Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 195, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 11, 1945 Page: 1 of 8
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TRUMAN HOLDS SHIPBOARD “ panSwoss
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CONFERENCE WITH TOP
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21
IVOO
CAROLINE IS
Brunti
In the ETO as well as other the-
sands
Vi
Ar
Indian Octon
during the
Pvt. Eawakd M: Praytor was dis-
Schools to Get
H
E
defensive line.
I
of
mand for Trieste and the French
mouth of Tokyo Bay to launch
Houston,
Naples-Foggla, Rome-Arno: Sonth-
Expected Home Soon
EAME Campaign Medal with five
808 South Wilhite
He
from Oregon Tuesday night
Tokyo by
stated that he would leave Mon-
hours after the assault be-
reached at a meet-
principle" was
Iwo Jima
paign Medal with
Alexander Gor-
Gen.
L. O. -Lyne of Great Britain. Brig
of
Lyne said that a group of ex-
Over 3 Inches of
toward strength.".
lian troops today moved
■ Rain Tuesday
The Australians, pushing north-
3no-foot-high mount Batochampart
The Weather
4
Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s spek-! tiny village of Wain on the Wain-
Wednesday
also
who
C
naval gunfire but met
no OPpo-
4
planes also altacke ralltfans-
The
port
east of Manggar air field had met
in Indo-China ,
4
1
/ '
I
L
8UYWAR8ONDS!
Japs Lose Harbor, Oil Refineries;
Forces Mass on Mount Batochampar
Mrs. R. L Drake
Dies Today
Rev. McTamney to
Conduct Memorial
Mass for Nephew
iUl
who
on
Center.
July 4
and possibly of boundary changes
to be included in the final Euro-
pe i ents.
Parks,
13th AAF
Sth AAf
RAF
over
seven
service and huve filed their papers
in the county clerk’s office.
attacks." the Domel News Agency
said -l
Witnesses Against
Charter Are Heard
By Senate Group
President to
Disembark at
Northern Port
I
will be announced later.
The British and American mili-
"It is a world revolution for Com-
munism
an-r
Ea
•e
*
1
end, F. B.
intendent
165,
ker
#
A
<10
D.
Will Meet Stalin
And Churchill
At Potsdam
mson
. Chennault Says
Support Will Be . .,
Given Land Armies
I
i
V
Discharged Servicemen Returning to
Homes in This Area Tile Papers
occupation zones, and importation
! for that purpose from the United I
Stales or Britain is not planned. :
Where Japanese forces have massed! cast from Balikpapan, were report-
for a determined stand after com- ed within half a mile of the pipe-
gold watches, and two complete
sets of burglary tools
Huffman escaped from Retrieve
Farm near Houston In November.
1843. He will be returned to Hunts-
ville following trial on charges al-
leging violation of drug laws.
, —____ - ’ ' 0-
A number of veterans whoi served :
' their planes ”
Fleet dispatches said the stunned
m
5N
INTERNATIONAL ADVISERS
3 ‘ ______
EM ■__— • a------------------------ —
$250,000 Fund
Recommended for
FEPC Liquidation
■ __ • ‘ . --e- 1
‘WASHINGTON, July h (U.P) ~
Arnold ana. Leahy r
joint chiefs of staff.
Questions of great import face
the impending Big Three confer-
ence. Among them are problems
of German occupation and control
r
Skies of China
d. ______
.3,
Tokyo Says 3rd
Fleet Breaks Off
ntion-enter, FMt Pern Honeton day for eleburer
"in He was awarded the EAME Cam-
et- . ___ . .. c,__ >_______
lllllti •NPA4-- "-- ----7
teen organized into a special 10-
bor, battalion for service in oase
pean peace treaty.
(Dispatches from London said
diplomatic sources ' there - listed
eight territorial claims which the
Big Three may consider. These
included Poland’s claim on Ger-
many to compensate for territory
ceded te Russia. Yugoslavia's de-
to the Serate without- an a]
prlatlon f Ar that agency The n
Europe.
■» ue ---------- — T 4 James O. Painter discharged
kters have received discharge from|Julv 6 at the Separation Center,
......--------- Fort' Sam Houston, served as a Employment
scout. He participated in 1
Naples-Foggla, Rome-Arno, South-
ern France campaigns and
7. Fort Sam awarded- the EAME Medal
served as a tHree stars.
way. or choose to attempt a break
through on the Kan River all the
way to Nanchang on the south
shore of Lake Poyang in northern
Klangsi
The communique said that Jap-
anese troops in the area 14 miles
• northwest of Kanhsien drove
day in a trailer camp, today was
charged with having In hlsPos-
session morphine. Nearly a dozen
I bottles of opium derivatives were
found at the trailer camp
ine—-. Charles G. Rob. a member of the
758 -N a______ — -h---A thA Alla
ain
GUAM
7
21st BOMBfR
COMMAND
u
srors HERE ENROUTE
TO SAN ANTONIO
Pvt. Frasier B Anderson,
DALLAS, July 11. (U.P)—Twenty
Pullman cars will be removed from
civilian use in Dallas this week-
3 I
- Chennault said it the-Japenese
are driven from South China they
might fall -BCK totme-raigtme
River, then to the Yellow Rfver-
Lunghai railway position: then to
the Tentsin-Peiping-Kalgan line,
and finally to the great wall with
KUNMING, July it. CU.R- -The
| Fourteenth Air Force has achieved
: its objective of sweeping Japanese
I planes from China’s skies. Heut,
i Gen Claire Chennault declared in
returned to Mie
Pfc. Parks,
has been in Germany for the past
three or four months, called his
brother, Bob Anderson, Tuesday
afternoon from the Cleburne de-
pot, when the troop train he was
aboard stopped here briefly. Pvt
Anderson will return later on a
30-day leave to be spent here with
hin mother, Mrs. Laura Anderson,
and in Fort Worth with 'EH wife
enemy failed to throw a single
noon yesterday.
presidential party aboard the Au-
gusta. said there would be no ad-
vance announeement of Mr Tru-
man’s arrival date for security
reasons.
The president was keeping in
constant touch with Washington by
radio and holding continuous con- j
Terences aboard ship with Secre-
tary of State James F Byrnes'
and Admiral William D. Leahy.
, apre sidential chief of staff
When the chief executive reaches
5,
5- -
Allied invasioh.
Jittey Japanese spokesmen sald
the American battle fleet, that bat.
anse stronghold on the Kan River,
has been the target of Allied bom-
bers for the past three days with
warehouses, dumps, and hundreds
of junks and sampans— loaded with
loot—attacked.
Central news said that Japanese
forces in Kanhsien. In southwest-
ern Kiangsi, had already begun
retreating northward and Kanh-
Gen. Geoffrey De Beauchesne
France attended by invittion.
largest in the Netherlands East
Indies, other units landed on the
Dienebora peninsula, four miles
north Of Penadjam, to secure com-
pletely Ballkpapan harbor.
No Opposition
The Australlans, pushing across
in small boata, were. covered by
on Sunday.
While one group occupied the
uary.
The high command s communique
supported this viewpoint today
with the report that Chinese trops.
stepping up their offensive against
Japan's China land corridor, had
recaptured Hain-Ch’Eng (Sin-
chang > airfield and Nankang. both
in Klangsi province, as well as
Chungtu. on the Kwellin-Luchow
.___ _______ highway 35 miles northeast of Lu-
demand for the Baar and part of chow in central Kwangsi.
17. He has been hospitalized since
that time. He stated that he whs
feeling fine. '
Pfc. Gordon W Parks called his
pf the Pullman Com-
- 3
3
1 .
plane or warship against Halsey’s L
; task force, and offered only
jmeager opposItion to We waves
; of American planes that blasted
1 a vast stretch of the Kanto, plain •
WASHINGTON, July H.CReuramndin“chetr°w. Nvtz r..
fleet communique V reported
American airmen had wo
mastery of the skies
3” $
Cleburne Times-Re view
vided from the respective Allied
TARAKAN t
e -s55fon='
15, UGNp
U “ X NEW GjNEA-
PLACE TO PASTE—Hardly had battle ceased in one area of Okinawa before U. S Avia-
tion Engineers were hard at it to build an airfield from which planes could take off to
paste Japan. Bulldozers and power shovels are leveling coral, which will be topped, with
asphalt and —bombers!
The House appropriations commit-
tee today cleared the way for a
showdown House vote on the Fair
Practice Committee
MANILA, July 11.' (U.P—Austra-i "Japanese forces. In considerable
'• —
2
E. R
street.
$25 00.
The additional funds were pro-
vided by action of the State Board
prav... __________- ____ - In the same broadcast, however,
ure had been tied up since despite :tDomet warned that the American
the new fisest year beginning IIFearriers, batlleships, cruisers nnF
days ago. ‘ rst ' lesser craft of the raiding nleet
-----»- - ■ i -■ were still hovering off the coast
; p( Japan in position, to resume:
’ the assault at any time.
Earlier enemy broadcasts said
h+he earrer raids cotld be expected
to continue for several days.-.
12 Hour Bombing
He said the Japanese apparently
have aurfiient rolling stock to
work the railways for their military
of planes.
Diab Touch
part in
tary governments will assume full
command of their Berlin sectors
at 9 a m tomorrow. All Russian
military government troops will be
withdrawn from these areas except
a few guards to protect Red army
needs, but that continued attacks
within a few months would leave
the enemy especially short
in addition to the drugs, the loot
uncovered by police included $500 esupply depots
in bills about $500 in silver, six
SAN ANTONIO. July U. UUR-
The Gl’s will now get the best
' blend of coffee there is, the 6th
Service Command announced to-
day
The command has hired three
official "tasters" who, after the
coffee bean arrives, and is ground,
taste the beverage that is derived
from the bean.
It is tasted and blended until
the "experts" think it has attained
perfection. The "tasters" actually
devour only vary little coffee
thougtas theyomyap W-BF-'
spoonful from each cup
Over three inches of rain fell
In Cleburne Tuesday. July 10, ac-
cording to records of U. 8 Wea-
ther Observer W S Ownshy:
Over two inches of this amount
fell in a hour’s time late in the
afternoon.
Records show that .98 of An Inch
fell here Tuesday morning and
7.12 inches in the afternoon, mak-
ing 3 07 inches.
Creeks in this area were running
today Traffic was hnlted for a
short time Tuesday evenihg in the
business section near the / Saruta
Fe station where the water over-
flooded the storm sewers.
round trip that will total more
than 10,000 miles. He will be the
first American president to visit
western Europe since Woodrow
ABOARD USS AUGUSTA ON |
THE ATLANTIC, July 11. (U.P.
President Truman held. shipboard
conferences with his top Interna-
tional advisers today as this pow-
erful cruiser sped him toward Ger-
many for the Big Three meeting
next week '--------
The president. now five days out
of Newport News, Va . will disem-
bark from this warship at a north-
ern European port and proceed
by plane to Potsdam, the Berlin
suburb where he will meet for the
first time with his Big Three part-1
ners - Prime Minister Winston
ChurchiH and Premier Josef Stalin
Holding Conferences
, White House Press Secretary
Fort Sam
He took
raid other Australian forces which destroyed or damaged a freigh
hud pushed almost a milenorth-Ther---F
\ / €a
BERLIN, July 11. (U.P- The In-
terallied Berlin command agreed Frone Rhineland and Central i i x t ■
__________ ex "anus Wounded Veteran
Vallette, district erican Defense service Medal ane
; population of its own sector.
' The food for Berlin will be pro-
FORT WORTH. July 11. (U.P. -------- --------
Two young women were summoned an advantage of a vastly shorter
before a military police coyrt here
yesterday to give information con-
cerning their husbands who were
AWOL ,
At court it was learned both or
them were married to the same
man After comparing notes for locomotives,
a few minutes, th women parted -------:—. ....
Occupation Force.
an sn me To Be Responsible
of two wronged —80 they sad For Food in Sectors
women. \ ve ------
sition, ‘ ——
The headquarters
The temporary agreement
a 1
five bronze on
'The Senate foreign relations com-
mittee today heard a succession; c.
of witnesses against the United that ,
Nations charter, one of whom WAS coPIW
escorted from the witness chair
Potsdam he will be joined by other
high ranking diplomatic and mili-
tary figures They include Joseph
E. Davies," former ambassador ' to
Moscow who has done tone of the
preparatory work for the codling
Big Three meeting, and consult-T
ant experts from the State. War
and Navy Departments, including
the joint chiefs of staff.
Mrs Albert S. King, Joshua; Mrs
Frank Nolan, Santa Ana, Calif i
and Mrs Bill Steakley. Fort Worth*.
> was wounded
March 9,. was
statea on May
esman said the hardy Australians Beser River,
dealt’ the Japanese a double blow MacArthur’s headquarters
revealed that heavy bomber
fighter units, continutng the
ingapore_.m8
»%> a LBolikpapn
stars. Good Conduct. Medal. He
participated In .the campaigns of
Normandy Northern France. Ar:
dennes, Rhineland and Central
T/S Walter W Kirkpatrick Iwus
discharged' July 7 at the Senar-
No Pullman reservations will be "kov of Russia, MaJ.oen, Gen
allowed for trips of less than 460 Parks hl the U.. 8. and Maj Ge
miles, the ODT' has ordered, and
Walker estimated that at lest 900
! Pullmans will be released through *
are now shifting many air force
1 unite from the home islands to
Manchuria where the enemy has
T"numerous excellent air bases which
l ar. operational on a moment's
I notice." .
Raided Shanghai
The general declared that he
believed the Japanese had drained
practically all their air strength
from Southeast Asia with only
on eccasional enemy plane making
a linking hop between Indo-China
and China prov iding a target for
the 14th’s gunners last month.
He revealed that during the
Okinawa battle the 14th raided
Japan’s Shanghai bases so effec-
tively that no enemy planes from
. that area participated in the strikes
against American invasion forces.
Summing up three years of OP:
erations in Chiba, the general sald
that his airmen had destroxred
over 2,000 Japanese planes in the
- ! ab and on the ground and they
a had hit over 2,000,000 tons of
enemy shipping more than the
Japs have floating now
Chennault’s streamlined organi-
zation operated with the tightest
possible personnel, with some
units using only 50 per cent of
the enlisted men normally requir-
UNIMPROVED
' Mrs. H H. Meredith, who is
- Fravely 4 st her home -on South
SSMT'" reported to betarfa retattves
. American planes were shot down
But the first enemy accounts
inasresppr‛ramcssurorusafsmal"riSimitiz"azzamfad
of the State The ayman i * that some of th* American war-
probably be paid in. AugU;stooThir ships steamed almost into the
will mean additional 913,000 lor mh (f Tu -
the County. Jackson saad.
included are the following: ,
8 3gt R W Viser, discharged ern France campaigns and was
at- Separation Center, Fort Sani awarded- the EAME Medal with
Houston, June 25, served as a three stars. American Defense
mess sergeant. He participated inservice Medal and GoqCopctuet
the Rome-Arno. North —Appenines- Medal \ .
Po Valley campaigns and was William Manning Coward,
awarded the Bronze Star, Good Commissar y Eteward, (Permanel
conduct, American Defense Service ApD , was discharged at the VS
Medals and EAME medal • with Training and Distribution Center
three bronze stars • at Camp Elliott, Calif., on July 6.
Clinton Jonathan Harris, Store- He had active duty from May 30.
keeper first class, was discharged 1942 to July 9, 1945
at the Redeiving Ship,- San Frane—— -----------—
eisco on May 31. He served at
NRS. Dallas; Const. Batt's.. USN .
&c. NOB Norfolk, Va. 64th Naval
Const Batt., R/S, San Francisco
a press conference today.
He said the 14th‛s next objective -
1 would be support of ghiheseknd T
armies now pushirk Japanese
ground forces back on several seo-
l tors. _ a — -9
Chennault said the Japanese
espite the fact that Halsey's
neet steamed almost Into the
mouth of Tokyo Bay, it was allow: .
i d to withdraw without 90 much
as an answering shot from the
stunned enemy.
Fires leaping through Tokyo and
the RO airffelds surrounding the
ch" testified"to the havoc wrought.
’ spemking from Washington. §gc-_^.
relary of the Navy James V.For-
rest a I said last- night -that the-----
Tlii rd Fleet's strike had proved
that the U S "naw controls te
sea ’ right up to Japan."
To do thia, he said the navy has
sunk more than 250 major Japan-
ese warships, hundreds of merch-
ant ships, and has destroyed thou-
Tuesday
N Connallv restricted Mrs. Waters 2 p.m.......
and! to ten minutes When she de- 4 pm.......
- - - neu- manded a further hearmngsheshutt 6pmm.
Pandansari refinery, which is the tralization of Formosa, blasted her off by pounding his gavel and 8pm
grounded enemv planes and air- - reminding her that "I can make j 10 pm.
drome installations at Shtnchtku more noise than you can." Shejl2p.m. .
and attacked oil fields on the finally was escorted away from the! Maximum temperature to past,
southwest coastal plain, I witness chair by two policemen. 124 hours 82
A night patrol plane harassed —1------ Minimum temperature in Past
KUSS neConaimanc ManmAqE LCENSES „ -"Rhinr W tnches - L 1;
n rounathe-clonkasueapdsdun"coumyrcnerkis"sorie .»■»(».. „
Jg bm^d nUHtarr taraeU in Amov this week are: Tommie Altion of EAST TEXAS: Considerable
soosenem and y Canton irenAnd cleburne and Miss Loveta Reyn-cloudiness tonight Thursday part
spokesmen harbor and the Canton areaghtDr - of Blum; joseph R cunning- ly cloudy with scattered thunder-
ham -of Otebume and Maragarettehewers-nearthe-coasteqentie.tp—-
Louise Raifsnider of Godley, moderate southerly winds on coast
Mr. and Mrs.
Carrier Strike
Hard pressed Tokyo added an-
1 touch to her dismal picture
with a broadcast saying that
veterans have
ess
northeastward yesterday while a
second column pushed northward
from Kanhsien engaging Chinese
forces along the Kanhsien-Sul-
chwan highway.
Indications increased in southern
Klangsi that the Japanese are
pulling northward out of the Kanh-
sign area.
by two policemen.---- —- — ----
The opposition witnesses van- Ean _____
ously assailed the, cnarter as H N
"Ommunist plot” and a plan for < I 11 4
"empire rule" and protested the LVVCI VUOV
“sinister" speed with which it was .
beinzonmovcd toward sennte rtGoes to Jury
The committee put a general 15-
minute limit on each witness ap- Testimony in the triai of T. F.
pearance watr. washington ' Lovell charged with the murder
Mrs. Agnes,W horieh ”ningpre: or Roy Fuller was computed in
D C ' dese ribedchers Blue Star District Court this morning and
senting. the.Nation firs? witness efter arguments by attorneys the
She enijcdY the charter "a fraud, case went tthe Jury shortly
umama ?
control the worId: AK.A. „oLt •
committee Chairman Tom Con- Monday night. ___-__.
nally, D .. Tex , interrupted to warn I-
Eer against gratuitous insults Jo) 1
other governments."
"This is not a war." she shouted
KETEshenghees
'OKINAWA IWoc
"SAKISHIMA is. N
Dome! said yesterday's bombing
johnson County schools will re-lstedpinr rloarsrimon and esth:
ceive an additional 92.0p pcr^ cap- mated that as many as 1,200 yank
if a this year, Count.Supt oen fiehters. dive bombers and torpedo
Jackson announced today n Whe bembers took part in the attack
the per capita apportionment . a it added the usual elaims that
paid, the county will, havc.receIe "alinst no damage" was tntlicted
827 00 . per scholastic instead ol in target area and that 26
Palembang
A
sien might be reoccupied by Chin-
ese troops in the near future.
The Japanese are still holding
Kanhsien, Suichwan and Talho, in
southern Klangsi—all former prin-
cipal airfield towns *
Drive Norths ^.n ih;-nation for troop movements se bccnpving
Central news said in retreating powers will meet and work out de-
from Klangsi the Japanese misht FORT WORTH July 11 (U.P—' tails of the food program which
move toward Hengyang, along thecrwt°Hirtan"-28 escaped
canton-Hankow railway or high- ordyt "wnsarrested yester-
on 28 grandchildren and two great-
the ' grandchildren. ,
Opl Jolin Boyne, nephew of
Rev.O E McTamney, was killec
in action cn May 27 in Mindanao
Philippin« islands. On • Tuesday
Reverend McTamney received a let-
ter from Chaplain Joseph W.
Buckley, who gave a detailed ac-
count of Boyne’s death.
The soldier was the son of M
and Mrs. Raymond Boyne of Phil-
adelphia, Pa. •
On Wednesday of next week
solemn reaulem memorial mass
will be held at 10 a. m. at the
Church of Ascension in Philadel-
phia with Reverend McTamney
einging the mass MeTamney plans
to leave Monday for Plilladelphta
pany revealed today
The removals, effective at noon
Sunday, are in line with a na-
ational order of the Office of De-
Transportation to hcl|) the
railroads shoulder the staggering
task of redeployment of troops,
E O. Walker .district rail di-
. _ . r A e.te
pletely losing both Ballkpapan lme bridge on the Soember River,
harbor and the Pandansari oil The pipeline five miles north of
refineries, " Balikpapan, leads northward to the
chanted at the Separatlon Center,
Fort Sam Houston, Juy 3.
Rattle Stars In Joshua
“ T/Sgt. Nathan 17 Roberts was; __ —
discharged July 7 at the Separ- trk. 75 died
ation Center, Fort Sam Houston MrsoHizzieNorauDrakean2uder _____-__
-m-s ss=-HAdditional Funds
Heart. American Defense Service her parents. She Was ,J(/r I
Medal, Good Conduct Medal, Bronze Dec. 15. 1880, in Joshua to R
Star. EAME Campaign Medal with Ppunera arrangements are pend-
four starsmi. „ Alexander who ing the arriva\of out-of-state Tel-
, 5 Rt Fort Sam Houston. He has । . Nrir w m page Elk City,
been awarded the FAME Campaign MSrs"j M Eder Ptman,
Medal with five bronze stars. XX" ■ ” ’ _ „... Spear-
American Defense Service Medal.!® ’ ’ wF M Howaer and
Good Conduct Modal. mani Mrs. W M erowder -n"
Sgt Willard C LeFevre, of fhe
36th Infantry Division Artillery.
was discharged at the Separation
battle stars.
‘ More Discharges
J l.
PACIFIC THEATER—Map shows theater of operations in ed. possidle
the Pacific, with Philippine Islands and Manila aa focusing gCommentinEmencan Arpowern
center. Okinawa and Iwo Jima are only about 900 miles China, Chennault said. -supply
from Tokio. Rich Island of Borneo Js -at south. White area protems remaim practicnily A
on Chinese coast la occupied by Allies. . | before, though ioun air base ta-
___________________________— I cilities me ample for a greatly
Wilson went to Paris for the 1919
peace conference
For the most part Mr Truman
has enjoyed excellent weather on
the trip thus far and his curiosity
, has taken him to virtually every
part of this cruiser. The Augusta
is skippered by Capt. James H.
Foskett of Strafford. Pa. The crui-
ser Philadelphia, the other vessel
in the special two-ship task force,
is commanded by Capt. Robert
L. Boiler of Bremerton. Wash
Rear Admiral Allen R. McCann
command.* the task force
Aside from his conferences. Mr
Trumans’ schedule aboard ship is
essentlally the same as his White
-House routine—up a little after
six each morning, a nap after
lunch and to bed before midnight.
* On Sunday he attended church
services with the crew.
the Rhineland.
Left July 7 Harass Retreat
Mr.Trumans party sailed. Centra news reported Allied
Newport News on July 1. planes were alaing Chinese ground
forces by harassing the Japanese
retreat Kangsien, principal Jap-
the by recommendnig a fund of $250,-
000 for its liquidation.____
The committee action w Hl permit' cther
a House vote on the FEPC item w... ----
tomorrow and make possible final | blind Japanese' war
aelion on the $752,000,000 1946 war " •—
agencies appropriation bill which J
FShief has been tied up in a legislative’ cf
anenet deadlock. .
AnsE The House previously passed a the an-----------.
e war agncies appropriation bill tered the Tokyo area with upwards
withouta provision for the FEPC.; of 1,000 planes yesterday had pul.
The senate, however, added 825D.- ed back out of range during the
000 for the agency and retumed night. .. ....
the measure to the House The "It is apparent that toe enem /
appropriation commibtee refused a{ task rorce .has vathdrawn after
second time to include P* funds, J me raid in fear of our special
and the House again sent-a bill
1 ’ augmented effort." ",.3
Japanese Abandoning Entire Salient =-=
In Kiangsi Province, Chinese Report a-:
,__ • 9 T ' ■ the Japanese probably will attempt
Face Problems | ----- 0--------------------------- ~ I to hold all major ports.
-den. Georze G. Marshall..-Ad- CHUNGKING, July 11 (U.P — < " 1 '
miral Ernest J. King, Gen H HThe Chinese central news agency I mnntr a A nnrnA
make up "neTpsegrtcutodaxymnabanaonnn EX AS BK
entire salient in southern Kiangsi 1 * H-AIII •
province where they have been -----------
clinging to a number of former
American airbases since last Jan;
°s INDUS porwi?STAUTR ALIA
--
___________________________AihlUhed Dnilu vt^d Prtn Lea^d Wire Service
— CLEEURNE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1945
40TH YEAR, NO. 195 - - 7 1 J .
173 JAP PLANES, 32 SHIPS WRECKED
mg . V ziaggemz,
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78 2 a m ....... 74
80, 4ajn........ 73
79! 8 a.m......... 73 4
75 8 a.m....... 72
74 10 a m ...... 73
74 12 nodn 73
Forrestal Says
I S. Controls
Sea Up to Japan
PEARL HARBOR. July 11 (U.P) '
—Tokyo said today the U. 3.
Third Fleet had finally broken off
its carrier strike against Japan
with a mighty final blast that
wrecked at least 173 Japanese
Mireraft and 32 ships.
| It was the 36th straight day of
. tha .pre invasion bombing of
•'japan Even as the fleet with-
drew army raiders from Okinawa
. took up the assault. Tokyo re.
I ported a flight of about 150
American P-51'a and P-47s aly
lacked the sulicide plane bases on .
Eastern and Southern Kyushu for
-ubeut two hours today. .
No Answering Shote
I —
kmongolta,OS,/
cmal$.m,.snAPAN
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G—auosa
MA Hong ng
ingoMa N
veEFRENCH
W*4VSJUNP0 CHINA
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——
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y
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Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 195, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 11, 1945, newspaper, July 11, 1945; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1558134/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.