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The Sunday Star-News Puniisned Every Sunday dy The Wilmington Star-New* At The Murchison Building p_ g Page, Owner and Publisher Telephone Ail Department* DIAL 3311 Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilming ton, N C„ Postoffice Under Act of Congress of March 3. 1873 SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER Payable Weekly Or In Advance Combina Tirae fitar New* tion 1 Weei_____8 .25 8 .20 3 35 1 Month-MO •»« i-5? 3 Months_ * 25 2-e0 4-33 8 Months_ * 55 5 20 910 ! year _ 13.00 10.40 18.20 News rates entitle subscriber to Sunday Issue of Star New* _ BY MAIL Payable Strictly In Advance Ccccblna Star News tion 1 Month _* .75 J .50 t 30 2 Months ___ 2.00 1.50 2.75 « Months _ 4 00 3.00 5.50 1 Year _ 2.00 5.00 1 0.60 News rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News Card of Thanks charged for at the rate of 25 cents per line. Count five words to line. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Is entitled to the exclusive use of all news stories appearing in The Sunday Star-News. SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1942 With confidence in our armed forces — with the unbounding de termination of our people—we will gain the inevitable triumph — so help us God. —Roosevelt’s War Message Star-N ewsProgram To aid in every way the prosecution of the war to complete victory. Public Port Terminals. Perfected Truck and Berry Preserving and Marketing Facilities. Seaside Highway from Wrightsville Beach to Bald Head Island. Extension of City Limits. 35-foot Cape Pear River channel, wider Turning Basin, with ship lanes Into industrial sites along Eastern tank south of Wilmington. Paved River Road to Southport, via Orton Plantation. Development of Pulp V od Production through sustained-yield methods through out Southeastern North Caroilna. L’nified industrial and Resort Promo tion'.! Agency, supported by one county wide tax. Shipyards and Drydocks. Negro Health Center Tor Southeastern North Carolina, developed around the Community Hospital. Adequate nospltal facilities for white. Junior High School. Tobacco Warehouses for Export Buy ers. Development of native grape growing throughout Southeastern North Carolina. Modern Tuberculosis Sanatorium. TOP O’ THE MORNING Keep My commandments and live. —PROVERBS 4; 4. -V It Can’t Be Done The benighted Japanese destroyed the entire library of the University of the Philippines in the foolish belief they could root out all knowl edge of democracy among the Filipinos and eventually accomplish their Japanization. They would force the islanders to abandon all Amer ican and English culture, all thought of a peo ple's government, all aspirations for a better life, and reduce them to the savagery and serfdom ot an Asiatic new order. If they had any sound knowledge of history they would know they cannot destroy democ racy or exterminate culture. It has been tried times out of mind, but always with no suc cess. Once the seed of democracy takes root It can't be destroyed. And democracy had taken root in the Philip pines. A quarter century of American assis tance, guidance, education, had so deeply im planted its principles and advantages in Fili pino hearts that no assault, no butchery, of Japanese conquerors can destroy it until the last islander is slain. -v__ Germans Swing South The German strategy in the Battle of Russia has been suddenly changed with some relief for Stalingrad and heavier pressure on Rostov. The purpose is obvious. Rostov is on the route to the Caucasus. Hitler must get oil there for his million-man offensive in Russia. Naturally he will use every military trick every man and piece of equipment, to do so. The change in direction of the attack is thus accounted for. Whether the new assault will be more successful or more successfully check ed, is not so clear. One new element which favors the Russians is the presence of Ameri can-made Boston bombers in the Don basin, an nounced for the first time yesterday. These two-engine light attack bombers have been extensively used by the R.A.F. and have given good account of themselves. Their value in the present fighting would be more easily appraised if it were known how many have gone aloft. But dispatches disclosing their pres ence omit this important detail. We can only hope that there are enough to more than make their presence felt. A token force will not do. The day has come when the aid Russia is given by her allies must be overwhelming. Another hopeful sign is that the Russian armies, which have borne the burden of slow ing far superior forces, are still holding their alignment and already counter - attacking atriking hardest in the Voronezh area where they have retaken five "communities” and by a successful blow defeating German garrisons guarding Don river crossings. Rostov would be a rich prize for the Ge.* mans. But its recapture (they held it for a time | last summer) would be worth the price Hitler seems willing to cay only if his forces cou.d ■proceed to the Caucasus oil fields over moun tains which impose barriers stronger than any Russian manpower or fighting strength could : put into action. The new strategy adds greater difficulties for the Soviet armies, but does not | indicate a definite victory for the Axis. -V Governors Could Help It is not only the wholesalers and their trav eling men who are under assault by the new gasoline rationing restrictions. Others all too liable to be driven out of busi ness, along with them, are filling station oper ators and their employes. They cannot hooe to continue in business if the motoring public can get gasoline only in dribbles. Furthermore, ev er;.' tourist home and camp will find iheir patronage so reduced—at the height of the va cation period—that they can no longer meet their "overhead," to say nothing of making a profit. The seventeen states placed under the ia tioning handicap have a valid reason to claim that they are unfairly dealt with. But merely to make complaint will not bring a remedy. There must be concerted demand, through the seventeen delegations in congress, so strongly stated that the rationing powers will not dare to continue this discrimination against the one area. There are many ways, of course, in which the united protest of the people most banefully affected in these states could make their posi tion known. A flood of messages, by wire or mail, to senators and representatives would not be overlooked or neglected. But better ever, than that, a conference of the governors of the seventeen states, called into session at Wash ington to frame a program, with the sole pur pose of forcing an equitable distribution of gas oline throughout the region, and to carry the case to the WTiite House if relief was not forth coming from other sources, could come near est, we believe, to producing the desired re sults. There is no one better situated or fitted to sponsor such a conference than Governor Broughton of North Carolina, Mr. Broughton has repeatedly demonstrated high qualities of leadership not only in state, but in regional planning and reform. His position, as chief executive of a commonwealth destined to be hit hard, if not actually hardest, by the new curtailment of gasoline, would add weight to his appeal to other governors for concerted action. -V On The Egyptian Front When Field Marshal Rommel made his dash into Egypt he had previously played havoc with the British tank forces with artillery brought up when his tanks alone could not break through. Having cleared the way for his ad vance by destroying great numbers of British operated tanks, he moved out of Libya with a speed closely approaching that of the tradi tional Nazi blitzkrieg. When General Auchinleck brought his ad vance to a stop a scant sixty-five miles from Alexandria the advantage in tanks lay entirely with Rommel. Auchinleck had fewer of these traveling fortresses and fewer men. Yet he stopped Rommel. Without attempting to ana lyze the strategy which made this possible, beyond accepting the general view that Rom mel had outrun his supplies, it seems reason able to attribute the check imposed on the Axis advance to Auchinleck’s superiority in the air. And this is anomalous, inasmuch as authorities who have compared the value of various equipment are mostly agreed that war planes are not the best weapons to use against tanks. Which introduces the question, if Rommel was stopped while he held tank superiority and had greater manpower, with Auchlineck hav ing only superiority and not supremacy in the air, how is it proved that warplanes can’t stop tanks in mid career? The answer may be found in the way airpower is used. Auchin lick has been striking heavy blows at Rom mel’s communications from the air. He has not sought to exterminate Rommel’s tank force by bombing it from planes, but had cut off, or materially lessened, the flow of supplies for Rommel’s tanks by air attack, while his lesser tank force blocked the road to Alexandria. Because of the careful and destructive use made by Auchinleck of his air force, the tank reinforcements which have now swung into ac tion against the invaders, consisting chiefly of American - made streamlined General Lees, which may have given the British commander equal tank strength with Rommel, conceivably could be the determining factor in this Battle of Egypt which, in its potentialities, may prove as vital as the greater Battle of Russia, near ing a crisis across the Mediterranean. -V Looking Ahead Among the best reasons offered individuals to invest in war bonds is that they will cushion the owners against any financial shock in the post-war era. The same reason has been ap plied in arranging the budget for the city ol Elmira, N. Y. This year’s budget for Elmira provides thal $50,000 be set aside as a reserve fund for capi tal improvements ‘o be undertaken when work ers in the city no longer have a place in the war production program. The plan, contem plates increasing the yearly reserve to at leasl $100,000 for several years to come. At the same time that money is being ac cumulated, Elmira’s city planners will be a work on a program of improvements which j will include construction of necessary build | ings and general beautification. When the war is ended the city will not only have its program but the money to carry it out, without increas ing its bonded indebtedness to any great ex i tent. i This is an example in forehandedness which ought to impress the governing bodies of many ' another city. -V Charles Stewart Says BY CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Columnist WASHINGTON, July 18—Several veterans of exceedingly long standing will be voted on senatorially in November. Some are Demo crats, some are Republicans and one’s an in ! dependent, but all the betting is that the whole group will be re-elected overwhelmingly on personal grounds, regardless of party politics. In fact, senate Democrats would miss the Re ! publicans, would miss the Democrats and both would miss the lone independent if any of them 1 should be beaten. None will be, however, though two or three might die of old age before ; election day. The independent is Senator George William Norris of Nebraska. in point 01 service tne .Neorasxan is tne senior member of congress. He isn’t the senior senator. Senator Ellison DuRant Smith of South Carolina beats him by a term, so far as the upper legislative chamber is concerned. The Nebraska solon, however, is next after Ellison, besides which he served in the house of repre sentatives before his state promoted him to the other end of the Capitol building. Counting his whole career on the Hill, he's the Methuselah : of the outfit, purely from the angle of contin uous service. Reckoning from his initial birthday, Norris - is quite elderly likewise. As this current campaign year began to wag around, Norris announced that being past 80, he’d had enough and wasn’t going to run again. Then the war scooped in the United States. : Immediately letters and telegrams began pour ; ing into his office, to the purport, "Gosh! What an unpatriotic act to quit at such a juncture, merely because you’re four score and a year or so!” Norris Stays on Job So the senator surrendered. He's running. He used to be a Republican, but that was just a label. He never was anything but an independent, and it’s a mild way of putting it to say that he's been a liberal from his cradle days upward. Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas is another outstanding veteran. He isn’t as much so as Senator Ellison D. Smith, whose term does not expire this year, by the way, or as Senator Norris, Senators Kenneth McKellar of Tennessee. Hiram War ren Johnson of California and Charles Uinza McNary of Oregon likewise are the Kansan’s seniors by a year or two each. Senators McKellar and Johnson aren’t up this year, but Senator McNary is. Tne Oregon ian, besides being a veteran, is the Republican leader in his congressional branch, which makes him doubly noticeable. Senator Capper, however, while not quite as senior as half a dozen of his colleagues, is a lawmaker to write home about. Does he hesi tate to run again, at 77? Not so you could notice it! ; When Capper was around 75 I had occasion to write a news story about him. It w’as com I plimentary, as I always aim to be in referring to that dyed-in-the-wool Topeka newspaper edi ' tor. but I did remark that it was a pity he ! ’.vas growing a bit ancient. In reply I got a letter from him, expressing appreciation of the bulk of my comment but deprecating my sug gestion that 70-plus was past the line of the Psalmist's theoretical limit. In all candor, his pep surpasses that of the ! average first-tirm senator. Farm Bloc Man Capper frets the administration a trifle, be cause he’s so solidly with the farm bloc, and it’s a bloc that bothers the administration on the wartime economic issue, but the worst of his criticism—as the administration sees it— is that it’s so all-fired reasonable and con vincing. Next after Senator Capper, on down the list of the senate's 1942 veteran re-electionaries, is Senator Carter Glass of Virginia. The Virginian doesn’t record his age in the Congressional directory. He simply says he was born and let’s it go at that. It’s generally accepted, though, that he’s rather venerable. Nevertheless, he’s running again and how! In short, the only senator who suspects that he’s growing old is George Norris of Nebraska —and he’s not letting that interfere with his serving his country in war time. Representatives aren't so easy Ito classify. The representatives come up for re-election in swarms of 435 biennially; senators only 32 at a time. You can keep track of the latter. --V Editorial Comment SMASH SUB BASES The Fayetteville Observor Torpedoing of another Japanese destroyer in th fog-shrouded Aleutian islands shows once again that two sides can play at the game of undersea warfare. It made a total of five which have been hit recently by the Ameri cans in the vicinity of Attu island, where the Japs have gained a foothold in the Western Hemisphere. American subs will have an increasing im portant role to play in the war against Japan when we build more of them. It is not far from Midway to Japan as it is from Germany to the Caribbean and when American sub marines finally become active in lorce in the waters south of Japan they will play a great part in preventing the Japs from exploiting their ill-gotten gains in the Indies. In the meantime we have the problem of utilizing our shipyards to build merchant ships to replace the losses we have sustained from German submarines. The Germans have no such problem because their great need is not cargo vessels but war vessels. They can concentrate on the con struction of U-boats. Every American looks longingly toward the day when our naval strength will nullify the action of these German submarines and take the cargo vessel load off our shipyards. To a pure and simple layman the most ef fective immediate answer to the German men ace appears to be the merciless bombing of German and French coastal bases by Allied planes operating from British airfields. This attack must be stepped up and Ameri can planes, reportedly .oncentrating in Brit ain in large numbers should be thrown into the fray now rather than tomorrow. -V This is no panty-waist war and it won’t be won by panty-waist measures.Robert Nathan, WPB Planning Committee chairman. * * * If China doesn’t get immediate help, Japan and Germany will encircle the world.—Soumay , Tcheng, Chinese woman lawyer the boys at the dike_ ' VOTE foa , tHf i , L 'm ' NEA Service, iac. The Editor's Letter Box The editor does not necessarily endorse any article appearing In this department. They represent the views cl the Individual readers. Correspondents and warned that all communications must contain the correct name and address for our records, though the latter may he signed ag the writer sees fit. The Star-News reserves the right to alter any text that for any rea son is objectionable. Letters on controversial subjects will Dot be published. TAKE THEIR MEDICINE To the Editor: This letter is in the nature of a tribute to my fellow man. When I accepted the responsibil ity of assisting the Ration Buard in rationing supplemental gasoline, I expected it to be a painful ex perience in at least two respects. ' I knew it would be physically and mentally wearisome, and I expect ed it would be unpleasant from the standpoint of having many selfish ;and unjustified requests for sup plemental gas. I was right in the first instance but wrong in the second. I have personally passed upon over a hundred aplications. and my experience should be about typical of the others who have assisted in this work. In my opinion, the percentage of selfish and unreasonable requests has been negligible. In almost every instance, the spirit of those apply ing has been most commendable ‘‘I only want enough to meet my minimum needs for business pur poses” has been a typical expres sion. If the final days of rationing are like the first three, I shall look back upon my experience as a pleasant episode in my life! “A SUPPLEMENTAL GAS RATIONER” Wilmington. N. C. .July 18, 1942. 4 As Others Say It SUMMER IN THE SOUTH These are the times that try men’s souls; when tempus fug'i’s and tempers fidgits, when usually nice people say-good morning with an air of “Do you want to make something of it”; when Casper Milquetoast beats his wife; wnen Pollyanna swears like a truck driver and truck-drivers swear like two drunk-drivers; when cats bark and dogs baa and gnats buzz like bumblebees. Some people like weather like this. They can have our share of it. And for us we’re going to chew a rug.—Paul F. Watkins in the Ashland Herald Progress. 4 FROM THE FRENCH French words continue to drift into the language and make them selves at home. Chassis, chauf feur, garage and others of tha” company have long been part of the daily speech. We have taken to terrain, in its limited military sense, like a brother. Now along comes nacelle. That was formerly used for the basket-like contrap" tion suspended from a balloon By derivation, it was a little ship a cradle. Today the airplane puts its passengers in one.—Louisville iKy.) Courier Journal 4 -V THE CONSCIENTIOUS JUDGE A federal judge in Alabama fined himself the other day for ap pearing late and paid the fin e. Otherwise, of course, he would have been obliged to cite himself for contempt of court,—Waterbury (Conn.) Republican. 4 I How To Get Rubber And Plenty Of It (CHICAGO TRIBUNE) There is a solution to this country’s rubber problem that is so simple, so direct and so plain ly indicated, that it is remark able that it hasn’t been seized upnon. The solution is to drive the Japa nese out of the rubber producing areas and reclaim them for our own use. When we again have pos session of the plantations in Java. Sumatra, and Malaya, a rubber supply will be assured. Maybe when we get there we shall find that some of the groves have been destroyed, but it is improbable that the Japanese will ruin all or nearly all of them, particularly if we don’t give them time to plan a systematic destruction. Needless to say, we must con tinue to drive ahead on the synthe tic program. Every practical me thod of making every useful sub stitute for natural rubbe-r should be employed as rapidly as pos sible. It should be remembered, however, that careful estimates of synthetic production indicate that there -’ill be little or no arti ficial rubber available for non-mili tary uses much before 1945. The chemical processes are known, but they have never been applied in this country of anwhere else on the sca’e now proposed, and it is reasonable to assume that there will be a con siderable period in which the re turns may be disappointing. But we must have rubber for civilian uses if in 1943 and ’44 men are to get to work at the munition plants, if the stores are to have bread and meat to sell, if children are to get to school, and houses are to be warm in winter. . The obvious solution of the rub ber problem is also the obvious so lution of the tin problem the quin ine problem, the camphor problem, the spice problem, the tea problem, and the vegetable oil problem. Fur ther than that, the reconquest will derive the Japanese of their sources of petroleum and of much of their iron ore. So why don’t we start? The long er we wait, the longer the Japanese will have to exploit the natural ad vantages we have lost and they now hold. The longer we wait, the harder the job will become. Everbody is agreed that some day we’re going to have to drive the Japanese back. We have the means to get going this summer, if we use them. A dispatch to the New York News, which was passed by Gen. MacArthur’s censorship, nearly a month ago, indicated all to plainly that a good start could be made with no more than a fortnight’s pre sent production of bombers from this country together with a cor responding complement of pursuit planes. We have a sizable army in Australia, and the Australians, of course, have a much larger one. If there were any doubt about the feasibility of advancing from island to island, it was removed by the Japanese themselves. Huge forces are not required. We know it can be done because the Japanese did At the Coral sea we showed that we have what it takes to lick the Japs when we meet them on any thing like even terms. The carriers they sent to that engaement are scratched off. So are many other ships. At Midway we sent four more, at least, of their carriers to the bottom besides a sizable fleet (of surface fighters and transports, again at relatively light cost to ourselves. We should exploit for advantage, now that we have it. before the Japanese have time to rebuild and repair their navy, and before they have applied the les sons they learned at great cost when they ran into the buzz saw. It will be said that we can’t spare anything from the European front: that all our efforts V r months to come must be concen trated upon sending equipment to the Russians. Tne statement will not bear analysis. This is the mid dle of July. A ship which leaves New York for Persia of Murmansk (might discharge cargo by mid August or little before. Perhaps i another month would be required ! under favorable circumstances to move the stuff from the docks to 1 the fighting front. That brings us !t0 mid-September. By that time the campaign will be nearing its conclusion for the year. Unless recent newsreels showing conges : tion at our posts gave a wholly false impression, we already have ■ more stuff at the docks awaiting shipment across the Atlantic than the Russians can receive before winter comes. The point is that without in any sense sacrificing the Russians, we can now turn a Tittle more attention to the Japa nese with a view not to holding them or annoying them, but to driving them back and back, and regaining our sources of rubber, tin. etc. We can move at the same time from Australia and westward from Midway. The advance need not be undertaken in a spirit of aespiration. The fact is that we now have the preponderance of surface and air strength in the mid. Pacific area, and powerful forces eager for action in the Australian | zone. If we mean not merely to en dure the war, but to win it, the (moment has come to take the offensive. -V Civilian Defense Timetable BASIC TRAINING COURSES All courses meet at 8 p. m. in High school room 109. Fire Defense A: Every Monday General Course: Every Tues day. Gas Defense B: Every Wednes day FIRST AID COURSES Monday, July 20, Masonic Tem ple Reading Room, at 7:30 p. m. 20 hours. PRACTICE DRILLS Wednesday, July 22, Thursday July 30. From 8:00 to 9:30 p. m. NO BLACKOUT. -V WEAPONS FOR FRENCHMEN An American correspondent who left France last November quotes a Frenchman as saying to him the other day: "We cannot fight machine guns with pit -h forks. But we are prepared and waiting; just bring us some wea pons.” The implication is that an allied army might look for effective as sistance from the inhabitants of France if a second f#ont were es tablished there in the near future But could it?—Kansas City Times. Fdir tmu0i wraiwlw NEW YORK JY. ■ ; Spelvin. America.-.. ,.siv! off his job, what ;i and all, so he has around for someth:.-.. ' industries, but with . «•’ results. Ke read quite '. "! back where Mrs ? 1 thought everyone sh: ,-L ed what to do.bv t and he has beer, r where Paul McXut* - Paul McNutt says tha"t : people have got to fit • into the effort or eh-: vin doesn’t need tt : help, although he • a little help in finding he could make h:rr '* up to now he hasn - 1-1 make a deal Not t - - . ' ' use rum. They can right, for in his time a little of just about ev is a not half bad harr.rr.-:; carpenter he can drive t knows a little about r.. I wiring and cement ■•-'or.-: . a pretty good sort o: ■ handy man. And he hs/W-", a little factory experience, too W eh. so he ras around for a joc. 00.0 every piacl ne goes som e g . tells hin has he got 5 rr.io c • a ■ George says -a eh he used to have one years ago bus old home; - and they alway tell 1 doesn t do 10 good He has g 1 join a new ,r. to and some of then | wan: up vr ?3CG and some war/ racket A 52 a day for and some don • vant so rr.ucb. t • they are so hi 1 that he . - bigod lobody s going to join anythir . vheth er it : I or the ..loose ‘ne mice or the ! m.-sKi-ats >,- v-.atever. I; is the principle if he hing with George and, noreover being a native American .r.ct a veteran if the la?: •var up nas .1 rather narrow preju dice about aer.tg .rdered an ;;rd :y guys vho tails :e y off ‘.lie roar. A of America.'> are rarrow-mir.de like that Goes to Irnon Obb place George ent the c pany wouldn't e't n: birr. :u „il without he had it. • •• t:r.r. the 'union, so he t» ent eo r. to tht in : ion joint and hurts •. r.h.:me ; day until the head r.u me in land by that time there t | 50 guys w . - ,tt: | they crowded . tt -he hh | and asked ; • • -•••:• confident:.-.'.;. u they spoke to him they —ayua. : er.tly well pieased - an idea frcru tut tv tut - srei i that they aad si something like maybe a ' t t t.te fourth race or maybe - . phone number. At last tut . ••. ■ around to Spelvin ar.d t... 'would cost him S7-5 to could pay it 10 bucks down - u tt; rest S2 a day until he was ;; :: and George says: "Whs- • for do I pay you 75 buc : have got my ever-lovir.; • and what do you figur-t •• me for the 75 bucks" I er buy war bonds.” “Why.” the guy sms these high wages for :ue George says: “Well — one because the wages tablished by govert.fr aud furthermore h what you are going : dough?” "Why,” the gu; sv? •' "f to pay salaries . expenses and re" . you have got t ... New Deal is ; . are going to seer d - ' ‘ r‘ '■'■ elections to best ‘.be - fifth columnists ar.d ?... traitors who are :-:u ' - war effort by p'.uy.u- ; ' “But.” says old Ge . * Republican and I , lick the dirty Germa ' Japs because I ant but I think the NV bad and you aren't - any of my dough ' paign fund.” May Be Dratted “Have it your v says, “but no oou_ . no card no job and X warn you. my frier.! country is getting ; labor and if you dor.'". - kind of a war job ye.. ' : you are likely to be .'■■■■- <-a some job for a slac.-tcr _ _ “If they want to dr: ‘ war job do I still have r union and pay you mugs i... to help elect some DeXal?’’ George askec. “Well, the new deal s the £ ingman’s friend." the “ “and strictly against sc* ' ( ery shape or form so I d >t they' will give up labor s letting a lot of disrupters -• alongside of loyal, patno .c men without doing their hold the President." “Well, the New Deal s everywhere and nothin? i: ments and George Spelv.w ;,c j can, still wants to work - war, but they can threw * the can for life before he 1 t er down, but the union - calling him a lousy trait r columnist and they say " gets drafted for a job trey give him the dirtiest kwu at the lowest pay and they leave him join the union. - will just hold back < amount of his pay can slip it to the new a preserve the unity of 1 u country and the precious ' "j of democracy. THE WRATH TO POME ^ Post-war planners will bev:p s mind that hell hath no fu.-y_ taxpayer snapping out of 11 c ,, V trance. That’s how this Fw ” 4 got started.—Detroit Free PrCS -V-- . TALES FOR THE KIDDH” Psychologists tells us _ ',g should never tell fairy iU the children. How about them the war comtnunw.-^ —Roanoke (Va.) Times.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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July 19, 1942, edition 1
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