i;j9—-Radio & Repairs
""”p>, ' ou Want Experts To
j’e :!r Your Radio?
n-; , : j ing it to us! We have
its and expert repair
to give you quick,
■ \XTEED Service!
. ' Know Radios.”
WILSON’S
Sales and Service
r , o St. Dial 7817
Howard Radio Co.
1027 S. THIRD
DIAL 4826
All w.-iRK GUARANTEED
j: Refrigeration and
Mice Service.
LAKE BROS.
-iA'astle Streets
^ghouse Dealer
Dial 2-2700
jjQ_;il Estate & Dealers
FOR SALE
- Gordon Road (10
• 'eared! 850 feet road
iron'.' Re.
\Y. M. HEWLETT,
REALTOR
5;e Hewlett or Mr, Herring
j;4 pr: cess St. Dial 7138
Acre Tracts
Ca. .c. Hayne Road Front
$750.00 Up
2. Cash—Bal. Terms
W. R. DAVIS
2-8545
j m S.a'pkins Neil S. Williams
H, t JOHNSON REAL ESTATE, 114
? ess street Office Phone 0118.
Re- 'iPi.ce Phone 6749
77.7~I 0 B U Y OR SELL REAL
•j- :e Sec L C- Brothers, 1017 Chest
nut Dial 4758
tv altV.i.t brown, real estate
Let ; sel for you Homes, business
•. uc::- or business. 2305 Market
street Dial 2-3227
•RILE REALTY CO- WE
are etnrpped to serve you.
tV~7!~7i E W LETT. REALTOR - BUY
sei.. rer' trade. 214 Princess street.
Dial 7138
r,:\.’ED PROPERTY WILL PAY
01- li Call Cape Fear Realty Company
2- 8545
.7 v77 EFFICIENT AND RELIABLE,
Ren: E;t te Service. List with us!
\V -;e Realty company. J E L. Wade,
Rea t. r . Princess street.
iI7~7u7R PROPERTY FOR SALE
Realty Co. 124 Princess
street D:a! 5233.
REAL ESTATE!
BUYING OR SELLING!
MARSHALL REALTY CO.
210 Princess Dial 2-1752
FT HIGHEST PRICES AND QUICK
:‘h Geo. A. Biddle, F-eal
D’aie. 21.3 Princess. D!.at 2-8.334.
RICHARD A SHEW
REALTY CO.
SALES A SPECIALTY.
213 Princess. Dial S-2160
FO;: 10P PRICES LIST YOUR REAL
•- •' 'e with W A McGirt. Realtor. 215
F ''’•<•£ss street
'■VL SEI.l. THE EARTH FOSTER-HL.L
■ > Co . 1:2 Princess street. Dial
mi
OCEAN REALTY ~CQ. SALES AND
• • a^s i" Odd Fellows Building. D13I
- J J Taylor, L. L Sa&ge.
153—Roofing'
Roof repairing and fainting.
-U1 wu:k guaranteed Concerete Wat «f
prHofii.o Co Di. J 2 2970
155—Seeds, Plants, Bulbs
H.OV.FH bulbs" LAWN GRASSES,
g ' ! garden tools end supplies.
T W Wood and Sons.
U IDS, SPRAYS SPRAY MATERIALS.
toi farm—garden— ia-vn.
< v. Si ed Co. Dial 6868.
- COMPOST SUITABLE
rubbery and gardens.
Lad, delivered. Dial 6083.
E>;1 ■ : 1 XOSCAPING - NURSERY
f:-'eens, flowering shrubs,
pecan and fruit trees,
imellias. Henderson &
_L.li iL2;. 2'1027 or 2-2403.
wo—Sit., Work, Wanted
IGHAPHER, experienc
part time -job. Phone
I ._
IlHd 'i rarssp0rtati0n. Storage
IN O GET MY PRICE.
Experienced men. L
T ansler. D’al 2-3384.
LONG DISTANCE HAUL
i nlize in any kind of
-■ cti.so furniture. C. D.
I—Phone 6395.
I ; , r °~ J HYDRICK
t;Yv : Drive, Maffitt Village.
- -General Hauling.
[ - Call -
: m Dial 2-2322. 1
k—_Yaffilt Soda Shop.
[^—Wanted
-L000 LBS. MISTLETOE.
. - Well berried. 15 cents
i; cred to Cavanaugh &
k-Llfl^sA. Rosehill, N. C.
k ■F-‘J TWO COPIES or STAR
r 1st. Bring to Star
b ■ • in Dept.
. RETURN load from
Va. November 1. Jones
Storage. Phone 4928
ft:; —
{ COUPLE DESIRES J OR
■ furnished apartment.
r pets. Phone 5235.
F1-anted to Buy, Rent
R.Vi'lL ' --
I - CIRCULATOR. MUST
b- ... _ tor Cali 2-2995.
f ■' ' ’ Y - OIL COOK STOVES.
b-~- ' irculators. Dial 2-3626
USED FISH SINK FOR
It C. Canady, Carrier 25,
E _ v.-ilmington.
S T 16 OR 20 GAUGE DOU
r—- ot gun. Call 2-0623.
L ■olmg 1,254,970 tons
L.j J°;‘ed through 15 United
[: 1 -Ports from seven areas
old during 1945.
! COPB. 1MC BY NEA SERVICE'. INC. T. M. BEG. U, S. PATTOFF.’/0~ Zt
111 find out who my husband is for, and vote for the
i other man—that way we’ll be fair to all the candidates!”
Five School Glee Clubs
List Festival Enteries
Five school glee clubs, according
to the City Recreation department,
will participate in the third annual
Harvest Festival, scheduled at
Pembroke Jones park for Wednes
day night.
In celebration of United Nations
Week, the glee clubs will pres
ent music and national songs of
member nations in the UN organi
zation.
Schools signifying their intentions
of participating in the Wednesday
night event and turning in a list
of their glee club members to date
are New Hanover High school,
Sunset Park, Forest Hills, and
Winter Park.
Personnel of the glee clubs is as
follows:
New Hanover High school:
Miss Mary Henri Woffe, director;
Mary Claire Bates, Betty Belcher,
Louise Bonham, Rachel Cameron,
Marjorie Nell Cagel, Geraldyne
Colkitt, Mary K. Davis, Anne Du
Rant, Doris Farrar, Myrtle Fu,
trelle, Gracie Gurganious, Mary
fVnne Hamilton, Jackie Hewitt,
Margaret Holmes, Martha Holton,
Brace Kelly, Carolyn King, Pricilla
Sung, Helen Preston, Maxine Prid
jen, Marianne Mann, Hilda Mat
rews, Beth Maynard, Flora Mc
[ver, Ruth Morrison, Maude Noe,
Marian Pantagis, Barbara Scott,
Uivan Seigler. Marian Sloan, Shir
ty Taylor, Mildred Thomas, Mar
guerite Todd, Harryette Vines, Bet
:y Yopp, Jane Smith, Patty Jones,
accompanist; Carlton Acree,
Pommy Batson, Jimmy Brisson,
Dowey Brookshire, Jimmy Brown,
Brooks Broome, Don Burnett, Jim
my Caudill, Jean Crawford, Hugh
Evans. David Godwin, Bobby Haas,
Raymond Haas, Carl Jenkins, Ed
Jewel, Robert King, Lynn Kirk,
2. F. Lewis, Jerry Lewis, Irving
Maynard, Bobby McKenzie, Bobby
Melton, Neal Partrick, Donald
Peterson, Bill Rhodes, Cecil
Rhodes, Emmerson Surels, Ray
spenser, Howard Tally, Ronnie
Walker, Carl Willis, Don Matthews
and Leslie Wilkins.
Changes Mind
CHICAGO, Oct. 20—VP)—An at
tractive, well-dressed young wom
an threw herself in front of a speed
ing Illinois Central electric surburb
?.n train Saturday night but changed
her mind in the midst of the appa
rent suicide attempt., flattened her
body between the rails and escaped
alive.
She ' suffered only apparent
bruises but her soldier companion
who watched the train pass com
pletely over her fainted.
Both fled without giving their
names after gasping witnesses re
vived the soldier with a glass of
water.
Clarence E. Shadow, an IC bag
gageman who witnessed the leap
from the platform of a south side
station, told Woodlawn police of the
incident.
Nun Beatified
VATICAN CITY, Oct. 20.—(£>)—
The French Nun Marie Therese De
Soubiran, founder of the Order of
Marie Auxiliatrice, was beatified
in solemn ceremonies at St. Peter’s
Sunday.
Thousands of persons — includ
ing pilgrims from France, Britain
and Italy and relatives of the nun.
who died in 1889 at 46 — witnessed
the rite. At the climax a portrait
of Therese ascending into heaven
was unveiled as hundreds of voices
chanted the "Te Deum’
Pope Pius XII arranged to come
later frcm Castel Gandolfo. his
summer residence, to venerate the
beatified nun at a ceremony to be
attended by representatives of the
diplomatic corps.
LADY ALEXANDER DIES
LONDON, Oct' 20—(A3)—Lady
Alexandrer, widow of the famed
actor-manager Sir George Alex
ander and often referred to^ for
nearly half a century as the “best
dressed woman in London”, died at
her home here Sunday. Her age
was not disclosed.
Winter Park school: Mrs. Lois
Bulkhimer, director; Sally All,
Lucile Barden, Mary Jane Birming
ham, Hazel Bonham, Christine
Eorneman, Freddie Butters, Sara
Coley, Marion Corbett, Sandra
Creech, Sarah Dudley, Elsie Far
less, Harriet Gallup, Mary Alden
Gallup, Edith Hales, Annie Lee
Hicks, Mary Edna Hollis, Nathleen
Howell, Betsy Hurst, Emily Ives,
Joyce Klander, Betty Lou Lamb,
Jane Lanier, Ann Lumsden, Caro
line Monroe, Joan Montford, Ruby
Moore, Carolyn Newton, Virginia
Parnell, Warwick Porter, Barbara
Ray, Dorothy Rusher* Carl Sand
ers. Sally Smith, Stella Lou Smith,
Mary Sloan, Vivian Talley, Wanda
Vaught, Betty Lou Walton, Jo Ann
Walton, Elizabeth Webb, Juanita
White, Jean McConnell and Lillian
Williamson.
Forest Hills School: Miss Dora
Staton, director, Janice Edwards,
Charlotte Jones, Mary Low,’ Betty
Winberg, Lucy Ann Carney, Patty
Ann Ward, Janice Carter, Rose Al
len Burris, Eilly Venters, George
Ewing, Richard Asgers, Thomas
Strickland, Bobby Tate, Edith
Thompson, Betty Bugg. Betty
Buck, Doris King, Carol Cox, Mar
jorie Farrow. Bruce Jones, Bruce
Dechamps, Ann Divine, Nancy
Snead, Garry McDaniels, Faith
Sneeden, Shirley Rich, Betty Jane
Piner, Mary White, Elizabeth
Phelts, Josephine Debram, Jim
Devant, Jimmy King, Rose Far
row, Ellen Whitley, Gaynell Ship,
Shirley Leitch, Eetty Reese, Shir
ley Shipman, Joe Johnson, Evelyn
Burgen. Mary Agnes Milliner, Wil
bur Jones, Sylvia Cook.
Sunset Park School, Miss Eliza
Williamson, director: Tommy Sea
go, John Thompson, Billie Rue
Hornsby, Wade Holder, Odessa
Parker, Phyllis Niven, Betty
Schnidt, Bruce Sanders, Jimmy
Sanders, Patricia Shipp, Mary Jor
den, Hilda Garm, Marie Potter,
Jimmy Chamblee, Nancy Bender,
Allen Croom, Robert Ellis, Joan
Pierce, Jack Watson, Mary Helen
Jones, Sylvia Wiison, Barbara Ann
Redfern.
—
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Forays
6. Studied
11. Soothe
12. The white
poplar
13. A dervish
14. Full of reeds
15. Long-beaked
fish
17. Small,
explosive
sound
20. Chromium
(sym.)
21. Constella
tion
24. Narrow inlet
(geol.)
25. Escorted
28. Sprites
30. Greek letter
31. Prophetess
33. Short sleep
34. Sum up
35. Neuter
pronoun
36. High (mus.)
37. Dismay
40. Worship
43. Natives of
ancient Gaul
47. Wearies
48. Notoriety
49. Animal
50. Shabby
DOWN
1. Royal Air
Force
(abbr.)
2. A wing
3. Each (Scot.)
4. Platform
5. City
(New York)
6. Young
salmon
7. Comply
8. Female ruff
9. Old times
(archaic)
10. Chief of the
janizaries
16. Biblical cit;
(poss.)
17. A mark to
take up
theme
(mus.)
18. Lubricated
19. Covered
with asphal:
21. Sphere of
action
22. Kingly
23. Conform
26. Persons
kept
as a pledge
27. Type
r measure
29. Erbium
(sym.)
32. Slight taste
37. God of war
38. Obnoxious
insect
39. Filmy fabric
40. Warp-yam
Saturday’s Answer
41. Female deer
42. Openings
44. Tree
45. Young boy
46. Pig pen
CKYI’TOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation
TJTHN IK M FAT SMPTE YKT GMJVHLYT
VG GVHYOFT MFQLVOE — EIKLWWTH
t
BAPTIST MEETING
TO OPEN TUESDAY
Winter Park Church To Be
Host To Annual Fall
Association
Better than 300 members of the
Wilmington Baptist association are
expected to convene at the Winter
Park Baptist church here at 9:30
o’clock tomorrow morning for their
annual fall meeting, the Rev. G.
Carl Lewis, association moderator,
said yesterday.
The Rev. Sanxey Lee Blanton,
former moderator of the 43-church
district and dean of the Wake
Forest School of Religion, will ad
dress the 43-church session on
religious education.
The Rev. Ben Ussery, of Caro
lina Beach church, will open the
meeting with a devotional program
at 9:30 a. m. He will be followed
at 9:40 by the Rev. T. H. King,
Winter Park church, with a report
on religious education.
The Rev. E. C. Chambles, asso
ciation missionary, will report on
missions at 10:10 a. m., with a
roll call of churches scheduled for
10:40.
The Rev. W. J. Stephenson, pas
tor of Temple church, will speak
on public morals at 10:50; Mrs.
Lewis will speak on the Baptist
orphanage at 11:20.
Standing committees will report,
and association officers will be
elected at 11:45, and the Rev.
J. O. Walton, of Southside church,
will conclude the morning’s pro
gram with a worship program for
the association.
The afternoon session will open
at 2 p. m. with a devotional in
terlude led by John Chambers, as
sistant pastor of the First Baptist
church here.
The Rev. W. A. Poole, of Bur
gaw Baptist church, will speak on
religious literature at 2:10 and
the Rev. C. E. Brisson, of Gibson
Avenue church, on hospitals at
2:35.
At 3:05 there will be a report
by the Rev. J. E. Allard, associa
tion treasurer.
The meeting will conclude after
an inspirational address by the
Rev. Charles A. Maddry, of the
First Baptist church.
Churches in the Association are
drawn from New Hanover, Pender
and Onslow counties.
ANTI-COMMUISTS
TAKE EARLY LEAD
AT BERLIN POLLS
BERLIN, Oct. 20.— (U.R) — The
strongly Anti-Communist Independ
ent Socialist party took an early
lead Sunday on fragmentary re
turns in the crucial Berlin munici
pal elections which will show
whether Germany leans toward the
Soviet bloc or the western demo
cracies.
The Independent Socialists (SPDi
led in the first reporting precincts
in both the French and Russian
occupation zones.
In the French zone, SPD received
480 votes to 198 for the Russian
sponsored, Communist-dominated
Socialist Unity party (SEU). The
Christian Democratic union polled
184 and Liberal Democratic party
76. Four ballots were marked with
swastikas.
In the Russian sector, SPD
gained 412, Christian Democrats
204, Unity 164, and Liberal Demo
crats four.
It was estimated that about 60
per cent of Berlin’s 2,300.000 elig
ible voters went to the polls to
elect a municipal legislature and
borough assemblies. It was the
city’s first post war elections and
first free balloting in nearly 15
years.
BOOTS^AND HER BUDDIES-— PLAN’S PROGRESSING
RjOO , VOU <3\MPLV
MUST Bt C«_M
wftW> c,TOP ,r,,_
V>0PPVIU6'. RtftPomtBtUIV
■ \J- • 1' ■
VJW, \Mfc CftNft tvtvi •HJXi
TWt. TUTTS WW\_ UWE.
THE HOU=jt VMEKJ V)^. OO
THfc .ICKa. >
___ JS1EI
PARTVCUV.ARVV THE
KVTCWE.NHAV. MORRVSON
AND BVEE GREER
eUREEV DVD A
“SWEET JOB'. AND
THE WARDS ARE
VOORKVNG ON A
ETUDV THAT VW_V_
TIOCEE THE
PROCESSOR PIHV<1
T. M. REG. U. 5. PAT. OF?. J
fr\U<5T |
CWu\- EWA- 1
PiU-tV PteOUT
THfc INSURftttO
CVJHPiT X UVOc
RDfAPU<5
Ll ROOK POR.
__J PU6'. <SW£\\
I ftOORfe Vt 1
[ CD PR. 1946By"*NEA SERVICE. InS^I
WASH TUBBS __ _____ THE DEATH SENTENCE
ORION! CAN'T BLAME A MAN FOR TRYING,1
WHEN MY BACK MOCHO. YOU THUGS ARE THRU
IS TURNED YOU WITH ME, AND READY TO MAKE
INTIMIDATE MY A BREAK FOR THE BORDER!
PALiRINGO, AND
TRY TO
.ESCAPE!
YOU'RE NFRNOlF VANOTHER THING...
YOU LEFT ME HERE \ YOU IGNORED MY
I'D HWIE THE POLICE 1 ORDERS NOT TO
ON YOUR TRWL IN /DIG IN THESE RUINS!
I^IOTIME. SO- fZ^
: / rw an \|
/ ARCHEOLOGIST, \
/ MOCHO.. INTERESTED!
IN UNCOVERING THE
HISTORY OF THE
l PEOPLE WHO BUILT /
v THIS ANuLNT /
|L citvi
' BUT WHEN SOU OPENED ^
THNT 5EM.ED ROOM IV&MNST
ORDERS, MVS FRIEND, YOU
iSEMEP SOUR OWM C-^M*
GASOLINE'ALLEY- READY FIRE
r ?■ "■ r—'— ~ " ' ~ ' ~ — — ■■■ ....... —— ■ ■ —i. . . . i^ju ■ —nvrr‘ p ■■ i ■ ■ r %
' I’M HERE TO TALK.
BUSINESS, MR.
WOOPCOCK. WHAT
I IS VOUR- PRICE
| ON THE HOUSE?
LAST WEEK. IT WAS \
$7500. BUT TOPAV 1
fM RELEASEP FROM
AN ARRANGEMENT
WITH MY REAL
ESTATE PEALER.y
3 NOW I CAN SELL
ANP you WON’T
: NAVE TO f*V THE
ACENTJS COMMISSION.
■\THE PRICE IS *7,125.
THAT'S SWELL! IT
SOUNPS HIGH, BUT '
ifcl VIEW OF THE
TIMES, IT’S OKAV. J
SV^T7TV
‘:J IT’S A CASH PEAL.
\ YOU WILL HAVE
\ TO PO THE
fcl FINANCING YOURSELE
' I’VE BROUGHT *100 1
\ TO DEPOSIT ON
IT UNTIL THE
TITLE 15 CHECKED,
AND FINANCIAL
ARRANGEMENTS MADE.,
N
DR. BOBRS- -- BY ELLIOTT and McARDLE
WHAT HAS JUST
HAPPENED IN
THIS ISOLATED
LITTLE HOME IN
THE MIDDLE OP
A FOREST VASTNESS
WILL SOON
ELECTRIFY
I THE WORLD.
r' WOULD VDU WIND I
SAVINS THAT ASAIN?
-.DID VOU SAY TWAT
SIX BABIES
' WAVE JUST BEEN
i BORN H!?g
W I counted!
I THEM ONCE I
■ ... THEN ■
/COUNTED AGAIN,
THEN POLISHED
MY GLASSES...
NO USE.. ONE
..TWO.. THREE
..FOUR...FIVE-.
_ SIX/
10-21
M
»f. MN6 fEATUKB gVKPtCATI. tm, WORtP KICHTt »8»KRVEP_J
I
OH, NAME OF A NAME!*
ciy ciy i
HOW WILL I FEED THEM|
|^..HOW
DON'T WORRY, LITTLE MAN '1
YOU’LL PROBABLY NAVE TO '
ADD THREE LARGE ROOMS TO
ACCOMMODATE TME cereals,
BABY ROOD AND DIAPERS
MOURE GOING TO BE PRESEN
jaM(kSggCT^-^TED WITH.
THE GUMPS- THE SCHEMER
WHEN iT COMES TO \
STRATEGY, ANDREW '
GUMP CAN TEACH A
THING OR TWO TO (
THE DIPLOMATS— '
* MY WIFE AND I ARE BOTH
LAID UP WITH THE RHEUMATISM.
PLEASE, DEAR FRIEND COME
S AND HELP ME
0*
NOW/ I'LL ENCLOSE
ANOTHER NOTE TO
old-timer TELLING
HIM TO COPY THIS
LETTER AND SEND
IT BACK TO
Iw ME~
MIN'S KINDLY HEART'LL
BE TOUCHED— SHE'LL
SEND ME TO HELP POOR.
OLD-TIMER— RESULT
PUCK SMOOTlNGfy'
ORPHAN ANNIE- BEST LAID PLANS
■Hill_
^SO FRED CANT WALK VET-^\
SO WHAT? I KNOW NOW THAT )
SOME DAY HE’LL WALK— \
AS DOC MEDULLA SAID-SOME
DAY HE'LL JUSTTJP AND
f AND NOW HE AND HONEY \
) WILL BE GETTIN MARRIED
\ FAITH!-GEE- IT SURE Y
| PA^S OFF. EH. SANDY? J
10-21 -Ak
HftROLb
6RA-f ■
P WHILE NEARER AND
NEARER AND NEARER
YOU MEAN TO SAY.
FATAL FLOYD. THAT
YOU GROWED UP
NEAR SMOKY HOLLOW
Ly _
OUT OUR WAY By J. R. WILLIAMS;
r VES, TH' JOB’S DONE, BUT VOU'RE
NOT— NOW VOU JUST SIT HERE AND
READ THIS FINANCIAL PAGE VOU
WERE HOtDIN’ TH’ FLASHLIGHT ON
k SO MUCH, INSTEAD ----^rfi
if OF ON TH’ JOB is
iHHi
J ff VVILLlf>M£> I
IO-t1 f
THE WAN1PERIKJO LIGHT £ VTf '
OUR BOARDING HOUSE With MAJOR HOOPLE
X GAY,TWIGGS, HOW DOES s
THIS SOUND FDR. AM AD; )
"WANTED —61RL With <
MELLOW CONTRALTO .J.
VOICE: TO SIMS FOR. { %
RECORDINGS — MO
SALARY TO START, BUT )
SNARE IM PROFITABLE: )
.^ENTERPRISE." ?^7
' IV X WAS A SKIRT AMO
didn't Know how you a
CAN BLOW UP ATOY BALLOON
TO LOOK LIKE A KEPPELiN,
■t. X‘D TALL FOR IT/ —- f
/ WHAT’S THE ENTERPRISE \
[ SHE'S SlM,GlNG FOR —— >
HER SUPPER^v'f'
A- LADV
COMING
IKiTO TWS 1
PICTURE «•1
WtA 6gTHnCtLJNC. LI, S. PAT, Off, ro-W