Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 200, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1945 Page: 1 of 4
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U'fi
WEATHER
Maximum *«•••••••••••• H&-&
Minimum
i Sunset
Sunrise
• «•••••••••••••
• «•••••••••••••• •
• • • ••••••••••••• •
&T9
5:45
6:55
Breckenridge American
WEATHER
Fair this afternoon and tonight.
Slightly warmer tonight'
vol. to— no. 200
breckenridge. texas, thursday. nov. 1, 1945
brict • cents mr cory
The
Observer
spooks careful
■OY delinquents
new candioate
SEEN or heard
SI't H >KS walked in Brcckenridgc
last night, i>ut therr Has .in
apprtf laird abumr ill proprrty
destruction. A lew windows were
marked with f.trifth's etc hut nt>
damage dont' arid no complaints
ht'.ird by local peace officer*
III Tit turn will sjx-.ik In thf
■* I join Club tomorrow jtn ■
criilc delinquency lit- has d<>nf
much research in thf files of the
county here Juvenile leeords mr
not open to thf public tit nrt- oth-
er tourt tlUirv hut thf re ran
found pathos. tragedy and humor
in tht sc file*
Bfn J I Van in discussing the
matter l.tst night mii| the first
step toward juvenile delinquency,
wt.ich n.ay latfr Ifad to a criminal
life, is whfn thf boys quits ik'hool
TIIE ftath I* dearly defined Mt
Dean a«Med If he i* permitt-
ed to remain out of school long
he got* to where ho "does no*
lie lone" with the students, and
thildren are extremely cruel to
one under under such a situation.
The htr| out on the street then
takes up with another lad tin the
street iif .tlxiiit the same predica-
ment he i.s In 'Itteir minds are not
developing and they may get Into
anything
Bright sptit of the situation is
that the record* show that nine
out of ten I toys w ho are brought
liefore the district attorney, and
without iNihlicity of afty kind, are
given another chance, "come out
of it" The incnrrigble* finally
land in a reformatory. or |a*niten.
tiary, or Irnth.
WiTII the war ended and vete-
rans returning homt- politics
later will l e mor,. |siignant In this
IS
jni i
PRESIDENT ACTS ON LABOR PROBLEMS
V ictory Bonds
Sales (iampaisn
Topic
Meeting
committee plans
pay tribute to
seriyce men
TO
Political observer* have learned
to s| ot the symptom* of public
office seeking in the various sta-
ges
First conies a sudden interest
m the press. t initials who have
not lieen very cooperative begin
to loosen up t'sually a publicity
man for his detriment begins
activities. though no such person
is allowed on the department pay-
loll in that offici.il rapacity.
c;<iv. Coke R Stevenson says
one sure symptom of candidacy i«
tie purchase of a grey suit. lie ex-
plained the one he was wearing
wits a hold-over from previous
t ainpaigtung
Final stage Is when the Indivi-
dual's secretary goes to the state
library antl asks for a copy of
Ay res New spaper Guide That
is fore runner of tit*. mailing of an
aitiiour>finent to nil the newspa-
|>cis of the state
INQl'IRY at the Otambcr of
( ommrrce lotlay brought forth
ttiat as Armistice I>ay falls on
Sunday this year. Monday also
will lie oliscrved as a holiday This
hv agreement of the holiday com-
riiiltec, it was added
The I/'gion has arranged for
John I.eo Smith to s|tcak Sunday
night
lit >l'GHT Eur "ITie Moment:
Rest satisfied with doing well
.ltd leave others to talk of you as
they please Pythagoras
SEEN or Heard Patents moved
today from Rreckenrtdge Hilt
ic to Weslside, hospital now to he
o|m-rated therr Seven keys on
string ftaind and hrought to office
for rightful owner .. Public re-
lations report* Dmtglas P Fam-
hrough discharged from Ft Sill
('••loiter M .... Have good pic-
lure of S-Sgt. Rennie L Hart
Iteing presented Rmnr,. Star If
relatives wish it . .. Also navy
notice slums Jo«• Morris of Rreck-
enridge discharged .... Strvl
topping with grnvel continue* im-
provements .... Call for Novem-
liei t|iiola for military service ha*
I een received by local draft hoard
.... Carnival at South Ward last
night reported fine succes*
Ulats blooming here and peach
tree* n ported blooming in Fort
Worth ir thin blooming weather
.... excuse please, pun* not so
good and despite what other*
say we still believe the Rue karoo*
can win over Rmwnwood.
Bronze Star Is
Awarded Breek
Sjrt. Bennie Hart
Staff Sgt Bennie I. Hart 11.1
N. Breckenridge Ave.. Brecken-
ridge. son of Ft B Hart, was re-
crntly presented the Bron/e Star
Vedal at Brooke Hospital Center.
Et Sam Houston. Texas, by Brig
Gen. George C. Beach, command-
ing general, where Staff Sgt Hart
is a patient at Brooke Convales-
cent Hospital.
He was awarded lb" Bronze
Star for rescuing two companions
from a burning tank under sever*
enemy fire in Germany. He was
with the .'With Tank Battalion ol
the Eighth Armored Division
Hart spent seven months over-
seas and in addition to the Bron/e
Star he wears the Purple Heart.
Good Conduct Medal and the
Kuro|ican'Theater of Operation*
Uihhon with two battle stars.
Newspaper Tells
Parents Bovs Freed
CORPl'S C1IRISTI. Tex ' I' -
ll must have lieen a deep feeling
of thankfulness which filled the
hearts (,f Mr and Mr> Wallace M.
Montgomeiy. Bishop farm family,
when they heard the long-await-
ed news
Their two sons. Claude. ?1, and
Lloyd. 22. battle veteran of the
Philippine*, bad lieen liberated
they were told by n local news.
pa|>cr n ported They had I teen re-
united alter 3 years separation
ill Japanese prison camps
Young Claude and I.loyd arrived
together at the Philippines in
Apiil l'.i-ll. and fought side by
side until the tall of Corregidor in
May. 1« U.
The Japanese soon separated
them, sending each to a different
prison camp The last their par-
ents heard from thcm.both had
lieen sent to camps in the main
Japanese islands
The ncwspa|M>r's call was Mont-
gomery's fust definite information
• onterning their liberation
Old Couple Thrill
To First Plan* Ride
INDIANAPOLIS I P Mr and
Mrs Charles /took each were S3
year* old and neither ever bad
lieen up in a plane So, w ben
their 50th wedding anniversary
rolled around relatives offered
them a I.VmihUte aerial sightsee
ing trip as a golden) anniversary
present.
The Zooks itstk off from Muni
cipal airfiort in a plane piloted by
Col Rosette Turner. Work! War 1
Bucks \re Rated
15th In State
team and band leave
at 4 for game at ,
weatherford
The Breckenridge Muckaroos
v\ill leave tomorrow afternoon at
1 o'clock for the game at Wcath-
erford The band will go, but it
was not thought fans will follow
for that game as they have other
out-of-town games
The fans art- more concerned
with the Brownwood game Supt
Bailey said he had not it ceived
his mail when railed this morning,
but expected tickets from Brown-
wood lo he in it when it arrives
Brownwood apparently in red
hot over high school fool ball. A
sell-out is predicted for the Cisco
.jan.e there Friday night.
Harold Ratliff, \ssn-iated Press
w titer, puts Brownwood fourteen-
th and Breckenridge fifteenth in
his state ratings of football.
lie said that l.utkin. Highland
Park. Waco or Wuhita F'i!ls
• ould be placed at the top hut lo
decide one way or another he
places them in the order named
I'bovc Odessa. Goose Creek, Am-
arillo, Paris. Austin and Browns-
ville follow with Pampa. Plain-
view and Marshall leading the top
of the next ten.
In view ol the score against
Wichita Kails and Kck Curtis'
comment* on the Coyotes. Buek-
aroo stock u"cs up here especially
when the condition of the Bucks
at tie time is Considered Kck
paid tribute to the Coyote line
that outplayed the Siotties. say
ing their tackles. Willi,. Bigham
and Bob James, "just about wrrr-
Ked us " He did not think, how-
ever. the Coyotes had as good
a back as (Villon Lindolf ol Waco.
Although Lindy Berry ol Wichita
Kails is excellent
Workers in the Victory Loan
drive met at the YMCA last night
lo the campaign for the sale ol
$.'>K5.1)0(1 worth ol bonds.
The'big thermometer on the
court house corner will I.,, ust-d
again to keep the public advised
ol the progress of the campaign.
Sale of series K lainds lieing
Hit chief worry of Milton Daniel,
chairman, and the workers, it was
deeiik'd lo ask the public to aid in
sale of these m every way fios-
sible..
It is hoped during the driv,. to
pay tribute to the service men
from Stephens county. A list of
all who have gone from this coun-
ty is to be irf|nested from the
adjuunt general's department at
Austin by Ben J. I>ean and Itond
buyers are asked to buy a hund-
icd dollar bond in appreciation of
each and every one. naming the
man. It is thought there will ho
altout 1.50t) names on the list
The campaign will lie carried
into the schools and a Itond pre-
mier. Serie* K bonds to Itf tickets
.to the show will ik- staged at the
Palace Theater.
The ladies are to b(. asked to
become bond minded and push the
sates. Mrs I) T. Bowles is chair-
man <i| this department.
The great need for the bonds is
for hospitalization and rehabilita-
lion work, to bring the soldiers
home, to meet the needs of those
who remain in service in occup-
ied territories, and a ^ ore of
other needs
It w is pointed out that no buy-
er of bonds in any of the other
<eien campaigns lias ever lost a
;tenny. in fact at! have gained who
have heltl the It^itds and there is
little concern but that the total
of s.iK"i,i*ni tun lie met, if th"
VlJ.ytM) (|UOta of Series K iHtntis
is mt t.
Interest on 'lit1 seven «\1e* of
lionds ;s altout the same as m the
oilier issues.
Russians Reject
Free Press News
MOSCOW. Nov
Commissar V M
lected a request
American press
1 'tr Foreign
Molotov has rc-
by th,. Anglo-
association in
Moscow that Russia abandon ccn-
•tirslup of press dipatt ties to the
t'nited St.'tes and Great Britain.
WAV RKC0RDS PILE IP
k( rt giorgf MKXDK Md
i ^ The Army has 1111• i1 the
lid on on,, of it * well-kept secret*
the prisoners cf war informa-
tion ' ranch.
Th« I'VVIR is in agency which,
flying ace. anil had a n>v long throughout the war kept record*
look from the air at their home in ()f ,A,.r> jHpan,.M. (^nnan and
Mooresv'ille llalun captured by the American
Mrs /ttok thought tin fi 'Ids fot, t>< Thost* rrcords now can l *
"looked like garden patch, s antl nu asured in tons
that automobiles wer„ V.. bigger Th,. «g(.ncy's commanding offi-
rer. I.t Col. H. N. Kirkman. re-
ve.ilfd that the PW1B has been
in o|)eration «in«e Pearl Harltor
In fact, the first entry in its re-
cord* is of a Japanese named K.v
//uo S.tKMmaki who was fished
Re|torls front the local hospitals out of the water at Pearl Hartior
today revealed three new ;>atients on Dec K 1941
Mr*. W H. Tarnegay and Mr* With Sakamaki the agency he-
Tom Wis ley an* medical patients gan a campiliation that wa* finally
and Harold Thomson i* a surgical to include data on hundred* of
patient at the Breckenridge Clinic. thou*ands of enemy prisoner*
than mice.'
She said they both wanted to &!•
ut> again some day.
Three New Patient*
To Local Hornitals
Fights Bandits
V
■If t
// ,...
>4 /*
Gen. Sun Lien-Chung, above, is
leader of Chinese central gov-
ernment forces advancing from
Honan into Hopei Province to-
ward Peiping against banoit
troops who are reported to
have flooded large areas by
opening dikes along the Yellow
River.
Future Farmers
Fleet Officers
Billy Jackson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. VV. R Jackson, was elected
president of the Greenhand Ku-
ture Karmcr chapter at the first
meeting held at the High School
Agriculture building. Wednesday.
Jackson is a junior In high school
and has been a member of the 4-H
Club for five years.
Other offVers elected were:
Vice-president Jessie Ray Wil-
liams.
Secretary Parks Angel
Treasurer Kenneth Ifamil.
Reporter Jerry Jackson
Sentinel David Noah.
Parliamentarian Charles
(ireenlee.
Historian Don Smith.
Sjnvinir Sundav At
Necessity School
Announcement received today
states that singing will I* held
at Ner «wl'j school Sunday af-
ternoon at 2..50 o'clock, antl Ihe
public is inviled to attend
Freneh Lonjj For
Army Surpluses
but something remains
to be done about
financing
i
PARIS fl'-l!' Parachutes to lie
converted into men's pajamas and
barrage balloons to be turned into
raincoats are items the French
government is eyeing hungrily in
its campaign to buy up American
Army surpluses.
Pa jamas ; re nearly im|K).ssible
to lind and a raincoat would co^t
about .SUN)
The government is chiefly inter-
est! d in buy ing material for re-
construction cranes, bulldozers,
winches. The Krrnch havr I teen
tremendously impressed by the
miracles of the U. S. Army in
building airports and repairing
harbors in record time. As this
was never a heavy machinery
country, the French are fascinat-
ed.
However, dreams of s|>otted silk
.Nirachute pajamas and bulldozers
have run into a snag. No requests
submitted to the Army Navy
Liquidation Commission by France
can lie acted on until financial ne-
gotiations on in Washington are
i omplcted. The French protest
that their foreign dollar holdings
are too slight to pay cash, as the
Army demands They also *ay that
the Army's price cost plus 25
|H-r cent lor transport is more
than they can afford
Meanwhile. 20.000 jeeps. HO.OOO
trucks and 30,000 hnapi'al lH>ds
ire among the items the Krench
would like to own Before the
sudden termination of Ind-lease
they had submitted a Md for ard-
nance signal, medical and engin-
eer supplies, such as switchltoanK
and lelelyitos They also asked
for l.ooo.ooo first aid dressing*.
"0.000 one-pound rolls of,absorb-
ent cotton. 382 blood transfusion
sets and 32 million feet of tele-
phone wire They ^iave their eyes
on the beautiful equipment of
hospitals sei up by the American
Army, which would like to sell
them complete.
from all three Axis nations.
< n,. of its biggest jobs has lieen
the handling of mail to prisoners
of war held bv thi* country. In
the case of German and Italians
the volume of Mint mail has been
ti. mention- up to 50.000 letters
a day.
In sharp contrast, the Japanese
prisoners have hnd no luck with
correspondence Kirkman said in
the past H months no more than
three letters to Japanese prisoners
hav e been received at Fort Meade
And not one of the three came
frotn Japan. Two came from a
Japanese - American in the Pana-
ma Canal /one
Kirkman explained that li
Japanese prisoner rarely wanted
his relatives at home to know he
was Mill alive and a prisoner. The
relatives who did find out appar-
ently felt too disgraced to write.
Farm Conference ...
Ends With Pleas
QUKBKC, Nov 1 <1 I" The
I'nited Nation* food antl agricul-
ture organization conference end-
ed today with a warning from the
i hairman that its success will de-
|tend on international ctt-opfration.
"I have no doubt of the compe-
terf f and zeal of the organization.
L B Pearson, th,. chairman said
"I have some fear, that the gov-
ernments because of apathy, or ig-
norant- may not give FAO the
supfMirt it must have may not
implem-nt its recommendations or
accept ii - advice.
He <atd he lielleved important
international progress in food and
agriculture has been made, but
that Hi,, conletence. besides ma>
ing stop* in agriculture science,
has been another example of a
"co-operative *fep by the united
nation* along with the road that
lead* to peace and pmsjterlty. ..
Revolution Seen
In Making Cloth
Of Any Fabrie
millions of spindles
mav be rendered
useless
Cloth that is made without
.spinning or weaving, by a process
termed the first basic change m
textiles since the linen used to
wrap a dead Kgyptian in 1000 1>
C. "is an even mor(> revolutionary
step in the textile industry than
the invention of the |>ower loom "
So states Lloyd Stouffer. writing
of new nonwoven fabrics and new
fabric coatings, in an article in
the Reader's Digest for November,
condensed from Forties Magazine
Cloth napkins, tablecloths, and
window curtains so cheap that
t||ey ••an he thrown away when
soiled." are foreseen by Mr. Stou-
ffer for the early future, as a re-
sult of the greatly simplified pro-
cess of manufacturing the new
fabrics. "In one >ingle operation,
raw cotton is turned into a fin-
ished textile; and any filler can
be handled in Ihe same way. in
Ihe conventional method of mak-
ing cloth the filter goes through a
dozen operations in as many high-
ly complx machines."
Describing the new method, the
author says that raw cotton is
combed lo form a continuous sheet
or "wen." 40 inches wide and a
quarter-inch thick, compressed l>e-
tween rollers to normal fabric
thickness and then overprinted
with liquid plastic to bind every
filler permanently In place 'This
plastic imprint tan lie colorless
and purely functional or it can lie
a design in any color." Drying
over heated cylinders and winding
on a reel completes ihe operation.
Because th,. new process does
tlie job lietlcr and cheaper. Mr
Stouffer holds that much of fin-
sent American equipment cor
sisting of 26.500,000 spindles and
470.000 fiower looms is probably
obsolete.
Cloth that can be stitched with-
out sewing is another development
mentioned by the author. "Be-
cause of lis plastic content, tvv
thicknesses can lie 'stitched' to.
gether merely by th,. application
of heat and pressure. Kventually
the housewife may lie able to do
her 'sewing' with an old-fashioned
curling iron."
Men Singers Are
Heard At School
The auditorium of the Brecken-
ridge High School was "slap dab
full" yesterday afternoon at 1 o'-
clock to hear th,. Men's Chorus
under direction of Charles Kiker
•nig.
"We got to sing to an audience
of 900 one tnemlier said" enthus-
iastically this morning Six num-
liers were given, the students join-
ing in singing the "Star Spang-
led Banner" at the end.
More music is coming for the
chorus and if any singer wishes
to join now is a good time. Also
some kind of dress for th,. Imdy is
under consideration.
New-Type Scales
Will Protect Public
NIAGARA FALI-S. N. Y 'I I'-
ll may lie ten years bctore new
types of commercial and house-
hold scale* reach the market, it
was revealed at Niagara Fall's
first post-war convention
Members of Ihe New York State
Weights and Measures Assn s con
vention were told thai war deve-
lopments have enabled manufac-
turers to study strain gauges antl
electronics that, it was said, will
mean ir-'reased protection for ti'c
buying public. Chief spc iker was
J K Wodland of Brooklyn
at work at sea
-I
Charles A .lories. lioatswain's
in.ite. second . lass, whose wile
Mrs. Kerne lay Jones, and son.
Lee Allen, live in Breckenridge,
is shown at work aho'ird the
minesweeper t'SS Sentry in Jap-
anese waters. As a gun captain
•md |s tty officer in charge of all
sweeping gear, he has hel|teU clear
paths through minefields m IH
major navy operations. He is the
■.on of Mrs. Allen Jones of Breck-
enridge This is an offical U. S.
Navy photo.
(forman Man Well
Known Here Dies
body or r. m. dixon
to be brought here
for burial
Funeral services will lie held
for R M f Morris i Dixon, "vt. Fri-
day aiternoon at 2:30 at the Kiker
Funeral Home, He sia-limited to
i long, illness while en route frt m
his home lietween Desdemona and
Gorman lo the Gorman hospital
altout 5:30 Wednesday afternoon.
Both Mr. Dixon and his wife are
well known in Breckenridge. She
is the former Ida Dozler. while he
has lieen an employee of the Mag-
nolia Petrolium Company over
twenty-five years. He was trans-
ferred to the Gorman distrirt in
1938.
Besides his wife, he is survived
by two daughters. Johnie Ruth.
IB; and Judy, 10. His mother,
Kitty Dixon, of Weatherford. Two
brothers, W. C. Dixon. 519 South
Smith with the Gulf Oil Company
and W. II. Dixon of Beaumont,
with the Republic Oil Company.
(>nc sister, Kssic May Maxon of
I KMiglas, Arizona.
The body will arrive from Gor-
man about 1 o'clock lo.r.y and
will lie in state in the Kiker Cha-
pel until the serivce. Pallbearers
will be announced later.
Curtis-Wriarht Plant
Holds Public Auction
BUKKALO. N. Y 'U.R More
than 4,000 separate items valued
i more than $3,000,000 will In-
offered at public auction Nov'. 7
to 10 at the sale of the contents
o| Curtis-Wright Corp Kenmore,
N Y plant
Varsras Candidate
For Lower Office
RIO DE JANEIRO, Nov 1 'U.P
Ex-President Getulio Vargas en-
tered the Brazilian election lists
a* candidate for Ihe federal sen-
ate today, stirring speculation
that he was attempting a politi-
cal comrl-ack to regain the power
ho lost in last week'* bloodless
revolution
The social I)emocrntic |wrty.
which is tunning Gen. Enrico Gas-
par Dutra for president, announ-
ced that Vargas and at least three
of hi* close*! collaborator* will
be on it* senatorial slate In the
Deccmlier 2 elections.
The sale, one "f <be largest in-
dust 11. I equipment liquidations
ever held here, is ex|iected to at-
tract i.ihki machinery buyers from
all |Mirls of tiie country.
Articles to lie sold include ma-
• inne tools, accessories, motor ve-
hicle'. stamping and forging press
cs and electrical appliances. The
equipment ranges from small
precision-testing instruments to
machines weighing more than
100.000 pounds.
Senator Get Sample
Ol' Public Opinion
INDIANAPOLIS 'U.P> U. S. Sen
Homer E. Capehart. R.. Ind.. tells
In- constituents litis one about a
taxi ride in Washington.
Sharing a cab with a woman of
determined hearing. Cipehart was
listening to the auto radio while
a news commentator quoted ex-
cerpts from the Hoosicr senator's
speech in Congress the day lie-
lore.
The lady bristled, turned to
Capehart and said:
'These senators make me sick.
Alw'ays shooting off their mouths
about things they don't know any-
thing about. We'd be better off
without them."
Capehart says he agreed meek-
*•
Truman Summons
Labor Leaders,
To Conference
hopes to avert strikes
that would render
7 million idle
HUMAN NO 1 . ...t..'
WASHINGTON. Nov. 1 t I"
President Truman today canvass-
ed the view-|Miints of labor and
management groups as pros|icet
tlfvelo|tfd that upwards of 7.000.-
000 workers may become idle as
a result of strike votes now 111
pi" ' e -s.
The President summoned repre-
sentatives of business and labor
group* to the White House lo
sound out their opinions on wage
price problems in advance of the
labor-management eonferenc to
Is • held here Nov. 5.
Ira Mosher. President of the
National Association ol mariufac-
turers. said the President wanted
to know his group's attitude to-
ward Ihe conference
"We 'isstired him," Mosher said,
"of our keen interest and that we
ait- approaching the' subject with
an otM n mind.'
One <>f the labnr groups was led
by John L. Lewis, head ol th"
United Mine Workers, who paid
his first visit to Ihe White House
since December. 19-11. Lewis seid
they discussed matters relating to
thr management-labor conference
in general terms but not in detail.
"What are you looking for out
of the conference," a reporter as-
ked Lewi*
"That is a good question," Lewi*
said. With that he left the White
House.
Sonip 4.000 Greyhound Bus em-
ployes joined the ranks of strik-
ing wage earners today, as Ihe
nation's top labor leaders iiiinoiin-
■ ed they would use tho new gov-
ernment wage-price policy 'o
break a log-jam of disputes hold-
ing up reconversion.
Hitler Evidently
Dead Is Report
LUENEBURG. Nov. 1 'tin
The first official Allied statement
on Adolf Hitler's disap| araii'ie
said today that all available e- i-
denee led to the conclusion that
h(. killed himself in the Bcrut
Chancellory at 2-30 a. m. la-t
April 30
An intelligence officer of tin-
control commission said Hitler
and his mistress. Eva- Braun, dn l
together in a bunker iiiulci tlv
Soviet-besieged chancellery and
ineir bodies wcr^ burned in tin
yard.
The report of Hitler's dealli
and his last hours was the lii t
to hear an official imprim It
tallied in Ihe main with tin- ac-
count of a former chauffeur of
Hitler and nt a Berlin policeman,
who told their stories after they
were captured last summer.
The intelligence officer, an-
nouncing the conclusion regard.n.;
Hitler's fate, said it win n-ai In d
after sifting ail evidence, includ-
ing the accounts of iiersons «l: 1
witnessed all or parts of the dra-
matic events in the chancellery in
tl* last hours of the battle for
Berlin
Territory Dispute ♦
Causes Clashes
WARSAW. Nov. J 'UP polish
Czech Iriction in the Teschcn bor-
der /one was 1 grjravated todav by
reports of new .'lashes lietwc n
ralionals rl bol.t countries in Un-
disputed a|-r. .
The situation ..long the frontier
was reported growing more ser-
ious daily, desp'tr refloated si. i"-
ments ly ''Otli sides that 1'iey
were willing to settle the territor-
ial dUpute amicably.
Polish president Boleslaw l'.e-
irut has expressed "regret" owe
the situation and there have been
frequent appeals from both ('/>■< h
and Polish officials for a settle,
instil "in the spirit of Slavonic
brotherhood
Enterprise Put
In Hall Of Fame
WASHINGTON. Nov 1 <U.P
The aircraft carrier Enterpri -e.
gallant veteran of Ihe Pacific, wim
assigned her place today besele
"old Ironsides' and other famoiu
ships preserved as symbols of
".American valor and tenrcity in
war."
The navy revealed that Presi-
dent Truman had authorized pre-
stravllon of the "Big E" so she
could join the naval hall of fame
alongside the constitution, constel-
lation. Hartford and Olympia
1
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Hall, C. M. Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 200, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1945, newspaper, November 1, 1945; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth132444/m1/1/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.