Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1945 Page: 1 of 4
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* •
WEATHER
Maximum
Minimum
Sunrisa
52.4
*0
.6:10
6:37
Khkkenmdge American
WEATHER
Mostly cloud? with occasional
rains east central portions.
VOL. M—NO. 1tS
SSSCKSNRIDOS. TgXAt, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 10, IMS
MI08 CENTS MR COPY
The
Observer
OOOO OLD SUNSHINE
QUESTS AT AUSTIN
OTHER NATTERS
SEEN OR HEARD
Writing Head'6
MacARTHUR BAN CUTS JAP IMPORTS TO BONE
Bv Rotary Club
m
W SI
S^^HTB^etteMhs^hat
sunshine after the rain!
MR. and Mn Ren J. Dean yes-
terday received a telegram
sent by the Merchant Marine
Quoting a message from Ben J.
Deen Jr.. for over three years u
prisoner of the Japs. Among oth-
er thing* it said he hoped to be
home by his birthday, which will
Be Nov. 20.
Mrs. Dean is specially prepar-
ing a bedroom for its felt Ben
J. Jr. will need at rest when he
*
REV ANOS MYERS REMINDS
NEW TRANSLATION TO
RE OUT NEXT YEAR
Rev. Amos Myent in addressing
mem Urn of the Brcckenridgc no-
tary Club Tuesday noon traced
the sources of material for the
present day Bibl0 and reminded
that a new translation of tiie
Bible i* to bo out in 1946. which
many are looking forward to.
The new translation not named 1 drop considerably until a-
ha* been worked on by seventy ut 'hreo weeks before Thanks-
outstanding scholars in six years giving.
•or the Federated Council of Chur *ho purchased sev-
chcs, and Rev. Myers said that >rrH' hundred in two lots paid
one remarkable thing about it cents a pound, but said he
will be likeness to other transla- _ " "wl Price would hold,
tions. 's about the pricc turkeys
This, despite the fact that the °Pcnod at ,a*r *«'■
Turkey Sales In
Brcek Open At
Thirty Cents
RIO CROP IS FORECAST;
DISEASE WARNING IS
OFFERED
Turkey buying has opened in
Brrckcnridge, but it is thought it
Another Secret Weapon Is Revealed
writers had materials for it found
in a number of manuscripts un-
covered since the revised version
of the Bible.
It was said there are many
birds in the county, probably
more than last year. Government
relea«e of frozen turkeys will
from 9 to 7 o'-
clock Mrs. KelL y Farrar and
Mm. Howard Hudgin*. the latter
of Vernon, will be guests at a
reception tendered in her suite at
Austin by Mrs. John Lee Smith.
Following that the executive
committees of the American Leg-
ion and the Legion Auxiliary will
be hosts to a dinner at, the Dris-
ColL hotel. There Mrs. Farrer.
president of th«. Auxiliary, will
be speaker of the evening. Mrs.
Hudgin is the outgoing president.
4T Ihf meeting of the Board
of Education last night bonds
were the chief topic of discussion.
Final details for refunding the
$400,000 worth of outstanding
school bonds has been completed,
the bonds being called today.
Refunding was at 2 1-2 percent
compared to 3 per cent. In the
past lour years school bonds have
been reduced from $465,000 to
$400,000 and four years ago five
and six per cent was being paid
The last of these bonds is due in
10T2.
Should Breckenridge wish to
school building now
It could not vote more bonds, but
within a few years this may be
don« if dcslttrd, Supt. J. F. Bailey
cud.
One of the important matters
before the board these days is
how to meet the rising scales of
Of school Mashers with no
source of ftwoiAc
raising taxes.
With a blackboard chart the hoW down buying until near
c-r Thanksgiving, which Texas a.<
a state will celebrate this year
on Nov. 22.
Texas poiAtry growers should
guard their turkey and chicken
Docks against a disease called
botulism, or limberneck, which
often causes losses at this time
of year. W. M. Emmons, county
agricultural agent said. Limber-
local minister presented court?
of events of production of Uw
Bible from the original manus-
cripts, all of which he said have
been lost but copies have been
handed down, through the oldest
manux-ripts that of the Alexan-
drian. now in the British museu.n,
the Vatican now in Rome, and
the Sainaiatkus.
lie showed how the Bible was
translated from the Hebrew into
the Greek, then the Latin follow-
ed by the Anglo-Saxon, Wyclffe.
Tyndal, Geneva and other trans-
lations until the King James ver-
sion. In all these translation,
soire of them copied laboriously
by long hand, there have appear-
ed a few word mistakes in the
Bil U> but no thought mistakes,
the minister said.
He told of the romance con-
nected Wtth the discoveries of
;>arts of the Bible^ one feature
s«emlrg!y by Divine direction, be-
ing that parts missing In one
manuscript are continued in one
or the others on hand.
For the translation for the 1946
Bible the workers have had as
ft
Jap Reds March In
Tokyo Shouting For
Emporor's Removal
TOKYO, Oct. 10 'I I!' Gen Douglas MacArthur tonight banned
all imports to Japan above amounts necessary to maintain a minimum
living standard, as hunderds of Japanese communists nd sympathi-
zers marched through Tokyo shouting for the removal of Emperor
Hinohito. ,
MacArthur's directive restricted imports to commodities the
Japanese "clearly and completely demonstrate" could not be produc-
Miners Meet To
A wake-less torpedo, silent and untraceable, is now revealed as one of the important U. S. secret
weapons of the war. The first elecUic-propcllcd weapon of its type, it was standard equipment
on U. S. submarines more than a year befote VJ-Day. One of the huge missiles is shown above at
the Sharon, Pa., plant of Westinghouse Electric, which manufactured them. The Sharon plant
built 10.000 of the torpedoes, which accounted for the sinking of 372 Jan ships.
GIs Once Hated
by • In Iceland Loved
germ and is most likely
in late summer and early fall.
The disease seems to appear
whenever poultry eat decayed
matter or drink stale water from
|>ools.
The common name, limberneck.
rnther aptly describes the leading
symptons of the disease. Emmons
:-a>* it is accompanied by leg
weakness, dropping wings and
stupor. Death often occurs within
one day.
The he«t protection is to keep
Hocks away from dead carcasses,
decaying plants and similar mat-
erials. Fresh, clean range is one
of the safest places for the birds
GIRLS ESPECIALLY HATE
TO SEE THE YANKS
LEAVE
REYKJAVIK. Iceland (U.Ri-Rr-
conversion has begun in Iceland
and fish are again replacing Am- cause of failure,
ericans as the island's richest nat-
ure! resource.
4 MM a new
many es 4,900 pieces of writing Feed Allergies Hit
Cows and Pin Hard
for tlieir guidance. The minister
said he offered the lecture as a
mattci of history, because he had
teen called upon suddenly to
speak and had this prepared for
another use.
rXccpt that of
TIE Stale Comptroller's De-
partment is faced with one
of the toughest Jobs in Texas —
that of determining the Just value
of nctural gas.
And the odds are heavy that
the whole procedure will end up
in courts for final decision
The situation is the result of a
new law-. State officials say it
shifts from the Comptroller, as
specified in the old statute, to the
producer the burden of proving
a fair market value for natural
gas. On the basis of the market
value, the state calculates the
amount of taaes which must be
paid on production.
First to be hailed before Comp-
troller officials is the Sinclair-
Prairie Oil Company on its ope-
■'ions in the gigantic Panhandle
gas field.
Representatives of the oil
company content that the
new law does not permit introd-
uction of reports on production of
other companies. Instead, they
assert, the law specifies that the
Comptroller may use expert test-
imony to refute market values
used by the produce
At any rate, at the first hear-
ing on Slrelair's valuta, the Com-
ptroller wasn't satisfied with the
amount of information obtained
from the company. More was re-
quested. The hearing was reces-
sed until October 1$ to give Sin-
clair time to get additional data.
One of the most interested ob-
servers at the Sinclair hearing
was E. H. Faster, attorney for
Phillips Petroleum Company —
one of the largest producers of
natural gaa in the country.
SEEN or Heard: Donald Gandy
Jr., surgical patient at West-
More
For End __
United States civilian will have
962-tliousand tons of sugar for
their needs during the last three
months of 1945 This is about
equal to the 1942 quantity, hut
562-tnoussnd tons lower than the
quantity made available to civi-
lians in the fourth quarter of last
year. On the liasis of this alloca-
tion and estimated distribution «o
lar this year, it now appears that
the eivilisn per capita consump-
tion will average about seventy
three pounds, compared with eigh
ty nine pounds last year. This
allocation includes sugar for com-
mercial food processors and in-
dustrial users, as well as for the
home.
CHICAGO <U. - Hay fever suf-
ferers have nothing on the barn-
yard cow.
Cowr. suffer intensely from al-
lergies produced by certain types
of clover and buckwheat, the
dairy ifelti* committee of the Am-
erican Veterinary Medical Assn..
report?.
These plants, when eaten, altfr
if the animals have white spots on
their hides, these unpigmented
the body cells so that the cattle
But the local citizens aren't any
too happy about it despite the
building boom which is now in
full swing.
Iceland's women, particularly
the pretty ones—and that means
the vast Majority - regard recon-
version as downright tragic, for
they are Just as distraught by the
exodus of the Americsns as they
were by our arrival. And, as Pvt.
Vernon P. Ludwig. Chicago, put It
"They hated our guts when we
first arrived."
Prior to the war. fishing vied
with farming as Iceland's chief
source of income. Then came the
Americans and they immediately
bucam* the ttland"a leading Indus
try. The depfcrtfcre of' the Ameri-
cans make fishing the No. 1 sou-
ice of revenue in Iceland.
Don't get tho false Impression
that Iceland is a country of rein-
Rainfall Totals
6.64 For Spell
PEEPING SUN WEDNESDAY
BRINGS HOFE EUT
FORECAST MORE RAIN
The sun peeping through clouds
Wednesday morning gave hope of
surcease from the rains which fell
Wednesday for the twelth day.
Retords of the Airways Cbm-
munication Station today showed
D. Vi nderworth, license examiner total of 6.64 Inches for that per-
77 of 100 Fail
In Drivers Test
Officer Savs
Testr to secure drivers license
recently have been embarrassing
to a number in Breckenridge be-
Consider Work
By United Press
Sort coal operators and United
Mine Workers, Chieftain John L.
1^1 wis met today to consider a
R ivernment compromise proposal
U. end the nation's biggest work
stoppage and send 174,069 miners
hi.cK to the pits
Secretary of labor Lewis Sch-
xvclltnbach promised to submit
a proposal after union and man-
agement representatives were un-
title to agree in a long negotiat-
ing session last night.
Meantime, striking_dock work-
e "s tightened their 'stranglehold
on New York shipping and a
strike of AFL bus drivers went
on in 7 Western States.
But probably they should not
feel toe bad. or a number should
feel bad one or the other. For E.
Strike Is Broken
To Get Meat
LONDON, Oct. 10 'U.RX- British
troops began unloading food ships
at hull today and government of-
ficials wr.rned that a general meat minute WlitarisnT
shoriai'c would hit England by Movements developed
It was issued as minister of
agriculture Kenzo Matsuma'ra
said in an interview that food
riots would Increase and the Jap-
anese bo reduced to making grass
hoppers and acorns a supplemen-
tary j art of their diet "to prevent
ma3s starvation,"
Meantime hundreds of Japanese
couiirunista, including newly-lib.
crated prisoners who had been
jai'ed for as Irng as 18 years,
marched through downtown Tok-
yo waving red banners and shout
ing for the removal of Emperor
Hirohito.
Communist speakers at the par-
ty's first rally in IS years called
for the emperor's removal and
the setting up of a democratic
regime in Japan.
Hundreds marched past Mac-
Arthur's headquarters with ban-
ners which said "we want work.
We want food. Banzai Democracy.
Meanwhile, vice-minister of ed-
ucation Seiichi Omura was quot-
ed in newspapers as predicting
that the government will soon
shake up Japan's entire educa-
tional system in an effort to cli-
wilhin
of Abilene is quoted as saying iod. rainfall that soaked the the weekend if similar action was Japan today to completely reform
that 77 |iersons out of 100 who earth, toward the last began fit
take the examination fail. lingjanks with stock water, which
In Breckenridge one of the most accompanied by cold nights took
embarrassing incidents heard >f the heaviest toll of goat flocks
by this reported was a taxi driver ever experienced in this country,
who failed- and his wifr passed. Few or no traffic accidents were
Lack of knowledge of the driv- reported in this area as a result
ing rules is the main reason for of slippery pavement, but yester-
failure and not because the candi- day American Airlines passed ov-
date is nervous during the test. er Abilene without stopping.
Vandciworth, like other exam- Locally .low ceilings stopped
army and navy plane flights, but
the airlines continued service. On-
ly call for aid during the period
to the station here was from &n
Castli nd flyer seeking a spot in
inert of the department, is not
hard-boiled- he Just maintains the
standard. It is now how a driver
might drive on a traffic lane
where no other cars might travel. .
but how will be drive in a flow the clouds to make a trip to Ft A Till V W&r Dead
of traffic Vanderworth wants to Worth. , . . Totfll Is 205000
not t 'ken at the strike-bound Lon
don Hocks.
UUr.officlal estimates laid al-
most 40.000 dcck wokers through-
out the country had Joined the
wildcat strike in defiance of back-
to-work orders from union leaders
and the lahoritc government.
Labor minister George Isaacs in
commons condemned the strike
as "wrong" and called oq.the men
to "g:> hr.ck to work at once and
avoid unnecessary hardship to
yourself*, your families and the
rest of England.
help. He urges all pros|iectivc Steady raihs W nj.reporied yea-
drivers to study and digest a dri- terday from El Paso to Dallas
ver's manual which is furnished .md1 north to within twenty mile
f"C- , rad'us of Wichita Falls where it
nw mm, ir„. . .. 1 1 topped.
are extremely sensitive to light, deer and fkin huts. That Idea is on Former Resident Hl,P° carried by the sun peep-
the report said. a par with those Icelanders who |)|_ |_ Oklahoma ln* ,hrou8h 'he clouds, however.
The nose, nostrils and eyes will believe the Sioux Indians still are ^d Bl'ck ^tfBwke"ndsrs ,va* dimmcd ,he wcather fore-
blister when exposed to light- scalping Cheyenne suburbanites. parheM oi| flP|d operators, dird cast oi cloudy with continued rain
and portions also will blister. Iceland is modern, up-to-date h|, Nj|W jn (>klflhomt i,nd 0001
White pigs suffer from the same country andjlts eppita!, Reykjavik ()n s„pt(.mbor a |etlcr mviv.
food allergy, the report said.
Argentina Police
Chiefs Devoted
BUENOS AIRES. Oct. 10 «'•*>-
Total civilian supplies for the Two cMef potior officials charg-
year are estimated at slightly
more than five million tons, or
one million tons less than in 1944.
Atomic Enerarv Is
Meetinsr Subject
WASHINGTON. Oct. 10 If —
The House Military Committee
went into a closed-door Session to-
day to westle with the problem of
sotting up a powerful commission
to control development of atomic
ciergy. In the background was
grim war department warning
that ' we are" flirting with national
suicide ii this thing gets out of
control." 4 qj
ed with enforcing Argentina's
state of siege were Eipmid today
in the wake of the forced resigna-
tion of Col Juan D. Peron, strong
man of the military government.
houre« 45.000 people In warm,
comfortable homes and apartment
houses that resemble ideas right
out o' the Architectural Forum.
Its war profits come first from
Germany, and ihe Germans are
still well licked In Iceland. Vague
reports Irijkled through the war-
time censorship that we found no
welcome on the doormat w-hen we
occupied the country shortly af-
ter the Germans vacated the pre:
mises.
It now can be revealed that we
ed today informed. Men of Episcopal
Mr. Black was known to many Faith To Dine
in Breckenridge and Caddo as
Dad Black. He celebrated his 87th
birthday on September 5.
Surviving him are his wife and
five daughters. The daughters are
Mrs. M. A. Russell, Shldlee; Mrs.
Grace Post, Shidlee, Mrs. Pearl
Fuller, Arkansas City, Kan.; Mrs.
Sue Denikc, Norman. Okla.; and
Mrs' I. M. Kennedy. Okomih,
Okla.
Mr. and Mrs Black visitel
Allied Advisory
Group To Meet
WASHINGTON Oct. 10
Secretary of State James F. Byr-
ne* announced today that the A!-
Far East, which will formulate
lied advisory commission for tht
policies to be carried out in Japan
•vill bold its first meeting
on Oct. 23.
were not only disliked, hut in d;,ughter Mn,
many in UncM downright hated Aian) (jmAl. uniii th*% fimiffhtpr mnv
Christ Episcopal Church, Tenth
fc LeweMyn Sts., Dallas will be
hosi to the men of the Diocese of
Dallas at a dinner on Tuesday,
Octolier 16th at 7:00 p. m.
The honor guest and speaker
will be Ihe Rt. Rev. C. Avery
Mason who was consecrated Bis-
hop Coadjutor, at St. Matthew's
Cathedral on September 21st of
this year. His subject will be
"Christ or Chaos."
WASHINGTON. Oct. 10
American Army deaths in battle
in World War II are four times
those of World War I.
In I <ct more Americans died
thau in live earlier wars combin-
ed. These were the Revolution,
War of 1812, Mexican war, Civil
war (including both union and
confederate deaths), and Spanish
Arrcriean.
In ihtse five wars 192,581 Am-
ericans lost their lives; the World
War I, figure was 58,510; the
World War II. figure is 205,000
plus.
Gen. George C. Marshall made
thc> comparison last night in his
clucf of staff's report "so that
thci-c ran be no misunderstanding
of the enormous cost of this con-
flict. for which we were *o com-
pletely unprepared."
the defeated nation's parlimen-
tary body—to long amenable to
every whim of the war machine --
and lo fight Communism as an
avowed foe of the emperor sys-
tem.
Domei reported a group of mem'
bers of the diet, forming them-
selves into a "commission for in-
vestigation into the reconstruction
of Japan," sought;
A new political party " compri-
sing men of ability in all branches
of national life."
Leaders of a National Federa-
tion of Toilers resolved at ano-
ther meeting to "wage a deter-
mined, fight against Communism
wHlWnalltarityl .efKMjfmlfcalion of
— our unique national polity under
the emperor."
New stringest government or-
ders were issued against flourish-
ing black market transactions In<-
tween Japanese and American sol
diers. Japanese police were order
ed to arrest any Japanese buying
or trading goods on the streets.
WOULD CARVE JUNGLE HOME
by the majority of the people,
who resented our Intrusion, fear-
ing it would engulf their country
in war against the. Germans,
whom they considered their fri-
end®. Even today it is not wise to
make disparaging remarks about
the Nazis in an Icelandic home.
At first we received the same
cold, yijent treatment the French
m>rveci for the Nazi Invaders.
Girls who dared to date Ameri-
cans were ostracized.
But three things changed all
that -t' j American GI, the Am-
erican Slate Department and the
American Dollar.
When the OIs left, the people
loved them.
The Rt. Rev. Harry Tunis
oral times until the daughter mov Bishop 6f the Diocese will
ed away.
Smallest Cotton
Crop Since 1935
AUSTIN. Oct. 10 Addition-
al shrinkage of Texas' indicated
1945 cotton crop was reported by
the United States department of
agriculture.
I lie smallest crop since 1893
was estimated at 2.000.000 bales,
introduce the speaker and will
offer the Itenediction.
Lt. Col. Bertran L. Smith, Rec-
tor of Oirist Episcopal Church
who has been se.~'ing as Chaplain
in th" Army both in this country
and in the South Pacifir for the
p.<st five years will wcleomc the
guests.
Truman Dedicates
Kentucky Dam
GII.BERTSVILLE, Ky., Oct. 10
President today dedicated the
newest unit of the Tennessee val-
ley authority, the Kentucky dam,
with a recommendation that the
"plain common sense" behind the
Tva should be followed in con- ,
vertir.fr the other water sheds of Police Break Un
the nation.
Ohio Boy Wins
Farming Title
KANSAS CITY, Oct. 10 <U.R)_
Gordon John Elchhorn, 20-year-
old Merlon, O., farmer today held
the title of star farmer of Amer-
ica. Announcement of his select-
Ion and award for $500 from the
weekly Kansas City star, was
made last night at the 18th an-
nual convention of the future
farmers of America. Since 1939,
the young farmer has built a
row, two steers and 26 sheep into
60 hogs, 90 sheep, 1,500 chickens
5*2 acres of wheat. 67 acres of
corn, 18 acres of soybeans and
more than 100 acres of other
crop*.
was esiimaiea at <,ww,«wi ninv. nrntt . . „
sr;fats are needed
John Ford Junior Rot
nrlim for this month .... Elks to
meet tonight at R o'clock
Omar Oilbnore reminding bank
holiday Frtdny .... Tom Mash-
burn finds second fine cow dead
....Mali law today because of
train crash near Clara .... frank
M here at waekend saying still
Iwtt to Hv# In tourist camp ..
Mrs. IMv Green la SL Jos-
Ft. Worth
wives Will be recruited for the
project.
They know no cushy billet la
waiting them in Venezulea's 350,.
000 square miles of wildemesa.
They an- prepared for aching
b,uter«1 ^ Jews In Jerusalem
.„ 11M. Battle British
It less," says Howard; "there's
Sept.
elude Adverse conditions produc-
ed by rains over the state since
Oct. 1.
The October forecast compares
with 2,646.000 bales produced in
1944 end 3,112,000 bales the ten-
year (1934-43) average. Yield per
LOS ANGELES Modern
pioneers forced to frontier-seek-
ing by reconversion cutbacks. 200
nigged Los Angeles war workers
today arc preparing for an adven-
ture in a new way of life.
They believe that they can find
.security by carving « new home
from tropical Venezuela's Gran
Ssbana region and establishing a
co-operative community which
eventually will number 2,000 fam
ilies. _ ______
Head of the group, which oalls ranfened with farmers who've fo^ce of British~s6Idim'^ prtim Admiral NhttltS
Itself the Pan-American Study •—« • — -• numuai j^ibsismi
The fat situation in the United
States is reported by the Produc-
tion and Marketing Administra-
tion of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture as "still difficult". It
is not likely that any considera-
bly supply of oils will bcrf>eceiv-
salvapcd fat delivered at reccH.
ing centers was increased from
two to four a pound.
Strike At Studio
HOLLYWOOD. Oct. 10 <U.P> —
Two hundred deputy sheriffs
smashed the five-day strike of
Warner Brothers movie studio to
dav by arresting 600 pickets.
The deputies opened picket lin-
es which had been drawn, around
the studio since last Friday. The
On October 1, the quotas of , , A . ...
fais and oils for use in making Pickp,,, wor ' members or the AFL
civilian supplies of shortening. Pa,ntpr* un,on who h"ve ***" en
JERUSALEM. Oct. 10 <TJ>>
gold, oil. copper, silver, iron and Thousandr of Jews armed with ye" average,
resins and many others. And I've clubs and stones beat off a strong
acreage on the 6,240,000 acres for od from the Far East in the near " klng and salad oils, and in the «HSL
harvert Is computed at 154 pounds future, says a statement received iM'^vction of household package .anc'ncr A,L un,on ,,Bce
—23 pounds below the 1944 yield by V/ M. Emmons, county agrl-
and six pounds less than the 10- cultural agent.
e e e e • e
Society, is former crane operator
Ben R. Howard, who wants "a
life where a man is his asm boss
can make his own opportunities
and worti a six-hour day."
Engineers, construction
ers, ctrpeliters, busineewne
ton, teaebaw, miners and
lived there most of their lives and
they tell me there's a 12-month
growing season when you con
raise three crape of corn or wheat
"Avocados, limes, oranEss. pine
apples, tomatoes, medicinal herbs,
cabinet and dye
who raided the Jewish quarter of flmtm fiMftinff
Tel Aviv today In search o( a DW WrWHIlE
suspected arms cache. NEW YORK Oct. 9 <U*
On thit account, the fat salvage
program which has received the
active cooperation of the Exten-
sion Service for more than two
years must be continued. The ag-
riculture department desires that
and bar soap, were increased
slightly. But the PMA statement
explained that this was made
possible by military cut-backs and
a larger prospective supply of
soybean oil than had been esti-
mated.
Along with the small Imports,
oil
March.
There was no rioting or fight-
ing as the pickets submitted to
arrest on charges of unlawful as-
sembly and rioting.
TaxWMU^BMl
Read* Fm Ballot
WASHINGTON Oct. 10
The Mum sqprty d
war todqr kr speed;
__ _ _ _ ^ ^ ^ _ probtbly by towmwi. w m
and juto—anythlM will grow, the minutes and then wllhdiew with- a naval hero In New York since tecs to continue atiive work. Re- total supply of fats and oils than pwwMi g ftm k **00.000000 mk
land la so fertile," out starting their search. 1N -Dewe^ Dj;. ce.tfly, th. rad pcint vulus Icr In 1941. duitUoto tawL MaCyoeA
Dispatches from TeLAviv said Fleet Admiral Chester Nlmltx ar there by no let Sown in the drive the production of _
the British wan orisradUwt to rived In New York today to re- to collect all of the used fata poe- jn the United States is
open fire. They battled the mob celve a thunderous greeting — slbte, and an appeal has been to be somewhat lets than a year
with rifle butts and flats tor 46 the first official reception given made to local flat salvage commit* ago. This adds up to a
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Hall, C. M. Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1945, newspaper, October 10, 1945; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth132428/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.