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FORECAST: 4 4 + 4 4 gipi^l umuujtmt litnnumj max ^O^76. WILMINGTON, N. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1947 ESTABLISHED 1867 Article Hits USSR Thesis Marshall’s Top Advisor ‘Regarded As Author Of Strong Expose WASHINGTON, July 8 - (U.R) ,-e'ary ol State GeorSe C ( shall’* top adviser on Russia reportea reliably to.-igut to ,%e author of a current anany li ‘ magazine article bluntly 0O;..zin* soviet foreign policy attempting to answer the ‘/ton: "what is Russia up to j mv. rjje article has created consider hl mterest here and has become ‘“I/" reading in State depart ‘ . and diplomatic circles wnere u is regarded as a faithful portray * of current U. S. policy toward 1 Soviet Union. Had it at, eared the suspected author s name f -’more popularly read maga i.c it may have created a sen sation. if not a diplomatic incident. The article sees only political /economic conflict between the [* S. and USSR and warns the U. ■ t0 expect only secretiveness, ,acK 0f frankness, duplicity, wary ■uspiciousness and basic unfriend L,s of purpose in the conduct of Russia"s foreign affairs under the present regime. It proposes—and observers agree rtjat its proposals are present U. j policy—that the United States inter "a policy of firm contain ment" designed to comfort the Soviets with "unalterable counter /ce” at every point where they ijow signs of enroaching tpon the interests of a peaceful and liable world. No (Jonlirmation There is no official confirmation ,i who wrote the article. But jverv diplomat who has read it and was "asked about it had no doubt that the author was George F. Keenan, career diplomat whose specialty has been Russia and who recently was named by Mashall to head his new long range foreign policy planning staff. The article appears in the cur rent issue of an erudite quarterly See ARTICLE On Page Two ‘DAHLIA’MURDER BAFFLES PI CE Twenty-Year-Old Woman Latest Victim Of Sex Maniac On Coast LOS ANGELES, July 8 —(U.R)— The nude and mutilated body of pretty Mrs. Rosenda Mondragon, JO, was found in the old Mexican lection within a few blocks of the city hall today. She had been strangled with a silk stocking. The latin beauty was the sixth vi"'im in a murder cycle that itarted with the “Black Dahlia’' s mg of Elizabeth Short, 22, Jan., 15. One maniac was belived responsible for all six. The latest victim’s breasts were lacerated and her face showed ligns of a beating. From bruises on her body, it appeared she was strangled first and then thrown from an automobile. There was evidence of attempted criminal assault. Around her neck was a religious medal to ward off evil. She wore a gold ring with a pur ple stone. me slam woman s estranged husband, Tony Mondragon, told police his wife visited him brief ly at about 2 a.m., and appeared •lightly intoxicated. He said they conversed briefly and she left, laying she had a date. Mondragon See DAHLIA On Page Two national airlines DC-6 CRACKS MIAMI newark time mark NEWARK, N. J„ July 8— flJ.Rj- —A National Airlines DC-6 *et a new commercial speed record between Miami, Fla., and Newark today, flying the distance in three hours and 23 minutes. . The four-engined airliner, Piloted by Ed Taaffe, left Miami *1 9:38 a.m., EDT and was tim *d across the Newark airport control tower at 1:01 p. m., EDT, The previous re lord wras *et about two weeks ago by an Eastern Airlines Constellation ^'nich made the trip in three hours, 28 minutes and 11 sec onds. The Weather 5®0ulh Carolina—Partly cloudy Wednes. . ana Thursday with continued , f:atc temperatures. Scattered thun \,un'’ns Central and East portions "Mnesday. :o'nSh Carolina—Partly cloudy west, It ',■rat)le cloudiness with scatter Por*v, uritiprshowers central and East (!, ,™s Wednesday. Thursday partly tear'tv, V,a^' scattered thundershowers the coast. Moderate temperatures, stern Standard Time) n , - t S. Weather Bureau) <"*0logical data for the 24 hours "g r-!0 r. m. yesterday. TEMPERATURES IS; m- 74; 7:30 a. m. 73; 1:30 p. m. nj,-.',, P- m- 76; Maximum 82; Mini “can 76: Normal 75. I.J. humidity (j. a m. 88;17:20 a. m. 76; 1 <?0 p. m. •4” P- m. 31. Total PRECIPITATION ■S3 inches'" 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m. inches' Since the first of the month .76 lpr. TiDES FOR TODAY V, 5 r ’lle Tide Tables published by 0ast and Geodet’c Survpv). HIGH L0TV °n - 1:28 a.m. 8:50 a.m. 1:57 p.m. 8:56 p.m. bboro ^let . H:21 a.m. 5:28 a.m. Sum..- 11:35 p.m. 5:34 p.m. 5:°8; Sunset 7:26; Monrise lt.lv':, “P^t 10:39ao. 1 «■ m :ag<- at Fayetteville. N. C. at j ' 1 hesday missing feet. METHODISM’S highest ranking officer, Bishop Paul Bentley Kern, of Nashville, who was elected, president of the Council of Bishops of the denomination in May, will preach to his nation-wide consti tuency, Sunday, July 6 over sta tions of the Columbia network. Speaking from Roanoke, Va., on the “Church of the Air” Bishop Kern -will be heard from 8:30 to 9:00 a.m. Central Standard Time. His subject will be “Out of the Depths: God’s Answer.” Music will be by ,the choir of the Grpopo Memorial Methodist Church of Roanoke. JAYCEESENDORSE NAL APPLICATION Organization Wires CAB Urging Granting Of Route Tr Washington At the instigation of their air port committee members of tire Wilmington Junior Chamber of Commerce last night endorsed the application of National Airlines for a direct air route between Richmond, Baltimore, Philadel phia, and New York. The Jaycees last night dispatch ed a telegram to the Civil Aero nautics board in Washington, D. C. urging that they grant permis sion to National Airlines to inaug urate the direct rcute. The case is now being reviewed before the board. W. M. (Red) Echols, chairman of the airport committee, present ed the question to club members and read the report which H. E. Boyd is to present to the board at the hearing in Washington. Four contestants in the Miss Wilmington beauty contest, Which is to be staged at Lumina on Thursday night, were special guests of the club at last night's meeting. Introduced by Stanley Rehder, chairman of the pageant, each girl told something about herself. NHHS Graduate Lois Cox, who has lived in Wil mington all her life, is a graduate of New Hanover High school and was employed with the U. S. Mar itime commission until about a month ago. June Willetts was born in Le land but she moved to Wilming ton and was graduated from New Hanover high. She attended Worn gee JAYCEES On Page Two ‘MISSING’YOUTHS VERY MUCH ALIVE Johnny Vollers, Harold Borneman Explain Top sail Light Episode The mystery of the missing white boat at Topsail Inlet has been solved. Johnny Vollers and Harold Bor nerman, young men of Winter Park, reported yesterday that •‘they were very much alive.” Borneman called the Star-News early yesterday morning after a story had appeared in the Star about two Spofford Mill workers, Leon Lee and Roland Watts, who reported they saw a small white boat, app-arantly in distress in the inlet early Monday morning. Borneman and Vollers had been fishing for drum and were using a miners light, a carbide-powered unit, Borneman said. The pair, after unsuccessfully trying to fan the light out by swinging it in the air, decided to stamp the light out. “I am sure the light those fel lows saw was from our lantern.” Borneman said. ‘'When the light went out, I guess Lee and Watts thought we had gone under.” Bor neman said. I,?e told the Star Monday night that he and Walts were unable to go to the aid of the boat “'In distress” because the boat they were using was too small. And there is the happy ending to what might have been a tragic fishing expedition. _ Bevin Hails Marshall Aid British Foreign Secretary Says Plans Step Toward Unity Of Peoples LONDON, July 8—(TP) —Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin today hailed the ’ „ 'all offer as a step ?at unity of peo -vfcVc e world” and *r\ door still was participate in rfide recovery plan. j^'-0 -''Pe is bleeding to death; must be stopped.” Bevin de clared in an address to the Wandsworth Rotary club. “And in the stopping of it you have got to rule out any prejudices, either religious or ideological.” The secretary said that unity in Europe had appeared impossible, because of racial and historical differences and the “awful devas tation” of war, until Secretary of State Marshall made his aid-Eu rope proposal. Bevin brushed off as “political propaganda” the proposal by For mer Prime Minister Winston Churchill for a “United States of Europe.” “On the other hand,” he added, “there is a prospect—and a very happy prospect, I think—no>v, of trying to produce something with out touching the political side at all, without even raising it, and certainly not accentuating it, to have an opportunity of approach ing the problem from an econom ic basis. “If built upon rightly and work ed out properly, this may yet make the biggest contribution to the unity of the peoples of Eu rope. By working on the basis of unity, it may be that even in our day and generation we shall find that we have contributed at last to a great unity of peoplps throughout the world.” Bevin said the Marshall propo sal, originally put. forward by the American secretary in an address at Harvard University, was con tained in an “unrehearsed speech, like a bolt out of the blue.” He welcomed Czechoslovakia and other countries which have accepted a British-French invita tion to the Paris Economic con ference opening Saturday, and added: “I do not know what others will come, or who will stay away. But I can assure you and the British public and the great public of the United States, which is behind Mr. Marshall in his great offer, that having put our hand to the blow we are not turning back.” Without mentioning Russia by r.ame, Eevin reiterated that the door was still open for those who had declined to cooperate and that “we shall *try to prove to them by example where we cannot now satisfy them by argument.” He sahd Britain was determined not to “quibble” over the details of the Marshall offer and not to “become annoyed” at criticisms. This apparently was a reference to critical articles which have ap peared in the Russian press. “To tell us now we are dividing Europe really is nonsense,” he said. TEACHERS TO GET DATA ON SALARY State Education Board To Set Schedules For Year On Thursday RALEIGH, July 8- (JP) —School teachers of the state will learn Thursday in dollars and cents the amount of salary increase they will receive next school year. The answer to the question the th 1947 General assembly in creased appropriations for their salaries will be forthcoming when the State Board of Education meets here Thursday to adopt a budget for the coming school year. The board’s finance committee, which has been studying the bud get for several weeks—and parti cularly the question of a teacher salary schedule—will make its re port at the meeting. Available for operating the school’s next year is approximate ly $59,000,000 compared with ap proximately $45,000,000 being spent this year. Approximately $50,000,000 of the total available for operating the schools has been earmarked for salaries for the 25,000 teachers and principals. The remaining $9,000,000 will go as salaries for superintendents, clerical help, bus mechanics, jan itors, and bus drivers, for opera tion of plants—lights, water and fuel, and for supplies. During the legislature, there was considerable debate over whether the appropriation for teachers’ salaries would provide salary increases of 30 per cent. “Flying Saucers” Made To Promote Toy Sales ROANOKE, Va., July 8—(U.R)— Kyle Walker, a Roanoke toy maker, said today that the flying saucer stories probably grew oui of a sales promotion scheme for his latest plaything—a scheme al most as fantastic as the tallest tales of the whirling discs. Walker said he had invented a new game called "spin sailers involving throwing aluminum rings at posts in the ground, kind of like quoits. To promote the toy, Walker said, he had constructed "by a rubber company’’ about 6,000 large size rings made of hollow rubber, about two feet in diam eter, painted them with luminous paint and sent them to prospec tive sales agents around the coun try. “I suggested that if the rubber sailers were filled with helium and let loose in the air the wind would blow them around the coun try and create quite a sensation, ’ Walker said. “Apparently that is what has happened.” Walker explained that the spin sailers, both the aluminum and gas-filled rubber types, each had See SAUCERS On Page Three GOP-Backed Tax Reduction Bill Passes In House By 302 To 112; Lewis Orders Miners Into Pits i-— Union Leader Scores Again UMW Chieftain Wins Big gest Wage Increase Ever Granted WASHINGTON, July 8 — (/P) — John L. Lewis ordered three fourths of his 400,000 soft coal miners back to the pits tonight to work for another year—when “aole and willing”—at the biggest wage increase he ever won. “Who’s looney now?” he de manded of his critics in general as he jubilantly told reporters of the precedent-shattering pact. Coal Operators paraded to Unit ed Mine workers headquarters to sign on Lewis' terms. For those who didn’t sign the terms were: take it or leave it. The Southern Coal Producers association was the only sizeable group to leave it. They hit Lewis for modifications in a closed meeting, apparently got nowhere, and decided to convene tomorrow at 12 noon (E.S.T.) for a “final decision.” One of the Southerners predict ed they would be “forced to ac cept,” as a group or individually. In fact, a scattering of them had already accepted. But Southern See UNION on Page Two NEW COTTON CROP MAY FALL SHORT Nation Now Faces Smallest Supply In Quarter Of Century WASHINGTON, July 8 — on — The United States faced the pro spect today of the smallest sup ply of cotton for the coming mar keting year in nearly a quarter of a century. The Agriculture department’s acreage figures — the first cotton report of the season — indicated that production tnis year possibly may fall nearly 2,000,000 bales short of estimated requirements. The department reported the cotton acreage m cultivation on July 1 at. 21,389,000 acres, an in crease of 17.6 percent over last year but about 10 percent below the government’s recommended goal. The department made no pro duction forecasts, but the crop would be about 10,495.000 bales of 500 pounds gross weight if the acreage abandoned is equal to the ten-year average and the yield per acre is equal to the long time average of about 250 pounds. The first official production forecast will be issued August 8. In setting a goal of 24,000,000 acres, the department last winter estimated needs for the market ing year beginning August 1 at about 12,360,000 bales. Thus a crop of 10,495,000 bales See COTTON On Page Two COURT CLERKS MEET AT ATLANTIC BEACH August L. Meyland, clerk of the New Hanover county court, will be one of several score in attend ance at the annual convention of the Association of Superior Court Clerks of the state beginning today at Atlantic Beach and lasting through Friday. Up for discussion will be new state laws, child adoption proce dures and other matters. Speakers will include Peyton B. Abbott, as sistant director of the Institute of Government at Chapel Hill, who will speak on the new laws, George R. Hughes, Trenton at torney and K. S. Cate of Chapel Hill. Along The Cape Fear ODD BURIALS — John Paul Jones, the early American naval hero and a Wilmington woman, apparently had similarities in be ing interred in a lead casket filled with alcohol, C. C. Chadbourn, 415 South Front Street, has noted in a letter. Chadbourn recalled the oddness of the burial of the naval hero after reading an editorial in a re cent paper. “It is interesting to recall,” he wrote, “that a French friend as a mark of courtesy to this country and in case this coun try ever desired to bring the body (that of J. P. Jones) home, placed it in a lead casket filled with al cohol and there it remained for over a century.” “In 1905 the body was escorted i.i triumph through the streets ol Paris and brought to this country accompanied by an honor squad ron of four cruisers. It is now in a marble sarcophagus under the chapel at the Naval Acadenmy at Annapolis where bicentennial me morial services were held July Gtii,” Chadbourn continued. * * * COINCIDENCE—“It is a coinci dence that only a few weeks ago you carried the story of a similar disposition of the body of a Wil J. G. THORNTON is shown here making a recording of his voice on a wire .004 of an inch thick while Fred Farrar, manager of the radio division of the Sears, Roebuck and Company store here, adjusts the mechanism. The new wire recorder will make recordings of broadcasts, records or of the voices of family friends. The placard above the pair shows the recorder from a top view and the controls necessary to operate it. (STAFF PHOTO). Army Whips Up Saucer Flurry However “Find” Finally Fizzles i SEARCH FOR HOSPITAL SITE HAS NOT “NARROWED DOWN” Morning Star Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, July 8—Contrary to published reports today, Rep. J. Bayard Clark’s office said tonight that the Veterans Ad ministration had not narrowed its search for a hospital site to three eastern North Carolina towns. The Veterans Administration, the announcement said, has a policy of not considering any town under 10,000 population. Any eastern North Carolina city .yith a population above the adminis tration’s set minimum still has a chance at the institution. While Wilmington will be visited bv representatives of the administration in its search for a hospital site, it cannot now be said that the search is confined to this city Wilson, and Goldsboro, the announcement added. POWER SHOVEL SAVES OLD GRAY MARE FROM ‘OOZY’ CANAL DEATH PHILADELPHIA, July 3 —-0P1— Bessie, an old grey mare, was found mired and slowly sinking in an old muck-filled canal in South Philadelphia today. Policemen tried to lasso the horse and drag her out. No luck. Agents of the Society For The Prevention of Cruelty to Animals donned hip boots and waded to the rescue — without success. Bessie continued to sink into the ooze. A big power shovel was put to work, shoving aside tons of muck until it reached the scene. Then it hoisted Bessie to safety aboard a rope attached to a 50-foot boom. Stableman Abraham Rathblatt wrapped Bessie in blankets and led her back to the barn. He was overheard muttering something about old grey mares. . . ELOPEMENT CLINTON, la., July 8.—(U.R)— Popeye and the “frog-legged girl,” both featured attractions in tee Mills Brothers circus, were miss ing today, and circus cronies be lieved they had eloped. Popeye, 20, who always goes by that name, pops his eyes in the side show. Bertha Haffley, 17, is billed as the “frog-legged girl.” The couple disappeared during the night from the trailers in which they travel with the circus. mington lady who died at sea,” Chadbourn wrote. “Such cases are exceedingly rare. Indeed these are the only two cases that ever came to the attention of this writer.” While such a portion of Jones’ history has seldom been told, the rest of his career is as familiar to the schoolboy as the Saturday afternoon westerns at the movies. Cha'aourn notes, however, that “for some reason unknown to naval historians this hero added the name Jones, his full name having been John Paul. He was a native of Scotland.” About this great naval hero, Chadbourn continued, “While he was engaged in many naval ac tivities his chief claim to fame is his classic remark, ‘I have not yet begun to fight.’ These were the circumstances: He was in command of the Bon Homme Richard which was never intend ed. for a fighting ship. She was a merchant vessel, but for the emergency converted into a war ship. She was engaged by the powerful British naval vessel, the Serapis. Half of the Admiral’s men were killed, most of his guns See CAPE FEAR On Page 8wo RECORDING UNIT SHOWN AT CLUB Invited Group Witnesses Demonstration Of New Wire Instrument Ever had your favorite radio program interrupted by a sales man knocking at the door and when you return you find you missed an important .part? Want to listen to an hour of sumphonic music over and over and do you want baby’s first few Da-Da’s preserved forever? Just get you a wire recorder from Sears, Roebuck and Compa ny and your worries are over. You get a cabinet model wire recorder which will also play rec ords and has a six-tube radio built in with a loop antenna. You also get 7,500 feet of wire which will See RECORDING On Page Two 1947 LEAF CROP REPORTED ‘GOOD’ p Federal-State Service Says Flue-Cured Tobacco Progressing Fast RALEIGH, July 8 — (IP) —The state’s flue-cured tobacco crop has made good progress during the last three weeks, and its con dition ranges from “fair” to “good”, the Federal - State Crop Reporting service announced to day. The crop is from one to three weeks late, stands are average but growth is irregular, the re port said, adding that yields proto See LEAF on Page Two UM W Inner Sanctum Hasi Fat Desk, Fat Rugs, Lewis BY ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Ju:y 8— (/P) — John L. Lewis has as many sides as a lump of coal. And today he had his best, or contract - signing, side forward. He smiled at reporters, was po lite to photographers, and at times—but only at times—talked rimost kindly of coal mine opera tors. Lewis met reporters in his ritzy office on the sixth floor of the United Mine Workers building. This room looks like the result Mysterious Disc Found On Farm Proves Altitude Weather Device CHICAGO, July 8 — (U.R)—The Army Air Forces whipped up a flurry of excitement today with an announcement that one of the mysterious flying saucers had been found on a ranch in New Mexico—but it turned out to be part of an Army high-altitude weather observation device. Col. William H. Eilanchard, commanding officer of the Ros well (N. M.) Army Air base, an nounced the discovery, describing the object as a “flying disc.” Brig. Gen. Roger B. Ramey, Fort Worth, commanding general of the 8th Air Force, then announced the object would be flown to Wright Field, O., for investiga tion. The Army Air forces in Wash ington quickly followed with a statement that Ramey had report ed to headquarters that “an ob ject” reported to be a “flying saucer” was being forwarded to Wright Field. Hours after the first announce ment, Warrant Officer Irving Newton, Stetsonville, Wis., assign ed to the weather station at the See ARMY On Page Two TWO PROBLEMS BEFORE COUNCIL ‘R ound - The - City’ Truck Route And Police System To Be Considered Two matters of more than pass ing interest are expected to come up at today’s regular city council meeting although in neither case is final action expected. One is the long-delayed propos ed “round-the-city” truck route and the other plans on greater ef ficiency for the police department. Council members will consider at their 1C a.m., meeting, which one of three routes, or any, they should recommend for the use of gasoline trucks in driving through or around the city. The police matter pertains to a report submitted by Roy Morgan, former FBI agent who recently completed a survey of the depart ment with an eye to improving the entire system and recommen dations by Police Chief Hubert Hayes along the same line. City Manager J. R. Benson is expected to submit the Morgan report. See 2 PROBLEMS On Page Two of a dream the interior decorator of a movie palace once had about a coal mine. And maybe it is. There are panelled walls and ove.rhead beams to delicately sug gest a mine’s innards. Special safety lamps are on the wall, on each side of the big fireplace. A fancy chandelier is made out of picks, shovels, sledgehammers, dynamite borers and miners’ safe ty lamps. There are fat leather chair*, fat See CMW on Page Two Senate Plans Quick Action Speculation Rife In Capital As To “Over-Ride” Strength WASHINGTON, July 8—(TP)—'The Republican - backed $4,000,000,000 income tax reduction for 49,000, 000 taxpayers sailed through the House again today by an over whelming vote of 802 to 112. Ttiis is 26 more than the two- thirds needed to override a second pres idential veto. Speaker Martin (R-Mass) per sonally took the floor and asked the body to make its vote so de cisive “as to persuade the Presi dent that the people should have this delayed justice.” Anticipating another Presiden tial veto, Martin declared the House should exert its right to perform its constitutional function of determining what taxes shall be levied on the people.” The measure was tossed over to the Senate, where Republican leaders said they hope to rush it again to President Truman’s desk before the week ends. Some Democratic leaders said another veto is certain. The measure is identical with the one the President returned June 16 as “the wrong kind of tax reduction at the wrong time” —except that the effective date of the tax cut nas ben changed/ from July 1, 1947, to January 1, 1948. While a veto - overriding voto See SENATE On Page Two ; CALIFORNIA LOOT FOUND IN STATE Charlotte Police Recover $25,000 Worth Of Sil verware, Jewelry CHARLOTTE, July 8—(/P)—Char lotte police announced today they had recovered in a pawn shop and home here silverware and jewelry estimated to be worth $25,000 al legedly stolen in California, and alerted Winston - Salem police to look for $1,500 more in silverware. Littlejohn said Robert Gene Smith was being questioned by detectives in San Luis Obispo, while he had asked Seattle police to arrest Robert (Sonny) Sund berg. Both Smith and Sundberg formerly lived in Charlotte, Little john added. The police chief said these ar ticles had been recovered here: A massive silver tea set and a 10-pound sterling tray, estimated worth $20,000; 39 flat pieces of sil ver; a $1,500 watch; other silver table articles; a long strand of pearls and another necklace of diamonds and other stones. Discovery of the silver and Jew elry here followed a request from detectives in San Luis Obispo for police to check on Smith, who had been arrested there after he had pawned a silver-plated pistol al legedly stolen in San Francisco. Littlejohn said he had learned that Sundberg had given Smith the pistol after Smith, in the auto mobile painting business here, bad painted Sundberg’s car. Both men later left for the West coast, Littlejohn said. GALLUP POLL GIVES VOTE ANAYLSIS OVER TAFT-HARTLEY BILL The fight over labor legislation hit the political interests of Amer ican voters like a rip tide. Now that Labor Management Law is in effect what opiniom does the vot ing population hold of President Truman, Senator Taft and other participants in the clash between pro and con? The American Institute of Pub lic Opinion polled a cross-section of voters before and after the law was passed. Dr. Georg Gallup, the Insti tute’s director, will analyze the results of these intensive polls in a series of four articles. Anyone following political trends in this country cannot afford to miss the series. The Morning Star will publish Dr. Gallup’s Articles beginning July 11. And So To Bed During the oncoming rainy weather yesterday afternoon, a beautiful young baby (about 22) was waiting in the doorway of the Murchison building for a way to get home. Suddenly, a gentleman walk ed up. He stood beside her, apparently without paying any exira attention to her. Then he said, “How are you going home?” “I am waiting for someone to give me a ride,” she re plied. Then the man said, "Are yen married.” “Yes.” she said. "Well,” the man said, "the buses run every 10 min'iles.”
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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July 9, 1947, edition 1
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