•*«« • PITT AND GREENE E M. C. MEMBERS TO MEET HERE IN _4tfc ANNUAL-SESSIWI JUNE 6 Meeting To Be Held In City Hall at 2 ©'Clock Saturday Afternoon The Fourth Annual Meeting of the Pitt and Greene Electric Membership Corporation will be bald in the City Ball in Fhraville on Saturday afternoon, June 6th, at 2:00 o'clock. David T. Harris, co-op. superintendent, will present the annual report, telling *of the mugress made by the organisation during the year. R. A. Joynsr, operating manager and treasurer, will render a detailed statement of the financial condition at the close of the fiscal year, allowing receipts sad disbursements. The Board of Directors and operating personnel will he present to enlighten members on any matter wished to be explained. War Savings Bond Sales Are Good Here Affording to L. E. Walstan, cashier of The Bank at Farmville, there has been sold through the bank here as of June 1st, a total of $219,500.00- in War Savings Bonds. *2,975.00 of this sum was sold during the month of May. This does not include what has been sold through the local postoffice or other agencies. Farmville people have always done their part in worthy undertaking and can be relied upon to pmnrhaoe their part and more of Uncle Sam's Savings Bond during this great crisis. RECKITX HONOR AWARDS The following honor awards were presented at the commencement program at the High School on Friday evening by J. I. Morgan, a member of the school board: Moat improvement in Mathematics, won by Cariey Ann Johnson, given by Mrs. J. Y. Monk, in honor of her mother, Mrs. Annie Lang. Attendance, won by Miss Russell Ward's room, given by Mm. Frank Davie, Sr_*5m Most improvement in eighth grade English, won by L. D. Braxton, given by the Farmville Literary Club. Most interest shown in Spanish, won by Lais Jones, given by J. L Morgan, Sr.—*10.00 U. S. Saving Bond. lftp. Haywood Smith gave the fol1 owing priass: Most improvement in piano, Agnes Qdnerty. hi Technique in Qm An Exchange Basis Virtually at> M right for lira • • • Appreciative Audience Hears Victory Concert , The American Victory Choir of North Carolina, under the direction of its talented conductor, Lewis Sidney Bullock, waa heard hen in an arousing Victory Concert last Tuesday night in the Fartnville High School auditorium. The choir rendered inspiring patriotic songs, beautiful negro spirituals, religious works, and fanciful American folk songs. 11m enthusiastic andtonee ■s«msd to particularly like "Water Boy," in which Jimmie Kannan «f Goidsboro, tenor, sang the solo, and "0T Man River," with a bass sofo §y Prt JfcLawhorn of Washington. The alto solo in "Beautiful Savior" waa song by Miaa Margaret Long of Goidsboro, and Miss Helen Rouse of Fannville sang the soprano solo in "Song of Mary." The members at this uaiqos choir are selected singers from fifteen cities and towns in North Craolina. Commissioned by Governor Bnoogbton as Official Ambassadors of Music and Good Will, this choir will represent North Carolina in nine other states when they leave June 7th for a Northern Victory tour. Air Observation Post For Week of Jnne 8th WEEKLY SCHEDULE Menday Night—8 P. M. to 8 A. M. Henry Smith—Herbert Hart Service Station. Tuesday Night—8 P. M to 8 A. M. J. 0. Pollard—C. A. Tyson. Service Station. Wednesday Night, 8 P. M. to • A. M. Geo. Menk—M. V. Jones. Service Station. Thnrsday Night, 8 P. M. to 8 A. M. Frank Allen—J. Y. Monk, Jr. Service Station. Friday Night—« P. M. to 8 A. M. C. S. Hotchkisa—F. W. Satterthwsita Service Station. Saturday Night—8 P. M. to t A. M. Arthur F. Joyner—S. A. Roebuck. Service Station. Sunday Night—8 P. M. to 8 A. M. T. L. Albritton—R. D. Rouse. Service Station. A. W. Bobbitt In charge of this list POPULAR The opening of the second quarter of 1942 finds U. & canned foods enjoying wide popularity among British consumers, with.meat products holding fiast place. FDR Praise! Mexico's Act President Extends Wekj come To Mexico As Fighting Ally Washington, June 2nd. — Prudent Roosevelt described Mexico's declaration of war against the Axis today as • "characteristically resolute and virile" response to unprovoked attach. To Be Unnecessary Washington, June 3.—Enthusiastic American airmen, hailing Britain's masslwu boating attacks en Germany aa a demonstration of the true meaning ot aerial warfkre, predicted today that the growing might of BritishAmerican air forces could reduce the Nasis to virtual military mpotence without the opening of a second front on the continent. The flfcjiing devastation dropped on Cologne and Eaam, these experts Mid, wore only the preliminary to a of ntratrginsl bombing which could cripple the German war machine without the aid of l«tf Military men holding more traditional concepts of warfare did not go nearly so far in their appraisal of results, although they agreed that attachment of soma Immediate objectives by the use of air power alone was entirety feasible. Mainly, these 1. Some relief of pressure on the Russian front by diverting Luftwaffe strength to the protection of Industrial dtiee. 2. Destruction of industrial centos, such as the great gun works at Essen and the metal plants at Cologne, so ae to make it increasingly difficult for the Nasis to replace their front line war machines. Beyond theee objectives, theories ai to bow to conquer Germany are split between those who claim that American and British air point can do the whole job and the more traditional strategists who se« it aa an undertaking for cooperating air and ground forces. The airmen argue that it tne jod is left to them the ground foreea need move in again* little more than nominal resistance. This weakening of the enemy, they aay, can be achieved by strategical bombing which they described aa an entirely new method of attack that the Germane only approached hi their —nit on England in the fall and winter of 1940-41. Aa authoritatively described the method work* Mm thia: Suppose t ia decided to interrupt enemy production of heavy bombers. Planta in which bomber parte are made and assembled are plotted and the most vulnerable point in the construction prnt sas ia determined. Perhaps it ia found that only four phants make under carriages. These are selected for attuk. either damaged or destroyed. Since bombers cannot fly without landing gear the enemy must either repair or rebuild the plants before his production Unas can roll again. Similarly devastating raids may be concentrated on oil raflnaries, storage tanks and warehouses, "hiPltag centers and railway yards. "Prima Mtnirter Winston Churchill's calm unfolding of planes to intensify thaw hi the ahead gives M «tna aa to how many thousands of planes the British have in restive. ' • i Still to be-heard from in Germany are the American air forces benig concentrated in Britain. Several applanations wen suggested hero as j to why they ha*e not made their appearance hi action so far. First of these, was that the British, with many a aeon to settle, must ■ Under Secretary of War Patterson reported the President's goal at 66,000 planes In IMS will be surpassed "by a substantial margin," and tank and munition production sA keeping pace with schedules. He said army ordnance monthly deliveries an 458 times as great as two years ago. The WPB said production of new machine tools is 72 percent above last year. The House psssed and returned to the Senate legOation setting up a smaller war plants corporation which make loans to small firms to enable them to obtain war contracts. The Commerce Department issued suggested procedures for establishing bnstnsas war-time clinics to aid local business men in working out anient problems of dislocation and changes in their businesses. Amy Iftiiwlw and Training. Chief of 8taff Marshall announced there will be nearly 4,500,000 soldiers under anna by the end of 1942 rather than 3^00,000 as originally planned at the start at the war. During the past four weeks alone the army strength has bean increased by 800,000 men, he said. The Civil Aeronautics Administration called for TOunteers to be trained as glider pilots in the Astiiy Air Sfetees. The glider training is spin to men 18 to 85 holding pilot licenses of private grade or higher, to graduates of the CAA program and to pUots completing 200 or mora glider flights. The War Department said medical students who have completed advanced ROTC courses and have been accepted as matriculants in an approved school of medicine will be commis; sioned Second Lieutenants and placed on a deferred doty status. TTie Senate completed congressional ac "I want to see everyone of them personally and to thank them for the great effort they made for ma. All that was done for me-was done through friendship, which makea it. aO the more dear to me And it la fomething to make me strive the more to do my level beat, and I pledge to every county and every section my whole-hearted efforts in their behalf." : Congressman Bonner praised the great help given him by the newspapers, which in most cases were favorable to his candidacy, and the others, with few exceptions, were neutral. He alao mentioned the great value of the country newspapers as a medium for contacting the voters. "I have found for a fact that people read their home newspapers," said Mr. Banner. WAR IN CHINA Chugtdng,. June S.—The fate of the | important rail line center of Chuhsien hung precariously in the balance tonight as Japanese troops, in some places leas than 10 miles from the city limits, threw in reinforcements in an attemp to close in from three sides upon a fiercely-resisting Chinese garrison. Capture of Chursien, in Western Checking province 46 miles southwest of the Japanese-occupied provincial capital of Kinhwa, would cut another segment from the 200-mile central section of the HangchowNanchang trunk line. The invaders already hold both terminals. (The Tdkyo radio broadcast Domei dispatches datelined "from the suburbs of Chuhaien" saying the city was aflame from bomfcing and that tTaapnese troops had crossed a river three mile from the city limits.) INVOLVED IN THIS WAR MUST GO "ALL OUT" 1 The Very Young and The Very Old Will Have To Work To Releave Others For Vital Jobs { 15 ;; , New York, Jane 2.—Emphasising th« point that only "tot* effort" win win Um war, Jonathan Daniels, assistant director of the Office of Civilian Defense, warned here yesterday that "a system of day nurseries on a scale nerer before contemplated" may be *r America to care for children whose mothers are called to work in airplane factories. Mr. Camels, who is in charge of civilian jpobilization for the OCD, _ _ __ awry; the fall import of the revolution that the rubber shortage is going to create in the transportation field; how desperately volunteer nurses may be needed when the majority of idoctom and nurses are called into military service; whet housing shortages and food rationing are all about,* And just why it may be necessary for women to leave their home and babies aad go into industry. He wants to take all theee "platitudes," and make them become "living, breathing facts" to everybody in the land. «<-"• • "We had a wrong idea of total war*," the North Carolina editor said. "Fieople thpught of it a. total danger.' It wt that exactly. It's rtotal effort* " f .:iV IfTWs total W and 'total effort1 stttff isnt something we've imported from Europe. Americans did it back in frontier days, in the caravans moving West, when every man, woman and child entered into the community effort to stay alive and Vrtn. We were 'total war' folks a long time before this man Hitler came along, and I believe we'll be the mum i a long time after he's gotoe." 1 It may be necessary shortly, Mr. Daniels said, for OCD to call "for a flood of volunteers" to concvery city and town in the if the g - mment should a program. That will An Uncle born Dr. Hans Helmut Gros admitted in a purported confession read at hie Federal court trial that he vu employed at $200 a month, plus a 20r 000-mark bonus, aa a German Intelligence Agent with the rank of captain. But lie declared he never worked very hard at the job. Dr. Gros said in the confession that the recently wounded Rekihard Heydrlch, No. 2 man at the German Gestapo, and his former schoolmate in SaxonJa, had instructed him to: "Organise sabotage, the blowing up of ships, industrial plants and such things. "Take photographs of harbors and military objectives. "Furnish information on persons who might be contacted to create strikes." He said an uncle, Maj. Hans Bebert of the German Military Intelligence, who got him the job, asked him to. "Contact John L. Lewis, leader of the CIO, and Harry Bridges, Padfffc coast labor leader, to asoertain their attitude on labor problems and their political philosophies and to attempt to make them useful to Germany, tf possible. "To represent the Military Intelligence of Germany in cooperation with the Japanese Intelligence department on the west coast" But he had no intention of doing any of these things, Dr. Gros said, and sent only newspaper clippings about strikes, unemploymtnt, and. airplane production information sach as would be available through German newspapers and magnaine*. Dr. Gros, his wife, nances, SI, and Albrecht Rudolf Curt Renter, 66, German born Beverly Hills art dealer, are charged with failure to register as German agents sad conspHng to transmit to Germany information concerning national defense preparations.' Mrs; Qros said te a purported statement read in court that before they were married Dr. Groe told her she could earn $200 a month for one to five hour's work a week clipping articles about U. S. military and naval affairs, airplane production, ship sailings and compiling lists of key defense positions in California. "Helmut asked me to become a German agent," * quotation from her dairy read. "I did not accept" EXPERTS SEARCH FOR TUBER MOTH Raleigh, June 4.—North Carolina haa been designated by the federal government aa one at the 16 states to make a survey to determine the extent of the damage done by the "petato *»»w moth," the larwte of which haa caused serious -vmnmif Iocs to Irish potato farmers in gome sections of the Nacufe, C. H. Bamwn, chief of the entomology cttviakn of the State Departmeat of Agriculture, reported todajC: '< > **}; dirt*m'» EUn*i *d Dr. Navy Says First A Fired A Few houses, Bat Caused Serious Damage _ Casualties; No Details Yet as to Second Raid On Alsatian Island Base Washington, June 3. — planes struck twice today at IMM States military and naval bases at Dutch Harbor, Alaska, the Nary rairafiin^ I j.ut juli* reveaieo wnigm. The attacks occurred six hoars apart—one at 12 noon (KWT) sod the other at ft 9. in. (KWT.) - - I Four bombers and about IS eecorting fighters p&rticipsted in th© first attack, which inflicted no serious damage and caused ttm casualties. : .J, <■ I The Navy said a "few warebousea were set on fire" In the initial thrust—the first time in history that North American proper has been attacked by air. There were no details on the second attack. In the absence of details on the second today, it was speculated that the first raid was a "feeler" and that the second was an attack in force. 0 The presence of fighter planes suggested that they came from an aircraft carrier, since Dutch £ arbor til more than 1,400 miles from the nearest Japanese islands—far beyond the flying range of fighter planes. The carrier—if one was involved— conceivably approached within striking range of Dutch Harbor in the fog which frequently that area. There was no information whether any of the attacking planes were shot down. ' Wsrs Prepared. A West Coast dispatch quoted a high Navy official as saying that the initial attack "was not a surprise" and that the defenders "were prepared to meet it" The successive thrusts broke the ominous calm which prevailed in the Pacific war area since last month's battle of the Coral Sea. The fact that the Japanese struck twice within such a short time at Dutch Harbor — most formidable American bastion on the Aleutian Island chain which stretches 1,500 miles across the North Pacific— suggested that this might be the prelude ot a Nipponese attempt to knock out American bases in Alsska constitute a vital threat to any Japanese move into Siberia. A knockout try would be calculated to remove the danger of |r flanking Mow should the Japanese attempt a thrust iqso Soviet territory. The raids alsot were viewed as reprisals for th« April 18 American air attack on Tokyo and other Japanese centers—raids which conceivably could be expanded to reach the United States mainland. The assaults may have been directed against Dutch Heritor on M the theory the American attack on Tokyo originated from there. But the starting point of the April 18 blow against Japan is one of this country^ best-kept secrets of the