Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 199, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1956 Page: 1 of 6
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if T*ur copy or the Aacrku folk
.■Ui/'V; 3'?ui plaasa cal
wtt, Circulation Deaartmaiit, ho
'or# 6 p. m. weekdays and bofon
5 *• «• Sunday*. A copy will bt
delivered immediately.
Smfefiirttqe American
FuU Leased Wire UNITED PRESS
"NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS COMMUNITY DAILY NEWSPAPER*
WEATHER
Little Change
NEA Newsphoto Service
VOL. 36 NO.
BRECKENRIDGE, TEXAS—WEDNESDAY, OCT. 10. 1936
PRICE DAILY 5 CENTS, SUNDAY 10 CENTS
W # i U
" " i V ■ •'
m
I
I'OSThlt WINNERS—Winners in the poster contest spou.sored by the Chamber of Commerce in
observation «,f hire I'invention Week are bottom row, left to right, Betty Ann Brewer, Bounilee Lenoir
a,,(I Bobby IIiowii Second row, Tommy Seely, Jo Ann Recce and Nolan Kelly. Winning posters are on
display along with other posters in downtown store windows.
* * *
Winners To Get
Posters Awards
At Junior High
Thursday, • k-tober 11 is 'school
day" in the observance of Fire
Prevention Week.
An intensive program of activi-
ties has been arranged in al! grade
and high schools. Talks will be gi-
ven by members of the Fire De-
pajtmerit and the Chamber of
Commerce Fire Prevention Com-
mittee. Fire Prevention Poster
Contest winners will receive their
prizes al the Jr. High.
"All teachers," according to
School Supe. intendent John Cul-
v.ell "have cooperated whole heart-
edlv in teaching the rules of file
safety to their classes, and the
children hare shown an intense in-
terest. Every student ha.-; been gi-
ven a Home In pection Klank, and
has promised to make use of it.
The completed forms « ill be turn-
ed over to the Chamber of Com-
merce by the School Officials for
tabulation. "All Mothers Clubs
have given splendid suppoit in
liviking th>- school fire prevention
program a success."
Community Breakfast
Hears Of City Zoning
By JO ROBERTS
American Staff
Jay R. Jameson, Abilene attor
ney and member of the Abilene i
I'lannmg Boaid. spoke for the j
Chamber of Commerce Community!
breakfast Wednesday morning in j
regard to the establishment of]
such a boa id in Breckeni idge. A-
bout 4."> persons attended the1
bi euklust.
'Certainly the people of Breck 1
enridge are v itally interested in
County Agents
Weekly News
By TOM JOYCE Cl.VMNGHAM
and JAtk GRJCSSETT
^WWW
Glove Factory Is
Changing Homes
Moving of the Boss Manufactur-
ing Co. glove frtf'ory to its new
<|.turtcrs at HK N. Bayuir has been
umU-r way for the past few days,
and Charles WVnde, manager, said
Wednesday it is thought it will
take about a week to complete the
move. The office already has been
moved.
In the new quarters #8 machines
will !>♦• installed computed to 74
in th<- present quarters, and there
will In- i:t< employes, an all time
peak since the company came here.
, Seen or Heard
By C. M. H.
Report today is that I." « tickets
mdd jetterday fur Snyder game-
Itucks going lo need plenty of
support ... One fire a day since
fire prevention week opened-and
all from causes that could have
been avoided-latest cigarette on
plastic purse called out firemen
to home of R. V. Forrest. 803
West Walker.
«Billy Jo.- Burton. Albany, arrest
,iiift charged with driving while
licated . . . Reported Possum
•dom Lake still turning over .
.Lake Daniel reported covered
with geese maybe cool weather
will come soon . . Mrs. Bud levey
most optimistic person seen today
-sail! It probably will snow or rain.
B Team to play Graham tomor-
row night at 7:30 o'clock-looks as
If the B team will he sending up
Mime good boys ne*t year . . . .
planning board here to be taken np
at next meeting of < -C board of
directors . . . Earl V. Green and
Dr. Bruce Snider to head Commun-
ity Chest drive-hoard to meet to-
night at 7:30 . . . J'"""* Wright
with right shoulder all bandaged
up-what will happen neat 7
Now that the world series is
over we run get our breath easily
again until Friday night . . . par-
don personal reference but we
made a statement todny and mar
overhearing it told Haskell Key
that should phone it to ua to W t
In the paper-statement was that
doctor said cold Ilk* we have us
ually lasts ,i week, but if we took
the medicine he gave oa it would
last only about seven days.
Thought For The Moment: Ifc*
toe an ogly fa than an ugly
— JaM snfch
Dixie Anderson, daughter of Mr.
and Mis. fcrvy AuUeison of kreck-
tnridge, participated tn the Mate
I'icss Revue lor 4-H club girls
at tne auditorium of the Women's
Building at the State Fair in Uil
las Saturday. This was Dixie's
first time to compete in the district
or state contests and -he did not
place among the top ten girts.
With 4 > girls participating trom
all over tne state, competition is
very keen, but we feel that Dixie
did leal well to be among the top
four in the district who participat-
ed in the state contest.
4-H clubs have been organized in
each of the Waid schools in Breck
emidge, and attendance totals are
not all in as ynt. The County-wide
4-H club for boy and gills who
are junior high ami high school
age will be figamted on Monday
night, October lath, at the court-
house. This group will meet once
each month tor training in leadei
ship, demonstrations, citizenship,
i and organization.
Yard work is being done half
i heartediy these days here in town,
but prejvuation now for spring
| and vv inter rains if they ev er come,
■ will pay off in early lawns and
blooms. Mulching still remains as
the number one practice in conser
ving soil moistuie and protecting
j plant roots from the hot sun. Mul-
ching is easy and inexpensive. The
Breckeni idge Home and (Virden
| Club will meet on Friday at the
Bennie Kingston home, 308 S. Har-
ding, and the agent will give a de-
monstration on soil improvement.
Altho*(h conditions have not chan-
ged to make composting the most
effective means of improving our
soil, other methods of fertilizing
will be shown as well as taking a
(Continued Oa Page Four)
the growth of the community. That
is evident by the fact that you are
constantly seeking industry for
Breckenridge and the fact that so
many of you aie hi-re this morn-
ing"
A good deal of planning goes
into zoning. The histoiy of zoning
is young. In 1S!>2 in Boston a re-
gulation was passed to regulate the
height of buildings. In 191ft, New-
York City passed a comprehensive
zoning ordinance. In the early days
of zoning and planning it has been
approved in many cases. The law
has stood up in u urt. It allows
communities to regulate the use
of personal property to a reason-
able degree." he said.
"Texas was a little slow in pass-
ing any act. In the legisla
ture passed a series of acts enab
ling cities to pis* general plans
and set up regulations for zou
ing."
Why Important
Jameson cited the Abilene plan
ning board on several occasions.
That organization has been estab-
lished long enough to see the gixxi
and bad points of its planning, ,'imi
they are constantly working for
the betterment of the community.
The Abilene board consists of !(
members including two women.
In telling why planning is im-
portant to a community, Jameson
said it is the application of intelli-
gent forethought to the develop
ment of a community. No scheme
and no plan for the future allows a
(Continued On Page Four)
Stepped Again
Attacks NMCP
TYLER, Tex. ir.pi—Attorney
General John Ben Shepperd piv-
oted his attack on the Corpus
Christi opeiations of the National
Association for the Advancement
of Colored People today in an
•ffort to get the NAACP thrown
out of Texas.
Sheppeid planned to make Dr.
H. Boyd Hall, a Negro dentist and
president of the Texas State Con-
ference of Branches of the
NAACP, his primary target.
The state was expected to con-
tinue attempts to show a working
tie-in in political action between
the NAACP and the Democratic
Progressive Voters L« ague of
Texas which would prove that the
Negro group engaged in politics
in violation of state laws involv-
ing corporations.
Tuesday the NAACP indicated
that it will make a strong issut
of the fact that the state used
gun-carrying law officers in its
civil investigation of the group.
Rotary Is Told
| Of Dry Cleaning
By Dwain Tolle
Dry Cleaning Processes was the
subject of a classification talk by
Dwain Tolle at the Rotary Club's
noon meeting Tuesday at the
Y.M.CA.
In explaining the proceses used
by cleaners in caring for garments, i
Tolle passed books among the i
members for th.'in to eximine as I
he talked. The method of dry clea- '
ning a garment was explained, j
"Most cleaners in this area use a I
petroleum base solvent for dry
('leaning. New developments in the
past few years allow enough mois-1
ture content to be used in the dry
cleaning process to attack spots
which only water, will get out. and
yet not give enough moisture con |
tent to cause any damage to fab-
ric."
"The weave of the fabric or the
dyes used make spotting difficult,
even impossible at times." he said.
He explained the finishing pioces
ses by which natural fabric oils
are mixed with steam to refinish
a garment to look new and resist
spotting longer. "Few garments
require pressing any more. The
style is toward the softer look in
a garment and the new fabrics
are of a softer texture which hard
finishing would ruin. So, the final
stage in cleaning a garment is not
pressing, rather it is finishing."
The National Diy Cleaning As-
sociation is an organization which
keeps cleaners posted in the latest
changes in fabric and develop-
ments in cleaning processes. They
maintain a laboratory to test fab-
rics. buttons and trim used in ma-
nufacture and help cleaners with
any problems which arise.
Russell Payne, president, remin-
ded members of the bond election
which would be held on October 20.
He urgi>d the members to go out
and vote as their civic duty.
The club voted to cast its vote
for W. Truett Walton of Abilene
for district governor of the Ro
tarv International.
Guests introduced by Sloan Ba-
ker were Jack Harris. Sweetwat-
er, Lewis Pitcock Sr. and Lewis
I'itcock Jr. of Graham, T. B. Mc
Meth of Dallas and Mrs. It I. Mc -
arron.
TWO RICE STUDENTS DIE
IN CARRYING OUT PRANK
Political Talk
At It's Worst
Charged Adlai
By I'MTKD PRESS
President Eisenhower and Adlai
Stevenson traded personal punch
es in major political addresses
Tuesday night.
The President, who took his
campaign to Pittsburgh, charged
Stevenson with political irresponsi
bility in implying the Republican
administration cares nothing for
the "little fellow."
Stevenson attacked the Presi-
dent's pet project—atoms for
peace—in Seattle
Sen. Kstes Kefauver struck at
the President's official family in
a speech prepared for delivery in
Syracuse. N. Y. today. He charged
that "advisers" accepted a $5,000
check from the same Texas oil man
whose rejected $2.50(1 campaign
gift to Sen. Francis Case K-S. D.
later sparked the Senate lobbying
investigation.
Nixon Barnstorms
Vice President Richard M. Nix
on barnstormed four cities of his
native California today on the se-
cond day of a 10.000-mile flying
campaign tour. He .said in a speech
prepared for delivery in Oakland
that small business will fare bet
ter under four more years of the
Eisenhower administration than it
would under Democrats.
Former President Truman took
his "give 'em hell" campaign to
West Virginia today. He said at a
, rally near Monessen. Pa., Tuesday
; night that "as of now we have
; them licked."
Hits Opposition Proposals
' Mr. Eisenhower said Stevenson
.and his Democratic running mate,
! Kstes Kefauver, are making a "re
| cord of clattering campaign ora-
tory" and cited as examples the
issues of "big business" versus
"small business;" the draft. H-
bomb tests, national defense and
peace.
I "They say your government is
I indifferent to labor," he said,
p..i ts 5 admissions and Three' d'i's- "Xht>v >our government is ne
mi«->l* for the past 24 hours. I gligent in social security-indiffer-
Admisions were Mr. O. C. Hum Pn* to the unemployed.
ev. surgical patient, and Mrs. C.| "This amounts to saying that
H. Stephens. Mrs. Ada Gray, Mrs. | J our government has on interest
K. E. Woods and G. G. Harrison,j'n the people of America. This
all medical admissions.
Dismissals were Mrs. L. T. Tay
CBLlMHV LWMU4
Ca
&
m
1ENSK ADDITION—Mi s. E. T. Holden and Mrs. Peggy Richards
join in picketing Calvary Assembly of God Church after the pastor,
Rev. VV. T. Miller, sold it to a Negro congregation. The church is
located in racially-tense Morningside Addition near Fort Worth, Tex.
White residents fear Negroes will buy homes in area.
Five Admitted To
Loccd Hospital
Stephen Memorial Hospital
Annual Belknap
Meeting Slated
For October 19
The annual meeting of The Fort
Belknap Society will be at Old
Fort Belknap Friday, October 13th
beginning at 10:30.
An unusual part of the program
will be a business session of the
Commissioners' Court of Young
County that day at the old fort
lor. Mrs.
Erickson.
Jake Wells and J.
amounts to the charge tK'it your j commemorating the first meeting
government has betrayed y ur | „{ the first Commissioners' Court
T. I trust. Such talk is political irres
; ponsibility at its worst."
Private Meetings Held By Nations
NO SIGN O F COiPROHISE
SEEN IN CANAL DISPUTE
Three Wells Are
Staked In Three
Parts Of County
Hillcrest Oil Co, et al, of San
Antonio staked No. *1-A S. G.
Copel.ind as a 4,500-foot rotary-
wildcat nine miles northeast of
Caddo in Stephens County.
Location spots 1.950 feet from
the south and 2,250 feet from the
west lines of MEP&P Survey 1.
Magnolia Petroleum Co. No. 18
Claude McCauley was staked as a
regular field project four miles
southwest of Breckenridge.
Late News In Brief
The New York Yankees led Brooklyn all the way today
to win the deciding game in world series by a score of 9 to 0.
HOUSTON UP—A district court jury today sent Elbert
R. Hutch ins, 29, to prison for five years for the "honor"
fatal knifing of Robert Northcott, 26, last Aug. 19.
PARIS UP—A bull escaped from a Paris slaughterhouse
Tuesday and fled into a China shop. Police reported "con-
siderable damage."
TANG A, Tanganyika, UP—Princess Margaret arrived
by air in dazzling sunshine today. She was greeted by a
half-doien African bands all playing different tunes, includ-
ing "The Quartermaster's Stores" and "Who Killed Cock
Robin"?
LAWTON. Okla. UP—Lew Johnson, sports editor of the
Lawton, Okla., Constitution, says there is nothing left for
Oklahoma in the Big Seven and it's time the Sooners headed
fMth to the Southwest Conference,
McBride Resigns
Pastorate Here
Rev. H. H. McBride, pastor of
the First Baptist Church of Breck-
enridge. Tuesday noon tendered his
to Judgi
chairman of the church board.
resignation
Judge L. H. Welch,
By BRl'CE W. MI NN
Fnited Press Staff Correspondent
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.. <L'.P>
— Egypt pressed today for a nego-
tiated solution to the Suez dispute
"consistent with Egyptian sover-
eignty" over the canal, but there
were no signs that Egypt or Bri | minute secret session of the
tain and France were ready to, curity Council—the first held on a
compiomise. ! political dispute in the body's 10-
United Nations Secretary Gener I >ear history. Informed sources said
al Dag Hammerskjold was using "e failed to retreat an inch from
his own brand of quiet diplomacy j Egypt s announced position,
in ane ffort to find a solution
through secret talks while India's
V. K. Krishna Menon worked be-
hind the scenes with a yet unan-
nounced "compromise plan."
Hammerskjold conferred Tues-
day night with the foreign minis-
ters of Britain, France and Egypt
and called them in for another pri-
vate talk this afternoon as "the
parties most directly concerned"
in the Suez dispute.
Dulles Disqualifies Self
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles was understood to have dis-
qualified himself as a "directly
concerned" party entitled to parti-
cipate in the secret talks. As a
result, Soviet Foreign Minister
Dmitri Shepilov was not invited
either.
The Security Council itself was
in recess until 3:30 p. m. Thursday
to allow diplomats 48 hours in
which to hold private meetings.
Hammarskjold's diplomatic hand
obviously .was playing a major role
during the 48 hour period.
He talked at length with British
Foreign Secretnrv Selwyn Lloyd.
French Foreign Minister Christian
Pineviu and Egyptian Foreign Min-
ister Mahmoud Fawzi in what a
French diolomat referred to as a
meeting of the "plaintiffs and the
defendant."
Meets With Menon
Fnw*i was Meeting this morning
with Krishna Menon who has scur
ried from New Delhi to Cairo to
of Young county, which was held
1 in November, 185ft, in "Roark's
' Store House" situated near the
' Fort grounds.
Of special interest will be the
1 speeches on timely subjects by-
Congressman Frank Ikurd and
State Senator George Moffett.
Later in the program, two <vin- | North Tipton
non now belonging to the museum' '
at the Fort will be uncovered for
their first showing.
On September 3. 1853. Lt. W. G.
Freeman, inspector for the Army,
inspected Fort Belknap, and in his
leport wrote:
"The ordnance consists princi-.
Fawzi held the floor during! pally of one fipd'r gun, one 12; northeast corner of
much of Tuesday afternoon's 90-1 pd'r howitzer, two 12 pd'r moun- ant^ 'n river bed.
.v. Se- ] tain how itzers, all of brass; two "—
I One Student Is
I Killed Trying
To Save Other
1 HOUSTON <r.i:>—A college prank
Tuesday night claimed the lives of
two Rice Institute students—both
teen aged sophomores—when they
tried to climb a 200-foot high
smokestack on the campus.
One of the students, Karl B.
Hiiley. 19, was suffocated by car-
bon monoxide as he clung to a lad-
der 15 feet from the top of the
stack, on the inside.
The other youth, Cecil W. Car-
roll. l: , died trying to rescue him.
The accident, the first in a de-
cade on the broad tree spotted
campus of Houston's leading school
occurred shortly before midnight.
Bailey and Carroll and two oth-
er youth, Ernest Montagne, 18. of
Gilveston, and James Michalek,
17. Houston, cooked up a scheme
to hang an old auto tire at the top
of the stack, called the Campaline
—a combination smokestack and
bell tower of a laboratory building.
Tire is Trophy
The tile is a trophy for which
students scuffle for possession in
a freshman guidance program, suc-
cessor to the old time college haz-
ing program.
Montagne and Michalek said the
four went to the tower around 11
p. in. after deciding it was the
; safest place to keep the trophy
! from being stolen by other stu-
j dents. The Campanile was consid-
i ered unclimbable from outside. A
ladder to the top is inside it.
Michalek said the air inside the
was cool and it was assumed there
was no danger from accumulated
fumes, but when • Bailey ascended
the ladder almost to the top, he
suddenly collapsed. Mis leg caught
in a ladder rung and he hung, up-
side-down.
Carroll Attempts Rescue
Carroll began climbing the lad-
der to rescue Bailey, called back
to the other youths that the air
was getting hot near the top, then
apparently lost his grip. He fell to
the bottom of the shaft.
City firemen brought Bailey's
body dovv.i in a boatswain's chair.
Justice of the Peace W. C. Ra-
gan ordered an autopsy but said
all indications were that carbon
monoxide caused both deaths.
Bailey was the son of Houston
leal estate dealer Karl H. Bailey,
London several times in the past
month and arrived in New York
Tuesday for the Security Council
session. Krishna Menon saw Lloyd
twice Tuesday and Fawzi once.
Slated for 3,000 feet with rotary,
it spots 1,118 feet from the north
and 330 feet from the east lines of Carroll was the son of Marine En
the southeast quarter of Section 32 j gineer Marvin E. Carroll of Hous
Block 8, TAP Survey. ! ton.
Eldorado Oil and Gas Inc.. of —
Dallas No. I B State Lease will be j
a directional drilling project in the
Field seven miles
Election Plans
Made By School
Section 123
The Breckenridge Quarterback Clnh
will Meet every Monday nirht. fal-
lowing the Ward School Foot hell
Game at 7:30, in the High School
Auditorium.
WnWWMWWWWWWM
Judge Welch said the resigna-
tion was effective as of noon Tues-
day. Rev. McBride canie here from
Louisiana, and has been pastor of
the local church about six years.
Judge Welch added that it is
understood he intends to do work
in Michigan in the immediate
future.
A committee will go into the
matter of investigating and issu-
ing a call to a successor to Rev.
McBride.
WVWWVWWWtfWWAA/WV^
Nest to honesty, your beat policy—
Trammell-Swanson Insurance
Agency
BILL BLACK
INSURANCE
IN N. Coart Phase 120#
PRESENTS
TBI WEATHER
Fair with little change in tem-
perature through Thursday. Law
tonight 58, high tomorrow 92.
Low last night ."0, high Ttie«day
95.
*5 pd'r iron guns."
For ten ynra Ben G. Oneal, pre
sident of The Fort Belknap Society
tried to locate some old cannon of
the raliber of some of these guns.
Finally this year, with the effi-
cient help of Congressman Ikard,
two such guns were found in the
government Arsenal at Watervliet,
New York. These two are ft poun-
der cannon of the pre-Spanish Am-
erican War period, class " ed by
the Department of the Army as
obsolete. By convincing the De-
partment tlvit The Fort Belknap
Society is a non-profit historical
Society, these guns were procured
as museum pieces.
Luncheon will be served under the
grape arbor by a Graham caterer
at a reasonable price.
The public is invited.
southwest of Woodson.
Slated for 4,500 feet with rotary,
the surface location is 300 feet
east and 120 feet north of the
northeast corner of Section 12 TE
Bottom hole ligation spoU^" feet . Tht' Boa'd '.,f Ration in regu-
east and 280 feet nor?h from the !
ber 20, and authorized that bids be
advertised for on the old building
these to be received Oct. 22.
A resolution was adopted com-
mending the city for placing
guards at Walker street during
crossing hours for students.
Purchase of a new school bus,
carry all type, was authorized.
Bills were ordered paid and oth-
er routine business transacted.
Kruse Rape Trial
Is Nearing End
SALINAS. Calif. (U.R)—The mur-
der trial of Army Pfc. John P.
Kruse, 21 year-old soldier accused
of the rape-murder of a Connec-
ticut coed, was expected to go to
the jury late today.
The defense rested its case Tues-
day after a surprise attempt to
show the defendant may have been
goaded into a "sexual frenzy" by
the 20 year old coed, Anne Shay of
Fairfield, Conn.
IVWWWVWVWWWVW/^
MERRILL'S SPORT CENTER,
918 East Walker, is open Sundays
for your convenience.
vwwwwwwwwww^w
Phone 6T0 or 671 for Oxygen
Equipped ambulance service.
Satterwhite Funeral Home.
Get your ticket now, for the
Chamber of Commerce Community
Breakfast, Wed., Oct. 10th, YMCA,
7:00 A. M.
Junior High Defeats Mineral Wells
Junior Mountaineers 30 To XI
Boy Scouts Give
Program Tuesday
Residents of the Easton-Elm j Breckenridge Junior High foot
Street neighborhood on the East. ball team defeated the Mineral
side thought that "The Injuns j Wells Junior High team Tuesday-
were coming Tuesday night when • niffht by a score ()f ;(0 to 12 at
Troop 18. Boy Scouts, presented! Buckar^, Stadium.
their program, according to an
announcement from Rev. R. A.
Lewis, Scoutmaster.
Troop 18 is sponsored by the
Episcopal Church and meets in the
Parish House each Tuesday. TTie
group has adopted Indian Lore,
scpecially that of the Comanches,
is its project with all Scout activi-
ties geared to that motif.
Otj Tuesday evening, the frrst
Council Fire was lighted and the
Medicine Man (Don Roberts) and
the Fire Lighter (James Raney)
>n their feathers and war paint
gave instruction to the members.
The boys masted hot dogs a-
-ound the council fire after the
orogram. Mike Kelley and Ted
Kimai ere assistant Scoutmasters.
Three touchdowns were scored
for Breckenridge in the first half
with Neil Cloud taking a 10 yard
pitchout around his own right end
for the touchdown.
Ruddy Langford ran 45 yards on
a quick opener play up the mid-
dle for the second touchdown. A
pass play from Larry Boyle to Ro-
bert Chapman standing in the end
zone netted 25 yards* and a touch-
down.
At the beginning of the third
period. Mineral Wells had their
back to their own g vtl line, were
thrown over for a Breckenridge sa
fety and 2 points.
The next touchdown was set up
with runs by Kara and Cloud to
the I yard line. Larry Boyle went
over for the touchdown on a quar-
terback sneak.
The most spectacular play of the
game «ime in the 1st quarter on
an 85 yard run by Joe Knox be-
hind good blocking only to be nulli-
fied by a clipping penalty. The se-
cond tei'm played most of the se-
cond half and showed good hust-
ling and played good football,
Coach LaGrasta said.
Outstanding defensive perfor-
mances were handed in by Tommy
Seely on pass defense, Neil Cloud,
Joe Knox. Mackie McArron, Ro-
bert Chapman and Reed. Larry
Boyle was credited with a good
job of selecting his plays in the
quarterback position.
The line turned in a fine perfor-
mance, blocking hard and fast,
and Coach McMurry, line coach,
(Continued on Pa fa 4) _
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 199, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1956, newspaper, October 10, 1956; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135411/m1/1/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.