Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 256, Ed. 1 Monday, November 10, 1947 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
maximum
WNMCtn*
StTS St!
SVK USE
tU .3
M.3
5:M
T:«3
WEATHER
rWILV CLOUDY
AND COLDER
«- . SSft
■tw-ficKMMPCt, TEXAS
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 1 , IM?
KICK S CENTS PER COM
1,600From Breck
Expected To Go To
Brownwood Game
Considering the manner in which the last of the tickets to the
football game at Brownwood tomorrow were soing today about 1.600
from here will witness the game tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock.
Chales Hagler said that 500 reserved seats went like hot cakes,
buying of the unreserved seats then slowed down, but they were being
picked up today. There were five hundred student tickets that he said
Billions For Aid Are Asked
Lake Project j
May Net Offerj
Land For Sale
tn answer to several queries re-
Indian Leader
t
(The
Observer
BROWNWOOD DRIVE
COMPORTS GIVEN
RISS INVENTIONS
SEEN OR~HEARD
t R,^u.nufJui n i h.m irTi ed Breckenridge dam of the Clear
t,,-khi,eTh^ Fork of the Brazos M. E. Daniel
tickets for these ent here. These .i,, .. ;,i n,.. ...;n
.«j .bou. sulit „u, .hi, T,nlnt. "£> ™ ™ ^ £
J2SJS.J5STSZ rtLSS.'th" pr°j'« L- "alUei ™d ,h;"11
Eft
ter than Possum kingdom lake in-
ness the quick sale of the 8.000
'SZ sruss-s ft - sss irzivcz:
tion is found in Buckaroo ranks. trom
Buckaroos take the
When the
field tomorrow the probable line-
up shows that Warford will be in
at right half and will be culling
in Throckmor-
ton and Haskell counties.
One of the first steps in start-
ing the project will be a re-sur-
vey including soil analyses, water
contamination, and other data de-
IN KEEPING WITH THE MS-
cision of the local holiday com-
mittee tnat Armistice Day be ob-
served as a holiday the Breck tn- th<- man under center.
ridge American wilt not publish The Buckaroos were idle Sat-
tomorrow. urday. Sunday afternoon they
Tne majority of the employes took a little warming up exercise, Ma u
will join Hundreds ot others who and this afternoon they were to Sili_ .« tw, nt imri f.u-
,te brush up on brtk .(ft™ — ►, SfcSTUSLS**' " 1"d "*
big tootball game. ten*- tactics. farmers. Mr.
There will be little weight ad-
IS APPROXIMATELY 80 V**- b'tWe<m the tW° teamit
IT
the signals while Ounlock will be ™rX"now pToposed it "will ex-
tend to double mountain.
The inquires have been concern-
ing tracts of land for farming.
In the proposal is a clause of
ets
4> prospective
niel sai(t there are
a number of objections to break-
ing u,p the area su rounding the
Miles to Brownwood It one f°at'h C°°per .Rob^ns will leave lake 4n tracts this smalI ^ tbat
K mJSTbETlI. - hour wi^h ^bout^O men Bt°md clause probably will be stric-
it wilt take approximately an hour
and forty-five minutes to drive
uown there.
This is considered safe day time i w'"
driving, and the limit witlun the vV't Breck.
taw for night driving in Texas. The
game wdt start at 2:30 o'clock,
v*ith these facts in mind, and no
*%>• net's taken passing on hills cr
darting in ana out the line, all
ran make *e trip with the taw of
averages concerning accident in
their tavor instead ot against them
ken out entirety, tn the present
| proposition the government would
The probable starting line-ups heck the buyers, giving forty
This new camera study of Pan-
dit Jawahartal Nehru, premier
o£ India, was made at New-
Delhi by Bert Brandt, NEA-
Aeme correspondent, on his
'round-the-world photo-report-
ing trip via Pan American
World Airways.
4he
Jones LE
Dodds LT.
Mehaffey LG
Bobbins C
J. Allen RG
Gray RT
Spencer RE
Gunlock QB
Rogers LH
Warford RK
Newebrry FB
Brnw(J.
Wilder
Langford
Emhry
Wright
Dula
Halt
Sexton
Griffin
Fair
Carter
Murphy
WT.
160
169
157
161
140
170
185
175
179
179
144
181
196
161
157
1 141
ABOVE IN OBSERVANCE' 160
of Armistice Day. The American 197
Legion last week had an air pro- -
gram representing the observance , _ , .
llcrc In meeting Brownwood the
At Brownwood tomorrow morn- wUI bt' meeting a team
ing there will be a downtown pa- tbat has been scored on only twice
radc in which the Bufckaroo band 'hts rvear Lnd that * Tvler, Xo
will take part This is slated for d'stnct ^an? *«* has seoredJ °n
II o'clock. them, ami the Lion* are said to
Eleven o'clock was the hour the ^ high fettle
Armistice was signed m the first tn the Stare Telegram ratings
Wortd War to end all wars. Since Breckenridge ls placed sixteenth
then we have had another war and Brownwood eighth m the state
years in which to pay for it.
Protest has been made on the
Knox County dam which carried a
similar proposal
The take would be one of thir-
teen mapped out for the Brazos
Rites Wednesday
At Grand Prairie
For Sgt Campbell
175, River watershed, but while nearly
190! as large as Possum Kingdom it 1
176; will not offer the beauty of that Funeral services for Sgt. William
162 i as an outing place, and it would J. tampoell. a brother of ilrs.
that should end all wars, but it standings,
appears that another is banking
on the horizon, A terrible pic
ture.
Fire Only Damage >
After Trains Crash
MEANWHILE. ONE Ql'ILT
and two mattresses have be n re-
ceived by Sis Clark in her plea
on behalf of the Red Cross for
three mattresses and some bed
clothing.
This morning Mrs. Don Bonnev.
1213 East Hullum. called this cor-
ner to say she is adding two com
forts to the above list. The call
is made for to aid two families,
one with seven children and the
other with eight. That other mat-
tress stilt is needed badly.
mud flats.
Possum Kingdom Lake was five
or six years developing, the people
little realizing its magnitude until
after its completion it suddenly
filled up in a few weeks when it
was thought it would take three
years to fill it.
Phillips Getting
Paid For Staying
In This Section
Phillips Petroleum company
w hich in t944 got deep oroduction
in the Ibex area and held atten-
tion on this oil area in a manner
that might be said to be the. fore-
runner in one sense of the present
day oil boom now has another well
This one four miles northwest of
Moran is the Comapny"s No. 1 Pan
today after the passenger train Cart, which flowed natural at the
crashed into the rear end of the rate ,>f 1.400 barrels of 44 gravity
freight in the north end of the uii from 4.192 to 4.202 feet, thro-
Leonard yards in a dense fog. Ugh a half inch choke.
Only injuries reported immed^ tt w located 1.500 feet from the
iately were minor ones suffered w*st and 800 feet from the south
by engineer Ben Webb and fire- lines Section 70 Asylum lands in
man C. C. Rice of the southhouhd Shackelford county.
passenger train. — Phillips has stayed with this pro-
—— o * ject since 1925, when thev bought
-COFFEE VACATION" URGED Ibex, and has continued as the
FOR HAWAIIAN SCHOOLS dominant producer of the hight
not be a power project as is Pus- Gertie Matt, and the ftrst war dead
lilm Kingdom. It would be mostly closely related here to be returned
tor burial, will be held in Grand
Russia Agrees
ToCompromise
On Palestine
LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 10 'U.R —
Russia was reported today ready
to agree to compromise with the
United States and abandon its in-
sistence on a United Nations Se-
curity Council commission to en-
force the partition of Palestine.
Russia was said to have agree*
to alter their uemand lor termina
tion of Great Britains mandate
over Palestine on next Jan. t.
Russia made the conciliatory
move at a four-nation conference
called for another try at resolving
American-Russian differences over
enforcement of Palestine parti-
tion.
Soviet delegate Semyon Tsarap-
kin was quoted as announcing at
the outset ot the closed meeting
that he had been authorized by the
Soviet government to compromise
with the United States on the
sorest point of difference, wheth-
er the UN Security CounciL or the
General Assembly should have
authority over Palestine in the
transition to independence.
The full extent of the new Sov-
iet position and the reaction of
..American officials was not known,
I but it was believed the develop-
ment might make possible agree-
ment between the two big powers.
The report of a Soviet concilia-
tion offer came as British officials
disclosed the British cabinet
would hold a special meeting in
London tomorrow to decide wheth-
er Britain wilt enforce Palestine
partition for the UN as suggested
by the United States.
More Greek Aid
Asked By Truman
Relief Plan
Offered To
Fight Reds
SHOOTS Hi'SBANDjKtDNAPS WIFE—Glenn Marsh. 2B. who shot and
killed Vernon Anderson and Grant Muhrlein in Rockford. III., and then
Kidnapped Mrs. Kjthence Anderson, is shown here with his oldest
child. Richard, 5. Mrs. Anderson later escaped from Marsh, who
later gave up.
Prairie Wednesday afternoon at 3
o'clock Civilian services wilt be
held
WASHINGTON. Nov. 10 <U.R>-
President Truman told congress
today that American aid has saved
Greece from economic collapse and
At the Satterwbite funeral home k?pt her free, but warned that the
this morning it was said that no situation remains "grave because
definite information has been re- of continued communist Guerrilla
ceived with reference to the time warfare.
of arrival of the body of Damon Accordingly, he hinted that fur-
Rollins. whose family formerly re- ther to Greece: will be-neces-
sided in this county, and who is sar> lest that embattled Batken _____—
to be buried at Necessity. country become "fertile ground;
Sgt. Campbell is the son of Mrs. for totalitarian ideologies.
Sarah N. Campbell of Kingsvilte j Mr. Truman painted the still- Men S ChorilS IO
formerly of Breckenridge ami dark picture in a letter transmit- v* . v,* j >-p
Weatherford. ting to congress the first report lllt'M iVIOn. and I ties.
He enlisted in South Texas in on the S40(KOOO.OOO' Greek-Turk-
1942 in the tank corps and was ish aid program. Congress voted Alt members are urged not to
killed - -
Meatless, Eggless
Days Emphasized
Frcm Committee
The following telegram was
received todav from Charles
Luckman chairman of the citi-
zens food committee: c
"To aid understanding and
avoid confusion in view of the
change from thtf Thursday
poultryless to the Thursday egg-
less day we would be aeepty
grateful if you would if not
atready doing so earrv a smalt
box on your front page Tuesday
Nov. 11 and 18 reading. "This
is meatless Tuesday". And on
Nov. 1.1 and 20 a box reading
"This is eggless Thursday".
LEONARD. Tex. Nov. 10 jU.P—
A passenger locomotive, pulling
the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Blue-
bonnet. three freight cars and a
caboose of a southbound freight
train were damaged by fire early
go direct .to Grand Prairie,^ ^ ^ ^ "nfthiK^aS
Besides his mother, Sgt. Camp- communism speech in March.
bell is survived bv four sisters and The report, prepared by the
four brothers. He also was an state department, said that recon-
uncle of Chilton Hall and Mrs. ts- struction in Greece ''has been
abelte Thome of Breckenridge. , hampered bv continued Guerrnin
Ale had received several awards, activity' which the Greek aovern- ^ ^ UI111
He once lived in Breckenridge a ment had hoped to conclude last e(, to be there
short time and worked for W. L. summer. j
Halt.
These are the last two rehear-
sals before the Albany program
and both are needed. The pitch
will be given both evenings at
7:30 and all members are request-
WASM 1NGTON. Nov. 10
Secretary of state George C. Mar-
shall. warning tnat Europe needs
American aid to avoid domination
by the Soviet Union, today asked
congress for $597,000,000 of stop-,
gap aid for Italy, fiance and Aus-
tria.
He estimated that the cost of
the four-year plan for Jong-range
help to Europe will be S18.000.00t)
to $20,000,000.
Marshall made the administra-
tion's first formal presentation of
the relief programs in a statement
to a joint session of the senate
foreign relations committee and
the house foreign affairs commit-
tee.
He said that President Truman
will present details of the Marshall
plan to the special session of con-
gress which begins next Monday,
but he said that tentatively he was
able to estimate that the cost of
that plan for the first 15 months
of its operation would run close to
S7.500.000.000.
Although Marshall said the
great critical problem was in Eur-
ope, he broke his long silence on
policy toward China by calling al-
so for economic aid and held to
General tssimo Chiang Kai-Sheks
government and to the Chinese
people, ft'' told the congressional
committees that a definite propos-
al on China was being prepared
for early submission to congress.
| ' < The former army chief of staff.
Funeral services will be held comparing the present critical sit-
for Oliver H. Perry at & o'clock uation with the crises of the war
Tuesday afternoon in Gunsight, years, admitted that the automatic
t Y' ,'V M°r8an of Breckenridge success of his plan could not be
officiating. uuaranteed. that the risks were
Mr. Perry a Iobk time resident many and real. But. he said, thev
| of Gunsight died Saturday night have been "carefully calculated."*
| at 11:45 at his home three mites "t believe the chances of sue-
I north of Gunsight. j cess are aood." he taW.
He was born in Arkansas. .la;i-! Marshall placed almost total
. uary 18. 1878, but lived most of blame for the present economic
I his life in Gunsight. He married chaos in Europe upon the Soviet
Miss Mary Jane Thompson on No- Union.
vember 20. 1893 in Palo Pinto. o -
Mr. Perry is survived by his!
widow, six sons. C. 6. of Bakers-
field. California: R. H. Brecken-l
ridge: D. G., Jal. New Mexico: .1.
W.. Oklahoma City: R. 0.. Hobbs.
New Mexico: and D. A, Kermit.
Texas.
Two daughters. Mrs. Ftovd
Seroegins of Bowie, and Mrs. W.
R. Harper of Buckeye. New Mex-
'arey
by
and
one areat grandchild.
Arrangements are being made '>v
the Thomas Funeral Hon.t in Cis-
co. Pall *>earers have not been
named as yet.
o—
| Funeral Services
[At'Gunsight For
(Oliver H Perry
IK ADDITION TO INCREAS-
ing plantings of beet sugar by 400.
000 acres over last year, the Sov-
iets daim a new technic in the re-
fining of beet sugar, which elim-
inates the byproduct treucle and
extracts an additional 330 lb. of
sugar per ton of processed sugar
beet juice, says food industries
Moscow Bureau.
"The new technic is also said
to hp capable of yielding hundreds
of thousands of tons of mineral fer
titters as byproducts. These min- _ .
.rait nitrogen, phosphorous, pot- stiu#tion to restore the vacation ch 1944. tt was the one bright
and other chemicals are de schedule which will permit school spont in wartime drilling efforts in
posited in the precipitations in the children of the Kona Coast to help, Stephens-Shackelford district, that
process, which has been tested at I pick the coffee crop, now ripening, probably has led to more discov-
the Kharkov Technological Insti- \ The legislators said that unless eries in this' part of Texas than
Diamond Is Bought
By Son From Mother
RARE STAMP COLLECTION
i GOES TO BOYS' TOWN
HONOLULU. T. H. — Unless at Ibex, and since March 1944 has
school children on the island of been producing oil for high luhri-
Hawaii get their usual late "coffee cation-gasoline content" Ellenbcrg-
vacation," it may mean a heavy er crude from its tbex-Ellcnberger
loss of a half million dollars to pool in west edge Stephens county
the Kona coffee growers. making around t.000 barrels daily
The Hawaii members of the ter- from 14 producers in the 4.250
ritorial legislature have appealed foot EUcnberger lime, discovery
... _ nouncement was made recently of
gravity oils from the Caddo Urn; thvMaie by Mrs. Mollie Alexander
•« t f .-v tt i 1 ■ > ft. . d ^ f • a Ita. Wv ^ ^ I 1%. th «• . k.a ■ - • ft- . •_
ALBANY, Texas. Nov. 10-An- seum
home
of her beautiful Diamond ranch
home four mites north of Albany,
to her son. Jim Pierce Alexander.
The new ranch owner acquired
a portion of the Diamond ranch
land a few years ago on his retire-
ment from military service, after
spending the war years as a ferty-
Rainfatl In City
k t t Measured At .03
BOYS TOWN. Neb.—An exten-
re collection of stamps and ttu'if Blustery winds of Sunday that w w„„s
cy will be added to the mu- early in the day appeared threat- p"eratum"to'Th*"'^ hanrilt "and
of Father Flatmgan s hoys | entng a cotd wave brought instead §oufh PEains aml ,,K>misinB pos
under an arrangement con- a shower early this morning. siWe near-freizing temperatures
•uuk t\ ktai'fttm' tttf«n . .. . ...... . . .
The fall measured .03 at the
eluded with IX O. Barrett, Tulsa,
Okla.
The Barrett collection comprises
more
and includes the regular and com
eitv water plant. Forecasts w; s for
t^rrett collection compr.scs, - ' thc ptairts mul; eolder
that, 50 standard volumes ueather TuesdayP
Hughes Tells Why
Parties Flung
WASK1NUTON. Nov. 10
Plane maker Howard Hugnes told
senate investigators today tnat fie
assigned lus party-giving publicist
to entertain air force otlicers be-
cause o.f rtports that he was "•Heart-
ily disliked at Wright Field." the
oig art- force center in Ohio.
The millionaire Hollywood rnov-
•e Producer and aircraft manufac-
turer made Ys second appcarance
before the senate war investigat-
ing subcommittee. The group is
studying S40 000.000 in war eon-
I ratts awarded Hughes tor a huge
flying boat and three speedy photo
plant s.
huj.es tu jt appeared before the
committe* last summer. That end-
ed inconclusively after days of
boisterous wrangling with sen.
Owen Brewster. Republican.
Hughes accused Brewster of say-
t„„ . htg he would have the inquiry call-
trthriowS^rinihe a phmfo.-'one
ii airline company to handle all IT. S.
overseas operations. Brewster de-
Second Norther ls
Moving Southward
(By United Press!
The seasons second norther
swept southwestward across Texas
today, bringing sub-freezing tem-
to the deportment of publie in- welt drilled on Wild farm in Mar- j„„ D[jot jlt the .\rmy Air Forces.
. a..... Ok! .... fe. . l«.. I'lli f 111 t . i.U t I 11 I ft**t k- tUn l\Mn Kfr .. ■ . i . . t I A.
the schedule under which Kona any single event since the Breck-
school children got their vacation: enrige boom.
in September. Oc tober and Novem- Phillips No. 2. Pan-Cart Ls drill-
)>ei is restored, the industry will ing at 1.100 feet in center south
lose au estimated $500,000.
tute and described as 100 percent
efficient.
-ANOTHER DEVELOPMENT
in food processing is the report of
a new method of making powdered
mitt. Exoerts of the Moscow Sci-
entific Research Institute of the
Dairy Industry have been drying
the milk by means of a special
dish revolving at great speed in a
special apparatus filled with heat-
ed air. Liquid milk, poured unin-
terruptedly on this disk, breaks
up Into fine particles, which dry E. L. Flippin is the co-owner.
and settle on the bottom manager of the Miller Hotel and
as powder. We might do a little Coffee Shoo and owner of the City
spying in Russia to our profit. , Plumbing Company, alt located at
I the corner of South Rose and West
SBKK Oft HEARD: FRESH: Walker.
norther promises real footbalt we - He was born in Throckmorton
ther tomorrow One prediction but left there when only six ye-
heard on outcome of the game— ars old His family moved to Brow-
Paul Williams said if we make itfield. Texas, where he went to
Mwe scores than they do we will: school. After graduating from
«El otherwise it will be a tie school he went into business in
jjyi, dosed today—Mrs. Nail is! Brownfield operating a store and
Mt wna
He built a substantial home on the
north acreage and has been ranch-
ing and farming there since re-
turning to Albany.
His latest purchase includes 883
acres with the imposing two- mcull!t
story home built only a few years ""j""'
■" before the war. It is one of the
memorative issues of United States t
:rr,X"'Ltrrr..;r;-i)EATH strikes as people play
stamps. Severat volumes of U. S. |
proofs and essays also are in the
collections.
Barrett recently added to
nied it.
Cotton Crop Placed
3,000 Bales Lower
WASttlNtJTO.v, Nov. id 1' -i.'-
half on south half section 70. LAL.
Nov. t') —A brignt Sunday spects the gteaming rails. The
alter noon in Maniiatt.ui. tne No- growing roar of an approachti! u.
Ins vemocr si nshuie glinting ott fritin and the unconcerned Mato-l.i
collection a series of state bank skyscraper windows^ ue gany coi- steps from one track to another. The tigrici'aure department today
notes, colonial currency, ernrrav- ocvtt taxii rolling (town I ark Ave- A grinding of steel wheels and cstmiated this years cotton crop at
ings/amt old autographed itoeu-! nue. tatt.o.-i holtting up their sons three cars of a second train have
ments of considerable historical to see the Statue ot Lioerty as the passed over Malola's body. A snt ;t
Staten Island ferry crosses the uroup of the morbidly curious
harbor. watch the difficult job of retnov
Mouse Apes Shnnk ' A working Sunday for Steeple- in.g th body from beneath tit •
jack EdwuiO'Oienicr. SI. He climbs train.
a
Eiflest ranch homes in the county.
A number of other ranch buildings
including the once famous sates FALLS CITY. Neb.—^A mous-• a towerim; smokestack at the Yellow cbrvsanthemums on fur
barn where many fine blooded caucrht by Henry Fritz has nrous.-.I queensboro Laundry, ties his seal- coats and whisky bottles in over
Iterefords were sold through the a tot of interest because of its re- t|}W Seeui.eh- and begins painting, coat -pockcts in the great, good- . . .
auction ring, make up the im- sembbince to a skunk. Thc rodent ^ ^ bricks and mortar at the natured crowd watching the pr-i crop was computed at 261.2 pqunds
provements on the acreage just had a row of white spots even y t ^ luos0 arul f;ienier ptum- football game at Yankee Stadium compared with 2:55.;$ pounds tost
sold Reported sale price was StOO spueed down its spine and over tne mets fQ ttlf urouotj \ vouni« in. The never-ending surge of ,cou- year and a 10-ycar average of
per care
tv
11,305.000 bales.
The estimate, based on Nov. 1
reports, was 3.000 bales below the
Oct. t forecast.
It compares with the smatt 1848
crop of 8.640,000 baits and thc
1936-43 average of 12.j90-.000
bales.
Lint yield per acrc for the t!M7
Page 4>
yews aga and bought the likes it a lot.
th« Miller coffee shoo. Four years
ago he bought the Miller Hotet
building. He has moved his City
Plumbing Company to the old Wy-
att's Home and Auto Store wh:eh
he purchased. .
The Ftippins have one daughter.
Betty, who is a student at Breck-
enridge Senior High School.
As a pastime Flippin likes to
fish at his cabin on the take. He
is a member of the Chamber of
Commerce.
He feels that Breckenridge has
been pretty successful! for him and
ments on the acreage just had a row of white spots even y t ^ luose arul r.ienier ptum- football game at Yankee Stadium compared with 2:55.3 pounds
Reported sale price was StOO spueed down its spine and over tne j,r0UDtj \ voung in- The never-ending surge of ,cou- year and a 10-ycar average
are" terne pulfe the broken body from pies along Times Square. The tie- 250.6
o nattern of white spots acros. the moun(l o£ mas0nry and thc serted canyons of Wall Street and The estimated production
, nips. .mkntaium uiron tvnllinn «nw>Hi lh> unnnturul silenee of the ! ur- states included Texas 3.2.')0.
OLDEST NEWSBOY. 93. WED
TO BRIDE OF 3S
LIVESTOCK
„ masonry «— -- ^ .
ambujance. siren wailing, speeds the unnatural silence of the gar- states included Texas 3.230.00ft
to Flushing Hospital—too late. ! ment district. The tinkle of glasses bales.
Church crowds streaming from and the hum of conversation in th • o~
SAVANNAH, Ivi.-The oldest!
St. Patrick's Cathe<lral on ftflh bars of the great hotels. The great tRg||f&Ter Pastor 'F*0
• kV ., .... ,, Catti* 6.800 Stow 'fed beeves Avenue, stirring up the flocks ot chunks of apartment buildings mdl , , ... .
cr^Vn(&l>^wV'^o*ff on^ scarce, steady.'Good fed yearlings pigeons, and on to the flower- the Sunday dinners on white table-. Be Buried IcdaV
■miithi v ,,«„r .u„ „f and heifers 22-2'k50. Medium ste- bedecked concourse at Rockfeller cloths and the papers spread all
matrimonv ers and vearlhigs t2.5fti0t50. Cows Center. They watch the ice-skateA over the living-room floor. Intoraation received here today
Last fail 1W left here on a trio 13-15.75."Butts ll-IR on the little rink at the foot of the And on the floor of the Hotel told of the death in Ranger of
to the West Const, hut he w'is Calves 5v400. Slow, few good ml 80-story tower, the pretty girts in Alabama in the Bowery, where Rev IL B. Johnson, pastor of the
strtvken ill in Lafayette La ami choice fat calves steady. Good and ballet skirts from the Ice Revue beds, coat 30c a night, the lifeless P^rst Chrtytian Church there for
returned I home vrfth fundsTontrib- choice mainly VkSMb red heav- and the tilth boy who falls down body of a man. only about thirty 25> years.
ttted hy vannah resIdtmts. ies to 21. Sticker calves 15-21. every other step. I years old In the pockets of his Flineral services were- to be held
Nowf after a six-month court- Bogs l.000i Mostly 25 lower. A dark, cank subway tunnel be- greasy and fout-smetttnc e'^hinc in Ranter this afternoon at 3
ship? he fes married to Willie E. sowsM-g0 tower. Top 25,50. Sows neath the Bronx where Mtte Ma- are onlytwokeysand hatf-finishedo'clock
Lorf 23.5M4! tola, a track walker, slowly fat-,bottle of whisky. He died Saturday night.
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Hall, Charlie. Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 256, Ed. 1 Monday, November 10, 1947, newspaper, November 10, 1947; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth132997/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.