Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 8, 1946, edition 1 / Page 7
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d Gets Charter; 11 Meeting Is Planned Wilmington Chapter, Re 0{ficers Association of the ^ gtates, has received its ^ cr from the national head of the organization, it was \^ced last night by Colonel vj Corbett, president of fit' ,local chapter. * Wilmington group, composed «n mcr officers of ■ the armed residing in New Hanover, \jck, Columbus, Pender and n counties, was organized re by Colonel John Bright Hill, |i1., of tne North Carolina ^artiment. Reserve Officers as f'f'fare now being made for a P"L of the local chapter with % next few weeks. ,cTERANS move to halt terror acts (Continued From Page One) ,in„ salaries to law enforce nt'officers and other employes Pte town, which has a popula ■on of 7,°°0. , discussing the woes of the sheriff Henry said ex-service who took over county affairs ;:VE an we want at this time. f;d0 not stand for removing of by force and we used force j.'v after we were denied an and free election._ jpu ha''e been paying $15.00 fa jour COLD WAVE Perma kjb at a beauty salon, try this to il). Go to any cosmetic or notion counter and buy a Charm-Kurl Supreme COLD WAVE kit. It’s Moratory tested. Then, follow the easy instructions. In 2 to 3 hours you’ll get the thrill of your life. save TIME! save money WITH THE NEW The new Charm-Kurl Supreme Cold Wave home kit gives you a COLD WAVE at home which compares with any professional COLD WAVE costing np to f15.00. It’s heatless machineless—takes only 2 to 3 hours, yet your lovely, natural looking curls and waves will "stay in” for months and months. Ideal, too, for children’s hair and so economical. Satisfaction guaranteed or money back Each Charm-Kurl Supreme Kit con tains everything needed to give your self a glamorous COLD WAVE. For Sele to Drug Stores, Cosmetic and Notion Counters. TINE SCHEDULE NO. 8 CANCELLING TINE SCHEDULE NO. 7 URBAN BUS SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 9. 1946 , WEEKDAYS ' SUNDAYS Leave Leave Leave Leave Leave !..mngton Northern Beach Wilmington Northern Beach Extension (Lamina) Extension (Lumina) *6:05 AM 6:15 AM 7:00 AM 6:80 AM 7:45 AM 8:30 AM 6;lo AM 7:00 AM 8:30 AM 9:15 AM 6:45 AM 7:33 AM 7:25 AM 9:15 AM 9:50 AM 10:00 AM •:15 AM 8:00 AM 10:00 AM 10:45 AM 7:45 AM 8:37 AM 8:30 AM 10:45 AM 11:30 AM 6:15 AM 8:55 AM 11:30 AM 12:15 PM ”•45 AM 9:30 AM 12:15 PM 12:50 PM 1:00 PM 6:25 AM 10:00 AM 10:15 AM 1:00 PM 1:45 PM 16:15 AM 11:00 AM 1:45 PM 2:20 PM 2:30 PM H:00AM 11:47 AM 11:40 AM 2:30 PM 3:05 PM 3:15 PM 11:45 AM 12:30 PM 3:15 PM 4.:00 PM 12:30 PM 1:05 PM 1:15 PM 4:00 PM 4:45 PM 1:15 PM 2:00 PM 4-45 PM 5:30 PM -:00 PM 3:00 PM- 2:45 PM 5:30 PM 6:15 PM 2:45 PM 3:30 PM 6:15 PM 7PM "•'15 PM 4:00 PM 7:00 PM 7:^ PM "'45 PM 4:30 PM 7:45 PM 6:30 PM 4:15 PM 4:50 PM 5:00 PM 8:30 PM PJJ 4:45 PM 5:30 PM 9:15 PM 9:50 PM 40:00 PM a:15PM 6:00 PM 10:00 PM ^ PM ^:45 PM 6:35 PM 6:30 PM 11:30JPM 12:05 AM ,5 PM 7:00 PM 7:00 PM 7:45 PM I'4° PM 8:20 PM 8:30 PM °:'10PM 9:15 PM 1:15 PM 10:05 PM 10:00 PM 6:00 PM 10:45 PM U :30 PM 12:05 AM eaving from Wrightsville Sound JTE: The following trips from Wrightsville Beach to Wilmington operate over the Old Shell Road by Rogersville and Seagate to Highway No. 74 except Sunday. 6:30 AM 7:25 AM 11:40 AM 2:45 PM Ihe following trips from Wilmington to the Beach operate over the above route: 2:45 PM 6:15 PM 10:00 PM Safeway transit company Large Expansion Program Is Started By Star-News (Continued From Page One) it will be carried out by experts it expected to be completed and the press placed into opera tion early in November. The high speed, octuple type Goss press will have a canacitv of 72,000 ten, twelve, fourteen^r sixteen-page newspapers or circu -ars an hour. Its hourly production £™lt3L °? larger PaPers will be 18,000. It is arranged in a man ner to print a maximum of five colors. 1 The press is 40 feet, three inches -ong, eight feet, six inches wide and eight feet, ten inches high and weighs 165,000 pounds. It will be operated by a 100 horsepower motor. Modern Press RoOm Altogether, the equipment will give the Star-News one of the most modern press-rooms in the south. Not only will it meet the present needs of the newspapers but their future expansion will of fer no problem in this depart ment of production. The program will also include installation of a conveyer system from the press to the mailing room and other improvements in keeping with the general moderni zation effort. As the press facilities are en larged, the production of the com posing room will also be increas cd with the addition of two new linotypes, at a cost of $15,000, to bring the total number to nine. They have been on order for the past several months and delivery is anticipated within the near fu ture. New type will also be ob tained as soon as the manufactur ers can promise delivery. Included in the long-range pro gram is construction of a mez zanine on the second floor of the building. According to present plans, this will extend from the elevators in the Murchison build ing to the entrance to the present News and Advertising departments. Estimated to cost $15,000, work on this section of the general project will be undertaken as soon as building priorities and materials can be obtained. Leslie N. Boney, Jr., of the firm of Leslie N. Boney and Sons, architects, is architect for this project. He also prepared the plans for the pressroom addi tion to the annex. The costs of new building, to gether with the value of the equip ment and expenses of installation brings the total for the program to $285,195. Page pointed out that the ex pansion and improvement is but the beginning of greater growth of the newspapers within the coming years. The mezzanine will be oc cupied by the Business and Ad vertising departments and will permit needed expansion of the composing room. This re-arrange ment in space will, in turn, pro vide a greater area for the News department. • As an example of the papers’ growth, the publisher cited the large increase in employment, ex clusive of carriers, effected since i 1941. In that year, the maximum i number of employes was 66, on Friday, Aug. 30, the number was 110. As the staffs of the various departments have been enlarged, their functions have also been in creased. The five-year period has seen the re-opening of the En graving department to provide larger and faster pictorial serv ice. The microfilming of die files of the News and Star, the latter North Carolina’s oldest newspa per, was a modernization project carried out earlier this year and provides the most modem method of maintaining these files, not only for the benefit of the newspaper but the interested public. ROYALL PRAISES LOCAL AIRPORT (Continued From Page One) The Secretary of State has done a remarkable job, Royall said. Royall said he was glad to be back, in Wilmington—“although I am not there yet.’’ he added. He ■=aid he maintained a cottage at Wrightsville Beach some years ago but had not visited the resort in recent years due to the pressure of business and the war. The former Goldsboro resident came to Wilmington to speak be fore a gathering of the North Caro lina Food Dealer’s association in the Ocean Terrace hotel, W’rights ville Beach, Monday night at 7:30 o’clock. He and Mrs. Royall will be the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Har grove Bellamy at their Wrights ville Beach residence over the week-end. Flying Royall’s private plane were Capt. Frank Schwikert, pi lot, and Captain W. E. Yeats, co pilot. Urgent Call Issued For Donor Of Blood Mrs. Katie Ganey, 815 1-2 North Fourth street, issued an appeal last night for a blood donor—type 4-0—to give a trans fusion to her son Frank, a Wilmington plumber, who is seriously ill in James Walker Memorial hospital. Mrs. Ganey said the transfu sion must be given by Monday morning, according to her son’s attending physician. A check with the hospital disclosed that the blood requested is of an ordinary type but that no plas ma is available in the institu tion’s blood bank. imposFmartial LAW ON GREEKS (Continued From Page One) way to defend her is, first, to over throw the present government for a form of government which would represent the people,” Demetrios Partsalides, general secretary of the EAM, said. “We could not defend our terri torial integrity by war. The only way is to establish a government representative of the people which will be friendly to all powers." FOOD DEALERS TO MEET HERE TODAY (Continued From Page One) leigh; WBT, Charlotte, and other stations. A dance, with music furnished by Bill Grassick and his Orchestra will conclude the second day’s ac tivities. The final day of the convention will be called to order at 10:30 o’clock Tuesday morning with the president presiding. The session will be highlighted by a talk to be given by Mrs. R. M. Kiefer, secretary of the Na tional Association of Retail Gro cers. Her subject will be "What About Tomorrow?’' In her talk she will outline the need for greater sales manship and greater efficiency of operation and the problems and changes which the food retailer must now consider if he is to be successful in the future. Mrs. Kiefer, whose work keeps her constantly in close touch with more than 60,000 independent re tail food merchants as well as government agencies and officials, will point out that opportunity in the United States today and in the future, is unlimited for those with imagination and the willingness to work. An address by George W. King will precede the election of of ficers and reports of committees. The 1947 convention site will also be chosen during the morning ses sion. The afternoon will be turned over to pleasure with the ^legates enjoying the water facilities of the resort. State officers and di rectors will meet in the conven tion hall at 2:30 o’clock. A second banquet will be held Tuesday night at 7 o’clock with J. E. L. Wade, member of the Wilmington City Council, acting as toastmaster. Penny will be introduced by J. LeRoy Allen, of Raleigh, a nv.m ber of the resolution’s committee. A grand ball will follow the pres entation of a loving cup to the group having the largest attend ance. In charge of arrangements —all are of Wilmington — for the affair are J. C. Parker, Jr., chairman; Roebuck, Miss Elizabeth Bate, R. Konig, W. D. Hewitt, N. W. Humphrey and Marshburn. State convention committees in clude; Resolutions — O. A. Swaringen, of Concord; Allen, of Raleigh; J. BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS TUBULAR STEEL De Luxe TRICYCLE Immediate Delivery $29-95 METAL SADDLE Leather Saddle $1.50 higher In North Carolina Add 8% Sales Tax • 16-inch Front Wheel • 1% -in. Puncture Proof, Semi Pneumatic Tires • Ball Bearing in Wheels and Bicycle-Type Pedals • Bicycle Type, Spring Saddle Seat —Adjustable for Various Ages and Sizes • Red and White Baken-on Enamel One of the Prettiest Tricycles on the Market FOR YOUNGSTERS 3 TO 8 GEO. RIDGE APPLIANCE CO., 713 N. MAIN ST., HIGH POINT, N. C. Here is my check or money order. Please ship a De Luxe Tricycle by express to: Name. Address. City.State. iffll See... Ike New FALL and WINTER CATALOG al our Catalog Sales Dept. Hundreds of wanted Hems at Sears Lou/ Prices Stop in Today and See from the Newest Catalog The Things You Want and Need! Remember you can also phone your order . . . Just telephone for any Merchandise in Sears Catalogs or Circulars. The Salesgirl will be happy to take your order for you and have it shipped direct to your home. SHOP AT SEARS CATALOG SALES DEPT: j 307 No. Front St. Wilmington, N. C. Dial 2-2621 _ . __ W. Cole, of Burlington and C. Brown Ketner, of Kannapolis. Nominating — Roebuck, of Wil mington; D. C. Staton, of Char lotte and John B. May, of Ashe ville. Auditing — John Dailey, of Dur ham; J. A. Reid, of Charlotte, and May, of Asheville. Sergeant-at-arms — Marshburn, Ernest L. Rogers, of Wilmington; Walter Tat, of Greensboro and C. M. Kiser, of Charlotte. Legislative — Allen; J. C. Mc Lauchlin, of Charlotte; W. T. Harris, of Charlotte; E. J. Angelo, Winston-Salem; May; S. W. Horne, of High Point; Walter Tate, of Greensboro; M. C. Murphy, of Louisburg; W. R. Dorsett, of Ra Hooks Cop’s Wallet and Badge PITTSFIELD, Mass. — <UJ» — Charles E. Newton of Pittsfield caught no fish when he went fish ing in Pontposue Lake, but he did catch a policeman’s wallet and badge lost in 1934. leigh; R. P. Covington, of Char lotte; Cleveland Bailey, of Dur ham and N. J. Covington, ef Charlotte. PLANT PEONIES NOW is time. Special offer by nationally-knows World’s Fair landscape gardener. Finest select tion reds, whites, pinks. Assorted, 6plants $1.50; 12for $2.50. Cash orders prepaid, or sent C.O.Dl plus charges. Return at once if not satisfied. Free planting instructions included. Also gives with $2.50 orders, “Million Dollar'’ Mystery Bloom Peony, $1.00 value. OWEN NURSERY# Dopt. sr-177 .Bloomington, Ilk Clip this. Anchor Hardware Co/s * HARD-TO-GET HOUSEWARES GARDEN HOSE 25-ft. _3.95 50-ft__7.95 Pitcher and 6 Glass Orange Juice Set Set_1.98 Burn-Proof Ironing Board Covers 8.95 GARBAGE PAILS Galvanized 1.95 All Aluminum 2.95 FOOD CHOPPERS FRYING PAN* All Sizes 39c up STEAM IRONS 1.98 pair BRASS ANDIRONS Set _ 32.50 China Dinner ware 92-piece aet_09.00 TENNIS RACKETS 6.95 to 13.95 mm Novelty Table LAMPS 7.95 up BABY PLAY PENS 13.96 r \saaS' Clothes Line & Pins Line_39c, 25 ft. Pins_15c doz. IRONING CORDS with Snap on Switch 1.25 Zinc or Glass ! WASH BOARD* 1.26 OIL DUST MOP HEADS 1.75 _ Enamel TOUCH-UP PAINT Quart_ 1.15 Metaff BROOM RAKES 1.79 Stainless Steel SILVERWARE SETS 14.95 Wrought Iron MAIL BOXES 5.95 Stainless Steel SCISSOR# 39c up 2-burner HOT PLATES (Chrome or Enam el) 17.60 Fire-Place SCREENS 9.75 and 17.50 Durable FREIGHT TRUCKS 13.95 * . . and hundreds of other new and unusual houseware! are to be found in our modern new store! ANCHOR HARDWARE CO. Corner Front and Dock Sts. Dial 5048
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 8, 1946, edition 1
7
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