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The Newark Advocate from Newark, Ohio • 4

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Newark, Ohio
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4
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TAGE FOUR BUY WAR BONDS .1. THE NEWARK ADVOCATE AND AMERICAN TRIBUNE i. BUY WAR BONDS TUESDAY, JULY 8, 19 The Newark Advocate Chew on This a Vfhile, Adolf! News Behind The News AMERICAN TRIBUNS ESTABLISHED IN iUO By PAUL MALLON, Washington, July 6. The successful American landings In Nev Georgia and the vaguely defined MacArthur moves in New Guir.e, were planned as the first steps In a real pincers move to entrap the big Jap base at Rabaul. The base ordinarily has 43 to 75 ships at anchorage every day, and is the second largest Jap base (next to Truk) in all the South Pacific.

It is the core of South Pacific Jap. I anese power, has three airfields, and is the re-shipping point, feed ing all the smaller strongholds. Published Daily Except Sunday THE ADVOCATE PRINTING COMPANY 25 West Main Street tl SPENCER. Publisher (1914-1942) tntsred it ucund-claM matter March IB ISM. at cost utiles, a war O.

under act ul Marco 4. 187 MEMBER Of ASSOCIATED PRESS Tha Aiaouuwd Ptm. la antltlad to Mis uaa tor publication ut all newt dispatches cradltad to II or not otherwiM credited in thia Paper and alau tha newt oubliahed Uierem All rlenta of Duplication of special dupatchss ara alao reserved. Dally, cents By earner, 18c weak. Mall subscriptions In Ohio- One year.

14.00; Mil months. (3.00, Three month. (2 00; One month, 75c Mail ubecripllon ratea oumde of Ohio: One year, MOO, SIX montha. Three montha. 13 SO; One month, 11 00 Ohio mall ratea apply to men In military service wherever located.

ALL MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS are payable In advance. The immediate MacArthur Is Axis Viewpoint. notice of danger in that quarter, although it has been little no! ticed in that country. Thus we have caused Hitler to spread thinly his dwindling power. Faced with threats on all fronts, he must spread his men and planes around in the complete circle of his vaunted fortress, preventing of his full power on any front.

This is an indispensable preparation for invasion, More humor than significance can be attached to Churchill's suggestion that heavy fighting can be expected in the Mediterranean before the leaves fall (winter). Mr: Churchill was answering the German radio which has been predicting every few days' that invasion would start to A Farmer's Diary Bt CALVIN A. BYERS THE TRAVEL URGE. Sometimes when I hear the roar of an airplane and see it ride majestically above our hills when the sun glint, on its metal sides until it is lost in the vast transparent haze, I grow restless like a ground bird in the autumn that vainly flaps its wings and calls when a migrating flock goes south. When I hear the whistle of a fast moving passenger train and see it crowded with many folks, going different places somehow I wish I were going foo I do not know just wnere.

I wonder why there is joyous excitement In getting away from old familiar scenes, even in imagination but there is. To go somewhere, to feel the stir of something new, to look upon strange faces that is a delight. with all its strangeness and excitement, travel cannot be a delight unless there is home to come back to. Even the scenery, the mountains, valleys, streams and highways interesting manners and customs of othV states or other nations, are measured by the familiar yardstick we left at home. And so, like one who feels deserted and left out, I reach my cottage and find the children playing (tag about the lawn or as often listen to their sudden quarrels and disagreements, and am drafted as arbitrator.

From the kitchen come odors of the evening meal, and the sound of my wife's quick steps and the piecing of plates and cutlery upon the table. As I peer inside the youngest boy looks up from the floor, where -he sits with the batter bowl between his knees and a wooden spoon in hand. He waves the spoon, a molasses-flavored smile smeared across his rosy face, and says "Gingerbread!" Outside the open door a stalk of roses wild single flowers in gigantic clusters sends perfume through the house. Along the fence above the spring, gorgeous pink climbers row. The cool water flows from its walled-in space a cricket sings from a hidden crevice.

Nightfall. Chores done. The 3-year-old, ready for bed, climbs into my lap rubbing his eyes. Confidently he nestles and cuddles for a little, then kneels to say his little prayer and' proudly goes alone to bed. The thret brothers follow soon.

Springs groan and creak in the attic then silence. Big sister bicycles home from a neighbor's. I overhear laughter and confidential chatter between her and her mother such girl and woman talk as girls and women only understand. From the cottage porch I watch the evening airplane drone like a gigantic firefly across the sky. I hear the distant whistle of a train.

And I know that no plane could fly so high, no train could speed so far, that it would compensate to me for the simple homey things that are mine that my wife and I have used the best part of our lives to build. THE other day we suggested that if we were Joe Goebbels we should welcome the coal strike as godsend to our hard-pressed propaganda budget. Apparently Nazi Joe felt the same way. German, Italian and Japanese propaganda has played the strike as evidence of disunity, as a symptom of class struggle, as a reason why we cannot produce the armament to win the war, as "proof that the American people are not behind their government." We know that these Interpretations are false. We also know that the slowdown in production will prolong the war and cost many American, British, Russian, Chinese and other lives on our side.

morrow morning or the day aft-er. The Germans obviously are looking for information and, at the same time, trying to build up a popular expectation of en-l emy action to keep their own defenses alert at home, while Mr. Churchill is chiding them with opposite propaganda. If you read his words closely you will find that invasion! objective was the New Guinea peninsula jutting out Into the sea north of Lae and Salamaua, closest New Guinea point to RabauL The immediate pur-pose at the other side of the pincers in New Georgia was to eradicate the substantial Japanese force in the Central Solomons, estimated as high as 30.000 men. In addition, the Japs are suposed to have 8,000 to 12,000 in the northern islands, a total of possibly all tht Solomons area.

While there are hardly sensa-tioral objectives, if they were to be won within a reasonable time, the vital Rabaul was dcun.ed. Hitler lately has been moving directly away from his promised offensive in Russia. From London comes reports that the fuehrer has withdrawn several divisions from the eastern front. The Russians hasten to deny this, obviously bent on dispelling any Allied relaxation of interest or pressure on their front, and probably they know more about the subject than the British. Nevertheless, undeniable information is available that Hitler has augmented his force recently in both France and in Italy.

These may have been reserves taken from Germany rather than the eastern front, but they would hardly have been withdrawn had an anti-Russian offensive been contemplated. Furthermore, it has been definitely established that a number of German fighter planes have been recalled from' Russia since expansion of the British and American air attacks on German industrial centers. The two previous Nazi offensives in. Russia were instituted in June, which was too late in the year to allow for full development of the action before winter. The Russians have likewise shown in their maneuvers no threat of launching a big offensive.

The right time for Stalin to strike would be when our invasion is underway. Few military men expect anything big out of Russia until we have started. The game the Allies are playing is clear, we are constantly threatening new points of invasion in the east, feinting with our publicity or air action at Italy, Greece and most significantly of late through Turkey into the balkans, our concentrations in Syria have given Hitler could start tomorrow and his i words would still read truthful- ly in retrospect. So They Say i The Japanese will build their base on Munda but we will use it. Statement by Adm.

William Halsey, Jr, six month ago. Can They Tell 'Em. WHAT would Mussolini and. Hitler, teetotali-tarian rulers of totalitarian states, think of the announcement of the Allieu Liquor Industries, incorporated, of New York, that normal stocks now aging in bonded warehouses are adequate to last three to four years on a rationed basis, and that the distillers, now making industrial alcohol for the production of explosives, expect to resume the making of distilled spirits as soon as government officials feel that sufficient alcohol has been stored for war needs? Can Hitler and Mussolini tell their people that Americans have three or four years' supply of liquor coming to them, and that there is nearly enough industrial alcohol already manufactured in America to make explosives for propelling the shells and projectiles that the people of the Axis countris have coming to them? Stinnett's Daybook By JACK STINNETT. (Editor's Note First of two articles on the Japanese strangleholds in the Pacific.) Washington, July 6.

Some military commentators recently have been prefacing their remarks with "Now that we have the Japanese stymied in the Pacific If there ever was a voice crying in the wilderness that such is not the case, it is the voice of Sen. Elbert Duncan Thomas, Dem Persevere in silence. Rememi ber the enemy employs all tricks and artifices to obtain a leverage with which he may be able to crush German morale. We must be wiser than he. Dr.

Joseph Goebbels. i I looked around at those gathered on the bridge. Every face was calm, without any sign of fear. Every lip was firm. Every eye was These were menj under fire facing possible early and rapid extinction.

It was impressive to see such courage. London Daily Express Correspondent Henry Keyes, describing U. S. attack on New Georgia island. It is not the policy of the U.

S. and British governments that Deeds Are What Count. IN opposition to the Smith-Connally bill, the CIO advertises that "representing most of the country's organized war workers" it has giveu its solemn and unconditional pledge against any stoppages whatever for the duration of the war." It is very questionable whether the CIO does represent most "of the organized war workers; there is also the A. F. of L.

and there are some substantial independents, including the Mine Workers. The leadership of the CIO presumably meant its "solemn duty and unconditional pledge" against war strikes, but in fact there are war strikes daily, many of them involving CIO groups. The Smith-Connally bill has serious flaws; but -some powerful law unquestionably is needed, right now. ocrat from Utah. First, let me tell you about Senator Thomas.

There are three "Thomases" in the senate, but theyshouldn't be confused. Elbert D. Thomas started life in Salt Lake City 60 years ago, the Mormon son of Mormon parents. He followed family tradition by becoming a Mormon missionary. His mission work took him to Japan and later to China.

'His colleagues will readily admit that there isn't one of them who knows more about the Orient than Elbert Thomas. He was intimately acquainted with Admiral Togo and General Nogi. "In my study and teaching of history," he says, "I start and end with the Orient. That puts me out of harmony with most of the history departments of American institutions, because most of our history teaching deals with western Europe and America. The rest of the world we let go hang; and we today are suffering the consequences." That may sound a little pedantic, but when it comes from a man held in such esteem by his colleagues that he is chairman of the senate education and labor committee, and a member of the committees on foreign relations, military affairs, mines and mining and pensions, you can be sure it's not.

Senator Thomas is not one of the "all-out" critics of postponement of our war against the Japs. Although he is con- vinced that postponement of concentrated activity in that theater will prolong the war at least a year or two, he sees in our present strategy the possibility of saving many lives. The records of Guadalcanal, New Guinea and Attu bear him out. These defensive offensives against Japanese outposts have been extravagant in dead, wounded, ill and captured. That they have cost the Japanese more dead than our own and Allied troops is little compensation.

Four things should be borne in mind: (1) The Japs are a desperate people, because they have made a desperate gamble to rule Asia or to go back to the days of Tokugawa Shogu-nate and isolate themselves again. (2) Except for the subjugation, of inner China and the capture of an eastern anchor in New Caledonia or Hawaii, they already have accomplished all they set out to do in a military way, and now have only to fight a defensive war. (3) Their manpower now numbers in the hundreds of millions and their resources in strategic materials are almost limitless. (4) Through propaganda, Asiatic blood ties and an understanding of the Oriental mind, the Japs are well on their way right now to estabilsh a far greater colonial empire than the occidental nations ever dreamed of. their armies shall be used to impose upon France any particular military leader, but rather to make sure that the will of the masses of the French people, expressed under conditions of freedom, shall decide upon the future government of their country Baby Pictures.

i Winston Churchill. i We have our worst enemy (the U-boat) now where he is, at leat, as worried over our next move as we are of his Secretary of A LOT of soldiers are going to be made happy by the war department's latest ruling about V-mail. This permits the transmission of pictures of children born after their fathers left this country for foreign service, and also of babies under one year, who in many cases were too tiny to have developed personalities and individual characteristics when their fathers saw them last. The picture can include the mother "or other person" holding the baby. We suspect there will be few "other persons" in the V-mail photographs.

What fighting men want is pictures of their wives holding their children the combination for which every father is fighting. Navy Knox. The Chinese people aie not exhibitionists. What is called a death-like silence abroad is called silent determination in I In Hollywood By ERSKINE JOHNSON. Marine flyers assigned to the "Guadalcanal Diary" film on location near San Diego are teaching Hollywood stunt men a trick or two.

Other day they were filming a beach landing scene for the picture. Several marine flyers were supposed to bring in their planes low over the landing barges. One of them went so low he clipped the top off a palm tree. After landing, he said: "I thought I'd give the scene an added kick. I hope you got it." They got it on film all right, but the cameraman almost fell off perch.

Seventeen-year-old Charles Chaplin, will be screen tested soon for the role of Rudolph VsJU entino in a film biography of the screen's great lover. I wonder if papa is coaching him for the test? It never fails. The Legion of Decency ban on Barbara Stanwyck's "Lady of Burlesque" has increased business 20 per cent. Although still in bed, Lou Costello is so much improved he -played host yesterday at a 21st wedding anniversary party for his manager, Eddie Sherman. The Tim Holts have reconciled after a four-month separation.

He's in the Army Air Corps. James Craig is wondering what the folks back home in Texas will think. He has the best role of his career opposite Hedy Lamarr in "The Heavenly Body." But there's nary a clinch. 'The folks," moans Craig, "will say I'm slipping." Olive Blakeney, who plays dignified matrons on the screen she has played Henry Aldrich's mother in seven straight films has been considerably amazed for weeks by a sudden flood of letters from service men, most of whom confessed she was their dream girl. Finally light dawned.

One of the soldiers enclosed a clipping from a camp newspaper a full-length portrait of Frances Gifford in a sarong. It had been published with Olive Blakeney's name underneath. The good neighbor boys are urging Columbia to permit Jinx Falkenberg, who speaks Spanish fluently, to accept a Mexico City film offer from Alberto Pani. He wants to star her in a filmusical. Madeline Carroll is still turning down Hollywood offers.

Just nixed another Paramount picture, preferring to remain on the east coast as entertainment director for the merchant marine. Kay Kyser and his orchestra have recorded 17 shows for overseas broadcasts in the last two weeks. Ann Sheridan and Cully Richards, former Hollywood night club entertainer now in the army, are still ablaze. Alan Marshall is due for a star build-up at M-G-M. "White Cliffs of Dover," opposite Irene Dunne, is the role he's been waiting for.

Songwriters "Country" Washburne and Freddie Fox have a sequel to "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition" "I'm the Guy Who Passed It to the Parson." Metro's glorification of the film industry, The First 50 Years," sounds like swell, nostalgic celluloid. And as a running gag. why not denote the passing of time with photographs of Charley Chaplin and his wives. China. The world must not be) I made to think are gloomy Chang Ping-chun, Chungking government official.

So long as everybody expects I that the sacrifices will be per- formed by someone else the war can never be won. Tokyo -radio speaking of U. S. domestic disputes. If you need to i cy od0 up Health Tips For a year or more anyway most of the work back home here is going to be done by middle aged people and since most of the sjress of middle aged life falls on the heart, some sensible rules for taking care of these hearts are quite in order.

Such is the view advanced by Dr. a P. J. Falk of St. Louis, in "Hygeia," the health magazine, in a recent issue.

The doctor suggests the following rules of presen ation: 1. "Attempt to establish a balanced plan of living with sufficient sleep (at least 50 hours a week) and adequate leisure periods." Fifty hours of sleep a week is a little over seven hours a night. I would be inclined to add that they should make it eight hours if possible. Because you can just go to bed and read a detective story or turn on the radio. This conduces to keeping quiet, not jumping up and moving around.

And the time you spend that way is almost as good as if you were asleep, for recreative purposes. So I believe Doctor Falk would be willing to accept my emendation that they spend 70 hours a week in bed. 2. "Establish and maintain some well-balanced, moderate exercise program suited to middle aged needs. It is interesting to speculate on just what influence the replacement of man's habit of Walking by increasing use of the motor car may be having on the increase in middle age heart dsease we are witnessing today." The problem of exercise for the middle aged here is emphasized: That they need some exercise, but they do not need as much as they once did.

Too many middle aged people carry over the ideal of a vigorous youth into their middle aged exercise habits. The old football star, the fellow who has on his mantelpiece the Country club tennis championship cup, 1910, the former city golf champion all these have to be restrained in their lust for exercise. Exercise refreshed them and made them healthy when they were young and they can't bear to give it up. But it won't do. When the golfer reaches 55, he had better reduce his rounds from 18 holes four times a week to 18 holes twice a week and nine, holes once a week.

When he gets to be 60, he had better reduce it to nine holes three times a week. When he gets to be 65, he had better reduce it to nine holes twice a week or better, six holes twice a week. A man or woman at 55 should never exercise even with moderate exercise such as walking to the point of getting the least bit tired. 3 "A balanced dietary program is important, but special emphasis should be placed on moderation in the size of meals and on a quiet and unhurried manner of eating." As exercise goes down, the total consumption of food should go down in about the same ratio at the same ages I see no reason to change the fype of eating, but by the time you are 60 you should take about one-half of what you think you want, have a helping and when you are finished with it, ask yourself whether you are not satisfied. War rationing may save the lives of hundreds and thousands of our middle aged friends.

It is a blessing in disguise Barbs Indications are that the heat you're kicking about now is going to cost you plenty next winter. We often wonder how people can look pleasant when posing for pictures that cost $25 per dozen. It's fine to be a person with a heart of gold if it doesn't stop you from having some of the stuff in your pocket. With summer flowers in bloom, remember that, it's bad judgment to smell of one while a bee is doing likewise. Father's day was something like Christmas in that it brought forth the tie that blinds.

Washington Letter By PETER EDSON Washington, July 6. The sequel to the slogan "Food Will Win the War," is "Lack of Food Can Lose the Election," but that does not seem to have dawned on some of the political master minds who are supposed to keep up on such thines. nartirularlv Lend-Lease and Air Rule. A NGLOPHOBES seek to build up fear and re- sentment against Britain by emphasizing that the British are preparing to use lend-lease planes on air routes to Latin America and the far east. The British, it is pointed out, realize that they are being left behind in international aviation, and are hedging against peacetime competition.

Well, why not? Would this country, if positions were reversed, sit back and see a friendly economic rival tie up the post-war air world? Are we so inferiority-complexed that we do not trust our ability to hold our own in the air? In the war against Germany, Italy and Japan, the British empire is making its full contribution and earning all it is getting from us. on the table today is attributable primarily to only one thing uncertainty on the market caused by failure of congress to take decisive action on subsidies. Packers can't be blamed for cutting prices to stockmen as a result, and stockmen have not shipped their beef animals to market because they have played the hunch that congress would knock out subsidies and permit the price of beef to rise. The only answer which most congressmen can give for getting more meat on the table is to let the prices rise. That takes care of the stock raiser and packer, but what does it do to the consumer? The pious hope that' letting the price of one commodity rise will not cause explosive inflation is bunk.

On the theory that we could have just one more little price rise here and there and then stop we have been deluding ourselves for the past two years and a half, while the cost of food has risen 46 per cent and the cost of living 24 per cent. There is only one way to stop price increases and that is to say that present prices cannot be exceeded and assure producers and packers that prices are not to be increased again. Once that assurance is put over, then the meat will start coming to market. This, however, is the unpopular point of view and evidence piles up it won't be done that way. If prices are permitted to rise and food becomes consequently scarcer with congressional approval, that is one way in which Jhe lost.

in rnnflrocc Her' On of the Best Figures That Lie. The problem of the moment in solving the food situation therefore boils down to a matter of getting more beef moving to market and on that matter, countrymen, the best minds falter and fail. As Senator Eugene D. Millikin of Denver, put it after hearings on this subject before the senate committee on agriculture, "We have this morning reached a state of complete intellectual bankruptcy in trying to put more meat back on the table." It's a kind of a mixed metaphor, but if you follow the train Of thought VOIl orocn Ik. iJ The way words have of getting twisted and exaggerated out of all proportion in wartime, lack of food today means lack of meat, and lack of meat means lack of beef in the meat market.

There are plenty of live beef, and plenty of other meat animals on the hoof, enough food to keep body and soul flourishing for that matter, if equitably distributed. But such is the perverseness of human nature that the lack of one item of food beef, in this instance, is enough to increase the demand and create the illusion that there is an over-all lack of food. and Quickest Horn Ways I You girls who suffer from simple anemia or who lose so much during monthly periods that you feel tired, weak, "dragged out" lue to low blood- Iron start today try Lydla E. Pink- ham's Compound TABLETS added Iron). Plnkham'a Tablets Is one of the greatest blood-Iron tonics you can buy iconeip Duua up rea Diooa to pive mcrs strength and energy and to promote a more robust bloodstream cases.

Taken is directed Plnkham'a Tablets is one of the best and 11 -s THE Office of War Information reports that the per capita income in this country has risen from $47.92 in July of 1940 to $85.03 in April of 1943, and adds that "price boosts already have taken up a part, though by no means the major part, of the increase in income." The trouble with these figures are that they represent averages, which are fictitious and nonexistent. There is no average man. If the same persons were employed now as in July of 1940 the average might have some evidentiary value. But the $47.92 income then was reduced by the large number of unemployed and of persons who do not ordinarily work but who now are earning, The rise in income per worker is much less than the figure shown probably less, so far as the great mass of unorganized workers go, than the rise in the cost of living. that yes, we have no beef and quickest home ways to pet precious iron Into the blood.

Just try them for at least 30 days TODE TUTTLE men see ii you, too, aon re- markabty benefit. Follow label directions, Weil tcortli trying! Looking Backward FIFTEEN YEARS AGO. (From Newark Advocate, July 6, 1928.) J. L. Martin suffered a deep gash in the foot Thursday when he struck his foot with an ax while cutting timber.

E. E. Duggin, who is recovering from an operation for appendicitis and hernia, was removed from the City hospital to 66 South Fourth street. At the meeting of the Columbine Rovers club Mrs. Helen Groves, 165 lOh street, was awarded the sack of sugar and Mrs.

eParl Slater, 378 Central avenue, received the quilt. Miss Atta Billman, who has been in Atlanta, Ga.t for some time, has returned to her home in this city for the summer. jes, we may be running out of brains. The prevailing thought in congress now seems to be that subsidies shall not pass. Congress passed a law, the price control act of 1942.

authorizing subsidy payments, apparently without realizing what it was doing. Office of Price Administration went ahead to put those subsidies in effect in an effort to hold down further rises- in the cost of living. Now congress renegs and even considers repealing that portion of the price control act which authorizes subsidies, though many of the constituents of many of the congressmen have been living off farm subsidies of one kind and another for years. Maybe it is proper row to call a halt, but the lack of beef homo? dearplmse run home an 6r yomt father's tow Jt ROPE OUT OF H)S CAR I MOTHER'S STUCK IN A NEW GIRDLE? Jit (a alNt.Ak (w Misery Loves Company. BEFORE the middle west Is restricted as to gasoline consumption beyond what is necessary to save tires, it should be established beyond reasonable doubt that this would help the afflicted cast.

If the serious situation in the east can be relieved by making other sections share the shortage this should be done even though it may be true that much of the trouble arises from bungling in Washington. But no section should be penalized merejy on the theory that misery loves company. If restrictions elsewhere will not make it possible to get more fuel to the east, there should be none invoked. SAYS UNCLE SAM IT MAY BE RATIONED NEXT WINTER STORM SASH and DOORS win do it! Our Estimators Will Call Without Cost ACT NOW WHILE MATERIALS ARE AVAILABLE We Also Have the Finest Line of Oak Flooring and Roofing Materials The Lake Lumber Go. EXHAUSTIONW to Headache At one point in his career, Mussolini fled to Switzerland.

The question that is probably worrying him now is whether the Swiss will want him this time. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO. (From Newark Advocate, July 6. 1918 Mr. and Mrs.

W. E. Beem announce the birth of a daughter at the City hospital Wednesday. Mrs. E.

L. Hanover was removed from her home. 62 Maholm street, early this morning to the private hospital in Granville street. Mrs. Louis Green and children of 352 West Main street leave Wednesday morning for Put in Bay to spend the summer with Mr.

Green who is interested in business at that place. Anson A. Davis and Mrs. Abbie Donson. both of this city, were united in marriage Wednesday evening, July 3, at the home of Mrs.

Bennett, King avenue. Hon trt head arte double the ml. Vl 1 oryof exhaustion. At the first Riga at pain take Opudin. It fiKjC quickly brinn rrlief, tooth I VV nerves tiiwt the ruin.

It in liquid Irrady dsoiviM all -J ready to art all radv totWJ 'Vf bnnr comfort, only aa di IL rgfleft. j(U. aiy, v5 Jim Th'fellerwhothinksHE pickedout riis wife is eosy bait fer a slick soles- Greeks suggest that when the Allies get around to deciding what to do with Sicily, they should remember that it belonged to Greece 3,000 years ago. 89 Stuth Williams Strut Phtm 2737.

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About The Newark Advocate Archive

Pages Available:
807,723
Years Available:
1882-2024