Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 233, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
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»•!
tS. FRIP4X, AUGUST 25, 1944
‘TH YEAR, NO. 888
Q
ENGLAND
BELGIUM
CALAIS
AREA
lish Channel
AlttVIUl
AMKNS
dispatch from
Press
United
2LE HAVRE
COMPIEGNE
ROUEN
SOISSONS
■ HEIMS O
CAIN
MANTES
4
DULUX O
COMEU
ALENCON O
FRANCE
Sf/Nf «.
(.resistance center, but the Germans
different
LONDON. Aug 25
Between Llsleux and the channel
will
It
Entry.
Mrs
■
Pri-
traln.
•oore at
*
from
AL
*1
TF'-’
"TF
..
©
=«
50
k——
fee r
Entire Balkans
In Turmoil Over
German Setback
Arrangements
Completed for
Fall Horse Show
(AIAIU
aicinianO
Germans Clinging
i .Stubbornly to
I larbor I acilities
Governor* Don’t
To Work That I
Hull to Meet with
Senate Committee
To Give Report
WAR j
^ONbsi
Hourly
Temperature
Leaders Seeking
Agreement on
American Plan
the
the
has
<By United Press)
Correspondent 1
broadc-asting
Eisenhower's
Q CHATtAU-
notnv
Cpl. Jack Porter
Wants War to End
that Oaramn
out Of----
’T*"
A
■
1
CHA>r>ts
O
o
vi($aiUH
"I 10
tween
rhlle
—
Ben Pate received word thB
Lj
B
f
I
MS to M
■tiUtary
Ij
liberated MatMlle to J
«|
inued ta i
mopped
T
fi^5 DIEPPE
A
I
•Mj
^usiiux
1
/
/
ROMANIANS ARE
SURRENDERING
ROADS JAMMED
• ‘ - ■ ■ ■ -
Weather Forecast
EAST TEXAS: Partly cloudy IN»
tonight and Saturday.
CLEBURNE, TH
MM
Mt urn
______________ * ~ , ' '
, -----------; ■'"■ .....■■■ . '!»*■-----------------------
AS YANKS STORM TOWARD FRENCH ROCKET COAST
' i
i
Johnson '
*‘ t the'
The ticket
poinij ( Marine Barksdale
correspondent Finds Stunned Jap
among 1 France on Aug. 9
Pvt. Hudson is the aOh of
and Mrs. E. G. Hudson of 1
Rt a.
In
suburbs of Ver-
in.. crushing *
NBC Correspondent Merrill
Walker, broadcasting from
“General Eisenhower's head-
quarters,” said todav that the
liberation of Paris by French
and American f orces "is a
faet ”
ed Division
desert warrior. Brig Gen Jacques
spearheaded the 1 ----
and i
Gen
The statement also reiterated the
Soviet pledge of last April that
Russia had "no intention of ac-
quiring ahy part whatsoever of
Romanian territory changing the
existing social stricture of Ro-
mania. or by any means Infring-
ing on the Independence of Ro-
mania."
More than 550 towns and vil-
lages were swept up by the Soviets
in ’ . ........
miles of the mouth of the Danube
River, including Chisinau, capital
of Bessarabia, and a number of
other strongholds guarding the out-
er approaches to Bucharest and
Ploestl, the latter Adolf Hitler's
last major source of oil.
Chisinau, a city of 112,500 and
pre-war Romania's second largest
city, fell to a combined assault
by the 2nd and 3rd Armies, after
tv had been by passed and virtiigll:
encirciled in the arly stages of the
six -day -old offensive.
Garrison Wiped Out
Virtually the 601110“ garrison was
wiped out in the assault which
crumbled four formidable defense
belts around the dty.
Draft horses will be judged at
2 o'clock in the afternoon of the
ea were swept up by tne (Soviets sjiow 5 parade will be staged
yesterday's sweep to within 18, downtown
na nnZMlih ♦ ViA rtanllhd _ . ___
'fl
parade will
at 5 p m
Entry will be at 7 p.
Judging of saddle
fled as a force of 82 carrier based
planes. In the Sumatra attack
was Indicated that, the raids wer<
In the Padang-Emmn
miles west ot the oil
-—-------------
\ ,-z ■
vtiNOtn
tVXtUX O
k ■
1 present involved th
----of John- pianos over
D. D. (Doug) Strategic
“ “ ‘.brought Gw
7 > --
04W
ROBOT BOMB CM
miles below Lyon, big Rhone
industrial center, 110 miles
from the Mediterranean
NO JU N K — Jesse Jones,
Commerce Secretary and ithe Anied armies m central ana
Federal Loan Admlnlstra- |southern Prance to_lTO mUm..-nW 1
tor, promises that war plants
will not be junked after war
but that industries can buy
.*■ — them.
'■ to ground forces in south*
> and northern Italy, and
attacked rail lines in Hungary and
Yugoslavia. **
„ Allied 1JB
of nounced that 53 enemy
LONDON. Aug 26. <UB—A Ber-
lin broadcast said today that Ger- 1
man forces had begun a withdrawal
from Romania and Cairo heard
they also were abandoning Bulgaria •
on the Hungarian army to revolt
against the Germans. ,
Wilfred von Oven. German boms'tough oompstition
service radio cor ** '
knowledge* in a 1
— de net EHnt to denyt—
German DNB News
American tanks, planes and infan-
try were driving in on Tirt.*. frert
the south after breaching the
Yvette River line, six miles south
of the city, at two points.)
United Press War €
Robert Miller reported from the
Paris environs that Gen. Charles
de Gaulle, president of the French
Committee for National Liberation,
personally commanded the French
forces entering the city.
The French armor swept
from the western
.dMMrM'2:3(1 a._________
light German screening force, and
by mid-morning was reported to
have reached the Latin quarter,
on the left bank of the aetae. »
More than M hours after Ihrench
'appeared to be fighting to prolong
“the American' advance as long as
I pOSSiDlC . ’ y.e
| Tlie fall of Lyon would cut all
the main escape routes for OecmaD I
1 forces remaining in southwest i
I France and close the gap between J
the Allied armies in central • and^^a
I American advance already had out
'the last railway link betweta Ranee
.and Italy.
I French forces tightened their ring ’
jot encirclement about the doomed
, German garrison in Toulon, cap- I
turing the land arsenal ineMg thw .
rp I . city and the by-passed stronghold
I 0KV0 Keports <>f omoules. 2S miles west <?rou-
"TW Landings.......l'°"' -------------
LONDON. Aug 25 <U.R>- French
armored columns rode down Nazi |
troops it the gates of Paris and ward
I stormed in to relieve the em- -----
As usual the Tlmes-Review will
hold Its regular election party,
.giving out the returns as soon as
Bombers from Britain and Italy
Deliver Double Attack on Enemy
LONDON. Aug.
— lean bombers frt
G°
/
STATUTE MILES
I —
0
AUSTIN. Aug. a. a
soldiers' wives from mtt
to see their husbaada .1
tonio, decided to sea ■'
about 7 o'clock thia I
There a tajl man in.
Ing the marks Of a fe
untearod consMerabM 1
about the capital.
■ You sure know a M
place." marvelled <me.
"You can’t fool us,*
Mt AUX
ST DENES qj
^PARIS
_4j>VSKlNHlS
YchaiihtonX \
V
/
announcement that his Partisan
troops and the Fsrtstene them-
selvas hnl liberated the city, fieroe
fWMErg smMmnd at a aoore o<
pctntg and the romnarits of the
Itaad garrison appearod ta have
I committed iteeif te a death battle
l in the barricaded strotts. -
wfinerlte to Germany *“* ln^ung“y
itoated attack, which Allied headquarters at Jtome an-
greatest number of nounced that 53 emmy planes were
diapatohed by the V. ehot down in all operations ym-
Alr Forces in Europe, terday, while the Allied forces lost
■nny’k oU centers un- IE. ‘ - „ /
Of more than 1.000
NttM WM liberators
WASHINGTON. Aug 25.
Republican and democratic foreign
policy leaders today were believed
seeking agreement on an unpre-
cedented joint declaration pledging
both parties to support the general
details of the American plan for
an international peace organisa-
tion.
Secretary of State Cordell Hull
is laying the base for such action
In his talks with John Fostec Dulles,
foreign policy advisor to Gov.
Thomas E Dewey They have con-
ferred for five hours during the
last, two days and- met again at
11 30 a m today
“We are trying to do something
--— i&sB
romk, Aug 25. uP“—American |
forces captured the Riviera resort' «
city of Cannes today and were to- J®
SMASHING NEW ALLIED assaults in northern Fiance have been launched along the south banks of the
Seine river in an all-out drive to trap the battered remnants of the German Seventh Army while other
American troops stormed toward the rocket coast of France. The latest communique from GHQ
stressed the British and Canadian advance 75 miles northwest of Paris where one Allied column was
reported within a mile of the important communication center of Llsleux in an appaient drive toward
German robot bomb launching sites on the French coast. (Internttional)
SiiPARIS BEING LIBERATED
26._<U.FD—Amer- the British-baaed armada, although
and the number-of fighters taking part
Voting to the nm-off ^election Germany and ber Satellites "disclosed?"1'**'' ”'**** *"***
Twelve German planes were shot
down ,nd 14 others destroyed on
I The enemy broadcast said one grouftd by the 8th Air Force
- HMfc H, S. BiiK
w ODDotlnff I more than 1J0G heavy bombers er" France
..nil-
I il k ,
of ported battling the Germans^only
15 1 <. •
viillej
inland
GUAM—(Delayed)—Marine Corp-
oral Jack R Porter of 522 North
Anglin street. Cleburne. Tex., want*
the war to end In a hurry so he
can get back home and *come a
a box, up popped’ ttm tsn of t tn * dttfe ta front of the enemy
-^1 jgp. Haan. h« junqiiil out *0 shackle
' 'hT’nn? S^tnnk^ge^biack'
Maa against the Japa and
an takportant part ta the
M drive to capture all of
pentMMU
Sb
; nauener saiu uic uucnn.vra, —• _—.-----
("is a fact’’ this afternoon, but the linked their left flank with the
'German DNB News Agency said British 2nd Anny line near Conches
LZ—. •' and were grinding steadily Into
Paris from the southern rim of the pocket.
Cannes 1 .„™ ,
acknowledged Monte Carlo as a fashionable Ri-
warned last 1
Army must continue
erattons In Romania until German — ~~ ~
S^isSBY FRENCH-AMERICANS
oj>erations in Romanian territory
and concluding peace negotiations
between Romania and the coalition
cf Allies." the statement said.
It promised that the Russians
would permit Romanian forces to
retain their arms and would assist
them if thev undertook "hand in
hand with the Red Army to wage
a wer of liberatton against the
Germans for the Independence of ,
Romania, or against the Hunger-
lanr for the liberation of Tran-
sylvania . ”
Soviet Statement
' v Fremir Marshal Pietro Bad-
o-lio's capitulation to the Allies
while the Grmans still were re-
ririlng fiercely in his homeland
The Soviet foreign commlsariat,
in the first official Russian state-
ment since King Michael's an-
nouncement that Romania had ac-
4 I >|
MJ M i W.i Mjg
PRICE Fiyfij
Mosquito?”/ txvnbers hammc
ess Jssrs.’SijnL.
Ing « motor vehtolee and M »
Wtercars. including one staff
directly ,0n Mapia Island
LEADING FROM
FIGHTING
SUPREME HEADQUARTERsJ AEE. Airi (U’l
The Germans were reported evacuating the r hot I <>1
coast of Northern France at top speed today, fallin;
towards the valley of t*h\ Mftrne and the west'>in >i<
the Reich. "..J
Word of the mass enemv withdrawal was fl islu'd l>ad-
to headquarters by Allied airmen, wh(. reported the ro'*ds const
— • I A United Press dispatch from
Annocy, capital of Haute Savote <]
province, said an American flying -J
column wus expected, there mo-
nu ntarily from Grenoble, M miles 4
to the south Liberated by French
Maquis, Annecy was draped with
American and French flags in an-, .
ucipution of the arrival. -4 -^3
I he lact that the Americans had ■
not yet arrived at Annecy appear- ’ 3
ed to disprove earlier reports that
they already had reached the Swiss .
ixirder nt *t Julien. 16 miles Xar-.--iJ
ther north, and Evian, 25 miles 3
noitheast ol St Julien.
Close to Lyon
Tin Rome newspaper II Tempo ->■
said an American armored column .. J
had engaged the Germans 15 miles I
south of I,yon after an advance
| from Grenoble, 58 miles to thb .3
southeast French Maquis were said 4
’ to bi* in control of Lyon. lohg a
to have proclaimed
and an underground radio called'bitter run-off oampal
AasottaM’Wpreme
^^[wchard Crlta^protat
tator, * ac- candidate, Ool. Oort
_ ntata «a NbRhMhtattvs
that Gathtags. »mm!r kd lha ti
tang by a small margin ta the I
soma primary MH ta Jtay. Rota t
w|ll tenders are scrapping for the v
IE MANS O
City of Cannes 1
Captured by a
American Forces
MOSCOW, Aug 25 (U.R>—Ro-
manian troops, ordered by their
klr« to cease resisting the Red
Army, were surrendering by the
thousands today in the face of a
Russian onslaught that already
has overrun virtually all Bessa-
rabia and Northern Moldavia and
carried to within 138 miles of
Bucharest.
Front dispatches indicated that
the Romanian Army had collap-
sed completely as the 2nd and
3rd Soviet Ukrainian Armies, ad-
vancing up to 28 miles in 24 hours,
relied to within 40 miles or less
of the Galati Gap to Southern
Romania and 118 miles of the
greit oil center of Ploeetl
< Soviet troops advanced 37 miles
last night and now are approach-
ing Focsani on the western end-
of Galati Gap. the London radio
reported Uxlsv tn a broadcast re-
corded bv CBS Focsani la 43
miles southwest of Barlad. the fall
of which was announced by Mos-
cow yesterday, and is less than
100 miles from Bucharest itself >
German forces still were offer-
ing last-ditch resistance -st many
points and some engaged in armed
clashes with the Romanians, who
were surrendering en masse More | -
I rather novel 7ii ’American political than 25.000 prisoners, most of them
life. Dulles told reporters when Romanians were rounded up yes- I
he left Hull's office at 7 p m , terday alone
last night I Much Confusion
Hull, well aware of Woodrow
Wilson's mistakes in 1919 has Disnatches likened the confusion
worked diligently to create biparti- | to that prevailing in Italy follow-
san congressional support of his in? Fremir Marshal Pietro Bad-
plan for world organization He rwlin's cAnitulation to tha Allies
was assured of it for the broad
outlines of his plan late in May
when a bipartisan Senate com-
mittee gave him a "go ahead" sig-
nal to call the current Dumbarton
Oaks conference on world secur-
. ity. —— tirrt s —» •
Before he meets Dulles for the
third time. Hull will confer again
with that Senate committee, pre-
rstftnatfty tB Ytve -them • progeew
report on the discussions at Dum-
barton Oska-tat tawraUkely to dis-
cuss with them the nature and the
goal of his talks with Dulles
Dulles emphasis that "we are
breaking new ground" lent cred-
ence to the belief of political and
foreign ixillcy observers that unless
some sort of declaration pledging
cooperation on foreign policy mat-
ters is issued at the end ot the
Hull-Dulles talks, the way would
be open for barc-knuckle partisan
debate on such Issues
All the evidence, however, points
in the other direction, republican
senators who have conferred with
Dulles this week have without ex-
ception strosaed that the two parties
are close together on questions of
an international organization and
that whatever differences exist are
"nothing to cause a political issue "
Furthermore. Wendell L. Wlllkie,
the 1640 republican presidential
candidate, also is supporting the
key point ot the American plant-
empowering the United States to
use its forces outside the country
without a declaration of war each
time by Congress.
It was learned today that
most of this week's work at
Dumbarton Oaks conference
been based on the Russian memo-
randum It was pointed out that
it was shorter than those present-
ed by the other two countries—
the American plan being the long-
est and the most detailed with re-
spect to an international organi-
sation and the British memorand-
um being, in effect, a series of
KHrtlro rather than a speeifta plan.
es-Review
Dutt* Prtaa tut Lga^d Win
~ ' .. -----~~r~l J L ll— ..—R—.....
GUAM—(Delayed)-Marine
vate First Class Raymond K. Barks-
dale. Rt. 3, Cleburne, was one of
a three-man searching party that
found a stunned Jap among other
enemy supplies In sn “unoccupied"
cave on this island.
The cave had been searched hast*
Uy a week before ta the seising
of the Aaan beachhead tout no
sign of life had been founa. ’nw
marine trio tedded to thoroughly
taveetigate the 156-foot ttu* eav-
Qen. Pierro Koemiv's premature ern. When one of them leaned over
Northern New Guinea
•OLBtC /
MAUVIUI / y Ll
in for election results
I
Emphasis is being placed on the WASTE PAPER COLLECTION
big parade which will consist of ] The j^y Scouts will collect old
floats, decorated cars, bicycles, In- newspapers and magazines In the
dustrial section, clowns and horses, western zone of Cleburne on Sat-
Cash prizes will be awarded win- urday morning. All housewives are,
ners in each section |requested to have them tied in)
i I From the Interest and enthus- separate bundles and on their front
» | team being- cgtni»Ut<'« porches by 9 am. The western
*e j anticipates one of the largest ari<T zone~TncIOTes~inT streets wekt of I and infantrymen to
moat successful shows in Texas. Main street. Poilus Into the city.
|.------------_■__I " Is a Fact
(NBC Correspondent Merrill
Mueller said the liberation of Paris
leading east and south from Dieppe. Amiens, Beniv.'tis and
the surrounding areas crammed with German t'-affi..
Throughout Thursday, large numbers of Nazi trucks v .-i.
spotted racing down toward*
I the Marne and the German
| frontier, and RAF night fliers
reported that the flow of
traffic increased after dark.
For the first time since the
battle of France began, the Ger-
mans Ignored the presence of Al- ,
lied night planes ovcinead and ;
r<>de bumper to bumper wipi their |
headlights blazing Indicating the
frantic haste ot the evacuation. J
Weather Clear
Headquarters spokesmen had no i
the gtim note that the weather
Immediate comment beyend
In Northern France was clear to- "
day and that Allied warplanes
alreaxiy were ranging over the
crowded highways.
The reported evacuation of the
channel coast from which Naxl.
robot bombs have been spreading '
death indiscriminately through U*l- |
don and southern England since
mld-June, came as four Allied
armies crushed through the beaten
remnants ot the German 7th Army
with a speed that indicated the bat-
tle of the Seine had reached Ita
final hours.
British and Canadian forces from
the west sleaheU as suueh as IZ
miles Into the Nazi pocket between
the Alsne and Seine Rivers . Awhile
the American 1st Army crushed
in from the south in converging
drives that threatened t$ c»rtj.
quickly into the great channel port
- ef Ia .__\__v ’
Canadian 1st Army trbope p
cd along the channel coast to the
outskirts of Honfleur. directly
across the Seine estuary from Le
'Havre and within full view of the]
port, while the Americans last were
'reported at Elbeuf, less than 40
'miles south of Le Havre, and clos-
ing in rapidly.
RAF Smashing Enemy
RAF fliers smashed one appar-
ent German attempt to evacuate
lx- Havre early Thursday morning,
and an unconfirmed report broad-
cast by Radio France at Algiers
said British airborne troops had
been landed near the port in the
Seine estuary area.
Canadian troops drove 10 miles
east of Llsleux to Brionne on the
RJsle River, while another column
lunged forward north of Orbec to
capture Thiberville and push on
Ito the Rlsle east of Bernay, which
was occupied in the advance.
The Canadians also moved for-
1 on the Monnal-Bernay high-
em-'way, gaining four miles and cap-
front of the building on Anglin j
street.. However, very few figures)
can be compiled before 8:30 or 9|
^ EBURNE
PttMahtfd Dotty Bxcapt Saturday
of | -------- -..... - - ■
Pvt. Olin Hudson
Is Wounded «
_ Liberator bombers, in the heav-| -----
tiff -Etebeufr^tawefr-ftehMiiq rogil|l—t sttadL-JiQ- f»rI Mrs. Ben
jin the latter city, which had been dumped 158 tnns of bombs Wetl-|WoTfl from the War 1
nesday on the strategic tslsnd 250 | that her husband. Pvt.
miles south of the Philippines 'Hudson, was wounded tn aettoa
Many files were started !
supply dumps and bivouac areas
Other Allied warplanes damaged
a small freighter-transport off the
Celebes and more than 200 fight-
ers and bombers hit enemy posi-
tions on Vogelkop peninsula off
Dutch New Guinea with 90 tons
of bombs
<By United Press)
Tokyo radio announced t<>dav |
th#t Allied troops landed on Mapia
Island. 125 miles north of Man
okwarl in Dutch New Guinea yes- .
terday but were repulsed witli
heavy losses and that. Allied bomb- ,
era twice attempted to raid "an
area,' apparently on the west coast
of Sumatra, while other bombers
Increased their softening-up as-
sault on Halmahcrs
There was no Allied confirmation
of the landing, which would com-,
pleto encirclement of Japan's large ;
naval bn.se st Mnnokwari The
base was by-passed by Americans Hfte>r .. —no-
Sarong |en(jP(i the Allied bridgehead along
>h RTskvir .. - "
Guinea in their leapfrog drive west east to within 17 miles of Nita and j
along the Northern New Guinea jg mlieS of the Italian border. 1
coast. Cannes ranked with Nice and n
The broadcast acknowledged Monte Carlo as a fashionable JU- I
"some damage"' by raiders, Ident.i- viera resort before the War. A con- |
. lrr for horse racing, yachttaKtfl
golf, tennis and sea bathing, it bad "a
a peacetime population of nrorly
sector, 325 50,000. • 3
center
I*alembang which was blasted by
B-29 Superfortresses Aug 10 The-
Japanese said .two Allied planes
were shot, down J in one attack but
-F1 . — made no clalmt, about the second
tanks fought furiously to hold open the] raid
follow the last remaining Seine crossings north - - • -
R--------------------- )H< t | g| __^a-e-a-a-^a -----■
| in the latter olty, which had been
reported captured yesterday.
The Americans, however,
with
taw.Martin at Fort Worth. Both
Aaoociate
Vote to Be Light
they also were abandoning Bulgaria ■
as the result of Romania's capitu-
lation to Russia. Il———- — ■■■— ■ — — — ——— o—w»iu w*»—vu,... «
The entire Balkans were report-<because of the small number of day Berlin radio reported,
eg ta a turmoil over Germany’s contested races on the tioket. ■ I —„ „
aetbaek in Romania and the grow- Attorney General Grover Bellers force had
to gr **■“ * ' * ------=—
was
. from Britain and the number-of fighters taking part
Italy delivered another double at- in the assault from Italy was not
I Saturday is expected, to be light for the second consecutive day to-
ed* ta a tunnoil over Germany’s I contested races on the ticket. • |~":n»e~~enfeiy-broadcast said one
“ - — -1 Attorney General Grom Bellers force had swept over northwestern
- will attempt to retain his agpotat- Germany and the Baltic area, while
died office against contender Jesse um other ranged over Austria.
....---- ----- a-*-. . — .. —-J almed
sis for the
followed yes-
| ------- Wreck Installs
The Germans were c
{beruLv to the haval..
two peninsulas which partly land-
lock the harbor from the southwest
mid southeast despite a hall of ex- I
'plosives from Allied warships and I
plxne The enemy presumably baa J
completed his demolitions of Tou- ,,
Ion's vital installations.
Other American elements ot Lt. j
Gen Alexander M. Patahr-JrrW^
7th Army pushed 42 miles north- J
west from
within eight miles of Arles on I
Rhone estuary, 14 miles south
Lyon.
Some street fighting
Marseille as French fG<u— ,
up a few scattered enemy petaoto'J
of resistance.
Sport Tosvn
Cannes and Grasse, 7H miles to a
tlie north fell to the Americana ,
n week-long siege and ex-
when they occupied the f _
area at the far end of Dutch New coast another five miles to the
^'^“t Gen. DeGaulle
~[Times-Review Commands Forces
I Early returns are expected from L nf"fk**1(1(1’ I lf"V
| the 29 voting boxes in Johnson 1 £ 4 J
[County Saturday night after
The Executive Committee of the pol.ls close at 7 pm. The t
Johnson County Horse Show met Is short and election officials should |
Thursday night and completed ar- be able to give out the returns al- |
rangements for the Fall Horse Shw m°st as soon as the polls close.
which will be held September 28
on" the softball grounds at the
0* 11 \ rk
Twenty-one different classes cf: totals can be compiled, froIP Jh*
horses will be Judged, with cash
prizes and ribbons awarded to win- t
ners In each class
o clock.
| Please, please do not call the
I Tlmes-Review office for election re-, stormed In to relieve the <
and Grand sulte Both Phones will be tied up Parisian street, army today turing Broglie.
m I with long distance calls from nut-' and headquarters spokesmen Indi- Between Llsleux and the channel
horses will lylng boxes 80 Plpasp do not call , catw( that (lnal liberation of coasti, the Dominion troops also
. .. . .. . in for election results __>_ ___-el,, 's.-—j .... a*—— »*<»■ mevin—
begin immediately after the Grund 1
forward four miles from Pont Le-
Iwith long distance calls from nut- ' and headquarters spokesmen Indi-.
| the historic capital may be only ' hammered out deep gains, moving
a matter of hours , forward four miles from Pont Le-
Allied headquarters said tough veque to establish a solid 7H mile
veterans of the French 2nd Armor- line along the Oalonne River from
under the legendary I Moyaux to Les Authleux.
2 - - —-q—11 The American thrust toward the
Leclerc, spearheaded the relief channel along the south bank of
I column and unconfirmed report- the Seine was reported meeting
said Lt Gen Omar N Bradley stiffer opposition as the Germans
had ordered his American t ——— -. . -
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 233, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1944, newspaper, August 25, 1944; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1307682/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.