Itenltemm 3BmUj Htspafrfr __ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA_ __ T VVENTY-NJNTH YEAR HENDERSON, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 24, DM2 ia'IU'ls,^.'E^T *'HN" " FIVE ( ENTS COPY British Bombers Raid Rostock Great Fires Left Raging At Sea Base German Warplanes Step Up Tempo of Their Attacks on Eng land; Berlin Claims 1 b t h Army Has Broken Siege Lines. If', fin A ~ ■ ,it i 11 Press) licit:-11 *• i .c|i i , systema tica! o ■ c.i-t i 11- (, i iiiany's war Mi •; m i 1 u . ■ -.-i ,-a | i res at the German Halt • of Ros tiiek ia.-t in. let . ■ i apiie.rently inflieti-d iii■ a\ y damaye, tile London air minis!1 . announced toda.\'. wh i It ■ na/.i warplane-, stepped up t he tempo of their at' aid-:- on Knyland. I >' -iT'!" d a - t la Imme of the III n M i reran v Rost • >ck is a - hi: 1 e:. hI ■ re r< nti'r and a nta.i'H ■ ■ : -i L-r (lei nian war suppdi .'i> v. ii «,» tIn Russian Finni.-ii front-. “Four ■ t . ;r ain-raft are mis ;ing.“ l !:•■ air n ■1 i -try said. \t hiimi' Briton reacted cn t!;usiaslicall> to laird Beaver brook’s speech in \i \\ Y’ork last night urging (ivati.ui ot a second front in western I mope. London comment ranged from the man - in-thc-strcet’s jubilant “> ou tell ’em. Beaver,’’ to more restrained n marks in informed tnilitaiN circles, and many ob servers interpreted the speech as symptomatic of a governmental change of heart toward the idea of a European front this year. More than a do/vii Briton." were killed in Gci i an a:d.--. with the ruizis di\ o b-v.wng an English sniith cast coast t n at ■. va ,1a-1 and pelting a winning cia-" di -t.iet with high e-xplo." ;\‘e.". (in the (iusMiin trout. a Mock holm dispatch quoted a Berlin spokesman as asserting that the German 1 (>tii arm\, trapped for main weeks in the nloodv Stara>a llussa battle sector ISO miles south, had burst through Soviet line's and reestablished contact with the main German forces. S»i \ let d . : , ‘. • • cj» •, t rd tllcll Finnixh ti * i"j . ed ut.. cl n..’ ili;.: la-.i.i ■ .• i■! -ii n the oa>t and |H’iiiiai'!y •:i• ■ Par-lie northwest \ - •' dd be e ' : ■ .a1 nr 'i n! of nor ma : m May I t w " ng supplies with tin- ;• < int e ■ li'ien' i one t!i i rd. Stl' 1 ed reduction, wl a ... ■ ‘i li per cent less 1 ':.!. ;:i i jinn do Chicle, .ii e.reles cm .mated. Ships hails To Ram Sub Survivors of American Merchantman R each Port After Sinking of Vessel. N 'k Ap A i i ,\Pi - The > '■ ■' a ■' i A •■'d Ai erioan i * ait snip •' rd n-aeeessfully enemy ne \\ hten h.. ' the butt old he At lanta eras', ttu main ai A pn I it!. The X'a\ v ami"Unccd the sinking today Captain Sannicl 1. Cobb of Staten island, X A' . and Ordinary Seaman Vic's i Pi-'rola. IT <>t \\ akefield. Ala - . were n rially wounded by shelllire and were bnrieil at sea. Five otl-.er ereAmen wire missing j and 27 -ui\ ivor.- were iaudud at Nor I ATintinneH .- Pace Th t-pp 1 Japan Still Puzzles Over Raid Reds Intern In Siberia American Plane Malt ing Forced Landing Held by Russia in Compliance With In ternational Law; Other News of War. ( i'.y The Associated Press) Japan, still puzzled about tiie "uiysti ry base'' from which l . S. bombers raided Tokyo six days ago, asserted today tlint Washington had not yet issued a cummin ipue on the assault be *.i!ie •in already completed test of the year-old neutrality pact between Tokyo and Moscow, Inn t . S. embassy officials in Kuibyshev said Ambassador Admiral Wil liam II. Standley had been in i'ruled of tlie circumstances and had asked Washington for in f’ struetions. Russia is still technically at peace with Japan, and Tokyo newspapers stressed that fact along with the hope that friend ly relations between the two countries might he strenytiiened through "Russia's better under standing of tlie greater east Asia w ar." Tukvu's nervousness over relations th Russia stems m part from tin ■ ■ o:::e vulnerability <>l Japan I > lung and submarine attacks bas . .,t the Soviet port ot Yladivo tna, .y (>8(l mill’s aero.-.- the Sea ol • ; ,m from Tokyo. So long as Rus.-ia and Japan lc (Continued on Page Eight) Wilson Man Nazi Victim Ned L a u g hinghouse, Injured in Attack on Zamzam, Reported to Have Died. Wilson, April 24.— (AI’)—Har ry Cawthornc, one of the sur vivors of German shelling of the Kg.vptian liner Zamzam in the south Atlantic last April 17, re ceived word today that Ned Laughinghouse. another Wilson ian, had died aboard the raider which attacked the liner. Cawthornc and Laughinghousc were member.-: oi a party ol tobac conists cn route to Atrica at tire time tlic Zamzam was sunk. Laughing housc was reported wounded during tlie shelling which preceded the sink ing and was said to have been taken a boa i'd the raider. Cawthornc said lie received a let ter today front Mrs. Percy Lt*\ itt ol Montreal. Canada, which said tha Laughinghou.se died aboard the raid er two days alter being visited by Thomas 1). Miller, another Wilson man when the prison ship Dresden contacted the raider .lust before heading for port in occupied France. Mrs. Lv -utt wrote that she had re ceived a le ter from her sister. Mrs. Lentz Levitt vho she said was in a German concei rot ion camp, stating tr it a Mrs. Star, g wile ol anothei Zamzam survivor. ported Laugh mghouse's death. Welcomes New Bulkeley Heir While Lieut. John Bulkeley, leader of the hard-hitting torpedo boat squadron, was damaging a Japanese light cruiser in an attack off Cebu, his wife Hilda was preparing a welcome for a new member of the fam ily. The mother poses with the recently arrived baby, John Duncan Bulkeley 3rd, in their home at Long Island City, N. Y. Behind them is a picture of the boy’s hero-father. (Central Press) Lewis And Murray To Showdown Fight Labor Sources See Culmination of Dis pute in Displacement of Murray as UMW Vice President and as Member as Well. Washington. April It.— (AD —Some of the labor movement's best informed sources were con ceding today the inevitability of a showdown between John L. Lewis and bis estranged "right arm." Fhilip .Murray, culminat ing not only in Murray's prob able displacement as vice presi dent of the l liilcd Mine Work ers but in an attempt to expel him from membership as well. Among significant recent develop ment.- well- tlie. e: 1. Three top otl'ieial- ol the Uni' ed Aline Worker- Worker:. (CIO) toid Murray in .1 ictti r the muon prob ably would do Mime "house clean ing" at its October convention. 2. The miner: continued to with hold per capita tax payments to the CIO, which Murray heads, while asking repaymem of about SI .HtiO.OOO advanced to the CIO in it fledgling days wlien Lev 1 ■ w a - its chief. The overdue per capita tax now total anout StiO.OOO. 3 CIO officer replied with a dun for the per capita payment.- and de clared that while -all workers thro ughout the nation owe a deep debt to ffic United Mine Workers of America, thi - debt cannot be meas ured in dollars " They ex pre-sen the opinion tile i,line worker- did not and do not consider the 1: oncy ad vanced for organ i/.at ion purp a to wiit-i I - i any - siiipbiuldmc. ' Mr. I!■ o'. I .-am that e. cry i . sly w as • . m, m. line f!ill icttliy "i a mg enoi.gb . ne added ! ha! y- .. eal 1 .me ’ -i end j w ithout 1 lour. He v. as mi ■' ' i '' -l the >i 1 t construction prograi wa regardi generally as 1 hi ’ I -liinuary pliin whuli wa- lagging i erioiisly behind. GERMANS REPORT MORE SHIPS SUNK Berlin t K: mu Go ' m; B: 1 .Me ’ April 24. (AP) L’he G i command reported today that n new l - boat operations off 'ho A • ican cast coast .aid in ’he <3- :■> bean i\ merchant .-I ps totaling 35.000 ions had been sunk One tiaz undi sea raider v to have .-auk a lug and three me go by gunfire "just outside an A non can port." CONVICT IS SI It 11*1 Raleigh, April 24. (Alb Kumh 1 Owens. 4fi-ycar old white pri-om serving a murdt r term in the Watauga county prison camp, com mitted suicide last night by slashing his throat with a razor. Prison Direc * N.r y Pitts 'nnnnniT'H twH; ■ v. ROOSEVELT AGREES IN MARSHALL VIEWS London, April 24.— (AID — Prime Minister Churchill has re ceived a message from President Roosevelt that lie agreed with all the conclusions reached b.\ I , s. Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall after his visit to Lngland. an informed source said today. Woods Fires SpreadAnew Governor Broughton Sends SB! A gents Into Pisgah Forest Seeking Incendiarists. Bre\ ird. \pril 2 !.— i AP — Raging forest fires t' at tub bornly resisted the united efforts of air patrols and volunteer lire fighters had spread today nvci 32,000 acres ol rich limber! tad in four southern stalls. Some ol the t.!azi v < : ed to inretni ia ns::: and Can ilina Governor .1 M U: •• ordi red State 1m rea 1 ■: :.• . ' . 4 "i agent' into the Iksgali No’ .2 K :4 est. whore 14.000 ..ere e mi laid wasti sinee la.-t S :nd..y Mean whi!e. . 1 a-v. . -. broke out in s.:.llnve l Vtrgm K 4 forest ranger- and l VC mni- 4:. • battled a f in ais Id. . e :!-,at ha - e m sumed at least 12,000 aero ■ The south's worst eollflagra 41-1 year.- spread dorm-.' the n,silt to North Go. ir.gia ..; n i so 'tin-,,-' Ken tucky and L S Regional For .-’e .losepi 1 t K:: el;.-i 1: i.nl.oi .,v . e strieted public u.-e oi national tor es ts in Nortli Carolina, Tenues ee and Georgia. Flight: ol civil air patrol pla lieu ->voi the liills ol u e -! rn Non Carolina and in rttiern Georgia to di rect tin- gro aid fighters and to cope with now me-. Citing "del inite e' idelK’e" ol n eendiai i-n- i the Ih -gah t ires. G- - - ernor I’loughtoii diveeted the mobili zation o! one or more state guard companies and -t nt additional state highway patrolmen to the region DROWNKl). Her! lord, April 2-1. (AID R, Graham White, about a9, president and general manager ol the Major and Loomis Lumber C’o. here, drown ed today in the Perquimans river hers Dr. t Davenport, coroner, said the dealt, ■ . |t*-d from aeeidentai _ .1 >• ." nine