Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 196, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1956 Page: 3 of 8
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France's Mild Mannered Premier Is
Riding Out Storms After 8 Months
Rv ch iri u uivt. ...
l „?y/."ARLES M MCCAXX , Britain ,
I nited I ress Staff lorres^ndent j t inent, «
<tuy Mullet, France's
nered Socialist premier,
ply to become a veteran
Mollet leads on*? of
try's weakest post-war
mild-man-
see in* lik-
in his job.
his conn-
cabinets.
turning toward the eon
tli France as its partner
tendency toward uni-
countries of Western
lacks
a
*
His four party ' toulition
majority in Parliament.
"urinK his eittht months in of
iice r ranee has been bt-.-u-t by con
stant trouble in North Africa. The
Suez Canal dispute has mad.
tnintts worse.
Now Mollet is facing his many
critics in a new session of the Na-
ttonal Assembly.
Will Survive Attacks
v. „ .'!i 'floated strongly that
Mollet will ride out any attacks on
him in the immediate future. Ha-
ul ready exceeded the average se-
ven months in office of a post-war
premier. It has happened that
t ranee's position in world affairs ; The open
has been strengthened since Mo|- Carnal Abdel
let took office 1*eb. 1 as his coun
try * 22nd post-war prime minis
ter. Mollet's own position has been
strengthened also.
Oddly, the canal dispute has
helped to strengthen France in in-
ternational councils. France and
Britain have been drawn more
closely together because of their
sharp differences with I'nited
States policy in the Suez situation. ■ <1
in a growing
ty among th
Kurope.
The prospect also is for closer
cooperation between France, Uri-
tiin and Western Germany in the
unity movement.
Keach Agreement
France and Western Germany
ended the last of their own disput
• s last week end when Mollet and
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer rea-
ched filial agreement on the future
of the Saar c«vil area.
Adenauer has called in the stron-
gest terms for stronger Western
Kuropcun cooperation.
As regards France's own pi-ob-
lems, M"1 let is trying to work out
a m-.i pr<igram for Algeria, where
a costly rebellion is nearing the
end of its second year.
The op.-n ambition of President
Nasser of Kgypt to
make himself the leader of all
Arab countries, and his aid to the
Algerian rebels, has made France
draw back on its plans to give Al-
geria a large measure of self-go-
vernment.
New Plan For Algeria
Hut Mullet still hopes to crush
the rebellion and then to offer Al-
geiia a plan f'.r limited indepen
liich will nevertheless leave
%Q£BN' & BELIEVING':... TEX
srms tomorrow1
>7' vlKe*.-8 g
COTTON BOWL FOOTBALL
TiXAt A4m tixa* t«.h
ocrotan • r **
I
ICE CAPADES
12* Intitnutwrnil Edthon
RURAL YOUTH from evtry
section of the Sto+e- open tfit fAIR.'
/ ft .
ciamn>^nkees I Girl Buried Alive
Kl '■
New Hi"t*
droAclwAy Mmm
RALPH'S STUCK WITH JOE
—Pilot Ralph F.kberry leaves
his plane at Atlanta, Ga., carry-
ing luggage covered with trav.l
stickers. But now he has a new
one—a huge "I Like Joe Smith"
label. He's helping to spread |
the legend of the "little man
who wasn't there" at the recent
GOP national .con\ etitiuu
it, as it is now, a pa it of France
politically.
Morocco and Tunisia, which
have won their independence, were
French colonies. Algeria is not. It
is regarded as a part of metropo-
litan France and is represented in
the French Parliament.
There is talk now that Sultan
Mohammed of Morocco, a moder-
ate mail, may be called in to h«>lp
France get an agreement with the
Algerians. There is talk also of
forming a sort of North African
federation, with Algeria, Morocco
and Tunisia as its members and
the sultan as its leader. This
might go a long way toward de-
feating Nasser's ambitions.
Gates Of State
Fair Will Swing
Open Tomorrow
DALLAS, Oct. 7 (Spl)—Gates to
the 1 !)">* State Fair of Texas will
swing open at 7 a. m. Saturday
morning, but the fairgrounds will
probably be abuzz with activity
long before that.
More than 2'j million people are
expected to attend the fair during
its l'i-day run.
The vanguard of some 100,000
I H Club boys and girls, Future
Farmers ami Future Homemakers,
who will gather at the fair Satur-
day for Rural Youth Day, is ex- j
pected to arrive as early as Fri-1
day afternoon. The yellow school j
buses and other conveyances bring-'
iiig the kids to the fair from all,
ov.-r Texas will continue to roll I
into the fairgrounds throughout
the night. The youngsters will come
from all corners of the state, some j
making the all-night haul from
as far as 600 miles away.
Highlights for the Rural Youth
Day visitors will include the state-
wide 4-H dress revue and a gigan-
tic hot-dog picnic lunch on the
main parking lot at noon.
Texas A&M will meet the new-
est member of the Southwest Con-
ference. Texas Tech, in a football
game on the Cotton Bowl grid-
iron at 8 p. m.
Bands of the two schools will
play concerts in the afternoon
the Tech band at 4 and the A&M
band at 5 p. m.
She traditional opening day pa-
rade through downtown Dallas will
begin at 10 a. m. The colorful
spectacle will include the bands of
both Texas A & M and Texas Tech,
as well as other musical groups,
military units, floats and other
special feat res.
Following the parade, U. S. Sen.
Price Daniel will officially open
the fair at the traditional ribbon
cutting ceremony at the main gate
of the fairgrounds at 11 a. in.
FK1DAV. OCTOUfciK 1956—iJKUCkK.NHIDUti AMERICAN- .1
PAN-
AMERICAN J \
LIVESTOCK SHOW/
M7ZX is
SHOr-TlM' THE WORKS
\N: . . ESPLANADE OF
LI'S T • VICTOR BOR6E
"6- LOTS MORE
I Autopsy Reveals
GARY, Ind. T.P>—Authorities'
| said Thursday night an autopsy
| indicated I.ana Brock, If!, New
Chicago. Ind., was buried alive in
a sandbank by an assailant,
j Dr. Eli Levin reported he found
traces of sand in the girl's lungs.
He said marks on her body indi
c.ated she was choked into uncon-
sciousness during a struggle with
her slayer.
Lake County Coroner Joseph
McGuan said the girl had been
dead about one week when her
body was uncovered by a man dig-
ging sand Tuesday.
Christian Science
JW,
God's healing and redemptive
power will be emphasized in Chris-
tian Science srvices Sunday.
The Lesson - Sermon entitled
"Are Sin, Disease, and Death
Real?" will include the following
passage from "Science and Health
with Kev to the Scriptures" by
Mary Baker Eddy (472:24-30):
"All reality is in God and His
creation, harmonious and eternal.
That which He creates is good,
and He makes all that is made.
Therefore the only reality of sin.
sickness, or death is the awful
fact that unrealities seem real to
human, erring belief, until God
strips off their disguise. They are
not true, because they are not of
God."
The Golden Text is from Psalms
(67:1,2) "God be merciful unto
us, and bless us; and cause his
face to shine upon us: that thy
way may be known upon earth,
thy saving health among all
nations."
It's a wise Santa
that gives ...
a PORTRAIT
For the gift that will charm your friend*
and family, lei us take a portrait of you
or your children. Avoid the last minute
rush! Phone H.'IT for your appointment today!
CHOICE of PROOFS
FHMINSHED in YOUR CHOICE
of FINISH
GIVE THE GIFT That Only YOU
Can Give - - - YOUR PORTRAIT
frank homme
PHOTOGRAPHER
128 W. WILLIAMS
\
i
o'#;
4 i. x f
located in Westchester County
which adjoins New York City.
The killer roared south int."
nearby Larchmont, wrecked the
car in u police chase, stole an-
other and sped into New Rochell--.
CLOAK-AND-DAGGER WITH OVERDRIVE-'Secret Ager.t v-b" is hidden in the crate
pictured 'oting loaded on a Russian gondola cur in Helsinki, Finland, for transhipment to Mos-
cow. The "asent'' is a 1957 model Ford. Idea for an American-Russian unveiling at about the
s;:me time was a sort of automotive cloak-and-dagger. plot hatched by the State Department
and Ford officials as a means of dramatizing the American economic story in, terms of thj
fcoods available to the average worker in this country. The four-door sedan is one of eight
new Fords Lein^ added to the American embassy's motor pool of mostly pro-19f0 American-
made au'.os.
Hollywood Debut
On TV Short On
Local Scenery
By ALINE MOSBY
I'nited Press Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD <F.Rt —Hollywood
had its television debut on "Wide
Wide World" hist Sunday, but it
was a picture postcard version
that seldom showed what the com-
munity really is like.
For 90 minutes the NBC TV ca-
meras roamed from Hoy Rogers'
ranch to the b;ick lot at MGM,
but local critics the morning after
claimed the scenes were "cliches"
or romanticized "fan magazine
views."
Many of the landmarks and col-
orful sidelights that make up the
show business capital were- miss-
ing.
To we reporters, who cover Hoi
Iywood, its story would include
other scenes besides a party where
the guests, all dressed up. sat a-
round stiffly, and plugged their la-
test pictures.
It was sad the cameras couldn't
have pointed out more historical
landinurks, such as the shambles
of the Hollywood Hotel, torn down
to make w.-iy for progress, or Val-
entino's grave or the monument to
him in a nearby park-.
In the studios themselves the
make-up and wardrobe depart-
ments that give the stars their gla-
mour also are important to the
Hollywood scene.
Outside of the studios the na-
tive habitats of the special known
as movie stars are colorful and
varied.
The Beverly Hills jail, where
many a celebrity hs sat in the
spotless cells with their restful
green walls, is part of Hollywood.
So is the Vedante Church, an ex-
act copy of the Taj Mahal nestled
behind the palm trees and the old
Spanish style houses in the hills.
Hollywood also means Chasen's
Restaurant where the stars vie for
tables, Malibu, where they play on
the sand, and, yes, even Forest
1,-iwn where many made their fin-
al exit. It's also Beverly Hills
where they go to their psychoan-
alysts and Santa Monica where
they get their divorces. The real
Hollywood has yet to be shown r>n
television.
Policemen Scour
Area For Killer
NEW EOCHELLE, N. Y.
More than 2o<> policemen hunted
from door-todoor in a residential
area with shoot-to-kill orders
Thursday night for the cold-blood-
ed slayer of a young Scarsdale,
N. Y., patrolman.
The searchers, in teams of 10,
fanned through a four-square-mile
area for the driver of a stolen
car who mortally wounded officer
Charles Ackerly. 32, when he tried
to halt the vehicle.
Ackerly was shot in the chest
near the bonier of New Rochelle,
An estimated 9(1 per cent of
America's wine is-produced in Ca
lit'ornia.
How Christian Science H m
KWFT (.620 kc.J
Sunday 8:45 a. m.
"God Does Not
Send Affliction"
DELICIOUS-!
HAMBURGERS — SANDWICHES
Treat Your Date—Friends—Bring The Family
WE SERVE ONLY THE FINEST FOODS
Malts—Shakes—Ice Cream
DAIRY DELIGHT
—1110 E. WALKER—
HUNTERS!
Choose From
Our Large
Stock of New
and
Used Guns!
Remington y
Browning
Winchester
Savage
Ammunition
| Game Bags
Boots
Taps
.. Get Your ..
.. Hunting ..
License Here!
MERRILL'S
Sports Center
918 E. Walker
Open Sundays
For Your Convenience
KIDDIE PARADE
9:30 A.M. - Saturday, October 6th
Parade Forms West Side Of Courthouse
Goes To Daniel Motor Company's Used Car Lot
PRIZES
FOR THE BEST DECORATED - - -
BICYCLE - TRICYCLE - DOLL BUGGY
Parade o^on to all children—Join the
Walkers, if you don't have a bicycle, Tricycle
or buggy
WHILE THEY LAST:
IN SIZES 4-6-8-10-12
FREE: T-SHIRTS
T-Shirts Not Necessary To Enter Parade
Candy For All Who Enter - - - Join In The Parade To
DAHIEL MOTOR CO. IHC
USED CAR LOT
300 BLOCK E. WALKER ST
PHONE 16,-
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 196, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1956, newspaper, October 5, 1956; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135408/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.