Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 220, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952 Page: 1 of 8
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I I
Call 4678
To Place A Wcyit Ad
B
#ut££tutater Mepatt
Dedicated To The Welfare Of Sweetwater And Surrounding Area
«M<I Today's News
TODAY
55th Year Number 220
Full Leused United Preys Wire Service
SWEETWATKH, TEXAS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1052
NEA Telephoto 'Service
Price Daily 5c, Sunday 10c
m
NEW VOLCANO—The earth's newest active volcano located on
San Benedicto island, a small uninhabited island 780 miles south
* of San Diego. Scientist said the cone was a bright yellow in color
and had risen to a height of 1500 feet. Erupting every 20 minutes
the volcano was sending up smoke and ash with strong suiphur
odor indicating it was in the latter stages of the initial ■jruotion.
(NEA Telephoto.)
Church Of Christ
.Protest Filed In
Closing Mission
ROME, Sept. 16—UP—Cline R.
Paden, Texas-born head of the
Church of Christ mission here, said
Tuesday his lawyer was preparing
a three-point court protest because
police barred religious services at
his temple last Sunday and sur-
Boys Rush
Back To
Jail Cell
Food for prisoners in the Snyder
jail must be pretty terrible.
Last week two prisoners broke
out of the jail, looted a grocery
store of a batch of groceries, and
after eating all they wanted, broke
back into the jail with sufficient
food and cigarets for fellow pris-
oners.
That's the story they told Cal
Montgomery and Lloyd Rogers
here today.
The boys told officers that they
considered stopping to cat some
meat in the store but they decided
they might get run out if someone
came along "so we hurried back
to jail."
The two prisoners, along with six
See BOYS—Page 8
rounded his home with guards
"We will protest the arrest of
Howard Bybee on Sunday, the fact
that police prohibited friends from
entering my home and the fact that
visitors from Canda and Germany
were kept out in the rain and for-
bidden to enter my home," he said.
Bybee, of Manteca, Calif., who
heads a Church of Christ mission
at Padua in northern Italy, was
said to have been detained by po-
lice briefly when he tried to pho-
tograph them outside Paden's
home
Italian authorities explained the
police went to Paden's dwelling be-
cause his church was not register-
ed as a religious organization
They said Paden was in Italy on
a tourist visa and not as a min-
ister.
However, Paden denied reports
that 21 other branch Churches of
Christ in other parts of Italy had
been closed.
"I have been in constant con-
tact with all of them by telephone,
and they have received no orders
from the police,' he said.
Paden said he went to the U. S.
embassy Monday and asked to see
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker. He
said he was told to submit a writ-
ten report of his case. Meanwhile
a conference was called at the em-
bassy to discuss the matter.
! (The State Department in Wash-
I inton asked the Rome embassy for
I See CHURCH—Page 8
Ike Says
Farmers
Got Hurt
Promises Consistent
Program UnderG.O.P.
ABOARD EISENHOWER SPE-
CIAL, Sept. 10—UP—Dwight D. Ei-
senhower accused the Truman ad-
ministration Tuesday of giving hog
farmers "a terrible licking" last
year in a conflict between two
agencies — the Agriculture De-
partment and the Office of Price
Stabilization
Speaking at Albert Lea, Minn.,
on the second day of his whistle
stop tour of the Midwest, the Re-
publican presidential candidate
promised that a GOP administra-
tion would be "consistent" in both
foreign and domestic affairs
Eisenhower was met at Albert
Lea by a crowd estimated by state
Police Capt Norris Peterson at be-
tween 10,000 and 12,000 including
4,500 school children
He introduced his wife to the
crowd as "Mamie" She was hand-
ed a bouquet of roses by 11-year-
old Sandra Skout
Eisenhower told the youngsters:
"I want to say that you young
people give me a lift I believe in
the youth of America"
Cites Hog Price Case
As an example of Democratic
inconsistency and confusion, he re-
called the hog price situation of the
fall and spring of 1951
"The farmers, particularly the
hog farmers, were caught in the
middle," he said
"The OPS threatened to put on i
price ceilings if prices got up to i
parity," he said
"The Agriculture Department |
said there were so many hogs that [
prices would never reach parity j
"In the confusion, farmers had |
to sell their hogs and prices fell
to 76 per cent of parity — all due j
to the confusion"
Eisenhower said one farmer told ]
See IKE—Page 8
UN Sabrejets Use New Mystery
Device In Winning Air Battles
!
m
Four
Shot
MIGs
Down
SEOUL, Korea, Sept. 10—UP—
United Nations Sabrejets, armed }
with a mysterious new device, shot I
down four. Communist MIG-15 jets j
and damaged two others Tuesday |
to make Steptember their best j
month of the Korean war in air J
duels with the Russian-built fight-j
ers.
10 Invited
To Meet
Democrat Rightists
Testify at Hearing
AUSTIN, Sept. 16—UP—An offi-
i • i i cial of the right-wing "Texas Dem
Tuesdays victones brought Uu I ^ party„ _ («ckmt, Dwight
month to 45 ae |p Eisenhower as their presiden-
tial nominee — testified Tuesday
only 10 delegates attended the state
convention because it was an "in-
vitation-only" affair
Allen Wight of Dallas, chairman
of the organization's state execu-
tive committee, testified in district
court as the "Texas Democrats"
defended their bid to place Eisen-
hower's name on the Texas ballot
MIG toll this
stroyed, three probably destroyed
and 37 damaged. The previous
record month was April of this
year when 41 MIGs were shot
down.
Allied destruction of MIGs for
September actually totaled 46 be-
cause a U. S. Marine plane shot
down a Red jet Sept. 10. Howev-
er, Navy and Marine kills were
FIRST WHISTLE STOP—Republican presidential candidate Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, waves
both hands acknowledging the plaudits of the more than 5,000 people gathered at Fort Wayne, Ind.,
to hear the candidate's first back platform speech. (NEA Telephoto.)
not counted in the Sabrejet scor- twjce_as a Republican candidate
ings on which th.s month s record ag we[] as thc noPminee of the ..Tex_
[ as Democrats"
Host Of Planes To
Be Here Sept. 20-21
Soviet Troops To Stay
• Longer In Port Arthur
I
MOSCOW, Sept. 16 —UP—Rus-
sian and Communist Chinese nego-
tiators, already agreed on keeping
Soviet troops in southern Manchur-
ia beyond 1952, were believed tack-
ling other major problems Tues-
day.
The Soviet-Chinese communique
announcing the decision not to with-
draw Soviet troops from Port Ar-
thur on schedule this year appeared
to be of an interim character cov-
ering only the business completed
so far.
Members of the 15-man Chinese
delegation were believed still dis-
cussing economic and political
questions with Soviet officials Tues-
day. Only top-level delegates were
involved in the decisions already
reached.
Until Japan Signs Treaties
The Soviet - Chinese announce-
ment early Tuesday said Soviet
troops would remain at thc ice-
free Manchurian port of Port Ar-
13th Airport Oil
Well Completed
Rowan and Hope's No. 1 Turner
May oil well west of the city air-
port has been completed with a po-
tential of 218 barrels of oil in 23
hours through quarter inch choke.
Casing pressure was 400 pounds
and tubing pressure was 400.
This made the 13th oil producer
in the field west of the airport.
One of the early wells, Seaboard's
No. 1 Turner May which was a
weaker well is now being rework-
ed in hope of increasing produc-
tion. Heavy acid is being given the
well which was only 48 to 50 bar-
rels a day producer compared with
the field allowable of 90.
Seaboard's No. 2 Turner May on
the east was one of the field's best
producers.
Rowan and Hope has moved in
"on the airport land and expects to
"kick oil" on the drilling opera-
tion by tonight.
South of here, Billie Hanks A-5
of Seaboard is down to 4233 feet. A
north step-out from the field,
TXL-B-1 is drilling at 5339 feet ex-
pecting to top the pay tonight or
Wednesday.
thur until Japan signs peace treat-
ies with Russia and Communist
China.
Japan's failure to make peace
with the Soviet Union and China,
the announcement said, had creat-
ed "conditions. . . dangerous for
peace and favorable for a renewal
of Japanese aggression."
The announcement said other
agreements reached during four
See SOVIET—Page 8
Stevenson Pushes
Charge That Ike
Has 'Surrendered'
SPRINGFIELD, 111., Sept. 16
—UP—Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson [
j Tuesday assembled for eastern
consumption a political road show I
portraying Sen. Robert A. Taft <R-
| Ohio) as the villain of the election '
I campaign and Dwight D. Eisen-
hower as Taft's "surrender" vic-
tim.
As Taft starts stumping for Eis-
| enhower, the GOP presidential
| nominee Stevenson apparently in-
tended to shift more of his cam-
paign fire to the Ohioan than at
Eisenhower himself
Members of Stevenson's staff
said the governor, who on Thurs-
day will open a speaking tour into
Connecticut, Massachusetts, New-
York, Virginia and Maryland,
would step up his campaign to
convince the electorate that Tail
had "taken over" the Eisenhower
campaign and turned the former
general's "great crusade" into a
"great surrender"
Working on Speeches
Stevenson cleared his schedule
as much as possible of routine en-
gagements Tuesday to complete
the speeches he will use in the
East against his GOP opposition
See STEVENSON—Page 8
Sveetwater will have 150 to 250
visiting fliers this weekend and an
opportunity to glimpse many of
the latest developments in aviation
in connection with the air search-
rescue practice mission headquart-
ers here.
Reservations for rooms for visit- I
i.iei i.:.ots uie approaching the 100
mark already, with some of the
group due to arrive Thursday.
Capt. R. K. McKinney, Civil Air
Service will send men and crews
here Thursday.
Among the interesting planes
will be an Air Forte rescue ship, a
SA-16-Grumman amphibian two-
motor Albatross.
There will also be an H-5 heli-
<. 'tpter and a C-47.
Hubert Pollard, airport manager,
said Tuesday that Webb Air Base
commanding officer said that if
Patrol commander, said that seven Poss'b't' several jets will be s'erit
of the planes registered so far- are j here ,0 be 0,1 the lleld ior Publlt
from Houston and the list,iraclnides inspection.
planes from all parts of fjjerotate, j The air search will start S;fhir-
Ellington Field's 5th Ail- Rescue j day morning with radio headqUjirt-
ers sot up in thc CAP building so
Typhoon Batters
At Wake Island -
. v"l '
WAKE ISLAND, Sept. 'lfeOP—
Emergency rescue planes, stood by
Tuesday for a mass evacuation of
this tiny mid-Pacific island after
it was "leveled" by a violent 138-
mile-an-hour typhoon.
Mountainous seas, fed by the de-
structive storm which struck with-
out warning Monday, washed over
the whole island.
The Navy said 90 per cent of
the island's facilities were de-
stroyed, "several" persons were
injured and all communications
from Wake were disrupted for
eight hours.
Virtually every building on the
j was based
Use Secret 'Gadget'
At least some of the Sabres car-
I ried a new device which Air Force
i Secretary Thomas Finletter de-
| scribed recently as a "gadget or
gimmick" that gave the Sabre an
| "important tactical advantage"
j over the MIG.
I
In addition to the confirmed rec-
The "Loyal Democrats," backing
; Adlai Stevenson as the party's can-
i didate, sought a temporary injunc-
i tion, barring certification of Eisen-
1 hower on the new ticket
Wight, represented in court by
| C.C. Renfro, Dallas attorney, was
! called as a witness by the "loyal
uei 1'uga's orchestra
Spring.
The program is open to all citi-
zens, the local leaders announced.
Large crowds attended the open-
that the staff can handle the entire I ing programs Sunday and Monday,
operation from there. i> j Monday night Fiesta Queen Nil-
A banquet Saturday night atj-lhe J wf,s crowned by Police
Blue Bonnet hotel will have about j C,hlel.['■ McCoy before a large,
250 Civil Air Patrol members? in ! cheering crowo.
attendance. J . fuesday afternoon a parade was
Many Join
In Fiesta
A three day celebration of the
anniversary of the Mexico's inde-
pendence from Spain will close
here tonight with program in city
park starting at 0 o'clock. There
will be patriotic songs and talks j Tuesdays-four kills with an an-1 "r. ,'V
and a concert by the Mustang nounf,ement confirming as official | aue"a-
Bands. ! the destruction of one MIG which i Cofer asked if the delegates were
Following the program there | was outmaneuvered and forced to 1 required to show a poll tax •
will be a dance with music by Man- crash Sept 4 by Capt. Arthur H. , "No." Wight answered.
' ' from B'81 McCart '
; ord of 45-3-37, claims were pend-
ing on four MIGs destroyed, one i He related th-at the state con-
' probably destroyed and five dam-1 vention was held in Renfro's office,
agecj j and explained that only 10 persons
_ ' , , , j ' were present because, "I wanted
Tuesday also set a new record who shared my
for the Fourth Fighter Wing, the . *
older of the two F-86 wings in Ko- j
lean. Its previous month record for ! In answer to a question by John
MIG kills was 25, but Tuesday! Cofer, Austin attorney, Wight tes-
marked the 25th and 26th. tified that no notice of the con-
.... . . , , i vention was given, ana there was
Fifth Aw *oree officials coupled J nQ opportunitBv for the public lo
Sunday morning a chaplain's (ser-
vice will be held at the field about
9 a. m. in charge by the Rev. Geo.
R. Wilson, local chaplain.
held downtown with the procession j and ml
ending at the Wr Memorial monu- ! Island '
ment where Queen Reyes laid a
wreath.
of Dearborn, Mich. j "Then you don't know whether
'3et battles were rag- j they were qualified voters or not,"
fighter-bombers and I Cofer inquired.
re attacked a military j Wight answered he didn't,
'ration far north on Ko- "j do not recognize the national
iast and smashed sup- Democratic- party as any entity op-
rations on the Haeju erating in Texas at all," he said.
| The "Loyal Democrats" obtain-
?Eight Monday ; ed a court order Saturday to block
'twere carrying troops ' the insurgent group temporarily
supplies in the Sinmi i The order specified that the sup-
i<i east of Sinanju. Six j porters of the new party had to
craft w1e'r? "destroyed and 24 others j See 10 INVITED—Page 8
damaged.
While
ing, A*
light b
boat c
rea s
penins
The <
Mrs. Joe, Lindley
Of Roscoe Dies
Air Force officials in Washing- i
ton, Tokyo and Korea refused to
j divulge the nature of the new Sa-
L
liart
L'lln
Mrs. Joe M. Lindley of Rosi
about 67, died unexpectedly hi
Tuesday afternoon at a local c
ic where she ha£l come for treat-
ment.
Mrs. Lindley, wife of a retired
Roscoe farmer, had lived in Ros-
THE WEATHER
SWEETWATER — Temperature, [ bre device; although a defense de^
high Monday 88 degrees; low j partment source said it "may be
respons L1~~ 1
Allied
Allied
best d
when t
probablj
Monday
Tuesday morning. 62. Baromter,
30.08 steady. Increasing cloudness,
unsettled, slightly warmer. Rela-
tive humidity, 62 per cent. Rainfall
Monday .40 of an inch. For Septem-
ber, 2.37 inches; for 1952—10.14 in-
ches.
WEST TEXAS — Partly cloudy
island was reported wiped out and i coe a number of years and was | through Wednesday. Widely scat-
Tests Show Calves Not Hurt
By Temporary Rations Slice
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (U"l—Ex-
periments with twin calves are
providing good news for western
cattlemen facing a "severe" feed
shortage this winter
Scientists at the Agriculture De-
partment's Beltsville, Md., re-
search center are conducting tests
on 10 pairs of twins which show
that beef calves fed at "mainten-
ance levels" during periods of
tight supply grow rapidly and
"economically" when put back on
full feed, and match their well-fed
twin in weight and meat quality
by slaughter time
Continued drought and extreme
heat in Texas and Oklahoma areas
have cut feed supplies to the point
where ranchcrs and farmers might
be forced to restrict diets later
this year. In many sections, hay
stocks normally reserved for win-
ter feeding already have been call-
ed into use.
Dr. C. F. Winchester, conduct-
ing the tests, report no stunted
growth or loss of health in the
twins fed scanty rations for three
to four months He ran the tests
on three and four-month-old calves
On the three-month-old tests, one
twin was fed 10>4 pounds of al-
falfa and 13'i; pounds of linseed oil
meal a week. The other twin was
eating 10'i pounds of alfalfa, 15-
9-10 pounds of linseed and 6 8-10
pounds of corn
The twins on low-level rations
have "gained rapidly and econom-
ically" since put back on full feed,
Winchester said.
While these tests are not yet
completed, e a r 1 i e r experiments
showed not only the rapid weight
increase but almost identical meat
quality for twins with cut rations
The earlier test with six twins
See TESTS—Page 8
costly commercial air line and mil
itary installations were uprooted
by gales and torrents of rain.
Still Under Water
Most of Wake was still under
water 17 hours after the typhoon
struck. The island's 750 inhabi-
tants huddled for shelter in trench-
es and foxholes used by the Japa-
nese in Worl War II.
The island residents, most of
them employes of American air
line firms and service personnel,
also were forced to seek refuge in
grounded planes.
A Pan American world airways
official radioed that all of the, line's
facilities on the island were "de-
stroyed."
"All personnel must be evacuat-
ed," he said.
Commercial companies and mili-
tary rescue groups readied planes
at Honolulu, Tokyo, and Kwaja
well-known. j tered thundershowers Tuesday aft-
Funeral arrangements will be I ernoon and eastward from the Pe-
announced by the Wells Funeral cos Valley Wednesday afternoon.
Home of Roscoe. No important temperature changes.
aged t'
which
fighter
only 6i
base at
Thurn
for the big jump in
lis
ots had one of their
the month Monday,
t down eight MIGs,
royed one and dam-
t of a flight of 80
pted to break up a
«r attack on Sinuiju,
ds from the big MIG
iOng, Manchuria
6 U. S. Jets Crash
Into Mountainside
SEOUL, Korea. Sept. 16—UP—
An entire flight of six American
Marine Pantherjet fighter planes,
streaking blindly through heavy
clouds, rammed into a Korean
mountain last week and killed all
six pilots, it was disclosed Tues-
day.
Spokesmen for the Far East Air
fighter-bomber pilots | Forces and the Navy in Tokyo said
reporteji.^Communist anti-aircraft j that to their knowledge it was the
guns fir«J pn them from across the 1 "worst" mass crash of the Korean
river inifiWMchuria. UN pilots had war.
HST Defends Position
On Health Program
strict not to return the fire.
PoweSuS.tB-29 Superforts from
Japan a®-"Okinaw a took over the
air wdBnight shift, dropping
more tlM#p. 100 tons of bombs on
a suppljfisrea in southeast Pyong-
vang. tfiffjS'orth Korean capital
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 16 —UP
— President Truman labeled
Dwight D. Eisenhower Tuesday as
a "political pullback" with "horse
and buggy" ideas about medical
legislation.
The President declined to men-
lein Island to fly emergency flights j tion Eisenhower's name but it was
to Wake.
tl
Local Showers In
Many. Communities
Hard local showers helped some
spots in this territory Monday af-
ternoon and weather indications
pointed to chance for further show-
ers at 62 per cent and rising Tues-
day morning.
Around Dora and in some parts
of the Divide country rain amount-
ed lo about one inch Monday after-
noon. There was only a quarter of
an inch at Nolan store but there
was heavier rain along Cottonwood
creek.
The rain come into Sweetwater
with M. C. Manroe, weather ob-
server. reporting .40 of an inch and
the city filter plant showing .33.
Showers continued north through
Claytonviile with about a half of
an inch across a strip about three
miles wide.
Non-Striker's Home
Shaken By Dynamite
FORT WORTH, Sept. 16 (IB—An
explosion at the home of a non-
striking employe of a strike-bound
munitions plant partially wrecked
an automobile and shook the
neighborhood lor two blocks around
Tuesday.
The blast, believed to have been
caused by dynamite, shattered a
car owned by L. F. Williamson.
56, who quit the CIO United Steel
Workers union a month ago be-
cause he was dissatisfied with its
policies.
Windows In both the Williamson
home and the one next door were
broken, but no one was injured.
Police Chief Roland R . Hower-
ton said he was investigating on
the theory that the explosion was
a result of friction at the strife-
torn American Manufacturing Co.
which holds navy contracts for
gun projectiles.
evident he referred to a statement
the GOP presidential nominee
made against any federally-operat-
ed compulsory health insurance
program.
Before leaving New York on a
whistle stop tour Sunday, Eisen-
hower said such a program would
give patients "regimented, assem-
bly-line treatment" resulting in
"less and poorer medical care for
more."
Mr. Truman, addressing the Am-
erican Hospital Association con-
I vention scoffed at Eisenhower's
remark that the country's health
problems could be handled by "vol-
untary means" and "locally indi-
gent medical care."
"That's about like saying we
don't need any form of social se-
curity except the county poor
house," the president said.
Defends Position
Mr. Truman avoided mentioning
any form of national health insu-
rance such as he has advocated but
defended his position that the gov-
ernment should help people met
medical expenses
cal and health services to people
at a price they can afford to pay,"
he said. "1 have invited the coop-
eration of the medical profession
in solving this problem."
The President said the iiigh cost
of medical care is the fault of no
one, but "these costs have to be
met somehow if we want to reap
the blessing of medical research in
the relief of human suffering."
Mr. Truman said he always be-
lieved the government was bound
by the Constitution to promote the
general welfare of its citizens
"These people really want to go
back to the horse and buggy days,"
Mr Truman said. "Fortunately, we
have gone ahead in this country,
despite the 'pullbacks,' to accom-
plish what we could over their op-
position."
Denies It's Socialism
He denied that it is "socialism"
for the government to help "make
it possible for every American to
protect his health."
"1 would call it a goal of enter-
prise. American enterprise, the
President said.
Mr. Truman spoke at length
about the progress made in var-
ious fields of medicine through co-
operation of the government and
ehmedical profession.
"The fact is that the medical
profession has more to do with de-
,Whisenant
ednesday
The First Marine Air Wing here
said the planes crashed at 6 p. m.
Wednesday against the fog-shroud-
ed 3.000-foot mountain 25 miles east
of Taegu in South Korea.
Circling the square
"Our problem is to bring medi-See TRUMAN—Page 8
The Shrine Circus was good. The
clowns, including boys like A1
Brandt, George Thompson and A.
Funerii'iervices for A. G. Whis- C. Bishop in their bloomers,
enant. 88, who was found dead at j brought many laughs.
his hon*-'^>2307 East Broadway, |
shortly i'fttt- 12 noon Monday, will Mrs. Ivan Flynn eating one of
be held Jitj3,:30 p. m. Wednesday at those "frozen cotton" setups at the
Cate-Spiihcft Funeral Chapel. circus, furnished some amusement
Mr. WW^mant, who operated a to people in her section of stands.
tilling ste'tkfti near his home, died |
of natuiVK Causes, probably a heart j Suez Temple is located at San
attack of his death was set j Angelo and not San Antonio as
at about ,lf:-30 a. m He had suffer- j stated by Shriner Carl Mayficld.
ed frorrfc it heart condition for some
time mfeinbers of his family said. "Circling the Square is either
Born ' D^c. 30, 1863, in Union 1 pretty smart or terribly dumb,"
County, 'Miss., Mr. Whisenant and says Tom Kassner. "Some of the
his wifi-Married in Tippah County, stuff in the column doesn't make
Miss., o1!)* jail 5. 1904. He and his sense." he added. Frankly, some
amiiv f^frle to Texas in 1927 and of it isn't supposed to make sense,
settled hj/ai' Roscoe. They moved | How about trying the funnies?
to SweeH^ater in 1937.
Surviving.' are his wife: two Suggested names for Sweetwa-
sons, Nasm-ril Roscoe and M. T of ter's new lake on Oak Creek are
Dyersbwug.'Tenn.; a daughter, Mrs. beginning to come into the BCD off-
Ivan R *TMe*ih of Sweetwater, four Ice. Several came in Monday and
>randct)Ud 'en; a brother, R. J many more today If you want to
Whiseiianjfc of New Albany. Miss.; 1 win that S100 Government bond the
a sisteivArrs. Ollie Daniel of Mem- BCD is going to give the winner,
phis, Tenh; better send in your suggestion to-
The liXni'-Ail service will be con- day. Be sure it is accompanied by
ducted T^Jhe Rev. A. B Cockrell I clear cut reasons why vou selec-t-
}f Hi&lffud Heights Methodist 1 ed the name.
Church. "i(lt*rment will be in Sweet-
water Q^Vptteiv with Cate-Spencer Raymond Bishop says we are
Fulit raktjoYhe directing. going to get plenty rain this fall
The filliaRing will be pallbearers: ! and winter . . . Jack Gorman says
Henry AUuiis, Bud Geron, H. E it won't even thunder for 6 months
Barfielci;?Hez Hawley Sr., A. C. ... difference between an optimist
Cook, dSjiaJGene Mosley. 1 and a pessimist.
.1 IHC
Ad Getie Mosley.
W;
Vi;'[
V -IV
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Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 220, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 16, 1952, newspaper, September 16, 1952; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth283928/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.