The Herald-Sun from Durham, North Carolina (2024)

I--PAGE 8 Page One Runovers DURHAM MORNING HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1943 General -London- Continued from Page One had grabbed the baby girl and fought her way down into the shelter where they spent the night. William Webster, another one who lived through the disaster, said he had been dive bombed at sea and "saw 20 men killed on a ship, but it was nothing compared with this." "You could not move he said. "Spectators who went up to help were powerless to do anything and a number of men fainted. "Although I was at Dunkerque have never seen anything so terrible," declared G. H.

Davis, another survivor. I squeezed through the door to the top of the stairs I saw bodies piled two and three deep. A man with a small baby in his arms was killed. His wife stood by powerless to Thomas Wilson said "people seemed to be piled up waist high on the stairs, We had to stand on unconscious people to get them out." There were stories of whole families being wiped out. And others of small children being crushed under their suffocating parents.

John Quorn, 22-year-old tunnel worker who helped build the shelter, said his mother, sister, brother and a nephew were killed. "The sight on the stairs was the most dreadful ever saw." Quorn asserted. "We laid the dead out on the pavement while the ambulances ran shuttle service to hospitals." J. Knowles, an air raid warden who helped in the rescue work, said the 178 dead and 60 injured were taken out of a space that would Ordinarily hold about 100 people. -House- Continued from Page One amendment which would prohibit advertisem*nt of liquor, wine or beer in newspapers, on billboards or on the radio.

Other legislation of importance that was, passed included bills which would: Place control of hog cholera and other hog diseases under the Department of Agriculture and appropriate $10,000 yearly to enforce a quarantine law for inoculation with live virus. Set up a commission to study the Superior and inferior courts of the State and report to the 1945 General Assembly any suggested changes to aid in their functioning. Prevent devastation in cutting timber and conserve future timber wealth of the State, Make it a felony to willfully or maliciously set fire to woodlands. A Senate bill designating the Cardinal as North Carolina's State bird was passed by the House today and will become law upon ratification. The measure was introduced by Senator Rivers Johnson of Duplin at the request of the North Carolina Bird Club, which conducted a poll to ascertain the public's choice.

Ten years ago the assembly passed a bill designating the chickadee, or "Tomtit," as the State bird. Legfalators repealed the measure a few days later, however, through fear that North Carolina might be called "the Tomtit State." -Plans- Continued from Page One British Eighth Army 18 extremely heavy pressure in the south and the outlook is for Increasingly sharp fighting along the entire Tunisian front. Allied airmen have scored striking successes in the Mediterranean with repeated attacka on Axis positions in Italy, Sicily, Sardinia and Tunisia. Continuous bombing raids on Germany and France have hit Axis prestige and undoubtedly damaged Nazi civilian morale. The Red Army retains the Initiative despite slowing of advances on the central and southern fronts.

Dial F-115 for Newspaper Service Weather Washington. March 4. Weather Bureau report of temperature and rainfall for the 24 hours ending 8 P. M. in the principal cotton growing areas and elate where: Station High Low Pree.

Asheville 38 0T 0.00 Birmingham 14 0.00 Boston 0,00 Chicago 0.00 Cincinnati 0.00 Cleveland 0.00 Denver 10 0.00 DURHAM Galveston Louisville 08 0.00 Memphis 0.00 Miami 0.00 Minn. -St. Paul 0.00 New Orleans 9.00 New York 0.00 Norfolk 4.00 Richmond 0,00 St. Louis 20 0.00 Washington 0.00 Off The Record By Ed Reed SHELL FACTORY AR AR 3-5 EDREED 14 The to "Speaking of duds--he's the only one around here -Bombers- Continued from Page One in a series of strafing attacks from extreme, low level, firing 30.000 rounds from cannon and machinerun. "Six enemy fighters caught on the ground while refueling were destroyed together with fuel trucks and large fires were started in the building area.

Our covering fighterg were challegned by 30 enemy fighters. In the ensuing fight, the enemy was completely outmaneuvered and his planes were shot out of action. Our losses were extremely Thus it was Indicated that the moment of the most severe setback had been seized General MacArthur to increase nerial softening up of the Lae defenses. In the northwestern sector of General MacArthur's Command, Allied planes bombed the town of (Saumlaki on Tanimbar Island and installations on Matkus Island; starting fires among large accumulations of oil supplies. A headquarters spokesman read excerpts from messages from planes over the target area.

Fortresses reported Wednesday afternoon: "Many lifeboats and Japs in the water- -many dead, much wreck" 'Entire area filled with lifeboats, personnel, debris, oil "Not one vessel now remaining afloat will ever reach land." "Enemy pilots we encountered displayed excellent ability." "Water crowded with liferafts, lifeboats, personnel, all being strafed." From the Fortresses Thursday morning: "Debris observed over 20-mile area. No shipping observed except two damaged destroyers." From a B-25 cruising 100 miles southwest of Salamaua Thursday morning: "About 500 men and battle equipment in water when arrived. Only 200 when aircraft left. Sharks seen around rafts and boats." Black Markets Continued from Page One year than it permits larger stores and chains. Maximum prices were quoted on sliced bacon (de-rined, smoked) grade akinned, smoked ham.

center slices, skinned, smoked whole ham; center cut pork chops fresh or frozen pork lions); and salt pork (dry salt bellies, fresh, cured or frozen), The two ceilings for these five products in the order named, by zones, were listed in cents per pound, as follows; Zone nine (South) (principal cities include Columbia, S. Jacksonville, Raleigh and Richmond): 48 and 46; 61 and 59; 41 and 40; 43 and 41: 26 and 23. Charles M. Elkinton, an OPA price executive. predicted the specitic pork ceilings, "it effectively enforced" along with already-established wholesale maximums, will result in a substantial decrease in prices for live hogs.

Asserting black market operations have been a substantial factor in increasing hog prices, Elkinton said he believed top prices would drop to $14 to $14.50 hundredweight, compared with recent highs of about $15.50. Such 8 decrease, Elkinton said, will "lessen substantially" any need for price ceilings on live hogs. Prentiss M. Brown, OPA administrator, said maximum prices will be announced soon for hundreds of common foodstuffs as well as beef, mutton, lamb and veal. WHOSE PHONE RINGS MORE OFTEN? A What can a girl do about POOR COM COMPLEXION? Is your complexion making heal externally-caused pimples and you lose out on good times? Don't blemishes.

It's mildly astringent, too. neglect a poor complexion! Take Powder Try Base Noxzema for just Night 10 Cream and from nurses who were watch results. See if don't days. Then a tip you notice among the first to discover how a definite improvement in your effective Noxzema is for the skin. complexion.

Get a jar nday at Noxzema does so much because it any drug or cosmetic is not just as cosmeticcream. It's a medicated counter. Inexpensive and formula that not only helps smooth trial size -also 356, soften tough, flaky skin, but helps 50d and $1 jars. -Russia- Continued from Page One tance northeast of Konotop, important junction on the railway which is the backbone of German communications between the Ukraine and central fronts. The 1 Russian advance here also was part of a vast operation aimed at undermining Nazi defenses to the northeast at Orel, present hinge of the southern-central fronts which has Russian armies fighting oh three sides of the city's approaches.

The Russians during the day reclaimed more than a dozen villages west of Rzhev. The fate of German-neld Vyazma and Gzhatsk to the south and southeast was not known. It has been assumed that the Germans would abandon those points, finding them untenable now that Rzhev has fallen. By EDDY GILMORE Moscow, March 4-4P -The Russians wheeled southwest from Rzhev today through the bleak, frozen Napoleonic corridor of retreat and reclaimed 11 more towns in a whirlwind offensive that gave the retreating Germans no time to establish new lines. The new drive was pointed directly at Smolensk, the great German pivot of operations on the Moscow front.

Smolensk is 135 miles southwest of Rzhev and at the base of a salient that has pointed menacingly at Moscow for more than 18 months. Early in the Winter, troops who captured Velikie Luki and towns south of Toropets struck to within 60 miles of Smolensk on the north. In the region between Orel and Rzhev, other Russian armies were believed to be even nearer. The Germans were declared hurling masses of infantry and tanks to stem the new offensive -the ninth in a series of brilliant Russian suecesses--but the noon communique said crisply that "all counter-attracks were repulsed." (The Germans claimed the capture of Slavyansk, 50 miles north of Stalino in the Donets Basin, and said the bulk of the Third Russian Tank Army was surrounded south of Kharkov. They claimed to have reached the Middle and Upper Donets on a 160-mile front.

Fresh Russian attacks northwest of Kursk and northwest of Orel were reported repulsed.) Charlotte Boy Accuses Father In Poison Case Charlotte, March Charlotte police went to Wilmington today to take custody of Robert Lee Arthur who, Detective Chief Frank N. Littlejohn said, was accused by his 15-year-old son, Foster, of inducing the boy to attempt to poison his step-mother, Police said the boy made the following statement: Foster Arthur, on this day March 3, 1943, do confess that daddy told me to kill my -mother. He said to give her poison while he 1 was gone and let him know when it was over and he would come back and take charge." The officers said an Investigation was started after Mrs. Arthur had become ill from drinking milk. Arthur was arrested by Wilmington police last night upon.

the request of Detective Littlejohn. Prison Guard Is Hurt By Convict At Raleigh Raleigh, March 4-4P) C. T. Poindexter, Central Prison guard, was beaten severely today by Creed Woody, Madison County white man serving 20-25 years for second-degree murder, Prison Director Oscar Pitts reported tonight. Potts said Poindexter was in a hospital, but his injuries were not believed serious.

Poindexter reprimanded Woody for infraction of a prison rule, Pitts related, and told the prisoner to follow him to Warden Ralph MeLean's office. When the guard turned his back, Woody struck him blow on the bead with his fist. Pitts said Poindexter remembered nothing after the first blow, and when other prison attaches arrived they found the guard badly beaten. Absenteeism Hits N. C.

Ship Building Program Wilmington, March 4-(P) An official of the North Carolina Shipbuilding Company said today that absenteeism in the shipyards during January caused loss of enough man hours to build 10.000-ton Liberty ship. General Manager P. F. Hasley, saying he recognized that much of the absenteeism was unavoidable. declared fact remains that too many workers are staying off the Job one, two and three days week." He warned that "strong measures" would be taken if undue loss ot time continued because of unnecessary absenteeism, but did not amplify the statement.

The shipyards employ over 000 persons, and in January tied for second place in the nation in the number of Liberty ships produced, 14 Become Suddenly Ill On Bus Near Asheville Knoxville, Tenn. March Fourteen persons were hospitalized tonight after becoming suddenly ill aboard 3 bus in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina. Forest rangers removed 90 passengers from the Asheville-toKnoxville bus near the Cherokee Indian reservation and gave artificial respiration to several who had lost consciousness. A Knoxville physician. who dered the '14 to a hospital until laboratory tests could be completed.

said It was not determined whether they were suffering from monoxide or food poisoning. About 10 million tons of poultry feed will be needed this year to raise pullets, brollers and turkeys None of the small Islands which make up Palmyra in the South Pacific has an altitude of more than six feet above sea level. And He Wanted Her To Become Ideal Woman Los Angeles, March -A young wife said today that her psychologist-husband, 30 years i her senior, had sought to teach her the arts of love when she was 14 in an attempt to mould her into his ideal of the perfect woman. The assertion was made by Ethel A. Negri, now 22, in a cross-complaint for divorce from Dr.

Vitali Negri. They met, she said, when she was 14 and he 44, at a community center where he instructed her in psychology. She said he made love to her, representing it as a lesson in paychology. When she protested at the disparity in their ages, he pointed to the great love affair of Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, Mrs. Negri asserted.

Vegas, Finally, she when married she him in Las was 19, she said. charging he later associated with other women, treated her like a child and gave her 25 cents a day spending money. In Dr. Negri's original suit he charged her with eavesdropping on his consultations with patients and then accusing him of illicit affairs. Mrs.

Negri asks custody of their eight-months-old daughter. New High Velocity Anti-Tank' Gun For U. S. Forces For purposes of comparison 4a new U. S.

Army high velocity anti-tank gun, three-inch caliber (right) is lined at the Army's Aberdeen, Ordnance Proving Ground shortly before America entered the war was the Army's major that tests have shown the new gun capable of destroying any enemy and is superior to the German 88-mm. gun as an Deaths And Funerals GEORGE W. HALL lof a heart attack. He was 45 years Funeral services for George W. (Will) Hall, 78, retired farmer, who died at the home of his granddaughter, Mrs.

H. P. Barbee of the Mineral Springs Road, yesterday morning, will be held this afternoon at the Oak Grove Free Will Baptist Church at 3 o'clock. The pastor, the Rev. Caleb Goodwin and the Rev.

Fred Rivenbark, pastor of the Sherron Acres Free Will Bapfist Church, will conduct the serv ices. Interment will be in the church cemetery. Mr. Hall had been critically ill for two weeks and little hope had been held for his recovery, A complication of diseases was assigned as the cause of death. The deceased was born in Durham County and lived his entire life in this community.

He was a member of the Oak Grove Free Will Baptist Church and attended regularly until his health failed. He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Leona Evans of Oak Community: six grandchildren; 15 great grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. Martha Ellis and brothers, Joe, Tom, Charles, Albert and Luther Hall, all of Durham County, Nephews will act as pallbearers and nieces will act as floral bearers. OSCAR M.

SCOTT Oscar Matthews Scott, 83, retired farmer, died suddenly at the home of his daughter, Mrs. C. W. O'Neal, 3028 University Drive, last night at 6:30 o'clock. Mr.

Scott was In good health and was stricken with the fatal heart attack while out on the back porch. A physician was summoned but he died immediately. Only last week, Mr. Scott went to his physician for a check up and was pronounced in excellent health for his age. The deceased was born in Chatham County but had made his home in Durham for the past 43 years.

He had been living with his daughter for several years, His wife, the former Miss Nellie Goodwin, died in 1918, He was of the Baptist faith. In addition to Mrs. O'Neal he is survived by three other daughters, Mrs. W. H.

Bright of Durham, Mrs. A. E. Nichols of the Wake Forest Road and Mrs. J.

A. Jones of Graham; two half-sisters, Mrs. Lonnie Lawrence and Mrs. Duncan Lawrence both of Chatham County and several nieces and nephews and grandchildren. a WILLIAM H.

HILL Siler City, March H. Hill, 63, busi- ness man of Gulf, died at Lee County Hospital, Sanford, at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon following a heart attack suffered eight days ago. He had been in ill health for the past two years. Mr. Hill was a native of England, coming to the United States as a miner.

He served as superintendent of the Langdonsdale Coal Mine in Pennsylvania, and operated the Coggins Mine in Montgomery County before becoming connected with the Cumnock Mine at Gulf. He was superintendent of the Hill and Thompson Brick and Tile Company at Gulf. Ile was a member of Sanford Masonic Lodge No. 151. Surviving are his wife, who is the former Miss Ollie Beal of Gulf; two half-brothers, Albert Rowe of Bogton.

Mass, and Williem Rowe of Dallas, Texas; also a half-brother. and a half -sister in England. Funeral arrangements were incomplete tonight. DR. JOSHUA TAYLOE Washington, N.

March 4. Dr. Joshua Tayloe, 45, chief of staff of Tayloe Hospital here, died today old. Dr. Tayloe had been connected with the hospital here since 1926, He was a past president of the North Carolina Urological Society, vice president of the Seaboard Medical Society, and a Mason.

The funeral services will be held at 3 P. M. tomrorow at St. Peter's Episcopal Church. REV.

WESLEY LAWTON Asheville, March 4P) -The Rev. Wesley Willingham Lawton, 73, a Baptist missionary, to China from 1894 to 1939, died in an Asheville hospital today. The funeral will be held tomorrow at the Baptist Church in Ridgecrest where he had been living for more than a year. Surviving are his widow, a former Methodist Missionary whom he married in China, and five children: Mrs. T.

T. Holloway of Dallas, Texas; Miss Olive A. Lawton of Shanghai; Mrs. Eph Whisenhunt of Norfolk, the Rev. Wesley M.

Lawton of Charlotte, and the Rev, Deaver Lawton of Chefoo. Mr. Lawton was native of Hampton County, South Carolina. He was educated at Furman Univerlaity and the Southern Baptist Seminary. Shortly after his arrival in China he joined with Dr.

Eugene Sallee in founding the interior Chinese mission for the Southern Baptist Church. In addition to his widow and children he is survived by four S. W. A. of Leba, S.

Mrs. T. O. 00 and F. A.

Lawton, both of brothers and four sisters. They are: Greenville, S. H. L. of Ridgeland.

W. E. Wyman of Charlotte; Mrs. William Lindsay of Columbia, S. Mrs.

E. K. Neely of Spartanburg, S. and Mrs. Hugh Vincent of Varnville, S.

C. RICHARD HENDRICKS Henderson, March 4. -(Special) Funeral service will be held Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock from the First Methodist Church here for Richard Osbille Hendricks, seven-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Geddie D.

Hendricks, who died at 9 o'clock this morning at the home of his parents near Oxford. The final rites will be in charge of the Rev. H. K. King, pastor of the church.

and interment will be made in Elmwood Cemetery. The child had been ill for only four days. Surviving are the parents, the mother being the former Miss Elizabeth Mabry of Hender- SON. MRS. JANIE PERRY Henderson.

March (Special) Mrs. Janie Hall Perry died at ber home on Chestnut Street at 5:15 o'clock yesterday morning after an illness of several days. She would have been 80 years old had she lived until her next birthday. She was born April 18, 1863, Funeral was held at 3 o'clock this afternoon from Holy Innocents Episcopal Church, and interment was in Elmwood Cemetery here. The deceased was the last surviving member of her generation, There were two brothers, the late John G.

Hall and the late Augustus B. Hall, and one sister, the late Miss Susan W. Hall. all of Oxford. Two other sisters died in early life.

Mrs. Perry was born in Brunswick County near Wilmington, on the rice plantation of her parents, John Green Hall and Sarah Ross Hall. The family moved to Granville County when Mrs. Perry was in her childhood and she was reared in Oxford, and was educated at St. Mary's School in Raleigh.

In 1883 she was married to the late Colonel Henry Perry, who was 9x12 LINOLEUM, EXTRAORDINARY RUG Feature Choice of Colors Companion Feature Good Quality 6.95 Value At Only .98 Heavy This may be the last chance you will have to buy these rugs at this low price, Quality BEAUTY TONE or while any selection price. of Buy patterns now 48 complete! $8.98 Values Fourth Floor Colors Cheice of $5 Fine, beautiful quality patterns. in a Very variety easily of EFIRD'S cleaned real buy at this low price! Department Store 307-11 West Main St. with a 37-mm anti-tank gun, which anti-tank weapon. The Army reports tank with one shell at long ranges anti-tank weapon.

-Story- Continued from Page One armed forces, aboard the vessel survived. Twenty members of the merchant crew of 130 and 13 members of the Navy gun crew of 24 also were rescued. A number apparently died from exposure in the frigid waters, survivors indicated. At least three who had been dragged through the waters for several hours hanging onto jam -packed lifeboats were dead when they reached rescue versels and at least one perished in a lifeboat while crew members made valiant efforts to fan the spark of life. The last survivors were not picked up until eight hours after the torpedo struck.

The heroic actions of a member of the New York Police Department -Hugh E. Moffett, 44, of the Bronx, N. Y. saved the lives of several persons. Moffett, who left a sergeancy on the New York department to join the Merchant Marine only three weeks before the sinking, helped launch a jammed lifeboat and then endangered his own lite to get others aboard, survivors said.

A naval veteran of the first World War, Moffett has a son serving in the Solomons. With the impact of the torpedo, the lights out instantly, and the stricken ship began listing almost immediately. Despite the grave danger of being hurled from decks into the choppy sea, crew members went to their posts in a "matter of fact" way, survivors said, and began lowering boats and rafts. Several struck, due to the list of the ship, before they could be released, they added. There was not the "slightest sign" of panic, the survivors indicated.

A number of those thrown into the sea of a comparatively new deattracted attention through the parture- a red light attached to lifejackets, Survivors, said they heard the outcries expected of any one in distress but there were positively no signs of disorders. "In fact. one survivor said, was the finest behaved body of men -soldiers, sailors and merchant crew--that I have ever -Draft- Continued from Page One until it is modified. It has been predicted by informed officials that it will be modified soon, because the supply of eligible single men is fast dwinding. Mcnu*tt said his order of Feb.

2, listing 29. "non-deferable occupations" in which men with dependents need expect no deferment after April 1 "primarily indicated which men with familles will have to be inducted first when men with familles are called." He said such men would have 30 days after April in which to transfer to essential lobs or to register Service with before the U. being S. Employment placed in Class 1-A. The revised policy toward college students grants no blanket deferment, leaving individually each, case by to local be considered draft boards.

However, it authorizes the boards to consider for "occupational classification' any full-time student in certain fields in a recognized college or university If the institution cer titles he is competent, gives promise of successful completion of his course, and will he graduated by July 1, 1945. Since many institutions have begun instruction on a year 'round basis under speed -up educational plans, the new policy could apply to a youngster just entering college, Heretofore, the rule has been that students were not entitled to deferment unless they had completed successfully a portion of their studies. Also authorized for deferment were graduate and post students engaged in scientific research related to the war effort or in instruction in one of the scientific or specialized fields, and undergraduate students in pre-professional studies who will complete their pre-professional course by July 1, 1945. Deferment until July 1 of this year was authorized for students of agriculture, forestry, pharmacy or optometry, and a one year deferment was made possible for inferaes. -Faid PassContinued from Page One launched a small counterattack.

The First Army was grinding down German material and was estimated by frontline correspondents to have destroyed 40 of the 75 tanks employed by the Germans. Of the 14 battalions of German infantry, the British were said to have captured two, or about 1,600 men. German losses in killed and wounded were estimated as proportionally high. (The German communique claimled Northern 2,110 were Tunisia taken and that prisoner in 68 tanks and 36 guns were destroyed.) More than 30 million letters to U. S.

servicemen overseas were delivered for Christmas last year. clerk of Vance Superior Court for 40 years until his death in 1934. There was born of this marriage one child, H. Leslie Perry, who practiced law in Henderson until his death in 1923. MRS.

JOHN O'NEILL JR. -Mrs. John E. O'Neill Jr. 22, of 1105 Alabama Avenue, Durham, died in Watts Hospital at 6:05 o'clock Tuesday afternoon.

Mrs. O'Neill was the former Miss Edna Suitt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Suitt of Hillsboro, Route 3. She was married in December to J.

E. O'Neill Jr. of Chadbourne, Mrs. O'Neill was a teacher at the E. K.

Powe School in Durham prior to her death. Her husband was employed there also before leaving for Candidate School. United States Coast Guard, London, on the 22nd of February, Mrs. O'Neill was a graduate of the Chapel Hill High School and Woman's College of the University of North Carolina. She is survived by her parents, her husband, three sisters, Miss Mary Elizabeth Suitt of Roanoke Rapids, Miss Verna Suitt of Greensboro and Miss Billie Suitt, and her grandmother, Mrs.

John A. Suitt, Funeral services will be conducted at the Cane Creek Baptist Church, of which she was a member, Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock with the pastor, the Rev. F. H. Marshall and the Rev.

Wayne Oates of Durham, officiating. Pallbearers are- her first cousins, A. J. Snipes Jack Snipes, Banks Lloyd, Clarence Lloyd, Lewis Lloyd, and Troy Lloyd. Honorary pallbearers are Cecil Cooke, W.

F. Warren, S. G. Lindsay, E. P.

Pierce Jr. Dr. W. R. Standford, M.

A. McLeod, Lewis Haynes, Chapel Hill, March 4-(Special) Lieut. Gov. R. L.

Harris Will Not Run For Senate Raleigh, March 4-4P) Lieuten. ant Governor R. L. Harris said to. night, "I will not i be a candidate for the United States Senate in 1944." The statement was prompted, he said, by published references to suggestions of friends that he become a candidate.

"While I deeply appreciate their good wishes and am sensible of the honor that they do me, I feel it is only fair to them and to the people of North Carolina to make known my position with respect to this suggestion." Harris declared. Heads Motor Club Henderson, March (Special) W. R. Vaughan has been named manager of the local office of the Carolina Motor Club, which distributes State automobile license plates and titles, and new quarters have been set up in the Chevrolet building at the far end of the business district on Garnett Street, according to motor club announcement today. Mr.

Vaughan succeeds W. C. Cates, who resigned recently after serving as manager of the club's branch office here for some six or eight years or more. H. M.

Hurst, Howard Dotson, Lacy Dotson, and cousins and close friends. The body will be carried to the church at 2 o'clock where it will lie in state until the hour of the service. MELTING ICE CAN'T SPOIL DRINKS SODA MADE WITH CANADA DRY CANADA DRY WATER WATER IT'S PIN- POINT CARBONATION LASTS APPEARANCE IS MORALE Battle Yearby Special Stylist From THE STORRS-SHAEFER CO Will Be In Our Store Friday And Saturday, March 5 and 6 Mr. Yearby is showing the newest woolens in hundreds of new and distinctive patterns. Your requirements will be given his special and personal attention.

Come in and meet Mr. Yearby. Individual Tailoring At Its Best DELIVERY AT ANY DATE ARMY NAVY CIVILIAN APPAREL "For Men Who Care" Pritch Co. WASHINGTON DUKE HOTEL BLDG. "Tomorrow's Styles--Today".

The Herald-Sun from Durham, North Carolina (2024)

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