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The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

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The Index-Journali
Location:
Greenwood, South Carolina
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Page:
4
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THE INDEX-JOURNAL, GREENWOOD, S. FRIDAY. MAT 28, 1943 Page Four New York Day By Day By C. B. DRISCOIX THE DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY.

GO-ROUND THE INDEX-JOURNAL The Laa41n Kawspasar of Wwtwi Bontli Carolina Thm Or wood Journal wtabllshad Auaui 1, 1J The Of wood Index aUbiislMl NoTmb- 1WT Jour I iia Tlx ladas ooaaolldafd Jmm. II. 119 PuhJianed Daily accept Sunday By THK INDEX'JOCKNAL COMPAlfT At 11 Maxwell Avenue H. L. WATSON, President ARTHUH LEE, Sec-TreM.

Title Beg. P. 8. ratoai Offlte By DREW PEARSON --rlf Congress can forbid one qualification, 'It can forbid any other qualification. By -forbidding the poll tax as a qualification.

Congress would set up a precedent and priu- ciple by which some future Congress could. h'. if ft chooses, forbid qualifications about residence and citizenship. Mr, Sullivan not only advises but urges the rest of the States to wake up to the dangers In this ''repeal" of the poll tax measure and fight It. (Mark Sullivan is a Republican of the state of New York.

lie Is not a Southern Democrat. But his advice is not likely to have any weight. It is a political field day for those who Intend 0 push It throtiRh. They have votes in their home districts which they wis-h to placate and win over for keeps. Washington It hasn't leaked out yet, but the Justice Department is nn the trail of another big antitrust case which is going to create headlines if the War Department doesn't intervene part of the year, but that Army commissaries purchased canned goods because it was easier to prepare than fresh vegetables.

The Truman Committee also ascertained that the Army was hoarding canned tomatoes equivalent to war effort. Merry-Ge-Roand FDR has no love for the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, saw nothing of them when they conferred with Churchill The only time Churchill ever was booed on the floor of Commons was when he made his famous speech in the win Tills time the giant National Lead J. a BAILEY, 1919-1938 Stetares at tha OrMnwood Poatotrtea as Mall lUtUr of the Saooad Claaa Teeau of SubocrlpUoa Glvea Ob Application MEMBU OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Tha Aaaociatad Ptms la axclualvaly antltted to tha i mm rapablleatloa of all news diapatcoaa endltad to tt or MX ttaarwlM eradttad In thla pepar sad also dusty shops along Third avenue that have had the same stocks of -econd-hand business furniture on iisplay for the last two decades. Hundreds of new offices have been opened in New York by the government and by agencies doing work for government. Office turniture being scarce, the buyers have made forays into the secondhand field.

I'm told that prices in the dark and dingy shops have gone skyrocketing, and that you no longer can outfit an office for 825 out of the pickings of these marts. Broadcasting on a program with Mary Margaret McBride is always a Company is involved. The case is similar to the deals of Standard of New Jersey and the Aluminum Corporation before the war to control synthetic rubber and ra nubltalMd horala. mngnesium in cooperation with AH rtahta of republication of Nazi cartels. In the National Lead case.

Japanese as well as German business connections were Make All Remittance to THE DfDEX-JOVBNAL COMPANT Greenwood, 8. O. National Rapraamtatlvas! WARD-ORiyt'lTH INC. satisfactory and restful experience, rhere's none of the nervous clock- New York Thinking out loud: Our neighborhood haa become so farm-conscious that it really sounrfe like a barnyard in Iowa. There are chickens in two backyards near us and the J.

B. Devltts, up the street, have bought, a white lamb to keep the grass crooned Iamb was kept tethered for a week or so, but now runs at large. It Is called Sunrife, and Is looked after bv a huge black Newfoundland named Midnight The citv-bred dogs In the neighborhod don't know what to make of the lamb, and several of them have fled in terror from its innocent "Baa-al" The gardens planted in tennis courts. -across the street, are doing well, up to date, and, with favorable weather and continuing hard work on the part of the most earnest of the gardeners, may soon produce radishes, onions and beans for the tables A little Chhiese girl named Ruby lives with her clean, respectable parents, hi a crcwded neighborhood through which we often pass. Papa operates a hand laundry, where Mama helps So Ruby, who is three, goes to a play school.

On the first day. the teacher told the children they should go to the toy room nd select whatever toys they liked best Ruby picked a toy flat Iron, ind was busily ironing doll clother for her little friends wher discovered at play by the teacher. The deal Was to control the pro watching and rushing through duction of titanium, a rare substance essential to the manufacture Tha aubliahar uauoM. ao liability for of paint, also to the cutting edge oi ter of 1936 defending Edward right to marry Wally and remain King of England Only a handful of labor la coming up from the Bahamas to work in the U. S.

so the Duke merely made that the excuse for his talk with Churchill. Actually he wante to get back to London Inside fact Is that ttie OPA opopsed liberalizing the coffee ration, had to be blackjacked into It by the coffee industry. At present, large quantities of coHee are entering the country from the Caribbean countries because of improved submarine conditions. But OPA feared the submarine menace might get worse, curtail coffe. Then the public would be confused at having to cut it scoffee ration again Residents of Martinique are deserting that French island In small ooata as if it were a sinking ship.

and la script inai is asaociaiea wiui most urograms. Mary Margaret ban been broadcasting so long that she has learned to take her time. When I tnoorractlj prload Uiroufk typoaraphlosl arror "WITH Otf EAT SUDDENNESS" This war will end with great suddenness, in the opinion of General Jan Christian Smuts, premier of South Africa. Smuts said this in a speech at Johannesburg, South Africa, on Mon- day. General Smuts went on to say: "It may be some tim ahead but It, Ik coming.

I liavc. no doubt whatever of the Issue, whether it be long or short." That "sudden end' feature has long been our own thought. General Smuts may have never heard, possibly, of Roger Babson, business forecaster, who was quoted here some days ago to the effect that the end the war could be ly seen some time before the actual collapse. The thesis of "eud with great suddenness" still appeals to us. tools.

ara event win liability se amnion wnoro nld at tlx tooorract prtoa. The Justice Department has un earthed documents showing that National Lead had an agreement a 1th O. Farbenlndustrle of Ger about 125 cans per foldier as against about 5 cans for every civilian per year, in fact, the amount of canned goods on hand for a ten million man army was about the same as the amount expected to feed civilians. The Truman Committee also found that as a result of this hoarding the packers and ranncrs were in a quandary and expected to curtail production. They knew the Army had over-purchased, could never use its vast stores of canned goods.

So the canners figured the Army would dump this back on the market, thereby causing an over-supply just at the wrong time. That was why 30,000.000 cases were turned back to civilian use by the Army now, to ease the market while there Is a civilian shortage. Note: More probing of Army food waste is in line, especially the habit of Army cooks of ordering several thousand chickens for Sunday dinner, when so many men are absent on leave. Mail Bag N. 1.

Topeka, Kansas: If Axis prisoners are put to work as farm hands, they will be paid a minimum of 80 cents a day. This applies only to enlisted men; officer prisoners get an allowance ranging from $20 to 840 a month without working. The Geneva Convention TELEPHONES Buataoa Offloa tl Wal Ml Advertising zjeparUatsat Dial MIS Editorial Kooaaa octet? Editor Dtal HI! FRIDAY, MAY 28. 1943 have the luck to be. Invited aa a guest, she and I chat a we would tt a restaurant, without script or my sort of rehearsal.

The custom- era, in great numbers, are nice enough to say that they enjoy that wrt of program. Mr. Joseph Patrick Kennedy, sometime ambassador to England, wna in town reeentlv. huvlnsr a bit BUY A POPPY Tyrannical Vichyite Admiral Rob THE WAV TO END IT many whereby, if war came. Nazi patents would be so held by Nation-al Lead in this country that they would not be seized by the Alien Property Custodian, but could be transferred back to Germany after the war.

This is not the first time National Lead has been under fire for its International business activities. For many years before the war, it cooperated with the big British-Dutch tin combine which forced the United States to ship raw tin all the way round the world from Singapore or Bolivia to England to be smelted, then back to the United States. It took months of inter-govern ert sends patrol planes out to try to stop them. More Canned Goods Housewives who will get more canned goods this summer can thank the Senate's Truman rom- "We should work as if this war would never says Chairman Donald Nelnon. of the WPR.

That Is the real Way to end it. Pass the word' on to John L. Lewis and the strikers in the rubber plants and others. of real estate. He told me of his four children who are in the services, and another about to enter.

And he gave me advice that my mother gave me often: "Don't tip back in that chair!" Mother was always saying I'd break my neck that way yet. Kennedy says, "I saw a fellow break his neck that way, In a big hotel chair. Late reports say that arrival of junk from the African battle grounds on this coast has been delayed. But great quantttiei of the best kind of scrap steel are expect Put down on your list of things to do tomorrow: Buy a poppy from tome one offering poppies for sale. You need not limit yourself to one poppy.

Buy more than one if you can. Be sure to buy at least one. The poppies offered for sale are made by former service men of World War One who are now Invalids and Inmates of hospitals. The money received from the sale Is used for their benefit. It Is a small thing to do.

But the results, if all of us buy as we should, will be large In helping men who will appreciate your response. Buy a poppy tomorrow. Do not forget. Do not fall, mlttee. No one announced it officially, but It was due to their probing that the Army recently released 30.000,000 cases of canned fruits and vegetables for civilian use.

Editorial Comment ed. Returning convoys can carry it ment Jockeying before Peurl Harbor to persuade government friends ol The Truman Committee had revealed the fact that huge quantities of canned goods were being hoarded or unwisely used by the Army, when fresh vegetables were easily available. Especially reveal as ballast. Meantime, however, if the steel industry still needs we have miliions of overhanging signs in New York that can be spared without loss to anyone. The result of cutting them all down would be a much better-looking city.

He tipped back, the legs broke off the chair, and he crumpled against the wall in such a way that he still has to carry his head and neck in a steel harness." Well. Eddie Rlckenbacker does it too! But then, he's notoriously lucky. Released by McNaught Syndicate. Inc. National Lead to build a tin smelter In the U.

S. A. so this country would be Independent of the international tin cartel. ing was the cross-examination of PROPER ACTION Fletcher Rockwell, president ol National Lead. Is also chairman of Business has been stirring in the the Board of Patinn Mines and En provides that officer prisoners must not be compelled to work, but must be paid.

The same free mall privileges allowed to U. S. troops will be allowed to Axis prisoners, and aLso the same rations, with special dishes such as spaghetti for the Italians and sauerkraut for the Germans, so far as possible. Officers not only don't have to work but are provided with orderlies from among the prisoners, who are paid 80 cents a day for this service. The same treatment is supposed to be given to U- S.

prisoners by Germany and Italy. (Copyright. 1943, by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.) FAIR ENOUGH Gen. E.

B. Oregory, the Army's Quartermaster General, by Senator Brewster of Maine. "Why does the Army feed canned grapefruit to its troops in Miami," asked Brewster, "when fresh grapefruit is growing all over Florida?" "Because the men are too lazy to prepare fresh was Gen. Gregory's frank reply. He also admitted that green vegetables and fruits were readily available to Army camps during a large terprises, the company organized by the big Bolivian tin king.

Patino. Note: Whether the War Department now steps in to block the Justice Department remains to be seen. Undersecretary of War Patterson has writhed in agony and protested to the White House when the Justice Department haa tried to prosecute various big business combines whose products are essential to the -by-Westbrook Pegler San Diego, May 27. Ever since pearl Harbor the East and the intermountaln area have been hearing that the people of the Pacific Coast feel that they are more seriously, more intimately, at war than their fellow countrymen beyond the Rockies. In San Diego one sees the reason why.

San There are areas of camouflage aroundljao Dlego so eIaboratj and Ingenious that they create a sensation almost of dizziness even seen from the ground at close range, which should mean that from the air, even a Jap who fished these waters and went to the Anti-Poll Tax Bill Is One More Stab Against South EDUCATION IX TIME OP WAR From Rock Hill Herald. Education, always one of the big problems of youth, Is made a bigger and more complex problem by the war and by the conditions created by war. But If It Is a problem for youth, the education of this youth of ours is an even greater problem tor age and for the nation. By education, of course, we mean In this connection the education which is received by way of books and schools. Much of the youth of America, which up to within a few short months has been engaged In this business of getting education and preparing for life, has been plunged suddenly into one of the greatest life tasks of all time, the winning of a war to save the things In this world which we believe only make all that edu' cation worth while.

The business of being a soldier has sudden-, ly taken precedence over the 'business of getting an education, in the minds of American youth. But because the nation holds to the principle that education adds to a man'a ability to a good soldier, even our military leadership wants this youth to remain in school as long as possible. The value of a good education the formal and well schooled sort of education cannot be over-estimated, even if one Is going directly Into the hard and sordid business of fighting a war. It is serious training for life, therefore, which the boys and girls of ours have just completed, who are receiving diplomas at 4hls time. We congratulate them upon the completion of this step on their way into life.

They are a cross sectlou of- the fine youth of our section and state and will help to make up this community of the future. We hope for them the best of what destiny may have in' stre. And for those who may be called Into the greatest present task of American youth, we pray especially that God will go with them and that Ills strong right arm will uphold and' strengthen them. President Roosevelt did the proper thing in his ultimatum to the strikers In the rubber' plants. These strikers had absolutely no excuse for their strike and Its consequent halt In war pro-ductlon.

The President told them so and told them also that If they did not go back to work, he would take over the plants as head of the government and would protect any patriotic workers who to work. That is the only medicine to use In a case like this. The picket line cannot stand up against soldiers with rifles. There were thousands of workers who wanted to keep on working but the few whb would not listen to reason could by violence keep these men from working and doing their patriotic The President told these unreasonable and Unpatriotic men that the Federal government could not allow them to dominate the plants, and that is just what should have been said. In fact, It should have been Bald on the first day of the strike.

The wishy-washy, soft and easy way of dealing with such situations make more such strikes. The country has needed firm and decisive action for some time and much of the trouble the country has been having would never have happened if a policy of firmness and courage had been announced and followed. Diego Is a city, of the war and for the war, swollen by the war to (By II. E. C.

Bryant) doubts but the question Is, can they keep np a fight until the end of the present Congress. They defeated a similar bill last Congress as It did not reach the Senate until near the end of the final session. The debates In the Hoiiko over the discharge resolution and the bill were acrimonious at times. Old timers said they were almost as heated as the dlscuRslons in Congress Just before the outbreak of the War Between the States. Rep.

William M. Colmer, of Mississippi, during the debate on the motion to discharge the committee, said: "Here at a time local schools would mistake an important target for something not 'worth bombing. There are guards on every hand and, as a tribute to stupidity, at some points i.nm nn nannlo tr aalr A vnn enormous size and expanse, concerned with nothing else but war with the hated and unforgivable Democrats. No Democrat opposed It. In that State as In others Democrats and Republicans are patting the Negro on the back for his support.

Pennsylvania has Japanese to the almost total dis Washington. May 28. Local newspapers give a 21-year old sailor credit for the passage of the anti-poll tax bill. The young man stood up In the gallery and railed at the members of the House and later said they were regard of the Germans. They had between 300.000 and 325,000 Negro voters.

their Japs here in the days of peace and always suspected that the Japanese fishermen were in Of the 28 members from Illinois fighting the Civil War over again. 24, six Democrats and 18 Republicans, voted against the commit terested primarily In spying on But as a matter of fact the reso oar Navy and our vital works and tee. Illinois has 325.000 colored places and only incidentally, and lution to take the bill away from the House judiciary committee showed greater strength than the voters. when unity is the most prized as a blind, in the business of Ohio has close to 300,000 Negro voters, and Its entire membership catching fish. bill.

The votes were 368 against thing that we seek, we find the sad and sorry spectacle of the House of Representatives, of the the committee, and 110 for it in the House. Democrats ana Republicans, voted to discharge the committee. It was 23. representa National Congress, bringing up an issue that Is calculated more They have seen green American soldiers and sailors disappear Into the haze of the Pacific and have seen many of ihem come back on stretchers or feebly walk the vote for the bill was 265 to 110. There was no break in the line of the opponents of Che legislation.

The truth Is that the purpose of the bill, now on Its way than anything else to bring about tives. MICE OR MENT Indiana, with approximately disunity. "I know that you have gotten ing. The whole area far back In to the Senate for passage to a pro your orders from John I Lewis, to the hills and beyond them over longed filibuster, is to enable the 100,000 Negro voters, voted solidly against the committee. AS far out as the Pacific Coast the Negro Influence Is felt In political contests.

The bill that just passed the House was handled by Negroes oi the seven Southern Earl Browder, the Association for the Advancement of Colored People, from, the Gentlemen from into the southwestern desert teems with soldiers. Marines and Bluejackets training for war and awaltingthat unpredictable hour when they will quietly vanish to a native and where were you born?" The object of this Inquiry, familiar at various points in. the Southwest, escapes everyone who has had the experience, for they always accept the answers and never ask for papers or otherwise pursue, the subject. The degree of hatred of the Japs on a per capita basis probably 1 not at Intense in this hugely swollen Ban Diego as It Is in other California cities where the original California population Is still predominant. The Eastern' American or.

one from the Plains or the South is Inclined to hold, that, after all, a Jap born In this country never saw Japan might be loyal If he but had a chance. The majority of Calif or-nlans, however, including many ot high intelligence; hate them all. trust none and would frankly write race into the constitutional, If they, could to revoke the cltl-v tenship of those who hold It, Intern them, every one, until the war Is over and then deport all who were born or ever studied In Japan and forbid any new Japanese Jap to set foot on American soli after that. This Is not entirely a new feeling. It existed before, but it has been intensified by Pearl Harbor, Bataan, Guadalcanal and the murder of the States that have the poll, tax requirement for suffrage to vote.

There la no doubt about the In fa Democrat from Washington New York (Mr. Marcantonio), and I know that you have gotten your orders from the First Lady or the land. I know that politically you know you must vote for be replaced by others. There are tentlon of the measure, supported by Mrs. Franklin D.

Roosevelt, And now It Is reported from Washington that both Democrats and Republicans are afraid of any decided stand in the way of legislation to check the abuses in labor matter. It Is said both parties realize next year Is election year and are. 'gun-shy because of tho votes which may be lost. If both parties had the courage to do what members know should be" done, how could one lone something which the tlier sido might gain from labor organizations? What sort of members of the Congress do we have, if this report Is correct? Are they mice or men? Senator Pepper of Florida, and the leading' Negro" organizations of the country. It is just one more this detestable thing, but in the name of thr one objective of winning this war, for God's sake, one, time let us rise above politi stab at the South, and those behind It know that.

Right or wrong, the plant Is to give the cal expediency and vote to up ANOTHER NAZI PI RGK TALKED From Spartanburg Journal. It appear that Hitler is planning to kill some more of his There has been talk over the Berlin radio of an approaching purge of the Nazi party. A Kaxl official said that party members were expected to set an example In strength and bravery and those who failed to meet the requirements would have to be ''expelled." In 1934 Hitler "expelled" a good many party leaders with gunfire. Some were close friends, but friendship means nothing to Hitler. Any one who fails to measure up to his expectations in promoting the alms of Hitler is in danger of losing his life.

Hitler hss a lot to worry about this summer. The Finns say openly that "an Allied landing In Europe this summer might be considered a certainty." The Finns are worried because they colored people of those States an State, and its six members, three Democrats and three Republicans supported the motion to discharge the committee and the bill. It Is estimated that between 75.000 and 80,000 colored men and women vote there. There are more than 100,000 Negro voters In California. The Negro migration from the South during the last 25 years took more than 3,000,000 Negroes to the North.

East and West and they are now using the ballot as they never used It before, and a large majority of the voters are Democrats, having turned against Herbert Hoover In 1932, and vot opportunity to override the whites hold the Constitution and the integrity of this Congress and contribute to the national unity so necessary to winning this war." Six of the South Carolina mem Hi A REPUBLICAN DISSENT at some of the ballot boxes where they outnumber their white The situation In Congress In re guns visible for some of the pub-lie roads and mysterious areas are posted and patrolled by sentries and the planes which growl up and down the coast and stand boldly out to sea, are up there not only to give their crews experience but to protect ships going' and coming and prevent a repetition of Pearl Harbor. Some of the wrecked equipment Of war comes back to San Diego for salvage and scrap and it surely is no military secret that new stuff la going out, but not as much as the fighters could use, and possibly, not as much as they need. There are war widows In San Diego and war babies who never will see their fathers, and little brides who have thumbed their way. so to speak, to the Jumping off place to be with the men of this marrying Army and Navy, taking their chances on finding quarters In an overcrowded camp. gard to this legislation la made bers of the House voted against the motion to discharge the committee Fulmer, Hare, Bryson, Richards and McMillan, and Riv clear by the votes on the motion to discharge the committee and captive Doollttle raiders.

on the bill. Ever since the Ne The expansion of San Diego far ers was paired against It, All seven voted against the bill. ed for Mr. Roosevelt. out into country which was only groes who migrated to the North, East and West during the closing months of World War No.

1 and The Southern States are outvot hills or sand and rotten rock where the war plant workers and ed, and may continue to be. The Negro organizations have the yeara after that become eligible to vote In their new homes service families live In trailers nf IIHt llltla a very elaborate schedule for re forms through legislation. Feder 'fear lhat Hitler will not be able to fight much In And Hitler Is worried about the threatened Invasion. He must have absolute control over his bencbm.ea. lie may be simply threatening "now, but in all probability he will order a purge If he deems it necessary for his protection.

Which means that Nazt blg-wlga will have an uneasy wondering it they will be able to get through It. they hare held the balance of power In close state, congressional and other elections. i "project: houses Is entirely war expansion. They have spread out mile after mile and yet one hears al and State. They have the anti-poll tax bill, introduced by Rep.

Marrahtonlo, American La-j Thirty-four of the New York of hunks In trailers rented for There are many no doubt, whose two or even three shifts of sleep nor party member from New York, and managed In Its passage1 by parting kiss within a few weeks ers who came from outside to help turn out planes. Not all Republicans In the North and East are clamoring for Federal "repeal" of State laws requiring payment of a poll tax In order to vote. Mark Sullivan, Republican, and for years -author of a daily newspaper column with large, circulation warns Northern and Eastern States, of a possible kick-back In this poll tax "re-': peal." fa Says Mr. Sullivan in his column, after calling attention to the fact that there are only aeven States, all Southern, which require a poll tax for voting, and that people in the other Slates may think the poll tax "repeal" does not con-' cern them In the least: But the fact Is. this measure spplies to every State.

It applies to New York and Pennsylvania and Illinois and Iowa to literally every State Just aa It applies to seven Southern States. Here again, the reader may think carelessly. If he is a New York reader, or an Illinois one, or an Iowa one, he may think: "We don't have a poll tax and we don't want, one so' why worry?" Bui If these States outside the South do not have the poll tax as a qualification for voting, they have other qualifications, which they cherish strongly, They have qualification about length of residence, about citizenship, about naturalization. And here is the menace to all the Staes or months, will be farewell. A Rep, Magnuson of Washington, the antl-lynchlng bill, and others.

delegation In the House supported the resolution to discharge the Judiciary committee' from further consideration of the bill so that it could he taken directly to the floor for consideration, 21 of them How and again the established lot of them get jobs In the airplane Later they will try to force the plant and some exceptional girls. local citizens permit themselves to wonder what will happen when Democrats of the South to allow Democrats, that being a majority the war Is won and suddenly We such aa the young widow of an enlisted sailor who has a baby 9 months old, are taken Into the offices of the Navyn Jobs are ended, but that Is a of the 4S members from that State, and the only votes against them to vote, In their primaries and to eliminate Jim Crow lawa. Their newspapers carry elaborate programs to those end. thought that It quickly swept un It were cast by three Republicans: Of course, there are war wid eight representatives did not vote Just before the last primary In From Chester Reporter. Hitler, were he suddenly transported to this couutry, and given all the privileges accorded a citizen or a neutral, could hardly be more brazen and defiant than John L.

Lewis. Here la a man. who has grown fabulously rich, the possessor of two or three prinoely homes, furnished superb ly, and with art treasures as costly aa any king possesses looking down from the walls, breathing defiance at the President; at the War Labor Board, at the men In, qur armed service who are giving their lives to save us. and putting his own personal and unhallowed desires and ambition ahead of everything else! Why do those who are In position to crush him tolerate him? but were paired. The Negro vote in New York Btate Is between and 350,000.

and In close ows and babies elsewhere, but, although there are no statistics. It seems that there must be more of them in San Diego In proportion to the population. Young wives have flocked here to the water's edge when young Amer South Carolina a delegation asked State political leaders to permit them to participate. They were turned down but they then said they would renew the request at the next election. der the rug.

Finally, for the comfort of the East. It can be rev ported that although San DtegO considers herself to be under the guns of the Japs or thereabouts and more grimly at war than most, other cities, the motor traffic Is heavy on the long-haul highways' and enlivened by old-style prewar madmen who drive like contests, such as that State has now and then, that Is a very Im portant factor. Of the 33 members from Penn That Senate, members from the ican men shove off to some of the Fighting for China like his famed father is Cap Chiang youngest son 8 fcX the generalissimo. sylvania 27 voted to discharge the committee, and 12 of those were South will, filibuster against the anti-poll tax "Mil no one here most brutal fighting In the history of war." 4 hell..

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