Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 5, 1946, edition 1 / Page 3
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COUNCIL TO STUDY CHANGEJN NAMES in the names of streets Sunset Park and East Wil in ** sections, if any, will prob up before the City ably fin the near future, accord C°Uf fitv Manager A. C. Nichols, ing t0 ‘ y m have to come as a gST action of the council, he »aid‘ u 1. revealed that he had a ^f treetHn the new territory list of str t the council and would pa«M0 as tQ which reC0If1fshould be renamed. He ex ,treet H th-t he would not endeavor ftfl the council what the new l’fheS citv^mana'ger said he al Tf had received a recommen read n which he, in turn, would sub daf0 the council, that the Wrights f ‘Beach highway fi the old V! v limits to the new limits be des ignated Oleander avenue or drive. Residents of that area became exercised and appealed to the coun , in late November, immediately cl,Lr a report was circulated to effect" that all of the four differ ences by which that road was known, ior 1° extension would be hanped to Dawson street. Chf that bme the council voted to e no changes in street names f til further consideration could be riven the matter. _ At Wednesday’s meeting, Coun ciman Ray Pollock Sunset Park, introduced a successful motion des ifating the newly-mclude portion if the Carolina Beach highway as South Third street_ LEW HAHN REFUSES TO DIVULGE NAMES NEW YORK, Jan. 4—(£>)—Lew Hahn, general manager of .the National Retail Dry Goods Associa tion, declined again today to give the Office of Price Administration the names of manufacturers whose products were used by the NRDGA in an exhibit designed to show that OPA regulations encouraged output ct low-quality goods. In a letter to Chester Bowles, OPA administrator, Hahn said: “You do not need these names. You have a telephone. Just call up a few manufacturers and ask them some questions. If you can give them assurance that you will not allow them to be persecuted for daring to tell the facts, you 1 will learn some things you should know.” Hahn suggested that Bowles ask: “the five largest cotton mills xxx why they are not producing cotton broadcloth;” ‘‘the leading shirt and pajama manufacturers why there are no shirts and pajamas to be had;” “why mothers cannot buy underwear to protect their children from the cold of winter;” “why the ex-service man cannot buy a decent suit of clothing in which tc lnnlr fnr a inh ” and “whv clothinS manufacturers cannot get rayor linings to complete clothing partial. ly finished.” The letter informed Bowles 01 Hahn’s belief that ‘‘by refusing to recognize that many of your war-born policies do not now fit the present need of the American public you are strangling produo tion. Hahn asserted the NRDGA has been "the staunchest supporter ol price control” and that most ol its members ‘‘believe that price controls should be retained for sc long a period as may be necessary but they want price controls whicl will encourage production and noi stifle it.” It would make a wonderful gift but instead you’ll probley wan for your very own the smart anc graceful new salad set that’s be ing shown in better stores every where. The seven rich piece; consist of a large bowl with fori and spoon, and four small indi vidual bowls, all hand-turned o: golden birch, and undecorated ex cept for the lovely natural graii of the wood. AMY SLOWS DOWN SOLDIER RETURNS (Continued from Page One) The revision lowered the pros pective European force by approxi mately 28,000 and the prospective Pacific force by 25,000. The War Department also an nounced' that some 800 war brides and other dependents of American soldiers would be brought to the United States in January; mostly from England and the continent. By July some 50,000 more will be brought from England, 10,000 from the continent and 6,000 from the Pacific. No date has been set for any large-scale dispatch overseas of families of American soldiers serv ing abroad. In announcing the reduced de mobilization rate, Collins forecast that the discharge score for Febru ary would be lowered less than five points, which has been the amount of recent monthly reductions. The score now is 50 for enlisted men. He told reporters it ‘looked doubtful” that the Army would be able to return to their homes in March the last of the soldiers who have served overseas two years General George C. Marshall as chief of staff had expressed hope that this could be done. Demobilization has progressed to the point where troop requirements overseas, rather than shipping, have become the governing factor in the discharge rate, Collins said. As reasons for the reduced dis charge rate. Collins cited a rapid pace of demobilization, failure of enlistments to keep pace with re placement needs. JAPS TO DISCUSS MACARTHUR ORDER (Continued from Page One) The newspaper Asahi termed the order “a forward step toward con struction of a new Japan.” The directive caught the Japan ese cabinet in session but without the premier, who was home with a cold. The cabinet went ahead and an nounced that the budget would be balanced' for 1946 for the first time since 1930. Finance Minister Keizo Shibusawa carried the report to Allied headquarters and Hiro hito. It called for expenditures of 12, 812,000 yen ($854,133,333 at the Allied-set exchange rate of 15 yen to the dollar) and estimated income at 13,328,000,000 yen. Meanwhile, MacArthur invited 30 . prominent United States educators . to come to Japan to help the Japa . nese revise and base their educa : f.onal system on more Democratic . principles. S His headquarters also denied a . Japanese request to extend fishing i areas into the East China and Yel low Seas, saying the Japanese were not now making “the fullest pos • sible use” of authorized areas near I .Tarvan WEATHER (Continued from Page One) WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.—(5>>—'Weather bureau report of temperature and rain fall for the 24 hours ending 8 p.m. in the principal cotton growing areas ana Station High Low Prec. Alnena — 37 30 0.00 Asheevme”::““r.:._ 59 35 0.00 Atlantic City - 42 34 ^ Birmingham - f f o.oo Boston - 47 o.oo Burlington - 39 ao _ Chattanooga - 63 4® 0'39 Chicago ..- « *} ..0,01 Cmcinnatr - 32 ■_ o.23 Denver -==1- « “ °0| Duluth j- 3 22 0>0 Fort Worth - “ K fill Galveston - ®® fn too Jacksonville - ™ L 178 Kansas City- »6 s e oc, Knoxville - 49 O.OO Little Rock _-.- — 5“ 4o . o.OO Los Angeles- „ -o I o.OO Louisville-50 0.00 Memphis-51 O.OO Miami —-- 7 52 o.OO Minn.-St. Paul - 5« o.OO Mobile - ^9 54 0.00 New Orleans - ” 0.00 New York-S 31 o.OO Norfolk - _ <* O.OO Philadelphia -,-„ g o.27 Phoenix - f. a 0.00 Pittsburgh - *1 16 0.06 Portland, Me. - g0 34 o.OI Raleigh-— -3 33 o.OO Richmond - jg 35 o.OC St. Louis-• 75 65 1.04 San Antonio-— 48 0.58 San Francisco- m 44 0.00 Savannah -51 44 o.59 Seattle - 74 54 o.OO Tampa - 59 45 0.00 Vicksburg .- 4, 30 o.OO Washington - u 42 0 00 Wilmington —-- — *7 / / GOVERNMENT PLANS SALE OF PIPELINES TO PRIVATE FIRMS (Continued from Page One) Philadelphia relinqry area. It cost >78,500,000 and has a capacity of 100,000 barrels of crude oil a day. The little Inch extends 1,475 miles iroin the Texas Gulf coast to the tfew York area. A 20-inch line, it :a capacity of 235,000 barrels of gasoline a day and cost $67,300,000. SPA said all segments of the petroleum industry, including small independent operators, will be giv en an opportunity to acquire the lines. Should it prove impossible to sell the lines, "cinsideration will be given to the possibilties of lease,” the report staged. Another possibility cited by SPA is conversion to natural gas. How ever, the agency said this would be done "only if it proves impos sible to keep the lines in petroleum service and the national security is otherwise adequately protected.” ‘‘From the purely economic sandpoint of comparative costs,” SPA reported, ‘‘there appears to be no reason that the Big Inch should not continue in service for which It was built in competition with tankers and any other form of transportation.” This also is true of the Little Inch, it was added, except that it is “in a less strong position in rela tion to tankers.” TAFT TERMS TALK "LEFT WING1SH” (Continued from Page One) legislation would get early attention and a suggestion from Senator Johnson (D.-Colo.) that Mr. Tru man do more about strikes himself. Taft said the measure Mr. Tru man proposed, which would halt strikes while fact-finding boards look into labor disputes, was hast ily drawn and contained no princi ples of any kind. He added: ‘‘One thing is certain. The Presi dent’s bill will not prevent strikes, and no one has found a way to pre vent strikes, except Mr. Stalin. If you can only prevent strikes by a g.neral plan of compulsory wage arbitration, which leads inevitably to a government fixing of wages and prices, then I am not in favor of prohibiting strikes.” The Senator took the position that the President had attacked the Democratic party, not Congress Answering Mr. Truman’s com plaint that Congress had been ‘‘dis tressingly slow” on domestic legis lation, he said Democrats outnum bered Republicans in both Senate and House, have more members on committees, and: ‘‘The speed with which bills are considered and acted upon by com mittees is almost entirely in the control of xxx Democratic chair mo ii. • i But hfr'said the Democratic party was hopelessly split between those who follow the CIO-Political Action Committee program on every issue and th^se who think progress must be made within the American sys tem (fi constitutional government and free enterprise. The /President, he said, had chos en to. follow the CIO-PAC on every economic measure except the fact finding proposal for controlling strikes. Rail the Democrats and most Re publicans in Congress disagree with that course, Taft asserted. ‘iHe had this to say about some of tlfe measures the Chief Executive had.singled out for special attention test night: v , . I More pay for the unemployed. The President wants to “Federal ize” unemployment.” A so-called “full employment” bill. “The proposal came directly from the Soviet constitution, the Communist platform, and from the CIO.” The President can do every thing without the bill he could do with it. But he said Mr. Trumsn tried to put Congress on record as requiring the chief executive “to submit vast programs for the ex penditure of Federal money when ever some crackpot economists thought there might be unemploy ment.” Continued rent and price control. “While the President denounced inflation, he is promoting the great est peacetime inflation this country has ever seen, first by lavish spend ing of government money, and sec ond by promoting a general in crease in wages rnd salaries. All the price control in the world can’t hold orices against those policies.” Taft called Mr. Truman’s recom mendation ’for Federal healt’- in v’. Obituaries OLIVER L. FORMYDUVAL TABOR CITY, Jan. 4.—Oliver L. Formyduval died Thursday after noon at 4 o’clock at his home at Nakina. He was born November 2, 1877, the son of the late Vance and Mary Gore Formyduval. Funeral services were held this afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Paly mare Baptist church with the Rev. O. B. Hardwick officiating. Inter ment was in Ross cemetery. Surviving are the widow, the former Miss Mattie Jacobs; five daughters, Mrs. W. A. Westbrook, Wiston-Salem, Mrs. T. H. York, Goldsboro, Mrs. W. P. Horton and Mrs. H. D. Best, Whiteville and Mrs. W. M. Ray, Tabor City; one sister, Mrs. Belle Ward, Nakina; and five brothers, S. C., G. D , and W. C. Formyduval, all of Old Dock, M. L Formyduval, Shallotte, and J J. Formyduval, of Hallsboro. B. R. STANLEY Benjamin R. Stanley, 59, who died yesterday of a heart attack while working at a carding ma chine in Spofford Mills, will be conducted Monday morning at 11 o’clock at Yopp Funeral home with the Revs. C. E. Brisson and C. C. Myers officiating. Interment will be in Spofford cemete/y. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Eana Stanley, three daughters, Mrs. Charles Watts, Mrs. Ida Riv enbark and Mrs. Edna Davis; two son, Wilson Stanley and Emory Stanley, and seven grandchiltjren. MRS. EFFIE ESTELLE WIGGS Mrs. Effie Estene Wiggs, 42, 705 South 17th street, died Thursday night at 9:20 o’clock in Raleigh. Surviving are her husband, Wal ter R. Wiggs, two daughters, Mrs. Geraldine Thornton and Mrs. Frances Day, Las Vegas, Nev.; two sons, Walter R. Wiggs, Jr., Wrightsville Beach, and Donald C. Wiggs, and two grandchildren. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Yopp Funeral home. CARL ELWOOD ROGERS Funeral services for Carl El wood Rogers, 26, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rogers, Seagate, who died Thursday afternoon in Ral eigh will be held this aftemcon at 3 o’clock from the home in Sea gate with the Rev. J. E. Allard officiating. Interment will follow in Seagate cemetery. Active pallbearers will be George Larson, Jr., Linwood Rogers, J. B. Parker, Herbert Millikin, Jr., Min or Bishop and Luke Hines. Honorary pallbearers will be Ben Hewlett, Graham Butler, W. J. Horne and W. J. Bennett. Survivors, in addition to the par ents, Include a brother, Woodrow Rogers, Seagate; two sisters, Mrs. A; B. Powlas, Seagate, and Mrs. George O’Brien, Chicago, 111, POISSON REPORTED FAVORED FOR POST BY SENATOR HOEY Wilmington Star-Newa Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.—Usually reliable sources reported here yes terday that Fred Poisson, Wilming ton ABC board member, is favor ed by Senator Clyde R. Hoey of North Carolina for appointment as collector of customs at Wilming ton. The senator himself, who Is at his home in Shelby for the holi days, has made no public commit ment for or against any of several candidates mentioned for the post. Col. John Bright Hill of Wil mington, appointed for a four-year term in the spring of 1941, has released to the press a statement contending that he is still the col lector on military leave without salary, as he was called Into the Army in March, 1942, and so would have three years more to serve; but persons favoring a change maintain that his term expired last year. Civil Service appointees have substituted for the collector during the last four years. Whiteville Postoffice Gets Class 1 Rating WHITEVILLE, N. C., Jan. 4.— <JPi—The town of Whiteville today became the first community of comparable size in eastern North Carolina to be accorded a first class postoffice rating. Postmaster A. E. Powell, Sr., said the office had met require ments for first class rating with total receipts of more than $40,000 in 1945. New Whiteville Bank Gets Off To Good Start WHITEVILLE, N. C„ Jan. 4.— (JF) —At the conclusion of the first day of operation for the new First Nat ional Bank here, C. Bion Sears, cashier, reported deposits of more than $500,000. The bank, recently charted and approved by the state banking com mission, has an authorized capital stock of $100,000. The bank’s official opening today was accompanied by a reception attended by banking officials from all sections of the state. Bill Hooks is president, and Lee Braxton chairman of the board. R. L. Sholer and S. L. Fuller are vice presi dents. surance “socialized medicine” and asked: “Can anyone be surprised that there is some delay in enacting such a left wing Communist pro posal?” Finally, he said, the President had made many other recommen dations without “the slightest evi dence that he cares how much they will cost or whether enough money can be raised to pay for them.” RAIL UNION CALLS STRIKE ON FRISCO (Continued from Page One) threatened strike materializes as scheduled, wherein half the work ers in the industry would be on strike and the other half would continue their employment.” The AFL union called a confer ence for Jan. 11-12 in Chicago and secretary - treasurer Patrick E. Gorman said the international of ficers would recommend a work stoppage “unless we get something considerably better than the 7 1-2 cents an hour increase” offered by the Swift and Armour packing companies Jo the rival CIO union. Besides some 400,000 already idle in strikes and 335,000 involved in the threatened meat strike, 700,000 CIO steelworkers are scheduled to quit work Jan. 14 and 200,000 dO electrical workers at a date not yet determined. Joseph A. Beirne, head of the In dependant National Federation of Telephone Workers has urged 260, 000 telephone workers to go on a sympamy sume wmai lie esumai ed would affect 450,000 Bell Tele phone workers. He urged the tele phone to support a strike in West ern Electric plants in New York and New Jersey. The "AFL Commercial Tele graphers union announced a nation wide strike of 50,000 Western Union employes, scheduled for Monday, had been called off. The workers had voted in favor of acceptance of a revised WLB award giving them salary boosts averaging 12 cents an hour. Police said three persons, includ ing a woman, were injured in what they described as a clash resulting from an attempt of supervisors to breaks through a picket line at the Western Electric’s strike-bound Kearny, N. J. plant. A man indenti fied as a war veteran was reported injured at the company’s Passaic, N. J. plant, but accounts differed on what happened. Some 17,000 members of the independent West ern Electric Employes Association are involved in the strike at plants in New York city and New Jersey. In Washington, CIO President Philip. Murray announced after a three-hour strategy meeting of top union leaders that the entire Con gress of Industrial Organizations would give ‘‘every possible assist ance” to the CIO • United Auto Workers in the General Motors strike. SIX AWOL AMERICAN SOLDIERS ARRESTED FOR TRAIN ROBBERY HERFORD, Germany, Jan. 4. —(A5)—Six AWOiL soldiers were ar rested Jan. 1, it was announced to day, in a luxuriously furnished box car from which they are accused of having conducted large-scale train robberies and black market operations during the last 18 months. British troops, led by American officers, nabbed four of the gang a® they reclined on easy chairs with German girl friends. The oth ers were caught when they return ed in a jeep. The sextet posed as American Security Police, an official said, and contacted rail transport offi cers in British and American zones to arrange the coupling of food cars on trains. The loaded cars later were dropped off on sidings and the contents were sold, it was said. Names of the soldiers were not disclosed. Saratoga Springs Plans Month Racing Season ALBANY, N. Y„ Jan. 4.—(U.R)— Saratoga Springs, a racing mecca since before the Civil War, will have a four-week season this sum mer, ending a three-year war-time interruption, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey announced tonight. Purses and stakes will be dou bled by revenue from an additional two-week special meeting to be held by the Saratoga racing asso ciation at the Jamaica track prior to the opening of the Saratoga sea son. FARM INCOME RATIO LINCOLN, Neb. (U.R)—Nebraska’s state agriculture director, Rufus M. Howard, sees a seven-to-one ratio between farm and national incomes. In proof of his belief, Howard quoted U. S. Department of Com merce figures showing the farm in come to be $8,900,000,000 in 1921, against a national income of $62, 300,000,000; $11,700,000,000 against $84,100,000,000 in 1928, $6,400,000, 000 against $44,200,000,000 in 1933 and $21,000,000,000 against $150, 000,000,000 in 1943. TOWN BANS BILLBOARDS LA JOLLA, Cal. (U.R>—'The last advertising billboards in La Jolla were coming down today as the local Conservation Society complet ed removal of real-estate adver tisements. “No billboards allowed” will be the rule after that. Two large signs at north and south entrances to La Jolla will tell tourists that the ban is an effort to maintain the beauty of the community. DUPLICATE SERVICE HERE In Wilmington, members of the Greek Orthodox church plan similar services to be held in the church which will be the first Epiphany service in the new edi fice, the Rev. E. B. Papazisis, pas tor of the church said last night. Next year, services duplicating the Tarpon Springs services will be held here near a body of water, Father Papazisis said, adding that he hoped to have present one of the bishops of the Greek Orthodox church. 1 City Briefs PASTORS TO MEET With the Sunday school sup erintendents in charge of the program, the pastors of the Wilmington Baptist association will conduct their monthly meeting in the First Baptist church Monday morning at 10 o’clock. DISCHARGING CARGO The S.S. C.B. Watson arrived in port yesterday morning, docking at the Cape Fear Terminal at 9:30 o’clock. The small tanker is discharging her cargo at both the Cape Fear and Shell Oil company termin als. BIBLE CLASS MEETING The weekly meeting ' of the Men’s Bible class of St. An drews - Covenant Presbyterian church, located at Fifteenth and Market streets, will be held Sunday morning at 9:45 o’clock. Dr. J. E. Evans is the teacher. All men of the com munity are cordially invited to attend. JAYCEES PLAN MEET The regular meeting of the Junior Chamber of Commerce will be held Tuesday night at 7:30 o’clock at the y. M. C. A. Routine business matters will be discussed. BALL TRANSFERRED Pvt. Thomas Ball who has heeij stationed at the Camp Le leune base, has been transfer red to the local Marine MP of fices as investigator for the Le Jeune camp. GROCERIES STOLEN A quantity of groceries were taken from a caT belonging to S. C. Hill, 226 Calhoun Drive, Maffitt Village, yesterday. The car was parked in front of the Fourth and Chestnut streets open air market when the theft occurred. HEALTH BOARD TO MEET The regular monthly meet ing of the city-county board of health will be held next Thurs day afternoon at 3 o’clock in the offices of the health de partment. Routine matters will be discussed. Twenty-nine per cent of railway crossing accidents are caused by automobiles running into the sides of trains. F" South Ranks High In U. S. In. Educational Facilities —----4 (Continued from Page One) AMERICAN TRAVELER AT OUTFITTING PIER AT N. C. SHIPYARDS The S. S. American Traveler is at the outfitting pier of the North Carolina Shipbuilding company af ter being launched Thursday morn ing under the sponsorship of Miss Claire Arlene Nevins of New York. The sponsor was the 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Nevins. He is pier superintendent of the United States Lines, pur chaser of the vessel. Accompany ing the sponsor here in addition to her parents, was Mrs. E. F. Nevins, her grandmother. The S. S. American Traveler 237th vessel launched here, is a duplicate of several previous ships constructed by the North Carolina company for the U. S. Maritime Commission and the United States Lines. -It is expected that she will be delivered to her owners^in Feb ruary, ready for the North Atlantic freight service. <KIDNAPPEE> TURNS OUT TO BE BRIDE OF HER ‘ABDUCTOR’ Bessie Elizabeth Jones, 16-year old daughter of Mrs. William Jones of New Bern, “kidnap” vic tim, has been found, and lawyers representing both sides were en gaged in a discussion yesterday afternoon over charged filed by Mrs. Jones that her daughter had been kidnapped. Miss Jones was apprehended in Norfohrj Va., Friday morning and produced a marriage license which had beep issued Thursday night to her and Raeford Weaver 18, a sailor, whom the girl’s mother had charged with kidnapping. Returned to New Bern yesterday afternoon, the girl declared her intention of remaining the wife of the sailor, ller mother, declining to drop the complaint, said she wanted Weaver and 34-year-old Thomas Willim Jones prosecuted. - ” ■ • ’ ■ ■». : The human body is so consti tuted that it functions best at tem peratures of 60 to 70 degrees for those who wear civilized clothing, and at somewhat higher tempera tures for unclothed people. advantage with 43 cent of the na tion’s total. Myrick's figures show that there are 189 Southern schools as against 244 for the rest of the country. Going further, Myrick says that persons who have decried lack of college and university education for the Negro in the South, should know that of the 106 Negro institu tions of higher learning in the Unit ed States, 102 are located in the South. North Carolinians who have long battled for better elementary and secondary school facilities can take •• pride in the fact, also revealed by “The State”, that North Carolina ranks second in the nation in amount of school appropriations, led only slightly by New Mexico. So the next time some one from another section of this country twits you about “ignorant Southerners”, these figures should enable you to dispel one of the many popular but baseless beliefs about the South. Greenks Will Celebrate Age-Old Epiphany Rites (Continued from Page One) the blessing of the waters and the diving for a golden crucifix. The celebration Sunday will mark the 43rd year the divers and their families have observed the day. It is estimated 15,000 to 20,000 persons will witness the ceremony at Spring Bayou that symbolizes the baptism of Christ by John the Baptist in the river Jordan more than 1900 years ago. SURVEY START DISCUSSED Start of the survey of potential revenue and tonnage of North Carolina ports was discussed here yesterday by Arthur J. Bulger, vice president of the Frederick R. Harris- company, with stat* and local port leaders. During the day he conferred with Mr. Page, J. T. Hiers, executive agent of the Wilmington Port com. mission, and H. E. EWiyd, secretary of the Wilmington Port commis sion. Early indication* are that the groundwork for the beginning of the study will be laid by the time final decision on the grant is made by FWA authorities in Washing ton. - - - - ■ Ray Recommends Approval Of Ports Survey Advance (Continued from Page One) Robert company in turn, has made arrangements with the Frederick R. Harris Engineering corporation, of New York, to carry out the de tails of the survey. In announcing filing of the ap plication, Mr. Page stressed that the survey would include all North Carolina ports and would not be centered on any special one. All efforts, he said, to advance North Carolina’s ports depend on the grant of $90,000 for the survey In the event it is not granted, the Authority will be under no obliga tion to either the Robert or Har ris firms as the preliminary ex penses of their work will be ad vanced by the federal government. Their surveys will include thorough studies of North Carolina's po-[ tential tonnage and revenue, In cluding those out-of-state areas in Virginia and South Carolina with in its ports’ service areas. They will also determine the amount of money needed to construct proper port facilities to put North Caro lina on a par with other Atlantic seaboard states in bidding for com merce. 9 If the grant is made and the sur vey completed, the Authority’s next step will be to obtain the nec essary funds to carry out its pro gram of port development and im provement. Under terms of the act under which it functions, this may be done by either a direct grant from the federal government or through the Reconstruction Fin ance Corporation or through the sale of self liquidating bonds. — FOR — CORRECT TIME CALL 2-3575 — FOR — Correct Jewelry VISIT The JEWEL BOX Wilmington’s Most Popular Jewelry Store io Relieve Coughs-Aching Muscles si*“ ot * cold-the Quin imml rh,eSts' thrt>ats and backs are immediately rubbed with Musterole. cou7^t*r0le i™tantlV 'tarts to relieve of onu S°Te throat and aching muscles Pi" actually helps break up ^easier GreTf011- MakeS breath‘ * ler~ Great for grown-ups, too! I DURING WAHL'S JANUARY CLEARANCE AT PUT ON LAY-AWAY FOR NEXT SEASON NO ADDED CHARGES - FREE STORAGE Every fur coat in this sale grpup is styled in the very latest manner. Huge, generous sleeves with turn back cuffs. New back fullness. Tuxedo fronts, tie fronts and regular. Lengths most becoming to your stature. Fur prices will be no lower in ’46, and the: savings are too great to go unheeded. Select , the fur of your choice now—make a reasons' e down payment —balance arranged in payments to suit your convenience. 9 204 N. a' RONT ST. DIAL 9567 OR 2-1823 ; . . .in——mi 4 S
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Jan. 5, 1946, edition 1
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