CHURCHILL G IS ROUSING WE :OME '(Continued from Page One) paen were forbidden to photograph. The weather in the Washington area was so bad that for a tune it was feared he would have to fly ! i on to New York. Tnraultons Welcome A big crowd gave him a tumul tuous welcome. Fleet Adm. William D. Leahy, 1 chief of staff to the President, and the British Ambassador, Lord Hali fax, were waiting for Churchill as he stepped from the plane. Stanley :! Woodward of the State depart ' ment, greeted him in behalf of Secretary of State James F. i Byrnes. Military police attempted to hold , the crowd at a distance but were unsuccessful. When Churchill ap j peared the throng set up a roar, ducked under guard ropes and ! swarmed around him. Lady Halifax became separated | from her husband in the crowd. “My, My,” Churchill chuckled |! as he’ shouldered his way to ! Leahy’s car. Leahy drove him and the Am bassador to the British Embassy. Churchill, who is vacationing with his wife at Miami, was ac companied by his Florida host, Col. Frank W. Clarke. They left i Miami at 11 a. m., (EST). No one was on hand to see them off. Mrs. Churchill stayed behind. He will fly back to Miami, to morrow. Plans Plane Trip Churchill is scheduled to address me student body at Westminster College, Fulton, Mo., on March 5, a-i plans to fly there with Mr. "Taman who will introduce him. (Vi oeo mil one an. reared to be the surface reason f:r bis visit. It was speculated, bcwever. that he and the Presi dent bad affairs of state to talk ( over although Churchill no longer represents His Majesty’s gov'ern He arrived on the eve of publica tion in Washington, London, and Moscow of the text of the year-old secret pact made at Yalta giving Russia the Kurile Islands, the 1 south half of Sakhalin island and other territorial and economic ad I vantages formerly held by Japan, i Causes Furore The agreement was one of sev i eral sub-rosa understandings neg otiated by the late President Roosevelt. As each came to light ; there was considerable furore in I Congress and the press. The lat est—the Kurile compact—brought from Byrnes the statement that there are no other secret arrange ments stemming from the Yalta conference. Byrnes disclosed to a recent press conference that he had no advance knowledge of the Kurile 1 commitment. He also said that so far as he knew Mr. Truman was ignorant of it when he took office. The Churchill-Truman meeting is their first since the Big Three Potsdam conference last July. That was Churchill’s last Big Three appearance. His govern ment was replaced by the Attlee Labor regime while the parley was underway. Invited By Truman The President invited Chufchill to fly here after he had to cancel his own plans for a two-week cruis ing vacation off the Florida coast. The Embassy said that the ob ject of Churchill’s visit was to dis cuss the Westminster speaking en gagement. Mr. Truman plans to fly Church ill to Fulton in his private plane, the Sacred Cow, weather permit ting. Contrary to popular belief, the cocky rooster serves no useful purpose to the flock except in the propagation of the chicken clan and really makes a dent at the feed hopper. looked A rine Limner; Then Threw It To Dog One lady recently stated that she used to throw her own dinner to the dog most of the time. It made her sick just to look at anything to eat. She was swollen with gas, full out and was badly constipated, of bloat, had headaches, felt worn Finally she got INNER-AID and says she now eats everything in sight and digests it perfectly. Bowels are regular and normal. She is enjoying life once more and feels like “some other woman” since taking this New Compound. INNER-AID contains 12 Great Herbs; they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on sluggish liver and kidneys. Miserable peo ple soon feel different all over. So don’t go on suffering! Get INNER AID. Sold by all drug stores here in Wilmington. STORIES CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE_ BUDS POPPING AT GREENFIELD (Continued from Page One) their beauty, come spring and departure of wild ducks for northern climes. Planting of thousands of azaleas, perennials and annuals during the 1943-144 fiscal year throughout the park was augmented this past fall and early winter with the planting of thousands more flowering specie and all are now thriving nicely and promise to add even further beauty to Greenfield. Ex tending from the Fourth street en trance to the park along the north ern and eastern shores of the lake for 2.6 miles, Wilmington’s “Azalea Trail” this year will pay off rich dividends in the form of pleasure for thousands of residents and more thousands who are expected to come and enjoy its great beau ty. Shows Results Extension of the “Azalea Trail from 13th street to the Negro swimming area, a distance of more than half a mile and embrac ing five and one-half acres, begun in 1944-45 will really begin to show results this spring and present in dications are that this section will rival the main section of the park, from a standpoint of color, come next month and azalea time. Improvements have also oeeu made to the shoreline on the Lake Forest side by filling in with earth, planting of shrubbery and laying out definite, shrub-lined pathways for the convenience of pedestrians. Through these added facilities, one may now follow pretty trails, all flower-bordered', from the foot of Jackson Drive, to the main park entrance at Fourth street. That Greenfield will prove more popular than ever this spring and summer is evidenced by the fore thought of Superintendent Snell and his staff in looking to the needs of prospective picnic parties. The “beach'’ section in front of the new bathhouse and pier has been groomed through the winter, wood has been cut and stacked near each of the five firep aces and pic nic areas around Greenfield Lake, and improvements added to the Negro picnic and swimming area on the southeast side of the lake. At all five picnic spots, ample room has been provided to take care of large family or small or ganizational picnic parties. Plant Backlog Despite the shortage of available labor during the early fall and win ter months, Paiks department per sonnel were able to complete most of the necessary work atGreenfield Park and with a backlog of plants, shrubs and bulbs to draw uppn from the city nursery at the park, the task of laying out and plant ing ne*- flowers and shrubbery, was carried out in a systematic manner and on schedule. Fertili zers were used where needed and as a result, all new plantings seem to be thriving, being of good color and with hardy stands. The beauty of Greenfield park reflects the untiring efforts of Dr. W. Houston Moore, chairman of the Greenfield Drive Association, Inc., on its behalf as well as the membership of the Wilmington Hotary club which has as its No. 1 project, beautification of Green field. Dr. Moore, for several J cal J, wwumiuugij his time to the planning and de velopment of Greenfiled park and especially to efforts on a behalf of a hard-surfaced drive around the entire 125 acres, which com prises the park proper. Rotary Active In this respect he has had the cooperation of Miss Allie Morris Fechtig, H. R. Gardner, Mrs. B. M. Jones, E. A. Laney, Mrs. D. C. Maffitt, Alan A. Marshall, Ear] Napier, Mrs. Carl Powers, Ber nard S. Solomon, John Spillman, Jr., J. E. L. Wade, Mrs. J. C. Williams and Louie E. Woodbury, Jr., all members of the Greenfield Drive association. Rotary club activities in behalf of Greenfield park have been car ried on by a committee headed by H. A. Marks and a report sub mitted last year covering work on the park project, won the com mendation of the district governor of Rotary. Upkeep and improvements at Greenfield park are financed from the city budget appropriation for parks, plazas and street trees and which amounted to $35,842.37 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1945. Today And Tomorrow (Continued from Page One) lously rich in oil; it is presides over by a cluster of weak states inhabited by peoples who are mis erably poor and largely illiterate The native states are so backward that, whatever the legal fiction, their rulers are now puppets, usu ally unruly puppets who play' off one empire against another for their own advantage and aggran dizement. There can be no hope of peace in the Middle East, nothing but conflict and intrigue which will undermine the peace of the whole world, unless the Big Three decide to look for a comprehensive settle ment which deals with all the ele ments of the problem at once. * • • That would mean a strategic agreement, an oil agreement, and an agreement to set in motion projects to raise the economic level of the region as a whole. The strategic problem is posed in the Italian treaty. The Soviet Union is asking for a trusteeship in Tripolitania. It is holding back on the award of the Dodecanese Islands to Greece. At the same time Marshal Tito in Yugoslavia is laying claim to Trieste, and is ex erting pressure on Greece which appears to be aimed at Greek Macedonia and Salonika. It is obvious that all of this adds up to a plan of the Soviet Union not only to open the Dardanelles but to become in the Eastern Medi terranean a great sea and air power. There is little doubt that this is what it means since the Russian post-war economic plan calls for heavy investmnt in naval power. It is necessary, therefore, to dis cuss naval armaments with the Russians. There is the real issue, of which Trieste, the Italian col onies, Greece, and the Dodecanese are only the external signs. We must ask the Russians to discuss with the British and ourselves the problem of sea power. Until we have an understanding on that, the Italian peace treaty, which is really a Mediterranean treaty, can not be written. * • • Nor can there be an oil agree ment. It is self-evident that the enormous oil reserves of the Mid dle East must be shared. They can not be monopolized. But it is impossible to share them unless there is strategic security. The United States, for example, can not depend upon oil supplies in an area to which it does not have assured access. Therefore, we too have an interest that the Medi terranean shall remain open to us at all times, and that will mean that we must take more than an academic interest in the strategi cal arrangements in that part of the world. It will mean in fact a three way negotiation instead of the present two-power conflict. A very different kind of settlement can be made to come of that than can possibly come out of Mr. Bevin’s trying to imitate an im movable object and Mr. Vishin sky’s trying to imitate an irre sistible force. * * • But arrangements about strate gic security and oil will not in themselves be enough. The whole region needs an infusion of new energy, and the rise of fresh hope amidst the dust and squalor of its antique life. Neither the British nor the Russians are at present able to infuse new energy: they have lost too much in the war to be able to provide this region with the capital and the technological guidance which are so necessary to it. Yet there is no prospect of any exit from the dreary circle of intrigue and tribal animosity and primitive rule except by a new ori entation. That can come only by great works of development which will make the desert bloom again, and give men something else to do, something else to think about, something better to hope for, than they have had in their long centu ries of exploitation and misrule. Copyright, 1946, New York Tri bune Inc. INDUSTRY’S LONG WAR NEARS END (Continued fiom Page One) rests with the Chief Execu tive. The boost is expected to apply only to carbon steel products. It would cover a wage increase of 18 1-2 cents an hour for Steelworkers. Return Next Monday A decision was foretast in time to enable U. S. Steel corporation and the United Steelworkers (CIO) to complete a wage agreement to morrow or Tuesday. Ratification by the union could be obtained by Thursday or Fridaj' and the doc ument executed to permit a re turn to work starting next Mon day. There was a possibiUty, however, that the corporation might reject the government’s official price commitment. In this event, some quarters believe the administra tion might then take steps toward seizure of the industry. Conversion Retarded The walkout has seriously retar j ed reconversion and is regard as the greatest threat to econo ic stabilization. Mr. Truman had asked his P cial steel fact-finding panel to re port for today but latest word that it would be delayed. Howeve , t ' M the three-man board was standing by with its findings. The panel has been asked to re main on the job until the strike is settled. If the walkout is ended by acceptance of Mr. Truman’s price and wage proposals, it Is unlikely that the panel report will ever be published. Porter To OPA Menawhile t h e authoritative weekly, Broadcasting, predicted that Paul A. Porter may relinquish the chairmanship of the Federal Communications Commission to head the Office of Price Adminis tration. Official Washington Sees Bowles On Top WASHINGTON, Feb. 10. — <£’> — Strategically placed persons said tonight they expected Chester Bowles to be set up as an auto nomous wage and price chief, di vorced from policy control by John W. Snyder’s Office of War Mobiliz ation and Reconversion. These persons, who would not be named but who included both government officials and non-of ficial political sources, said they believed President Truman would emphasize a decision to back Bowles in a strong hold-the-line policy by making these shifts. Administrative Changes 1. Moving Bowles up from Price Administrator to Stabilization Di rector, succeeding John C. Collet who would go back to his Federal judgeship. 2. Taking the stabilization office out of OWMR, which would in ef fect permit Bowles to report di rectly to the President. 3. Shifting Paul Porter from the chairmanship of the Federal Com munications Commission to head OPA. Works On Ceiling These reports of impending moves came as Collet put in his Sunday working on a new steel price ceiling. Steel prices pre cipitated the economic row that led up to the reported shifts in top personnel. They also have become the remaining major block in a settlement of the strike of 750,000 CIO-United Steelworkers. Officials are trying to get the price increase settled “as fast as they can,” it was said, and were hoping to report a plan to the in dustry tonight if possible. A pub lic announcement, however, may not comc until later. An increase of around $5 a ton is expected.' CIO President Philip Murray in dicated yesterday that he expected an early end to the walkout, U. S. Steel corporation officials were re ported to be in Washington. galpIn takes DIM FARM VIEW '(Continued from Page One) ing with a long-range eye into future markets, conserved its own timber holdings, Galphin said. “And so,” said Galphin, “it’s the old story: It’s the farmer who pays. He hired timber cutters, chopped his trees down, and sent them to the mill. After he paid the cutters and the transporters, he found he had little profit to show for it. The industry had his money and his trees, and all that was left to him was devastated woodlands full of tree stumps. “But he kept on cutting, convinc ed that he was helping his coun try win the war. And now, caught in a vicious circle, he keeps on cut ting, not knowing how or when to stop.” “Doing Our Part” It wasn’t so long ago, Galphin re called, when he found some men cutting down trees on his own farm without Galphin’s permission. When he asked them by whose leave they were destroying private property, the men replied: “The people said the government needs pulp wood mighty badly, so we’re doing our part.” The "people are the pulp wood people, according to Galphin. “And if they don’t stop fooling the farmer into giving them every twig he has, a huge proportion of our natural timber resources , will be lost for 30 years to come.” ALONGTfflTcAPE FEAR ’(Continued from Page One) means that a copy of the same Star you receive on your front porch before breakfast this morning will not be delivered to the Lynches until about Feb. 25, the regular mails requiring about two weeks to deliver newspapers from here to Alaska. It’s a long way, you know. About 5,000 miles. . However, everything being rela tive—consult Mr. Einstein on this one—the news about Wilmington the Lynches receive on the 25th of February will be just as new to them as it was to you this morning before breakfast. Anyway, how are you all doing up there in Anchorage, Mr. and Mrs. Lynch? How about dropping us a line and letting us know what goes on with a former Wilming tonian and a former Pennsylvanian way up there in the frozen North’ Any Eskimaux? How do you so about green vegetables’ Ts f meat situation up there as bad as it is here and do you eat caribous or is it cariboux’ "mous, We’d ^°^earfron^you all? the insect-kill pr ^mh Proves that i the little aseift not harmful to . ' HUe agents of Pollenization. k 1000 MPH SPEED SET FOR PLANES (Continued from Page One) like left-overs from the horse-and buggy days. , , Among the sights the writers were shown: A tunnel in which a plane wing was subjected to wind velocity of 1,000 miles per hour, with visual projection of the winds’ shock waves bending at angles 45 de grees over the leading edge of the wing. A bar of aluminum alloy com pressed longitudinally in a ma chine capable of applying 600 tons of pressure, in a test to determine structural weaknesses. The alloy, described as twice as strong as that used in today’s B-29 super fortresses, twisted when the pres sure reached 14,000 pounds, but snapped back to its original form when the pressure was reduced. A supersonic sphere for meas urement of air friction on model plane wings. Mechanism with which models will be fired from a gun at 1,400 miles per hour into a tank filled with Freon gas, the progress and performance of the model to be recorded by a combination of magic eyes and high-speed cam eras. This experiment is designed to determine lift, drag and stabili ty at transsonic and supersonic speeds. A plane model catapulated through space at 90 miles per hour and subjected to a strong updraft in a gust tunnel. These tests en able plane designers to learn what must be done to make aircraft less susceptible to gusts such as are encountered under certain meteor ological Conditions. a caxapmi wmcn smasnes a sea plane pontoon at 70 miles per hour against two-foot waves gen erated in a longpool known as an impact basin. Lessons learned here enable NACA scientists to devise improved' equipment for the Navy’s seaplanes. DR. EDWARD COX, RETIRED, DIES '(Continued from Page One) in the fall of 1931, and retired the following year. In addition to service in his parishes, he was active in Dio ceasean affairs. While in Eastern North Carolina, he organized ana was the first editor of the “MissioR Herald.” He was deputy to the 1913 General Convention of the church and deputy to the 1916 Convention. Dr. Cox was the author of two books, ‘‘Some Courageous Southern ers” and Southern Sidelights.” Survivors include his wife and a son, William Cox of Southern Pines. SPELLMAN READY TO FLY TO ROME ’(Continued from Page One) from St. Louis by plane at 12:55 p. m., (EST.) today and was met at LaGuardia field by Archbishop Spellman. The St. Louis Cardinal-designate said his plane was delayed at Columbus, Ohio, by a low ceiling and that he had stopped over night at Pittsburgh. Special prayers for the safety of the three Cardinals-d'esignate who will leave from New York, were said today at St. Patricks cathe dral. SMALL TO CURTAIL COSTLY BUILDING '(Continued from Page One) stinted support in achieving his goal of 2,700,000 new low-cost homes within the next two years. Small said that every facility, authority, assistance and backing of his agency is being thrown be hind the program and Bowles said Wyatt could count on OPA for full support in preventing “the kind of skyrocketing prices for materials we had after the last war.” Rep. Wright Patman, Democrat, Texas, proposed five amendments to his low-cost housing bill which he said w#uld give give Wyatt “the tools he needs” to get the program underway. MURDER CHARGE AGAINST WOMAN i '(Continued from Page One) lames Walker Memorial hospital. Doctors said a knife had pierced . ler left lung. . Child Throws Rocks Statements made by Mrs. Collins • ;o Acting Coroner E. L. Strickland ! ind investigating police, M. W. Willis and C. W. Wilson yesterday ' it police headquarters, indicated ' hat an argument which arose be ;ween the two women was the :ause of the tragedy.' j Mrs. Collins, the accused woman, ; laid that her niece, young Bobbie rean Grainger, came into the , ipartment occupied by the Graing- < ers and Mrs. Collins about 2:30 yesterday afternoon and complain ed that she had been struck by a rock thrown by Beulah Lee Bor deaux, 11-year-old daughter of the slain woman, as the two girls played in the public playground near their residences. “Figured” Trouble “I picked up a knife and went out, because I figured Mrs. Bor deaux would be trying to make some trouble,” the Collins woman told police. “I knew she had some knucks, and she had told me she had used them before.” Mrs. Collins told police she and Mrs. Bordeaux had never quarreled before and said they had been fair ly close friends for three months, the time she said she had lived near the Bordeaux. Mrs. Collins said that she went out to the playground and “scold ed” the Bordeaux girl, after which the young girl ran to her mother’s apartment. Called a "Liar” "In a few minutes Mrs. Bordeaux came out of her apartment and ac cused me of striking her daughter. I denied that. She called me a liar, and I said I wasn’t lying and could prove it by Bobbie Jean,” Mrs. Collins said. “Mrs. Bordeaux suddenly reached into her waist and I saw those knucks. At the same time I reached for my knife, up under my sweater, and when she struck at me I guarded off the blow and struck back,” Mrs. Collins said. “I didn’t know at the time whether the knife had struck her or not, she didn’t say anything, but turned around and walked into her apart ment, about 100 yards away. 1 walked back into my apartment and put the knife on the sink, then I saw some blood on it.”— _ — Metallic "Knucks” Tho lrnife tn whieh Mrs. Collins referred and which police are hold ing is a six-inch blade hunting knife. The “knucks” which police have and with which Mrs. Bor deaux was accused of having as saulted the Collins woman are metallic knucks, apparently made of lead. Acting Coroner Strickland said the knife, allegedly wielded by Mrs. Collins, cut a ten-inch gash in Mrs. Bordeaux’ left shoulder, en tering from the back, and pierced the lung._ Death, Strickland said, was caused by hemorrhage of the lung. A formal statement said “death resulted from a knife stab, at the hands of Mrs. Collins.” Child Witness So far as could be learned last night the sole witness to the stab bing was Mrs. Collins’ niece, 10 year-old Bobbie Jean Grainger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Grainger with whom Mrs. Collins and her two children lived. Acting Coroner Strickland, who said last night that no other wit nesses had yet been found, said Mrs. Bordeaux’ husband told him that he and his wife were upstairs when they learned of the trouble between the children. Wife Screams He said that his wife went down stairs after he told her to stay out of the children’s row. He said the next he knew he heard his wife scream and that he went down stairs and found her lying close to the house where she had attempted to walk. He picked her up and carried her into the house and laid her on a couch where officers found her shortly afterwards. Policemen M. W. Millis, and C. W. Wilson said Mrs. Bordeaux ut tered a few words after they ar rived. He said that when asked if she knew Mrs. Collins, she mumbl ed, “Yes, I knew Collins,’’ and became unconscious. Outwardly Calm In jail last night Mrs. Collins was reluctant to talk but appeared outwardly calm until asked if she had any children, at which point her voice faltered. She said she would not talk about the tragedy and remained silent when questioned concerning the events leading up to the fatal stabbing. However, about her personal life, she appeared eager to talk, except to answer questions regard ing her relatives or their where abouts. The accused woman told report ers she was born in Aynor, S. C., 30 years ago, that her mother died when she was 11 years old, that her father remarried but that he had since died. Mrs. Collins is Divorcee Ihe blue-eyed blonde, whose ap pearance would not indicate she is 30 years of age, said she was divorced from her husband Wallie Collins, ex-sailor, and that she mows nothing of his whereabouts, she .said she had been staying with ler sister and brother-in-law for toe past three weeks and that her >idest son was being sent to a ocal school. When asked where she lived be ore moving to Riverside apart nents she did not answer. After a >ause, she laughingly said later hat she would not tell because she might want to live there again day.” It was learned later bat she moved here from Galli um's Ferry, S. C. She said she ias a brother who also lives in Wil mngton. When asked if a picture might Je taken of her for the press she ■efused at first, but later half con sented, after she had had time to ix her face and hair. Later how rver she flatly refused to be photo traphed, saying: “No I’ve never been in jail be °re, and I don’t want a pitcure of ne in jail, printed in the paper.” Local aiqiUiorities said they had 10 previous record against Mrs. lollins. They disclosed that she will be photographed and finger printed this morning. Funeral arrangements for Mrs. Bordeaux will be announced by Yopp Funeral home. Besides her husband and chil dren, Mrs. Bordeaux is survived by her mother, Mrs. Addie Mal pass; two sisters, Mrs. E. R. May han and Mrs. Ralph Lewis, all of Wilmington, and two brothers; James, Maco, and Frank Malpass, Wilmington. RUSSIAN SEES POSSIBLE END '(Continued from Page One) sion proposal implied that British troops have contributed to a situa tion in Indonesia which is a threat to world peace. “Nothing has been shownt hat British troops have threatened world peace,” he declared. ‘‘His Majesty's government will not take that.” The British Secretary said he was “not going to allow to go unchallenged all 3orts of inferences being thrown at British troops.” Supports Britain Mahmoud Riaz, speaking for Egypt, supported Britain and the Netherlands in opposing a commis sion. Riaz said a commission w^ild “serve no useful purpose because the Dutch government was starting negotations with the Indonesian Nationalists.” CHARLESTON :0PS TEAR GAS MOBS '(Continued from Page One) City Detectives Herman R. Berk man and J. Kelly Miller placed a sailor under arrest in a restaurant on Market street, between Meeting and King streets. He was arrested after cursing the officers, they said. QUEEN MARY DOCKS WITH GI BRIDES three deep-throated blasts of wel come. “This don’t make me ’omesick, not arf,” said one in a Cockney accent. “That thing’s noise only reminds me o’ the factory.’’ The Queen Mary was the second ship to bring a large contingent of servicemen’s brides to America. The Argentina arrived last Mon day with 458 brides and 175 chil dren. Dial 2-3311 For Newspaper Service TOO FAT? Set SLIMMER this vitamin candy way Have a more slender, graceful fig ure. No exercising. No laxatives. No drugs. With the simple AYDS Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan you don’t cut out any meals, starches, potatoes, meats or butter, you simply cut them down. It’s easier when you enjoy delicious (vitamin fortified) AYDS candy before meals Absolutely harmless. In clinical tests conducted by medi cal doctors, more than lOO paraana lMt 14 «• IS lb«. avaraca la a few w**ks with AYDS Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan. 30-day supply of AYDS only 12.26. If not delighted with result-* MONEY BACK on wary first box. Phone FUTRELLE PHARMACY Phone 4422—4423 [Viel oiT Standard Oil "ESSOHEAT” g Oil Burner Service p Harriss Fuel Co. —that prior to the activities of the North Carolina Association for Wine Control, the North Carolina market was flooded with deletorious, synthetic, and substandard wines? —that today nothing you can buy is more carefully protected by law as to its purity and quality, than wine—sold in North Carolina? —that all Wine sold in North Carolina must meet the highest of standards set by the State ABC Board? —that the Wine Industry through the North Carolina Association for Wine Control is continuing its ac tivities voluntarily, to aid in the strict enforcement , of all State regulations and laws regarding the sale of wine? Public cooperation It requested in the observance at State and local laws and regulations designed to control the uses oI wine at a wholesome, healthful beverage of temperance and moderation. f NORTH CAROLINA ASSOCIATION FOR WINE CONTROL | 800 Southeastern Bldg., Greensboro. N. C. John W. Caffey, Director ”Dedicated to Law Observance and the Temperate Uses of Ww L—. ^ i NEW YORK FACING REAL DISCOMFORT ’(Continued from Page 0nt) from fuel restrictions »v»r severe than in wart ' '* of the AFL tugmen’s str ’ other millions in Philadeic^ the prospect of a transit tieua ^ Mayor William 0'D\ -.-er f" a possible "epidemic o; A-,?4 tory illness and disease” P a' ordered rigid rationing of y"d York’s fuel supplies. ° Aew The Board of Health said there was "a state of great ard t.c-A ing peril” to the health' of' city’s millions and direc’c.'1 se ? of any building which n ght h! needed as a hospital. housingfrogram GETS OPA SUPPORT (Continued from Page One) port of the Office of Price Admin, istr^on. Make Adjustments As you know, we are doing everything we can right now strengthen our controls on build:' materials and contractors' ser vices. At the same time, howeve we are making quick adjustment! I wherever they appear to be neces sary in order to get faster pr-oduc tion of a large volume of the ma terials which are in short supply. "I think you can assure builders and prospective home owners that they will be protected from the kind o4 skyrocketing prices for ma terials we had after the last war.” Jf The price chief said rent control « will be continued "as Jong as m, severe shortages threaten to p- I decent shelter out of the reach ci I veterans and others.” Reservations Now Open 1 * For YWCA Bingo Pari* Reservations for the benefit bridge and bingo party sponsored by the Blue Triangle club of the YWCA Business Girls which will be held Tuesday evening, are being made in the “Y” office, according to officials. Bridge tables will be set up in the parlor and library and the bingo tables will be placed in the game room. Proceeds from the evening's game will be used by the club to send delegates to the Business Girls Interstate conference which is scheduled to be held in Ashe ville, February 16 and 17. The public is invited to mahe reservations by phoning 2-8895, (3 Sevens & A Four The Heat Number) | David S. Harriss, Mgr. | I

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