrow fillet
14 Bewildered 17 Woman
15 Also adviser
16 Staleness 19 Badgerlike
18 Notched animal
20 Circumference 23 Insists
24 Peel
21 Rowing tool
25 Beverages
made with
malt
22 Hints
124 Agreement
Im— Hitler —
27 He and — 26 Ibsen’s “-
30 Claim
22 He defeated
the Midianites
34 Staggered
35 Merited
‘36 Worm
37 Poems .
39 Assists
00 Small bottle
41----, amas,
amat
41 Supplied
8:05—Farmer‘s Weather Fare
8:20—News
8:30—TV Sermonette
8:4%Home Hints
9:00—Garry Moore
9.50—A to Z
19:00--Mid-Morning Movie
11:00—Valiant Lady
11:15—Love of Life
11:30—Search for Tomorrow
11:45—Songs From the Country Chapel
12:00—News
12:15—The Seeking Heart
12:30—Welcome Travelers
1:00—News
1:15—Shopping Bag
4:30—Six Gun Theater
5:00—See Saw Zoo Club
5:30—Sports With Sherman
5:40—World News
5:50—Evening News
6:00—Cowboy Thrills
6:30—Western Theater
7:00—Movie Marquee
7:30.Kit Carson
8:00—Masquerade Party
8:30—Badge 714
9 00—Racket Squad
9:30—Madison Square Garden
10:00— Texas News
10:15—Weather Telefacts
10:25—News Final
10:30—The Unexpected
11:00—Tonight
KCBD-TV. CHANNEL n
LUBBOCK
WEDNESDAY
9:50—Program Preview
10:00—Home
Ii no-Betty White
11:30—Feather Your Nest
12:00—Norma Raine
12:15-News & Weather
12:30—Serenaders
1:00—Channel 11 Matinee
2:15—Cook Book
3:00—Hawkins Falls
3:15—Melody Go Bound
3:30—World of Mr. Sweeney
3:45—Modern Romances
4:30 Howdy Doody
5:00—Time For Adventure.F
6:00—Hospitality Time
6:15—News, Weather, Sports-L
6:30—Eddie Fisher-NBC
6:45—Bernie Howell-L
7:00—I Married Joan-NBC
7:30—My Little Margie-NBC
8:00—Bob Lamont-L
8:30—Favorite Story-F
9:00—Danny Thomas-ABC
9.30—Big Town
10:00—News, Weather, Sports
10:30—Wateriront
KFDX-TV CHANNEL S
WICHITA FALLS
WEDNESDAY
12:00—Afternoon Playhouse
1:00—Date With Dorothy
1:30—Bill Hood Show
2:00—The Greatest Gift
2:15—Golden Windows
2:30—Musical Previews
2:45-Concerning Miss Marlowe
3.00—Hawkins Falls
The World of Mr Sweeney
ink
cipe. Round-Up
2:30—nob Crosby
2:45—Doty on Duty
3:00—Brighter Day
3:15—Secret Storm
3:30—On Your Account
4:00—Children‘s Theater
5:00—Horse Opery Matinee
5:30—The Nat. Fleming Show
6:00—Wild Ml Hickok
6:30—Eddie Fisher Show
6:45—Warren & The Weather
6:50—News Highlights
7:00—I Married Joan
7:30-The Falcon
8:00—Kraft TV Theatre
9:00—This Is Your Life
9:30—Big Town
10:00—Touchdown, 1954
10:30—Late News
10:35— Warren & The Weather
10:40—Sports Spotlight
10:45—Nightcap Theatre
WEDNESDAY EVENING
ERBC News Weather
KWKC-Fulton Lewis, Jr.
KRLD News
WBAP-Man on the Go
kunesa
KRLD-Sport:
WBAP-Music
KRBC Lone
KWKC-Gabr
KRLDChor
WFAA-Worl
KRBC-Lone
KWKC.Today
KRLD-Edwa
WFAA-News
gh
atter
Top Tunes
R. Murrow
KRBC-Take a *
KWKC-Squad R
KRLD-FBI Pea
WFFA-Dinah a
7:15
KRBC Take a 1
KWKC-Squad R
KRLD-FBI Pea
WFAA-Frank !
1:1
RBCJust Eas
KWKC-Nightma
1 KRLD-21st Pr»
WFAA-Walk a
War
& War
atra Show
ile
8:00
KRBC-Sammy Kaye
KWKC On the Campus
KRLD-Crime Photographer
WFAA-Best of Groucho
KRBC-San
KWKC-In
KRLD-Pe
WFAA-Be
lave
cho
KRBC-Whiteman Varieties
KWKC-Mr. & Mrs. Worth
KRLD-Amos IT Andy
WFAA TBA
19:00
KRBC-News
KWKC-Baseball
KRLD-News
WFAA-News
10:15
KRBC-Family Altar
KWKC-Baseball
KRLD-Forward March
WBAP-World News
10:30
KRBC-Daily Devotions
KWKC-Baseball
euu MPrde
KRBC was
KWKC-Fam
KRLD-Musi
WFAA-Perr
KRBC-Headl
KWKC Starli
KRLD-Mr. 1
WFAA-Fibbe
Gee
KRBC-Johnny Allen
KWKC-News
KRLD-CBS Orch.
WFAA One Man's Family
ERBC Johnny %nen
M
Charters for Group
DOVER. Del (n—A court at-
tempt to revoke the charter of the
National Assn. for the Advance-
ment of White People has brought
a promise from its president that
the NAAWP will pursue its course
throughout the country.
Bryant Bowles took this stand
yesterday in Philadelphia after
Delaware Atty. Gen. H. Albert
Young began legal action in the
Court of Chancery here to have
the association's charter revoked.
Bowles said that if the associa-
tion lost its charter in Delaware
“we will go into the 47 other states
and seek franchises, and failing
that, we will take to the U.S.
mails.”
KRBC-Just Easy
KWKC Nightmare
KRLD-21st Precinct
WFAA-Walk a Mile
KRLD.T
WFAA-D
KRBC-J
Ernie
Dea
KRLD-Tennessee Ernie
WFAA-Dance Oresestra
^^
KRLD-Hillbi
WBAP Nighi
KRBC-Marti
KWKC Basel
KRLD-News
WBAP-Night
KRBC Marti
KWKC-Basel
KRLD-Hillbi
WBAP-Nigh
KRBC Marti
KWKC Sent
KRLD-Herm
WBAP-Night
KRBC Marti
KWKC Sent
KRLD-Herm
WBAP-Nigh
Parade
Parade
THURSDAY MORNING
S:SS
KRBC Morning Roundup
KWKC Morning Neighbors
KRID-Musie Rack
WBAP Bunkhouse Ballads
6.15
KRBC-TBA
KWKC-News a Sports
KRLD-Stamps Quartet
WBAP News
KRBC Music with Message
KWKC-Morning Neighbors
KRLD-News
WBAP-Farm Roundup
FRBC-Farm Review .
KWKC-Weather-Farm News
KRLD-Rural Mailbox
WBAP Chuck ason Gang
KRBC Mesquite Melodies
KWKC-7 O’Clock Alarm
KRLD-News- Roundup
WFAA-News Sermonette
7:15
KRBC-Lest We Forget
KWKC-News by Air
KRLDMasical Caravan
WFAA-EarV, Hirds
8:00
KRBC Breakfast Club
KWKC-Coffee Time
KRLD-News
WF AA-News
8:15
KEBC-Breakfast Club
KWKC-Coffee Time
KRLD-1080 Club
WFAA-Early Birds
KRBC-Breaklast Club
KWKC Coffee Time
WFAA-Cedar Ridge Boys
KRBC-Breakfast Club
KWKC-Coff
KRLD-Juli
WFAA Cedi
Boys
10:00
RwKehtE CM"
KRLD Arthur Godfrey
WFAA Strike n Rich
KRBC-tme for the Missus
KWKC-Florida Calling
KRLD-Arthur Godfrey
WFAA Strike n Rich
KRBC Music for the Aisnes
KWKC Queen for a Day
KRLD-Make Up Your Mind
WFAA-Phrase That Pays
10:45
KRBC-Music for the Missus
KWKC Queen for a Day
KRLD-News <
WFAA-Second Chance
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ETTA
ole _
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0QU0
It JUJLBC
DAG
28 Cultivated 42 Pointed
2S Finishes implements
31 Hypothetical 43 Plant part
earth repre- 44 Philippine
sentations
33 Play
38 Most aged
____40 Aboriginal
Gabler” Ceylonese
27 Longer service 41 Property item
native
46 Unemployed
47 Metrical time
unit
48 Clip
50 Pronoun
IJ
J
J
KRBC World News
KWKC-Breakfast Bl
KRLD-News
WFAA-Earls Birds
KRBC-Weather-aek
KWKC-Breakfast Bl
KRLD Top Tunes
WFAA-Early Birds
and
Sana
KRBC My_______
KWKC-Meet Your Neighbors
KRLD-Arthur Godfrey
WBAP-Bob Smith Show
KRBC My True Story
KWKC-Meet Your Neighbor
KRLD-Arthur Godfrey
WRAP-Bob Suit Show
KRBC Whispering Streets .
KWKC News
MAPNT Sun.
9:45
KRBC When a Girl Marries
KWKC-Moods to Music
KRLD-Arthur Godfrey
WBAP Break the Bank
KRBC Music *
KWKC-Break
MRea
wuk
KRBC Music for the Missus
KWKC Capital Commentary
KRLD-Aunt Jenny
WFAA-Back to Bible
11:30
KRBC To The Ladies
* # ;
lists
KRBC-News-Weather
KWKC Bob Eherley
“PTE CH SE :
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
use
KRBC Paul Harvey
KWKC Cedric Foster
KRLD Jolley Farm News
was
KRBC Western Favorites
KWKC-News by Air
KRLD-News
WFAA-Murray Cox RFD
12:20
KRBC-Weather; Markets
KWC-Luncheon Serenade
KRLD-Stamps Quartet
WBAP Bob Crawford Show
KRBC News in Rev
WKC-Moods to Mus
KRLD-Guiding Light
WFAAJJudy & Jane
KRBC Allan Shiven
KWKC Story Time
W1TYA
1:15
KRBC People and P
WFAA
KRBC SI
KWCW:
WFAA
Show
Macer
isovercomes
52 - and Lady "
53 Poetic island
94 Three (prefix,
55 Greek porch
56 Let it stand
57 Petite Island
DOWN
1 Ages
1 Weather —
t---and the
lion
4Perfume-
3
33
IJ
VC Wear
lets
KRBC Slim Willet
KWKC Parlor Pickins
KRLD-Hilltop House
WFAA-Woman in Love
tu
KRBC Slim Willet
KWKC Parlor Pickins
KRLD-House Party
WFAA-Woman in Love
KRBC Slim Willet
KWKC Parlor Pickins
KRLD-House Party
WFAA PF' Veans
CRBC
Pickins
KRLD Music ___
WFAA-Right to Happiness
3.00
KRBC-Here’s to Vets
KWKC Concert Matinee
***=*""
KRBC Here’s to Vets
KWKC Concert Matinee
MEZVE
KRBC Here’s to vets,
KWKC Music You Want
KRLD-N- n-he
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REG:
5
KRBC-Music A'Plenty
KWKC-Date With Interstet
MARSSRAAH-
KRBC-Music A Plenty
KWKC-Request Club
KRLD-Ed Whitte's Show
WFAA Lorenzo Jones "
KRBC Local News
KWKC-Request Club
KRLD E. Whitte's-Show
VFFA Frast Sinatra
KRBC Pet Parade
MSSWJZ,
WFAA Pays to be Married
KRBC-Birth
KWKC Set.
KRLD-Allan
WFAA Star
KRBC Meet
KWKC Sgt.
#RS=
KRBC Cork
KWKC-Sgt.
KRLD-News
WFAA Bob
KRBC Souve
WFAA-New
Parker
Preston
Every Ye ar More People Buy
RCA VICTOR
than any other Television hiS
EVISION CENT
South F th Str
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 111, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 6, 1954, newspaper, October 6, 1954; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1649606/m1/25/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.