Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 47, Ed. 1 Monday, October 23, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
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Americans Overrun Jap Defensesin Philippines
Gainesbille ail Register
AND MESSENGER NdP MV
Reds Take
55TH YEAR
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS, MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 23, 1944
(SIX PAGES)
NUMBER 47
Government of Islands
By C YATES McDANIEL
Pressure Expected to
77—
TE
• , 38 3
tj
L
the
tight-drawn nazi defense band from Holland to Switzerland’s
Arctic sea pulled up to the bor-
g3 2
‘ . TT5
n
" ■ *$ 3
,, nj
base posing a constant
the, Murmansk
332
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4
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ftaCk
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4
PANORAMA OF ‘PORTABLE HARBOR' ON FRENCH COAST ways leading out to piers capable of receiving various sixes of ships
on the French coast shortly after D-day, shows the floating road-
nounced by Acting Secretary of
Farm Problems as GOP
Senator Supports FDR
that the French leaders, includ-
the
the weekend
city where
over
all fronts,” wbile, back of the
the village of
miles northeast
port President Roosevelt.
Republican Chairman Brown-
It was here-+other Americans
had contacted , the
field
roads.
was
rcent.
Named for Inquiry Cleared of Nazis
would be a moderate contribution
increased wages
would aid the r;
Burns $800 and
offensive
ra-
the upper Saar
rated from the
Ohio
phe which struck the East
com-
by a
The Weather
children still were under
CAMP CROWDER, Mo. (A) —
will furnish some precedent for
deal
Justice Zierlein said he found
mained in critical condition.
their
Seizure of the port of Mudros
Lemnos,
: of
and which guards
The first defendant is
he purge. Alto-
copy of your discharge.”
who served
as
F
nique said * British
tly
and
expected to
all
Goods,for three da;
would be in semi-
two
*2.
v
38
-mmme
southeast of Duren which is 20
miles from Cologne on the Rhine
"Restoration of the suspended
freight rate increases, resulting
in an average increase in freight
DeGaulle Regime
Provisional Government
Of French Republic Gets
The assault was on against the
shrinking south Schelde pocket
west of Antwerp, the Breda box
north of Antwerp, the hard-held
doorway from Aachen, the upper
entrance of the Saar valley, and
the sharp-cloven Vosges passes.
The British Second army, strik-
Kirkenes,
and air
’ Thurman B. Rice, state health di-
rector of Indiana, complained bit-
Paris Court Opens for
Collaborationist Trials
Official Approval
WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 (A) —
12
0mf
2
1
fighting in Mon-
on Page Two)
By The Associated Press
"Japan is now on the defen-
coming in
landing.
The crew
Nipponese Agency
Naval Commentator
Says Enemy 'Welcomes'
American Invasion
Wurselen, three
of Aachen.
• .7
v 622
VE.
Separated Only by
Marrow Channel From
Mainland of Greece
front,
th in-
bd by
? open
where
nique.
The
of Nancy, and
(Continued
coast at dawn on 1
a30-hour battlec
(Continued (on
Peole
Odd Glimpses of Life
in Town and Country
s
’ I
4 .
Aegean Island
Of Ewoia Been
A panoramic view, composed of several British official photos, of the loaded with invasion supplies. Panorama starts at upper left, ends
British ‘‘portable harbor,” prefabricated in England and installed lower right. (AP Wirephoto).
9
9
Cleveland Death
Toll 98 asBoard
fensive, but it was intended
to hammer the enemy line
ever thinner and to mask the
timing and place of the main
attack.
in its efforts to prosecute the war
until final victory and to lay the
foundations for the rehabilita-
tion of France, can count on the
continued, full, and friendly co-
operation of the government of
the United States.”
Tokyo claims asserted a trans-
port and a destroyer had been
sunk and five other ships dam-
aged in the gulf. ,
by the Federal Communications
commission, listed the four as
two destroyers, a transport and
OUT!
CINCINNATI (P)— The locked
front door of a downtown to-
bacco store bears this legend:
“Out of cigarettes.
“Out of gum.
“Out of films. \
"Out of stamps.
"Out of patience.
"Out of town.”
ing when the crash occurred.
Debris from the ship
Big Job Seen for
Postwar Retailers
LOST? WHO’S LOST?
’ SUWANEE, Ga. (A) — Neigh-
bors and state patrolmen
searched all night for 2-year-old
Billy Wheeler after he disap-
' peared from the front yard of his
home.
His grandfather found the child
cuddled up in a pine thicket with
• two kittens, apparently none the
worse for his night in the open.
MONEY BACK
„ce338g
ol x 3 22838053%
-
—w«na
Four Men Killed
In Ft Worth Crash
FORT WORTH, Tex., Oct. 23—
Four airmen from Fort Worth
Army Air field were killed today
at 7:35 a. m. in the crash and ex-
plosion of a four-motor bomber
a mile south of the field as it was
thur declared "null and void” all
laws and proclamations of the
Japanese - controlled government
of President Jose P. Laurel.
After several small but fierce
Japanese counterattacks, and
stubborn resistance in the center
of the line where warships moved
in close to the shore to knock out
enemy strong points, MacArthur
said his “ground forces are stead-
ily extending their positions on
Railroads Ask
Restoration of
Suspended Rates
Would Rehabilitate ■
Properties After War
From Revenue Increase
Dopking. on the souther)
reported that Yank SeK
fantry division troop
tanks, were moving up t
valley inland from Dula
today and tonight; ues-
I cloudy, cooler pan*
general offensive to clear the sea
lanes to allied-held Antwerp as
a supply port, had pressed the
Germans from two sides into the
destroyed more than, 1,500 en-
emy planes—equivalent to a ,
month’s production for Nippon- <
38733988388
,-x
4^
the bedin his two- American airbase in southeast
- - - - China.
f 12
nm
hT*
.9
The German hold on
Schelde was slipping with the
capture of the controlling enemy
guns at Breskens and Fort Fred-
NO DEAL
ROSWELL, N. M. (A) — Demo-
crat John E. Miles and Republi-
* can R. C. Dillon, boh former
New Mexico governors and both
now candidates for land commis-
sioner, found their campaign
' trails crossed here, so they break-
tower and
and U. S., Britain and
Archangel convoy routes to Rus- ‛
Far to the south, where the Russia Recognize
Russians were less than 130 miles' - — —
from Austria and 180 from Vi-
enna, Moscow announced victor-
Roosendall, four miles ahead.
The strikes here, which were
assuming the proportions of a
pied, by the British and all of the was by his side, a
freed todayas German orceston had pierced his heart
that “some cab drivers” had sent
him a dime refund.
ffaKo en-
#ficks as
in Leyte gulf of the Philippinesyinadzansdhinlandsfpanesulet.
The wireless dispatch beamed erans of Bataan fled from both
to North America and recorded the town and airdrome of Tac-
loban, offering no organized re-
sistance to the First cavalry divi-
sion.
The enemy has been virtually
cut off from sea reinforcements
and their remaining airforce was
limited to dusk to dawn sorties
against the great American fleet
of more than 600 ships in Leyte
gulf. -
As U. S. forces rolled ahead,
Seizo Kobayashi, president of Ja-
pan’s Imperial Rule Assistance
seem unlikely.
Third Army Busy
Lt. Gen. George S. Patton’s
“sacred right of self-rule.”
It was, he said, “a prelude to
the liberation of the entire terri-
tory of the Philippines.” MacAr-
The Office of Price Adminis-
tration contends that the wartime
increases “have provided the rail-
roads with some $700,000 000 in
revenues not required.”
revenue of about 4.7
Railroads today asked the Inter-
state Commerce commission to
restore suspended freight rate in-
creases so that the railroads can
make "substantial expenditures
to rehabilitate their properties
after the war.”
11 Temperatures: High yesterday.
177; low last night, 47; noon today,
1176; high for the year. 106; low for
the year, 9. - ,
East Texas: Generally fair this
afternoon, tonight and Tuesday;
not much change in tempera-
ture*.
West Texas: Fair and
warmhertod
zdapax
border today with an unceasing pressure aimed at opening
the eventual cracks that will permit a smash to Berlin.
of the liquid fuel gas storage
plant explosions and fire which
devastated a 50-block east side
area.
The death toll in the catastro-
Brazil also announced recogni- gian border, 16 miles north of
tion. I Antwerp, after an 11-mile ad-
The American action was an-; vance in two days, and ham-
nounced by Acting Secretary of mered methodically toward
supply.
Stettinius’ statement
INDIANAPOLIS (P)
16 and after
rm l Mudros,
ge Three)
“provisional government of the
French republic.”
Moscow radio reported that
Soviet Russia had taken the same
step, and similar announcements
First army seemed to have com-
pleted its regrouping, brought up
"vast” tank reinforcements and
could be expected to attack at
any moment somewhere along a
16-mile front between Geilenkir-
chen and Stolberg.
The front from Aachen to the
ing in three columns on a 12-mile
front from the western side of
the Holland salient, drove to
within three to five miles of the
prize communications hub of ’S-
Hertogenbosch.
Canadians Sweep On
for an emergency
ten-man board of
PARIS, Oct 23 (P)—With wealth and gaiety on one hand and
heart-tearing poverty and grief on the other, a France jumbled by
war into a crazy quilt of contrasts set out today to sweep out the
rats as the first step in putting her house in order.
The gloomy halls of the ancient ? i —.—i
Palais de Justice ope
old-time campaigning in New The speaker compared For-
New York City of a plan for an mosa with Pearl Harbor but then
aggressive wind-up of his fourth said:
Dewey Plans to Discuss Japan Is Now on
Defensive, Says
By J. W. DAVIS
Associated Press Staff Writer
How Americans can prosper in
farm communities developed
new political arguments today
along with the question of how
America might work in a com-
munity of nations.
Governor Thomas E. Dewey
traveled from New York state to
the midwest with his summary
The explosion occurred on im-
pact with the ground.
The plane crashed in a pasture.
Dr. There were no survivors.
a German submarine
last were
had received . that the Germans apparently
clearance for an emergency land- seared the main blow was build-
1 - - ------ h- ~---h ~om--eH 18 —P*
A Berlin broadcast said the
terly to city authorities last week --____
that a taxicab driver had over- Airplane stamp three in war
charged him by ten cents. i tion book three will be valid be-
Dr. Rice disclosed last night ginning Nov. 1 for buying one
pair of shoes, OPA announced to-
day. It- will be good indefinitely
along with currently valid air-
plane stamps 1 and 2.
on the county morgue's missing
roll may be found among th e un-
identified dead.
Another 49 men, women and
CLEVELAND, Oct. 23 (P)— As
workers today resumed combing
ruins for additional victims of
Cleveland's greatest disaster, a mainland north of Al
6 Allied Armies Pound Nazi Lines
Ito ......1.1—33
_ Radio) — (AP). — American
soldiers, pushing westward on
Leyte island’s southern front,
today overran strong Japa-
nese defense positions and
were trying to trap enemy
troops retreating up the wide
Leyte valley.
A P War Correspondent Al
Political society, moaned over
Tokyo radio, “the- enemy, with
great military strength and nu-
merical superiority it attempting
to wipe us out."
His plaint coincided with Mac-
Arthur’s cold warning that Im-
perial warlords would be held
responsible for the brutal mis-
treatment of prisoners such as the
‘death march" perpetrated on Ba-
taan prisoners by the present de-
fenders of Leyte.
Chinese counterattacks, sup-
WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 IA)—
The Association of American
The Canadian army swept on
came from Ottawa and Canberra, from Esschen on the Dutch Bel-
CAM.CROWDER, MO- .first of a series
T-Sgt. Floyd C. Dusen received the government
ment in hospitals.
an aircraft
les both in Hungary and Yugo-
slavia. Sombor in Yugoslavia, a
place of 32,000 and a communica-
tions center 95 miles northwest
of liberated Belgrade, was top-
pled. So was Nyiregyhaza, Hun-
garian city of 56,000, close to the
Czechoslavak border. At cap-
tured Baja on the Danube, the
Russians were nearest to Austria
and Vienna.
Berlin Admits Penetrations
Wide penetrations of East Prus-
. sia were acknowledged by Berlin,
but Moscow remained silent on
the campaign which the enemy
has reported for a week. German
' broadcasts said the Russians had
pulled up on both sides of the
rail center of Tilsit, a city of 50,-
000 on the Niemen river.
"Attacks and counterattacks are
alternating in rapid succession,”
Berlin said of East Prussia, "sev-
eral Luftwaffe squadrons* were
put in the air for defense.”’
Goldap, at the top of the wild
Masurian lake country, was the
scene of a von Hindenburg tri-
umph early in the last war when
he collapsed the invading Rus-
sian west wing and crushed the
czar's armies with losses of 100,-
000 men.
The Germans asserted they had
encircled and crushed two Soviet
divisions east of the Hungarian
town of Szolnok, taking most of
the Russians captive.
In reaching the frozen Norwe-
gian border, the Russians over-
ran the rich Finnish mines which
has been nurturing the German
war machine.
” The rain of blows was not
yet a grand coordinated of-
east toward Duren after its cap-
ture of its first major German
city, Aachen, and was clearing
the enemy from .the area around
threat to
The United States and Great
Britain today recognize the De
Gaulle administration as the
recalled chor at Bergen Op ‘Zoom, four
mies ahead.
have complete responsibility.
This interior zone covers every- Breda box—a 40 by 20-mile rec-
thing except the combat areas tangle below the Maas (Meuse),
and points essential to combat The Canadians were about to
outflank the German coastal an-
L---e.
it ---p
aac.
advocate of a strong ]
agency, reported in advance
carrier. Previous
Vice President Wallace pre-
entrar ice to the
announced yes-
Knavy commu-
““T ““•“T - 201-----a---- J --- — -a y----.
two years of active duty with the per “Aujourd-Hui” and who is al- each are
army and replied: “How about leged to have been paid $15,000, ministry
of the monthly for his services. e
ighbor. A .38 caliber pis-
by his side, and a bullet
erik-Hendrik. Only one battery
—there were three two days ago
—remained in action in the Vlis-
Open Crack for Smash
Through Toward Berlin
Areas West and North of Antwerp, Around Aachen
And Vosges Passes Are Objectives in Offensive
Designed to Mark Time and Place of Main Drive
LONDON, Oct. 23 (AP).—Six allied armies pounded the
pointed by Mayor
Lausche began an investigation
■ i ■ •
Third army restlessly poked an
attack at the Germans towards
333233723323
I
.....
dgadmef,a
' 222
of which are chemists and —--
neen at Case School of A] oplied on . the south
sprawled on______
room house near Crosby, Sunday,
Since the suspension in May,
1943, of freight rate increases au-
thorized by the commission, net
earnings of the railroads have de-
clined, and “each subsequent
month of the preceding year,”
Parmelee said.
He asserted that due to the
wear and tear of heavy war traf-
fic, and shortage of materials and
labor, maintenance and improve-
ment work have been necessarily
postponed. Wage rates and‘prices
have increased, he said, adding
more than $1,100,000,000 to the
annual operating cost of the rail-
Vosges was a rain-soaked mire,
and clouds at tree-top height also
made an immediate
valley, capturing
Bezange La Pete, 19 miles east
ashes in a sheet iron box stove,
where the elderly man had
burned the currency. The rem-
nants of the bills will be turned
over to the Treasury department,
the justice said.
strewn over a considerable area
and the wreckage burst into
flames. A crash squad from the
airfield extinguished the fire and
removed the bodies. Identity of
the airmen was not announced.
r all
for future operations” was being
The Japanese Domei news developed. ..
agency asserted today that four / The 96th infantry diyision, in
more American ship? had been'toff------
damaged by Japanese bomber, emy tank and infantry
, 4-.
.is:...
expected him to declare for
Roosevelt, due to his reaction to
Mr. Roosevelt’s Saturday night
speech in New York. The presi-
dent then called for a world sive,” a Japanese naval commen- ese factories. •
peacesorganization.inwhich tator, Masanori Ito, said today in President Sergio Osmena and
American, representatives from a dispatch transmitted by Domei his Filipino cabinet reestablished ‘
confess to help authorityaf rm news agency. the free Philippines government *
force if necessary. I Ito's statement came in the at Tacloban where Gen. Douglas
“We either Wrk with the course of remarks in which it MacArthur announced he was*
other great nations or we might was claimed that Japan “wel- bringing back to the islands the
some day have to fight them,” corned” the invasion of the Phil-
Mr. Roosevelt told the foreign ippines because it offered "an-
policy association. other opportunity to deal crush-
President’s Speech ing blows on the mainstay of the
That speech climaxed a day of enemy's Pacific forces.”
r j
33
ROME, Oct. 23 (P) — The large Commitg Suicide
Aegean island of Ewoia (Eu- -------5
boea), adjacent to the Greek HOUSTON, Tex, Oct. 23 (P)—
. -- * —_ -* -Athens, has Charlie Louis Sherry, 72, black-
inquiry ap- , been cleared completely of Ger- smith, of Crosby, burned up about
Frank J. mans, allied headquarters an- $800 in currency and shot himself
nounced today. * to death during the weekend, ac-
The island, a mountainous cording to Justice R. R. Zierlein,
stretch of 115 miles and 33 miles who conducted the inquest.
TTV"" "
one of the first Amerian beach-
heads was established
The troops engaged in the ac-
tion were under command of Lt
Col. Herbert Edmundson, of
Georgia.
The country leading northwest-
ward from Dulag is flat and ideal
for tank warfare. The Leyte
। valley, over which the forces of
liberation are moving, is 25 miles
wide on the southwest It tapers
to 10 miles wide on the north-
east. The valley is flanked by
mountain ranges with peaks ris-
ing up to 1,300 feet.
(The action west of Dulag ape
peared to center on the highway
leading from the east coast to
the roadside town of San Pablo,
seven miles inland. Beyond
that town was Burauen, west end
of the provincial road. There it
turns northward toward Dagami,
highway junction.
(Supposedly, the Japanese on
the southern front were retreat-
ing northward up the open val-
ley or falling back into moun-
tain positions on the southwes,
of the valley).
Meanwhile Tacloban, the pro-
vincial capital, occupied by the
Yanks after they took the airfield
in that sector, became the tempo-
rary capital of the first free gov-
ernment of the Philippines in
more than two years.
Air Bases Hammered .
Carrier planes and aircraft
based outside the Philippines
were steadily hammering enemy
air bases and transport centers
328. i
......j".
-33
ga.aaga
"“ea•
338338822
’ ’ jUk
23
GENERAL M a c A R-
northethe“Greece
engi-
decrease of $385,000,000,
pared with 1942, he said.
Shoe Stamp Available Soon
WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 (P) —
wFu vnov .. Science, shortly before hi and which guards tht
NEW YORK, Oct. 23 (P —The American Red Cross officii is re- Dardanelles, wait
nptnnt astelout.ytcbssasd final plans for a fehabili- terday in a roy
nnnninnn --a "-e--i — Re
ticeoeredsfphiee ing squad—if he is convicted-
108 Persons Still
Listed as Missing
After Gas Plant Fire
throughout the islands. In ten
days of pre-invasion and inva-
sion-supporting blows they have.
bs" 9283 3.
*5*,
P 6%,5
3V529a* .
tion were taken prisoner.
The strategic North Aegean is-
land of Lemnos has been occu-
ern front. the Russians on
Bf/i l
ha
fasted together.
Commented Miles: “We dis-
•cussed swapping votes, but never
could reach an agreement.”
. FADED
Trying to
Trap Nips
In Valley
Tacloban Temporary
Capital of New Free
ing General Charles De Gaulle, West ofAntwerp the Canadian
have declaredtont several ^d YrPedenk-Hendrlk a mite farmer
elections as soon as possible. 8th"setnstressnmgaers32s
"Pending the expression of the side of the pocket, the Canadians
will of the French people took Schoondijke, pinching the
through the action of their duly Germans into a canal-sliced area
elected representatives,” Stetti-jof only five by eight miles,
nius said, “the provisional gov- German Hold Slips
ernment of the French republic
State Stettinius who also dis-
closed that most of France, in-
cluding Paris, had been desig-
nated by allied military authori-
ties as an "interior zone” in
which the French authorities
- T•3 "9
1C
8 3333
33822 22333
........ SEStt-as
administration the net farm in- cess-bearing strategy of 1940. tano55rfmrrrnto xs that
come would “be cut in half with- Mr. Roosevelt may speak in Yeai a nohtgt on the defensive
in a few years.” - i Chicago Saturday night; another P, . was on
Minnesota also figured in the address is expected in Boston, Wh1e thres - „ars •
political scene through the an- presumably Nov. 4. Cleveland, ■ • e oens 5 ...
nouncement by Joseph H. Ball the last stop on his 1940 schedule. The broadcast was recorded by .. , .. n
one of its Republican senators, may also see him within the fi- the Federal Communications com- qne.. aiereathase.50.2 arms
that he would vote for and sup- nal two weeks. mission.
singen (Flushing) area on the
north side of the estuary after
two allied heavy-bomber attacks.
Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges’
U. S. First army pushed a mile
in meeting their problems of im-
provement, maintenance, employ-
ment and adequate service,” he
said.
Parmelee predicted that gross
I earnings of the railroads will
; reach an all-time peak in 1944,
almost certainly decline in 1945,
and drop sharply during the re-
conversion period, with an up-
ward swing in the first three or
four years following reconver-
sion.
Despite an estimated gross
earnings increase in 1944 of near-
ly two billion dollars over 1942,
net railway operating income for
this year will probably show a
! trated Japanese positions threat-
ening Liuchow, only remaining
of a postwar agricultural pro-
As testimony began on whether gram which he is expected to
to restore or abandon emergency broadcast from Minneapolis to-
freight rate and passenger, fare morrow. He could reserve it for
increases, railroad representa- his Wednesday afterroon appear-
tives filled the ICC hearing room ance at Chicago.
to hear J. H. Parmelee, director ; The choice of Minneapolis
of the Bureau of Railway Eco- would place the Republican
nomics, read a statement of the - presidential nominee in the same
AAR’s contentions. -it- —’ -----1 1
reported six miles
toward offsetting the effect of
s and prices, and
‘ailroads in the re-
conversion and postwar periods
peace York that the president's foreign
! they (Continued on Page Two)
T-Sgt. Floyd C. Dusen recenvea the government hones will deal / i z u . 7
* a communication from Ms draft out justice withfhri? months to thentrials of-hundredsasqf other
‘board the other day:.. ... more than 100,000 persons ac- promainentupsrwarorwite ra.n-
"We have been advised that cused of collaborating with the cuted OrwarKingnfo natpreor
you have been discharged from Germans or giving them aid andnated periodicals now suppressed
the armed forces. In order to com- comfort during their occupation. Vast special judicial machinery
plete our records, it will be; The first defendant is George has been set up on a nationwide
der of Noray on a wide front
within inking distance of the
Norwegian non export harbor of
Associates of Ball, who is an ell said in a statement at New
• n
s,
. ■ 3 : 38 .
i_________ .
wa.. *
HA.... . ■ ........
Goldap in
Ei Prussia
• Offensive Broadened
Along Entire Eastern
Boundary of Province
LONDON, Oct. 23 (AP).-
Russian troops have captured
the East Prussian highway
center of Goldap, 18 miles in-
side Germany, and have
broadened their offensive
along the entire eastern
boundary of the province, the
German communique said.
“Deep penetrations", in nazl
lines between Goldap and Suwal-
ki were aknowledged
The Germans -u.d the front
now was 150 an line miles long
from beseiged Memel, northern-
most German c umed city, and
Augustow in t : Suwalki sector ।
at the southeast c ner of East
Prussia
At the extreme tip of the east-
5"-',
-mernmsmrhere
2 ' i
1 ■ e ■ .
; 4
at its greatest breadth, is sepa- Justice Zierlein said Sherry
mainland by a had been in ill health for some
norrow channel. time. ,
GasCo's plant Eridayuaftenoon thPislatags chief”cAy,hehsatseis $800 ein cash hast couldn’t
g^to^d^^^ ported by U S warplanes pene
mg, 49 of them plant employes, tattssnini nIneParotrns Zierlein related “He said he was ported by U 8' warplanes,pene-
However, many of those cerried left behindtin a“German’evacu- going to burn the money up."
* The body of Sherry was found
Ei
9988
M02-.
CATTLEMAN DIES
SAN ANTONIO, Oct. 23 (P--
Funeral services were to be held
here today for J. Gunter Hardie,
49, well known cattleman, who
died at his home here yesterday.
p-am---al- -"am-. --4
"-ae*ziazhaefehrse, ,
*X1 aatmeHw-Ma . ad. k.
treat- Ic , . ___
Seven re- Cyclades group was
__. _ __________ _ ge has been set up on a nationwide
necessary for you to submit a Suarez, veteran Paris journalist, basis to handle the purge. Alto-
copy of your discharge." who served as director of the gether some 254 courts with one - . —g----- {--0.. pugam.z.
The sergeant thought over his German sponsored daily newspa-or more judges presiding over 1 000,000,000 of goods yearly after i The Red Cross said 680 home-
two years of active duty with the per “Aujourd-Hui” and who is al- each are being c stablished by the the war and "perhaps even more," less persons who have been sleep-
army and replied: “How about; leged to have been paid $15,000 ministry of Jasti----3 A---"4--“ ” "" --- —‘ " i
you mailing me a copy of the monthly for his services. 'expected to beg
discharge you mention?” I His fate—which may be the fr-l over France with
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 47, Ed. 1 Monday, October 23, 1944, newspaper, October 23, 1944; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1466248/m1/1/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.