Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 31, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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EXPLOSIONS ROCK HAIFA DOCK AREA H Flames Following Blasts, 2 Rage Along Shell Oil 2 Company Pipe Lines 2 JERUSALEM, Monday, March _(JP)— Explosions and flames -swept the Haifa waterfront today las British troops transferred to Z Cyprus-bound transports the first -'of nearly 1,600 uncertified Jewish ! immigrants rescued a few hours • earlier from a distressed refugee -•hip. - Fires following the explosions 'raged in the port area about two miles from the docks where the im migrants were being put aboard the transports by British troops carrying pick handles. A quarter-mile area was burning in the neighborhood of installa tions of the Consolidated refineries and Shell Oil company. Apparently flames were raging along the Shell company feeder lines from the Consolidated refinery. The visa-less immigrants close brush with death came yesterday 30 miles off the Palestine coast when the 700-ton schooner seeking to bring them to Palestine develop ed a dangerous list and began tak ing water. The schooner, named Moledeth (Hebrew for “Fatherland’ ) and formerly called the San cent out a distress message. British naval vessels, which had been shadowing the Moledeth through the Eastern Mediterranean, raced to the scene and removed 730 of the passengers crammed on the schooner’s decks. This action was believed to have averted a mag or disaster. Area Blacked Out Jews in Haifa were aware that the Moledeth was in trouble. When the distress message was inter cepted by radio receivers there, 60,000 Jewish residents blacked out their section of the port city as a gesture of sympathy. British troops immediately took up de fense positions awaiting the arrival of the refugees. The explosions occurred after a British destroyer brought 400 oi the 750 immigrants removed from the Moledeth. The rest of the refu gees were following on another destroyer and on the Moledeth herself. The schooner was being towed to Haifa by a minesweeper. The Moledeth, built* in 1876, has normal passenger accomodations for 30 persons. When British sailors came alongside to aid her they found 1,550 persons jammed into the ship. Engineers from a British destroy er boarded the Moledeth with pumps and removed a considerable amount of water which the schoon er had been taking rapidly. Unofficial reports said the un certified immigrants would be transshipped to Cyprus as soon as the Moledeth reached Haifa. The sympathy blackout in Haifa occurred in the modern Jewish section of the city. Cafes and night clubs went dark. Lights went off in residences and the streets were emptied. In downtown areas British troops, in an operation that is be coming routine, moved barged wire barriers and guns into place. Troops of the Sixth Airborne di vision, equipped with pick handles, were alerted to begin transferring the refugees to waiting transports for Cyprus when the Moledeth and the British naval vessels arrived. The rescue of the uncertified immigrants followed a renewed Jewish agency denunciation of terrorism in Palestine and an an nouncement that Mayor Israel Ro kach of the all-Jewish city of Tel Aviv had started legal action to challenge the whole structure of the British mandate government's law in the Holy Land. The new Jewish agency state ment against terrorism followed the death of a British police in spector from wounds received when he was acmbushed near the Ramie military camp yesterday. A British army officer also was killed in the attack, which au thorities blamed on Jewish terror ists. A LOCAL LADY SPIT UP ACID LIQUIDS FOR HOURS AFTER EATINC Tor hours after every meal, a Local Lady used to spit up a strong, acidulous liquid mixec with pieces of half-digested food She says it was awful. At time; she would nearly strangle. She hac stomach bloat, daily headaches and constant irregular bowe! action. Today, this lady eats hei meals and enjoys them. And she says the change is due to takinj INNER-AID. Her food agrees wit! her. No gas, bloat or spitting uj after eating. She is also free o: headaches now, and bowels are regular, thanks to this Remark able New Compound. INNER-AID contains 12 : Grea Herbs; they cleanse bowels, cleai gas from stomach, act on sluggisl liver and kidneys. Miserable peo pie soon feel different all over. S( don’t go on suffering! Get INNER. AID. Sold by all drug stores. Four Killed WATERTOWN, S. D., March 30. —(if)—Two private planes collided in the air near the Watertown air port today, killing four persons as they crashed and burned. The dead: Harland Johnson, 24, Hartford, S. D., a pilot, and his passenger, John Jenny, 30, Revil lo, S. D.; and Bill Fox, 26 year old Watertown fight instructor, and his student Dick Aschwege, 39, of Corona, S. D., who were in the other plane. The ships crashed in a plowed field near the farm home of Fox’s parents. BRITlSHlEEKING ARMS ‘SHOWDOWN! (Continued From Page One) wants these principles established first: 1- Arms reduction depends pri marily on establishment of inter national confidence; the converse argument is misleading and dan gerous. 2- Completion of an international military force by the U. N. would contribute greatly to this con fidence. Establishment of an effective system of international control and verification must precede adop tion of any arms slashing system. Previously Russia has argued against the theory that security is an essential condition of dis armament, citing such a stand as an attempt at .delay. Cadogan moved to spike a possible renewal of the Russian argument when he declared that such a stand was taken by Mussolini and he hoped “no one will be inclined to repeat the Fascist government’s con tention’’ here. To Present Facts A special group has been at work in London for some time on a set of British proposals and Cadogan will present these once the issue of principles is cleared away. The rest of the commission, in cluding the United States, has gen erally supported the British stand with American Delegate Herschel V. Johnson stressing the immed iate need to work out safeguards and verification. The French have still to speak, but it was under stood they would follow the line taken by the Western powers. Ralph A, Bard, former under secretary fo Navy, will take over the American representative to the commission in about three weeks, following his week-end ap pointment bv President Truman. MINE SHUTDOWNS MAY CLOSE OVENS (Continued From Page One) only day on which the work stop page will have its full effect. Furnaces To Close In Pittsburgh, the U. S. Steel Corp. said it might be forced to close eight blast furnaces with the possible supension of 4,000 beehive ovens. Banking of eight furnaces would cut off about 20 percent of the firm’s daily pig iron output. The Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp, said it would not be affected by the mine shutdown. A ^ookesman for the Tri-State Industrial association, a group oi fabricating plants in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia, reported most small and medium plants had “learned a lesson in the past and now have adequate stockpiles of coal.” He said they did not expect to curtail operations. A Pennsylvania Railroad official in Pittsburgh said he “doubted” if that line would be materially afected. He added, however, that some lay-offs would result among crews which haul coal from the mines. He expresed the opinion all railroads had sufficient coal stock piles to continue normal operations Meetings Planned In the coal fieias, miners gath ered today for regularly scheduled month-end union meetings. They were read telegrams from district presidents which told of the work stoppage. The miners’ celebration of John Mitchell-John L. Lewis Day will touch a note of solemnity this year. The traditional exercises always include parades and speeches by dignitaries. This year the ad dresses will pay tribute to the Centralia victims and their fami lies. TO ACCEPT STATUS LONDON, March 30.— (JP) —The independent weekly newspaper The People said today that India’s dom inant Congress party had offered to accept dominion status for the : subcontinent for a “trial period” prior to full independence from Britain. Official government quar ters neither confirmed nor denied the report. The U. S. Naval Photographic service has developed an elec tronic repeating flashbulb which flashes 10,000 times without re placement. BROGUES \ Just Like Dad9sT Styled exactly like a man's shoe; to withstand the rougher wear a boy gives. In brown, with wearproof soles and rubber heels. $ SIZES 1 to 6 y Merit Shoes 106 N. Front St. 1152221, “The way the ice on the streets melts at noon is a sure sign—before you know it we'll all be reveling in the beauties of spring again!" Along The Cape Fear (Continued From Page One) of Black River,” Mr. Bridges cau tioned us. ‘‘But, don’t believe a word of it as the best ocean run rock in th< world are the ones caught neai Snow’s Run,” he assured us. So Mr. Smith and Mr. Holland , we are expecting an able defense of the Black River rocks and at an early date if they are to enter ; Along The Cape Fear’s best eating fish derby. Selective Service Board To Close Shop On Tuesday Mrs. Martha Rasberry, clerk to the local selective service board, said last night that there were ap proximately 17,000 active files on men in this county from 18 to 45 years of age as the system dies to night at midnight. The local board, which now is known as North Carolina group I, has not sent any men to induc tion centers since about last Oc tober, she said. She added that she had no idea how many had been sent out of the county by the draft boards since they were created by an act of Congress Sept. 14, 1940. Beginnig today, she said, she would be the sole remaining mem ber of the board, and “I am just standing by for orders.” However, she said she yet had not received any official notice of the termina tion of the system. Meanwhile "Washington reports said that 10,020,637 men were sent to battle by the system in World War H, and it registered about 44,000,000 in its six years of life. There were about 37,000,000 proces sed, and about one-fourth of the registrants were rejected for physi cal reasons. Its peak month was February, 1943, when it sent 406,000 men into the army and navy. The only thing left of the sprawl ing wartime system will be its records. Pursuant to President T'-uman’s wishes, Congress set up an office of selective service rec ords to keep the rata it accumu lated on a stand-by basis. This was decided upon when the Greco Turk crisis broke and Mr. Truman voiced his new doctrine against communism. A director of selective service records at a salary of $10,000 a year also is provided for. He is charged with collecting draft rec ords from state and local boards and holding them for safekeep ing. Unlike the draft, which also ex pires tomorrow midnight, the se lective tervice system does not die without mourners. Several members of Congress, particularly in the senate, contend that the present unsettled tate of world affairs was good enough reason for keeping the system intact, at least temporarily. The senate wanted to keep the boards until June 30 to give Con gress time to decide whether to approve a universal military train ing program, but was forced to accept the house version which permitted it die tomorrow. Mr. Truman himself said he was agreeing to termination of the law in the hope that universal training would be enacted. He also warned that he would ask rein statement of the act if developing world conditions warranted it. At its peak, tne system’s 6,500 local boards and its other offices had 27,000 paid employes and 183, 000 non-salaried workers, including the board members. At present there are only about 85,000 non paid workers. This system operated the first peacetime draft in the nation’s history and, although many of the nation’s youth griped at times that their classification changed too fast for them to keep up with it, there were no incidents to match the bloody draft riots of the Civil War. At that time it was charged that republican officials in charge of the draft stuffed the lists with names of democrats. In New York, on July 13-16, 1863 mobs roamed the streets killing about 1,000 per sons, including Negroes who were hanged. The law setting up the machinery for the draft in World War II stat ed simply and clearly: “The congress declares that in a free society the obligations and privileges of military training and service should be shared generally in accordance with a fair and just system of selective compulsory military training and service.” UNION, INDUSTRY LEADERS TO MEE1 (Continued From Page One) phone workers. The NFTW is ask ing a $12 weekly wage increase and other contract benefits foi its 22,000 members. Worked Before Last year’s threatened strike was forestalled by a pattern agree ment worked out with the loraj lines workers. Moran said that the AITTW con tract with the A. T. &' T. expires at midnight tomorrow but addec that the union—as far as he was concerned—would not strike before April 7, the date set by the Nation al federation. He said th; “where machinerj is set up for handling grievances, you cannot tell what might hap pen.” In the talks *’ s far, Moran said, arbitration ha* not been discus sed. The union head declared, how ever, that the organization would give “very careful consideration to a real arbitration proposal.” He explained that he meant an ar bitration proposal which included all the union demands. TO TEST COMMUNISM MONTREAL, March 30.— (IP) - Communist strength in Montreal, Canada’s largest city, will be test ed tomorrow in a parliamentarj election in the Cartier district, tc choose a successor to Fred Rose, former Communist member of the House of Commons now serving s six-year prison term for sending information illegally to Russia dur ing the war. Pioneer Steel Plant Goes PITTSBURGH, (U.R) — The La Belle Works of Crucible Steel Co., one of the oldest steel plants in the country, is being ‘dismantled foi the scrap heap. Its machinery is outdated and room is lacking foi expansion. Part of the mill is more than 83 years old. GRAIN EXPORTS ECONOMY THREAT (Continued From Page One) lation of 120 million people, a minimum safe carryover was con sidered to be 125 million bushels. Last year it was only by virtue of an all-provident nature that our reserve of 100 million bushels carried us through without trouble. “The market cannot and will not ignore the implications of what is— whatever its purpose—a highly dangerous program.” In demanding a Congressional study of the grain markets, where prices have been rising steadily Higgons said: "Federal officials should he called upon to explain why they seek to mislead the public in the belief that speculation rather than ‘government scraping of the bin’ is responsible for current high prices.” Higgons , who made public his letter to the Senator, said b« wrote to him because Williams had taken the initiative in blam ing high grain prices on a “techni cal corner” of the market because of government purchases. Definite Possibilities Higgons said the government should be required to formulate “definite buying policies to meet export demands. “Conflicting statements and shifting programs have, caused ‘government intentions’ to contin ually hang over the grain market like the proverbial sword of Damocles,” he added. The Chicago executive also said an investigation is needed to make it clear that “humanitarian and economic operations abroad” by this country are separate from agricultural support programs. “There is widespread fear,” he declared, "that government hu manitarian activities have been Integrated with support aciivities to avoid the problems of sur pluses. Such fears should be promptly dispelled-” STAR - NEWS VIEWS ROBESON COUNTY (Continued From Page One) valuation of appromimately $25,$ 000,000 Robeson county is recog - nied throughout the nation for its progressive farming methods. The last available listing placed the county number seventeenth in cash money crop returns in the United States. Predominantly an agricultural leader Robeson county also has its place in the fields of industry and commerical enterprise. Textile products, fertiliers, lumber and wood working lead in the manu facturing with tobacco marketing, tobacco processing plants and cotton and hog marketing headiny up the commerical aide of life in this economically well balanced county. publication placed Robeson coun ty among the first ten counties in the state. This publication set the county’s inhabitants at approxi mately 80,000 and increase of more than sixty percent in popu lation in the last thirty years. Of the total population about 15, 000 of the total are listed as Cherokee Indians to give this county the largest number of In dians of any county in any state east of the Mississippi River. Robeson county has 948 square miles of land, with the famed Lucber river, (known to the In dians an Lumbe, and to the first settlers as Drowning creek,) run ning through the county in a southeasterly course to mark a part of the poundary line on the south between Columbus county. This stream passes through Lum berton within one block of the county court house. It is estimated that Robeson county has 8,000 farms now under cultivation with about 200,000 acres open and regarded as til abel land. Robeson county farm lands and buildings are valued at between 25 and 30 million dollars. Hard surfaced highways pene trate every section of the county and five railway systems afford Robeson more railway track mile age than any other county in North Carolina. Two bus systems operate more than a hundred and fifty buses in and out of Robeson county every twenty four hours to give, with the railways and the facilities of Lumberton airport, Robeson county adequate county wide transporation facilities. While Lumberton is the largest town being the principal retail and wholesale trade center for the residents of Robeson and adjoin ing counties, and the home of the county government it is only one of several important towns to be found in the county. Lumberton’s tobacco market is the main industry but closely following in order named, Lum berton has two big textile plants, a large hog market and a num ber of smaller industries. Inci dents, Lumberton is unique in that its strets were laid out and the lots staked off under authority of a bill passed by the North Carolina assembly which permit - ted General Willis, father of Lum berton, to dispose of the town lots on a lottery system. This occured in 1787, and the principal streets of the town are today just as they were placed by the original sur vey. HTCOND LARGEST Fairmont, eleven miles from Lumberton, is ranked as the coun ty’s second largest community. Located on the Myrtle beach high way this town was originally known as Ashpole. According to the slogan Fairmont is the “big gest little-town tobacco market in the world.” Near Rowland in South Robe son, is located the old Ashpole Presbyterian church one of coun ty’s most historic landmarks. Just north of Rowland is Pembroke, center of the Indian population of Robeson and the home of Pem broke College for Indians, the only institution of its kind anywhere in the southeastern part of th United States. The town of Pem broke was named for Pembroke Jones, a former official of the Atlantic Coast Line. Maxton, the most westerly town in the county, was once called Shoe Heel. According to legend this name was derived from the Indian word, “Quehele.” Maxton is also the home of the Presby terian Junior College. Just north of Maxton is the site of old Floral college, one of the first women’s schools of the South to be granted authority to award degrees to graduates. Ten miles to the north is the thriving town of Red Springs, oice referred to by the late Josephus Daniels, as center of the “God Blessed Macs.” Red Springs is the heme of the celebrated Flora Macdonald College, named for the glamorous Scot lady of pre-Revo iutionary days, who as a girl in Scotland helped to give protection to Prince Charles, pretender to the English throne. Red Springs is also Robeson’s biggest cotton market. As one travels through the coun ty he will find such old towns as Shanno, Buie, Lumber Bridge and Parkton that lie between Red Springs and St. Pauls. The third largest populated town in the county, St. Pauls is a large textile center. Other important community centers in the rural life of Robe son county include. Marietta. Barnesville, Elrod, Purvis, Proc - torville, Orrum, Alfordsville and Rennert. Four newspapers and hundreds of churches and schools plus a progressive farming and business policy in every community are serving to maintain the well rounded financial, industrial and agricultural balance Which spells continued progress for this ever growing county. The cast of yesterday’s program included. Ruth Davis McDonald and Betty Brit. Mary Henri Wolfe was featured accompanist and W. O. Page, Jr., was featured solist. Tom Eagleson was special program announcer. Next week the Star and the News will salute New Hanover county on the Sunday Star-News reel over WMFD at 1:30 p.m. Stan Miesek of Detroit, second highest scorer in the Basketball association of America. never played high school or tollege bas i Ketbill. Uncle Bud Says: C&r BUI BaMwte) u irimmuf” McClure Newspaper Syndicate Senator Bilbo most have been terribly embarrassed when he walked in the Senate chamber and nobody askod him to have a seat. AIRLINES CLERK SLAIN WITH STONE (Continued From Page One) still on Dellinger’s wrist and there was $26 in cash in his pockets, discounting robbery as the motive Cor the slaying. Shortly after 3 o’clock this morning, Dellinger left the Bull Fiddle tavern, a Jackson Heights nightclub specializing in jive music. Police said that some of the tavern customers thought he left alone and others believed he was accompanied by two men. Dellinger lived in an apartment in the same neighborhood and ap parently was walking home from the tavern when he was assaulted. He shared his apartment with a man identified as Orville Schuch. He worked in New York for the Scandinavian Airlines, having come here from his family home in Wakefield, Mass. 40 KILLED WHEN INDIANS BATTLE (Continued From Page One) tion was that a funeral procession of one community had attacked a house of worship of another, but the stories varied as to which com munity had made the attack. Seven Stabbed One hospital reported it had re ceived seven persons suffering from stab wounds, one of whom died. TVl A rintinn* tw Pol/t.iU. _ the death toll there, where Hindu Moslem clashes have been contin uous since last Wednesday, to more than 50 persons killed and over 400 wounded in less than a week. Five persons were killed yester day in Calcutta proper, some by police fire, and 42 others were wounded, a government communi que said, while communal disord ers in Howrah, across the Hooghly spread to three police districts, causing three deaths and injuries to 52. The military moved into Howrah, quelling 30 incidents and arresting 80 persons. In Cawnpore, one man was kill ed and an unspecified number of others were wounded in fighting which started when Moslems ob jected to anti-Pakistan placards displayed at a Punjab celebration. Some senior civil officials were injured by stone throwing. A cur few was imposed and troops pa trolled the streets. On Signal Fighting broke out in Bombay almost as if by signal wherever the Hindu and Moslem districts converged and in many other sec tions of mixed population. First fighting started in the Null Bazaar, where police fired on the rioters. Flames reddened the Bombay sky after a mob fired a cotton mill, but the blaze soon was extinguish ed. Police said many of the casual ties occurred in fierce gang fights marked by knifings and the hurl ing of soda water bottles. In Calcutta police opened fire 30 times and made more than 200 arrests. Forty-four separate clash es were reported during the day and 10 arson cases. Relief organizations said they were evacuating persons from trouble areas to safer localities. Peace committees touring affect ed areas in an attempt to restore order were stoned Calcutta’s trans portation system had been halted since a bus was burned recently. Street cars have not been opera ting for several weeks because of a strike. Thousand Killed The past few days of communal fighting constituted a resumption of early disorders, which had sub sided for several weeks, costing more than 1,000 lives over a period of five months. Rancor between Hindus and Moslems over Moslem status in India has been chiefly responsible for the riots. The Moslems, in the majority in the Punjab and certain other sections of India, insist that an independent Moslem state of Pakistan be provided in the India of the future. Hindus and Sikhs have violently opposed this move. Shut Out, leading money winner of 1942, is in stud at Lexington, Ky. The Greentree Stable chestnut son of Equipoise is bringing a $1,000 fee in stud and his book is full for this year. AMERICAN FLOOR SANDING and FINISHING MACHINES GREGG BROS. MARKET & FRONT Dial 0055 The Weather Weather bureau report of temperature and rainfall for the 24 hours ending 8 p. m. in the principal cotton growing areas and elsewhere: Station High Low Preclp WILMINGTON - 64 51 .10 Alpena - 33 17 — Asheville_ 54 41 — Atlanta- 60 48 . 02 Atlantic City- 47 38 — Birmingham_ 65 46 .05 Boston_ 38 3.5 — Buffalo_ 29 21 — Burlington _ 34 27 .08 Charlotte - 60 - 40 — Chattanooga_61 38 — Chicago_ 43 24 — Cincinnati- 49 25 Cleveland- 39 24 .01 Dallas - 70 49 — Denver_ 67 36 _ Detroit_£_ 38 23 — Duluth _ 41 13 —_ El Paso- 80 48 — ~ Fort Worth_ 70 47 — Galveston_ 71 59 _ Jacksonville_ 80 60 . 60 Kansas City_ 55 38 — Little Rock_ 43 41 Los Angeles___ 70 48 — Louisville_ 52 27 _ Memphis_ 63 41 — Meridian_ 68 45 .82 Miami _ 82 68 _ Minn.-St. Paul_ 34 22 _ Mobile - — 52 3.47 Montgomery- 56 46 .56 New Orleans_ 83 57 1.08 New York_ 43 34 _ Norfolk _ 55 45 — Philadelphia_ 46 34 .04 Phoenix_ 85 52 — Pittsburgh _;_ 42 22 . 02 Portland, Me.- 41 25 .03 Richmond_ 58 38 _ St. Louis_51 28 ' _ San Antonio_ 78 55 _ San Francisco_ 63 52 — Savannah- 64 50 . 73 Seattle- 60 43 .16 Tampa- 80 61 22 Vicksburg- 71 3a j0 Washington_49 34 _ EVIDENCElOOMING SENSATIONAL OIL (Continued From Page One) company of California and the Texas Co., parlayed a $27,000,000 investment into holdings worth $5, 000,000,000 to $10,000,000,000 in a deal that was financed by Ameri can taxpayers. 2. "rhat the U. S. Navy was forced to pay $59,879,000 for Middle East oil that it could have bought at one time for $26,419,000. The Navy had to pay $1.05 a barrel while the British got the same oil for 40 cents or less. The Navy said in this connection that the oil offered originally—for $26,419,000—was in ferior. It also denied it had paid excessive profits to the companies involved. 3. The United States indirectly loaned $10,000,000 to King Ibn Saud of Saudi-Arabia who had sought a loan from the oil companies, by lending it first to the British who thereupon loaned it to the King. ‘‘I gay the oil companies deliber ately defrauded the U. S. govern ment,” Moffett told the commit tee. Offer Rejected The witness formerly headed a concern set up by Standard of California and the Texas Co., to exploit Arabian oil. He said he proposed a deal to the Navy ii. 1941 by which it could have purchased oil for 40 cents a barrel. His offer was rejected, however, and the Navy later paid Arabian-Ameri can’s predecessor, the California Arabian Standard Oil Co., the $1.05 price. The Navy denied Moffett’s charge that the detel netted the latter com pany a $68,000,000 profit. The committee recessed the hear ings. after Moffett testified, to give Wheeler a chance to scan itg rec ords. The group announced that it had been assured of President Tru man's cooperation in btaining rec c ds cf the 1941 proposals from the Hyde Park, N. Y., files of the late President Roosevelt. His in tervention is necessary before papers can be removed from the collection. Until Wheeler reports, the com mittee will resume its investi.a ticn of the Inter-American highway running from Mexico’s southern border to the Panama Canal. The project was scheduled to cost $30, 000,000 but the United States al ready has poured $68,000,000 into the venture and engineers estimate another $60,000,000 will be needed to finish the job. Old Fire Engine Hag Speed PORTLAND, Tex.,—(U.R1— The Portland Volunteer Fire Depart ment has acquired a 31-year-old pumper which still has a lot of fight for an ancient firewagon. The firemen got the old buggy up to 60 miles an hour during a test run. „ Today; Thru >Ved. OPEN 10:45 A. M. DAILY MARLENE JAMES -OIETRICBTEWART' I Asitc j WINNINGER • AUER • DONLEYY I western^a'ctionT IsTARTs'j "WHEN THE f-DALTONS RODE" WILLY IN FAVOR °F NATION union (c«ta57r,„ - k Nationes,”Xhensanide ^ ior thij^ounlr^to * no, pean democracies y,h‘v .Euro! Policy should be "eir H However,” h* , ol the fact that »f "‘n vie* spent some 400,000 several hundred billion Zu ^ two wars for the preserv r'5 * European democracy u atloa ot me we do have a right tSeenis 0 our respectful recommit Sub®it . Wiley proposed tte rant natiCK m political union "with18 i°« citizenship, without losinCOrtlIri»'! respective governments g- ^ surrendering some of iLa‘ nou!l rate prerogatives.” r lsPt WOMAN SLAIN DETROIT, March 30.- Tk mutdiated body of M-c v Tit« Chmiel, 42-year-old Jhe frgiI« troit bar owner, was foun(,J today along a road in Van ivS? just north of the Wayne M,,' county border. Macomh ml authorities and Detroit Je® said she was slain with ment such as a claw hammer ^ Gets Free Air Ride Horn. MINNEAUOLIS, (UP) Clifford Mulzahn, St. Paul JZ and ferry pilot, got his disclZ at Altus, Okla., the army nJ someone to fly a P-38 t0 jZ, apolis. So Mulzahn took th, I and got a free ride home. The heavyweight boxing tin, has changed hands five tin, ismce 1930, always in the mor.n of June. ' dsStt ai erne mm Shows 1:15 3:08-5:04-7:00-8:56 • TODAY & TUESDAY » 1 - 2 : 50 - 4 : 55 - 6:55 - 9:00 She had more than her ihire d everythin; and wanted more , . , more . • . more. TV Aaforj “LAURA' bow brbfsH thi X?tf~ MARGARET LOCKWOOC IAN HUNTER SPECIAL FEATUHETTl! “Alice In Movleland" TECHNICOLOR CAHTOOHI “Crackpot Kin?1' LATEST WORLD NEWS 11
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 31, 1947, edition 1
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