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RUSSIANS FEARFU1 NAZIS MAY_ PI MOSCOW, Sept. 16.—CP)—Thei is a growing feeling among Rut sian sthat the Americans and th British map take too easy an att tude towards the Nazis after th war. Already comments and observa tions cropping up in the pras point toward a Russian opinioi that we may be sentimental abou the Germans. Characteristic is the commen by the famous writer Ilya Ehren burg in today's issue of Pravda, communist party paper. "I have read carefully differ ent proposals for extermination ol Nazism.” he wrote. ”In Americar papers I have found a number oi suggestions which would tend to be amusing if one could laugh af ter such things as the Maidanek camp at Lublin, after Babi Yar and other atrocity camps. ‘'The criminals must be punish ed. Humanity cannot refuse to ac cept the sword of justice to bring about balances. “Regard for the children of fu ture generations leads us forward to Germany. A mother cannot bear her children knowing that the fascists are living under new passports, absorbing transoceanic vitamins and singing psalms. “We have to remove the cancer from the heart of Europe and we will do it.” And, he concluded, “we don’t want any shelters for fascism in barracks in Madrid, on the Argen tine pampas, or in (Franz) von Papen’s bedroom.” -V - Area Meetings Planned By Petroleum Committee RALEIGH, Sept. 16.— MV-1Three area meetings of a newly organiz ed Office of Price Administration officials here will be held during the coming week, T. S. Johnson, OPA district director, said today. The initial meeting will be held Tuesday with others to follow at Washington and Elizabethton on Wednesday and Thursday, respec tively. Johnson said the committee was appointed in order to have an ac tive body covering 54 eastern North Carolina counties which can at all times '‘bring problems to the OPA and exchange trade and ra tioning information for the better ment of the rationing and business programs.” --_v Thomas Renamed Head Of Automobile Workers GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Sept. 16.—(.Pi—The International United Automobile workers (CIO) conven tion tonight elected R. J. Thomas to his sixth successive term as president. Thomas’ only opponent for the presidency, Robert Carter of FVi local 651, conceded defeat midway trough the roll call vote. George F. Addes was reelected secretary-treasurer. He had no op position. TT POINT VALUES OF ' SOME FOODS UPPED (Continued From Page One) cause of the removal from ration ing of nearly all vegetables, special products and fruit spreads. “The War Food Administration’s allocation of processed foods stil rationed has not changed. What has changed is the point purchas ing power. . . Under the new setup housewives will continue to get 50 blue points j a month. Red point values on meats, but ter and dairy products are un changed. However, combination spaghetti dinners, formerly on the processed food chart, are being ■hifted to the Red point chart, with a one-point value for cartons con taining from one to one and one half ounces of grated chese. ■ Did “Diamond Jim” Have Stomach or Ulcer Pains? It is hardly likely that Diamond Jim Brady could have eaten so voraciously if h# suffered after-eating pains. Sufferer* who have to pay the penalty of stomach gr ulcer pains, indigestion, gas pains, Beartburn burning sensttion, bloat and ether conditions caused by excels acid should try Udga. Get a 25c box of Udga , Tablets from your druggist. First dose must convlsce or return box to us and get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK Saunders Drug store and drug stores everywhere. I ‘Careful There, Pal’ * Inmai * Maybe the fox terrier in the photo above once had a sad expert ence with snapping turtles. At any rate, the way he’s yanking the ear of his big boxer pal, it looks as if he’s trying to warn him that turtles can nip canine noses. The turtle? He scrams. The encounter took place at recent party at New York Children’s Aid Society. City Briefs BAKER TO PREACH The Rev. C. E. Baker, pas tor of Tabernacle Baptist chnrch, will fill the pulpit at the fall evangelistic services that start at 8:30 Monday night and exend through the week to the fourth Sunday at Bay Baptist church. WILL VISIT HUSBAND Mrs. W- J. Ulmer has gone to San Francisco to visit her husband who is stationed there. WILL CONDUCT LESSON J. E. Woodburn will conduct the lesson of the Men’s Bible class of Grace Methodist church, Fourth and Grace streets, today at 10 a. m. The class, through its president, Clayon C. Holmes. invites all men in the city who are not members of other Bible classes to attend each Sunday. PVT- J. S. CRAIG Pvt. J. S. Craig, Jr., 1709 Orange street, will return to Camp Barkeley, Tex., today after spending a short furlough in Wilmington with his wife and parents. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Eagle of Sunset Park announced the birth of a son, September 15, at Marion Sprunt annex* MEETING The first fall meeting of the Senior Fraternity will be held Monday night at 6:30 o’clock at the Brigade Boys’ club, when M’Kean Maffitt, superin tendent of the water and sewerage department will be the speaker. This will be a regular semi-monthly session, according to R. M. Padrick, secretary of the fraternity. GERMANS BATTLE TO HOLD RIMINI (Continued from Page One) communique said the Fifth Army had rammed breaches in the de fense positions but these had been sealed off) The German defenders of Rimini had little choice but to stand or die, because along the Adriatic front they were mostly without transport. Along the Marano river and be fore Rimini the Germans brought up tiger and panther tanks and self-propelled artillery to bolster their thin line of infantry. They were fighting to keep the Eighth off the broad highway from Rimini northwestward to Bologna and Milan behind the Gothic line. Canadians were the first to cross the Miarano river and were engag ed by Panzer Grenadiersao British tanks and infantry came up, cross ed the stream and captured the villages of Ospedaletto and Patrig nano, five miles south of Rimini. Greek troops fighting up the coast captured San Lorenzo and Instrada, iivi miles southeast of Rimini, then forced the Marano and pushed on two miles to the airfield. -V The first public library in New York city was established in 1697. Farewell Dance Slated AT USO Club Tuesday A special farewell dance has been planned for next Tuesday night, at the 4th and Ann U. S. O, Club for the 142d AGF Band from Camp Davis. The band, which has played a regular schedule oi dances at the club for the past two years, will fulfill its last en gagement Tuesday night. Arrangements have been made for an evening with entertainment and refreshments- The club audi torium has been decorated in ar "Auld Lang Syne” motif by a committee headed by Mrs. Mary B. Holmes and assisted by Miss Ruby Shipp, Miss Louise Toot, Mrs. Joseph Garro and a numbei of service men. Members of the Junior hostess corps, servicewomen, service men and service men’s wives are in vited to attend. -V RUSSIANS NEARING YUGOSLAV FRONTIER (Continued from Page One) "We are established in coser con tact with a Soviet division ir Praga." A Moscow communique announc ed the entry into Sofia by units o1 Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin’s third Ukraine army, putting the Russian* within 60 airline miles 01 the Skoplje-Nis-Belgrade railway German escape route from Greece and lower Yugoslavia, which ai ready has been cut by Marsha! Tito’s partisans. Sofia is only 104 miles north of the Grek port o: Salonika. Since their crossing into Bulgaria Sept. 8 the Russians had traveled an airline distance of 225 miles tc Sofia in their swift drive to An nihilate ail the Axis troops in Yu goslavia, Greece, and Albania. El ements of Marshal Rodion Y. Mal inovsky’s second Ukraine army al ready had established contact with the Yugoslav partisans at Negotin south of the Danube river 100 mile! northwest of Sofia. With Bulgaria seeking an armis tice with the Alies and declaring war on Germany, Bulgar troop! were aiding in the Balkan cleanup Capture Localities In the wheeling attack outflank ing Warsaw on the north the Rus sians and Poles during the daj captured five more localities above the captured suburb of Praga— steadily driving the enemy into a pocket formed by the Vistula, Bug and Narew rivers, the communique said. These included Pelcowizna, or the Vistua river two miles north west of Praga and opposite Zoli borz, or the old city district ol Warsaw, and Kobialaka, six mile: north of Praga and 14 miles south east of Nowy - Dwor, where the waters of the Bug and Narew empty into the Vistula. Russians aided by Romaniar troops captured more than 5C localities, the communique said, including Hodac, 22 miles north east of the German-Hungarian stronghold of Targu-Mures on the In northeastern Romania the Rus sians also captured Vatra-Dcrnei. 55 miles southeast of the tip oi Czechosovakia and only 10 miles from Hungarian-annexed Transyh vania, in their advance through the Carpathian mountains on the ap proaches to Bargau pass. Meanwhile a Hungarian commu nique broadcast by Budapest dis closed that either Russian or Ro manian troops, or both, were fight ing close to the prewar Hungarian frontier. Budapest announced that Hun garian troops, striking from then base at Oradea, had collided with Allied troops on a 50-mile front in western Romania, running between Lipova, Ineu and Beius. These three localities are 25 to 38 miles from Hungary, and Ineu is only 147 miles across the pains from Budapest. BARKLEY SUPPORT FREE NEWS MOVE (Continued from Page One) Senator O'Mahoney (D-Wyo) ob served: “I certainly think there is no difference of opinion about the de sirability of such an action.” Connally has drafted a resolution asserting congressional belief in the right of the responsible press and radio to “write, send and pub' lish news at uniform communica' tion rates and without interferencs by governmental or private mon opoly.” MOIUKdUAT gas ! RATIONS SUCED WASHINGTON, Sept. 16— UTf - Gasoline rations for motorboats, used for non-occupational pur poses today were ordered sharply reduced Oct- 1. The Office of Price Administra tion amended its regulations to allow: Inboard motor boats two gallons of gasoline for .each rated horse ; power, with a mayimum of 24 gal i Ions in any -three month, period. Outboard boats 2 1-2 gallons per I ! horsepower, with a maximum of : 10 gallons quarterly. ! Heretofore, under the same rat ed horsepower formula, inboard boats have been permitted a , maximum of 125 gallons and out board boats a maximum of 20-gal lons quarterly. OPA said a limited number of boats in the coast guard auxiliary or operated for conducted fishing trips will continue to receive ra tions under the old formula. -V Obituaries MRS. NETTIE FRAZEE Mrs. Nettie Frazee, of Wilming ton, died yesterday afternoon at 6:30 o’clock in James Walker Me morial hospital. She is survived by two daugh ters, Mrs. Henry J. Tompkins and Miss Erma Frazee, and three granddaughters, Mrs. Douglas L. Meares, Mrs. AClifford Kittle and Mayfair Thompkins. ROBERT T. SLAUGHTER Funeral services for Robert T. Slaughter, Jr., former resident of Wilmington who died Friday in Richmond as the result of injuries sustained when he was struck down by an automobile, will be held at 2:30 p.m. today at Nelson’s funer al home in Richmond. Surviving him are his widow, Mary Slaughter of Richmond; a step-daughter; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Slaughter of Wilming ton; three sisters, Mrs. R. K. Spar row of Wilmington, Mrs. Edward L. Smith, formerly of Wilmington and now of Bainbridge, Md., and Mrs. Mildred Pate of Raleigh; and a brother, W. A. Slaughter, motor machinist’s mate second class, USN, Fort Pierce, Fla. JAMES H. RAND, SR. NORTH FALMOUTH, Mass. Sept. 16.—<£■)—James Henry Rand, Sr., ! a pioneer in the business machine industry and founder of the com pany which today is Remington Rand, Inc., died yesterday at his home. He was 85. ; MRS. NETTIE B. STONE LUUMBERTON, Sept. 16.—Mrs. ; Nettie Barnes Stone, 35, wife of C. J- Stone, of Lumberton, died Friday noon at Charlotte Memorial hospital, where she had under gone a neck and throat operation on the same day. She had been ill for two weeks. Funeral services will be con ducted Sunday at 4 p. m. from Biggs Funeral home here with her pastor, the Rev. S. A. Rhyne, of Back Swamp Baptist church, as sisted by the Rev. I. P. Hedgpeth, in charge. Interment will be in the New Hollywood cemetery. Mrs. Stone was the daughter of the late Kinchen and Penny Barnes, of Proctorville. Surviving are her husband; one son, Jimmy, two half brothers, Haynes Barnes of Proctorville and Oliver Barnes of Uvalde, Ga., and one half sis ter, Mrs. Lone Stone, of Proctor ville. F. C. HOLDER BENTON HARBOR. Mich., Sept. 16.— (iP) —Frederick Chrsitopher Holder, 86, who with the late Gus tave F. Swift founded Swift and Co., in Barnstable, Mass., in 1875, died of a heart attack at his home here today. -V NfcW KfcAtfc TALK HEARD IN EUROPE (Continued from Page One) lomat recently paid to Hitler’s' headquarters. The report was not confirmed, j and an authoritative source herej said that no credence was put in I it. “Among all the Nazis, Hitler; | would know best that such a pe-! I tition would fail,” said this source, j “This sounds like just another of! those peace stories we’ll hear fre quently as the war nears a finish ” The roundabout dispatch added that it was “strongly rumored that well-informed German sources said ! the Japanese had asked the Soviet Union to contact the United States for peace terms with the United States and Britain.” -V Philology is the science of lan guage. ASTHMA SPASMS Liberal Supply Free The development by French Chemists of a palliative formula for easing the difficulty in cough ing and breathing caused by spasms of Bronchial Asthma brought such striking results that its fame quickly spread over Eu rope. Now introduced in the Unit ed States as Bel-Din. This prepa ration contains the same active ingredients and aids as a pallia tive to ease gasping, choking and the feeling of suffocation that of tentimes accompanies Bronchial Asthma. Caution: Use only as di rected. The Montrose Sales Co.., Inc. Dept. 455-B, Montrose, r lit., is anxious that all sufferers from Bronchial Asthma Spasms try this preparation. They will send a lib eral supply Free to anyone who writesthem. If you wish, you may send 10c to cover mailing and handling. Send for it today. 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Come in and buy them today—the Peeev Sai»A n J reSsy Sage preparation* that will give your hand* a lift. BUILDS ESISTANCE An excellent tonic for children end adults to |promote appetite, aid digestion and at a nu tritional assistant in malnutrition resulting from Vitamin A, B, D. G, and E deficiencies. Contains wheat germ oil and iron. Pleasant to take . . . Free from cod liver oil. FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS LARGE ^ $1.49 ► SALE FO* LIMITED TIME ONLY 4 ' I HINDS - i FOR 4 ; HANDS • MOTHINR FOR SUNRURR tool 1 ( I