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Served By Leased Wire Of The ASSOCIATED PRESS With Complete Coverage Of State and National News VOL. ?!—NO. 310- WILMINGTON, N. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1941 if FINAL EDITION ESTABLISHED 1867 Neutrality Short Cut proposed Pepper Suggests FDR May Revoke Combat Zone Decree Of 1939 AVOID CONTROVERSY Florida Solon Believes Re location Would Speed Lend-Lease Shipments WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. — (/P)__Senator Pepper (D.Fla.) suggested today that Presi dent Roosevelt short-cut the congressional controversy ov er revising the Neutrality act i by executive action which would permit American ships to carry cargoes to England. The Florida senator, long one of the more aggressive exponents of assistance to the British, pro posed in a Senate speech that Mr. Roosevelt simply revoke ms proc lamation of 1939 making the re strictions of the law effective and delineating “combat zones” which American" merchantmen may not enter. . . . The day's discussion of foreign af airs aiso produced a proposal bv Senator Gillette (D.Ia) and Senator Johnson (D.Colo.) that- a Senate committee investigate re ports of espionage and subversive activities by diplomatic represen tatives of Japan, Italy, and Ger many. If the reports prove correct, Gil lette told the Senate, Japanese consular agents should receive the same treatment that was recently given to similar German and Ital ian officials. The consulates were (Continued on Page Three; Col. 6) $11,000LANDDEAL i IS RECORDED HERE Increased Value Of Down town Property Noted In Sale Of 105 Market St. Pointed to by realtors as indica tive of the soaring value of down town business property, a 15-foot frontage and building located at 105 Market street Thursday changed hands for a sum in excess of $11,000, according to title records filed with Adrian B. Rhodes, county register of deeds. Exclusive of its one-story building, assessed at $3,000, the property, 15 by 51 feet, brought in excess of $700 a front foot. It was sold to Ella E. Pope, 5 North 13th street, by Mary Bissinger and other heirs of George Bissinger. The building is to be remodeled. It formerly was leased by a branch store of a large local bakery. Tip To Wilmington's Housewives: Bay Lots Of Potatoes, Beans i WASHINGTON, Oct. 2.— UP) —If housewives in the Wilmington and Fayetteville areas want to take ad vantage of the best buys in fiftsh fruits and vegetables currently available, they should include in their meals this week sweet pota toes and string beans with desserts Wit around apples. This was the week's food advice to consumers in the areas by tl\e consumer division of the Office of Price Administration here, based on information provided by army quar t'-rmaster market centers and the division of purchase of the Office of Production Management. 8 MILLION CALLED UP ROME, Oct. 2.—(d?)—The Fascist national bureau for conscription of civilian workers announced tonight that 8,460,000 laborers had been caiied up by Sept. 9._ Flatbush Hotly Resents Funiner First In Line NEW YORK, Oct. 2— W — There were harsh words in Brooklyn today for one John Green, who was called a sabo teur, a fifth columnist and—a bum. While the faithful slept, Green stole in from Washington, D. C., and camped first in line at Eb bets Field. That stranger at the gates— that was hard to take. “Throw the bum out” came a’v cry when the line began form ing. It looked bad for Green, a 65 year-old retired government em ploye, until a pacifist recom mended: “Let’s give him a chance to leave peacefully.” This, and the presence of 10 stalwart policemen and a ser geant, comforted Green who still was first in line tonight when hundreds of King county dwell ers began crowding near the entrances—aof\y with chairs, warm coat- lunches. Brook'. .tF-llfe':'* early this mornfc audacious A ere was l day that be punc |g|ps>wing line, some punched sandwiches, 'sat and waited and », gued on the merits of tht .ookiyn Dodgers. TKe banner line in the Brook lyn Eagle’s World Series extra reflected the views of many. “Only 3 more to go,” it read. Yesterday, the Eagle had pro claimed: “Yanks win. So what?” DEFENSE SECRETS KEPT FROM JURY Judge Rules FBI Evidence In Nazi Spy Trial Too Vital To Publish NEW YORK, Oct. 2.—<■&>)—De fense secrets, some of them too hot for the eyes and ears of a federal court jury and all of them allegedly snatched from German spies, were introduced in evidence today at the trial of 16 men charged with espion age conspiracy. They included: A comprehensive survey of scores of shipyards on the east, west and Gulf coasts, and a list of hundreds of naval craft under construction— from 35,000-ton battleships and an aircraft carrier to fast torpedo motorboats and surf landing craft; An unexplained diagram, pre sumably of the wiring of a Norden or Sperry bombsight; and A highly confidential booklet, "Protection of Industrial Facilities,” issued for a few FBI officials. Federal Judfee Mortimer W. Byers directed that none of the contents of the confidential FBI book be in troduced into the record except a flyleaf inscription which described the matter as “a secret document (Continued on Page Four; Col. 1) OIL SHORTAGE AGAIN DENIED Senate Group Reaffirms Contention No Real Emergency Exists WASHINGTON, Oct. 2.—I.2P)—A Senate committee, told that the railroads could begin hauling 200, 000 barrels of petroleum daily to the eastern seaboard within two weeks, unofficially reaffirmed to day its findings that a threatened gasoline shortage could be avoided if proper steps were taken. Chairman Maloney (D-Conn.) summed up members’ views with the terse comment that he saw little change in the situation since the committee reported three weeks ago that there was no actual shortage either in gasoline or transportation facilities. Previously, Petroleum Coordina tor Ickes had testified that if some thing was not done to overcome the 175,000 barrel daily excess of consumption over shipments to the seaboard area, there would not be enough oil to go around this win ter. President John J. Pelley of the (Continued on Page Twelve; Col. 4) CONGRESS PROBE ASKED WASHINGTON, Oct. 2.— (iP) — A congressional investigation of a gen eral accounting office report accus ing the National Youth Administra tion of "questionable” transactions was asked today by Aubrey Wil liams, NYA administrator.__ Davis Wives Organize Welfare Association - 1 At the call of Mrs. Frederic H. Smith, wife of the commanding offi cer, wives of Camp Davis officers and men have begun organization of the Camp Davis Welfare association, 11 group designed to render advice aiK1 assistance to all families of military personnel stationed at the anti-aircraft reservation. A community chest has been es tablished at Camp Davis with lini Ited funds. These are sufficient to meet minimum operating expenses at this time and efforts to in mease the amount will be made a an early date, it was announced. Starting Monday, October 6, from a. m. to 12 noon, daily except a urday and Sunday, there will be gistration and information offices Pen for both white and negro ses. The office for whites will established at the Woodrow] Wilson hut and the negro cases will be registered at the Congre gational church, Seventh and Nun streets, until the negro hut has been erected. Persons needing help or advice are urged to register and informa tion is desired from individuals who may know of persons who are worthy of assistance, but too timid to come in. This information is very helpful and desired, a spokesman for the new group said. Volunteer workers, from the reg (Continued on Page Four: Col. 5) PARAGUAY .RIOT .REPORTED BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 2.—(A>»— Several persons were shot yester day in Paraguay during an anti government demonstration grow ing out of a student strike, travel ers said today upon arrival here. Two Youths Released After Questioning In Marion Miley Slaying LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 2.— UP>—-Case of the Miley slayings at Lexington was wiped clear of acknowledged suspects tonight with the release from custody at nearby Shelbyville of the second of two boys who were questioned by state and local authorities. Commonwealth’s Attorney H. B. Kinsolving said he was con vinced the youths had no knowl edge of the Lexington Country club robbery in which Golf Star Marion Miley., 27, was shot to death and her mother, Mrs. Elsa Ego Miley, 50, wounded fatally, early Sunday. CAROLINA BATTLE PUNS COMPLETED General Drum To Address Soldiers, Civilians Today; Governors Honored MONROE, Oct. 2.—W)—Some 12, 000 officers and noncommissioned officers will assemble here tomor row to confer with Lieut.-Gen. Hugh A. Drum, commander of the First army, on plans for the Battle of the Carolinas, which for the next two months will engage nearly 500, 000 troops in 16 counties. General Drum will speak at 4 p.m. and his speech will be car ried over an extensive civilian ra dio network. About 360,000 soldiers, at base camps in the 10,000-sctuare mile maneuver area, will also hear the address by radio and am plification systems. The exercises here will be pre ceded by a luncheon at the public relations division in Camden, S. C. The luncheon is to be given by General Drum in honor of Gov ernors Burnet R. Maybank of South Carolina and J. M. Broughton of North Carolina. Brief talks will be made here by the governors and the com manding generals of the three army corps making up the First army — Maj. - Gen. Charles F. Thompson, Maj. - Gen. Lloyd R. Frendendall and Maj.-Gen. Karl Truesdell. Following the meeting here, the (Continued on Page Three; Col. 3) Both Chinese, Japanese Claim Big Hunan Victory SHANGHAI, Oct. 2.— UP) —With both Chinese and Japanese claiming a gigantic victory in the two-week campaign in Hunan province, the Japanese today launched a new of fensive 500 miles to the north, in Honan province, apparently aimed, as was the other, at erasing the stigma of an old defeat. A Chungking military spokesman, however, said divisions and three independent brigades composing a quarter of the entire Japanese army strength had been beaten and routed and now w'ere falling back 12 to 18 miles north of the Hunan capital, Changsha. WEATHER FORECAST: North Carolina—Partly cloudy, show ers in the mountains Friday, Saturday, partly cloudy, scattered showers. (Meteorological data for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m. yesterday): (By U. S. Weather Bureau) Temperature: 1:30 a. m. 73; 7:30 a. m. 73; 1:30 p. m. 86; 7:30 p. m. 77: maximum 86; min imum 70; mean 78; normal 69. Humidity: 1:30 a. m. 99; 7:30 a. m. 96; 1:30 p. m. 59; 7:30 p. m. 89. Precipitation: Total for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m., 0.00 inches; total since the first of the month, 0.00 inches. Tide* For Today: (From Time Tables published by U. S Coast and Geodetic Survey): High l«w Wilmington - 8:07a- 2:49a. Masonboro Inlet ___ 6:04a. ^--a. Sunrise 6:08a.; sunset 5:54p.; moon rise 5:09p.; moonset 4:26a. Cape Fear river stage at Fayette ville at 8 a. m. Oct 2, 8.8S feet. (Continued on Page Twelce; Col. 3) City Will Seek Air Line Link Wilmington And Hanover Delegation To Appear At Capital Hearing FOUR FIRMS INVOLVED Group Will Press Claims To Washington Board On October 13 For the purpose of renew ing Wilmington’s fight for a commercial airline linking this district with other principal Atlantic coast cities, a delega tion of Wilmington and New Hanover county business, pro fessional and public leaders will attend a Civil Aeronau tics board meeting in Wash ington, D. C., Oct. 13. Membership of the delegation will be determined early next week, it was indicated by Addison Hewlett, Sr., chairman of the board of coun ty commissioners, one of the leading exponents of placing Wilmington on a regular commercial airline. At the Oct. 13 hearing, Mr. Hew lett said Thursday, the CAB will hear applications of four airlines petitioning to establish a route along the South Atlantic seaboard, most of them originating in Washington or New York, and extending south to Florida. Applicants, all of which have signified their intention of including Wilmington as a terminal stop, include Canadian Colonial Air ways, Pennsylvanian Air Lines, National Air Lines, Inc., and East ern Air Lines. Discussing the forthcoming CAB meeting, Mr. Hewlett said he doubt ed if the authority would make an immediate decision in the route or award of the franchise. He explained that such a decision usually comes after intensive study of the area proposed to be covered and a thor ough study of applications of vari ous cities along the proposed route. Three of the four applicants have pledged Wilmington that a terminal (Continued on Page Four; Col. 2) AMERICAN FLIERS ROUT NAZI AIRMEN Eagles Scatter 25 Messer schmitts, Down Four Over France LONDON, Oct. 2.—W—Peeling off in sections of four from a patrol high over France, an Amer ican Eagle fighter squadron dived on a flight of 25 Messerschmitts today and sent four of them down in flames. The official account of the fight gave to Pilot Officer C. W. Mc Colpin 27, of Buffalo, N. Y., the credit for downing two of the Ger man fighters. British Squadron Leader Mears was credited with one and Pilot Officers N. Ander son, 31, of Chicago and R. O. Scarbrough, 19, of Arizona shared the fourth. An Eagle pilot’s official report on the afternoon skirmish said: “We were flying high when we saw 25 (Messerschmitt) 109 E’s and 109 F’s climbing up below us. (Continued on Page Four; Col. 2) Paulette Goddard’s Mother Wins Uncontested Divorce RENO, Oct. 2. — UP) — Mrs. Alta Fleming, mother of Screen Actress Paulette Goddard, won an uncon tested divorce today from Earl K. Fleming, Los Angeles mining man, on grounds of extreme cruelty and non-support. They were married at Las Vegas, Nev., April 2, 1940. HOLLYWOOD’S JEANETTE MACDONALD and Gene Raymond inaugurated their plan of “Date Leaves” for serv icemen under USO auspices. Shown serving refreshments the screen couple had as guests at their Bel Air home 10 men from the Army and Navy and 10 girls from the Uni versity of Southern California and UCLA. NAZI ARGENTINE ENVOY_Y LEAVE Move Would Spare Berlin Necessity Of Severing Diplomatic Links BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 2.—(TP)— German Ambassador Edmund von Thermann, whose explusion has been demanded indirectly by the Argentine congress, soon may quit the country voluntarily, political circles said tonight. Such action would save the Argentine government further em barrasement over the revelations of a congressional committee charging him with directing a formidable Nazi ring here. It also would spare Germany the removal of its entire diplomatic corps which a break in relations would neces sitate. Other developments in South America today included: News that three Paraguayan stu dents and one policeman were in jured in a class last Friday in Asuncion, the capital. The Brazilian government closed the offices of the newspaper Der Urwaldsbote (Jungle Post) at Blu menau, heart of the German dis trict in southern Brazil, and charged that the paper had carried on ‘‘a continuous campaign .con tary to national interests.” Chilean liberals announced plans for a nation-wide anti-totalitarian (Continued on Page Four; Col. 8) Russian Press Hails Allies Aid Agreement As End Of Hitlerism MOSCOW, Oct. 2.— m — American and British delegates to the tri-power conference vis ited Lenin’s tomb in Red square today as guests of the Soviet government. The delegates were entertained by Premiar Stalin last night at a Kremlin banquet which lasted from 6 p. m. to 1:30 a. m. The Moscow press hailed the agreement reached at the con cluding session yesterday as as surance of victory over Ger many. The British-American pledge of arms and war mate rials for Russia, said the Mos cow News, is a “guarantee that Hitlerism will be smashed and annihilated.” Red Infantry Routs Nazis From Trenches MOSCOW, Friday, Oct. 3.-(tf!-L Gerifian trenches before Leningrad are being overrun by Red infan try charges and Soviet marines have landed on the Gulf of Fin land coast west of that city to dig in ana harass the Nazi flanks, mil itary dispatches said today. Fighting along the entire front was described as bitterly continu ing. Russian guns, it was added, si lenced German long range batter ies which had been shelling one of Leningrad’s districts. The Germans, said front-line re ports, are rushing up reinforce ments in an effort to stem general Red counter-attacks which already have greatly improved the Rus sian position all about the city. (The British wireless reported also that the Russians had re k-— taken Strelna, 20 miles west of Leningrad, and that 20 miles to the east of the city the Nazis had been thrown back to a depth of nearly 30 miles from Kolpino east ward to Lake Ladoga.) On the central front, Russian counter-attacks were reported roll ing on, and the official Commu nist newspaper, Pravda, declared that Red planes set fire to the forests in some areas to drive the Germans out at the conclusion of a 17-day battle. The Dnieper river in the south, (Continued on Page Four; Col. 4) BERLIN HEARS OPERA BERLIN, Oct. 2.—ta>)—The Kroll Opera House, after housing the Reichstag for eight years, again pre sented opera last night. The Prus sian State Opera presented “Tann hauser.” Police Chief Reports 602 Arrests Made By Department In Month In a report to City Manager Janies G. Wallace, Chief of Po lice Charles H. Casteen Wednes day said that a total of 602 ar rests were made by police during the month of September. Of this number, 384 were white and 218 colored. The department handled 1,205 radio calls during the month; of 21 cars stolen, 18 were returned to their owners and one demol ished by -fire; eight bicycles were stolen and seven found and re turned to ‘their owners. The de partment seized 14 gallons of Il legal liquor that was turned over to the C0|Urt. One murder oc curred during the month and two accidental deaths were reported. BLASTWRECKS DOWNTOWN AREA 23 Suffer Serious Burns As Mystery Explosion Shatters Buildings CUMBERLAND, Md, Oct 2— (#)—Twenty-three persons were in jured severely and one man was missing today after a terrific blast that shook the business district, levelled three two-story buildings and shattered plate glass front of several stores while the streets were crowded with afternoon shop pers Firemen fought their way over a block littered heavily with debris to reach the burning structures and quickly got the flames under control, but not before a dozen persons had suffered severe burns. Confusion in the center of the city was indescribable. Cries of shocked shoppers mingled with the screams of the injured and the sirens of ambulances and fire and police equipment Officers could not immediately ascribe a cause for the blast Chief Eyerman said that the miss ing man was Carl Wagner, owner of the Wagner meat market, one of the buildings destroyed by tne explosion Derelict Nordic Pride Goes Under Heavy Seas While Guard Stands By SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 2.—(JT>)— The Nordic Pride, derelict fishing boat from Tacoma, disappeared un der pounding waves tonight. The Coast Guard cutter Adriadne, which had been standing by since shortly after noon, awaiting abatement of high seas so she could send out a boarding party, radioed shortly be fore 8 p. m.: “Nordic Pride gone under, appar ently foundered, still standing by.” The Nordic Pride was found wal lowing helplessly in stormy seas 25 miles offshore, some 57 miles north west of Point Arena. The Coast Guard was inclined to think the vessel probably was smashed and her crew swept away by mighty waves. S. C. GIVEN U. S. AID WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. — Governor and Mrs. Maybank en trained for Monroe from Wash ington tonight after the execu tive announced approval of military and naval recreational 1 projects for seven Palmetto state cities, totaling {579,445 and WPA assistance to farmers of 1 drought-stricken areas, 1 OPM Places City On Priority Lists For Building N eed Six Carolina Defense Centers Given Materials Preference (Star Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON. Ocl. 2—Builders of privately-financed homes in Wilmington, Jacksonville and Morehead City are assured little trouble in obtaining materials, Donald M. Nelson, director of priorities, disclosed today. GERMAN DEATH 1 DETAILS BUSY Many Hanged, Shot As Re volt Fires Spread Fiercely In Nazi-Occupied Lands NEW YORK, Oct. 2.—UR—Hang man and firing squad held sway in the writhing New Europe last night, as Germany stamped at an acknowledged “internal front” of revolt that stretched from Prague to Paris. In former Czechoslovakia, in the angry remnants of Yugoslavia, in Greece, in France, and even in Bulgaria and Hungary, the story was the same, differing only as to scope and detail. Admitting employment of the sternest possible measures, Ger man sources asserted: “With Germany, herself, deep in a fight for life it is under standable that we cannot tolerate an internal front against us.” But, Czech sources in London suggested the blood bath in old Czechoslovakia had a far more sinister meaning than mere sup pression of revolt. They said it was a deliberate process of ex termination of all intellectual Czech elements liable to offer op position, preparatory t o mass transfer of heavy German indus tries to comparatively bomb-free sectors behind the Sudeten moun taihs. ■ Such of the particulars as trickled through the censorships follow: Nazi courts martial passed out 39 new death sentences today and arrests mounted as the German Gestapo continued to stamp out rebellious Czech rings in the pro tectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Total death sentences in the pro tectorate since an emergency was declared last Sunday now have reached about 130. Dienst aus Deutschland disclosed another 228 arrests in Bohemia and Moravia in the Gestapo in vestigation of charges that they plotted high treason and sabotage. The new Reichs protector, Rein hard Heydrich of the Gestapo, (Continued on Page Five; Col. 5) Retired Supreme Court Judge Louis Brandeis Reported Gravely III WASHINGTON, Oct. 2.— CP> — Former Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis was reported gravely ill tonight after a heart attack. A close friend of the Brandeis family disclosed the retired jurist, who will be 85 years old next Nov. 13, suffered the attack yesterday and had been constantly under a physician’s care since. Brandeis retired from the Supreme court on Feb. 13, 1939, after serv ing 23 years. President Roosevelt said that the country had needed him through all the years and that he hoped Bran deis realized “how unanimous the nation has been in its gratitude to you.” UNFRIENDLY ATTITUDE TOKYO, Friday, Oct. 3.—(A>)—The Japanese spokesman warned today that any shipment of supplies from The Netherlands’ East Indies to Russia would be considered an un friendly attitude.” The three cities were included among six defense-congested areas of North Carolina where the Of fice of Production Management will accord priorities in materials necessary to construction homes for occupancy by defense work ers. The other three cities are Fay* etteville, New Bern and Charlotte. Arrangements already have been made for granting priority assist ance to public-financed units. “With the impact of the defense program upon the national econ omy,” Director Nelson said, "hous ing operations in every field have been affected by the shortages in products manufactured from crit ical metals, without which livable housing cannot be produced. “The production of housing has been in competition with produc tion of other defense essentials, and was delayed because the scarce materials needed for both were diverted by priorities from hous ing into other uses. Yet, plants manufacturing tanks, guns, shells and other essentials of national defense cannot be operated, and ships cannot be built without workers, and workers must have places to live.” Procedure in obtaining priorities for housing materials is available at the division of priorities here and will be forwarded to all ap plicants immediately upon re quest, Mr. Nelson said. Wilmington building contractors (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) AFL STEVEDORE CHIEFTAIN SHOT - Police Broadcast Alarm Following Slaying In Downtown Manhattan NEW YORK, Oct 2—(#1—Emil Camarda, 56-year-old general vice president of the Atlantic coast dis trict of the AFL’s International Longshoremen’s association, was shot to death today in a building in the heart of the financial dis trict. Police Capt. Edward Mullins said that the shot was fired by Salvatore Sabbatino of Sabbatino and Co., stevedores. Sabbatino disappeared after the shooting and police immediately sent out a general alarm for him. Capt. Mullins said Camarda was shot twice after a brief confer ence in Sabbatino’s office during which Camarda reportedly ques tioned Sabbatino about the em ployment of stevedores. Crowds pouring from buildings in the busy Wall st. district con gregated about the building in which the shooting took place as police closed all the exits. Camarda was shot in the cheek and forehead and was dead when police arrived. 1 Two Trainmen Killed In Wichita Collision WICHITA, Kas., Oct. 2.— — Two crewmen were killed and two others and a dozen passengers in jured tonight in the head-on col lision of two Missouri Pacific pas senger trains, 10 miles northeast of Wichita. The dead: J. R. McBride, Wichita, engineer of the westbound train. Jimmy White, Wichita, firemar on the eastbound train. Gov. Rivers Attack Believed Kidnap Try LAKELAND, Ga., Oct. 2.—(J>~ A strange attack on former Gov.. E. D. Rivers and his wife late last night by an assailant who later committed suicide was believed by officers today to have been a kid nap plot that backfired. Entering the darkened Rivers home on a pretense of delivering a package, the man clubbed the former Georgia chief executive and his wife with a pistol, but fled when the intended victims struggled so fiercely they almost overcame him. Rivers, visibly shaken but not seriously injured, said he believed his fight, strengthened when Mrs. Rivers fought with the armed man, saved him from possible death. One wild shot was fired during the grappling and another when --* Rivers broke free, Mrs. Rivers suf fered a gash over her left eye. Neighbors heard the calls for help and trailed the assailant to a Valdosta tourist camp where Val dosta police took up the chase. They found the man in a trailer and called for him to come out. Suddenly, he jammed a .32 caliber pistol into his mouth and fired. Valdosta Police Capt. J. L. Mur phy said the man was identified as Horace Waters Bikle of Pitts burgh, Pa., and, with Lamar County Sheriff J. F. Studstill, ex pressed belief the attack was part of a kidnap plot. In New York, police disclosed a letter written by Horace Waters Bikle, Jr., to his wife there in which he expressed “growing hatred for our various local, state (Cotinued on Page Three; Col. 2;
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