Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / June 13, 1944, edition 1 / Page 4
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rv/uiv ^__B HHtlmtngfott &tar North Carolina'c Oldest Dally Newspaper Published Daily Except Sunday By The Wilmington Star-News S. B. Page, Owner and Publisher Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilming ton. N. C.. Postoffice Under Act of Congress 9t March 3. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER IN NEW HANOVER COUNTY Payable Weekly or In Advance Combi Time Star News nation X Week__* -30 * .23 $ .50 I Month - 1-30 HO 2.15 5 Months - 3.90 3.25 6.50 6 Months _ i - ,- 7.80 6.50 13 00 b uontne-- -_ 15 60 13.00 26.00 News rates entitle subscriber to Sunday Issue of Star-News _ . BY MAIL Payable Strictly in Advance » Months-* 2.50 *2.00 * 8.85 ft Months 5*00 4.00 i.iUi 1 Year .—7 ”_ 10.00 8.00 15.40 News Rates Entitle Subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News_ When remitting by mail please use check or U S P. O. money order. The Star-News cannot be responsible for currency sent througn the mails._ MEMBER THE Aaaucmiau rntuatr With confidence in our armed forces— with the unbounding determination of our people - we will gain the Inevitable triumph — so help us God. —Roosevelt’s War Message. TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1944._ Our Chief Aim 1 To aid in every way the prosecution of the war to complete Victory. TOP O’ THE MORNING Our time is all today, today, And while it flies With still small voice the moments say Today, today, be wise, be wise. JAMES MONTGOMERY. -V Vice Presidential Candidate Governor Broughton’s announcement that he will be a candidate for the vice presidency comes without surprise to his friends in Noith Carolina and in other states where his influ ence has been felt and his real worth recog nized. It has been understood for some time that he would be available if the forthcoming party convention should settle upon him for nomina tion to that office. It is also realized that with evidence* of defection in the “solid South” during recent months a vice presidential candidate from Dixie would go far to heal Mississippi, Louisi ana, South Carolina and Texas wounds. Mr. Broughton’s administration as governor of North Carolina in this trying war period has demonstrated his capability for a national office. -V-— The Fighting First ( It was by no accident that the American ^ “fighting first” led the invasion of Europe. , The “fighting first” was the first American division in France in the last war, the first to meet the Germans, the first to take pris oners. It was the center-task force in the north African landing, taking Oran three days after 1 the attack. Next, says a Reuters dispatch, ! it saw action at Gafsa and El Guettar. "For i twenty-two days it was in continuous fighting, a record at that time for an American unit." \ From Tunisia it moved against the enemy ] in Sicily and di4 some of the hardest fighting : of that campaign. When it was counter-at- ] tacked at Gela by some forty to fifty German tanks, its artillery was moved to the front and from 3,000 yards knocked out twenty-four tanks and broke up the attack. Now this First Infantry division is fighting on the Normandy beachhead, the first Ameri can force to land in France in this war, as in the last- It had its trial by fire a quarter century ago and is not being found wanting now any more than then. — V ' — ► French Aid For a couple of day* reports have beep coming in showing the French people at msny places taking summary revenge on German agents and collaborationists. At this writing It is said French patriots had seized strategic positions in Toulouse, Limoges and Tarbes executing prefects of police, mayors and other public functionaires with Vichy leanings. Pre vious dispatches had reported French parti sans engaging in widespread sabotage and fighting pitched battles with Nazis far behind the German lines. These activities are said to be in progress from Brittany to the southern boundaries of France. > It is not apparent that anything that has happened thus far is the concerted uprising of the French underground, although mem bers of that organization, as individuals, prob ably have bad a hand in it all. The under ground has wisely delayed its principal out break until General Eisenhower gives the sig nal for attack. With the Nazis still in occu pation and powerful, big underground at tacks could lead only to severer tortures than French people have been subjected to in the past. The blow from within France must be as carefully timed as was the Allied landing in Normandy. In the meantime, however, it is heartening to find that many Frenchmen are seizing opportunities to dispose of Quislings and wreck German trains and bridges on rail lines over which the Germans would other wise %nove reinforcements and supplies. It means, we take it, that whatever DeGaulle’s follies, the common people of France are more concerned with the defeat of the common ene my that in his political aspirations It must be considered, however, in estimat ing the help the French people as a whole will give the Allies as the campaign on their soil progresses, that after four years of Nazi occupation and oppression, a large number have become so benumbed that little can be expected of them. Many will accept Vichy*s dictation and after Vichy direct orders from remaining Nazi agents, not because they are fully converted to Nazism but because they have contracted the habit of doing so and are too whipped down to change. -:—v A Soldier On Strikes Often since labor'leaders started strikes in war industries members of the American arm ed forces abroad have voiced opinions of the situation. No group has a better right to say what it thinks of labor and interruptions in produc tion due to strikes than the men who are bearing the brunt of the fighting. Certainly the uniformed ranks of the nation deserve a wider and more sympathetic audi ence than the Labor department and all gov ernment officials combined. We may be sure that when they come home, triumphant in war, they will demand an ac counting which will not end in a love feast. But to get back to the letters sent home by boys at the front who have been riled by the news of stakes. One has just come to our attention. It is from the son of a Wilmington man. He has been on an LCT (landing craft, tanks) in England and probably participated in the invasion of Normandy. The letter was written on May 20. He says, in part: “Have been reading about the strikes they are having back home. It really burns me up to even see it in print. All those guys should be put on the front line without a minute’s training. I’ve already seen dead soldiers and sailors and it’s not a pretty sight ... all were American boys from American homes, and then when you see all that stuff in the papers it just makes you mad as hell. You don’t hate the Germans like you do your own people, if your own people let you down. I saw where one strike was about who should deliver cold drinks to the workers. When you read stuff like that you wish Adolf Hitler him self were delivering block busters to them. I’m not complaining because I think that we’re right in trying to knock out the Ger mans and the Japs, and I don’t regret one day of it, nor do I begrudge any one for my being over here, but I do say let’s get the thing over with as quick as possible. . . Some people there seem to think the war is prac tically over, and yet the worst and nastiest fighting hasn’t even started. John L. Lewis had better join Hitler in finding a ‘safe place’ when this mess is over.” How many other boys are feeling the same way about labor strikes? There is no way of taking a census of them. But they are legion. Mails from war fronts bring thou sands of just such letters. A German Blunder The Allied air command is convinced that the Germans blundered when they failed to send the Luftwaffe up on the first day of the invasion We may be grateful for the blunder but that is no reason to overlook it from a purely military viewpoint. Whether Hitler himself was responsible, or the decision was made by his high command with the idea of holding the Nazi air force in reserve for the protection of Germany proper has little bearing on the case, but it is to be remembered that Hitler himself made the decision when the Germans failed to follow up their advantage in France after Dunkerque and that he alone ordered the invasion of Russia. The fuehrer again has proved he is not the demi-god he lpd the Germans to believe when he was preparing to conquer the world. Lieut. Gen. Barney M. Giles, deputy com mander of the Army Air Forces and Chief of the Air Staff, has said in Washington: ‘We expected air opposition the first day and were surprised when it did not develop.” We had superiority in the air, but if the Luftwaffe had chosen to fight, we perhaps could not have claimed complete command. The Ger mans would have been defeated in the air and would have suffered heavily but there were so many ships in the channel that they could not have helped but sink a good number of troop-laden transports.” If, as we have suggested, the Luftwaffe re mained grounded because the Germans con cluded it could be more effective elsewhere at a later time, General Giles is as sure they arp blundering as badly in this as on the first invasion day. He says: ‘‘If the Ger man air tacticians held back in hopes of find ing a numerically weak Allied air force in the skies after the period of initial landings, they will be sadly mistaken. ‘‘As General Arnold has pointed out, we still are building up our air strength in the United Kingdom. The Germans will find no let-down in the skies over France.” -v A Pat For Farley Throughout hit long public career Jamts A. Farley hat been assailed more than he has been praised. Everything that could be said against him without the filing of libe] suits has been said—and repeated. If his ene mies could be believed, he is pretty bad. ; „ We remember particularly an article ex i coriating him as boxing commissioner writtei oy Westbrook Pegler in one of his more vitri olic moods. To swallow it whole would gag the toughest consumer. Because Mr. Farley has been subjected to so many attacks and his motives so generally impugned, chiefly by persons who failed to receive favors from him, it is consoling to find the New York Times speaking up in his defense and praise. We may not go all the way with the Times, but in the main agree with what it says So may you. Because we believe many read ers of this newspaper hold the same view we are quoting the Times article in part: “Born with the gift to like and be liked, his tact and power to please are natural, not acquired. He must know by sight no small part of the voting population of the United States. Enlarging a Jeffersonian trait, he has written letters to most of the rest of the popu lation. He comes down to us in a stream of green ink. He never talks too much and never bores us. Brought up in a Republican county, he has never had the bitterness that might have been expected. He has been moderate and reasonable. If he has had disappoint ments he keeps them to himself. He is a good fellow with no sacrifices of dignity. He is a good man. though he doesn’t know it and won’t believe it if he is told. As a public man he is Al- The best of luck to him as a private man. As he gives up the chair we recall this recipe from his book of reminisc ences. He ‘still believes that the only way to get ahead in public life is to understand people and sympathize with their viewpoint’." An old song, or saying, notes there’s a bit of good in the worst of us and something bad in the best of us. In Mr. Farley’s case we may well believe the Times when it infers that the good in him far exceeds the bad. Fair Enough (Edtotr'i Note.—The Star and the News accept no reoponiibillty tor the personal views of Mr. Pegler, snd often disagree with them as much as many of his readers. His articles serve the good purpose of naklng people think. BY WESTBROOK PEGLER NEW YORK, —The lady who is suing an auditor of the OPA for $25,000 on the ground that he bruised her reputation by challeng ing her expense account has sounded a sicken ing note in the revolution. It is not pleasant to us who. by tradition and instinct, have regard ed auditors as worthy opponents to be met with sudh fair weapons of ingenuity and high dignity and, in some cases, with tempera ment. This action may be in the spirit of the times but it will arouse no cheers among journalists or ballplayers of the old school and I doubt that any veteran traveling drum mer will wish the lady well. That is not the way the games is played. You don’t try to collect for personal injuries when a sportsman bleeds your nose in a friend ly fight. Auditors, in their peculiar way, are not bad. Their job is to detect not larceny so much as stupidity, and some have been known to glow with admiration for beautiful examples of a peculiar art. If a war correspondent with Pershing’s column in Mexico lost $125 in the poker game and the item showed up as the price of one horse shot from under him by skulking Visslistras, the auditor might know privately that the reporter had an expensive curisoity and a weakness for inside straights but pass it, nevetheless. But if the correspon dent had two bad nights and charged $250 for the horse, the auditor was justified in faulting him for sheer laziness. He should have had the energy and personal pride to split it up into two entries, accompanied by rebeipts, of $125 each, separated by several other items and dates, such as “mess bill, May 8 to 15, $84.50, “News tips from Mexican peons, $35, May 11, and “share of cost of presentation sword for Captain Patton, May 14. $40. An auditor has n riffht +n HomonH o lUtlo -^laueiKilUu Of course auditors do vary but mostly they vary according to circumstances beyond their control. If the paper is frugal, the people know it and reckon their expense accounts accord ingly. A rich and extravagant paper has another set of values and higher expense ac counts, although the two men may share the same room and the same taxi and both patro nize the same Chile parlor for their meals. As a young reporter in Iowa on a very economical paper, I got away with murder on an assignment ot a hamlet called Cam bridge, where a little boy was reported to have been murdered by a neighbor through the cruel and unusual device of stuffing him down a post-hole. The fare was only 80 cents, fixed by law, and subject to no liberties but I belted ttyem good with 75 cents for a room overnight and $1.25 for dinner and breakfast The farmer who found the little boy in the hole put me up on a sofa in the parlor and fed me night and morning because I honestly •insured him we would orinc a picture of him in his wedding suit. The $1.25 for meals really amounted to $2.50 for I would have spent that much anyway had I remained in town. How ever, we didn’t print the picutre because the little boy hadn’t been shoved down the hole at all, the dirty litle liar. He climbed down, himself, and couldn’t get out and there was nothing wrong with him that couldn’t be fixed by a good licking. So the story made up to nothing more than a little item back among the electric belts and and goiters. That farmer and his family probably believe to this- day that our press is utterly untrustworthy. For ironic contrast, many years later, a city editor whose name will ever be re vered, wired me $500 in Miami and bade me gamble illicity and write a fearless denuncia tion of wantonness in a prohibition state. For two nights fortune mocked me and I ran the $500 up to $800. and won even at the slot machines. Meanwhile, however, champagne at $24 a bGttle, and caviar, and burning cherries in candy liquor at $3 an issue, plus couverts at $5 earh for ‘self and party’’ as the stilted expense account phrase has it; helped toward a balance And then I really did get caught in ihe spokes and disposed of the nest egg with elegant grace. But it was an ordeal. Had I won a thousand dollars, the auditor might have been pleased, but the city editor had b< en a reporter, himseif, and he still resrectcd the fine old manners ana customs of the ci aft. I ne' er saw a Floyd Gibbons expense ac count, but an original Gibbons would be suit able for framing, for Floyd had grandeur. His uniforms were beautiful. hi» leathers aristocratic and where another man might have hired a Model W °r. a camel to cross the Sahara. Floyd> organized a caravan. Where others telescopfed phrases into frugal gibberish 1 Floyd expanded, using ‘the’s,” ‘and’*’* and WHERE TO GO THIS SUMMER?| - With Ernie Pyle Editor’s Note: Ernie Pyle ar rived on the beachhead with the Allied assault forces. Transmission difficulties prevented his sending any account of his experiences in Normandy at once. The following, written on the way acroes the Channel, describes some of the pre liminaries to the invasion. ON THE NORMANDY BEACH HEAD, June 7.—(Delayed)—It will be several days before military se curity permits us to describe in much detail the landings just made in the long - awaited Allied inva sion of Europe. Indeed it will be some time be fore we have a really clear pic ture of what has happened or what is happening at the moment. You must experience the terrible con fusion of warfare and the frantic nightmarish thunder and smoke and bedlam of battle to realize this. So we will take up this short interval by telling you how things led up to the invasion from the correspondents viewpoint. This column is being written on a ship in a convoy, crossing the English Channel, so that it will be ready to send back to England by dis patch boat as soon as we hit the beach. wnen we necrewy icn uuuuuu » few days ago, more than 450 Amer ican correspondents were gathered in Britain for this impending mo ment in history. But only 28 of those 450 were to take part in what was termed the assault phase. I was one of those 28. Some of the rest will come over later, come will cover other angles, some will nevar come at all. We assault correspondents were under military jurisdiction for the past month while waiting. We had complete freedom in London, but occasionally the Army would sud denly order us in batches to take trips around England. Also, during those last few weeks we were called frequently for mass conferences and we were briefed by several commanding generals. We had completed all our field equipment, got our inoculations up to date, finished our official ac crediting to Supreme Allied Head quarters, and even sent off our bedrolls 10 days before the final call. (We will rejoin them some time later on this side—we hope). Of the 28 correspondents in the assault group about two-thirds had already seen action in various war theaters. The old-timers sort of gravitated together, people such as Bill Stoneman, Don Whitehead, Jack Thompson, Clark Dee, Tex O’Reilly and myself. We conjectured on when we would get the final call, conjectur ed on what assignments we would draw, for few of us knew what unit we would go with. And in more pensive moments we also conjectured on our chances of com ing through alive. We felt our chances were not puutiuauuu, ana mea only at urg ent rate. He said the Chicago Tribune ex pected its representatives* to main tain its prestige and he never let it down. John McGraw said the same of the Giants when he set a new social scale by lodging his club in the best hotels- But for contrast, other teams got a mean allowance of $2.30 a man per day ana some of the athletes saved $1.50 of that and showed up for Work so weak from malnutrition that they could barely make a sin gle out of a hit that should have been good for three. very good. And we were not happy about it. Men like Don Whitehead and Clark Lee, who had been through the mill so long and so boldly, began to get nerves. And frankly I was the worst of the lot, and continued to be. I began having terrible periods of depression and often would dream hideous dreams about it. Al! the time fear lay blackly deep upon our consciousness. It bore down on your heart like an all - consuming weight. People would talk to you and you wouldn’t hear what htey were saying. The Army said they would try to give us 24 hours’ notice of de parture. Actually the call came at 9 o’clock one morning and we were ordered to be at a certain place with full field kit at 10:30. We threw our stuff together. Some of us went away and left hotel rboms still running up bills. Many had dates that night but did not dare to phone and call them off. As we arrived one by one at the appointed place we looked both knowlingly and sheepishly at each other. The Army continued to tell us that this was just another exer cise, but we knew inside ourselves 11_i. 11.1. ...nr, 14 Bill Stoneman, who has been wounded once, never shows the slightest concern about these things. Whether he feels any1 con cern or not I do not know. Bill has a humorous, sardonic manner. While we were waiting for the de parture into the unknown, he took out a pencil and notebook as though starting to interview me. “Tell me, Mr. Pyle, how does it feel to be an assault correspond ent?” Being a man of few words, I said, “It feels awful.” When everybody was ready our luggage went into a truck and we went into jeeps. I can't tell you where we boarded the ship, of course, but I can say I personally rode two days in a jeep and made the last 30 miles on a 2 1-2 ton truck. The first night we gpent togeth er at an assembly area, an Army tent camp. There we drew our final battle kit—such things as clothing 25 Years Ago Today (From the file# of the SUr-News) June 13, 1919 Capt. Sidney MacMillan, who has recently returned from overseas, is al home on a leave. Another member of the Taft family to attain scholastic distinc tion is Miss Helen Taft who is acting president of Bryn Mawr col lege for the coming year. She has been dean for two years. The presi dent, D. M. Thomas- is to make a tour of the world. Mrs. Anson Alligood, Mrs. Robert Bowden and small son, Robert, too Jr., and Graham and W. L. Burkheimer are spending a week at Wrightsville Beach as guests of Mrs. Eloise B. Burk heimer and daughters at their cot tage. W. A- McGirt is in Atlanta at tending the meetings of the South ern Develpoment company is ses sion there this week. -V In China coffee costs S35 a cup. With or without cream and sugar? impregnated against gas attack, a shovel to dig foxholes, seasickness capsules, a carton of cigarets, a medical kit, rations and one funny little item which I can’t mention but which was good for many pur poses. We also drew three b’an kets just for the night, since our bedrolls had gone on ahead. The weather was cold and three blankets were not enough. I hardly slept at all. When we awakened early the next morning, Jack Thompson said, “That’s the cold est night I have ever spent.” Don Whitehead said, “It’s just as miserable as it always was.” You see, we had all been living comfortably in hotels or apart ments for the last few weeks. We had got a little soft, and here we were again starting back to the cld horrible life we had known for so long—sleeping on the ground, only cold water, rations, foxholes, and dirt. We were off to war again. The Literary Guidepost By JOHN SELBY “Leave Her to Heaven,” by Ben Ames Williams (Houghton Mifflin; $2.50). There will be many readers for Ben Ames Wii> sms’ “Leave Her to Heaven, since the novel is the current Literary Guild choice So it may be weii to say at the outset that they have to get over a pretty high hurdle if they are to enjoy the book as they should. The hurdle is the fact that the chief character, one of fiction’s least appetizing females, allows the crippled brother of the hero to die when she could have saved him, and that the "hero” rather a sloppy rhap, not only pro sets the monster but continues to live with her- The hero is presumably a novelist, but he is actually an imbecile. It is devilish hard tc feel sympathetic toward a fool However, that’s the worst of the book. The best is that Mr. Williams is an old hand at the fiction trade, and knows exactly how to draw his reader along, and how to make him overlook such matter.? as the foregoing. He is also very adept at analyzing female stinkers —he seems to b«' fascinated by such creatures as the Ellen of I “Leave Her to Heaven,’’ who not only gobbled up her father, but our hero, his crippled brother, her husband, her unborn baby, her foster-sister and cousin, her mother and eventually herself. Ellen had literally no tone thing to recom mend her, but was despeicable throughout. Mr. Williams lays it to possessive jealousy, but I should guess it was just a habit with the woman. She was a black widow spider in some previous incar nation. Having agreed to accept Ellen, however, Mr. Williams’ readers will probably do what I did, which was to read all of the book twice. This odd procedure came about throught the author’s habit of doing the same scenes through at least two different pairs of eyes, cutting back continuously, enriching the picture by a process of overlay that a painter would understand better than anybody else. His habit 3l reversing sentences is strong, too, and the result is that some times there is an almost archaic flavor in this wholly modern novel. It is not inappropriate, inasmuch is literal acceptance of Ellen is rery difficult indeed Interpreting TheWar By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Associated Press War Analyst , Just one week after their taU :rom Britain by air and sfa S ® :orces were within sight o'n£ ■irst prime second - front n?heir ave, capture of the Cherbo,6'’ peninsula. roourg r Thu7 ,had out " guessed and out fought the Nazi foe on grow, ais own choosing, long prepared fo° resistance to invasion. A 60 rni I Wlde EaP m his coa^l defens yawned. Through it Allied resen poured under blanket protection!! air and on the sea. The Cherbou ! peninsula Nazi bastion was TJ tainly doomed. Even the enemy hold on its greater Brittany neieh bor, tipped by the fine port of Brest was gravely threatened by 1’ American infantry break - through 20 miles deep in the center of th. beachhead line to the gates of St Lo. At the head of this deepest Allied beachhead salient west of captured Censy Forest, Allied troops stand some SS miles from Avranches i„ the bight of the Gulf of St Main Base lines of the Normandv and Brittany peninsulas meet 'there and another 45 miles southeast lies Rennes, the controlling commun' cations hub to all Brittany, Anv grave threat to it must force Nazi commanders to weight the neces sity of evacuation of that penin' sula, and the threat is clearly pres ent even now Nazi Position Difficult With fall of the Normandv fore land, seemingly imminent, 'giving the Allies use of Cherbourg to speed up movement of troops* and heavy equipment to the continental battle fronts, the situation of the German garrison in Brittany will be ominous. It may be the next Eisenhower objective, backed by forward air bases just across St. Malo gulf in Normandy. Its cap ture would double Allied weather proof communication facilities in France. Failure of the foe to prevent land ings in Normandy or to seal the first beachheads off effectively wih available reserves has already created an acute problem for the German high command. Neither r; local reserves nor the first waves of tactical reinforcements have served to halt the Anglo • Americ;n advance through Normandy. Ti - tone of official announcements from Allied headquarters indicates astonishment at the relatively p or defensive showing of the foe up ; > date. For there is a growing danger to the German position in all north western .France, from the Seine to the Loire, to be seen in the now well consolidated invasion deni. Even Paris is menaced, with Bet ish forces on the Allied left of lint at encircled Caen less than 10( miles from the French capitol. German reports have eonicnde' for days that in the south, whtt a complete Nazi army debacle fast developing in Italy, another A! lied army estimated at 300,00 strong is standing by to strike a the coast of mainland Italy nr fo a foothold in the Rhome valley del ta of Franee. rear rvew mows In the circumstances Gerrr.a leadership dare not greatly weak?' its defensive front in the south t bolster the Normandy - Brittai? front, just as it dare not pull i reserves from elsewhere on t it Channel and North Sea coast > the continent for fear that she n.ai Allied blow' in the west is yet fall at points closer to Germs./ Sooner or later, due to failure ! repell the Allied landings in X mandy a major decision upon re treat in France to shorten defen' lines will be forced upon Beni: The enemy is already reveal", the weakness of over-extons: m i the west as his Russian front d: closed similar fatal defects nnt the Soviet army was ready to ope its long offensive all along the lie In Finland the Russians are nr, striking with crushing i wee knock that Nazi war .assoc;: te o of the struggle. That is mere a fore-runner of greater Rue-'- : blows to come against the Ge mans, however, and porch !y kg < in with Allied plans to str;ke .:. Norway -V Daily PrayeM FOR FERTILE MINI'S MB O Thou, who art the source ^B light and life, from whom come inspirations, hear our prayei ERfi day that our minds may ^B quickened and stabilised. GHR us that we may think Tin. mom. Bn after Thee, in spaciousness ■ ness and patience. Stir us a . ' ||| steadiness of thinking, th; 1 , HI see clearly the relation ni ■ : 'H|^ partments of our 1 fe to tins sent crisis. Deliver us b'll! flH childish swhimpering plaining and shirking. B« Hi up the blessing of ope HR that we may devise belter IRR furthering our Cause. which ‘ HR lieve to be Thy Cause aim Ksj the thoughts of all invc '.|j|l of all executives; may we - HS Thee, as Jesus bade us. i!n Hy our minds." Give us a belli '".HR of relative values and o'. '.r;m ^HS standards. Light of our d: :'"'lHlj lead us in a plain path to tainment of the goals Te e: . Hg set before us. Amen. - b\- -• HR -V- ■ GET NEW OFFICE . Hi The new office of the New ^‘HS over County Alcoholic Control police in the ba>ementHR the new section of the county m H|g house was formally occupied terday. The location previous .'- |H| been used by the ConsohaaiMg Board »* u--m- M a flrroscc^B room H
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 13, 1944, edition 1
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