Aid The Disabled +, 4 ^ ^ . Served By Leased Wires sjgfc tumtumin Marnttm s>tar < -------- State and National New» VOLJO—NOjS.---- WILMINGTON, N. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1946 ~ "" 7 ESTABLISHED 1867 Bomb Scientist l K. ALVIN M. YVEINBEKG graham to speak AT ATOMIC PARLEY Program For Session Here At High School On No vember 21 Told Dr Frank Porter Graham, presi dent ' of the University of North Carolina and three scientific vet eran* of the Oak Ridge ajgm bomb project will be among*he featured speakers at a conferee or, “Facing Atomic Energy’mat the New Hanover High Schooll|u ditcrium the afternoon and eve ning of November 21. The local conference, one of seven being held through the state un der the sponsorship of UNC and the North Carolina World Fed eralists, will be concerned with both the military and political as pects of atomic energy. It will be presented here by the governmental affairs committtee of the Junior Chamber of Com merce. whose chairman, Robert Dannenbaum, announced last night that his group is sponsoring the speeches without necessarily agree ing with the views of the speakers. Dr. Graham is scheduled to ad dress the conference’s closing ses sion at 9 o’clock Nov. 21 on “The Case for World Government.” The trio of scientists will speak on the development of atomic power, the potentialities of the atomic bomb as a military weap on and the results of the bomb’s two test explosions at Bikini atoll. Dr. Alvin Weinberg, director of See GRAHAM on Page Two PORT INTERESTS CITE WORK NEED Shippers Express Views On Effects Of Dredging Curtailment Here The Cape Fear river channel will continue to shoal up until it is only 23 feet deep at some points within 10 months unless early ac tion is taken to secure the funds the local U. S. Army engineers need to return to dredging it, a spokes man for one of the local port’s largest oil terminals shippers de clared last night. Although the channel’s official depth is 30 feet, tankers have en tered the port in recent months with mud scrapped off the river bottom in their condensers even though they were drawing only 26 feet, the oil company spokesman said, "U we wait until July - for the loca, engineers to get funds they won't be able to put a dredge into the river before September," he continued, "By that time the chan ge PORT Or. Page Two HAHBONE’S meditations By Alley SOMETIME vM'EN A MAih To A IT Rich quick, he jes' 4T pp' pAf MU£rt Quicker!! (Releaaed by The Bell 8y« ]l.i*t dlcate. Inc.) Trade Mark * r* Reg U S Tat. Offlca* U.S.Business AskedToHue To Price Line Secretary Of Commerce Harriman Urges Real Re straint By Corporations “SYSTEM” ATTACKED New York Lawyer Stresses Need For Watchful Eye On Russian Activities NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—(JP) —American spokesmen told businessmen Monday to hold the price line at home and at the same time keep an eye on Russia, whose attack on our system is a vigorous one.” Secretary of Commerce W. Averell Harriman, addressing the opening session of the three-day National Foreign Trade convention, urged “each corporation to adopt real restraint in its price policies.” Asking for bi-partisian support, he stressed “the vital necessity of keeping our foreign economic poli cies out of domestic politics.” Allen W. Dulles, New York law yer and president of the Council on Foreign Relations, Inc., said Molotov’s recent speech at Lake Success was a “vigorous attack” on our system. Dulles charged that Russia, “most interested in expanding its own political and economic sys tem” in Europe, “|ems to be blocking the conclusiro of peace.” Soviet tactics in Europe, he added, “operate to prevent American business on a free basis from com peting with the government control led economy of Russia.” Loan Warning Curtis E. Calder, chairman of Electric Bond and Share Co. warn ed against the United StateJ’ lend See BUSINESS On Page Two LEWIS MAINTAINS ‘PARLEY’ SILENCE Mine Leader Confers Two Hours With Krug; Other Developments By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First bargaining session aimed ■at forestalling a threatened walk out of 400,000 AFL United Mine workers recessed Monday until 2:30 p. m. EST Tuesday with John L. Lewis maintaining silence on whatever contract demands he may have made. Meanwhile, elsewhere on the labor front, pickets were arrested in a Hollywood movie dispute, TWA strike settlement efforts were stalled, and a union leader express ed belief the 195-day old Allis Chalmers tieup at West Allis, Wis., might be ended within a week. In the soft coal talks at Wash ington, Lewis and 28 other mine union officials met with Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug for two and one half hours, but Lewis gave no hint later as to what terms he submitted. There was speculation that Lewis demanded . a shorter work week with little or no loss in take home pay, and tnat Krug and the coal operators wanted to study the re quest. No Announcement So far Lewis has nor announced details of his new formula for more pay and shorter hours but he has contended that the contract made when the government seized the mines last spring can be ter minated legally. The UMW chief has. laid down a timetable where by the government would be notifi See LEWIS On Page Two Oldest Soldier GEORGE D’ORANGE __ LEGION HERE TOPS MEMBERSHIP GOAL Announcement Of 1,000 Enrolled Made During Armistice Celebration Wilmington Post 10 of the Ameri can Legion had attained its goal of 1,000 members enrolled for 1947 with the passing of its Armistice Day deadline, W. K. Stewart, post commander, reported last night. Harry S y m m e s and Robert Jones, Jr., co-chairmen of the post’s membership committee, an nounced the passing of their 1,000 member goal as the local Legion concluded the largest Armistice celebration in its history yester day afternoon. At 11 a. m. yesterday, 28 years to the minute after the close of the first World War, more than 1,000 persons stood with bared heads outside the Legion home in a 30 second silent prayer in memory of the dead of the nation’s last two wars. The audience included Secretary of State Thad Eure, who a few moment’s later urged his audience to support efforts to bring the Unit ed Nations to North Carolina’s Sand Hills section as its permanent home, and George D’Orange, 88, the county’s oldest Legionnaire and a veteran of three wars. D’Orange, a former U. S. Coast Guardsman, who saw service in the Franco-Prussian, the Spanish American and the first World War, is a regular attendant at Armistice Day celebrations. Eure, as the Legion's program chief speaker, urged the UN’s es tablishment in North Carolina as especially fitting in the state “where the Mecklenburg declara See LEGION on Page Two FIREWORKS BLAST KILLS VETERANS Four Camden Men Lose Lives At Filling Station South Of Charlotte CAMDEN,- S. C., Nov. 11—(.$>)_ Four men were killed and two others seriously injured in an ex plosion Monday in a filling station 19 miles north of Camden of the Charlotte-Camden highway. Sheriff J. H. McLeod, Jr., and Coroner Purdy Lee identified the bodies Monday night at those of Stacey Griffon, Landon Faile, Ray mond Barfield and Charles William Connell. The officers also said that Jack Outen and Jesse Griffon, a brother of Stacey were seriously injured. Sheriff McLeod said the filling istation earlier in the day had re ceived a large shipment of ex plosives, including ammunition and firecrackers, and the explosion was probably caused by their becoming ignited. All the dead men are World War II veterans, the sheriff said. A coroner’s inquest is scheduled for Tuesday. BACK IN U. S. Man Who Waged Battle With FDR Ends Exile MIAMI, Fla., Nov. 11. — (&) — Howland Spencer, of New York and Palm Beach, who moved to the Bahamas in 1939 because of a feud with the late President Roose velt, said Monday that he had re turned to the United States for the first time in eight years be cause of the Republican election victory November 5. Spencer, who has been living at Harbor Island, Eleuthera, Baham as, said the election “shook me out of my hermitage.” ‘‘These are the first words of a returned exile,” he told reporters. He used to live on the 500-acre estate called “Krum Elbow,” across the Hudson river from the late President’s Hyde Park home. In 1938 he turned his spacious estate over to the Negro cult lead er, Father Devine, for his cult “Heaven.” Spencer, who arrived here Mon day, said he had kept his home on the Hudson and was now headed north to “air out my part of Heaven.” He said he would make the trip on the schooner “Windsong.” Spencer said he had not been in > See MAN On Senate* /tyles Bridges Says Majority Group Will Also Ration Spending PROCEDURE CHANGE Appropriations Committee Will Hear Arguments For Against Budget WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.— (/P)—Senator Styles Bridges (R-NH) forecast Monday that the new Republican-organized Congress will “ration” federal spending and put ceilings on government payrolls. Bridges, in line to head the Senate’s new streamlined Ap propriations committee, pro posed also a change in the procedure under which testi mony taken by the committee on proposed expenditures has large ly been limited to officials of de partments concerned. “This time,” he promised in a statement, “all evidence heard will not come from special pleasers who want more to spend. Those u’ho want to reduce spend ing will have their day in court as well.” He said a new technical and professional staff provided under the Congressional Reorganization act would be recruited and “used to the fullest possible extent to provide an accurate picture of our real needs as opposed to the am See GOP On Page Two GENERAL MOTORS UPS CAR PRICES President Wilson Says $100 Increase On All Models Immediately DETROIT, Nov. 11—(£>)—General Motors announced Monday an in crease of $100 in the list price of all its passenger car models pro duced and sold in the United States. The corporation said prices of all Chevrolet trucks also would be increased $100. The same increase, General Motors said, will be ap plied to all corresponding models produced by the GM truck and coach division. President C. E. Wilson said in the announcement that General Motors had sought a $100 increase in prices from OPA more than two months ago. GM’s adjustments, he said, now place its prices on a “more rea sonable relation’’ to increased costs of production. General Motors makes Chevrolet, Buick, Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Pontiac cars. No Ford Hike A Ford Motor company official said no price increase was con templated immediately. There has been no word from Chrysler cor poration as to its plans. George W. Mason, president of Nash - Kelvinator corporation, an nounced that future prices of Nash cars and Kelvinator electric ap pliances will depend on labor and material costs and volume of pro duction. "Our main interest,” he said, "is to keep prices as low as possible.” NationsDeny Allegations By Russians Soviet Ambassador Critizes Lack Of Palestine Trus teeship Agreement U. S. ALSO SCORED Dulles Takes Moscow Dele gates To Task In Off-The Floor News Statement LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Nov. 11.—(/P)—Soviet Russia, in a long-awaited statement, roundly criticized Great Brit ain Monday for not offering a Palestine trusteeship agree ment to the United Nations and simultaneously blasted the United States for holding “contradictory” views on trusteeships. As Soviet Ambassador Nikolai V. Novikov finished his hour-long speech to the U. N. Trusteeship committee, Great Britain, South Africa, and the United States im mediately countered with off-the floor statements denying the Rus sian allegations. The United States flatly accused Russia of "constantly” pif venting formation of a trustee ship* council for the old League of Nations man dates. John Foster Dulles, New York lawyer, who was advisor on foreign affairs to Republican nominee Thomas E. Dewey during the 1944 presidential campaign, and is the U. S. delegation expert on trustee ships, volunteered this statement to newsmen: Constant Complaint "The Soviet Union constantly complains that the trusteeship council has not been set up. Ap parently it enjoys being able to make that complaint and to prolong that enjoyment for its acts con stantly prevent the establishment of the council. “At the London assembly it was See NATIONS On Page Two Dewey Resting SEA ISLAND, Ga., Nov. 11—(JP)— Two of the nation’s successful gubernatorial candidates in last week’s election rested here Mon day from their campaigns, and another was expected to arrive Monday night. New York’s Governor Thomas E. Dewey, successful in his reelection campaign, arrived with Mrs. Dewey and their two sons. They will spend two weeks at The Cloister. Governor-elect Kim Sigler of Michigan arrived Sunday. He and Mrs. Sigler have taken a cottage. Governor-elect William Preston Lane, Jr., of Maryland and Mrs. Lane were scheduled to arrive Monday night. Along The Cape Fear TWO SPOKESMEN — Mr. Tru man has spoken. So has our South Fifteenth street correspondent. By some strange coincidence the two gentlemen touched on a subject in common. You’ll recall when the President announced the virtual end of the Office of Price Administration the exceptions were rents, sugar, and rice. Our kind correspondent dis cusses electricity and rice. So Mr. Truman and one of Wil mington’s best vfersed authorities on doings along the Cape Fear half a century ago are together on one point—Rice. * * * LONG STORY—Just how Mr. Truman’s and our favorite chroni cler of Cape Fear doings paths happened to cross is a round-about tale. “Since you are still in the throes of misery about electric lighting,” our friend writes, “I will offer this.” “About 60 years ago I drove in town and saw my first electric light. I entered Nixon street and there it was, at the corner of Eighth and Nixon. “It was a cumbersome affair to what we have now. It hung in the middle of the street on two wires that could be lowered at will to near the ground for servicing. “The light unit consisted of two finger-sized sticks of carbon about eight inches long, and adjusted so the ends were about an inch apart. The current jumping across this space produced the lights. “The servicing required the .daily rounds of an electrician to adjust the carbon sticks and replace de fective ones. This type slowly dis placed the gas and oil lamps, but was finally discarded in favor of the Edison lights. • * * UNUSUAL SIGHT—“The unusual sight that impressed me was the thousands of large night-flying bugs circling around the carbon light. The intense apen heat scorched their wings and a 20 foot circle under the light was covered with crawling or dead buj|s. They were one and a half inches wide and two and a half inches long. They finally disappear ed. I suppose the lights singed them all. They were said to be a product of the Rice fields. “Another product of the Rice fields at that time was coots and rice birds, a delicacy many old See CAPE FEAR on Page Two TRUMAN BIDS FOR WORKING COOPERATION BY CONGRESS; NOVIKOV HITS AT BRITISH - I I 'V - Christmas Decorations Going Up Employees of the Brooks Electrical Company are shown hanging the Christmas lights in downtown Wilmington. The thousands of multi-colored bulbs will be turned on Nov. 21 and will remain lighted each night until Jan. 2. (STAB STAFF PHOTO BY BOB HODGKIN) The Weather FORECAST South Carolina and North Carolina Fair and considerably cooler Tuesday, Colder Tuesday night; Wednesday fair, not much change in temperature. (Eastern Standard Time) (By U. S. Weather Bureau) Meteorological data for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. rn. yesterday. Temperatures 1:30 a. m. 66; 7:30 a. m. 67. 1:30 p. m. 77; 7:30 p. m. 71. Maximum 78; Minimum 64; Mean 69; Normal 57. * Humidity 1:30 a. m. 93: 7:30 a. m. 88; 1:30 p. m. 56; 7:30 p. m. 79. Precipitation Total for 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m. 0 00 inches. Total since the first of the month 2.32 inches. Tides for Today (From the Tide Tables published by U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey). High Low Wilmington _ a.m. 6:39 a.m. 12:16 p.m. 7 :35 p.m. Masonboro Inlet _ 9:57 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 10:23 p.m. 4:18 p.m. Sunrise 6:42; Sunset 5:10; Moonrise 8:26 p. m.; Moonset 10:30 a. m. BLIZZARDTAKES THIRTEEN LIVES Temperature ExtremesCon tinueAcrossNation; Cold In West, SouthWarm By The Associated Press Temperature extremes continued across the nation Monday, but forecasters said generally fair and rather cold weather was indicated for the north central states Tues day. Temperatures dropped Monday in the snow swept northern great plains and unseasonal warmth con See BLIZZARD on Page Two ARPORT MAY BE STATE TERMINUS Airline Officials Express Highest Praise For City’s Facilities 1 State Airlines, of Charlotte, is def initely interested in Wilmington as its operating base when and if it re ceives Civil Aviation board approv al for its planes to establish an air lines linking the city with five states, Neil B. Berboth, the com pany’s president, said here last night. Berboth made his statement after an afternoon inspection tour of the city’s Bluethenthal airport, See AIRPORT On Page Two TEACHER DEARTH HITS 2,000,000 NEA Survey Indicates Serious Situation Affect ing Children Of Nation WASHINGTON, Nov. 11—(£■)—'The National Educational association estimated Monday that two million pupils have been “seriously affect ed’’ by the teacher shortage. “This estimated total does not take into account the quality losses resulting from overcrowded classes and lower teacher morale brought See TEACHER on Page Two SOVIET VIEW Russian News Reporter Describes Atlanta Case LONDON, Nov. 11—m—If the people of Atlanta, Ga., want to know, how one recent Atlanta in cident was pictured in Russia, Monday’s report by the Russian news agency Tass will tell them. The following dispatch was sent by Tass for publication in Tues day’s Russian newspapers, and was distributed in London by the news agency under the headlines “Brown Shirts in U.S.A.—New Pro-Fascist Group Beats up Negroes.” "Soon after the reactionary Tal madge, known for his anti-Negro campaign, won the Democratic party nomination as Governor of Georgia, a new pro-Fascist group, the 'Columbian,’ began organizing in Atlanta. It was organized by a certain Loomis, who arrived in Georgia after the election of Tal madge. The ‘Columbians’ have adopted a brown shirt as uniform, with insignia somewhat resembling the swastika. “In October the ‘Columbians’ raided a residential block. They posted ‘guards’ before the homes of the white people, fired shots and threw stones into Negro homes. The police did not act until one See RUSSIAN on Page Two Republicans Promise Aid For Progress President Breaks Election Silence With Armistice Day Policy Statements STRESSES HARMONY Senator Brooks Says Ma jority Will Follow ‘Real American’ Programs WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 — (JP)—President Truman de livered a conciliatory bid Mon day for cooperation of the new GOP Congress and Re publicans responded cordially although with qualifications. Breaking his election sil ence with a policy statement to an Armistice Day news conference, Mr. Truman candidly acknowledged that the present situation—the legis lative branch Republican and the executive branch Democratic for at least two years—“threatens serious difficulties”. But he said both are equally de voted “to the welfare of our na tion” and when differences arise there must be no attempt on either side “to tamper with the public interest in order to achieve per ; sonal of partisan advantage.” I shall cooperate ip every prop er manner with members of the Congress,” he added, "and my hope and prayer is that this spirit of cooperation will be reciprocat ed.” Republican Congressional leaders promptly and unanimously said they will cooperate — "cooperate to secure progress and security in the American way,’’ added Rep. Martin (R.-Mass.), slated to be speaker of the House. Rep. Taber (R.-N.Y.), prospective chairman See REPUBLICANS On Page Two POLICE MOBILIZE TO PROTECT KING Scotland Yard Takes Every Precaution Against Pos sible Attack On Ruler LONDON, Nov. 11—(IP)—Military and civilian police mobilized Mon day night to guard King George VI from any conceivable terrorist attacks when he rides in pre-war pomp and splendour Tuesday to open the second session of parlia ment since the Labor party eame to power. Th. precautions overshadowed the traditional King’s .speech drafted by the T ibor government and expected to blaze new trails of nationalization and endorse what the labor party has heretofore op posed—peacetime conscription. From the time the King leaves Buckingham palace at 10:30 a. m. (5:30 a. m. Eastern Standard time) in the state coach until he reaches the Houses of Parliament as the center of attraction In a procession of pre-war pageantry, guards in and out of uniform will patrol the crowds with more than wartime viligance. Scotland yard, oommenting of reports that the Stem gang or See POLICE On Page Two ,j And So To Bed - * The long arm of the law stretches Into many places, but last night when a local gend arme was walking his beat he was confronted by a man wear in a night shirt underneath his three-quarter length coat. “Say buddy,” he asked the officer, “where is the back door to the hospital?” where upon the officer asked the man what he was doing on the street at night in such attire. “I am a patient over at the hospital and I just went for a walk and they locked me out.” The officer obllngiy called the hospital and the man was re admitted i