n Henltersmt Umltj Htspatdr ___ ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA T\VFN I 7 -N1N I H \ EAR_thk ass..i'-'iT-i ViVt.;f2H<>1> HENDERSON, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 27, 1012 ruiiM.sinj. i_^a^ktkkm,on F1\'E CENTS COPY ihe General Is All Smiles Jlj'. t. Isect’-- .vw wywwhw—WWWflt8W-3*WOWy-^«^V»BiCtorn<W^ ■ . ly confident, Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur beams as he walks :n a cheering crowd in Melbourne, Australia. He is accompanied le Gen. Patrick Hurley, secretary of war under Herbert Hoover, and now U. S. minister to New Zealand. (Central Press) Corregidi Blast Jai Troop Concentrations B» ok on Up and Enemy Trucks Set Afire on Bataan; Island Forts Ha\e 250th Air Raid Alarm. \\ i hia.jton. \ pril 77.—( \ i’ ) —'ll' War department report ed Ox! i , that artillery fire from besii t orrogitlor fortress broki up ,t .tapanese troop eon mitiMiion on the nearby ISa taan peninsula in the Philippines and mu ilire a number of enemy motor trtieks. In first eomiminipue cm - eri'i lighting in the Philippines ivsui !ii the War department in fi\e d" -. it yy.is annnnneed that < <irr>- lor had experienced its ^SOt1' it i id alarm. 1 F irl llie.1i . ' > m b t ’ , ivhit i I1 1 arbor lma* d . four hnu fi ■ 'n and 11:1 l!i ” 1 Bin-. T I0 ‘ (|:st.i , , -1 >;| ' , ep •' ’ p,i • ;.!••!> It BOO miles .,t 1 •.'roll'd Ale ■11(1' M. P dell T \ m • lime traip Jumps Track five Known Dead, 262 Injured in Accident; IV)oiorman Charged ^ ith Manslaught er. .. « -v. X. .1.. April 77. : AI' - ■ ■' I;m >|led the li nek a ‘* : 1 ■ laden 1 lud-.nn rn er 1 ula ■ eel along 75 feet under *■’ ' ' ■■ '' Kxflumge I Mace stall n :l' *'■ |>- hi. I-:\VT last niglu *"' ' 'error, elaiming 11y i - d, ..nd iii.jm mg 1 h7. " ' a ey, public safety cmiiI 1 11 apii'lunc'd early t el. y i . ' ■'‘d Ike in, ,11 a i nan ■ 11 a 1'1'1'"1 ‘ : 1 II nisim and 51 anhatl.a ox-ear train, Lmti.- A ,l'1 '■•■I'. II;. ..n a manslaughu i eh irge Tk i . ■ "Til eul pti\y ei- 1 nc j’ ‘."k1 ' the tunnel into biaeniit' j' 11111 "• I'lifst point on tin* Ini'', ill A1'1'"|J ’■ • tram burniv. • untie 11 • . i.>. r. Acrid fumes gusbet 1'Be -to. t;n batteries in l. < [ ' I e,11, Vy ' ich left the true 0 h 11 Blinding i. -h and bur t "it 1 It'll! ■(• . I IK) ot tlios. njm ed \w . r ''d 11," ’ the me. a I centei treatment for supe I rial in A" North Carolina. wen '"'B'" he dead. Vi vniir 1* "li NOK i >• i MiOLl.x ‘•iltlc ehangi u .etnpc 11 • luntgiu ’ yr's Guns \ ) Forces Destroyer • is Sunk i Washington. April !7.— (A!*) 1 —The \av\ announced today the | d« stroyer Slurtevant had been stinl*. oil the coast ol Florida “hy ail underwui. • c\plo*<iiiu wiihio 111 past 11 hours. I ? • ol lift \\ as small, the Vr-'v eoiKiiiuniqin* reported, and most oi the crew ol the edd World War vessel reached port sa!ei>. indicaliim tliat tin* ship ma\ have gone down quite slow 1> . T r e :i s u r y Secretary V-: Out in Opposi l'-jn to Compulsory Buying of War Bonds.1 r.\ c is \i;i s > s i i u ut r p ; W A:» ! . '1 re;usury S- , • . II1 y Y\ . rymtluiu. Jr., j • . ' i' .i m ■.!. i; m 'i 1; 11 • A'. i r bog n. : •. '-: ii,.* r | u‘iideney ile.pl,' national j : .. .Mo . to meet he emergeney by lie adoption of ■ oo e pretty dicta : .!• .,1 p die -j. It ..-n't an incmsint moa , "Iher. alii'mg , ifl'a-er holder- who ;et into po.-i'ions of Vitihoi'ity an out- : •anda g friends of the "peep'll,," and mdonhtedly mean a he -o It i- rather e,, ,, il, t U- i nd Secretar\ M<>rtf'*nt hau | ,,)■ ■ .1,... ; ,-i. ,.iv li.-lo. irally inclined • j., j. |,,!k arm.nil \ery peremptor- i 11 • in .j on I' iy1 rl nrec) __ Chinese Army Takes Hopong C) ■ m i April -7. (AP) — ], •, ■ I) t (P'liera I .Pi-epli \V Stil ( c nvy . mi"Uiiced today ti ■ • 11ad rerapt'ii ■ d HoponS, in ,,,. j||o ipa ud\; ntajfe of its posi m t 'a1 'line Mandalay irom 1 It southeast. IP - is little more than ten ; , rast of Taunggyi which was won : ..ek from the .Japanese late last ! Both towns are approximately inn | | . .. nthe ist of Mandalay. , ,.. o , Aa k’:la I nmt. <lireelly , , \i-.i,.i..i i.s. the Chinese a an they w re fighting . ■ 1 ■ '"fa'list in RAF Rules Skies Of West Europe In Greatest Offensive; Japan’s Armies Strain To Beat Monsoon Premier General To.jo Acknowledges That ‘War Still Has to be Fought;’ U. S. Landing on New Caledonia Significant. (By I he* Associated Press) Straining lor conquest of Burma ahead of Ihe wot mon soon coming- in mid-May am jockeying with a fresh show ol air power for southwest Pacific positions Before the United Na tions can strike hack full force •Bipan lias a hig job on her hands and little time in which to do it, Premier General To,jo Itim ; e 1 f acknowledged today that “the war still has to be fought’ despite Japan's victories so far. "The war's coming stage will be a real tesl lor the .lapanrs. nation," lie said in an address eovered b\ the Tokyo 'a.!" "liven we, who are behind Un ions must be of the same mind as Ihe troops at the front and be fully prepared to cope with any alia'las on .Japan herself." Wide-ranging allied b: mber- an swered the sudden in tonsil icat inn el enemy air activity m the Australian theatre yesterday hv blasting again at .lapane e bases at I.ae. Xcv. Gui nea, and Bougainville, in the Solo mon islands. A Sunday attack In the Japanese mi Port Moresby. New n tinea, v..;- tv ported beaten off. At lea t wur niaiu-.- were destroy 'd by the alia • at Lae. The recent landing oi .Ameri can troops on the French island of New Caledonia—-subject of a pending protest by Vichy to Washington—was viewed by ob servers in Australia as a move to thwart Japanese expansion to the east on the Batik of the sup ply route to Australia. It was reported that the Japanese have been concentrating fresh m . a-ion forces and materials in the. .Mar-hail islands in apparent pre paration for some new operate 11 which may bring the United Stale fleet into action. Some ubserv i i fun saw the p-■ ■ability of a great naval battle some v\ here between Hawaii and New Zea land. In Burma. it was a qur-tion whether the hard pressed Biatisn imperials and then' Chinese com rade' in arms could stay the Japa iio-e push, until the ii’oii non ram ,-ome with their prospect ol hinder ing .Japanese eon.mmiicalioiis. At present the deienders wen im periled by two new thrusts, accord ing to L,mdon reports: one ,. drive Iri.m I.oilem on the eastern . in,-. >f the line, toward the Mandaiay Lasiuo road, thre atenmg the tv. ■ cities joined by the highway, and Ihe other an infil'.raturn to the w '■ t limed at isolating the allies at tic I’vavvbwe area, about ll.j miles soule. ,1 Mandalay Radio Under Freezing Ban Washington, April 27. - (At1) - I'lu' federal communications rom np.-ion today closed tor the dura imi of the war all domestic radio •oiptrnclioii with two exceptions. Chairman James L. Fly said the irdcr applied to standard. telex r ion. ac-miile, relay and high frequency Nations. The only exceptions to the free/mg irdcr were experiinenlal high fre pieney and non-commercial educa ional stations. International broadcasting was not nx'olved. Five Killed In Accidents Charlotte. April 27. (AP) least fixe persons met violent deaths m North Carolina oxer the week end, four of them in accidents in volving motor vehicles. Jamie Yates Jones, la. ot route Raleigh, xxas killed near there in a three-car collision. John Henry Cannon, ot Wilming ton, route 1. was killed when a load ol lumber rolled i n him. lie was su pervising tlio unloading ot a ear. Durant Alphin, 74, and Edwin T. Gill, 19. of New York, were killed in separate accidents nt'Tir Kinston. Alphin was run over by a truck and Gii! died in a collision. Private Rayford S. Lyi eh '’(i, of Goldsboro, xxas killed in ,i n.<> ,,r cyele accident near the Cn ■ - iand-io bt-s n •■'iiinrr Lm< New Lef ease Board Meet? ;n O. C. D. Headquarters -:-— • -- -- ----.—-, —< . I*. I’honi'phnto. rhe luvl meeting ! tlu- War Board of the Office a C 1 n.- ■ • , , j;<m y i di>. dirrt lo)' (.1 th'.' I,V. :.nd fixunxxn "l lie nev n i - ti (I. let: ’ i yj.y (;, s j.-. i’.iddd : SciT' t:.ry i v K ■ ;i n ; Km-a: !\;.i . I). M. \. i.intli S'., ini' n.M. ic.: : . ■ y: it, :i re: X. .,n:: i •: I. . 1;. . ( (y, j, | , (; Dirirtiif ol I Ji'len.'f, iI li and Welfare Services: Pa r tin . .i loni ■ 1" ' Hat 1 i i Stassen. ol Mini ■ - . Bo-t. n. The plans . thi >t:il in til' to r.oat o. r UU;o~. Roosevelt Proposes Program To Combat Rising Living Cost W ashing Inn. \ pri 1 '!7.— (API -—President Kooscyelt said today licit during the war no \nieri e.in cili/.en ought to have .1 net ineonte. after he lias paid his taxes, ol more than S25.000 year" in proposing to Congress a seven-point program designed to combat the upward spiral 111 living costs. iu? l>r iden pi . d t.-.l • .: ., tit 1 w ages and lames 01 .nil;' - (bails. ■ ay .. g "I a , e .: 1 a t s’.. a ing the ei of la. .ng wall ■: that a. age.- ill genera! can and - ■ ,ai bi kepi :1 ’ exi I ng ! eels" and a 1, repeal <.f the pravi auis ol tie :a . fixing law whieh ail we farm eoni lliodities to rise i a 110 per rent e. parity . ( P; ; :gv 1. lie j>r,ee (la-,g ■..■■■ Jo ga,. tlie la l a aa a retu i n, . m d on indu.-lnal purer . es. 1 n 1 ’.vim a a illob-H base jj real.) "We must its i" .lings on the prices which consumers, retailers, wholesalers and maim •aitui ers pay lor the things they buy." the President said as hr outlined Ins plans to kc-‘p the east ol living down, and added "ceilings 011 rents lot dwellings ill all arras affected by war industries" to the sti |is that must he taken Air. linoseveit ab ” .!■ elarvii ’ "miteiensibli that a1 1 a. : ’ < a ■ huge ittei a a IT n 1 tale a lid . a,. n 1: itiis should 1 1 in mu: ■ lar ia ad. "is- -imp el at lea . I ta'-a a." Iiatly opposing Mispcn-ion oi the 10-houi work week law. the President said: ".Host workers in munition industries are working far more than tO hours a y\ ei k. and should eontinue to he paid at time and 1 half for overtime. Otherwise, their weekly pay envelopes would be reduced." I Mi . lb." 1 vi I! res rted 1’ strike.- a re at a mi’M I'll - i'11 a lent .'. .' i di-aiis progi-aai P-r tin 1: 1 'Ml in a r (la ad i ess ton ino night. K< Deinoe! alia i., adi '- an ley ,. a a White 11'Ut.-e c.nb .1 nee. The . - I wa. not announced immediately, siiir.il in the cosi of living. The program, outlined in a am saga to C .ngress, was the admin: tration’s plan for gearing the ewn omy of tin nation and its pie >plo 1 emergency war coalitions. The Chief f.xecutive also pro posed heavy taxes, holding per sonal and corporate pi nt its to reasonable levels, stabilization ol prices received by farmers, dis couraging credit and instalment j buying, rationing of all essential scarce commodities, and stimula tion of the pin chase of hoods Only taxes and stabdizai. 11 -a al prices. Mr. Ho >-u volt said, injuin legisla'ive ction Hut 111 oi led if rn. lilh.-ot. t*eaC I Evidence By Listening | Device OKed ' .i derisa hi u'l - 1 11 v -i i •' 1 i ili i’ll’ ta ■ ■ It i 1 lir.’ i ri ii even 1 if n, with .hi ' i .!Ilf ;s. in. .1 I ■ i: ' I it tf niry : .I-IU'I 111. la it |>. i > I if i| if I if::;. ad .1 ,i t if M : i - pity, am itiif; .. ;s so it■ i •: 11 • > .a I'Vai . liarl). : . til life depat linn,' . t..|d tile S i’ll.. L'. Hi -1 that ,1 vv; ! , 1.1: y . 'a ; s' i't! n a ip me I’m ■ i ‘I. t ..pi | I : .ay . i. rflir.,1 >r Intel oept tile ennmumieatinns el imported spies in- sain item s ” The derision applied pecit ieallv tn the eem ada>11 ■! three \f\v YoH. I att'irr.e.vs Martin M. Goldman. .la fill l1 Sh:,In an and Theodore Gmd i, , ..a .i dial pi oi foiispii'int, 1 I eausL ’fii. i liptrv i>e1 it imt to nr i ili'. I I. leu':' a li. I then t itii ■ ydiaov n in a MVtrt i ’ il, at t;4 V icill.. I - Ini' the::' v. i irk. " i Ti ■ kee| ■ the cos I nl li ng fran .spiraling upward, ve n , t stabihze Die p: ires rcH'i'iU'd ity grower,- fn: | s'iidurt .'1 tlieir kind, a. Jo J;eep the cost >1 ! iv i ng 11 ■ : ,-p,ruling upward, we mist encour age all citizen- to contribute to the co-l ol w inning this war oy purchas u:.g war bonds with their earning instead m . .-mg those earniing: to 1.y arl icle vl el are m .t essent al "Ii- Ti - keep the o >st of 1 w ing fr<>m -piralin.g upward we n . 1 ration all en , - . wiiiei :;le ■areit.s o that they may be ill -1 r.i 'Uted i a i riy .. . a ig . on • ua • ■. in accordance wild to pas high prve I' a' i hem. " To beep the i■■ t of Us ing : nmi •piralin gains ard. w e ■ dl-c mr credit .aid . . I . 11 <■ 111 i ..s ing. Uifl encourage tin- pay mg oft of la amount .a, ... i. .|p,i, till pni'Cha e ol an: I olid.-.' P oned Last of Revenue De partment Embezzle ment Cases to Begin 1 his Afternoon. \|>r: 27 (AP Ti :■ 1-nl I: !. : riled red I. .' i:; ' u; \ a t ■ ' • 1 ■ , it1 J 1 . ■> ! V ' ’ ' nd ri ■ n :uto the Are y . - a c. I--nei. - :n Wake .- upe ■ <•: c- art s mi i v unde: stood he ss’e Id be :a : ,a gi o: the legal 11. ..ri'll of the ■ apply dis'i ion. All r t • ■:11g informed -a lv>vai a rare. Presiding Judge F I'" id granted a pe-1peneme-1’ in ai I ..: of Fred Brown IV ,r. liief of the sales tax dp util 2 p m. Brake has pleaded inn— •lit ' - charges ol embezzling SI DO .mil , idai.g and abetting in the om lerr.lrment ol other funds. Robert Fee Ward. ,Tr . dapper, hun t- ,-e.l ex-accounts chief ot the •vs i ti department, was cons c! I n an .'a- Sat relay for hi- pm i in tin pp rent wholesale loot iif t he (.Continued on Page Three) British Aerial Drive Threatens Destruction of Centers of German Power; United States Planes Soon to Join British. (I >y I hi A ■ iciat t'd J ’iv . ) I In It A I- ruled the -.kit . of western Ivu. 1 oilay in ji yi'i ati A ni 1 ■ i\.- of 11 if w ar, a Arateyu.i: :actor upon which the whole course ol’ tin* conflict may depend. it 1 h I'eaten: d (!'■', a Aat ion of c'enters o| (ieiTiian |,w , r. ,mo 1 »y "He, iii l! eAiii,-raii■ manner "1 the last he r idtrlit of ciiii secuti\'e honiieity at Rostock, a progress winch no doubt would he speeded up when and if Ger many yets under wax ayain. t Ru ia. It was e-i imated that I .GOu, "HU \ loiinds of i x |ill :Si\ eS had 1 men dumped >m R< st(g-k. I n ■ -line h ttu- aerial sover eign!' . the British had the premise that 5 nited States planes sunn would lie working with them wine to wing- in a campaign which already has shaded German's own Itlli blit/. I he prospects of 1 piled States collaboration in the work of de struction was not new. it devel oped I rnm the recent v i-.il to Loudon In the t nited States cliiet ol stall General George ( . Marshall. But American pal - i tieipution in the offensive was -till in secretive preparation. La.-t KAI > , at Hi > and ' the i Ihei R jlroi't iis wel] a.- a groat plane ouilu dlior daylight -weep n -.-r the lei ;h ■ 'rii : si rt 1 'I ea|>t vc Fi ..net'. British a . pov.'ei' u.e- coining .. close a.- it could to opening up a sec ond Eu pent nt while the Ger mans still dallied, with a great di et >n of thei air i owi . un tin Russian in nt. i,. at- .-..a.i,-o.o- .i. Sunday, \dolf Hiller dropped n hint ot expectancy that the war would go into another winter. In tin coming winter, wherever it finds uv Herman railways will he better aide to meet their task than in the last w inter." He spoke ot Russia as the only front mi which the war would he fought—w hairy ci such a state ment is worth. I" 'I i. i.i y. ;i|i| i .ired today to bo try - eti-y I Ileute: . m London. Freni m agency di pate! tree Istanbul w' ;ch m tu ,i 111 r eed ion I’upon ;is hay mg told .ii.y : ev. : Ie ■ ye.ir: that -it" u ■ ' • i- i | . ..ij ]_ (Con::n :ed on Page S..-.j Finns Lose Many I roops Russian Offensive in 1' rozen Lapland Lik ened to Drive of Two Years Ago. London, \pril l',. —- i \ I * ■ — Nearly '.’.(Mill Finnish troops were reported killed last yyrrk in t Russia:: oflensjye in fro/cn lap land as the Red army pushed forward in a spring ady.nne liken eel to the one id twi years ag.. which ended in 1 inland's defeat. ti ' veil in tilt 1 :. -' i. fo "! led ..ltd tile Soy: 1 s .p ye. rep. : ted del: oiistra I hi .i.mg i lie bat i a. I r, y that they held i hi' initialive ttt .uly. T ' II - . . ! ye, y . ei g ; ■' 1 1 toy. - 11-t the lie i leartei 1 ecl Fi ;e- 11 m. eli'ort t ■ knock them "U' . i 'he yy ar and pfdeft the Arctic " a ' . i I'b u . " aiss ami Archangel. 1 ,et ugr ui rep. i tii-cessi; .1 do - ten~e agi. nst raiding axis planes in dicated the t.i.-.ails yyere using every available lircrai't in an effort t" cripple the Red army while the n .. r- prepared l >r an offensive. M xtxt Finnish and tier.nan creyvs were 11,-ed m b e north, by plane. which bombed Leningrad, machine 'tinned troop concentrations and btn iced at road:, hedge- and artillery i j a t i t n et

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