Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 266, Ed. 1 Friday, September 29, 1944 Page: 1 of 3
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IfeATHE
Precipitation ........
!R
.03
Minimum Temp. . . . .
55 .1
Maximum
...w.. 71.2
Sunset .it.....
7:22
Sunrise
'7:29
m m
UNITED PRESS NEWS SERVICE
Partly cloudy. Cooler In cast
portion this afternoon. Saturday
fair.
HHMnSS :
vou ao—no. 266
Servlos of the King Features Syndicate, Inc.
BRECKENRIDGE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 1944
: &&.. jsa
Price Daily 5o—Sunday Sjc
SUMMER OONE
; hog killing
NOW aniTThen
; seen or heard"
Buckaroos To Be
SUMMER has gone and such
days as that of today reminds
thnt ere long the frost will be on
the pumpkin and Christmas near-
ly here, in many ways the full u
the best time of the year. It Is
the time when nature pays off for
a summer's work.
4 high poin t in such thinking
to. year* was hog kitting time,
although many now have little or
no ide* of exactly what we are
talking about.
But we learn now that this
great American Institution is a-
bout to undergo a change.
"The traditional scalding and
scraping of hogs in butcherng may
soon be replaced by a new scien-
tific method. A power company
has produced a liquid plastci which
docs the trick. Hogs are dipped in
the sticky stuff. After the plastic
cools, it is peeled ®fr taking all
the hair and dirt with it. Plastic
can be remclted. clean and used
again." Says Gib Swanson in
Capper's Farmer.
fOG killing time when we were
a kid in Tennessee was quite
an occasion. Many negroes, far-
mer slaves of our grandfather,
still lived on the place, working
in various capacities. In fact the
old plantation was sort of a fac-
tory to make a living for all con-
cerned. with the negroes doin^
most of the labor. Our cook, who
was coak for the family when our
father was a boy, had thirteen
children. To give an idea of the
number. All hands had to be fed
and It was never thought of feed-
ing them fiom stores in town.
A large number of hogs usually
weighing about 200 pounds or
a little over were penned up ami
fattened, far from the house near
a large tank. On hog killing morn
ing all hands, except father who
kept a country store turned to.
The women sewing up sacks for
the sausage, getting pots ready to
render lani and-,us sewn kids
running Shoot in high incitement.
When tWS slaughter started we
were allowed to take the hog
bladders blow them up. thump
Kile another over the head with
them, float them on the pond, etc
When we were finished they were
put away and dried to he used ax
ice bags for the sick in the sum-
mer wlht the icc cut off another
pond w«ls kept fenced and thus
free from contamination.
WE,-were allowed, if we did not
get in the way too much to
roast the melts over the coals un-
der the hot water pots and #al
them with salt and petxnr sfcrlnto-
ted
Then? was smoking of hams,
grinding of sau«age rendering of
lard, and all the other things that
go with it.
Which reminds that our mother
used to save the water in which
the pig feet were boiled. Boll corn
meal with small portions of boil-
ed liver mashed up and, put ,n !t
seasoned with sage, and we forget
what else put it in molds and
store it away. Then on a cold
morning slid this and fry it. It
was not so rich as sausage, but
tasty i to high heaven, We wonder
what has become of such old time
recipes.
SEEN or Heard: Mrs. C. B. Pen-
nell new medical patient at
Clinic ... Jess Pipkin reported
sitting up more than usual,... G.
R. Whitney home past two days
III ... Marvin Gillam, Marine on
furlough, quoted as saying he saw
Buck Sloan at Saipan as one of
last friends seen ... Flight Of-
ficer Robert Bowers home Lt.
Bill Piter home ... R. I. Me-
Arron saying "these civilian clo-
thes surely feel good ... Mrs. L.
D. Hawkins painfully injured In
} fall down cellar stairway .....
Financing of school system ably
presented Lions Club by J. F.
Bftlley today ... Tobe Graccy re.
marking teachers still get about
-y 60 per.cent of salary they should
receive ... Quincey Corbctt start-
ing as Joke that fish at Possum
Kingdom being poisoned then hav
ing to stop It ... Dr. Cartwright
explnlnlng to Ben Dean that enV
(Continue On Page 4) ..
jinx tucker places the
team eighth in his
state ranking8
Coach Eck Curtis and his squad
of thirty Buckaroos left this af-
ternoon for Wichita Falls to meet
the husky Coyote team there to-
Right.
Curtis will present a shifted
line up against a team that swam-
pt-d Riverside of Ft. Worth and is
generally considered strong, al-
though Riverside is hot considered
among the top teams of the state.
The game is being given top
publicity along with several oth-
ers to be played tonight, but few
or none voice predictions as to the
outcome.
Another feature tilt of West
Texas is the Vernon Amat'illo
game.
Sports Scribes already are climb
ing out in print to give their own
rankings of teams and Bracken ■
ridge gets a high spot with most
of them.
Jinx Tucker venerable sport
writer of Waco puts Breckenridge
eighth in his ranking, but Jinx
predictions are not as good as
they were years ago when his ac-
curacy made him famous.
Here are Tucker's top ten. which
likely won't get a vote of confi-
dence from the folk in this sec
'ton: '
Breckfnridg? (San Antonio!
Highland Park. Paschal of Fort
Worth. San Angelo, Amarillo, Lub"
bock. Port Arthur, Breckenridge,
Marshall. Austin.
Weldon Hart of the Austin
American-Statesman sees the first
ten differently and In a better
light for the tough West Texas ag-
gregations. Hart puts Lubbock in
the No. 1 spot, followed by San
Angelo, Port Arthur, Highland
Park, Breckenridge. (San Anton-
io) Amarillo, Waco, Breckcnridge
Paschal and Austin.
The following are those who
made up the squac^:
Center- Richard Rowan. Billy
Laurence. Russell Clark.
Guards Charles Gallagher. Don
Gray, Billy Williams, Gene Slau
ghter, Don Hellinghausen.
Tackles Harold Hartman. Jack
Alexander. Billy Ray Brown. Pan!
Stone. Billy Evanoff.
End* John T, Ford, Connie
Mack Iloot!. Kenneth Weatherford
Billie Joe Jones, Grady Everett.
Backs - Bobby Adair, Gilford
Robinson, Floyd Pearson. Dock
Moon. Bobby Scoggins, Joe Carey,
Bobby St Dwell, Ralph Spencer,
Frank White. Eugene Offiekl Bill
EchollJM
—. ■ '
Frank
Means, professor of
missions, of the Southwestern Rap
tist Theological Seminary, Fort
Worth, will be the supply pastor
oi the First Baptist Church until
a new pastor is called. Dr. Roger
D. Hcbard left Thursday morning
for his new field at Harlingcn,
Texas.
Three Pass Exams
The local draft board is in re-
cipt of tfihw names of those who
pasted examination for induction
into military service from these
sent to Dallas recently.
These are Joseph Richard Rowan
Floyd Alven Walters and Robert
Brown Waller.
■
LEATHERNECKS ADVANCE ON PELELIU ISLAND
\
tnMnmti OF THE FIRST DIVISION move toward another objective on Peletiu island—Inch by ii.c.i w
their bellies, as they flush out the Japs defending the island, which ia the gateway to the Philippine.
"1 his is an official United States Marine Corps photo. (International Souudiihoia)
5th Air Force
Has I ts Heroes
On Ground, Too
MANY UNSUNG HEROES (SO
ABOUT DOING DUTY AS
MATTER OF COURSE
ADVANCED URBASE. SOUTH
WEST PACIFIC U.R! For five
i days a parly of six men "imsin-i
; "trough dfificult, jungle to reclaim
i an American piano that had hern
forced down and damaged. It was
! not an unusual mission for these
I men of the 5th Air Force Service
J Coiiniuuici just one of the thou-
sand-and-one jobs tlu>V tlo to keep
I "em flying.
The service command party on
this particular mission was- com
posed of Lt. G. O. Galloway of ,
Franklin. Tev; VVairant Officer!
Fred Herman of Lockport, I'!.: I
T-5 William Wall of Athens, ,
W. Vs.: Ctaff Sgt. Warren Cheney j
of Conn«aut. O.; Pvt. Hyirjku! ..
Cherenson of iWeh^ter. Mass..: o1
and Sgt. Donald Beat tie of New'
Kensington. Pa.
There are many unsung heroes
in this branch of the service. It
takes over a score of. service com-
mard personnel to keep one pjnnh
aloft and their tasks ranee from
kipnlying equipment. handling all
fuel, servicing p'anes maintaining
armament and furnishing yiimmt!-
nit ion to salvage, building1, new
planes from worn-out of dAmag. :l
ones and producingideas Tor mod-.'
idliNmiMflnii
Nam es For Blood
Giving Are Slow
telephone at once but
do not telephone but
one per80n
Registrations for blood donations
arc coming in slowly those here
in charge of this work for the
Red Cross report, and remainder
was issued today that October 16
when blood taking for four days
here will pegin, is not far off.
here will begin, is not far off.
es on the list the last time the
Weslev Cox Wins
Air Wings; Ready
For Combat
PANAMA CITY, FLA., Sept. 29
Pvt. Wesley N. Cox has been
graduated from the Army Air. For
ccs Flexible Gunnery School at
Tyndall Fi-*id, one of the largest
schools of its kind in the Army Air
Forces Training Command.
Upon his graduation, the soldier
received a pair of silver wings
Red Cross mobile unit came' here 1 ib?'now hc <Lread,y7°
take his place as a member of the
combat crew of an A AF bomber.
and it is asked that this be avoi-
ded this time. If a volunteer don-
ors telephones one person on the
committee receiving names'do not
telephone another. Sometimes na-
mes were entered three times be-
cause three committeemen were
telephoned.
Those who will volunteer are
asked to call E. R. Maxwell, 700;
Mrs. W. H. Dakin 553W'or Mrs.
G. R. Whitney 733. |
It has been suggested that those
who know they/cannot give blood
for one reason or another get a
tutm* instead, tftrt some one elso
to give, to other words give a pint
One thousand names have been
asked. That is a lot of names, a-
bout one to every 15 persons in
Stephens county, and attention
was called that the time is short
for such a task,
A special call Is made this time
to the rural people, because of the
large number" needed. Some en-
couragement has been given the
workers from this source, but now
is the time to get the name in.
illkie Out For
gro Minority
WASHINGTON. Sept. 09 «r.i:>~
Wendell L. Wlllki? rays that both
party platforms fail to face rea-
listically the problems of the na-
tions negro minority.
TO SEND AND WHERE
The zero hour for sending Chris
tmas gifts to men and women of
our fighting forces in every sec-
tion of" the globe fast approaches
It is presumed that by this time
the importance of careful wrap-
ping and extra special care in ad-
dressing have been sufficiently im
pressed and standardized boxes
are on the market. But what to
send and where to send it? The
Army and Navy have given a list
of suggestions as follows;
European Theatre - AtWrliiW
roast coffee and vacum-type cof-
fee makers; canned sandwich-mak
ing materials; clothing, like un-
derwear, because extras are hard
to get: cameras and film.
Middle East—American dollar
bills,, wool swimming trunks, lea-
ther travel kits, brown civilian-
type shoes; no perishable items.
Persian Gulf large-lized bill-
folds for large Iranian money;
leather or fabric wrist-watch
straps; hair oil, mouth wash and
face lotion; bottle openers and
can openers; tee shirts; sun glas-
es; moisture proof cigarette eases
bowl or stick shaving cream.
China-Burma-India — A special
request from here ems to be for
highest duality razor blades fsome
thing to do with humidity,"
ntly); sun glasses also wanted.
South Pacific—lighters, flash-
light, sun glasses; highly seasoned
snack foods for beer parties, rad-
ios; watches (very scarce and
highly valued).
(Continued on Page 3)
At the gunnery school, he was
trained in the operation of .30 and
.50 calibre machine guns, first
oh ground ranges and later in the
air, learning by simulated aerial
battle conditions how to blast en-
emy fighter planes from the sky.
m
Bpy Farm As
American Legion Pout has
near'iljjrleisburg as a haven for
Mm
Services. j : '■.r.
The post spent more than $10,-
000 on the property, farming ma-
chinery and livestock for the nov-
el rehabilitation project.
Any veteran may go to the farm
for cither a short visit or to re-
main as a paid member of the
agricultural crew. While nearby
forests and streams offer recre-
ational hunting and fishing, the
promoters believe rOutine farm
work at the prevailing wage would
give a livelihood and sense of self
sufficiency. \
Postmaster George Simon, di-
rector of the post's farm program
said the facilities will be available
to all World War II veterans who
would benefit by them, He ex-
plained that the Legionnaires feel
conditions will be similar to those
after the last war and want a way
"we can help carry the load" for
those men returning Incapacitated
ot unable to adjust themselves.
Brings Fire
Back To Fireliouse
TIPTON, Ind. 't'B>—Fire chief
Hillard Losey believes in chasing
fires, and if he can't put them out
on the spot, he brings them back
to the station.
He noticed a truckload^'of bated
hay on fire when it passed the
a half into the country before he
could stop the driver. Unable to
smother the fire there, the chief
suggested that the truckman drive
back to the fire station, where a
pumper truck was brought into
action, vt
Labor Vote Raps
Senator 0'Daniel
resolution asks that
he be segregated
in senate
AUSTIN, Sept. 29 The Tex
as State Federation of Labor yes
terday unanimously passed a reso-
lution asking Sen. Tom Connaly
to institute appropriate action
withir the senate undcr which
Sen. W. Lee O'Daniel would !*•
"segreagatcd" from the senate
where Democrats arc usually seal
ed.
The resolution was adopted by
a voice vole, with no audible dis-
sent, by approximately 200 dele-
gates attending the A. F. of 1..-
cffiliated organization's 47th an
nua! convention.
The resolution said that all
the present representatives to
congress front Texas "campaign-
ed for office < and were elected
as members and aupporter* of':tl ,
great principles and Meals of the
Democratic party "but that O'Dan
ile hac^r by lite vote "and actions,
indicated'M Is "either ignorant
ol pi^ciplflir °r s
wilfully and Intentionally disre-
garding his pledge" ,
"The representative who has of-
fended in the manner above de-
scribed XXX is one W. Lee O'Dan
icl. late of Ohio, Kansas and Tex-
as, and junior senator from Texas
to the senate, XXX.
Battle For Calias
Resumed; Bombers
CAIRO, Sept. 3 'U.R: A new
sroitp of Amcricun airmen te-
kfiisje "lfom prison camps in Bul-
garia has. reached Cairo by air.
ficatlon of our
with needs.
PROUD OF UNIT'S RECORD
Every spare plane part'dovvn to
the smallest nut must lw 'uppliod
Sgt. Dover Into
Infantry Service
FORT LEONARD WOOD, MO
Sept. 29 —A new volunteer to
the infantry, the branch s? the
service which will "win the war,"
is Sgt Herman C. Dover, 511
S. James Avie. Breckenridge, Tex.,
He Is now assigned to duty with
the 70th Infantry (Trailblazor-
Division, in training at Fort Leo-
nard Wood, Mo.
A recent War Department dir-
ective allows men in other bran-
ches of the Army to volunteer for
infantry service. Sgt. Dover vol-
unteered while on duty with the
Ordnance.
Sixth War Loan
Drive On Nov. 20.
Washington! sepi. 29 — -
Secretary Mofgentbau announced
today that the Slxth.: War Lo n
will start Nov, 20 and that the
fcoal will be $14,000,000,000. Ten-
tative closing date of the drive
Will be Dee. 16.
The goal for the lost war loan
was $16,000,000,000, and it was
oyer subscribed by nearly $5,000,-
000,000k
; >'f -V l
it, til.-; Caribbean, The report says
ho onei was killed and the tanker
by the si-rvice command.
Col. Russell .T. Mintv
meda. Cal., one of thsl service'com
mand's senior officers, is justly
proud of the unit's AGP (aircraft
grounded for parts record). A re-
mark.'iblv small percentage of the
5th Air Forces planes'are ground
:'ri fi>r that reascth at *>ne tirtie, a
record thnt coniians favorably
with any.ether «'ar theater.
Service command men are riot
considered fiehtim; troops, hut
they freouently aw under fire and
bombardment such as' at \itape,
Wakde and Rink. Th"i.- woi k dttr-
'ng the capture of Riak Is'a.nd
from the .Tapanesn is ah oMfstanrt-
ir.g exarr.plj of their ifclaptahiiitv
'n nn. emcv^encv.
CAUGHT BETWEEN LINES , . . f. ,.
At Blait; Service command troop* tn? UT, ,hf
moved in on the third day after 'L> 10 , 0
the Army landed. Their iob was
to prepare the airdroni" for om-
rlnpes. hut the fight ing raged
fiercely for three week* and
sej-vlce command troops we.e
rnnght betwenn the A-thericim ar-
tillery and tho Japanese lines.
Then, men of the service command
ocrftnftte" defens«/rtRd kAttfe went
wjith the Infantry.
Finally. nn*ong others, the ser
vice comma-id fa~ assigned to oc
cupy several ncirhy islands. Luck-
ily, the eremy nracl«!allv had
abandoned 'these isjbihds. but Jnn-
anese planes straf<-d tha landing
"arty on one of them.
Amer ican and French forces of the Seventh army have fought
their way into the Belfort gap, the passageway to southwestern Ger-
many. They liave made gains west and north of Belfort itself, ami
one American column is 10 miles from the city.
The, British have wiped out part of an attacking force of Germans
in Holland. The Germans had crossed the Rhine to strike at Allied
positions at Nijmegen.
A Berlin broadcast says without confirmation that the field com-
mander of the Allied air bor ne
army in Holland has bwn captur-
ed. He. is identified as Geri Fred-
erick Browning, an Englishman
and the husband of Novelist Dap-
hne Du Maurier.
The battle for Calais: apparently
has been resumed. The Germans
refused to surrender uncondionally
although they asked for an armis-
tice.
American heavy bombers ap-
parently are attacking Germany
again. A Berlin broadcast reports
that the bomber are over the
western and southern Sections of
'he Riech.
The fall of the Nazi stronghold
in the Baltic appears imminent.
Russian forces arc pressing a fron
fal assault on Riga -following a
thrust into the northeastern sub-
rubs of the latvian cantial.
A partisan communique says
Yugoslav troops, have captured ai
".rtportant Croatian port. Its cap-
ture Cut German communications
• ■iUth of Fiume.
A communique from General
Ror of the Polish patriot army
says the Germans have made se-
reriil successful attacks in one
Warsaw district. But Russian ar-
tillery fire is said to have block-
ed the Nazis from exploiting their
ne..f gains.
The British Second army 1*tsh-
^ md "ast. west and north last
-iht in drives to nin nerhaps 200.-
000 Germans anlnst the sen in
restore Holland and menace G^r-
• nn soil aln"" a 15 Hi lie front
'ittle more than 10 nlles froi-n
'he northern end of the Siegfried
'fry at Kleve.
Powerful elements Of Lt. Gon.
the former' prisoners say
Iaey ,tnd their buddies receiced
The Fifth Indian Division fight
ia JiipaiKMC prison cwhfis.
INDIANS NEARER BASE
iv ANDY, ( KYLON, Sept. 29 "'.l:
Allied stronghold ir< conquered Hu
ing in Biiima has readied the
"Chceolatc Stauca.-.e'' -a'.winding
ivuiuntuiri load only eight miles
Iv'omi tile big enemy ha.-e at Tid
dill. " . . '
japs TAKE AIRFIELDS
SAN I UANCISCO. Sept. 29 (U.R
drcrefi to k^ up A M'uruw, . ommunique claimr
the «aptute of two . American air
fi Itls at T inchuk and Pingnai
In Kwungsi province of Chin.i
'1 lv communique, broadcast bj
Tekyo radio, also reports that
Ike Jflp.'-ii'-se ha\e occupied Faok-
ii;r. which . ilescrlied as the last
Ailed stronghold n conquered Hu-
ll .n provnre. These claims are
not confirmed by any Allied
.source.
TORPEDOES HIT SHIP
WAS! IINGTON. Sept. 1T4 <l l!
Ti e Woe Shipping :\dministraton
n ve ils that tin unidentified sub
mamie fired Uijve torpedoes in la
the American tanker "Kittanning"
•t;.yed afloat.
NO CABINET SPLIT
WASHINGTON. Sepl.UO tU.R)
i PresidentRoor.eye.lt has denied
| the! there i;j any split in his cah-
i ii t over how Germany should be
denounced
Argentina for submitting to what
he < alls "increasing Nazi
cnce." Hc
It,
utiles C. Dem v-ev's armv .— d
anev 4fi0-m!te frn"t wli -r"
Prime Ministe- ^hnrvhilt . «->ld
■ 000 000 to ri.00 0n0 Allied m^ht-
!ng men were massing-- more,j tii>
along the Ma'-s t (.VTeiise> rivr;-.
Tliei- were distributed fA'er a
rreandcrintr front of 15 miles from
Cuvk. 11 miles southwest of Kleve
sniithwarrl to Vierlingsbeek. on
also charged that Ar-} hank or the Ma as where
trying to ••undermine". i-s winds from three to five mil >s
influ-
t gentina
'' ! the afety of the American re-' from the German frontier, Asso-
publie?
::NAZIS TO PIGHT AGAIN 'if
iX>Nr )N. Sept. 29 <I?.^-An-
Ihtmy Eilen reveals that the Allies
General Staff While recongizing
( the Ijieviiabillty of defeat In this
wcr already is thinking in
terms of the next, Eden spoke to
Commons today in the war debate
w hich was opened by Prime Min-
ister Churchill yesterday.
Meeting Fails On
Plans For league
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 -IM.''
The Russian phase of the Dum-
barton Oaks conference has end-
ed without complete agreement
on plans for a new league of na-
tions. A joint communique issued
by Russian. American and British
delegates says some agreement
has been reached. But t foils to
mention in what fields.
Labor Leader Haps
Surrender
LONDON^ Sept. 29 Brit-
ish labor leader Bevan urges that
the Allies give' up what he calls
sily insistence upon unconditional
surrender for Germany. Bevan
told Commons that Allied surren-
der terms serve only to inspire
stirrer German resistance and un-
doubtedly t«rp responsible for the
loss of muny Allied lives.
PEN PAL FOUND IN ENGLAND
MINNEAPOLIS. Minn. 0iR -
Five years ago. Mrs. Winifred
Robinson. teacher of the fitst
grade in Minneapolis' Hamilton
school, started her pupils to cor-
responding with pupils of the In-
fants' school in I>uton, Bedford-
shire, England.
One of the Hamilton pupils was
Marlys Gillespie, Pauline Sell
tlicn 6, ;■ as was■' Marlys-an 1 evacuee:
from Lwtdon-, Ifecame Martys* pott
pal. Mariys' parents and Pauline's
parents slrirled writing, too.
This international, Inter-fainHy
correspondence friendship reached
the?' face-to-face phase recently
when Marlys' okler brother. Sgt.
jnmes M. Gillespie, who was sta-
tioned at nn air base In England,
\ Lsitcd the Sells.
He wrote home: "They treated
me just like one of the family.
They woke me at 9:30 in the mom
ing to give me fa cup of hot tea--
to open my eyes, they said. It
was good." y' ■/
The Sell <Jllk«ple Incident eas-
ily could lie duplicated, too, for
the letter writing launched by Mrs
Robinson was taken uft by a totat
of about 400 persons in Minne>*
epotis and Luton. Last Christmas
the .Hamilton school pupils sent
So gifts to Luton's children, and
received 40 English books. The
league In Luton meets monthly,"
antf n similar organization here
gathers five times yearly,v
elated Press Correspondent Roger
Greene reported.
MiniorTvets
Seen Aided
In Education
WASHINGTON, <U.K- The re-
cently enacted "G.I. Bill or Rights
will enable near ly 1,000,000 veter-
ans of World War II to attend any
accredited schools or colleges they
ehoose. the Office of War Infor-
mation said in a report on educa-
tion opportunities provided under
the bill.
Under the act. OWI said, a vet-
eran may Obtain educational ben-
efits and a disability pension si-
multaneously. Any person who
srrved in the Army, Navy, Mar-
ine Corps or Coast Guard for at
least three months between Sept.
18, 1940, and the end of the war
is eligible for these benefits.
Persons who were discharged
aftcrless than 90 days' active ser-
vice because of an injury incurred
ni line of duty, or who were hon-
To take advantage of these fa-
cilities, the report said, the vete-
ran must enter school not more
than two years after the end of
the war, whichever is later. But
under no condition, it was cmpha-
silcd, will these benefits be grant-
ed beyond seven years after tho
close of the war.
Television Coming
WASHINGTON. Sept. 29 <U.Ri—
Radio industry officials predict
television In nearly every home -
end soon. At a federal communi-
cations hearing, ralo experts fore-
cast that the price of television
will be so low that almost any-
one coulct afford u set.
U
1
1
N
$
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Hall, C. M. Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 266, Ed. 1 Friday, September 29, 1944, newspaper, September 29, 1944; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth132217/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.