Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 128, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 7, 1943 Page: 1 of 3
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4
Trmit At Homo
For Self Protection
VOL. 23—NO. 128.
BRECKENRtoOl AMERICAN
WEATHER
Colder oust portion tonight.
Sunday generally fair ami cooler.
Fresh wind*.
NEA TELEPHOTO AND COMIC SERVICE
UNITED PRESS NEWS SERVICE
BUOXimtlDOl, TBXAS, SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 7. IMS.
Price Daily 5c — 8unday >
THE
OBSERVER
morc sumidicft
engineers' dream
after the war
seen or hearo
RUSSIANS STORM AND RECAPTURE KIEV
Heads Air Arm
Subsidies, nui idii'«. &vm<
like wry time we pick up a
|uipcr w(> read something about
paying people for Mtmething they
liav.nt done Wh., not subsidize
the poor salaried man who is
rate-hint: it coming and a gou.g
these dajs. Just make it unani-
mous.
4LS(> rv>-ap| earing muchly t >-
day ik th,. term free enter-
prise. || Is muchly talked also.
Still it appears all do not under-
stand what it ik.. One man. wh. n
a number were quizzed for a def-
inition that it is som-thing you
give awa> Maybe that is why
some p.-oplc ar(. for it A punter
wanted to know why don't they
tax it?
TIIK Abilene youth who was
treated with penicillin flown
from Temple for gas gangren •
still is in en Ural condition re-
ports Saturday said. Whether the
l*>y recovers or not will one ray
of many, but if he recovers from
such a condition it will I** anoth-
er step toward final approval of
th.' new wonder remedy.
There is one luw we would
very much like to see nation-
wide. This is that affidavit by ei-
ther parent as to the birth of a
person would be sufficient « \ i-
dence for s;-curing a birth certif-
icate. M,.n |«a*t middle age Sh# *c
days, and born in distant states,
have a hard time setting witness s
to their birth certificates. A birth '
was v.-ry much like Will Rogers
said, you know sort of a private
affair. The Texas requirement,
might leud one to think that those
who drew them up seemed to
think the t<ert chamber was fill -d
of |H*oplc for the event.
.
ARMISTICE Dsy will set mqny
a man in the Army and Navy i
and many a civilian to thinking
about the conditions service men
will find when they take up their
"after the war' occupations.
Adjustments that will be need-
ed in industry, commerce and ag-
riculture already have been vis-
loned and a post-war plannirg
committee named.
Oianges will lv faced also l>v
the professional m.-n who return
Irom military duties to civilian
life Doctor* may come I Kick to
socialized medicine Lawyer* al-
ready are certain to come back to
a law practice with a number of
changes.
Many at home are beginning 'o
wonder just what the ordinaly
man will come back to.
THE post war dreams of pro-
fessional engineers have n
rn*> hue, to *a> the least
TTwy visualize automobiles with
jc.-p personalities and getting V)
miles to every gallon of gasoline.
And to, make it even more vision-
ary, they dr.-.im about stratoliii-
ers that can reach any spot on
the globe within 4H hours.
Addressing the North Texas
chapter ot the Texas Society of
Professional Engineers recently.
Edward Larson. ex-Hmtlve secre-
tary of the national society, pre-
dieted that science will develop a
ros -colored world after the war
"We will find the American cit-
izenry adopting th,- helicopter-
type plane as a sort of second
family car." I .arson said "The
housewife probhbly will do h«-r
shopping in it.
"And when 'he family decid -s
to take n bttle jaunt to Japan,
if It's still there,*' he continued,
"they'll jump in the helicopter,
descend on an engineering mas-
terpiece of airport runways and
take off again in a stratolinei."
UCUT. OIN. CAM A. SPAATZ, 52-
year-old IVnnsylvanian, has been
placed at the head of all Ameri-
can air forcra in the Mediterran-
ean war rone. Spaats heads the
new U. 8. 15th Army Air Force
which already has gor e Into ac-
tion in a raid on the German plane
assembly plant at Wiener Neu-
atadt, Austria. (1 ntcrnntionil)
Cisco District 's
Pastors Returned
few changes are maoe
because OF the /war.
®ay local pastor
At the Methodist Conference
just closed at Ft. Worth thro
were only a few minor change's
made in this district. The Cisco
district. Rev. R. J. LaPrade be-
ing returned to Breckenridge is
pastor.
Rev LaPrade reported as few
changes made as |iossihle be-
cause of the war. The Cisco di«-
trki assignments follow:
District superintendent W H
Cole; Bluff Dale Circuit, E. P.
Swindell tsupply; Breckenridge.
R. J. LaPrade Runyan Circuit.
John J. Nonas (supply ; Burkett.
L. M. I.awhon; Caddo, F (>. Gar-
ner, Carbon, T G Story; Cisco.
First Church' L. W. Seymour;
Twelfth Street, s ba Kirk|wtriek:
Cross Plains, H C. Bow-man. D>
Lions Warned of
Nml of Winning ;
On Home Front 1
attorney compares two
wars in armistice
address
|
Speaking on an Armistice Day-
program James G. Harrell Friday 1
told members of the Breckin-
ridge Lions club that World War
No. 1 in .vane reflects was mo;-"
remarkable than the present war
and com laded that the chief wor-
ry today should not bo about the
outcome of the pri sent war from
a military standpoint, but con-
cerning winning the peace.
The present war is more spec-
tacular than the last, he said, bu*
for hard work and sacrifice World
War No. 1 set a standard. He
(it.si losses m several battles, cli-
maxing with Verdun where the
Germans lost 27.\0<>0 and th*
French 10O.0U0.
The men who gave their liv
ate entitled to our gratitude for
if they had failed we would not
have had this second chance, foi
the men fought and di?d frtr tit •
same principle in the first world
war as in this, he said.
The men of the first world war
I were deprived of the fruits of
, their victory because those on th •
home front failed. The United
States after that war went on th
wildest party the world has ever
seen and the peace was lost.
lie pointed out as outstanding
dangers today the attempt to So-
vietixp the nation, men striking i
for higher wages, and the build
ing of the astronomical war debt.
These he said are causing the
men on the front to ask tlrfan-
**"selves if it is all worth while, and |
whether congress has provided |
."or quirk return of powers that
have been granted.
Rev. Guy Newman speaking
briefly said he considered Mr. !
Harrell exactly right, and quoted
a poem as tribute to the heroes
CAMP roUK tNDS IN ROMANCE
-•*
Key Ukraine City Is
Taken After Month
Of Hard Fighting
• By United Press i
Marshal Josef Stalin touched oil' Russia's celcbratio;i o; II.
anniversary of tl-e I'-it evolution with the announctni :it io-la
Japs Are Rushing
Forces For Fight
To'The Finish
ruppkt states promise
to support japan
in war tpport
By United Press
The Japanese were reported
moving powerful convoys toward j the Soviets had ut ;t;>U!i* .| Kiev, capital of the Ukraiia, ihe
Rahaul and the Solomons today, J city taken l>y m C ■ ,.:i i. it- th ir eastern campaign.
indicating they might make a fin-{ Stalin, in a i m.ing «.idcr of the day. hailed ifi t.
ish fight for control of the South t stormed Kiev at da.vn u«| .swiftly stumped out the la: i (
Pacific. resistance, lie ;-:.i I he city and its military zon • "i
I Long lines of enemy ships were .. .
i , , .... . „ Greatest mnoitance in the exoulsi
righted by Allied fliers in the
I water: near Kavieng, New Ire-
' kind, which Is 150 miles above j ~ * ^he victory cap|>>-d
| Ral'.iul. on New Britain Island
j where MacArthur's fliers have
I taken n enormous toll of ships i
) and planes this month.
Liberators dropped 57 tons oni * v
ore group, scoring on two cargo' fj 11 vcr ^ 1 _.j
vessels. Others were sighted con-' llOll Will :
taining as many as 53 vessels. A ;
; spokesman at southwest Pacitlr
VMUi
I
\pu!^ion oi tin* Germans from th
!jWai"Oiest Drjve
! Total Is $11,096;
f The victoiy capped iuchi-
j !onj4 battle which l:«!:aii w! 'v.
| Russians forced the wide- v i i
Dniefier at three points on oii!
i side of the city, scaling the hi,;!i
| bank when least expected.
Beyond Kiev, the op; a Ifkram-
, , ,. .. . Tabulations I y
headquarters said the reports | Waj. l|n,. '
probably included duplications but!;
: one force ^ included seven cruise -s j
i and seven destroyers. i
While Marines won two Islets'
off liougainville. northernmost -if
the Solomns, and forced Japan-
ese troops back on the biggei is-
land, the Japanese claimed the
sinKing of two American aircraft
OM'A CAMP TOUR, Frances Rafferty, one of Hollywood's rising
young actresses, met Lieut Dewey Barnes. Result: Engagement
The wedding will be sometime this year. (lattrnatiowU)
of World War No. 1.
Songs by Dorothy Kilpatrick
with Mrs. Walter Castleman at
the piano were enjoyed. L. V.
Draper, T. M. Gordon Jr. and Ro-
land Kaderli were introduced as
new members. Program was in
Ration Book 4
To Be Available
All those people who have fail-
ed to receive War Ration Book
4 may obtain them at the Local
Ration Board Office in the Cily
Hall Tuesday and Wednesday,
November 9 and 10, from
a. m. to 4:50 p. m.
To obtain Book 4. the front
Legion Sponsors
S|>ecial Service
three churches to
unite; public invited
to christian church
charge of d. T. Boles, President | cover of Book 3 must be com
Amos Myers presiding.
Cub Scouts Meeting
Monday Afternoon
The Cub Scouts will meet M
the High School building at 5
next Monday afternoon for their
regular monthly pack meeting.
Th.. program for the afternoon
w ill consist of games, regular'
pleted in regard to age, height,
weight, #ex, occupation, address,
and signature of the applicant,
and the Book 3 presented to the
legistrar at the office for issu-
ance of Book 4. To save time, it
will be required that the front
cover of Book Three be complet-
ed by the applicant before appear-
ing at the Local Board Office.
It is extremely important tb'it
With a holiday and a football
gjjjj game looming Thursday, observ-
ance of Armistice Day will open
in Breckenridge Sunday evening
when the special American Le-
gion Armistice Day service will
be held at the First Christian
Church.
Rev, Amos Myers will preach
the sermon, in the rotation oi
this service, the program to open
at 7:45 o'clock. This year the
State Guard will join the Legion
Post in the service. Post Com-
mander Paul Jones announced.
Insofar as possible Legion-
t e: elveu i.i t
for $22,0:<0, i r n U
halfway mar1:.
With next Tiii.ir-d i* the
day set aside .'or fi • i!..,e ■
rr response v.ill i
Bis of th
vj nlio'vcd
< n:r.f d;> :
■> 1- M tit
basis
Of
e needed on
w< -k.
of the 1- i i
the money r—.clv -d twe.i -
, . .. were ;;ift to th i „r 'Itr e ;..
carriers and four other warships; tht. w fls ,,,m , ,, ,,
arourd the area this week.
iho
;-t or
All.'e-j planes were set to mak?
the Japanese reinforcements run
a gauntlet of bombs ail througn
I he area.
A front dispatch said Austra-
lian veterans fighting around'
Pinschhafen, New Guinea, had
caught a Japanese garrison at
nearby Satelburg on two sides
and were slowly digging them
out.
On' China Mitchell bombers of
the 14th U. S. Airforce. in the
first operation as a composite
wing with Chinese fliers, sank a
5,100-1on cargo ship and dam >
aged a 1000-tonner in the Sou'h
China -ea Thursday.
Japan got her puppet states
together to adopt a joint declar- A ,
ation promised her aid in the war. And Ciathci Scrap
The (Hippets are North China,
Thailand, Burma, Manchuria and
the Philippines.
c-tin-
vMla;t-
were small.r gift?
paigmng on t'u-
tary subscri|)tiors
The twenty big ;,.i ■ l.t) a ■ i
up totulied $r>,.'tm -in;l the 5H
smaller gifts totalled . .,893.! I.
This made the mere ., t.ij; jrtt
$260 and the aver-c .r.taff
$10.76.
There remair.i I .<• in. . ,
five businc s h! tel. . I • •oik i1.
the big gifts e.m:.e.-t e i« -.r
half through, and the rural dis-
tricts are to 1>" visited. vvhi< .1
makes the campaign at the ha'f
way mark in almo-i e\ ry
■pert.
Schools Buy Stamps '
ian plains present d no i .r n l.
aide barrier to a .- v.ep ;
Poland.
Gen. Konstantin :
ormnized the Dnieper cr...
and directed the iritial pie-
ille battle for Kiev. Then ii:■ I;
over a new command .-,etl
the honor of recapturing the t y
to Gen. Kikolai p. Vitutin
In the Southwest Pntii'ie
ens of Japanese ship, were re-
port >d racing down fr m I ;ik , i
the RalKiul-Solomoi s theater
an attempt to halt the Allied en-
croachment on the enemy d -
UHin, J A Sli«eoff; IVLeon Ci.- business, and a weiner roast. The ^yone who has not yet r^eiv
cuft. ||. J. Saijders; D-sdemonff.
W C. Ferguson; Dublin, o. <1.
«>doni, (Castland. J Daniel Bar-
ron; Gorman, Roy Johnson; Huck-
nby Circuit. J. W. Tickner (sup-
ply*; OUIen, <*. A. Warden (sup-
ply i; Pioneer, L. L Brougtiton:
I'utnam, Lee Roy Baker (stipfilyt;
Ranger. A B. English; Rising
Star. C Y. Butler; Scrontrm, to
be supplied; district missionary
secretary, L. W. Seymour; dis-
trict director evangelism, J. A.
Sliceoff.
Methodist churches ..f Hie Cen-
tral Texas Conference have KV
936 active members and 17,.'I7H
non-resident memlvrs, R. v. W. V.
Bane, conference stati-tleian, ar.-
n«Hincitl Friday at the closing
pack is growing and has a mem-
nairis will sit together in the
Book 4 make arrangements to church. It was said the Metho-
dist and Presbyterian Churches
War stamp sale in t scfaicis
of the city In-t week lotfdierl
S743.45, Supt. ,1. P.iilej said
Saturday. Division '<>; sales v.-.is
High School Jtirii .r Hi
$226.95; East V\ar d si 10.70: South
Ward S72.2« : North Ward S121.
The student-; also ire ratheri v
scrap metal, scv. ral tons idrcady
being collected. NotJri h is been
received from the .-int. rtejiait-
ntent to gailt . pap rs a!.", but
how to dispose of them is th ■
present questi- n.
"ro.n nf m wu„ nca" aI ,h«' ^ Board Office ott Prest.yter.an C hun
I r hip of ... paid-up members abova* mention.d arMl the Church of Christ will
for the year. The Den mothers: . r "u w * m«nuon« i
for the year. The Den mothers i . ,
now serving are Mrs. A. A. Web-fda>s as no arrangements for fu-
ster Mrs B. Tys«.n. and Mrs ,ur^ registrations has yet been
Framvs Dunigan. The comfhit-' ma("'
ti-emen are Adra Huffman. Errv^t •
Maxweii. and jjm wiikerson. The Eighteen Men Are
m""r " w- °°>" a"-- Accepted In Draft
sessions of the annual conference, j
Churches of the conference Reports received at the loc it
raised Sl.48H.259 for all purposes \ draft board show that eighteen of
during the year, an increase of
approximately 40 per cent over
the previous year.
The conference has 463 hous -s
for worship which are valued at
Stl.392.463 on which there is an
indebtedness of $376,RfW.
HEROIC WORK SAVES SHIP
rOUGHT For The Moment
Confidence is that feeling by
which the mind embarks in great
and honorable courses with a
sure hope and trust in Itself
Occro.
SEEN or Heard. Dr. Kesslef l*«
fore leaving for Marylanl
■aid he would attend a family re-
union at which both an older bro-
ther and sister would hp present.
<• Np«)
the last contingent sent for ex-
amination were accepted for :,en-
ice.
They are: Simeon Porter Rey-
nolds, Scabees; D. G. Gri:ae«,
Marines, and C. L. Fisher, coast
guard.
Going into the army are Buliei-t
Wray Whitley. John Rih>I Ott*.
Dole Patrick Mcfiallen. Beniivt
Kirkland Weatherford, Billy Jo
Somewhere in the South Pa- rnd Ccmdr. Howard R. Shaw of Fry. Floyd Washington Norman,
cilic Tlx- I'.S.S. Alchilui fom-i''"le. Mass.. her execut.'e1 Leslie Dorman Kiser,"Charles Kd-
"the ship Whose Clew would not officer, led the heartbreaking, ward Johnson. Johnnie Leo Gif-
H her die" although she was >x- fight. ! ford, Billie Frank Stoker, Charley
plisting and burning with her Then, Just when their task Houston Evans, James Newton
cargo of high-test gasoline and seemed finished and their ship re-1 Brannan. James Junior Talytr,
explosives tod,iv flies tlie only stored, another Jap torpedo blast-1 George Bruc? Malcolm. Ralph
Presidential unit citation flag in ed into the engine room, knocking Le.i Perdue, and Jack Allen Co*
the South Pacific. out her power Again her crew set — — —
The battle of the Alchiba's to w..rk ami repain-d her suffi-! . fiioril Tft
crew to save her during nin- ca-ntly to sail her 6,000 miles to! « aie uU«rQ 1 O
flaming days and nights on a a West Coast port, although her j Parade Monday
l -ach on a South Pacific Island bark was broken in two places. (
wawre she was run after tieing hit, R-pair.'d, the Alchiba again is Monday evening the two units'
by tvi torpedoes on Nov 28 ; on duty in the South Pacific. AI-' of the State Guard will stage 1 PrOOpS Into Italy
1942. is a classic of Navy gallan- though other shifts have won the i parade down the main streets "f
try in u. ion. Presidential unit citation for ac- Breckenridge and following thn
no;
have service Sunday evening t-t
unite in this special service. The
Baptist, because of the climax of
their revival will have service at
the Baptist Church.
Mr. Myers has announced h's
sermon subject for Sunday eve-
ning as "Yesterday's Unfinished
Task." S|iecial music has been
arranged by the choir director.
Mrs Vernon Marshall.
This year the Armistice Day-
service will not he in the form
ot a celebration but in the form
of a memorial. The public is in-
vited to attend.
Tan Sales Proving
Big Success
Tag Day in Breckenridge Sat-
urday was proving a groat success
Mrs. Kelley Karrar reported Sat-
urday noon. Seven hundred tags
had h«>cn ordered printed and by-
noon at had gone and 300 more
were ordered.
Mrs. Farrar added that many
w«Te given dollars and halves in-
stead of dime.
Garments Coming
For The Greeks
Alex Kimes, local chairman of
the camiwign her? to collect gar-
ments for Greece, said Saturday
a fine response is being made by
the Breckenridge people.
He has received 150 garments
since appeal was made througn
these columns not long ago. Quo-
X Elsenhower Says
twenty million for the nation Victory Certain
Two million have been secured in
the nation.
The people here are giving hats,
shot s, men's suits, ladies dresses.
One woman who gave liberally
mad.- a number of new garments,
also gave material.
The gifts are being handled
through the Greek War Relief As-
sociation. Adult's garments can-
not bo delivered until the Allies
deliver Greece, but It was said
garments for children, 4 to II
years old, can he sent n >vv
through the R~d Cross.
Allied Headquarters, Algiers
Nov. 6. Victory aver Ger-
many, while not yei in sight, ••
certain as the war r. -irlies dail;
nearer "the vitals of the enemy
Gen. Dwight D Fi nh«,vt i a, I
today- in a mi --a ;< t<> it! tin ;
Oi; the , ve of the first e . iv , .s -- •
of U. S. landings u\ North Africa.
"Our Alii, s mer.h r vard u l
us," he said. • 111" t. >d of jit ir<■
|>ei'imeler and possibly
showdown fight for naval
ac-y.
I Vankt Push Ahie.d
The German defense p . i
ir. Italy were proving mi.
able as those in Russia. j.
Gen. Mark W. Clark
Hfth Atniy patrols c,.re.
: Garighano t« drive the i'
j w dges into the n.-\: n..itr. ■: ,
' lieyonii tlie Massico ! rtd . j
I timis shattered in the In ; i
j days oi fighting.
While thi> |Mitrols prof., d
German positions on th.' At u
slopes beyond the Garigli<.
er.c€.|-, troops inland seize,;
iro. putting the final mm! ,, i
collapse of the old j •
tain tine.
Farther across Italy the- |-,t •
Ei.'jhtli trniy advanced I.-,
to • 1,'e V'ftsto, the I'.' IV;
t.ernian |*ositknt on the .:
short of the vital juried- n .
earn.
Nazi t-larm over II:.- ,s;t
Tontinned on rrnge fot><*>
Five Snips Sunk
Off Dutch Cca-r
London, Nov. (., .'1
light coastal forces or
aged five German
sweep off tht# Dutch (••• t-,
nesday r.ight, the ndtnii-.d.
ttounced today.
In an attack on a com •
Ilrit ish vessels destroye t a
armed enemy trawler, I
another trawler ami set fir.
medium supply ship. T
man torjM-do hoiit v.er h.,
daniag, d heavily in an .la;
",a;:< n-ent.
Probe of Spendiri.tr
May Be Made
a
In*-;
lata
to
G
lights <n <-ur -\
flrengtl.en ctir.-e
yet lying ahead.
I.
or
us t h
the ta
Nazis Are RushHiir
l;i,.p •' open, burning and ex-1 tion in this area, the Alchiba is. will hold open house at the arm
pl- dir.;;. the big 14.000-ton vessel said by Navy authorities to be the i ory. « "
was hewhed st.iessfully and her only vessel now on duty here fly* This to open observance of
enrvy fe-iihed a l otv vshlle they. flying the citation pennant. Guard Week. There will be an
wcrked unceasingly, salvaging I The flag, of horizontal blue, exhibition of drill at the open
cargo i.i d . fighting the fire. (yellow and red stripe*, was pre- house and a display and d?mon-
. Cofulr. James 8. Freeman of Jas- .sent?d personally
I per, A .a,, skipper nf the Alchiba, (William F. Halsey.
by Admiral' stration ot, wespons, etc. used l y
; the guard.
Madrid. Nov. 6. U.r Reliable
reports reaching Madrid from the
Italian frontier said today that
the Germans have dispatched ap
additional 30 divisions from their
strategic reserves to northern
Italy at result of the Allied
break through ot the "Little Rom-
mel" line.
4,000 Guadalcanal Native* Build
Chapel For U. S. Hero Deati
Guadalcanal. (Delayed) 1.B ance for the Untied State- v
"This Is the House of God. This ' made by Brig. Gen. A. F f;
is none other than the Gate • f, ard. USA.
Heaven."
With these words the native
population of the British Solo-
mon Island Protectorate In Sep-
tember presented to the Ameri-
can people a memorial chapel hon-
oring 1.600 American dead buried
on Guadalcanal.
Guests of honor at the cere-
mony. carried out In the open air,
included fair major generals, t'vo
brigadier generals and a roar ad-
miral. leaders of the United Na-
tions forces in the Solomons wcr
Jason, a Christianised native
who is leader of the Labor Carps,
made the presentation through
Lt. Coi. D. C. C. Trench, acting
commissioner. Accept-
Jason's preset tatioti address
was the highlight of tl> - c p«-
mony. With simp'c ^ - -1 i t > th--
barofoot native attir <! in wl.if-
"lap-lap," or ban e! 'th, and
singlet, said:
"Me want to I--I1 V'fl: all p • •
that all ire fella h-lo-i:, Solemn"
build this chlireh h-t.ei- • We v.e.if
to thank you. We havi wo.': "1
hard and we tiope v -u tike tie-
clittrch, Ard we pra; that C, <'
will ble>-« all of yon and w ! ,i
you will pray for \aur ft-: aid
who are lying in this cemetery
"Also we want to thank all th"
Amerkans and Allies who l'iv.
fought to push the enemy out ef
our land. Now we give this
(Continued on Page 4)
Wash n;;t.):i, Nov. K. iy,
■■.in,;re. .' iotial drive to ' >
r.-ie on government r.t ■ .
theretl n.onirnti'm tad--;.- v, ; .
anttounfenu-nt thnt tlie •. r -
i'lr.i' ipriation;, coe-.mil 1. ..avitif
a« | next week r.n a r so!u;
«ailing for u s-.ve pin:; t;. . >
lion of government e.«n. n.ddui •<
war ami otherwis'>.
Mine Workers ( f>
Hack To Pnducinsr
Wi.shington, Nov, fi. \
;':ol*'vr.rin for the United Mi--
Workers .-ai I , to.l.e th -t
t r.lon was go-'r.g ■ Il-on; i : if
resumption of cesil aviain with-
out Halting for s.t'lrnrtt1 f :
r.al c'atr; .■ in it. new
with the govern' ■ -r.t
^inland May Qu' L
Camp cf Hitler
London. Nov. 6. ■ *M: Proml*
■Jore.' Stalin said tonight tha
"Finland is on the |K)int "f abftr.
doning Hitler.*'
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Hall, C. M. Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 128, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 7, 1943, newspaper, November 7, 1943; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth131994/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.