Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1960 Page: 2 of 8
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*—BrecMnridge Amerltsn — P RI DAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 198J
$torh*hr&0? ■ Antmratt
EPITOIIIAL PAfiE
'Views expressed <n these columns do not necessarily reflect the
view^ cf the Drerkenridqe American but are th^uiht of interest
to readers of the American.)
Candidate Kennedy's Record
The Entertainer .
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' flitiS
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B1 THF DALLAS NTWS
fifrsW Mann iJali.i attunuy
Wilt UStll to p.f, .Kilt pun, fu| !• Ml
ai.d now i «juii.irtf i ba< kii.i tin-
Jfii k Krniinlv <anii .ii. ii iii T > .1 •,
uii^es i'Vfi to f.,i, . i ti„- b.
moi i .itu nominee'* h l. n,ii ami
< omi-iiti all- i,n |,i |,iim ij,jt .,,,(1
record.
'Ihe Nev.s will i■ It'll help Mi
Mann t-nli liten tl.i- Ti-\,-t voiei
whu show- no ign ol forgetting Mr
K nn« ii> i* U.'i.;n Lui nu\ hav<
foi ><< t!en MjtH,- lirttUM" of III- If
Ci.| 111 tin Hi,i| i .,i„l S. n.ill-
t •lutfitv v.a a. aii. i tilting
lv*a. til.. 111f>-1.• f,r 1 Willi li luve
meant million I , i ||„,,| , |„|,t
nil ..lul villi na.ii, rmllioin Inure
Kmiiii- Iv I,a approved h*-
•tuclng ihi- li1: ! i ri at ml (lfjili-
lion alioaiii'i- for oil inn, ,i I
t;l . .,1 v\ lili |, 11|„ . jj t .t(. j-
W e 11-.- a ' t,t ,, i ,. ..i.,,, that
iff«.rd' Mi .it..l fail- n , ri,,.:
\li Ktiuii .1 vn!f<t a'.iri't tin
r.ilt MurtU-v Ait wine 11 (in tid
abu*<- ul hi aut/,<l |.,b.,i and pci
mitti-il lu'lii tii-uou lav iliai - .vi
an individual .he pri\lit- oi s;,v-
lii^: v.U-tin-i |„ |j, !cn to a
tuiioa oi not
Mr Retmed. con: istently has
support! d pnMic |,iiv i-i (,i„ji it^
which mi an- i.i- i* in favor of i. I
ing Uncle Sam's tax mom \ and fin
aiu iiit! i oiii|.i-tuii.ii ti;i |,i i\ ate ),o
vvei I hr i- tin- bat-l- of Mil lalism
whii ti lakes \oui lax irn-nej and
let' itn- fi.vi-rnmcrit run ♦ i-i km.I
of bUMiii-i- on the tin oi . thai
>ou. a grocer or a barber or s rem-
inder rhould not er.ji. tin fruit-s i.i
>cir own labor
Mr Kenned' la-t vear voted to
raise urban renewal lurid* !i. in the
Ft dei; i (iov eminent u. ir.i> ix^i ixm
a yeai This program in certain in-
stances. t;.kt s vour private proper-
tv alleging that it i-; slumin;,. it-ars
J( down with I'm le Sam's money
BARBS
BY HAL COCHRAN
It's eaty to take a strange view
of thing*—just Le an amaWu;
photographer.
• • •
An. ordinary jape can be
' imoketi t J a tn.nuU. accord-
ing to rtatistici. If you don't
Tun out of rr.atclics.
t LITTLE L l'
Ky^^ /
J?// i /.
Men don't adm.re o v.cmon fcr
' h«f mind so much Oi fvf what she
1 rrarid. « M> *
and turn- ii over to other private
developers who ill ' oiile l ilies have
tripled iln-n inone, with very little
mi.. ;tmeul.
Mi Kennedy con: istentl.v ha-
snpiwrted fedeial aid loi educatioi
j v.Inch at its ultimate would him
ovei to Ihi' Kedei'al (Invel'lliiielil
control of wli.il your chddren will
U* taught, liuiv and bv whom
, \Ii Kennedy, m the past two
>e.i!s in the Senati has voted 91!
i.ii' hi Hi liiii- : with the ultiali
Ihi..I Hubert I'tirnphiev "adnntli
thr- rn•« ; liberal egghead in
1 i.iii,ii - llie quoted part is noi
llw '.iw-' it i. from a Catholic
| i :i< I ihi Kev Dr .I B ( aiol.
■ Ik, i- vuti'ii; aga'.ii-1 Kennedy bt
lau-e ol his "liberalism.")
Mr Kennedy gets an almost per
, fi i ' l or, from the ultraliberal
An i-i u an- foi Democratic Action
a '.'ioup dedicated to the principles
,i.I the late krauklin Roorevell; of
urn le t lo Dalla- our Rep. Bruce
■\l i i i ; a bif zero from ADA
M, Kennedv think the lulled
Siati should vacale the critical
C'liiiii off; (lore island-. Quenioy
and .vlutsu The Communist Chin-
e:e think the ' ame. The White
llou e and Pentagon -av defense of
tin i- islands is a cardinal part of
our policy,
.%!:• Kennedy urgi"d that we re-
[ . (u'ni.'i- the "independent persona-
r.lv of Alge, ia " 'Ihi was three
ve.-.cs afo when out all-, France,
> i fuhiini: Communist Algerian
cuerritlas workint' cn orders from
Mi,' i ■ for an "independent per-
sc.ialitv in Algeria
11 v. ill b,- inteie^iing to see vhe-
tiier former Quarterback Mann re-
«' i i to a pa- punt or a praver
in trving to score with Jack Ken-
nedv's record - a record foi the
i.iost part utteiiv a^auist the con-
victions and principles cf most
Texans.
Texans want their tidelands
which a ioiniei administration —
yes. Democratic 1 frumani — iried
to steal Texans want to protect the
o.l industry which affords millions
In income, wages and taxable re-
venues Texans want the privilege
tc sav whether they must belong to
a union or not Texans do not be-
live lhat the Federal Government
— rather than lccal school boards
— should run their schools.
The News would remind even
if Mi Mann did not that Republi-
; ran Nominee Richard Nixon declar-
ed flatly he would nevei be a party
to "stealing' our tidelands. He is
for Taft-Hartley and the freedom of
'choice of the workingman. He is
for local cunlroi of schools. He Is
i lor the oil depletion allowance.
Inasmuch as Mr. Mann raised
the point on the real issues that
count Richard Nixon is pro-Texan
Jaiii Kennedy is not.
o
The Bahrein Islands east of Saudi
Atabia are ;n independent sheik-
dom. Petroleum concessions are
held i quallv by Standard Oil of
California and the Texas Co.
! n: . ■ III
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• V > : :*i
A
w
Cirnti.' ''■
>•. - -i , • --t
Today In History |
Today is Friday September 9ih,
the 253rd day of 1960. There are
113 days left in the year
Today's highlight in history:
On this day in 183C, ihe first bal-
loon flight in the United States bv
a native - born American w as madt> i
bv Charles Dm ant. He was also
the first tc land on a ship.
On this date —
In 1661. on orders from King
Charles the second. Governoi Ende.
coit ot Massachusetts ordered the
release ot all Ouakers from piison. ]
In 1776, the Continental Congress |
resolved that thereaftei in all Con-
tinental commissions the words
"United States" be used instead
of "United Colonies."
In 1850, California became the
first state on the Pacific coast to
be admitted tc the union.
In 1919 Boston Police began the
Like which elevated Governor
Calvin Coolidge intc prominence.
In 1957, President Eisenhower
signed the Civil Rights bill em-
power! 4! ihe government to
endorse the right to vote with court
injunction.
Ten years ago, President Truman
created the economic stabilization
agency to control prices and wag-
es:.
Five years ago. the U. S. anno.in.
ced it probably would launch six
to 'en artificial satellites for sci-
eiitilii' observation purposes by the
end of I'Jafi.
One year ago. Tibet's god in
exile, tiie Dalai Lama, appealed
to the United Nadons for interven-
tion to spare his people from extin-
ction by the Chinese communists.
Today's birthdays:
U. S Senatoi H. Styles Bridges
of New Hampshire is 62 years old.
Actress Jane Greer is 36.
Thought for today:
It's i. poor joke when a little child
is brought to tears.
o ——
The U. S. $100,000 bill, which is
used only in transactions between
the Federal Reserve System and
the Treasury Department, carries
the portrait of Woodrow Wilson.
Breckenridge American TV Log
It Was Only A Warm-Up
By BRUCE BIOSSAT try.
In terms of its immediate praeti- Nevertheless,
cat benefit, the Lcibtailed August clear that the
session ot Congress has proved ticket will suffer
it is far from
Kennedy-Johnson
long-run damage.
* WASHINGTON COLUMN ★
Growth of City Areas Could
Mean New Cabinet Post
BV PETFR EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Fnterprise Assn.
WASHINGTON— iN'EA)—Committee for Economic Develop-
ment— a research organization of predominantly Republican
Lug business executives—-has )ii i published a new .study on
"Guiding -Metropolitan Grr.vth" winch endorses some impor-
tant campaign promises on this subject m the Democratic plat-
lorm.
The CED people didn't plan it lhat way. obviously Hut that's
the way it comes out There is no comparable section in thr
GOP platform in such specific language.
What the Democratic platform proposes is "a 10-year pro
gram to restore our citir s and provide for balanced suburbar.
development The specific planks include elimination of slums
restoration of blighted area.- federal aid for metropolitan area
planning, federal aid for metropolitan transportation, federal
aid for conibatim air and water pollution and so on.
Says CED in its report "Estimates of the capital reouire-
ments to renew our cilies cover a wide range—from 120 million
dollars up."
NOBODY HAS YET ADDED IP how much lederal money
now goes to the cities.
CED recommends the continuation of present programs with
federal aid maintained at approximately present levels," until
this whole question can te evaluated. In this recommendation
is an admission that private enterprise and local municipal £bv
ernments can t cope with the problems of America's rapidly
growing cities
The U.S. Conference of Mayors endorses this It finds that
"the job is so big it will require all available, combined private,
federal, state and city efforts to make a dent in it .. . The fed
eral role is the crux of the matter." -~
CED has had a research committee under Jervis J Babb ot
New York, former heail of Lever Brothers, working on This
Sroblem of metropolitan area development for three years. It
as published tv o earin r reports on tne central city concept.
It firtds that there are 192 metropolitan areas of 50,000 or
more p^.ple in the U S today The combined city pomilatir
is 120 million, or two-thirds of the U.S. total.
ONE OF THE PRINCIPAL DIFFICULTIES in the metropoli-
tan areas is that their governments are obsolete, like the cities
themselves. There are 13 000 local governments in these 192
^reas.
Where a metropolitan area roughly eorresponds to a county,
as in Los Angeles and Miami, ti e problem is somewhat easier.
Where it tales in half a dozen counties and even crosses statf
lines, as in New York, the problem is harder
rol
nearly a total lo:-, to the Kennedy
Johnson presidential ticket.
Togethei Ihe Demociatic nom-
inees chose four principal fields of
action — minimum wage, medical
caie foi the aged school construc-
tion and housing, 'the record as the
brief session closes indicates eith-
watered-down legislation oi none at
all.
The liberal proposals sponsored
by Kenn.?d> and Johnson loundeied
on the conservative Republican-
southern Democratic coalition, as
have so many similar bills before.
The difference this time is thai
the two Demociatic leaders made
these particular matters a cam-
paign issue, lliev felt compelled to
press for them as an early fulfill-
ment qf certain 1S0O platform pled-
ges.
By this measure their failure ir>
plain enough. The promises will not
now be met.
Furthermore, the effort has kept
Kennedy and Johnson largely pin-
ned down at a time when they
might been making more fruitful
campaign forays aiound ihe coun-
Vacationing Americans have cen-
tered relatively little atteutio non
the doings of Congress.
And no one can be sure that the
two nominees will be faulted at the
pol|s iu November for this August
failure in Washington.
Some think that the outcome still
leaves Kennedy on the popular side
ot the issues he espoused on Capitol
Hill
They believe he can make votes
by calling again for his proposals,
and for an even more heavily De-
mocratic Congress which might
conceivably adopt them.
As for the campaigning time lost,
it is axiomatic that September and
October are the heavy mouths for
this activity. One would have to
be boli> indeed to say that this
year August is decisive.
Caution and reason suggest that
the real combat in the 1960 elec-
tion is still tc come.
In the long perspective from the
conventions to Nov. 8, the events
cf August — in and out of Congress
— are not too likely to loom large.
The Individualists
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
Of late some observers have de-
veloped the habit oi referring to
j Vice Presidi nt Nixt, nand Sen
John Kennedy, thi majoi parly
presidential nominees, as prime
examples ol the "organization
man."
In plan fact they are just exactly
the opposite of lhat.
The term "organization man"
was coined to di- eribe the man
who i-. pressed into the business or-
ganization mold so completely thai
even Ills M-' i-d Ufe i Ihus domin-
ated. He is the man who follows
rules set by others, and lets others
make the decisions.
Neithei Nixon nor Kennedy fits
that description in any degiee. nor
has he evet llolti men me makers
of organizations, not members and
followers. There is a vast differ-
ence
; Both are strong individualists,
• gifted decision-makers, imagina-
j tive, resourceful, with a affinity foi
command.
If either were in fact an "organi.
zation man. he would not today lie
the presidential nominee of his
party. For winning those nomina
tions calls for the use of talent:-
which the cog in ihe machine does
not have.
Examination of the Nixon and
Kennedy careers shows conclusiv-
ely that each man has from the
start pursued a distinctive course.
In Kennedy's 14 years in politics,
he has at all lime sheld himself
apart from standard organization
politics. The organization which
won him the Democratic nomina-
tion vvss one he built on his own.
In Nixon's six years in House and
Senate, he quickly carved a sep-
arate niche that made him a fav
ored choice for the 1952 vice pre-
sidential nomination. His eight
years in the Elsenhower admini-
•tiation have found him remark-
ahlv building individual stature and
influence while serving as second
man in the President's shadow .
Kennedv and Nixon are boih men
with high skill at organization.
Those who think that this makes j
them "organization men' do not
read very well.
It is die country's pood fortune
thr.t both are about as far from
that as It is possible to be.
Dallas Robberies
Net Total of $400
DALLAS t.V< — Bandits made off
with 2U0 dollars or more in each
of two Dallas holdups last night.
One robbeiy was at a drive-in
food store whore two gunmen took
billfolds from clerk Ted Reed and
a customer, herded the pair into a
big refrigerator, rifled the cash
register and fled on foot. Reed es-
timated they took about. $200.
In the other stickup, two pistol-
waving men with silk stockings pul-
led over their heads robbed the
Marco Polo lounge. An employee,
19-year-old Jov Lindsey, estimated
they obtained' $200 to $250 at the
lounge.
KSTB—I4JM K. C.
MONDAY 1MRU FRIDAY
8:OB—Alarm Clocx Scramble
6:30—Headline* and Weather
0:92—Alarm Clock Sei amble
7:00—CMlbelt Sportscast
7:06—Alarm Clock Scramble
f: 10—Weather Report
7:23—Alarm Clout scramble
7: SO—New
7:33—Texas News
7-40—Local news
7:4ft—Alarm Clock Scramble
8:00—News
8:«5—Coffee Club
8:80—Headlines and Weather
8:82—-Coffee Club
V:00—News
0:06—Morning Devotion*
0:15—Serenade for Ladles
10:00—News
10:0S—HlUbtlly Houseparty
10:80—Headlines and Weather
10:32—Hillbilly Houseparty
11:00—Newe
11: SO—Headlines and Weather
11:82—Trading Post
11:45— Farm and Home News
11:55—Texas Market
12:00—Chuckwagon Roundup
12.15—News at Noon
12:30—Chuckwagon Roundup
12:45—Blackwood Brothers t
1:00—News and Conn ntary
1:05—Musical Showcase
1:80—Headlines and Weather
1:82—Musical Showcase
2:00—News
2:05—Musical Showcase
2:30—Headlines and Weather
2:32—Musical Showcase
3:00—News
8:05—Musical Showcase
8:80—Headlines and Weather
8:82—Musical Showcase
8:45—Stars for Defense
4:00—News
4:05—'Teen Time
4:80—Headlines and Weather
4:82—Teen Time
5:00—Five Star Final
6:15—Sundown Serenade
5:55—News
0:00—Sign OU
omm
BY DICK TURNER
3
Friday
KFDX-TV—Channel 3
6:02—Warren and the Weather
6:08—Southwest Tonight
6:15—lluntley-Brinkley Report
6:30—Cimarron City
7:30—Wichita Town
8 00—Play Vour Hunch
8:30—Masquedare Party
9:00— Moment of Fear
10:00—News Highlights
10:05—Weather
10:10—Southwest Report
10:30—Comment
10 45—Jack Paar Show
12:00—Nightcap News
KBl.D-TV. Channel 4
6:00~Nevvs
6:10—Weather
ft- 1B--New«
6:30—Rawhide
7:30—Hotel De Parte
8:00—Video Village
8:20— December Bride
9:00—The Twilight Zone
9:30—Person to Person
10:110- 10 P. K1 Report
10:20—People—Places
10:30—Movietime
12:20—Sign Off
WBAF-TV. Channel B
6:0O—News And Weather
6 15—Huntley-Brinkley
6 30—Cimarron City
7:30—Wichita Town
8 00—Danger Is Mv Businesr
8:30—Masquerade Tarty
9 00—Moment of Fear
10:00—Texas News
10:15—Wepther Telefact#
10:25— Southwest News
10:30—World of Snort*
10:35—Jack Paar Show
12:00—News
12:10—The Late Show
12:45—Sign Off
ERBC TV. Chants! t
6:00—News
<MO—Weather
6:15—News
6:30— Cimarron City
7:30—Wichita Town
8 00—Award Theater
8:30—Masquerade Party
9 00—Moment of Fear
10:00—New*
10:10—Weather
11:30—Sign Off
caaL
Saturday
KFDX-TV—Channel 8
:(KV- Cartoon Party
15—Through The Porthole
3$— Cartoon Party
:00—Howdy Doody
:80—Rufl & Pi eddy
:00—Fury
3'J—Circus Boy
00—Junior Auction
30—Curtain Time
00—T\ Traveler
15—On Deck Circle
25— Maioi League Baseball
00—Matinee Theatre
00—Detective's Diary
30—Brave Stallion
00—Playhouse 3
00—Bonanza
30—T!:e Tall Man
00--The DeputV
30—Wide World 60
30—Man From Interpol
00—News
15—Producers Showcase
00—Slue Off
I
I
1 8
9
a
10
10:
11
11:
U-:
12:
12:
o.
li .
4:
4
5:
6:
7:
8:
8
!):
0
10
10
10:
«Z
c IMP b, MC*. Ire. T.M U.S. Pit Off.
O
Stephenville Man
Killed In Crash
STF.PHENVILLF, — A local
man was killed last nk'ht when his
car left Siate Highway 108 and
overturned about 10 p. m.
He was 39-year-old Jehn C. Pat-
terson of Stephenville who was rid-
ing alone in the automobile. State
police said Patterson's car left
the road and overuirned about two
miles north of Stephenville.
"Mover lie, Pet! Just tell him things you don't want him
. to know while he's using his electric razor!"
W B A P-T V —Channel 0
00—Cartoon Capers
:UO—Howdy Doody
.30—Ruff and Reddy
:00— Fury
30—Circus Boy
no—True Storv
30—Cartoon Wonderland
00—Industry Cn Parade
15—On Deck Circle
W.j lajoi League Hiseball
00—USI T.A Tennis
00—Detective's Diary
30—TV Country Style
00—Saturday Showcase
30— Bonanza
30—The Tall Man
00—The Deputy
30—World Wide "60"
30—The Man from fnterpal
:00—Texas News
:15—Weather Telefact*
30—Sports With P.Iullarkey
35—Award Theatre
00—Siirn Off
KHLD-TV—Channel I
7:30—Cartoons
8:00—Capt. Kangaroo
:00—Heckle & Jeckle
9:30— Mishtv Mouse
10:00—The Lone Ranger
10 30—Travel for Fun
11:00— Summer Olympics
12:25—Baseball Game of the Week
3 15—Sports Highlights
4 00—Seven Wonderful Nights
4:15—Spotlight on Dallas
4 30—The Gourmet
5:00—Studio Wrestling
5:00—Studio Wrestling
6:00—News
6-15—Dallas Police Report
6.30—Perry Mason
7-SO—Wanted—Dead or Alive
8:00—Summer Olympics
8:30— Have Gun. Will Travel
9 00- Gunsmoke
9:30—Death Valley Days
10:00—News
10:20—People and Places
10:30—Channel 4 Movietime
12:20—Slgll Off
K R BC-TV —Channel 8 •
8 00—Howdy Doody
9.30—Ruff & Reddy
10:00-Funr
10:30—Circus Boy
11:00—Trite Story
11:30—Films feature
12:15—On Deck Circle
12:25—Baseball Came of the Week
3:00—Detective's Diary
4:30— Corn m a i id Present a ticn
6:00—P-j'iy Express
6:30— Bonanza
8:00—The Deputy
8 30—World Wide "60"
9:30— Man From Interpol
10:00- News
10:10— Weather
10:15—Command Preservation
11 00—MGM
9(H)—Gunsmoke
3RFCKENRIDGE AMERICAN
Published Sunday morning and Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday afternoon by Brecker,ridge American, Inc., at 114 E.
Elm Street, Breckenridge, Texas.
Entered al the Post Office in Breckenridge, Texas as second-class
matter under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Second class postage paid at Breckenridge, Texas.
Subscription rate in Stephens County, by mail 5.95. Elsewhere
9.00 pre year
ALLEY OOP
OUT OUR WAV
WHAT 1
ahem- <7rtere<soe$\ SCH0OLIM
SCHOOLIN'
poes fer you
-us OU BOYS
TRiEf TO DRAW
attention
to ourselves
gy harp work,
but thai s
vore efFBC- '
tive/ They'll
State legislatures controlled by rural counties that have small
sympathy with city problems make solutions next to impossible.
Where there are a number of political entities m one metro-
olitan area, they can't assess or agree on unifo'-n or
oat bond issueg to pay for their own salvation.
So they rush to Washington.
Senator Joseph S Clark iD-Pa.) has been backing legislation
to create a deoartinent of urban affairs in the President's cab-
inet to trv to make some sense out of this confusion. But Con-
glass isn't ready for this drastic step yet.
£
WHAT
th' next
foreman
job/ why
COOlpw 1
of thou6ht
of that, in
allthese
vearsfthey
harply knew
he workep
here/
well
NOW UH-
tmat
on you —
6ettin
NOW
.VtCUAOp
the inside track
YOUR FRIEND, TH'
REPORTER, THAT
PRgTTV LI'L S0UAW
> IS OUT WITH TH'
R'.NG, HAW-HAW,
HAW-HAW;
HE'S TRYING TU NVskE
ROMANCE OUT CT- Mi'5
DAILY'S INT£PV'r
WTTH C.UZ
what's
him an
haw
stuff
YETH? WELL IF I \ OH, I
kNOW GUZ, HE'S
PRje'LY A LOT
KICHTEK N -iOU I
KNOW
BOTH ALL WET-
BUT TH£Y HAVE
EuEN GONE A
AND IF THEN 'RE NOT BACK
PRETTY DAi3-SONE SOON, i
THEY'LL HAFlA COME HOME
BY TH' LIGHT OF TH' MOON ,
±Z
CAPTAIN EASV
THE PILOT MAT se USING A SPACft SUIT
. STOLEN FROM gl8 RCCENTLYi ONE THAT
whem Our. Vdevelopeo an oxy&en leak at zc.oqd
INTERCEPTOR&^r—r FEET. WHEN BIS TESTED ITi <
t jrned back, th'
U-2 HAD REACHED
K 56,000 FEET
fr.thl ■
yamatO can't
know that; if
me keeps cl!«a3
insi he may Die
from lack
OH.Y
' PSflgASlV WILL
, CLIMB HloHE^i TO BS
| SU2S HE'5 OUT OF
KEACH CF "S'HlP TO
AIR MISSILES FROM
C'J7. NAVAL UNITS 0^r
THE CHINA COAST..,
BUT P6AD OR NOT,..IF HIS U-2 CRASHES IN
CHINA, IT WILL SERVE THE gEDS'PURPOSEi I
They'll still claim they shot
it down. ahjp captured g'B / yesiyou Rt !
TUCKER!, T—f Ri&hT. OUR i
ONLY HOPE IS
TO FIKJD 618...
DEAD OR
ALlVEi
mc t, h^«. ^1 tjt ii., t. q
u
i
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1960, newspaper, September 9, 1960; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135988/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.