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The Sports Trail " „y WHITNEY MARTIN KEVVr YORK, Jan. 31.— (IP) —We ' . be a naive sort of soul who 2d look for the bay where they the bay rum, buf we find d‘P ° ri t0 realize a bunch of kids il tenting a school would plot f a basketball game for t0 as the Brooklyn College "]°vers admitted doing^ !%.hel. the kids nowadays are efferent or we were brought up more wholesome section of L country, for we could no more nriate such a practice with our a2e days than we could asso c ,*g. sparrow with a B-29 just because they both fly. Prom our experience the pride . hP;ne a winner and pride in in school dwarfed everything ’■l£ and the boys would have liv e'“ ’oa bread crusts rather than *V'hemselves and their school j„,vn the river. y,e can't believe the Brooklyn r,"'epe affair is anything but an elated case, although, like one annle in a barrel, it will cause .; otber games to be looked on I'ith suspicion, "j. is unfortunate that the gam bols moved in on college, basket ,,1:' although the very rules of •\”e»ame seem to make it a natur 'j jcr, ;he fix. In football there are vo manv players involved. Base i -ca;t although calling for nine play i frs ’on a side, offers an opportuni ... because the nature of the game j. -5 so much responsibility on one or two men. But basketball, with five players In a team, leaves an opening for the fix as one or two star players with a yen for easy money can make the difference. The wr.olc: affair is something of a black eye for private promo tion of college basketball. We have an idea there are no such hap penings involving games played on campuses, and we just can’t picture a crooked game between, say, Iowa and Minnesota. Pride in the schools and their records are just too great. We can just hear Forrest “Phog” Allen cackling “I told you so" out in Lawrence, Kas. Phog put his finger on the button months ago, but was laughed off as a publicity-seeking calamity howler. To the credit of New York, it exposed its own unfragrant situa tion. The sports-loving citizens here want no more of such shen nanigans than do the real sports fans in other parts of the coun try, and they resent as much as anyone else the fact that a hand ful of cheap gamblers have been trying to make a travesty of the game at the expense of iil-advised kids. Ned Irish, who started big-time private promotion of college bas ketball, has been doing his best to curb the growing gambling, but it’s no easy job. He knows it is a peril to the sport, that such an exposure as the one just made not only will be harmful to his own private enterprise in that teams will be cagey about risking their reputations in the garden at mosphere, but it might cast shad ow of doubt over the game throughout the county. Sports Writer Reports On Western Front Tour _—-m. -- HUNGER MOVED 10 NEW STATION CHAPEL HILL, Jan. 31.—(JP)— Lt. Comdr. W. Glenn Killinger, whose Navy Preflight teams in football and baseball last year amassed impressive records, was detached this week for duty at a Naval air station in Florida, and Lt. Comdr. Paul W. Bryant, former .Alabama grid star, has been named to head the football training course of the Cloudbusters. Announcement of the change was made by Lt. Comdr. James P. Raugh, commanding officer of the Navy Preflight school here. Besides serving as head o-f the football training course, Killinger, who was a member of Walter Camp’s all-America grid team in 1921, coached the Cloudbuster elev en which early last fall upset" the heavily favored Naval Academy team and went on to rank among the best grid machines in the coun try with six wins, two losses and one tie. The losses were to Bain bridge and Camp Peary, two ser vice teams which were loaded with ex-professional luminaries. Killinger also coached the 1944 Cloudbuster baseball team which compiled a record of 24 wins against 12 losses for the season. Bryant, who succeeds him. star red at end during his collegiate days at Alabama, teaming up with Bon Hutson to hold down the Flank positions on Alabama’s great Rose Bow! team of 1934. Last fall he served as line coach of the Cloud busters. . He was assistant coach at Ala bama and later at Vanderbilt, be ‘fre entering the Navy in 1942. « reported to Chapel Hill last Huy. after 15 months sea duty in ’■be Atlantic area. -V (Editor’s note: J. Roy Stockton, St. Louis Post-Dispatch sports wri ter, has returned from a USO tour of the western front where he was master of ceremonies for a unit of four major league baseball play ers, Mel Ott, Frankie Frisch, Bucky Walters and Dutch Leonard. ST. LOUIS, Jan. 31—(iP>— It was cold in Paris, there was no heat, no warm water in our hotel and we learned quickly that the trim uniforms fitted in a New York Fifth Avenue shop wouldn't be suf ficient in winter in cold, damp, muddy France. And when Frankie Frisch, a cold blooded fellow for all the umpires may say, put on his favorite two sets of long, heavy underwear, he couldn’t pull his dandy officer’s blouse to within two inches of but toning. Special service knew our prob lem and fitted us out at the post exchange. When they gave us leg gings fom sizes too large and trou sers that dragged the ground, we knew this was the same Army we had been in back in 1918. Early th«' morning of November 30 we left Paris In our converted weapons carrier and motored to Reims. Lt. Col. Frank C. Schroe der, special service officer, met us and USO camp shows unit 417 was reariy. We met the 82nd Airborne at Sissone and Suippes and the 101st at Mourmelon and Chalons. Offi cers and enlisted men had volun tered for that branch of the serv ice. They were a sort of mixture of Foreign Legion and Frank Merri well. That fellow over there is Buck Dickson (Los Angeles),” said Lt. Bob Burnes of the 101st. “He’s a pistol. One of the original para chute jumpers. “One time we moved into a Hei ne installation so quickly they ran out and left the telephone ringing. Dickson answered the phone and carried on a polite conversation with some high officer for several minutes. Buck got some valuable information out of the officer and when he heard all he could get or wanted, he swung into the darndest Heine swearing you ever heard. And did we get a laugh out of vis ualizing that Heine officer on the other end of the telephone getting the hell bawled out of him.” We met Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and Lieutenant Burnes told us a story about him. “General Taylor jumped with us in the invasion and to avoid con fusion in the darkness he was to be identified as 'Killer.’ When he jumped he landed with his para chute in an apple tree and got tangled up. One of our soldiers was cautious and Taylor’s answer of ‘the Killer’ didn’t satisfy the sol dier. He suggested the thing in the tree had better figure out a better story or things would happen. “‘This is your general, Gen. Tay lor,’ the Killer explained and the soldier was very apologetic. ‘Par don me, sir,’ he said. ‘Just a mo ment, sir, and we’ll have you down sir and pardon me, sir, for being about to blow your bloody brains out, sir.’” buy war bonds and stamps Ti I VOLLEY BALL GAMES ■ (Played at YMCA) ■ "*orth __.15 13 15 2 ■ J;de Water .. 7 15 13 1 M Mass. Life Ins. _15 15 15 3 BB Pendfr Furniture_13 10 13 0 Hj STANDINGS M t!'8",’ w l ■H t'oe Wmer _ 14 7 n ^ L;ff -.””””"11 10 I|£rrie Fum- __9 12 Hm "Oolworth _8 13 jgfj t —-v- . HB .Bi V " \K BONDS AND STAMPS ■ Good grooming begins Kj with a head of lustrous B well-kept hair. Moroline ^B Hair Tonic helps tame B unruly ends, supplements ■ natural oil of dry scalp. B Adds lustre, sheen to hair. gj Large bottle only 25c. B| Try MorolineHair Tonic. hr—_—. W A N T E D SEC0,N’V HAND BICYCLES AND TRICYCLES PH KARRS L— Markel st- Dial 2-3224 1®pen Your Checking Account Popular or Standard The Morris Plan Bank _ Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation DEMPSEY SAYS NATIONAL GAME WILL CONTINUE Former Champ Asserts Baseball, Other Sports, i Must Go On MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 31.—-1#’)—An encouraging word for baseball came today from Comdr. Jack Dempsey, the chief of the Coast Guard physical fitness program, who knows his way around in Washington. “Baseball is going to be played, I understand,” the former heavy weight champion told Guy Butler, sports editor of the Miami Daily News, in a telephone conversation from Palm Beach, where he is va cationing. "There is too much money in vested in baseball and some other sports, and too much interest by the civilian populace as well as the servicemen for them to be closed down.” The big fellow warmed to his subject. “Sports must go on. no matter what happens,” he declared. “Of course, nobody expects big, strong, healthy athletes to be anywhere but in a fighting uniform—but we'll have enough 4-F's incapable of fighting, dischargees, older men and those 17-year-old kids to con tinue the various sports. “Sure, I mean boxing, baseball, football and all the others. “We can’t quit now. We can’t back dov/n. What will we have to carry on with after the war if everybody gives up sports now?” Sports are necessary for morale purposes, he emphasized. “We’ve got to have ’em,” Demp sey continued, “although we’re going to have to go with a lot less, in quantity and quality, than we’re accustomed to. But that’s all right.” Turning to boxing in the post war era, the former mauler said he would have to string along with Champion Joe Louis until the lat ter is dethroned. “People say that the last war produced great fighters,” he com mented. “It didn’t. Gene Tunney came along, to be sure, but it was seven years after the war be fore he became champion. “There are no real good boxing men that I’ve observed in this war. It takes three or four years to develop a topnotch fighter.” "TT Jayvees Lick Lejeune High In Ninth Win By WEDDELL HARRISS New Hanover High School’s unde feated junior-varsity quint, romped to their ninth consecutive victory this season by trouncing the fight ing Camp Lejeune High School Devil-dogs 19-13 last night in a spirited affrey staged in the high school gym preceding the varsity tilt. The high-flying Jay-Vees, under the guidance of Coach Wallace West, garnered a first quarter lead of 4-2, and trotted off the court at the halftime with a 13-3 advan tage. The visiting ‘Dogs found the range in the second half, however, and led by the deadly shooting of Hardesty and Nelson, chalked up 10 markers and limiting the locals to a scant 6. The Jay-Vee four-foot wonders, West’s capable but extremely light reserves, stole the show during the last three minutes of play. Eager, they darted onto the court from their well-warmed bench. The midgets drew thunderous ap plause from the ever-growing crowd of Wilmington supporters as they determinedly dodged around and under their lanky opponents, the game was climaxed by an unex pected field goal by Tiny Thomas in the closing minutes. The Jay-Vee attack was headed by demon-dribbler W. A. Brown, Red Crowley and Billy Hartison, who combined to score the majority of the locals tallies, and worked with their colleagues to form an al most impregnable defense against the Lejeuners, forcing them to re vert to long shots most of the night. ■XT New York Assemblyman Acts On Sport Gamblers ALBANY, N. Y. Jan. 31.—(UP) —Assemblyman Malcolm Wilson, Westchester Republican, introduc ed a bill today amending the penal law making amateur athletes liable to heavy penalties for accepting bribes. Under terms of the measure, amateur athletes could be fined up to $10,000 and imprisoned from one to five years for accepting money or any article of value to “throw” a game. The present law applies only to professionals. -V Bob Cats To Engage YMCA Stars Tonight Daye Wilkins’ Bob Cats will tangle with the YMCA All-Stars to night in a Municipal B&sketball league battle. The second-place ’Cats will bo the underdog, but they will have the support of Bobby Manor, Jim my Cane and Bo Markiton, all of whom will be in good shape. The ’Cats will be seeking their fourth win. Their only defeat was suffered at the hands of the YMCA quint, 20-6. -'*■» TWO BROOKLYN PLAYERS HELD BY GRAND JURY Stemmer And Rosen Held In Default Of $25,000 Bond Each NEW YORK, Jan. 31.—(UP)—A Kings (Brooklyn) County grand jury was ordered to continue its investigation of basketball gamb ling today after indicting two men accused of bribing five Brooklyr College players to throw a game or a charge of conspiracy to cheat and defraud. Judge Samuel S. Leibowitz or dered the jury extended one month in order to complete its inquiry and set February 13 for trial of Harvej Stemmer and Henry Rosen, whc pleaded innocent and were orderec held in $25,000 bail each. The indictment came 36 hour; after the five players said Stem mer and Rssen had given them $1, 000 of a promised $3,000 bribe tc throw the game they were sched uled to play with Akron at Bostor tonight. The game Was cancelec when the scandal, worst in the hit tory of intercollegiate athletic., was disclosed. Repercussions extended to A1 bany where a bill was introducec in the state legislature which woult amend the penal law to make ama teur athletes liable to heav; penalties for accepting bribes. They could be fined up to $10,001 and imprisoned from one to fivi years for accepting money or anj article of value to throw a game The Brooklyn players—Capt. Bol Leder, Buddy Barnett, L a r r ; Pearlstein, Stanley Simon am Jerry Green — were not chargee with any offense and will be uset as material witnesses because present law applies only to profes sional athletics. The grand jury completed thi first phase of its investigation las night after hearing testimony fron the five players, their coach, Mor ris Raskin, and the police officer; who broke the case while they wer< investigating Rosen’s activities ii connection with a stolen merchan dise ring. j. uuov ** v- v* » iiivuo * vukubvu »»*• ■ second indictment against Rosen It was returned by the New Yorl grand jury and charged Rosen witl first degree .larceny and receivinj stolen property, an outgrowth o charges that he trained more that a score of teen-aged youths to stea merchandise from trucks in th< Manhattan fur and garment dis trict. Rosjen was committed to King county jail and Stemmer to Queen; County jail. Leibowitz, complimenting th jurors for their “earnest am speedy work” ordered them to ex tend the inquiry and “seek out an; evidence of crime” in connectioi with past games. “Don’t go after the small fry,’ he told them. “It's th-J big fel lows we want. He said he wouli continue to extend the term of th< jury if that W'as necessary to com plete the investigation. In addition to the conspirac; charges, Stemmer and Rosen alsi faced bribery charges. Stemme was arraigned yesterday and or dered held for $2,500 bail for furth er hearing February 5. The indictments charged Stem mer and Rosen conspired with < third man, identified only as “Dan ny,” and who is not yet in custodj to cheat and defraud persons bet ting on the game. Their attorney Nathaniel Kramer, asked the cour for a speedy trial. When Judgt Leibowitz set February 13 he ob jected that that was too soon. Aftet hearing from Assistant District At orney Henry Martuscello the courl set bail at $25,000 each. Martus cello asked that it be that high tc make sure the defendants woulc not “flee the jurisdiction of the court.” -V PROMOTOR CAUSEY RETURNS TO CITY Promoter Bert Causey, local em presario, has returned to the city after a brief illness, and announced last night that the Swedish Ange! and Blimp Levey would be featur ed in the Thalian Hall arena Tues day'night, February 13. Causey pointed out that following the next wrestling show here, the bone-bending exhibitions would be moved to the old Friday night date when big names will appear on the Wilmington card. Additional grap piers for the fray February 13, will be announced later, Causey said. TT MARINE QUINTS PLAN TWO MORE CAGE CONTESTS CAMP LEJEUNE, Jan. 31.—The Marines of Camp Lejeune and the nearby Cherry Point Air Station, boasting two of the hottest basket ball squads along the Atlantic sea board have extended their 1945 competition to four games. Dates for two additional contests between the teams, which split their previous engagements, still are indefinite, but the finale is scheduled to dedicate a huge field house for Cherry Point. This agreement will help round out attractive slates for both clubs without enchroaching upon limited travel facilities, Captain R. M. Port, Lejeune athletic officer, said. The first tilt in history between the Leatherneck teams, here Jan uary 13, drew the largest crowd ever to attend an indoor athletic event at Camp Lejeune Barrow Takes Advisory Position Under New Owner Of Yankees, No Change In Policy Is Expected ——---- --4. . — To Battle Wake Forest Saturday Ed Koffenberger, left, six feet, two, from Wilmington, Del., is the starting center for the Duke Blue Devil cagers, and big John Crowder, right, who has tucked away his football togs and put on a basket ball suit. These two will be on hand for the battle with Wake Forest at High Point College Saturday night. Koffenberger has been acclaimed by many as the most versatile floor man and ball handler at Duke since the days of the Loftis brothers. Crowder played first-string center for the Duke Sugar Bowl champions, and is r.ow No. 1 guard for Gerry Gerard’s cagers. He will play to home folks Satur : day in the Big Five game. Duke And Wake Forest To Clash j In Big Five Game At High Point > ---X -“ ---— TAR HEELS PREP FOR INDIAN TILT CHAPEL HILL, Jan. 31.—North i Carolina’s White Phantoms will be ■ seeking their eight win out of elev en games in Southern Conference i competition this season when the . William and Mary Indians drop in ; on Woollen Gymnasium at Chapel i Hill for a visit Thursday night, r Starting time is 8 o’clock. £ The boys from the Virginia Pen , insula have been an unpredictable [ quantity all season—as hot as a , stack of counterfeit gas coupons \ one night, and as cold as a tray of ice cubes the next. s In a home and home series with . N. C. State the Indians presented both extremes. Playing in Raleigh , the Red Terrors walked all over them to take a win by a 2&-point margin. Then they got the Raleigh ' team up in Williamsburg and took them over the coals, coming out of that mixup with an advantage , of almost 10 points. When the Indians come to Chap ’ el Hill they will bring a Confer | ence record of two wins and two ‘ defeats, and will be fighting for a berth in the annual Southern Conference tournament. Starting for them will probably be Magd 1 ziak and Bruce at forwards; Wright at center, and Appell and ■ Mackiewicz at guards. Assistant Coach Clyde E. “Pete” Mullis, taking charge of the White ■ Phantoms during the absence of Coach Ben Carnevale, who is con fined to bed with a back injury, put his charges through a stiff practice session yesterday after noon, and them planned a light, ; tapering-off drill for this evening. -V SPORTSSHORTS CHICAGO, Jan. 31.—(UP)—K. P. Wrigley was re-elected president of the Chicago Cubs today in the an nual meeting of stockholders in which it was revealed that the team’s 1945 roster of 40 players in cluded their entire starting squad of last year. Other officers elected were James T. Gallagher, vice president and general manager; Earl W. Nel son, treasurer; Margaret Donahue, secretary. George Boyle, assistant to the general manager and Robert C. Lewis, traveling secretary. BUFFALO, N. Y„ Jan. 31.—(UP) —Manager Joe McCarthy of the New York Yankees announced to day that he will leave for New York tomorrow and confer with Col. Larry MacPhail, head of the syndicate which last week purchas ed the club. MONTREAL, Jan. 31.—(UP)— An effort to revive the Canadian open golf tournament this year was made today when the Beaconsfield golf club voted $15,000 to under write the event and suggested it be held in either July or August. The tournament, which annually attracted the top professionals of the United States and Canada, has been suspended since the war. _-V Deacons Seek Early-Season Revenge From Blue Devils HIGH POINT. Jan. 31.—Basket ball fans of this section will be offered a Big Five and Southern Conferenc contest here Saturday night when Duke's Blue Devils and Wake Forest's Demon Deacons clash in the High Point college gymnasium in the feature half of a cage doubleheader. Elon a n d High Point tangle in a North State Conference tilt on the same pro gram. Wake Forest, with a lineup fea turing some of last fall’s Deacon football stars, will be seeking re venge for an early season loss suffered at the hands of Coach Gerry Gerand’s Blue Devils, In fact, Wake Forest outscored Duke in the second half only to fall short of wiping out the Blue Devils’ first half advantage. Wake Forest has a strong team despite the fact its record isn’t impres sive. Loacn Murray treason has whipped together a well-balanced team after the Deacons suspend ed the cage sport last year be cause the army finance school was using the Baptist gymnasium. Duke’s defending Southern Con ference champions had won only seven ef 14 starts before last night's clash with N. C. State at Durham. The Blue Devils, after a slow start, are rounding into top form, and they expect to put up a strong fight in t h e conference tournament at Raleigh on Febru ary 22, 23, and 24. Three footballers have also been sparking Duke's play. They are Gordon Carver, Johnny Crowder and Cliff Lewis, all-stars of Dukes Sugar Bowl victory over Alabama. Carver and Lewis are starters, while Crowder is second string center. Crowder also is a High Point boy and he will be playing before the homefolks. Stars of the Duke team are Bill Sapp, Ed Koffenberger and Bob Roellke. Sapp is the leading scor er for the year, while sixfoot-three Koffenberger excells under the basket. Roellke is a long shot ace. They are the big three of the Blue Devils. Dave Harris, pass catching end in football last fall, is leading Wake Forest in scoring. The husky six-footer has been turning in some brilliant performances on the hardwood. High Point fans should see an exciting battle when Wake Forest and Duke tear into each other Sat urday night, because the past few years these two rivals have stag ed some lively athletic games. VOLLEY BALL CLUB The Volley Ball Club will hold ts monthly meeting at 8 p. m. to* norrow at the YMCA, and Sam lohnson will preside. WILDCATS BEAT SAILORS, 45-22 The New Hanover High schoc Wildcat hoopsters sailed to thei fifth victory of the season last nigh to bring their average back up t' the .500 mark, snowing a favore Maffitt Village Ferry Comman five under a 45-22 landslide on th local hardwood. The Wilmingtonians, led by th high scoring Mason brothers, Bill and Carl, with 10 and eight po.nt respectively, and lanky Johnny Me Koy, also with eight tallies to hi credit, paved the way for the Wild cat victory with their accuracy. The first quarter kept the fan constantly on the edge of thei seat with the lead continuall; [changing hands, terminating witi [the count knotted at 6-6. The local supporters were abl to settle back and breathe a littli easier during the second perioi however, when the ’Cat quint open ed up and hastily ran the rcore uj to a 20-9 halftime advantage. The remainder of the tilt was al New Hanover, with the Mason and Jack Marcus bringing the thiri setto count up to 32-17. Bobby Brindell, Norman (Ploo gie) Waters, and McKoy got on thi ball during the final period boos the standing to 45-22 triumph. Jerome Thibideau, Fairy Com mand center, took high scorinj honors for the affray, aggregating 12 points, while Wilmington co Captain Billy Mason followed clos< on his heels with 10 markers. -V— aaffo Basketeers Win Over Pepsi Cola, 14-7 Saffo’s basketeers defeated a fas Pepsi Cola team 14-7, on the YMCA court last night in the firs game of s double-header, and the Kenney Educators edged out the City Optical five 16-15. Herbert Moskowitz, captain o the bottlers, and Croom, of Saffo': shared scoring honors with sb each. In the second fray, John Browr was high scorer for the Educators with 15, while Bobby Crowley lec the Opitcals with 10. BOWLING CIVIC LEAKUE (Results last night) Jaycees: 12 3 Tot Lee . _ 142 113 170 425 Capillary . 122 171 169 462 Howard_ 125 126 149 400 Atkinson _ 141 112 123 376 Ward _ 148 146 104 398 Total _ 678 668 715 2061 Senior Frat: 1 2 3 Tot Everett_ 143 124 144 411 Ruark _ 163 162 127 452 Padrick _ 152 141 120 413 Sandlin _ 128 153 128 409 Keen_ 150 165 115 430 Total __ 736 745 634 211*4 Looking (or Quality (rifts? ! Hundreds of Appropriate • GIFTS For All Occasion* Now is the time to seiect you! VALENTINE CARDS Visit the (jewel (Box Qift &hop Downstairs at the Jewel Boa 109 N. FRONT ST. Czar Holds First Business Conference With MacPhail By JACK HAND NEW YORK. Jan. 21.— If) —Ed Barrow's policy under the new ownership of the New York Yankees will be to offer advice but not to interfere with Col. Lar ry MacPhail as president and gen eral manager. In a formal statement released today after his first business con ference with MacPhail since the sale of the club, the 76-year-old Barrow said: "1 told him we could not both be head man and that I would stay as chairman of the board of directors as long as-my health would permit. He said I could have any office I wanted. “As my policy is never to in terfere, I am sure we will get along without any friction, f told him that he should be president and run things ’and I would stay in an advisory capacity. I will sup port him when’ he is in the right, but when he is wrong I will simply keen mv mouth shut.” MacPhail revealed actual trans fer of stock has not taken place and only $50,000 actually has changed hands, bul posting of the remainder of the estimated $2,800. 000 purchase price was purely a matter of working out the legal quirks of a large scale operation before a March 26 deadline. me lormer. tsrooiuyn ana Cin cinnati executive who will be nam ed president and general manag 1 er for a long term when the trans i fer is completed reaffirmed h i s “no change” policy as he observ . ed, “there have been no changes and there aren’t going to be any. [ “Today’s meeting,” the colonel said, “was largely a matter of ’ Barrow telling me ‘here's what we | have been doing’ and me saying 1 ‘that’s okay by me’.” 3 MacPhail said he- would take charge February 10 when he is 3 placed on inactive status by the , Army but would be present at the 5 Friday and Saturday meetings ' “not as an American leaguer but 3 merely as an interested person. - Barrow will represent the New York club and whatever his views 5 are. it goes for me too.” r Barrow will in no way be bound ' to a vote for Ford Frick for com 1 missioner, MacPhail’s personal choice, but the new No. 1 man 5 of the Yanks classed himself as ■ a leading proponent of the group i asking for immediate election of • a czar. i ---- \ NOTICE ' Plumbing, Healing and Air Conditioning Examinations The State Board of Examin ’ ers of Plumbing and Heatin/ Contractors will hold its regular series of examinations on Feb ! ruary 21st, 22nd and 23rd in the ! King Cotton Hotel, Greensboro, ■ri. c.v; , Examinations for Plumbing or Air Conditioning, begin promptly at 8:00 A. M. February 21st. The Heating examinations begins at 1:00 P. M. February 22nd. Applications for examinations must be filed with the Board hot later than midnight Februtry ; 11th. For information and ap plication blanks write to W. F, Morrison, Executive Secretary, Box 110, Raleigh, N. C.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Feb. 1, 1945, edition 1
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