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PARATROOPS GAIN OBJECTIVE FAST (Continued from Page One) tunny blue sky, raking the 150 mile column of planes and gliders stretched out before and behind us—mostly behind. As the first men dropped, I could see scattered German ma chine gunners and riflemen firing at our falling men. As we followed them German snipers potted at us. When we hit the dirt, the army of 18 men on whom my own fate depended went into action with a rush. They went first after the snipers. A quick look at the maps and we headed for our assembly point headquarters, searching woods and houses as we went. We joined up squad by squad, collecting into fighting units, the paratroopers killing or collecting such Ger mans as they met. At the first headquarters we reached, British troopers and Am ericans had dropped nearby. They had rounded up 27 German sol diers, four civilian men, three women, a young girl and a baby. All but the baby were terrified by our invasion from the sky. Behind us were coming the vast glider fleets with troops, tanks, jeeps, ammunition and supplies. In all the paratroops here took about 100 prisoners. Our own cas ualties were light. At this hour ■ we command the hillocks and other dominating ground in our area, the clusters of houses and the road crossings, and the fighting men are moving out on what they hope is the last big heave of the war. -V Williston Musical Farce Promises Fine Stage Fare The three-act musical comedy to be presented tonight by the Drama Guild of Fayetteville Teach ers school promises to be the out standing offering this season by the Athletic Committee of Willis ton School. The cast consists of twenty-eight players and the production staff numbers twelve. This group has been well received by the men at Fort Bragg and Camp Lejeune with return engagements pending. “Stage Door” is the title of the comedy which carries two scenes in each of the three acts is di rected by and the department of dramatics. The doors will open at 7:30 and the curtain rises at 8 30. rich cream is blended into this delicious > tomato 3 soup HEINZ £?J^55555 C R E AM OF TOMATO SOUP • made from Heinz own Aristocrat tomatoes and rich countiy cream (MM Lack Of Food Inside Reich Held Vital Factor In War's Duration By CHRISTER JAEDERLUND Berlin correspondent of Stock holm's Tidningen, who has just returned to Stockholm. STOCKHOLM, March 25.—(/Pi Revolution from below still looks highly improbable in Germany, unless starvation drives the people into the streets or a beaten army floods back in a state of disinte gration. The first signs of a real collapse of the Nazi food system will cause more panic in the Reich than the worst military defeat. So far the German food rationing and supply systems have functioned extreme ly well although rations have been short, particularly fats. But Allied bombing of food fac tories and storehouses and the crippling of the transport system plus the loss .of Germany’s rich est agricultural lands in the East have changed the situation. The Germans now associate the dura tion of the war with the food sup ply. “The war will end,” Berliners say, “when Goering can put on Goebbels’ trousers.” (A new German order forbids planting of flowers even for use in cemeteries. The Berlin corre spondent of the Stockholm news paper Dagens Nyheter reported Sunday that parks and sports fields were being plowed under throughout the Reich for the planting of potatoes and vege tables. The dispatch said officials estimated that each square kilom eter of land in the Reich now must support 304 persons instead of 147.) Although foreign agents have at tempted to form so-called Troicas after the Baltic pattern—groups of three men each as a basic cell for a wider resistance movement—it was not until the Red Army in vaded Germany that Berliners be gan inquiring of one another about the chances of joining an “organi zation.” . , In addition to war prisoners and Jews who have become “divers there are*army deserters. Rem nants of the beaten Vistula army were the first to go underground in Berlin. It was estimated their number reached 30,000 and later 40,000. Each time soldiers under the im pact of retreats believe a break down is imminent, the area behind the front is overrun with desert ers. Many soldiers obtain civilian clothes and mingle with refugee columns. In recent weeks the Ges tapo made frequent roundups in Berlin and other cities, finding even officers who had deserted. It is not advisable for a single policeman to demand identifica tion papers of a suspect. Fre quently of late the questioned has pulled out a pistol instead of pa pers and shot down the police man. Those who have gone under ground now live in constant fear of capture since Hitler summarily commandeered the entire nation for war service. Living underground in Germany is limited mainly to efforts to stay hidden, although here and there sabotage groups blow up bridges. Ever since Hitler came into power the German people have been used to tne organized ration ing of food. Heretofore food has been adequate while strictly con trolled, but now supplies are de teriorating rapidly. The giant evac uation from the East was stoppt* because of the shortage of food within the Reich proper. After the Vistula retreat the first thing done in Berlin was to stretc* eight weeks rations to nine. The first serious breach of the rationing discipline occurred with well-informed party men an* wholesalers informing one another secretly of extra sales several days before the public was noti fied. As a result when the public lined up all the best things weift gone. This has become more and more brazen in the past year and the public has become aware of it. When the Russians reached the Oder and Berliners thought the capital might be besieged within' hours they suddenly found trddes men no longer had anything to sell. On the following day goods re appeared. This was the most se rious sign of disintegration on the rationing front. When everything begins to collapse and the people of Berlin see nothing ahead but siege or flight, then not even the strictest measures by authorities will prevent the remaining stocks from vanishing among relatives, friends and favorite customers. The less fortunate faced with star vation will take to the streets in search of food. ‘Old Hickory* Division Spearheads Ninth Drive (Continued from Page One) have a breakthrough,” declared Maj. Robert Hewitt of New York. “We achieved surprises in that the Germans did not expect a large crossing south of the Wesel.” At the regimental command post of the 120th Regiment, Assistant Operations Officer Lt. Ralph Simon Df Vincennes, Ind., said: "We hit a soft spot and went right on through.” The division’s operation, though, was something more than that, (t may be studied in war colleges in the future. Attacking three regiments abreast ifter a terrific artillery barrage, he 30th hit everywhere at once along six to seven miles of the river. First one spot gave way be !ore the 120th where the going was -ough in the center during the •arly hours. The 120th, under its pistol-pack ng regimental commander, tiny, mergetic Col. Walter Johnston of Missoula, Mont., who wears a .45 slung on his leg like a Western gun man, caught up with the flank regi ments and spurted ahead. About seven miles from the river all artillery and mortar fire al most ceased. There was no organ ized line and the Doughboys hopped Dn tanks and drove to exploit the breakthrough. The battle area running east and aorth of the river gave mute testi mony itself to the cracking of re sistance. Along the river every town was :rushed under the weight of ter ific barrages of artillery and there vas a scattering of German dead in iome towns.” Two to three miles inland, houses sere and there were intact and arther on they were more numer ius. Along the river there were a ew makeshift tenches but nothing vhich could be described as a for nidable defense. The only sign of a front was from t hidden tank which took pot shots 'ere and there but to which the Doughboys hurrying forward paid 10 attention. They left it for “rear :chelons” to deal with. The 29th Tactical Air Command swarmed all over the area with Thunderbolts and reported Ger mans milling around in great con fusion ahead of the 79th and 30th Divisions. The pilots claimed the destruction or damaging of 99 Ger man tanks and armored cars in the battle area. Maj. J. J. Eberhardt of an An onio, Texas, 120th’s supply officer, said the 30th Division had not yet lost a single tank in eneipy action. Nor had the Germans been able to launch a single counterattack against the 30th—which they always do if organized. About 200 prisoners of odd shapes and mentality were laying around. To complete the picture, four be draggled Italian slave laborers wandered up and asked for some thing to eat. The 30th, which kicked off an hour ahead of the 79th, had a bridge completed at 4:15 p. m. Saturday. Its 120th Regiment quickly smash ed six miles across the Rhine, the 117th Regiment went three miles beyond the river and the 119th 2 1-2 miles in. One of the finest American divi sions, the 30th has met and defeat ed the best the Germans had to offer. I missed the Normandy beachhead landings, but it held the vital Mortain elbow in Normandy when the Germans tried in vain to cut the Avranches Gap. And with the Second Armored Division, it spearheaded the push through the Siegfried Line near Aachen. But perhaps the 30th’s finest per formance came in the Ardennes at Stavelot when the division under Maj.-Gen. Leland S. Hobbs was rushed down from the Ninth Army front and collided head-on with Hit ler’s personal First SS Division. The ,30th ripped the Nazi division to pieces and helped hold the gap at the most critical period. The 30th was hauled back later and made the Roer river crossing across the worst piece of river, but led other attacking divisions to the objective. It had earned the rep utation of “crossers” even before sntering battle because its 117th Regimen used to sage model cross ngs a Fort Benning, Ga. ration Gains 27 Miles, Takes Bridge Over Main icontinued from Page One) >truck a hard core of resistance ind was held to a foothold little more than a mile deep. All resistance crumbled in the ace of the Fourth Armored Divi sion, the hard-hitting outfit that be ?an the rout of German forces vest of the Rhine with its cross ng of the Moselle river. Location of the bridge captured ntact across the Main river was lot. disclosed, but it was a great military prize, for the Main was a major barrier. Frankfurt-on-Main, a city of 546 - 300 populatino, evidently had been bypassed, as positions 40 miles beyond the Rhine would put the Fourth Armored Division nearly 20 miles northeast of the city. Gen. Eisenhower’s victory offen sive was going full blast. (The American Broadcasting Sta tion in Europe told the German people that Eisenhower’s headquar ters reported “approximately one quarter” of the Rhine’s east bank was in Allied hands, OWI report ed. ) __ The U. S. Ninth Army was head ed for a knock-out of the Ruhr, without whose factories Germany cannot longer wage war. It was “out in the open” in what looked like a decisive oreak through and was almost in sight of a superhighway to Berlin. The British Second Army with Canadian elements had driven eight miles north "of the Rhine and was across the Issel river — first barrier on the north German plain. The U. S. First Army likewise was headed Berlinward. through Germany’s scenic hills in an op eration of such scope that a front dispatch likened it to the St. Lo breakthrough in Normandy. The U. S. Third Army’s Fourth Armored Division was so deep into Germany and traveling so fast that tankmen were sending back urgent calls for transportation for the thousands of prisoners captured. Dozens of towns were being swept up by the Third Army against scattered resistance, and even in Darmstadt, with a peacetime popu lation of 115,000, the 90th Infantry encountered light opposition. Farther South, the U. S. Sev ent:. Army drove up all along its front to the Rhine, putting a firm period to Gen. Eisenhower’s orders to destroy every enemy soldier west of the rivir by liquidating the last German stand. Only enemy stragglers remained on the west bank. Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson’s Ninth Army was driving east with the same blazing tactics in the Ruhr that broke German power west of the Rhine in the Roer riv er offensive. Infantrymen clamber ed aboard tanks in swift pursuit of the retreating enemy. . The Ninth’s 30th Infantry Divi sion, breaking the German Rhin line was nearing the superhighway to Berlin where it swings eig“ miles east of the river a mile ijprtheast of Bruckhausen. D°NT continue to fidget and • *.f“er fro™ the torment of sim ple piles. Relieve itching, burning distress with soothing R«inol. * “ fently oils tender parts, as its specially blended medication re RESINOLS Patton Labels Drive Over France, Germany ‘Treason In Reverse’ WITH THE U. S. THIRD ARMY, March 25.—(JP)—Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., calls his Third Army’s power drive through the Saar and Palatinate and now across the Rhine “treason in re verse,” it was disclosed today. He explained in a letter to Maj. Gen. Otto P. Weyland, 19th Tacti cal Air Force commander, that ‘‘the 19th Tactical Air Force and the Third Army have been com j mitting treason in reverse as we did so happily in August and Sep tember. ‘‘By this I mean that instead of giving aid and comfort to the en emy we have been giving him plain discomfort and doing it in a big way. Let’s keep it up;” Weyland posted Patton’s letter to all TAC units with a note which said: ‘‘With apologies to Patrick Henry I say if this be treason, let us make the most of lt.” -V Obituaries R. L. CLAY GREENSBORO, March 35.—(AP) —Rotoert Luther Clay, 55, chief of the Field Division, United States Internal Revenue Depart ment, died today at a hospital here after an illness of two weeks. A native of Mitchell county, Clay came to Greensboro in 1933 from Boone where he was with the Revenue Department. He became Field Division chief with the Reve nue Department in 1943. Funeral services will be conduct ed here at 4 p.m, Monday by Dr. E. K. McClarty, Methodist minister of Boone, and by Dr. W. A. Stanbury, pastor of Centen ary Methodist church, Winston Salem. Interment will be in For est Lawn cemetery here. Surviving are his widow, five daughters and three sisters. WALTER B. BELL WINSTON-SALEM. March 25.— (!P)—Walter Bynum Bell, 71, for mer managing editor of the Char lotte Observer and also formerly connected with the Raleigh News and Observer, died today at a hos pital here after a long illness. Funeral services will be held at o o’clock Monday afternoon at Elkin, his former home. ENISS F. BASS Funeral services for Eniss F. Bass, 72, of 507 Princess street and Carolina Beach, who died Satur day at James Walker Memorial hospital, will be held at 4 p. m. today from the Yopp funeral home. The Rev. C. D. Barclift will offi ciate and burial will be in Oak dale cemetery. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Katie L. Bass, of Wilmington; a daughter, Mrs, C. Leslie, of Wrightsville Beach; a brother, James Weaver Bass of Newtdft Grove; a sister, Mrs. MarsShll Warren, of Newton Grove; and two grandchildren. Active pallbearers will be Bruce Valentine, Horace Shinn, Claude Boddie, Luther Rogers, Clyde Walton and L. W. Edens. Honorary pallbearers will be Dr. James M. Hall, Fred Poisson, Wilbur Jones, E. B. Snipes, Wal ter Blair, Jesse Batson and B?1 Lumsden, LOCAL R CROSS DRIVE IRS END (Continued from Page One) ployes of the Star Cafe; employes of the Life Insurance Co. of Vir ginia; employes of the Metropoli tan Life Insurance Co.; Equitable Life Assurance Co. The Governor Dudley; Wilming ton Finance Co.; H. G. Latimer & Son; Norris News Stand; Brass Bar; Cape Fear Loan Office and employes; Carolina Motor Club and employes; DeLuxe Hotel; George’s Sandwich Shop; Andrews' Mortu ary; Recreation Bowling Alley. W. D. Mills Grocery; King Mar ble Granite Co.; Tide Water Pow er Co. and employes; Wilmington Star-News and employes; employ es of Berger’s Dept. Store; Radio Station WMFD and employes; Standard Oil Co. of N. J. and employes; Foy Roe and Co. Brooks Cash Grocery Co. and employes; employes of Moore-Fon ville Realty Co.; employes of the Cape Fear Terminal Co.; New York Cafe; Jacobi Hardware Co.; Wilmington Furniture Co., Inc., and employes; Mademoiselle Shoppe and employes. Employes of the City Finance Dept.; employes of the City Police Dept.; employes of the City Pro tective Inspection; employes of the Public Library; employes of the City Parks Dept.; employes of the City and County Tax office; em ploys of the Clerk of Court; em ployes of the Register of Deeds Of fice; employes of the O. P. A. Rent Division; employes of the O. P. A. War Price Ration Board; employes Girl Scouts; Allen C. Ewing and Co. and employes. Hoggard-Bowden Co.; F. W. Livingston and Co. and employes Marshall Realty Co.; Bik Ike Shoe Repair Co. and employes; Albert F. Perry and employes; Wilming ton Candy Store; Southern Kitchen and employes; Louie E. Woodbury, Jr. and employes; Su-Ann Shoe Store and employes. Employes and pupils of Acorn Branch School, Board of Educa tion, Bradley Creek School, Caro lina Beach School, Castle Hayne School, Chestnut St. School, East Wilmington School, Forest Hills School, Cornelius Harnett School, Hemnenway School, William Hoop er School, Kirkland School, Lake Forest School, Maffitt Village School,, Masonboro School, Middle Sound School, New Hanover High School, Peabody School, tVinset Park School, Tileston School, Washington Catlett School, Willis ton Industrial School, Williston Primary School, Winter Park School, Wrightsboro S c h o o ol, Wrightsboro Branch School Wrightsville School. shellexplodes WEAR CHURCHILL (Continued from Page One) While on the east bank, the Bri. tish leadef was persuaded by Simpson not to walk to the nearest village because it had not yet been cleared of mines. Churchill praised Ninth Army Engineers, who a few hours earlier had completed bridges across the Rhine in record time. “Churchill seemed more pt urb ed about lighting his cigar .n the wind than he was about the shell fire,” said Lt. Ellsworth K; rrigan of Aberdeen, S. D. Karrigan is a member of the American 30th Di vision in whose sector the Prime Minister crossed the Rhine. “He finally lit that big cigar and walked away as if nothing had happened,” the lieutenant add ed. On the east bank, Churchill look ed over into German-held land and compared Hitler’s problems now with his own in 1940, saying it was impossible to defend a long river line in strength lust the same as it was trying to guard a long coastline from invasion. Walking along the American bat tlefield Churchill discussed yester day’s fighting for the bridgehead with Maj. Gen. L. S. Hobbs, Wash ington, D. C., commander of the 30th Division. Hobbs pointed out German emplacements along the dike behind the Rhine. Shortly after a noon lunch of fried chicken Churchill looked out of the window of a building on the west bank and mused: “The last time I was on the Rhine was at Cologne during the last war. We cruised 50 miles up stream in a British gunboat “I would like very much to get across.” Gen Eisenhower who still was with the party shook his head. Shortly after the Supreme Com mander had gone, Churchill began urging again and finally talked the others into letting him go. City Briefs COUNCIL TO MEET Cape Fear Council No. 24, of the Daughters of America will hojd its regular meeting at 8 p.m. today in the Junior Order HaU. BREAK-IN Maffitt Village police yester day reported that the Snack Bar in the Hughes building on Hughes street was entered Sat Mr'and between $40 1 and $70 token from game na- ' chines. Entrance may have j *ef.n «ai"ed by * pass key, miJi M thete Were no m -_y.__ ' j I TtiSSP S?ales and skin from ; econd orP,on b0lUng water for * ' Scots Drive Deep Into Germanv And Bowl Over Enemy Opposition ByWILLIAIVI FRYE WITH THE BRITISH SECOND ARMY, March 25.—(A3)—A lancing thrust by elements of the 15th Scottish Division drove Field Mar shal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery’s bridgehead eight miles inland to day at a point northwest of “e sel—the deepest penetration on the British front. The spectacular thrust from the Xanten crossing area bowled over enemy opposition, including a small tank detachment which got in the way near a forest cross roads. , It carried the . fighting , Scots around high ground between the Rhine and the Issel rivers. The town of Haminkeln was captured and troops have advanced beyofid that place. A linkup of Commandos with the U. S. Ninth Army’s 30th In fantry Division near the Lippe river south of Wesel gave the 21st Army Group a continuous line as masses of men and equipment poured across Rhine pontoon bridges and ferries in the build-up for the eastward lunge at the heart of Germany. Tall columns of smoke rose over shattered Rees, 11 miles west of Wesel, as units of the 51st Highland Division slugged house to house in the final close-in fight ing to clear the last fanatically resisting enemy troops. The roar of guns shook the air as the holdouts took a pasting be fore the Highlanders began claw ing through the burning, battered streets. Three miles northwest of Rees, Canadians fought into the out skirts of Bienen, after wiping oii? the last enemy resistance in Spel drop. North of Rees, other units ran into stiff fighting. Both there and at Bienen, enemy troops were units of the 15th Panzer Grenadier Division. Farther south, the Scots beat off elements <jf the German Seven • Parachute Division, and that sec tor was beginning to loosen up a bit. , While gains elsewhere were not spectacular today, headquarters finally permitted disclosure that the phenomenally successful air borne attack yesterday carried \ilians stood outside the.; i homes, dressed in Jlfj best, watching Uie vch and clatter through \h. roat streets, brit^Vt„S“ ments for the Second Arm" '*1 Prisoners have not been C0Ult ed since the 8,000 reported ^ last midnight, bu; one case reported of a surDris,na ,„W8! ness of many German iifld to give themselves up plli ,°pt ly since Montgomery’s forc^f' ■;£ mined resistance,6 itowevet opposition may grow as the rj? mans commit more veteran serves t0 battle. an re‘ Montgomery’s forces east of the Issel river over six bridges snatch ed and held firmly by the para troopers, ers. Despite clouds in the spring skies and a haze of smoke and dust hanging over the placid Rhine, fighters and medium bomb ers flew close support to the ground sluggers. Mediums flying precisely direct ed attacks knocked out all but two of more than 40 enemy guns which had been smacking the Rees cross ing. Fighters keeping a canopy over the whole bridgehead against a possible blow by the German Air Force, shot up what little enemy transport was found moving on the roads and pounced on any groupings that looked like the *e ginning of enemy counterattacks: Only one small group of enemy fighters was encountered, and four of its planes were shot down. Fighters destroyed four tanks on the ground and damaged four more. The bridging program in the crossing areas now is well ahead I of schedule, and the ferrying C± men, equipment and supplies de lighted Lt. Gen. Miles C. Demp sey, the British commander, and Montgomery, by delivering stag gering totals to the bridgehead. For miles west of the Rhine, criss-crossing ribbons of dust mark | the paths of columns of equip ment tunneling into the ferries and bridges in endless streams. Apathetic crowds of German ci LEGION ‘FIESTA’ TO OPEN TONIGHT The American Legion Spring Fiesta opens tonight at Legion Field under the auspices of Wil mington Post No. 10, and will con tinue for six days and nights end ing Saturday at midnight. Tonight’s program begins at 7 p.m. when the main gates open for the week. “Selden, the Stratosphere Man,” the world’s greatest aerial dare devil, the feature free act attrac tion, arrived yesterday from Chi cago and will make his debut to night. This sensational act will be staged tonight and every night at 11 p.m. in the center of the mid way at Legion Field. Selden per forms death defying stunts, on a slender steel appartus actually 138 feet in midair, minus the use of safety devices. Three other per formers have sacrificed their lives attempting the same act, but Sel den remains as the only success ful living artist in his line of pleas ing the public. The R and S Amusements will present the midway attractions with all new attractions including several of the latest and greatest rides. “Jimmy” Faftery, owner manager, says that this week will be the first real start of the 1945 tour. Among the rides are the Dive Bomber, the Octopus, Tilt a Whirl, Ferris wheels, Skooter, Rocket, and >thers. NURSE LOSES FAT SAFELY AYDS WAY Get slimmer without uxorrlso Eat starches, potatoes, gravy, just cut down. AYDS plan is safe, sensible, easier. No exer cise. No drugs. No laxatives. Nu rae was c ne of more the n 10# persona losing 10 to IS lbs. average In a tew weeks injcllnical tests with Ayds Plan conducted by medical doctors. Delicious AYDS before each neal dulls the appetite. Yet you get vitamins, ninerals, essential nutrients in Ayds. Start the lyds way to lose weight now. 30 day supply of lyds. $2.25. MONEY BACK on the very first nxif you don’t get results. Phone FVIBEUI’I; PHARMACY WATCH REPAIRING GUARANTEED Quick Service We Teach Watchee To Tell The Troth The Jewel Box 109 N. Front St. John’s Tavern 114 Orange Et. Dial 2-8085 DELICIOUS FOOD Chicken In The Rough — Friday M. HANOVER I - MAFFITT VILLAGE TODAY-TUE. “See Here Private Hargrove” with ROBERT WALKER DONNA REED WED.-THUR. “YOUNG AND WILLING” ^Today 1W.JH. cR NR NR H* & Tues. _ Double Feature! It's a musical furlough! HIT WALLY BROWN NP- “7 DAYS ASHORE” X __ Thrills to the fighting girl guerrillas ... a mighty drama of cour age! "UNDERGROUND GUERILLAS" LATEST NEWS OPEN 10:45 A. M. DAILY! \( To thrill your hearts' J It A love »*«ry ■ . m ton story 1 It Jack Oakio, Susanna I » FoaUr.^Mana Montea | ■^“BOWERY TO BROADWAY 1 A nackier than | e season’* 1 nysterv! I KNIGHTS’* I v Gilbert J Howard M senbloom Today! 1 Only! south Sea joyland ef fun and rhythm! Dorothy Lamour Eddie Bracken Gil Lamb In RAINBOW ISLAND1* In Techniocolor Gala Opening To-Niie ALL THIS WEEK AMERICAN LEGION SPRING FIESTA 11 P. M. — Every Nite ’ ’ Free Act Attraction s E L D EN the Stratosphere Man _THRILL ACT GET EXTRA] RED POINTS! ★ > ★ * Save used fats for your country! Keep eaving all used kitchen fats. V, ^ | Your country urgently need* them... to help make medicines,' parachutes, synthetic rubber, munitions, paints and soaps for military and civilian uses. So keep up your good work. Save every pos sible drop of used fats. Remember, ior each I**1™? you turn in, you Retired ration points! Save Used Fats For the Fighting Front Approved by OP A msd tTFA. Paid for by Industry
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 26, 1945, edition 1
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