The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 13, 1954 Page: 5 of 24
twenty four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
RNS) —
met m
a inwater
te Bra-
P. Wat.
i: Mrs.
re pres-
am, re.
Joe Col-
icretary;
: Mrs.
Ian and
parlia-
is Town
vice
N
S
ndicate
1 inju-
PSON
. 4-7329
res your
ng that
sagging
ing skin
1 "neat.
make-
way «■
to re-
D
M 28111
*
.1
1292
HEADS AF WEATHER SERVICE
Young Abilene General Preps
For Job as Tinker Commander
EDITOR’S NOTE: An Abi-
lene man, Maj. Gen. W. O.
Senter, has been named com-
mander of the Oklahoma City
Air Material Area. The story
below is by the Oklahoma City
Times Washington Bureau.
whereas now his job is the weath-
er all over the world.
That’s why he plans to put in a
week at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base, Dayton, Ohio, head-
quarters for the Air Material com-
ma nd
Then he hopes to spend a week
at jet school at Moody Alr Force
- - — — — — Base, Valdosta,Ga., followed by a
Force 5 youngest major generals, familiarization course on B-47
bombers, three weeks in a man-
WASHINGTON, Feb. t — William
Oscar Senter, 43, one of the Air
Monday began an intensive two
months of preparation for a new
job — Tinker Field commander.
When be replace the retiring Gen.
F. S. Borum May 1, he'll be in a
job completely new to him.
As f commander of the Air
Force’s weather service. Senter
has subordinates in virtually every
corner of the world, including a
station on an Ice Island near the
North Pole.
agement course at George Wash-
ington University, Washington, D.
C., and then back to Wright-Patter-
son for another several weeks of
training.
Determined Texan
This intensive preparation for a
new job is an example of the ener-
gy which has put him far above
his West Point class of 1933.
. He has the kind of determination
As commander of the Oklahoma after being a chain smoker. That's
City, air material area, he’D be what he did several years ago.
within driving distance of most of He’s an anomaly. He's a soft,
his domain. He 11 be concerned with spoken Texan and he hasn't lost
repair and modification of aircraft, his drawl.
did several years sgo.
He's an anomaly. He’s a soft-
CROWD EXCITED
Smoke Near Courthouse
Was Just Pot of Asphalt
Clouds of billowing smoke rising
Friday afternoon from near the
Taylor County Courthouse caused
a flurry of excitement in down-
town Abilene, but firemen quickly
got to the cause of the trouble
and extinguished a burning pot of
roofers’ asphalt that drew a
crowd of curious onlookers.
Firemen were called at 4:45 p.
m. to Thornton's Toy Land at
South Fourth and Pecan Sts.,
where a roofing job was under-
way. A email trailer-type unit for
melting asphalt, parked alongside
the building, became overheated
and caught fire, Watson Childers,
foreman on the job for Lydick-
Hooks Roofing Company, said.
With the exception of a burned
tire on the trailer unit and loss of
some asphalt, there was no other
damage from the blaze, Childers
said.
City fireman also ware called to
three other fires Friday afternoon
and evening.
. They were called to Hawley at
7:02 p. m. when a loading plat-
form of the Fort Worth Denver
Railroad was set afire by a grass
fire. No estimate of damage was
immediately available.
A fire in the residence of Mrs.
Bessie Myers st 1726 North Sec-
ond St. was reported at 4:02 p.m.
Damage was confined to the con-
tents and interior of the house, fire-
men said.
Firemen were called to extin-
guish a grass fire at the resi-
dence of Mrs. Lizzie Bethel. North
12th and Plum Sta., at 3:36 p. m.
The fire spread to a small storage
house at that address damaging
a wall and door.
A second grass fire was extin-
guished in a vacant lot at 1831
Butternut St. Firemen were call-
ed at 4:45 p. m.
Sweetwater Attorney May
Lose Eye; Snyder Man Critical
SNYDER, Feb. 12. — A Sweet-
water attorney and a Snyder man
remained in very serious condition
Friday night in Cogdell Memorial
Hospital after they met in a head-
on collision Thursday.
C. S. Perkins. 67, of Sweetwater,
was “holding his own” Friday
night, according to Mrs. Perkins,
who came here Thursday after-
noon to be at his bedside.
Also in critical condition is Emi-
le Favreau, 32, of Snyder, who hss
not regained complete conscious-
ness since he was admitted te the
hospital.
Perkins’ right leg to broken be-
low the hip, and he has five broken
ribs. Mrs. Perkins said be proba-
bly will lose his right eye.
Favreau, who hsd s head con-
eussion, also suffered a fractured
leg and jaw. He is considered la
more critical condition than Per-
kins by the attending physician.
Mrs. Perkins stated that her
husband, who was driving a 1949
Buick, was en route to Snyder to
attend a Rotary Club luncheon.
The accident occurred shortly be-
fore noon, near Inadale near the
border of Scurry and Nolan Coun-
ties.
Favreau, she said, was beaded
toward Sweetwater.
Deputy Sheriff Bill Love, who to-
vestigated the accident, reported
that after the accident, the Buick
and Favreau's 1252 Studebaker
were facing west. The highway,
U. S. 84, runs north and south.
Cause of the sccident hss not
been determined. Mrs. Perkins
said that particular stretch of road
is not curved.
According to papers in his bill-
fold. Favreau is single and hos-
pital spokesmen believed he was
unemployed at the time of the ac-
cident.
A brother of his from Whites-
boro arrived in Snyder Thursday
night. His mother lives in Kansas.
With Mrs. Perkins here is the
couple's son, Clifton, an Insurance
man in Sweetwater. Mr. and Mrs.
Perkins also have a daughter, Mrs.
Neal Psrks King of Mission.
EA THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
A Abilene, Texas, Saturday Morning, Feb. 13, 1954
A BITE OR
A BANQUET
You’ll always find a
variety of tasty, ex-
pertly prepared foods,
served in a jiffy in a
congenial atmosphere.
Menus changed for
each meal daily.
Mack Eplen’s
CAFETERIA
273 Cypress
180 Yank Soldiers
Killed Since Truce
SEOUL (n—American soldiers
still sro dying in Korea—some 180
since the armistice was signed
seven months ago.
The U. S. 8th Army reported to-
day that this toll resulted from
shootings, n a r e o 11 e s, drowning
traffic and plane accidents and-
despite ita safety campaigns—care-
lessness around Korea’s hazardous
roads, shaky buildings, dud ammu-
nition and mines.
Officers at headquarters did not
consider the figure alarming, since
the 8th has some 250,000 men. In
1952, with the war in full owing,
422 men died in non-battle mishaps.
The toll elnce the truce was
slightly over the National Safety
Council's accidental death rate in
the United States for 1953 of 60
per 100.000.
Almost half of the 180 fatalities
were in Jeep or track accidents
or drownings. Mines and dud
ammunition accounted for 22 per
cent. Fourteen died to shooting
scrapes and an average of six a
month as a result of using
narcotics.
He's co-operative, friendly and
sympathetic with a reporter who
knows nothing about the weather
service or air material.
His close friends call him Oscar.
Somehow, "Bill" never stuck even
though he refused to sign his
name W. Oscar Senter.
Wife ‘Just a Gypsy’
Since 1949, he and his family of
three have lived at Andrews Air
Force Base several miles southeast
of Washington. They have become
settled in a military society found
only in Washington.
Mrs. Senter, an attrative bru-
nette, aald she likes Washington,
but she's not unhappy about mov-
ing.
After aU, she grew up in the
service, and like most military
wives, she knows moving is part
of the game.
“I’m just a gypsy, I’m ready to
get going,” she said with southern
inflections in her voice.
Her girlhood home was Nash-
ville, Tenn. At that time she was
Ruth Tinsley. She was reared by
her stepfather. General V. J. Me-
loy, now retired, who, coincidental-
ly, is an old friend of General Bor-
um.
Father is Editor
Sha's an enthusiastic gardener.
She likes music, and was glad to
bear that Oklahoma City has a
symphony. She’s interested in the-
atricals, too.
Senter was reared by his step-
father, Frank Grimes, editor of the
Abilene (Texas) Reporter - News.
He hss been with the paper 40
years.
Senter grew up in Abilene, was
editor of the High School paper,
and spent a year at Hardin-Sim-
mons, then known just as Sim-
mons, preparing for West Point.
At the academy, he played var-
sity football his junior and senior
years. His position on the team?
Center, of course.
Notre Dame Whipped
Hie junior year, particularly,
waa a successful season. Red Blaik
was the backfield coach. They beat
Notre Dame, 12 to 0, and Senter's
178 pounds on a 6-1 frame took a
beating. He's still a trim 195.
Someone can be the general's
friend by Bearing up season tickets
to the University of Oklahoma foot-
ball games. “You have a wonder-
ful team, and I want to see them
play," he said.
When be left West Point, Senter
went to Randolph and Kelly Fields
in Texas. He specialised in bom-
bardment at Kelly, and then was
sent to Langley Field, his first ac-
tive duty station, where he met
Ruth. They were married there.
He specialized in B-17s, at that
time considered super-planes. He
got interested in meteorology and
in 1837 went to Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology for a year of
weather study
Leyte First War Call
That set him on a course from
which he tried unsuccessfully to
deviate later.
World War II found him at Max-
well Field, Montgomery, Ala., as
commander of the base weather
station. It was at Montgomery that
their first daughter, Suellen, now
14, was born.
Soon he became chief of opera-
tions of the Air Force’s weather
directorate in Washington In 1943,
he was sent to Asheville, N. C.,
where be organised the Air Force
weather wing. He became com-
mander of all weather units in the
western hemisphere.
"Afraid I was going to miss the
war entirely." he tried to get
back into B-17s, and put in repeat-
ed requests for combat.
He went to war at Leyte, south-
west Pacific, as staff weather of-
ficer for the Pacific command.
Meanwhile, Mra. Senter and Suel-
len were in Asheville.
Adviser to MacArthur
He was General MacArthur’s
meteorological adviser.
Mrs. Senter and their daughter
joined him in Tokyo after VJ day.
and they spent a "delightful" two
years in occupied Japan.
In 1848. it waa back to Maxwell
Field, where Jane, who’ll be 3 in
June, was born. Senter attended
the air war college for a year, and
In 1848 was sent to his present sta-
tion. He was promoted to brigadier
general the summer of 1860 and re-
ceived his second star a year and
a half later.
Pete Hale Sr., 45,
Of Hermleigh, Dies
SNYDER, Feb. U (RNS) — Jo-
seph Perry (Pete) Hale, Sr. 45,
of Hermleigh, died at 3.45 p. m.
Thursday to a Loraine hospital.
Mr. Hale, who had lived in Scur-
ry County 27 years, and his son.
The title “Prinee of Wales" to count, a year .no m c
purely honorary, not hereditary. 3. p. Hi, sr’orn .hewm
YOU NEED A TV
REPAIRMAN ....
be sure
you call our
TELETRICIANS
* takes special training, a rigid examination
and certain experience to obtain eertifleate
This Name IS Tear Guarantee
RADIO % CENTER
ISIS FINE a New Phones 2-4661, 3-2851
machine shop hi Snyder.
Mr. Halo was married to Ruby
May Knight in Abilene in 1927.
He was a member of the Method-
ist Church and the Masonic Lodge.
Survivors include his wife: three
sons, J. P. Hale, Jr., of Snyder,
Don Richard Hale, who is serving
with the Coast Guard to Florida,
and Norman Leon Hale of Herm-
leigh, and one brother, Marvin Al-
fred Rale of Hermleigh.
Funeral will be held at 2 p. m.
Saturday at the Methodist Church
in Hermleigh with the Rev. S. A.
Sifford, paator, officiating:
Burial will be in Rose Hill Cem-
story at Merkel under the direc-
tion of Bell Funeral Home of Sny-
der.
5=
LUCY AND DES1 WIN AGAIN—Lucille Ball and Desi Ar-
nag voice their thanks as they accept an “Emmy” statuette
at the annual Television Academy of Arts and Sciences
Awards dinner in Hollywood. Their program, “I Love
Lucy,” was named the best situation comedy for the sec-
ond year in a row.
FILM STARS GET 'EMMIES'
Eve Arden, Donald O'Connor
Cop Top TV Academy Award
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 12 (—]Hol-
lywood stars Eve Arden and Don-
Newscaster Edward R. Murrow
headed the winners among the
Eastern shows. He was given the
aid O'Connor reigned as the king'
and queen of TV today, but New
York shows rated the most awards
from the Television Academy. ________________
Miss Arden, who is any student’s best in the news or sports cate-
dream of a school teacher on “Our
Miss Brooks," and the versatile
O’Connor were named the best
academy’s top Emmy aa the out-
standing TV personality of 1953.
His "See It Now" was also named
gory.
New York shows won eight of
stars of TV series st last night’s
academy dinner. Both were film
veterans before entering the new
medium.
the 16 awards in 14 classifications
(there were two ties). Hollywood
trailed with seven Emmies and a
if you have a TV set no one can fix-
| SEND IT TO US!
A
Economics Lesson
Tought by Baby
SALT LAKE CITY Wn—Thomas
J. Fehr, Salt Lake City, reports
little success with his brand of
When his 20-month-ola con Rus-
sell threw his bowl of cereal on
the floor, Fehr says he paddled
him, filled another bowl and placed
it before the Infant That went to
the floor too, whereupon another
paddling end another full bowl.
But Russell wasn’t learning very
fast. The third bowl, then the
fourth too, went to the floor.
Fehr went out end bought a plas-
tie bewL M
Britain Finds ‘
Fags, Cancer
Go Together
LONDON * — Health Minister
Ian MacLeod disclosed today the
finding of a government advisory
committee stating "it must be re-
garded as established that there is
a relationship between smoking
and lung cancer.”
A group of leading tobacco man-
ufacturers immediately replied:
"A statistical relationship-even
If established beyond all doubt-
can never do more than indicate
one of the lines to be further in-
vestigated. There ia no proof that
smoking is a cause of lung can-
MacLeod's report on the three-
year study of the standing advi-
sory committe on cancer and
radio therapy set up under the
National Health Services Act wss
made public in the House of Com-
mons. It said:
“Though there is s strong pre-
sumption that the relationship (be-
tween smoking and lung cancer)
is casual, there is evidence that
the relationship is not a simple
one.” -
The report' added that evidence
in support of the presence in to-
bacco smoke of a carcinogenic
(cancer creating) agent ia as yet
uncertain and statistical evidence
indicates that it is unlikely that
increase in the number of lung
cancers is due entirely to increases
in smoking.
Cafe, School Bring
Burglary Toll to 33
A cafe and a school were tapped
by burglars Thursday night, bring-
ing to 33 the total break-ins here
since Jan. 1, city police report.
Broken into were the new Wood-
son High School, North Fourth St.
and Cockrell Dr., and Jack and
Ina's Cafe. 1402 South Second St.
About 360 was taken from a
candy machine and a drink dis-
pensing machine at the school.
Nothing was taken from the cafe,
police said.
Police had not determined Fri-
day night bow the school was en-
tered, but said the burglar made
entry to the cafe through a sky-
light.- There was a program at the
school Thursday night and police
reason that somebody might have
hid in the building until the crowd
left and then committed the theft.
Detective Capt W. B. McDonald
aaid Friday police have solved
“about 12" of the 33 burglaries
committed her thia year. Several
days ago police official shifted
men from day to night work in
order to put a halt to the wave of
burglartoe.
Chicago show, “Kukla, Fran and
Ollie." won as the best 'children’s
program.
Awards for the best supporting
players went to Art Carney of the
Jackie Gleason show and Vivian
Vance of "I Love Lucy.” Miss
Vance drew laughter from the ca-
pacity crowd at the Palladium
when she called Lucille Ball “the
greatest straight woman in show
business.”
"I Love Lucy” copped the best
situation comedy honors for the
second year in a row and the high-
ly favored “Dragnet" won in the
best mystery, action or adventure
category.
Parsons Attorneys
Plan to Appeal
Murder Conviction
WICHITA FALLS, Feb. 12 (fl-
Attorneys for Mrs. Mary Jean
Parsons plan to file a second mo-
tion asking the Court of Criminal
Appeals to rehear her appeal of
a murder conviction.
Mrs. Parsons, 22, a Tulsa social
figure, was convicted here last Feb-
ruary of the pistol-slaying of her
bridegroom, Lt. Richard Parsons.
She got 10 years.
He was shot to death in their El
Paso apartment. They'd been mar-
ried aix weeks.
The appeals court rejected
Wednesday a plea for a new hear-
ing. Earlier, the court had rejected
58 defense complaints against trial
court proceedings.
Leslie Humphrey of Wichita
Falls, one of Mrs. Parsons’ law-
yers, said a second motion for re-
bearing will be filed.
DR. ROBERT G. COLLMER
. . . now H-SU prof
H-SU Adds English
Prof; Due In Fall
Dr. Robert George Collmer,
currently teaching st the Philadel-
phia Bible Institute, hss accepted
a position ss associate professor of
English st Hardin-Simmons Uni-
versity, effective for the fall term.
Dr. Evan Allard Reiff, H-SU pres-
ident, has announced.
Dr. Collmer, who received his
PhD from the University of Penn-
sylvania, is s scholar of sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries litera-
ture.
Born in Central America, Dr.
Collmer attended Martin High
School, Laredo, Texas, before go-
ing to Howard Payne College and
Baylor University. He received
his Bachelor's and Masters degress
from Baylor. His B. A. degree was
awarded with honors.
While st Pennsylvania, Dr. Coll-
mer was president of the Gradu-
ate English Club.
He holds membership in the Sig-
ma Tan Delta, national honorary
literary fraternity.
Dr. Reiff, in announcing Dr.
Collmer’s position with H-SU, said
that his appointment would give
the English department a special-
ist in Shakespearean and Eliza-
bethan English.
Six Texans Listed
As Dead in Korea
WASHINGTON i-Si Texans
are among 95 soldiers listed by
the Army yesterday as dead. They
were reported previously to be
missing in Korea.
The Army said most of the
deaths reported in the new. list
occurred white Oto men were pris-
oners of the Communists.
Texans included in the list were:
Sgt. Lawrence Hubbard Barren,
sen of Mrs. Nora M. Barron, care
W. H. Barron. City Farm, Houston.
M. Sgt. Guenther August Burrer,
brother of Mrs. Estella B. Ebert,
Route 1, Fredericksburg.
1st Lt. Lemuel Lester English,
husband of Mrs. Wilma I. English,
122 Starr Ave., Nacogdoches.
CpI. James Terrell Nash, hus-
band of Mrs. Imogene B. Nash,
Route 1, Seagraves.
Cpl. Roberto Paredas Rodriques,
son of Guadalupe Rodriques, 2818
Elgin St., Corpus Christi.
Sgt. John Elbert Thompson,
ward of Mrs. Addie L. Johnson,
1128 North 6th St., Waco.
suuwpoocouorsyur
Nm.einnde in lMinde
drab hair tonewlustrous natural youthful color
wash or rub off. F
with lanolin...
KIDS
STORK NEWS
WEATHER DATA
Robinson
PHARMACIES
929 Bulternut—Ph. 2-2822
L 14th Shopping Center
Ph. 3-1442
Ex Loh 1325 Hickery-Ph 2-1(23
PROMPT DELIVERY
CAA Ends Hearing
Over Fatal Crash
Food Okay Despite
Political Overtone
For the 24-hour period preceding 6:20
p.m. Central Standard Time Friday:
Texas Stations: -—- ’—m-u
Abilene
Amarillo
Austin
Midland
ST Chrie
a Paso
Fort Worth
Houston
Junction
Presidio
San Angelo
San Antonio
High Low Rainfall
61 28
BERLIN, Feb. 12 If* — A French
menu for the Big Four foreign
ministers dipped into high politics,
but it didn’t seem to spoil the
food.
Three babies were born in Abi-
lene Hospitals Friday.
At Hendrick Memorial:
A boy to Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy D.
Barron, 2810% Waverly St. at 8:07
a.m.’
A girl to Mr and Mrs. Robert
Henry Boyd, 1433 Franklin St., at
• p.m.
At St. Ann
A boy to Mr. and Mra. Wayne
Lewis, 1481 Shelton St., at 9:23
am.
French High Commissioner An-
dre Francois Poncet quipped about
the significance, the West German
government bulletin reported to-
day and said .
Wichita Falls
Wink
Other Stations:
Albuquerque
Atlanta
Chicago
Denver
Des Moines
Kansas City
New Work
Oklahoma City
Washington, D.C.
Los Angeles
some
ss 36 1.30
Paul 19 ^ tr.
Time Marches On;
Welch Back Home.
WACO (n—An Harold Ginsberg
knows is that he's got his watch
back.
Gas Co. Explosion
Kills 3 in Tulsa
TULSA, Feb. u M-Three em-
ployes of the National Cylinder Gaa
Co. were killed today in the ex-
SH R EVE PORT, La. — The Civ- plosion of a tank filled with hydro
il Aeronautics Board ended a two- T “
day hearing yesterday into the rea-
sons why an amphibian aircraft
crashed near here Jan. 10. killing
ten prominent businessmen and the
two pilots.
A report on the four-men CAB's
findings will be released at Wash-
ington later.
The Grumman amphibian, owned
by the United Gas Pipe Lines Co.,
crashed near Wallace Lake. The
ten businessmen, Including Thomas
Braniff, president of the Braniff
International Airways, were re-
turning from a bunting trip in
southern Louisiana.
gen gas. Four other persons were
injured, two of them critically.
The dead were Gus Pichon, 52,
the company's Kansas City plant
manager; William Weakley and
Garland Goldman
Pichon, who lost both legs, died
2 % hours after the blast. Weakley
and Goldman were killed outright.
The explosion hurled a heavy
chunk of steel from a cylinder tank
through both doors of a pickup
truck in a parking lot 150 feet
away. The explosion was believed
to have occurred as a crew check-
The turtle soup illustrated the
hard ehell methode of conference
tactics, lobster Thermidor was a
reminder of the Thermidor period
in France when moderate courea
politics replaced Robespierre’s
guillotine, roast lamb was apt bo-
causa the Big Four would have to Ginsberg runs . pawn chop pars.
E =*=========,E - - ft
me em e each the S*Pe was * watch taken from the ruins
son point The ehampagne IPR of his office after the May 11 tor-1
bomb too cold to reach the explo-
sented Germany, the merry widow nado.
everybody is courting. 1 The airman told police he got
H from another airman that bought
it for $5 from another airman. Air
Force officials said the third air-
man has been discharged
MICROTONE
TRANSISTOR
HEARING AID
Authorized service and re-
pairs. We repair all makes.
We bay all Mercury used
batteries.
PAT
202 Graham Phone 4-4166
Certified Hearing Ald Audiologist
PARENTS!
Talbott Inspecting
San Antonio Site
SAN ANTONIO (B-Air Force
Secretary Harold E. Talbott began
aa inspection of San Antonio air
bases today to determine tor him-
self whether the Air Force acade-
my should be located here.
Shortly after arriving at Kelly
AFB at 6:55 a.m. he wax asked by
newsmen If he thought San Anto-
nio would be a good site tor the
academy
The secretary replied:
“I’m sure it would be. In fact,
I don't know whether there are
any better.”
“That’s why I’m here Well just
have to give ft a look.”
Talbott wax accompanied by his
wife, Lt Gen. Hubert Harmon and
Lt. Col. Henry Hogan, the secre-
tary’s aide.
Finest TV of Amazing
LOW PRICE!
Stewart - Warner “),
All 82-Channel T
VHF UHF Tuneri %
FAGAN
ELECTRIC
1082 M. 1st. Ph. 4.6220
ed the tank's pressure.
It wrecked the quarter block-
long. one-story brick structure’s
main compressor room, ripped off
the roof and blew out windows.
Texan leans large
Estate In Britain
LONDON Un—A U.S. Army ser-
grant from Texas who was killed
fighting in Korea in 1952 left an
estate in Britain valued at 43,892
pounda ($122,901), according to a
will probated today.
Sgt George Bernard Durham,
M. whose father lives in Corpus
Christi, Tex., was a director of the
family shift firm here. William
Sugden & Sons, when he was called
up for military service in 1950.
Young Durham left all Ms Brit-
ish assets, valued at 32,892 pounds
($107,901) after taxes, to two broth,
ers, Edwin and Richard
I Isn’t It Time for
“A Piano and Lessons”?
Ask M
ABOUT 12
OUR Mo
I RENTAL PLAN
On New and Used
PIANOS 1
DENMAN MUSIC CO.
357 Cypress Phone 47558 1
FOR BETTER HOME
GERALD G. LAWLER
3252
PRESSING VIEUES
A camel is 17 years old before
it is full-grown.
H-S.U. ANNOUNCES
For Tuesday, February 16
Behrens Chapel 8 p. m.
THE WORLD
AFFAIRS COUNCIL
Featuring:
1. HON. CAMILLE CHAUTEMPS, four times premier
of France
2. JOHN C. METCALFE, famous for his brilliant behind
the scenes reports.
3. MELCHIOR P. AQUINO, Phillipine journalist a
diplomat.
4. DAN T. MOORI, former ranking county intelligence
officer for OSS in the Middle East.
TICKETS ON SALE AT:
THE MELODY SHOP a THE RICORD shor
$1 20 and Students 90e
SOMEBODY MUST
HAVE S110T MIM.
A GROUP OF DYES CALLED
fugitive dyes *
MAY AS OFF OR RUN IN EVEN THE
MOST CAREFUL PROCESSES.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 13, 1954, newspaper, February 13, 1954; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1652658/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.