Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 286, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 16, 1943 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : illus. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1 Trail At Horn
For Soil Protection
Breckenridge American
MSA TELEPHOTO AND COMC SCRVIC*
—— i ■ ■
' WEATHER
Scattered thundarahowora aid
cooler in extreme northwett po •-
tton and in northwett and north
central portions tonight
22- No. 2H6
BRECKENRIDGE,, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1943
Price Daily le —
THE
OBSERVER
RATIONED PCWt
Mil AO
AIR RAIO DOPE
SEEN OR MEARO
BATTLING NAZI SUMMER DRIVE
BECAUSE < I the cvei increasing
demand* « ( the war and
wishing to 1* ot every assistance
to our government in winning the
Mar. all seats at the First Baptist
Church. beginning next Sunday
will I* rationed
A space ol cighten inches will
be al' itt.-d per |*Tv>n <tnd no per-
•on may occup.v more than this
sa>f, exccpt by special agreement
wilh one or more neighbor* oc-
cupying that pew
Even with this arrangement
ttiere will not he «|moi> enough 'or
every member now on the church
noil*. and those wishing to attend
should secure their allotment
cards early.
Thoxi who have not been to
Chun h ■ im r I have been pastor
must bring letters o( identifa-ition
A picture in u< h castes would
u .real a:d Those coming late
Wl'l find their space given to
other*.
Our church off*,- mi|| tie open
eight hours a da> during the
week to care for I hi- rush this is
expected to bring. If this ration-
ing work. like -ill other rationing
has worked so far.
• Not Signed)
Roger llehard. pastor
WHEN Rev. Roger llehard
o. itrU tiiat rationing slat s jmU
UHii'dseu men salt s pei cCt.t
Ik ii'iiiAnteu uiai iiia>oe ma
cCuren ousinr s snoi d lx- lation-
cu. una wunocrvd u *unu* one
Muuid >11 aw luiu up aiiu au. a il
tsouiu uu uiai iiiuo' k uO.
We nave Ounc x> nei*, and in
9*ew ui uie tact Uiat tiie service
la lot a cnurcii. we are running;
tits' ad ifee Also hoimiu na iim!
reao Uus nor u in >uicr i-# a-
M«ie Ilial a ia uemg piiiaed. It
t* MM l ol att. HO., so lu -,<e.iK
AND whi.e we we m this ironic
jf nunu we tnink it aaviaaute
to pass amng a bit ol tree advice
in can* an air raiu. it na« been
tilted air rani desii uction.
in iaM ol an an u.u t alai.ii
tear out and run. 11 you are in-
tioe. lun outsiut', ii you art.' out -
Mile run insult', jum war out.
Always iimkc the inosl ol an
air ruai aiarni. Ii you ate in a
buHery, steel some sonic pis', il in
a nai giab a bottle, a in a movie
grao a blonde. During an air raid
atai m always yell bio *1) muider.
Il makes lor confusion and scat > ►
tlie tap out of kids.
IK you lind an unex plotted h ml>
snake to close to your ear. The
tiring pin may he stuck. II an in-
cendiary boinh falls in youi neigh-
borhood throw some gas iline on 11.
You can't |tut it out anyway, -o
you might as well have some lun
If you are ha by a bomb, ke<v
your nerve and don t go all lo
pieces. Just lie "till ami no ori"
Will notice you Above all don
worry about a homb with yon.
name on il It is the one label d
"to whom it may concern' lb-
you ought to worry about <Id«
atolen. word* changed!.
VE probably should not hf wr
ing this way. hut this war <
nerves is beginning to give us t'
Jitters Trying to write the sar
Invasion headline day after d
that will stamd different And
Just had to bust loom* somewhet'
rOl tGIIT For The Momen
There i« nothing more to i
eteenvd than a manly firmn"
and decision of character. H'
lltt
%*CMRERS of Brownies Pat'
JO gathering V* worth of gtv
Me and fata for government
Catfish Chanev overheard telliiv
• man thai he shlned the eyes
■ frog and when he p«Hted h<
OP he Jumped out of his hand c'e."
Reman the river t Winter Woo-'
Changing tn brown s his vacatl" •
goes m . . . Jim Wtlkeron n "
vaticinating chicken* Blake
jfStwm remarking that Mr*
went to Abilene and h
the chicken* . . . Paul
Winiama telling about a dm
iMntn* fi alnil a ta'enhon* n^'e
mi trving la get amy from go-
RotariailS Hear I Wreckage Of PantelYeria After Fall
Brief Talks At
Noon Luncheon
City In Aakid To ".Maw"
Weedts and liraw In
City Park
A series ol brief talks on ca'l
from the chau mil music for en-
ti'itninment comprised the ;>i
"ram at the Bret kenridge Rotar)
(Tub Tuesday nt on
J K Bail.*y told >f the work
of a school su|>crintcndcnt duririL
the summei months, adding tha'
he had returned from a v isit ' >
Flins\ i!lp Hnrl fifty- >dd studen*
will come from th'-re to Br eken-
ridge next year He ad'lcil th-'
Acker a|s<i wishes to send stu-
dents her in a et-ordination
•ovenvnt
Mac NVKInnev cal'^d attenti
of those present to how forlun<>t<'
Breckenridg is l(. hive seven
ornctlcting physicians, when manv
of the town* in the oil lielt have
only one or two.
Rev Rogci ileburd praised the
work being done hen- in the
schools and proponed that some
step Is- taken to get the city (Kirk
"mowed."
Russell Winterly, insurance nun
of Abilene said h had been com-
ing to Breckenridge it-^lilarly si.i-
(••• the hail damag'd homes heie,
adjusting damages I'hi.-f of P<.l-
ice Ollle Jack-on thanked t.if
members for the assistance given
in law enforcement here.
Mr and Mrs. Edgar Cain spoke
briefly, the two celebrating their
wedding anniveisary Mi Cain
told of a meningitis epidemic at
his camp in Tennessee during the
last war when volunteer nurses
were cal'ed and the first to volun-
teer was Mrs Douglas McArthur
'hen single
Mis. t am said that a ^irl grati-
}
1
1
Regulations For Russ Hold New Line
New Ration Book Jhree Days After
Crossing River
I'his photo seni | \ Signal (V rps r idiotelephoto show, the wreckage of the City of Pantelleria
lied Air Koives forced suriender ol the Island > Nea Telaphoto)
after Al*
Wheat Crop May
Be Kept Here To
Furnish Feed
Binders and combines have star-
ted in Stephens county, harvest-
hnck Tuesday afternoon for the
state prison at IfuntnviMe.
Beard appeared lo hear sen-
ten< pas- -f| when .ludi;e t>wen
Ualt'U lilt 11 lllgil m.iiuji .111(1 ih1j i . .. .
... " ' | Thomrw convened district court
Ui service tlicy were urginunig io . ... ,, . ..
,, * • I here at <1 ;i m He was hroutrht
teel neai ei U* cur.<«l out Mil'
-as giau ncr uoy was still ai Jic
state*, aiuiougn she wouiu not
binder him from doing wuui otnoi
inotner' sons arc U ang.
jean Ann i hooi,j<toii, uau^iter oi
•nr. and Mrs. Eugene Inonipson,
entertaim'd wiUi a piano numiaT
i rial wa> *cil ivccivtu. .tn.
i iiompstin was a visitor, aciom-j Mri-k chawing ol gum was the
i>anying Jean Ann.
cooks Are Sought
ujr i\*vj sttauccH
The Navy Sealiees have
■ediute vacancies loi ctntks
Death Sentence
Is Heard Calmly
Slayer Of Abilene Deputy
To Die In Chair On
August 3
ROBY, June 16 <Spl t Con-
demned to die in the electric t ,h<' 194:1 <T"P' but
chair n"j<t June .1 for the Abilene wh*ther the wheat will lie so'd <*
slaving of Deputy Sheriff Wade "'•"'"cd for feed by the growers
Willis. R x IVnrd Jr.. started,wa,i 1"^ ion today.
One buyer report d he has re-
wived only four truck loads, and
that one grower who has 100 ac-
res in wheat and expects to make
2.000 bushels said he would not
sell a bushel. That he would keep
it to feed to chickens. 91.20 was
being paid.
That offered here for sale has
been of high quality, testing from
60 to 64. and the yie'd has h->en
from eight to twenty bushels per
acre.
Ab >ut 7.000 acres were planted
to wheat in Stephens county this
year, but som" of it was aband-
oned However, there will he a
Vtrge yield.
OaK were practically a com-
plete failure.
Salvation
Fa* orohlem To
•'ere at 'I a m He was brought
here without advance notice, and
there was hr.rdly two (iiaten spef-
••itorv
Armsakimho the youthful gun-
nir.n stoel . reel and unflinchlnp
as Judge Thomas gravely directed
that Beard be executed "at any
' irne lie fort the hour of sunrise
>n Tuesday. Aug. 3. 19-I.V
: only indication the prisoner might
he nervous There was rv> t hange
ot expression. Il he paled, a was
concealed by the blue-white pal-
or resulting from months In pris-
onon
All th" vthile his eyes appear-
im- ed to r ive the.second-floor court-
SAN DIECK). Cal. <Ulf Anir-
tca's one-'egged men and women
have made the Salvation Army
store here their mccca for shoes.
The business started when Co.
and n* m and its numerous windows.
.iKei's and attractive rating- can He faced hut scarcely looked at
<• ollered any man who can qua!- the udge
• ly. actvirdin^ u> t^hiei Recruiter f Behind B"-ird sat his mother.
"fi t«a ton ol thr Abiii-ne llts - Mrs. Curtis Moser of Abilene.
• uiting t tffic e Mr (l ist in al io who VM|K*d tears trom her eyes J Hammond of the Salvation
tates that there an- vacancies .n out otherwise s.-med to retain: social service department
narly all rates ol the ScaBees composure With her were Mrsl'nncriv'^ ,,M> of helping one-
•nd that it will .. to the tulvan- Moser - husband, and the youth s J'°KKcd p-ople obtain footgear
I {e of those interested to e n- step-mother. Mis. Rex Btwrd ,,| j without charge or rationing e.tu-
act the Navy Recruiting Pariy J Wichita Kails
.i each Wednesday at 1 p m. <d I •
"•e Courthouse 'ohby or apply a' 1 PatfpHtS
Re|f rts from Bn>ckenridge hos-
'ie office in the P t Office Build
• al Abilene
Mr Gaston abo points out that
llstinent of 17 year old btys are
II being effected
pita's today showed Pats' Sue
Morsee and Mrs. Sybil Brown ad
milled to Westsidc as medical
' patients.
1RAZIL TO SEND RUBBER
•
By DAVID J. WILSON i now being ex| orted fr-im th<* Am-
nited Press Stall Correspondent | azon valley. Transport ition is th>
tiELEM, Stale of Para. Brazil i mam drawback for an immedlat'
I'1 Ten thousand tons of "man-1 large output of "manicoba" rub
i ba" rubber are expected to be I her. although it* sources ai r
k I Miclit/i f Ill U til • JV I ita ■ I * a« • _ a*. ...K ill. > t It , •< ikiWn rxt t is
X|iorted fmm Bih/iI u> the L'nil
d States during I5M3, according
•> officials of the Johnson Wax
"ompany This company has scv-
ral plantations here of "carna-
iha", which yields a wax used in
he manufacture of several prod-
•cts and Is now bmnching Into
.•ubber under the dir«**tinn of
'lerbert C. Johnson, pre^id-nt of
•he company, and presently res'd-
*ng In Forta'eza. state of Ceaie,
is representative of the Ruhher
Development Corp.. su|>ervlslng
th transportation of laborers from
that state to the Amazon valley.
The figure of 10,000 tons can
he ratied within two or three
years to 30,000 or 394100 eoual to
tha amount of "hevea rubber"
nearer the sea than tho«e of tb
"hevea rtilils'r" and situated In"
tr- sanitary region.,
Accordim: to those officials lb
"manicoba" rubber is In ma •
respects superior to the comm"
"hevei# tyne from the Amar<
vallev as it does not require a
liflcia' coagulation; It consulate*
by itself in the tin cups int>
which ft drips from the taps mad
on the tr« s.
The state it Ceare alone n="
several thousand trees of "maol
coba" rubber, manv of which a
one time or anntb«r have beer
developed by International coo
IMfs. rtiw hli<*e
to the French concern
rtntn-r nivtr wt"
nternattonat con
e far***
oncem "MtctHin'l
• |
|M>ns.
After looking over the huge
•lock of mat'less shoes accumu-
'atr I in the years al the Army's
store. Col Hammond offered to
furnish shoi-s for single-footed
H"n and women free of charge.
The United Press sent Ihe item
•ver natlon-wid.* wires lanl April.
Today, swamped by letters
from sing'e-footed people from
Maine to California. Colonel
Hammond is kepi busy filling tbc
requests. Most >f the appeals
onlain return postage, some ct
'he writers send odd shoes, and
<ne man sent $5 to help the cause
>'ong.
former Resident
Die* At Ft Worth
Information was received her.'>
•day of the denth of C. D. Judd.
"4, a former resident of Stephens
■ounty. at All Saints hospital in
"t. Worth Tuesday night at •
o'c'ock.
Mr. Judd was an Instructor in
'(story at TSCW. Denton. He
au«?ht his flr«t scho-vl at Lacasa.
and later taught at Ranver and
itve ws superintendent of nubile
education In Ba«tland county. He
married Mia* Ira Maxwell of Step-
hens county. He ban often visited
here since leaving. Funeral an*
waa not
Farm Operators
To Report Crops
The Sooner The Re porta
Are la The Quicher
Marketing Cards
As soon as the planting of allot*
rncnt crops and war crops is gen-
earlly completed in Stephens coun-
ty. farm operatars will he re-
quested to report the performance
on their farms as of that time,
to the AAA coUfily office. Due to
the need for conserving travel and
manpower, the responsibility of
reporting performance is being
placed on the farm operator.
Crops to be measured include
cotton, wheat, and fresh vegetab-
les for market. The farm operator
may report his correct measure-
ments of these crops planted on
his farm, in feet, yards, or chains.
Crops to he estimated include
"rain sorghums and peanuts along
'•'ith production practices carried
cut or to he carried during .he
year 1943. These war mps need
not he measured as was previously
•ndicated. hut they will be estima-
ted by the operator, farmers are
Ving notified.
Each farm operator has been
-nail"d a letter exnUVnlnf he tim-
"edure to he used in reporting for
his farm.
Farmers were given additional
encouragement to nlan for- maxi-
mum production vvhr'n the $15 per
ncre penalty for failure to meet
90 per cent of th"ir war crop goals
was lifted this week.
W. W. Evans, secretary of the
AAA, said that the sooner Ihe
reports are In the sooner cotton
growers will get their marketing
cards.
Are Set Forth
No Application* To Re
Received From June
11 To July .11
In regard to the Wnr Ration
Book J, w'hich has already I teen
received by a number of persons,
it will Ik- the responsibility of Ihe
consumer to write in his own ad-
dress and to sign the War Rook
3 received by him. It is not nec-
essary that the hooks have ihe
space completed -ntitled "Action
by Board," it was said at the lo-
cal diaft hoard today.
T|h mailing centers are using
a rubber stamp to validate the
hooks, and should one rec-lvc a
book that has not been stamped,
'"(■ward it to the mail center from
• hlch it originated. The local rat-
">n hoard will not he able to val-
idate these Be iks, nor will it he
able to comp'ete any of the blanks
on same.
No application for War Ration
Book 3 may he made between
June 11. 1943. and July 31. 1943.
1 inclusive. On and after August 1,
1943, application may he made by
or on hehalf of any person who
Is eligible but has not received a
War Ration Book 4, whether or
not an application for a hook was
previously made for him. If any
application for a hook was pre-
viously made and the bonk was
not received, the applicant shall
present to the hoard the stub
from the application originally
made for him.
In case one should receive dup-
licate hooks, turn It in to your
local board, who will acknowledge
receipt of same, and the board
wfil mail these duplicated books
to the proper lace.
Within ten day* after th? death
of a person in whose name a War
Ration Rook 3 has been 'ssued,
the person who has It shall turn
it over to any war price ann rut.
Ion bttard. A person shall turn his
War Ration Rook 3 over to any
war price and rationing board
when he leaves the United States
for a period of more than thirty
days or when he broom;** a mem-
l>er of the armed forces of the
I'nited States.
School Students
Changes Under Way
Supt. J. F. Bailey said today
he and Mrs. Ula Brockman. -coun-
ty superintendent will visit Acker
probably next Tuesday to discuss
with the people there the send-
ing ol then students to Bivck^n-1
ridge to school.
Oakley also is considering such
h move. About 380 students frt.m
surrounding corpmunities came to
school here last year and it ap-
|>ears about the same numo-r
will return next fall.
Knssa today confirmed German reports of brisk fighting on tha
rim ol the Orel Salient Midway between Moscow an Kharkov, hinting
that it might develop into a major opeoati/in, while lite Alliod and
Axis fought an intense war of nerves over Western Europe.
Moscow dispatches said the Red Army, attacking north of Or I
in time force, crossed a river and penetrated the German positions
to some depth and vvas holding its gains against counter attacks
after thive days of hostilities.
A Stockhoul ie|>ort thnt Hussian
and German representatives had
rni't in the vicinity of the Svv d
ish capital to talk of peace wa-
denounced at once by the Soviet
Ambassador to Sweden as a Nazi
propaganda plant.
Britain's King George was re-
vea'ed b he on a flying visit tr
North Africa, from which a |x v-
erful Allied air offensive had
swung against Sicily and invas-
ion talk rose to a new hiph.
Spanish sources near 't'-R'lhral-
tar said an Allied convnv of t?3
merchant men. a battleship and
an aircraft carrier arrived at the
British base from the Mediterran-
ean.
The ai offensive aininst West-
ern Europe dwindled further Brit-
ish medium bombers and fighter*
bombers took it over hv niHit.
Union Services
Of Churches Will
Be Held 2 Months
During July anil August a num-
ber of churches of the city will
join together to h.ild union ser-
vices on th" lawn of the First
Baptist Church.
In makin" the announcement it
was said the preacher* will be
rotated in delivering the sermon*
hut in such a manner that none
but the preachers themselves will
know who is to preach on a par-
ticular evening.
The chuirhes that have agre'd
to ioin were not s->ecifi >d but the
informant said the Methodi-t, Bap- blasting and gunning German rail-
tlst Presbyterian and Christians road and water tran-norts in Fra-
bad agreed, and it was thought nee, Be'gitim and Ho'land.
others- would loin. < j Bctlin reported that many clt-
Flood " -h* will he available jP* |n the Hhlneland and R'uir
and combine'! choir from the var- j still were smouldering from the
ious ehuirh • meeting will be us- ! pounding they took over the vveek-
ed for the music. jend.
This will Is- the f'**' un1 n re- Invaion Feait Mount
lieioiis service in Breckenrid e in Axfs invasion fears heightened
a number of years, it was pointed Tue dav with the Italians report-
in" an A"lc«t f'?et .ia*slne near
Slelb' with Ber'in "ami'" i f a
possth'e <-«" W|| • -ff-—.
and the Germans reported tr> h'e. e
realigned their star genca's ill
around the perimeter of the Eur-
opean fortress.
Axis radios told of new atta-Vs
acalnst Allied warships, ttrans-
ports and landin< barges repoi t -I
"Bthering off North Africa rv><" <
and threatening Sicily. A Rome
commutator called upon th« Ital-
ian people to nrenare for the de-
cisive phase anoroachlng.
The Ita'inn Official Journal
published a new decree imt"isi"g
that the city workers should give j heavy punishment on anyone f.id-
their farmer neighbors a helo-1in* renort a landing of enm.v
armed forces orwiemy agents, |V|?
Rome radio said Toesdav
A Berlin broadcast reminded H">
German* of the "ver-nre e. dan-
out.
To A{ > Paemgfg
In Par* Time
City Workers
MILWAUKEE I P' — Wiscon-
sin's fight on the farm front to
produce food for victory, despite
shortage of labor and other farm
necessities, will he aided tills
year by 260.000 workers, affiliat-
ed vvith the American Federation
of l ahor.
R -eently the State Federation
of [.abor executive board agreed
hnnd The hoard then directed
each of its rent re I bodies in fie
''9 mnior cities of the state to
organize heln for the farmers in
move-
lofomons Elands
Blows Exchanged
ANKARA. Juno !R 'U. _U. S.
fliers in the Solomons have again
blasted the Japarfj- bases
their area'. The worke.s wi'l he <7**r 'be east, rep-irting Oct the
reglsterwl along with other peo- | Rtl*,''3ns were massing sooth .if
Moscow.
Spstllnht Shifts
The spotti* ht of the Med'i"rran-
hiftejj dramatically to-
d."v from th" eenter to the east,
where the Allies were report d
"cmi-off'etnHv from Angara to
have 'tosed Syria's frontier with
pie who w ish to ioln the
ment.
t*he committees hesides n"Tis-
tering voluntcrs. will go to tbej^an *^ar
'.uniers and 'e't them what work-
ers are available and what lime
thev can five lo farm work.
Secretary-treasurer of the A.
F. L. state federation. William I Turkey.
I -ondon sources loft the rep-Tt
iiKont confir—lation. denial t r
at
Pat Henry Wins
1900 Scholarship
A telephone call to Rrecken-
rid-*c from Pat Henry at George-
town revealed that he has won a
scholarshitt io Southwestern "ni-
ver*it after taking competitive
examination.
It Is a four-year scholarship
and amounts to about W00. It
wa« «aid. Pal. son •> Mr. and
Mrs. A. **. Henrv. took three dif-
ferent examlnat*on« Monday and
T ie dav and o'aced at the ton.
H was editor of* the school
annual here this vear. nresldent
of the Shot well Co-Fds. and «
membfer o* th" d"b«te team.
A teleitiam to the Re«eVenrMee
American later todav s«M that
Henrv ou'd e« er Southwestern
Ju'" 1 to mator In law.
"It la the first ttme I ever won
an'dhiei " Pat said. *ben asked
how he tolt about winning the
Kahili, shorland Island and Vila,
while the enemy retaliated by
bombing American-hc'd Guadal-
canal. the navy announced today.
Na^orsre "aid the t'nited States
Employment Service line- un ful'-
time workers to send to the farms comment, but
"but this program vvl'l Is- to get 'nfrt ,h:" '"mlicstion that tSe
rart-time help from the cltv t nH,l*h nnH T"n,
worker. After a'l. people can't :,nrt ,T s '^bs that .n,e h-.-n
take long trip, on their days off ♦minine qnltlv and hiding up
this year, so why shouldn't thev • strength for month* in s- ria. ral-
hc w tiling t . give that time to ! Traq and Tran mirht be on
help the war effort
food front.'
along the
OPEN BOAT CRUISE NEAR END
By -GUSTAVO ROGER
United Press Staff Corr-soo-dent
VALPARAISO. Chile <0F Wil-
•iam C. Weld '/7-y*ar-o|d Seat-
tle. Wash, youth, with more than
a da«h of adventure In his maae-
up. left this seaport i«ce«tly on
'he last lap of his round-the-oa-
"ifle eruise thoard h's small boid
"Pagnn" With -Seett'e as -W*
destination h expeets to robs-
olete the trio in three mont^* j
an t tn en'M In one of th" armed 1
•ervlces of *he ttnlt-d States
'•'eld ha* heen sailing the Pa-
cif'e In his 25-foot v"s-el bv him.
•e'f for the na*t four s«d one-
half years. In n- (vefh «e and to
•var he has «mne from Seattle to
A'a*Va thenee o -nte-nr-%t| *m"'t
Islands In the Southwest Ps"t ie
and to Australia. In the 'atter
, nart nf 1W one year after the
i war had broken out In the Pa-
Ncific, he *hnly aat aall from Ta-1
hltl for the west coast of Chile.
A taciturn, hermit-like person,
his only comment on the dangers
he met was that life wns endan-
gered several lim-s during Jhe
crossing from Tahiti to Valpar-
aiso by "sharks and "'hales". He
said he «aw no eviderce on his
voyage of the trenvndnus conflict
""ing on ' etM'een the United
^'ations and Japan.
Weld arrived here last Feb. 21
and annmirr-wd lhat he wou'd re-
main In Valparaiso for a fort-
night to make minor repairs on
the "Pagan." However. th'-
'"rtnlght f-etched I n three
months, princioally b"caus« Weld
I" I- no h"rrv to do anvthlntr
and heeati«e he liked Valparaiso
verv much.
When the solitary navigator,
aa he is knmvn to Chile, laft Ta-
hiti he toto~d d o heed for Cal-
Oenttnuag On Fags 4
the move.
The 1">ailv M- reld ouoted Ger-
man renort* that the Atbes "'ere
massln" an "tovs -'on" In Svrin.
\ tlloJ P'n«Tc fttf
East pv Toio
I Br t'nlted Press!
Janan"'-e Premier tti-'eM To|o
'vamett 'be ToVv., died that M-
l Uoft of'enslt*. hlos* were im1 'cnd-
I lnt in the *""r Fastepn fhente.-.
1 <vhera the r*h|ne*r today cant tired
| another •t*n e~tc Vanet*e ,r
j toten und ^ Ul'vt "n'ltvw dts-e'o ed
| the (te-'wirtlw AQ more pnr'iv
I nlan-Hj for an 11 "vts'h, total of
11.337 In the Set.tVtvest Paelfle.
f iw|e i Pee* Price
T o«tel T«« Vlttw
ttme in Tt*l
Price A'tot'wl-trotor Oreefls.- Sf
Brown t«M Senate hueVng
eommlttee todav he
that the nrVws «f enst of living
'♦ems can he •♦ablHred at Sent, lfc
1W2 levels with nntv W)fWIO.OOO
a year In ntlHstt k sutoM
i *
MM
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hall, C. M. Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 286, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 16, 1943, newspaper, June 16, 1943; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth131891/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.