HUmittgfom JHnnuttij VOL. 81.-—NO. 59._ WILMINGTON, N. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 194L ESTABLISHED 1867 Jurors Blast School Board Report To Judge Carr Again Cites Building De fects Not Remedied A New Hanover county grand ,ury yesterday again rapped county school authorities for failure to remedy defects in buildings of the public school system previously called to the school authorities’ attention. The grand jury report, pre sented to presiding Judge Leo Carr, specifically called atten tion to unsafe and unsanitary conditions in some of the school buildings in the county. Judge Carr directed A. L. Meyland. clerk of court, to write to the New Hanover coun ty board of education and the county superintendent of schools, enclosing copies of the report of the grand jury and requesting them to study the report carefully “as it indicates there are some conditions that demand immediate attention.” After listing in detail the con ditions at each of 21 New Hano ver county schools, the grand jury report emphasizes: “It is specifically noted that the above conditions have in most instances been reported by previous grand juries and no action taken. This grand jury feels that unless these unsatis factory conditions are remedied by the next term of Superior Court that proper authorities should be subpoenaed for ex planation." Only Tilestjn ana eraaiey Creek schools were found to be in “excellent” condition. Maffit.t Village colored and Williston primary schools were reported in “good” condition. William Hooper school was reported “in deteriorated condi tion due to lack of proper main tenance. Floors unsafe for chil dren, badly worn and rotted. Building needs repainting and rotted wood replaced. Cafeteria in unsanitary condition due to dirt and is inadequate. ■ . ■ • plastering is cracked and dirty. In general this school is in bad condition.” Some of the repairs needed at other schools were only minor ones but they have been re ported before and no action was taken. Leaking roofs, bad plumbing, and poor drainage head the complaints. CHEST DIVISIONS WILL MEET TODAY Commercial, Service Group Workers Ready For Kick off Instructions A joint kickoff meeting of the Commercial and Service Em ployees divisions of the Red Feather campaign of the Com munity Chest to collect $119,996 will be held this afternoon at t:30 o’clock in the Tide Water assembly hall, it was an nounced vesterday by Charles M. Harrington, general chair man of the campaign. These two kickoif meeun0» are the fifth and sixth divisions of the Community Chest which have begun to solicit funds. Publicity supplies for these two divisions and the Industry divisions which met Monday, are being distributed this week by the Boy Scouts. George F. Hunt, Jr,, and L. D Latta, chairman of tne com mercial and service division respectively, will preside joint ly. Goals for the Commercial division is $4,000 while the Serv ice division has a goal of $6,000. A special training film will be shown by C. H. McAllister, safety director of the Tide Wa ter Power company. Charles M. Harrington, gen era! chairman, will give a brief address to the joint divisions. George L. Mitchell, chairman of the Railroad division, an nounced yesterday that the our chasmg department of the ACL has surpassed its goal and also signed up 100 per cent. The Weather \ FORECAST: South Carolina—Fair and mild tempera tures Wednesday and Thursday cooler to coastal section Wednesday night. North Carolina—Clear to partly cloudy jjod mild temperatures Wednesday and Thursday. Cooler in extreme East por tlor* We<inesday night. | "meteorological data for the 24 hours •nding 7:30 p. m. yesterday. TEMPERATURES |:3n a. m. 71; 7:30 a. m. 70; 1:30 p. m. '■T ":30 p m. 71; Maximum 74: Mini mum 67; Mean 70. Normal 62. . HUMIDITY 1:30 a. m. 84; 7:30 a. m. 85; 1:30 p. m 78- 7:30 p. m. 93. f PRECIPITATION ■ for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. -33 inches. t Total since the first of the month *19 inches. TIDES FOR TODAY 'From the Tide Tables published by S' Coast and Geodetic Survey). HIGH LOW "ummgton _ 9:17 a.m. 3:54 a.m. 9:31 p.m. 4:2S p m. 1!m|)0ro Inlet _ 6:53 a m 12:51 a.m. <. 7:14 p.m. 1:22 p.m. sunrise 6:29: Sunset 5:23: Moon rise | i.p; Moonset 6:06a. , lv«) stage at Favettevilie N C . at 8 I m. Tuesday 9.1 feet or* WFATHEB On Pa*e Two Communists Guilty Of Aggression Acts Rep. Marion Bennett Says Army “Service” Report Lists 63 Incidents Against American Troops At Trieste SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Oct. 28. —(UP)—Rep Marion Ben nett, R., Mo., said tr he had been supplied ^ telhgence repor ^^ JPe which revep’ 4$*’i\~ c had been guilt- ^ ^ A ; armed aggress; • American troop at -^v ,e said one American A ^ ,ed and “Num erous others ^.jured. Returning trom a six-week 20,000-mile tour, Bennett said that it was his belief we should maintain the strongest possible Navy and Air Force and should step up the production of the atom bomb. He said that it was his opin ion o. y the Kremlin knew—if anyone did—when the next war wold start. Bennett said the in cidents at Trieste were only ex amples of the Communist pres sure throughout Europe as they pushed to see how far they could get. He brought home with him a copy of the Army Intelligence at Trieste, he said, and had been report detailing the 63 incidents shown other Army reports con cerning Russian tank produc tion. He said the estimate he received was that Russia was making “43000 tanks a month.” Bennett said the report of the Trieste incidents covered the period from September, 1945, to August, 1947. “It is a state of cold war over can and Yugoslav troops are there,” Bennett said. “Ameri separated by barbed wire and armed patrols. “It has the appearance of ac tual war.” Ports Authority Plans Decision On Shipyard BOY BLAMED JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Oct. 28. —(U.R)— A 12-year-old boy was accused today of starting a forest fire by pouring cleaning fluid on a cat, setting it ablaze, and turning it loose. The cat ran into tall grass and started a two-hour forest fire. The boy’s father said he has whipped him soundly and will not permit him to leave home to play for a month. Fire Chief John A. Moran was not certain whether he would press for juvenile court action. ROTARIANS HEAR PLEA FOR GUARD Cap. J. H. McDonald Urges Club To Aid Recruiting Drive In City Members of the local Rotary club were urged to join them selves, if in the age limits and to recommend that their sons and employes join the Wilming ton units of the National guard, by Captain J. H. McDonald at their luncheon meeting at the Friendly yesterday. With a complement of 100 of a proposed 700 men at present and two nationally recognized units of the seven planned for the city, Wilmington is lagging in its “Minute Man” member ship drive for the guard, ac cording to Capt. Armstrong, who pointed out that the guards program is past the midway point. The National organiza tion was seeking 88,888 recruits, a man a minute, during a two month period. In his talk, Capt. Armstrong pointed out the comparative weakness of United States armed forces now compared with VJ day, when this country possessed the world’s mightiest military machines on land and on sea. He said that the army and air force now only boast 900,000 of a proposed 1,100,000 men and that the navy, al through still the greatest, has most of its ships in port. “The intention was to fill in the gap with the organized re serve of four million men, uni versal military training, and the National guard,” he ex plained. He said that the guard, which had 200,000 men before the war, now wants 880,000 members. Locally, he said that the or ganization is prepared to help Wilmington in any civic func tions from parades to flood and disaster. He referred the Ro tarians to the rescue work of the guard in the recent New England forest fires and Flori da storms and floods. The two units here recognized nationally, he said, are Com pany I of the 119th infantry and Battery A of the 150th AAA bat talion. Seeking recognition now are Headquarters and headquarters battery of the AAA. Stressing the point that mili tary supplies, largely lacking for the guard before the war, are now plentiful here, Capt. Armstrong said and explained See ROTARIANS On Page Two Chairman R. B. Page An nounces important Meet ing For Friday An important decision on the development of the northern ex tension of the Wilmington ship yard will result from a meeting in Winston-Salem Friday noon of the North Carolina States I Ports authority, Chairman R. B. Page, publisher of the Star News, revealed yesterday. The anouncement followed a statement by the Maritime com mission that the next move in the negotiations to lease the shipyard to the State authority was up to Chairman Page. An agreement covering leas ing of the northern end of th yard by the State for 75 years with a few of five per cent of the annual gross receipts going to the commission was ap proved by Howard J. Marsden, chief of the Commission’s Ter minals division, some two months ago. When State Ports Chairman Page requested more favorable terms at a later date, Marsden halted preparations to ask the Commission for power to nego tiate a lease within the scope of the original agreement. In a letter to Page last week Mars dn asked whether he should submit the plan under the orig inal proposal or ask for better terms for the State. To Provide Answer The Friday meeting of the authority will provide the an swer to his inquiry. The new terms asked by the State in cluded paying of five per cent of net receipts instead of gross receipts from the operation of the yard with payment starting after improvements are paid for, rather than immediately See PORTS On Page Two PEDESTRIAN HURT NEAR HALLSBORO John Jackson Suffers Bone Fractures From Three Automobiles WHITEVILLE, Oct. 28. — John Jackson, 52, is in Columbus County hospital today with seri ous injuries after being hit by two separate motor vehicles at Halls boro last night. Highway patrolmen who in vestigated the accident said Jack son was knocked down by a passenger car operated by Ralph Durham of Atlanta, Ga. Then was missed or straddled by an other car immediately behind, and while lying on the highway was run over again by a third automobile. Examination at the hospital disclosed the fracture of both bones of the right leg below the knee, dislocation of the left shoulder laceration of the scalp, broken front teeth and multiple bruises. Information obtained by Pa trolman H. L. Covington and J. T. Watson indicated that Jack son started across the highway, became frightened and stepped di rectly into the path of the on coming vehicles. The vehicles at the rear of the car which knock ed Jackson down had no way of knowing he was on the highway. “Lady Across The Street” Remembers Boy In Will UNION CENTER, Wis., Oct. 28 _ (IP) — Seven-year-old Ronny Markee, who used to run errands for the elderly lady who lived across the street, learned today that she had left him $10,000 in her will. The bequest was revealed when the will of Mrs. Effie Mc Namara, who died last month, was admitted to probate in Vernon county court at \iroqua. Mrs. McNamara, “the lady across the street,” divided her $22,000 estate in half, one share going to Ronny and the other to the care taker at the McNamara home. The youth’s mother said Ronny spent considerable time at the McNamara home, carrying water, going to the store and running other errands. At one time, Mrs. McNamara sought to adopt the youngster but his parents refus ed. Police Fight Reds In Paris Three Hundred Injured In Bloody Street Battle Before Meeting PARIS, Wednesday, Oct. 29— (AP)—Unofficial estimates of the injured ranged from 40 to 300 early today after a bloody street battle in which Paris po lice beat back nearly 35,000 com munists who attempted unsuc cessfully to break up an anti communist meeting. It was the first major political street battle in Paris since the bitter riots of 1936. The Communists, responding to a call in their newspaper L’Hu manite to break up the meeting in Wagram hall in Place D’Etoile, sponsored by former Sen. Gus tave Gautherot, besieged the meeting place and were routed only after they had broken through three police lines and a wooden barricade. The riotous street scene began a few hours after Socialist Pre mier Paul Ramadier opened his government’s fight for life in the National Assembly chamber. An official police statement said eight policemen had been injured although one foreign correspondent counted 10 being carried away from the fracas. Estmates in the Paris press rang ed as high as 150 injured on each side. There was no estimate of the number of police and mobile guard employed to protect the anti-Communist meeting which police permitted to begin its ses sion after the fighting. More than 1,500 persons attended the meet ing, which ended early today. When the Communists first drew up their forces before the fight, there were about 25 000 of them massed at one end of Avenue Wagram and 8,000 at the other end. food donT INS N0W8P CENT American Gifts To Europe Equivalent To ?71 Pounds Per Capita WASHINGTON, Oct. 28—(U.fi) — During the past fiscal year the United States sent food to other nations at the rate of 8.6 per cent of its total production, or the equivalent of 271 pounds for every man, woman and child under the American flag. The stupendous role Ameri can farmers and food-pro cessors are playing in feeding war-torn Europe and Asia was revealed in a survey made available to the United Press by Sen. Harry F. Byrd, D., Va. It is based on figures sup plied by federal departments and agencies and may loom large in Congressional consider ation of President Truman’s emergency aid and Marshall long-range plans. The greatest portion of food stuffs—from wheat to nuts—was shipped for civilian feeding by U. S. Army authorities in the Anglo - American zone in Ger many, in Italy, and in the U. S. occupation territory in Austria. This total was 3,481,000 long tons. Other nations which shared in the American larder were: Britain, 1,652,000 long tons; India, 1,003,000 long tons; the Latin American republics, 2, 322.000 long tons, and France, including French North Africa, 771.000 long tons. The survey did not differen tiate between those goods which passed through the normal channels of foreign trade and were paid for, and those which were supplied as outright relief. Simons Street Three Probe Taking On Definite Pattern Scenarists Refuse To Di vulge Commuist Party Leanings WASHINGTON, Oct. 28—W— In rapid-fire order, contempt ac tions were started against three more Hollywood screen writers today after they defiantly refus ed to tell the House Committee on Un - American Activities whether they are Communists. Following up similar steps taken against John Howard Lawson yesterday, the Congres sional probers of the movie capital voted to recommend contempt citations against Dal ton D. Trumbo, Albert Maltz and Alvah Bessie. Loud sound effects punctuated the hearing — the crashing gavel of Chairman J. Parnell Thomas (R.-N.J.), a buzz of cameras, mingled boos and applause from spectators, who again included movie actors and actresses. And through it all ran what appeared to be a definite pat tern : The committee brings on a wit ness. The witness won’t say whether he is a Communist, or ever has been. He is “excused” from the stand. The committee produces its records on him. Then comes the contempt action. Three-Member Group This is a recommendation to the full nine-member committee to cite the witnesses for con tempt of Congress. A subcom mittee of only three members has been sitting for two days. Speaker Martin (R.-Mass.) or the House itself can turn over a contempt citation to a United States attorney for prosecution. Conviction carries « top punish See PROBE On Page Two COUPLE ARRESTED ON CHECK CHARGE FBI Arrests Man, Wife For Obtaining $50,000 In Four-Year Period NEW YORK, Oct. 28. — (&)— A husband and wife, whom FBI Agent Edward Scheidt said acted as a team in passing more than 400 fraudulent checks for $50, 000 in cash and merchandise, were ordered held for federal grand jury action today when ar raigned before U. S. Commission er Garrett W. Cotter. They were identified as James A. Moloney, 50, and Mrs. Barbara Moloney, 48, of New York City. The man was held in $1,500 bail and the woman in $500. Both were arrested yesterday. They were arraigned on charges of violating the national stolen property act. The husband also was charged with conspiracy to vi late the act. Scheidt, head of the New York FBI office, said Mrs. Moloney in duced shopkeepers to cash fraud ulent checks in excess of pur chases made. Her actions were the results of an idea her husband had while serving a prison term for fraud on Riker’s Island, Scheidt: .id. He added Moloney told the woman where and how to have the fraud ulent checks printed and used names of fictitious business firms in inducing merchants to cash the checks. Along The Cape Fear FIRST EXPERIMENTAL FARM—On September 15, 1853, General James Iver McKay, one of the greatest statesmen ever to issue from the Cape Fear valley, passed away in Golds boro, at the age of 61. He had become ill while returning from Tarboro where he had attended court as a witness in a criminal case. His body was borne to his home amid universal evi dences of sorrow along the route of the cortege. Perhaps the larg gest demonstration of the public mourning for the great states man occurred in Wilmington. When the contents of the general’s will became known, it was revealed that the “Watch dog of the Treasury,” was in truth charitably disposed toward his fellow men. Disposing of a dozen great plantations, the general’s will directed that after his wife’s death his home place, “Belfont,” be turned over to trustees to be used as an ex perimental farm for the bene fit of the poor and the orphans of the country. It is believed that this was the first experimental farm in the Cape Fear valley. FREES SLAVES—The general’s will also provided that slaves he had inherited or acquired by marriage be hired out by his ex ecutors to raise funds for their transportation to the colony of Liberia. As soon as the necessary funds could be raised, the exe cutors were strictly ordered to take the steps necessary for the transportation of the slaves to Liberia under the direction of the Colonization Society. In the reasonable length of time the executors did raise the money needed for the trans portation of the slaves to Li beria and the terms of the will were carried out to the letter. Old residents of Elizabethtown used to tell of the vivid scenes they recalled of the Negroes leaving for Wilmington to board ships for Liberia. Some of them left their homes in the Cape Fear valley only after great crying and mourning by which they gave vent to their distress. In latter years, however, one of the Negro women returned I See CAPE FEAR On Page Two Recommends Eighth For Super-Highway; More Writers Cited CAPT. A. N. MONSEN MRS. MARY S. CHIDIAC ABOARD THE STORM-BUFFETED DC-4 plane, missing be tween Ketchikan and Juneau, Alaska, are Captain A. N. Monsen, pilot, and Mrs. Mary *S. Chidiac, purser. The four-engined trans port carried 13 passengers, including an infant, and a crew of five. (International Soundphoto) . Signal Flares Buoy Hopes Of Searchers HE DIDN’T KNOW HEANOR, England, Oct. 28. —(U.R)— Isiah Wilcoxen, 74, and blind, thanked the little girl for helping him across a Hean or street. He didn’t know snub-nosed June Smith, 6, couldn’t hear him. He didn’t know she had pushed him out of a speeding car’s path and was killed. She was buried today. DEMOCRATS PICK 1948 SIH TODAY City Of Brotherly Love Has Edge For Party Con vention Next Year WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. — «P) — The Democrats will get to work selecting a 1948 party con vention site tomorrow and it looks like Philadelphia. But San Francisco will be bidding for it, too. The Democratic National com mittee, facing other decisions for the Presidentian campaign year, will gather here for two sessions tomorow. Besides pick ing a convention site, it will: 1. Select a convention date, ex pected to be in early July. 2. Elect Senator J. Howard McGrath of Rhode Island to suc ceed Postmaster General Robert E. Hanegan as committee chair man. Hanegan, chairman since January, 1944, is giving up the comittee post because of ill health. 3. Consider a recommendation of a subcommittee headed by Frank M. Hale, Indiana Com mitteman, to increase the con vention delegate bonus for states which went Democratic in the last Presidential election. Final approval of the delegate appor tionment will be up to the con vention itself. The 1944 conven tion had 1,176 delegates. 4. Act on resolutions praising the administration of President Truman, who is expected to be the party’s Presidential nominee next year. Philadelphia’s bid for the Dem ocratic convention—it has already won the Republican convention for the week starting June 21— will be presented by a group of 100 headed by Mayor Bernard Samuel, a Republican. Their of fer will be the same as that made for the Republican meeting— $200,000, plus $50,000 for enter tainment expenses and a free au ditorium. San Francisco interests will be handled by Mrs Edward Heller, California national committee woman. Mrs. Heller said she will “try to match’ Philadel phia’s bid, but will not cam paign for the convention “in the sense of canvassing committee members.” She said the Cali fornia climate would be a fac tor in her bid. Ships, Planes Redouble Ef forts To Locate Missing Airliner KETCHIKAN. Alaska, Oct 28— UR)—1The sighting of a smoke column and signal flares at two separate points in the radius of Alaska’s greatest sea and air search spurred hopes today that some or all of the 18 persons aboard a missing Pan-American DC-4 may have survived a forced landing. Searching air and surface craft were ordered to concentrate on Dundas and Graham Islands where fishermen reported spot ting what may have been signals from survivors of the transport plane that vanished Sunday. The area was Southwest of Ketchikan, in the opposite di rection from which veteran pilot Capt. A. N. Monsen radioed he was heading after abandoning attempts to land at the Annette Island airport near Ketchikan during a lashing gale. A column of smoke curled up from sparsely-settled Dundas Is land in Chatham sound, one fisherman reported. The flares were reported sight ed on Graham Island, off the coast of British Columbia. At least 20 military, com mercial and private planes scoured the area under leaden skies, and a fleet of surface ves sels including private fishing craft and seven Coast Guard cutters probed the fiord-checked coast. But search officials said they held only slender hopes for the five crewmen and 13 pas See SIGNAL On Page Two DRY ICE MAY END FIRES IN MAINE Two Planes To Attempt Flame Extinguishing Task Early Today WASHINGTON, Oct. 28. — m — Clouds hovering over Maine will be sown with dry ice tomor row in hopes they will rain and extinguish fores 1 fires which have cost 15 lives and millions in prop erty damage. Navy officials said two plan.-; probably will be used in the first attempt in extinguishing fires with the dry ice method that has been tried widely for aiding crops. Weather Bureau officials said conditions for rain-making may 1 more favorable tomorrow or Thursday than on any day since the fire started. But they added “conditions won’t be ideal.” The method involves dropping small amounts of dry ice into the clouds. This reduces the tmpera ture of the suspended moisture until ice is formed, setting off formation of ice crystals over a wide area. The moisture reaches earth in the form of rain. If Beds Keep Coming In Folsom MayUndo “GW” MONTGOMERY, Ala., Oct. 28. (TP)— Gov. James E. (Big Jim) Folsom now has six beds in which he can rest comfortably. The last, “about eight feet long” .nd made of valnut. came as a gift from the Corpus Christi, Tex., furniture dealer. Mrs. Ruby El lis, the governor’s sister and of ficial hostess, said it will be sent to the family home at Elba, Ala. Thus, added Mrs. Ellis, “he’ll have a comfortable place to sleep most any place he visits frequent ly in Alabama.” The Alabama chief executive requires special beds because he is six feet eight inches tall. He already has oversized ones at the mansion, at hotels in Montgomery and Birmingham, Ala., and Ashe ville, N. C., at G.ulf State Park, and his home in Cullman. 1980 Population Placed At 90,000 Auto Registration May Double Here By 1960, Planner Says A multitude of recommenda tions were presented to the ctiy planning board last night by George W. Simons, Jackson ville, Fla., planning consultant, chief of which was the improve ment of Eighth street into a multilane semi-express street or super-highway. In presenting a 232 page book of the master plan to the board, Simons predicted that the city’s maximum population would reach 90,000 by 1980. It will have twice as many automo biles in 1960 as at the present time, he added. Other recommendations in clude additional park and rec reation facilities, schools, reha bilitation and slum clearance, beautification and other traffic aids. Simons prefaced h is discus sion of the final draft of Wil mington’s master plan, which he said anticipates the needs of the city for a number of years, by declaring that “No plan is a rigid instrument, and any plan must be ready for change from time to time.” We ve tried to maintain the character and dignity that Wil mington now has,” he ex plained. “Wilmington is a dis tinctive community—a commu nity with personality. You have a rich background, and in the future you will want to main tain it.” Tracing the city’s historical background, the plan itself esti mates that the future popula tion will not be static, but will continue to grow. From the 1946 population of 47,480 to all indi cations normal growth of Wil mington will give it a popula tion minimum of 54,000 and maximum of 90,000 by 1980, Simons pointed out. He said that the city has shown a flattening or tapering off of growtn since 1920. See 1980 On Page Two TOBACCO MARKETS HOLD LAST SALES Price Trends Prove Irregu lar With Gains, Losses Evenly Divided By The Associated Press Tobacco price ttrends were ir regular yesterday (Tuesday) as the markets held final sales be fore closing down for a sales holi day which resulted from banning of American tobacco imports by the British government. However, announcement tha , plans had been made for the gov ernment to enter the market and buy the tobacco normally pur chased by British buyers brought from Fred S. Royster of Hender son, chairman of the Flue-Cured Marketing committee, a statement that the markets probably would reopen next Monday. The Federal and State Depart ments of Agriculture announced that the three remaining markets of the Border Belt held final sales for the season Tuesday and that they would not reopen after the See TOBACCO On Page Two And So To Bed A local man, who is unfor tunate enough to have a night job, was sleeping soundly the other morning when the telephone rang until he t nought it would fall from the table. The sleepy - eyed man trudged to answer the phone. “Please deliver me a truck load of white sand,” the voice demanded. “Sorry, sir, this is not the sand com pany,” our hero yelled. Back to bed and about 15 minutes later the phone again began to jangle. “Will you please send my groceries?” a female voice asked. “No, man,” our still sleepy friend replied. Five minutes later the same thing happened only this time it was the tele phone company checking the line. You guessed it, our hero removed the phone from the hook and went back to bed. Then the door bell began to chime. “What the -)&$(-|$ is it now?” he yelled as he jerked the wires from the bell.

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