Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 15, 1960 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Breckenridge Daily American and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Breckenridge Public Library.
Extracted Text
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•I
Ameriratt
WEATHER
CONTINUED WARM
VOL. 41 NO. 12
BRECKENRIDGE AMERICAN—THURSDAY, SEPT. 15. 1360
PRICE DAILY 5 CENTS SUNDAY 10 CENTS
Leawd ASSOCIATED PRESS W>re
"NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER"
NEA Newsphoto Sen ice
:!
OAMb TONIGHT Trvictt Holland, left, and David Sullivan .will de
the B Bjckar.os m their second try of the 1960 season.
The Jr B <ckj opened aga-nst G'aham last Thursday, with Graham
the winner Tonight they play host to the Jr. Brownwood Lions. 7:30.
Bucks To Meet Ambitious
Team In Coyotes Friday
1 he Hi *< m'iii hI*'*' Bu< karoos will
af*1 •* x * i > ambitious bunch of Co-
>otea on thi (it l'i at Wichita Kalis
Friday nuhf Both offensively and
drfrnsuelv the Coyotes show ini-
tiative and ability
Offen.sivHv in the backficld, the
toughest small man thev have is
Jon Jones nuntlwr .10 the King-
man Jones ueifcihs 151 The block-
ing bac k is number 20. Don Hec-
tor. uei^him: l." l The fullback and
the man calling signal* u number
Larry Shield* Shields v%eighs
194 and is a triple-threat man
Soviet Charges
Against UN Die
While Aborning
NK« \t RK V The Soviet
I nion launi lied ,i bi'tei attack on
t' N S. i-1 rl.ii ■■ (.'• t ri al llammar-
skjold in the 11r11> council last
night describing the 1" N official
as the willing tool ol Western
imperialists trying to re impose
on the Congo " Soviet Deputy for-
eign minister Zorin made the
chaigp after failing to get council
rei ognition for a Congolese dele-
gation sent to the I N by Congo's
Premier l.umumha.
The United States immediately
came to HammarskjoPs defense
In a statement made outside the
council I S ambassador James
W ad -.worth charged the Russians
with a "deliberate and malicious"
distortion of fact Calling Zorin's
(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO!
Seen or Heard
by C. M. H.
nth cars re-
asked Leon
morrow
said
last
election
With 00 tickets reported sold to
th« Wichita Fallj game yesterday
thi$ morning it was said that only
seven more wir# solJ today .
We feet the Buckaroos have the j
wherewithal! to win this game, and ;
if we were predicting we would 1
say that AbMefV will beat Sweet-|
water . . Some fans questioned
if they would find rattlesnakes on
the roadsrde to kill '
turntnq home — we
Ford and he said they are not com-
ing out y.'t.
Congratulation* to J L Mat-hen.
v ho vesterday observed his ft5th
birthdav - still attends to business
, The grand jury will meet to-
no arrest, sheriff s office
Tomorrow will be the
day to vote absentee in the
set for September 20.
County Attorney Ben .1 Dean Jr .
reminds
Work will start tomorrow closing
the well on the second floor of
Burch Hotel — sorr*. sumotious re-
modeling of offices rn tenth floor
IS nearly c-mpletcd — Albert
Green and Jack Boyle to move
there to make way for tb;
club quarter, . . About .20 ha*,
indicated they wish to be members
of the club . J"* FJ ',khn *
FFA project a female sheep has
strayed - °ne where-
abouts please phor. 9-3058.
Police Chief Kay Nix reported
he and policemen Recked MO
\ esterdav and issued only one
tickci - people are Wtting tn ''nr-
seems Firemen yesterday
!e£ called to a fire in the motor
scooter of l.ynn Duggan on North
PaTks and to the Walter Bedford
Ranch east of Frankell where con-
<iderable acreage burm n off .
And that is about all we ran sell
cn one day tor a nickel.
When they need short yardage, he
is (he one called on The tail-back
and the speediest man in the back-
held is number 40, Mike Kelley
Kelly weighs lfiO and is the man to
watch sweeping wide around end
Hector and Jones are seniors.
Shields and Kelley are Juniors.
The left end Is Robert Gray,
number 7!t, weighing 170. He is the
favorite receiver for deep passes.
Lett tackle is number 78. T Harbi-
son. who weighs 171. I.eft guard
Marvin O'Neal's number is 57 and
he weighs 163 Leonard Jeter, the
center, is also the team captain.
Jeter is number 54 and weighs 190
Number S5. Delbert Rodgers the
right guard, is possibly the best
trapping guard Rodgers "weighs
150 The right tackle is number
68 Don Allen. Allen is very strong
at 192 pounds. The best all-around
lineman is right end Herby Carr.
number 66 Carr weighs 169.
The linemen are all seniors ex-
cept Juniors Rodgers and O'Neal
The average weight for the of fen-
she starting lineup is 169 pounds.
Only Gray, number 76. Allen. 68.
Carr, 66. a<nd Jones number 30
play on offense. Gray plays left
end number "8. Robert Burnam,
191 pounds plays left tackle num-
ber 71 Hob C'olvard plays left
guard Allen ai'd Carr play right
guard and tackle respectively and
G Overstreet. weighting 150. plays
right end
In the secondary. Mike Marley.
number 56 and weighing 140. plays
left linebacker Jay Lavender, num-
ber 51. plays middle line-backer
Lavender weighs 151 Jones, num-
ber 30 plays right linebacker Joe
Watkins at 170 and Butch Hunn
at 151 play left and right half-
hack Watkins is number 45 and
; Hunn's number is 26.
I The defense works good together
and will be hard to trap Jay La-
vender. the middle line-backer Is
I probably the best defensive man.
■ The Covotes will have one starter
back from last year, so experience
_ wise the Buckaroos will be even-
ly matched. With the improvement
the Bucks have shown, the contest
should be nne of great interest to
all who plan to attend.
Texan Is Killed
ARLINGTON .f — A-60-yar-okl
man was struck and killed by a
car at Arlinzton between Kort
Worth and Dallas last night He
was Thomas Jefferson Foosha.
killed as he was walking near his
home
Two Air Force
Pilots End 30
Days Space Test
SAN ANTONIO — Two air
force pilots, grinning and happy,
completed a record-breaking 30-
day simulated flight to the moon
and hack in space cabin at San i
Antonio.
They are Captain William Hab- j
luetzel of Ingleside, and First Lie-
tenant John Hargreaves Jr of
Castle Air Force Base in Calilor- j
nia.
They stepped from their R-by-12
pressurized steel tank at 6 30 a
m , Texas time.
Said Habluetzel, I leel fine, just
a little wobbly in the knees."
Said Hargreaves. "I'm okay ex- '
cept maybe 1 lost 15 pounds. "*
Both said the first thing they
noted upon leaving the cabin was
the bright lights in the room, and
the lightness in their heads caused
by loss of weight.
Hahluetzel said he did not exper- ;
ence headaches as previous space |
cabin test pilots have reported.
Both wore their light blue-green
hospital pajamas that had been
their uniform throughout the 30-day
test.
Habluetzel said he thought they
felt as giKjd as they did because
they kept regular sleeping hours
and did exercises every day.
The Texas air force pilot con-
tinued
"We did a lot of thinking, too.
We had a lot of time for it We
thought about what people will go
through when they actually fly a
space ship And we thought a lot
about memories of the past.'
Habluetzel is 36 years of age and
Hargreaves is 30 years old.
They will undergo a full day of
medical and scientific tests to de-
termine how well the human body
reacts to space environment
Air Force officials in San Antonio
say the two pilots who completed
3(Vdays in test this morning will
be given a convalesence leave. j
However, both men appear in
good shape The leave won t take
away from their regular vacation
time.
TROPICAL STORM THREATENS
ALABAMA-MISSISSIPPI BORDER
Former Breck
Resident Dies
In California
Luther Frank Witcher. former
Breckenridge resident and brother
of J L. Witcher of Breckenridge. !
died Wednesday while on the job
in California. He suffered a heart i
attack.
The body will be flown to Dallas
where >he Satterwhite Funeral
Home will arrange to bring it
back to ' Breckenridge for burial,
arrangements to be announced
He was formerly a member of
the First Baptist Church and the
Roughneck Bible Class here.
Mr. Witcher was a former em-
ploye of the Texas Pipe Line Com-
pany here. He also operate service
stations in two different locations
before moving away about five
years ago. The family had lived in
California about eighteen months.
Survivors are his wife of the
home; two daughters, Mrs. Don
Hunt of Anaheim, California, and
Mrs. Bill Carroll'of Norris. Ten-
nessee; his mother, Mrs. Lola Wit-
cher of Devilla; two sisters. Mrs.
Mabel Heller of Temple and Mrs.
Jessie Messer of Corpus Christi;
three other brothers. II B. of Aus-
tin. L. R. of Houston and D W. of
Tulsa. Oklahoma; and three grand-
children.
He was the father of the late
Dale Witcher. former Buckaruo
player, who was killed several
years ago in a hunting accident
i
>V,
NO INJURIES—Twisted 6y the impact of the crash, a propeller and engine of an American Airlines
Electra frame the rest of the aircraft which hit a dyke, flipped over on its back and slid 500 feet while
landing at LaGuardia Airport in New Vork. None of the 709 pas-engers and six crew members was
injured.
Inspector Killed In Plane Crash
PLANE ADD HOTEL HOAX
CALLS PLAGUE 1ALLASITES
DAI L AS ft Two American ! were injured. The injured were
airline's* flights were delayed and 1 Walter Gruenberg. James E. Jor-
the Planes searched last night af- dan. R. Fitzpatnck. Bobby W
ten- a Dallas police dispatcher re- Clark, R. R. Rogers, and David M.
celved an anonymous telephone | Bellows.
call that bombs had been planted ; Observers said nne engine may
aboard "the next American Air-1 have run wild or that the landing-
lines plane to take off from Love
Field "
In a second call, the same man
told the Dallas police dispatcher,
Mrs Loni Eton, that a bomb had
been planted at Dallas' handsome
and new Statler-Hilton hotel.
An American Airlines plane with
66 passengers aboard and bound
for Los Angeles had taxied toward
a runway at Love Field, ft was
called back and a search launch-
ed It was supposed to have taken
off at 10:40 p. m.
A second American Airlines
plane, to have left Dallas at 11:15
for Tulsa and Oklahoma City, was
also delayed while an intense
search was made of it.
The FBI entered the airplane
bomb threat case immediately.
Dallas police started an inten-
sive search of the Staler-Hilton
! where hotel security police said:
"The first we knew about it was
when the police walked in."
A big Branitf Airliner, a DC17.
was being taxied at Love Field
in Dallas yesterday when it sud-
denly lurched to one side and, pro-
pellors spinning, smashed into a
three-story Braniff hangar
An inspector at the controls of
i the plane. Elmer R. Tifany. was
killed Besides the 42-year-old Tif-
[ fany, six other Braniff employes
' aboard the big four-engined plane
"Biis'llf Late Nwi iHf A. P. Niiiis
Tj-ljU-UVVfyVVVy*.' " - - - « « ■ ■ • ■ • ■ ■ * *****+**++++++++++++++•
In Npw York former President
Truman says a dockworkers' plan
to heckle Khrushchev Is a mistake,
because it will give the Soviet pre-
mier a chance toget headlines and
make people sorry for him
The Defense Department says
some national security agency
briefing notes are missing but It
isn't know n whether they were tak-
en by two code workers who defec-
ted to Russia
An East German army officer
who has defected to the West says
the Communists are mapping a war
againsta West Germany.
The U N. Congo command is
trying to rescue TO white persons
said to be trapped in a mining
town by tribesmen.
Some last second trouble wash-
ed out an attempt at Cape Cana-
veral to launch an Atlas missile
on a 9.000-mile test flight.
The White House says President
Elsenhower will spend the week-
end at his camp David retreat iB
Marylnd working on his U. N.
speech.
In Morrocco. 48 persons are re-
ap riu Moment: What1 ported de-id in the crash of a bus
. Thought ^ th thev give loaded with paisengert enroutg t#
{STn ISfi■ - MlnWeu" ' * mwtow
The President's brother. Dr.
Mitlton Eisenhower flies to Mexico
City with three cabinet members
today, to take part in a fiesta mark-
ing the 150th anniversary of Mexi-
co independence from Spain.
When a restaurant fire broke out
at Newington, Connecticut, It was
not difficult for the proprietor to
find his insurance agent. He was
one of the customers whn the
blaze broke out.
gear brakes on the hig craft may
have hone out. A Braniff official
said we do not know what happen-
ed.
Some of the injured were trap-
ped inside the plane for nearly
two hours before firemen and other
rescue workers could get them out.
Witnesses said the plane burst into
flames on impact with the hangar
hut that the fire was quickly ex-
tinguished.
o
Drugs and Women
Taken In Raid
BIG SPRING ,fi— City and
county officers, accompanied by-
liquor control board officers, stag-
ed a raid on a tavern on the north
side of Big Spring last night.
Police Chief Jay Banks a former
Texas Ranger captain, said quan-
tities of Marijuana, barbiturates,
contraband liquor and lewd pictur-
es were confiscated.
He also said two Latin American
men were charged in the case and
released under $2,500 bond. They
are identified as 33-year-old Elipe
Alvarado Juarez and 33-year-old
Santoa Mendoza. Banks said Juar-
ez had been arrested at Del Rio
on the Mexican border last week
on a charge of possessing seven
pounds of mariquana.
He said the contraband was
found behind the counnter at Sam's
Ixiunge. and in an apartment up-
stairs
He also said six Latin-American
women were arrested and charged
with vagrancy, four o fthem from
Big Spring, nne from Austin and
one from San Antonio.
™0 RAD E" A ' M A RI GOLD MILK
7k Oellen
•■■en ics 00—eai i. wiic
Lions To Hear
State Senator
Speak Friday
Members of the Breckenridge
Lions Club and their Guests Friday j Aa"h,^r'J'
.... ., i. > . j ists to leave within 48 hours.
noon will hear the newly elected ,, , , . .
, ., . .. . . . _x „ . Colonel Joseph Mobutu, a 30-year
senator of this district. Tom Crei-! so|dier d journa;
ghton Norman Brewer is program ; |)s( ann0lln(.ed tha, hofh Prudent
cnairman. Joseph Kasavubu and Premier l.u-
D r> ; V:5 ,°rn a," r°a mumba had been "neutralized" un-
in Palo Pinto County and is a pro- ,h d f ,he Army
duet of he Mineral Wells public , . aroun(j ,hcjr
schools He served in the United ™ c '
States Navy during World War II; i no"J''s-
. ■ - u- i i i i All communications with the out
and upon receiving his honarahle j
discharge entered the University
ARMY SEIZES CONGO POWER
COT LUMUMBA BOUNCES BACK
(By ASSOCIATED PRESSi
The Congolese army seized con-
trol of the turbulent Congo nation
from its quarreling political lea-
ders last night and ordered all Rus-
! sians. Czechs and other commun-
of Texas and graduated from the
School of Law in 1950. He returned
to Mineral Wells and was associa-
ted with the law firm of Cfeighton
& Creighton. In 1952 he was elect-
ed county attorney of Palo Pinto
County and has twice been re-elec-
ted to that office in which he pre-
sently serves.
Creighton is a leader in civic
and political endeavors and has
served as district commissioner of
the Boy Scouts, president of the
Mineral Wells Junior Chamber of
Commerce and state vice president
and national director of that orga-
nization. He served as president of
the Wolters Chapter of the Asso-
ciation of the United States Army
and was president of the Palo
Pinto County Uhited Fund in 1959.
In 1952 and again in 1954 Tom was
selected as one of the outstanding
young men of Mineral Wells.
Stocks Down On
Gothem Exchange
NEW YORK '/Pi — Prices were
down on the New York stock ex-
change acain this morning. Trad-
ing was moderate. Key stocks fell
fractions to a point or more. A
few selected issues went against
the trend. I
The decline sent the market do-1
ser to the three-times-tested 600
support level in the Dow-Jones in-
dustrial average. This level held
in March. Mav and July. The big
whe- 1
All c
side world were cut off as Mobutu
made his startling announcement
to a news conference in a down-
town hotel.
But Colonel Mobutu w as later re-
ported under arrest. A spokesman
for Premier Lumumba announced
this some 12 hours after Mobutu
said the army was seeking to bring
order and that the communists had
been ordered out of the Congo.
The spokesman said Col. Mobutu
was arrested on Lumumba's or-
ders.
Immediately after the announce-
ment, the senate met for an emer-
gency session that was four short
of a quorum.
The spokesman, left wing expatr
iate French serge Michael
the Lumumba government
inues in power.
The council should eneoufage
secretary-General Hammaskjold to
huild up a massive iinancial and
technical assistance program.
Action must be taken to sale-
guard fundamental human rights
in the Congo.
The council should urge the par-
ties within the Congo to resolve
their differences be peaceful
means.
The council should declare thaj
no personnel, supplies or equip-
ment for military use should be
sent into the Congo except by the
U. N.
Rocket Capsule
Sighted In Sea
Five Thousand
Flee But Wind >
Is Weakening
i By ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Late morning reports on hurri-
cane Ethel is that it continues to
weaken and had lop winds of 80
miles-per-hour. Hurricane v am-
ines have been lowered on th°
Louisiana coast and east of bt.
Mai'Ks, Florida. They remain dis-
played on the Mississippi coast east
to St. Marks. Ethel was then cen-
tered about 25 miles south of Pas-
cagoula, Mississippi, and moving
northward at about 12 miles per
hou r
It was expected to move inland
within a tew hours near the Mis-
sissippi-Alabama border.
Some 100 miles east ol Pensacj*
la, Florida, offshoot tornadoes
struck through two villages in th;
Panama City area. Police reporc
25 houses wrecked at the fishing
village of Springticld. Another toi -
nado hit West Bay. But no casul-
aties are reported.
Two persons are missing ani
presumed drowned alter their boa*
capsized near the mouth of the
Mississippi River, 90 miles south-
east of New Orleans. The area was
swept by 75-mile-per-hour windu
from Ethel.
Locally heaw rains of six inch-
es will spread through northwest
Florida and into parts of Alabama
and Georgia today.
Authorities in the Central Gulf
Coast area esetimated more thait
50,000 persons have lied to escape
the storm's fury.
The Red Cross says evacuaton
of Alamaba's coastal lowlands in
the path of the hurricane were
completed last night. Civil defense
officials report that more than
1.000 there have moved into shel-
ters'.
At Port Arthur, thirty-one men
are safe after having a narrow es-
cape in the gulf of Mexico whe:i
their escape "boat ran into storrn-
buffeted high seas.
The men had abandoned an oil
drilling rig olf the Louisiana Coast.
50 miles south of the Eugene Is-
land light house. I#"1 area is on
the fringP of hurricane
the sea was
Ethel, and
running 15 teet high.
WASHINGTON '.T — The Air
Force says the capsule dropped
from the satellite Discoverer 15
has been sighted in he Pacific
about 200 miles northwest ot
Christmas Island and 800 to 1.000
miles southwest of Hawaii. Earliei
attempts to snag the capsule in
the air as it parachutr.l through
the earth's atmosphere had met
said with failure. An Air Force spokes-
cont- man says an amphibious plane has
been dispatched to the scene to
?%Lno,netfi United Na'tionTpr^ '"Thrspnkesmanlays inlormation ,h(.
Western Nations
Protest Squeeze
BONN W -The U.S., Britain ani
France have oficially protested to
Russia over the new travel re-
strictions impos'.l in Berlin by th?
Communists. Western officials at
Bonn Germany describe the allied
notes as lirm But the texts are no-
disclosed.
The Western action was dis-
closed as Poland and Czechoslo-
vakia got into the Communis*
squeeze on Berlin. They've joined
gram
situation. A resolution put before
the U. N. security council today
embodies these four points:
Commission Cuts
October Oil Flow
AUSTIN i/r — The Texas railroad
commission chopped 47.644 barrels
from the daily oil allowable in
October.
The permissive daily now was
set at 2,630.000 barrels per day.
Production will be permitted for
eight days .the same as the Sep-
tember pattern However, the dif-
ference in calendar days for the
Red China has again rejected
U. S. demands for the release of
5 Imprisoned Americans, including
Roman Catholic Bishop James
Walsh of Cumberland, Maryland.
Ar.1 in a French town a dispute
over whether boys and girls should
attend school together has lieen
settled. Children win attend
classroom lectures together,, bat
a white line will separate boyu (rem
firU is t!u pJ*y|roua4.
BILL BLACK
104 N. Court Phone HI 9-4434
INSURANCE
PRESENTS
THE WEATHER
Fair and warm this afternoon
through Friday. Low tonight 70
to 75, high Friday 95 to 100.
Low iast night 66, high yester-
day 100. No showers predicted.
Winds southerly 10 to 20 miles
per hour.
tion in flow.
o
question in Wall Street is
ther it willI hold again, or whether , mon,hs accounts for the reduc-
the list will pierce it and drop to
a lower level.
The 11 a m E D T.. industrial
' average was 603.10.
Gasoline Squirt
| Prevents Robbery
DALLAS 'If — A customer drove
into II. L. Decker's service sta-
tion at Qutnlan. near Dallas, the
other night and told Decker to
"filler >r up."
Then he pointed a pistol at Deck-
er and said, "let's go into the of-
fice."
But said filling stMion man Dec-
ker: "No."
"I* threatened the gunman,
"am going to shoot you.
I "I don't think so,' said Decker
i as he pulled the trigger on his gaso-
1 line nozzle "d doused the startled
i gunman, who jumped into his au-
i tomobile and fled.
impact area. A search plane was
dispatched and homed in on the
capsule's radio transmitter. Short-
ly thereafter it spotted the capsule
visibly.
Officials had said last nigh tthat
chances for recovery of the cap-
sule appeared slight after cartio
planes failed to snatch it from the
air.
It the recovery is successful, as
is expected, this won 1.1 be the
third straight capsule recovery for
the United States. The capsule
from Discoverer 13 was plucked
from the sea, while that from Dis-
coverer 14 was snatched trom the
sky.
Vhen you finance your car at tha
eir t National Bank ita financed
«H*> |m Sanlr
East Germans in denouncing
as illegal passports carried by
West Beriincrs.
Five Are Admitted
To Local Hospital
Stephens Memorial Hospital re-
ported five admissions and tv o
dismissals during the past twenty-
four hours.
Linda Glover, Edna Farris, N. B.
Livingston. B R Presley and A
B MeElvea ar,. the patients admit,
ted
Mrs. E. T Doyle and N. O. Rod-
gers were dismissed.
hen you finance your ear at tne
First National bank ynti ma* olaea
your Insurance with the agant of
tout cnoica. *
...■aeewteimiiwu
i„®«, Cost—A h«ftter (t l-Wh«r
•mi finance your Automobile with
■LAKE JOHNSON
INfURANCI A0ENCY
HI %un
Officers Shot By
Barricaded Pair
WAYNE CITY. Ill (VP—A far-
mer and his 80 - year - old lather
surrendered at Wayne City, Illi-
nois. today, ater holding off a force
of 20 lawmen through the night
with a barrage of guntire.
Two officers were wouhded when
the shooting started last night
The men, Joe Redfern and his
35-year-old son, Glenn, barricaded
themselves alter the younger Red-
fern refused to accept a summons
for a sanity hearing.
Houston To Honor
Ramsey Tonight
HOUSTON </F — Lieutenant Gov-
ernor Zen Ramsey of Texas will
be honored tonight in Houston for
his 17 years of public service.
The dinner is being co-ordinated
by the Houston Chamber of Com-
merce.
Guests at the dinner tonight are
expected to Include 25 of the 31
member; ot tU« Te*«s ututa.
Route Boys Are Business Men
K?NN|TH L?5 P001,
The Breckenridge American to-
day presents to vou the first in t
series of pictures and short re-
nines about the youngest business-
men in town—your American
carrier hoys.
Meet Kenneth Lee Pool. Ken-
neth lives at 307Vi South Oakwo'.l
Street. I lis route is number 2 and
consists of West Williams. Hullum-
Wheeler. and Elliott Streets from
South Rose to South Shelton on
hoth sides of the streets mentioned
arul including all the side streets
in between.
If you should miss your paper or
wish Kenneth to collect, please
c-'' hirn HI "-4392.
Kenneth is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. I.ee Pool and is a Freshman
in Breckenridge High School.
The carrier hoys are assigned
routs and are responsbile for the
delivery, collections and complaints
pertaining to their particular
route. By complaints is meant per-
sons reporting their paper missed.
Pool delivers his paj>srs by motor
tcooici.
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 15, 1960, newspaper, September 15, 1960; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135992/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.