Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 253, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 16, 1945 Page: 1 of 12
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WEATHER
WEST TEXAS: fair with moderate tempera-
tures Sunday. Monday partly cloudy, scattered
showers, cooler in Panhandle. South Plains.
BUY A VICTORY
BOND TODAY!
THE CARBON BLACK C ENTER OF THE WORLD
Vol. 19—No. 253
NEA Service
Associated Press
Borger, Texas, Sunday, September 16, 1945
(Twenty-Eight Pages Today)
Price 5c
THOUSANDS ENDANGERED SY STORM
MacArthur Tells Japs
They Are "Not Equals
(By The Associated Press)
TOKYO, Sunday, Sept. 16—(AP)—General MacArthur
clamped a tight censorship on Japan's news industry today, j
dedat ing the empire was no equal >f the allies but "a defeat-;
ed enemy which hits not yet demonstrated a right to a place j
among civilized nations,"
All but a few of the top sabre-rattling militarists on his
wanted list of suspected war criminals were in custody. Those
detained included I.t Gen. Masaharu Hdnitna, held account-
able for Bataan's terrible "Death March."
Jose Laurel, puppet prt sident of the Philippines, his son
and Benigno Aquino, head of the puppet Filipino assembly,
were arrested bv V S. army authorities at the health resort
of Nf.ra near Osaka and taken
Boy ing/on Back In U. S.
Republicans
Want To Speed
Soldiers Rome
WASHINGTON, See' 15 -•/»’
House Republicans art mounting
drive to force Congress lo do
umethng about ending the draft
and getting men out of uniform
faster.
And they expect a lot of help
from the Democrats in tackling
what promises to be one of the
hotte-t issues in many years.
Dissatisfied with failure of th«
House Military Committee to do
•um,. thing to speed up discharge-.
tepublieans under the plodding
„f Hep A L. Miller of Nebrask
are drafting a (incharge petition
to force a showdown
A discharge petit win is a pr<
reduce by which legislation bo-. -
iled ip1 in committees can be
,’?(iCljt to the fiuui- for u cote if
oiu members request it in writing
Millet has asked chairman May
(O-Kv of the Military Committee
to consider the Nebraskan's bill 1
halt inductions immediately and
to permit immediate disc ha rye
upon application of any man who
has been a prisoner of war or
who has been in the service two
years
He has served notice that unlcv-
the committee acts within thirty
days, he will file a discharge pe-
tition.
May, whose committee recently
sidetracked demobilization legis-
lation in favor of a bill to en-
courage voluntary enlistments,
said he had no immediate plans
fur hearings on Miller's proposal
But lie indicated that he might
change his mind.
Several other proposals, to dis-
charge all lathers and men with
dependents, also are pending be-
fore the committee.
TEXAS TO OBSERVE
MEXICO'S INDEPENDENCE
•By the Associated Press1
Most Texas cities will cele-
brate another nation’s holiday to-
day (Sundayi—Mexico’s independ-
ence day.
Several began the observance
yesterday, holding two-day rele-
brat ions.
Women's Auxiliary
Elect Delegates
To State Meeting
Delegates and alternates to bo
sent to the state convention at
•'oft Worth were elected by the
,-cal chapter of the Women’s
Auxiliary of the American Legion
taring u special call meeting
Monday evening.
Those chosen to participate in
lie convention on September 114
md 115, as delegates are: Mrs. E. J.
fritz, Mrs, Quince Nelson, Mrs. C.
U. Risher, Mrs Jeff Wilson, Mrs.
frank Pierre. Mrs Lou Roberts,
firs. George Ken and Mrs. Hous-
on
Alternates elected are: Mrs.
Melms. Mrs. J C. Phillips, Mrs. B.
f. Brinton, Mi- Gordon Burch,
\1i Kd 1 nu. Mis Ray Hotter,
Mrs. Charlie Mizell and Mrs. Bon-
larn.
Regular meeting of the Auxil
ary will be Monday night at 8
i. nt. in the American Legion Hall.
* Hospital Notes
NORTH PLAINS
Shirley Beth Myers is a surgical
patient
Karen Opal Neyland is a surgl-
■ u! patient
Mi*. Hairy L.ratar is n medic.il
) lilt it‘| it
Calvin W St* plusiiMin if a Mir-
J »> q! |)<it ( lit
RANT*:*
Mi I, A I'lnkldlHI Is a .all
i e ul pallflll
< AbA SKRtNA
: to Yokohama.
Meanwhile. mart strategic
centers of all four home islands
were marked for occupation by
Octcber in a stepped-up sche-
dule testifying to the smooth
Spread of U. S. mi itary power
across the fallen nation,
MacArthur showed the Japanese
| the steel fist in his policy of occu-
pation yesterday when the nation's
| news leaders were assembled to be
told that 100 percent censorship j
; was effective at once
"General MacArthur desires it
lo be understood that the allied
powers do not regard Jaoan as
an equal in anv way," Col.
Donald Hoover, chief of censor-
ship, t-ld the Japanese newsmen.
"The Supreme Commander will
nictate orders to the Japanese
i government. He w ill not negotiate
I w ith it."
The Japanese were informed
| they had demonstrated thev could
not be entrusted with "the l.iti-
tnde" piovided under the first
beginning censorship MacArthur
I imposed. >
"Domei was suspended yester-
day at 5:29 p. m for the dissemi-
nation of news disturbing to the
public tranfuility," Hoover con-
j tinned.
Domei went back into opera-
tion but with censors at its el-
bow and with its operations
limited strictly to Japan. Cen-
sors wili move into Japanese
newspaper offices and radio
stations.
The Japanese still were entrust-,
ed with the mam burden of round-
ing up the men MacArthur wants .
tor questioning, but the Americans
j may take over if at least three high .
; on the list are not quickly produc- j
| ed.
They are Shigenori Togo
Foreign Minister at the time of
I Pearl Harbor; Taketora Ogata, |
I named as a black dragon terrorist j
| who holds ministerial rank as;
secretary of the present cabinet, j
and Vice Adrn, Ken Terathima,!
"Pearl Harbor” cabinet minister of
communications.
The Japanese yesterday turned
over a batch of smaller frv. in-
cluding Dr. Tokuda. suspected of
performing experiments on allied
prisoners of war that cauped
some to die.
But the biggest fish walked in
unassisted and gave themselves
up to the Japanese police at Yoko-
hama.
They were the sib-foot, hulking
Homma and Lt. Gen Shigenori
Kuroda, who succeeded him as
commander in the Philippines.
Tojo, the leader as war-time
Premier of all these men, was
recovering from a botched at-
tempt at suicide. Most of his
principal henchmen either were
in American hands or were sui-
cides.
MacArthur’s headquarters an-
nounced a revised ocupation sche-
dule which for the first lime men-
I tioned the southern island of
' Shikoku and called for a speedier
movement into Japan's principal
I cities and ports.
|
An advance party of Marines
was moving in today (Saturday,
U. S. timel at Nagasaki, atom-
bombed citv on the western
shores of Kyushu.
Tlu- naval base of Sasebo farther
>li)i Hi wfill be occupied beginning
Sept 22 Three days later Amen
'tan troops will mart li into Osaka,
second greatest city in Japan
Olhei American forth- will l.md
JHBS- — -
Lt. Col. Cregory Boyington i; shown upon his arrival at the Oak-
land, Calif., airport as he is hoisted on the shoulders of some of
the men of his Black Sheep Squadron. (NEA TELEPHOTO)
Stimson And
Marsha!! Are
Slated To Go
By ERNEST B. VACCARO
KANSAS CITY, Sept. 15—</P)—
President Truman said flatly to-
day he would tell reporters all
about rumored changes in the
War Department at his press con-
ference next Tuesday in Washing-
ton.
He made the statement shortly
after he had told an informal
pre s conference he could give a
better answer to any question
relating to that department upon
his return to the Capital.
There have been persistent ru-
mors i a- Henry L. Stimson, Sec-
1 retaiy ■> War, is anxious to re-
! tire .0.1 U...I his departure would
be followed by that of Gen. George
C. Marshall, Chief of Stuff.
Leaving his office in the Fed-
eral Building, the President was
told his answers concerning the
War Department had occasioned
considerable excitement among
reporters.
Mr. Truman replied that he
hadn't told them anything specif-
ic but that tie would tell them
all about it next Tuesday.
The President, however, made it
clear that he has not decided upon
his choice for the Supreme Court
t vacancy.
Mr. Truman, reporting to re-
260 Injured, Florida Citizens
Driven lo Emergency Shelters;
143-Mile Wind Whips Huge Fire
MIAMI, Fia., Sept. 15—(AP)—Over 200 persons were reported injured
tonight in a fire at the Richmond Nav/ Blimp base as a violent tropical hur-
ricane iha? reached a peak velocity of 143 M. P. H. swept inland across the
Florida Keys. I r
1 Jap Newspapers
To Print Under
Siiitrf Censorship
Hurricane warnings were ordered hoisted over all of
Peninsula Florida, 50,00 persons were driven to seek emerg-
ency shelter in south Florida alone, and at least one death
was reported.
Flames whipped by the great winds threatened to de-
stroy the giant navy blimp hangars at Richmond, 30 miles
irom Miami, which were described by the navy as the world’s
largest single-arch wooden
constructed hangars.
The Navv said no deaths re-
sulting from the blaze had been
reported up 2o 10:15 p. m. (CWT).
fcut all available ambulances,
doctors and medical personnel
were being rushed through the
storm to the base.
Three hundred enl'sted men
I porter: at his ‘of ic£ n“the Vid- ; OPAUdtt Naval Air Sta-
■ i turn. Miami, were dispatched to
DDT
With
Should
Liberal
Of Common
Be Mixed
Amount
Sense
Stale Lacks Cash
To Pay Old Ags
Amended Benefits
help combat the flames. The enure
of the fire was not immediately
determined.
Another fire sprang up on the 1
northwest fringe of downtown
Miami, destroying a furniture fac-
had ebbed to 08 M. R. H.
The highest unofficially report-
ed winds at west Palm Beach were
about 60 M. P. H.
Two big fires, whipped by the
tremendous winds to great sky-
flaring glows, raced in the hur-
ricane zone tonight. One was re-
ported engulfing all three hang-
ars at the Richmond Blimp
Base 30 miles irom Miami—
the largest hangars in the world
—and another klaze in a block
of buildings was being fought
by firemen on the fringe of
down town Miami.
eral Building on earlier calls on
his mother, his barber, and a
former haberdashery store pro-
prietor, aso disclosed:
111 That he will look into labor
disturbances at Detroit on his re-
turn to Washington but that he has
no intimate knowledge of the sit- anf- a . tile-manufacturing the Southern Florida coast to
nation at the present time. R ant anc> casting a great red glow r.mipa and at 5:45 p.rn. storm
(2> That he has no knowledge j up against the rain-whipped skies, 'warnings were ordered tip along
concerning published reports that j Relief workers went into the *he cast coast t< Fernandina, near
Major General Patrick J. Hurley, l Florida Keys as the core of the the Georgia state line, and St.
enroute home from China, wants 1 storm raged over the everglades in Marks on the coast south of Tail-
*—u".....J— * --------’ ’ ahassee.
Full hurricane warnings were
displayed Irom Palm Beach around
to resign his post as Ambassador
to that country.
AUSTIN, Sept. 15 —CPt— DDT
: when applied for the first time
j should be mixed with liberal
! quantities of common sense, say
state health department officials
One Man Injured
In Car Collision
One man was injured late
nd workers who ha^ used to^ terday afternoon in a collision of
two cars at the intersection of
Third and Harvey streets.
The man, whose name could
not be ascertained at a late hour
last night, was treated at North
of it.
It’s rightfully named the mir-
^ i acle insecticide they add, but per-
sons using it for the first time
AUSTIN. Sept 15—eB The should krow something of its p£ins"hospital”for’slight arm" in
State Board of Public Welfare to- properties, how to use it and what jurv ancj re.]eaSed
day authorized executive director '■ to expect of it.
John H Winters to ask the Attor- I
Otherwise they are going to
be disappointed, quite likely,
with their first use of the ma-
terial whirh is beginning to ap-
pear on store shelves.
a curving northward movement
Hundreds of homes were report- I
id damaged in the Keys, where the I
hurricane, reached .an officiary re-
corded velocity of 143 M. P. it. at
Carysport Light, 40 miles south of I
Miami.
Winds of 99 M. P. H. roared j
over Miami itself but damage was
held to a minimum by the tightly I
boarded up city.
The hurricane swirled vic-
iously errors the Florida Keys
and at 5:45 o'clock its center was
in Florida Bay about 250 miles
north of Tavenier, a little fish-
ing village at the southern tig
of Key Largo. The sterm was
pointed towards Ev ( glades
Ciiy on the mainland.
i.ey General to rule on whether
or not the recently adopted wel-
fare con.-titutional amendment is
self-enacting, or whether it re-
quire: further legislative action.
on the iioiuniniiio.-i island <
Hokkaido Sep! 26 a day abend <
: Hied I lie. ix-cupptllM Hokkaido
M i oiid i ilv of Sopporn The pm
ol i Haiti to the noitb will be tube
in it mi 4
Kobe eil> ot in al ly 1,1100.ill
population on tile inland sea mi
JaPMil* piiunpul Whipoil will I
Hubert Johnson of Waco, on
whose motion the authorization
was voted, said it was his im-
pression that many old age
pension recipients felt that
adoption of the amendment
would result in an immediate
increase in payments.
The amendment placed a ceiling
of $35,000,000 annually on what
the state may spend for Public
Welfare, and changed the opera-
tion of the welfare program in
other respects. It increased from
14 to 16 years the maximum age of
children eligible for assistance;
removed the ceiling of $1,500,000
annual on state spending to aid de-
pendent children; and raised from
$15 to $20 a month the maximum
state grant for old age assistance
Gov. Coke Stevenson recently
called on Winters, for an interpre-
tation of tiie amendment.
Winters told the board that
there is not enough money in
sight now to make any increase.
Winters said that the amend-
ment has been tentatively approved
b\ the Federal Social Security
Board. Old age assistance is made
i-p of both stale and federal
money.
Winters also told the Board that
the pension rolls are increasing
steadilv. There has been a rise
from 170.000 to 172,000 in the last
few months, and a roll of approxi-
mately 180,000 is expected. The all
t me high of pensioners was 183,-
464
He said that only approximately
45,738 pensioners—those now re-
(giving the maximum of $15 from
the state and $15 from the Federal
Government—would be affected
by an increase in the allotment.
No change in the definition of need
is contemplated.
Other members of the Board at-
tending the brief session were
Dr Thomas H. Taylor Hrownwoo 1
chairman, and R. M- Kil ling of
Hughes Spimgs.
PORT ARTHUR, Tax.. Sapt.
1$ iv-Gull Rotming com
u«ry workers who m» mam
* . rs ot (ha InUrnational Oil
W> rkart Union (CIOi liava vol
ini lo full * (Iriks VOla Monday,
Union Lsdsrs said sinitlsr
aU liopt Wl)l bs bald al all it-
I•«.*i i on it.a Trass and I -.uts
One Killed And
Another Injured
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M„ Sept.
15—(.!’)—S-Sgt. George D. Sam-
son, 24, was killed and Pvt. John
An unconfirmed report said
$7,000,000 worth of Navv and
private planes, shifted from the
Miami area to the hurricane-
proof blimp base, were endanger-
ed by the fire there.
An advisory issued by the wea-
ther bureau at 8 p. m. (CWT) said.
“Extend hurricane warnings 8
p. m. of Florida peninsula to in-
I Eighty-nine mile winds roared
through Miami and Miami Beach, j
I smashing plate gla; s, carrying •
away colorful beach cabanas, lift- ;
ing roofs off a few buildings, ov- j
eruirning automobiles and flood- j
ing deserted Collins Avenue, along !
the ocean front.
First off don't expect to sweep their car overturned
ui> heaps of flies, mosquitoes and , R.-m.n «.Hv tndav
roaches after it is applied to
screens, walls and other surfaces.
F. Swellie, 19, was critically in- | c^uci,iv Jacksonville and St Marks
The severe hurricane is central |
near Raton early today. I °Y?r the F‘0I'i,da everglades 61 j
- Both were stationed at the Ama- ! miles west of Miami, attended by
1 rillo Army Air Field. Swellie is > winds of full hurricane force
You can best judge its success ,-rom Springfield, Mass., and Sam- : "Highest wind reported at ,
by the absence of live insects son ,s believed to be from Ari-! Miami was 99 M. P. H.
rather than the presence of dead Zu -
ones. | Driver of the car, another AAAF ! westward at 12 to 16 M. P. H. with
That’s because DDT is a slow i soldier, was S-Sgt. Ernest E.
killer. When the solution is ' Noyes, jr., 20, also of Springfield
sprayed upon a surface it leaves and a cousin of Swellie.
a deposit of tiny crystals. In- j--
The weather bureau said the
wind direction had changed to
southeast at Miami and should
begin to diminish in this area
about 10 p.m., after increasing
to approximately 110 miles an
hour.
By RAY CRONIN
Associated Press Staff Writer
General MacArthur cracked
down on Japaqese newspapers and
the agency Domei today and sim-
ultaneously stepped-up his sched-
ule for occupation of other parts
of the Nippon homeland.
The Allied supreme commander
clamped on a tight news censor-
ship and told the Japanese
through his censorship chief he
wanted it understood "that the
allied powers do not regard Ja-
pan as an equal in any way.” Ja-
pan. he added, is “a defeated en-
emy which has not yet demon-
■4rated a right to a place among
civilized nations.”
MacArthur made it clear that
he has not been negotiating with
the Japanese government. “There
are no negotiations" he said. “The
supreme comma :der will dictate
I to the Japanese government.”
Domei was suspended “for dis-
semination of news disturbing to
the public tranquility.” It resum-
ed service under the eyes of Amer-
ican censors.
Meanwhile the b:.g of suspect-
'd war ciiminals increased. Lt.
Gen. Masaharu Homma, whose
loops staged the i-fumuus Ba-
taan death march in the Philip-
pines, surrendered himself for
luestioning. Lt. Gen. Shigenori
Kuroda, another Japanese com-
mander ia the Philippines, also
surrendered to the Nippon police.
Homma denied he ordered the
death march and said "l don't
think it was such a tough
march," he added and he was
ready to "lake full responsibil-
ity" tor the acts of his subordi-
nates.
Homma, who received the sur-
render of General Wainwright,
hero of Corregidor, disclosed that
tlie brave band of Americans and
Filipi os who defended that fort-
res.- to the bitter end almost had
him licked.
He said defense of the island
was so vigorous that he was on
sects touching the crystals appar- Whole Landed
entlv absorb it through their feet. L i .1,
On Gulf Coast
After exposure they become
restless, drag their legs. Then | ROCKPORT, Tex , Sept 13
their movements becomes jerky (Ah—Two Texas Marine biolo-
and spasmodic and finally they 1 gists and several other
develop tremors (the DDT’s, it’s went to St
a tendency toward a slow north- | be <!* mroved were express-
ward curve which will probably j «!' Man>' troes were uProot‘
tprmitvitp in a Hofinitn nnrfVwsacf- *"
A number of Miami’s streets were
Grave fears that South Florida's j
It is apparently moving north- ; uuuti-milhini dollar grapefruit. yje verge 0f admitting Japanese
-tward at 12 to 16 M. P. H. with I oran®e'. im" ■ nc* avocado crops , lajjure when the Yanks hoisted
the white flag.
Others already in
terminate in a definite northeast- ;
ward movement while still over , „ ,
Florida interior close to the Gulf I bl2fuked fa! cn t ees'. ,
coast or after emerging a short! .. 'J1' l"mi depaitment h-nted
& B all traffic over the three cause-
ways connecting Miami and Miami
Beach to prevent motorists from
being blown into Biscayne Bay.
During the great Miami hurricane
of 1926 when 327 persons died
nd 6,327 were injured, many of :
or after emerging a
distance out in the Gulf of Mexico.
This movement will cause the
storm to affect all of peninsula
persons j Florida and adjacent water area.
Joseph's island, near | “Destructive winds are indicat-
or central Florida late tonight
custody in-
cluded Col. Kingoro Hashimoto,
who ordered the bombing of the
gunkoat Panay in the Yangtze in
1937; Yoshitaka Ueda, secret
leader of the imperialistic Geo—
political bureau; Lt Gen. Teiichi
Suzuki, minister without port-
folio in the Pearl Harbor attack
cabinet of Premier Hideki Tojo;
Okinori Kaya, finance minister;
Michiyo Iwamuka, justice min-
jokingly culled) and die. i here, to study a small whale ed
Ail thin Hmo And die which had been pulled out of and Sunday and over north Flon- .. .. ... ........-.........-..... -.............
ill-oof mav be f-ir removed from shallow water with a truck by da Sunday. Hurricane winds that •' <J 1 ' . ost,cb>. Y£ntl!ni^? ! >ster, and Sekiyu Ino, agricultural
*■ y 1 o-, —1_ n- .....^ n.jnnii mm. now prevail over extreme south (lla^ cau-eways as the storm ;inri overseas minister ,-iii mem.
diminish
the point of exposure when death J'’0*6 Townsend
overtakes it. , a§jer.
Point number two; Unless ap- 1' 'vas a globqjiead whale,
plied to surfaces insects walk or
alight on the kill will be zero.
a ranch man
I Florida will begin to
12 | slowly after midnight.
feet. 10 inches lWig and weighed I “Hurricane warnings are now
about 1,000 pounds. The party displayed over the entire Florida
The residue of*DDT smrav' (the 1 theorized that it had lost its way peninsula.”
crystals' will kill insects, if they during the recent hurricane______At 8 p. m., the winds in Miami
walk over it long (months under
some conditions) after it has been j
applied.
DDT itself is a white powder.
For home purposes it can be mix- I
ed with kerosene or in a standard
insecticide spray. It can be used
in solutions, emulsions or diluted
in dusts.
center passed
erous lull.
giving a treach-
When purchasing it from
stores you probably will find
it put up in solution.
If using it in small quantities
in the home spray screen doors
and windows ard the door and
window lacings. Also spray cup-
boards. and other places where
roaches, ants and flies are in
evidence. If spraying walls
make sure the solution you use
does not stain wall paper.
Remove utensils and food
from any location you intend to
spray. Then put them back
when the spray dries.
Some solutions may be toxic.
I If using laKge quantum- wear
lubber gloves or wash hands
thoroughly in warm, soapy water
when spraying I- finished Avoid
breathing the dust or spray it
may not harm you, but don’t in
Kill t lough
Health detail llitttf offend-
Timberwolf Division
Stands Last Formation
For Wives And Relatives
All public buildings including
schools, police stations, post
offices and motion picture thea-
tres were thrown open as emer-
gency storm shelters in virtually
every southern Florida city.
Hundrtds were under cover in
them, some late arrivals be-
draggled and soaking wet.
and overseas minster, all mem-
ber- of Tojo’s cabinet, and Shozu
Murata, former Japanese ambassa-
dor to the puppet Ptulipine gov-
, ernment.
American troops arrested Jose
Laurel, Philipine puppet presi-
I dent, his son, Jose 3rd. and
Benigno Aquino, chief of the
Philippine puppet assembly.
MacArthur headquarters dis-
closed that 13 additional Ameri-
v re than 1.000 bed Cross ean divisions, totaling some 175,-
| workers w ere on the job, some in | ooo men, will join his occupation
, dangerous spots. Gene Hall of: armies within Japan iate this
Miami, a litter carrier and Red month or in October. Before the
i (. ro.'s- volunteer, carried an emer-■ oncj 0f j^e current month the
gcnc.v radio transmitter into the j Yanks are scheduled to take over
storm at Key Largo. ! the Sasebo naval base. Osaka;
Cocoanuts were yanked oN i Sopporo, on ;iiokkaido island
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif,, Sept.
15 — i/Th — The victorious 104th
(Timberwolf) Division celebrated of khakl movlnK in lmison A
its third birthday today by passing j 100-piece band drummed the stir-
in smart review before its com- J ring marches
mander, Maj. Gen. Terry Allen, i Lt. Cecil Bolton, Huntsvi’le, La
who told the 15,000 bemedulled winner of the Congressional Medal
Regimental, battalion and com- trees and flew through the air
pany standards made spots of bril- lllso f"otb.d!s in forward passes,
liant color against a background
battle veterans “this may be our
last formation."
While 5,000 wiles, sweethearts
end relatives jammed the review-
of Honor, was present with other
Timberwolf heroes to watch the
review.
Allen in his tribute to alt hi
the
he reported “Water covers the
overseas highway on Key Largo.
1 located one family cowering in
the stoi m after most of their
house blew away.”
An extreme 143 mile velocity
was reported at Carysfort Light,
i() m.les southeast of Miami.
, mg stands, Allen culled his men "a
men pan
i partlcu]
iur praise t
truly Kn*at combat div
u$ion, which i
Timbcrw
olf dead
left in Eure
1 never faltered, was
alw ays uk
The ct
•rnrnandet
• recalled W
* revive and in my
opinion is
i vision's
achievem
ents us pit
h»-t uiid lo none
| 1 trill 111*,
ill fightui
s, their jur
As the yiuts wlut
led up Hit*
with Uw
fun a
nny at Aa
.trill field, n was w
idi ill every
►el/me
of emb
allied htol
• •Idler tell a Uuillw:
‘If pi uia in
1 ia hei la
rtf tfini
l fel.O,
1.114a u menibur of a
HI eat Iraili
(hi’ Hhi
fiirths
>1 10
11 Cl
inn
Kobe and Kyoto. On Oct. 3 the
Kure naval base and atom-bombed
Hiroshima will be occupied.
Marines were moving into atum
bombed Naga-aki.
American naval fliers located
an . dditional prisoner of war
amp on Honshu Island. The Jap-
a e-e reported another camp, on
northern Honshu.
Among prisoners already res-
cued was Lt. Col. Jamas P. S.
Devtrvux heroic defender of
W .ke Island. Ha was aboard an
escort carrier near Omtnafo.
A Hr iti-li prisoner of war hsiaon
l> all - flown lo hlunghtti to
<. ir| <»t flalliHl i)f
i: •nun i Mutuft# found in
in) Hi» i* K«r* *m lUiimb *«i
•Mm * k
i. ■
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 253, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 16, 1945, newspaper, September 16, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth520367/m1/1/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.