BRITAIN BEGINS
POTATO RATIONING
«»
Housewives Protest Weekly
Allowance Of Three
Pounds Per Person
LONDON. Nov. 9 —<*>—
Britain began the rationing of
potatoes today for the first time
in her history, limiting each ra
' tion book holder to tnree pounds
. weeklv. Grocers said that
meant about seven average
sized potatoes.
There were immediate pro
' tests from housewives in some
sections of London. A nutrition
ist’s published statement to the
effect that the ration was suffi
cient to maintain health did lit
tle to quell them.
The total British ration pro
vides 2,700 calories daily, but
the government has warned.
that supplies may fail to meet
that at times during the com
ine winter.
In Brixton, lower middle
class London subrub, house
wives complained as they lined
up today to buy their potato |
ration at the shop of George:
Kingston. Many, said Kingston, j
“went away very upset and
crying when they saw their
three-pound ration.”
"Potatoes art the mainstay of
the poor in Brixton,” he con-,
tinued. “and I do not know how
the workingman can carry on j
with one a day. Why, the aver-(
age order for potatoes in this .
district was 10 pounds before I
they went on ration.”
Worse Blow
In the Aldgate and Bishops
ate section, housewives told
me British Press association
that “we can never manage on
that few potatoes. It’s a worse
blow than bread rationing.’’
Similar protests were made a
year ago when the government
started rationing bread at sev
en and one-half ounces. A ma
jority of the people say now,
however, that the ration is suf
ficient.
prof. V. H. Mott ram, a nu
tritionist, said in a published
statement that “three pounds of
potatoes is about the average
amount eaten at present and is
quite sufficient to keep the peo
ple in good health.”
Potato supplies to fish and
chip shops will be cut by about
one-third, and the secretary of
the national federation of fish
friers said the shops would have
to forbid the sale of potatoes
without fish. One London chain
of restaurants said each patron
would be limited to three and
three-sevenths ounces of po
tatoes with a meal.
Abbotsford.
Quolity...
restraint...
lovely coloring.
a floral bouquet N
unmistakably Imperial.
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Notice To Former Employees
OF
North Carolina Shipbuilding Co.
The Newport News Shipyard will give prefer
ence of employment to those former em
ployees who made good records helping to
biuld ships at the Shipyard at Wilmington,
| North Carolina.
Immediate employment can be offered to
Plumbers, Pipefitters, Pipefitter Handymen,
Pipefitter Helpers.
Former Employees of the North Carolina
Shipbuilding Company who desire employ
ment with the Newport News Shipbuilding
and Dry Dock Company at Newport News,
Virginia, are requested to report to:
Local office of Employment Security Com
mission of North' Carolina, 26 North Second
Street, Wilmington, North Carolina.
AMERICAN ARMY
(Continued from Page One)
ply appeared to postpone until
tomorrow morning a scheduled
weekend compromise huddle of
American and Russian Pales
tine delegates, together with the
compromise - proposing dele
gates of Canada and Guate
mala.
Americans said they were
ready for such a huddle tonight
if the expected word came from
London and the Soviet delega
tion got its instructions from
Moscow.
Russian official* indicated,
however, that they either had
the instructions or were ready
to meet without them any time
tonight. A spokesman for Soviet
Delegate Semyon Tsarapkin
said “we are ready to meet if
we hear from the American del
egation.”
WALLACEMARKET
CLOSES THURSDAY
One Of Best Seasons In His
tory Of Tobacco Selling)
Says Sikes
WALLACE, Nov. 9 - Farm
ers of this' area have three
more days to sell their tobacco
on the market that last govern
ment figures showed to be the
tops in the Eastern North Caro
lina belt, John Sikes, Wallace
sales supervisor, said tonight.
The Wallace market, winding
up its best year in history, will
close after sales Thursday, Nov.
13.
Warehousemen Bill Hussey,
Oscar Blanchard, and Rack
Rackley, leaders of sales for
Wallace’s four warehouses, to
night urged farmers to bring
their tobaccos on to Wallace im
mediately.
“By using the market on our
three remaining sales day,” they
said, “farmers are sure to re
alize the best sales they can get
anywhere during the remainder
of the 1947 marketing season.
We sincerely believe they will
profit by ofering their tobacco
here during our three last days
of sales.”
With tthe help of the farmers,
who’ve been unusually loyal to
the market this year, Wallace
seemed a good bet to reach, and
probably surpass, its goal of 15,
000,000 pounds in sales for the
year. Through last Friday the
market had sold 14,764,000
pounds, leaving but 236,000
pounds to go
Prospects tonight were that
at least 125,000 pounds would be
sold here tomorrow.
Warehousemen were prepared
to do everything in their power
to get the highest possible prices
Cor the farmers so the market,
long one of the highest price
average markets anywhere,
could close its season with the
high dollar as well as the high
est volume in its history.
The prevention of fly breeding
is for a crop 13 per cent below
ation in housefly control. From
the methods of preventing fly
breeding, those should be chosen
which best fit local conditions
and needs.
CADILLAC ...
OLDSMOBILE
SALES
AND
SERVICE
COASTAL
MOTORS INC.
1020 Market St. Dial 5301
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City Briefs
Labor supply for New Han
over, Brunswick, Pender, and
Columbus counties has reached
its lowest point at any period
during the past year but still ex
ceeds demands for workers, it
was announced yesterday by W.
H. Powell, manager of the local
employment security commis
sion.
The Wilmington public library
will be closed Tuesday in ob
servance of Armistice as will the
banks.
The regular meeting of the
Wilmington Light Infantry has
been scheduled for tonight at 8
o’clock at the WLI armory, Fifth
and Market streets, James L.
Duffy, president, has announced.
The James Walker Memorial
hospital alumni will meet Thurs
day night at 8 o’clock at Trail’s
End on Masonboro sound.
The Women’s Bible class of
Grace Methodist church will
meet Tuesday night at 8 o’clock
at the home of Mrs. David J.
Padrick, 1709 Ann street.
The scheduled monthly meet
ing of the 322nd Organized Re
serve composite group will be
held tonight in room 30, post of
fice building at 7:30 o’clock, it
was announced yesterday by An
drew H. Harriss, Jr.
David B. Bannerman, son of
Mrs. L. Bannerman of Tarry
more Cottages, Carolina Beach,
has been admitted to the Naval
Academy, Maryland, as a mem
ber of the class of 1951, the ac
ademy announced today.
Members of the Wilmington
chapter of the Knights of Col
umbus were guests of Paul Bas
chon at a communion breakfast
in St. Mary’s parish hall Sunday
morning after they had attended
Mass at St. Mary’s church in a
body and received Holy Com
munion. The brief program at
the breakfast was in charge of
Angelo Narciso.
- i
Wilmington's annual school;
garden contests, which are di- j
rected by Carl Reheder of Wood
lawn, will be featured in the
Feburar.v issue of Better Homes
and Gardens, national magazine.
Written by Larry Hirsch of Sun- j
set Park and illustrated by Jim i
Wommack, local photographer,
the story will be included in the
magazine's "More Beautiful
America” section.
Mrs. T. Macon Womble is re
ported as “doing nicely” at her
home on Wrightsville Beach,
where she is recuperating from
an operation at Bullock hospi
tal two weeks ago.
The Wilmington Ministerial
association and the McClure Fel
lowship Bible class will meet to
day at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m.
j respectively at the YMCA.
DYNASTYOFSINGH
_
(Continued from Page One)
this area seems largely due to
the fact that nearly 100.000 of
its 400,000 population here
served as soldiers and are train
ed in modern warfare. This
“poonch” area is famous for its
fighting men.
Even if the Indian army, aid
ing the Maharajah, repels the
tribal raiders who are attacking,
they will still face the almost
insuperable job of cleaning out
the rebels who are fighting with
their backs to their homes and
who know every inch of the
mountains.
In such country as this, the
heavy equipment and fighter
bomber planes of the Indian
Army are almost useless .
Planes Ineffectual
The rebels assert that the In
dian planes, sent in response to
desperate redio appeals of the
surrounded Hindu troops, have
proved completely inffectual.
They say that their experienced
soldiers merely dispersed in the
forests when the planes came,
and suffered no casualties.
The four troop pockets are
surrounded by crack-shot guer
rillas, rebel leaders say. Even
if a few troops escape, the re
bels say, they face almost cer
tain death at the hands of the
of the native Moslem popula
tion. These Moslems, even if
they do not possess rifles, have
at least spears, hatchets or
swords.
VIOLENCE TAKES
(Continued from Page One)
bile in front of his home in Fair
Bluff Saturday night.
Three Negroes were killed
near Shelby Saturday night
when the auto in which they
were riding crashed into a tree.
The dead were J. C. Jennings,
Edward Jennings, and William
Jennings, all brothers.
Joseph O. Hoell, 34, was burn
ed to death when his trailer
camp home caught fire early
Sunday.
The national school lunch pro
gram serves more than 8,000,000
U. S. children daily.
BABY’S WAILING
(Continued from Page One)
sentee parents, two Camp Le
juene marines among the an
gry crowd actually broke into
the car by smashing a window
to reach the child. The car’s
safety glass was shattered, a
broom forced through and the
door, latch pushed to open the
door. Marine PFC Bob McGill
took the baby out of the car
and held it in his arms to quiet
it.
At this point two local police
men arrived on the scene in the
course of walking their Front
street beat. They located the
child’s parents and suggested to
the father that he move the car
to another parking place to pre
vent further violence.
The car owner, a well-dressed
young man, told the officers
that he and his wife had
traveled over 5,000 miles with
the baby and had always left
it in the car while eating, as
they had done here.
“The child is perfectly normal
and healthy,” he declared, “and
he has always been perfectly all
right when we have left him in
the car while eating, we have
found it too inconvenient to
carry the baby into restaurants
while attempting to eat.”
He followed the policeman’s
advice in moving his car around
the corner to park it on Grace
street, however, and the mother
carried the baby with her as
they returned to the nearby res
taurant to finish their meal.
The baby's father attempted
to learn who had broken the
window of his automobile, tell
ing the policeman “I could sue
him if I found out who did that.
I can understand their feelings
and appreciate it,” he declared
as the cop told him that the
crowd had become highly indig
nant over the apparent neglect
and mistreatment of the baby,
“but there are laws about
destruction of property.”
The crowd had dispersed in
the meantime, however, and
no one could identify the win
dow breakers.
HUGHES PROBE
(Continued from Page One)
the subcommittee’s action on in
action in the Hughes case.
Since then the Maine Senator
has, for the most part, been
avoiding any statement about
the Hughes affairs, and has been
absent from the hearings.
Tomorrow’s session—at which
Hughes also may go into the
question of his alleged payment
of expenses for former Maj. Gen.
Bennett E. Meyers may wind up
the second installment of the
hearings.
Meyers was chief of Army Air
Materiel Procurement during the
war. The committee last week
attempted to show that he was
instrumental in winning Hughes
lucrative contracts and had tried
to get favors in return.
After the hearings the sub
committee is expected to prepare
a report which will staate wheth
er irregularities were involved
in Hughes’ dealings with the
government.
CALIFORNIA CITY
(Continued from Page One)
erras. the box was handed up
to a representative of the cam
paign, who was to count the
donations en route to Reno and
make his report there.
A scroll was presented to
Pittman by Warren as the lat
ter turned over custody of the
train. Pittman promised he
would turn over the scroll to
Utah’s chief executive Herbert
Maw when the train reaches its
first stop in that state.
RUSSIA EXTRACTS
(Continued from Page One)
000, of which $46,000,000
were coal and about $9 000,00
timber,” the report said. “Ship
ments of manufactured goods
very low.”
It said exports should be in
creased appreciably during the
last half of his year, but that
“for a full year it is unlikely
that exports will reach one-tenth
of the $200,000,000 which has
been estimated as the minimum
necessary for self-sustaining
economy.”
---
The Weather
Weather Bureau report of temperature
and rainfall for the 24hours ending 8
p m. in the principal cotton growing
areas and elsewhere:
STATION High Low R’fall
WILMINGTON_ 60 41 .00
Alpena_ 36 30 .00
Asheville _ So 36 .00
Atlanta_ 62 36 . 00
Atlantic City_ 53 42 .00
Birmingham - 66 32 . 00
Boston___ 48 39 .00
Buffalo _ 37 31 .31
Burlington - 42 32 . 33
Charlotte - 62 33 . 00
Chattanooga - 63 31 .00
Chicago _ 40 27 . 00
Cincinnati _ 50 30 . 00
Cleveland--- 41 31 .00
Dallas _ ■-- 66 45 .00
Denver __ 38 28 .00
Detroit _ 38 32 .00
Duluth_ 30 17 .00
El Paso _ 70 38 .00
Fort Worth_ 64 45 .00
Galveston - 75 60 . 01
Houston - 73 45 . 00
Jacksonville - - 68 44 .00
Kansas City - 47 32 .00
Key West- 75' 67 .00
Knoxville - 60 35 .00
Los Angeles - 67 50 .00
Louisville - 56 30 .00
Memphis- 66 34 . 00
Meridian - 72 32 . 00
Miami- 74 61 .00
Minn.-St. Paul_ 30 19 .00
Mobile - 73 42 . 00
Montgomery _ 68 34 . 00
New Orleans_ 70 41 .00
New York__ 48 40 . 00
Norfolk - 58 37 .00
Philadelphia -:_51 38 .00
Phoenix - 72 42 00
Pittsburgh- 42 32 00
Raleigh - 61 36 .00
[Richmond - 58 34 00
St. Louis - 50 32 00
San Antonio _- 66 40 oi
San Francisco _ 64 47 00
Savannah - 68 43 00
Seattle-,- 51 37 .00
Tampa - 68 44 00
Vicksburgh - 73 29 no
Washington - 56 37
OBITUARIES
LT. OSCAR NOLAN SANFORD
Funeral services lor Lieut.
Oscar Nolan Sanford, of Wil
mington, who was killed in ac
tion in Belgian on Jan. 15, 1945,
were conducted in Hillside ceme
tery, in Laurinburg Sunday af
ternoon at 3:30 o’clock.
Lieut. Sanford was buried
with full military honors, ac
corded by the Laurinburg post
of the American Legion. The
Rev. Guy C. Moore, pastor of
the Southside Baptist church
here lead the preyer at the
services.
Active pauubearers were
cousins of the deceased. They
are Calder Shackelford, of Wil
mington, L. T. Sanford, Jr., Bly
the Sanford, Claude Sanford,
Garrett Fields and John M.
Maxwell.
The young officer, the son of
Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Sanford,
of i6 Hudson drive, was em
ployed in the Wilmington post
office before he entered the ser
vice in September, 1942. He went
overseas in June, 1944, and was
in command of an Infantry unit
at the time of his death.
Lieut. Sanford was a mem
ber of the Southside Baptist
church and was active in work
of the Senior fraternity of the
Brigade Boy’s club.
In addition to his parents, he
is survived by his widow, Mrs.
Grace McDaniel Sanford, of 519
Lamar avenue, Charlotte, a
daughter, Miss Lina Calder San
ford, and a sister, Mrs. V. C.
McIntyre, of Wilmington.
BARFIE R. LONG
CHADBOURN, November, 9—
Funeral services for Barfie R.
Long, a veteran of World War
11, who died in Veterans hospital
in Oteen, were held Sunday
afternoon at 4 o’clock from
the chapel of the Peacock Fune
ral home, by the Re\. A. T. Pea
cock, assisted by the Rev. W. P.
Pope, Jr., Burial followed in the
Chadbourn cemetery.
The Chadbourn Klondyke
American Legion Post No. 139
had charge of miliary services.
JANET MARIE OTTOWAY
Janet Marie Ottaway, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
J. Ottaway, Sr., of Masonboro
Sound, died Saturday in James
Walker Memorial hospital.
Funeral services will be con
ducted Monday morning at 11
o’clock from the chapel of Ward’s
Funeral home with the Rev. Alex
ander Miller officiating. Inter
ment will follow in the family
cemetery in Masonboro.
In addition to her parents, she
is survived by three brothers,
S. Sgt. Henry J. Ottoway, Jr., El
gin Field, Fla., and Richard N.
Ottaway and David G. Ottaway,
both of Wilmington; one sister,
Sally Ann Ottaway of Wilming
ton, and grandmothers, Mrs.
Franc Montgomery and Mrs. J.
H. Ottaway.
PVT. JAMES S. ROGERS
LUMBERTON, Nov. 9. — The
body of Pvt. James Sinclair
Rogers, 25, Robeson Indian who
died on Jan. 19, 1945, in Bel
gium from wounds suffered in
action, arrived in Rowland
Thursday from Charlotte where
it had been shipped after arriv
ing in New York on the U. S. S.
Joseph V. Connally from over
seas.
The funeral was conducted
from New Bethel Methodist
church Sunday at 2 p. m. by the
Rev. T. M. Swett.
This is the first of the war
dead whose body has arrived in
Robeson. Pvt. Rogers was a
member of Co. B, 44th Infantry
regiment at the time of his
death.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs.
Elizabeth H. Rogers; one child,
James Sinclair, Jr.; three broth
ers, Luther, Dennis and James
R. Rogers, all of Lumberton, Rt.
4, and his grandfather, James L.
Hunt, of Rowland, Route 2.
PVT. JOSEPH H. FAIT, JR.
BLADENBORO, November 9—
Funeral services for Pvt.
Joseph H. Pait, Jr., who died in
Holland will be held Tuesday at
3 p. m. from the home of his
parents conducted by the Rev.
A. T. Stephens and the Rev. A.T.
Peacock.
Pvt. Pait’s body arrived in
Bladenboro Thursday. He was 23
years old at the time of his death.
He attended Bladenboro High
school before joining the Army.
The William Stewart Ward
Post of American Legion will
have charge of the services.
He is survived by his parents,
three brothers, Randoll, Millard,
C. C., all of Bladenboro; three sis
ters, Mrs. Robert Taylor, Mrs.
Wilbur Smith of Bladenboro and
Mrs. Stanley Yarborough of
Abbot sburR.
MRS. ELGIE P. WILLIAMS
Funeral services for Mrs. Elgie
Peasley Williams, 70, of Carolina
Beach, who died Sunday after
noon in James Walker Memorial
hospital after a short illness, will
be held Tuesday morning at 10
o’clock from the Chapel of Ward
Funeral home. Interment will fol
low at Fairmont.
She is survivied by her hus
YOUR FUR COAT ..
Does it need alterations for
the new season?
Does it need repairing of
any description?
Consult Our Stylist
Mrs. Harriet Pylant
In Our New
FUR RESTYLING
DEPARTMENT
| 1710 Dawson Street
band; three sons, Irven of Caro
lina Beach, Nelson of Roxboro,
and Charles of Greenville, S. C.,
one daughter, Mrs. H. R. Vance
of Piedmont, S. C., one sister,
Miss Ada Peasley of Whitefield,
N. H.
FREDERICK LACY KING
Funeral services for Frederick
Lacy King, 58, 405 S. Third street,
who died Saturday morning after
a brief illness, will be held this
afternoon at 3 6’clock from St.
Andrews Covenant Presbyterian
church.. The Rev. Dr. Eugene
Witherspoon, minister, will offi
ciate and interment will follow
in Oakdale cemetary.
Mr. King was vice-president
operations of the ACL, as deacon
of St. Andrews Covenant Presby
terian church, a member of the
Cape Fear club and Carolina
Yacht club.
* Mr. King was born in Wil
mington on Oct. 13, 1889 and en
tered the employ of the ACL on
April 1, 1905. He was elected
vice-president operations as suc
cessor to the late F. W. Brown
on March 20, 1947.
Surviving are his widow. Mrs.
Lilli am T. King; one son, Fred
erick Lacy King, Jr., of Rocky
Mount; two daughters, Mrs.
John C. Keith, of Wilmington,
and Mrs. Lewis Turner, of
Vermillion, S. D.; two brothers,
Thomas King and J. U. King,
of Wilmington; two sisters, Mrs.
Jack Neuer, of Wilmington, and
Mrs. W’illiam H. Montgomery, of
Chicago, 111., and five grand
children.
Honorary pallbearers will be
C. McD. Davis, R. J. Doss, W.
D. McCaig, P. Nichols, J K.
Bannerman, C. B. Case, Dr.
David R. Murchison, C. B. Sib
ley, L. S. Jeffords, E. B. Rush,
and Robert Scott.
Active pallbearers will bs L.
W. Green, H. M. Kendall
George Gornto, Jr., W. L. Dix
son, L. T. Andrews and M. M.
Rudolph.
JOHN BERT JACOBS
John Bret Jacobs, 51, Salotte
died at 6:30 a. m. yesterday in
the Dosher Memorial hospital at
Southport, after a long illness.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Blanchie Robinson Jacobs,
Shalotte: twro sons, Elmer and
Cecile Jacobs of Albany, Ga., and
Shalotte; two daughters, Ruby
Jane and Julyne Jacobs of
Shalotte; three brothers, Charlie
Jacobs of Sarasota, Fla., Henry
Jacobs of Miami, Fla., and Willie
Jacobs of Little River, S. C.;
three sisters, Mrs. Beulah Stocks
of Nakina; Mrs. Osley Monrlee of
Tabor City, and Mrs. Lester Long
oof Tabor City.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock
at the Prospect Baptist church
near Supply. Interment will fol
low in the church cemetery.
The body will remain at the
Harrell-Coble Funeral home and
will be placed in state at the
church at 1.30 o’clock Tuesday
afternoon.
SOLOMON E. HEWETT
SOUTHPORT, Nov. 8—Fun
eral services for Solomon E.Hew
ett, 68, who died yesterday at
11:15 a. m. after a long illness,
will be held this afternoon at
3:30 o’clock at the Bru: wick
county home. The Rev. B. H.
Price will officiate and inter
ment will follow in the Bethel
cemetery.
Mr. Hewett is survived by his
widow, Mrs. Ella Hewett; two
brothers, C. S. and J. W. Hewett.
ADAM GOES SLEEPLESS
MILWAUKEE (U.R) _ Sylvester
Adam wanted police to give him
a place to sleep. He pulled the
hook in a fire alarm box. All
he got for his trouble was a
$25 fine on a drunk and dis
orderly charge. Not even a
warm bed for one night.
North Carolina’s 1947 sweet
potato crop is now estimated
at 8,960,000 bushels or 17 per
cent above that of 1946, and 14
per ent above that 1936-45 ten
year average.
Contractors
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MARSHALL REPORT
(Continued from Page One)
mitteemen on the cost of the
stop-gap plan, but a battle brew
ing over the question of what
agency, old or new, will control
the billions to be paid out.
Marshall will make only a
statement tomorrow. On Tues
day and Wednesday he and
other State Department officials
will submit to questioning at
separate meetings of both com
mittees.
Meantime, Sen. Tom Connally.
Tex., ranking Democrat on
the Senate committee, recom
mended tfcat the funds be
administered by a single direc
tor with an associate advisory
board. He said the director
should be appointed by the Pre
sident and confirmed by the Se
nate.
This is in line with recom
mendations of the Presidential
committee, headed by Secretary
of Commerce W. Averell Harri
man, which proposed a new gov
ernment agency to run the pro
gram, modeled along the lines
of a corporation.
A somewhat similar proposal
was made by the special House
Committee on foreign aid head
ed by Christian A. Herter, R.,
Mass. The Herter committee,
however, asked for a corpora
tion with a bi-partisan board.
House Speaker Joseph W.
Martin, Jr., Mass., “Heartily”
endorsed the Herter com
mittee’s suggestion and urged
that the proposed corporation be
expanded to “fight Communism
anywhere in the world— not just
in Europe.” He also said Con
gress probably will include
China in the emergency aid pro
gram although the administra
tion has made no such request.
Martin said in a statement
that there was some doubt whe
ther the corporation could be set
up in time to handle the emer
gency aid. If it can not, Con
gress has been asked to pro
vide funds for the Export-Import
Bank and Commodity Credit
Corporation for use until a long
range plan can be put into ef
fect.
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service. All recognized air travel cards
accepted. See your travel agent or cat
^ 22821
I
__gOjfj«w row with 4-twwm) tMimtm. (
It’s The Law
Of The Land!
Odd and out of date
laws for your scrap
book. Read them
each Monday.
In Wheaton, Illinois, people en
tering the court house must re
move their shoes and leave them
outside!
Wear what yon please on your feet — but, lor that
sparkling appearance, let ns dry clean or launder the
clothes yon wear on your back!
CAISON BROS.
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
13th & Dawson Streets Phone 2-3673
- —— 134)1
FOREIGN OFFICE
(Continued t„"p',t, 0((|
"s" minls,«-» M ta< .
the majority small hold,,
since the liberation ' ' ^
In Name Only
In Yugoslavia, a p„, .
Stanoye Simich, is nomin/^'
eign minister, but r " f,N
Vine Premie, E4.tjfe«
is in supreme control ,f 7J
eign policy and the min‘ °!'
day-to-day work « Car.„p, ■ '
by Simich’s three (•.d 0l,t
deputies, Ales Bebler Ge”^
*W Velebit and Vlado K rv J'
A similar situation exi-’'"'
Bulgaria, experts said.' ^
the foreign minister o v c“
Georgiev, a non
while Communist Trai^T’
tov is supreme oversee- of ,
icy. JI Pul.
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1
CINDERELLA
BQOTERIE
113 North Front St.