Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Oct. 17, 1943, edition 1 / Page 6
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The Sunday Star-News Published Every Sunday By The Wilmington Star-News At The Murchison Building R, B. Page, Owner and Publisher Telephone All Departments DIAL 2-3311 Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilming •n, N. C., Postoffice Under Act of Congress of March 3, 1871, SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER Payable Weekly Or In Advance Combina Time Star News tion l Week .$ to $ -20 $ <0 1 Month .. 1.10 H* t Months . 3.25 2.60 5.-0 6 Months .. 6-50 5-20 10.40 \ Year . 13.00 10.40 20.80 New rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News BY MAIL Payable Strictly In Advance Combina Iirn« Star News tion 1 Month ..I -75 » -50 $ M » Months . 2.00 1.50 2.75 * Months . 3.00 5.50 I year . 8 00 6 00 10 00 New rates 'entitle' subscriber to Sunday Issue of Star-News Card of Thanks charged for at the rate of t5 cents per line. Count five words to line. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 5 entitled to the exclusive use of all news stories appearing in the Wilmington Star News. » tr i-.nrr/vnTTi 17 1040 Speaks Out In Meeting Because the American pulpit for the most part has carefully bypassed political discus sion during the war emergency, It is impres sive and significant when a pastor so far digresses from the custom as to assail the present governmental trend toward bureau cratic control. This is what the Rev. Dr. Henry Darlington, rector of the Church of the Heavenly Rest, New York City, did. His sermon climaxed the massing of the colors at St. Thomas church, which was preceded by an hour-long parade in Fifth avenue. The growth of bureaucracy at Washington and government by directives, “superceding the Constitution and Law,” he said, consti tute grave dangers to the nation. Such gov ernment should be stopped at once or “we will find that those liberties for which today our blood is shed have been irretrievably lost, and that the freedom we sacrificed to maintain for mankind has evaporated at home.” We wonder if the truth of Dr. Darlington’s message could by any possibility penetrate the sacred precincts of bureaucratic Wash ington? -V water turning BracKisn If the federal officials with jurisdiction over I ■uch matters could be in Wilmington and have to go to a pump for drinking water, they probably would not be reluctant to grant nec essary authority for placing the city’s new source of water supply above the dam at King’s Bluff. Certainly they would not compel the city to take its water from a Hood’s Creek intake, which offers little improvement over the pres ent Toomer’s Creek reservoir. Salt infiltration due to autumnal high tides and inadequate rainfall on the Cape Fear watershed may be nearly as great at Hood’s Creek as at Toomer’s Creek. Wilmington appears to face another period of salt water in its mains. Already it is unpalatable. The city has opened its new wells and certain business firms, as usual, Invite consumers to use their private wells. But whatever may be said for this gesture, it is still true that Wilmington deserves to get its water from a source free from salt the year around. The city was done a disservice when the King’s Bluff project was turned down in favor of Hood’s Creek. It is not only the inconvenience of consum ers that deserves consideration. The costs they face through damage to boilers and plumbing from salt water should not be ig nored. There is no way now to sidestep the an noyance, inconvenience and expense of another salt water period this year. It is assuredly the duty of federal authorities to provide against possible repetition next year and all years to come by granting whatever priorities us needed to place the intake at King s Bluff. More OPA Distress Because the OPA learns little about regional conditions and does not assimilate what is presented to it, failure after failure marks its course. Much in the manner of typhoid car riers, it spreads distress wherever it goes. A case in point is the ceiling prices on a group of vegetables, established without fore warning and in violation of a promise that they would not be set up until later in the month. R. W. Galphin, New Hanover county farm agent, who attended a meeting at Wash ington, N. C., when the ceilings were an nounced to farmers in this region, says that if they are enforced we are in for a serious food shortage next year “because farmers cannot and will not produce vegetables at such a loss,” meaning the difference between cost of production and delivery to market on the one hand and the price they may receive on the other. He cites lettuce as an outstanding example. The OPA has set the price at $1.15 a half crate. Enumerating separate costs to get it, to market, he declares the total is $1.44 1-2. The grower must either absorb a 29 1-2 loss or not produce lettuce at all. The figures he quotes could have been dis covered by the OPA, but as everybody knows the OPA is interested only in the figures it produces for itself, and being arbitrary closes its ears and mind to all others. As lettuce is a principal crop of New Hanover county truck growers, it Is obvious that the farmers and the county will lose a prime source of revenue. The case of snap beans and the other vege tables subjected to new ceiling prices is much the same. Where a minor margin of paper profit is^shown, it disappears as soon as the costs of operating a farm are brought into the picture. Southeastern North Carolina farmers are uniting in protest against the high-handed ac tion of OPA. We wish them success, but are dubious. Other groups have tritd the same thing and failed. Farmers and consumers might as well devote their attention to ersatz from this time forward. The OPA seems de termined to make natural foods too costly. Nothing is left but substitutes—sawdust and worn-out shoes and such, -V Harking Back With Allied forces fighting over much of the ground that Garibaldi covered in his at tempts to free his native land from a variety of oppressors, it is interesting to have this news item forwarded to the Star-New* by an unnamed correspondent from the New York Weekly Tribune of October 11, 1862: An interesting correspondence has taken place between Garibaldi and the United States Consul at Vienna. Garibaldi an nounces his intention, as soon as he shall regain his liberty and his health, to offer his services to the great American Re public, which is now fighting for universal liberty. The same correspondent enclosed a clipping not identified as to source which shows that Saribaldi gathered his 1,000 Red Shirts and invaded Sicily to overthrow the Bourbons and rnite the Italian people. Further describing lis adventures, the clipping continues: He stormed the gates of Palermo, cap turing it, and then crossed the Straits of Messina to Naples. It fell, and thus the Two Sicilies were joined again. But Garibaldi had always dreamed of a republican form of government for Italy. Years before he had led the army of the short-lived republic of Rome against the French invaders, and lost. Once more the dream of an Italian re public possessed him. He sought to or ganize such a government for the Sicilies. However, he was dissuaded when the King of Sardinia, Victor Emmanuel II, sent troops against him. The people, too, were not ready for the new form of gov ernment, and he generously gave way. What followed was the annexation of the Sicilies to the Sardinian kingdom of Northern Italy, ushering in the beginning of the modern State of Italy. Garibaldi’s later unsuccessful attempts to wrest Rome and the Papal States from the French against his king’s wish es, because of the political repercussions, were characteristic of his consuming de termination to unite all of Italy. How much better it would have been for taly if it had had a Garibaldi during the ast twenty years, and particularly four years ago, instead of Mussolini. -V The Civic Council A Civic Council in Wilmington has great potentialities. Composed, as planned, of lead ers in civic organizations and meeting at reg ular periods to thresh out proposals for the city’s advancement, and particularly for uni fying activities concerned with community cul tural, educational religious, business and civic oetterment, the organization can exercise a tremendous influence upon the future desti nies of the entire area. But it is worth while to point out that th« attainment of major objectives will be pos sible only through perseverance. The coun cil s success will depend in large measure upon its perpetuation. Only through long-range effort can it count on achievement. For this reason, which we believe is self evident, it is important that in the selection of a permanent chairman greatest care is necessary to be sure that he possesses not only the qualities of leadership but also has the time to devote to the job and is not easily discouraged or diverted. There are such men in Wilmington’s civic I organizations. We sincerely hope that one from their number will be chosen when the Council meets on Tuesday afternoon. In Interest Of Efficiency ! The City of Wilmington takes a creditable step forward with the introduction of new rules governing personnel, designed to in crease individual efficiency among the 308 employes. Elsewhere In this issue of the Star-News the regulations as promulgated by City Man ager A. C. Nichols appear at some length. It is not necessary, therefore, to review them in detail here. But we are happy to commend them, and especially the provision which dis courages political activities by any member of the municipality’s staff of workers. Too many cities are cursed by what is commonly and often correctly known as a “City Hall gang.” If the new policy is sedu lously carried out Wilmington will never have to bear this stigma. The provisions for regular vacations and sick leave, for promotion and transfer, for observance of legal holidays, and absence from post in case of illness or death in the family all seem to have been prepared with mutual consideration for the employe and the city government, with equal fairness for all concerned. By the same token, and also in the interest of efficiency, the regulations are commenda ble for their provisions governing demotions and disciplinary measures. -V Nurse Recruitment Lags The Red Cross crusade for nurses with the armed forces is falling far behind. The recruitment in September is a fair ex ample. The monthly quota is 2,500. In Sep tember 1,289 signed up. It was the fifth month in succession that applications fell off which, in view of the fact that 400 new hospitals are to be opened in all theaters of war during the next year, creates a grave situation. Are the increasing number of casualties among our men in the armed services to languish unattended? Are fatalities to mount because nurses are not on hand to give es sential service? These are questions nurses must answer for themselves. It is not easy to believe that they can appease their consciences with a negative reply. Fair Enough j (Editor’s Note.—The Star and the News accepts bo responsibility for the personal views ef Mr. Pefler, »nd often dismfree with them as mnch as many of W* readers. Kis articles serve the food pvrpose of makinf people think. BY WESTBROOK PEGLER NEW YORK.—I don’t want to accuse any one of hypocrisy today, being in one of my patient, generous moods, but as to those friends and neighbors over on the left who decry the poll tax in those few states which still have the poll tax and oppose the piece work system and would deny the boss the right to fire a man for cause, the least that I will settle for is inconsistency. All unions use the poll tax and defend it with the very arguments that are offered in its favor by those who would preserve it in the poll tax states of the southern tier. They don’t call it a poll tax but it comes to the same thing because the member who doesn’t pay his dues and assessments is not allowed to vote. Even worse than that, he is not allowed to work. The intent of that ostracism is to starve not only the man him self but his wife and children, as well, which is a much more cruel penalty for the mere nonpayment of some money than denial of the ballot in the public elections. In the poll tax states, the delinquent is still permitted to earn his living. He doesn’t have to go under cover, change his name or work at odd jobs in the dark of the moon to get by. Another, and much worse, little foible of some unions is the Class-B, or robot, or sub human membership. Class-B people are usually the unskilled auxiliaries of skilled trade unions whose full members want these extra due? and this additional picket-line pow er to serve their ends, but are careful to provide that the lower classes can’t seize control through the ballot. No state has any thing like a Class-B citizenship but in those unions which I refer to a Class-B member may have only one five-hundredth or one thousandth of a vote which is really no vote at all. His political inferiority is based on his inferiority in skill, which may not be ac tual inferiority at all but arbitrary classifica tion. But imagine, if you can, the uproar that would be raised by our friends and neighbors ] on the left if anyone of prominence were to . propose that a pick-and-shovel man should , have only a fraction of a vote in the public ] elections while a banker shoulder have a whole vote. That would be pretty bad, but j still « pick-and-shovel man would have a , free opportunity to advance through the ] grades to some occupation of rating based , on skill which would eventually entitle him to a full vote. The Class-B union member, J however, is permanently inferior. The A-Class , closes its rolls for varying periods, rigs the < examinations so that aspirants are bound to ] flunk or, in some cases, pick relatives of j its membprs fnr fho vananrips I suppose few of us realize that unions, . themselves, frequently use the piecework sys tem, but they do. Piecework is where you E get a small retainer or salary and a certain j bonus per unit of production, and that was ] exactly the system that the CIO used in its f great manhunts when captives were being r driven into the union pounds by the thou- t sand. The organizers got so much per head, t That was one reason why they were ready . to beat people’s brains out with clubs and tire j irons in the riots. You give a couple of poor \ stiffs a working over and scare 2,000 others j into the union hall to join up and you are ( doing all right for yourself. ( They fire at will, too. In one case, down j South, a CIO union, canned an organizer who j called a strike by a fake vote, after the c strike was lost, and because it was lost. The i employer and the workers took an awful > lacing through weeks of idleness and non- c production, but that was just their hard luck. The union, in the end, suffered a pretty se- E vere loss of prestige and canned the organiz- - J1®1 ,for faking the operation, but because s he didn t get away with it. This happens right 1 along. They hire and fire at will and no t labor relations board ever interferes because the employer is a union. The new deal , wont cite a union for anti-labor activity, it l Getting The Mallet Ready For Some Good Heavy Slug ging MAJOR OFFEf&WE I aoai^t : JAPAH Appian Way Retraveled In Drive Toward Rome American and British armies now pounding over the roads, to Rome echo for the modern world the tramp of legionnaires and the rumble of war vehicles that once made martial music on the Ap pian Way. Regarded by Romans as “the queen of long distance roads,” the Via Appia was rated so important to the trade and se curity of the Empire that main tenance was made the responsibi lity of a high official. Begun by Appius Claudius Cae cus, the censor, in 312 B. C., the road was pushed from Rome 132 miles southeastward along the coast to Capua, says the National Geographic Society. The original road, 15 feet wide, was first used for military purposes. At Capua it forked. One branch dipped south to Reggio on the toe of the boot, a take-off port for Roman soldiers and merchants headed for con quest and commerce in Africa. The other branch ran from Ca pua southeastward to the seaport now called Brindisi, on the heel of the boot. Its harbor swarmed with galleys that ferried traders to and from Mediterranean ports. The modem Levant Fair held at Bari, near Brindisi, recalled Rome’s bustling trade with the Near East in the great days of the Empire. Then, Assyrians, Per sians, and other merchants travel led up the Appian Way to do busi ness in Rome. Rome-bound American boys are in position to note that north of Naples the old roadbed touched the coast at Terracina, then took a 65-mile straight shoot for Rome through the 175,000 - acre plain known as the Pontine Marsh es—a fever ridden “dismal swamp” recently reclaimed by canal drainage. Southwest of Terracina rises Mt. Circeo, a solitary hump that seems to pop right out of the sea. Once an island and so recorded eight centuries before Christ by Homer in his “Odyssey,” the mountain is now a part of the mainland. For centuries its served as a boundary mark for the marshes. Beyond the peak, wooded sand hills straggle along the coast. A chain of lagoons edges the shore, prelude to the broad Tyrrhenian Sea. Inland, to the east of the old road, the plain is bordered by the Lepine Mountains, a limestone ridge softened with the greenery of olive groves. At sunset the hills are veiled vijth purple haze, use ful atmosphere for art or war. Near Rome, the road climbed from the plain to the Alban Hills, and passed through a district of churches, catacombs, memorials, and baths. The end was near the modern Piazzi di Porta Capena. First surface of the road was gravel. Paving came much later. Milestones and repair records oc casionally turned up throw light on highway traffic in the age of chariots. J\ew Light Is Thrown On Puzzle Of Africa By RICHARD L. STOUT Kenneth Crawford, formerly of PM. now of Newsweek, went to Algiers last summer and in his oook, “Report on North Africa,” ust published, brought back the most complete story of the de "laulle-Giraud controversy I have seen. The matter has a Washington ingle because Crawford -was head if a news bureau here and is an experienced political writer, con rary to most of the reporters on he Mediterranean front, who are, le found, largely vigorous, young iports writers unused to tortuous iiplomatic intrigues. This has a searing on what follows. The sum total of what he reports s that American-British forces in heir North Africa invasion diplo nacy followed the path of military ipportunism. They were willing to slay ball with any French faction. Ihurchill had built up and sub idized the de Gaulle group. Roos velt kept contact with Marshal ’etain at Vichy. There was little £ any real contrast between these wo seemingly divergent policies, ccording to this interpretation. Crawford interviewed the still inrepentant General Nogues, who esisted the American landing. His csyalty was, and is, to the Lyautey radition and to France’s Morocco ’his is apt to be the attitude of ertain other French segments, he lelieves. Roosevelt left de Gaulle nd the Free French out of his nitial calculations, because they ad little active following among forth African civilians, American lonsul Robert Murphy, with his onspiratorial staff of 40, collabo ated with Weygand, Darlan, and ater Giraud, simply because, by oing so, they saved American ives in landing, and helped to irotect their backs in the life-and eath days that followed. Incidentally, at one time Wey and was half-promised that no ays any union is labor and that ibor can’t be anti-labor any more lan you can be anti-you. There are a lot of things about mons that most people don’t now. British would participate in the invasion, and the first British troops landed. Crawford reports, disguised as Americans. This is a great deal of apparently authenticated material in the brief book. Contrary to the usual liberal interpretation. Murphy appears as a very effective American repre sentative, and de Gaulle as some thing more than a trial to Roose velt and Churchill. An overstrict censorship, combined with military exigencies, prevented the facts from being correctly interpreted, Crawford insists. And the report- • ers assigned to the battlefront were : too busy with the fighting to pay ' much attention to diplomatic de velopments, which were nut of their field anyway. Crawford, the lib eral, for example, was prepared to dislike Murphy, but is forced 3 to the_ conclusion that he did a i good job. A revealing incident came in his desire to see at first- I hand the French concentration 1 camps for political refugees which j were the subject of bitter dispute 1 in America, involving State De- 1 partment policy. When the trip j started, Crawford was alone. The t news at the front was just too big t for the war correspondents. 1 Without taking sides, the Craw ford book provokes certain t .-..-uvoua Jiavc gUl 10 1 c Jearn how complicated are Euro pean politics. It just will not do ? to plump for one particular hero and forget all other considerations. 2 Parenthetically, Crawford records * that one editor told him on his return that he was so far com mitted to de Gaulle that he could f not allow additional facts to in fluence his judgment anyway. g Another thought is that it would P be wise to sprinkle trained political b correspondents among the wars writers at, or near, the front. Ulti mately, this phase will overshadow w even the battles. E Finally, there is the question of r postwar “gratitude.” Crawford isle dubious about this. America hasiY found allies and is lucky to have — them. America is trying to make T i better world. But America is h also fighting in its own self-inter- ci est. to preserve its own security, rr As Others Say It CIGARETTE CRISIS The cigarette consumer who has promised himself or herself tha1 some day he or she is going to cut down on his or her smoking learn ed this week, from a Department of Commerce, report, that the ex act date is likely to fall in the yeat 1944. More than two-fifths of oui cigarettes are going abroad. Ir 1940 our production was almosl exactly enough to allow every in habitant four cigarettes a day, noi considering exports. Since mos' young children and quite a feu adults don’t smoke, or don’t smoke cigarettes, the supply was ade quate. If two-fifths of our allow ance is withdrawn we shall be down to about two and two-fifths cigarettes a year. One can imagine what will happen then. The nose and throat doctors may lose some of their customers. Well-dressed ladies and gentlemen may be seer picking up butts in the streets. The gum business will thrive. De corative little pipes for women will make their appearance in large numbers. Plug tobacco may have a renaissance, and with it the spittoon, though the latter u tensils will be of plastic rather than brass. Yet we do not suppose the Rep ublic will perish. The other great war, as every one knows, led tc a great increase in cigarette smok ing. Women including aunts and grandmothers, first asked their male friends to blow some their way and then learned, by-patient experiment, that the way to light a fag is to inhale, not exhale, as the match is applied. But in 1920, after this social revolution was well under way, only enough cig arettes were manufactured to give every man, woman and child one and one-third a day. We are re turning to simpler ways, but not luite to pioneer conditions. —New York Times. ■-V MERGER The Postal Telegraph company las gone out of existence, having seen swallowed up by its larger :ompetitor, the Western Union, relegraph companies, like tele phones, are natural monopolies. But consolidation of the two tele graph companies in this country, tails fo rstricter supervision on lie part of the communication luthorities to see that proper serv ce is rendered and that monopo istic privileges are not exercised. —Kinston Daily Free Fress. ---v SOUND WAVES KILL Since the dawn of history man las been inventing more fiendish weapons with which to kill. Now, navy officers say, it is ossible to kill with sound waves, linding men dead from no ap iarent reason, with no marks on heir bodies, medical men inves igated and discovered that sound rom a torpedo for example ac ually travels so hard and fast hat it takes human life without javng a trace. Terrible as it is, this is war, no aore horrible than many of its ther phases, and friend and foe like must continue to endure aese hazards until our victory is ■on and peace restored to the artured peoples of the earth. —Topeka (Kans.'Capital. -V iCiLLo THE TRUTH Joseph Goebbels. German propa anda minister, told the German eople that “there will be a limit > American and British success ;s.” Joe; for once you're right. There 111 be a limit. That limit Mr. oosevelt and Mr. Churchill al lody have tersely defined as “un mditional surrender.” — New : ork World Telegram. 1 hat may be a better basis for c ^ediate international postwar \ elaboration that unthinking senti- i ent. Christian Science Monitor. 1 Interpreting TheJWar by KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press War An , An old ally of the United V ni deadlier in battle than the ^' "'l bombs of man-made war T, dRli deploying its forces this jJiT tober week-end. H,c' Another Russian winter s at hand to cut at the \Vav*! s< Dnieper “blooc* wall" 0f N.,,: g vaders. to slash with icy bl numbing cold at the foe Derhan to turn another German fore-shaa owed retreat into a greater di«« ter than crushed Napoleon s sr army on the same bleak .ween lr west-central Russian plu,r, From the Baltic to Kiev." v lntp,. freeze-ups will come now aln'o ■ any day. Rarely arc they later th" early November. Their onset th year bodes evil for Nazi rocking insecurely on the RUSsr' punctured Dnieper line, and above to the Baltic or below to the R Sea. mi__ i .vuuci ui urt-aci Hitlf has known in Russia is at 1 throat. It could do more than Ru<' sian or Allied lighting power, ■ ■ all the year of unbroken victor • - to break the will of the GernV people and tumble Naziism to Id doom that Fascism lias met .,* ^ closing in on Japanese militarise" It can no longer be doubted tha' the vast Russian summer offensive which has swept the Nazi foe back across the Dnieper was Moser,., designed from its inception in ju]v to merge without a break into in . other Russian winter attack. Al lied apprehensions that Red ;r. mies would exhaust themselves and afford the foe opportunity to brace and stock new defense lines have proved unfounded. There has been no halt anywhere in Russia since July to give a, enemy a breathing spell. f„.j rains could not check his retire ment once his line of last vriater was broken at Kharkov, 0:,. and Bryensk at Neve! and no ■ far to the south where the Dnieper turns finally westward to ret : the Black Sea, at fallen Zaporo zhe. The great retreat to shorten NT i defense lines has been skillfully managed, but it is not over by t. ery sign. It has not shortened tre 1,200-mile fighting front from tie Baltic to the Black sea. only it > supply lines in the center. The Ge man high command needs more 11 fewer troops, to hold that battered “blood wall” already virtually split in two by the Russian leap beyond the river near the pripet mouth ", the eastern rim of the Pinsk mar shes. German evacuation of the Crimea or the badly dented Dnieper bend ! front. Both are menacing traps that could engulf and destroy great er enemy forces than were over whelmed at Stalingrad when the Russian march to the Dnieper be gan last winter. It is beyond mili tary comprehension that the vaders dare risk much longer crushing a disaster in Russia - ■ the isolation of the Crimea or the closing of the Dnieper bend trap, Nor is the indicated situati a brighter for the long left wing cl the Nazi line above the Dnieper where sub-zero cold and the ter rible menace of Russian winter maneuvers will strike first The Nevel rail key is already lost the Orsha and Vitebsk bsstions quaking under unabated Russian pressure. And a Nazi w.yf," '• treat from Leningrad and ice 1 hov and the Loval could involve no less dangers than the seemingly in escapable withdrawal from the C. i mea and the Dnieper bend. On all fronts, the scene for L9 United Nations is bright by con trast with the face it :<iowed a ye-, ago this mid - October. But no where is it so bright, so fraught with tremendous possibility* in the months just ahead, as in B 1 sia. And it is there that the nic est ally of them all. another sian winter, is marshalling for w action that could bring on the^v cisive battles of the v;.r hi rope before sprnig comes again. House Committee May Widen Investigation Of Plane_Produdion WASHINGTON, Oct. IS- * ~ A House Naval sub committee [ called quietly for a conf-0^ War Production Board repGy \ plane production, with * • • ’ possibility that it may . current investigation in B:e:', 3 Aeronautical Corporation ol ’ to cover other plants. The move came as " , result of a claim by Brev.- ■-* ; ficials that their production admittedly far behind N®'-' dules, is not at the bottom WPB list of plane producers. “If there are other plane m facturers with records aan dalous as that at Brewster. — ; Maas (R-Minn), the c ranking minority memo- , " his colleagues, “then let - •• . out w-ho they are and v • - ; be done to correct the ktttu. With confidence in our armed forces — with the unbounding de termination of our people—we will 1 gain the inevitable triumph — so help us God. —Roosevelt’* War Message Our Chief Aim To aid in every way the prosecu tion of the war to complete Vic tory. _ THOUGHT FOR TODAY The right place for the church is in the world; but the wrong place for the world is in the church; just as the right place for a ship is in the sea, but it is absolutely fatal to have the sea in the ship. —SAMUEL CHARWICK. _ _\T_ POSTMASTERSHIP WASHINGTON, Oct. 16- ? The civil service comiv. announced that applica’.:'- s L ‘ received until the close of b'--r^ Mov. 9 for the following posinias^ ships in North Carolina. Asiws*-ei 52,700 salary. -y-— CHAMPION ECONOMIZER A woman charged at Marlboro^ street today with being trotested against having been n to the police station in » ar, saying the constable coU /ell have assisted her TC nd thus save petrol. 1 veiling, SiaruAryf
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1943, edition 1
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