FORECAST: " TTT'T , _ Served By Leased Wire* Wilmington and vicinity: CToudy of the windy and mild with moderate to A SCrtPl A Tim PPFCQ heavy rains and squalls today; Friday AOBUWAlriU rltM* partly cloudy and warmer with and the showers. j UNITED PRESS jj With Complete Coverage ei —————_ State end National New* ■VOU-81—N047.--- WILMINGTON, N. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1947 ESTABLISHED isTF Britain Warns Arab States Against War LONDON Oct. 14. — (U.R) — £..ei,t Britain was reported today w have warned Arab states that a move to carry out the Arab League decision to mass troops iJtg thi. Palestine border may j,gv-e drastic consequences. The Foreign Office revealed that British representatives “in formally" told the Syrian govern ed that Britain sharply dis approves Syrian troop “maneu erS-’ in the direction of the Palestine frontier. There were strong indications here that similar “advice” had beer handed to other Arab states. "A! the middle Eastern coun ties are now fully aware of our position,” a Foreign Ofiice spokesman said. The British action carried an implied threat that 100,000 British troops in thp Holy Land would take ruthless steps to put down any Arab revolt within the bord ers of Palestine while Britain was still responsible for main tenance of order. Another Blow Diplomatic sources said Rus sia’s OUtright apprnunl nt tion was another who expected a measr *3 So’, let support for they. AA <\ an undivided Arab st Strong British ^ * Arab troop mo- V Aidre garded here a. $;ortain to quash effectiv aJVd plans to ring Palestine Ah troops. The regular armies1 of most of the Arab states are dependent upon Britain to a large degree See BRITAIN On Page Two Luckman Relaxes Rules For “Meatless Tuesdays” QUEEN WILHELMINA PASSES SCEPTER Juliana To Serve As Prin cess-Regent Of Holland Until Dec. 1 THE HAGUE, The Nether lands, Oct. 14.—(U.R)—Queen -Wil helmina of The Netherlands, overcome by fatigue and ill ness, temporarily passed the icepter today to her stalwart, 38-vear-old daughter, Crown Princess Juliana. Juliana, as princess-regent, will rule the lowland kingdom until Dec. 1, when it is hoped that the 67-year-old queen will be sufficiently recovered to re sume the throne. The princess took the oath of office at 3 p.m. before a joint session of parliament in ancient Knights’ Hall, amid shouts of ‘'long live the regent!” which quickly spread to the thousands of loyal Dutch subjects lining the streets outside. The temporary queen, simply dressed in a greenish-blue frock, was accompanied by her husband, Prince Bernhard, who wore the uniform of a general in the Dutch Army. Queen Wil helmina was unable to attend. Ceremony Short The short, sober inaugural eeremony was opened by Prof. K. Krartenburg with a brief speech welcoming the new ruler but expressing “the sincere See QUEEN On Page Two TOBACCO PRICES WEAK ON MARKET __— I Middle Belt Growers Get Lowest Return Of Sea son For Offerings By The Associated Press Flue-cured tobacco markets reported generally lower prices yesterday according to the State and Federal Departments of Ag riculture. The greatest price drop of the season was reported from the Middle Belt. Averages for all grades were down from $2 to $7 per hundred pounds from Mon day’s sales with common and low quality leaf, fair and low smoking leaf, all primings, and thin nondescript showing the greatest losses, from $5 to $7. Sales continued heavy but cuality of the offerings was in ferior to Monday’s. There was more common grades and non descript and less choice grades. Growers sold a total of 4,447,697 founds Monday at an average of $43.71 per hundred, 77 cents above last Friday’s average. Eastern Belt On the Eastern Belt, the ma jority of grades were off from *5 to $3 with losses more prev alent for smoking leaf, cutters m . iugs. A few nondescript and : 'non leaf offerings showed * vances c.f from $.25 to $2. j - e general quality of offerings See TOBACCO On Page Two 1 he Weather FORECAST: South Carolina—Cloudy, windy and with occasional rains Thursday, *' moderate to heavy rain and oc ” squails coastal areas Friday c ' -ierable cloudiness, slightly warm f ; wers east portion. Carolina—Cloudy, windy and '‘ld with occasional rain Thursday; ":n 1 ^derate to heavy and occasional East portion, moderate gales v" '•< areas. Friday partly cloudy and with showers east portion. • ■'torological data for the 24 hours *ndlnS 7:30 p. m. yesterday. temperatures *. "1° a rn 64; 7:30 a. m. 62; 1:30 p. m. ‘ 1 P m. 72; Maximum 74; Mini n Mean 67; Normal 66. , HUMIDITY *,! r m. 87: 7:30 a. m. 93; 1:30 p. m. 1 P m. 88. precipitation ,a‘ for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. ' inches. Ith ht aI Since the of th€ month 2.52 tides for today to. i; p t'ie Tide Tables published by • -cast and Geodetic Survey). Wilm;r a* HIGH LOW ngtcn -10:36 a.m. 5:06 a.m. lfasoni 10:51 p.m. 5:36 p.m. nboro Inlet _ 3:00 a m. 9:19 a.m. ^ 3:32 p.m. 10:01 p.m. 7*>;17, Sunset 5:38; Moonrise • Mo on set 6:39p. iMore WEATHER On Page Two Chairman Now Permits Eating Of Kidneys, Brains, Pig Feet WASHINGTON, Oct. 14—Iff) — Rules for “Meatless Tuesday” were relaxed today. You can eat liver, kidneys, brains and other by-products and still con form. Charles Luckman, chairman of the Citizens Food committee directing a national drive to save grain to feed Western Eu ropeans, told reporters after his 26-member group met on policy today that: 1. The committee hopes to en courage use of meat by - prod ucts “which are in plentiful supply,” and which may be used on Tuesdays under the al tered program. The list also contains sweetbreads, hearts, pigs feet, pigs knuckles, tripe, oxtails and tongue. 2. The committee will ask the brewing industry to reduce beer and ale production to save more grain. Brewers will consult with Luckman tomorrow. 3. Luckman said a request to the banking industry to produce a smaller bread loaf is under study. He noted there aie many problems, such as pan sizes which cannot be changed over night. He added that one sug gested solution is to cut down on the height of the loaf and that it could be done with the present pans. Waive Weight Laws The chairman said a number of states have indicated a will ingness to waive weight regula tions on bread loaves if the committee believes a smaller loaf is desirable. 4. Luckman will seek to ar range conservation programs with three other industries with in the next ten days—the wet milling industry, including pro ducers of corn syrup and mo See LUCKMAN On Page Two EDITORS TO MEET HERE THIS WEEK Star-News Will Entertain Visiting Newspaper men At Luncheon Plans to entertain editors dur ing the national editorial associa tion’s tour of North Carolina next May will be revealed when the Eastern Carolina Press associa tion holds its annual meeting in Wilmington Friday night and Sat urday. Henry Belk of Goldsboro, president of the association, has announced last night. The meeting will open with the association’s annual dinner at the Friendly cafeteria Friday evening, and the business ses sion will get under way at the Cape Fear hotel Saturday morn ing. The Wilmington Star-News will entertain the visiting news papermen at luncheon Saturday at the Cape Fear club. Don Eck, Chicago, manager of the National Editorial associa tion, will attend the Wilmington meeting, according to Miss Bea trice Cobb, Morganton, state press secretary. E. A. Resch, Siler City, president of the N. C. Press association will also be pres ent. Eury To Report A survey of staff requirements See EDITORS On Page Two Eighty Years Of Service An Editorial The Wilmington Morning Star today observes the 80th anni versary of its life of service to its community, state and nation. Founded by the late Major William H. Bernard, a gallant officer of the Confederacy, in the stirring days of reconstruction, the first issue made its appearance on Oct. 15, 1867. It was a small publication but back of its pages was a courageous spirit of progress which has continued to make it the dean of North Caro lina newspapers. The advancement of the intellectual and civic influences of c. e Wilmington Morning Star has been constant during the four years. gjP^Today its personnel is the most competent and its facilities ■ the most ample in its uninterrupted history. In that, we take pardonable pride. And this feeling is accompanied by the realiza tion that this growth was made possible by the steady support accorded by the community and territory. We deeply appreciate this support. We believe it has been engendered through the newspaper’s strong desire for all the people to feel that it is their newspaper. Over the eighty years, The Wilmington Morning Star has become an institution whose interests are so closely interwoven with those of the city and Southeastern North Carolina as to be inseparable. Today, Wilmington is living in another post-war era. But instead of the darkness and hopelessness of the com parable period when Major Bernard made his vision a reality, there is brightness and unrestricted opportunity which should carry Wilmington to its greatest heights. In the late 1860’s, The Wilmington Morning Star was a leading force in rallying the people to the hard tasks of re construction. In the late 1940’s, its first desire is to continue as the strongest of all voices in the call to hasten the community’s potentialities in a spirit of unrestrained cooperation. Because the most fruitful of all years lie ahead for The Wil mington Morning Star’s sphere of service, it marks this occasion with renewal of its pledge to do its full part in realizing the extensive opportunities of Wilmington and Southeastern North Carolina. It is meeting this responsibility with greater determina tion than ever because today is the most opportune of all times for advancement. May we continue to go forward with greater strength than ever. Veterans Will Get Army Camps Notice > ' GREEN TURNS UP CHARLOTTE, Oct. 14. — (JF) — A traffic light conveniently changed to green as a driver less car slipped from its park ing place yesterday and rolled across Trade street, one of Charlotte’s main arteries. No one was hurt — but a large plate glass window of an automobile showroom was broken, and the owner of the machine reported $160 was missing from a glove compart ment after the freak mishap. “ORAL” RELEASE STANDS IN COURT Jury Returns Verdict For Defendants In Suit By George W. Lyons A jury in New Hanover coun ty superior Court today found that George W. Lyons, real es tate agent, had released Mr. and Mrs. John K. Davis, form er owners of Jo’s Night Club on the Carolina Beach road, from the terms of a contract they had made with the firm of Lyons and Thomas before they sold the club to Capt. Ben L. Wagnman for $13,000. The jury’s verdict prevented Lyons from recovering $1,800 he sought as 10 per cent commis sion on the sale. The case was clinched for the defendants Tuesday when attorney W. K. Rhodes, Jr., called H. H. Thom as as a witness to corroborate the testimony of Davis who tes tified he had been orally re leased from the contract with the realty firm when the part See RELEASE On Page Two STALIN NOW RESTING FOR HIS HEALTH AT BLACK SEA AREA SPA LONDON, Oct. 14. —W— The Moscow Radio disclosed tonight that Prime Minister Stalin is in a rest area on the Black Sea. Announcing that Stalin had re ceived eight Laborite members of the British parliament visiting the Soviet Union, the broadcast said the “reception took place in the area of Sochi,” a Black Sea resort. Stalin, who will be 68 Dec. 21, spent a prolonged vacation in the Sochi area following the end of the war when there were wide spread but unconfirmed reports I that he was seriously ill. Fanner, WifeFindMeans To Continue Charities PELICAN RAPIDS, Minn., Oct 14 —OB—Because Mr and Mrs. Ktinhold G. Rhode feel a responsibility toward seven des titute Eluropean families, those families are going to continue receiving food and clothing even though difficulties have beset Mr. and Mrs. Rhode. The couple, who farm 80 acres nine miles Southeast of Pelican Rapids, wrote to a Far go, N. D., radio station saying they would have to cease send ing food and clothing to the families because their corn crop failed and the price of livestock feed has “gone sky-high.” They asked aid in locating persons who would care for rthe fami lies from December through May. By the end of that time, they said, they might be able to help some more. Five women responded tc the request. Two of them said church groups they represented would take over the sending of packages. Mr. and Mrs. Rhode have been sending food and clothing to friends in the British occu pied zone of Germany. WAA Officials Agree To Plan Proposed By Noble Committee BY FRANK VAN DER LINDEN Morning Star Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, Oct. 14—Vet erans organizations will get a thirty-day notice on the sale of surplus military establishments suitable for conversion into 150,000 temporary housing units, the chairman of the Vet erans of Foreign Wars Housing committee said today. The committee, headed by Ken Noble of Wilmington, N.C., completed an eight-point hous ing program here today and it will be presented to President Truman next week by National Commander Ray Brannaman of Denver. Noble said War Assets Ad See VETERANS On Page Two ACL ALTERS PLEA ON TRAINS 48-49 Company Plans To Press For Discontinuance To Rocky Mount RALEIGH, Oct. 14— W —The State Utilities Commission to morrow is scheduled to continue hearing on an application of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad for permission to discontinue its trains 48 and 49 between Wil mington and Rocky Mount. The petition originally asked for authority to discontinue the two trains from Wilmington to the North Carolina-Virginia state line. However, the railroad today notified the Utilities Com mission that it was amending its application so that operation of the trains between Rocky Mount and the state line would not be affected. To Press Plea The railroad officials an nounced, however, that they would press their application for See ACL On Page Two New Tropical Blow Heads For South Carolina Coast; 48 Rescued From Airship Heavy Seas Make Rescue Dangerous Giant Flying Boat Forced Down At Sea With 69 Persons Aboard NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—(^)— Weary Coast Guard crews, fight i. . waves two stories high, to night rescued more than 48 of the 69 persons aboard a giant Boeing flying boat, wallowing for more than 12 hoi- - approximate ly 820 miles off the Newfound land coast. While mid-Atlantic night winds of gale force whined around the leaking hulk of the plane, the Bermuda Sky Queen, Coast Guardsmen made five trips to the craft, removing 48 persons to the safety of the Weather p Bibb. The Coast Guard here report ed in a message received at 6:45 p.m. (EST) that it would “be necessary to make three more successful trips tonight bringing seven persons on each trip” be fore the final rescue work could be accomplished. This was likely to “take the balance of the night,” the mes sage read. Thus far no injuries or deaths have been reported despite the winds and mountainous waves. The message from the Bibb, however, said one of the sur See SEAS On Page Two R0TAR1ANS HEAR FINANCE REPORT State Treasurer Johnson Guest Speaker At Lunch eon Meeting “North Carolina is doing I more for the average individual than any other state in the un ion,” State Treasurer Charles M. Johnson of Raleigh, avowed candidate for the governorship in the 1948 election, told local Rotarians at their luncheon meeting at the ^Friendly yester day. After Fred Willetts, Jr., had asked his father, Fred Sr., to introduce the gubernatorial can didate, Johnson told the club that the North Carolina govern ment is different from any oth er state government in the un ion. Elaborating on this point he declared that this State con structs and maintains its own state roads and that for nine months out of the year the state maintains its educational sys tem. Discusses Finances Discussing the financial situa tion in North Carolina, on which he is rated an authority, John son said that there is $25,000, 000 in the highway liquidation fund, which is kept separate from the general fund. In the genera] fund the State has $51,500,000 set aside and there is no general fund debt. Fifty millions are earmarked for building and 30 millions for a postwar reserve fund. Although North Carolina is '•i'^ralpng under the same tax law under which it operated in 1940, its income in 1947 will be $119,000,000 against $41,000,000 in ’41. Fred Green, a former mem ber of the local Rotary, was a visitor of the club. Bradford Wiggins and Floyd Williams were honored as junior Rotarians. The club went on record as observing meatless Tuesday. Along The Cape Fear BATTLE OF FORT FISHER —The holiday lull in the Feder al attack on Fort Fisher did not last long. On January 13, 1865, a second fleet of 58 vessels un der the command of Admiral Porter appeared off shore and began a furious bombardment of the fort which lasted three days. In his official report of the battle for Fort Fisher, General Whiting writes: “On Thursday night the ene my’s fleet was reported off the fort. On Friday morning the fleet opened very heavily. On Friday and Saturday, during the furious bombardment of the fort, the enemy was allowed to land without molestation ind to throw up a light line of field works from Battery Ramseur to the nvir thus securing his po sition from molestation and making the fate of Fort Fisher, under the circumstances, but a question r,f time. “Cn Sunday, the fire on the fort reached a piten of fury to which no language cm do jus tice. It wag concentrated on the land face end front. In a short time nearly every gnr was dis mounted or disabled, and the garrison suffered severely by the fire. “At tnrte o’clock the enemy’s land force, which had been gradually and slowly advancing, formed in two columns for as sault. The garrison, d' ring the fier bombardment, was not able to Stand to the parapets, and many of the reinforcements we’» obliged to be k.3pt a great distance from the fort. “As the enemy slackened his fire to allow the assault to take place, the men hastily manned the ramparts and gallantly re pulsed the right column of as sault. “A portion of troops on the left had also repulsed the first rush to the left of the work. The greater portion of the garrison being, however, engaged on the right and not being able to man the entire work, the enemy suc ceeded in making a lodgment on the left flank, planting two of his regimental flags in the trav er^s. See CAPE FEAR On Page Two FOLLOWING A SUCCESSFUL OPERATION on her eyes, the dog, said that it was the first time he had tried the operation “Liebchen” is shown with her mistress Gayla Blasdel in Los Angeles. Dr. H. Blasdel, who performed the cataract operation on on an animal. (international) AFL Votes To Oust Lewis From Office FOR CHARITY WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 — (U.R) — Former Secretary of State James F. Byrnes will not receive a penny from his sure-fire best-selling memoirs, “Speaking Frankly”, publish ed today. All receipts from sale of the book and of serial rights syndicated to newspapers will go to the James F. Byrnes Foundation. It will provide scholarships for orphaned children to attend college. Byrnes’ father died when he was a baby and his mother was unable to send him to college. FLORIDA DAMAGE FIFTY MILLIONS Typhoid-Laden Sewage Threatens Health Of West Palm Beach MIAMI, Fla., Oct. 14 — (U.R>— Typhoid-lad en sewage from overflowing septic tanks and choked drainage systems spread a fear of disease over flooded South Florida today and authorities ordered strict coun ter measures as it appeared the floodv/aters were far from sub siding. Damage, mounting hourly, had surpassed the $50,000,000 mark. The West Palm Beach city health officer “advised’’ some 6,000 residents of South and West sections to move out, aft er their septic tanks overflow ed. Fifteen families were order ed iron) a West Miami location for the same reason. A score of inoculation stations were opened along 120 miles of See FLORIDA On Page Two BUS-TRAIN COLLISION KILLS 12 YOUTHS IN WEST SWEDEN TOWN STOCKHOLM, Oct. 14. — M>)— A bus-train collision in a dense fog six miles south of Karlstad in Western Sweden today killed at least 12 young people between the ages of 15 and 25, all from the nearby village of Edsvalla. The police superintendent at Karlstad said the death toll may reach 14 when identification is completed. The entire village of Edsvalla went into mourning as parents and relatives aided in the grim task of identifying the victims. Convention Hands UMW Leader Crushing Defeat Over Labor Law SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 14— W— The convention of the American Federation of Labor administered a crushing defeat to John L. Lewis tonight by vot ing to wipe out its 13 vice presi dents in a move to make the en tire federation eligible to use the National Labor Relations Board. The action came after a stormy and prolonged fight on the convention floor which saw the AFL’s top leadership direct a bitter attack against Lewis, head of the United Mine Work ers, on his stand against signing non-communist affidavits as re quired by the Taft-Hartley law. The floor battle, which at times developed into heated per sonal exchanges, precipitated an other of the famous Lewis “walks”. The mine workers chief told the delegates he would not be a candidate again for the execu tive council if the resolution was See AFL On Page Two CONSULAR OFFICE NOW UNDER GUARD British Troops Install New Defences Around U. S. Building JERUSALEM, Oct. 14— Iff) — British Army troops installed new defenses and British con stables from the Palestine po lice were placed on guard to day around the United States Consulate which was damaged yesterday by a grenade tossed over the garden wall. Sandbagged guardposts, pill boxes and barbed wire of the new defenses took the Consu late inside the British security zone “B” which previously had stopped just behind the consu lar offices. Police sources said security measures also had been increas ed around other Consulates. The American, Swedish and Polish, have been bombed in the past fortnight, and an Arab inform ant has declared the French and Czechoslovak consulates were “next on the list.” The Arab informant attribut ed the U. S. consulate bombing to the “striking force” of 'Haj Amin El Husseim, exiled Mufti of Jerusalem. Arab underground groups. See CONSULAR On Page Two Four-Year-Old Blows Real Scientific Bubble PITTSBURGH, Oct. 14 —(U.R)— Four-year-old Sally Coltman huffed and puffed on a plastic bubble blower—and a new idea for atomic ray detection blew into her scientist-father’s mind. The tot’s unsuccessful efforts to fashion a bubble from plastic at her birthday party prompted her father, Dr. John W. Colt man, of the Westinghouse Re search Laboratories, to aid her. Dr. Coltman said today the transparent plastic ended a long hunt for a “window” for the atomic ray detector he and a colleague, Dr. Fitz-Kugh B. Marshall, nave devised. The detection had to be a hun dred times thinner -han human hair, to admit nuclear rays of lowest intensity. It had to be strong enough to withstand coating of aluminum boiled in to a steam—to keep out un wanted light rays. The plastic bubble was. Dr. Coltman said ‘he new atomic rav detector can count particles cast off by exploding atoms at the rate of 100,000 each second about 50 times faster than the standard geiger counter. - • .-J 90-Mile Per Hour Winds At Center Wrightsville Beach Escapes With Minor Damages From Tides High winds and tides wreaked havoc with the nervous system* of many Carolina and Wrights ville Beach residents last night but if any materia: damage wa* added to the depredations of th* Tuesday morning disturbance, it was hidden by the darkness. Some of the beach residents, alarmed by warnings of two more storms to come Tuesday night, hurriedly made voluntary evacuations Tuesday afternoon. New Hanover county Red Cross was alerted but no seriou* relief measures had to be under taken. Apprehension reached a high point when the tide rolled in at approximately 8:30 p. m. But it was not appreciably higher than the tide of Tuesday morn ing which did minor damage along the water front. The wind steadily increased to near gale proportions as the dis turbance passed east of Wil mington. Rain squalls added nothing to the comfort of small crowds of anxious observers who gathered about the piers and ' other vantage points to await de velopments. John D. Mercer at the Atlantic View pier said he sustained ap proximately $3,000 damage when the breakers that came in with ■ the high tide Tuesday morning ; battered his concession stand. It : was the highest tide he has seen t on Wrightsville Beach during th* ■ five years he has been ther*, ■ Mercer said. wnen a small crowd of obser vers arrived Tuesday evening to wait for the storm, Mercer open ed the pier for business. The old timers recalled the storm of 1944 which washed out the pier and the terrific hurricane of 1907 which washed the beaches clean, See 90-MILE On Page Two ENRAGED FATHER SLAYS DAUGHTER Eldest Child Critically In jured From Beating With Hammer NEWTON, Mass., Oct. 14—OI.W —Because he opposed a daugh ter’s wedding plans, a 44-year old Newton widower shot and bludgeoned one daughter to death today, critically injured another by beating her with a hammer, and then tried to take his own life by swallowing acid. In a police complaint, Fiore D’Antonio, a stone mason, was charged with murder in tho death of his 14-year-old daugh ter, Nina, and with murderous assault on his daughter Mary, 18. Nina, a Newton high school sophomore, died as a result of shotgun wounds in her back and a fractured skull sustained when she was beaten on the head with a hammer. D’Antonio and the bride-to-be, Mary, were hospita lized in critical condition. Hospital authorities said Mary had suffered several broken head and face bones from ham mer blows. The father, police said, swallowed nitric acid, used for cleaning masonry. Authorities theorized that D’Antonio became angered last night when Mary told him sht planned to marry Mario Pigna telli, 21, of Newton, a former Air Forces sergeant, late this month. Pignatelli said he and Mary admitted to D’Antonio last night that they had spent the day shopping for wedding clothes in Boston where the girl was a See FATHER On Page Two And So To Bed Rumors were flying thick and fast last night that th« Atlantic View Pier had wash ed away. Johnny Mercer, owner of the popular fishing spot open ed the pier turned on th* lights and proudly announc ed that it was still standing. “If you don’t believe it, just walk out there and see how steady it is,” he told a pretty young miss. She started out to look at the waves bashing at the end of the pier, suddenly the young lady slipped and fell flat on the hard boards «f the pier. Returning she said to Mer cer. “It sure is steady.’ as she walked away brueI''”g wa^er off her raincoat. vt