Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 111, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 6, 1956 Page: 2 of 8
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BKKCKKXKlDUt: AMKCli AX WEDNESDAY. JI NK 6. l 56
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R",.. r " ZtJrr^ v>i ..
THE RdOSIANS WflRF HFRC Hu tun colonists at <>ne
t,:. .. had • I'l.-I. • i t j! l>«.rt !'•■ «'ulif , Just 72 miles nortti-
■ <-t „t S.i. Kmi • i • Tin- Uri't < In.pct, above, a remnant of
: ... i-uloti). !...■• i.t.itiv u i* '■•" The Russians aban-
<i..n«-d 'btii i iiia ■ i-ttkiiiii.t m RU because ul financial
uiltrs.
ScathQig Denunciaiton Of Stalin
By Khrushchev Finally Made Public
'v IHIS&I.D J I,u\z \| KS
V. V H!.\ur«i\ If!" Soviet
• , II!,, t party ! .;* N li.it i
i\ i'i hi It* • , *« His fiMiMHIH fM-.-r It
' ■ • 11 if < oii.iiiuni-1 party coiij: re ;.•<
I • huary. flntly |pd th '
..I i-. f 5?talin of u.siui; "mans
'• i i" at l_ muidei in-.-. "i- my
I .. >l|(| iJT" hnlii Ht Mil ilUH' •• lit
• ■ m . t."** in Ki ili -it : ;>> :i
"s-j! • i man "
i itiShchW t' hitter |M> t II orti I
lat i>• rr—«• t i't: in ■ '■ .> •
t.t Monday "hv th - :-ia - Ik-part
ii • lit >ii th - form of a doou i.ent
i >>ut |>y Moscnw T• i foinniUni I
(.. it . . aul it hnd obtained the 5K
| . dtHOIliMMl fl nil a "I'ulll nlfllt
ial ■ourc*.'*"
I ... State Department caul
that it does not vouch for the
"authenticity" of th>- document.
H il ,t ' if, evidence lh - ■ lat*- Me
$2295.00
Buys a II old fuII> air-
• olldit lulled.
UAMKI. MOTOR t •>. Inc.
J. K. "Jack" Shackelford
Pre*. «V t.en. \l«i.
p.il'tllient helieVed it Was peppered
iih ui-h parenthetical phrases as
i n.i-uiinu.-. prolonged applause"
>ii(i "animation in the all" to de-
.-> i■. ihe feelinr of the delegates
i«i the conference a- Khrushchev
I (Hike.
Text Made Public
KhrUHhchi '• i• > ■• I. I In speech lie
I fHiI* a tlwri session of the coin-
| muni i pai u ci.in* ress in Mo«•« \
>, | . I. 24. I hele were pitcemeal
I• ik- >>l the .-.eiisational address at
'.the time. Hut the text made pub
I lie today was even more scathing
'iian the fragments.
in the op ninK sentence of his
l • ,-ti Khrushchev nuted that a
>>t had heen said at previous meet
ill? "t the Conjfreess "about the
• u!t ul the indi< idual and about
its harmful consequences."
After Stalin's death, Khrushchev
aid tup party leaders agreed to
• renounce any policy of elevating
transform him into a superman
' ii>. > sing supernatural rharacter-
| i tie* akin to th"Se of a (iod."
Itehef Cultivated
"Such a man «upposed knows
< • i rvthing. see everything, thinks
1.,, everyone, can do anvthing' is
infallible in his behavior," Khiush-
chev said." Such a belief about a i
man, and specifically about Stalin
van cultivated among us for many
years."
Khrushchev then charged that i
Stalin, early in his rise to powei
laddered and made Ial •• charges
(gainst "honest Commumsts
HJravely utidct minded' the t'oni
nunist effort and showed that Stal
n regarded real levolutioiists a
'two - faced
"This was the result of the
tbu.se of power by Stalin, who S.-
<an to us,, mass terror .,gainst the
paity cadres " Khrushchev said
The bald party secretary, warm
ing to the attack, cried that "vile j
things" were practiced under Stai \
m's legiine.
New Questions On
Traffic Are Tested
Bl'FFALO, X. V if I*i — The j
liuffalo police department is ex-
perimenting with a new method of j
inte11ogatinj. persons involved in
traffic accidents.
In a special questionnaire drawn
up with the aid of a university
psychologist, police officcials seek I
to learn information which may
help determine what part physical
and mental conditions play in
causing accidents.
Traffic director Francis I*. (lau-
>rhan said the an sewers obtained to
the 30 question form from drivers
and pedestrians aie intended sole-
ly for i . search and cannot he used
as evidence in either criminal or
ci\il procexlings
Included are the following: Do
vou feel the accident could have
been prevented? . Were you un
usually tired? ... Were you in a
• marked emotional state? .. Had
1 yop completed yopr day's work
shortly before the accident? . . .Do
wild drivers make you nerverous?
. . . How many hours of sleep did
you ha1 c in the 24 hours preceding
the accident? . . . Were you in an
argument with anyone shortly be
fore the accident?
Gaughan -aid that if the experi
ment provides valuable informa-
tion hearing on accident?
(iaughan aid that if the experi-
1 ment provides valuable informs
tion hearing on accident causes,
the questionnaire may lie improved
and incorporated permanently as
p:<it of the police department's
investigative procedure.
NEW OWNERSHIP
NEW MANAGEMENT
CHLOE CLIFTON PORTRAITS
(Formerly Duke Studio)
11') S. HI(K( K KNIf 11 >(; F
PHONE ,'M2
iMobilqasI
MM.NOI.IA SERVICE STATION
."<00 E. Walker, Is Now
I NDKK NEW MANAGEMENT
Bill O'Haras
MAGNOLIA SERVICE STATION
50H E. Walker Phone 9.175
OPEN EVENINGS TILL 10:00 P. M.
Half Of Stanford's
Students Work
STAXFOKi), Calif. a.Ht — A
campus fact finding board, bent
upon disproving the popular
thought that Stanford is a "rich
1 man's school," polled the student
body to see how many labored at a
job as fell as over the books. It
found that half the institution's
attendants earn all or part
of then expenses with part time
1 jobs.
An employment questionaire,
sent out by the board and answer-"
ed bv 4.HT4 studr-nts, also revealed
! that:
1—Another 12 per cent expect to
need part - time jobs before they
graduate.
o—Over I't per cent receive
, scholarships and loans from the
, school.
3— Nearly nine per cent get fi-
nancial aid from the government.
4—Over seven per cent get fi-
nancial aid from other sources.
Many among Stanford's working
student population toil on campus
in such jobs as "hashing," library
assisting and working in various
schooloffices. Close to 25 per cent
1 of all those paying their own way
! were women, and many of the
part-time workers al";; meet their
il.KiWi a year monetary output by
holding summer jobs.
Majority Of Autos
Four Years Old
CHICAGO TP' — If you are
driving a car that's at least four
year:: old, you have plenty of com-
pany.
The Chicago Motor Club said
registration figures show that 43
per rent of American cars are from
four to seven years old and 23 per
cent are seven years or older.
About 22 per rent of the autos
in the nation are two or three
years old. New models less than one
year old account for only 12 per-
cent of the total.
The club said the auto popula
tion of the l.'nited States has al
most doubled during the past 10
years and that the end of 195/i
registrations should total more
than r.l.lMio mm passenger cars
tiucks and buses.
111. IX Teen dating
You Can Be Sure If It's a
DALLAS
ai Main
cf/Msn
fir- J
ts-
☆
SAN ANTONY
J-Mory. a, Tei-
For thosa v/ho demand the Each hole! [3 located on a
Lest in hotel ocrointncJatic.tis. main highway In the center of
Famed for irienJly se .iso and activity In its respective city,
excellent cu 6ii.9. Prompt Qsiracje Service Qtdoof
o each hotel,
TEXAS HOSPITALITY at its best!
JUNE GUEST—Weil „
Chancellor Konrad A'i.rij n-r
will fly to the United Slates < n
June Hth for a seven-day v. it.
He will meet with President
Eisenhower and Secretary of
Slate Dulles, and will receive
honorary doctors' degrees from
Vale and Marquette Universi-
ties.
h
$
t
ANIMAL. VEGETABLE. MINERAL-That# what this car
jurns for fuel. Tin* (i«-ru rul AI • * • t MP-3(10, ,t ttm^ the oncc-
we? from (iM cxtcs, u < (rt.'o phi' •• ofigioft which buins
animal, veg*.'t:«b!e :u 1 m'ockiI m 'I llifii uiunps li« t
through ;i lo a tur ; « hiu. iii;v« - iv-ar wheels. Th
?ar will be unvti't-l o* t t th in P f.t« it.
Psychologist Has
Marriage Report
ANN ARBOR, Mich. <UJ >—A !
i psychologist who has studied the
marriage of some IUMi couples for
i the past 2" years claims the most
|-ignificant change has been the j
i attitude toward religion.
I'rof. Lowell K. Kelly, psycholo-
I uist at the University of Michigan,!
said both men and women place
more emphasis on religious values
today than they did when first
married.
Kelly, who started the still in-
complete study in 19;i.r> with then-
: engaged friends and ckssmuts.
said other findings revealed that
there also is a definite tendency
among couples to lie less neat, less
energetic, have fewer interests and
horter tempers.
Instruments used in obtaining
information for the study included
p.-yehological tests, personal inter-!
j v iews and questionnaires.
Kelly, past president of the
American Psychological Associa-
tion said the attitude of man and
' wife toward housework also under-
goes a change as the years go by.
The change, he explains, is from
one of indifference in the early
'.cars to a definite dislike.
Buckwheat grows in a wider-
variety of soil types than any
.Hher grain crop
twm-,
APART TOGETHER —Otic of the few Siamese twins ever
successfully separated are intrigued by a telephone during a
recent visit to Washington, D.C. They are Napit and Prissana
Polpinyo, born connected at the chest on May 25, 1953, in
Bangkok, Thailand. The delicate surgery that separated them
was done at Billings Memorial Hospital, Chicago, last year.
They were adopted by Mr. and Mis. Ellis Atkinson. He is an
adviser to the Thai government.
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HERE'S
GOOD
ADVICE.
\ : ■ \
f -(/' \
I® A
m-. ■■ ■ il
mite* ■
fe," , '* '■ '&'**
i ii;.:-:.' •
DON! BE MISLED BY THE FAST - TALKING SALESMAN, who Offers You
Unbelievable Trade-in And Gemipicks In Order To Sell His Merchandise.
Remember, He Musi Make A Fair Mark-up In Order To Stay In Business---
He Can't Give Away Merchandise Or Service — Compare The Item You Are
Buying With Other Nationally Known Brands—Check The Brand—Check The
Model—Check The Features—And Above All, Check Door To Door Sales
People Through The Better Business Section of the Chamber of Commerce.
Fourth in a Series of Ads, in Your Interest Sponsored By The Following Aggressive Firms Of
Breckenridge And The Better Business Section Of The Chamber Of Commerce
Frank Homme Studio Thurmon Furniture Co. Higginbotham-Bartlett Co.
F. W. Woolworth Co, Trammel! Furniture Co. Ewing-Christian Hardware
Tots and Teens
Peeler's
White Auto Store
King Appliance Co.
Firestone Store
Rockwell Bros.
Breckenridge Lumber Co.
Clay Building Material
Douglas Anderson Co.
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 111, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 6, 1956, newspaper, June 6, 1956; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135325/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.