Cotton, short, lb. . i .. 21 Mi c to o I Cotton, long, lb....... 20c to S ,o I J PErtiy cloudy with little change I hi ti mnerature today, tonight and Cotton Seed, bushel .. .. .. o Eggs, dozen .. ..... . .. 1 3 Corn, bushel .. .. .. .. (IX) "ieat, bushel ;. .. .. .. .. Itlday. ' ' 8unset today, 8:40; sunrise Friday. 8:15. ' ' ' ' . . ' . , PLELEIED Oil MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS .' ' Si. MONROE, N: C, UNION COUNTY, THURSDAY,- JULY 6, 1944 3-MONTHS, 75cj 6-MONTHS, 1.25 EEMI-WEIiLY, ?2.C3 A TVENTY-C-COND YEAR - - 1 Gtrr.zr.j '7- 2 v Crptctsd To , Fijlt VLI;c ! To HaU trjnsH r.iA:rj:;G gaits American troops have fought' dog V gedly forwar dto within less'-than 18 ' sir lint miles of the big Italian west coast port of Llvorno (Leghorn) and are engaged In the preliminaries of what may provt their hardest, battle . ' aincfc the Anrio beachhead, Allied headquarters announced today. - Front-line reports showed the Oer ' mans were dug In on -high ground running about W miles Inland from ' Castlglioncello on the coast through Roslgnano and Volterr and Carole lTElsa, which isabout 15 miles west -r of newly captured Siena. ' "It Is Clear that the enemy intends to hang doggedly to -Roslgnano and Vol terra In his endeavor to delay our t advance on Livorno," said an official Allied communique. Violent fighting was In progress i along almost the entire length of this new enemy defensive line, aprucwariy around Rosignanq, which alts astride - the coastal highway to Llvorno. Heavy Mad guns emplaced on heights dom inating Roslgnano are throwing a deadly fire into advancing Yank ar mor and Infantry, which was report ed to have reached the outskirts of the fortress town. Casole dElsa, upon which Ameri- ' can troops made six. attacks Monday, wa sthe scene of bitter bouse-to-nouse fighHng as It changed hands several tunes. Doughboys at last, report had penetrated the town -"in some strength" and were bracing to meet expected German' counter-attacks. (. Headquarters warned that only slow i" progress cod be expected from here i on Tin the pusht to Llvorno, adding - that the port Itself Is defended by thick concrete pillboxes, extensive mine . fields, and barbed wire. Keconnais- v sanoe reports said the city would be "defended v'n s-' Nrnness.- "Further ii ncaUons of- our , ap proach to loi.g-prepared enemy de fense lines is seen with the German : v mpIoyment again of heavy 170-mm. - srans. which have --not been - usea i against the Fifth Army since Rome, aald a headauartera spokesman.. . British Eighth Army troops in the ix tenter - recorded - yesterday's biggest calna as theV occuDled Castlgllon.and Fkwntino. nidwve- within lew.Ahan five miles of the important city of ! LAreczo on the main road to Florence, Five towns , on the lateral Arezzo 'filena hlehway .also fell to ; Eighth Army units. Which were reported "forcing the enemy relentlessly back , to the Flsss-Rimini une.- ,: French infantry moved more than three miles north of Siena despite - fierce Nasi resistance and many mine fifiids. The Polish corps, .now ngnung up the Adriatic coast toward the port of Ancona, was reportea meeiiun wu- 'aiderable resistance In the Oslmo and i Fllotirano areas. ,. ' CrUGIIT FUTUT.E SEETI m.rj:::ss fizlds BaB And lenes Picture Great Oppor. . tsmltiea For Frtvate Enterprise. Th juteretaries of State and Com- tunM-r!ordell Hull ' and Jessie H. Jones declared In New York last week that private businessmen in tne wes- iVarn Hemlnhni would flhd STeat OP ' portunltles for 'economic 'progress to the postwar period.- -; . -TtiiKinwis enterorise "will be conuted on to carry the ball after the major Vv nf war nmductlon stb finished. Jones said in a speech read for him at the first conference of commissions of inter-American development. "Upon the experience of business management and the initiative of free men will depend the success of the transition from production for war to production for peace," the secretary said. "For business enterprise, it will be a great opport W'y." ' Hull told tae c ,ates in a mes sage that the cot :..:rence "with the etrength and vitality or private initia tive behind its work, can provide a - bold and vigorous leadership In dlrect- lng plans, thoughts and hopes to the almost unlimited opportunities and possibilities for economic progress in the years of peace to come." Concentration pn complex post-war economic problems, Hull said, "tends to create a state of mind whi.'h re fects an undue caution concerning tie future," ..Kelson A.' Rocl;f.:"-r, co-or";" br of inter-American ..p!rs, -i?t KM t y cots-" : -.a of r" s of 3 l v 5 '( ' T v t 1 1 r t'.r- i t r 3 1 PATT-3TIC Cir.VICIS rL:::z ra f?jday4 Impressive Program Win Be Presentet At O'clock In Front Of Belk's. y There will be ft patriotic service Fri day evening, July 7th, at six , o'clock in front of Belk Brothers' Store. Tail program will honor the men and wom en, whose pictures appear In the store windows. " The program will be in charge of the Monroe Ministerial Asso ciation and the following interesting program has been planned: v '.' -' Music by the WAG band of Gamp Suttoiu s ' ' 4 ' Color Formation, song. "Btar epan gled Banner." Prayer. - ' Remarks by Chaplain ,Teagtte of Camp Button, s . ' - . - - Hymn. - ' Praver br Chaplain Lowe, followed by silent prayer for those in Service. Benediction py nev. . a. atiuwubh. Taps. Residents of the city and county are urged to attend the services and there by express their appreciation to the hundreds of union county men ana women in the armed forces. t Germans Lose More Generals Three High Rankin? Officer! Are Killed In Russian , - ' Drive - ' i i t ' irti 1 pr niranrn ItTMC 21 KILLED DURING JUNfc ' ' ; I Indirectly admitting -ihe magnitude of reverses suffered by German arms in the vast month. A Nasi oommuni- Lque yesterday reported the death of three more' generals m tne Kussian fighting, thus bringing to 31 the num ber of German, general officers killed or captured during the Reich's "Black June," its first month of warfare on three great fronts. . . ' Deaths or capture of most of .the generals have been acknowledged by German communiques, but the Ger man public probably has not been told of the other loss eN)ut 394,000 men to date sUre . t e L.ception of this three-front struge In June, by official Allied announcements. , However, the publlo must realize all too clearly that generals do not die In action or let themselves be captured when thing are going well at pie fronts. . 1 - YeeteMar's-comuwlq'igd- of the deaths of Generals Pfelffer and Mar tlnek of the artillery, traditionally the weakest branch of service in ihe Get man army, which counted only re cently deaths of two others of Its ablest leaders, Col Gen. ' Friedrlch Dollman, artillery specialist, and com mander ot the German Seventh Army in Francne, and Go. Gen.' Eduard Dietl, commander of seven divisions in North Finland, who died in an air plane crash;- and inspired the first oration from Adolf Hitler In months. ' The ' communique also told of the death of Lt. Oen. Schuenemann, member of a ; prominent . publishing family which owned ' the Bremen Nachrichten. - - . The Russian communique last night added two-more major generals to the list of those captured. : The bulletin said MaJ. Gen. Konredy, commanding officer of the 36th infantry division, was captured by Red Army troops on the First Write Russian front, and MaJ. Gen. Michael!, commander of the 95th Infantry division; was taken on the Third White Russian front, both along with large batches of pris oners. 'Against this calamltour mortality rate for German general officers no since June A was the backdrop of a less than 11 killed and eight, captured far greater and more pressing problem of manpower, accentuated by a fourth front in the air and a fifth front in occupied countries presented by rising patriots. ' ' The Germans have lost oy death or capture, according to official - Allied estimates, 219,000 men to the Russians; 75.000 men in Normandy, and between 80,000 and 100,000 in Italy. . These telling losses are reflected in such reports as that regarding the use of Czech policemen In Essen and Dort mund, to replace German police im pressed into Army service; or the use of troops chiefly Impressed 'from the Baltic states and Scandinavia against the Russians in Zinland. . . 1 ::i2Am:i bU..v wLk.il, (training, this college- campus being The sehpdule for the second ' week the Navy's basic Indoctrination train in July of I''ine Demonstration meet-i tag station for newly-enlisted WAVES ir i Is as to,.,ism: 7, July. 10, Union, at Union ', Ja'y U. Falrfleld. at Fair- , J 'y 12, New Salem, at . i o'-'-e. ' . . v y 13, Lnea Creek, t ' ( 1 5. 3 ."rd I "ria. .. .y, Ji..y 13, C..Loa, C .. 11. Tr- -t, at Frc k three ' r -.-i 1 e keli. 1. y e e T n-t-n r ' Soviets Llovc- Toward Yilno Ever'Widecs; Russian 05en- ' sive Sweeps Near East Prussia f HTTLER CATS' COUNCIL WhUe overwhelming Soviet forces lunged toward the Baltics and East Prussia almost lit win. slaughtering German defenders - ana caoturlng towns in incredible numbers, the Most cow radio broadcast' early today a re port from Stockholm that Adolf Hitler had Just reached a decision to throw all his Nazi reserves Into the gigantic struggle on the eastern front. : ; The radio report said "an extra ordinary meeting has Just been, held at Hitler's headquarters. Col. 1 Gen. Kurt Zeltsler. chief of the German general staff, and Co. Gen. Ernst Von Busch, -commander in chief of ,(he eastern front, were present - "Zeltzler said the German army was faced with superiority it could not equal and Hitler was said to have ordered that all reserves were to' be flung into the battle at once to stop the Soviet advance." . ' ' ' Red troops smashed closer to Wllno (Vilna) in prewar Poland Wednesday capturing two Important rail Junctions on the line from Minsk;' Moscow an nounced, and at the same time a Ger man broadcast said that Kowel had been evacuated, indicating a possible new Russian offensive south of the PrlDvat marshes. Premier Stalin personally announced tne capture oi tne ran center oi deczno, 40 miles northwest of the White Russian capital of Minsk, and the y subsequent Soviet eommumqus said that this same drive by Oeen. Ivan Chemlakhovsky's Third White Russian army, also had taken Smor- gonie, 31 miles farther west on tne same railroad. " Molodecsno- feu to . the massed as sault of large Russian tank foram tlons. cavalry and infantry after two days of fierce fighting to the streets and from house to house. ", -' Other Russian troops, however, al ready were much farther westward- some reports said witmn so mues oi Wllno and also were striking witnin a few miles of the . Baltic states - of Latvia and Lithuania con the north anhd Baranowtase in old Poland ' on the southenr sector ; of the central front. More than 530 places were captured In the. day's widespread ngnting, m eluding the; district center of JSaalml on the Fmnish front "K ." , " Tile 'evacuation of Kowel, big Ger man communications center 100 miles north of Lwow In central Poland, was announced by DNB, German official news aeencv. Moscow made no com' ment, but the city had been two-thirds encircles for months and lying open to conquest whenever .the Russians decided to resume their advance on the southern sector of the sprawling 2.000-mile eastern front. 'Although the Russians maintained their usual reticence about whatever might be happening around Kowel, the communioue did announce that Soviet forces had advanced in the little reaches Of the Pripyat river to the north, taking the town of Turov. -six , miles west of Morsyr, as well as more than ' 30 other places in tins direc tion. Chemlakhovsky's army, pounding toward Wllno, occupied more than 150 localities and other troops south and southwest of Minsk took another 100 communities, Including eight described by Moscow as large, and three railway stations. i i ' The Russians also continued mop ping up isolated German pockets east of Minsk and during the day wiped out remnants of -the surrounded Nasi 12th and 27th army corps and 39th tank corps, the communique said. WAVES RECRUITER TO EE IN CITY r.0M)AY Volunteer! Are Badly Needed; Women vrged To Investigate. June, the month that saw Fortress Europe breached by Allied troops, also brought a new spurt of enthusiasm in WAVES enlistments. James E. Meach am, WAVES and Navy Recruiter for Union county, said today. The local recruiter said that June, with a total of 120 WAVES called to active duty 'and accepted and placed on Inactive duty to await further or ders, stands high in the recruiting rec ords for North Carolina. OI the 120, sixty-eight have been sent to Hunter College In New York City for "boot" called to active duty. The remaining fif ty-two, he added, will be sent - to Hunter either in -July or August. "Tiie vown cf t..'s ctiiii. he Cf....,,rn;. 1, "are r"a... niose and r t t - t ret c- 'y a"e t ry r -r ..'.1 m ' 1 but t. ( t svo t..e l...vy's ,;'s i. rve c i a ' 'i vs- cf r - -,. ev v ere cf t i i y a . i v 'i t. e v r in v1 "i t ry c. ti t L and exjxr'.we t' fit tj te cf untoid value to ue n-.a:.r tl.e war is ' '"r. ": s Is or.'y V't br :!nr'rf, for I f' ir'v be;u ve mt, ur.ti t e vry ! r t,.it V ace r--' s r i-n, e to r t 1: o v i f- i ) V r i : : v r ' tvii ti " i I i - - j t . TII2 LATEST WAX NEWS " ; ITI ?JEF ' . ' ; Sapreme Headquarters Allied Ex peditionary . Forces Hard-fighting . " eolomna of the American First Army planted soTTthwaM beyond -besieged Ls Hare Da Falte today both to the east and: west, oat- -flanking this wertern anehor of the ; : enemy's NornuuuSy line while ether troops battled Inside the town tt . self after capturing the railway i ' station nearly half .a mile to the : -'north. s ' Moscow The Bed ' Army an leashed a great new thrust today in the direction of Minsk and ; Brest-Lltovsk, while vanguards of t Gen. Ivan Chenilakhovsky"B Third '' White Russian Army were reported ? within 45 miles of Wllno, gateway ' to the northern Baltic repabUes. Like the beginning of the White ' Russian campalgii, the new drive was launched with terrific artillery . barrages operatmg with might air support It was tee early, how to tell whether it was a general " offensive. J ; . London Gei nis ii i flying " bombs have killed I.75Z h persons ' and wounded 8.0M ethers since blind robot attacks, centered en London, - started three weeks age. Prime Minister Churchill disclosed to the' . House of Commons : today. More than 10,004 ef the casualties were in London, Churchill caid, an- nounclng - that children already 'were being sent from the capital as they were in the Mlts days four years aaw fi;si:s . . London Heavy bombers ef the Royal Air Force stnwk another Ug blow last night at the meve- ment ef German eonnter-lnvasion reinforoementa from ' the east, blasUnr Dljoin, railroad center 160 miles southeast of Paris, anV today German radio said Ameri can heavy bombers again were at tacking the Reich. . (A German radio broadcast heard in Now York said enemy bombers were ap proaching Southern Germany and ' Austria, indicating Allied ; airmen from bases In Itaty were Joining to. the attack en the continent.) ; 1 Chunrklnf Geseralisolmo . Chi ang Kai-Shek, la a message to the' - Chinese peopde est the eve of the beginlng ef China's; eighth year of war. acknowledged today that the military situation n his eewntry Is grave, hat he told patriots in oecu-;' pled areas that liberation is close at hand." . "'j..... ir Union i Men In Service 6gt Philip O. Whltaker, who is sta tioned at Tinker Field, Oklahoma City, Okla, arrived this morning to spend a 20 day furlough with his mother, Mrs. Margaret B. Whltaker and other rel atives,. Before altering the Air Force he was employed by The Monroe En qulrer. , , Cpl. Harold D. 8taton of Camp Mo Coy, Wis, returned to camp after spending a ten-day furiuougn with his parents Mr. .and Mrs. Fred O, Btaton of Olive Branch. -, f Cpl. J. B. Stewart of Camp McCoy, Wis., returned to camp after spending a, ten-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Stewart of New Salem., - Pvt. Fatrley Roy. Autry of Camp Jackson and wife, Magdeline Autry of Lancaster,. S. C- visited lu parents Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Autry of Monroe over the week-end. Pvt. Hoy Autry was an employee of the Springs mill at Lancaster, before entering the ser- . . ...... , , 0 : .- ' PTC WllUam B. Godfrey left Wed nesday for .Camp Bowie, Texas, after spending a 15-day furlough with his wife and mother, Mrs. w. B. Oodirey of Monroe. , v " . .CpL Love ,In New Caledonia -Cpl. Charlie F. Love of the1 U. S. Army has been serving overseas for the past twenty-one months m the Southwest Pacific. He entered the Army February 14, 1942. V CpL Love has seen a great deal of action. He was wounded last July 13, 1943, on New Georgia Island and has been awarded the Purple Heart and service ribbon. After recovering from- his wounds he was evacuated from the theatre of action, and was sent to New Caledonia Island, where he is still stationed. --- ' CpL Love was recently promoted to his present rank. . He has a little daughter nineteen months old,' whom he has never seen. Mrs. Love and little daughter. Judy Diane, are mak ing their home with Mrs. Love's par ents, 1 r. snd Mrs. Roy V.'iUlams on rtouie 3, l. jnroe, for the duration., Lieut V'.":am Brewer who Is t'oej in c laha, Neb., wlU come the if t cf t a k for a f w days leave v i ? ? v A spend .h his family st t el e of fcer mcr, Mrs. V. H. - i - i Ji his parens, Mr. and I.:, s. J m T. Brewer. l.;rs. Brewer i t .' y will return to Ginaha with him. . C;-l. Andrew Lee (T'n) r--nderson It :t t ' .i T t i. ! 1 ; : 'j for Flart, I : 1 impa. 1 .. i h 1 2.:rs. . 1 " I ;'lace f r sr-end-i i s rr- i y 1 I'rs. w I ...u-i i i. i xmys Fire Traps 75 IJen In Mine Hundred Rescue Workers Aid In Effort To Save . . Elmers , - FIRE WALL IS ERECTED ".(." ' - " - 'v;,,;--v--' ; ' Seventy-five miners were ' reported tyapped last night by fire in the Pow hatan mine of the Powhatan Mining company, 15 miles south of Bellalre, Ohio, and 100 men were fighting the flames. The information came from two men IL"16 J!SaMl& fhttmw. 6. Mi;i HIQAlim VA 0CUUWI WU11.J Henry Aby of Clarlngton, a member of the rescue crew. Earlier, the office of the mine su perintendent had said that only 12 were in the burning section of the shaft and that their liberation was expected soon. ' - . ,r 7 Boy Fox; the superintendent, has been in' the mine since the fire was discovered at 1 p. m. ' . Rescue worker Aby said fires were burning at three entries. . He reported that 199 men were in the shaft when the flames broke out, but all but 75 made their way to safety. .. The fire started, he said, when fall ing slate struck a trolley wire. Aby said the fire was about four miles from the mine entrance, and that the trapped men had erected A barricade to close the section front I flames. " ' .- He expressed the opinion that it would be "some time" before the men could be rescued. ? ? ; Observers at the mine, the largest soft coat pit In Ohio, said, originally 74 men had been caught behind the slate fall, but that George Emery, a foreman, had made his way back to the men, and that he had probably helped them erect the barricade. Aby said he did not know or any communication between the men and the rescue crews. Deputy McLaughlin, who-had been at the scene since the fire was report ed, gave information to O. C. Mackey. a newspaperman, who relayed it to the Associated Press by police radio and by telephone. The officer said the nre was in sec tion C, north, 200 yards from the sec tion where two men died in a fire two years ago. The ' section " had - been sealed oft until a few months ago, ne added. - .-, He said - ambulances, , nurses, and families of the miners were clustered around the shaft awaiting for rescue workers to bring xbe-men ouv ; i j' i i i i i.i,.-"-.-y-.J-T .v DI0NNES VICTIMS " OF, FALSE REPORTS Now that the Dionne quintuplets have passed their tenth birthday, it is time to correct some of the raise reports and rumors that keep circulat ing about them. . . - -. . -. One of these rumors -is'that the quints are not bright and that one of them, Marie, Is . actually backward. This is not true. All of them are en dowed with Intelligence slightly above average for their age. . . Like all children they have thelrf individual differences, but not any one of them is brighter in everything than the others. Marine is not backward. The other four give her more atten tion, however, for being smallest at birth she is acknowedged the "baby." It has been rumored that the quints canot speak English. They have Eng lish lessons every day and. sing In English without trace of an accent Their schoolwork Is done in French. Another report is that the little girls no longer earn as much money as they once did. They are still doing very well, although some of their ori glnal Income has-been allowed to go Into war funds. They have contracts that bring In from $25,000 to $30,000 a year. Besides this, they have a reserve of $1,000,000 put aside until they are grown. Not bad is lt? : Many problems have come to poul- trymen but Paul Hlnson, a nine-year old boy: son of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Hlnson of R2, Monroe, has one that Is rather peculiar. Paul has a cross bred pullet 14 weeks old with an extra leg and foot that has grown off the left posture of the back bone. The extra leg sticks out on rear and is not used by the bird to walk or scratch. .Return to rationoing of meats fore cast as result of scarcity. 'this week for Raleigh to be with his mother, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Nance, the rest of the week, then he will go to Jacksonville, Fla, where he will be assigned his duties. : . : .'...:'.-' ' hi - .... Lt T. O. Horton, Jr, who has been stationed at Fort Washington, Md.. has recently been transferred to New York. - . - O. Pvt WBllam H. Laney has returned to his base at New River, N. C, after spending a nine day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hurley Laney and his wife formerly Miss Georgie Yow, both of Monroe. rn1 Chan R Knieht is on ll-days Hurloireh and is visiUng his mother, Mrs. H. L. Brooks, and Dr. Brooks. lie is stationed wiai the Medical Detach ment Base Hospital, Municipal Air port, Memphis, Tenn. f ' '- -rs of t-J-o sons of Tr. snd iT'rs. h C"ile now in ? ere - I fs f I vt v - s i v ! - a r 7 r i i si i. S. C. i ,4 C .1. w. ' A.-rt. i '-. tiiit u -I '.. - I. U0:iS WILL INSTALL . fOT OFFICERS TOMGIfF Lien Homer O. Wilson of Winston. , Balens Win Be The Goes Speaker. i Lion Homer O. Wilson, pastor of the Fourth Street Church of ' Christ of Winston-Salem, will be the principal speaker at the Monroe Lions 'Club an nual Ladies night and installation of officers this evening at 8 o'clock at the Americana GriU. He will be ac companied by Lion Oakie Allison, song leader of the Winston Club. - lion Wilson is one of the outstand ing Lions of North Carolina, baring served --as ' president of many of the leading clubs hv various parts of the United States. -Immediately following Mr. Wilson's address, newly elected officers for the ensuing year will be Installed. They "re M XoUowa: w. T. WaU president; Henry Smith, 1st vice-president; Hen' ry Ellis Copple, second vice-president; Ray House, third vice-president; Roy Curry, secretary-treasurer: Rev. Harry Hawthorne, Lion Tamer and Carl Wells, Tail Twister.1 ' has served since January lT having (Roy Moore, the retiring president succeeded Carter Preslar, who moved,"" , ": iu zrr: to Charlotte. V Both of these Uons, i fifttudT. W .marks the. official with the able assistance of Henry Ellis Copple, as secretary-treasurer, have accomplished much during the year. AV tonight's meeting, Paul Gamble will receive the Attendance Award for the year and Roy Currie and Henry Smith Key Membership awards. During the ensuing club year, the dub has pledged Its self to take a more active Interest in the civic, oom meerclal, social and moral welfare of commumtiny, and looks forward to a banner year in things to be ac complished. Chinese Slay 6,000 Nippons Ten Days Of Heavy Ffehtin Proves Costly To The ' ' Japanese THE AKl FORCE IS ACTIVE The Japanese attacking the strate gic Hunan province railway town of Hengyang have lost more than 6.000 men killed in 10 days of heavy fight ing, the Chinese high command said Wednesday, and the . Chinese defend ers are striking .hard with air and artillery -support - P. H. Chang, a Government spokes man,, toll 'prsa conference that the' bitterness of the fighting should dis solve, "suspicions and rumors'' that the Chinese were not holding up their end of the resistance to the Japan ese.. An American 14th Air Force com munique said the Chinese in Teng yang had received many tons of am munition dropped to them by low-fly- f lng B-25 Mitchell i bombers. - Indicat ing close support of the Hengyang de fenders, the communique reported widespread fighter and bomber sweeps over Hunan province battle areas and said heavy damage was done July S In s raid on Hengshan. north of Henyyang. I The Chinese command aald Chinese troops had routed the Japanese from a town S miles south-southeast of Hengyang, where the Invaders had cut the Hangkow-Canton railway by an outflanking maneuver, and that the Chinese had taken "a large number" of enemy strong points on both sides ef the Slang river in that area. - There also was severe fighting in nere auo was severe ngnung m '5 ?T SL'JS! where the Japanese are staging a general northward drive in their cam paign to wrest all of the Canton Hankow line from the Chinese. In that sector, the Chinese an nounced recapture of Lungmoon, 70 miles northeast of Canton, and said they were pursuing the Japanese back towards the south. The Chinese also reported they had beaten off Japanese attempts to occupy Thlngyun, 40 miles north-northwest of Canton, . and were annihilating Japanese troops who had gotten Into the western suburbs. UXRALN'S CEGir;L"G :to FuOduce again ' With the Germans driven out of the Russian Ukraine, leaving behind a wreckage and a desolation that would fa ftCTMilr imrmff a Ipo hairiv neo- ple, the countryside is beginning once Although approximately' 1,000,000 families still have - no homes other than dugouts, and lack two-thirds of their horses and oxen and most of their tractors, married middle-aged women are working hard to bring the scorched earth back to life again. Winter wheat and rye are ripening and even thourh the fertile L,nd Is poexmarxeo wiun sneu craters ana j trenches the earth has been p'.owed and is feeing cultivated. Collective ' farms, pooling their few resources, are agnin flourk.ijirar in the Ukraine, and indications poi::t to the area once more ti-con:.. j C.e tread tt let cf KuKsSa. ! Iew mm a- . e bee!!- f ry' are e...ier c and even y has teen e nearly. l.C Germany. I . tion. old men .1 r i i t e f - t r 3 t 1 V dren, are t. grain than f v Cected of tie. a. Cc::::ly I in OverAn Qcla Of $317,CC3 May De RcicLed ly EsJ ' v OiVeck - DRIVE CLOSES JULY 8 Union county is lagging behind by approximately $75,000.00 on its X bond quota of $372,000.00 according to ' figures - releaved . this morning by Claude : Eubanks; chairman of the , county war finance committee.; At the same time it appears that Union . county is near the over-all quota of $817,000.00. i "There have hot been enough in . dividual buyers of V bonds,' Mr. Eu- banks stated, and their failure to . purchase these bonds In the' current . drive has been discouraging to bond selling leaders, and they are urging u cltliensto buy every single bond close of the campaign. Increasingly widespread purchase or "E" bonds is necessary on the part of 1 every individual in order to assure at tainment of the quota set for the - county, and much effort is -expected to be exerted today and throughout the remaining days to increase the sale or ; these bonds. 0 In cooperation with the County War Finance Committee and thousands of ' other theaters throughout the nation, .' the Center and State theaters are of fering free admission tomorrow, Fri- ' day, July 7, to every one who buys an . "E" bond, from any of the regular . Issuing agencies in the city. When making the purchase the buyer, merely , has to ask for .the free movie ticket which will entitle him to see either of the shows at the Center or State ' theaters. ' - Continuing the advertising campaign,- which has been so enthustas- -tically supported by various merchants ; and patriotic cltlsens of the city, The Enquirer is today carrying a page ad- , vertisement sponsored by J. O. Penney Company, and The Enquirer in con nection with the campaign. NEWS AKD EVrT3 Cr -- WEEK FHC..1 wL.CATE .(Br Mrgf B, E. Blvens) - y Friends of Mr. and Vrs. Volger Perry t will regret to learn that they have moved to Monroe. ; Mrs. W. W.-Wilson and daughter, Marie.Wllson, hy returned to Foston after visit intr Mr. and - Mrs. iTonUs . Williams. 'Among the Sunday school workers from the Baptist church Who have gone to Ridgecrest for the Sunday school conference are: Mrs. Carlton Blvens) Miss Kate Griffin, Miss Mary Lee Baker, Mrs. J. .W. Stokes. - Master Roy Bivens, son of Mr.'-and Mrs. Douglas. Bivens is visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Bivens. , " Miss Edith Bivens has returned to the home of her parents, here after spending a, few weeks in Washington, D. C. ' Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bivens spent last week-end in Goldsboro with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Plnyatello. Little Miss Patricia Ann. Plnyatello has returned to her home in Golds-: bodo after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bivens. - ' Mr. and Mrs. Broughton Bivens and son of Maryland are visiting Mr, and Mrs. R. C. Bivens. Misses Edith and Jewell May, Mr. and Mrs. B. J. May, Jr, and Coy M f c recently visited Mr' and Mrs. B. J. May. Sr. Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Link, Jr., have ' returned from Ridgecrest where they attended some conferences there. Ralph Smith spent last weekend in Concord With Mrs. Smith. Friends Of Woodrow Griffin will be glad to learn that he Is recuperating nicely from his operation and has re- truned to the home of his mother, Mrs. J. B. Griffin. Mr. . and Mrs. Clyde Thornburg of Dallas, N. C, visited her mother, 1 s. J. B. Griffin during the week-r ' 1. Mrs. Aubrey Benton and chl. en of Monroe and Miss Elsie ;nl'.h f X last week-end with their parents, l.-r. and Mrs. O. C Smith. . Master Tommy Brewer GrL""n of Charlotte and Miss Mary Kemp C- "".ri of Florence, S. C, are visiting t .tir grandmother, Mrs. J. B. Gri:? .t. Mrs. W. J. Douglas, Sr., of C r fleld, S. C Is Visiting Mr. and I is. J. B. Gaddy. J Mrs. George F. Kahn and cl.r 'n of ; Mt Pleasant are visit5 -t I s. Hahn's mother, Mrs. C. 1.1. 1 The Business Woman's r' t on Monday night with I. . s. I 1 Braswell. Mrs. L. L. Helms t.' ' t t t . ters In the Kr-.!.m l "The Levels cf Tr r." I gave te Cfv . 1. " t v : 3 j J ( f , j . I.e