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Arizona Daily Star du lieu suivant : Tucson, Arizona • Page 1

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S. WEATHER BUREAU An Independent NEWSpaper Printing the News Impartially AND VICINITY: Partly and cooler today with icat-tered afternoon thunder showers. 1 Cll'KC' Yesterday: etf Ago: HiRh. High. ..100 82 Low.

Low. 87 65 VOL. 103 NO. 268 Entered at ucond-elu mittet. Office.

Tucson. Arizona TUCSON, ARIZONA, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 24, 1944 THIRTY-TWO PAGES PRICE TEN CENTS SUCCEEDS HOWES UNCERTAIN LINK FORGED WITH AIR TROOPS AS BRITISH SMASH THROUGH NAZI DEFENSE; GOTHIC LINE IS CRACKED ABOVE FLORENCE WHEN AMERICAN CRUISERS SANK 32 JAP SHIPS FORT HUACHUCA TAKES INACTIVE STATUS OCT. 15 Population Will Shrink From 25,000 To 300, Hardy Announces 'pqrT HUACHUCA, Sept. 2t-(Special) Fort Huachuca the oldest continuously L'ed military reservation in the nation, will be placed on inactive status on or about October 15 and its population "wile from last year's 25,000 persons to 300, it was announced yesterday. CoL Edwin N.

Hardy, post commander who has just returned from Fort Douglas. Utah, made the Announcement yesterday. The information about the inactivation of Fort Huachuca had been received it the headquarters of the Ninth Service Command in Fort Douglas. colonel Hardy said inactivation Trill start on or about October 15 and be completed in 60 days, at which time the post complement 111 consist of approximately 300 wrsons, including officers, enlisted iien and civilian employes. Families of those persons will increase somewhat the total number of resi- dents upon the military reservation.

He also announced that approximately 6,000 Mexican laborers will be quartered at Fort Huachuca for three months and are expected to mve October 1. "Full informa- If m4mm 'r 7. JEM -safcjd. RESISTANCE GROWING Germans Show No Sign Of Flight Despite Heavy Attacks SUPREME HEADQUARTERS ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, Sept. 23.

(P) British Second Army patrols tonight forged a tenuous link with units of the "lost division" of airborne troops in the Arnhem, sector in Holland, and thousands of British and American glider troops, with large amounts of supplies, were flown in despite strong opposition, to reinforce Lt. Gen. Miles C. Dempsey hard-slugging rescue troops. A late front dispatch said the situation in the Arnhem sector.

remained serious, even as the Second Army, after a bloody six-mile relief march, hurled shells across the river into enemy lines ringing the valient sky troops a quarter of a mile away from the hard-won British position on the north bank of the Rhine. To the south, U. S. Third Army armour churned forward through, a sea of mud in a six mile push, capturing Buriville, six miles north, of Baccarat and about 30 miles east of Nancy. The remainder of the Third Army front was stalled by rain and strong Nazi resistance.

Patrols Cross River British tanks and infantry and the American sky-troops who fought through stand-and-die resistance apparently sent their pa- American heavy cruisers and destroyers of Third Fleet under Admiral Halsey scored 32 out of 32 when they took on convoy of small Jap cargo vessels and sampans five miles off Mindanao in the Philippines. Burning enemy vessels and an American cruiser can be seen in the background while another cruiser's guns (foreground) appear ready for action. (U. S. Navy photo.) GOP FALSEHOOD IS FDR CHARGE IN LABOR TALK Republicans Imitate Him, Says President In Outlining Issues WASHINGTON, Sept.

23. President Roosevelt assailed the Republican opposition tonight for what he termed their "callous and, brazen" falsehoods on domestic issues and asserted the nation must not let the Republicans "botch" the peace this time as he said they did 25 years ago. In a fighting speech that reminded many of his hearers cf the Roosevelt of earlier campaigns, he drew on ridicule, sarcasm, and mockery to lash his opponents for what he said was their attempt to "imitate" the present administration. Described by him as the opening address of his fourth-term drive, the half-hour talk was delivered before a wildly cheering audience at a dinner of the International Teamsters Union (AFL). 1,000 Present Approximately 1,000 persons including 845 union delegates, crowded the ballroom of the Statler Hotel and applauded time and again as the chief executive singled out speeches of his opponent and assailed and ridiculed them.

Without mentioning Gov. Thomas E. Dewey by name, the President declared that: 1. Republicans have practiced the most obvious common or garden variety of fraud," by trying to persuade the people to believe the Democrats brought on the depression and that the GOP is responsible "for all social progress under the New 2. The war -must be finished speedily and the peace ahead must be completed with the "same will and skill and intelligence and devotion which have already led us so far on the road to victory." 3.

The peace-building tasks were "botched by a Republican administration," and that this must not happen again. 4. The opposition tried to make him out an old man, to which he replied he was too old for one thing "I cannot talk out of both sides of my mouth at the same time." Among the other "malicious falsehoods" he accused the opposition Soviets Race Across Estonia, Seize Parnu On Gulf Of Riga LONDON, Sunday, Sept. 24. (Russian troops racing across Estonia reached the west coast yesterday, capturing the port of Parnu on the Gulf of Riga and sealing off thousands of Germans in a week-old offensive which is estimated to have cost the enemv eight divisions, or 80,000 men.

The Red Army captured Parnu in another two-miles an -hour advance from BRAZILIANS ADVANCE Heavy Artillery Used To Open Wedge In Fortifications ROME, Sept. 23. (P) American forces have smashed through the center of the German Gothic line and are looking down on the Po valley of northern Italy, it was disclosed tonight, while the British Eighth Army on the east coast, fighting out onto the Po plains, pushed the Nazis out of strategic road and rail positions. Sid Feder, Associated Press correspondent with the Fifth Army, said the exact location of the new American positions could not be disclosed, but that, "it seems safe to say the smash which carried Fifth Army troops over same of the tallest peaks in Italy to where the broad Lombardy plain at the gateway of which lies Bologna is unfolded before them, tore the heart out of the Gothic line at a point where it was probably the deepest." Previous Reports Previous reports had put theJ Americans 28 miles south of Bologna at the southern threshold of strategic Futa pass. The American advance was rammed home with one of the heaviest artillery concentrations of the war, with some German prisoners reporting the shellfire had cut some of their battalions to as few as 60 men.

The Brazilian expeditionary force on the western seaward flank was well on the way to capturing its first big objective, hammering on 20 miles northwest of Pisa to within 23 miles of the Italian port of La Spezia. As they fought out on to the ancient Via Aemilia, a highway which runs along the southern edge of the Po valley 75 miles northwest to Bologna British and Canadian troops were rounding up an increasing number of prisoners. Xearing Ravenna Other Eighth Army forces were fighting straight north Ravenna, 34 miles beyond Rimini, driving before them concentrations of enemy troops Mho were raked yesterday by the fire of the British destroyer Loyal. The advances also put the Eighth Army astride rail lines which run northwest to the big Italian industrial city of Milan. the clandestine pro-Allied Milan radio declared the Germans had been clearing out of the area for several days and a general strike had been called In the Piedmont to hamper their retreat to the Brenner pass.

There was no official confirmation of this report, but heavy aerial assault on communications in the area of Milan indicated that the movement of enemy troops was substantial. Bridges Blasted Medium bombers singled out dozens of highway and railway bridges from northeast of Venice westward to Milan in an attempt I to maroon and destroy as much of Field Marshal Gen. Albert Kessel-1 ring's army as possible. Kesselring's position along the whole Apennine front was becom-1 Ing more precarious hourly. His casualties were high In the terrific shelling and maehinegun fire ahead of Allied forces driving up the Tyrhennian sea flank.

LOUIS RENAULT IS REPORTED JAILED PARIS. Sept. 23. OP) The Agence Francaise de Presse, official news agency, said tonight that Louis Renault, motor magnate and one of France's leading industrialists, had been jailed in the Fresnes prison. The agency reported that accountants of the Renault firm said Renault factories from 1930 to 1943 made and sold $120,000,000 worth of war materials for the German army.

DR. JEREMIAH METZGER METZGER GETS HOSPITAL POST To Succeed Pr. Howes As Superintendent Of State Asylum PHOENIX, Sept. 23. (JP) Dr.

Seth F. H. Howes tendered his resignation today as superintendent of the State Hospital for insane in a dispute over what he termed an attempt by labor unions to organize the institution's employes. Dr. Howes will be succeeded October 15 by Dr.

Jeremiah Metz-ger, chairman of the Hospital Board of Control, whose post goes to Mrs. Estelle Bjerg. Flagstaff. The actions were taken at a board meeting attended by Wade Church, president of the Arizona Federation of Labor, and Ross Goodwin, business representative of the state employes union. Denies Labor Statements The labor leaders accused Dr.

Howes of recently discharging hospital employes who had Joined the union. Their statements were denied by the superintendent. Dr. Howes later declared he was relinquising the post because he refused to be associated with a hospital institution "where the employes belong to organized labor." In addressing the board Church offered a ten-point program on behalf of the union which would raise salaries, provide a day a month sick leave, establish grievance machinery and recognize seniority rights. Urges Legislation He added that recommendations would be submitted to' Governor Osborn for legislation to establish a cooperative program for state employes, providing hospitalization and retirements benefits, half of which would be financed by the state.

Harry Whltmer, the board's business manager, declared in a financial report that the hospital spent $70,092.40 for food in 1943-44, compared with $71,243.35 in 1941-42, despite a rise in living cost. He attributed the saving chiefly to increased production of the hospital's farm, dairy and livestock ranch. WFA TO PURCHASE COTTON AT PARITY WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. (JP) War Food Administrator Marvin Jones announced tonight the WFA will purchase from farmers at parity prices all cotton of the 1944 crop for which a loan schedule has been announced and which may be placed in acceptable storage.

The program will start as soon as arrangements can be made and extend through next June 30, with the Commodity Credit Corporation handling actual purchases. At the same time Jones announced the WFA will buy from producers at parity prices less carrying charges to the end of the storage year all unredeemed 1941 crop wheat which is under loan May 1, 1943. The wheat also will be bought through the CCC. WFA said its cotton sales policy, announced on August 26. will be modified to permit the CCC to sell cotton at not less than parity.

Latest figures at the agriculture department showed that the cotton parity price on August 15, this year, was 21.08 cents a pound. It was $1.50 a bushel of wheat on the same date. The September 15 parity prices have not yet been announced. Text WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.

(JP) 1 'vX PEACE CABINET SPLIT REVEALED Morgenthau Plan Fails To Win Support Of Hull, Stimson WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. (JP) President Roosevelt's cabinet com mittee on German peace policy has split wide open, it was learned today, over a plan sponsored by Treasury Se'cretary Morgenthau for completely destroying Germany as a modern industrial state and con verting it into an agricultural country of small farms. Morgenthau's plan, drawn up after his recent return frojm European and England, is reported to have had the general approval of the President since be fore his Quebec conference with Prime Minister Churchill. It has failed to win support, however, from Secretary of State Hull and is violently opposed by War Secre tary Stimson.

Hull, Stimson and Morgenthau form the cabinet committee. The dispute over the Morgenthau plan has so snarled up treasury, war and state department work on detailed arrangements for post-war control of Germany that three-power planning by this coun try, Britain and Russia at Dum barton Oaks on long-range German pohev also has virtually stalled This planning, carried on through the European advisory commission, has been proceeding along lines other than those advocated by Morgenthau, so far as American leaders were concerned. Roosevelt presented the Morgen thau plan to Prime Minister Churchill at Quebec. Morgenthau and British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden were present. Stimson and Hull were not.

Morgenthau came away from the conference with the impression that Churchill found his proposal acceptable, especially since Eden is reported to have held somewhat similar views. Hull is. known to be determined that whatever plan is decided on here must be agreeable to Russia. Morgenthau's plan is understood to provide: 1. Removal from Germany to devastated countries of whatever industrial machinery those countries want; destruction of the rest of Germany's industry.

2. Permanent closing of whatever mines remain in the territory of the post-war German state. 3. Cessation of the Saar and western German industrial areas to France as well as cession to Po-(Continued on Page 6, Column 7.) What the Republican leaders are now sfying in effect is this: "Oh, just forget what we used to say, we have changed our minds now we have been reading the public opinion polls about these things, and we now know what the American people want. Don't leave the task of making the peace to those old men who first urged it, and who have already laid the foundations for it.

and who have had to fight all of us. inch by inch, during the last five years to do it just to turn it all over to us. We'll do it so skillfully that we won't lose a single isolationist vote or a single isolationist campaign contribution." There is one thing I am too old for I cannot talk out of both sides of my mouth at the same time. This government welcomes all sincere supporters of the cause (Continued on Page 10, Column 1.) 1 tion on the status of these laborers has not been received," he said. Important Mission Colonel Hardy said there is no doubt In his mind that Fort Huachuca will remain a permanent post and will be used in the post-war period, if not re-activated before then.

"The mission of the post complement is extremely important in order to protect the great investment the government CaS maue at run, xiuaiuuia, lie continued. 'The main mission of the post implement will be to protect the reservation from unlawful trespassing, to maintain fire protection, ind to maintain utilities and buildings so as to keep the station in a itate of readiness for re-activation In the shortest possible time upon notice from higher authorities." Colonel Hardy eaid personnel ill be reduced gradually to the caretaking detachment as Inactiva-tion progresses. All worthy employes will be given every protection possible in placing them in Hew Jobs at other war department Installations, he said. Was Training Ground The fort was the training ground lor the 93rd Infantry Division, now in the South Pacific, and of the 92nd Infantry Division, which was there until this year and part of which Is now in action in Italy. It was the largest training post in the country and used exclusively for Negro troops.

The fort was established in 1877 nd occupied continuously through the Indian wars, border difficulties and World War I. Four years ago its expansion to a great, modern post was begun and millions of dollars were expended in buildings md the reservation itself Increased to "3,000 acres or more than 117 quare miles. The new Installations lay beyond old post portions around a pa-M ground, but even so a few Apache Indian scouts were re-toed. Street after street was ordered with barracks, mess halls, headquarters buildings, recreation clubs and centers. officers' clubs were built and Kere were manv ennrta a field house and a stadium ung n.ooo persons.

Third Largest Center frt Huachuca was Arizona's ftv argest Population center at "eight of its training program. mary censors permitted it 'to be en ty over 25'000 Persons were tne reservation last November. ft. flSdU-rin tne training of 1 Division under command Major Gen. Edward M.

Almond. Lionel Hardy has been past during the era of the fort's "Pansion and the training of the divisions. It was not said ves-y whether he will continue 5 ln.activation. iwLiT- was the service of sup-' and distribution center for all CJ Sn Arizona, some in -uexico and even in Cali- nia. it received mmniioi regional supply department in Antonio and thn io and then distributed to airfields near Phoenix.

Mfar Califnrn- Kingman, over into a nact-hauled them to ICO. Rail unei truck and air- were used. ft Did Military Laundry also did military laun- Zoull 4Cleaning for man th Anzona and was one Hon 1 arteries of communica- PWtcnnM Said that Sundry the clothing and ufitr. 30'000 and the com-arin- Sy'Stern was ot 1 lUm 24M0 telephone T'n hours. dental in? beds three It had at f'rmarips with 42 chairs.

lhe only Xe'0 tt armv staffpd hospital in ere hrL Tu thG two hospitals Lilian han the larest Xeo States h0Spital in the United ot spreaaing was one wnicn ne described as "that old, worm-eaten chestnut that I have represented myself as indispensible. The President was given a 2ifc- minute ovation when he entered the banquet room, and another of several minutes duration before he began his address. Hailed As Leader He was dressed in a double-breasted blue suit and sat between Daniel J. Tobin. teamsters' president, and William Green, presi dent of the American Federation of Labor.

Next to Green sat Henry J. Kaiser, war industrialist. In introducing the President. Tobin hailed him as a leader shaped by destiny to meet the problems now confronting the country. Before starting to read his prepared speech while seated, the President said he was "very much touched" by the ovation and the informality of a dinner with "old friends." He said he was particularly happy to be opening his 1944 campaign "in vour presence as I did four years Hardly had he began his formal address than cheering and laughter broke over his assertion that "when votes are at stake" the Republicans "suddenly discover that they really love labor." He declared the frnvernment wel- The Road To Berlin By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1 Western Front: 305 miles (from Arnhem).

2 Russian Front: 310 miles (from Warsaw). 3 Italian Front: 580 miles (from south of Bologna). trols across the river at the Arn hem brige. A link-up in force would signalize a great Allied victory on the Ruhr valley route to Berlin. The Germans, who throughout' the day battered with tanks and 88 mm.

guns at Dempsey's Eindhoven-Nijmegen corridor, sent planes in groups of 20 and 30 to battle the troop-laden gliders and transports reinforcing the Second Army. The Nazi airmen were driven back by hundreds of fighters the largest escort yet sent with airborne reinforcements. Corridor Widened The British widened the corridor through which they rushed to the lower Rhine, taking the town of Beek, three miles southeast of Nij-megen at the corridor's upper end and two other small towns two or three miles east of Eindhoven and about an equal distance west at the base. Heavy fighting raged In almost a 100-mile stretch from the Dutch frontier south to the Moselle front as the Germans threw in one tank-led counterattack after another. Each successive attack was thrown back.

In one of these counterthrusts about seven miles of Aachen the enemy suffered the loss of 40 per cent of his forces before he was beaten off. In thd Metz area, to the south, American troops beat off small forces of Germans who drove into the Third Army's lines in the Pournoy area. Cape Gris Nez Taken On the channel coast, Cape Grls Nez, Nazi holdout point midway be tween Calais and Boulogne, was re ported captured. In the Eindhoven-rwjmegen sec tor the long, thin supply line of the British Second Army once more was intact. Thirty miles south of this critical front British units routed SS (Elite Guard) troops and 200 tanks which had slashed across the highway at the Dutch village of Vcghrf.

En route to the north branch of the Rhine, along the southern sub urbs of Arnhem, the British and Americans made a union with hard-pressed Polish reinforcements who had landed two days earlier to take some of the pressure off the Tommies in Arnhem. The Germans were summoning every tank and trooper from northern Holland to throw into the bat tle for Arnhem. Dig In On Rhine A press dispatch from the First Army positions inside the Siegfried line southeast of the battle from Holland declared the Germans were feverishly digging in on the east bank of the Rhine indicating the high command foresees the collapse of fortifications to the west. Standine at bay on their home soil, the German troops gave no indication of flight even though they finally were routed from Stol-berg. the city six miles east of the Siegfried line's fortified outpost of Aachen.

Nor was there any sign of enemy weakening on the Third Army front, where on the plains of Lorraine east of Nancy the biggest tank battle ever fought on French soil thundered into its Fifth day. (Continued on Page 13, Column 2l)' DEWEY MAPPING INTENSIVE DRIVE Will Visi Midwest, New England After Pacific Coast Tour Ends EN ROUTE WITH DEWEY TO OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept. 22. (JP) Obviously heartened bv what one of his aides described as the "ac celerating progress" of his campaign. Gov.

Thomas E. Dewey today mapped an intensive drive through the midwest and New England after winding up his Pacific coast tour. The republican presidential can didate sped toward Oklahoma City tonight for the last of seven major broadcasts on his current fi.200- mile transcontinental tour. With hirn he carried the best wishes of California's Governor Warren, who introduced him as "our next president" to 90,000 cheering persons in Los Angeles' Memorial Coliseum 'last night. It was by far the biggest crowd of Dewey's trip.

After delivering the last of his current series of talks in Oklahoma City Monday night, the New York governor plans to go to Al bany to catch up on state business before setting out again in quest of the important Middle West and "Down East" votes. At San Bernardino, Dewey told a cheering throng: "We need an administration which will give to the United a government that knows its problems; a government that will give to the western United States a full and proper place in its cabinet." lie reiterated that if elected he will make "one of the finest house-cleanings we ever had" in Washington. NUGENT IS NAMED ON KIWANIS BOARD GRAND RAPIDS. Sept. 23.

iTPRobert L. Nugent of Tuc- son, was appointed a mem her of the 1945 Kiwanis Interna- There are enlightened, liberal elements in the Republican party, and they have fought hard and honorably to bring the party up to date and to get it in step with the forward march of American progress. But these liberal elements were not able to drive the old guard Republicans from their entrenched positions. Can the old guard pass itself off as the New Deal? I think not. We have all seen many marvelous stunts in the circus, but no performing elephant could turn a hand-spring without falling flat on his back.

I need not recount to you the centuries of history which have been crowded into these four years since I saw you last. There were some in the Congress and out who raised their voices against our preparations for defense before and after 1939 as hysterical war monger- Paide. 50 miles to the northeast, and its fall cut the land escape routes for thousands of a bewildered foe caught between Parnu, and Tallinn, captured Estonian capital 72 miles to the north. At sea, Red naval planes pursued some German ships which escaped from Tallinn with troops aboard. During Friday the Soviet airmen sank 11 of these evacuation vessels, and apparently thousands of Germans perished in- the Gulf of Finland.

The fall of Riga, Latvian capital 97 miles south of Parnu, appeared imminent as four powerful Soviet armies pressed the speedy cleanup of Estonia and Latvia in sensational gains. Some Russian units were fighting in Riga's outer southern defenses, and Red artillery was laying down barrages on Nazi positions in the strategic city. The Soviet victories in Estonia and Latvia were regarded merely as the forerunner of great attacks on East Prussia, in Poland and on Hungary. They shortened the front by more than 120 miles, gave the Red fleet new oases and the air force fields from which the Russians can control two-thirds of the Baltic sea. FEDERAL AGENCIES ASKED FOR IDEAS WASHINGTON, Sept.

23. (JP) In line with a presidential suggestion, the Budget Bureau today called upon federal agencies to submit within 30 days their ideas for re-adjusting the government to a peacetime basis. Changes in organization, administrative procedures and reduction of personnel and appropriation are to be recommended, Harold D. Smith, Budget Bureau director said. SOLDIER IS GIVEN DEATH SENTENCE LONDON, Sept.

23. (TP) Augustine Guerra, 20-year-old U. S. Army Air Force private from San Antonio, Texas, has been sentenced to death by hanging by a court martial at Ash ford, Kent, for the strangulation murder of 15-year-old Betty Green. A companion faces trial on similar charges.

ing, who cried out against our help to the Allies as provocative and dangerous. We remember the voices. They would like to have us forget them now. But in 1940 and 1941 they were loud voices. Happily they were a minority and fortunately for ourselves, and for the world they could not.

stop America. There are some politicians who kept their heads buried deep in the sand while the storms of Europe and Asia were headed our way, who said that the lend-lease bill "would 'bring an end to free government in the United States," and who said "only hysteria entertains the idea that Germany, Italy or Japan contemplate var upon us." These very men are now asking the American people to entrust to them the conduct of our foreign policy and our military policy. romes "all sincere supporters of tional Committee on Post-War the cause of effective world col- Planning, Ben Dean, the organiza-lahoration. adding that "millions of tion's president, announced here Republicans are with us." today. of President Roosevelt's Political Address light.

Indeed, they have personally spent years of effort and energy and" much money in fighting every one of those laws in the Congress, in the press, and in the courts, ever since this administration began to advocate them and enact them into legislation. That is a fair example of their insincerity and their inconsistency. The whole purpose of Republican oratory these days seems to bo to switch labels. The object is to persuade the American people that the Democratic party was responsible for the 1929 crash and depression, and the Republican party was responsible for all social progress under the New Deal. Imitation mav be the sincerest form of flattery but I am afraid that in this case it is the most obvious common or garden variety of fraud.

suddenly discover that they really love labor, and are eager to protect it from its old friends. I got quite a laugh, for example and I am sure that you dirlwhen I read this plank in the Republican platform adopted at their national convention in Chicago last July: "The Republican party accepts the purposes of the National Labor Relations Act, the Wage and Hour Act, the Social Security Act, and all other federal statutes designed to promote and protect the welfare of American working men and women, and we promise a fair and just administration of these laws." Many of the Republican leaders and congressmen and candidates, who shouted enthusiastic approval of that plank in that convention hall would not even recognize these progressive laws if they met them in broad day Following is the text of President Franklin D. Roosevelt'8 political address tonight: Well, here we are together again after four years and what years they have been! I am actually four years older which seems to annoy some people. In fact, millions of us are more than 11 years older than when we started in to clear up the mess that was dumped in our laps in 1933. We 'all know certain people will make it a practice to depreciate the accomplishments of labor who even attack labor as unpatriotic.

They keep this up usually for three years and six months. But then, for some strange reason, they change their tune every four years just before election dav. When votes are at stake they Fire M0T011 FIRE Nrin an overloaded i28 th Siv0" ICe lushed i Xth avenue, was ex- te. last niht b.v Ported at 7 fire department. He- Pu' out immediately..

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