The Stephens County Times (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 30, 1955 Page: 5 of 7
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S I KI'li :%\>
ill AH I ! M h'
I Ml USK.vV. JINK :tu, ih.'i
Untold Millions Held In Russian
Slave 0ar?;iS" Americans Make Flags
i> i HAi;
I lilted Pit
It Wis,s
LE>
Met AW
i n Analyst
tht:
tut
Wvtk
'•lied
4*:t nips
Stat.-- !
papter
th. ri.sk
It vv;
iut r«
bruta it
a> ^teus.
I :!' • .
many o<
millions
'ast
ma~
kbor
lited
m-ti
camps
They havi'
stic t* rm?
.nous pret*-
Hi
Kusi
labor,
rtist j
-hi
A < hi dial in\ ital ion
MOKMNC
tmiLi: (
9:00 A M
I*.tl.i« •- I lu a:
low IM
LASS
I .'ai h Sum! j
«. KUIk,
been sentenced t«« fan-
of imprisonment on
•xts.
the fact is that the Soviet
ian economy depends on slave
• inefficient is Commit-
■unit lit that the Soviet
^. .ernmenr can not depend on free
!;J< >i i any labor in the Soviet
1 * 111 * * ri can b« ealtvd free.
.Mitchell liaise* Issue
Seci eta ry of Labor .lames l*
Mitchell raised the issue in a met-
[cile>s attack on the Soviet labor1
systeui b'fniv the •international
labor organization in Geneva*
Switzerland, on June I.
He attacked the Communist !a-
b r unions as mere "transmission
belts'* for government recruitment i
<«f labor, and also attacked th** la-
bor camp system.
Hut the issue which interests the
I."'iiit *d States and other Western
< « untries is that of their own citi-
J/ Wl
GR-R-R—"Tipper" figures he
ought to have special equip-
Blent if lie's t oiun to bo a pro-
fesiior.al hound-dog. That ex-
plains the comic teeth clutter-
ing his mouth. The aiiie-inonth-
• old ber-gle will d-> his huur.diiv.'
around West S.:::l L-!te. N. \
NO FIKANCSAL PROBLEMS?
You iii.i1. i «'t !m
a si«*ad> iticouu
v* in k in !• t or v o
\e>litl
job it
but
if von
have
havt
surplus, dollars,
that shouUl btt
\n
Yuiir surplus «t
Vt Leu Ut\ :• I *-iI.
Alauv I\SI>1
to llclp V'OI: t it V i
I Hill out t I><i,
caiefuti> • U 11
theui w|i) % < u
whose I !« MI
III v est ill
in then
•ut Problem
keep and keep
better
11A I
mlii
d for
i s ho
A ItitKI I
I'uMI'AMKS have Accumulation I'laas
nl cum • ut income.
it lu w INVKSTMKNT ( OMl'AMKS
ui itit-> and then continuously supervise
entrust youi idle dollars to professionals
tin handling of investment funds for
l\\KSTUKNTS MAMK KASY. It's
tli.
• MM Lli X
I . l a
« OMI*\\v,
i lor Street,
l\ \ KS I MKNT
Port Worth.
BA N K Eli
U it ho
t.ooKl.
I \ \ I.
< li \>. U . SO MM KU
i"h', Hi eckenridge, Texas,
i oblicati«m please send me the new
I MK\ I M Mil; KAS> .
zens
viet
It
that
the L'
Issue
!;- !•'
,'h.i
,M itt-hf
'nit.-d
..f An
M-d bv tin
I- h
it the
•rpeeeh
uiu
' h-it
ght
isom
vhicl"
rs at
has i
bet'H s"t
r Jul
y is In den*
*va.
w.1
•Ut nt!
(lis patches
t* roij)
\'16 nna. i'i
vinir i
K* v di'taiis «
f t.ht
iiiipnsomn
•ut «•;*
A n:- i ic.ins.
would
-ft (11 III I!
It, K.•:'* t.
lis almost i't
rta! n.
Aust i;tn
s i* tU
nuntr from it
rpris-
to]
d n*..t
ur.lv of Anif
ricanp
but of I Mt
Oils li
. i Frenehitif
i arui
J a
par;
«i.-'rman<
by Euss
Now Seems
Even if IVeSid
and Seeretar. of S'
Dulles did not rai
the British and Fr-
probably would.
But the pi
ly to cause
government
Japan is
trouble
in ofh<
raisin
ies«* i.mprtsOTiect
("ertain
mt K isenhowe r
ate John Foster
sc the |u vstion,
•nch delegations
question is like-
■ for the Soviet
r <juartors also
X the prisoner
question in its pc-nee treatv nego-
tiations with Russia now in prog-
ress in London. Japan holds th\„
Russia still is holding at least 17.-
,'{00 of its war prisoners.
It is reported that West German
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer will
ask about German prisoners when
h*
sum mi
belie VI
ooo (
about
isits Moscow, sometime in late
• or early fall Russia is
! to be holding about lu,-
eruian war prisoners and
l2tU O0 ci\ili:ms.
lexia To Relive
Colorful But
Tragic Days
MKX1A. T. x. <L'.P>—Some of the
:!ii>st i-inrtul and tragic history of
: ,'ai• 1 y Texas will be relived again
m .l-.iiy 1-.'i when descendants of
pinneer Parker family of Fort
f'ark,-r tame gather for a family
reunion.
l'ni a points throughout Texas
ail Oklahoma will come Indian
■ iescendants of Chief F'eta' Nocona
;ad his white wife, Cynthia Ann
i'arker, whose kidnapping by
l',r.i:anehes and Kiowas at the age
m' nine is well known to many
| Tcxans.
Fnui! the two states will also j
mile white descendants of John
i Parker and his sons, who migrat-
,-ii tu this area in 1833 and built
id "Parker's Fort" on the Nava-
suta liiver near the present cities
Mi-xia and (I roesbeck. Cynthia
\nn was a granddaughter of John
I Parker.
Three Days of Camp
The Parker descendants will
-l>emi til• ■ ■ days in group camp
:a. iiities at Fort Parker State
Park, near the site of the Indian
raid of May lit. in which
Cynthia Ann and several other
| pioneer Te.xans were • taken cap-
's ve aad others killed.
i In the afternoon of July 2, at
tile restoration of the old fort it- ;
' 1 f, a short ceremony will be held i
in memory of both white and In- i
lian ancestors of the present fam-
i 1
I'wo years ago, on the occasion j
if the first meeting in history of
i Indian and White Parkers at the
fort, numerous spectators came
■'•"•a far and near. Many are ex-
! pet-ted again this year.
Cynthia Ann lived among the
Comanches for over 24 years and
. became the mother of three chil-
dren i>y the famous Chief Peta N'o-
i cona.
I'apt. Sul Ross, of the Texas
Hangers- later governor—and a
I liand of Rangers "recaptured"
Cynthia Ann at the battle of the
Pease River, near the present town
| of Margaret in Foard county, in
| December, 18(!l .
With her was her baby Prairie
Flower, and they were taken to
relatives in Anderson county
where both died within a few
| years.
t hief Becomes Raider on Whites
Somewhere out on the great
plaiiLS Chief .N'ocoiia and his sons
Quanah and Pecos, continued their S
; lives without ever seeing Cynthia 1
Ann and Prairie Flower again.
Chief Nocona and Pecos died at
places unknown. Quanah became !
the leader of the Antelope band
of Comanches, a fearless and suc-
cessful raider against the white j
settlers of Texas.
By 1875, however, with the pass-
ing of the buffalo. Chief Quanah
led a little hand of hungry, ragged
Indians into the federal stockade
at Fort Sill. Okla., and settled
down to a life of peace. He died
in 1911, after siring IS children
by six of his seven wives.
At the reunion this year, sov-j
eral of his children aie expected. (
as well as many grandchildren and ;
great-children.
The reunion is for members of !
the family only, but the afternoon
ceremony of July 2 is open to the i
public.
NEW OFFICK AT ! 2
OLD ORCHARD P.F.ACH, Me.
(I'.Ki—The town couldn't bear to
see Fred Luce, 92, leave public of-
fice after tin years as a town's of-
ficial. When Luce was defeated for
town clerk. Old Orchard Beach
created a new job of license in-
spector and appointed him at an
annual salary of $1,0811.
Salvation Army
To Observe 90ti
Birthday July 2
July 2 is the 90th anniversary
o, the founding of The Salvation
Army, and throughout the world
the Army will be found again in
the open air where it first began
its operations. Special street meet-
ings will be held in all cities where
The Salvation Army has an officer
to commemorate this Founder's
Da>.
Founder's Day this year also
i marks the opening of a world-wide
1 spiritual effort aimed toward bet-
; tei* serving the needs of mankind
1 in 85 countries and colonies. The
theme of the year-long campaign
is "For Christ and the People"
Civil War Veteran
Rides lit Parade
TEMPLE, Tex. (IU!>—Walter W.
Williams, Texas' only surviving'
j Confederate veteran, helped Temple
celebrate its 75th anniversary ot
I the coming of the Santa Fe rail-
and throughout the world
the Salvation Army serves, a re-
newed zeal will be evident in the
services rendered by the organiza-
tion.
The format of The Salvation
Army street meeting has not
changed much in the past 90 years:
hymns, instrumental music, Bible
reading, and testimony. It still has
the same purpose it had in the be-
ginning—to go where the people
are to preach the salvation ot
Christ. William Booth, founder, be-
gan its ministry in the slums of
London in his efforts to buing
Christianity to the hearts of those
who never set foot inside the or-
ganized churches. Even so today,
the Army takes its gospel message
on the stret to bring a living wit-
ness to the goodness found in
Christianity.
The men and women of The Sal-
vation Army work in all neighbor-
hoods, offering friendly help to the
homeless, the destitute, the alco-
where | holic. They offer many services to
people of all creeds, races, and na-
tionalities regardless of physical,
economic, and moral conditions.
They firmly state that the primary
aim of its social work is to bring
people to a fuller spiritual life;
however, it places its greatest hope
for such change on good deeds per-
formed with grace and sympathy.
way Wednesday.
The 112-year-old Williams, one
of onlv four veterans of the Civil
War both Union and Confederate,
still living, rode in a convertible
in a parade. He wore a white shut
and cowboy boots.
Mai Gen. Thomas Harold, com-
mander of Fort Hood presented
-Uncle Walt" with the flag ot
Hood's Texas Brigade. Williams
was forage master tor wood s Bri-
gade during the Civil War but now ^
is an honorary colonel.
' c R Tucker of Chicago, oper-
ations vice president of the Santa
Fe presented the city with an old
steam locomotive as a memento of
the Diamond Jubilee celebration.
|
fa-
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The Stephens County Times (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 30, 1955, newspaper, June 30, 1955; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth130952/m1/5/: accessed May 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.