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Ser’assorted mss T1’e ^ ♦ J. ^^t\t * QL.J. REMEMBER [5ss tlttttttQtoti iUnrtitttQ vtur p™LRAmiR -'T"?c^XoT— No. 276 " " ’ ' ------.--------—-— VOL. --- WILMINGTON, N. C., MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1943 FINAL EDITION ESTABLISHED 1867 /'I 11 1 _H" T“---i ---- —--—---- " Many tailed For Hearings On Tax_ Bill Senate Committee Hopes Jo End Session On Mea sure By Monday advice is wanted jrew Voices Have Been Raised In Support Of Higher Taxes WASHINGTON, Dec. 5. — ny __ Determined to com Ute public hearings on the Shattered $2,140,000,000 tax increase bill by tomorrow Uht. the Senate finance committee has summoned a jjoup of department offi cials for advice on House-ap oroved amendments affect ing the renegotiation ol war contracts. \Po to be heard are Philip Murray, president of the Coneress of Industrial Or ganizations. and opponents of the Maybank amendment which would suspend for the duration the federal tax of 10 cents a pound on colored margarine. . ... I„ six days of hearings which started iasi Monday scarcely a was raised in support of jew or higher taxes, but a proces s;0„ of lawyers, lobbysts and bus ;r!,;men filed before the commit to protest one phase or anoth er 0f the bill approved by the House* Declaring the measure full of "bad features,” Acting Chairman v,m D - Mass) predicted it rmMbt ripped to tatters eithei mihin the committee or on the f Senate floor, for a net result of lit tle or no more evidence than could be expected under present laws. The only way Walsh saw to re alie a major share of the $10,500,- < 000.000 asked by the Treasury was j to tap sources of revenue not af- : fected by the House bill. He had j no specific suggestions, hut Sena tor Guffey (D-Pa) put in a plug , for a war bond lottery plan. Postal Hike Out , A proposed $166,000,000 postal , rate increase seemed headed for ( i the ashcan because of Postmaster : i General Walker's opposition. Men , I in the jewelry, fur. light bulb, I luggage, cosmetic, telephone, pic- • I ture show, bowling alley and cab- ; * a ret businesses have registered ( lusty protests against new or in- , creased excise taxes on their prod- ‘ ucts. Total projected excise boosts aggregated SI.201.700,000. 3 The House has ruled out a fed- ‘ eral sales tax and it probably will , not be advanced seriously in the ^ Senate finance committee. There was guarded discussion of the practicability of another major , rise in individual income tax . rates, but few thought the increase could be jammed through a Con gress already conscious of next year's national elections. Among witnesses docketed to testify on the contract renegotia- ' bon amendments were Under Sec retary of War Robert P. Patter son, Under Secretary of the Navy ' James V. Forrestal, Major Gener al Lucius D. Clay. Assistant Attor- ; fley General Francis M. Shea, Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones. Joseph M. Dodge, chair man of the j0int prjce adjustment : hoard. Randolph Paul, general counsel for the Treasury, and commander Arthur G. Rydstronm, 1 /-‘ the Commission's price ad justment board. 1 — ~~ I ■ II.' j Results Of Teheran Conference Will Be _Announced Today I Washington, Dec. 5—w»)— e world will hear at 1 p. m. .as ern War Time Monday an 'ersion of what Presi n> Roosevelt, Prime Minist Churchill anc. Premier _ rshal Stalin decided in their memoirs conference at Tehe "• ln ancient Iran fpt-„ * offitaal 1 eport ot the con than*06 be made Public Moscow radie broke the h- ,tbat the conference had ... “eld, in a broadcast pick second Friday niRbt, Am ' d tlme >" a week that and ICj.n and EnC*ish press new/?410 Weiu beaten t0 ah., j Premature disclosures oad- Renters, British new. Chii/w’ii/asbed Roosevelt Churchill-Chiang conference tr„ ,Weck and stirred up a con 'd' tbat hasn’t died down lined r- , Renters story, date Brit e1Sb"n’ was withheld from in /I" papers but distributed n other countries GENERAL McCROSKY Gen. McCrosky Returns As Davis Commander CAMP DAVIS, Dec. 5. — Brigadier General Samuel L. McCroskey, veteran anti-aircraft artilleryman and Camp Davis’ first executive officer, returned here last week to as sume command of the Anti-Aircraft Artillery Training Cen ter, succeeding Brig. General James R. Townsend, who was 1 Gen. McCroske;, came here from Mitchel Field, Long Island, where, as commanding general of the 55tn AAA Brigade, ne was engaged in the practical study cf combined antiaircraft. Air Corps, and Sig nal Coips defense, under the supervision of the First Air Force. In 1942 Gen. McC'rcskey, then a colonel, was assigned to New York City to plan and command the antiaircraft defense of this nation’s gi eatest metropolis He was ap pointed brigadiei general in June, 1942, and assigned to Camp Ste wart, Georgia, where he organized the 55th Brigade The new commanding general entered the service in 1917, after graduating from Washington State College. An early and' firm adva cate of the development of antiair craft artillery, he has had much experience in that, field. He was a member cf the Coast Artillery Board at Fort Monroe, Va., in 1932 When the Army was reorganized in that year, he was assigned to the Antiaircraft Artil lery Commend at Richmond. In 1938 he was assigned to the chief of Coast Artillery’s Office in the material section. Under the supervision of Brig. Gen James B. Crawford, then Camp Davis commander, Gen. Me Croskey was a member of a group of officers, selected the site for the camp and planned its construc tion and development. He was the camp’s executive officer from February to December. 1941. Two tours of foreien duty were in Pannama from 1921 to 1924 and in Hawaii from 1929 to 1932. A na tive of Colfax, Wash., the general is married and has one daughter. His family resides in Garden City Long Island, -New York. Liberators Attack New Japanese Base PEARL HARBCR, Dec. 5—W) —In their deepest recent blows at Japane’s defense permeter, American Liberators have bombed Hare island in the Kap ingmarangi atoll, lying in a compartively oper stretch of the Pacific surrounded by the Solomons, Gilbert. Marshall and Caroline islands. A solitary Liberator, appar ently from the Solomons, installations on Hare island’s seaplane base Dec. 2, head quarters of the commander in chief of the Pacific fleet an nounced today, but a fleet spokesman added that was the third recent strike at the Nip ponese base. Fires were started by the latest bombing. The previously unreported prooeding strikes were believed to have badly crippled the seaplane base. PETER PROTESTS NEW GOVERNMENT Formation Of Council Within Yugoslavia Bit terly Attacked CAIRO. Dec. 5. — (Jf) — King Jeter of the Lugoslav government n-exile violently protested today he formation of a rump govern nent—the council of national lib eration—inside Yugoslavia by Gen. rosip Broz (Tito) and Dr. Ivan Ri jar. Ribar heads the new rump gov U’nment, and Tito was made a ield marshal and chairman of a lew committee for national de ense. i Formation of the government i-as announced yesterday by the I'ree Yugoslav radio, mouthpiece if the pro-Russian partisan move nent, which said 140 delegates had ireated a parliament and govern ng body for the areas already (.’rested from the Germans. The Allies, including Russia,, iave recognized King Peter’s ex led government which has head luarters here. The provisional re iime inside Yugoslavia was es ablished in opposition to it. King Peter in a formal state nent declared this was “a move nent of terroristic violence,” that t was non-representative, and ended furth-r to incite “interne :ine struggles” in the Nazi-ridden iountry alref d T divided by the eud between Tito and Gen. Draja tfihailovic. The Yugoslav exile government j mnouncement said the rump gov la from abroad, to whose success !rnment “resulted from propagan infortunately certain Allied insti utions contributed a great deal.’’ Tito’s partisans have had con siderable Soviet support and it is mown that the hammer and sickle nsignia is frequently seen in par isan mountain hideouts. This latest Yugoslav headache vas disclosed at a time when Cairo md other newspapers were full of •eports from Moscow and other ;ources of a big harmony meeting )f President Roosevelt, Prime Min ster Churchill and Premier Mar ihal Stalin. --V PAPERS COMPLAIN NEW YORK, Dec. 5.—(.¥)—The Office of War Information quoted Swedish dispatches from Bern today as saying Nazi-con trolled newspapers in northern It aly complained that Italian resist ance groups in mountain hideouts are being supplied by Allied air planes and by Italian manufac turers. _ Senator Defends Action In Junking Vote Measure WASHINGTON, Dec. 5.—(^)— Senator Moore (R-Okla), on; of those who Senator Guffey (D Penn) says formed an “unholy al liance” to reject the federal sol dier vote bill in favor of State con trols, reported tonight that what they really did was to help head off “the most gigantic vote steal ing in history.” And thus came another round in the warmest Congressional row in weeks, a row which shows signs of getting even hotter. The squabble broke out Friday when Southern Democrats and Republicans teamed to upset the Senate leadership. They threw out a bill for a Federal absentee voting plan and substituted state supervision. Guffey called it an “unholy al liance” which would deprive the armed forces of their right to vote and for this Senator Moore (R-Okla) called him “the veriest demagogue.” Moore said in a statement that the Administration’s bill laid the basis “for the most gigantic vote stealing in history” and he defend ed the Democrats who voted with (Continued on Page Three; Col. 7) Nazi Targets In Occupied ° H Sm" v $ jfr iTigainst # A7es De ^ •▼Allies 11 BOBBERS LOST Other Fighters Make Of fensive Sweeps Over German Territory LONDON, Dec. 5.—(^P)— Americans and British air might turned from its me thodical destruction of Ger man cities today to deliver a smashing blow against ene my targets inoccupied France. U. S. heavy and medium bombers and fighters took a leading part in the daylight^ bombardment assaults which cost the Eighth Air Force 11 heavy bombers against the destruction of 11 Nazi fight ers. The crews of two of the' j wrecked bombers are safe. Targets Not Known Today was the first time in more than two months that the Fort resses have concentrated on tar gets in France. The last time was I Sept. 26, when they hit a Nazi fighter repair base near Rheims. The target stoday were not im mediately specified. Thunderbolt and Lightning fight er planes supported the Flving Fortresses, the Eighth Air Force announced, while RAF, Canadian and Allied fighters provided cov er for U. S. Marauders and RAF fighter bombers attacking mili tary objectives in northern France. Other fighters made offensive sweeps over Nazi territory. One fighter was lost during the day’s operations. Mine Laying Tlie daylight assaults were a sequel to Mosquito attacks on tar gets in western Germany last night and mine laying activities by other RAF planes. One plane was lost by the minelayers. Allied war planes now are al most continuously over Europe, and last week not 24 hours pass ed without bombs falling on Ger man soil. The weakening of the German air force even in purely defensive operations w a s demonstrated clearly last week by its inability to defend Leipzig when British heavy bombers feinted at Berlin Friday night and then banked to smother Leijzig with 1.500 tons of bombs. Leipzig Unprotected Nazi fighters were packed over Berlin and there were not enough left to protect Leipzig when the bombers suddenly changed their course and plastered the vital in dustrial and railway center, vir tually unopposed in the air. Fires raged uncontrolled in Leipzig yes terday, indicating much of its air raid protection services had been transferred to Berlin during the two weeks the capital was smash ed by five heavy RAF assaults. Another evidence of inability of (Continued on Pago Three; Col. 6) GERMANS THROW MORE TROOPS INTO FIERCE ITALIAN FIGHT; RED DRIVE MENACES MOGILEV VITAL RAIL HUB Russians Fight Amid Swir ling Snow To Penetrate Deep Into Lines overrunTbulwarks Continue Push West And Southwest Cf Ukraine City Of Kremenchug LONDON, Monday, Dec. 6. —(/P) — Red Army troops fought to compress the Ger man defense lines upon the approaches to the Gomel re gion rail hubs of Zhlobin and Rogachev yesterday and snaked forward northwest of Propoisk in a drive menacing Mogilev, Moscow announced early today. Fighting in rain, mud, fog and cold, the Russians in their plunge in the Propoisk region overran three Nazi bulwarks, the broadcast com munique said. Mogilev is one of the main remaining rail and defense centers held by the Germans in White Russia. Propoisk is approximately 70 miles north of Gomel and 40 miles southeast of Mogilev. Line Penetrated Moscow dispatches declared that Gen. Constantine Rokossovsky’s troops had penetrated deep into the Germans’ strong defense line vir tually from one end of White Rus sia to the other. The Russian communique, record ed here by the Soviet monitor, said Russian troops, despite clinging UKraine mud, were continuing their push west and southwest of Kre menchug, and had captured three Nazi strongpoints after stubborn fighting. German troops continuing their infantry and tank attacks against head in the Cherkasy area were the Russians’ Dnieper river bridge repulsed, the war bulletin said. By expanding their holding below Kre menchug westward the Russians apparently are attempting to re lieve the pressure on the Cher kasy bridgehead. Landing Made The communique also contained a belated disclosure of the land ing of German sea-borne forces a few days ago at the mouth of the Dnieper river—a landing which it said wTas completely wiped out by resolute Soviet counter-attacks. German losses in this operation were declared to total 700 iVad and the Russians took 500 pris V ers. The Nazi landings were made on Kindurinskaya Kosa, and the enemy captured Vordtadt and Pok rovskey Khutara before the Soviet counterblows developed, the war bulletin said. (Continued on Page Three; Col. 4) Drive On Japs Rolling As Anniversary Nears BY HAROLD STREETER Associated Press Staff Writer The second anniversary tomor row of the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor comes as mili tary forces of the United States are deployed along a broken battle line of 5,000 miles from the Aleu tians to New Guinea. At the closest point, they stand 2,000 statute miles from Tokyo. That is in the Aleutians, a dor mant sector. Dipping southward, Midway is land, the most advanced position west of Hawaii, is 2,5-15 miles from the heart of Nippon. Skirting around the enemy-oc cupied Marshalls to the Gilberts, where Marines paid a high price last month to achieve victory, those newly-won islands are rough ly 3,300 milts from Tokyo. A little closer but si ill more than 3,000 miles distant is the most ad vanced American position on Bougainville in the northern Solo mons. So too is the jungle front line of Gen. Douglas MacAnhur—in this case held by Austrahans—on the Huon peninsula of ■ northeastern New Guinea. These are great reaches, most of them watery, many of them dotted with strong, intervemng fortifica tions. They are distances which are easy to lose sight of during the scanning of such war reports as those of the past week: From the Central Pacific — The ■ airfield on hard-won Tarawa in the Gilberts is pui in operation by those engineering marvels, the Navy ‘ Seabees" (construction bat talion), and Allied bombers keep hitting enemy air bases in the in vasion-menaced Marshals. From the Sou'n Pacific—Planes of Adm. William F. Halsey, not once spotting a Japanese intercep tor during hundreds o+ sbrties in the northern Solomons, pound Bougainville s airfields full of holes faster than enemy engineers can fill up the old ones: the Ameri can beachhead on the island, un dergoing little change, now is be ing used chiefly as a fighter plane base. N From the Southwest Pacific — While Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s bombers blow up supplies and de fenses with nearly 400 tons of ex plosives on western New britain and destroyers shell it for the first time, Australians methodically clear out tne New Guinea junglfe sector from which New Britain soon may be invaded. Those are the general outlines of another week of war, a picture filled out b\ such details as the aerial destruction oi a loaded 10, 000-ton Japanese transport off Ka vieng, New Ireland and an 111 ton aerial bombardment of the enemy’s main New Guinea air base at Wewak. But both general outline and] minute detail are infinitesimal (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) I Roosevelt And Churchill Reported Meeting Inonu Turkish President And Two Big Allied Lead ers Have Conference Regarding Nation’s Entry Into War, Nazi News Agency Says LONDON, DEC. 5.—<.P>—A Ger man news agency said today that the Turkish president, Ismet Ino nu, conferred with President Roos evelt and Prime Minister Chur chill In Cairo yesterday after the momentous Iran meeting of the heads of the American and Brit ish governments with Premier Marshal Stalin. In a broadcast quoting dispatch es from Ankara, the Nai news agency Transocean, which previ ously had reported Inonu journey ing to Cairo for the meeting, said a communique was not expected before Wednesday or Thursday, “after the return of the Turkish statesman.” i The Berlin radio also reported i that Emir Mansur, son of King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia, and Imir Fahad, nephew of the king, arriv ed in Cairo Saturday. The broad cast, quoting the Cairo radio, said the reason for their presence was not stated, but that it was gener ally “expected they will take part in some Cairo conference.” After the conferences at Cairo and Teheran which Roosevelt and Churchill had with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and Stalin, a multi-front assault seemed assur ed. All reports on these conferen ces indicated that the Allied lead ers laid the basis of a new world without war and were casting anxious eyes at Turkey. A promise of freedom for Eu (Continued on Page Two: Col. 2) Italian Mountain Army Threatens Nazi Retreat BARCELONA, Spain, Dec. 5.—(£>)—German forces retreating before Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery’s Eighth Army’s drive up the Adriatic coast face a rear threat from an Italian army estimated at 50,000 strong gathered in the mountains of Abbruzzi. mis army or Premier Pietro Badoglio, whicn retired into the Gran Sasso and Morrone mountains just south ot the Pescara valley, has been steadily reinforced dur ing the pas* month by youths es caping from German - controlled areas of Italy. An Argentine citizen who arrived here from Italy only last week said some estimates place the Abruzzi mountain forces at 100.000, of whom about 50,000 are armed, and said they were preparing for action against the Nazi rear guard. According to reports from the border and this neutral informant, the force includes at least 20,000 soldiers whi were in Italy’s regu lar army prior to the armistice. They have been living on reduced rations and have been conserving their ammunition for just such an opportunity to strike at the Ger mans as is now piesented by the Eighth Army’s Sangro river through. Most of the newcomers, either former soldiers or youths escap ing the Germar and Fascist mobi lization sine? the armistice brought their guns, or have been armed from stores controlled by regular army units. Some reports say tba tltalian forces have already made guerril la-type stabs at the retreating Ger mans, and to have cut the trans peninsular Rcme-Pescara railroad, which is now the Germans’ only east-west line south of Anehona. The Argentine, who asked that his name be withheld because of possible reprisals against mem bers of his family still in Italy, said the Nazis in central Italy, par ticularly the Rome aiea, are now “acting as il they are on the eve of a hurried departure from the midst of a people they hate and who hate them.” He said that when the Germans seize goods belonging to Italian citizens they hand out slips of paper falsely promising, “Pagara Badoglio, ’—Badoglio will pay. “A squad of Germans under the command of a lieutenant lawked into the largest store in Tivoli and in my presence ordered the clerks to pile tneii: trucK full of rationed foodstuff and many luxury foods,” the Argentine said. “They gave the excited proprie tor merely a slip of paper before they drove off. He showed it to everybody, including me, and it Continued on Page Three: Col. 8) PLANES DESTROY 6 NAZI U ■ BOATS German Underseas Craft Attempting To Attack Atlantic Convoy LONDON, Dec. 5—IB—Six Ger man submarines were destroyed in the Atlantic in eight days by U. S. Naval and RAF coastal command planes smashing a re newed outbreak of U-boat war fare, the Air Ministery announced today. In all, 15 attacks were made on Nazi U-boat wolf packs seeking to attack three Atlantic convoys recently, a communique declared, and one RAF Liberator was lost. The convoys were brought safe ly to port, and so intense was the battle against two large U-boat packs that not a single torpedo was fired against the merchant men. Only bad weather saved the U boats from further losses, the Air Ministry said. Three of the subs fell victim on the sixth day, all being sent down by Liberators’ depth-bombs. In each of the six confirmed sinkings, wreckage and bodies were seen afterward on the surf ace, and a total of 80 to 90 survi vors were seen following some of the successful attacks. Results were not observed in the other nine attacks. The victories were not speci fied among U. S. and RAF air men. On the first of the eight days, the communique said, three sub marines were attacked by planes from Iceland. No U-boats were seen near the convoys themselves, but they were found by aircraft sweeping the approaches. On the second day, Hudsons and Venturas of the American Navy swept the neighborhood near tiTe convoys, and a Hudson made one attack, with unobserved results. Later a Ventura straddled a sur faced U-boat with depth charges, and it sank by the bows, with 30 survivors left in the water. (Continued on Page Two; Col. 3) Action To Delay Subsidy Vote Is Gaining Ground WASHINGTON, Dec. 5— UP) —An administration move to delay a Senate showdown on food subsi dies for 60 days while it submits the issue to a Democratic caucus appeared tc be gaining some ground. With a bipartisan majority lined up behind a House approved bill which would halt subsidies Jan. 1, leaders appealed to Democratic colleagues to side with them for a postponement of a Senate vote un til February, at least. Their argument is that all of the Senate Democrats could meet j in the meantime and uecide among j themselves what stand they ought to take on the controversial issue of providing or denying authority for payments which Price Admin istrator Chester Bowles has said must be made to keep food costs down and to prevent inflation. There are indications this effort to split the Bi-partisan bloc op posing subsidies wa^ making some slight headway, but ample evidence is available that most republicans would fight any delay in. a vote on the bill. Senator A^ken (R-VT) said he and others of like views would not (Continued on Page Three; Col. 5) SAN VITO TAKEN More Than Nine Enemy Di visions Are Rushed In To Save Line 8TH GIVES UP CITY Fighting Equals That Of Verdun In First War Reports State allied headuar TERS, Algiers. Dec. 5.—(/P) —American infantry has stormed key strongholds on heavily fortified Mount Mag goire, 1.500 foot bastion on the southwestern flank of the Mignano pass to Rome, in the blazing all-out battle into which the Germans have thrown more than nine di | visions to hold their winter I 'ine, Allied headquai’ters an nounced todav. On either end of the line both the American Fifth Ar my and the famous British Fitrhth have cast their full ’•ow into the offensive for the first time since the in vasion of Italy. Ridge Captured British troops with the Fifth have captured an important ridge, 2.800-foot Monte Camino, also on the southern flank of the road from Mignario to Rome CTTiree of the most formidable heights in the Mount Camino area now are in Allied hands, the Al giers United Nations radio said in a boardcast recorded b£ Reu ters at London.) On the hard-fought Adriatic flank the Eighth Army captured San Vito. 16 miles below the stra tegic port of Pescara, but so toush was German resistance that the rnen of Gen. Sir Bernard L. Mont gomery were forced to give up newly-captured Orsongna to a de termined. tank-led counterattack. Reinforcements Arrive Official reports said the fight ing for the peaks came the closest to resembling World War I con flicts, such as Verdun, of any en gagements in this war. Reinforcements reached Ttalv for Canadian forces. A delayed dispatch from an Allied-held Ital ian port said headc/uarters per sonnel of a Canadian armored unit, tankmen and motorized troops had landed after an un eventful voyage from Britain. A communique from the loth Army group headquarters of con servative Gen. Sir Harold Alex ander. Gen. Eisenhower’s deputy commander-in-chief, described the losses of the German Tenth Armv as “heavy.” Local Successes “We have achieved very impor tant local successes.” said a head quarters spokesman, “in some places on the mountains the Ger mans had dug into solid rock to a depth of eight feet and had to I be driven out in hand-to-hand com bat.” In the third day of the Fifth Army's smashing attack, yester day, the battle developed into an almost entirely infantry-artillerv 'affair as rain cut Allied air ac | tivity to a minimum. The Royal Navy took a hand in the show on Dec. 3, the destroy i ers Troubridge, Palladin and Teazer carrying out a bombard ; ment of Minturno just ahead of (Continued on Page Two; Col. 2) -V WEATHER FORECAST: NORTH CAROLINA: Increasing cloudi ness Monday. Tuesday cloudy with rain beginning west portion late Monday afternoon. Continued mild becoming cold er in west portion Tuesday afternoon. (Eastern Standard Time) (By U. S. Weather Bureau) Meteorological data for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m., yesterday. Temperature 1 :3Q am. 51, 7:30 am, 48, 1:30 pm, 65. 70 pm, 56. Maximum 65, Minimum 47, Mean 56, Normal 51. Humidity 1:30 am, 97, 7:30 am, 98, 1:30 pm, 44. ’•30 pm, 65. Precipitation Total for the 24 hours ending 7:30 pm, 0.01 inches. Total since the first of the month, 0.01 inches. Tides For Today (From the Tide Tables published hy U. S. Coast and Geodetic sSurvey) . High Low Wilmington _ 5:04a 5:34p 12:19p Mason boro Inlet-- 3:08a 9:23a 3:06p 9:48p Sunrise. 7:04a, Sunset, 5:03 p, Moon rise, 2:09p, Moonset, 1:41a. Cape Fear River state at Fayette ville. 9.20 feet.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Dec. 6, 1943, edition 1
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