CHADBOURN YOUTH
DIES IN ACCIDENT
Clinton Barnes Is Killed
In Early Morning
Auto Crash
WHITEVILLE, Aug. 23—Clinton
Barnes, 20, of near Chadbourn,
was fatally injured this morning
at 2 o’clock when the automobile
which he was driving left High
way 74, between Whiteville and
Chadbourn and crashed into an
electric power pole. Culbert Dy
son, who was riding with Barnes,
escaped with minor cuts and
bruises.
Barnes, who for sometime had
been working at the shipyard in
Wilmington, died in the Columbus
hospital two hours after the ac
cident. He is said to have had a
fractured skull, chest injuries, and
his left leg was broken just below
the hip.
Investigating officers said that
the car apparently got eut of con
trol and left the road, going down
a three or four foot embankment
before hitting the power pole. The
car was almost completely demol
ished before hitting the power
’ pole. Barnes was not thrown from
the machine.
Barnes was married and is sur
vived by his widow, the former
Miss Pauline Britt, of near Chad
bourn; a son, Kenneth Maurice
Barnes; his mother, Mrs. Edgar
Barnes; five brothers, Shafton,
Grover and Emerson Barnes, of
Chadbourn, Haley Barnes of Fort
D:x, N. J., and Earl Barnes of
Camp Livingston, La.; and one sis
ter, Miss Janice Barnes of Chad
bourn. His father, the late Edgar
Barnes,-died just two months ago.
Funeral services are to be held
Monday afternoon with Rev. G.
M. Singletary, pastor of the Cor
ninth Baptist church, in charge,
and burial will follow in the fami
ly cemetery.
_v_
Roseboro Man Appointed
To Sampson Committee
CLINTON, Aug. 23. — Jesse H.
Harris, of Roseboro. has been ap
pointed and has accepted a position
on the War Price and Rationing
Board for Sampson county to suc
ceed Howard Hubbard, former chair
man who tendered his resignation
recently as did the other two mem
bers of the board, R. E. Williams
and P. G. Bunn.
No successors have as yet been
named for the latter two men who
are still serving until such time as
men are named to take their places.
--—1V—
Speeding Charges Cost
Man Gas Rationing Card
CLINTON, Aug. 23 — Speeding
charges cost Ernest Faison, col
ored taxicab driver for Wade Mc
Phail, has gas rationing book. Clin
ton police officers O. R. Honeycutt
and J. D. Strickland secured a con
viction of Faison in Recorder’s
court here this week and as a re
sult, the local War Price and Ra
tioning board revoked the gas ra
tion book issued to Faison for
cause.
Officials of the board said taxis
are now being investigated, espe
cially concerning their use for
pleasure riding. The board has
received several reports of such
misuse, the statement added.
•XT
New York Hot Water
Rationing In Offing
NEW YORK, Aug. 23.— (A?) —If
New York city is to have hot water
rationing, as Mayor F. H. La
Guardia suggested last week, the or
der apparently is going to have to
come from Washington.
Acknowledging in his weekly
broadcast today that his plan had
caused “a great deal of attention
and talk and controversy some of
the real estate men did not take to
that plan or any plan,” Mayor La
Guardia said;
"In all likelihood, if regulations
are to be necessary they will come
from Washington, and in all likeli
hood they will be far more severe
than those we have now under
study.”
_ 1T _
Former Nazi Press Worker
Dies In Polish Hospital
NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—UP)—The
death of Prof. Karl Boomer, 42, Ger
man propaganda ministry official
•who fell Into disgrace when he was
accused and convicted of tipping off
Germany’s intention to invade Rus
sia last year, was announced tonight
by the Berlin radio with a laudatory
comment that “his work will not be
forgotten.’’
The German broadcast said that ;
Prof. Boemer, for a number of years
chief of the foreign press section of
the Nazi ministry of propaganda,
died in a Cracow hospital of wounds
received in the fighting around
Kharkov, on the Russian front. He
was a first lieutenant in the Ger
man armed forces at the end.
-V-=
USEFUL EXFEK1ENUE
NEW YORK, Aug. 23—W—Rich
ard Law, parliamentary under
secretary of state for foreign af
fairs in the British government,
said today upon his arrival by
Clipper that the Dieppe comman
do raid was viewed in England as
'"not exactly a rehearsal but that
■we got a lot of useful experience
out of it.”
-V—
The measure for weighing a dia
mond is called a carat because
in ancient India a seed of the
carab tree was used as a counter
balance in selling diamonds by
weight.
Protected Commando Boats In Dieppe Raid
These Allied fighter pilots cluster about a Spitfire plane, somewhere in England,
after their return from protecting invasion barges loaded with rangers and comman
dos in the raid on Dieppe, France. The American fliers may be distinguished by their
light-colored trousers. Second from left is Maj. Fred Dean of St. Petersburg, Fla. The
raiders took a toll of 276 Nazi planes, destroyed two shore batteries, a radio location
station and two small ships. This photo was radioed from London to New York—
(Central Press).
CROSSING CRASH
KILLS 3 PERSONS
Auto And Train Collision
Wrecks Both; Engi
neer Among Dead
BRIGHTON, Mich., Aug. 23.—OT)
—Three persons were killed in a col
lision of a fast Pere Marquette pas
senger train and an automobile at
the Silver Lake crossing, three and
a h&lf miles southeast of Brighton,
at 6:15 p. m. (E. W. T.) today.
The engineer, Leon Slade, 66, of
Grand Rapids, died instantly as the
locomotive plunged three-quarters
of a mile down the track, turning
end over end. J. T. Bell, 48. Detroit
attorney, driver of the automobile,
also was killed outright while the
fireman, Norman Tooley, 47, Grand
Rapids, died en route to University
hospital. Ann Arbor.
Four or five coaches, in addition
to the loccenotive and tender were
derailed, state 7)olice said. The loco
motive was demolished.
State police said only one pas
senger was injured. He was Charles
Taj lor, 12, of New Hudson, treated
at Brighton hospital for head in
juries.
The train, westbound from De
troit, was en route to Grand Rapids.
The train was held up four hours
while a new engine was sent out
from Detroit. '
Severe Earth Shocks
Recorded At Fordham
NEW YORK, Aug. 23—(ff)—Ford
ham university reported that fair
ly severe earth shocks were rec
orded today in a northwesterly di
rection at a distance which would
place them in the vicinity of the
westernmost Aleutian Islands now
occupied by the Japanese.
The shocks were recorded on the
Seismograph at 2:46:54 a. m., and
2:56:22 a. m., eastern war time
The distance was estimated at 5,
000 miles from New York.
Georgetown university’s seismo
graph also recorded a quake de
scribed as “fairly strong” and esti
mated at 5,000 miles distance, prob
ably in a northwest direction. The
shocks were recorded as lasting
from 2:46:56 a. m. to 5:30 a. m.,
with the maximum at 3:15.
_v_
CHARLES A. HAMILTON
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 — (j!>)—
Charles A. Hamilton, 86, member
of the Congressional Press galleries
since January 16, 1883, and treas
urer of the National Press club,
and Washington correspondent for
the Binghampton (NY) press, died
at his home today.
Hamilton, a few months ago at
a White House press conference,
recalled to President Roosevelt
that “when T. R. (Theodore Roose
velt) was in the White House, he
had a big stick.
“It’s time you had one too,” he
added, handing to the President a
gnarled black cane.
■-V
GIVES UP SEAT
ROCKFORD, OLL., Aug. 23—W
—An Army General gave up his
seat today to—of all people—a
Buc.. Private.
It happened when a grounp of
soldiers filed belatedly into St.
Paul, chapel at nearby Camp
Grant for morning services. With
all other seats taken, Brig. Ge'..
John M. Willis, commanding offi
cer of the post, arose to allow
about >0 privates to share his pew.
When they sat down, the General
was left standing in the aisle.
Red-faced, the men quickly squeez.
ed together and made room for
him.
20 ARRESTED
BOMBAY, Monday, Aug. 24.—
(IB—Twenty students were arrested
in Bombay Sunday night when
groups tried to march in a pro
cession.
At Nagpur 350 arrests have been
made to date in connection with
recant disturbances. The district
superintendant of police at Nagpur
declared that events of the last
week showed mat restruction of
government property had been or
ganized along the lines of a pre
arranged plan.
Huge Battle Raging
On Don River Bend
(Continued from Pace One)
bend,” the paper said, “but Soviet
troops are firmly holding positions
captured a few days ago.”
The communique also spoke of ]
heavy fighting here against an Ital
ian division, declaring that at least
half of this division had been
killed.
Speaking of the southern prong
of the battle for Stalingrad, the
communique said:
“In the area northeast of Kotel
nikovski our troops fought inten
sive battles with large tank and
infantry forces. On various sect
ors the Germans, at the cost of
tremendous losses, managed to ad
vance.”
There was no indication, how
ever, that the Germans had made
any progress in either of these
sectors.
In the Krasnodar sector, the
communique said, one Russian de
tachment ‘‘repulsed a strong Ger
man attack and inflicted heavy
losses on the enemy.”
Of the Pyatigorsk region, it said
simply that “our units fought de
fensive engagements with enemy
tanks and motorized infantry.”
Fresh Nazi forces brought out
of reserve pools or switched from
other sectors were piled steadily
into the tense battle for Stalingrad
or. which Hitler’s command des
perately hopes to deliver a mortal
blow to the Aed army and Soviet
economy.
Everywhere the Russians fought
stubbornly on against every enemy
thrust, exacting a mounting toll of
casualties in men and machines.
Their lines appeared to be intact
everywhere despite the wedge in
the kotelnikovski sector. The Rus
sians have not said officially how
near the battle is to Stalingrad,
but at one point in the Don elbow,
Stalingrad is only 45 miles away
Tt appeared likely that the Ger
mans were as close with the south
ern arm of their vast nutcracker.
In the other major battle of the
Caucasus, the Red army continued
to roll back southward from Kras
nodar toward the Black sea before
the overwhelming pressure of
enemy forces. The Russians held
successive lines as long as possible
cn the road to the naval base of
Novorossisk and then withdrew to
new positions.
They also engaged in resolute
fighting southeast of Pyatigorsk
where the Germans were inching
steadily closer to the Grozny oil
fields, surpassed in value only by
the Baku pool sheltered by the 18,
000 foot Caucasus mountains. The
Germans were less than 100 miles
from the Grozny Derricks.
(The Germans again failed to
mention the Stalingrad battle but
said Russian attempts to cross the
Don at various points were frus
trated. Strong Russian positions
and road barriers in unspecified
sections of the Caucasus were de
clared penetrated and Russian
counter-attacks were said to have
been repulsed. This drive appar
ently was south of Krasnodar.
T T /
Brazilians Complete
Delivery Of 44 Planes
NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—(iP)—Col.
Armando Ararigbois, Brazilian air
attache at Washington, disclosed to
day that while Brazil was declaring
war on Germany and Italy members
of the Brazilian air force were com
pleting a 9,000-mile delivery of 44
planes from the United States to
Brazil.
He said that the long flight, made
by training planes in many hops
without mishap or deviation from
schedule, was revealed with the ap
proval of the United State War de
partment.
It was the largest fly-away de
livery of planes yet made to a South
American nation, Colonel Ararigbois
said.
The Brazilian attache said the
American planes are to replace Ger
man Focke-Wulf planes in Brazil
for training and transport work, and
additional trainers are to be manu
factured under license in the Brazil
ian government’s aircraSt factory.
PORTUGAL’S TIES
HOLD IN BRAZIL
Moral Solidarity Unaffect
ed By Country’s War
Declaration
LISBON, Monday, Aug. 24—^P)—
Premier Antonio de Oliveira Sala
zar sent a message to the Brazil
ian government today declaring
that the “moral solidarity” of Por
tugal and Brazil had not been al
tered by Brazil’s declaration of war
against Germany and Italy.
In an announcement issued after
an extraordinary session of the
cabinet, the premier said that the
position of neutrality assumed by
Portugal in the war had never
meant “any breach of the histori
cal bonds which link Portugal and
other countries.”
This was especially true, he said,
with regard to Brazil “with whom
tight ties of blood make relations
between the two countries un
changeable.”
The statement will be delivered
to the Brazilian government by the
Portuguese ambassador at Rio de
Janeiro.
The statement added:
“At a moment when Brazil is
involved in the war, the Portuguese
government heartily expresses in
the name of the Portuguese people
their feelings of fraternal esteem,
of moral solidarity and of sincere
emotion with which they accom
pany the brother people in the atti
tude of sacrifices that the Brazil
ian people assumed in defense of
what Brazilians consider their hon
or and right.”
tr
German Administrator
Aids In Dieppe Repair
NEW YORK, Aug. 23—WV-The
German radio proudly proclaimed
tonight that General Otto Von
Stuelpnagel, German military ad
ministrator in occupied France,
had donated ten million French
francs to the prefect of the Dieppe
region to pay for damages and
civilian hurts suffered in the Allied
raid on the French port last
Wednesday.
This was done, the Berlin radio
announced, as a reward to the
French population of the region
for their “remarkable discipline
and calmness” shown during the
fighting.
In that connection, tne British
radio at the start of the raid had
warned the French that the hour
of liberation had not come; that
the action was not a second front,
and for them to stay out of the
fight.
-V
Quick-Witted Guardsman
Gets Coveted Decoration
BUFFALO, N. Y., Aug. 23—UP—
Coastguardsman John C. Cullen,
who reported the landing of four
Nazi saboteurs on Long Island
last June 13, today was awarded
the Army and Navy Union medal
of Honor.
The award, approved by the
Union’s National Council of Ad
mistration, cited Cullen’s “out
standing patriotism, devotion to
duty and service to his Nation.”
Only four others hold the Medal
—President Roosevelt, Gen. John
J. Pershing, Secretary of Navy
Knox and J. Edgar Hoover, head
of the Federal Bureau of Investi
gation.
City Briefs
meeting set
The Cape Fear council,
Daughters of America, will
hold its weekly meeting at 8
o’clock tonight in the Junior
Order hall.
Scientists estimate Prussian em
ber to be 40 million years old.
IRISH LEADING
IN U. S. TROOPS
Big American Convoy Pre
dominating In ‘Brook
lyn Irish*
WITH UNITCD STATES TROOPS
IN NORTHERN IRELAND, Aug.
23—{at—Indians, Filipinos and Chi
nese were included among the thou
sands of soldiers arriving in the
largest convoy of the war, but
"plain Brooklyn Irish returning
home" predominated.
"How can I get to County Mayo
or Sligo?” Sgt. John F. Duffy, 24,
of Philadelphia inquired. "I’m
heir to an estate there.”
Duffy, a bartender in civilian
life, was born in Sligo and his
mother in Mayo, but there is little
chance he will visit his home as it
is in Eire—forbidden ground for
American troops.
Pvt. George Braden, 36. of
Brooklyn, a member of an air force
ground crew, might never have left
the aulo sod the way he rolled his
r’s.
"Sure’n I was born in Carrick
Macross (Erie) and I’ven a broth
er in Maghera Clone,” he -said.
Braden did not get to the United
States until he was 21.
Capt. R. V. Myers of Bluefield,
W. Va., expressed the opinion that
“None of these boys will have any
trouble getting along. They are the
cherriest lot I’ve seen lended in a
long time.”
All the ground crews were eager
to news of the U. S. Flying Fort
ress raids over German-occupied
Europe.
Myers and Capt. J. W. Cooksey
of Beaumont, Tex., retraced a trip
they made a quarter of a century
ago Cooksey was pilot in the 25th
pursuit squadron in the last World
war and Myers was with the en
gineers.
As the troops landed in northern
Ireland, an American fighter pilot
in a Spitfire swooped low and wag
gled his wings in a salute.
There was one soldier who would
have preferred to go to the Pacific
theater of war. He was Pvt. Sing
Yee, 28, of Philadelphia. His moth
er was last heard of in Canton,
CHna.
Cooksey and Lieut. J. Brand of
Los Angles were the center of Irish
eyes in this ever-rainy isle. They
had brought sun helmets which
they had used in a Georgia training
camp. They probably were the first
sun helmets worn in the anything
but tropical land.
_v__
WAR CONTRACTS
FACE STOPPAGE
Strikes In Houde Engineer
ing Corportion, If Call
ed, Will Stop Work
(By The Associated Press)
Work on war contracts held by
the Houde Engineering Corporation
at Buffalo N. Y., faced stoppage
tonight as CIO employees author
ized their leaders to call a strike
if “they deem it necessary” to get
a collective bargaining agency elect
ion.
Thomas Nelson, secretary of the
CIO United Automobile Workers
local at the plant, said the pro
posed strike was unauthorized by
international officers, but that the
local had decided to force the issue
after having failed to get action
on a petition for an election.
Union members in seven big
Alcoa plants awaited reports to
morrow from returning delegates
who attended a conference last
week of CIO Aluminum Workers
at Pittsburgh at which a general
wage increase was discussed. The
delegates indicated that they were
ready to recommend rejection of a
decision of the War Labor Board
denying higher pay.
President Nick A. Zonerich said
he was empowered to call a strike
if the WLB’s action was disapprov
ed by locals.
An appeal of the WLB that a
midwesternr tuckers strike be
ended apparently had some effect.
Fay Watson of Watson Brothers
Trucking Co., at Omaha, Neb., said
that the strike had ended so far
as the lines that operated through
Omaha were concerned.
Affected by the strike were
approximately 10,000 drivers in
eight states west of the Mississippi
River. Involved was a question of
retroactive pay increases.
At Detroit, production of tanks
in the main plant of the Chrysler
Corporation tank arsenal ahead
although E. J. Hunt, operating
manager, said that walkout of con
struction workers employed in
building a new plant would hold
up future production. AFL workers
protested the employment of CIO
sheet metal men.
The WLB was schedule! to take
up this week a dispute involving
the General Motors Corporation’s
Harrison Radiator division in Locfc
port, N. Y. CIO workers had called
a strike for Monday, but it was
postponed upon notification
to tk WTCtS6 W°Uld be '^ified
to the WLB. The union seeks a
pay increase.
_tr
not ordinary paint
Paints used to camouflage vital
war production plants must posse*
appear^th whIch win caused”
appear the same shade as the sur
r/type oTh«? photo^Phea with
.anfrabredCkS ^^aphed^dth
Here’s That New Tire “Sandal”
This newly developed automobile tire “sandal,”
shown mounted on a tire and made of non-strategic ma
terials, should give up to 3,000 additional miles service,
according to U. S. Rubber company. Martin Castricum,
who developed the sandal for the company, is shown with
the tire. It’s made of cotton pile fabric and asphalt
emulsion. But you shouldn’t exceed 30 miles an hour to
assure good results.
Largest U. S. Convoy
Arrives In Britian
(Continued from Pare One)
England, where the invasion
armies are training.
During recent months engineers
under Maj. Gen. J. C. H. Lee,
chief of supply for American
forces in the European theater,
have been on a 24-hours-a-day
schedule preparing the huge bases,
transportation problems and work
ing out plans for the handling of
thousands of troops. These bases
new are nearing completion and
are able to absorb men and mate
rials at a sharply stepped-up pace.
The air force is in a similar
position and its striking power can
be doubled and redoubled within
an extremely short space of time
compared to the months of pre
liminary preparations.
Sun-b r o w n e d, war-whooping
American soldiers — with some
Navajo Indians among them—were
included among the arrivals, which
included every branch of the serv
ice for the new striking force be
ing assembled under Lieut. Gen.
Dwight B. Eisenhower, command
er-in-chief of American forces in
the European theater.
The convoy’s arrival, coming al
most simultaneously with the visit
of Prime Minister Churchill to
Moscow and the super-Commando
raid on Dieppe, was calculated to
give Hitler something to worry
about.
Among the vessels which have
^een hauling troops there appear
ed at one British port for the first
time a Liberty ship—a heartening
sight to Britons, acutely aware of
civilian and military privations
which are attributed by their lead
ers to shipping losses.
Tank crews filled their machines
with gasoline at the dock and drove
away ready for action.
All were eager to start fighting
with the motto “Let’s get it over
with.”
Army encampments from the
eastern seaboard to the great
southwest have been represented
among recent arrivals.
Their smart appearance and well
drilled performance in debarking
gave added point to Major General
Mark Clark’s statement that
“crack” American units only were
being sent to this war front. Clark
is commander of all American
ground troops in the European
theater.
Private Pearce Claude, 221 of
Gallup, N. M., a Navajo Indian,
declared he and other red-skinned
warriors were fine fighters but
poor sailors.
Another arrival was Private Max
P. Pablada, 34, of Los Angeles, a
Filipino, whose mother, father and
brother were in a village hundreds
of miles north of Manila when the
Japanese captured the Philippine
capital.
He said he was anxious to “lick
the Nazis and then get at the
Japs.”
-V
WEATHER
(Continued from Page One)
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23—(IP)—Weather
Bureau report of temperature and rain
fall for the 24 hours ending 8 p. m., in
the principal cotton growing areas and
elsewhere:
Station High Low Free.
Asheville _ 83 64 0.18
Atlantic City_ 90 76 0.00
■Boston_ 88 74 0.00
Burlington_ 77 66 0.00
Cincinnati _ 74 64 0.85
Denver _ 85 47 0.00
Duluth _ 62 43 0.00
Fort Worth_ 82 73 0.61
Jacksonville _ 94 72 0.00
Key West_ 87 79 0.00
Memphis - 82 73 0.00
Miami-91 75 o.OO
Mobile- 90 75 0.00
New York- 86 76 0.00
Pittsburgh - 86 62 0.18
Portland, Me. _ 87 67 0.00
St. Louis- 76 62 0.00
Savannah- 95 78 0.00
- 88 74 0 00
Washington - 87 75 0.76
_tr
diplomatic visit
VICHY, Aug. 23—UP>—Dispatches
.°m»^^ris stated the former Span
ish Ambassador to France, Quin
ones de Leon, returned today from
^ffnne- where he had a long
tVieI* infante Don
thUraonne Pretender °* the Spanish
~r
Boosts Bond Sales
Ezio Pinza, bass of the Metro
politan Opera, is shown with his
one-year-old daughter, Clelia, at
their home in Mamaroneck, N. I.
He is teaching his pride and joy a
song written to boost the sale of
War Bonds.—(Central Press).
1532 HOGS BOUGHT
ON SAMPSON MART
Total Marked Up Since
July 1 On Clinton Live
stock Exchange
CLINTON, Aug. 23 — Although
there has been but little activity!
in hog marketing centers of the;
state for the past two months, the j
Sampson Livestock Market which i
is located at the fair grounds here
has purchased a total of 1.532 head
of hogs since July 1, according to
a report filed with the Clinton Mer
chants Association by Stacey Hon
eycutt, manager of the market.
The porkers which embraced all
types from top hogs to heavy sows,
weighed a total of 301,578 pounds
and brought their owners a cash
return of $41,032.77.
Starting in business here on
March 20, or almost at the close of
the ! 941-42 hog marketing season,
the Sampson Livestock Market did
a business of over $56,000 the first
month and up to and including
Tuesday, August 18, a total of
$213,033.26 worth of hogs have
been purchased at the market
from farmers of Sampson and near
by counties.
With the new marketing season
rapidly approaching, operators of
the market here are making prep
arations to handle a record-break
ing number of hogs. Facilities at
the market will be improved as
rapidly as possible in order that
farmer sellers, will be able to mar- ‘
ket their hogs here with the least >:
possible delay.
NOTICE]
Men Needed For Police and Fire Depis.
Any one wishing io take the next examination 1°
qualify for positions in the above departments
should file an application at once.
Minimum weight for the Police Department 160 lhs.
Mininum height 5 ft. 11 in.
Application blanks may be secured trom
, the undersigned.
CITY OF WILMINGTON
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
_ C. W. SHACKELFORD, Sec.
O’DANIEL LEADii
IN TEXAS PRIMARY
(Continued from Pase 0np)
Allred accused the senator „f; ,
tionism and a lack of kncnvlL °!a'
national and international 01
O'Daniel denied empha a‘?s
the isolationist charge s ;frd aI1J
bitter campaign denounced •v‘it
on pen editors, politically co P°!s'
ed newspapers, professional »
cians, and communistic labor
er racketeers.” ies|t
For O’Daniel nomination » •
mean his fourth consecut:vf ■
tory in Texas politics. He I"'
twice named governor bv a t :;j'
ity of an electorate which k.5
him campaign with hill-billy-!!'"
and advocacy of old age p^.fIC i
then was elected ■ rnator to'”?1
unexpired term of the late J
Sheppard. 1
Allred, also a former govea- 1
declared during the campaign fa 1
his defeat would constitute a > I
pudidation of President Roosevel*
PATTON WINS
CHARLOTTE. Aug. 23-<j_Bl.
ly Joe Patton of Morganton
the championship of the Myen
Park Country club's ninth anno;'
Invitation golf tournament todsv
by defeating Sutton Alexander
Charlotte veteran. 5 and 4
-V-- '
WIDOW’S PRIDE TRIUMPHS
MILWAUKEE, Aug. 23 - .p _
Widow’s Pride, driven by \C
Fleming, defeated the favored
Adios in the featured America
stake for two-year-old pacers t0i
day in the opening Grand Circe:'
Harness racing program at th»
Wisconsin ■ State fair.
The next time you r!ean
your garbage pan. add i
little Creolin to the watt:,
It will act not only as u
effective deodorant and dis
infectant, but will help repel
flies and insects. Ask votr
druggist. Merck & Co. Inc.
Rahway, New Jersey,j
Limited Number s | qj;
Victory Electric Fans ■ »
CAUSEY'S
Corner Market and 12lii
COASTAL
CAB
Dial 4464 Dill
WMFD
11:15 P. M.
to 15:30 P 51
oa Develops
jUC Your Roll
Of 8 Films
J4 HOLR SERVICE
Complete Line
Photographic SuppU**
(Cash With Order)
gejTstudio
119 Grace St. phonf S!!S
FOR
CORRECT TINE
DIAL
3 5 7 5
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