Tap 10 GPL. 6. A. WATSON SERVING WITH AIR FORGE IN ALASKA Whitehorse, Y. T., Corporal Geo. A. Watson, son of Mrs. Mollie Watson, of Cullowhee, N. C., is currently serving with the 66th Jet Fighter Squadron on Exercise Sweetbrier, a controlled training exercise being conducted jointly by U. S. and Canadian Forces under Arctic conditions in the Yukon itAFw onH Alaclra Hurinff Jan vary and February. The sleek jets, part of the Alaskan Air Command, based at Eleaaendorf AFB, Anchorage, are supplying close tactical air support e Allied ground forces engaged 4n maneuver with 44invading" Ag^essor hordes who have made a theoretical airborne assault on Alaska. U. S. Army and Air Force units ia Alaska are providing the Aggressor forces which launched the anjrthical invasion, bringing Exercise Sweetbriar into being as a speedy counter-action. First peacetime joint Canada? United States maneuver to be held in the Arctic, Exercise Sweetbriar climaxes a series of test task forces ^exercises by both countries since World War II. William Cunningham Serving In Japan With 8th Field Artillery WITH THE EIGHTH ARMY IN NARA, JAPAN ? Private First Class William Cunningham, son of Mrs. Arizona Cunningham of Sylva, North Carolina, is now on duty with the 8th Field Artillery Bat - A tolion, which is sianonea ax i\ara, Honshu, Japan, and is part of the Tacific " famed 25th Infantry (Tropic Lightning) commanded by Major General William B. Kean. His present duty is that of cook in Headquarters Battery. Joining the Army on August 9, 1948, at Greenville, he was sent to Fort Jackson, South Carolina, for his basic training. He arrived in Japan on December 24, 1948. Approximately five million persons used national forest lands for hunting, fishing, and trapping during 1949, the U. S. Department of Agriculture reports. \ RITZ THEATRE WEEKLY PROGRAM Night 8howK 7:00 A 9:00 P.M. Mat. Set.?Late 8how 8at. 10:30 Adm.: Adult* 35c tax incl.?Children under 12 yre. 12c tax Incl Thursday-Friday February 23-24 BRIDE FOR SALE Claudette Colbert, Robert Young. "When you see a better comedy than this, you'll have to go some. It's got everything! Saturday, Feb. 25 RENEGADES OF THE SAGE Oiarles Starrett, Smiley Burnett. Your old friend "Durango Kid." Late Show? IN THIS CORNER with Scott Brady and ,A. Shaw. Story of the Fight Racket. Sunday, Feb. 26 T1IP IIIATU IIPIIIT int nAoli ntAni Ronald Reagan, Patricia Neal. The compelling story of a doomed nan's battle against stubborn pride. A screen triumph. Monday Tuesday February 27-28 CHICA60 DEADLINE Alan Ladd, June Havoc, Donna Seed. Here is Ladd with the best lory he has had in a year and the co-stars he's ever lind. Tt's terrific! Wednesday. March 1 LETS LIVE A LITTLE Hedy Lamarr, Robert Cummings. And do they live. See how it's done, then try it. Swell! All Children net in arms will have te purehaae a ticket to enter any performanee at thle Theatre. - II ? " THE The Time T1 Killed For ten years the anti make it possible to giv In oar last ad we told: trust lawyers and all . But the anti-trust lav federal judges. They still wanted to d< They Appealed to Ne\ So they appealed Judge At well's decision to th Court at New Orleans. One of the three, Judge Curtis L. Waller, agreed w the case should be dismissed. The other two members of the Circuit Court, Judg< Jr., and Judge Allen Cox, although saying the case that the indictment was vague and contained many inflammatory. They decided that Judge Atwell at Dallas should p ? . ii - i 11 i i.i i j. inflammatory allegations ana couia oraer tne anu-i the defendants with a bill of particulars. So the case was bacR in Dallas again. Judge Atwell, carrying out the decision of the out the inflammatory matter. He said that without this inflammatory and prejud Jury might never have returned the indictment. Judge Atwell said to the anti-trust lawyers: "There are many statements in the indictment in violation, and are highly prejudicial and infl The anti-trust lawyers objected. They advanced s They said that the removal of their inflammatory alle judges had agreed did not belong in the indictment Judge Atwell instructed the anti-trust lawyers with a bill of particulars. In short, he wanted sp of vague generalities. He set the deadline for f.ui at January 15th, 1944. When the anti-trust lawyers twice asked for more 1 among their staff, Judge Atwell extended the time to he believed that they were honestly trying, in goo< material he had requested. Actually, it developed, they were using the time to cade in Dallas and start it in another court. 0 They We: Three times the anti-trust lawyers went inti Three times federal judges said the anti-trui In previous ads in this series we told you atx We think you should know about these prevh could seriously affect our business if they wer There was the time in Washington, D. C? when they said we and other good American citizens conspired to fix the price of bread in that city. This was the time Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsborough ruled that A&P and the other defendants did not even need to put in a defense He instructed the'jury to bring in a verdict of "not guilty". It was the time Judge Goldsborough said to the anti* trust lawyers: "If you were to show this record to any experienced trial lawyer in the world, he would tell you that there was not any evidence at all. . "Honestly, I have never in my over forty years9 experience seen tried a case that was as absolutely devoid of evidence as this* That is the honest truth. * f hftw rrrr>rr *een fine like it" THE GREAT ATLANT fLVA HERALD AND RURALITB he Anti-Tri Tk n,?. 111C1I UWl i-trust lawyers have been attacking the e thepublic the. best quality food at the 1 Kou how Federal Judge W. H. Atwell, at their inflammatory charges against A&l ryers were not satisfied with decisions estroy A&P. v Orleans Th< e three-judge Circuit On February 26th, wl without any previous ... . . .. ? . to the newspapers in nth Judge Atwell that the case in Dallas. ; Joseph C. Huteheson, They said that it was should be tried, agreed m an appropriate jur allegations which were .. . , . The "early date" turn rotect A&P from these As soon as one anti-t ;rust lawyers to supply trust lawyer filed a i most of the same allei and that are being mi Circuit Court, struck So now, according tc ruled on the Dallas c icial matter the Grand Despite defeats in thi country, they continu ! which are not at all When Judge Atwell h< ammatory." to prepare an order f< in amazing argument. In signing this order 1 gations (which all four ?This nolle ^ ) destroyed their case. court Thaf is to furnish the court courf8 approval. lecific charges instead rnishing this material "It is, however, a m may be of interest t Fehra&ttWilsor^North Carolfi i faith, to nrenare the Alison,_North Carolir ^ - ^ ? - ontouanviue, minois ' get ready to drop the They were still deten more and better food re Wrong Three Time ) federal courts and made serious and damagi st lawyers were wrong and rendered decisions >ut these other anti-trust "cases" involving us, >us cases, because once again the anti-trust law e believed by the public. There was the time in Wilson, North Carolina, they said we and other good American citizens conspired to fix prices paid farmers for their potatoes. This was the time Federal Judge C. C. Wyche directed the jury to bring in a verdict of "not guilty". It was the time Judge Wyche said to the anti-trust lawyers: "In my opinion there is no testimony produced from which*it can reasonably be inferred that the defendants entered into a combination to depress or lower the price of potatoes. *7 might say that / never tried a case in my life where a greater effort, more work, more investigation had been done, combing almost with g finetooth corhb to gather evidence. "But, as was said a long time ago, you can't make brick without straw, and you can't make a case without facts." IC & PA S Thursday, Feh.23,1>50 ust Lawyers i Lase! business methods that owest prices. Dallas, threw the anti? right oat of his Court. against them by three * ;y Quit in Dallas ? ? i*?? -fi? ? i_ _ me the judge was stiu waiting ior nis answer, ana ! notice to him, the anti-trust lawyers gave a story Washington, announcing that they were dropping : their intention "to file a substantially similar suit isdiction at an earlyjlaie" ed out to be the same day. \ rust lawyer killed the case in Dallas, another antitew case in Danville, Illinois. This new case made nations that had been made and dropped in Dallas; ide against us today. > the anti-trust lawyers, all four judges who had ase were wrong. * ree federal courts in widely separated parts of the led their campaign to destroy A&P. ;ard of their action he ordered the anti-trust lawyers u >r his signature dismissing the Dallas case. le said to the anti-trust lawyers: li does not have the sanction or approval of this ? necessary, nor that the government ask for the latter that may be presented to the other court and o the people at large." J * . . .. to destroy A&P had failed in Washington, D. C., la, and Dallas, Texas, the anti-trust lawyers moved mined to destroy this company which had brought at lower cost to millions of American families. # - . . 1 s Before! ing charges against A&P. against them. which the judges said were not cases at all. yers are making damaging "allegations" that There was the time in Dallas, Texas, when they made practically the same "allegations" they are making today. j This was the time Federal Judge W. H. Atwell ruled that the case should not even be tried. He said that the indictment contained inflammatory statements that he would not permit to be presented to a jury. It was the time Judge Atwell said to the anti-trust lawyers: *7 know of no American rule, and / wish / had the power to underscore the word *Americanwhich permits us to try a man because of his size. "If I thought I was presiding over a court and that I might have to sentence some person because he was a great big fellow, or because he was a Lilliputiani, / would feel like resigning. God knows we don't want it ever to occur in America that the size is going to determine whether a man is guilty or innocent." ? ! CIFIC TEA COMPANY i 9

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