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PAGE SIX
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From Deutsches Volkstum in alter U eh, Berlin, Volkahund for das Deutschinm im Ausbnd, 1938. i
rpHE -!■ 100,000,000 WORLD people THROUGH throughout NAZI the EYES: world “Some speak
Gentian as their mother tongue,” says the caption
tinder this map, issued in 1938 by a Nazi-sponsored
Berlin publishing house. “There are Germans every
where. . . . For centuries, Germans migrated without
a master plan, and therefore were often lost to the
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WHEN reception their mother, Crown Princess Juliana of The^Net her lands* give
a to the crew of a Dutch warship at Pictou Lodge, over
looking the shining waters of the Northumberland Strait in Nova
rf, 0 * 1 !’ I ? an y of the seamen saw the children of the Dutch royal family
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The Call America Heeds
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The Red Cross nurse is the symbol of the 1941 American Red Cross Roll
Call poster, appealing to all men and women to join their local Chapters
during the annual Roll Call. Bradshaw Crandell, distinguished poster
artist, painted the poster and Frances Fedden is the model.
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Results)
mother land. This is why we value that German
racial spirit which has remained and which is now
finding its way together again.” Austria, Czecho
slovakia, Poland, Denmark, Norway, The Netherlands,
Luxembourg, Belgium, France, Yugoslavia and Greece
have already learned what the finding-together of the
German racial spirit means to them.
DEBUTANTE DOES HER BIT
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fltHERE A are no "play-girls” among
Canadian debutantes these days.
All young Canadian women are in
war-work of some kind, many of 4
them in industry. Typical of the
debutante class is Miss Joan Hol
land of Montreal. Prominent in the
social life of the younger set in that m
city, she gets out of bed at 6:30 y,i
o'clock each work-day morning and
an hour later reports for duty in the
shell-case manufacturing plant where Passed by Censor
she joins her fellow-workers, men
and women, making, inspecting and stamping shell cases for beleaguered
Britain. Canada is turning out ammunition of various types at the rate
of millions of rounds per year.
Guests In New Jersey
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with Duke the of Duchess Windsor puffs meditatively on 2 m 2.-T gar Mt*.nrapoUs as he Star-Journal boards and a Tribuna train
on his American tour.
Duke and Duchess of Wind
X sor. following a New York visit,
will spend a week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Suydam Cutting
the explorer-sportsman’s estate in
the Gladstone and Peapack com
munities in New Jersey. Mr. Cut
ting is a long time friend of the
Duke. The Cuttings spent a short
THE COVINGTON NEWS
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ffi if ^ ■ ? v ; m This train wreck delayed the opening last week of the hi
• \ ton County Fair,. Officers are still investigating the possibl rail]
4 of sabotage after an iron rod. apparently bolted to the
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mm m >■ found near the scene. the Atlanta, Carrying Birmingham equipment belonging to then
4 Heth Shows, on and Coast, the eij
, and a number of cars left the track. The engineer and fird
V • were severely injuried but are reported improving AtU
in Col
III! j hospitals. None of the passengers were injuried.—Photo
m sy Atlanta Journal.
vacation at Nassau and were often
guests at the Governor’s Palace.
“The Windsors make an art out
of dinner," reports Mrs. Cutting.
“They are gourmets.”
The Duke likes long cigars and
smokes them in the typical leisure
ly.-Easlifib fashion, 1
(Largest Coverage Any weekly in the State)
j People, Spots In The News
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THE SNITES—The Fred Snites, Jr., and their
daughter, Teresa Marie, are shown shortly
after arrival at Miami Beach, Fla., to spend
winter season.
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STRAPLESS —
Straight wardrobe out of a bal- WAR BUG! Fast-moving “jeep,”
lerina’s is outstanding
this white jersenese in southern war games, has been chosen as a
strapless sun suit, standard anti-tank vehicle by the Army and
with heavily shirred slated for volume production. Joseph W.
bodice and dirndl Frazer, left, president, Willys-Overland Mo
skirt. The matching tors, now building 18,600 units, explains mass
scarf shows desert production methods to Brig. Gen. Burton O.
influence. Lewis, of the Ordnance Dept ( j
Women Make Good Mechanics
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1*X T/TANY thousands of Canadian wo
m en are engaged in the produc
tion of the munitions of war in
plants scattered throughout the Do
minion. They have proved them
selves to be careful, quick, intelli
gent workers and they have won
{high praise from industrialists tor
their skill and devotion to duty.
,
They have made their worth felt In
airplane and small arms manufac
turing particularly. Two pictures of
typical Canadian women in industry
are shown here. On the left ts one
of the many girls who are building
the cabins of Bolingbroke bombers,
and on the right is a scene tn the
Bren Gun plant where nearly a
thousand women are employed.
Thursday, Octobe ^ 30, i 94
China’s Boy Scouts Do Their Bit
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This youthful Chinese Boy Scout shows his loyalty, and determine
typical of his people who have held out for almost four years oM
as he stands at salute pledging allegiance to the New China o' *,
he is already an important part. United China Relief funds wi
educate hundreds of thousands of young citizens like him.
NATIONAL BIBLE WEEK
December 8-14 Designated by
Laymen’s National Committee
OWE announcement by the Lay
X men’s National Committee that
it is sponsoring the adoption of the
week of December 814 as “Bible
Week,” will be a source of satis
faction to all who feel that the
Bible as a living force has, in the
rush of modern life, come more and
more to be neglected. The cam
paign. headed by Dr. Frank King
don, former President of Newark
University, will mobilize national
leaders and organizations, schools
and educational Institutions, the
press, the movies and the radio,
and will reach into every town and
hamlet In the country. Men and
women of every creed. In every
walk of life, have already offered
iheir services in what bids fair to
be one of the greatest movements
our nation has ever seen.
Among those prominent Ameri
cans who are giving the campaign
Iheir support, are Col. Frank Knox,
Secretary of the Navy; John T.
Manson, President of the American
Bible Society; L. J. Taber, Master
of the National Grange; Judge
Irwin Untermeyer, Marshall Field,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee,
and Mrs. Dwight Morrow. Among
the contributors to the work are
such firms as The National Biscuit
Co., The United Fruit Co., The
F. W. Woolworth Co.. Ethyl Gaso
line Corp., and S. H. Kress Co.
"The immediate aim of our pro
gram," said Dr. Kingdon, “is to
nake our people Bible conscious.
1’he eventual goal is a national
realization of the part religion
played In the establishment of our
government, and a realization that
our spiritual defense must keep
step with our military preparedness
if we to preserve those things
which we have struggled so hard
to secure In this country.”
L
Or. Frank Kingdon
To maintain di Amerkas “mittee ^
spirit by bui ' g 1 be!M
thinking is. the Com® p {oil)
of the utmost res.staDceoi Im**®,
Europe, the ®' '
Totalitarian R ev nU rt»f
based upon the « Engta®
the parish Churche. ability «' ^
America our ^ *
our demo" 8 ; tW
preserve analysis resl ,“fi
last The ^ C al
foundation. de d upo»
of America was tJca i«
in God and was a I g0 {
religion-.OJy (b
sion of fir05 i
Americft is 6 P" defend tW»
she be able to founder* I
ideals for which tne live*
Republic pledge 1 their
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