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Jitlatinglmt Star North Carolina's Oldest Daily Newspaper Published Daily Except Sunday By The Wilmington Star-New* R. B. Page, Publisher Telephone All Departments 2-3311 Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilmlng ten, N. C., Postoffice Under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.__ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER IN NEW HANOVER COUNTY Payable Weekly or In Advance Combi Time Star News nation 1 Week _$ .30 $ .25 3 .50 1 Month _ 1.30 1.10 2.16 2 Months_ 3.90 3.25 8.50 8 Months_ 7.80 6.50 13.00 1 Year . 15.60 13.00 26.00 (ADOve rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News) By Mail: Payable Strictly in Advance 3 Months ..3 2.50 3 2.00 3 8-85 8 Months . 5.00 4.00 7.70 1 Year .. 10.00 8.00 lb.40 (Above rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News) WILMINGTON STAR (Daily Without Sunday) 3 Months-$1.85 6 Months-$3.70 1 Yr.-37.40 When remitting by maiJ please use checks or U. S. P. O. money order. The Star-News can not be responsibJe for currency sent through the mails. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND ALSO SERVED BY THE UNITED PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1945 TOP O’ THE MORNING Die when I may, let it be said By friends who knew me best; He plucked a thistle from its bed A’id set a flower in its stead Where’er a flower could rest. —Lydia Ward. Sugar Bungled The work got along without sugar lor cen turies. It can continue on short allowances, Just as it has throughout the war, and life will go on much the same. But what we can't understand is why there should he a shortage of it in this country, unless indeed the OPA artificially created it in the beginning and can't now undo the harm it did then. We recall when the OPA was first feeling its oa.s, so to speak, it placed restrictions on sugar and warehouses filled up so fast that their walls bulged. Shiploads of sugar from Cuba were turned away at New Orleans be cause refineries were so greatly overstoced they could not handle another sackful. This naturally discouraged Cuban planters from sending more of their product to the United States, and instead of permitting re fineries to unload their surplus and make way for a fresh supply the OPA kept tightening its bonds. Both Puerto Rico and Hawaii are large pro ducers of cane sugar. Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas and southern Alabama also had large cane crops yearly in the good old times. But still the OPA continued to discourage the industry obviously as a part of its program to make the consuming public better acquainted with the fact that there was a war on. In addition, the producers of beet sugar in California, LTtah, Colorado and Idaho came un der the baneful influence. Instead of the mil lions of square miles annually in sugar beet cultivation in normal times, that is to say be fore the bureaucrats took over in Washing ton, these states are now practically out of sugar producing business. Now we are told that sugar will be scarce for another year and the prospect of ending rationing is remote indeed. It is all hard to account for except on the ground that the OPA bungled sugar as a fledgling and don't know how to correct its mistakes, or doesn’t care to, since it became a full grown bird of prey. Alaska Colonization When gold sent thousands of prospectors, gamblers and other members of society, in cluding Jack London, to Alaska in the ’90’s, the idea was to make a quick haul and get back to civilization in a hurry. But even then, agents of the Geological Survey and savants in other callings were pointing out the pos sibilities for prosperity in timber and agricul ture in the territory. For the most part this phase of life in Alaska was ignored for years. The gold fever was too virulent, the country too wild and Alaskan winters too severe to attract many permanent residents. Then, about a decade ago, the government started a colonization project and sent settlers to Natanuska all outfitted with cows and chickens and farm tools and plenty of inex perience, but the undertaking was not a great success, as might have been foreseen consid ering the settlers were not used to such cold weather and other unfamiliar natural condi tions. It takes a peculiar type of man and woman to be successful pioneers, and most of the Natanuskans were not this type. Well, the Japanese threat in the Aleutians and the fear that the Yellow Peril would ac complish its purpose of invading Alaska and work southward into the Pacific coastal plain, redirected military attention to the territory and resulted in construction of a highway for transporting men and equipment to exposed areas. This highway was a marvel of quick engineering and construction and considering the conditions the builders had to contend with stands as a monument to American in genuity. It was far from complete, as we understand highways, but it served its pur pose. And there is no reason to doubt that it will be brought up to standard within a very few years. With its completion there will be good rea son for persons who can find some degree of comfort in excessive cold winters to coion ize the territory and take advantage of its many natural resources, of which mining is byt one. Not many natives of the United States could live In Alaska the year around. But it would seem feasible for the govern ment to invite Finns and Norwegians who cannot longer abide the political situation in their own countries to settle there. These peo ple, many of whom are already American citizens, make good settlers. They are law abiding, thrifty and reliable. They would go far in developing Alaska's resources. , * U. S. Must Lead Plans for invasion of Japan had been made with the island of Kyushu’s number up for the initial strike when the Tokyo government decided it^ had had enough. Kyushu was chosen because of its many airfields from which, once conquered, our Air Forces could increase their destructive raids and lay waste cities particularly on Honshu, the principal island, where what is left of Tokyo is situated. Now the invasion program has been changed—greatly changed. Instead of the cus tomary, but greater, amphibious landing which was to start the conquest of Japan’s home islands, American naval forces ride at anchor in Sagami bay, just south of Atsugi, in the tidal wash of Tokyo bay itself, and air borne troops, specialists to arrange for the landing of occupying forces, are on Japa nese soil eighteen miles south of downtown Tokyo. Instead of the bloodiest invasion of the war, with the costs in men and materiel incalcu able, the surrender hopefully will proceed without bloodshed and the occupation continue as long as necessary without untoward inci dent. With the landing of this first contingent ol American troops, the defeat of Japan appears to have been completed. Only the arrival of the full complement of occupying forces, the placement of war planes on strategic air fields, the deposition of our protective fleet remain to be finished, and the terms of sur render signed, to end officially the conflict that forced the United States to build the greatest of the world’s navies, the largest and strongest of the world's air forces and the training of ground forces that steadily over whelmed the enemy in every engagement aft er General MacArthur started back in fulfill ment of h;s pledge to the Filipinos to come back—the conflict that has left thousands ol American homes with broken family circles and has cost many billions of dollars. The victory, and the price, will have been in vain, if we as a nation fail to measure up in the emergency of peace as well as we d'd in the emergency of war. We can do the one as well as we did the other if we ex ercise our tremendous influence not alone for our own gains but for the betterment of the misled peoples who followed their leaders in to battle; and we can do this only by rec ognizing our individual and national obliga tion for higher moral and spiritual standards than prevailed between the first and second World Wars. Another Racket Dying When prohibition was abandoned the illicit liquor racket, as a racket, and bathtub gin soon disappeared. It is not for us to argue whether prohibition was good or bad for the country. Not prohibition itself but the fact that people were being denied something in common use by government made drunkards of thousands of former total abstainers and created the most vicious gangsterism in tile nation s his tory. On the other hand thousands of occasional tipplers, being law-abiding by nature and training, left off drinking altogether and prob ably lived longer and were kinder at home than formerly. There are arguments on both sides, but they are not to be presented here. The purpose is merely to note that in the same way liquor racketeering disappeared on a big scale when liquor sales were legalized, the black market racket is on the way out witn improved marketing conditions, and to add that similarly with liquor the black mar kets prospered chiefly because people were being denied the right to buy where and when they pleased. There is such a close analogy between the bootlegging and the black market rackets that it cannot reasonably escape the eye of the nation’s leadership and impel it to take such steps as are necessary to do away for all time with all attempts to regulate a people s morals by legislation. It should be apparent by now that people generally are not materially different from children emotionally and are equally deter mined to do what they are forbidden to do if only to assert their individuality and in dependence. SO THEY SAY SO THEY SAY Passenger car transportation in the United States is in such a state of decrepitude that fast or careless driving will turn millions ol units into scrap iron and scrap rubber—H. J Brunnier. president, American Automobile As sociation. One element of a healthful city is a com fortable city. A comfortable city means all the trees that can be nurtured.—Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Times-Leader. Only the grace of God can give real peace by washing from the souls of men the leprosy of greed and hate and lust and pride from Which future wars can come. —The Rev. Thom as F. Maher, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, New York City. Many of ua think we have influence until we try to use it.—Worland. Wyo., News. Fair Enough By WESTBROOK PEGLER (Copyright, 1945 By King Features Syndicate! NEW YORK, Aug. 28.—As to whethei Franklin D. Roosevelt did or did not promote or assist the “personal business affairs” oi his son, Elliott, a conclusive case could be made by a public hearing of testimony by Elliott, himself, who takes the negative; Harry Hopkins, John Hartford, the grocery man; Hil* Blackett, the radio advertising man, whose story of his visit to the White House for a family dinner already has been told; Charles Harwood, Governor of the Virgin Islands, and Jesse Jones, who negotiated the settlement oi some of Elliott’s debts, however, the issue is bigger than that. The questions are whethei Mr. Roosevelt was aware of certain activities of Elliott and his oldest son, James, and Mrs Eleanor Roosevelt and other relatives and whether the presidency was commercialized. As bearing on those questions we may con sider Jimmy Roosevelt’s venture into the yeast manufacturing business in 1935 when he was 28 years old. On July 12 of that year the National Grain Yeast Corporation, of Belleville, N. J., announced that James had been “elected” president. This company was formed in 1926, during the prohibition era, and is now the third largest manufacturer of bakers’ yeast in the United States. It is a moot question whether alcohol is a by-product of yeast or alcohol and yeast are co-products. James succeeded Samuel Brass as president and the announcement said that he had ac quired a stock interest but would continue his insurance business and continue to manage his father’s dairy and forestry interests at Hyde Park. Federal court records show that in 1929 the company was denied a permit to manu facture industrial alcohol and operate a bond ed warehouse on the ground that the identity of all the financial backers of the company had not been shown in ithe application. Soon after Jimmy became president, he took notice of reports tha^ Irving Wexler, alias Waxey Gordon, a notorious bootlegger, was in terested in the company. He denied these re ports. It appears that the company did name its stockholders in its application for the alcohol permit but that one of the principal stock holders was unwilling to name his own per sonal backers. The salary which Jimmy received was not publicly stated but, in August, 1938 he au thorized a magazine article in which he said “when Frank Hale, president of National Grain Yeast, asked me to try my hand at organizing his sales force, to try to install some sort of system of accounting in his or ganization, I took the job”—at $25,000 a year. In a late? episode, when Jimmy became a Hollywood executive, Sam Goldwyn, his em ployer, said his salary was $35,000 with him. Jimmy was a novice in the movie business as he had been in the yeast business. In the magazine piece, Jimmy does not re fer to himself as president of the company but identifies Hale as president. The New York Times reported on Nov. 20, 1935, that Jimmy had resigned the presidency and that the directors felt that better results could have been obtained if he had given more time to his job. Shortly before his resignation, a special representative of the treasury, then ruled by Henry Morgenthau, visited Belleville and made a particular investigation. The National Grain Yeast Corporation has offices at 122 East 42 Street, New York. Three telephone calls to the company have been answered by a service company which handles such calls for subscribers who are ab sent from their premises. Two personal visits were made during business hours but the of fices w'ere closed. A personal telephoned mes sage and a telegram to Mr. Hale have brought no response. m May, iy28, shortly before the nominations of Herbert Hoover at*Kansas City and Ai Smith at Houston, a Senate Committee was investigating campaign expenditures. At tention was given to a publication called "Politics,” operated by Frank J. Hale, which appears to have been hostile to Mr. Hoover even during the presidency of Calvin Coolidge. Mr. Hale had been prohibition agent and he was called by the committee to discuss the costs of operating his paper. He said the paper had lost more than $8,000 since the first of the year and that he, alone, was paying this expense. On May 28, 1928, Mrs. Mabel Walker Wille brandt, for a long time the Assistant U. S. Attorney General in charge of prohibition en forcement, appeared as a witness. Asserting that she was testifying from official records, she made statements concerning Hale. She said he had been appointed on the recommen dation of one J. N. Chamberlain, of Atlantic City, deceased, who had vouched for him as a "good soldier” with the added remark "unui sed.” Mrs. Willebrandt then stated that prior to Hales appointment Chamberlain’s bank de posits never exceeded $300 but that soon af terward his deposits ranged between $1,000 and $5,000 a month. In a little more than a year, Mrs. Willebrandt said Chamberlain de posited more than $155,000 in two banks, all but $5,000 of it in cash although his salary, bonuses and commissions did not exceed $10 - 000. Of Hale, Mrs. Willebrandt said that govern ment records showed he never had a bank account and that his total income tax pay ments for the five years that he was in the pro hibition service, ending in 1926, were $75. On this basis, she questioned his ability to stand the losses of the paper. Mrs. Willebrandt, continuing, said that Hale’s title was chief of the alcohol and brew ery control in New York, with unlimited au thority in any investigation and that, on one occasion, when two New Jersey agents were sent into New York to stop an alcohol leak, the head of the suspected firm telephoned Hale, who called their superior officer in New Jersey and rebuked him for sending agents into his New York territory without his per mission. Mrs. Willebrandt said that after several in vestigations of Hale had been thwarted, he finally was “summarily dismissed.” The next day the New York Times reported that Mr. Hale had no comment on Mrs. Wille brandt’s testimony. Mr. Hale is known to have had certain re lations, not necessarily sinister, with the New York and New Orleans slot-machine racketeer known by the alias of Frank Costello who, a year ago, dictated the nomination of a justice of the New York Supreme Court. The National Grain Yeast Corporation is knowr strictly as a manufacturer of bakers’ yeast , I still think it unusual of such a corporation, which had desired an alcohol permit, to hire as its president the son of the President of The United States, a man of 28, less than five years out of college, with no experience in the yeast business at $25,000 a year, when many excellent bus’ness executives and yeast specialists of long experience and established reputation could have been hired for much less. * 1 “CROSS ROADS OF THE EAST” I ’ Adjustment To Freedom Of Living Finds Many Dutch People Unprepared By H. G. KERSTING (Substituting for Kenneth L-Dixon) AMSTERDAM, Aug. 28.— (tf) — The ever-present threar of the Gestapo and all it meant during the years of Nazi occupation plant ed itself so firmly and deeply in Dutch minds that even today — after nearly four months of free dom what might be called “oc cupation reactions” still are sec ond nature. People are as startled by com pletely innocent incidents as if they still were surrounded by German oppressors. A car stops suddenly, with a squealing of tires and brakes, in the street outside in the dead of night, a doorbell that rings after they have gone to bed —these things still are enough to bring honest Dutchmen awake with a start, often to send them olving for the hiding places that were their last resort in the months when house searches and arrests by the Nazis were an almost night ly occurence. Going home recently late at night — Amsterdam still has very few street-lights — I found myself suddenly face to face with a man in uniform. My first reaction was one of shock, for it, always had been dangerous to be abroad af ter the curlew hour, even with fal sified documents. Then the Canadi an soldier asked me the way to his hotel, and for the moment 1 had to fight down the instinct, bred in many years of invariably giving Germans wrong directions, to misdirect him. A friend, very much interested in politics, became engaged in con versation with a politically astute English soldier. It was not until he had returned home that • h e Dutchman realized he had gained far less than he might have from the conversation — for he had not yet unlearned the habit of being cautious and reserved in all politi cal discussions lest their context might be reported to the Nazi auth orities. People have not quite shaken otf the feeling that they must always speak cautiously, even somewhat enigmatically, on the telephone. Others catch themselves examin ing their pockets and briefcases be fore leaving home in the morning, on the chance they might contain incriminating documents. Happily, the large majority oi these cases are not serious and do not require medical aid. It is a curious fact that during the Nazi occupation, psychiatrists complain ed about their empty waiting rooms. People lived dangeroulsy with their nerves close to the breaking point, and they often had sleepless nights. But they were aware of the causes and hence^did think of visiting tecotohd.r n to NOT THINK OF VISITING THE not think of visiting the doctor. But in the weeks immediately after the liberation many men who had lived for years under the ut most tension cciiapsed and requir ed medical attention. 1 My doctor cited the example 01 a patient who had done dangerous underground work, had many nar row escapes, saw his son carried off to a concentration camp and his daughter placed under arrest. Some weeks after the lib >rat:or his son came back from Germany without damage to his health, his daughter already had been set free, his house was in order — in short, all conditions were favor able for a happy, normal ex istence. Instead he is under the care of a psychiatrist. Living dangerously was normal for him. Now he must adjust him self to peace and quiet. And finally, there is one of the most active of the former under ground leaders. If anyone must be convinced that the Dutch are rid of the Germans, it is he. From the very first day of the liberation he has been making speeches, attend ing meetings of various commit tees which are undertaking the problems of the new freedom, edit ing his former underground week ly which now promises to be one of the leading voices in the new Dutch political and cultural field. He even has been received by Queen Wilhelmina. In short, he is drenched in freedom. Yet — one night he leaves his office with a friend. He is on his way home, it is dark. And after locking the of fice door, he catches himself peer ing into the darkness, to see if perhaps a Gestapo “shadow” has been put on his trial. - The Literary Guidepost By W. G. ROGERS THE BIRTH OF MISCHIEF, by Rafael Sabatini (Houghton Mifflin; $2.50). Sabatini can make steel ring re alistically on steel, run a villain to a death which makes your skin creep, raise a hero to the most romantic heights and paint a hero ine to fit your dreams. That’s what he can do, though he hasn't this time. Charles Stuart-Dene, marquess ol Alverley, out of favor in Eng land, seeks his fortune in the court of Frederick William, upstait king of warlike Prussia. Alverley’s German cousin is beheaded through t h e treachery of the king’s more famous son, and is avenged when Alverley, in the service of France, uncovers the new Frederick’s belligerent de signs. The book offers a foretaste ol Nazi Germany and the 20th cen tury, with an Englishman for hero; it’s the birth of the mischief which plagues us today. It moves with some of the heavy tread ol Frederick William’s oversize grenadiers, and while it may be accurate historically, it is not stir ring fictionally. BENEATH THE STONE, by George Tabori (Houghton Mif flin; $2.50). No novel was ever quite so im possible, told by a man “sliding slowly down the tree” who couldn’t have told it; none ever dropped new characters so unex pectedly into your lap; and none ever flitted so restlessly from present to past to present again. It’s like a pendulum, yesterday, today, yesterday, today. I got diz zy watching it, yet I did keep on watching. It is in three sections: “The Capture, the Evidence, the Execu tion.” An Englishman who para chutes into a Balkan valley is made prisoner and entertained for the evening by German Major von Borst, who warns him that his ci vilian attire probably means he will be shot. It is a sort of cat-and-mouse story. Interest centers in the ma jor, who it develops is obsessed with an inferiority complex with regard to the English. The writing is alert and vivid. ATLANTA WOMEN HEAR GLAD TIDINGS THAT HUSBANDS ARE SAFE ATLANTA, Aug. 28 — (JP) — More than three years of waiting ended yesterday for Mrs. Edward King and Mrs. W. E. Brougher when they learned that their husbands —both Generals—were alive and well in a liberated Japanese pri soner of war camp at Hoten, Man churia. Mrs. King, wife of Maj. Gen. Edward King who was on Battaan' with Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wan wright, said both she and Mrs. Brougher received calls from the Chief of Staff in Washington that their husbands’ names were on the list of prisoners at Hoten. No other details were given, ex cept that they will be brought back to the United States by ship, Mrs. King said. Mrs. King had not seen her hus band, MacArthur’s artillery com mander on Bataan, for more than four years. The last message she received was a typewritten note with no signature early last June. p NEW HANOVER BAR TO MEET FRIDAY A proposal to endorse Judge John J. Parker of Charlotte for the U S Supreme court will be discussed at a meeting of the New Hanovei County Bar association at its meet ing Friday at 10:30 a. m. in the Superior court clerk’s office, Clay ton C. Holmes, association secre tary, predicted Tuesday. The lawyers are also expected to discuss Gov. R. Gregg Cherry’s re quest to cancel some of the fall terms of Superior court here al the mee ing Friday. Judge Parker, senior jurist of the United States Circuit Court of Ap peals, has already been endorsed by several bar groups for the High Tibunal. His endorsement is also expect ed to be discussed at the annual j North Carolina bar meeting and! institute in Raleigh Sept. 5-7, which several bar members here are ex pected to attend. Speakers for the state b'.r meet ing were announced Friday by Edward L. Cannon, secretary of. the association. Listed for the first day are J. O. Bierman, assistant chief counsel, Bureau of Internal Revenue; Sam J. Foosaner of Newark, N. J., chairman of the Committee of Federal Taxation, of the New Jer sey bar; and Vincent H. Maloney, New York practicing attorney. Judge Parker will be h-ard Fri day on the San Francisco confer ence and the United Nations char ter. Brig. Gen. Brougher was com mander of the 11th Division of the Philippine Army on Bataan. FLEET WING ON OKINAWA DID MAN-SIZED JOE By BOBBIN COONS OKINAWA.—MPi— In the Vu days of the war-which the ic bomb could well make *he 1 , war for individual deeds of s,s ism,-men on Okinawa continue daily to do heroic things in ^ unflambcyant wavs. 1 ” Men of Fleet Air Wing l typical. Compared to atomi bombings and spectacular strk?. by carrier aircraft and superior,? their exploits in dogging japar.;' shipping and coastal installation! were not sensational. Yet th played a great part in blockad?! Japan, ruining her efforts to sneak stolen goods into the empire and breaking up her rail and rad communications. Pilots and crews, zooming dm™ to 200 feet or less over their t? gets in lumbering PB4Y2’S i\,vj version of the B-24), took the sari —often greater chances-as pa? of other fighting craft. Dangl was routine with them as with other fliers. Every three or four days a crew’s turn to go out looking for trouble—came around Fighters and most bombers were briefed on specific targets E these boys had to find their own and targets already were getting scarce the day Lt. Cmdr. Car] Ward Rinehart, (918 Fairwav drive) Pensacola, a squadron commander, pointed to the pin. marked map in his office. muse um, ne said “and he’s having a busy day." ' The pins marked targets hit a], ready, according to radio reports from Lt. George H. Shortlidge, Keene, N. H., and his wingman! Lt. Robert F. Browne, El Paso! Shortlidge was Rinehart’s wing! man the day half a dozen priva teers bombed or strafed a coup's of important bridges in northern Korea, a coal mine, locomotives and trains and luggers. After a while Shortlidge anti Browne landed their planes, and we got their reports: four trawlers strafed or bombed or both. A Jap destroyer had tried to shell them with its bow guns, but they had made a getaway. Routine stuff— they’d just happened to find the trawlers, made quick work of them. It was Browne’s first mis sion—“a tough break-in,” said Shortlidge, recalling that destroy, er’s flak. Browne chuckling!? agreed he’d seen enough targets for a first day. This squadron formerly was commanded by Lt. Cmdr. A. F Farwell, Jr., now on leave in Pensacola. Farwell organized and led a six privateer "Fourth of July romp’’ against enemy communica tions between China and Japan. Once after a particularly hot foray against enemy railroading— seven trains destroyed, three tun nels, three bridges and one rail yard demolished — Adm. William F. Halsey messaged: “Nice work on your anti-Casev Jones mission. Before long hope to hear fate of old 97 described.” But “Flairwing One," as it's : nicknamed, was anti - everythin® I Japanese as well as ‘‘anti-Case? - Jones.” For example, the place piloted by Lt. R. M. Finley. Hold enville, Okla., (Co-pilot Lt. ij®' Charles J. Fernandez, former news editor of the Tarhpa. Fla, Times) had five ships, two planes, and a submarine to its credit. Other crews’ "kills” were equally diversified. The privateers look ungainly and old, their paint a faded blue, and they don’t often make the headlines, but they’ve done a job. Daily Prayer FOR MILITARY MORALE So great is Thy greatness, 0 In finite Ruler over all, that Thou carest for all the children of men, with a Father’s wistful care. Only Thy limitless power and love can ■ provide succor for every need. Thou art the Inspirer of all holy impulses and of all sustaining spiritual strength. So we bring W Thee the deeper needs of me spirits of our men in service, i that they may be helped by Thee to live on the level of their hign est capacities. Deliver them i-om the mire of monotony, the slougo of despondency. Sustain m.e-r spirits in cheer and courage , conviction. Deepen their sense c their high calling and let not t- o morale be weakened by lonchnc-, routine or jadedness. Keep c.e^ before their vision the I°vr loyalty of the home folk: an., u^ sacredness of the Cause i.t ■' they are enlisted Incite us " ■ are at home to do our pa-1 " sustaining the morale of all ice men. In the unity of a - '■ purpose and a great may we all achieve the levels of life. This we asK, I confessing our shortcoming5 I sin, in the name of our com.-' ■ Christ. Amen.—W.T.E. Recorder Continues Case Against Nobles The case of Ed Nobles. Kf Maffitt Village, charged • breaking afer a loose - ^ ^ on one of his choes a ; ,v;.en suspicions of a city dete , ters. he came in police headq; ^ was continued in Heco^ yesterday. 8(:cr Sought since Augu.t A,. leaving footprints arou 1 ,, lantic Paint and Varm.s.hmnte(i to where he allegedly «««“&»' crack the company s sa ^ ti. connection with the casc s;lCe» tablished by c°mparing * with casts of the foodp ficers said.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Aug. 29, 1945, edition 1
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