Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 22, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Whiteville Man Named Head Presbyterian Men’s Retreat LAKE WACCAMAW, Sept. 21 _\V. G. Prevatte, of Whiteville, fliis afternoon was elected presi dent of the annual retreat for *he Presbyterian men of Bladen and Columbus counties. Serving with him will be W. M. Boice, of Whiteville as vice-president: •g l. Derrick, of Chadbourn as secretary-treasurer and E. Con rad Clark, of Elizabethtown as publicity chairman. Lake Wac camaw was selected as the place tor the 1948 retreat. The theme of the 1948 retreat was increased work for the church by the men'. It was em phasized that the men must be organized if they are to accomp lish more. It was suggested that the larger churches have an or ganized Men’s Bible class and a Men’s club, while the smaller churches have only the Bible class. The first task recom mended to the men was the success of the Presbyterian pro gram for progress, during which in the course of five years $8, 000,000 is to be raised for foreign relief administered wholly by the church and for home mis sionary programs. ... The theme was outlined m de tail by Eugene Davis, of White ville; E. W. Fairies, of Wallace, and Dr. Sandy C. Marks, of Wilmington, all of whom attend ed the recent conference at Montreat. Dr. L. A. Taylor, secretary of the Wilmington Presbytery, this r—-\ SEEN IN THE SMARTEST HOMES WALLPAPERS Dramatic patterns! Rich ctdors! The fattest thing in fashionable walls. Be rare to see them at our showroom! GREGG BROS. f 110 Market St. Dial 9655 I ^-—_J morning placed emphasis on the church as the sole means of bringing about world peace and outlined how the church must accomplish this by influence up on the individual, until individual by individual the church has generated the influence suffic ient to effect peace. Sunda’- afternoon Dr. F. Cros sly Morgan gave as the reasons why everyone should study the Bible the place it occupies as a book; the importance of the subjects treated in the Bible; the claims made by the Bible itself; and the goodness of the fruits harveseted whererever the Bible is read. An outline of the proposed basis of union of the Southern and Northern Presbyterian churches was given by the Rev. J. R. Kennedy, of Whiteville. At noon a delightful dinner was served by the ladies of the Lake Waccamaw Presbyterian Church. The retreat, which had 61 men in attendance, closed with the holy communion. STORM CHASES (Continued From Page One) the city’s beach front was “filthy with snakes.” He said his station had re layed a plea from Bay St. Louis to the Red Cross in New Or leans to send snake-bite serum. In Gulfport, a police patrol car, equipped with a loudspeaker toured the city warning all per sons to keep away from the beachfront because of the snakes. The broadcast warned that these snakes were “very, very dangerous.” A few water moccasins were found in the yards of the beau tiful residences lining the North side of the old Spanish Trail. Most of them were found on the South side along the bathing beaches and along the ruins of the first three beach fronts. Most of the Gulfport police and the National Guard said they had received no report of any one having been bitten by these poisonous reptiles and that everything possible was be ing done to prevent it. The many friends of Miss Peggy Padrick will be pleased to learn that she is improving at James Walker memorial hospi tal following an operation. ! " . i Make an | CLppointment I Cfor G Ylew [Picture 1 Before You I (jo-(Bacl-cLoSc/ioo/ | Adams Studio j 8th Floor Trust Bldg. I 22 Fears In Wilmington ^ PARTY UNR HARMONY I Complete calls quickly. This assures better service for you and your party line neighbors. ' A KEEP CALLS BRIEF K* aura phone Is placed securely on hook after each cali. Remember, one phone off the hook ties up an entire line. Allow a little time between calls to permit others to have their turn at the line. When another party on your line has an emergency, please release the line quickly...and pleasantly. HANG UP CAREFULLY 3IVE OTHERS A CHANCE - ^ RELEASE THE LINE IN EMERGENCY SOUTHERN BILL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY incorporated \ Obituaries MISS ELIZABETH CHANT Miss Elizabeth Chant, 85, 905 Princess street, died Sunday aft ernoon at 4 o’clock. She has been a resident of Wilmington for the past 25 years and was a native of Sommerset Ct., England, and has taught art in this city for a number of years. Funeral services will be con ducted from the chapel of Ward Funeral Home Monday after noon at 4 o’clock with the Rev. Alexander. Miller officiating. Interment will follow in Oakdale cemetery. JOHN B. O’SULLIVAN Funeral services for John B. O’Sullivan, 67, who died at his home, 3 B Nesbitt court, Satur day will be conducted Tuesday at 4 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ with the Rev. G. L. Akers officating assisted by the Rev. Harvey W. Glazier, Interment will be in Bellevue cemetery. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Beulah O’Sullivan; one son, Carl; one brother, Arthur O’Sul livan; one sister, Mrs. Beatrice Smith, and three grandchildren all of Wilmington. JAMES E. SHARP Funeral services for James E. Sharp, 74, of 4 A Nesbitt court, who died at James Walker Memorial hospital Friday, will be conducted Monday at 4 p.m., at the Yopp funeral home chapel with the Rev. H. J. Wilson and the Rev. E. W. Halleck officiat ing. Burial will be Bellevue cemetery. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Bessie Sharp; one son, Clifford M. Reaves; one sister, Mrs. E. H. Davis; and two brothers, Charles E. and John O. Sharp, all of Wilmington. The active pallbearers will be Hershel Sharp, Earl Sharp, Everett Hale, Jr., John Long, Clarence Sharpe, Carter Cas teen, and honorary pallbearers wlill be Dr. J. Watts Farthing, E. J. Hale, Sr., Ervin Swann, J. L. Williams, Dr. Dr. F. E. Warshauer, and W. W. Hook. ARMY PLANS TEST (Continued From Page One) at other points in the same gen eral area. He gave no dates, but the Army indicated the tests still are far in the future. It said that contracts will be made with the Engineer Research As sociates, Minneapolis, for the delicate scientific instruments needed to record and translate information on the blasts. The tests actually are a con tinuation of those held secretly late in the war which helped beat Germany and Japan to their knees. But they go far be yond the earlier experiments, which used charges only up to 2,000 pounds. The Army said the tests were scheduled to obtain information on heavier explosive charges “in keeping with the increased firing power of offensive wea pons.” They also will show, it said, explosive effects “without regard to the means of de livery, whether by bomb or guided missile.” “These tests,” the Army’s announcement said, “are aimed primarily at determining re quirements for command posts, air defense control centers and other vital military installa tions. “In addition, they will be of great value in establishing pro tection for underground indus trial plants should they be built.” The British tried a similar experiment on a German anti aircraft tower in their occupa tion zone of Germany and got only the derisive ridicule of German youngsters. STORM WARNINGS (Continued From Page One) the lower peninsula leaving eight dead and damage estimated up to $30,000,000. Same Storm This was the same storm which scurried into the Gulf of Mexi co and swung northward to beat fiercely at the Gulf coast from Biloxi, Miss., to New Orleans. That section of the coast still is a scene bordering on chaos. Devastation, particularly in Mis sissippi, is everywhere and ac curate estimates of deaths and damage are difficult. Brig. Gen. William P. Wilson of the Mississippi National Guard, directing rescue and rehabilita tion crews, said there were many conflicting and false reports as to the number of dead and in jured. A survey by two Associated Press reporters, almost isolated on the Mississippi coast, late to day confirmed 20 dead. Previous ly reports of deaths in the same area had run as high as 60. In New Orleans flood waters began creeping higher and this afternoon Deputy Sheriff John Williams said Lake Pontchartrain was rising slowly. Since 2 a. m., it had lapped upward four inches. Highway connections between New Orleans and Baton Rouge were closed by the flood. Encouraging Note There was an encouraging note, however, from the NeV Orleans Weather Bureau, which' said the wind had shifted to Southwester ly and should alleviate condi tions in the flooded area. The bureau explained that these winds would drive water from Lakes Pontchartrain and Borgne into the Goulf or adjacent i waters and restore the lakes to I normal levels. RUSSIA BUILDING (Continued From Page One) cities rising there and else where throughout the Soviet Union “bear witness to the huge strides the U.S.S.R. is making toward rebuilding an industrial economy so terribly ravaged by war.’) He added: Not On Maps “These cities are so new they do not yet appear on even the latest maps of the U.S.S.R. In fact, only a few of the 100 new cities have as yet been given any designation at all. The rest are known by the collective name, Bezimyanka — literally ‘Nameless City’ — until Soviet planners can dream up new var iations of Stalin’s and Molo tov’s names for their enlarged gazeteers.” Declaring tne cities are not being built for propaganda or to impress travellers, Raymond said: “They are built to ac commodate huge new factories, hydro-electric plants, railway junctions, mining plants, or to provide dwellings for hundreds of thousands of workers from all over Russia, who have been transplanted to the newly-devel oped or discovered sources of raw material.” Severournlsk, potentially one of the most important of the new centers, is one of the few which has been given a name. Located in the Ural mountains North of Magnitogorsk, Sever ouralsk “demonstrates Russia’s determination to concentrate heavy industries in the Urals where lies the greatest known concentration of mineral re sources in the world,” the writ er said. CAPE FEAR (Continued From Page One) which parallels were drawn be tween the mechanization of cot ton and the advent of the com bines which mechanized wheat growing. Agricultural labor al ways profited from having the labor made easier, the consen sus of opinion agreed. A higher standard of living from the ad vances of mechanization, most speakers generalized. To be more specific, one ex pert alleged that three-fourths of the income from Southern ag riculture comes from one-third of the tillable soil. He held that much of the remaining two thirds of the soil could be profit ably worked if labor released from the cotton fields were avail able to work it. The crying need of Southern agriculture— diversificatiin of crops—was de clared to be in prospect with the advent of the mechanized pro duction of cotton. A representative of the Nation al Cotton Council nailed down the social aspect of the displac ed labor question. The mechani zation, he declarel, would free the wife and mother from the field and put her back in the home where she belonged. It would free the children from the field, he added, so they could at tend school and receive an edu cation. COMMITTEE SENDS (Continued From Page One) modify the terms of the Italian peace treaty. Marshall, who is scheduled to confer tomorrow with President Truman, was not present at the committee meeting. The American delegation mean while offered no objection to the major item proposed during gen eral debate by Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vish insky at the end of his bitter attack on the United States. This proposal asks the U. N. to “con demn the criminal propaganda for a new war” and specifically accuses United States, Turkey and Greece. With acceptance of the Rus sian item without a formal vote, the 14-nation committee com pleted its recommendations on the 60-item agenda. The issues now will go to the full floor of the Assembly at Flushing Mea dows. This move was expected tomorrow afternoon or Tuesday morning at the close of the general debate, which still lists Britain’s Hector McNeil and nine other speakers. morehead city man I may LOSE EYE FROM airplane accident James Beck of Morehead City was admitted to James Walker Memorial hospital here at around 4 o’clock yesterday afternoon suffering from lac erations of the right eye re ceived in an airplane crash several hours earlier hospital officials reported last night. Beck, reportedly in his 30’s, told hospital attaches that he had been flying for around 10 years. He was flying a cub plane at Morehead, he said, when something went wrong with the plane while he was attempting a landing. The air plane was landed upside down, resulting in his injury. Beck’s condition was not listed as critical, but emergency room attendants said that he was ex pected to lose his right eye as a result of his injury. NATIONS TO SEAL (Continued From Page One) conference, Premier Paul Ra madier indicated in a speech that France feit the absence of the Soviet Union and other Eastern Europe states from the conference. Room For All “We feel that Russia, as well as England, forms a part of Europe,” Ramadier said, “There’s enough room around the table for everybody.” Russia, from whom France last week requested wheat, and other Eastern European nations declined to attend the conference or participate in the plan for U. S. aid for European recon struction proposed by Marshall. The report was said to em phasize that it was in no sense a “shopping list,” but was based on the ability of Western Europe to export $15,000,000,000 worth of supplies within the next four years if it received raw materi als and machinery. OFFICERS SEARCHING FOR PRINCIPLE IN SHOOTING CASE HERE Sheriff’s Officers today were investigating the mysterious shooting of Gracie Brinson, Negro, Route 1 Market street road, in the early hours of Sun day morning at the High Hat club, Negro night club four miles North of Wilmington on U. S. Route 17. Gracie was in a critical condi tion at James Walker Memorial hospital, having internal compli cations from the bullet wound in the stomach. Her residence is two doors from the club, on the steps of which she was standing when the shooting occurred, police said. LEAF WAREHOUSES (Continued From Page One) day, increase to five-hour sales day Oct. 6. Old Belt: Three and a half hour sales day through Sept. 26. Four-hour sales day starting Sept. 29, increasing to five-hour sales day starting Oct. 13. OLD BELT MARKETS START SALES TODAY RALEIGH, Sept. 21 — Marketing of flue-cured tobacco will move into high gear to morrow when sales begin on markets of the North Carolina and Virginia Old Belt. The Old Belt opening will complete the roster of flue cured belts, the four other belts having opened at intervals since the sales season began on the Florida-Georgia belt in mid-sum mer. The Old Belt markets are: Burlington, Madison, Mebane, Mt. Airy, Reidsville, Roxoboro, Stoneville and Winston-Salem in North Carolina and Danville, South Boston, South Hill, Ken bridge, Martinsville, Petersburg, Clarksville, Chase City, Law renceville, Brookneal and Rocky Mount in Virginia. On the North Carolina mar kets of the Old Belt last year a total of 157,673,944 pounds were sold at an average price of $41.87. . A \ \ ***** \ COPR. 19*7 BY MEA SERVICF, Kr. . r. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. 9*12. j "it tne graaes seem too low, why can’t we parents provide little prizes for the teachers whose pupils get the highest marks?” HAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS By Alley - » ■■■ ■ , AnY 3>ov£ "You S£NpS OUT PE^t PAYS A-LOO KIN’ ft/H P£A££ gtS# KEEP RI6HT ON tip 7WEU THE l.t 5HT ON P£ Moon / wm M m r7V>V\%. --^ < Released by The Bell Byn- —*“■* di.ale. Ine.l Trade Mark 9-22*1/? Re*. U 8. Pat. 0»c«) RADIO 1406 On You Dial 6:30—Coffee Club 7:30—Zeke Manners 7:45—Musical Clock 7:85—North Carolina Highlights 8:00—News with Martin Agronsky 8:15—Star News Commentator 8:20—Musical Clock 8:40—NBC Musical Reveille 8:55—UP News 9:00—The Breakfast Club with Don McNeil 10:00—My True Story 10:25—Betty Crocker Magazine of the Air 10:45—The Listening Post 11:00—Breakfast in Hollywood — Tom Breneman 11:45—Ted Malone 11:30—Galen Drake 12:00—Noon Day Musical 12:30—Tom Tom Tunes 1:00—Baukhage Talking 1:15—Musical Interlude 1:25—WMFD Concert of the Air 1:55—Star News Commentator 2:00—Walter Kleman—New* 2:15—Ethel and Albert 2:30—Bride and Groom 3:00—Ladies be Seated 3:30—Paul Whitman Club 4:15—So Proudly We Hail 4:30—Eddie Duchin 4:45—Dick Tracy 5:00—Let’s Dance 5:15—Terry and the Pirate* 5:30—Lone Ranger 6:00—Organ Serenade 6:15—Star News Commentator 6:20—Sports 6:23—North Carolina Highlights 6:30—Voice of the Arms . o 6:45—To be announced 7:00—Headline Edition 7:15—Elmer Davis 7:30—Bands of the Land 8:15—Your All Time Hit Parade 8:30—Treasury Agent 9:00—Adventures of Bill Lane# 9:30—So You Want to Lead a Band 10:00—Doctors Talk It Over 10:15—Tippin In 11:00—News of Tomorrow 11:15—Joe Hassel 11:30—Gems for Thought 11:35—Hotel Pa Orchestra OVER THE NETWORKS Tim* li eastsra standard. Far ssntral standard anbtract ana haar, for mean tain standard subtract tws hours, Some Iscsl statlans change hsnr af relay ta fit local schedules. Last minata pre gram changes cannot be inclndcd. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 (Far last. Daylight add ana haar) —TODAY— 5:00—Newa Report, 15 Mina—nbe Newscast Every Day—cba Kiddles Hour (also 1 hour later) — mbs-west 5:15—Sports: America Serenade — nbc In My Opinion, Talks—cbs 5:30—Red Barber and Sports—cba 5:45—Lowell Thomas Newscast—nbe World Newa & Commentary—cba 8:00—Radio Supper Club—nbc-basle Mystery of Week—cba Fulton Lewis, Jr. (repeat hour later) —mbs 6:15—News and Comment—nbe Jack Smith and Song—cbs Dance Music Orch—mbs-basie 6:30— Tlte House Party—nbc Henry J. Taylor (repeat at 10)—mbs 6:45—Kaltenbom Comment—nbc Bob Trout and News—cbe ; Sports (repeat SO m. later)—mb# 7:00—Cavalcade of America—nbc Inner Sanctum, Mystery—cbs Scotland Yard—mbs-basic 7:30—Howard Barlow Concert—nbc Godfrey Talent Scouts—cba Charlie Chan Mystery—mbs 7:55—Five Minutes News—cba 8:0(1—Voorhees Concert, Guests—nbc Radio Theater Hour—cbs Gabriel Heatter Comment—mbs 8:15—Real Life Drama—mbs 8:30—Dr. I. Q. Quiz Show—nbc Guy Lombardo Orchestra—mbs 9:00—Contented Concert—nbc My Friend Irma, Skit—cbs Fish and Hunt Club—mbs 9:30—First Plano Quartet—nbc Bob Hawk Quiz—cbs Dance Music Time—mbs 10:00—Newa 8c Variety 3 hrs.—abc News, Variety, Dance 3 hrs.—cbe News. Dance Band 3 hrs—mbs • ABC PROGRAMS - Times fit either Eastern Daylight or Eastern Standard. 6:00—Network Silent—1 Hour east 7:00—News anj Commentary Kiddies Hour—west repeat 7:15—Daily Commentary 7:30—The Lon* Ranger Drama 8:00—Lum and Abner, Comedy 8:15—Honey Dreamers Song 8:30—Treasury Agent Drama 9:00—Bill Lance Adventures 9:30—Sammy Kaye Band 10:00—Doctors Talk It Over 10:15—Buddy Weed Trio 10:30—Dance Half-Hour 11:00—News 8t Dance Band Hour 12:00—Dane# Band Hour—west only The Weather Weather Bureau report of temperature and rainfall for the 24 hours ending 8 P. M., in the principal cotton grow ing areas and elsewhere: Station High Low frecip. WILMINGTON_ 86 72 .38 Alpena - — 54 1.70 Asheville _ 82 65 — Atlanta _ 88 71 — Atlantic City_ 78 66 — Birmingham _- 90 74 — Boston _ 70 49 — Buffalo _- 58 — .01 Burlington _ 70 50 — Charlotte, N. C. _ 87 68 — Chattanooga ____\ 80 68 — Chicago __.._ 70 64 1.14 Cincinnati _ — 69 — Cleveland _ — 67 — Dallas _ 87 71 — Denver _ — 38 — Detroit _,___ — 68 .03 Duluth 53 43 — El Paso __-_ 89 70 — Fort Worth _ 83 73 — Galveston _ — 81 — Houston ___ — 76 _ Jacksonville ____ 90 75 .02 Kansas City _ — 62 1.12 Key West - — 75 ^21 Knoxville __ 88 66 _ Little Rock - 76 07 Los Angeles _ 81 65 _ Louisville _ 87 70 14 Memphis - 88 76 .25 Meridan - 88 72 .18 Miami _ 84 74 37 Minn.-St. Paul _ 63 61 — Mobile -87 ~ Montgomery _ 89 71 _ New Orleans- 87 76 87 New York_ 77 12 Norfolk _ 88 K7 *“ Philadelphia _ 81 gn Phoenix _!oi 70 ~ Pittsburgh _ 86 60 Portland, Me. «2 „ ~ Raleigh _ ” g= .7. Richmond -Z-_ 80 64 - St. Louis _ _ San Antonio __- 97 ** San Francisco_ <14 =7 Savannah _ S7 7, Tint -~ " 3 Z lampa _ on 71 Vicksburg _II 84 72 w Washington _81 64 — POLYGLOT (Continued From Page One) day for the ordinary people he fought to help. So many came that police opened the mourning procession at 9 a.m., three and a half hours ahead of schedule. A col umn four deep stretched two blocks from the cathedral by noon and grew longer as the bright autumn day wore on. Blind Pay Respects Even a blind man made the pilgrimage, led by a friend. Aged men on crutches hobbled by and parents held their babies aloft for a glimpse. In a dozen tongues the mourners whispered, “He was our friend. He was the greatest mayor we ever had.” Josepn iJonomo, Jr., a ooy oi six, asked his father “Is that the man who used to read us the funnies on the radio?” The casket lay in St. James Chapel behind the main cathe dral altar. In the candlelight the late mayor, his famous paunch wasted by long illness, looked thin and peculiarly youthful. He was dresseu in a blue serge double-breasted suit and black bow tie. A honor guard of two police men, two firemen and two san itation department employes in khaki-green uniforms was post ed by the casket, three on each side. At the foot of the chapel altar, six police and firemen mounted guard with depart mental flags. Despite a family request not to send flowers to the catheJ' dral, floral offerings lined one entire side of the chapel. One was from the Polish foreign minister, another from Polish Ambassador Josef Winiewicz inscribed, “To A Friend of Po land.” As director general of UNRRA, La Guardia speeded much aid to the hungry in Po land. A blanket of red roses from the family covered the foot of the casket. At the side was an other. It said, “To Daddy.” La Guardia had two adopted chil dren, Jean Marie, 18, and Eric, 15. An elderly Negro woman in mourning garb, her eyes glis tening, mumbled, “poor mayor -_ Today And Tues. MAT. 3:15—NITE 7 & 9 P. M. ‘ TARZAN And The HUNTRESS” —Starring — Johnny Dienna WEISMULLER JOYCE Tarzan is back with all his jungle folk! La Guardia is gon „ , ft” ped a recl rose ft ftft Man>' Visitors ke‘ Thousands of the , were from Harlemn 2°Urr‘«ts behind the high ft* Les ^ich the cattdrSft ^ Many visitors from mt ant>s. aamirers of La Guarcftft mg liberalism, joined \i ^ umn. -a ‘he col. Raja Maharaj Sinon ft delegate to the ft ft him last year He loss.” as 3 great A fire engine dashed pa„ a cathedral in mid-aftftn t ; rens whining and bells ft mg, to answer an alarm ft neighborhood. n tk< ‘‘Butch would hav,i i that,” a swarthy little man ■ T-shirt said. man la = pm Sm|t, Dorothy McGuire ' Guy Madison Bob Mitchu.n l —In— ‘■TILL The END OF TIME" Plus news and cartoon. First show . at 7:30. mmmmmmmmmmmmammrnmmmomm Air Conditioned! From The Joyous Pulitzer Prize Winner! RONALD COLMAN "the" LATE GEORGE APLEY" —With— P*Ijy Cumminj Chnn.. 11 .On «... FRANCHOT TONE ANN RICHARDS "THE LOST HONEYMOON" —Extra Added!— "WILMINGTON MY HOME TOWN" SHOWS: 12:50-2:i 0:50-8:50 Mat. 30c Nifht 40r Plus Tax 25c plus tax GENE TIERNEY ! VICTOR MATURE I "SHANGHAI GESTURE" 20c plus tax "THE DALTONS RIDE AGAIN" —1With— ALAN CURTIS LON CHANEY ^TARTHA O’DRISCOLL ||V^C ARTO 0 N 1 IM KWirS THMUJiA* Of jj f ACV1NTVU AWAIT* TOW W GLORIOUS IN COlOBljf lAOli-ltON fllMI PtOCUCTlOX A VI ▼ W3 CAROLINA THEATRE 4 DAYS - STARTING WEDNESDAY! It's The Law Of The Land! Odd and out of date laws \ for your scrap book. Read f them each Monday. < An ordinance in Tenn. says: “You can’t catch fish with a lasso! You dont need a lasso to gel a good Dry Cleaner just Dial 2-3678, OB DRIVE BY 13th. & DAWSON STS <> CAISON BROS. Laundry & Dry Cleaner* 13th & Dawson Sts. Phone 2-3678
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1947, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75