The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 48, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 23, 1952 Page: 3 of 22
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9 A THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
S-A Abilene, Texas, Tuesday Morning, Sept. 23, 1952
TOWNNEW $
Police Seek Burglar Who
Took $450 From Pharmacy
Abilene detectives were search-
tag Monday night for the burglar
who entered Peak's Pharmacy at
1052 North Fifth St. Sunday night
and made off with $450 in cash.
Capt. W. B. McDonald, head of
the Police Department Detective
Bureau, said entrance to the build-
ing was gained by jimmying the
front door. Inside the lobby, the
burglar gave the pharmacy door
the same treatment.
McDonald said that although no
Chaplin Says
He'll Return
CHERBOURUG, France. Sept. 22
IT—Charlie Chaplin, in high good
humor despite a U. S. threat to
bar him from returning to Amer-
ica, declared today “I intend to
go back to the United States.'*
He described himself as an art-
lat without political convictions
and a firm believer in individual-
ism and liberty. He said he did
not know the reasons behind the
U S. announcement that he may
not be permitted to return.
"I am not political,’* Chaplin
told a news conference aboard
the Queen Elizabeth here. "I have
never been political. I don't want
to create any revolutions. I just
want to create a few more films."
tools were found, it appeared that
the burglar used a crowbar or
or large screwdriver to force the
doors.
He said the money, aU cash, was
stolen from a locked small metal
box inside a drawer.
Bradbury to Speak
Bryan Bradbury, Abilene attor-
ney, will be the main speaker at
the September monthly dinner
meeting of the Abilene Chapter,
Texas Society of Professional En-
gineers, Tuesday night. The event
will be held at the Drake Hotel,
beginning at 7 p.m.
Bradbury will tell of his recent
trip to Europe
Cash for News Tips
Asked why he had failed to take
out American citizenship during
his 30 years residence in the Uni-
ted States, Chaplin replied:
"I am not a super-patriot. I
think super-patriotism leads to
Hitlerism and we have had our
lesson from that. I assume that in a
a democracy one has a right to
a private opinion.”
The U. S. threat to bar him,
for reasons still unexplained, was
made while Chaplin was at sea
with his wife and children en-
route to London for the premiere
of his new film, “Limelight." The
Queen Elizabeth, on which be is
traveling, touched here enroute
to England.
Red Charge
Is Rejected
WASHINGTON, Sept a un—The
United States and Britain have
curtly rejected Russia’s charge
that they are converting Trieste
into a permanent "war base.”
In terse notes delivered at Mos-
cow Saturday and made public
tonight, the two allies flatly de-
nied they are violating Italy’s
Peace Treaty by an agreement
giving Italians a bigger role in
governing the British - American
zone of Trieste, which lies between
Italy and Yugoslavia.
The American note, made public
by the State Department, ranked
as one of the shortest ever sent
Moscow, In 190 words, stripped of
the usual diplomatic pleasantries,
the United States turned down s
formal Moscow note of nearly 1,000
words sent last June 24.
Russia had accused Britain and
the United States of flagrantly vto-
lating the Italian 1947 Peace Trea-
ty by the deal with Italy.
The Soviets claimed Britain and
the United States were trying to
ignore treaty provisions which
make the Adriatic port a free
territory. Moscow accussed the
Western Powers of seeking to con-
vert Trieste's "human and mate-
rial resources to the war plans of
TRAIN GIVES
IKE TROUBLE
ABOARD EISENHOWER
SPECIAL, Sept 22 —Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower is hav-
ing his trouble with railroad
engineers just as Gov Thomas
E. Dewey had in 1948.
Four years ago Dewey cre-
ated a political incident when
he called the engineer who
backed his special train into a
crowd at a whistle stop a "lun-
atic."
At Henderson, Ky., Eisenhow-
er apologized to the crowd be-
cause he said the engineer on
his special had not pulled the
train far enough forward to
clear all of the listeners. Then
the GOP nominee complained
because the noise of escaping
steam was drowning out his
voice.
This train's engineer was Ce-
cil A. Tindle of Evansville,
Ind . brother of Lee Tindle. the
engineer Dewey bad dubbed a
"lunatic".
Gibbs, in charge. Burial will be in
Highland Cemetery under the direc-
tion of Kinney and Son Funeral
Home.
Mrs. Dyer was the former Hea-
ter G. Hunstable. She was mar-
ried to Joel Dyer in Dalles Jan.
31, 1893. They moved to Stamford
to 1907 He died here in 1944, aft-
survivors include another daughter,
Mrs. Grover C. Carroll of San
Antonio, and two sons, Gibbs Dyer!
of Dallas and Harrison Dyer of
Paris; eight grandchildren, three
great-grandchildren, a brother and
three sisters.
er they had celebrated their gold-
en wedding anniversary the prev- .___. .
ious year He was a contractor have flourished about 6.000 years
and elder in the church. ago and to have been the birth-
Besides the daughter in Denver, I place of the prophet Abraham.
The city of Ur, is believed to
Good-bye Corns
D: Scholls SUPER-FAST RELIEF/
1 Stops Painful Shoe Friction g /
’•uni Pressure in A Jiffy...
2.pecomeii,sKCm a
E
I BACK
ON
You
A Removes Corns One Of
The Quickest Ways Known
To Medical Science..
O'Scholls Lno pads
|orsch
HELENE S Royal Family of
Bra* odd that distinction and
naturalness to the wardrobe of the
woman who want* the very
best. For debutante or matron . . .
for any style or figure!
Two alert tipsters won cash
prizes of $2.50 each this year for
tips which resulted in page one
stories in the Reporter-News, rias reauuscep w — w= .—
Winners were Mrs. G. C. Forte, the aggressive Atlantic bioc
2126 Walnut St., and Floy Key.
860 Mulberry St.
Mrs. Forte turned in a tip Sat-
urday about a dog that found part
of a human jaw bone under a resi-
dence at 1202 North 21st St.
Key alerted the newsroom Tues-
day morning of a manhunt that
was underway for the driver of a
wrecked car near Ranger.
Honorary mention for news tips
went to Paula Wise, 1402 Mesquite
St.; Lucy Wilson, University Drug
Store; Mrs. Audra Martin, 1202
Pecan St.; and Mrs. W. C. Herring.
The American reply flung this
charge right back at Moscow.
Russia—and not the West— it said,
is to blame for failure of plans to
create a free territory of Trieste
833 EN 14th St
Pleads Guilty
Sylvester V. McClendon entered
j plea of guilty before Judge Reed
Ingalsbe in County Court Monday
on a complaint charging him with
driving while intoxicated on Sept.
20. He waa fined $75 and court
costs of $21.20.
6 Red Leaders
Indicted by U. S.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 (—The
Justice Department announced to-
day that six Communist party
leaders have been indicted in De-
troit on charges of conspiracy to
overthrow the U S. government
by fore *
The six were among 18 party
leaders rounded up by the FBI
last Wednesday in a number of
cities acmes the country. A fed-
eral grand jury returned the in-
dictment.
The Department said that evi-
dence against the 12 other persons
taken into custody on the same
day is now being presented to
other federal grand juries in St.
Louis, Mo., and Seattle, Wash.
Jury Due Today
A jury has been summoned for
Tuesday morning in Taylor County
Court to try criminal cases. It will
function until Wednesday noon
when it will be dismissed until
Friday morning. Judge Reed In-
galsbe said.
Recess of the jury between Wed-
nesday noon and Friday morning
will enable Judge Ingalsbe and
County Commissioner Claude New-
berry to go to Austin to appear
before the State Highway Com-
mission regarding an important
cut-off highway project in west
Abilene.
Britain to Blaze
Jet Skyway to U. S.
LONDON, Sept. 22 0 — Britain
soon will set out to blaze a jet
skyway to America eight miles
above the Atlantic Ocean, it was
disclosed today.
The survey flights will be car-
ried out by the state-owned British.
Overseas Airways Corp. (BOAC)
as a prelude to regular trans-
Atlantic jet airliner service.
Sir Miles Thomas, chairman of
BOAC, told reporters the trail-blaz-
ing will be done by an improved
version of the British DeHavilland
Comet, the world's first jet air-
liner. A prototype of this version-
known as the Mark II—is now fly-
Ing and delivery to the BOAC Is
expected in early 1954.____________
Funeral Wednesday
For Mrs. J. Dyer, 81
STAMFORD, SepL 22 (RNS) —
Funeral services will be held here
Wednesday at the Central Presby-
terian Church for Mrs. J. Dyer
who died in Denver Colo.. Sun y
Mrs. Dyer, 81, who formerly lived
in Stamford for 44 years, at n
making her home with a daughter,
Mrs. John A. Miller of Denver,
since May, 1951.
The body is being sent by train
from Denver and will be received
in Wichita Falls Wednesday at 3:36
a. m. by a funeral coach of Kin
ney and Son Funeral Home of
Stamford.
The service has been set for 3 p
m. with the pastor, the Rev. John
MAIL COUPON
BELOW FOR
T BY HOME TRIAL
complete with
7 ATTACHMENTS
AND
FLOOR
POLISHER
| Reduct
FREE ELECTROLUX
Home Demonstration
Anywhere to Texer
How to Hold
144
FALSE TEETH
More Firmly in Place
Do your false teeth annoy and em-
barrass by slipping dropping or, wob
bling when you eat, laugh or talk? Just
sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your
plates This alkaline mnon-acid) powder
hold, false teeth more firmly and more
.meet tee SA SE At
“plate odor” (denture breath) Get
FASTEETH today st any drug 2
The ancient Roman roads usual-
ly were too narrow for modern
use, especially where they passed
through archways, and grades of-
ten were for steeper than those
permitted on modern roads.
SWEETEN STOMACH
TO SWEETEN CHILD
When constipation occasionally upsets little
==-=
Lazative-Stemach Sweetener Works Overnight!
==========
Given st bidtim bipeoonforu ComtE
========
Works wonders for a child’s good nature
Fond I^^tur MIE
2-eteuuechernunitee
MAW!
Let the young ‘on go out
with the th’ truce flag. He’s
insured with
R. E.Wounq
Insurance
ALEXANDER BLDG
ABILENE
PH. 2-8449
WHITE SWAN UNIFORMS
choice of Women in White
Winner Fashion Academy 1952 Award
At Left—Style 997
SUPER POPLIN
Medium weight . . . tucked Peter
Pan collar ... tucked band* on
waist, circular skirt.
■ .> 14.95.
At Right—Style 0427
CRISP NYLON
Stond-up mondarin collar . , . .
tucked waist front . . side Grippers*
swing skirt ... set-in belt ... yoke
back.
Junior Size •
Regular Sizes 10 to 18...
Style 427, some model
with long sleeves .........
MINTER’S, please send me the
following items as advertised:
7.95
7.95
ITEM 1 SIZE 1 COLOR I QUANTITY I PRICE
WHITE
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AME
ADDRESS
9-22
Terms...
Liberal
Allowance
for Your
Old Cleaner
Out-of-Town
Orders Given
Prompt
Attention
WE HAVE A
COMPLETE LINE OF
NEW AND REBUILT VACUUMS
$ 95
Phone 2-3239
NT
UM (LEANER STORE
1842 N. 10TH ST., ABILENE, TEXAS
-------
i am interested in . FREE Home Demonstration of e Robuill
Electrolux Cleaner, complete with Amachments. AB 9-23
Address___________________________________
City-----------Ri*——
White Swan
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Pat
G
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bothersome pads . . . always in place for a
perfect figure . . . washable.
In Nylon — 5.95
HELENE’S STRAPLESS
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wear ... 4 section cup and double-needie
stitch assures perfect fit of your "dream
gown" with complete mental and personal
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4 1
In Cotton — 3.95
In Nylon — 5.95
K
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wear HELENE’S ME TOO .’. . 4-section stitched
cups eliminate bothering with pads, etc . . + the
answer to your wish for a perfect and natural
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In Cotton — 3.95
Foundations
Second Floor
THE CLINIC SHOE
p-w
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It’s no wonder they ore preferred by
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shoes are just naturally the most comfortable
things on two feet . . . model sketched
in white crushed-kid with silent Nop soles.
9.95
Women’s Shoes
Mezzanine
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 48, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 23, 1952, newspaper, September 23, 1952; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1652147/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.