Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / April 27, 1945, edition 1 / Page 4
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Huntington §tar ' Morth Carolina’* Oldest Daily Newspaper Published Daily Except Sunday By The Wilmington Star-Naws R. B. Page, Publisher_ Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilming ton, N. C, Postoffice Under Act of Congress of March 3. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER IJi NEW HANOVER COUNTY Payable Weekly or In Advance Combi Tima Star New* nation 1 Week_f -30 * •» * , *® l Month - 130 1.10 2.15 ' S Months- 3.90 3.25 «.M 6 Months __ 7.80 8.80 13.00 l Year _15.60 li.OO 28 00 (Above rates entitle subscriber to Sunday Issue of Star-News)___ By Mail: Payable Strictly In Advance 8 Months -% 2.50 $ 2.00 * 3.85 8 Month* _ 5.00 4.00 7.70 1 Year _ 10.00 8.00 15.40 (Above rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News)_ " WILMINGTON STAR (Daily Without Sunday) g Months-21.85 6 Months-$3.70 1 Yr.-57.40 When remitting by mail please use check or U s P. O. money order. The Star News can not be responsible for currency sent through the mails.__ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AN ™ALSO SERVED BY THE UNITED PRESS With confidence in our armed forces—with the unbounding determination of our people— we will gain Hie inevitable triumph—so help ■s God. _ Roosevelt’s War Message. FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1945. TOP ’O THE MORNING Teach us to look in all our ends On thee for judge, and not our friends, That we with Thee may walk uncowed By fiear or favor of the crowd. RUDYARD KIPLING. Slower, Please Third Street property owners, at their or ganizational meeting, outlined a splendid pro gram in the carrying out of which the stretch of the thoroughfare involved should rapidly Vta anH nprmanentlv bettered. One recommendation particularly is called to the City Council’s attention. It is that oil tankers be compelled to travel at a speed not exceeding fifteen miles an hqpr there. It was pointed out that the vibration caused by them when they move at higher speeds is known to have cracked plaster in homes, and the new Legion headquarters was pointed out as an example. This is not the only building in which walls show great cracks, all traceable to the same cause. But this is not the only reason it would be advisable to bring down the oil trucks’ speed. Their thundering fast through Third street causes many light sleepers to lose a night’s rest. And if they waken sleeping per sons, how much worse i» it to have them disturb invalids who, though not sleeping, may be resting. Certainly it would serve the public welfare to require oil tankers and all other heavy vehicles to move at low speed, and not only on this section of Third street, south to Cas tle, but on streets in. all residential areas. -V Set Sights High The proposal to create at Warm Springs a great memorial to former President Roosevelt, where he fought and won his battle with in fantile paralysis and from where thousands of victims of this disease have regained use of twisted, shriveled legs and arms to take their place in the world again and earn inde * pendent livelihoods, certainly deserves popular support. It would be infinitely better than rearing a monument to his memory and plac ing a bustof him in Statrary Hall. But in planning for Warm Spr' lgs and its fur ther development as a haven for polio vic tims it would be well to consider the financial situation of thousands of families into whose homes the disease enters. If the institution is to meet the greater need and fulfill its highest destiny it must be sufficiently endowed to treat many patients without charge and even pay for their transportation to and from the institution. Many millions of dollars would have to be raised and invested in sound interest-earning securities to make this possible. For this rea son the promoters of the Warm Springs Roose velt memorial movement will have to set their sights high. -V Herriot Freed Many notable prisoners of Germany are finding their way back home either to live in security or stand trial, as in the case of Marshal Petain and other Frenchmen, for treason. For the most part, American interest is mild. It centers chiefly in the release cf military prisoners from German torture pens and charnal houses. But word of the freeing of one German captive is certain to be re ceived with genuine pleasure in this country. The man in Edouard Herriot, and the rea son is that he alone of all high French dig nitaries at the time ' demanded the French government pay its debt to the United ‘States following the former World war. Eeck in the twenties, that was. when war detbs were a matter of keen interest and all countries, save Finland and sometimes Hungary, were repudiating them as often as payments fell due .With unexampled courage, M. Herriot stood up on his pudgy legs and declared that France ought to pay on the barrel head with out further ado and evasion, and was prompt ly ridden out of office. furthermore, M. Herriot could not abide Laval. Although he had joined the Vichy re gime and served as chief of its puppet Cham ber of Deputies for a time he protested an order of Laval in his customary blunt man ner and went to jail for it. Now he is free. Somewhere in the widen ing field of Russian operations Red troops came upon him and turned him loose. It would be dangerous for him to remain in France. Even if he escaped trial and execu tion for his Vichy services, he certainly could not get along with De Gaulle and a clash with him would lead to furthef trouble for the 72-year-old man who, for all his years, probably has lost none of his stern sense of right. He is one Vichyite who could find asylum in the United States with popular ap proval. -V Still The Same Alternative In his address to the delegates at the San Francisco Security Conference, President Tru man, among other things, said: “We still have a choice between the alternatives: The con tinuation of international chaos, or the estab lishment of a world organization for the en forcement of peace.” We are particularly impressed by Mr. Tru man’s use of the word “still” in stating the case. The choice is not new. It existed after the former World war. When the Senate of the United States rejected the League of Na tions it made a choice that laid the founda tion for the international chaos Hilter brought about. The bitter fight in the Senate over the League of Nations was a party fight, with a republican clique led by Senator Lodge determined to de feat Wilson’s cherished dream of a lasting peace. The league never had a chance, lack ing United States membership. It is not unfair to think that had we been represented at Geneva when Mussolini was romnont fViorr iimnlH havp hppn sanntinns against Italy and Mussolini would not have dared make war in Ethiopia. It was that Ethiopian war that marked the first out rage, of the growing dictator group and en: couraged Hitler to militarize Germany for the war he was so soon to launch. With the league lesson learned, and well known among delegations to San Francisco from so many nations, it is to be expected that partisanship, as such, will be repressed regardless of what quarter it might spring from, and the decisions affecting the peace of the world for generations to come be reached solely upon the principles of right and justice. -V Patton’s Shifts It seems that General Patton no sooner gets set to take a major objective than he is direct ed to detour and started toward another. After Normandy it looked like he was to occupy Paris. But he was told to skip it. Then he. was headed for Berlin and when the way seemed clear for his advance upon the Reich capital he was told to veer southward apparently to link up with the Russians at Leipsig, but again he was told to swing further south, which indicated to the easy chair stra tegists that he would contact the Russians at Dresden. When General Patton and his' Third Army were only forty miles from Dresden another order came from headquarters eliminating the Russian juncture and sending him with his valiants to the Danube valley and the Alps. One might suppose that General Patton, de nied so many spectacular maneuvers, would be down in the mouth, especially as he is a temperamental fellow craving the spotlight. But it is reported that he is in a most cheerful humor, his face wreathed in smiles. There must be a reason for his happiness. What it is must remain a matter of specula tion, but it would appear that he has been commissioned to clean out the last island of resistance in Germany or German - held ter ritory. For some time General Patton and his Third Army have met little resistance, and oth he and his men love a fight. We must assume, in the absence of better information, that they are going to have a fight in Hitler’s Bavarian redoubt, and are honin’ for it. , -V Another War War has broken out in the Western Hemi sphere. Unlike the war in Europe and the Pacific it stirs warmest sympathy. Washing ton can be imagined as saying: ‘Let Us know if there is anything we can do to help.” It involves no international complica tions, levies no drain on manpower. Even with the San Fracisco conference occupying the spotlight, the United Nations wish it well.. Columbia has declared war on house flies. The sanitary department at Barranquilla has imported 2,000 wasps. Immediate victory is not foreseen. The wasps and the flies will engage in no aerial warfare. Instead the wasps, if they pursue their, customary hab its, will feed on fly larvae and so kill off the oncoming generation before it is born, and we may suppose the people of Barran quilla will do something about exterminating living flies aloft by swatting them as they alight. All success to the war. * -V In our area the Germans are frankly hostile. Closer to the border and before we crossed the Rhine their attitude was different. But here they look at us with actual hatred in their eyes. — Capt. Doris Donovan, Army nurse at Darmstadt. * Fair Enough (Editor’s note.—The Star and the News accept no responsibility for the personal views of Mr. Pegler, and often disagree with them as much as many of his read ers. His articles serve the good purpose of making people think.) By WESTBROOK PEGLER Copyright, 1945, by King Features Syndicate, SAN FRANCISCO, April 27.—A few days ago, over in the Arizona desert, one of those telegrams came from Washington to a young wornan of 26, the wife of an Army flyer, whose most recent letter had announced tha1 he had been decorated and promoted to cap tain. Now he was gone. He wouldn’t be home, that evening, after the girl had een pul to 'tied, her mother blurted in rage through her tears, “damn those politicians if they don’t give us a decent peace this time—”. Although the present deliberations here in San Francisco have been pointedly described as preliminary discussions, to warn the peo ple that they will not produce peace or even .in its final form an organization to preserve peace, millions of human beings do antici pate something substantial and reassuring. They expect much more than this conference is likely to produce and they would be hurt in their souls and made rebellious if they were to hear it referred to as a clambake, as it often is in these preliminary stages, and compared to those cynical and vulgar rites by which we choose our presidential nominees in the national conventions. There are points of similarity to the nominating coventions, it is true, but people who have lost husbands and sons and others who have dissolved their homes and sacrificed young years in this war have great hopes which it were heartless to mock in this way. Perhaps, this time the agents of the peoples will be able to compromise and adjust and observe a decent respect for the feelings of the vic tims of war such as the one who damned “those politicians,” even in an atmosphere oi doubt, amounting almost to fippancy. It would be dishonest not to admit that confusion, distrust -and past experience justi fy at the beginning a lack of confidence that so unwieldy a meeting can give promise ol a great peace. There has been so much dis cussion already, there have been so many plans, understandings and tentative proposal that few men understand the basis on which this conference meets. And many who foi years attended Versailles, the Washington dis armament conference, the League of Nations and other European treaty meetings may be pardoned the comparisons which now come instinctively to mind out of the past. At sight it is plain that Russia and the United States dominate the situation in the sense that these two must agree and in good faith if a good peace is to be given the world. Yet it is plain, also, that the Ameri cans are doubtful of Russia concerning Po land and then the question arises whether the woman who damned the politicians would be willing to risk that peace for the sake of a victory on this point. There are many Polish groups in the United States who would in sist that Poland, the first nation to feel the might of the Nazis, at a time when the Rus sians were collaborating with Hitler, had been betrayed again and here we wonder what would be the verdict of the widows and moth ers who have lost their men if that came to be the issue on which the success or failure of the conference should be decided. And would Poland actually be worse off under Russian domination? This distrust of Russia, for all the propa ganda of the communists in the United States and the abusive publications released by left wing American collaorationist.s, does rise from an old record of revolutionary activity here directed from Moscow. It is all in the official documents of the American govern ment and beyopd question this political ac tivity, especially, in the American labor move ment in the early years of the new deal, was intended to overthrow the American gov ernment by the violent revolution of a mi nority of the people. The proof exists in the records of the Dies committee and of the Department of Justice. The Roosevelt gov ernment gave aid and comfort, oard and lodging to some of these revolutionaries in Washington and maintained for all the years of the new deal many of their sympathizers in offices in Washington. President Truman never has been their friend and he may gradually ease them out and reassure his own people that in cooperating with Soviet Russia toward the peace he nevertheless re pudiates communists here and all who be lieve as they do in the United States. Cer tainly the influence of the communists and their friends will be less than it would have been but for the change of presidents and this might cause, in turn, a new understand ing between the two countries that the price of cooperation will be a decent respect for the political -privacy and governmental integ ruy 01 our own ouuuuj. It is .true that the mechanics of operating this enormous congress resemble the clam bake or the national political convention. Aft er all, there must be stages and flood lights, press rooms, ceremonies, orations and pic turesque or grotesque characters and they must be housed and fed and we are going in for a few amenities which are on the old world or oriental side. And, in the end, the conclusions may be reached in the equivalent of the smoke-filled room, which is not to say, however, that they must necessarily be sordid. For, after all, in Congress the con clusions often are shaped in committee rooms where smoking is not forbidden and nothing could be accomplished in any such meeting as this by full and open debate in many strange tongues. Notwithstanding appearances, there . is ground for hope that this time the politicians will produce a promise of peace in which the American system need not succumb to an alien form of government. More depends on Russia, however, than on the United States. You’re Telling Me Astronomers tell us that every day more than' 15,000.000 meteorites strike the earth’s atmosphere. Who’s throwing rocks at us? Mars—or Venus? * * Some falcons, according to Factographs, live as long as 150 years. They enjoy both— high life and a long one. • * * Cost of living is terribly high in Japan. Well, the Mips should have known that Hiro hito and his gang were no bargain. * * Nothing, mourns Zadok Dutnkopf whose fa vorite cage team lost the annual tournament, looks so forlorn as a basketball in April. • * Post-war gold mines, we read, will be air conditioned. Gosh, this should make treasure hunting doubly enjoyable j| MURDER MYSTERYj Your War-With Ernie Pyle Editor’s Note: This is Ernie Pyle’s last column BY ERNIE PYLE OKINAWA —(by Navy radio) — One of these days Mrs. Leland Taylor of (101 Francis Court,) Jackson, Mich, is going to be the envy of all her friends. For she is about to come into possession of four pairs of the most beautiful Japanese pajamas you ever saw. These are daytime pajamas or drawing room pajamas—the kind that some American hostesses wear at cozy cocktail parties. Mrs. Taylor’s husband, who is a marine corporal and known as “Pop,” found these pajamas in a wicker basket hidden in a cave. They apparently are brand new and have never been worn. They are thrilling to look at and soft to the touch. Pop carries the basket around on his arm from place to place until he can get a chance to ship them home. * * * One morning I wandered down to our mortar platoon and ran onto a young fellow with whom I have a great deal in common. We are both from Albuquerque and we both have mosquito trouble. This New Mexico lad was Pfc. Dick Trauth of 508 W, Santa Fe St. Both his eyes were swollen al most shut froVn mosquito bites. At least one of mine is swollen shut every morning. We both look very funny. Dick still is just a boy. He’s seen nineteen months in the marines and a year overseas. He's a vet eran of combat and still he's only 17 years old. He has one brother in the marines and another in the army in Germany. Dick writes letters to movie stars and not long ago he got back a picture of Shirley Temple, auto graphed to his company just as he had asked her to do. Dick is very shy and quiet and I had a feeling he must be terribly lonesome. But the other boys say he isn’t and that he gets along fine. * * * One of the marines who drives me around in a jeep whenever I have to go anywhere is Pfc. Buzz Viters of (2403 Hoffman St.) the Bronx, New York. Buzz has other accomplishments besides jeep driving. He is known as the Bing Crosby of the Marines. If you shut your eyes and don’t listen very hard you can hardly tell the difference. I first met Buzz on the transport coming up to Okinawa. He and a friend would give an impromptu and homegrown concert on deck every afternoon. They would sit on a hatch in the warm tropical sun and pretty soon there would be scores of marines and sailors packed around them, listening in appreciative silence. It made the trip to war almost like a Caribbean luxury cruise. Buzz’s partner was Pfc. Johnny Marturello of 225 Livingston St., Des Moines, la. Johnny plays the accordian. He is an Italian, of course, and has all an Italian’s flair for the accordian. He sings too, but he says as a singer his name is “Frank Not-so-hotra.” Johnny plays one piece he com posed himself. It is a lovely thing. He sent it to the GI Publishing Co., or branch or whatever it is in the States and I feel positive if it could be1’ widely played it would become a hit. The piece is a sentimental song called “Why Do I Have To Be Here Alone?” Johnny wrote it for his girl back home, but he grins and admits they are “on the outs.” Johnny came ashore on Love Day and his accordian followed two days after. Now in his off moments he sits at the side of the road and plays for bunches of Okinawans that the marines have rounded up. They seem to like it. Johnny had a lot of trouble with his accordian down south in the tropical climates. Parts would warp and stick and mould and he con tinuously had to take the thing apart and dry and clean it. But it was worth the trouble. It had kept Johnny from getting too homesick. He brought it along with him from America just for his own morale. He knew the accordian would probably be ruined by the climate, but he didn’t care. ‘‘I can always get a new ac cordian,” Johnny, said, ‘‘but I can’t get a new ME.” -(30) WASHINGTON CALLING by' MARQUIS CHILDS WA3H1WUTUJN— While the dele gates at San Francisco are sol emnly debating the form which the worlo security organization is to take, Congress will be considering the . economic and financial props tha? are essential if any interna tional organization is to be more than a hopeful gesture The Reciprocal Trade Agree ments bill and the Bretton Woods Agreement are just as important as what comes out of San Fran cisco. That may be why the ad ministration has apparently decid ed to allow these measures to get no further than the committee stage until'after San Francisco. That seems to me a dubious de cision. It might be better to put the full responsibility squarely up to Congress and let the debate go on while the delegates of the- 45 nations are our official guests. Bretton Woods, in particular, is a test of our intentions. Are we going to talk a noble peace while, on the economic side, we insist on keeping the old weapons that finally lead to war? The Bretton Woods plan—agreed to by representatives of 44 nations —sets up two international organ izations. One is a bank for re construction and development. Everyone, including the American Bankers association, is for that part of the plan. The second part of the agree ment has stirred a controversy. This is the international monetary fund. It is a pool of money formdfl by the contributions of all mem ber nations. We put up so many dollars, Britain puts up so many pounds, the French so many francs, and so on. Then, if a country feels that its currency is depreciating—slip ping downward in relation to world prices—that country can come to the monetary fund and get a sta bilization loan. If England had large payments to make in France, she would get francs from the fund and agree to repay the credit later in pounds sterling. This would help to do away with currency speculation—the kind of gambling in money which has made big profits for a few peo- : pie at the expense, often, of cur rency stability. It would help to ' eliminate the kind of funny busi- ' ness with blocked currencies [ which the Nazis, under the guid- ■ ance of crafty Hjalmar Schacht, carried to fantastic lengths. j The T bankers object because, . they say, the privilege of getting \ credits is ‘‘non - discriminatory.” j rhat is a banker’s word meaning j they would like to see tighter re- , strictions put on the privilege of borrowing from the fund. 1 The treasury experts, who have j nursed the agreement along from < the beginning, ^eply that the 30- i page Bretton Woods agreement < contains very careful provisions limiting the right to obtain cred its. Certain requirements are laid down, and if the borrowing coun try does not comply, then the di rector of the fund can refuse the loan. The adoption of the Bretton Woods plan- is not going to bring the millennium, with Wall Street paved with gold and choirs of angels singing in the Stick Ex change building. As the" bankers have pointed out, its usefulness is limited. But it does seem to be a be ginning. The United States worked with Britain and France to hold the chief currencies of the world on an even level. Our treasurer entered into bilateral stabilization agreements with Latin-American countries, and out of that opera tion came a profit of. $100,000,000. Bretton Woods carries stabiliza tion the next logical step, in a formal international compact. President Truman, at his first press conference, gave his , com plete approval to the plan in lan guage that no one could misun derstand. Hearings before the House Banking and Currency com mittee are still going on. Repre sentatives of many large organi zations have come out for Bretton Woods as an economic prop un der the political plan that will evolve at San Francisco. The delegates out on the West coast are going to have one ear cotked at Congress. They will want to know whether we intend to stand behind our noble profei* sions of good will. (Copyright 1945 by L’nited f>atur» Syndicate, Inc.) __ The Literary Guidepost By W. G. ROGERS “The Ghostly Lo v e r,” by Ellabeth Hardwick (Harcourt, Brace; $2.50). Love is the subject of this first tovel. Miss Hardwick may pretend ;o write about Marian Coleman and 3ruce, or the senior Colemans, or ;he inscrutable Hattie, or Gertrude, )r Florence and Jesse, but her real subject is love, love like an im nense longing, an enormous and nsatiable appetite, sometimes very iroper and sometimes reprehensi )le, often mysterious, always pres snt from the girl of 16 to the dying jrandmother, from the right side >f the railroad tracks, the white side, to the wrong side, where the Negroes live. But if this is about love, there s no actual love in all the 300 •ages. Love doesn’t quite materi ilize, it stumbles, it hides, it ivades, and finally it is renounced iravely, almost in the grand man ler. Marian’s mother has run all over he country with Marian's father n the effort to keep him to her elf. Marian’s brother Albert gets narried, much as a man gets a old, and 4bere’s some love in it. » Gertrude fields irrevocably, pays for Marian’s education, a” that’s all he pays for and all # gets. . ,i Marian herself is the cen._« problem. We stay with her » some five years, out of high scM and through college, or oat of ■ yard where she first met her ’ vorced neighbor Bruce anc - New York where she finds be. The problem of the girl hecc ing conscious of desire an1rIJLffl many writers, but few nft are adequate to handle it. j. are interested definitely. but j norant; you.women are inform but inclined to be reicent. Miss Hardwick has the Info tion and she is not reticent. lad - she is honest and frank. \n more, ’she writes subtly. She t _. how to pique a reader’s mte. And she doesn’t let him do''" , “Sick Bay,” by Alex (,aro (Scribner’s; $1). j, This is the gayer side, if 'he . one, of being a sick sailor, u n, does a good two baker's d°ze' ,, cartoons, and dedicates thtm doctors, nurses, corpsmen a■' tients at the Norfolk Naval u . Ing Station. Interpreting The War By KIRKE L. SIMpsox I Associated Press War Analyst The long awaited junction 0f A1. lied-Russian forces in Germany ' fast changing its potential sccpJ and meaning even though firs' Pa. trols contacts in some Elbe rn sector are still to be announce/ With the great Elbe estuar' port of Bremen in British ha^7 and the similar Oder estuary =c * of Stettin taken by White Russ!/ armies, a general merging 0f sian lines on a front 200 miles / more wide from northwest of b/" lin to east of Leipzig appears j/' pending. The jaws of the gr’e-.' vise are already closing down t! squeeze last Nazi resistance out ; the north, clear to the b!-/! coast. Far to the south the Thud Army is clamping its grip 0n the Danubian river port of Passa within sight of turning the last northern water barrier guard;/ the Nazi Alpine redoubt/ The unknown factor in the south was the distance Russian col umns, pushing up the Danube from Vienna or crashing throu-ti th.e Australian Alps in a direct ]/ with Berchtesgaden, had to' / Moscow has been silent as to their progress for many hours. An Al. lied-Russian junction on the Par!! ube may be much closer than c ,r. rent progress reports would indi! cate. General Patton’s tanks pushing down the left flank of the Danube valley on the German-Austrian. Czechoslovakian frontier corner near Passau will be in a position to turn potential Nazu northern [ defense lines south of the Danube when they reach that city if it s * not already in American hands. I A major Danube tributary, the | Inn, flows into the greater river I from the southwest at Passau. A [ Danube crossing east of Passau t would expose Salzbkrg and Berth- I tesgaden to immediate blitzkreig j attack. Patlon’s tanks were last re- ; ported racing down converging highways that meet at Passau from Tittling and Rhornbach. Every report from the European fronts bore out Secretary Stim. } son’s unusually emphatic itate- ' ment in Washington that German military power had been every, where broken “with flat finality.’’ The American War Secretary, ; echoed by Prime Minister Church ill in London, gave his words add- 1 ed meaning by the assertion that J the situation in Germany “should ) be a direct warning to Japan of i what is coming to our enemy in the Pacific.” There is no question that a be ginning on assembling that vast striking power beyond the Pacific has already been made. Much of the equipment used last June to jump the channel from Britain to Normandy and the specially train ed personnel to man it probably ; has already started for the Pa cific. Troops, seasoned veterans of 1 European battlefronts, will folic - as they can be released by a gen eral merging of Allied and Rus- j sian fronts for the final mopping- ! up in Germany, the “battle of the f pockets” as Mrs. Stimson styled it, for there are only pockets of Nazi resistance, big or little, that i remain. Daily Prayer OF THANKS FOR HEROES As we bow in prayer lo Thee for victory, Eternal Father, our hearts upleap in thankfulness for the heroism and idealism of our I boys in the service. We thank Thee ! for what they mean to us. and to' jj what they mean to our Allies. Still [. keep them brave and true, saving ! them from loneliness and from mis givings concerning us at home. En able us all to live up to the high level of the holy Cause that engages our powers; and to find our best finding thee. For this is the daisy and agonizing cry of our near's: that we may know Thee, and ■ sus Christ whom Thou hast sc Open the eyes of our spiritual un derstanding, that we may bsW Thee as our Father and our Got-. Deliver us from doubts and mod ference and enable us to see some what of Thy purposes in this chas tening war. Amen.—W. T. E_^
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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April 27, 1945, edition 1
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