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UUntington morning §tar North Carolina's Oldest Daily Newspapei Published Daily Except Sunday By The Wilmington Star-News At The Murchison Building R. B. Page, Owner and Publisher Telephone All Departments _DIAL 2-3311__ Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilming ton, N C., Postoffice Under Act o 1 Congress of March 3, 1879._ 5UESCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER Payable Weekly Or In Advance Combina Time Star News tion 1 Week . * 25 $ 20 * .40 1 Month . l-’° ?? jh78 3 Months . 3-20 2.60 5.-0 6 Months . «-50 5-20 10.40 ! year . 13.00 10.40 20 80 New rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue ol Star-News BY MAIL Payable Strictly In Advance Combina Time Star News tion 1 Month ..* 75 $ 50 J 90 t Months .. 2 00 1 50 2 75 ■ Months . 4.00 8-88 5'®® 1 Year. "I.!'.. 8.00 6.00 10.00 New rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News Hard of ihanlts charged for at the rate of 25 cents per line. Count tiv-- words to line. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Xa entitled to the exclusive use of all news stories appearing in The Wilmington Star THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1943 With confidence In our armed forces — with the unbounding de termination of our people—we will gain the inevitable triumph — so help us God. j — Rooievelt’a War Message Our Chief Aim To aid in every way the prosecu tion of the war to complete Vic tory. _ __ THOUGHT FOR TODAV He who loses his wealth loses much; but he who loses even one friend loses more. —CERVANTES. Poppy Day Poppy Day is near again. The l'.ttle flowers will be offered to the public on Saturday. They have been making their appearance annually for so long a time that no especial introduction or appeal is necessary. The money derived from their sale is de voted to the care of the men whose bodies were broken in former wars with a fraction gping to the widows and orprans ol veterans. There is one aspect of this year's sale which calls for much larger patronage than ordinary. Many men who survived the Iasi great up heavel and earlier campaigns have become so old they cannot longer provide for themselves and must have aid from their fellow citizens. It would be ungrateful to ignore them and their just claim. Bear them in mind when young women offer poppies on Saturday. Student Guidance The honor roll at New Hanover High school, as published in yesterday's papers, might seem incredibly large if the reason for it were not at hand. One of the more important phases of high school work is student guidance. When pupils are not making normal progress in their stud ies. or show no particular aptitude in certain courses, teachers go into a huddle with them, seeking the cause. When it is located, as it usually is, the pupils are either given the en couragement needed to bring them up to par or urged to change their course 01 study, more than once if necessary, until they "find them selves.” Thus, the list of honor students grows and more and more^ pupils fit themselves for the tasks they must assume in maturity. What an improvement this is over the methods of past days when youngsters were required to take identical courses and were expected to show equal aptitude or be rated dummies. -V Time Not Wholly Wasted Complaint is heard that the present Congress has passed no vital legislation, and that is the truth. But its time is not wholly wasted. If the tax bill now about completed by the House Ways and Means committee wins ap proval Congress will have set tiie brakes on federal extravagance and done the nation’s taxpayers a great service. With only a fraction more than two billion dollars of the ten and one-half billions asked by the Treasury provided, the government will be forced to practice rigid economy to come out. even in war expenditures. This can be done according to competent economists, with out sacrifice to the war program, by stopping the wholesale waste that has characterized federal spending since the war began. With this House bill passed approximate^ as it stands, it will have to be done, and sc Congress will have achieved a notable victorj for the taxpayers who are now carrying i crushing load and would collapse if it were inciwased as the Treasury demanded. i It May Be Spring It is notable that in its discussion of the Moscow conference, Izvestia, Russian govern ment organ, while declaring the decisions | pointed toward a second front in Europe, add i ed that both British and Americans in Moscow agree the Russians “were satisfied with the 'military decisions taken, and no doubt they 'made certain assurances to their Soviet friends 'on this subject.” The quotation is not direct from Izvestia but from an Associated Press Moscow dispatch, which obviotisly summarizes Izvestia’s own version. , Quite as obviously, it means that Moscow, London and Washington are in agreement not only regarding a second front but also the time for its establishment. Moscow has stopped calling for it today or tomorrow-, as in the past. Instead, Izvestia is content to say that its need in recognized and that decisions con cerning it were reached by the Moscow con ferees. It may be assumed, therefore, that there will be an Allied attack in western Europe, but that it w-ill not come until the Germans are sufficiently weakened by the present air battle and the land fighting in Russia to guar antee its success without unnecessary slaught er of Allied forces. This could mean that no expeditionary torce will be sent across the Channel or the North sea, or into southern France, before spring. Another winter’s bombing of Nazi defenses in western Europe and Nazi-controlled war in dustries and communications, coupled with further assured Russian successes on the Eastern front and the probable elimination of enemy forces in Italy, could reasonably be expected to pave the way for amphibious, at tack, maybe many attacks, in the west and south of Europe when spring comes again. This, naturally, is a layman’s view. No one outside the inner military circles of the Allied powers can know or hope to learn when the blow will fall. But evidence grows, and is sup ported by Izvestia’s declarations, that the ob servers who have forecast the final showdown with the Germans will not come before early in 1944 may be correct. There is one thing we may take for granted. When the showdown comes, Germany will not have a ghost of a show. _ Stories From Germany American newspapers within the pest week have printed two more stories of Nazi fear and dissention, purporting to have come from inside Germany. They should be taken with the usual dosage of salt, since they may be only the latest propaganda efforts to induce complacency and relax the Allied effort. Yet there is enough plausibility in each to warrant its being looked at, whether it is true or not. One- story is the latest in a series dealing with the Hitler-army feud. This series began long before the war. Its latest installment was the rumor, shortly after Mussolini’s ab dication,-that Hitler had been overthrown and a military dictatorship established. Since then, however, the military picture has changed in two respects: Italy has made for herself as satisfactory an arrangement with the Allied powers as circumstances w:ll permit, and the prospects of an eventual Nazi victory have become steadily less promising. It is not impossible that, in the light of these developments, Field Marshal Keitel and other top German commanders might realiy believe that they could repeat the Italian pro cedure, seize Hitler, and open peace nego tiations. The other story is that Heinrich Himmler, the Gestapo chief, and high officials of the Elite Guard and Storm Troopers are already planning to take the Nazi organization under ground, when the political toot coves in, and continue their work. These are men who helped Hitler carry his party from a bunch of beer-hall crackpots in 1923 to the rulers of Germany 10 years later. And, according to the story, they are willing to devote an other 10 or even 20 years to a new program of propaganda, sabotage, reorganization and rearmament. Their disappearance and t h e emergency of a military dictatorship might, turn out to be the most expedient soiutiw. of -their growing predicament. Both these plans, if they are true, w'snlcl hinge upon the hope that I‘iem.fr Valin's would be the commanding voice at the peace table, and that his wish for a "strong Ger many” would prevail. They v/Ould also pre suppose that the condition:, of unconditional surrender that President Roosevelt, and Prime Minister Churchill havo repeated!y demanded would oe drowned out. Perhaps both these stories are pipe dreams. But true or not, they serve to emphasize again one fact of undoubted truth and ex treme importance: The war in Europe will not be won with the internal collapse of the German nation. It will not be won with the wholesale and still-distant defeat of the Ger man army. The war will only be won, and the world will only be safe, when Hitler, Goering, Goebbels, Himmler and every other high Nazi leader are either in the custody of the Uniled Nations or are dead. No public clamor for early peace or cessation of further hostilities should divert Allied strategy from that goal, a goal on which America, Britain and Russia are agreed. Dewey Strength Grows In addition to the rebuff offered Presidenl Roosevelt, the New York election on Tuesdaj clearly indicated that Governor Dewey holds the Empire State in the hollow of his hand. New York’s electoral vote is a powerfu. weapon in any man’s hand. It is possible, ir present circumstances, to think that Mr. Dewey who has indicated he will not seek the Re publican nomination lor the presidency, might readily consent to be drafted. This is the more probable in view of the fact that Mr. Willkie is unacceptable to so many G. O. P. groups or fractions not only because he was defeated in the last national campaign but because he has failed to present a clnr-cul policy, do mestic or foreign, which offers the needed im provement on what we have now. Mr. Dewey has risen rapidly and seems destined to go higher. He could not hope for future favor if he should turn a deaf ear to his party’s call. He is wise to display no great interest in next year’s contest at this time, but would be foolish if he did not keep his eye on the passing show or failed to lay his course for the nomination if the wind set in his di rection, as many political prophets forecast it will. -V The Farmer Knew It From Granville, New York, Ernest C. Stro beck, secretary of the Dairymen’s League Co operative Association, says that the League predicted a butter shortage two years ago but that official Washington ignored the warn ing. “The small butter making farmers are pen alized by a rollback of prices which the house wives are told is to save them money, al though the rollback of five cents a pound means an average saving of only sixty cents per year per person. Despite Washington talk of subsidy payments to make up to the farmer what he loses on the rollback, the small farm er making less than 1,000 pounds of butter monthly gets no subsidy. The result is less i butter for consumers.” Fair Enough (Editor’a Note.—The Star and the New* aceepta no responsibility for the personal views of Mr. Pefler, md often disagree with them as much ,as many of kis readers. His articles serve the good purpose of making people think. By WESTBEOOK PEGLER NE*W YORK.—Even the politicians and the lay citizens of the loyal opposition are guilty of a delicacy amounting to political prudery in their discussions of the corrupt elements within President Roosevelt’s political follow ing, notably the Kelly, Hague and O’Connell mobs in Chicago, New Jersey and Albany, the miserable Tammany organization in New Jersey and Albany, the miserable Tammany organization in New York and the foul but influential racketeers of the American Fed eration of Labor throughout the country. Why is it that these evil elements in Amer ican civic and political life are always treated as separate, independent entities, as though they existed strictly by and for themselves when the plain facts is that they are all sub ordinate parts of the new deal party, giving strength to and deriving their power from the great national whole? I believe this reticence is patriotic, although mistaken, because members of the political opposition cannot bring themselves to face and emphasize the unmistakable truth that the governing party of the United States is knowingly and actively in league with the underworld of politics, crime and unionism. And thus, although President Roosevelt has a personal acquaintance extending down into many of the counties and wards, particularly in the worst of the political bad-lands, men who know the truth ignore it lest they seem to undermine popular respect for the presi dency itself. In this, I hold, they will serve the country, whatever their reasons for treat ing such evil as a rash of localized blotches. The Hague organization, for example, is an influential section of the new deal party, de livering the vote in return for the usual awards and favors. It named for governor of New Jersey Vincent J. Murphy, the sec retary of the state federation of labor, whose domain includes the very brigands who for I years (and lately, with the sanction of Mr. j Roosevelt’s Supreme Court) have operated an ! undisguised stick-up on the highways under j the authority of the teamsters’ union. Union 1 ism in the AFL in New Jersey is absolutely j crawling with racketeers—one of whom, Jack 1 Wallace, recently laid by the heels in the ; state of New York for operating a shakedown on vast projects financed by the government, roughed up Norman Thomas, the socialist j leader, when he tried to test his right on 1 free speech against Hague's verboten. Wallace : was, until he was convicted, an underling of ; the notorious union racketeer, Joe Fay, a , strong Hague man and when Fay went to Bermuda a few years ago to attend a wed ding in his family, one of his social guest . 7/a;i Longic Willman, an old-time Jersey boot | legger and gangster named a few days ago, in flic current trial of the Browne(Bioff series, among the underworld mobsters who took over the movie and theatrical union of the Al l. The ramifications are intricate and end i less with cx-convicts and other notorious but uncorivicted rascals of the foulest type serv irig the party and receiving, in return, the j new deal party’s protection against remedial 1 legislation, its sanction through the courts and | its active help through various miscalled labor agencies of the national government. President Roosevelt spent many years in Albany, the fief of the O’Connell gang whose perfidies are now beginning to be revealed by Governor Thomas E. Dewey and the O'Con nell machine is as much a part of the new deal party as a spark-plug is part of a car. Governor Lehman, his successor and politi cal kinsman, also lived in Albany unaware of the stench; and Fay not only operated in Albany, but beat an indictment for assault when the victim conveniently vanished on trial day. Am “investigation” which Lehman or dered toward the end of his term proved to be only a political gesture, mocking orderly justice, which came to nothing. His momen tary successor, Charles Polletti, then conduct ed a clandestine jail-delivery of several vicious union criminals, including a fire-bug identi fied with the communist front and also with Mr. Roosevelt’s friend and one-time appointee, Sidney Hillman. Soon afterward, Polletti was commissioned lieutenant colonel and he is now in Italy teaching the Italians the new deal version of civic decency and political morality. The relationship, the unity and identity of the new deal party and all this corruption are traceable, demonstrable and unmistakable and, in time, will be acknowledged by history. I fully believe the testimony of (John T.) Plante and absolutely disbelieve the testimony of all of the defense witnesses.-Woonsocket (R. I.) judge, accepting reporter’s word against denials of seven other witnesses in liquor violation case ____1 __OLD HOME WEAK_|; Raymond Clapper Says: Abolishment Of Wars May Be A Possibility I_ WASHINGTON. —It is no longer a dream, but a real possibility that to a large extent, the human race may be able to extricate it self from the bondage of war. Cer tainly the Moscow four-power dec laration offers opportunity to put an end to this recurring curse of wasteful, senseless, criminal, ag gressive war such as Germany has set off twice in this generation. For the first time now, we have the opportunity to change the meaning of war. Through t h e Moscow declaration, it is possible for the nations on our side to stay together after the victory. It is possible for us to keep in our own hands the bulk of all military weapons. Our side.-if we all stay together, can take the power to make war out of the hands of gangsters and make it the arm of the law-abiding community. Force can be made the ally of security and order and peace, instead of the means of ruthless destruction and conquest. The Moscow four-power pledge is a departure in policy for the United States. Yet, essentially it promises only to continue after the surrender the close relationship necessary to win the war. Evidence of Russia's good faith is found in her willingness to enter agreement with China as a fourth partner. While Russia is not com mitted to aid the war against Ja pan. her appearance in a pact with an enemy of Japan is bound to be disturbing to Tokio. Russia is risk ing some retaliation from Japan in thus associating herself in the same four-power declaration with The main principle or the Mos cow declaration is that until a sys tem of general security is set up, the four Allies will undertake to keep the peace. They recognize the necessity of establishing at the earliest practicable date a general international orgsniza' on. Be' 'ho core of it all will be the military strength of the four large powers. Tneyagree to take joint action to maintain peace and secuity, pend ing the establishment of the gen eal security system. They law down a vesiaint ”mn themselves in a pledge that after the termination of hostilities they will not use their military forces in any other states except after joint consultation. They also agree to work with other United Nations with respect to the regulation of armaments after the war. Nothing concerning boundaries oi the handling of Germany after the surrender was disclosed after the conference. Many matters were discussed. Some unannounc ed decisions were reached and other questions were deferred without agreement. Many ques tions were deferred without agree ment. Many. questions remain. But the creation of an advisory council to sit at London, and pro vision for consultation among the three gov rnments provide the op erating machinery for collabora tion. Declarations regarding punish ment of war criminals and the in dependence of Austria, and the promise of democratic freedoms in Italy, all have large value as psy chological warfare to shorten the war. No treaty has been mentioned. These are all joint declarations by executive authority, requiring no action by the Senate. Although the Senate is groping ill a fog of words over the Con nally resolution, it still is desir able that the Senate end its double talk and record itself in favor of the Allies continuing to work to gether. Many headaches are to come Yet it is inconceivable that the Senate, or one-third of it, will try to obstruct this great second ef fort of the United States to help end war-breeding international an archy. During most of this cen tury the world has lived under war i or threat of war, in a state of j bloody disoder with frightful I waste of lives and resources. No; state of affairs could be worse than that. The declaration of Moscow is a start from which a new age can come. -V As Others Say It THE BLUE VOLUNTEERS Franco’s Blue dvision volunteer ed to go to Russia to fight on the side of the Germans and it would n’t be in the least surprising to learn that they likewise volunteer ed to return home when the op portunity was afforded.—Roanoke <Va.) Times. --V- ■ GET THE ‘FEARS’ STRAIGHT A recent advertisement shows 1he picture of a wife plowing in 1777. while her husband was away fighting for their country's inde pendence. The advertisement then stressed that by building up cer tain financial reserves, one can gain “freedom from the ugliest fear of all—want.” Nowhere was the point made that the woman plowing was doing a job to help free herself and her husband and her country of a fear much greater than that of finan cial want; namely, fear of tyran ny. fear of oppression, fear of in justice. The right to be independent and free of domination by any gov ernment, any king, or any bureauc racy. is what the 1777 woman and her husband were fighting for. A full stomach or financial security were the least of their fears.— Philadelphia Dispatch. -_V TRUISM The Navy plans to constuct three 45.000.ton super-aircraft ear ners, and in Washington this is taken to mean that the Navy ex pects a Ion." war in the Pacific. Which emphasizes a point worth bearing in mind—the longer a war we prepare for. the shorter a war it. will be.—Charleston (S. C.) Eve ning Post. -V THE RIGHT ATTITUDE A certain newspaper editor had cause to admonish his son on ac count of his reluctance to attend school. “You must go regularly and learn to be a great scholar,” said the fond father encouragingly, ‘“otherwise you can never be an editor, you know. What would you do, for instance, if your paper came out full of mistakes?” “Father,” was the reply, “I’d blame ’em on the printer.” And then the father fell on his son’s neck and wept for joy. He knew he had a worthy successor for the editorial chair.—Wall Street Journal. -V WEARY OF CONQUEST Gapevine rumors say the Nazis who started out to build a greater Germany would be willing to set tle now for just about what they started with.—Greenville (S. C.) News. HOW MUCH SIMPLER! How much simpler if Italy had been one of the effete democra cies. There, a fallen duce could have hung around Rome and open ed a law off'ce.—Louisville CKy.) Courier-Journal. LOGIC In some remarks about govern ment spending. Representative Robertson of Virginia advised that there is no use talking about spill ed milk. Maybe not, but we don’t have to keep on spilling it just for fun, do we?—Greenville (S. C.) News. -V— ON THE BUG Soon the Naz’s may have to re treat to the Bug river line. A good name for military headquarters there would be Bug House, in hon cr of the great military genius who decided to attack Russia.—Wash ington Evening Star. -V You’re Telling Me Muskrats, according to the latest do.w story, indicate a miid win ter. But, can we quote them di rectly on that Germany is having a tough time gaining new volunteers for her U-boat fleet. It seems the boys have developed a reluctance to going down to the sea in ships —and staying down. The German Army is falling back to the Pripet ma.rshes— where that grand old mud slinger, Onkle Choe Goebbels, should feel right at home. After reading that too much cake is bad for the complexion, Junior insists that the variety meant is of soap and not the bak ed kind. Washington Roundup By PETER EDSON When Wendell Berge. the ne» assistant attorney genera5 charge of the anti-trust divi- * aeld his first press conference a announce the filing of a civil con plaint against Meek Co., man-' Eacturing chemists accused ' of maintaining a cartel agreement with E. Merck Chemical Works of Darmstadt. Germany, an ass.star., took a box of cigare . i- - " Berge’s desk and passed it around to correspondents. On the hd the box in big letters was the name ’‘Union League Cl b " What was this? Was the \>„ Deal’s anti-trust division a> ch-conservative all of a suddem It was just the band i ,:ne “ t ■' Brge hastened to assure, and 'the cigars were from the Union Lea gue Club of Chicago, not the one In New York. But this Union be;, Club of Chicago is the one that used to have an “anti-New Del 1 room." all black, wit : ; every one of the him- -• New ueai agencies. So the laugh was still on Mr. Berge. Even if Thurman Arnold's suc cessor as champion of the Sher man antitrust law does like a Rf. publican capitalist’s brand of cigar he is giving no indications that he will ease up on prosecutions of :: legal cartels, monopolies and com binations in restraint of trade. The Merck case is the first of what Mr. Berge says will be a number like it to be developed during the next year to keep alike the American idea of free entr prise and open competition as a pattern for planning post-war in ternational economy. In the Merck case, the charge reduced to simplest terms is that the American Merck company in 1S32 made a “treaty” with German Merck whereby the Amercan com pany had use of the Merck trade mark in the sale of so- - -100 : cals and pharmaceuticals, includ ing quinine, sulpha drugs, and thp vitamms, in the United Slates and Canada, while the German com pany retained c—- - ' t? practically all the rest of the world. The American company was, for instance, shut out of the South American market—that is. until the British blockade of 1939 made it impossible for the Ger mans to deliver. Then the American company re vived an old and inactive subsidi ary, Powers - Weightman - Rosen garten corporation, to take over the German business in Latin America for the duration, with ev ery understanding that all the Lat in American business would be re turned to the German company at the end of the war. The Depart „ f Tnofifln on if ie fn riiccnlfO the treaty between the two com panies and to enjoin American Merck from refusing to fill orders from established dealers in drugs ii foreign countries. It so happens that while Mr. Wendell Berge was explaining all this in the Department of Justice in Washington, and while the actual suit against the Merck compan es was being filed in Trenton, N. J„ up on Capitol Hill the Senate war about to begin its fourth day of debate on the Connolly post-war foreign policy resolution. In that debate, Sen. Harold H. Burton of Cleveland. O.. made a speech for broadening the Connolly resolut; o and he was questioned by Sen. Abe Murdock of Beaver. Utah on the meaning of the word "agper sion" in the text of the resolution, where it declares: “That the United States (shalll join ... in the establish ment ... of international authori ty ... to prevent aggression and preserve the peace of the world | Was it just “military aggres sion.” as had been stated in toe original draft of the resolution.’ 0: was “economic aggress'on included? Without perhaps realizing the time, the senator- were then considering tit: ' the question of international car tels—the world-irr.-'S : c.’ fostered in Germany and partiti pated in by business monopolies of nearly every ' Turn, aggression of this sort has been part and parcel of the Nazi scheme of world conquest which made i. impossible to do business with Id ler. -V Daily Praye FOR SOLDIERS WHO SI H I K Many of our soldiers and anfl airmen have been called it offer up their bodies in suffer1".? and with tender yearning we c mend them to TiV' care. 0 - Physician. As Thou has m;' ' them valorous in action, so r them heroic in enduring pain aiio idleness and monotony. Give : to all ministering physicians c nurses, and grant that many wounded and ill may be restored to normal strength and service. We thank Thee for all the new skills of the healing art. For those who must suffer throughout ' !e from the wounds of war, we crave Thy sustaining grace; and the en veloping care of loved ones and o a grateful Country. Speed the day when war’s fierceness will no long er blight the bodies and spirits o mankind; and when the heal"'? hand of peace may be laid upon the bodies and souls of the- ' i man race. All this we pray in •••e name of the Healer who once ministered in Galilee. Amen - W. T. E. CAVIAR EMPTOR! The Chicago school of isolation ists doesn’t like the spectacle Frontiersman Hull dining at me Kremlin: their advice to him. v.e suppose, would be: caviar emptoi —Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. The Literary Guidepost Bv JOHN SELBY “MY LIFE IN CHINA: 1926-1941’ by Hallett Abend (Harcourf Brace; $3). For a variety of reasons. Halletl Abend’s “My Life in China’’ is the most interesting and the most valuable book on China, by a correspondent, I have read so far. Partly this is because he lived in China as New York Times correspondent for the 15 years be fore 1941, and thus has a long view of events. Partly it is be cause he has had the good sense to hang everything on himself and his own experiences; as long as this is done, a reader has a meas uring rod by which to judge the content. Two major things .emerge from Mr. Abend's bo$k. One is the tangle of war, murder and intrigue which preceded China’s “unifica tion’’ under Chiang. The other is the complete pattern of Japanese aggression from its real begin ning in the ’twenties to the pres ent. The vast detail connected with each of these ventures makes ex traordinary reading, and this is largely because it has been so well organized by the writer. No American will remember all of it but none is likely to forget the essential facts. Mr. Abend himself was under fire, physically, and so far as hi? reputation was concerned. He says Chiang and his nationalists per secuted him in typical Chinese fashion because he insisted on re porting both sides, and would not write that unification was com piete years before it really was. And Russia, he says, decided he was a naughty boy as well—Rus sia and China pestered the New York executives of the Times foi years with demands that Abend be recalled in disgrace, and got exactly nowhere. The truth, according to Abend, is that China was not unified until the Japs began their major attack in the mid-thirties, and that then the unification was a compromise which set over the differences be tween Chiang and the “Red” Chi nese armies until after the war The truth is that Japan deliber ately tipped her hand many years before the present war began, and most of our diplomats in Chjna re fused to read it, he adds. As late as 1935 an interview with an im portant Japanese frankly explain ing Japan’s campaign against the white race was buried in the back Pages of the Sunday Times. And so on, in shocking but (I am afraid 1 uncontrovertible detail, for 396 pages. TESttM \ > EUPoP* \ \ i '
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1943, edition 1
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