Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Oct. 20, 1941, edition 1 / Page 1
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ïîintîii'rHnn Battu Stsjiitfrh ONLY DAILY NL Λ SPAPER PUBLISHED IMTHtg SFPTrnv nF fl r,Rnf ,fT, vippt-'W · TWENTY-EIGHTH YEAR »». service ™^vnrr..nTT ττ η, , — 1 LAK0LLNA AND VIRGINIA !»■ A9SOCUT»d HENDERSON, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, θ( ΤθΙ;Μ· ·>η i«,n ~ — - ' 1 J 1 1 I'L'HlJSIIKti EVEH Τ AKTttKNUON ΙΓ-ΤΛ7Ε1 ΡΓΧΤΦΠ except si-NDAT. rIVE CENTS COPY Nazis Pa γ High Price For Gains News Of Kearny Casualties Of 21 Men Jolts Washington To jo Calls For *Iron Unity9 Mediation Effort Fails President Roosevelt May Γake Over Strike Bound Kearny, N. J., Plane Plant. (Ii\ Mir Associated Press) 1 nless President Koosevelt ean find snme »ay tu reconcile dif ferences between a ( It) union .mil \ir Associates, lue·, a vital supplier of parts for airplane m.ι mil κ turers. it appeared prob able i< il.i.N that for the third time the government would have tu t.ik over a defense plant. il.l disc mediation board, ui been trying .since July t:ι ι the dispute between the t": .·· ι A1 ;tmnobile Workers and the .■ut ni the Bendix, N. J., c . ι .needed failure yesterday ■ (I the problem over to the Pi·. - dent. ; pled speculation wheth ei dd find it necessary to pur· .t .r .i' course as m two other si .. demise strikes. In one, a: ii.i . :.ι American Aviation plant ai I: .:»··.·, nd, Cal., he directed the Λ : : ; \ take over. Later the factory v.,. . ι turned to the company. In ;::i 1 ■ »■ ι. the Navy assumed and . ι'.. ms control of the Federal S1 ipii.i.ldmg and Drvdock company Κ. ην. N. J. i.n point presently at i.s.-ue Air Associates and th? . CIO charge that its niem br: > ιe "lucked out" after a wage ( : .· .. rsy. •ard recommended almost - ago that the company re (·'· y all strikers immediately i .scrim illation. Yesterday. •λ . !i eials advised the b ard :M ''immediately commence π 1 :'· : ι .ut" of strikers and asked ..•ι which to complete doing I: y the board sent a telegram reinstatement was "an ·:·. winch plainly can be ae 1 ■ ·< 1 w ithin a few days at the ' il- union and the company ' ' ι recommendations of the >·.:·. "d faith and cooperate in ii rt to carry them out i; \f aii: K.\ii>. ι. ι ■ . I let 211.- (AIM—The RAF ee· -sful sweep across oc ·' Ρ ■ i Κ ι nee today during which it (i' r · Ί an ammunition train, th·^ •t \ announced. I ' "aek came after bad weath ' :! e continent had kept Brit ' r grounded for the third " night. Greeks Report Massacre By Bulgars I. i'ii), ( let. 20. — ( Λ Γ ) — The (in.ι·,. government m exile said to day 1 .>.li(H) Greeks had died in "a wru- I brulal massacres" by Bul *··>' .it tin· Kavalal district and pro v ·'» ■ ι Drama, Greece. The government said it had re ceived the information in a cable Ίΐ'" : <iff:i'inl sources." I'l:· Greek.·. although virtually un i'J'ii» d, killed 330 Bulgars and scvn (ii'i i! an . the cable dated Sunday said Γ',.· Κ. ι \ a 1 ; 11 district and Drama pro\ nc, 11 re in that part of Mac·' Ί'-'ηι.ι "ccupied by Bulgaria after the axis invasion of Greece. (A Greek uprising in the Drama region v. as reported recently to have '-"■en crushed.) I'lie cable said revolt broke out in 'he Kavalal district after Greek and Jew <h hostages were shot "indis criminately." Iir!"l!i"ii which spread all ov/r Bran ι province was deliberately ex ploited by agitators, the cable said, tidd'ii» tliat. "based oil the statement of eye witnesses." IS.uou ^.is a con servative estimate of the uiimbel killed. Nazi General Assassinated Vichy, Oct. 20—(AIM—Ger ni.in General Hull/, commanding the Nantes region in German occupied France, was shot and hilled today. The announcement said the general was fired on by two as sailants and that both escaped. The shooting occurred early today in the I'lacc St. Pierre, Nantes' principal square, as Holt/ was en route to his head quarters. Two men fired a series of shots at him and escaped in the re sulting confusion. Both French and German authorities immed iately began an active search for them. Thomasvilie AFL Groups Stage Fight Dally Dispatch Bureau, 111 tile Sir Walter lintel. Raleigh, Oct. 20.-- There i.s at least cne indication from the Piedmont ithat North Carolina isn't altogether tree of the jurisdictional labor rows which have afflicted many sections of tl.'o country with great virulence. The Tar Heel disturbance isn't a clash of CIO and AFL affiliates, however, but a battle between two groups within the AFL—the Uphol stereis International and tire Broth er of Carpenters and Joiners. Thomasvilie is the field of battle, with hostilities having gone to the point where lVprosentatives of the uphol.sterers are alleged to have "beaten up" C and J officials. The trouble arises over organiza tion of lurniture workers in Thomas ville. ΤΙιυ carpenters and joiners tl ' :k that the upholsterers unit . hi'Uld take in only those workers ac tually engaged in upholstery work. Actually, it seems that the two unions .-ought to "divide up" the up holslvr.-, leaving High Point's furni ture mills to the C and J'.-, and ex pecting the latter to leave Tlmmas \ille lor them. This, it seems, .he C and .1 ha\ en I done. Α.- a result, Civorge Walker, or ganizer for the upholsterers, is said to have asserted that a strike of Thomasvilie worker- is the only sol ution. There are unconfirmed reports that $75,00 has been deposited in a Thomasvilie bank to feed strikers when they are called out. Whih.· this storm is brewing within «Continued on Page Two) Crossroad For Japan New Japanese Pre mier Says 'Crucial Hour' Faces Nation in 'Encirclement.' Tokyo; Out. 20.— (ΛΡ)— De claring Japan now stands at a crossroad in lier national history. Premier General Tojo called to day for "iron unity anions all tlie flçlitinç arms and the people to cope with the encirclement of Japan by foreign powers." To jo's appeal was issued in ;.n order of the day directed to the war office in his dual role of premier and war minister. He told war office officials in an address that they must he prepared to sacrifice everything in order <o surmount the "cru cial hour" which he said was I f·· ci ne .la nan. The premier, who returned to Tokyo by plane overnight after a pilgrimage to the temnle of the sun goddess at Ise, immediately plunged into the task of revamping the Jap anese civil and military administra tions to bring them under strict, unified control. One of the first moves as home minister, a post he assumed along with the premiership and war minis try—was an unexpected and sweep ing shakeup of the department's pr> (Onntinupd nn Pr2p Two) Pelley Loses Court Appeal Washington, Oct. 2(1.—(ΛΡ)—The Supreme Court denied today a re quest by counsel lor William Dudley PeVvy. Silver Shirt leader, that the tribunal withhold temporarily an orrît r issued la.-i Monday refusing a review of a decision directing his return to Asheville. N. C. The delay was sought until a peti tion for rehearing e uld be filed on behalf of Pelley. Despite today's ac tion, he still has 2â days from last Monday to π quest reconsideration. Pelley faces possible revocation of probation granted alter his 1935 con viction of vi lating North Carolina blue sky laws. His return to Ashe ville was ordered by the United • States court of appeals for the Dis trict of Columbia. Few Details To Amplify First Report Eleven Listed as 'Misoing,' But Believed Dead, Ten Injured ir Torpedo Attack by Sub 'Undoubtedly German.' Washington. Oct. 20—(ΛΓ) —Secretary Hull today charac terized the torpedoing ιοί the I'nitcd States destroyer Kearny as another in a series of inci dents illustrating Adolf Hitler's known and confessed effort to seize control cf the seas as well as the continent. Hitler has notified all nations to keep their ships out oi an area covering a lagc portion of the North Atlantic on penalty of hav ing their ships sunk. Hull told his press conference because he proposed to drive all other na tions off the seas h\ intimida tion. ir such intimidation were suc cessful. the secretary continued, he supposed Hitler then would want other nations to get off the earth. Asked whether the I nitcd States had made or was contem plating a diplomatic protest to Germany, Hull replied with asperity that one dees not often send diplomatic notes to inter national highwaymen. Washington, Oct. 20.— (ΛΓ) — The capital was jolted today by tlie news that the torpedo which hit the Γ. S. S. Kearnv took a toll of '1 casualties—ten injured and eleven listed as "missing," but believed dead. The Navy formally identified the attacker as "a submarine. |inidi)ubtrdl\ German." but this detail of the official announce ment was momentarily over shadowed by the unlookcd for discloscurc that the Atlantic fleet has sustained its first personnel losses When the torpedoing of ! ho new 1,630-ton dcsti·. yer was ! . I mad known Friday. the Nil· >·'· e mitt in if)»j-· -iιifI "no eaMinltic- wvr ;nd · eated" and re!a ■ tempered the rao. tpal'- react a >n !.. the incident. 1. a- ; night. however. the Navy tve ■·. : i further information—tli wounded Kearny had made her way t·. ;m m disclo-ed port and reported ·..·!· J! casualties It i*as the first time since Japanese warplancs bombed and machine gunned the I . S. gun boat I'anay on the Yangtze river in China that a unit of the Nav* has had losses due to belligerent action. The toll ill the l'ana\ bombing in Dcccember. was two dead and 4.·> injured. The Navy's announcemu r,î la-; night was almost as meager a- the 'original communique on tii ■ t"rpcd" ng. It volunteered no details η why the eleven men were considered "missing." or on the nature of the injuries of the other ten. Tin only amplification \v..s that one man y ι critically injured, one seriously n j tired. and eight liad minor in.;ari ■· The character of the encounter tween tin· Iv amy and the - . : a ine, however, led informed qu.o'· here to write fi the miss in:: „ d· r. It was their hel.ef that the either had heen blown out o: ; ship when tin torpedo exploded, else that tie s were trapped wi watei tigiit bulkheads were closed after the ship had been hit. Cotton Prices Turn Lower New York, (Vt. 20.— (ΛΡ)—Cot ton future oponi-d 12 to 19 lower Mid-day valu** - were H to 20 points ■ I wer, Ueeembci 16.18; March Hi Π ! July 1(173. WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA General^ fair tonight and Tues>da.\. sbffhtiy cooler tonight. Bombers Evade Watchers In Maneuvers Over N. C. With the Third Interceptor Command on Maneuvers—Oet. 20.— (AIM—Several flights of army bombers roared far inland over North Carolina, despite the watchfulness of many air craft warning service posts, to drop "destructive" explosives ni military objectives at the opening of the third interceptor command's week-long mimic warfare today. Tin.· lirst reported flight was ob served over Laurinburg, NT. C , trav veHing rapidly toward the center of th - 1.111·. Almost simultaneously an other flight vva- reported over Now berrv. S. driving apparently to ward Un Charlotte army air base, .m .:·-piii·:.nit objective because ·>Ι the province ol the headquarters ef Hrigadier Général Walter H. Frank, commander ol the interceptor force. Almost impossible flying weather was reported over the Charleston area, but rapidly ac cumulating reports lty spotters indicated that the long range bombers from offshore bases were skirting the instrument weather area to cross the shore line near Wilmington. By 8 a. m. many flights were seen by spotters in the Wilming ton section, all moving toward the center of North Carolina. Many motors of interceptor planes roared, warming up in the chief de fense bases and the sub-basts, as warning orders were received from the interceptor command. Intercep tors were hurtled into the air from dispersal points and bases on the North Carolina c ast and several in terior sub-bases immediately after the approximate courses of the bomb er flight.·, were plotted with receipt of the confirming information. Bomber formations that crossed I the shoreline over the Wilmington ι area were bey nd range of the anti aircraft artillery units defending thai port. There, great planes winged their way swiftly on parallel courses, about 40 miles apart, toward objec tives in the Lumberton. N. C. region. Thinly scattered on the ground in that part of North Carolina were many thousands of the soldiers of Lieutenant General Hugh A. Drum's First Army and the sixth corps en gaged also in mimic warfare. [ General Frank made it clear that these far flung exercises, greatest in j extent and number f planes that lever had been ordered for the south east. particularly arc lesson one for the aircraft warning service spotters m their isolated posts. GOP Leaders Seek Repeal Wants U. S. in War ^WSssmgsi^M^mm y'~ - ψ Russell Birwell Shown telephoning from his office in London, Russell Birwell is con ducting^» one-man campaign for an American declaration of war against Germany, lie attracted nationwide attention in America re cently with a full-page advertise ment in a magazine capii ned "What the hell can we yet out of this war!" 'Breathless Moment' Came September 18 Daily Dispatch Rureau. In the Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh, Oct. 20. — Fur several years the petroleum industry has been calling attention to an annual • bit athless moment". the day on which the nation's gasoline tax bill p.. tile b. 11 ; i'.-fli.liai' ι nark; but 11,I ye.u the ι■ event slipped up on the blind ide <·ι the oil publicity folk>. with ■■ resuit that the gr< at I moment ra:· ■ and \\--nt without any j l<itiIt.re ol' |< .S.it··· t> It (4 G111 ν ' S1. : : 1 ) t ' Î * 18 ' tilt' date *1 ' ; * ι ή Mit h> earl ut i than hist yt,.: Ai i . this df-pitr j "H>mest liai·· dit ■· lit! ι aue. il- as.·ι eer.i: !'·.«· i-a.-: eoa : area.· . m ρ... v. ; ! . to u e less gasidine. ■: > ; S.· t'.i tin· "el -e" is thai it u -e T1 r.it. at U· ιi. '■ ti In 1 ! Ν": ' t' iί.a which ha· re|" ι led .. . : I.it;Its m gasoline tax ι · Ίlei ' ..is l. the !.. t two month- right - ι ι : •iting bark t" the "breatli nen!" 1 * r in· itorists (Mr. . er ι im- out of breath ). it ! · ·!> ei \ I'll .11 iiilîy w hell Ί ■· η " · : " ι 1.1. That. i ncidenl ii:e ! ir.-t \ ear in which the :..· :.,K bill reached a bit- , \ ι . ; ιό ί leet ion.- came nd la. 1er and heavier, with : .·: 11 moment" ι 'X"\ el:"·ι· lâ. .ear because of higher t'ed ! ·.' ι Ί il i ncrea · - .! pas . ngi r cars and trucks -ι activitu . tin date jump i | as.-ed ι $ l ,:iin ι last. Liquor issue To Be Injected Into Campaign Dally h Hun an, In tlif sir Walter Ί,·ι»ι Raleigh, Oct. 2(t. The mere fact I that the Woman's Christian Temper .. . .· I · h : \ . ! : C°<i i'< >1 ma. in . ■· ι -r s ; ι . . i·. ·<i at Klizabeth ·. ·ι .· .11 aggressiv«>. 1 i.in I .. . ·.·»· ,1 >tate\vidt I .. ,11 .: ... i ! it 1.1 itsei; j nit an ti.at .1 : >>c ·ι η v. ill bo I primary (.•kv*. ■' : ι λ On tin ■ ■ 11 :t- 1 ■ . " ■ r!;:ri' >n call ·.( II ι , i >t < >ι 1 ! - a tic I I lit !: .. i'llg the pi'i ill 11.1111 Ή l. ·.. < ■ . ιι 11 ,!M ι art1 so many corroborative siens that it is ! difficult to escape tin· conclusion that l.,t...n : : il; ! ι ' i. ■> q.utu a part m thr 1942 voting. Πι.· ilurrj ·ί !>·>· .1 ·>ι·. 11 election.·, call-. .1 !>> the pi· ' il : In'in ' m ·»·.ι· i halt-d<'.·ι·ιι en; ·■'. c · n!.··· in».. ctl a change η <li > t,.. tu ■. \\ h ci. prcv inu. I.V had ,..·:· d 11.. 'I . ... ί L - (Continued on r'gge Two) Group Has Active Backing of Willkie in Effort to Secure Out right Repeal of Act; Bi-Partisan Character to Movement. Washington. Oct. 20.— ( API — \ croup of Republican senators. . h lively backed I» λ Wendell I. \\ l!kie. were reported ready today to demand outright repeal ■ lie neutrality act. S ai:ι m d<V ;ind would ι..ί:·: partisan character to the ι-οιτι !«·'.· repeal movi mont, f< ir I )ι·: ;. m.v tie Senators Glass of Virginia, Pep >er of Florida and others already ha\e •ι· meed that they w ild ·.·.·-:-k to λ ;.ι· the legislation off '.he !»».ks ii. .'hcoming test. I.eadr- of the nepolô.can re peal group in the Senate were rc i irted reliably to he Senator Austin, of Vermont, the assistant minority leader. Senator îiridges of New Hampshire, and Senator ilurney of South Dakota. Ii.'· ' 'iits said they h.id disrtiss d 'ii neutrality i^ e w.'i, Willkie . . I ! <1 agreed w 'h hi» that the •v itild take aggre-sive li ader ■e\ Mon ot the· pro-en: statue. 1940 OOP pre dei.t.al l'on .ne. . has urged repeatedly that the Hi {itiM'can party stand f.>r "in terna'. nalism" rathe! than for "iso I a t n >n ι · 11 ;. It will he several day- le fore the neuti ;li!y aet revision reaches the Senate floor for full dress debate, i d 1 !.ι■ lemslative outlook was cloud ed b.v a new imponderable—the cas . lt\ 1 i>t of · ng and injured which the U. S destroyer Kearny rep rted 1 ist night after surviving a t· "pedn attack by a submarine, "un· d l'ed'y German." in the North Atlantic near Iceland. Senate Group Limits Debate Washington. Oct. 20. — (API — vVith opp nents crying "gag rale." he senate foreign relations eoo^vit ee voted 12 to 9 today to hold closed oarmg~. beginning tomori ow. on tile •louse-approved ship arming bill. Ch.i rman Connally. Deir- crat. 1't ν ο. aid the committee had ν ted • · : 11 · 1 .de the hearings at 5 p. nT l-'rai.iy. He added that Secretary ! pi'oba'oly would be the first Asserting that the proceeding was "Β ι υ . ι;],.·· Sena!· >r LaF· · 1 Ii · 11 < ·. Pro •j i'· · · > W ι ■ · 11 - m 'old ι-' p1 rt or-- ; 'ha: ί·ρ·-ι:· uts ■ ί the* letfMation had ... · ■ 1, d ght to pn ent a 1 [ o.t -, :1,ι· e-· tia-y V. .- · e(i to b?| heard oee.i ,.o· f t1 e time limitation. Sot '· r Γ . ■ ·. ! ι. " -·. a', M: -our:, -a1 d ι, ι i i μ- ι ■ ed η Ί ' ee in the meeting t.. .' ·a .· ·■ d ·ν·: be bound by any rules of secrecy and would tool fm to d ;·.;Η.e!y the te-t; mon ν that w ι .· ■ ι i ··· · nd el· ■ ■ ■ ! loor's. The 12 ti 9 ' '· c m a · lion by Sei.it ι : Π·ο oer ' Virginia. for el· on · , r'ng ·. Stock Buyers Are Hesitant Xew York. Ocl 20.—ί.ΛΓί—Bui ling lui- Mocks \v;is hesitant today it demand was sufficient to keep tin· market generally on it- feet. An assortment .>1 industrials, rails !vi 'til.lies n anaged t1 > tack on . mall >lUs narks at the start and, in the ι■ *\· , jt ni' tances, the^e \'. e, ο : tained near the fourth hour. Dealings wei i' m .-h throughout. bowev. aid numerous issues were unchang ed .ι ! ade lew 1 Quotatl· 'lis at 2 p. m.: Ail e: -a: Κ ,1:..' : Û 3 ·' Ae-i : .. . η Τι U·;m 1Γ<2 3 An el |· Tohaee 15 (>·) 3- I An,a i aida 2t> Atlanta· 1, 11 .21 j Atlantie Kef'. 11 nig 23 7-8 Bethlehem Steel 01 "-4 Chrysler . . . 55 5-8 Columbia Gas & Klee Co . . . 2 Consul idated ( 'il Co fi Curtis- Wright 8 Γι-.t Dul'ont 144 1 I Kleetric Power Light 11-2 (relierai Motiu s 30 5 8 Liggett & Myers Π 87 12 Montgomery Ward & C 32 1 t lievnoVl- Tobacco Η 2!) 3 1 Soi it I ιΊ'η l'ail wav 17 18 Standard Oil Co Ν J . . .41 3-8 U S Steel ...... 52 3-o Four Million Casualties Estimated Desp ttc 1 remendous Toll 'Still These Ac cursed Locusts Come On,' Pravda Says; M oscow Under State of Siege. Ι,(ΐιΐ(|(ιη. Oct. '20. — (AIM — I'ravda ιΙι·( land todav that Ger man losses on the eastern front Il ou are approaching lour mil lion killed and wounded, hut "slill these accursed lu( lists conic on." according to a Moscow radio broadcast. Ί r ι'ι !hc Germans are paying !" ··.. . gain- was indicated by the S·.·, .«st i η 1 ' τ· ι !;i t iι ·η bureau, which Ί that η 'lie Bryansk and Kalinin .>ce1'.rs Sa turd ι y alone Russian forces distrayed abo ! 443 German trucks loaded \\ ,th ...i n. fuel and muniti ns. 23 lank- and 70 cannon. Meanwhila. Moscow became one vast bristling fortress today under a state of siege proclaim ed h\ Premier losef Stalin as the city's millions braced them selves for the impact of advanc ing German forces only 37 n.iles away. The '·:··.adoast f Stalin's proclama tion ' y the Moscow radio preceded an ,i Soviet anno inclinent that gigant i.-ittU-s were raging on two approac a .- !.. the city, in the Moz ha s'.: ·,ι ·! Maloyaroslavets sectors to ill· west and southwest. That the German drive was being held ui) there was indicated by two successive c mniunifi'.ies, later yester day and at noon today, both report ing particularly fierce fighting in those sectors. Mozhaisk is 37 miles airline west of Moscow, ui The railroad running to, Vy.i a. the central front sector where a'taeks and counter attacks irged fa·" th.· start of the German M -c· ·■ i-Mcn-ive on October 2. Ala! yar ι·:- a 63 miles below the r:*y on tin· rai! line to Kaluga, .nieitioii center about 23 :!es farther to the southwest. Tl · Mosc. ; radio said the Ger ■ ι us att( :ό [] to turn the Russian : 1 ; ι : :, η t··.· Maloyaroslavets area but were halted by strong resistance. Tt vas r.-railed t'i»t Maloyaroslav . : - va- the po tit where Napoleon η Or! ' 21. UI!" encountered Rus dui ng hi- retreat from M " TJo-e :·«.«'stance "further we '..'(I ' 's troop? atid forced them ■ ■ < t:.* ι ..-.Ί to S·· oli usk. which -.1 . ;.(h ι rl h.-ei' d ι ·■ - ; ; tated during the advance on Moscow. BR I A!) BASKET ■ .·' a. ( let 2n —( ΛΡ)— Ru-t • · · '■ t.· the United >r food supplies, particularly ■ jhi Ιο.·- of rich ο ,.· aa .ιn-a.- oi the Ukraine, un del >ar! : · cnt ol !' rials sa t U'a Stat. Λ grir t. .day ( uni ιί;ι \< ι H\ de l'ark Oct. "20.— (AP>— \ conference on help for Russia w.i- scheduled h\ President Riioscvelt toda\ with \V. \vercl! llarriman. head of hi- mission to Moscow and llarr\ I.. Hopkins, his supervisor of lease-lend operations. Ammunition Shortage Revealed \V, .... a I el 2D. — ( ΛΓ) — Ιο ι r< a' l'h·Ί! a.-. Republican, Ni-W .! ι i·.,. ,.- · . ted today that the Γ ,. a : S ! a a - ..: ι a a,t a η stocks ■.. t.t t.. .-upply the Army a a.·. «·(· ! ν,ι re eugag·. d in a a .. a . .ie [-.imparable t' .,(·:' ! ; . · Gi - - : an . .perations. Sua .a.ae. ,e.- .uid other work stoppages caused by labor disputes, ι h tu»v. have slowed up production t1· such an extent that am a- : 1.1, .·: ha : ni amount- to illy -o - .' pel cent ol a year's defense requ renient.-. Hi added that be had confidential al a ; at.on th.it the War department had undol estimated the time needed lor adequate expansion of anti-air craft delens" and hence "not a city m the I'nited States is protected Iron enemy air attacks." Consequently, he .-aid, "American ait; along the Atlantic seaboard out necessarily expect token air laid. m relations with Germany continues to grow worse. '
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1941, edition 1
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