PLAN PRESENTED TO BOOST COTTON BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Oct. 30.— (Cl—Oscar Johnston of Scott, Miss., president of the National Cotton Council, asked the Alabama Farm Bureau federation here today to endorse a cotton marketing formu la which he said would do away with present price handicaps American cotton has to face in world markets. The plan, .ittributed by Johnston to D. W. Brooks of Atlanta, gen eral ■ manager of the Cotton Pro ducers association, is this: Granting that the present gov ernment loa"' program is contin ued, the cotton producer would re ceive the oriion of placing his cot ton in the loan at 92.5 per cent erf parity or selling it at the market price and receiving from the gov ernment the difference in cash be tween the average price of the 10 leading spot markets and parity. Under the plan a farmer with five bales of cotton might sell at ,the market price which might be 17 cents against a parity of 20 cents, the farmer would receive a certificate from the purchaser which would be a negotiable de mand on the government for a sum' equaling three cents a pound or roughly $15.00 a bale. Johnston cited the effect of ar tificial price supporters on the world market for American cotton, asserting that the produce had suf fered in export business because the domestic price was “too high to compete with foreign growths.” Brazilian cotton is now selling at about seven cents a pound under American cotton, he said. A new use for cotton has been found in the insulation field, John ston declared, adding however that this produce would not be avail able until after the war because a tinfoil backing was required. _v RUSSIANS START BUDAPEST DRIVE (Continued From Page One) my, which already has conquered Ruthenia and is invading Slo vakia to the west, had captured 10,160 Germans between Friday and Sunday, making a 10-day to tal of 21,390. Far to the southwest, on the Hungarian plains, Berlin said that Soviet Marshal Rodion Y. Mali - novsky’s second Ukraine army al ready had forced the Tisza river at many points, breaking across the last natural defense line be fore Budapest, by using “unprece dented masses of men and ma terial.” Two “major Soviet bridgeheads” thrown across the river north of Szoinok, 50 miles southeast of the capital, were crushed, Berlin claimed, and Hungarians and Ger mans were fighting furiously south of that pivot city in an effort to halt the Russians. In the past week the Germans have acknowledge Russian cross ings of the Tisza in at least three areas south of Szoinok—at Toszeg, five miles below that hinge city, at Tiszafoldvar, and at Tiszakurt, 19 miles south of Szoinok. The crossing at Tiszakurt, 60 miles southeast of threatened Budapest, was achieved by two Russian guards divisions which were “favored by extremely bad weather.” A German war correspondent at the front reported by radio thag Axis troops had been ordered to “hold on at all costs,” in an ef fort to save Budapest. German front bulletins stressed the Soviet' intention of toppling Budapest, queen city on the Dan ube and key communications center at the doorway to Austria, before th esnows set in. Moscow has never confirmed the crossings in the Szoinok area, but the Russians already hold the west bank stronghold of Csongrad, 20 miles south of Szoinok, and a 67-mile line running southwest of there through Kishkunhalas to a point near captured Baja, on the Danube 84 miles due south of Budapest. __t T._ SWEET POTATO CEILING RALEIGH, Oct. 30.—W—Declar ing that current maximum ceil ing price regulations on sweet potatoes will within the next three weeks result in an acute scarcity ef .supplies of the product, the markets division of the State Ag riculture department today asked ihe Office of Price Administra tion for an immediate revision of the order, permitting the sched uled farmers’ 40-cent price rise to occur on November 14 instead of November 26. What A Cough! And how it hurts, and nags And disturbs your sleep. Chronic bronchitis may develop if your cough, chest cold, or acute bron chitis is not treated and you cannot afford to take a chance with any medi cine less potent than Creomulslon which goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Creomulslon blends beechwood creosote by special process with other time tested medicines for coughs. It contains no narcotics. No matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough, per mitting rest and sleep, or you are to have your money back. (Adv.) You Can Fight, Too, Buy War Bonds » G.I. Joe Is Building Up Billion Dollar Nestegg NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 30.— UB— G. L Joe may seem like a bit of a spendthrift when he gets a 48-hour pass or 10-day furlough, but figures reported by the War department’s Office of Dependency Benefits today show that he and his mates are building up a billion dollar nest egg for the day .they > are demobilized. Through deposits, transfers of surplus funds and allotments of pay to their families, the soldiers are setting aside money for a rainy day. Allotments of pay alone have jumped from less than 2, 000,000 at the beginning of t h e year to more than 3,000,000 and $2,498,170,703 has been disbursed to date through these allotments. ... . These are iii addition-to the near er $4,000,000,000 ODB has paid in monthly allowances to soldiers families. ODB figures show that $396,000, 000 of the money paid to soldiers families in allowances since last January has been deposited in banks. In addition, army men and women of all ranks and grades have saved more than $211,000,000 in personal transfer of surplus heads through their finance offic ers. Another $102,000,000 has been set aside by enlisted personnel through the system of soldiers’ de posits in a government fund earn ing 4 per cent interest. These sol diers’ deposits cannot be with drawn until the.soldier’s discharge from the service. FOE'S HOLLAND LINES BREAKING f Continued From Page One) the British had been held up. for 36 hours, although they were in force, but they broke into the city today almost unopposed, indicat ing tiie extent of the collapse. The Canadian drive to clean up Antwerp’s approaches raced on with the same bewildering speed, and all organized resistance on the south bank of the Sehelde and on south Beveland island was crush ed. Dominion troops compressed the reeling Germans into a small pock et on the swampy south coast of the Schelde estuary from which the enemy can no longer fire on Allied ships which choose to enter the estuary. Then to the north they broke German resistance on south Beve land, whittled its mauled garrison to some 2,000 troops, raced its en tire length and retched the cause way' joining it to Walcheren island to the west, where German guns still dominate the Schelde. An ambitious German drive in eastern Holland, probably designed to ease the pressure on all these enemy forces, was stopped cold with the arrival of British rein forcements for the hard-pressed Americans, and *he Allies went ov er to the attack. me enemy couuiciuiuw o^cm iw» force only 11 miles east of the big Allied base at Eindhoven. To night bayonet - wielding Tommies fought back into Lieseel, 15 miles cast of Eindhoven, and their Amer ican comrades were hammering at the gatesto Meijel, five miles south of Lieseel—the two towns overrun by the Germans. The Berlin radio admitted that the Germans were pulling their 15th Army out of southwestern Holland. A front dispatch said the enemy was fleeing across the river by boat bridge and ferry before the Cana dian First and British Second ar my. British troops who applied the pressure on the east flank cap tured Capelle, four miles southeast of the d s they we a mile alf aha Here they were a mile and a half south of the Maas. The Poles who captured Breda, last important Dutch city in Ger man hands south of the Maas, pressed on four miles north to just south of Terheyden, which is but seven miles southeast of the Moerdijk bridges. They linked up on the east with British troops who seized the im portant communications center of Oosterhout, five miles southwest of Geertruidenberg bridge. Americans to the west stormed across the Breda ■ Roosendaal high way and shoved on nearly three miles beyond to within six miles of Moerdijk, posing the most im mediate peril to the Germans’ main escape route. British on the west, after captur ing Roosendaal, fought on three miles north into the outskirts of Oud Gastel, seven miles south of Willemstad ferry across Hollandsch Diep, seaward arm of the Maas. _v_ TUGWELL CABINET IS UNDER ARREST SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Oct. 30. ——Arrest of the entire cabinet of Gov. Rexford G. Tugwell for con* tempt of court was ordered today by District Judge Marcelino Ro many in a dispute over a $16,000,000 war emergency council appropria tion. Tugwell, himself, was not includ ed in the proceedings brought by Sen. Celestino Iriarte, head of the united opposition parties. Romany enjoined Tugwell’s war emergency council from spending any of the appropriation on the ground it was not approved by the legislature and his ruling was up held by both the Puerto Rico Su preme court and the Boston Cir cuit court, to which the government appealed. Enrique Campos de Toro, attor ney general designate, who appear ed for the defendants, said the council continued to spend from thq appropriation because the coun cil had not yet been officially noti fied of the Boston court’s decision last week affirming the injunction. Romany denied further appeal and ordered the arrest of the entire cabinet, which embraces the heads of all government department. The $16,000,000 fund was set up for the relief of Puerto Ricans, 250,000 of whom, according to gov ernment accounts, were faced with starvation. -V-— Cook meat at moderate heat so that it will be tender, juicy, and evenly dene to the bone. WEATHER FORECAST North Carolina: Generally fair and warm. (Eaatcrn Standard Time) (By V. 8. Weather Bureau) Meteorological data for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p.m., yesterday. Temperature 1:30 am, SO: 7:30 am, 49; 1:30 pm, 70; 7:30 pm, <1. Maximum 71; Minimum 40; Mean S3; Normal 81. Humidity 1:30 am, 78; 7:30 dm, 88; 1:?0 pm. 34; 7:30 pm, 72. Precipitation Total for the 24 hours ending 7:20 pm, 0.00 inches. Total since the first of the month, 7.90 inches. Tides For.Taday (From the Tide Tables published by U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey) High Low Wilmington-*■— S:J®» S:22p 4:37p Masonboro Inlet-- 7:13a 12:57a 7:3Tp l:30p Sunrise. 6:31 a.m.; Sunset, 5:20 p.m.; Moonrise, 5:52 p.m.; Moonset, 6:21 a.m. 24,000 JAPANESE DOWN IN 10 DAYS (Continued From Fage One) ter patrols yesterday discovered a Japanese column two miles long at Carigara, some four miles west ward along the bay. First cavalry patrols entered Carigara several days ago without resistance, then drew back. Guer rillas warned yesterday that a large enemy concentration was present. Another patrol then returned t