{ title: 'The Advance-news. (Ogdensburg, N.Y.) 1933-1935, October 31, 1943, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1943-10-31/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1943-10-31/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1943-10-31/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071106/1943-10-31/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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/ OhrMM >. «>,«•• .Ai Arl \T< AOWNT NFWS is h. y at ill ST. Vic Dumas 1 Praised By Adim.King Washington, O. C.—Vktoc A. Da- mus. carp^ater's mate. Srd class, is today the proud possessor of a letter frees Admiral Kins of the L. S Navy. I In April. Dumus >vbo&e home is | i n Ogdensburg. N Y . joined an art group at the I SO oa K Street in Washington. D. C For three I months he marked on an oil por- trait of the Admiral whk-a was i later forwarded to the command- ; ing officer through the Nary. Admiral Kins'* U iter arrived the day l>umas received his promotion : t o carpenter's ma;e. The letter reads. \Commander Campbell has Isent the portrait you painted for me to see. I am triad to 'tare seen , it and wish to congratulate you on the talent yon have indicated and hope that you will have the time , and make an effort to develop it. With all good wishes.\ Dumas is taking the Admiral? advice and will attend classes this winter at ihe Corcoran Art Gallery . At the present time he 1» working . on an oil painting, depicting « i scene in the Solomon Islands. Du 1 mas credits the VSO with his first chance to work in oils. *.' •/• i\ } Victor A. Dumas while attend- ing Ogdens-burg Kree Academy showed considerable ability in art and studied under both Miss Belle Jamieson and Miss Ruth No son in ( the local academy. His work was red frequently highly commended here at t during exhibitions of school work. 71 the ring •ase MRS. E. REGAN Mrs.V\nua Simonds Regan. 6»', passed away at the A. Barton Heje burn Hospital at f>: IS Oct. ri' Flit had been taken to the hospital only three weeks ago. hot had been ill since April of 194;. Mrs. Regan was born in Nor- wood on June 7. l^s.t, the daughter of Gilbert and Marga.et Manning Simonds . i<he married Edward Regan on i Sept. 16. ISIS, in Norwood *ith the tier. Father Roach officiating. The ! couple moved here in 19HZ. Mr. j Regan was a well known railroad j engineer until his retirement. Mrs. Regan was a member of the St. Mary's Parish and the Rosar> and Sacred Heart Societies. I Surviving are her husband: two l-step daughters. Mrs. Joseph Mur- I ray of Deposit. N\. V.. and Mrs. i Arthur Donnely of Long Island. N Kri-i Y.: two sisters. Mrs. Lester Tapper Ma- of Syracuse and Miss Mary Sim- onds of Norwood. Funeral services will be held from the horn* at f]4 Ford St. on Monday morning at a time to be ar;-onnced later. flon- Dis- and the offi- nner sion. src^- t St ling • :i w iate >ter ially ORATOR WILL SAT... VOUR NUTBS: // ^-OPERATION DViDED LINE ESTION VTILL QL HIKER ^. Illl»aOMI COSMIT t » VOftPO *VOWC Ogdensburg's Picture Parer. Only Sunday morning .ssue la North Country Pall Associated Press leafed wira service. W«» news to 2 a.m. OCDENSBURG ADVANCE'NEWS Weather Warmer Sunday afternoon. VOL 8—112 The Advance Est 1M1 Th* Advance-News. Sat. a*33 OCDENSBURG. N. Y.. SUNDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1943 Entered as Se~>nd CJass Matter at Poet Of::cr ogoensburfc. N. T. Pric* Fhre Cent* Red Army Reaches Crimea Entrance 'Spectacular Drive Made Bv Russians; ', a> J Crimea Battle On New Regime For Italy Discussed Naples—(Delayed^— (APi — Th* shelving of both King Vitterto Cmanuele and Crown Prince Nm- berto in favor of a regency for Um- berto's S-year-cld aon. the Prince of Naples, was proposed for Italy Saturday as American and British representatives conferred with a group of the foremost Italian poll steal leaders. The conference* were believed to have dealt with Italy's fature government, and afterward Bene- detto Croce. perhaps the country\* most powerful political figure, sug- gested in an interview tea: a re- gency for the hoy Prince under Premier Pietro Badoglio mas the answer to the need for a stronger government than Badoglio now hc.:ds. The nature of the meetings, at- tended by American Minister Kob- en Murphy and British Minister Harold MacMillan. was not an- nounced, but it was believed that the organization of an Italian gov- ernment in the full sense of the ford was discussed. The presence of Croce. Italy s elder statesman and one of the strongest influences in present Italian politics, and Count Carlo Sforra. former Foreign Minuter and antifascist leader, underlined the Importance of The conferences. Premier Pi*»tro Badoglio arrived Swurday with Murphy and Mac- Millan for bis fi*-st public appear- ance here since the city was freed from the Germans, but whether he pprticipated in Saturday's confer- ence* was not disclosed. Boh Murphy and MacMillan held long talks with Croce and Fforza. and the latter two. who have not met since the Counts an-ira! from the United S'ates. are scheduled to confer at Croce s viae, -at Sorrento Sunday. Italian leaders have agreed unanimously that the establish- awasU «tf aatwg torn of jaawajramtat with greater prestige and powers than Badoglio now commands is an tmmediaie necessity, but they also agree that any regime can be only provisional pending liberation from the Germans and the possibility of consulting the wishes of all Ital- ians The 77-year-old Croce himself, in di-idosin^ for the first tim»- that he favors a regency, tended to con- firm earlier reports that both King Vi'torio Emsnuele ami the Crown Prince had lost considerable pres- tige. Strikes Mount-In Coal Fields; Yanks Split Japs On Choiseul Jap Planes Driven Off By Allies Allied Headquarters in the South- west Pacific. Sunday—fAP)—At l»ed invaders of tiny Treasury Is- land are pushing its few hundred Japanese defenders toward the . northern tip and seaborne Ameri- can paratroopers who landed on Choiseful. splitting enemy forces there, are consolidating thrir posi- j tions. These development!: in the new- ly-opened offensive on the ap- proaches to the last big Japanese i Solomons base of Bougainv lie were announced by headquarters today. Belatedly It was disrlosed that after American and New Zealand .amphibious troops landed Wednes- day on Treasury. SO miles south of Bougainville. ?5 Japanese dive- bombers and fighters tried to inter- fere They were Intercepted to thet north of the eight-miie-long island by Lightnings. Kittyhawics and Airacohras which shot down at least 12. All the # interceptors re- I turned to their bases. The report was the first of any appreciable enemy air activity in the sector where hi* base* were bombed out prior to the invasions. An indication that the Japanese also may be moving inland rein- iforcements was given in a report that north of Boongainrille a troon- iaden coanui vessel •sste.aaaiBid rtadwtofC* \* - *\*fc *r • On the southwestern s*hore of Choiseful. where paratroops achiev- ed unopposed landings from ships Thursday at a village < lose by a Japanese barg^ staging depot, the communique today confined itself to \our ground troops are consoli- dating their position\ There mas rn> indication that any fighting had occurred yet. Report Sears Asks |\Vide Coal Aurelio Clearance New York—lAP'—Thomas I. Sheridan, attorney for former Magistrate Thomas A. Aurelio. announced Saturday that official referee Charles B. Sears had recommended that Aurelio be cleared of disbarment charges brought by the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. Referee Sears had announced earlier that he had presented to the Appellate Division his official report on proceedings against the repudiated Democratic and Republican candidate for the New York State Supreme Court. Sheridan told reporters \I'm going to get a show-cause order asking for the affirmation of the report. I'll probably do A on Monday morning.** Coal Stocks Regulated Washington— «AP> —An emer- gency regulation prohibiting the delivery of anthracite coal to any and lndians a , on domestic consumer having more than 10 days' supply on hand was ordered Saturday, by the Solid Fi;els Administration. *Tfcf* emegency legulatiou also prohibits retailers from delivering and consumers from accepting 2. WPB also stood ready, in n»are-fh*a a hdlt-Uh> of auttraeite, * v *? 1 « • prolonged strike, TO baa -^arold L. *ckes.*DT* Tt,els Ad- ^^ £F^riT\dZn»iw:. minjstrator. said the regulation is A spokesman said it might b* ut*<*essary to assure distribution of necessary to divert som*» coal the limited available supplies of stocks of utilities to war plants. \Shut-Down Expected Washington-- fAl'' —The num- ber of striking soft coal miners climbed to HS.tKM) Saturday height- ening prospects.of a virtually com- plete industry shut-down by Mon- day. ; Monday also may bring a settle- ment, in one fashion or another, of • the issues which have kept the in- dustry torn with controversy and turmoil since early spring. The United Mine Workers Policy Com- mittee meets here, and President Roosevelt has promised that unless this meeting brings a ba<k-fo-the- mines movement he will take \de- cisive action.\ I Whatever the climax, the gener- al expectation is that this time the situation will force some arrange- ment, goverumer.t-imposcd or fHherwis*-. holding good for the \rars duration. in other developments: 1. The War Production P.oard estimated the s'rikes in Alabama where the cur- rent series of walkouts h*-ggn Oct. 13—have <-aused the loss of l»H>.uflu tons of iron and steH output. This is metal enough. WPB said, for **3\ Liberty shiua>i>r l\5i»0 medium tanks or 7,l»«»o 15Z>-millimetei gims \ London—(AP)—Russian troops sweeping acroas the No- gai&k steppe reached the edge of the Crimea at its northeastern entrance Saturday and simultaneously raced to within 22 miles of its northwestern door at Perekop, the last escape route for the large German Crimean armies. in one of the most spectacular drives of the war the Rus- sians thus were ready to seal off the great peninsula and within matter of hours lay siege to the hundreds of thousands of Ger- mans estimated to be still quartered there. The battle of the Crimea was on. Tht- uvrili'-i'ri-Tn fti::aBc-' to u'ie - Partisans In Bloody Fighting In Hungary 'I anthracite during the present l>eriod of strikes and threatened strikes All anthracite sizes larger than barley are affe< fed. Tlie emertenc y order is effective at once. Enemy To Abandon 'Co-Prosperity' Tank Cars Destroyed Highland. N. Y.— fAPi —Explo- *!'>ns ?hat sounded like the boom- ing of cannon sen' thousand* of |u;iou* of oil aad gasoline trp in flame and smoke Saturday in the spectacular wreck of a New York. New Haven and Hartford freight •trnn. Thirty tank cars, by unofficial en;:nt. blew up and ignited when the locomotive jumped the track at a **itch siding one mile and a ka!f northwest of Highland on the west side of the Hudson river. No one was killed or injured. %>i:- the flame* leveled three houses §V iar the right «rf way. The occu- p«tits escaped, leaving behind th«jr household and persona 1 be ionguues London Has Air Alert j Washington — <AP> — Shipping losses have forced the Japanese to j abandon their \co-prosper;'*. -- scheme as it afferts the Dutch East Txidies. a Tokyo broadrast indi- :ates. In favor of \self-sufficiency\ .'or those captive Isles. The broadcast, addressed in the Japanese language to Asia, was picked up by Vnited States govern- ment monitors. It said the Japa- perceti' ineffective, the net an- nese program concentrates on Jure notim«d resaH beinc a bomb hit things. on « private residence. 1. Prewmre upon the Indonesians ' Th * Orrnan Air Force lost two to join the Japanese-sponsored de- <•- » ** TRr >* \ mal] number\ „f plane* London— (AT'i —I^ondon was subj'-ctcd to a light nuisance raid Saturday nirht a few hours after lb* RAF delivered fresh blows on do* ks at cherbotirg and the Mau- p» , rtus airfield nearby The London raid was almost 1»* 3. The Solid Fuel-; Administra- tion reported that bituminous coal production ri<-< lined 4t > :..«>«Ki tons in the week ended Oct. ZZ compaved mith the previous m - eek Output for the meek was 11 ,:>o«.»»00 tons 4. The outlook for anthracite production became increasingly un- certain. Reports from hard coal fields in eastern Pennsylvania said about 32.000 of the M<HMHI an- thracite niiners worked Saturday ompared with fewer than SH.OOII un Friday wl-en many miners de- served John Mitchell Day. a tradi- tional holiday honoring an early union leader. London—iAP>—The Yugoslav Partisan radio announced Saturday that Guerr>llas had pushed their way across the Hungarian border in fc-ioody fighting with the Nazis and Saturday night other Partisan forces _%*re reported battling the Germans In the Fiume-Tneste areai after Joidfcng^Up with a Strang group of Italian patriots. ._ —_ | i>\B. the (ierraan news agem y. tn a broadcast from Berlin gave tacit admission of the scope of the Yuto-iav Italian opposition, declar- ing that \mopping-np operation- icaiiust the irue'tilias in the north- •a»ii corner :>f Italy \is proere>s- :ng. with »•>•' capttire<l a.nd 1.6«H» killed\ bu' added. \:r. Palmatia the jrtrerrilla war still continues \ lu I>n!ina;i». the conimuni«|ue said a German column was de- feated after T> hourR of hitter fightint: in which some laO Nazi soldiers were killed or wounded Tito's communique said that the Cbetnik leader. <Jen Pjukanovic. who was captured recently while fighting <m *he side of the tier- mans ir. .Moutcncgro. had died of mounds fense corps. 2. Large scale recruiting live labor. 3 A drive for \economic autfkrMTK v\ m the Indies. of na- self- that reached London dnnr.c the brief alert. One was believed des- troyed. BEE SOUVENIRS j Jamestown. N. Y. iAPi—Three j Jamestown policemen set out to 'disaose of a bee tree. They came hark with th* tree sawed down and ~.l pounds af honey—also swol- Huge Jap Flying Boat Destroyed %Vashintftoe>- 4AP. —l*estr»r- ii&n ffr one of Jat**'* Mccftt fry- -hur boats was daxlaaed Sarardav \hf tht Xmrr la a serws as* a*etuie» taheat trnm camera* an plase* irWr* went tbe eawmy craft aavctg Sex tote tJae aea Tbe bar fam enakiie aka* -wrss wboi dssara » a tree an trine •rn a;aj?ea*e«t t>e tare rarrier-astaed HeDcatt P%&l+r* wrtoa eocow*i'« i»4 at «aast •frae Gtfkmn ssiaans as the aamrthwmt Pariftc KHarsrtlr awraw ahaa the T f Kary's tbe esvenry fryisst baavt. -Rwihy. baw a w-ra* ian isWI «f US te^t ass aa awarall Jmrnk «d wj SMTL OOPS. SOKJtV. Kesr York — fifteen r oi*ege «tt»- dent*. aporang red pork-pie hats, entered Kings County Court a* part at their fratemitv initiation \ *\> hands aad arms Judge Peter J B~ancato looked «p. frowned on the ha is atop the crrw-ruurcttued beads. Told to re- soowe tbrm. tbe youtte- rerrmmed as htmnobile as wooden Indians The jnsbjrf held them m contempt. casaped tbezn m a cell. One of Ua* coDesrams was Peter J. Branca to. Jr.—«be Jadcea aon. HAS MONEY—WO FURLOUGH .Endicott. N. Y.--1AP1—i'vt. Kail C, Uauderauu; wrote his wife from Hawaii be had received a Marine Cars* Leacae farasach prize of $1**. Wat saw no prospect of a fur- laaxrh. He aaatt the money borne for fcoveatsoesit ss war bands Eisenhower To Get Key Post Is Belief Washington iAi'»—Tne Arm> aid Navy Journal said Sa r urday that Army circles are confident General I>wicht I>. Eisenhower will he selected by President Roosevelt to \direct tbe Office of Chief of £taff of the Army\ if General Ooree C. Marshall should he ap- pointed Supreme Commander af Anglo-American forces Referring t* Kisenhowei's ' hand!hog\ af difficolt military and ( political pnoWems in the North African campaign and tbe planting . of tbe Sicilian and Italian cam- paign*, the on official service aohH- cstioo crni'ttinit^J- *\A11 tbe»* snonttmental tasks were done t# the satisfaction at the f*r«^M4en«. Prhaie Vtnist-e: Chanrn- ( «t and Ot»eral Marshall \ Slice Tax On Liquor Washington <AP»—Th: House Ways and Means Committee, re- shuffling several proposed excise tax ratev. de> ided Saturday to sli<e in half Hs previous recom mendation for a ?4 a gallon boost in the tax on alcoholic liquor. The committer, without a record vote, changed the proposed rate from fU< a galion >o $K. The pres- ent tak is fd a gallon The action •will decrease tbe estimated reve- :nie from that source by $»42.«>o».- ' However several change, f on, Stat6 CIO BaCl\S Crimea was rea< hed with the cap- ture of Genischesk. while north- westward a second column striking directly toward Perekop captured the town of Askaniya Nova, only ** miles away. The Knssiaus advanced np to 22 mile* in 'heir day's drive and «wet>t np a total of 159 more towns on the desert steppe as they pre- ;»ared to choke off the Crimea at its thin, vulnerable neck. Scaling off the peninsula, with hundreds of thousands of Germans caught in the trap, appeared to be only a matter of hours as German resistance broke. To take Genichesk the Russian* had advanced ifi miles in exactly a week from the capture of Melito- pol and reached the shores of the Sivasb or 'putrid*' sea. formed by k thin bar of land cutting the east- ern shore of the Crimea from the ( Sea of Axov | While «_;en. Feodor Tolbukhin's i cavalry-paced columns spread over i tbe great southern steppe like a flood. Gen. Rodion V. Mahnovsky's Imieper bend army pushed ahead ree to five miles toward Nikopol. mancanese center, and Gen Ivan S. Konev s troops fought almost continuous counterattacks in Use Krivoi Rog area, where the Ger- mans were nicking their most des- perate bid to s^a^e off wholesale disaster on the entire southern front. _^ I Ore Cossack column swept I>mit- rievka. If miles frcrn the Dnieper at Kakhovka. The Kus\uns thus were swinging into position for at least two crossings nf the river, at Kakhovka and near Nikopol where Russian forces were beyond Rla- govyescbenskoe. only five miles fron- 'be river. , Agreement In Moscow Is Assured Moscow — (AP) — Speeding to- • ward a conclusion ef the 11nlay- old t\.power conference. Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Foreign Commissar Vyachesiav : Wolotov met an hour earlier tn*n usual Saturday in what was de- scribed as a continued high atmo- sphere of cordiality and coopera- tion. As !»resldent Roosevelt disclosed at hi* press conference Saturday. the three Allied representatives lare ncderstood to have possibly p::t their signatures so certain declarations which have come be- fore the conference and undoubted- ly will be made public later There has still been no an- nouncement as to how mach longer the conference win last. NAZIS ARE WORRIED London— (AP) —Tht Moscow three-power eon*erenea plunged Be.-iin into restless anxiety Saturday. Nazi propagandists relayed Swedish reports that the Adles had given Russia c **fixed date\ and all details for launching a major front >n western Euroge. Two Ships Are Sunk revious tenta'tvr decisions re malted in a n*t in- tease in revenue of $4*.<»0<>.\4«». The committee's actions in« itid- ed 1 Iioubling nf the present tax on Hears, a move estimated vi« Id t2S.tMH>.00». 2. A further increase in the tax or. electric light bulbs and vacuum tubes from ?\• ie 2J percent 7. An mcr+>a*e in the tax on >ewelry to H' percent Nazis Flood Pontine Marshes «*; Lonergan Resting After Questioning biew York <AJ'.— Wayne ljeo-r- fab. who experienced the glr'teT of <*Je aocH'ry and kn«>m the IhV «d a Brtwwtwsy plarlioy was left akane aad friet»d»e*wi m his «^ll Sa - :nsay. as pohce woagbt a4drt*em^i *in >e so tbe HIiMhoeonmr send r.trlkwc nf his pretty. 2l'-yrw:^»la nfe. Parricia Partwn l^rm ersas l>WK'.gati wt>«* istwirirt AT*ani>* y Frassk ft Hastar saai aarn^d a c4aa re*mi -jast laW ass* «*ber •~ ftwe m hmt feasa bane*. Roosevelt For \44 Buffalo. N Y. -IAP'—The Sew Yo « >'»w c.ti. clahninc UT^.tHH- meral»ers. Saturday end<»rsed a ^ fourth term for president Roose- velt aad asked renommation by the iJemocratic party of Vice Pre si dent Wallace hi 1*44 Av •**olntitm snpporiing a fourth term *a> adopted at the ttfth annu- al <\IO c^wivetitioti whi< b also en doTH^d L» CH^TI William N Has- kell. f»etmxra;it and Ani*-ricaii IJI- a*»r Party <andidate. f4*r Lien ten an'-Gc»vern<»r an next TueadaV'- - W't sun Tbe fottrth 'enr re-*«»hrti*»n as- serted \1J»44 w-Ul be a year of er«»t aVcisMan\ and declared \Amerirsi as>d tbe world leouiie rhe the <on tmuance\ af Prestdrn' K(>*»»e-ielCs tej>u>tship \thremgh tbe defftratt days that he ahead\ The drafting committee of Amer- i<an. Russian and British experts worked late last night and went back to their highly technical job early this mornine. Numerous pa- pers, approved in principle by the thre~ foreirn ministers, have pass- ed through thei\ bands. The delegates are beginning to ook tired, although Secretary H;;!l Al.ied himself does not show the strain Particularly. Tbe Secretary has been careful to conserve his strengrh. consistently refusing all social irvi'afions H» is st:U oVs- scribed as in fine health and nvng early every day. Th« nose bieed which he suffered rrid»ary thtoiseh the 'inference has not ocmnea sin e l.ondon AP>—Two light war.>rup-. one British and one Nor Jwegian. sank a Gei man-controlled I xessel of 3BO - ons off the Norwe- ' ciar. coas^ last St:::dsy. bur the Brrish ve*.«.e: was lost. She had o be sunk as a result of a subse- quent encounter with German plane- a communique announced Saturday. The clash occurred 100 miles north of Bcrgrr. Or.e German-con- trolled ship— nat locality not fur- ther specified—loaded v:ih pota- toes u-as allowed to proceed but the other, carrying cement, aas . jcanl: after trs crew was allowed to era tor bombers take to boats Yanks Bomb Burma Base BEWARE. TAKE CARE Ithaca. K. V iAl\' iuia«* Ce4- lt-rc pt;>»-i<-; fitne»# esu reveal that '•*» SfT»boanoie ct-ls. Violet Kissel) «*r S'aten l»iaod and Kay < am^rata of the Brorx have •trmxrth eonivaier.' to men playmg varsiry lo<>tliall. Congress Mav Act Soon On Civilian Draft Bill Chungking -' AP —Medium lib- from tlie U. JP • 14th Ah\ Force wrni'd np wi'h iCaunese ground forces to slash at tee Japanese akmr tbe Burn.a border front srhere fighting broke out across the Salweeit Rrvrr west of KutiiusottL. camrrratuqises report- ed today. The Chhasae high eorrrmjaid re- parted ttrnt \cacsiderable rasvr- ties\ saere mflksed on Ca* Japa- lawae an tbe Salswer: fratr. wr.;k» i heaaosmrteTs ol tbe I4r3i Air Pr<rcc aaad S-24 Idberamrs asui.»ie«l sanr •*m» ef fcrtnb* on the Burma Kraal aarc af MaTtsriir.. a asaaar wemj oaae m Tm:i*n Prorsnoe. Iwrtrtcb aru*t b» swesa af tbe swrsncrhng Wk* a trrnge t* the west «*»« a« atasairnr AatrboiMai s s*^ avas*i«gt0*»- * AT < m'ar H»- «tak« th*? - said, mr^ » 'awar af tbe *j C|»\ att San Ctwtt a »am 4umi tartimg thewr aniwtaa aa »»n<Wlan« pa-.u«esfl and *i*-W»Tv«e s«r««» w> Mil a* a sjw-m. *l osrmaat fartbes • OTtUJIlieSe ^IMp 'Ebasjc ro« rcTLStc •J V. 4XT> -C-4S#-**r*d >t ta* >^« Tsw* Staae Trasa- tnc ffraieai a-^r a.wd 17 aas isesa- • > DO»J WHTTEHEAO %VrWi f»wj Ameri£»fi Frfttt *rmy _ ., _^ tr tbe vaneys. •*xti»ct aaacaao «»er«aolmg The «a> ta*w <a»e acaaaai boa m rsaty—fPetayaa i - t*rt \rae <>4- ^ . ^ ^^^ ^^ ^j,,^^ ,„, c^.^,^,, v«f»er m'tth Albed <*m- Tbey paare asss Crrascstr have flsuwsi teat s^awne , »sas»lK-a^ag tke axarf's awcibieans trat af tkw wwwaaw>. The Oermams asil^s af Cbe fsmaaii Plasma*- «f i sailial aad supply CwrOed w-maaf be foreed sswrk te pr«tewi Roaae shut Mmmm amaaan vab aw a*daag aa swatwer tberr ftaak Hsri recislsai i » h» piaa 'a .give jabaoaaninrt. hRtd ww tbe asi|*t. I TCerenheanas. tbe Fsfth Arssr «s This wras hwt a»e af tbe asaatr «b» ji |iwng ai«*dT as i saaii i acahsst atarae* tbe raj*iesrtaa Otisa de the Oranae ta tbe aa>>w frasraraw hathaay swaag* tfaara «• aktrr •earns wmw pi aaiaaa, b*r ftaaae. rrner r>a?waa wfh a wit's af m sea art Forssia Msmartass• mmmm wrwx-a saarr itsu) aa fafl ah* y*ar tarhw *• «jaw'wd mu i,iatasa libju's <be naad. an vow rke <in iwiaai baa aaaw af»*^ saasry Umij wawtbes lia iaiTtat, Hae Osi-jtfsaaa rtmmr tt«f af Oris apl msih 4a»r^ paw stasswriv* i saan I'uliiwTd 43ewrmiat- «r mi^ tmmjtm m J was oeartral ate'v safla*. f+t**- imu nwiA *W aaaser f rbe Cortrtiaaw feresw sa ruiiieanl i*T»i<r Uar'-st ^attmr. **. frrlKTs J«w saWstary t C ID \t\ »wsm awry >*d MW« im \hmm ma- <*r%-We «SMI a>^» war e»fe< ua» saw |^ StlflK l$V MlUC < a ia ra-asg tarat «*-gree astti«» m:tnv «c a '-ntltam draft af araihssde auraawwer r<jwT»< > biff afMihi»>4» te swn «rry Wit* JJM^-W Mil wasrtd 11 ^sali ate la\ iv>6wr4 tr.Mt m—-k t* »>p .Svnaw aatd X«r« ssaiaieaatue o«rps L,v^e «U •<\•««»* •. the twft is -nrm was* «•> *K d i af* aaw wrm wha Liahae <AP'— Tb» ;.'»'--»aai Pw taau-e< f-eiatb**- Padva. Ts>r -barter as the Tnt^reatsaatal Ked base tfta- A&mW <as> ihesi Warrr 'berr I'D!. Coff9T^tllljtP^ >\dor> the hlftrri.t- '-^wswiw Kn- ksr* tMi h~+ awdwi^d «n« the < ^ M * \\^T^ ^T*\**-!! a^r^rt +rim* «• Easa*- A W-*M*W • • •* vvas^i «is—ws»v . 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