Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 183, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 16, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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i
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vol. nil
NO. 183
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1
▼
ican
s
to Me Red
i
ANK
m
w
am
N
F for
tji
thousand*
the
i to
to
itir fight-
x-;
the
00
ON
♦
j
MKT.
j
t
KK
are-
1735
industry
3ntr-_ ;S
ND
WIRE BRIEFS
Mato.
CO.
423
to
•m
I eating
Martini Law
<-
(I
l>
i
A
Char-
1 and
The
•'•R'
.•a
The
$31
•mi: ntomW
• v
55
$
w
the U-boats to-
oopergtkm.)
had reached between
pt ik im»
taction of al-
inaMto cad
mands wdra betas bombed tap
man ptanea. Three of the -
were reported malto* EL
been shot deem.)
”U . _
wrf
I. I Ml I -■
have been 1
i heli mon ad
which
at Fresh Pood in
and the ashes sent
„ for interment
where hh Me was buried tn UM
foreign
Cross Is
British Hold
Burma Positions
/Vozi Police Hunt
French Youths
5S *
I
F 'Q
Near Freezing
Reached Here
cheer and
Ip. wound-
L-sti nation.
American
More, .will
i
of
on
ABOUT
TOWN
i from labor,
and the public
WASHINGTON. Marek 1K-
(AV-I ughfalten aatberiatag the
secretary ef agrteuKore to term
bays aad girts between 1<
II ta torsi “ *
Tydtaga (D-Md).'
usually
way. j
1* par
WASHINGTON. March
(»— Chairman Connally (Il-
Tex) ef the Neaasto foreign re-
lations ronunittoe reiterated to-
day that he favwra a peat-war
riniernaitonal agency to pre-
serve the pence." but aaM the
admlntstrattea to not eeaamM-
ted to the asUertive aecnrtty
aytoem proposed by Senator Bail
(Il-Mina).
i •*-
the
Mm* Id CO
simplicity, funeral
iforgan were held
Bt George’s Pro-
Church in Stuy-
i which his father
of 1 _________„___
euiatton tndudad the peaeMMp Ant
thto might be both a awaag of re-
raeuring ^M^Unttod^watienejm^ to
rine resources of the Atiantto toMf;
en.
that
AM er the chakaktai
■a of Daataa la rttab
and
farm traps was
ay by 8eaaatsr
I on
out
I
■o
1
oy fried
member
ationed.
growing
m grow.
AIRY
TVE
one M3
MXflto HEADQUAHETKfl
AUSTRALIA. March NM1
on the beete of MUflMN|
none were massing men and d
their island bases nortbw
Australia. Allied attaeen tort)
dam Ihal eanote^k anmMfldHB^fl
suddenly m uim tM yMuNM
Wasted two troop-laden trai
in a three-ship convoy boa
Dobo, Oenernl MaoArthurik
quarters announced tattap.
The threat implied tat tfl
M pBffBOM, including metn-
hi* family and friends rep-
rV,'^ J
’Im
■;
J
■
Well, Anywi
Looked Lake
I eannat pet
tent to which
those magnificent
the American unit
depend upon
irs^sirss.’x
d weU-anned French yimhe OM M the OOM MNOpi the poBw
I dafted a Mast iMin mloii to of mkhg Mta oMMy owabor
W. M b right in hto
i and Aawrioasre pl
Into the Ortaod attar
7 * TM many qua
tao tadtevwtoMme
tatoM the W. HaB to «W to hto otow that
tmito railed *mg a MB minis* of tatecmattoa to
WHlXaata'Siol to rotate tag*
ootart Btoh etan goto tar detaeatoe parpowsf
era toM to W& the otowr AtoPe BMd basoo to
eeStai barto ofSe taMtalWM
,_j agatast'the suhioct peoples be given their inde-
STANDARDIZING DESIGNS TO
SAVE MANPOWER PROPOSED
JdeB.r-xi ?T j
Russians Smashing
On Toward Smolensk
Ha
Japanese conorntrattafM
home, meamrtdle. by 1
burst of enemy serial
thto theatre tn months-d Ota
assault on Darwtn. AmMoMmI
l&fPiane raid on Oro M**l
Guinea. . • •
Amend Debt
Lunitation Bill
wanuitoMSMMi m
The OMBte tatohoo committee vote
qd wtlhoto dtoaonl today to am wad
the Beuse-approved debt limitation
bin to prevent any reduction in
A drop in the temperature of
more than fifty degree* In lei* than
13 hours—that * aump*n for March
Monday the high point was up to
13 and the low only M. but Tuesday
morning Ice was reported by R B
Neale and Hon Frasier, iiowever.
the Ekperimenl Farm reported a
low of only 36 Neale'* bird-bath
was lead over and icicle* hung from
the windmill at Frasier'* place
north of Denton The readbig* a
year ago were IS and to.
Amarillo's reading had risen to 33.
A drop of 44 degrees to IP—'
from yesterday's high of to was
reported at Dallas, where the wave t
struct during the night
Other. 7:» temperature reports
from the weather bureau:
Gainesville 31. Abilene to. Ban
Irwelo to. Big Springs to. Mid-
land 31. Wtnk to. Lubbock to. Wich-
ita Falls 33. Ftart Worth to. Waco
44. Austin 41. Ban Antonio M. Cor-
pus Christi to. Galveston and Hous-
Stresses Need of
Understanding
so far to have mads
the insurgents wtab
number at toast AMP.
The youths MtattMta
German labor fpruft. WO ,
tod tar foraosr taroaib statoPM 18
gen sr sis.
(London raports said the Womb
iRhs:
u’ jl A V <*(
Tillie Meine Konaa. daughter of
* Mm Martin Kena* of
BltJ-sraww, teUl HK? WJHBMIlte- I .---- ---- ------
Bryansk Railway to mile* north al , Money
thew Woll. who hold full mem-
bership* on the board, and Martin
P Durkin Louis A. Lopes, and
Hewitt, alternate members.
ALGIERS. March IE—OP>—
Geo. Jrah Marie Bergerot, far-
mer Vk-hy air sstateter. has re-
signed as Gsa. Heart Giroud's
deputy la r warns nd sf civBtaa
affairs la North Africa, aa affl-
eial anasuhosasewt aaM today.
A new March norther took the
temporuture down to to degrees,
barely three above the freeotag
point, at ths State Btqiertawnt Bta-
tam here eoriy Thursday, and tee
NEW YORK. March IL—UP)
-Henry J. Katoer. ship, steel
aad magne*ta*n maker, vu
named today chairman of the
beard ef directors sf Brewster
Aerensatiral <W> In a new eai-
paastea ef interests la the Prtd
sf airpl*s IS.
' ftata^lmo brew StaitfffflreFw
Z AirUprenm?
■ l^dlHM BBM
ALLIED HEA
'ERS IN NORTH .
Want Higher
Wage Adjustment
wFmI* p£
ataMraT Ctataa Md*12
Ocnpi^Mi
Fury Grbws in $3^. .31
Its”
iCAppU-
s
"YOU have hoard what the lata
wMM« seta and yol yoor evidence
to to the POBtauy- Ata I to infer
ttato you wtoh to threw doubt ob
“WST*
*m9m1Sp1
"There will be more oats produc-
ed in ths county than many of us
thought possible after that five-de-
gree temperature this month.'' said
Win Btuart. south of Denton.
“Since that fine rain, about two
inches at my place, and that nice
•un. Ute oat* have brightened up
considerably The late onto have
come out better than llie fall-plant-
ed crop"
The Denton Public Bcluxta are
to have a real 'Victory Garden',
vegetables from which will be used
in the school cafeteria The F.-T.
A. and the Vocational Agricultural
students, and others who join up.
will plant five acres of land to a
Victory Garden. Dr* Holland and
Hinkle have given permission to
use fivb acres of land on the Den-
ton-Decatur highway. The plot of
ground Is now fenced on three sides,
but the fourth side must be fenced,
and barbed-wire to needed for that
purpoee. If you have some such
wire, telephone Superintendent R.
0. Patterson.
» ye, comfort ye my poo-
your God.—Isaiah 40-1.
■dbly doooribe the ex-
aU of ue, particularly
’( soldiers who flu
units in North Africa,
— _ ths American Red
Cross.—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.
wore pjaofer of parto, gatostad to
reprwonk broare.
U.S. BUSTS
uniMraifi
_____________ '
rrs'l
£Sh -
MS-' JI
wtoh tomatos
I Mt R I
tatato."
It wheah Ab
te '■'^2,1' A "'Aft* —'"S Vs 1 r
CAMBRIDGE,
IMfHftt tata___
/ tart re won taH
uung.
It paieetl a ragpbl
night cutting upon
» University to "donate
effort many tOBB^
Tn^ Bhtos .
In the attack on the oonvp
enemy-occupied Dobo, In the
Islands about satf mites naM
Darwin, direct bite wore gMM
two of the ships by AOted bM|
which roared in at masthead M
and several near Mto ware sooq
the third vessel Bse ABted oaff
nique said.
Lotw-runge flgbtera wtotetoi
compantod tbe bdNbwa rebad
transports from stem to starve
cannon and machinegWB flea, f
Ing heavy casbaMos to troops J
ed on the decks, tbe MflattR Ml
The * “ *
key u
NBW TORR,
with dtantty and
ssrvtoM Mr X F
thto morning in
tratani Bptecopa
veasnt Place, fra
was buried in 1*13.
The body of the 75-year-old fin-
ancier who died Saturday in Florida
mbtotai George (D-CB) MM
OjMtaltoo^ derided to dtooard
%bteb too atareo
to ties MH. and red*
BMta otatato tanreiB
st aaronnaanA agMte
_ stahsrBy to cut art*
WORM bask of the level
black coffin which was
by approximately 1«
floral pieces—presumably sent by
members of the family, for a request
had been made to friends that no
flower* be sent to the church.
Th small church was crowded
with 1“
ber* ol_________________
resenting the social, indurtrial and
World*
Following tbe rites, the body was
to be cramated at T ------
ItaHnor* in the vicinity of La Ve-
la. (Moradtx have devised a moans
the highway transporte-
rs. RM and white pen-
attached to man bores of
small toads of pro-
i MMbrt aad motor
to towns etap and
fee
KTStSreS’
a now aad u
JMpta^raMM to tbs amt ntoe
T«to rentoSeeV aetton wtattd, to
<tftaok Gasol added, rapoal a pro-
ifctaa of an aaoeutivo order dtroeb-
teffttoalsalarimbeheMtoamaai-
ypa tovoi of MMB after payamal
ISwJSXVt
Good Response to
Red Cross Fund
Over County
The Treasury Department took
in quite a sum of money last Mon-
day aa the payments poured in on
4*43 income taxes, but the money
poured out much faster. The War
Production Board reported the oth-
er day that war spending in Feb-
ruary hit a new peak rate of «3M.-
400,000 a day, or MAglDOODOO for
the month, and a total of WOAOO.-
000,000 since July 1P40. Them Og-
uras should make thorn who strug-
gled to make their first quarterly
income tax payment feel a little
better.
March 15th was the last day up-
on which Income Tlxes were sup-
posed to be paid, and it was the
last date for payment without pen-
alty. There may be some who failed
to make the return, but who should
have. Income experts advise volun-
tary' payment, even though late,
rather than falling to make the
return. The penalty, if return is
made voluntarily, they point out.
will be light, but not made and
later apprehended, the penalty will
bo very severe.
Vide Area
(By Associated Pram)
Items' fourth March cold wave
nought freesing teasperetures to
to Panhandle today and was
keeping southward.
The weather bureau at
crore .tate Erttaf ,--—
made by every town to Dagrton
Oounty, with ata eeaBBMBlttog r*
era incucauii* wwy pMu io
be shortly. Latato-MBtaMolttaB to
reach theta gsato are flangre and
Navo, with pure PrtaA Ttaatar.
Krum and Mtaar already an*
nounosd., .
Ptare are undarwag to eaaspteto
the campaign this Wfc all over
MMfr etata^ X^tad «Zt rn«retartanMthM
wortars ware still accepting eMh fltrfltaflfc flttdfd 1
trtbuttons and sWtac ptnoM Wi*
alxwkty (twn to tho Jfcod OClWP ftlilSu lOfCM
an opportutaty to donate
wotort *a
"1 just had to cut 'em off." said
Bhortff Roy Moore, who for some
never*! days carried a little mus-
tache That Uilns was getting eo
heavy. It was making me stoop-
ahouidered. and I cant aay lhat.it
fek particularly good, nor did it add
much to my appearance Ill let the
other fellow hkve the mustachtos."
M|MM
. ■ \
*
re. I H
l I ■
myo the
tore mw
ie ^Japanese smash at I
tip of Australia, mat gHfl rei
from Bpitftre fighters wtaMto
intercept them.
The Alites aretoMMOOd lb
shot two bombere sort IS
out of setton sad *tao rnrtagM
•god an addittMBl IlNNrtl i
and two bomtom that thsy j
taHed re resiEte Abate baas.*
Four Allted plana* wore reported
loot in the action, tart the phots of
two were raved. aaM ths num bul-
letin ' •
Heaviest ta Meafhe
ft was the hea vtast JagUMse i
ial stab In several montim.
There was acme spsoulal
meanwhile, over the whereabouts of
the remains of tbe enemy convoy of
eight ship* which had been heavily
attacked for two successive days
straight aa It approached Wewak. in
northeastern New Guinea. Hits had
been reported on four cargo ships
and one destroyer but B-1T* which
went out again in search of the
convoy yesterday found no shipping
whatever In that area, a headquar-
ters spokesman said.
In other far .flung Allied aerial
activity two enemy merchant vereels
of 3M0 or 3.000 ton* were attacked
by heavy bombers in Bltajaroe Bay
in Dutch New Guinea, but rreulta
were not observed.
In the Banda Bea. west of the
acene of the attack on the three
transports, one medium bomber at-
tacked and damaged a Japanese
coastal schooner.
In New Britain a Catalina made
b ni^ht attadi on Uw OmbuUa air-
drome, followed by an attack on
the building area by a B-W In
still other aettona in New Qufltoa
Beaufighter* made 10 strafing pass-
es over the Japanese in the Mubo
area, sweeping a tong stretch of the
coast without opposition.
New Formula
For Wage Hikes
!..r your
*
i ,
WASHINGTON. March !•-<*>-
Members of the American, Brtttah
and Canadian High Commands
have reached "complete igTieuonf "
the Navy announced today, bn the
bort methods of defeating the Aids
submarine menace In the Atlantic.
The derisions were made at con-
ference here under the chabwiMi-
shtp of Admiral Rm rat J. King,
commander tn chief of the United
Btactos Fleet, it vu saM ta a ataa-
munique issued simultaneously with
Identical announcements to London
and Ottawa.
The gMattafl was deecribed as one
of a series “which have been.and
will continue to be hold"
coordinated aetton by <
of the forora of the thr —
combatting the undersea ofln
against allied supply ttnra to
ain. Russia and Africa.
(In London. Prime Ml
Churchill told the Bouse of
mens earlier today that the «i
campaign against In-
sured full allied coop
The joint disclosure
conference said “'con
ment wag reached on
bo pursued in the pro
11®G BnOppulm ill UiC ___
tn tbe beet methods of rsagtagtog
the anted oooort vessels, anti-ol-
martae craft, and aircraft to fls-
feating the U-boat menace."
There was no explanation tsota
the Navy as to wtw. since each
meeting* haw Imd hoM for mom
there rtMHd be announcement
recent osorton now. tart spa-
te ahhinqton. March IS—UF>—
TTie Little Steel" formula is fast
vanishing as a factor in wage in-
creases approved by the War Labor
Board, and the buk of adjurtmenta
now is based on "inequalities."
Reason for the disappearance Is
stmnle: most groups of employes al-
ready Ivo received the U per eent
general increase permitted r
formula as a cost-of-Uvtng i
ment.
Board officials say. ta tact, there
are scarcely any bnportant branches
of industry whteh have not retoed
wagm at teaot that much since Jan-
itory 1. toil- In asoas Mho anthyc-
lie mining, labor contracts of Sm-
sfly tong MWIliii stand ta ths
’. Anthnumo mtaors received a
!• par cent incraam ta IMI and
Maas a contract which ttora not ex-
pire WUBSfft AjBfl M
Anottbtr Ntw York
*t saving bTu Stabbinw Inddont
otantaritaHinK NflW TOOK. £nH M
B arnvoa at. to* fourth MabbiM taMrat ta the
dtficatton antan eta in » M-hoar oertod occurred
party *ooay wnan a si-yrar-om
imt ff yr***
McOmviM. wataSn toiuSS
was dovqlopod by WVR*b
. MCganiwd oonmrvatton
dfetateta headed by Howard Ooon-
W- to a recent arttols In Duab
OcmMB mllmBtgd thbl Sb*
___ ^’fetaTif tonpUflcatton and
otandardisaitaB were extended
throughout American Industry^
flfib wortars this
j murt mm ttum
tadintriee, WMO MUoh R
_j tHSB Mo rals r flash c
•5Sk A hr owBhr syr
z*r ■ fit f ‘
A tow of 31 was reported at Bor-
ger. where high winds yesterday
afternoon tore down streets lights.
Ceeitaesd C«M
The wSBlher bureau forecast
contiaued. OOM in tbe Panhandle to-
night and colder elsewhere tn West
Texas with freesing temperature to
the Pesos Valley and oast of Pecos
river, and below freesing ta the
South Mains
Colder this afternoon and tonight
was predicted for Bast Texas, with
a COM waive in the northeast and
southwest portions, with lowest
teasmta* of M to » degrees to
north portton. Light frost was fore-
cast ta tbe Interior of tbe south-
east portion and a heavy killtag
trout In the north and upper area
of the southwest portion.
By KDVY UILMOBk z
MOSCOW, March 16—(AP)—The Red army ia contin-
uing to amaah westward toward Smolensk, the German key
base of the central front, and also appeared today to have
established a strung line east of Kharkov after announcing,
the loss of the Ukraine city recaptured only Feb. 16.
Four spearheads were aimed at
Smolensk from an arc swinging
northwestward from Vyasina and
one of the newest and most specta-
cular successes was that reported
by a column surging forward from
Kholm-Zhlrtovsky. west of the up-
per Dnieper River
(Today's official German commu-
nique inured the fighting in the
had gained further ground in the [ Boan^called upon the board tody
justment formula, adopt a new pol-
icy and guarantee derisions by ma-
jority rule within the board "with-
out dictation" by any persons or
governmental agency
The AFL group of five, headed
"j Secretary - Treasurer George
„ __ Meany, submitted their demands
'piaims in tbe day 's fight- to a petition summarised to these
Eastern Front.) , five points:
ps pushed six mile* west- 1 1 Increase the allowance for
Ing the remnants of two maladjustment* or Increase to the
cost-of-living from 15 per cent to
a new. realistic figure based upon
| the actual cost of living to the
3 Permit employers to apply the
im CLUB u
__________ p^-ra^raMEtaf air mi i i ,
MARCH 13. IMS
,............. ............................................................................................
Slight Gains Are W
Allied Troops in 1
Agreement on
Defeating Sub
Menace Reached
tba ataM and
„jW» light bufos ftS
I.WbL b*** **
1AM to Mt; auto tire ataktag
14 to taw; ototh Mrt |
tag bags from IN to 11
"I have declared more March
dividends on my overcoat Uita year
than ever before.” said L L Tblta-
ferra. “but rd rather not have divi-
dends on the coat as the wear and
tear on it costs more than the
dividends bring ta. I've seen quite a
few March mmillw. but 1 don't
resell one ta ths many that has
brawght m much oeld wrathsr as
. ft .
ROUNI
Another March norther hit Den-
ton Monday night and carried the
temperature down to below frees-
Ag Ice was reported to have fann-
ed ta several places Tuesday morn-
ing. March has brought a succession
of below-freesing temperatures,
making the most unusual March
ta 44 years This may be Uie free*
that Bill Oanssr said would arrive
around tbe 3SUi of Uw month,
but It wouldn't bs surprising to see
another arrive in a tew day*. And.
again, there's that cold spell pre-
dicted by ths Thunder-prophet.
Jim Reeves, which should fall
around April 3nd. as thunder was
htard on February 3. Yeah, and
therris ths flMMt csM apsfl WHi
ter. which this year, comes on April
3Mb. the latest Easter since ISM
estimate is valid. WFP aimplifica-
tton orders could provide far more
than the number sf war workers
which WMO has estimated must bs
drawn from civilian tadustrv-
Boms MAN wovksre have already
been picked up tram tadustrtss sm-
ptoyiitg M0.M0 persona, tbe con-
servation chief roakened. Ry 4MRT*
Ing this 10 per sent “ — *
industries that mu
ibe^LMunir f
ia
Ths weather bureau al Dallas NEW DCLHL India. March M—
ssrrsrTar
gross al Amarillo, a drop of M • day of fierce taps mm attyks and
de<re<a from Amarilloof Britiih counterattacks nortilWMat of
?4 resterday afternoon Al 3:38 i Rathedaung. M mites north of
— - - - . . — Akyab In Burma.
I "Activity has been concentrated
chiefly ta the area between Thaung-
ara and Kyauktaw." a Brittih com-
munique said
It added that British bombers
and fighters had .joined the flit
and had given "maximum support"
to tbe land force* Yesterday the
I British acknowledged that they find
been forced to readjust their BUM •
j as the reeuR of an attack by rein-
forced Japanese troops.
Tbe Japensra aho sent a force
of bombere with fighter eeoort to
attack the Buthduang area, tart
only slight damage was done to the
British pcciUom and three cf th*
enemy formation were shot down In
an air battle.
TUESDAY AFTERNO
taBPBMtaMHMOmMMMMHtofl
Simple Funeral
For J. P. MorggtW
__ _ ..5 ■
NORWEGIAN NAVY HELEN
MINE NWEEF1NG
1 GN DON March 1*-<A5- Tbe
Norwegian Navy has taken over
mine swwpbw patrols along an Im-
portant stretch of BcotUst coast,
the Norwegians' First Operational
Oommand ta Britain, the British
Navy announced today.
By STERLING F. GREEN
WASHINGTON. March !• -<*>-
Offered partly as a means of tree-
ing more manpower for war wort.
a program for standardising <te-
stgns and ruthlessly trimming un-
neerccan trim from both civilian
end military goods has been sub-
mtttod to the War Produetfan
Four Spearheads Poiht Toward Important
City; Soviets Assert Strong line Established
East of Abandoned ’Kharkov.
Consolidated Aircraft a* an aircraft
fabrication worker and Alton Zack-
ery of Aubrey, was employed by the
rams corporation ta the same line
of wort
v..v ... WASHINGTON
Sinolensk area, but said Naxl forces AFL member* of the War ^>or
had gained further ground in the Board called upon the board today
Kharkov-Belgorod sector and had to scrap Its 15 per-cent wage ad-
enclrcled a Soviet force southeast ‘ * * *“
of Kharkov. The war bulletin,
broadcast by the Berlin radio and
recorded by the Associated Press,
declared that a hekvy Russian at-
track in the Lake Ilmen sector yes-
terday was repulsed, partly in hand- by
to-hand fighting, and that the Sov- Mi
let* lost 5S | - - - .
tag on the
The troo
ward, cha*
German divisions, front line dis-
patches indicated.
Biara Town* Taken
The Soviet noon communique de- wwx"-
RS^w^rxJSbwSm
NaUonri ^Tar^Zor
newspaper, tn commenting on me i
swflt push toward Smolensk said . . .
that “our troops already have ad- '
vanced several dosen kilometer* .
—t.afvyramE-cntamaybeup-
the need to aid in the better pros-
ecution of the war.
4 Bet a dale immediately for a
rehearing of the packing house and
West Coast air frame eases In the
light of the suggested new wage
policy.
» Guarantee that the right of
the National War Labor Board to
arrive al ite own decisions on wage
/ ride shall be preeereed
without dictation by any person or
the rame tine, but more to
north, also was captured by Soviet i
troops, fighting knee deep in snow
The advance from Kholm-Zhir-
kovaky represented the first time i
tn any Russian offensive since the
beginning of the war that the Sov-
iets had reached and recrossed the
Dnieper River, the great waterway
of Western Ruiwia
Hie fate of the civilian popula-
tion tn ruined Kharkov remained a
quretloi* There was reason to be
llrve that there were many among
the 300.000 inhabitants who did not
get away
There was no official Soviet ex-
(vlanation for the evacuation of
Kharkov but recent Russian com-
munique* and reinrts had stressed
continued lieavy German tank and
h-J an try attacks with fresh re-
serve* launched against the city
A writer ta Red Star today declar-
ed "Hitler's fresh division* took
Kharkov but he did not win the
balUe"
Anotlter Red Star reporter assert-
ed that all Hitler got in the cap-
ture of Kharkov was Uie bodie* of
Germans
Hitler, he said, sougiit ta the re-
capture of Kharkov the revenge for
hl* loss oL BtaUngrad and Uie
liquidation of more than 30 divis-
ions
wards of 30 mile*. >
No specific figure was given on
liow far the Red Army** advance
unite were from Smolensk but from
current report* and their last »pe-
Cifted positlou it was reasonable to
assume that ta this sector they were
about N to M mMss tram tbe base
The Russian columns al» offered
a threat to another German base.
Bryansk, with some troops fighting _ .
stiff hattte* smith of Vpaama to eap- ‘
tare the railway station of MUyat- . ,
inaky-Zavod. on Uie Vyaama “
tawa^ 11110* w UJ1TOB llUlUi IM — --
Bryansk This U toe closest point I. ®fnerL "7**
Mr and Mra Martin Kanu nJ *** Retl AnnJ' approached that ”
Uue^LJSr I TUaJ •UXMWhoid which with Orel
' ■•n*“ * • turning point between
rwwniirtaiad AinaraH .. .n -i^af. aputhem and central fronts £red --------
The railway station of Mutation on The WbB u made up of equal rep-
the reaentatlon from labor. 1—•
bill to, ________w_____
er eatartm Mow the high-
ATTHE FRENCH FRONTUMl IN
SWITZERLAND. March ISM
Moto ieetl Freooh police ted tar Ger-
man SB trooper* defftasod Mb Hw
hills of Haute Bavtee ctaae te UM
thousand
who had --------
:m reiater.
AB tart iNgM Mid ‘
pottos and tra*
the roads into __
to the Mila tart theff M
ill
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 183, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 16, 1943, newspaper, March 16, 1943; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315667/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.