Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 22, 1945, edition 1 / Page 2
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NAZIS ARE WARNED OF GREAT PERIL’ LONDON, Jan. 21.—.'UP)— The German radio and goyemment controlled newspapers mid a tense homeland today that the Reich is facing its “greatest hour of peril. Announcers of the German home service radio, recorded by BBC, divided their time between reas suring their listeners that Eastern Front counter-attacxs would oe launched soon and "warning of the horrible fate that faced the entire, nation should they fail to stop the Soviet drive. The DNB news agency quoted ; the newspaper, Deutscne Allge meine Zeitung, as reporting that “now in her greatest hour of peril, ( Germany can fall back on lines . built up since last August. The ter- I rific Soviet onslaught was the main topic of all newspapers, DNB said, i quoting the Deutsche AUgemeine i Zeitung as also cautioning its read- 1 ers that the bringing up of re serves “naturally still will take some time." German newspapers which reach-; ed Stockholm Saturday were more j optimistic than the reports put out j for foreign consumption, and It was obvious that the Nazis feared panic would spread through Bres lau, Danzig, Koenigsbcrg, Posen and other cities in the path of the Russian steam-roller. One of the best examples of the radio offerings to German homes was a talk given by commentator Hans Fritzche, who first assured his audience that, although a break through had been accomplished, German defense lines were taking shape and that Russians would feel the strongest of counlcr-blows from the “core of resistance” within the Reich. -V Negro Branch Library Will Open February 1 The new Negro branch of the Wilmington Public Library, locat ed at Sixth and Red Cross streets, will open on or about February 1, it has been announced. It will replace the second-floor branch, at Eighth and Princess streets, which has been closed for approximately one month while its 4.000 books were moved to the new location. The new branch, located in a Negro residential section, as the ether was not, will draw a larger appropriation from City and Coun tv funds. Its annual operating allowance will be $2,000 instead of $1,200, half of which expense will be borne by the City and half by New Hanover county. Librarian Emily Showbar, in charge of the branch, has an nounced the acquisition of ap proximately 500 new books, which are currently being catalogued and will be in the stacks for the opening. _ n ^jjfi St. John’s Tavern J 114 Orange 8t* KjfofWa Dial 2-8085 DELICIOUS FOOD , Chicken In The | \ fj Rough — Friday Special m BUSINESS MEN'S 1 Lunch 43c I 11:30 to 2:30 Daily I Except Sunday jj: G & J. CAFE I 118 Market St. a A Good Place to Eat! ^ ( manor rr = i LAFF ... A MILLION ! MILTON BERLE N0 x , —in— *HIT , “OVER MY DEAD 1 _BODY”_ HORROR . . . CHILLS! : N0 2 JOHN HOWARD HIT —‘n— ‘UNDYING MONSTER’ PLUS LATE NEWS OPEN 10:45 A. M. DAILY! BID KIDDIE SHOW Every Saturday Morning 10 A. M. Free Prizes . . . Fun For All — . ■— - ■ —a ■ . _ - N Today and Tuesday! Greatest of Manhunts! Spender Tra. y In “THE SEVENTH CROSS’’ with Signe ITasso Hume Cronyn Shows: 11:04—12:50—2:58 4:55—7:05—9:10 H Today and the Waves and eet the Wives £ Tender Story ugh Love! Crain in .itimc. Darling ik Latimore Ml ||e was a Diabolic Trader W */ In Women’s Aj',v'*r*"4 a 1 K "ENEMY OF WOMEN” il It with Donald Woods ” It’s Bing st^Hll All- |l K Bing Crosby in II ■ "GOING MY WAY /■ ft with Barry Fitigerald M Ml Frank MeHugh gise Slesens ill ’ Ig’f sa 635r*07 r DTBCS eoto««s I m **** I Chart above shows the distri bution of British Empire war casualties, as recently described by Prime Minister Winston Churchill. The figures repre sent period from start of war, September, 1939, up to last November. ! ‘G1 JOE’ NAMED MAN OF THE YEAR (Continued from Page One) providing for the deduction of Fed eral income taxes from State in come tax returns. Mr. Cartier spoke briefly on thf “Challenge of Change,” saying tha ' the future depends on the youngei men who have enough courage t( get out and do something con structive. “Somebody is going to have t( put some of the money made ii this war back into the service o: men,’’ he declared. Postmaster Wilbur R. Doshei made a short talk on the past ac tivities and future promise of th< group and Elliott O'Neal, Wilming ton Jaycee president, spoke or public relations — the newspaper! and radio as mediums of publicity Carroll Tinsley, assistant Seoul executive of the Wilmington area, discussed Scouting in connection with Jaycee activities. Boo Dannenbaum, last year's chairman of the North Carolina Junior Chamber of Commerce’s - committee on Americanism, spoke I on the freedoms expressed in the ; Declaration of Independence, Con stitution of the United States and the Atlantic Charter in connection with race relationships of the post war wot Id. The luncheon, attended by repre sentatives from New Berti, Wilson, Favet’eville and surrounding terri tory, was presided over by Claud O'Shields. C. W. Frost, one of North Caro lina’s tv/o directors of the National Junior Chamber of Commerce, was introduced. Reports of Jaycee activities of the last calendar quarter and of presidents of all represented clubs were presented at a meeting at the Cape Fear hotel at 10 a. m. yes terday. Approximately 100 people attend ed a banquet held at the Blue Top Lodge at 8 p. m. Saturday for members, their wives and guests. -V Chinese Fight To Hold Jap Drive On Railroad CHUNGKING, Jan. 21.— Ift—Bat tles to hold converging Japanese drives from Hunan and Kwang tung aimed at sealing off the Chi nese-held gap of the Canto-Han kow railroad were reported to night by the Cninese High Com mand. There was no positional change south of Leiyang on the railway about 35 miles below Hengyang, where clashes had been reported earlier. In Kwangtung, fighting continued in the outskirts of Tsingtung, 40 miles north of Canton. I; COUGH LOZENGES ; Get below the gargle line with |; F 4 F Cough Lozenges. Each F 4 F I; Lozenge gives your throat a IS • minute soothing, comforting treat i; ment all the way down. Millions • use them for coughs, throat irrita ; tions or hoarseness resulting from j; colds or smoking. Box—only 10#. Yank Engineers Rebuild Bridge After AirAttack ! WITH U. S. SIXTH ARMY FOR CES At Villasis, Luzon, Jan. 20. ! (Delayed)—(&)— American Army I Engineers, advancing with the 1 Doughboys toward Manila, were throwing up a pontoon bridge across the Agno river today a few hours after the first troops had negotiated the stream at this point. The Yanks reached tne longest ■ bridge in the Philippines —a 2, 080-foot structure—iate yesterday but three of its sections had been blasted out by American fliers. | The Yanks waded the Agno—at low stage during the current dry sea son The river bed is a series of sandbars over whicn trucks and other heavy mechanized equip ment must be hauled by track layers. The first man to cross was Capt, Robert A. Marshall, of Abilene, S. D., who forded the river in a jeep. When he got to the other side he met a major who had work ed his way through along the other bank of the stream from another sector. Bomb disposal teams were busy picking up both Japanese and Am erican duds from the steel and concrete bridge which was pitted with bomb blasts. Among the dud gatherers were Lt. Leonard J. Stuart, of Lexington, Neb., and Corp. Joseph Getherall, of Charles ton, Mass. Soviets Take Tannenberg In East Prussian Drive (Continued from Page One) sian Army invaded the Junker homeland on a 50-mile front, ad vancing almost 16 miles. Tannenberg. sacred to the Ger mans, and the burial ground of Field Marshal Paul von Henden burg, the great Prussian military hero who defeated the Russians in 1914, was captured in a 15-mile ad vance. Seizure of the village, seven miles inside the frontier, brought Rokossovsky’s troops within 22 miles southeast of the rail city of Allenstein. It was near Tannenberg, Mos cow s midnight communique re called. that the Russians, Poles and Lithuanians ‘‘completely smashed” the German Teutonic knights ir. a historic battle in 1410 Allenstein apparently was Rokos sovsky's first objective. Other spearheads, crashing through line after line of concrete and iron for tifications between the western most of the Masurian lakes, ad vanced 14 miles inside the border and won Jedwabno, 19 miles south east ol the rail city. South of Aliensteln, other troops, pushing ahead despite German jet propelled bombs, captured Allen dorf, 22 miles from the city. Sixteen miles due west of Tan nenberg, Rokossovsky’s troops fightirg through Polish territory captured Lubawa, in their closest approach to the Baltic and to Dan zig. At Lubawa, they were e*jht ' miles southeast of Deutsch Eylau, 1 capture of which would cut the vital supply railroad from Ger many, through Torun to Inster burg and Konigsberg. They also were 17 milts south ! west of Osterode, another impor tant city on the trunk railroad. Both Osterode and Deutsch Eylau . are the cornerstones of a triangu lar lake region guarding the ap proaches to the Baltic. At the same time, Rokossovsky’s troops were advancing along a 65-mile front north of the Vistula river, and by capturing the cities of Plock and Sierpc in gains of up to six miles, were within 55 and 44 miles southeast of Torun. The jaws of a great pincer were closing on East Prussia as Rokos sovsky’s army drove through a network of Nazi defenses in the Masurian lakes. At Jedwabno they were 83 miles southeast of spear heads of Gen. Ivan D. Cherniakhov sky’s Third White Russian Army which was smashing into East Prussia from the east. With the collapse cf Gumbinnen, 15 miles east of the great rail elty of Insterburg, Cherniakhovsky’s army extended its front 18 miles south beyond the western fringes of Rominten Heath to Gawaiten, six miles northwest o' Goldap The front now is 70 miles long. More than 3,500 enemy troops were killed or captured in Gumbin nen, and Cherniakhovsky's troop* advanced five miles beyond to capture Kubbeln, 10 miles east of Insterburg. The fall of Insterburg was im minent. The city was outflanked nine and seven mile3 to the north west by the seizure of Patimbern and Padrojen, the former 42 miles east of the capital city of Konigs berg. Thirteen miles northwest of In sterburg, Cherniakhovsky s troops advanced six miles down the Tilsit Kongsberg railroad to take Mahlau ken, while other forces captured Schenkendorf, 38 miles northeast FATHER, DAUGHTER HELD IN MURDER (Continued from Page One) en out by Sheriff H. D. Stanley, but when Caribelle Long was ar rested at her home by the sheriff and State Highway Patrolman Porter Davis, Jr., she claimed that she had done It. Troy Long, taken in custody by Deputy Sheriff Mack Kennedy, denied he had fired the bullet which passed close to David Long’s heart, emerging beside his spine. Funeral services for the de ceased, a veteran of World War I and a member of the Junior Order of United American Me chanics, are scheduled to take place at 3 p. m. today at the Hap py Home Baptist church. The Rev. J. R. Carter will pronounce the services, and burial will fol low in the church cemetery. The victim of the shooting is survived by his widow, the for mer Miss Lillian Ward, three sons, Frederick, Roscoe and Sigman, the first of whom is serving with the U. S. Navy,in the southwest Pacific; three sisters, Mrs. Curley Smith, of Lumberton, Mrs. Lettie Long and Mrs. Nola Rhodes, of the Long household; three broth ers, Troy Long and M. K. Long, all of the household; and his mother, Mrs. Lenora Lorrey, of the Nakina section. of Konigsberg, in an 11-mile ad vance. The northern wing of Cherniak hovsky’s army advanced 12 miles south from the Niemen river along the Baltic coast and cantured the coastal town of Gilge 33 miles northeast of the capital city. Twelve miles south of Gumbin nen, the Russians were advancing on the road and rail center of Dar kehmen. They captured Konigs felde, seven miles to the east. In Silesia, the First Ukrainian Army under Marshal Konev, hurl ed back German Volksstrum (home guard) units recruited frejn the mines, offices and factories to reinforce Germany’s battered ar mies, and approached within 16 miles northeast of Oppeln by win ning Radau. One communications line from Breslau to the three German cities of Gleiwitz, Hindenburg and Beu then was severed when Konev’s army cut a 29-mile stretch of the first of three railroads along the east bank of tne Oder between Kreuzberg—through Rosenburg — and the Polish town of Lubliniec. Lubliniec was captured Satur day. In an 11-mile advance north west that carried them five miles inside Germany, Konev’s forces captured Guttentag whicn put them six miles from the second of the three supply lines. IT_ ROOSEVELT ASKS JONES TO QUIT (Continued from Page One) in the Government because he had had the confidence of both Con gress and the President. "I have had that confidence be cause I have been faithful to the responsibilities that have been en trusted to me," he continued. “For you to turn over these assets and responsibilities to a man inexperi enced in business and finance will. I believe, be hard for the business and financial world to understand." Mr. Roosevelt said that he was suggesting the ambassadorial jobs "among many other posts” that Jones could fill in the Government and hoped that he would have the opportunity to discuss the matter with Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius. Jr. Jones replied that his 13 years in Government service was “ample evidence" of his desire to be of any possible assistance in time of war, but that his desire to serve further does not encompass a dip lomatic assignment. The Wallace-Jones switch has been rumored since the President’s re-election to a fourth term but Mr. Roosevelt's intention to turn over to Wallace all Government lending agencies came as a dis tinct surprise, it generally had been felt that Jones would retain control ot these functions as head of the Reconstruction Finance Cor poration. It was reported reliably that Mr. Roosevelt will submit Wallace’s nomination to the Senate tomor row. An Administration leader said it would be referred promptly to the Interstate Commerce Commis sion, but felt that opposition would develop if Wallace’s new job in cluded control of the financing agencies. This source said that Mr. Roosevelt was contemplating a move that would send Jones to London to replace Ambassador John G. Winant, the . New Hamp shire labor relations specialist, lyho would return here to replace Frances Perkins as Secretary of Labor. The Cabinet shuffle would end a lot of New Deal headaches, par ticularly one that involves Wallace who was picked by the President as his running mate in 1940 but dumped overboard at the Demo cratic convention last year for Sen. Harry S. Truman (D-Mo.) - V - YOUTHFUL SKIPPERS GO DOWN TO SEA NEW YORK—l/P)—Four salty sea captains, masters of ships taking vital war cargoes to war zones, met in New York recently. They were Robert Levy of the Bronx, veteran of five years at sea with the Cities Service Oil Company’s fleet; Henry B. Leitman, Manhat tan, a winner of the Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Me dal; Charles R. Stevens, of Brook lyn, a veteran of the Normandy invasion, and Robert C. Skinner of Washington, D. C., a United States Lines skipper for more than a year. The story is their ages. Skinner at 24, was the old man of the group. Leitman and Stevens are 23, Levy is 21. -V Mexico City’s newest hydro-elec tric power plant was paid for out * ?P*cial per cent tax on electricity users, beginning in 1938. “Dauntless Dotty” Sings Again .... mill in T "m ^^ Songstress Dorothy Myles, whose heroic fight for life after she was almost burned to death in Boston’s Coconut Grove fire won her the name “Dauntless Dotty,” is shown with gifts sent by servicemen who admire her pluck. Now, after five plastic surgery operations, the 19-year-old singer is ready to resume her career. OBITUARIES MRS. SARAH E. BANNERMAN Mrs. Sarah E. Bannerman died at his residence, 314 Ann street, at 1:15 p. m. Friday, after-a lin gering illness. She was born in New Hanover county on March 16, 1862, daugh ter of the late Tempie Houston and A. J. Grady, of Duplin county, and was the last member of her immediate family. Mrs. Bannerman was the widoff of Williams Tate Bannerman, clerk of court of Pender county for many years. She was active in religious and civic circles, an officer and hon orary member of the N. C. Sorosis, former member of the Stamp De fiance chapter, D. A. R., president of the Doman’s Auxiliary of the First Presbyterian church, presi dent of Wilmington Presbyterial, and vice-president and recording secretary of North Caolina Synod ical. She is survived by cousins in New York, Georgia and North Car olina. Funeral service will be conduct ed from the residence at 11 a. m. today, with her pastor, the Rev. William * Crowe, Jr., D. D., in charge, and the Rev. A. J. Howell assisting. Interment will follow in Oakdale cemetery. Active pallbearers will be Eu gene Johnson of Wallace, J. A. Grady of Kenansville, Mark Hines of Winter Park, Laurin Beatty Of Ivanhoe; Haywood Bannerman ot Carolina Beach and Marshall Be atty of Ivanhoe. Honorary pallbearers will be Dr. Rp A. Codington, A. T. Summev, J. A. Adams, Walter Storm, Her bert Wilder, D. C. Whitted, John S. Crowley and Glasgow Hicks. EDWARD C. WHEELESS BURGAW, Jan. 21. — Funeral services for Edward C. Wheeless, 26, who died at James W’alker Memorial hospital in Wilmington, Friday night of typhus fever, were conducted at 3 p. m. yesterday at the Burgaw Methodist churcTi by the Rev. I. J. Strawbridge. Burial followed in the Burgaw cemetery. Before his death Wheeles was cashier of the First Citizen’s bank in Burgaw for four years. He is formerly of Rocky Mount and Smithfield. Survivors are his widow, the for mer Miss Lucile Hilliard one child, Edward, Jr., and his mother, Mrs. Annie S. Wheeless, all of Burgaw; two brothers, Russell W. Wheeless, and Roscoe Wheeless, both of the U. S. Army in the Southwest Paci fic area; and a sister, Mrs. M. E. Morgaw, of East Greenwich, R. I. JAMES C PICKENS James Coburn Pickens, 54, of Washington, D. C., died in the Emergency hospital there Saturday afternoon at 4 o’clock. He suffer ed a severe heart attack, after being in declining health for some time, and died two days after en tering the hospital. He was superintendent of the Joint Facilities of the Southern Railroad company at Washington. He was a civil engineer and a graduate of Washington and Lee University. Mr. Pickens is survived by his widow, Mrs. Julia Faison Pickens, formerly of Wilmington; his fath er and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Dever Pickens, of Philippi, W. Va., and one brother, Paul Pickens, of Cum berland, Md. Funeral services will be held in Washington and burial services will be held today. MRS. OLIVE ODUM POWELL LUMBERTON,, Jan. 21. — Mrs. Olive Odum Powell, 86, widow of William Carlyle Powell, died at her home in Orrum yesterday after noon after an illness of two weeks. She was born in Robeson county, and had lived in the Raft Swamp and Orrum sections most of her life. She was & member of the Or rum Baptist church. Funeral services were conducted at Bigg’s funeral home in Lumber ton yesterday afternoon by the Rev. I. P. Hegpeth. Burial followed in the family cemetery in Raft Swamp ownship. Surviving are two sons, Stinson Powell and June Powell, both of Lumberton; four daughters, Mrs. W. R. Townsend, Route 4, Lumber ton, Mrs. I. P. Graham of Proctor ville, Mrs. J. C. Atkinson, and Mrs. Archie Lewis, both of Fairmont; one sister, Mrs. Margaret Baxley, of Route 4, Lumberton. GEORGE D. ROBBINS, SR. LELAND, Jan. 21.—Funeral ser vices for George Davis Robbins, Sr. 69, who died at his residence here Friday afternoon, will be conducted from the resident today at 3 p. m. with the Revs. H. S. Strickland- H. F. Brinson and Woodrow Robbins officiating. Interment will be in the family plot at Leland. He is survived by three sons, George D. Robbins. Jr., John Al len Robbins and William Henry Robbins of Leland; two daughters, Mrs. Minnie C. Cook and Mrs. Mary L. Cook of Leland; and a sis ter, Mrs. Fannie D. Bordeaux of Wilmington. Active pallbearers will be W. T. Medlin, Fetchie Medlin, Leo Med lin, Eldridge Medlin, Allen Sykes. Alex Jones, Chub Brew and Lor enzo Williams. MRS. SALLIE E. BAGGETT Funeral services for Mrs. Sal lie Evelyn Baggett, 54, who died Saturday afternoon in Duke hos pital. Durham, will be conducted today at 3 p. m. at the Yopp fun eral home by the Rev. J. F. Hu bert. Interment will follow in Eellevue cemetery. Mrs. Baggett is survived by her husband, I. Baggett, a daughter, Mrs. C. W. Vereen, two sons, Jesse I. Baggett and Harry A. Baggett, and a sister, Mrs. Mary M. Huddleston, all of Wilmington, as well as a number of grand children. Active pallbearers will be E. H. Rhodes, E. W. Manning, J. L. Walters. S. W. Lewis, D. L. Holt, and F. W Davis. Honorary pall bearers will be J. W. Price, W. L. Kure, A. Klutz, Dr. J. F. Rab ertson and Dr. D. R. Murchison. -V FDR HELD WARY OF SECRET PACT (Continued from Page One) next historic meeting remain to be disclosed. One of these may be, however, at least in part, his decision to take along Secretary of State Stettinius. Hull did not make the trip to Tehran in 1943. Another measure which looks highly probable is as full a report as possible to Congress and the country when the meeting is fin ished. Stettinius will be able to amplify this in his recently be gun conferences with Senate and House Foreign Affairs Commit tees. In this connection it is under stood that while Mr. Hull offered members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee his own con viction that no so-called ‘‘secret agreements” were made by the President at Tehran, he was un able to say to the more critical members that he knew of his own first-hand knowledge and experi ence what had gone on there, since he had not himself been present. TONIGHT’S SINGING SENSATION Is this handsome gent with dream stuff in his justly famous voice. Jerry Wayne is his name—and he’s on tonight on Borden's new radio show. Starring lovable Ed Wynn, with Mark Warnow, and Elsie, El mer and Beulah. WMFD, 9:00 P. M. EWT. I i City Briefs 1 MEETING SCHEDULED The Cape Fear Council No. 24, Daughters of America, will have its regular meeting to night at 8 o’clock in the Junior Order hall. All members are urged to attend. _ USO INVITES WIVES Wives of servicemen station ed in the W'ilmioeton area are invited by the USO to the Sec r-rf • '■ -'I for dessert, Tuesday at 7:30 j, .1 m lounge a. nusbands also are invited to attend if thev are in town tomorrow night. A discussion of the pro grams of the club will be held after the social hour, and serv ice wives are asked to be guests. -V YANK ARTILLERY RAKING GERMANS (Continued from Page One) ing ahead all along the 25-mile front after initial gains of three miles. A front dispatch, disclosing fur ther progress, said there were no reportable details. (The German communique ad mitted the French had dented the lines west of Mulhouse, and report ed heavy fighting in Thann, 10 miles west of Mulhouse in the east ern foothills of the Vosges mount ains.) The assault line stretched from St. Amarin in the Vosges south east to the area of Mulhouse and on to the Rhine. North of Strasbourg, the Alsatian capital, Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch’s Seventh Army balked an enemy attempt to exploit a five mile wedge driven into American lines in the Weyersheim area, re pulsing a midnight infantry assault. Without regard for the peril posed on this flank, the Seventh Army fought back savagely inside Drus enheim, seven miles northeast of Weyersheim, and west of nearby Herrlisheim. The Germans were known to have five or six divisions concen trated in an arching 15-mile line from Hatten in the Maginot Line southeast to Gambsheim, nine miles north of Strasbourg. They included the Tenth SS Pan zer division, which left the Russian front to fight in Normandy, par ticipated in the Ardennes 'break through, and now is fighting in the Drusenheim area. -V Special lighting devices have been developed for inspection of I gun bores and shell cases. /fr = WEATHER ' Eastern Standard | nr, ,, , lE| V- ®- w'»'htr Bureau, Meteor |-gical data . anding 7:30 p.m., yesterr.a ' "?-*1 Temperafirp 1:30 am. 41.0: 7:30 J; - 37 •. , 46.3; 7:30 pm 45.0. :j Ps Maximum 50.0; Mirutr.v «•. ,, 42. Normal 46. Humidtv 1:30 am. 38: 7:30 am 92 7:30 pm. 96. ’ prr Precipitation Total for the 24 ho _ . , 3.00 inches. ‘ ' ' s Total since the f. r5 1.81 Inches. Ir/:r-th Tides For Tor.ay (From the Tide Table* U. S. Coast ar.d Geodett: s "ea Wilmington _ !'^a . Masonboro Inlet _ 3. -f l Sunrise, 7:15 a.m.; Su Moonrise, 1:00 p.m: M—... _ ,. *•>*» a Junior Hostesses Plan Meeting At USO Loung( The Junior Hostesses front tht USO clubs at Fourth and ,v streets and Third and Grac streets, which were closed Jan ary 1. by club officials are urgei to attend a meeting of the Si and Orange streets club todai at 7:30 p. m. in lounge A. All members who plan to parti cipate in the programs of thi: club are asked to be present order that the rules and program may be discussed, officials* add ed. If any member finds possible to attend, and \v aid jj*', to be a member of the. Junto: Hostesses group at the Secont and Orange club, she is asked v arrange an interview with Mw Glenn Willard. Phone 2-2617. Cotton stored on the farm can b put into the Government loan Make application through the Iocs AAA office. When-^K? chaps hands QUICK RELIEF! Freezing weather dries out skin cells. Skin may crack, bleed. Mentholatum (1) Stimulates local blood supply . .. helps Nature heal. (2) Helps revive '‘thirsty” cells so they can retain needed moisture from the blood. For chapped skin—quick, Mentholatum! Jars, tubes 30e. DE LUXE BLENDED WHISKEY National Distillers Products Corporation. New York. Blended Whiskey. 86.8 Proof. 51% Straight Whiskey, 49% Graia veutral Spirits.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Jan. 22, 1945, edition 1
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