Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 19, 1941, edition 1 / Page 1
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ïtettîterson Hathj ÏKspairf? ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN Ί HIS SE' ΊΊ< >X OF ΝΟΗΤΗ CAROLIN A AND VIRGINIA 1 \\ ΕΝ Γ\-EIGHTH YEAR the a"so"'ΛκF>Rp ι'κ asotr HENDERSON, N. C., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 1!>. l'.U] ρυιιι.ίΛΗκγ^κνι·.;<^αι··τκκ.ν....ν FIVE Π,NTS roi'V Allies Declare Lines Holding Germans Report Swastika Planted On Mount Olympus; Armistice Move Predicted Berlin Dispatches Also Report Capture of Larisa, 150 Miles From Athens; Nazi Air Force Pounds Troop Columns. Γ ΛρπΙ It). (ΛΡ)— Nazi ■ planted tin· .swastika on ι ' ι y ι ! pus, I a bled hume of t lit' ancient Greece, and have l.i isa, .hi important ι ail nut • ι t,"ii I··:ty miles s uth uf it. ι .· .m high cummand said tu (I,t., well on Kie r<·; d down ίλ peninsula te Athens. . iii miles away. ut German political circles •eii a belief that a Greek-Ger tice might unie as a birth j. : ι .ut for Acinli Hitler, who ;m i_' tomorrow. l.i ·: ι ii in Home that Franz vim I1 . » ! . German ambassador to Tur in route to Berlin as a i, ■■ . :.teiuiedi:iry to seek an arm : umd no confirmation in the ι■ m capital, however. I. 1 ι : ad been abandoned by .ban population). thrusts wh'ch passed "both ι Mount Olympus," the high ml communique said, "the A iards ol the British main f e wen· repulsed and the south ( t.- ot the mountain were t .ken Siting and .-Tiarp pursuit." air farce, the w: bulletin >.i ■ n. pounded "enemy columns region ol Larisa and on the I li Min Ionnina to Arta," in the : 11 sector of the fighting front. S·· era ι transport vessels, totaling l ι tnn.~, were said to have been <:· · yed l'y air bombs in the port ■ ■ Κ .Ikis, on the southeast coast of ( ι eCCC. I ii t < ί : nêd Germans earlier had said I'ritish were pushed out of •u'.v fortified mountain positions 'ir,born fighting and that the • ■ ■ Ί were keeping on the I the I »ri 1 i-h despite desperate I'· '· efforts to stem their advance ' ι ting bridges and m untain I 'ill-'. Excise Tax Foreseen Revival of Long List of World War Taxes Ex pected in Congression al Circles. W., Minion, April 19— (ΛΡ)— I·' ri .il ,ι long list at' world war «·..(· taxe-, .>uch an those mi rail· (I ticket.·· and life insurance poli ' ■ . wa described In congressional : icle today a.s a logical step toward tii' proposed goal of $3,500,000,000 idrlittonal revenues. S"| ,ι.· ninnibcrs of the House ways ini means committee went so far ■ t -try renewal of such levies was ■gone conclusion.'' Those leg 1 ι j explaincid that the addi h"iial exciiv taxes would be neces > to make up whatever amounts ' ' ■ pi objective increases in income 'id corporation taxes failed to pro duce. Well-informed members said that ·» addition to pr ducing new revenue "ceded to fina'ice the defense pro ui.i· the administration looked to higher taxes for a psychological re :-t impression on the general pub ■ r "I the gravity of the current sit uation. Among the biggest money-raisers ■!1 tla excise tax group 120 years ago v. the levy η the transportation of '• eight by rail or water, which, in ' c tiscal year ending June 30, 1921. produced $140,019.200. This pre ceding year, the tax on passenger travel by rail or water produced S98.7;ie.(>35. Both levies were dis ei'iitinued in 1922. Other excise taxes imposed dur ing nr immediately after the World ·"' included levies on lighting fix 1 "e-, medical preparations, soft Roods, cameras and lenses, chewing Rnodv. cameras and enses. chewing Sum. lire arms, and electric fan.v In the year ending June 30. 1920. he tax on candy brought in $23.142, «Ù '.Ju' yield drepned to less ';·"n half that sum in 1924. the last J Mr it ..'da collected. Shuford Lauds Wage Stand Of Textiles I iS> Staff Correspondent. Held-ville. April 1 i). Commission ΐ'Γ "I I. . 11111 Forrest II. Sluitord this ι : l' mm I. > ■ κ I' < I tile altitude < > 1 North Carolina's textile industry toward tiie leder.il wage ;ind hour law and 1 ι·;oii'isod operators "lull coopera tion" in strict, but fair, enforcement I .Ι the l.itutc. He pok< before Northern Nortii Carolina-Virginia division of the Southern Textile Association. The commissioner pointed out sharp contrast between recent action ol a wage-hour committee of the in dustry in recommending a 37 1-2 cent hourly minimum and the long squabble something more than a \car ago over a proposal lor a 3- 1-2 iint minimum. On the recent com mittee. lie cited, there were threo North Carolinians and ol the 21 inember group no less than ten were si )uthernei "In m.v opinion this indicates most clearly that southern representatives ! ol tin indu-try have accepted fully in principle the wane and hour law and ha\c found that the minimum wage and ο ertime provision.·, ol the act have aided rather than hindered the indu try," I*' said. lie tolil the convention that com plcte administration ot the wage and hour law in North Carolina ha- been I placed in the hand, ol the Stale lie partment of I.abor the first such agreement in the country. "I urge and believe that I will re ceive1 your lull ι peration in this administration." he aid. "I say to you that we will oiler you every co operation. It will be my duty to bring willful violators into line with em ployment policies which are in con lurmity \\ ith the act. "Only a short time ago it was found necessary to bring criminal action against a textile firm, and a fine ol more than $5,0(10 was impos ed. ('η 1 he other hand, most firms have come into voluntary com pi: mo·. making restitution payments 1111 -pa 1 violations. Such a method 01 ι tiling should be preferred by all." Cotton Closes 2 To 6 Lower New York. April II).—(AP)—Cot ton futures opened 2 to 3 lower. Futures closed 2 to (i lower, mid dling spot 11.43. nominal, off 2. May 11.22 11 23 July 11.18 11.18 October 11.14 11.12 December 11.15 11.11-13 January 11.10 11.09 Mai ell . ■ 11.1J 11.12 British Women Register London. April lit.— I.M')—A quarter million women of :!0 and 'ÎI arc cxpc.ted to resistor today in Kngland's first conscription of feminine labor for war indus tries. When Labor Minister Krnost Bcvin announced the plan to draft women workers March Hi. he declared the registration call was to be hncded equally in the drawing room and the laundry room. The only exemptions will be for women already serving with the nursing service, lull-time air raid precautions and civil de fense volunteers, and students at universities, technical and pro fessional schools. Two or Hire weeks will he re quired lor classification of to day's registrants before the min istry of labor begins interviewing those who will best fit into the nation's humming industrial machine. Russe-Jap Pact Vague Interpretations Are as Many as There Are In terpreters, S t e w a r 1 Says. By CHAKLi:s IV STFWART font cal Press Columnist Washington, April 1'J — liitecpce tations nt the new Russian-.Iapanesi neutrality pact ace a- numerous a. interpreters ace, and the interpret ers' numbec run. II tu awnu Il M II,\\ » II 11i· 11 ast π ni' >m ica 1 Vjo Iwu f 'en igree. One vu\siun i liât the cliekei ioosn't mean ιηικΊ if anything. ΊΊκ laps and tnc Ku.s iians .simply agree Mutually that, il :ither uï 'cm it, at .ackcd, tin· utile: vill remain m u ral; it dueaii' r, 1 ι ι · VIM,-. doos thiit signity'.' According to tin-, account, Yosuke Matsuoka's rating in Tokyo ι.· pret.'y luw■. lie's been l· r eign minister t..fit· for quite awhile and ha-n't I'raiptd up a single inter national deal that's been worth a cent in Hie Japs. Now he ha been \ isiting Berlin and liome. Nippon'» nominal axis partner-., and t.aled to squeeze any thing useful out ot either Herr Hit ler or Signer Mossoluu. So, home w ard bonnd \ ι.1 M mow, he abso lutely had to lake back with him some 1 > 11 ol .1 document that he can claim as a real (but actually phoney) accomplishment, worth the price ol his trip. Accordingly, Commissar V'yacheslav Molotov, at Moscow, per 1 haps with .. certain sympathy with Yosiike, as a lellow foreign minister, j made an empty bargain with him. t exhibit as a genuine prize. But shucks! It's mere neutrality. That's the interpretation. Another one is that TiTnister Mat suoka scored a distinct point by <>b taming Russia's pledge not to jump on the Japs from behind, as the lat ter undertake Singapore. Malayan and Dutch East Indian grabs. Also maybe the Japs think Comrade Sta lin will stop shipping anti-Jap sup plies into China overland. Can Still Supply China ) However, Russia didn't agree to stop supplying the Chinese. All [ Mi scow said was that the So\ iets 1 would stay neutral if the Japs were I attacked. True, the Japs do argue that they were attacked by China, ! but it will take a lot more interpre ( tation to prove that. China notori I ouslv attacked the Japs' in the same way that the Finns attacked Russia. Only, the Russians aren't likely to interpret the Chinese attack on the Japs as they interpreted the Finns I attack on them. No interpreter surmises that Rus (ConUnufcd ou Paet T.-aJ Vosuke ^latsuoka Yugoslav Soldiers Their Fight Over Y un·*!..ν sulci ;y the thousands are - ■»·· -n in th Οπ·ι· ·» prison camp. ..:··· i iym; accMidinn to the ι on from Berlin. Yugo.Ur .1 ,-urr · ndercd to Germany 'inc · 11, ΊI \ of at lack which shati red an army of more than ·· ri.illi ·. ncn. according t>> the (iii: ,.:n H.jji Highway Death Toll To Record Heights Greek Premier j Dies Suddenly Athens, April 19 (AP) Alex ; ndros Korizis, premier of Greece in : thi' darkest hour < >1 her modern h in ■ li ry. dι «I suddenly late yesterday aftei -nly (i<) days as leader of till· ι ghluiK nation. He was f>5 years old The si'ivernment made only the ι bare announcement of his "sudden death" and said his funeral would be held Saturday at 1 p. m. Cause ol death was not disclosed. It \\a- '.nlv last January 2!) that Km ι/ -ο ι i-eded his intimate friend, 7H-yc.il "Id I'ren.iei John Metaxa-. wlio dint 1 ι throat infection after < .ι till'! ·■ ·. ι·· : lines.- Meta\as had personally designated Korizis as his· lavt 1 ι ·· ι y on the \\ ai then behiK ■-'.·' 11 ., l;;i ι list Italy al·inc. \Y 11 ■ ι ι iii i eed Κι irizis w n«« i,i ι ii w <· ι ι i 1'ii' . ι ! m irt time after 11 : ■ (ii ' ν ι ι · iiineed, a ρr> i <!,-:· . 11 ii ι .. i ■ the radio by C hi ι- lu (' ■' 11 he had as sumed till' ι ι ; ι llpl'l" : Ό II11 i I j I.JI y CIIII'I ·, .' · . del i ρ 'in the ! war mint.·Irv. Some Stocks At New Lows Χ ι V ι k. . Λ ι > ■ 1 I :i (.MM- IVr t► ■ 111 w ar It.·!- : η spiked tin· guns . t buying forces m today's mar ls c t and .ι number ol lea lei « r< 11 · 11 id into new lira tern!· ry .-nice the . I! "I I'Vance last June. I'res tire ni otic rings v. a- lacking . ' . 111 > time. ho\ve\ er, and tli - ap ι : : 1 > u as hewrtening In tlin.se with h inclinations who argued that ■ decline had put the mar oasically healthy technical ·. ..· I 1 η the appearance ot reas . ; ι ,·.;>· g 'id news. C!·- ι':· quotations: lii>nι which il could ea ily . Λ " " 1 Ί 1V I · > V ' Coast Lilu At' r' ι Refining . . I .i nd ι \ Λ ν ia lion I',,;1·'· Steel Chi > ■'< r C ' ί ! I ; 1- & Klec Co Commercial Solvents . .. C' Ί1 1 'I i'rcl Cil Co Curt - Wi gilt DuPont Kleet . 1 ' ι Light tienei a 1' .'· trie Genera 1 Mra ι· s . . l.iggett & Myers Π Montgomery Ward & Co R( ynolds Τοο,κνο Β Southern Rail v. ,.v . . . Standard Oil C Ν ] U S Steel v mei tcan Radiator '■ . ·. ■ Telephone .; Tobacco 1» \· Ί Η i. I (i 1 8 lâfi 1-4 ii:·; 1-3 it 1 ' Γι 1-4 : ίο -!f Λ 12 3 S 50 1-4 March Reports of Traffic Fatalities In State Send Quarterly Total to 275, Compar ed With 188 in 1940 Period. Daily Dispatch Bureau. In the Sir Walter Hotel. K> IIKNRY ΛVI ItII I. I \. ι ! ♦ · ι u 11. April 1!) An ικτ'ίιί . » tod ι ; 11 ♦ u| killing in March sent N«»r1h C;t: ulm.. - highway death lull 1« » ι τ.. « · 111 ·1 (j ... : te)· of 1941 to record he.'uht w it'll l'T.'i dead lor the period ι c. ι paired /.ith 188 in tin1 corre-p·m id in#.'. (lUrli'tct 1 ! 1ί)4Π. The V!» per cent jump l'or March gave g: >!y point to a grim jot hy C . · r I Ι'., i·· .. i?. >tat ist ic> ehiet . .t the - 11 · ' \ .1 ; : ' » η, who remarked a ί loui.cd m-r ihe machines which tah riate m ;μ·<·!,jrnl ligures: •\Ve r· οι ' uni Cm ί<>ur hundi ed ; ni.it· and î h. « t ',;til! jn 1 .ι I i t î 1 « · b ι ! i, ! ι · \ 11 ; ι m ' i h -y'ro k 11 ling 'em." Th» ?% ï ;. i ι l'invité' also sent the pen. en 1.1 · m me - ased fa t ; 11 it k?s · ■> Î;,r t!,. y r : · ι i| : y i Γι., per cent : and li tt ..lei\ · .! ''dering win . ι il w i II ;.ll 'lui. They took some scaiît • I ' -ri : ■-»!·■ !>m tut ι hat reports • t.,. ι î ι ι::π ι ί ί i» j ·<· !'■ that "A pli! λόιΓϊ h» > h, i t Γ iim when asked l'or figure. and · ' i'e-· the lie .t Mes dared ineii · · .! 'icreasp « !' II.'· ι"..· 11·;,ιi . ,1 > ■ , ■ 1 " nvvr till il» kil led in At ■: 11 : ·. î ΓίΐΙ Ί ι : ill.·!·:! , ■('('(' til Si 1 • if liriMiu ι·> tl.f ··· >· .ιi>l<2 îiii·* •I 1 ■ ■ u11 '■ ■ '■ <·!·« id th· I * 111 ..II1 I M >'.\ . I IL. . . ■ ISO 0\ Of . 1 VI ·. ι r On 11-, · . . y 11 il' 1 ; 11 ) , ii"i !■· .11. ι three ■ ·:■: I 11 ; < ml m > 1 ( urban ■I I M-d t· itMlt (|| 10. "··> ··" I !>'■!·!.. ' ' aotua I > Ο ■ . : . d i\ .: e til :;<i It'll . ' ill' I I . ι ' II'' ! t -| II l| I — ■|l)lc I ' ! I I :■ I ■ ' I i III :i it;ed.'· ·!ι 'In ■ ι . · Mit' CIly II till' .>11 III" ; ι M11 l ■ 11 ι Will ■ • ton-S;, U : .■ .· ti ! ill' t ir.st .lireo nil .'It!:·- w, ' .! ίο tnil fie "loath. l!hi'iu.:ι . ·μ ι ί ropiut •d I'm the < · m - it -, · !'· ι ho 25. KH) in 50.000 class, both High Point ■ nd Hi n i; \ Μ ι ,mt ' ' · d clean ■ kite.- Kli'i fil < ' ι ll:i 111 ("tie*; from III,(Hill til ".>.11(111 || d m do ith. Cul I ;■ ' 1 ι i' \ Oil icle.s ■ nd the <>\i·! ti' 'lint. ··. <· ι ·,*. in the d,id wo: ο tin .''ily types . ccident .vhioh h:i\o ii"i οι.ι mod more vie nus 111 i- > o.i" 'h,οι I.. -1 : ;mc| t ho ca r •ill' crush oq.i.llod I;.-! year's r.l! ,\ ith. 54. while the 1 ti !, ; >htie result - ηκ ι roni π*, οι turning of c . r ; :i tin· idw .,> war only one undci 1U4«' ii-l throe iininth's total l-j!#fii-'t inc're.isi was d ι t : lins .ill the roadway, with. .>t> vi. mi - 111 - yo»ir tn 22 last Other c;:ll.-os >1 accidents, with unmoor killed tin ι Oil ι' cunpared will·. Inst were: Pedr.-triiins 85 inj (>5 tram-c. col lisions 24 and 15; bicyclists II and 4 .olhsion with fixed ob.teots 22 and ft: ilher non-collision 7 and Ô. The city death lists with 1940 lig ures m parentheses. 50,000 ίο 100.000: Ashev.lle 2 L'harlotte l (> >. Durhai. 2 1 ι, Greensboro 5 (41. Wmslun-S,don none. 25.000 tn 50.000 Fayottov: 11. 2 ι 2 . (Continued on pa^L two) No New 1943 Car Models Expected ι I )r!i ι .1 ;. , lit ι ΛI ' J - l .11-1 al ! Motor - en! : is ( making n · ,· · > 1 nctv · ·ι· I ι ta* I songer nu in I9i;$ hi expected in j a 11 toi I >1 ] . ι . ι ι flei C t' . 'Γ 1, illow ■ j cd siioi lly . \ 1.1.ii <i· t i"y tin· h i . ι ini' ί Ilio'.oi cal ni di ist rv III ailll- i : 1 :11 : · ΐ'ο :. pany . (If cision ni Λ ι .. Vc \llred 1'. Sloan. ',1: . tii nr.,! M.it .board chairman, said tin action ii d Ijeen deternun i'd .ip ii .·, ι Ilia' pus ibli· accéléra 111 >n might m g.ven to the national uelen.-c piogram. All ot.-.ei r mpaiiies mauutaetiu :ng niotur \ι ι ries have pledged tin ir Iuin-t el: t to tin- deiens..· material.- p: odi. .nil pmgiam and a decision to tore:. . 11)43 model change > has been leg rded among authonta t i \ - c l>>erver- the industry as an "obvious I'Sent ility." While th< I· id Motor Company and Chrysler Corporation, which with General Motors produce about 85 percent o! all the nation's auto mobiles. have made no de! mite state ment yet ot thiir 11)43 plans, their reaction t the Sloan announcement left little do.ιijt ol their plans lor 1943. "The entire industry,1' said a Ford spokesman, "has been ol the opin ion that there would be no new mod els lor I94:< As tar as the Kord Motor Company is concerned, the defense progran comes tirst find we have s stated." Chrysler's attitude was expressed by Κ Τ Keller, its president. "We have been so busy with de fense work that we have not had »· chance to think about 1943 models," he said. We h. ve not got out our ■ l'JU aioikli yet.' Axis Troops Suffer High Casualties l· i g h t i η g intensified Along Entire Hellenic Front, Reports Indi cate: Nazi Attacks Re ported 1 hrown Back, But Renewed. Λ Ρ Γ*. ' h I ('·'■■' l·" : «ri- · of the tiiilifou '· 11 · .· ■ : 11 · ! ■ h« · dec i . r· -d 1 ■ flay t ! i'-i r i ' unhi ■ »Ι·.«" . .. * ι ' I their t < .· of : ι \ ι · ;,)·> .·· boi-tercd ί.ι y ι..'!/' d. ι · ion '. » m it; . · ·;, 11 ir wo Vuf*' j - It·.· m. Κ ne. ( i ' ό i ■ i »1 j ! ". · lu h a pf* new govern met i* possibly a nnh larv e.jbinet in at · <·: night enae"·4 \.-r< . .'ated l.v the- .i« ,·> ,,| Ι»,, ,, ·. Λ le χ; m cl i us K« h , ' urd 1 run : Un· l'UiM.h indicated î.'n» h.td inlen i 1 H'Ci i< >n.e the eut · ci··: ' ι i -< · iinr The Πι ili -1 .■ ;·γι \ he.aàjuai le:. in Λ then.- dc -ei art ·.· i :··,.«· ι '· ·α η \ν · a 11 an by .ι. η:< -red ! un at: ι.ti :d infant r\ ha\ ' "ο··ι·η | ■ ι : ed" and -nid 11·· π 11 » t · 1 : < : ;«i.i}erl 1 penetrate the line iit 'ι in^le puinl " I mpe .al !'i >t · ■· · ι «· i η çnril-.< t aluns tJie whole front." the Bntir-n headquarter- aid. " Hea\y allai i"." by armored formation* and infantry h.ive bf «·η repu! <'d and many pia ·*. • ι .· taken. Enemy ca.-.ualtie> are i ('\ iΊ'θ. "H.i-nic Greek cooperation fui <>ur lcl't pl.>,v tu · v.i uable p.n-1 "I)■ ^pit<· ill! efl'i: !-. our front : ·> mnv!:i'l'( been |<· il<> 1 ;U'd and our I ! ; 1111 ; - η here t .1 nod.'' An Australia© detachment; fur rounded by a German battalion neat Servi.ι. northwest of Olympus, was reported to 11 ;■ <- fought it way haci. lo llri· -h lin·" l-.l'in.L' I fill pn mei The Coin ill were aid to have lo..t 300 dead. Mean'.. Ilil'1 !', ■■ e ίίΐ'ΠΓΐ,ι! Du 'il! Simovic of Yugi>sla\ fa, a- head of in ι\> i\ einn m nt in t · ·. ι it· 1 -lea.· ed 1 hi o ii 1411 the Yugoslav legation in Athens a statement attributing tile swift de It at ni Yugoslav armie? to Germany'.; peed in -1 I lk.I1K 1 lit' ' ( Y· >at 1 a and e > lack of "prior collaborât am with the ..II.e " 1 iy his country II·· expressed determination to "go •ti li-'Jit'nu at lilt' Mil·- III out allie !'"' ' ii.it \ icti " y AM r.-p' t IY ti : the ΙΠ .lit up until ι t, ,11 .ι! ί ν il'd ea ted the a 11 ied fini · v. ei t ui i'l 1.limed 111 Hie last t v. el '.a '.tin·-, despite relentless nazi pres-t : ure. Ά'ι t 1 ■ < I · ·-. ' 11 1 ,iy the 1111 m - • ι ■ t . I ' I . : ·,· 1 , el 11., j, the te-·, t "11 11"' I- I ■ ■ ' a ·.11011 1 Oil \va 1 · mother pu. la··, ρ,I V I'd ,:f 'a 11 lilt.TV office, TI ' h ■ . ■ . . end,m.· U'i , γ) 11.11 lei 1 I .· t .· ι..,· anything they 1 1. ' I ■ 1 t1.. I . 1' ·) f 'all a r te date." BRITISH FORCES LAND IN IRAQ ι. -ι · u . ι η I : lit 1 U μ ! : th..! -(Μ'Πι· m! \ ι . ' ' , iifl !l·.· t lu ..d «.-t · Γ.· ■ I ; > ι η. ι f. ni.-1 lu ' '! Ι' "F f1 M «V · li.) V.M · Ou til 1 " Λ 1. > ■ " ι · '1 I ' H ' I ι 'lit M.·: j l' I Λ,. ί ί ,» .( t the ή ' ( ; ' 111 Ιί) : Λ Ρ ι.| I 1 Μ Id. V which Nazi Attacks Repulsed Athens 11:25 p. m ' -■> s·.·». KST) — ( Λ11 ) H i. η '·' ι : pr1 il ! · 11 ces m ( ; ι I'l l'. .1. !..;:r·.· 1 ! :. ν ! ■ .: ! 1 ι :. ■ ·.· her·· had been peneti-iiied, ann nmced t<· c !. ι \ 1! . 11 the> ! ι. ι ri < puhed hea\y r,: " l:y · cd uni >1 ion i:ne! ·., ■ ιί .ni.iii'; y w .il: "sevei r ' Il >>-C "1 )r- ] i!l r ' I (·:> -t · HI Γ 1*1*» '111 11'· \\ ΐ'.ι' I 1:. I Ί·ι 1. | ι ne! ι T f ■' i, " said ι t ;. .un 11 if 11 addi-d 'il. " : .iny ;.· · ,nnei> had i.ct'ii t;.'<··:i Π)· j·· 1 ; "· >|is w ci ρ r«>|na tort : 11 ar1. "il a Ifim t h« ■ entire front a waves ni German infantry tried vain ly ΐ ι ι" ι c a way up the mountain guarding the passes in tlio f.ice ot' murderous tire. Observers ^.iid the slopes were Mi-ewii with dead and wounded nazi blitzmen. The mountainous country and ste .t resistance lias put nazi me chanized warfare in reverse, obser vers said. Instead "I the Cterman panzer inlua r breaking through to clear the m. d> for the infantry. Hitler's legions must fight their way on foot, . ilL.ld 1 tilt- .util..: , it Vv tlù ^iUÛ. FDR, 3rd at the Circus Franklin Delano Roosevelt, third, enjoys the circus in New York with his mother, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., the former Ethel du Pont. The President's grandson is just another wide-eyed young ster, thoun'h, as lie watches the circus wonders. American Mother »■··:··· , :Γ;,Λ Mrs. Dcna Shelby Diehl election ot .Mrs. ι 'ina Mu-lby UionI, of Danville, Κν., as American Mother of Γ.Ί1 was announced tiy the (inldon liule Association. She is a widow and the mother of four children, ni! hv marriage a great pi'eat jtranddaoirhier of Unae .Shel by, Revolutionary War hero and first governor of Kentucky. WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Partly cloudy and continued warm tonight. Sund.n increas ing cloudiness, possib'v showers e.\Ueine iioitiou.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 19, 1941, edition 1
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