itaM 33a ‘MUK SHADOW OflK STARS I By-f}bb&^allace ^»»y«rHt»w»rOyAi«e«)^^ *«»—YeBB QinmM IB Jumrn^u* TUa** m Tm Colvum. P«r • •Wwfc • •. »mi miy tit tot mf mrw Amoioor RxAsmo k Luoit D*i Cmait m4 mm1*« hf man aafl • iwilwlil ktt«r of frM Advkt aaalyB- iu (1mm (I) QMMiMM prtmdr. Sim TM* fd smm. a«UnH Md Urtlxlit* u ■I aad piMM >f hi a tUmPti wtloft e* jroar Mply. tMM# «0 «K ilBSr WALLACt, tmt THE dAKOUNA TIMES, t. O. Mm ?n, DVMHAM, N. C^MOUNA he «liildr«a ont of his ftght. Ym >t '4oara* h« is going to do better^ ihhotigh tii« ch«ng« migbt no( f jm "mm to ahoir him mol** [indo«M And •oxurideration hll Iiinkiiijg qprees ‘would grow far- hcr Nem eoold him vhil« Irioldag: BOO—I married * gir^ she sttd lum aepanted, the has * ehUd tDd I vaot %o know if it i* mine >r notf ! —^The kid is yoniji al right. ffiie’a the goat in the oaae Mt yoa. My anggMtion ia that jon lo Tight thin^ and go bMk lOBie to yaax nife and child. CKBr—Kind Sir, I have a drlnk- Qg inaband and when he hrfok he jnat qoarrels all the inje and acta mean to the child* leii. Wiil he get any better or lo«« Bomeona have him fixed f Ane: ^ While ht ia under the n£ln««eof drink, try to ke.pp*^^ Lai|[est LoW'Rent Housing IVoject lo World To Receive First Tenants Soon , ft WAflHINGTON — The largest low rent housing development foo: Kagroes in the world wiU receive it* firat tenants this month. In fi&i4ua£T touches on the" first aowfileted houses of the Ida B. Wellp Homes which are being Livestocit Outlook For 1941 Is Bright A bright outlook Cor Uvestoek farmers in 1941 ia indciated by the inereaaed defense aictivity, say« Fhrof. £. H. Hostetler, State College animal husbandman. ' Peo ple eat more nffeat when they are working and earning regularly” he pointed out, "and the farmer who eontbinee livestock rodue- tion with eotton or tobacco grow ing will benefit the most Piof. Hostetler says that the re-employment will help the live- atoek cotton farmer in two ways, namely. Worken eaa utilise more oottjon and they oan eonsome more of the livestoek prodocte that are products through* the feeding of eottonseed by pro- duets. I j i': In this eHine0tion, the State Cdlege leader cited a reeent ea- timate^that one hour’a ^raga re ceived by the average American will buy 2.1 poanda of beef, whereas the same amonat of la bor will earn an Englishman only 1.4 pounds of beef, a German 0.9 of a pound and a Roseian 0.3 of • burlqr prodneen durioc the mon th waa $3430 above the Dieember, 1090, ai^^«c« pHea- Salea reports to Janaary 1 are shown in the aeeompanying table. The Nepo Tmher Needs A Oedit, Union To Tide Over ake place right away. I feel tbal boUt witii United Staites Housing AotSority funds. 0eon trucks and vans loaded wUh furniture will begin tte job. 0# wofii^ 1,M2 familiee from ^eir old homes in the hemmed in i£VP—I received my re^nf a. 10 aaled ''black belt” of ttie na- ireeka *go and you anajyiod[tioit% eeeocd largest ciAy to the ease to a perfection. It eoold t hATe been any better. I am yon now to aak you am I in quitiog my jobf If you ~y stay I will do so, and if yon y •t*y J .will do so, and if yoa y p&ek up hodc, line, and sinker is alill okay by me. Ana: Xow is no time to make a Battle the situation out til the spring of the year, A- Eaater time you will be eite of the new project—an are* of about 11 city Mocks. I The nea/t houses in simple mod em style—^there are 126 separate strvciares in ^ hge develop- meni—wiU provide homes for thousands of people who are nonv foveed to Uve in one of the worst glqzD areas of the country. pound—^when meat is available at any prise. basic IMl farm outlook Indieates that redpotions Sn unon- plojpment, eoupled with ineraaaed those been elaaeed as unemployed, should 2\Bise the demand by oon- sumers for such fanu produsts as meat, dairy and poultry products'| vegetables and some fruits. Ouri'hark .sompaoies DURHAM — tlie Nevn> teach er must boneir H leaf from the book of his prcgreaaive white fellow teacher and oiganise a Teadiers' Crsdii Unioo. During thie period of ttie year, or the a^^oaching, Christmaa holidays, the need of aneh an ur- ganization is more keenly fsH y many Negro teaohen. While vari- oufl iadustriid plante will pay their employees, in addition to their regular wages a nioe fat bonus, a teacher wifi.not >eeeive one red sent of what he has earn ed in December until sometime in the Haippy New Tear. , This stete of affairs is lainely doe to the faet, that instead of reoeiving: weekly salarkis as t^ey do in Texas, or at, least se|mi iiMnthly ae the mty school Refuses To Replace Negro Musicians With Nordicn NEW YORK — Beeanae he doean’t believe in Jim Orowism. Joe SuBivan, famous -white band leader this week tamed down the jolfer of a Miami Bea^ hotel {operator to play an engag«ment tWe, 4>roviding he would get rid of his sepia mnsie markers.” SuIlivan’B band is • six piece eombination with Sullivan plajring the piano the only white musician in the sr0w. l%e nnit i* now play ing the Fomous Door Ckfe, on S2nd Street and before thait j-lay ed for several months at Cafe Society. Bnllivan said, in an intervie»w this week that his present mixed ere>w ie tiie musical goal for which he has striven sinee Samnd T. Uouel, Soeial and pro gram eonunittee, Pariiam E. Don- ell. Sick and Lookout aliMnmittce, Henry Holman, Reporter James H. Riefamond, S«uvaDt-at- arms SSddie B. Baldin. Dorothy Maynor TeDs 6m Story hi True Story NEW YORK — In • *pesM article in the current True Story liagaalne, one ol the nation’s largest Love Story magaaifae n- veab her own story titled "She Bball make Music,'’ Dorothy Maynor whose magnifieent voice thrill thousands annuity has won a pnHninent piaee in the heart of mnsie loven 6he ia a daughter of a Metho dist miaister in Norfolk, Va., and the days attended Hampton Institute where vbo hava not hibitive* The teacher tm, teaeheni are still the vietims of ^ payiqg system wftkh erigiu- ated ilk the dsjm of tbs little red school hooa^ «ltan a definite pna sohod budg^ vat somMkai j?n>- % when he tsed t« play in Chicago’s -whea slia entered school had backrooms with ^e old time planned to teach domertis arts* colored greats. ^ student there joined tbe worked ,Tery hard to'ehoir and toured with the group shape this band into its present between her studies. ,|play!ng eondition’» he said “andl After return trip ftwn Europe the last thing in tlie world I would'with the choir, riie changed her do woald be to abandon it, even studies and took up mosie still for offers five time* what I’m now with the idea in mind to teaoh. reeeivinsr. I*ve tfwaya wanitM an I ^^fted several appearenees with oA sompoeed of eoloaed and ciioir, a friend persuaded her white mnakiaDa because mwis • to study in New Yoi*, there she one of the medioms ihroi^ turned to the stage. She rapidly which the barriers of racSai pre- ^ the ^tention of sritiss who finds himaetf judiae ean be broken.*' condnetods. Her deep faith io short of fond* at the Cbriatmaa season must eftan seek civdit at stotea as- wall as tnm to loan with . .titeir ex- North Carolina cotton and to- bacoo fanners might aa well face these facts and diversify their operations” Hoetetler declared- In conclusion, the hus~ bandman suggested that farmers get in touch with their county farm 'Re Ohioago “Wack belt” ia a diseuas with narrow ai^ stretehtng sotsthwaT^ repwsentetives of thb Stete fnoDi the Loop. In ’t lire some Extension Service the _ best type* of livestock to raiae than experts say the area -o^d,^J. «>« P^ticular community n adequately house. Every year the situation has become iwoive since the Negro populaition is growing and at the same time business and commencial enterprisea have been taking over property in the area fonnerly used for residential pur posea. "Negro housdng’' according to Horace R. Oaytton writing in t^e magazine Social Action, "is the number one explosive in the eHy of rhi«a?o.” Althoug4i N^ifroes from Chic ago’s loiwest income group, the inaneially able to get a felw peo- 200,000 Negroes, 80,000 told and make a new start ^Qy here yon desire. A. R.— I need s«ne help, A Oman took mjr huriumd away I have spent all the money I rake and scrape to get him and still I don't have }iiin. yroxk but spent all my money to get him to leave this 1 »nd eome home. TdJ me. if he AOS': Honestly,* yon are wasting' ?ai7 iima tk«t y«« Mm. on would cease this foolishness f giving your money to pewle ~ , can've iav»vwv jip el^ they y®”'rentals they must pav Sn the ccm* i^and you wo^d be better offi belt" homes are eveiy way T^e the money and ^ comparatively nd It on clothes fix your hairU„„ u- Price Is Down For Flue - Cured doiny so, you will meet new 'ends and show this husband of idoiv a thing or two. He isn't to return to you. lost my husband in July nd r hare given him up the best poold as Qod willed. My only .typbter .18,^ears old has wre*ed .life with a baby and no hns- And 1 am now burdened • debi and hare to stay and oare for her baby and ’t g«t out to work. I am to own hearts and disgusted that fee) like giving op and leavinif* Ana: — T^ou and your daughter than those that must be paid by t members of other racial groups. In the USHA project the average rent will be $14.03 a month. eioudUa lUrlid hnbin g,ie dt The devrfopmentj buiit by the Chica^ Housincr Autihority at a east of $8,681,000 of which 90 fjeremt represents a USHA loan, is oonvenieniily located near traps portation Hues, churches, and schools. The site itMlf 'a land- Waped and provides recreational faeUities and in addition H ad joins two parka. The pro,fect bears the name of North Carolina’s tobaoeo grow- erg sold $484,974,920 pounds f producers' tobaoco for an averagft; of-17.30 per hundred pounds through December- 31, compared with 745,915,961 pounds for an average of $15.82 per hundreds pounds over the same period Iasi year, J. J. Mwgan, statistician of the State. Department of Agricul' ,t^, reported yesterday. tqrtionate rstas of interest. Often the reputatiw of the teach«x as wejl as basiiisas mnat jmffcr r»- vfnes becuaae of an antujuated paying system which long sine# work with, served its'd^y and generation. But, these facts make it all the more 4pparent why Negro teaoh-. era should make a change, adjust ihcmselvss. to conditions, and or ganize a credit union. By making changes man has . been able to survive, while, animals that didn’t have much sense, like the dinor a^ur, wve unable to change and n9 longer «xiat« «ipon the face of the earth. A change (o a modem systebi of paying*to meet th« present day Longr time ago,’^ he eontinued,'religion and reiigious aetivitives “the idea of white and eolored sonree and inspiration playing together in the eame band her mnae. was lau^^ed at but today this, . , - myth Is being ihattered. The’^.^———■ — meniwrs of my ork are all agree able fellows and I find them gentlemen and a perfect set to Baptists Of North Carolina Elect Executive Secretary RALEIGH —The Statist Convention of Carolina unanimously elected the Rev. 0. £• Qriffin of Mebane as exeeutiye seeretary at a special Nobody’s Business Bit Ckne McGee 8. L.OU1SK ALOEE. WTTtmore*, Ohio, has Joined staff of Nsttrmat Tuberculosta Association aa fpe«ls' .leld worker on Negro Pro*r«m. UoiOiikv HmBdCiili WteDtTnDt? what I did for a living. I intimat ed to him that was a powerful personal question but I proceeded to tell him of my daily routine, and let him make up his own mind as to whether ox not I should a livelihood from such efforts. First, I explained to the man that I go to my (wholesale) >4 fiss every morning as eartly as the cook will permit me to eat brefUcfast. I open the mail, an swer such stuff as needs to be answered, ask the folks in the place bow’s things and then 1 usually find some federal or state or connty or city tax inquiries to look after. Also a few wages and hours questionnaires to abc>orb and to reidy to. The Way We See Things According to Berlin, the British have never been able to drop bombs on ^ything in Germany except churches^ hospitals, grave yards, fiA ponds and open spaces. It looks like they would hit a train 01^ depot or something kind General accidental some time. But North every German bomb, if you take the Win’d of a German for it, tnds right kerd«tt ffi lop o^ an ammunition dump, or a railroad Is and liiiilmiii 9onditions ,§esBion at the First Baptist chureh station, or an airplane factory, or w»ald greatly enhance the poai- tion of teaebei* a| well as ibU'i-. *nW But,.Neg:ro teamen musiii in Raleigh this week. . He will sBoceed the Rev. W. 0. SomwviUe, who resigned to be- nbt «it supinely And. wait^ QonstriM general ^ecryta^ of the t^.e - chan^ee • come stowly, . theyj^^^t; Oarey Foreign Mission Con- Deceinber sales repotted at 9. ve not go to 4hrash this thing B. Wells, crus^ln,r edi- at home. Your daughterand edu^tor-one of ihe n»- a. .a IV «»^!t>on'8 first NegW) women lourna- fortune isn’t a« bad as it 4>’ an. She wiU settle down *ndj wHhin the next few eaM. she doee, the baby will go| her. , ; ^ AT—I wpuld like to know why *t I love my htubandf I try to ok it looks like I just can't. He very good to me, gives me any* I aak for, but he trcis to and he don't know thing. I try to tcAl him some- ‘-y and he won’t listen. Ans:—'When two bull headed ^dks get together one has got to a diplomat. That’s your job. e loves yon, provided well, gen- ns with, his money, so what ore do you want. You love your TUlbiand, but when yon t>wo have fose you hold a grudge and he Let him be the boss md onr home life will be happy. DO—-Whs^a can I find the young ellow who played this trick on and how tell him about itf An$: — Let the matter drop, on have nothing to gain and verything to lose by thing into open. Forget it •'II . I . , in > ■ .. We rarely iliink these paragra- sn are smart or witty never- ela*, we hai»« to write 'em whe* er yon read-'em or not. Iktereat Grows In Beef Cattldt That interest in better beef cattle is continuing to grow in Yancey County is evidenced by the fact that there are 17 more purebred bulls now than a year •go, lays Farm Agent R. H. Crouse. a wharf or a ship or women and children. a crowd of It takes only about one third of my time to make tax returns for ourselves and a few friends who don’t know how to make them either. About 10 per cent of the balance of my time is spent n answering inquiries about the re turns already made and making small remittances to take care of errors, oversights, excess deduc tions, refunds for mistakes made in respect to gifts, donations and contributions. '' Won't it be nice to get a rest I ^tertain a large number of ovemment men. They check and double check me and my few times every year. I all kinds of government inquiries aboat what we get for com me«d and bay and eottonseed meal and from John L. Lewis? He possibly alfalfa. I have to tell somebody njust rise, like . whits fellow^r t^ers , ao4 , 4a. the . seibessary t^ing tOfSi^Te. ' ... : '^*143.^ , / E)W \'i' tttP VAJ^QUISBI^ ']pie te«ritpi3r of my ji««r^i. Tliat \iie^ took embrittled. > . staad^'- i . . ; - 5^6,103 pounds returned grower? M*averaj^ of $12,63 per ^undi«d, or $1.56 less Uxan. the December 1939 price.' "Warehousemen in the old belt sold 5,798,978 pounds of product era' tobacco during Deoember for^On olfl^er It UT«d'»i^. an average pf $12.72, compared' Akd dlfMUnt' .by s^Qkstin^ with $12-93 fqr the same month oft .* ' . 1939’' Morgan said. “Farmer* ' • ' this area have.-reiseived an average j COUW pA^ft^bAo, of $17.49 per hundred for the 64, i With it woi 604,4d8 pounds iiold to date,|The saiisfaction of the mad. - compared with $15.31 per hundred Now by suddeu rfaVery [Vention of America, Thirty seven enough money from recent'every Monday morning by mail to years pld, he is ^ native of Eliza- - for corresponding 1^ sales "Season’s podueers' sales on the eig^t middle belt markets, oiwt closed for the season, amounted to 99,948,121 pounds, averaging $16.58 per hundred, compared with 148,656,379 pounds sold ur- ing the 1939 season for an aver age of $15.70.’* Burley toboeco sales on the Asheville and Boone maritets aver aged $19.41 per hundred for the 2,750,852 pounds sold during December. The average price paid My hieart provM your hypothsis An isolated, heart may bo Takan with a single kiss, ’-Selected •U my ideaa When smokiOLf ■oan When not fink apon the floor. And BQ wer* *11 joken^ the greatest '-Elected, WATCH! For thci Forthcomiiifir Date of the Long:-Talked of Play , , , “IT PAYS TO ADVERTISr Given in the B. N. DUKE AUDITORIUM SOON; A.N.C.C. ^ Watch For The Date In The CAROLINA' TIMES mm ro« uv»i« mi B«r, rwihrt —il INMiy. £•/«• fSOSW With kmth be& City an^son' of a long line of Baptist churchmen^ He if the gtvndSon of * the late Rev. Elijah H. Qriffii4 pioneer Bi^ist- mini^ ter- of eitetem North Carolina- The fon of Dr. Chas. H* D. Griffin, who .pastored' Comer Stone Bap- 'tis^. Church, Elizabeth City, itf. Lj‘Central Baiptiflt church, Berkley orlolk,‘ Va. and now the pastor of U>e historic Fii*t Baptist Ohor^, Fannville, Ya. He Is the nSephew of Dr. G. D. Griffin, fotin- eiily of-New--Jersey, now ot H51i*a b^iA CHty. He is ^so the nephew of the ^te Dr. W. S. Creecy Rich Square, N. C. outstanding Baptist pastor and Educator. He went to school at Elixabetii Oity and graduated at Shalw Uni versity with A. B- and B. D. de grees. He has held pastorates at the Lovely Hill Baptist Cburch '’f Warrenton, N. C., the First Bap tist chnreh of Boxboro and the Rm Baptist Church of Mebane where under his leadeiship he has recently completed a new brick chnreh edifice. Taking office immediately, the new secretary will continue the woik of unifying Uie 1,700 church es and 275,000 members of colored Baptist Churches of the state, in a program of cooperation in fore ign and home missions and Chris tian education. ^ deals to permit him to live in whom I sold sugar and shorts and com meal—arid name any persons suspected of making any bootleg items. I have i far. kingly style from now on. We don’t know of any good he hae ever done but we don’t know every'licker from such thing. He has caused more distrust'never named one and trouble and discontent than any other man that ever lived. I work occasionally for my Mabbe Lewis and Bridges will buy firm, but moat of my time is themselves a big luxury liner and taken up, after getting tax mat tQur the world. If they ever stop ters fixed temporarily in prepar- we hope John L will take up his ing state and county tax returns, abode in Italy and Bro. Bridges'applying for licenes plates for ,wUl naturall want to live in his trucks and ears, paying, liability dear old Russia. Suits us. insurance for this and that and the other, making returns to the city for this and that and so forth, then we have to let the so much and I highway boys tell us once or twice mcks Smqde tUp Puy tect Flock’s HeaUi. Whenever yoa taavs a tmd coM yosl try to tet lots ot rmt, keep wana. perl)^ take a aaUd lanttve, satf cat rlsh In vttasdtns. bsouMS yoa have found tiuss tilings aid natnre tn throwing off tbf eoM. It’s Just as posslhis to a 1m* throw oS her cold, asdedlne to Onfton Lotbrofi, bead at Os flsDir* tattoo Department Purina’ MUIb. -AHtumgh no one aeons to Jtmt what eaasss coWs WjesTTh fci isetnfc frnmjm ■tntsd that sdMs Id caoHd ]9y a isfssilai^ UnXavonit# popfly Tcntilatcdi exposure to soki wit reduce tbs radstanes ef a iaife «pi raadcr It men smcejjitfMs t» Itt liUection. The need Ur good eam adequate nutrition, and a socltatlB^ prognim iihleb will help tntzodoetkm of this inffeetlan Is readily i^iparent* in ditckena as a mis taegtia with a thin nsial dta^barfe tfOtrita by a eoflectloc git cbeeiv inatcrlid fa the sinutes of the hsad anfl a sveQr Ing about the area, tbif affe^tid Urd ihoin a k»s of appettts; 00 In productkm and bodywelgbt* aod becomes droopy. If infsctions colds ahoold bnatt o«l in your Ho^ X^ittuep saggssts tbe tcllowlng sevenpi^ podltiy sanitatioa pngram— ^ 1. eliminate draftih daaqcMM and crowding. X Scrub fountains with % stiff bnish daily and dlilnfsct a ^Silovpnn Ik dye tbs bbd* » wild ttaak If it appears ncceamy. ^ Clean the poultiy booss tiKatv oofbJ^ aod disinfect wttb a ^ Qn-ao-Xto sohitKn. . plenty of diy Utter, i. Immediately venore tb« birds and bom those sttteb dls. I, When evidence of oolds observed, eloss the becae ^ dost tbe birds with Chlonaa Folder until tb«y ly.‘Qe|«fit wttlL tV^t daajr until tbe UM* Aar Jbl* pryivenifnt. T, icesp tbe bteds oo f«A f^fL IS feed ooQsuamitiaa fe«d Leyena cbeAsi at To forUMr incieaie fsai sqmpUon tt msar be t6 add te tbe laying pmaii i^petiser Uke Eotroa's Non: auonoMt Qriribi fee and Ob^-B^Ton are our dtstflbutur ftr olVbgH to help Qontsoi tbe oojds derekjp in their eWqlwe. complets dirsettsm ~ It wouldn't hurt the country '^o terrible if Friend Hugh Johnson would stop talking so loud. He hasn't been any great I a year that our old cars and ^ blessing to the country. If be hai aint fit to be on the public roads, Crfii^f HrnipiMf •'? r 1 it ■ not of been so Hitler-like with by that time, I’m broke,.humilated the NRA, it might have done emaciated, fidgity and trying to iColul lujLIPC better. Some folks are now worry think up some kind of business 1 JRmmm ing because they feel that he can get into that I wouldn’t have I « WbMAK teles artel might try to get back into the to work for nothing most of thej /V. rte flnda fcpylt Democratic party again. Tlie New time and would let me mkae a kttW vv *9? Deal got rid of a few thorns in fair living without having tj lie the flesh just in time not to have 4lK>ut it. thmi around their neck. Nowl .— ■ —— ain’t no time to have things a- a||^ • i J A aa round your neck except collars >^|)3[113 AM AlliCa and ties, and they ought tc fit I ^ e m mi ' i«« Lead To The The Three C’s Gub M Officers For the New Year Wednesday night the Three 0*8 Cbb tield their semi-annual eleo- fion of officers for 194L Tbe folkfwing were elected: President J>avid }ihnore,. Yiee President Eugene G. ^ort, . Seeretary, James E. BesTee, Assistant Seere- taiy Jubn T. Long, Treasurer, (^haaa P. Lyons, Business mana ger, John T. Long, Auditor, Par* hau E. Donnell, Chaplin James *S. Seott, membeiship eoaunittee ut"‘ nlEnglish Channel Wh grows cotton to sell to buy gnano|^ 117I11 Da 117^11 to grow eotton with. The tobacco,if ttl if 111 DtJ ffvU farmer prodiKes tobacco one e e • year and sells it so’s he will have ijhe great British victory in money enough to grow another a frw»ft, which grows more ‘om- erop of tobacco the next year to pi^tg gvery day, has definitely sell so’s he can grow some more removed the threat of an Italian for nothing. The manufacturer of offensive against the empire’s life tobacco products makes all of thej time »t the Suez Canal and now profit, the users pay all of the ^ptna to be developing into such taxes. All farm produce is o ^ tremendous triumph as to cheap the government will never itsiy of her coveted possession in have to arrest a farmer for pro- Aftiea. ! ' fitemng. Yet, lots of folks want The losses sustained by tke Ita- to see crop control discontinued all ti«n« *t Sidi Barrani, and To- the country woidd have to do bruk, in material and men, mean then would be to increafe thejthe end of Graziana’s army un- sise of its poorhousea and the }^ reinft>reements arrive from Bi|M now, I oAv a enssliBry biaatlon that 9m wUI M fol: firoMR CIiMae Vnd I Wiekags ocawgs isTored «elil!> j 1 pint hot waten H •■V s«iir$ % salt; t taasgagB Tinecar; I eopei eranbenl| sroUnd; 1 saeloig# (t eeewpl CraUB ChMM. Diasolve celattB Is kgt Add sugar, salt, and vhisg»r. Qlil. men Barttally OtiBkisnjr «|d fii^ berries. Maah ebees% naUI eniaiy. Add ceiathi-craBberry stBtere il^ uaily to eheese aa4 beat wHk 1 egg beater eatil Mended, ring mold. OhiU —to Ins. mold on erlso lettage and witB ^cory ^ eseat«tfa. with French itreasini or Serve# ^ lengths of bread lines about 10000 per eent. Day In and Day Omt A man asked me the other day Italy. This seema unlikely be cause British naval units are in control of the Mediterranean and Bnti^ aviators seem to have al most eomplste nustery of the Aento wbaM dMrtacw ixij ported, in . G^a, nHliioq^ crop in larg«r than ^ jmt say* tiw^ at

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